2004 Annual Report

Page 1


Providing homeless New Yorkers with everything they need to move from the streets to health, homes and jobs.


Project Renewal Project Renewal continues to be among the nation’s most innovative and effective organizations working to end homelessness. It is perhaps the only group in the country that offers homeless people everything they need, all under one organizational ‘roof’. In fact, it was our unique ability to offer street outreach, healthcare, drug and mental health treatment, housing and job placement that won us a prestigious new federal grant to create a dynamic never-been-tried program. Project Renewal was one of only eleven organizations nationwide—and the only one in New York—to be given this opportunity. The new program we created, In Homes Now, helps people who have tried everything else but have been unable to escape homelessness because of ongoing substance abuse problems. Through our new program—the first of its kind in the country—we place people who have been living long-term in shelters or on the street into their own apartments, and offer them comprehensive health, treatment and jobs services where they live. We were chosen to create this program in conjunction with the local Veterans Administration, because we already have the requisite outreach, healthcare, treatment and jobs programs up and running. We also opened two new supportive housing complexes in the summer of 2004, providing beautiful new apartments and necessary support services for nearly 150 formerly homeless New Yorkers. And, since our last annual report, we opened up the first freestanding dental clinic for homeless people. But new programs aside, the test of Project Renewal’s success is our graduates— the people who come through our programs and leave homelessness and hopelessness behind forever. We’ve chosen a few of these success stories to share with you in this annual report. Thank you for your continued support of Project Renewal and the very vulnerable men and women we serve. Alan Belzer

Edward I. Geffner

Chairman of the Board

Executive Director


Our Programs Providing everything homeless people need to move from the streets to health, homes and jobs.

Outreach

Housing

Street Outreach Program Times Square Homeless Engagement Project Shelter Outreach Program Shelter Outreach and Assessment Program (SHARP) Mobile Psychiatric Teams AMTRAK Outreach Mobile Medical Outreach Unit

Holland House Clinton Residence Lease on Life St. Nicholas House Tinton Avenue Residence In Homes Now

Residential Addiction Treatment Kenton Hall Center New Providence Renewal Farm Renewal House Third Street Center

Residential Mental Health Treatment Fort Washington New Providence Clinton Residence Parole Support and Treatment Program Safe Haven Times Square Respite Center

Healthcare Licensed Medical Clinics Mobile Medical Outreach Unit Comprehensive Outreach with Bowery Residents Committee Dental Clinic

Substance Abuse Treatment Chemical Abuse Crisis Center Outpatient Clinic

Employment Next Step Literacy Program Next Step Placement Program Culinary Arts Training Program Computer Technician Training Program Suburban Jobs Job Links IMPRINTS


Sharing Our Success


Lee Stringer


Because I joke a lot, a friend once asked me: “Aren’t you ever serious?” I told her that my inclination toward mining a chuckle or two from any situation isn’t due to a lack of seriousness, it’s a byproduct of my propensity to take a certain joy in just about everything I’m doing.

“What you’re seeing,” I told her, “is a sense of gratitude.”

I certainly hardly imagined myself ever publishing my third book, speaking at the UN, touring Europe, serving on three nonprofit boards, working with troubled youth at the same boarding school for at-risk kids that I was once remanded to or visiting with fellow recovering addicts and homeless people every month at the same Project Renewal facility in which I got the help I needed to kick my addiction.

It wasn’t that many years ago, after all, that I only had to cope with one problem: how and where to get my next hit of crack. I didn’t have much more than a spitting chance of dealing with anything else, even though my life had spiraled to the point where I was living in a crawl space beneath a platform in Grand Central Terminal.

I guess life’s like that; if you’re not hitting the crack pipe in the bowels of Grand Central terminal, you’re giving the keynote address at the UN! (There I go again!)

I knew from past experience how lucrative doing commercial voiceovers can be. An ad can run 30-50 times or more on a given day. And each time it does, the voice behind it can earn a royalty of $35. You do the math. Yet I could never find fifteen minutes in my busy, drug-seeking day to give this guy a call and take him up on his offer.

And if I crack a one-liner every now and again it’s because I’m seldom without a touch of giddiness over being here, no matter how serious or challenging life may at times prove to be.

So I’m grateful today, even when things are serious. Grateful that Project Renewal was there when I needed it. I remember pitching Street News on Grateful that I found my way the subway one day, for example, when a man from the Hal Riney advertising to its doors. Grateful that I agency motioned me over and handed now spend my days engaged me his card. “We want your voice,” he in things that are intimately said. “Call me.” connected to who I am.


Vanessa Taylor


Where can I begin? I guess first of all, how grateful I am to Project Renewal and especially the counselor I had there—she really saved my life. When I first got to Culinary Arts (Project Renewal’s six month program that trains formerly homeless and addicted men and women for, and places them in, jobs in the food service industry), I had a lot of attitude. I would act out all the time, almost as though I was trying to get kicked out of the program. But Michelle really believed in me and gave me the love and support I wished I’d gotten from my family. I sometimes think that I finished the program and did so well to please her. Anyway, she definitely saved my life.

Culinary Arts was the perfect training program for me: I love to cook and always have, though I forgot about that all the time I was out drugging. Knowing how to be a chef gave me a base to work from. But the job I have now is the perfect one for me. It’s at the same place I did my internship, ten years ago, where Project Renewal placed me after I finished my training. Only now I’m Staff Supervisor. That means I work with people like me, just coming out of training who are trying to hold down the first job they’ve had in ten or twenty years and stay clean. I love

that I can be an inspiration to people —that they can look at me and know that they can make it too, because I was in exactly the same place they’ve just from—homeless, addicted, hating myself. But this job also helps me remember where I came from and that keeps me humble. Because I can remember it well. I remember feeling like I was in prison growing up, with a father who beat me and my sisters and my mother all the time. I remember hearing my friends talking about how drugs made you feel good, and I just wanted that so badly. But they never did. In fact they ended up making me feel even worse. I remember one time looking in the mirror and not knowing who was staring back at me. But the thing I’m most grateful for is having my daughter back in my life. It wasn’t easy. She’d heard me say so many times before that this time it’d be different, she had no trust left. But bit by bit, day by day it got better. Now she is my best friend and our time together is the most precious thing in life to me.

It’s an incredible thing, to be given a second chance in life, to regain all the things you thought you’d lost forever. But it’s possible. I’m living proof.


William Mercer


I guess my story is a pretty familiar one. I was abandoned by my substance-abusing parents when I was two. All eight of us kids ended up with addiction problems.

About that same time, I got back in touch with my childhood sweetheart. We reconnected and I ended up proposing to her at a Narcotics Anonymous meeting. One of my colleagues held the yellow roses. Got down on my knees and everything.

My problems with drugs started when the mother of my two-month-old daughter took up with my best friend. I tried crack and it was the beginning of the end.

Next, I bought my own house.

What followed was years of homelessness and things I don’t even want to think about. Eating out of the trash. Arrested 28 times. You can’t imagine. I remember one day while I was sleeping in Grand Central Station I was awakened by the smell of smoke: the cardboard that I had been sleeping in was on fire. The first thing that I did? Check my pocket to see if my crack pipe was still there. Anyway, the last time I was in jail, I got in touch with Project Renewal and they agreed to help me. That’s when everything started to change.

Then, my wife convinced me to get back in touch with my daughter, who I hadn’t seen in fifteen years. I did and later got custody of her. She is the light of my life. Three years ago, my wife and I decided to adopt her nephew who had been put into an orphanage in New Jersey. So, today, I’m the assistant director at Third Street, where I got clean and sober 11 years ago. I own my own beautiful house, along with the bank. I have the most wonderful wife anyone could ever have. I am a father to two great kids.

They helped me see the root of my addiction so I was able to not just get clean but get rid of the demons that drove me to drugs in the first place. Then they hired me. And gave me my own apartment. And helped me go back to school (I’m 22 credits shy of a Bachelor’s degree).

And it’s all thanks to Project Renewal.

So thank you, Project Renewal, and thank all you good people for helping this organization help folks like me. (from a speech given at Project Renewal’s Annual Benefit & Auction 2004)


Dave Sharkey


To: Project Renewal From: Dave Sharkey Subject: thank you

this is really a miracle for me to be were i am today. to think i used to live in penn station only 5 short years ago, and now i have a great job— i am the senior facility manager for the metro ny district of AMF world wide. which means i am in charge of the 10 bowling centers from south jersey to milford connecticut. they even sent me to florida because they had problems at a bowling center and i was part of a team of top mechanics across the country sent in to straighten the bowling center out. the only problem i had was i had to come home early because i had another blessing—i became a grandfather. my 16 year daughter had a beautiful baby girl. the amazing thing about it was that i was totally against this—then i held her. and now i believe god gave me another chance to right the mistakes i made with my daughter. i promised my granddaughter (Bella Rose) that i would never run out on her like i did her mother. so lets see what the future has to hold— a future i only got because of the help i got at project renewal. i would like to thank every one at project renewal for giving me a second chance. (an email from former client Dave Sharkey. Dave is currently Senior Facility Manager AMF Metro NY District.)


Robert Neugeboren


On a beautiful spring-like evening in mid-November recently, I arrived at the Clinton Residence on West 48th Street to have dinner with my brother Robert. Usually when we get together, we eat out at one of the local restaurants, but this time, Robert asked if I’d like to eat with him in the Clinton dining room. I accepted the invitation, then accompanied Robert to the kitchen door, where he paid for my meal.

than a quarter century ago, but our mother died only 16 months ago and, talking about her, Robert suddenly began crying. He reached across and took my hand, after which he changed the subject and asked if I remembered when he worked for a film-editing company. Did I remember the young Puerto Rican man Ruben Martinez he worked with who had fought in the Golden Gloves? I remembered him, I said. Robert laughed. “I remember when Ruben came back from basic training, in the Army, and he said— ‘And I thought all men were created equal…’”

“When I leave Clinton,” Robert said to me when we were having dessert at a nearby Starbucks (my treat this time), “Tommy and I have decided to get a place Was everything okay at the together.” Residence? He smiled. “Oh yes,” he said. “The staff is Tommy is Robert’s roommate, and though Robert’s statement seemed like attentive to me. They treat me the most ordinary remark, it was large very well, you know. They in significance. Robert has been at the even laugh at my jokes.” Clinton Residence for five years now—the longest stretch by far (and we are talking about forty-two years)—that he has ever lived outside a mental hospital, and this was the first time that he has seriously broached the subject of living more independently. Then our talk turned to earlier years, when Robert was working at the post office—“That was like a mental hospital too!” he joked—and from there we went down memory lane with each other for a while: talking about our early years together, and about our mother and father, both of whom are gone. Our father passed away more

An ordinary evening, then: two brothers out and about, having dinner, reminiscing, laughing…but given that a few years ago Robert’s doctors believed he would never be able to live outside a locked ward, a most magical and miraculous evening. Written by Jay Neugeboren, brother to Robert and acclaimed author of 13 works of fiction and nonfiction, including Imagining Robert, recently adapted into a film that aired on PBS in 2004, and Transforming Madness.


how we do it


Our Financials Statement of activities Years ended June 30th

2004

2003

$ 1,609,355 354,672 30,375,237 25,550 1,141,630 454,001 11,090

$ 1,378,569 333,596 28,055,672 25,550 857,374 428,172 19,587

64,296

(7,957)

$34,035,831

$31,090,563

Expenses: Program services Management and general Fundraising

29,686,021 3,458,978 525,329

27,064,536 3,319,481 358,460

Total expenses

$ 33,670,328

$30,742,477

365,503 1,259,355 1,624,858

348,086 911,269 1,259,355

Public support and revenue Contributions Special events, net of expenses Grants and third-party revenue Management fee income Rental income Miscellaneous income Interest and dividend income Net realized and unrealized gains (losses) on investments Total public support and revenue

Change in net assets Net assets, beginning of year Net assets, end of year

2004

Contributors: 3%

Contributors: 5%

Programs: 88%

Other: 3%

Grants and Third Party Revenue: 89%

Administrative: 12%

Financial information is derived from our audited financial statements.


Our Contributors We are pleased to acknowledge donors of $500 and above who provided generous support for current programs (July 1, 2002–June 30, 2004). $25,000 and above Alan M. and Joan Taub Ades Alan Belzer & Susan Martin BT Americas, Inc. Citigroup Foundation Corporation for Supportive Housing The Frances L. and Edwin L. Cummings Memorial Fund Ira W. DeCamp Foundation FJC-A Foundation of Donor Advised Funds Horace W. Goldsmith Foundation Hearst Foundation, Inc. Mary J. Hutchins Foundation The Kresge Foundation Lend Lease Real Estate Investment Million Dollar Round Table Foundation Fred and Nancy Poses The Starr Foundation Tiger Foundation United Way of New York City van Ameringen Foundation, Inc. $10,000-$24,999 ABC, Inc. Bradley Abelow & Carolyn Murray The Theodore H. Barth Foundation Broadway Cares/Equity Fights AIDS, Inc. Cashin Family Fund Warren and Mitzi Eisenberg Epstein Philanthropies Susan and Leonard Feinstein Michael Field & Jeffrey Arnstein Irwin and Janet Tweed Gusman The Hyde and Watson Foundation The Lambert Family Foundation Joseph P. Mack Marden Family Foundation Mega Contracting, Inc. Shelly and Neil Mitchell Foundation J.P. Morgan Chase Morgan Stanley Deanna and Stephen Mulligan Mary Lynn and Frederick Putney

Bill and Kathy Reiland The Ritter Foundation, Inc. Theodore C. Rogers Carl S. Rosoff John and Carla Scheld Lillian and Jonathan Stern Kelly G. Sumner $5,000-$9,999 James P. Allman Altria Employee Fund Automatic Data Processing, Inc. Ayco Charitable Foundation The Barker Welfare Foundation Evelyn Berry BeTrust Concepts Sarl DARC Corporation James S. Davidson Michael and Karen DelPrete The Geraldine R. Dodge Foundation Francis Exley & Marilyn Vadon Richard and Carol Feinstein John P. Garvey Getronics MacAndrews & Forbes Holdings, Inc. Ian D. Mackenzie Bette Midler Family Trust Mizuho Bank Foundation Gerald and Gunilla Morris MRI Open Society Institute Shearman & Sterling LLP Marc and Lori Silverman Jim and Mimi Stevens $2,500-$4,999 Frances Belzer-Reid & Robert Reid Martin and Rebecca Eisenberg Foundation The Deborah and Ronald Eisenberg Family Foundation Mary Beth Farrell Feinstein Family Foundation The Jeffrey and Debra Feinstein Foundation Financial Planning Association

Andrew J. Green Jeffrey R. Gural/Newmark & Co. Real Estate Marian S. Heiskell Anthony S. Kendall Brian M. Kinkead Irene Levoy Foundation, Inc. Judith and David Maron Dana D. McCarren Stephen J. McClellan Elizabeth and Michael McKiever Richard and Ronay Menschel Sam Milliken & Lore Monig MPPI Insurance, Inc. New York University Community Fund Leon and Nadia Oxman Nan and Edward Perell Len and Louise Riggio Juan and Marianna Sabater The Fan Fox & Leslie R. Samuels Foundation, Inc. Laura Baudo Sillerman & Robert F.X. Sillerman Thomas D. and Denise R. Stern Family Foundation The Sulzberger Foundation US Trust Company John E. Welsh, III Josh and Judy Weston The T.G. White Fund Lana L. Wilson $1,000-$2,499 Associated Telephone Design Blair Brickman The Brodsky Family Foundation Cameron Foundation Russell L. Carson The Clermont Foundation Andrew Cogan & Lori Finkel William T. Comfort James J. Crowley The Dammann Fund, Inc. George and Mary Davis Karen and Daniel Davis David A. Dechman Eckhaus & Olson


Amy G. Feinstein Doris and Arthur Field The William Fox, Jr. Foundation Gap Foundation Danny Garvey David and Carole Gaunt John A. Gibbons, Jr. The Malcolm Gibbs Foundation, Inc. Gilbert Tweed Associates Inc. GNYHA Ventures, Inc. Sharon A. Goldfarb Taylor and Virginia Gray Judith and Frank Greenberg Foundation Mark Justh & Lydia Denworth Howard and Wilma Kaye The Kibel Foundation, Inc. Maria and Jonathan Kudlick - Lauder Companies Inc. The Estee Elaine and Robert LeBuhn Bruce R. Lee Susan and Arthur Leeds Edward and Hannah Low Brian and Florence Mahony Barbara and David Margolis Joseph F. McDonald John P. McKeown Med World Pharmacy Michel Mercure Steven and Pamela Mitchell M.J.M. Electric, Inc. Chuck and Angella Pol Martin and Mary Puris Robert C. Quinlan Renaissance Housing Betsy Renwick Riker Danzig Scherer Hyland & Perretti LLP The Robbins Family Foundation, Inc. Bernard Roberts & Elaine Stein Roberts Philanthropic Fund Matthew A. Rosen Henry and Sue Salzhauer Edward and Jean Sarnoff Schuman Lichtenstein Claman Efron David E. Shaw Burton and Barbara Stern Delores and Robert Viarengo Charitable Trust Washington Mutual Foundation Martin and Sara Wetzstein

$500-$999 Malcolm D. Abrams Peter and Andrea Abruzzese Max and Christine Ansbacher Ralph Aquila Willard N. Archie The Astorino Financial Group, Inc. Betsy Atkins Atlantic Bank of New York Leslie Bedford and Frank Upham Bettina and Edward Bierly George and Alison Birnbaum Blaylock & Partners, L.P. Iain D. Brownie William Calarese Frank C. Carlucci Colleen Cavanaugh Neil D. Chrisman The Christopher Street Central Block & Merchants Association Nicholas L. Coch William and Betsey Cochrane David H. Cogan Foundation William and Michelle Cohen Gerald B. Cramer Family Foundation Matthew Devlin & Nina Pawlak Michael J. Donoghue Joel Dreifus Tom and Ellie Ference Fernando Ferrer Freddi Finegood & Ethan Horwitz Martin Fleisher & Andrea Bierstein Solomon J. Freedman Harry and Bea Friedman Ralph and Audrey Friedner Richard and Linda Gelfond Jordan and Suzanne Glatt Henry Goldstein & Linda Broessel Janice Goodman Donald J. Gordon David Greenberg Grosvenor Marketing Limited Gabriel and Joyce Hakim Ingerman Smith LLP Paul and Dayssi Kanavos Michael and Lyn Keeshan Robert and Roseanne Kennedy Timothy and Jennifer Kingston Kevin and Phoebe Kline Stewart and Donna Kohl Alessandro and Ulrica Lanaro Lauren and Richard Langan

Richard and Lisa Lebowitz Pia and David Ledy Ursula and Paul Lowerre Masters Coverage Corporation Divison John P. McAlonan The McGraw-Hill Companies Pamela and Robert Miller Steve Mills Robert and Adriana Mnuchin Michael and Kimberly Moers North Fork Bank Alfred Oakes Jerome E. Oppenberg Barry Pfeifer & Kristy Grimes Quinlan & Field Ronald and Bonnie Rafaloff Rochdale Investment Management Jonathan P. Rosen- The Joseph Rosen Foundation Peter and Laura Rothschild Steven Schroko Arthur and Judy Schwartz Charles and Janet Seidler Eric and Randi Sellinger Shelley's Prime Meats Todd and Judy Slotkin Leisa M. Smith John C. Speak Colin and Debbie Spence Matthew and Janet Stern Herbert J. Sturz Sycamore Management Corp. Bernard and Laura Tool Louis and Ileana Verde Vesper Foundation Steven Victorin & Neil Parker Francis T. Vincent, Jr. Frank Vivero & Martha Robertson Walker Malloy & Co., Inc. Ronald and Marilyn Walter Susan Waltman & Thomas Barry Bernard & Zipora Weber Bradley Wechsler & Patricia Newburger Scott Widham M. Steven and Barbara Williams Richard and Deborah Winfield Lori and Kenneth Wortz Saky Yakas


In-Kind Donations Project Renewal is grateful for the generosity shown through in-kind donations for special events:

A Night at the Big Apple Circus November 2002 and November 2003

Gala Benefit & Auction June 2003 and June 2004

BT America’s Connecting for a Better World Gala October 2003

A&E Television Networks Abbott's Limousine & Livery Service, Inc. L'Absinthe Brasserie . Restaurant Joan Taub Ades Aeromax, Inc. Alex Jewelry, Inc. Mirella Allman American Airlines American Ballet Theatre Murray Archibald Elizabeth Arden Red Door Spa A Salt & Battery Larry Ashmead & Walter Mathews Tess Casey, Aisling Flowers Anne Auberjonois Designer Avirex Baboo Digital Barton G., The Restaurant Bed Bath & Beyond Alan Belzer Henri Bendel Richard Berenholtz Berkshire Opera Company Best Buy Big Apple Circus Blooms by Betsy Blue Hill Troupe, Ltd. Douglas Boller Hilary Boller Borough Supplies Corp. Daniel Boulud Kenny Brown

Valerie Browne BT Americas, Inc. Butterflies & Zebras buybuy Baby Cakes Couture by Rita Dadaian Canard, Inc. Canyon Ranch Deborah Carabet, AADP La Carezza da Spa Billie Carnes Casa Natalia Caspari, Inc. Centolire Chanterelle Le Chef Le Chef Bistro Chef Central Club Gourmet Restaurant Coastal Frameshop and Gallery Anthony Cockcroft Coco Pazzo Continental Airlines The Copacabana Critter Beach of Rehoboth Beach Crossroads Wines & Liquors Crowne Plaza Hotel Billy Crudup Cullen Quentin Curry db bistro moderne Karen DelPrete Stadium Racquet Club Demner Jewels Ltd.

Christian Dior Parfums Richie DiSalvo Dodger Theatricals Karen A. Dombrovski-Sobel Dyson East Hampton Indoor Tennis Debbie and Ron Eisenberg Anne Ekstrom Flora Endelman Escada Fellan Florist Michael S. Field Michael C. Fina fortunoff The Four Seasons Marc Friedland / Creative Intelligence, Inc. NY-LA Christopher D. Gbur Anthony Gillison The Golf Channel David Goodman Goodson Parker Wellness Center Carol Graham Gramercy Tavern Jay M. Gross Janet Tweed Gusman Christopher Gwyn The Hain Celestial Group Fran and Jordan Halper Annelee Hansson Haru Restaurant The "John J. Harvey" Kathy and Rex Hearn


C. Hugh Hildesley Hoya Crystal The Institute of Culinary Education Jackson Hole Mountain Resort Jazz @ Lincoln Center Jerry's Place Jodi's Gym Nancy L. Johnson Lianne Johnson Designs Richard Johnson and Sunny Hayward Lucy Kirk Abigail Kirsch Anne Klein Watches Nancy Konipol George Lang Lanvin - Lauder Companies Inc. The Estee Linda and Bob Lee, What a Racquet Level 3 Communications Links of London Andrew Lloyd-Williams Loews Hotels Lord & Taylor The Luftig Company Joseph P. Mack Toni S. Magnane Manfredi Manhattan Theatre Club Manhattan Fruitier Peter Martino Mary Lou Knits Nina McLemore, LLC J. Mendel The Metropolitan Museum of Art Metropolitan Golf Association Abigail Michaels Concierge Joseph Micheletti Pamela J. Miller Paul Miller Joseph Mirabelli Shelly and Neil Mitchell MODO Eyewear Mohegan Sun Christopher Moore, Artbag Kenneth Moore, Metropolitan Museum of Art Marc Moses Movin’ Out The Music Festival of the Hamptons

Victoria Nastri National Flag & Display Co., Inc. NBC Experience Store Neiman Marcus New York Mets New York City Opera Niko Personal Training Cathleen Noland Greg Norman Collection Nortel Communications Olan Opera News Magazine Oren's Daily Roast Osteria al Doge Restaurant Paperproducts Design, Inc. DeAnsin G. Parker Simon Pearce Tim Perell PGA National Golf and Sports Club Kat Phillips Photo District Gallery Picholine Charles A. Pol Project Renewal, Inc. PSP Sports Mary Lynn and Frederick Putney The Red Lion Inn Redken Renewal Farm Betsy Renwick The Ritz-Carlton, South Beach Carl S. Rosoff Peter Rossow David Rothstein, Race Brook Lodge Ruzzetti & Gow Juan A. Sabater John Sahag The Savoy Hotel Group Scholastic Serafina Dr. Nathan Shapiro Sheer Madness Salon The Shirt Store The Shubert Organization, Inc. Lori and Marc Silverman Amrita Singh Julie Smith Yash Soni Southampton Inn Jo-Una Spadafora

Spahr Designs StamfordTickets.com The Stanhope Park Hyatt Lillian H. Stern James W. Stevens Gracey Stoddard Mrs. John L. Strong R. L. Sullivan Tea & Sympathy Thoroughly Modern Millie TJI Creations Town. Tony Traxler, Hair Stylist Warren Tricomi Salons Tuscan Square Twinings of London UKGoods.com United States Tennis Association UTOG Transportation The Verve Music Group Virgin Atlantic Airlines The Waldorf=Astoria Walkers Shortbread, Inc. John E. Welsh, III Tony White Jeweller The Whitney Museum of American Art Bunny Williams and John Rosselli The Diane Young Anti-Aging Salon David Zale Zegna Marko Zelenovic


Home at Last Campaign The Home at Last Campaign raised over $2.7 million for the construction of two new residences: St. Nicholas House in Harlem and Tinton Residence in the Bronx. The residences provide homes for 147 formerly homeless and lowincome New Yorkers and the supportive services needed to help them stay independent. We are grateful for the leadership support of the donors listed below who brought the campaign to a successful conclusion in January 2004.

$100,000 and above Alan Belzer & Susan P. Martin Booth Ferris Foundation Cashin Family Fund Mitzi & Warren Eisenberg Family Foundation Feinstein Family Foundation The Kresge Foundation Lambert Family Foundation New York City Council North Fork Bank & The John and Elaine Kanas Foundation The Starr Foundation Anonymous $50,000–$99,999 Alan M. and Joan Taub Ades Daniel Brodsky Deutsche Bank FJC - A Foundation of Donor Advised Funds Shelly and Neil Mitchell Family Foundation Deanna M. Mulligan William T. Reiland Mimi and Jim Stevens Anonymous

$25,000–$49,999 Michael Field & Jeffrey Arnstein Marian S. Heiskell Joseph P. Mack Gerald E. Morris Mary Lynn and Frederick Putney John E. Welsh III $10,000–$24,999 The 42nd Street Development Corporation Anthony S. Kendall Joseph F. McDonald Mega Contracting, Inc. Carl S. Rosoff Schuman Lichtenstein Claman Efron Marc L. Silverman, Esq. Josh S. Weston $1,000–$9,999 Automatic Data Processing, Inc. BDO Seidman, LLP Anson M. Beard, Jr. The Clermont Foundation Robert S. Davis & Gail H. Goodman

William T. Drowns JKW Foundation Judith and Frank Greenberg Foundation Stewart and Donna Kohl Peter and Alice Kreindler Arthur and Susan Leeds Richard B. Lowe, III Mackenzie Cutler Inc. Janet Mandelstam Thomas F. McWilliams Henry and Marion Pennell Donald and Peggy Redliner The Sirus Fund Caverly Stringer Judith P. Sulzberger Helen C. VanDusen Vesper Foundation Delores and Robert Viarengo Charitable Fund David and Carol Zale Anonymous


Board of Trustees Alan Belzer Chairman of the Board Bradley I. Abelow Joan T. Ades James P. Allman Robert S. Davis, Esq. William T. Drowns retired October 2004 Fernando Ferrer Michael Field Anthony S. Kendall The Hon. Richard B. Lowe, III Joseph P. Mack Joseph F. McDonald, Esq. retired October 2004 Neil S. Mitchell Gerald E. Morris Deanna M. Mulligan Nan L. Perell Charles A. Pol

Mary Lynn Putney Jules M. Ranz, MD William T. Reiland Carl S. Rosoff Marc L. Silverman, Esq. Lillian H. Stern James W. Stevens Caverly Stringer Janet Tweed Samuel M. Wasserman John E. Welsh, III, retired June 2003 M. Steven C. Williams Honorary Trustees Christian Beels, MD Robert R. Morgan, MD Michael E. Smith Judith Sulzberger, MD


200 Varick Street New York, NY 10014 212-620-0340 www.projectrenewal.org ©2004 Project Renewal


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.