2018 Annual Report

Page 1

2018 ANNUAL REPORT


MISSION Helping donors achieve their charitable goals for the greater benefit of the community.

VISION The Area Foundation is a community partner that creates a better future for all by pursuing the community’s greatest opportunities and addressing the most critical challenges, inclusively uniting people, institutions and resources from throughout the community, and producing significant, widely shared and lasting results.

VALUES Community • Integrity • Passion • Excellence

BOARD OF DIRECTORS Theodore (Theo) Guidry II, CPA Chair Michelle R. Scarver, CPA/PFS Vice Chair Gen. James T. (Tom) Hill Treasurer James D. (Darryl) Byrd Secretary John Hayes Immediate Past Chair Marie Smith Past Chair Janie Barrera Harold Berg, CPA Laura Ehrenberg-Chesler Luis de la Garza David Komet Adena Williams Loston, Ph.D Brad Parman Alex Perez Jane Phipps Matthew C. Reedy R. Bruce Tilley Harry W. Wolff, Jr.

VISIONARY CIRCLE Visionary Circle members of the San Antonio Area Foundation ensure the important charitable work they support continues through the gifting of their estates or financial plans. The Area Foundation would like to thank these committed, philanthropic individuals for their continued generosity. Bill and Molly Asher Betty Jean Dooley Awbrey and Stuart Awbrey Isabelle Badouh Jamie L. Barshop Elsa G. Barshop Glenn and Gisele Bernard Dee Ann Bridges Dr. Willis E. Brown, Jr. and Elizabeth A. Brown Christine Schmid Cabibi and Lee Cabibi Sue Caldwell Barbara Candler Gary and Pam Chambers Lee and Cecilia Childress Tom and Lyn Christal Dr. Pamela Christian Dr. Elizabeth D. Conklyn Phyllis A. Conrad Rose Marie Cutting Albert and Claire DeLauro Heather C. Diehl and J. F. Bierlein Sue Dodson Seymour J. and Jane D. Dreyfus Helen and Bowie Duncan II Carl I. Duncan Dr. Lorna L. Engleman and Howard D. Engleman Dr. Robert M. Esterl, Jr. Dr. Sylvia P. Fernandez, Ph.D. and Mr. Raul B. Fernandez

Colonel Stephen R. Fischer, Ph.D., USAF (Ret.) Bertie Frank Gerry Frost and Lee Rodriguez T. Paul Furukawa, Ph.D., LMSW Alicia Z. Galvan Raymond and Patricia Hannigan Sarah E. Harte and John S. Gutzler John M. and Caroline D. Hill Priscilla Hill-Ardoin and James Ardoin, Jr. Dr. Linda J. Holley and Lon Taylor David M. and Rebecca Holmes Sterlin Holmesly Lonnie Howard Drs. Penn and Carlayne Jackson Dr. Norman L. Jacobson Rosemary Jasso Anna and Roquey G. Jobes, Jr. Curtis R. Johnson Concha Jones Wister H. Kampmann Xonia Kargl Joyce Krueger Anne C. Larme Dr. Susan L. Gersnenhorn and Dr. James Lazarus James Letchworth and Kirk Swanson Teresa Llanas and Dr. Charles E. Brady, III

Colonel Larry D. Luken, (Ret.) and Margaret H. Luken Helen McAllister Meredith McGuire, Ph.D. Marlene Merritt Dr. John V. Mumma and Judy Jay Mumma Henry R. Muñoz, III Keith M. and Pat V. Orme Major General Susan L. Pamerleau, USAF (Ret.) Brad Parman and Tim Seeliger Philip and Sallie Steves Peacock Claire Pronovost Mary Quandt Noel Robin Leo and Chickie Rose Diana and Larry W. Rosenberger, Jr. Nancy Russell Dr. Deanna Schupbach Patricia S. Scott Joseph A. Soane Doris Barshop Spector Paul R. and Sue S. Spellman Kevin and Karen Steingart Barbara H. Steward Bert C. Striegler Tom Thomas Albert and Denise Trujillo Dorothy R. Wilson Dr. James and Juanita Wittmer


With over a half-century of service to the San Antonio and surrounding area, the Area Foundation has been integral to many of our community’s advancements, yet the opportunities to address systemic issues remain vast. The Area Foundation exists because caring donors invested in a community foundation, designed to create a community-focused, sustainable pathway to charitable giving in perpetuity, all for the promise of a better future.

Today, the Area Foundation manages nearly 600 funds, and in concert with our donors and fund advisors, the annual average grant-making over the past decade has risen to over $26 million per year, empowering our nonprofit partners in their collective mission to serve. Because of these caring donors and fund advisors, we now rank among the top 20 foundations in the nation, based on asset size. Perhaps more importantly, the Area Foundation leadership, staff and dedicated board members are committed to serving as a collaborative leader, convener and thought partner in relation to complex problems that require cross-sector partnerships to fund lasting and systemic solutions.

Theodore “Theo” Guidry II Board Chair

How does the Area Foundation create the opportunity for convening? We create the space for knowledge transfer, whether hosting an Education Forum on public school finance, or offering a cadre of training topics by experts onsite in our Wells Center facility. We convene leaders at the Wells Center on strategic initiatives like high school completion, successful aging, and we help to create the pathway for improvements. Research is supported and nurtured at the Area Foundation that ultimately creates the opportunity for community change as validated by the research findings. In 2019, the Area Foundation is further aligning its funding and grantmaking efforts to that of the community’s vision; creating a shared responsibility to achieve impact and outcomes. As part of this effort, we will be narrowing our fields of interest based on stakeholder and community feedback during an eight-month process in 2018. As we phase the changes into our strategies, and engage the nonprofit community in our planning year, we will offer bridge funding to allow any nonprofit to apply for operational grants as a method of continuing needed funding and fully acclimate nonprofits for the new opportunities ahead.

Rebecca “Becca” Brune President and COO

As a vital part of this journey, the Area Foundation is making racial equity a priority — an “equity lens” brings into focus the ways in which race and ethnicity shape experiences with institutions, access to opportunity, and outcomes. It is our approach to ensure an equitable community, one in which resources, opportunities, and barriers are not determined or predictable by race. On behalf of the committed staff and Board of Directors of the Area Foundation, we thank you for being a part of our past, present and future. Sincerely, Theodore “Theo” Guidry II Board Chair

Rebecca “Becca” Brune President and COO



YOUTH SUCCESS Education in every sense is one of the fundamental factors of economic development. Education increases an entire community’s opportunity for advancement not just for the current generation, but for generations to come. Education has long been a focus area for the San Antonio Area Foundation and its numerous donors who have chosen to provide millions of dollars in support to Youth Development, Education Partnerships and Scholarships as part of an education ecosystem continuum. Youth development occurs through a competitive grant process for high school completion, after-school, and out-of-school time programs as well as programs that support basic needs of food, clothing and shelter for area youth (see 2018 Impact, page 12). Partnerships enable cross-sector collaboration, and scholarships provide the “to and through” initiative needed to secure the workforce of the future. Currently, students can apply for more than 100 scholarships funded by our generous donors. In 2018 alone, 748 students received scholarships totaling more than $4.8 million. The Mary & Rodolfo Jasso Scholarship Fund is one example.

Mary & Rodolfo Jasso Scholarship Fund While in high school, Zach Cazalas (pictured top left) volunteered at a nonprofit home for children who had nowhere to go after their parents were incarcerated. What began as a volunteer opportunity, though, turned into his future goal of becoming a nurse with a specialty in pediatric care. His collegiate plan in mind, he began to seek out ways to pay for that education. Zach applied for and was awarded the Mary & Rodolfo Jasso Scholarship Fund, which helps cover tuition for students unable to attend the Alamo Colleges District without financial assistance. “The Jasso Scholarship has allowed me to focus on my studies, and I have also enjoyed the clinical side of working in a hospital,” Cazalas said. In addition to maintaining a 4.0 grade point average, Cazalas serves as a part-time firefighter with the Leon Springs Volunteer Fire Department. He is on track to receive his nursing credentials in December, and even though his nursing pursuits have taken him to Haiti and Ireland, he intends to work in central Texas, which is currently facing a shortage of nurses.

Somerset ISD Robotics Taking second place in a state competition for robotics is a nice milestone for any school to accomplish, but in May 2018, the Somerset ISD High School Robotics team made the win an incredible feat. While most schools have several computers and resources at their fingertips to build competitive robots, Somerset’s team only had two computers and were very limited on other materials, greatly restricting student innovation. Add to this the fact that interest in the program is booming. Somerset ISD’s Robotics After-School Program has seen a 50 percent increase in participation, leading to the creation of an all-female team and a bilingual team. “The robotics program is helping our students to not only become leaders on the robotics team, but also become leaders on campus,” said Paul Briseno, Somerset ISD’s robotics program coordinator. To foster the program’s ongoing success, the Somerset ISD Education Foundation was awarded a competitive grant for $30,000 to purchase laptop computers and robotics kits so additional students can participate in the popular after-school program.

The Area Foundation’s charitable donors also provided funding in 2018 for programs focused on high school completion, to enable students to dream for their future.

To find out how you can support area students with scholarships, basic needs, or high-school completion, after-school, and out-of-school time programs, contact Development and Donor Services at 210.775.1083.



LIVABLE AND RESILIENT COMMUNITIES The U.S. Census Bureau named San Antonio one of the nation’s fastest-growing cities with more than 60 people, on average, moving into the area daily. The Area Foundation stays abreast of trends through research and community collaborations with organizations that continuously gauge the pulse of the area. As a result, the Area Foundation has identified Livable and Resilient Communities as a key area of focus. Donor funding is used to grant needed dollars to nonprofits serving the following areas: community-at-large, health and human services, animals, and more. The Center for Refugee Services and The Saddle Light Center are two of the more than 80 grant recipients in 2018.

Center for Refugee Services According to The UN Refugee Agency, 29,025 people fleeing violence, war and human rights abuses were granted asylum in the United States in 2018, several of whom were relocated to San Antonio. The Center for Refugee Services assists more than 1,000 refugees each year who are legally resettled in the area. In support of the Community-at-Large focus, the Area Foundation awarded more than $25,000 to the Center. “The Center for Refugee Services could not continue to provide case management services to deserving clients without this grant from the San Antonio Area Foundation, which has a stringent due diligence process to ensure that donated funds are spent wisely,” said Diana Kellerman, board member for the Center for Refugee Services. The Area Foundation grant will fund ongoing case management that will provide mental health counseling, pregnant/postpartum support, access to health care and health insurance, vehicle safety, and advocacy, and educational support from primary grades through college.

Saddle Light Center

Young Diego participates in equine therapy. His parents prayed that the sessions would increase his range of motion and encourage him to speak. After years of therapy, their expectations were exceeded as Diego now excitedly calls to his horse, Millie, over and over during the sessions and his mobility has vastly improved. That’s one of the many success stories at The Saddle Light Center (SLC). The center is a Premier Accredited equine center offering Therapeutic Horseback Riding and Hippotherapy for children and adults with disabilities. The SLC recently initiated a program to address mental health, known as Equine Facilitated Psychotherapy, or EFP. The Area Foundation awarded a $12,000 animal services grant to help take care of the center’s horses, to include veterinary care, feed, supplements, and more. “We have to maintain healthy, well-trained and content horses to provide this service to our clients,” stated Kerstin Fosdick, executive director of the organization that serves 63 riders a week from Bexar County and the surrounding area. Equine therapy is a recognized, evidence-based intervention, and one of many programs the Area Foundation supports annually, through its many caring donors.

To find out how you can help nonprofits supporting the areas of Livable and Resilient Communities, contact Development and Donor Services at 210.775.1083.



CULTURAL VIBRANCY In 2010, the San Antonio community came together to define key areas in which the city needed to improve if we were to be a viable and relevant community by the year 2020. Arts and culture were among the 11 identified cause areas. The Area Foundation has always believed in the value of a vibrant artistic culture, knowing it has the capability to illuminate our inner lives and enrich our emotional world. Our donors and fund advisors, over the years, have invested millions of dollars into nonprofits that provide programs to strengthen and advance the cultural vibrancy of the area. In 2018, alone, more than $851,000 was granted to nonprofits, two of which are highlighted here, yet collaboratively interlinked.

American Indians in Texas

San Anto Cultural Arts

During last year’s tricentennial celebrations, the nonprofit American Indians in Texas at the Spanish Colonial Missions (AITSCM) offered cultural presentations, artistic performances and mission tours that raised the profile of Native American contributions to the region.

With each community mural it creates, San Anto Cultural Arts (San Anto) reduces urban blight, turns street corners into open air museums, and provides a source of pride for community residents.

Even though San Antonio is home to the 10th largest American Indian population in the U.S. dating back 10,000 years, the Native American presence has been largely invisible to a broad audience of locals and tourists. Ramon J. Vasquez, executive director of AITSCM said because of their small staff, the focus was placed on “doing the work” instead of sharing the story. Thanks to a $25,000 grant from the Area Foundation, Vasquez says that AITSCM will be able to sustain and grow its place at San Antonio’s cultural table by investing in the marketing and outreach of its programs. “Now, we are like a bird flying high, looking in many directions and with the ability to go anywhere,” he said.

In 2018, San Anto partnered with the American Indians in Texas at the Spanish Colonial Missions and East Side community residents to develop “East Side is Love,” a tricentennial mural featuring prominent East Side figures and the cultural heritage of Native Americans. “We started with a theme and hosted community meetings to see what imagery residents would like to see depicted,” says Ben Tremillo, executive director of San Anto. “We also hosted community paint days where residents of all ages and skill levels help paint the mural,” he added. A $40,000 grant from the Area Foundation in 2018 will help San Anto develop the very first textural mural in San Antonio, which will make mural art accessible to the visually impaired.

To find out how you can help nonprofits supporting the areas of Cultural Vibrancy, contact Development and Donor Services at 210.775.1083.



SUCCESSFULLY AGING By 2035, the senior population in Bexar County, alone, is expected to reach more than 410,000. Along with this increase comes the amplified need for vital services like transportation, socialization, caregiver support, and housing to ensure seniors thrive. These are the findings of Successfully Aging and Living in San Antonio (SALSA), an initiative of the San Antonio Area Foundation. Over the past two years, the Area Foundation has sought to understand the challenges faced by organizations serving seniors. Through research and discussion, SALSA identified the four vital needs areas listed above and developed a strategic plan to address systems level leadership and solutions. In 2018, nearly $513,000 was awarded to 18 nonprofits serving the senior population in the San Antonio area. To create even greater impact, the Area Foundation announced plans in 2019 to add a two-year $150,000 collaborative grant that will provide substantial financial support for a larger system to address the four vital services. Merced Housing and Texas Ramp, two nonprofits receiving funding during the Area Foundation’s 2018 grant cycle, created programs addressing the vital areas of housing and mobility, respectively.

Merced Housing The devasting message came without warning from the unsuspecting caller. Susan was told that her closest living relative, Aunt Joyce, had died. The relative she had tried many times to reach, never recovered from a coma. Because Joyce had no will nor advanced directive, she became a ward of the state and her life vs. death decisions as well as her burial arrangements were made by a caseworker. Once Susan was located, she had to hire an attorney and work through a complicated, three-year legal process to save what remained of her aunt’s estate after it was greatly consumed by state-related expenses. For Susan Sheeran and her team at Merced Housing, Aunt Joyce’s story is common. Sheeran is president of Merced housing, which began in 1995 to address the need for affordable housing and supportive services in San Antonio and in other parts of the state. Through their multi-family housing program, resident services program, and owner-occupied repair program, the team hears stories like Susan’s way too often. Sheeran, also a member of the SALSA initiative, knew her organization could fill the void facing low-income senior adults who do not understand the need for legal end-of-life documents. Many verbally leave their homes to relatives, she said, but never file the proper paperwork. Without a legally-recognized heir, the property becomes tied up in legal red tape that can take years to unravel before the living relative can take ownership.

A $15,000 grant from the Area Foundation is being used to create a program for older adults regarding wills and powers of attorney, to include Spanish language materials, so that the Aunt Joyce’s of our community and their families never experience this difficulty.

Texas Ramp The Texas Ramp Project meets the needs of area seniors and people with disabilities by providing wheelchair ramps to make their homes accessible. The nonprofit received a $20,000 grant from the Area Foundation to buy lumber, tools, building materials and other supplies to construct 25 wheelchair ramps. By using all-volunteer labor, the Texas Ramp Project can hold the cost of a ramp to about a third that of a retail contractor. For an average of $600 to $700 in materials and a few hours of donated labor on a Saturday morning, the life of a homebound person can be completely transformed. Texas Ramp Project ramps provide safety, independence and improved quality of life to clients and relief to their families and caregivers. They often allow clients to age in place at home, surrounded by those who love and care for them. The ramps are built following ADA guidelines and are safe, strong and durable. They are always free to clients. Texas Ramp Project enlists volunteers from churches, service clubs, military organizations, businesses and schools. Since 2006, the Texas Ramp volunteers have built more than 1,820 ramps in the area.

To learn how you can be part of creating a viable and sustainable environment for area seniors, contact Development and Donor Services at 210.775.1083.


2018 IMPACT Thank you, generous donors, for the financial contributions you made to nonprofit agencies serving the needs of our community. Here is the impact you made in 2018.

TOTAL FUNDS

$819.62 MILLION DONOR-ADVISED FUNDS

198

$87.41 MILLION

Total number of donor-advised funds under management

$25.90 MILLION

Total net assets of donor-advised funds

(Corporate and Donor-Advised)

Total dollar amount awarded from donor-advised funds

Note: Donor-advised funds are in addition to the Area Foundation’s annual responsive grants. Annual responsive grants are determined by community advisory committees. Donor-advised grants are recommended by authorized fund advisors.

EMERGENCY & HARDSHIP FUNDS 1,021 grants totaling

$879,848

The Area Foundation’s Philanthropy for Business product line (of which emergency and hardship grants are included) includes the management of grants for Fortune 500 employees across all 50 states.

NONPROFIT CAPACITY BUILDING

81

Total number of trainings/workshops

43

Total number earning UIW Supervisory certificate

2,055

Total number of nonprofit training participants

21

Total number 2018 Andeavor Leadership Fellows

45

Total number enrolled in OLLU’s Nonprofit Management certificate


SCHOLARSHIPS

101

Total number of scholarship funds

748

Total number of students awarded scholarships

84 Scholarships Awarded totaling

$4.8 MILLION

The number of students awarded scholarships increased 26 percent year-over-year and funds awarded increased 50 percent, providing larger scholarships to address higher-education needs.

GRANTS

Total number of annual responsive grants awarded in 2018

20 Animal Services grants totaling

23 Arts & Culture grants totaling

123

$577,000

$851,735

14 Biomedical grants totaling

$401,413

19 Children & Youth grants totaling

$543,514

16 Community-at-Large grants totaling

13 Medicine & Healthcare grants totaling

18 SALSA/Seniors grants totaling

13 High School Completion grants totaling*

$560,327

$512,949

$520,751

$635,000

*Note: $635,000 recognizes total awarded in 2018; not total received. Portions of the $635,000 will be received over multiple years as conditions are met.


AGENCIES RECEIVING FUNDING Alamo Colleges District/San Antonio College, Scobee Education Center — $500,000 Funding will be used to create the John L. Santikos Micronauts program, one of the nation’s first cradle-to-college pathways for the science, engineering, technology and math (STEM) disciplines. One aspect of the center is a simulated trip to the International Space Station for young children. Hill Country Daily Bread — $500,000 Funding provides for the construction of an 8,000 square foot training center with a commercial kitchen and an outdoor amphitheater with adjacent outdoor spaces.

CAPITAL NAMING RIGHTS

Boys & Girls Clubs of San Antonio — $500,000 Funding helped create a state-of-the-art youth development park to include baseball and softball fields, a soccer field, an area for youth football, a sand volleyball court, walking paths and more. Texas Public Radio — $750,000 Funding will contribute to the construction of a new four-story building to serve as headquarters of the public radio station.

Picture it — a luscious, serene garden filled with plants of various colors and fragrances. Without warning, you spot a beautiful contemporary sculpture jutting from the landscape, adding a heightened sense of excitement and wonder.

San Antonio Foundation for Excellence in Education/CAST Tech — $250,000 Funding will be used renovate a building that will house Fox Tech High School juniors and seniors. The in-district charter school prepares students for careers in technology and business.

That’s what the San Antonio Botanical Garden has created with the Santikos Art in the Garden series. The Botanical Garden is one of six nonprofits in 2018 receiving a combined $3 million in capital project funding from the John L. Santikos Charitable Foundation, a fund of the San Antonio Area Foundation.

PHILANTHROPIC COLLABORATION

“Since 2004, Art in the Garden has brought together the public, artists, and art supporters for extended exhibitions by local, regional, and national contemporary sculpture artists. It is one of the Garden’s best-known and most anticipated annual cultural programs,” said Connie Swann, director of marketing for the San Antonio Botanical Garden. The Botanical Gardens will use the $500,000 they received to enhance the garden even further with the construction of an eight-foot cascading fountain scheduled to be unveiled in May 2019.

John L. Santikos’ (JLS) legacy led to a philanthropic collaboration that transformed a $3 million gift to six nonprofits into a nearly $9 million gift to 14 nonprofits. Local philanthropist and entrepreneur, Harvey E. Najim, wanted to help other nonprofits falling slightly short of receiving the capital funding they were seeking from JLS. “I asked the Area Foundation for applicants to their grant process who represented unmet needs for children and youth in our community,” said Najim. “As a result, I was able to provide $3.5 million in funding to an additional seven nonprofits without any extra work on the part of the nonprofits involved.” In addition, the Valero Energy Foundation joined by providing a $2 million gift to another deserving nonprofit.

The capital naming rights process is one way giving can be amplified to increase grant-making impact to nonprofits. To find out other ways you can be part of the amplification process, contact the Area Foundation’s Development and Donor Services team at 210.228.3766.


THE AREA FOUNDATION Established in 1964, the San Antonio Area Foundation has grown to become one of the nation’s top 20 community foundations based on asset size. The Area Foundation manages nearly 600 charitable funds for individuals who seek to make a difference in the community. These individuals, or donors, award millions of dollars each year to vetted nonprofits with programs successfully meeting the needs of the growing community. Additionally, the Area Foundation supports the nonprofit infrastructure by offering trainings and workshops. The foundation is also a community convener, uniting thought partners in the area to address key community issues like education and mental health.

THE WELLS CENTER The Wells Center serves as San Antonio’s central hub for nonprofit organizations, philanthropists, and community stakeholders convening to solve community issues. It is where nonprofits come for training, host working groups, and attend board meetings. It is where donors engage with other donors, gain insight on critical community topics, and make decisions about where their charitable giving will flow. With over half its space dedicated to community use, the Wells Center welcomes diverse constituencies for intimate meetings and key conferences. This is where social innovation takes flight.

FEATURES • Local nonprofit organizations can use meeting rooms at no- to low-cost.

• 9,000 square feet of meeting and training

space available, which includes 7 meeting rooms with various room setup capabilities. Tables and chairs are provided.

• Rooms range in capacity from 8 to 120 people. • Each room offers audio/visual capabilities, as well as free wi-fi access and teleconferencing.

• Free coffee is offered to guests.

• The Reggie Williams Resource Library

is free and open to the public and hosts books and online databases for nonprofit and funding research.

• Ample free parking available with

easy access to and from Hwy. 281 and Interstate 35.

23,429

Total number of visitors to the Area Foundation

697

Total number of events hosted by the Area Foundation

567

Total number of events hosted by nonprofits

$850,500

Total room rental savings for area nonprofits

• Elevator access available for second-floor meeting rooms.

• On-site facilities staff provide support for room reservations and set-up.

For more information, contact Facilities at 210.242.4743.


THANK YOU ANNUAL RESPONSIVE AND SCHOLARSHIP DONORS Animal Services Aid to Helpless Animals Trust Max and Victoria Garbich Memorial Fund Alice E. Jacques Animal Support Fund OWNUP — Anonymous donor Jesse Wright Boyd Jr. Animal Assistance Fund Gaynelle and Gene Ranking Endowment Trust Russell M. Hughes Charitable Trust Frances Margaret Seaver Fund Dr. Thomas E. Vice Fund Arts and Culture Keulah M. and Felix J. Katz Memorial Trust Ruth Lang Charitable Fund E.B. Loch Charitable Fund Edith McAllister Donor Advised Dan and Gloria Oppenheimer Fund John L. Santikos Charitable Foundation Frances Margaret Seaver Fund Valley View Trust High School Completion Mary S. Duncan Fund Basil and Onie Karcher Fund Beulah M. and Felix J. Katz Memorial Trust High School Completion Operating Fund John L. Santikos Charitable Foundation Frances Margaret Seaver Fund George Weldon Sheffield Fund Simpson-Nooe Fund Livable and Resilient Communities (Community-at-Large, Medicine and Healthcare, Biomedical) Communities-at-Large Max and Victoria Garbich Memorial Fund Beulah M. and Felix J. Katz Memorial Trust Ruth Lang Charitable Fund Fred Roy Charitable Trust John L. Santikos Charitable Foundation Ernestine Boylan Shurgart Fund Simpson–Nooe Fund Valley View Fund Frank H. and Flora Paeltz Wolff Trust Biomedical Research Franque and Phillip Curtis Trust Robert T. and Anna M. Harper Memorial Fund Beta and Melvin Leazar Memorial Fund James and Alberta Otterpohl Fund John L. Santikos Charitable Foundation Semp Russ Foundation Lila G. and Vesey F. Taylor Fund Medicine and Healthcare Giesecke Memorial Trust Fund John Philip Goudge Memorial Fund

Martha and Frank Herberth Memorial Fund Beulah M. and Felix J. Katz Memorial Fund Ruth Lang Charitable Fund E.B. Loch Charitable Fund Semp Russ Foundation Spirittouch Caregiver’s Fund Lila G. and Vesey F. Taylor John L. Santikos Charitable Foundation Children’s Eye Care Fund Emily Joan Brown Fund Althea K. Kirkwood Fund Sally P. and L. Glenn L. Ramsdell Charitable Fund Norma Friedrich Ward Trust Seniors — SALSA Fred Roy Charitable Trust Robley Freeman Sopris & Elizabeth Reese Sopris Fund John L. Santikos Charitable Foundation Strauch Family Fund Lila G. and Vesey F. Taylor Fund Elizabeth Madden Welch Fund Youth Success (Children and Youth) Alma M. Dyer Trust Margorie N. Kaplan Children’s Charity Fund Ruth Lang Charitable Fund Gaynelle and Gene Rankin Endowment Trust Random Allen Richards Jr. Charitable Trust Fred Roy Charitable Trust John L. Santikos Charitable Foundation Frances Margaret Seaver Fund Harvey Najim Scholarships Abrazo/Mitchard Birthmother Scholarship Ben and Ida Alexander Memorial Scholarship American Sunrise Scholarship Fund Stuart Baxter Memorial Scholarship Beldon Family Scholarship Marshall O. Bell Scholarship Benson Foundation Scholarship James H. and Ann P. Bissett Scholarship Anna, Pierre, and Ephraim Block Scholarship Blue Bird Auxiliary Scholarship Noel C. Bonilla Memorial Scholarship Bob and Jackie Campbell Scholarship Fund Vikki Carr Scholarship Carvajal Educational Scholarship San Antonio Chapter of the Association for Women in Communications — Ajay Castro Scholarship Fund Dewitt Churchwell Memorial Excellence in Construction Scholarship Bartlett Cocke General Contractors Scholarship

Emo Jean Cottrell Scholarship Cunningham Scholarship Franque and Philip Curtis Scholarship W. B. Daugherty Educational Scholarship Duncan Scholars Program Scholarship Fund Florence Emma Eichler Scholarship Francisca H. Eschauzier Scholarship Sonia E. and Edward D. Esparza ’66 — Texas A&M CS Scholarship Fund ETA Alliance Booster Club Scholarship Fund Express-News Employee Scholarship Victor J. Ferrari Memorial Scholarship Michael J. Figueroa Memorial Scholarship Joseph, Rose, Myron, and Norman Fink Memorial Scholarship Jean Y. & Robert W. Fish Memorial Scholarship Fund Friends of Carver — Barrett Scholarship Fund Friends of Carver — Ewing Halsell Scholarship Fund Friends of Carver — Doc and Diann Holiday Scholarship Friends of Carver — Valero Scholarship Fund Jessica Redfield Ghawi Scholarship Fund John Philip Goudge Memorial Scholarship Ernest B and Marie H. Graham Scholarship Fund Walter E. and Evelyn H. Haggard Scholarship Frank H. and Zona T. Hall Scholarship Dr. Herbert E. Harper, Jr. Memorial Scholarship Fund Dr. Herbert E. Harper, Jr. Memorial Summer Program Scholarship Fund Jimmy Elizabeth Harper and Ethel Harper Scholarship Patricia L. Hartman and Lois C. Hartman Scholarship Fund Frances Ann Hill and Arthur Gray Smith Legacy Scholarship Fund Ida V. Holland Educational Scholarship Ida V. Holland Missionary Scholarship J & B Family Scholarship Mary & Rodolfo Jasso Scholarship Louise M. and Francis J. Jehl Scholarship Lt. Commander Bryce James Johnson Memorial Carol Lee Jones Educational and Cultural Fund Mr. and Mrs. Gus T. Jones Memorial Scholarship Trust Hedwig T. Kniker Scholarship Pat and Dorothy (Lehr) Legan Scholarship Jean Longwith Scholarship for Radio Television-Film Judge Lee H. Lytton, Jr. Scholarship Donn Kent McCorkindale Memorial Scholarship MLK, Jr. Scholarship Fund

Brice and Teresa Moczygemba Engineering Scholarship Tito Villalobos Moreno Memorial Scholarship Brian Morris College Gateway Scholarship Fund Harvey E. Najim Family Foundation Scholarship Fund Alfred W. Negley Scholarship Mary Kay Owens Memorial Scholarship Alice and Harold Clark Pletz Memorial Scholarship Fund Penny Ann Powers Scholarship Sally P. and Glenn L. Ramsdell Scholarship Rapier Educational Foundation REOC Charitable Fund Wade Richmond Memorial Scholarship Theodore and Rita Rittimann Texas A&M Scholarship Paul K. Robertson Scholarship David Robinson Scholarship Joe Salek Scholarship for Theatre Arts Trust San Antonio Association of Hispanic Journalists Scholarship Fund San Antonio Music Teachers Association Music Education Scholarship John L. Santikos Companies Employee Scholarship Fund Teresa and David R. Schmidt, M.D. Scholarship Morgan Schooley Scholarship Fund Walter and Hannelore Schwindt Scholarship Loretta B. Simpson Scholarship Harvey P. Smith, Jr. and Rebecca Smith Patton Memorial Scholarship Colonel Robert L. Smith Commemorative Scholarship Debbie Stolle Scholarship Fund A. J. Sr. and Mabel Fore Stricklin Memorial Scholarship Robert B. Taylor Scholarship Stephen P. Taylor Scholarship Charlotte and Jule S. Theobald Scholarship J. Kent Trinkle Scholarship United Charitable Fund USAA Golden Eagle Scholarship Olga Seiser Vincent Music Scholarship Walk by Faith Whataburger Family Foundation Scholarship Fund R. L. White Scholarship Glenda Woods Scholarship Fund World Affairs Council of San Antonio Scholarship Fund MHM Scholarship Fund Honoring George Wray Jr. and Col. Vane Hugo Della Mabel Wright Scholarship

303 Pearl Parkway, Suite 1143 | San Antonio, TX 78215 | 210.225.2243 | saafdn.org


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