Community Foundation Awards Sustainability Grant to Neighbor to Neighbor

The Door County Community Foundation has awarded Neighbor to Neighbor Volunteer Caregivers of Door County, Inc. a Sustainability Grant from the Green Fund. This grant supports their Emergency Room Loan Program.

The Emergency Room Loan Program makes Door County safer for the vulnerable populations by enhancing safety services available to them on evenings, nights, weekends, and holidays through a collaboration with the Ministry Door County Medical Center’s Emergency Room. Certain pieces of durable medical equipment will be loaned to those being discharged through the Emergency Room at times when Neighbor to Neighbor is typically closed.

“Offering quality medical equipment for those in financial need is an invaluable facilitation program offered by Neighbor to Neighbor,” said Linda Laarman, board member of the Door County Community Foundation. “With the Emergency Room Loan Program, the organization is able to assist Door County residents at times when Neighbor to Neighbor volunteers are not available to provide services.”

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From left to right, Linda Laarman, board member of the Door County Community Foundation and Ann Bennett, Executive Director of Neighbor to Neighbor Volunteer Caregivers.

 Neighbor-to-Neighbor is a non-profit organization that comforts and assists people experiencing problems arising from conditions or limitations that lead to a deterioration in their quality of life.  Since 1981, Neighbor to Neighbor has offered four core programs:  Medical Equipment Loans facilitated through three medical equipment loan facilities located in Sturgeon Bay, Northern Door and Washington Island, Peer Companions, Respite Care, and the Lemonade Club which is a support group for cancer patients and survivors.

The many committed volunteers of Neighbor to Neighbor help to ensure that Door County residents have access to needed programs and services that saves their clients thousands of dollars annually and allows them to live at home independently and safely.

For more information about Neighbor to Neighbor Volunteer Caregivers, please visit www.neighbor-to-neighbor.org or call 920-743-7800.

The Door County Community Foundation’s Sustainability Grants program distributes grant dollars from funds such as the Arts Fund, Children & Youth Fund, Education Fund, Green Fund, Health & Human Needs Fund, Healthy Water Fund, Historic Preservation Fund, and the Women’s Fund.

For more information about the Community Foundation’s services and various grant programs, please visit www.GiveDoorCounty.org.

The Door County Community Foundation, Inc. is a collection of separate charitable funds set up by individuals, families, non-profit organizations, private foundations and businesses that are managed, invested and disbursed for the current and future good of Door County.  The Foundation was launched in 1999 and currently administers nearly $16 million in charitable assets.

 

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Community Foundation Awards Sustainability Grant to Crossroads at Big Creek

The Door County Community Foundation has awarded Crossroads at Big Creek a Sustainability Grant from the Green Fund.  This grant supports the addition of a rooftop photovoltaic array, bringing the organization closer to becoming 50% carbon neutral.

One mission of Crossroads at Big Creek is to promote environmental stewardship through education.  This photovoltaic array project provides a valuable, hands-on learning experience for energy professionals, teachers,  Door County residents, and seasonal visitors alike.

The benefits of this installation have been many.  This project demonstrates that it is economically feasible, even in our northern climate, to produce energy with solar photovoltaic panels.  For example, electric bills at Crossroads have been reduced, enabling the organization to now redirect those dollars towards educational programming.  In addition, the excess energy produced by the array is fed into the grid, decreasing the fossil fuel consumption for Sturgeon Bay Utilities.

“The Door County Community Foundation is pleased to support Crossroads at Big Creek as it continues to provide important leadership in promoting environmental stewardship within our community.  The photovoltaic array project is one example of many Crossroads initiatives that shows us the viability of employing sustainable best practices,” said Bret Bicoy, President and CEO of the Door County Community Foundation.

2015-06-22 09.29.50 FinalPicture from the left: Coggin Heeringa, Director of Crossroads at Big Creek, and Bret Bicoy, President and CEO of the Door County Community Foundation.  (A full-sized image file is attached to the original email used to send you this press release)

Crossroads at Big Creek is a beautiful 125-acre preserve that provides opportunities for experiential, life-long learning.  A visit to Crossroads nurtures historical and cultural appreciation, scientific curiosity, and environmental awareness.

To learn more about Crossroads at Big Creek, please call 920-746-5895 or visit, http://www.crossroadsatbigcreek.com/

The Door County Community Foundation’s Sustainability Grants program distributes grant dollars from funds such as the Arts Fund, Children & Youth Fund, Education Fund, Green Fund, Health & Human Needs Fund, Healthy Water Fund, Historic Preservation Fund, and the Women’s Fund.

For more information about the Community Foundation’s services and various grant programs, please visit www.GiveDoorCounty.org.

The Door County Community Foundation, Inc. is a collection of separate charitable funds set up by individuals, families, non-profit organizations, private foundations and businesses that are managed, invested and disbursed for the current and future good of Door County.  The Foundation was launched in 1999 and currently administers nearly $16 million in charitable assets.

Traven Family Fund Makes Annual Distributions to Door County Charities

The Door County Community Foundation announced today that the remarkable gift of the late Lee Traven continues to do wonderful things for Door County.Lee Traven 2

The Traven Family Fund is a permanent endowment that Lee established at the Community Foundation to forever benefit the charities he cared about the most. For the third year in a row, the Traven Family Fund will make significant donations to benefit the following organizations that he loved:

  • The Ridges Sanctuary
  • Peninsula Music Festival
  • Good Samaritan Society – Scandia Village
  • The Clearing
  • Ministry Door County Medical Center Foundation
  • Lawrence University – Bjorklunden
  • Wisconsin Public Radio
  • The Sustainability & Advancement Grants Program of the Door County Community Foundation

“While some of our donors prefer to remain anonymous, Lee created the Traven Family Fund so that his family’s legacy will live on forever,” says Bret Bicoy, President & CEO of the Community Foundation. “We celebrate and honor Lee every year as a way to thank him for making this incredible gift to Door County.”

Olivia Traven, Lee’s mother, regularly visited her grandmother in Baileys Harbor and eventually made it her lifelong home. Always active in civic life, Olivia would become one of the co-founders of the Ridges Sanctuary.

Fred Traven, Lee’s father, was active as a Boy Scout leader for nearly three decades and served as president of the Ridges Sanctuary.

Lee Traven grew up in Baileys Harbor. He served in the United States Air Force in Texas, California and Japan. He lived and worked in Manhattan for
thirty years, and traveled throughout the world. But his heart always called him back to his home of Door County.

After retiring, Traven returned to Door County and began a new career as one of the community’s most engaged citizens. He served on the Boards of the Ministry Door County Medical Center Foundation, The Ridges Sanctuary, The Clearing, Peninsula Music Festival, and Scandia Village.

As a result of his inspiring community leadership, Traven was named the 2010 Philanthropist of the Year by the Door County Community Foundation. He passed away on April 22, 2013.

The Door County Community Foundation, Inc. is a collection of separate charitable funds set up by individuals, families, non-profit organizations, private foundations and businesses that are managed, invested and disbursed for the current and future good of Door County. The Foundation was launched in 1999 and currently administers nearly $16 million in charitable assets.

For more information about the Door County Community Foundation, contact Bret Bicoy at (920) 746-1786 or visit www.givedoorcounty.org.

When Charity Shouldn’t Act Like a Business

“Nonprofits should be more like business.” It’s a headline that is increasingly seen atop newspaper editorials and articles in business journals. The concept is simple. If nonprofit organizations would simply act more like for-profit businesses, they’d do a better job serving the community.

There is a certain amount of truth to this belief. Indeed, good charities already incorporate many “business practices” into their work. While they may be nonprofits, these organizations are in fact businesses too. In Door County, many of our local charities have done an effective job applying business techniques to their work. Several examples were highlighted a few years ago in “The Business of Charity” in the Peninsula Pulse.

Unfortunately, if you read some recent editorials, the desire to apply every for-profit efficiency to the charitable world is becoming an unhealthy obsession. There are real and fundamental differences between private businesses and public charities. As a result, some practices just don’t translate very well. As Shakespeare pointed out, it’s possible to have too much of a good thing.

Large charitable gifts often come with restrictions.

Imagine for a moment that you’re a homebuilder. A wealthy couple has a vision for a beautiful new house up on the bluff and they’re ready to hand you a giant check so that their dream home can become a reality. You’re elated because building houses is what you do best and you know this new customer will be ecstatic with the results of your labor.

Just as the couple is writing out their check, they tell you that none of their money is to be used for “administration.” The husband says that he doesn’t want any portion of his check to pay for your company’s electric bills, salaries for your accounting staff, or for your marketing efforts to bring in future customers. Similarly, the wife insists that they will only pay for the building supplies and laborers that work directly on their home. None of their money is to be used on the overhead and administrative costs that are an essential part of operating your business.

There is not a single for-profit business in the country that could survive very long operating under these kinds restrictions. Yet this is what we expect of charities every day.

When the private business wants to make investments in its own administrative and operational infrastructure in order to maximize efficiencies, it simply does it if the numbers make good business sense. However, the charities of the world face restrictions placed upon them by their donors. Those restrictions, both explicit and implicit, inherently limit what a nonprofit organization is able to spend on its own operations regardless of the wisdom of the decision.

An increase in customers often costs a charity money.

Now envision that you decided to open a new restaurant. You’ve got one heck of a chef who makes the best burger in town. Every time you sell a burger, you make a little money. As word gets around, demand goes through the roof. With the increase in volume, you’re able to realize efficiencies in your production and service. Hence, your cost per burger goes down and your net revenue from each burger goes up. Every new satisfied customer directly results in more money for your restaurant.

That’s the quintessential story of American business success. At least it is in the for-profit world. It’s not that simple if you’re running a free nonprofit afterschool program like the Boys & Girls Club.

Similar to the restaurant, the afterschool program wants more satisfied kids to keep coming back through the door. Thus the organization does its best to make the children feel welcome. It provides safe recreational activities and quality educational opportunities. We see an afterschool program overflowing with happy and engaged kids and we correctly judge it a success.

Indeed, it is a success. Yet that is the unique challenge of the nonprofit world. A successful program often results in more work to do without any more money to pay for it. Both the for-profit and the nonprofit business often want to serve more people, but in the former, more customers usually translate into more money. In the latter, serving more people often results only in more work, not more revenue. The truth is that every new child who walks through the door of the free afterschool program isn’t a revenue generator, it’s a cost center.

The person paying for the service is often not the one receiving it.

Whether you’re a couple paying a homebuilder to construct your dream home, or just a guy who wants a good burger, normally the person paying for the service is also the one who is receiving it. Of course, there are some exceptions in the for-profit world, such as health care, but does anyone want to argue that the health insurance system in the United States is an example of best business practices?

In a for-profit business, the customer pays for a service they ask for. Yet rarely in the nonprofit world does the user of the service actually pay full price for the service they receive, if they pay anything at all. In the case of many afterschool programs, it’s free or virtually free. The charity’s cost to deliver the service must be paid for by the organization’s donors.

The same holds true even when you’re paying for admission to see a show at most performing arts venues. When you buy a ticket to a show at the Peninsula Players, the Fox Cities Performing Arts Center, or even the Kennedy Center in Washington DC, you’re receiving a charitable subsidy. Each one of these venues and the overwhelming majority of performing arts centers across the country are charities. The face value of the ticket is insufficient to cover all the operating costs of these nonprofit organizations. Hence, donors are needed to subsidize what the price of admission does not cover.

Thus, we need to be thoughtful and deliberate when applying for-profit business practices to the nonprofit world. There is a lot that charities can learn from their for-profit counterparts. However, there is a reason these are nonprofit organizations – because there is no profit to be made. Not every business practice is applicable to the unique mission-driven charitable world.

Bret Bicoy is president & CEO of the Door County Community Foundation. Contact him at bret@givedoorcounty.org.