Jenkins 2015-16 Annual Report

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2015 – 2016 ANNUAL REPORT


Letter to the Community The mission of the Jenkins Foundation is simple: to improve the health of Greater Richmond. We do this in partnership with organizations that work diligently to serve the least fortunate among us. In the past year alone, the Foundation awarded grants totaling $1.7 million for essential care of the underserved and for programs that encourage a stronger, safer community. Since its inception in 1995, the Jenkins Foundation has worked closely with many nonprofit partners to create improved access to health services along with an efficient delivery system. Our grants are in direct response to the changing needs of our

Cover Photo: Courtesy of Family Lifeline

community. Through our own research and with the help of our peers and partners, we stay abreast of changing demographics, emerging approaches to community health and the various ways in which public policy affects our work. Thank you to all who help make our mission a reality. Our board is proud the Jenkins Foundation has evolved into a significant resource for health philanthropy in our community.

Megan Walker Rose Chairman


2015 Grant s b y Pr i or i t y A rea

10%

3% 2%

18% 68%

Access to Care $1,176,000 Violence Prevention $306,500 Substance Abuse Prevention & Treatment $175,000 Unintended Pregnancy Prevention $50,000 Capacity Building $31,000

In 2015, The Jenkins Foundation awarded a total of $1.73 million to local health-related organizations, primarily to improve access to care for the underserved. Our grants also support health education, companionship for older adults, trauma-informed care for individuals experiencing violence and much more.

To learn more about how to apply for a grant, please visit www.jenkinsfoundation-va.org.


For 16 years, The Jenkins Foundation has shared our vision to provide a free clinic in Goochland County. Their continued support has impacted the quality of life for more than 5,000 low-income Goochland County residents who benefit from our health care and basic human needs programs.

— Sally Graham, Executive Director, Goochland Free Clinic and

Family Services

Support from the Jenkins Foundation made it possible for children and their families to receive mental health services when they might not otherwise. Elk Hill provides behavioral and emotional interventions when problems first appear and when youth are most responsive to treatment, rather than waiting for them to experience multiple failures.

—Dr. Laura Easter, Director of Community Services, Elk Hill


2015 Grants Access Now, Inc.

$50,000

To support access to donated specialty medical care for low-income, uninsured patients in the Richmond region.

Advisory Council of the Virginia Treatment Center for Children $50,000 To support the Children’s Mental Health Resource Center.

A Grace Place Adult Care Center

$60,000

To provide salary support for an Occupational Therapist to provide a therapeutic model of adult day services for individuals with disabilities.

Better Housing Coalition

$50,000

To support the Senior Coordinated Care program, which provides health and wellness supports to help older adults remain in their own homes.

CARITAS

$300,000 / 3 yrs.

To provide operating support for The Healing Place.

Challenge Discovery Projects, Inc.

$30,000

To support Say It With Heart, a bullying and violence prevention curriculum.

Chesterfield CASA, Inc.

$20,000

The Daily Planet, Inc.

$25,000

Children’s Home Society of Virginia

$35,000

East District Family Resource Center

$40,000

Elk Hill Farm, Inc.

$25,000

The Ellen Shaw de Paredes Breast Cancer Foundation

$20,000

The Faces of Hope

$20,000

To support training and supervision for volunteers who are serving as court advocates for children who have experienced abuse or neglect.

To support the Possibilities Project, a collaborative effort to provide youth aging out of foster care with the housing, services and healthy relationships they need to reach their full potential.

Circle Center Adult Day Services

$35,000

To provide access to high quality adult day care services to low and moderate income older adults and respite to their caregivers.

The Community Foundation

$11,000

To support the Darcy S. Oman Endowment, which will support the diverse and changing needs of Greater Richmond, and to support a 2015 Amazing Raise prize as an incentive for local health organizations.

To hire a data collection specialist, which will create efficiency and improve the use of data for planning and decision-making.

To support Healthy U, a collaborative approach to change the health outcomes for residents in Richmond’s East End.

To support school-based mental health services.

To provide breast health procedures for medically underserved women in the greater Richmond area.

To support a focused and culturally sensitive childhood obesity preven­tion and intervention program as it expands to a new site in partnership with U-Turn Sports Academy.


Family Lifeline

$50,000

Fan Free Clinic

$15,000

To support home-based services for older adults, people with disabilities and their caregivers. To engage a consultant to guide development of a new, sustainable funding model.

Free Clinic of Powhatan

$30,000

To support access to health care for uninsured and low-income adults in Powhatan County.

Full Circle Grief Center

$25,000

Greater Richmond SCAN

$75,000

To expand community-based bereavement support groups for children and their caregivers.

To support treatment services for children and families impacted by trauma resulting from child abuse and neglect.

Greater Richmond SCAN

$1,500

To sponsor a local screening of Paper Tigers, a documentary about the trauma-informed approach to student education and discipline and how it can help break the cycles of poverty, violence and disease that affect families.

Henrico County CASA

$25,000

To support recruitment, screening, training and oversight of volunteer advocates who serve abused or neglected children assigned by the Henrico County Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court.

Institute for Public Health Innovation $225,000 / 3 yrs. To support seven Health Resource Centers, located in public housing communities and community centers in the city’s East End, Northside, and Southside neighborhoods.

Instructive Visiting Nurse Association $55,000 To support the Healing at Home program, which provides access to in-home skilled nursing, rehab therapy and case management for uninsured and underinsured residents of metro Richmond.

Jewish Family Services

$40,000

To support comprehensive health services to help low-income, chronically ill seniors remain independent in their homes.

Legal Information Network for Cancer

$20,000

To provide legal, financial and other supports to patients with cancer.

Lucy Corr Foundation, Inc.

$35,000

To support the dental clinic, which serves low-income seniors who do not have access to oral health care.

Medical College of Virginia Foundation $30,000 To support a pilot of the Health Exchange Financial Assistance Program, which helps newly insured individuals become knowledgeable consumers of health resources.

Medical College of Virginia Foundation $50,000 To support Bridging the Gap— Emerging Leaders: East End, a program that will offer comprehen­sive violence prevention services to high risk youth seeking treatment in VCU’s Pediatric Emergency Department.

Partnership for Nonprofit Excellence $20,000 To support technical assistance and capacity building for the region’s nonprofits.

Richmond Area High Blood Pressure Center

$19,000

To support transition needs as the organization moves toward acquisition by a community partner.


Richmond Behavioral Health Foundation $50,000

Tricycle Gardens

$15,000

To support a full-time Health Educator to deliver health and wellness programs at RBHA’s primary care clinic.

To support the Urban Farm and increase targeted access to fresh, healthy food and education programs in Richmond.

Safe Harbor

$25,000

Virginia Supportive Housing

Senior Connections, CAAA

$25,000

To support counseling for adult survivors of sexual and domestic violence.

To support the Age Wave Initiative’s Aging for Life Toolkit, which streamlines access to high-quality education, training, and resources related to healthy aging.

Shalom Farms

$22,000

To support healthy food production, distribution and community-based programs to improve health and selfsufficiency of low-income residents with limited access to healthy food.

South Richmond Adult Day Care Center

$25,000

To support Care Scholarships for lowincome older adults who are at risk of nursing home placement.

$40,000

To provide permanent supportive housing to the most vulnerable homeless individuals in the Richmond region, prioritizing those who are chronically homeless and have a high level of mental and physical health needs.

YWCA of Richmond

$50,000

To support the Greater Richmond Regional Hotline Collaborative (GRRHC), a coordinated crisis response system for hotline callers in the region experiencing sexual or domestic violence.

MULTI-YEAR GRANTS

The following organizations have demonstrated a close alignment with the Jenkins Foundation’s mission, a history of delivering efficient and effective programs to those in need and continual progress toward positive health outcomes for their clients.

CrossOver Ministry

$180,000/3 yrs.

Family Lifeline

$165,000/3 yrs.

Fan Free Clinic

$240,000/3 yrs.

To support the Chronic Disease Management program.

To support CHIP of Richmond, a program that brings parenting education, health care coordination, disease case management, and mental health support directly into families’ homes. To provide free quality health care to the low-income, uninsured.

Goochland Free Clinic and Family Services $195,000/3 yrs. To support comprehensive health care services for the uninsured.

Rx Drug Access Partnership

$45,000/3 yrs.

To support medication access for the uninsured.

Virginia League for Planned Parenthood

$225,000/3 yrs.

To support access to health care services for low-income individuals.

TOTAL 2015 GRANTS: $1,738,500


G rant P ri or i t i e s The Jenkins Foundation is committed to expanding access to community-based services through programs and organizations that have the potential to make a significant impact on the quality of health in our region, especially for uninsured, underserved or vulnerable populations. The Foundation’s funding priorities fall under two focus areas:

Access to Health Care Services

The Foundation’s primary goal is to support access to the following: • Health education & prevention services • Mental health care • Oral health care • Primary care

Key Community Health Issues

The Foundation seeks to reduce risky behaviors and promote safe and healthy environments by supporting: • Substance abuse treatment and prevention • Unintended pregnancy prevention • Violence prevention In addition, the Foundation is committed to the long-term viability of the organizations it supports, and will consider capacity building grants that strengthen an agency’s ability to better serve its clients. The Foundation will also consider a limited number of proposals outside the above stated focus areas.

Jenkins Foundation is a supporting organization of The Community Foundation Serving Richmond and Central Virginia.

Annabella R. Jenkins Foundation Boulders IV 7501 Boulders View Dr., Suite 110 Richmond, Virginia 23225-4047 Telephone 804-330-7400 www.jenkinsfoundation-va.org

2016 Board of Directors Megan Walker Rose, Chairman Barbara Ruffin Cone Berenice D. Craigie Susan H. Davenport Mary Lou Doherty Marietta Shelly Dormire Kirsti A. Goodwin Terrell Luck Harrigan Patte G. Koval Jane W. Peters Cathy N. Pond Dianne L. Reynolds-Cane MD Myra Goodman Smith Barbara B. Ukrop


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