Communities Foundation of Texas 2013 Annual Report

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2013 ANNUAL REPORT


Founded in 1953 as Dallas Community Chest Trust Fund, Communities Foundation of Texas and our donors have supported community needs by funding thousands of nonprofits. On the cover, a student stands in a learning garden at Robert E. Lee Elementary School. CFT funds REAL School Gardens to create learning gardens in low-income schools and train teachers to use them to improve student engagement and academic achievement.


s children, we see life as timeless, never-ending. The days come and go, each one a vibrant, fleeting and magical glimpse at the splendor of the world around us. In later years, that youthful outlook evolves into a careful consideration of our impact on those around us. We reflect on opportunities received, on kindnesses provided, the wisdom of our elders and lessons learned the hard way. We see the passing of time through the eyes of our children and the ghosts of our fathers, and realize that while our life here is not eternal, the generosity of our spirit can change lives forever. Communities Foundation of Texas was founded on this principle in 1953, and for sixty years we’ve been privileged to be part of so many wonderful legacies in North Texas. By matching visionary giving with the needs of our community, we’ve helped make tomorrow better for generations to come.

COMMUNITIES FOUNDATION of TEX A S


THE SCIENCE

of giving WILLIAM WALTER CARUTH, JR. started a construction and building supply company during the Great Depression. He went on to achieve legendary success in land development before his death in 1990. A passionate philanthropist, Caruth gave generously to his favorite causes: education, scientific and medical research, and public safety. In 1997, the W.W. Caruth, Jr. Foundation at CFT made a major grant to UT Southwestern Medical Center to create Caruth Scholars in Medical Research. The program enables 20 of the world’s brightest young medical scientists to work in the most promising areas of research under the school’s prestigious faculty, whose concentration of Nobel laureates is the world’s highest. Will Caruth wanted to support scientists making profound discoveries. Today’s medical scientists continue to discover the effects of his generosity.

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g iving back &

LOOKING FORWARD


A current beneficiary of Will Caruth’s largess, Kim Orth is a Caruth Biomedical Scholar and professor in the Department of Molecular Biology at UT Southwestern Medical Center. Her research focuses on bacteriahost interactions and contributes lifesaving knowledge about pathogens that cause everything from bubonic plague to food poisoning.

COMMUNITIES FOUNDATION of TEX A S

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As our name attests, we have always been about the community. In the 1960s, CFT leaders like Charles Sharp (pictured at left) understood that public spaces help make cities great. Gathering places that provide recreation, cultural enrichment and civic beauty are the uniting landmarks that reveal a community’s soul. Through their funds at CFT, community leaders have supported numerous civic improvements: playgrounds from West Dallas to Collin County, Crape Myrtle Alley and Toad Corners Fountain at the Dallas Arboretum, the Leonhardt Lagoon at Fair Park and improvements at the Dallas Zoo.

P L AY

Recently, CFT provided funds and expertise during the planning stages of Klyde Warren Park, the city deck park connecting downtown,

it forward

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Uptown and the Arts District. As the park took shape, CFT’s Caruth Foundation gave a $5 million grant for the park’s safety and security.

g iving back &

LOOKING FORWARD


Projects like Klyde Warren Park and other urban gathering places show the power of public spaces to both help revitalize our city’s central business district and strengthen the bonds of citizenship throughout our community. The future of Dallas is clearly moving toward a more beautiful place.

COMMUNITIES FOUNDATION of TEX A S

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Ms. Betty Curl has been tutoring children at the South Dallas “Top of the Class� Community Tutoring Center at S.M. Wright for over 40 years. Her efforts have helped at-risk students succeed in school. During the 2009 school year, the center provided test-taking practice for standardized tests, and its students passed reading and math tests at a rate of 97 percent and writing tests at a rate of 100 percent.

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g iving back &

LOOKING FORWARD


WISDOM

of Pearl

The first major gift to the Dallas Community Chest Trust Fund, later Communities Foundation of Texas, came from Pearl C. Anderson, an African-American grocer and physician’s widow. Her gift was a future interest in a prime piece of real estate in downtown Dallas worth $325,000. Growing up in rural Louisiana, Pearl was not allowed to go to the racially segregated school a few miles away, and there was no school for black children. When such a school was finally built, it was the result of a gift from the Rosenwald Fund. Pearl felt that she owed a debt to those who made it possible for her to get an education, and she vowed that she would one day pay it back. Her gift to the Community Chest Trust Fund kept her promise. She asked that the donated funds be used to help “the poor, young people, and other struggling people,” regardless of race or religion. Today, we still use the Pearl C. Anderson Fund to honor her wish. Recently, the fund made a grant to the S.M. Wright Foundation’s tutoring center, which provides free, one-on-one tutoring for South Dallas students.

COMMUNITIES FOUNDATION of TEX A S

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Before there were Morton’s Potato Chips, there was Granville C. Morton, honing his potato chip recipe in the kitchen of his Dallas sandwich shop. He ultimately sold the store to manufacture the chips and made his fortune years later when the company joined General Mills. Morton gave to many causes throughout his life, including $1 million in 1965 to help build a cancer and research hospital. Today, his granddaughter Meredith Woodworth advises on grants from the Morton Fund at CFT, which has granted $23 million since 1982 to such nonprofits as the

OFF THE

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American Red Cross, Ability Connection of Texas, Dallas Baptist University and Dallas Children’s Advocacy Center. “He wanted to make

old block

Dallas a better place,” Meredith said. The man who started out making snacks now nourishes countless lives through his generous legacy.

g iving back &

LOOKING FORWARD


Meredith Woodworth, Granville Morton’s granddaughter, recently recommended a grant from the Morton Fund to the Fellowship of Christian Athletes (which first came to Dallas thanks to her father Van Ellis’ work with Tom Landry). In football programs at schools like Kimball High School, the organization’s mentors become life coaches to young athletes, teaching integrity, character, leadership and teamwork—values that will serve these youth far beyond the playing field.

COMMUNITIES FOUNDATION of TEX A S

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Communities Foundation of Texas began as the Dallas Community Chest Trust Fund in 1953. Cities all over the U.S. created community chests that addressed needs from hunger to shelter to education. The Dallas Community Chest Trust Fund was the financial safety net supporting the Community Chest of Greater Dallas and its agencies.


1975

1965

The Blanche Swanzy Lange Special Care Newborn Nursery at Baylor opens in Dallas thanks to a grant from the Lange Fund at CFT.

W.W. Caruth, Jr. gives all assets of his private foundation to CFT.

1958

Pearl C. Anderson Day Nursery opens thanks to a grant from a fund at CFT in her name.

“A man has made at least a start on discovering the meaning of life when he

1962

plants shade trees under

CFT makes St. Paul Hospital Cardiac Research grant.

which he knows full well

1953

1966

Prominent city leaders establish the Dallas Community Chest Trust Fund, the precursor to Communities Foundation of Texas.

1950s

he will never sit.” ALFRED NORTH WHITEHEAD

Granville C. Morton of Morton Potato Chip Company recommends a $1,000,000 grant from his CFT fund for research and treatment of cancer, leukemia and other blood diseases.

1979

CFT funds a new home for the Dallas Bar Association.

1960s

“If a free society cannot help the many who are poor, it cannot save the few who are rich.”

J O H N F. K E N N E D Y

1970s


1982

Millard’s Crossing Fund is established at CFT to benefit the historic village in Nacogdoches, Texas.

2005

The Dallas Police Department receives a $15 million dollar grant from the W.W.Caruth, Jr. Foundation at CFT.

1989

Dallas rejuvenates and restores the McKinney Avenue Trolley. CFT helps fund the project.

1995

1985

A CFT grant from H. Ross Perot funds the Morton H. Meyerson Symphony Center.

2003

The Mabel Peters Caruth Center opens to meet the needs of CFT, local community groups and philanthropists.

1987

14 field of interest funds are established at CFT, making it easy to support your favorite causes.

2004

The Caruth Foundation at CFT makes a $5 million grant to UT Southwestern Medical Center to foster research with young scientists and doctors.

Educate Texas launches to improve public education throughout the state.

2001 1999

SPCA of Texas opens its Russell H. Perry campus in McKinney thanks to a grant from CFT.

1980s

1990s

The Butterfly House at Texas Discovery Gardens is funded through a grant by the Rosine Foundation at CFT.

2000s

2013

Through DonorBridge, North Texas Giving Day sets records and raises $25.2 million for 1,351 nonprofits.


Sixty years later our name has changed, but we continue to support North Texas and beyond, matching real community needs with the passions of our donors. Since 1953, we’ve made more than $1.3 billion in grants and are now one of the largest community foundations in the nation. Today, we celebrate this milestone with the countless men and women who have given back to our communities and with those who still look forward to making tomorrow better.


R

ecently, I heard someone say, “Sixty is the new forty,” and who am I to argue?

Sixty does not feel old to me. In fact, at age 47, the closer I get to it, the younger it seems. Still, it’s also true that there’s a certain pride that goes with acknowledging every single year of being 60. Age can produce real benefits. Like experience. Stability. Judgement. Credibility. Staying-power.

So, how do you celebrate 60 years?

Communities Foundation of Texas has been helping people invest in their community for 60 years. The foundation started downtown in 1953 as the Dallas Community Chest Trust Fund. Back then, we were the financial safety net for the social-service agencies that were part of the Dallas Community Chest, which eventually became part of United Way of Metropolitan Dallas. Since 1981, we’ve been known as Communities Foundation of Texas. But more importantly, we have grown significantly in every way over the years. Those folks in 1953 would not have imagined a day—like today—when the foundation employs 65 staff members and has awarded more than $1.3 billion in grants to thousands of different charities across the country and around the world.

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Sharing a big piece of cake is definitely appropriate. But, we’re also sharing lots of stories. We’re sparking community conversations on the critical topic of education. We’re supporting community-wide giving through North Texas Giving Day that tops anything experienced elsewhere in the U.S. We’re honoring the past while staying true to our mission—stimulating new ideas for the future. When you have a chance, be sure to stop by the lobby at CFT and experience the new interactive kiosk. It lets you quickly see the last 60 years in Dallas, decade by decade, with a focus on philanthropy. Based on the numbers, North Texas is one of the most generous places in the country. Based on the stories, you can feel the truth of that in your own heart.

Brent E. Christopher PRE S ID ENT A ND CEO

g iving back &

LOOKING FORWARD

Giving back and looking forward is our motto for this 60th year. Thank you for everything you do alongside us to make that possible. Here’s to the next 60!


boa rd of

TRUSTEES

Frederick B. Hegi, Jr.

Frank Risch

James E. Bass

Becky Bright

Brent Christopher

Jeanne T. Cox

Board Chair

Board Vice Chair Civic Leader

President Ojai Goliad, LLC

Civic Leader

President and CEO Communities Foundation of Texas

Civic Leader

Judith W. Gibbs

Ken Hersh

Jack M. Kinnebrew

Bobby B. Lyle

John McStay

Harold Montgomery

Civic Leader

Co-founder and CEO NGP Energy Capital Management

Attorney Strasburger & Price, LLP

President and CEO Lyco Holdings, Inc.

President John McStay Inc.

Chairman and CEO ART Holdings, Inc.

Carlos González Peña

The Honorable Florence Shapiro

Karen Shuford

Terdema L. Ussery II

Ruth Sharp Altshuler

Joseph M. “Jody” Grant

Civic Leader

President and CEO Dallas Mavericks

Ex-Officio, Chairman’s Circle

Ex-Officio, Immediate Past Chairman

Principal Wingate Partners

President Peña Search Consulting

Former Texas State Senator

Civic Leader

Chairman Emeritus Texas Capital Bancshares

Vester Hughes (pictured top right with 1962 trustees) first began working with CFT in 1958, and he has served as the general counsel or lead tax counsel ever since. To put the length of his service into context, Vester joined CFT in the same year that Alaska joined the Union and Elvis joined the Army. During the years that followed, CFT evolved into one of the most prominent, trusted community foundations in the country. And, Vester evolved into one of the most prominent, trusted tax lawyers in the United States, whether in Vester T. Hughes, Jr. Senior Tax Counsel for CFT 1958–Present

the Supreme Court, the halls of Congress, or a law firm conference room right here in Dallas, Texas.

COMMUNITIES FOUNDATION of TEX A S

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f inancial

HIGHLIGHTS

2013 COMPOSITION OF ASSE TS

ASSETS $982

(in millions)

$801 $700 $605

$562

(in millions)

$853 $769

$754

$705 $651

$647

$80

2

3 00

2

4 00

2

5 00

2

6 00

07 20

2

8 00

2

9 00

1 20

0

1 20

1

1 20

2

1 20

3

W. W. Caruth, Jr. Foundation

348.8

Donor-Advised Funds

280.7

Discretionary Funds

108.3

Designated Funds

92.2

Other Supporting Organizations

91.8

Nonprofit Agency Funds

30.9

Scholarship Funds

13.0

General Operating Funds

8.5

Charitable Remainder Trusts

7.9

TOTAL ASSETS

Fiscal years ending June 30

$982.1

$134

TOTA L G I F T S R EC EI V ED

2013 COMPOSITION OF GIF TS

(in millions, unaudited)

(in millions)

$87 $79

$73

$54

W. W. Caruth, Jr. Foundation

50.1

Designated Funds

32.6

Donor-Advised Funds

27.3

Agency Funds

13.4

Other Supporting Organizations

10.6

Other TOTAL GIFTS

20

09

20

10

20

11

20

12

20

13

Fiscal years ending June 30

14

g iving back &

LOOKING FORWARD

0.2 $134.2


Raising the Bar From $2.5 million raised in 1957 to $25 million raised in one day in 2013, CFT and generous North Texans continue to give more and more back to our communities.

2013 GRANTS DISTRIBUTION Youth & Recreation

Community Improvement

7%

Arts & Culture

5%

Education

8%

36%

8%

Other

10% Religious Activities

14%

12%

investment managers

Health & Scientific Research

Housing & Human Services

Aberdeen Asset Management PLC Barrow, Hanley, Mewhinny & Strauss, LLC BNY Mellon Cash Investment Strategies Burgundy Asset Management Ltd. Credit Suisse

TOTA L G R A N T S PA I D

Disciplined Growth Investors, Inc.

(in millions, unaudited)

Hotchkis and Wiley Capital Management, LLC Pacific Investment Management Company, LLC

$84

State Street Global Advisors

$79

$76

$73

The Investment Fund for Foundations Western Asset Management Company

$66

custodian

legal counsel

BNY Mellon

K&L Gates LLP

independent auditor Cole & Reed, P.C.

investment consultant Segal Rogerscasey 20

09

20

10

20

11

20

12

20

13

To review the annual independent audit report and the related audited consolidated financial statements with footnotes, please visit www.CFTexas.org.

Fiscal years ending June 30

COMMUNITIES FOUNDATION of TEX A S

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tran sfo r ming

ED U C AT IO N

rom spearheading statewide legislation to funding regional programs and supporting local initiatives, CFT is committed to challenging the status quo and transforming education throughout Texas.

educating

TEXAS

NATIONAL AND STATE RESEARCH has confirmed what many of us know intuitively—that the single most important variable in student achievement and quality education is the quality of the individual teacher in a classroom.

Recruiting & Preparing Hiring Retaining

Educate Texas, a program housed at CFT, occupies a unique The public-private arena that allowed us to convene stakeholders from education, policy, business and philanthropy to form TEACHING the Texas Teaching Commission and take a holistic look at Inducting CONTINUUM the teacher continuum in Texas. Our goal was to support a Rewarding thoughtful, generative dialogue on how to improve and align various programs and practices already in place. As a result, the commission produced the report Supporting Students, Honoring Teachers: Recommendations for the Next Generation of Teaching Policy in Texas. Evaluating Developing

“The goal for the State of Texas must be to recruit, support and retain great teachers using compensation as one critical tool. Great teachers in the classroom equal great results for kids.” MIKE MOSES | former Commissioner of Education

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g iving back &

LOOKING FORWARD


million

$1.5

Caruth grant award to the Commit! Partnership

100 Number of Commit! Partner Organizations

15+ school districts

IMPACTED

ca r uth

COMMITS

THROUGH THE CARUTH FOUNDATION at CFT, Commit! has been awarded up to $1.5 million over three years to help transform the way our community approaches education. The Commit! Partnership helps drive student achievement, from cradle to career, by measuring what matters, identifying effective practices and aligning community resources to spread what works. Dallas County is its focus, a region with 2.5 million residents, 32 cities and nearly 800,000 students in early childhood, K–12 and higher education systems. “Commit! is doing the kind of bold work that Mr. Caruth would have championed in his lifetime, and we are proud to continue his legacy,” says Dr. J. Cook, executive director of W. W. Caruth, Jr. Foundation.

“I am a teacher. I have answered my nation’s call to redefine the future. I have been entrusted to nurture and develop our country’s most precious resource: our children.” D A N I E L L E I J A | f o r m e r Te x a s Te a c h e r o f t h e Ye a r

at - r i sk

36% of FY 2013 grants made through CFT benefited education

YOUTH

CFT HAS MADE $2 MILLION IN GRANTS to improve middle school education. For example, Teach For America is receiving $350,000 over two years to start a pilot program providing comprehensive training and classroom tools for both corps members and non-TFA teachers at Ann Richards Middle School in Pleasant Grove. The new Dallas ISD school opened in September 2012 with about 1,250 students. According to Alexandra Hales, Executive Director of Teach For America Dallas/Fort Worth, “The support from CFT for the pilot at Ann Richards empowered us to rethink whole school support and how we can partner to help build strong instructional capacity at every level to encompass classroom teachers, instructional coaches and administrative teams.”

Teach For America Corps Member Emily Martin works with her students at Ann Richards Middle School, where she is a 7th grade English language arts teacher.

COMMUNITIES FOUNDATION of TEX A S

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stre ng th e ning

NONPROFITS

More than 550 volunteers from 59 of Entrepreneurs For North Texas member companies came together for the 12th annual Freedom Day, a service day developed to honor the lives tragically lost and changed on September 11, 2001. Volunteers met at Dallas ISD’s Atwell Law Academy to give the campus an extreme makeover. In a matter of hours, they transformed the school with inspiring words, playful images and a mural of the updated school mascot. Teachers, administrators, students and Mayor Mike Rawlings were awed by the enthusiastic contribution of EFNT volunteers, which was worth well over $140,000.

TIME TALENT

thro ugh o ur

w ith o ur

EFNT’s 12th Annual Freedom Day

D3 Institute: Building Nonprofit Muscle CFT’s Data Driven Decision-Making (D3) Institute boosts the power of organizations that help low-income working families. The institute helps organizations better understand the needs of the working poor, evaluate their programs and strategies, and expand their networks of resources, including best practices. Last year’s D3 grant recipients (shown right) have new muscles today, thanks to the Institute’s coaching.

AVA N C E - D a l l a s Bu i l d e r s o f Ho p e C D C

Catholic Charities

Ci t yS q u a r e G e n e s i s Wo m e n ’ s S h e l t e r Ha b i t a t f o r Hu m a n i t y He a l i n g Ha n d s Mi n i s t r i e s H I S Br i d g e Bu i l d e r s In t e r f a i t h Ho u s i n g

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TRE ASURE

b y g iving o ur

J e w i s h Fa m i l y S e r v i c e

LIFT NETWORK

No r t h D al l a s Sh a red Mi nistrie s The Seni or Source

Y WC

VM LC A of Me t r o p o l i t a n Da l l a s ( Y W )

North Texas Giving Day Raises $24K per Minute The fifth annual North Texas Giving Day crushed the national record for community-wide giving events by raising more than $25.2 million in 17 hours, surpassing 2012 results by $10.8 million. The generosity of North Texans continues to amaze us.

g iving back &

LOOKING FORWARD


“Freedom Day gives our employees the opportunity to pause and reflect on the events of 9/11 while joining other community-minded companies in service.” DON BR PA AU MNG E R B E R u t i v Financial e D i r e c t o r, EFNT PresidentE xofe cHall Group

“We learned to look at data in a different way—to apply data not only to our outcomes, but also to the decisions we make within staffing and programming. Because of this grant, we have refined the data we collect in a way that’s making it more productive.” ANNE THOM A S | Executive Director, AVANCE

$25.2 M IL L IO N

2013 North Texas Giving Day highlights

$14.4

75,366 26% Total number of donations made in 17 hours

1,351

MILLION

2012

$10.7

Percentage of donations that were a donor’s first to the chosen charity

Number of nonprofits receiving donations on North Texas Giving Day

2013

MI LLI ON

2011

$5

$4

MILLION

MILLION

2009

2010

$59.3 million

raised in COMMUNITIES FOUNDATION of TEX A S

5 DAYS

over

5 YEARS 19


co r po rat e

leadership Brent E. Christopher

President and Chief Executive Officer

Sonja Eldridge

Joey Nemastil

System Administrator

Lisa Stabler

Meeting Coordinator

Executive Assistant to the President, CEO and CFO

Ann Marie Warrick

finance and administration

philanthropy

Beth Bull

Chief Philanthropy Officer

Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Human Resources Assistant

Sarah Cotton Nelson Wende Burton

Community Philanthropy Director

Jennifer Clifford

Phillip Adams

Laura Mitchell

Donna Langdon

Accounts Payable Administrator

Bobby Lewellen Accounting Manager

Karen Mercado

Accounting Assistant

Kristine Thomas

Vice President, Accounting

Claire Hodges

Marketing and Communications Manager

Geri Jacobs

Director of Charitable Gift Planning

Sally Kurtz

Palacios Area Fund Coordinator

I nv e s t m e nt s a n d A c c o u nt i n g Senior Accounts Payable Administrator

INFO RM AT IO N

Philanthropy Officer

Philanthropy Associate

Carolyn Newham

Fund Administration Director

Elizabeth Liser

Donor Services Director

Debby Lewis

Executive Assistant

Stephanie Valenzuela Grants Associate

Lisa Pearrow

entrepreneurs for north texas

Monica Egert Smith

Pam Gerber

Executive Assistant Community Philanthropy Director

relationships Susan Swan Smith

Chief Relationship Officer

Ty Bui

Fa c i l i t i e s a n d Administration

Data Integrity Associate

Matt Allen

Data Integrity Manager

educate texas

Jessica Bassett

Facilities Technician

Beverly Garner

Karen Gutierrez

Luzelma Canales

Facilities Director

Data Management Director

D’Etta Hughes

Melissa Hardage

Human Resources Director

Abigail Hazlett

Executive Director

Chief Operating Officer Marketing and Communications Manager Rio Grande Valley Focus Executive Director

Liza Ceniceros Program Assistant

Projects Coordinator

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Denise Devora

Associate Program Officer

Kelty Garbee

Associate Program Officer

Alma Garcia Program Officer

Priscilla Aquino Garza Associate Program Officer, Policy and Advocacy

Amy Groff

Director of Finance

Melissa Henderson

Kristin Kuhne

Community Involvement Strategist

Marketing and Communications Director

Donor Initiatives Officer

Associate Program Officer

Sejal Desai

Carol Pierce Goglia

Philip Brown

Denise Davis

Susan Henderson

Operations Associate

George Tang

Help Desk Technician

Chief Program Officer

Kimberly Bruce

Stephanie Fox

Colleen Bradley

Chris Coxon

Associate Program Officer, Policy and Advocacy

John Fitzpatrick

Advisor Relations Officer

Program Officer

Executive Director

Yvette Elkins

Information Technology Director

Dee Chambliss

COMMUNITIES FOUNDATION of TEX A S

Associate Program Officer Research and Evaluation Analyst

Kelbert McGee Financial Analyst

Lora McKeown

Accounting Assistant

Reo Pruiett

Program Officer

Gaylette Wineberg Executive Assistant

w.w.caruth, jr. foundation Jeverley R. Cook Executive Director


North Texas

HUB OF PHILANTHROPY From our early headquarters on Live Oak (inset photo below) to our current facilities on Caruth Haven Lane and beyond our physical walls, Communities Foundation of Texas has always been an effective hub of philanthropy. As the largest community foundation in Texas and one of the largest in the nation, CFT works with families, companies, nonprofits and other funding organizations to strengthen our communities through a variety of charitable funds and strategic grantmaking initiatives. For an expanded listing of the named charitable funds at CFT or to learn more, please visit www.CFTexas.org.

CFT’s funds and underlying assets are governed by an independent board of trustees composed of respected community leaders from diverse backgrounds. CFT board members are selected for their knowledge of community needs and for their professional expertise. The trustees’ charge is to understand donors’ interests and the roles of nonprofits, acting as stewards for more than 900 funds. Trustees serve without compensation and exercise final authority with regard to all CFT investments and charitable grants. In addition to its board of trustees, CFT also has an advisory council that includes leaders from myriad businesses and civic and cultural organizations. Beyond generating public support for the foundation’s work, advisory council members provide educated and objective viewpoints that are valuable to CFT’s projects and endeavors. For a full listing of our advisory council, please visit www.CFTexas.org.


5500 Caruth Haven Lane  Dallas, Texas 75225-8146  214.750.4222  Fax 214.750.4210 CFTexas.org | EdTX.org | EFNT.org | DonorBridgeTX.org


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