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Community Impact Report

As part of our Mission of Love, Masonic Villages extends services to neighboring communities and individuals of

all ages. While many activities were placed on hold or modified in 2021 due to the COVID-19 pandemic, staff and residents were still able to impact neighbors and local organizations through donations of time, money and expertise, as well as items such as food and clothing.

The Masonic Villages proudly provided $36.1 million of charitable care and services across Pennsylvania in 2021.

This amount consists of approximately $10.1 million (at cost) of free care and services and $26 million (at cost) for care and services above the amount reimbursed by Medicare, Medicaid and other third party payers.

In addition, Masonic Villages provided more than $323,521 in scholarships, donations to local emergency services providers, internships and community assistance to our neighbors in Dallas, Elizabethtown, Lafayette Hill, Sewickley and Warminster.

Lisa Livingston, administator home health and hospice, provides a donation from staff to the Community Cupboard food bank in Elizabethtown

COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT AND SUPPORT

Masonic Villages works with other organizations to help fulfill needs in the community, some of which also benefit our residents. Many of our programs with local schools and organizations in need of meeting space were postponed in 2021, and we look forward to re-engaging with these groups safely in 2022.

For the seventh year, Masonic Village at Dallas collaborated with the physical therapy department at Misericordia University on a Balance & Fall Prevention Program. The program encourages good health, exercise and wellbeing, while giving students real-life field experience.

To benefit Elizabethtown Community Housing and Outreach Services (ECHOS), which runs a winter shelter at St. Paul’s Methodist Church for those with emergency living needs, Masonic Village at Elizabethtown’s environmental services department washed 2,870 pounds of sheets, blankets, comforters and towels free of charge, donating staff time valued at approximately $1,664.

In a partnership with Elizabethtown College, biology students have the opportunity to earn a 40-hour CNA certification, which includes classwork, direct interaction with residents and a competency test.

BUSINESS AND ECONOMIC SUPPORT

As an institute of purely public charity, Masonic Villages is not required to pay real estate taxes; however, we understand the importance of helping to pay for vital community services. Through Payment in Lieu of Taxes (PILOT) agreements for Dallas, Elizabethtown, Lafayette Hill and Sewickley, we paid $2,266,266 to local boroughs, townships, counties and school districts in 2021.

Supporting the local economy is also a priority. Through contracts with 339 businesses in the Dallas, Elizabethtown, Lafayette Hill and Sewickley areas, Masonic Villages purchased approximately $5.95 million of products and services.

Masonic Village at Elizabethtown was recognized in 2021 by the Lancaster County Employment Coalition for employing and providing a positive working environment for individuals with disabilities.

DONATIONS

Masonic Villages seeks ways to support other charitable organizations whenever possible. We contributed more than $53,260 to fire and EMS companies, libraries and other causes in 2021.

EFFORTS ALSO INCLUDED:

Clothing and books were donated to Salvation Army, Goodwill, libraries and other local thrift stores. In Lafayette Hill, residents donated puzzles and books to Fox Chase Cancer Center and clothing and other miscellaneous items to Whosoever Gospel Mission, the Salvation Army and the National Federation for the Blind.

The Masonic Village Farm Market donated produce weekly to the Community Cupboard of Elizabethtown, East Donegal-Conoy Food Banks and the Elizabethtown First Church of God meal program. During their Photos with Santa, Mrs. Claus and the Elves events, the Farm Market accepted donations for ECHOS, raising $500 for the program.

Masonic Village Hospice raised more than $8,641 for the 2021 Relay for Life of Lancaster, benefiting the American Cancer Society.

Masonic Village at Elizabethtown and the Masonic Village Farm Market partnered with Northwest EMS and the U.S. Marine Corps Reserve to support the Lancaster County Toys for Tots collection, donating 13 overflowing boxes of toys. We contributed $15,000 to the Elizabethtown Area Education Foundation to help generate support for the foundation’s grant program to enhance learning experiences in the classroom and beyond.

At Masonic Villages’ Elizabethtown and Sewickley locations, we awarded $20,000 in scholarships to eight graduating high school seniors and college students who volunteered at least 100 hours with us during their high school years.

Masonic Village at Elizabethtown provided shuttle busses for the National Night Out on Aug. 3. After the organizer’s ice supplier backed out, our food services department donated ice for the event.

EDUCATIONAL OPPORTUNITIES

Masonic Villages is proud to work with local schools and universities to welcome students seeking internships and job shadow experiences to help enhance their formal education. In 2021, some of these opportunities were accomplished online, while others were postponed until we can invite students back safely.

Across the state, interns joined us in the public relations, marketing and food services departments.

“I feel that through my experience with Masonic Village at Dallas, I gained a new perspective on senior care. I gained great connections to not only the staff, but residents, as well. They all really made me feel welcomed. I was able to apply critical thinking and problem solving skills throughout the summer. The development of these skills will definitely help me in the future, no matter what career path I choose. Masonic Village truly cares about all their residents and assists them with anything they may need. I loved the compassion of the organization that made residents feel comfortable to age.”

~ Connor R. Beyer, a senior at Pennsylvania State University, majoring in Health Policy Administration, interned with Masonic Village at Dallas in summer 2021. He is planning a future career as a Nursing Home Administrator.

In clinical settings, including the pharmacy, music therapy, therapeutic recreation, social services, nutrition, wellness, hospice and environmental services departments, staff

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supervised more than 50 students for an estimated 6,357 hours – time valued at approximately $33,116*.

*Based on national community benefits reporting standards, 20% of staff time overseeing students in a clinical setting may be quantified as a community benefit.

Included in the values above, students from University of Sciences and Lake Erie College of Osteopathic Medicine completed public health clinicals with Masonic Village Pharmacy. We anticipate continuing relationships in 2022 with Beaver County Career and Technology, Pittsburgh Technical College, Community College of Beaver County and other schools, colleges and universities.

Masonic Village at Elizabethtown’s food services department has partnered with Lancaster Career and Technology Center’s Mount Joy campus since 2015 to provide internships for students pursuing culinary arts degrees. They also formed a partnership in 2021 with the Culinary Institute of America in High Point, NY. The first student completed a 550-hour internship, and after graduating in August, came back to work for us.

For several years, Masonic Village at Elizabethtown has teamed up with Lancaster-Lebanon Intermediate Unit 13 to offer students internships and real world job experiences in environmental services and other fields. We hosted 17 students in 2021.

OUTREACH AND HOME ASSISTANCE

Funded through generous contributions, the Masonic Children’s Home in Elizabethtown does not charge individuals, organizations, or the state or federal government for its services. It provides a home for up to 40 youth who are being raised by aging grandparents or who come from various social or economic environments which do not provide necessary security and support. Children do not need to have a Masonic affiliation in their family to be eligible for services. In 2021, the Elizabethtown Area School District received $431,119 through reciprocity agreements with the school districts from which the children come to us.

Youth at the Masonic Children’s Home sorted through plastic caps and lids collected by the local community to send to Green Tree Plastics - ABC Partnership, in Evansville, Illinois. The company makes benches out of the recycled plastics for elementary schools. Masonic Village at Elizabethtown resident Sonja Alcon is a mentor for the program and said this will provide Bainbridge Elementary School with two “buddy benches” for their playground.

Youth at the children’s home and Masonic Village resident Sonja Alcon sort through plastic caps and lids to be recycled into benches

Masonic Village’s Outreach Program distributed $18,949 in home assistance support to individuals and families. The program also operates a Durable Medical Loan Equipment Closet, which provides equipment to families on a short-term basis at no cost. We supplied wheelchairs, walkers, canes, shower chairs and other equipment to eight individuals in 2021.

Community members at any stage of life can find assistance at Masonic Villages. Last year, in Elizabethtown, an average of nine individuals, including community members and Masonic Village residents, participated in the monthly Dementia Caregiver Support & Education Group. An average of four individuals per month attended meetings of the Bereavement Support Group. Masonic Village contributed approximately $1,542, including 48 hours of staff time, materials and classroom space, toward these support groups.

RESIDENT CONTRIBUTIONS

Many Masonic Village residents are active in the community. Last year, residents contributed to service projects that benefited children, students, older adults, emergency service providers and those with food and housing insecurities.

Masonic Village at Dallas residents participated in an Adopt-a-Road project to help clean up nearby Country Club Road and volunteered at the Back Mountain Food Pantry, along with donating nonperishable goods and $7,028 to support its mission. They also contributed donations to Toys for Tots and Pyramid Healthcare and provided lunch to Habitat for Humanity volunteers. For the holidays, residents assembled 1,900 items and hand-delivered care packages for Meadows Nursing Home and provided holiday cookies to Dallas Township First Responders.

A dozen members of Masonic Village at Sewickley’s PLARN (plastic yarn) group knit plastic mats for the New Life Community Church in Pittsburgh, which donates them to homeless individuals. A group of residents also knit blankets, robes and hats for Project Linus, a national nonprofit organization which donates blankets to children in hospitals, including the Shriners Hospitals for Children; shelters; social service agencies; or anywhere a need arises. They donated 60 knitted blankets, 17 fleece blankets and 98 quilts in 2021. Residents and other friends of the Masonic Village at Sewickley Woodworking Group partnered with members of the Shrine to make toy trucks throughout the year, sell them and donate the proceeds to the Shriners Hospitals for Children. In total, $1,136 was donated in 2021.

Through the sales of handmade floral arrangements, jewelry, blankets, cards, gift bags and much more, the Craft Group at the Masonic Village at Elizabethtown donated proceeds to numerous Masonic and community charities, including $1,000 to Northwest EMS and $1,000 to Friendship Fire & Hose. The Retirement Living Resident’s Association gave $1,000 to Northwest EMS and $1,000 to the Community Cupboard of Elizabethtown. The Masonic Village Piece Maker Quilt group, comprised of 26 women, gave money from their sales to campus groups, $1,000 to Northwest EMS and $500 to ECHOS. They also sent quilts to the Kentucky Tornado Relief Fund.

The Grey Lions of Elizabethtown, Masonic Village’s Penn State alumni interest group, awarded four $1,000 scholarships in 2021 to deserving Penn State students.

Residents of the Bleiler Caring Cottage participated in several community service projects, including garden clean up at Community Cupboard of Elizabethtown and planting flowers at Cornerstone Youth Center. Twice a month, they cleaned up trash at the Elizabethtown Train Station and/or Wolgemuth Community Park. For the 11th year, they also participated in Share-A-Card, providing cards for terminally ill individuals across the country. Residents collected donations for Toys for Tots, community food drives and hurricane victims.

SELL CHAPEL

Through the Congregation of Sell Chapel’s Community Outreach ministry, members donated $46,621 in offerings toward ECHOS, The Children’s Playroom of Lancaster, Hope Within Ministries, Communities That Care, Naaman Center, the Christmas Shop, the Community Cupboard of Elizabethtown, Cornerstone Youth Center, the CROP Walk and the Emergency Fund, which has helped during floods and tornadoes. Members of the congregation volunteered with ECHOS and the winter shelter, The Children’s Playroom and other programs in Lancaster County.

View our full Community Impact Report online at MasonicVillages.org/about/community-report.

A TOUCH of Tranquility

For residents of Masonic Village at Warminster, the outdoor courtyard is a favorite spot to enjoy some sunshine, visit with family and friends and relax.

Thanks to a donation from Masonic Lodge No. 9, Philadelphia, combined with significant support from Concordia Lodge No. 67, Jenkintown, and Newtown Lodge No. 427, Woodside, a brand new koi pond and waterfall is bringing a splash of excitement for residents, staff and visitors.

Masonic Village at Warminster residents applied their artistic vision to painting rocks for decorating the garden and other outside areas. Look for their colorful creations outdoors on your next visit to the campus.

“This is the perfect touch to enhance the courtyard, where residents sit in the garden and enjoy fresh air and friendly conversations every day,” Kelly Shrum, executive director, said.

“The sounds of the waterfall make for a relaxing environment, and residents can feed the fish.”

Construction on the pond started in November and was completed in December 2021. This addition follows on the heels of renovations to the community’s exterior and front foyer, which were finished in April 2021.

Projects like this will benefit our residents for years to come. We appreciate the generosity of all our donors who made it possible.

For Your Entertainment

Performing on stage or in front of a camera may be terrifying to most people. For some Masonic Village residents and staff, it’s an opportunity to showcase their passion and energy for an audience. Whether seasoned performers or new to showbiz, we’re putting the spotlight on those bringing entertainment and a smile to others. Lights, camera, action!

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