Community Foundation Awards Sustainability Grant to the Door County Medical Center Foundation

The Door County Community Foundation recently awarded the Door County Medical Center Foundation a Sustainability Grant from the Health and Human Needs Fund, Elizabeth “Betty” Lawrence Human Services Fund, Bernice & Gene Hawkins Charitable Fund, and the Ruth & Hartley Barker Memorial Fund for the Ministry Door County Medical Center Dental Clinic. The objective of the Ministry Fund is to help people in need, especially the vulnerable and the poor, to strengthen their capacity to live independently.

“The lack of oral health care continues to be a serious epidemic throughout Door County,” said Dick Egan, board member of the Door County Community Foundation. “Ministry Door County Medical Center Dental Clinic provides routine care to the under-served youth population and low income people in Door County.”

DSCN0505.JPGFrom left to right, Andrew Boettcher, Assistant Director of the Door County Medical Center Foundation, Dick Egan, board member of the Door County Community Foundation, Tanya Fischer, Director of the Ministry Door County Medical Center Dental Clinic, and Andy Boettcher Executive Director of the Door County Medical Center Foundation. 

Door County Medical Center Dental Clinic provides oral health care to the youth and adults of Door and Kewaunee Counties. The clinic serves those who are on Medicaid and/or those with no dental insurance that are low-income with no dental home.

For more information about the Door County Medical Center Foundation, please call (920) 746-1071 or visit www.ministryhealthy.org/DCMH/home/Foundation.org.

The Door County Community Foundation’s Sustainability Grants program distributes grant dollars from funds such as the Arts Fund, Children & Youth Fund, Green Fund, Health & Human Needs Fund, Education Fund, Historic Preservation Fund, Healthy Water Fund, and 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 more than $16 million in charitable assets.

Community Foundation Awards Sustainability Grant to The Art and Nature Center

The Door County Community Foundation has awarded the Washington Island Art and Nature Center a Sustainability Grant from the Clifford and Clara Herlache Heritage Foundation. This grant provides financial assistance to support the Nature Room Renovation Project.

Renovation of the Nature Room will allow for an enhanced environmental experience for all of the Art and Nature Center’s visitors.

“An exhibit is only as good as the presentation of the material,” said Frank Maxwell, board member of the Door County Community Foundation. “Renovation will allow the Art and Nature Center to greatly expand display areas, provide more space to complete the display messages and provide a greater rage of experiences unique to Washington Island.”

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Pictured from left to right are Laura Waldron, Frank Maxwell, board member of the Door County Community Foundation, Susan Vandenwalle and Steve Waldron.

Since 1965, the Washington Island Art and Nature Center has flourished as a not-for-profit organization for Islanders and visitors, promoting the creative arts, providing a sales outlet for Island artists and craftsmen, and directing nature study programs with special emphasis on youth education. Its only sources of funds are contributions, memberships, book store sales and art commissions. The building housing the Arts and Nature Center dates back to 1904 and was originally used as a schoolhouse, one of four schools on the Island. Upon consolidation of the schools, the building became the high school and was used as such until 1964. The Art and Nature Center was then founded in 1965 for the preservation and promotion of creative arts and natural history of Washington Island.

For more information regarding the programs and services provided by Washington Island Art and Nature Center, please call 920-847-2025 or visit www.wianc.org.

The Door County Community Foundation’s Sustainability Grants program distributes grant dollars from funds such as the Arts Fund, Children & Youth Fund, Green Fund, Health & Human Needs Fund, Education Fund, Historic Preservation Fund, Healthy Water 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 more than $16 million in charitable assets.

My Father Is Still Teaching Me About Generosity

Every year the Door County Community Foundation presents an event called Preview Door County for our friends in Southwest Florida. From our vibrant arts community to our wonderful music, to those who steward and protect our environment treasures, the goal of Preview Door County is to remind our seasonal residents that so much of what they love about our peninsula is inextricably intertwined with the world of charity. We don’t often think of it this way, but charity provides much of the reason people come to Door County and it’s what keeps them coming back year after year. These nonprofit organizations are essential to our quality of life and are an indispensable part of the economic engine of our community.

This year’s Preview Door County took place in Bonita Springs, Florida, on March 15. As I stood before the crowd to offer a few comments, I couldn’t help but reflect upon the fact that this day was the third anniversary of my father’s passing. I wrote about him in the Peninsula Pulse in 2013 in a piece titled “The Man Who Taught Me About Generosity.”

I shared with our Florida friends that Dad had died just a few days short of his 90th birthday. If a son believes he is going to live as long as his father, then sometime early last year I entered the second half of my life. There is no ceremony or tradition to mark this transition, yet life’s blessings can arrive in the most unexpected of ways.

The Community Foundation is about to launch an initiative about growing older in Door County. Hence, a colleague recently gave me a copy of a book by Richard Rohr titled Falling Upward: A Spirituality for the Two Halves of Life. I told the crowd in Florida that while my friend and colleague could not have known of my personal milestone, the serendipity of this message gave me great pause.

The book’s basic premise is that the arc of a healthy life has two distinct phases. In the first half of our existence, we are building what Rohr calls our “container.” We spend our time trying to answer some of the most fundamental questions about ourselves. How can I support myself? Who will go with me? What makes me significant? During this first half of our life how we appear to ourselves and the world around us are almost the only questions we consider.

If we’ve managed to answer these fundamental questions well, as we grow older eventually we become restless and find that our old agenda is no longer sufficient. Few experience a light that shines from above, a sudden epiphany, or a spark of inspiration. Rather, we move forward naturally, and almost imperceptibility, turning from constructing the container that is our self to the task of deciding how we will fill it.

In the first half of our life, we define our identity by differentiating ourselves from those around us. In the second half of our existence, we look for the things we share in common. We find happiness in compatibility. We don’t dwell on differences or exaggerate problems. Creating unnecessary drama has become tedious and boring.

As I looked around the crowd at Preview Door County in Florida, I noted that I was surrounded by those who have been enormously successful in the first half of their lives. They have built containers that are robust and distinctive. Yet as I’ve gotten to know many a person in that room over recent years, I’ve seen firsthand how they now spend their time filling their containers with something deeper and more meaningful.

Rohr describes people like these as “human works of art.” These good souls aid and influence others not because of the titles they hold, or the power they wield, but rather simply by being who they are. He writes that in the second half of life, we know that we are all in this together and that we are equally naked underneath our clothes.

My father showed me how to live a generous life. He was more than a good man, he was my teacher. Although my teacher is gone now, his grace remains with me, and the clarity of his teachings is just beginning to take deeper root.

While I slowly enter this second half of my life, Rohr’s writings are helping me understand what my father meant. As we grow older, eventually we recognize that it’s good just to be a part of the dance. We don’t have to stand out, make flashy moves, or be better than anyone else on the dance floor. If you’ve answered those container questions about yourself when you were younger, you no longer feel the need to define or explain who you are. Life becomes more participatory than assertive.

I have so much more to learn about generosity, but I’m beginning to understand that this was what my father was trying to teach me.

Every year in Florida, and really all around Door County, I preach the same message to anyone who will listen. I remind you of how important it is that you give back to the charities of our community. I say how much all of you mean to Door County.

What I’m beginning to understand is how much Door County means to all of you. Charitable giving, at every level, allows us to be a part of a community. It gives us a chance to join with others who understand our dreams, feel our passion, and share our vision for how we want our community to be.

Being generous with others is our opportunity to be a part of the dance.

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

This article originally appeared in the Peninsula Pulse.

Community Foundation Awards Sustainability Grant to Big Brothers Big Sisters of Northeastern Wisconsin

The Door County Community Foundation has awarded Big Brothers Big Sisters of Northeastern Wisconsin a Sustainability Grant from the Children & Youth Fund.  This grant provides financial assistance to support One-to-One Youth Mentoring programs in Gibraltar, Washington Island and Sturgeon Bay.

Big Brothers Big Sisters programs match volunteer mentors with Door County youth.  The program is designed to support healthy behaviors and decision-making which leads to positive academic, socio-emotional and behavioral outcomes.  These positive outcomes lead to improved high school graduation rates, the avoidance of juvenile delinquency, readiness for post- secondary educational opportunities, and improved employment opportunities.

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Pictured for left to right are John Herlache, board member of the Door County Community Foundation, Kristen Mihaljevic and Todd McPeek, of Big Borthers Big Sisters of Northeastern Wisconsin.

“The youth mentoring program is based on a successful model with proven results,” said John Herlache, board member of the Door County Community Foundation. “The evidence is well documented that these one-to-one relationships cultivate experiences for Door County youth that changes their lives for the better.”

Northeastern Wisconsin is a donor and volunteer supported nonprofit organization that professionally matches youth with mentors.  Since 1972, communities in Northeastern Wisconsin have been enriched by Big Brothers Big Sisters’ mission to make a positive difference in the lives of youth through professionally supported, one-to-one mentoring relationships.  The program is based on the documented premise that youth need the influence of mature, responsible and supportive mentors during their formative years in order to reach their full potential as adults.

For more information regarding the programs and services provided by Big Brothers Big Sisters of Northeastern Wisconsin, please call 920-498-2227 or visit www.bbbsnew.org.

The Door County Community Foundation’s Sustainability Grants program

distributes grant dollars from funds such as the Arts Fund, Children & Youth Fund, Green Fund, Health & Human Needs Fund, Education Fund, Historic Preservation Fund, Healthy Water 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 more than $16 million in charitable assets.

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Community Foundation Awards Sustainability Grant to Lakeshore CAP

The Door County Community Foundation has awarded Lakeshore Community Action Program (CAP) a Sustainability Grant from the Martha Cherry Fund and the Health and Human Needs Fund.  This grant supports their Door County Cradle to Career program.

Cradle to Career coordinates collaborative and comprehensive services to Door County residents who are pregnant or parents under age 30 through a Coordinator/Case Manager. The coordinator links families with educational, career, parenting education, wellness and economic supports to build self-sufficiency.

USE DSCN0496“Currently, no Door County programs provide comprehensive and individualized coordination of case management for young parents and their families,” said Sally O’Brien, board member of the Door County Community Foundation. “The Door County Community Foundation is committed to supporting the young families of Door County through this grant to Lakeshore CAP.”

Door County Cradle to Career has a unique organization structure designed to capitalize on the combined expertise and passion of the representatives in the Steering and Administration Committees to build a new program for young families of Door County.

For more information about Lakeshore CAP, please visit www.LakeshoreCAP.org or call 920-743-0192. For more information about Door County Cradle to Career, please visit www.DoorCountyCradleToCareer.org

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 more than $16 million in charitable assets.

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Philanthropy Supporting Business

There’s a fascinating shift going on in modern philanthropy. Many of our nation’s most ingenious philanthropic institutions are broadening their focus. Rather than limiting themselves to awarding grants to nonprofit organizations, foundations are increasingly recognizing that the entrepreneurial spirit is an invaluable tool to achieve their goals for the community. As a result, these charitable philanthropies are making investments that use the for-profit motive in innovative ways.

Examples are popping up every day across the country. The Cleveland (community) Foundation has been at the forefront of creating “evergreen cooperatives.” Rather than offer a subsidy to induce a corporation to bring jobs into a community, this new model creates employment opportunities by investing in new local, employee-owned businesses. The Oregon Community Foundation has made “economic vitality” one of its strategic priorities. It’s making investments in developing workforce skills and providing entrepreneurial education.

The line between philanthropy and business is blurring even on our little peninsula. At the Door County Community Foundation, we’ve launched the Community Opportunity Investment Network (COIN). COIN fosters the creation of new jobs by making small business loans available to entrepreneurs that do not have access to traditional lending. In the last year in Door County, three new businesses were launched and one was able to expand as a direct result of COIN loans.

While much attention is being focused on how the world of philanthropy is intersecting with the for-profit sector, I was asked to comment as to why this is occurring. What’s driving our philanthropic institutions to use investments in for-profit businesses to realize their charitable goals?

The most obvious explanation is that an enormous number of social issues directly correlate to a family’s income. Life expectancy, obesity, crime, alcohol and drug abuse, domestic violence, and numerous other problems all have a strong and demonstrated link to poverty. Of course, there are plenty of fat, rich alcoholics who beat their spouses, so these problems are most certainly not limited to the poor. Yet we would be ignoring reality if we didn’t heed the countless studies which demonstrate an overwhelming correlation — and very often a causal link — between poverty and these societal problems.

Thus, foundations have simply concluded that the most obvious solution to address a myriad of issues is to help lift families out of poverty.

Our challenge is that the problem of poverty, particularly among children, is getting worse. The Annie E. Casey Foundation’s 2015 Kids Count Data Book reports that nearly 1 out of every 4 children in the United States lives in poverty. That number has grown by more than 20 percent during the last five years. Poverty among our nation’s children is reaching epidemic proportions.

Yet a statistic from the Philanthropy Roundtable’s Clearing Obstacles to Work by David Bass gets to the heart of why foundations are making investments in economic development. If every poor family in the U.S. had at least one person with a full-time job, 75 percent of today’s poor children would be lifted out of poverty.

Fostering the development of businesses that have the potential to grow and create new jobs is the most effective and lasting poverty eradication program there is.

However, there’s more to a job than just material gain. There are emotional and social benefits as well. “When they are separated from work, the poor lose more than just money for food, shelter and clothing,” writes Bass. “They suffer deficits of purpose, emotional well-being, and social connection. They get cut off from clearly defined goals and aspirations. They lose a prime means of generating and feeling respect from others. These things can’t be compensated for by government income transfers or charitable gifts. This itch must be scratched by devoting oneself to productive, fulfilling labor.”

If you talk with someone who recently got a job you know just how true that is. Certainly the newly employed want and expect to get paid, but it’s almost never the first thing that they say to you.

“When they find that new job, they just transform,” says Sandy Duckett, CEO of We Are HOPE, Inc. which houses the Door County Job Center. “You can see their self-confidence, their self-worth grow. They are reminded they have value.”

Like most Americans, I still have a strong belief in the value of hard work. Yet it is a mistake to conclude that foundations have wholeheartedly embraced the old adage that if you give a man a fish, he’ll eat for a day, but if you teach a man to fish, he’ll eat for a lifetime. While that sounds like sage wisdom, if you’ve ever worked with those living in poverty you know it’s not that simple.

Parents who are trying to figure out how they’re going to feed their children dinner tonight aren’t thinking of ways to improve their job skills. A man who is homeless doesn’t have an address to list on his résumé. The woman who is chronically ill has a hard time getting herself to a class at the technical college. A child who is the victim of abuse cannot concentrate on school work. If you try to teach a hungry man to fish, he’s going to eat the bait.

Thus we need to do both things. Foundations should invest in efforts which lift people out of poverty through workforce education and fostering the entrepreneurial spirit, but we also must support those charities that provide for our community’s basic human needs. Let’s give the hungry man a meal, then we’ll teach him how to fish.

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

(This column originally appeared in Door County Living.)