SUSTAINABILITY GRANT AWARDED TO BELGIAN HERITAGE FOUNDATION

The Door County Community Foundation recently presented a Sustainability Grant to the Namur Belgian Heritage Foundation from the Clifford and Clara Herlache Foundation. This grant is being used to purchase and install an audio visual system.

The Belgian Heritage Center is in the process of completing it’s series of 20 individual historic interview videos documenting the recollections of those who heard stories from their parents, and other family members from the earliest days of the Belgian Settlement The system this grant supports will allow volunteers at the Center to make group presentations to tour groups, school children, and others.

“The Belgian Heritage Center is the only historical center dedicated to the collection, safe keeping, and display of the Belgian Settlement history in the area, says Mark Jinkins, Board Member of the Community Foundation. “We’re honored to be able to help preserve Door County history.”

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Pictured, from left to right are Joe Alexander, of the Belgian Heritage Center and Mark Jinkins Board Member of the Door County Community Foundation.  

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 $20 million in charitable assets.

 

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Community Foundation Awards Sustainability Grant to HELP of Door County

The Door County Community Foundation has HELP of Door County a Sustainability Grant from the Ruth & Hartley Barker Memorial Fund and the Bernice & Gene Hawkins Charitable Fund. This grant supports HELP of Door County’s Hotline Program.

HELP of Door County provides services and programs throughout the Door County Peninsula to victims of domestic abuse. They work to improve the well-being and dignity of individuals, families, and intimate relationships. The hotline provides free, confidential services to domestic violence victims at any time and any place in Door County.

“Last year, HELP of Door County fielded 588 hotline calls,” said Kacie Mueller, Community Relations Officer of the Door County Community Foundation. “No two domestic violence relationships look exactly alike. The highly trained advocates at HELP deal with unique situations every time they receive a call with the primary goal of ensuring domestic violence victims are safe. We are hopeful these funds will help achieve that goal.”

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Pictured, from left to right are Kacie Mueller, Community Relations Officer of the Door County Community Foundation, and Steve Vickman, Executive Director of HELP of Door County. 

HELP of Door County provides services and programs throughout the Door County Peninsula to victims of domestic abuse. HELP works to improve the well-being and dignity of individuals, families, and intimate relationships. They do this by supporting and enhancing their strengths to reduce the incidence of violence and conflict within their relationships. HELP does not provide counseling but they are here to listen without judgment, support without blaming, and empower victims through advocacy and information. All victim services are free and confidential. For more information about HELP of Door County, please call 920-743-8785 or visit http://www.helpofdoorcounty.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 http://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 $20 million in charitable assets.

A New Study on Giving in Retirement

Working with retirees is just part of everyday life for those of us whose business is charity in Door County. Yet there is surprisingly little research on philanthropy in the retirement years. Thankfully, a new study was just released in July that for the first time looked at how charitable giving patterns change as people transition from their careers into retirement.

How Women and Men Give Around Retirement was researched and written by the Women’s Philanthropy Institute, a part of the Indiana University Lilly Family School of Philanthropy. Within the study are several conclusions with implications for Door County’s charitable community.

One of the most heartening things in the research is how robust people’s commitment is to the charities they care about, even as their financial situation changes. Not surprisingly, when someone retires, household consumption tends to significantly decline. Spending on housing, transportation and education tends to fall dramatically from the years just prior to retirement to those immediately after retiring. Food spending also declines, although more modestly. Overall, total household spending drops 16 percent on average in the five years immediately before and after retirement. Thankfully, charitable giving is an exception.

In contrast to the drop in overall consumption, charitable giving tends to hold fairly steady during the transition into retirement. This is equally true whether you measure it in terms of the average size of a charitable gift or the percentage of total household income that is donated to charity.

The study also found that many differences in gender and marital status tend to continue into retirement. Numerous studies have shown that single women are more likely to give than single men and they generally give higher amounts than men. Similarly, married couples and single women are consistently more likely to give than single men, even when adjusting for other factors. These same patterns hold true into the retirement years.

One of the more interesting observations among retirees is that single retired men demonstrate far greater volatility in their giving. The study notes that the trend line for giving by single retired men fluctuates dramatically, both in terms of likelihood to give and the amount that is ultimately donated. Women and married couples are far more stable in their giving patterns.

Were we to view the data purely as a market analysis, then charities might reasonably conclude that retired single men present the greatest new market opportunity for those raising money for a special campaign such as a new building or to create an endowment fund. The study notes that retired men “tend to be more transactional in their giving, often responding to personal appeals and not engaging as deeply with their organizations they support.” As a group, retired men have been shown to be more volatile in their giving, but research also demonstrates that they can be motivated to make significant charitable gifts with the right approach. The data shows that retired single men may not require a long, deep relationship with a charity before they make a gift. Presumably some combination of a good idea and/or the right fundraising volunteer is sufficient to motivate single retired men to donate. This means that retired single men with financial capacity are a good new market opportunity for Door County’s charities to approach with a request for single, one-time commitment that is the very definition of a special campaign.

The data in the study also supports the idea that a different kind of approach is necessary when asking for charitable gifts from single women and couples who are retired.

Single women are the only demographic studied whose level of volunteerism goes up in the first year after retirement. In fact, it goes up dramatically. Volunteerism among couples declines slightly immediately after retirement but rebounds quickly in the next few years. Eventually retired couples will volunteer their time at a rate higher than during their working years. Single men, on the other hand, are far less likely to volunteer during their retirement.

This difference should cause charities to approach retired single women and couples differently than single men. Rather than the transactional approach of asking single men to give to a special campaign, Door County’s charities would do well to develop vibrant volunteer programs that engage retired single women and couples in their work. The study notes that “women’s deeper engagement and loyalty to the causes they support may lead to more sustained giving, which helps explain their more stable levels of giving around retirement.” The study notes that retired single women and couples tend to be far more consistent in the organizations they support. These kinds of donors provide for the regular and dependable income stream that charities need to thrive.

Finally, when you think about retirees and charitable giving, inevitably the conversation turns to a gift in an estate plan. What the study found, however, is that if charity waits to discuss planned giving until a person retires, they’ve often missed the boat.

“Retirement is a process,” notes the study. “People think about estate and bequest gifts many years before they retire.” The data shows that the idea to make a planned gift typically begins around ages 45 to 50. Although it may be a decade or more before a charitable donation is actually incorporated into an estate plan, potential donors are ready to have a conversation about an estate gift many years before most charities even think to make the suggestion.

Of course, as fascinating as this study is, it speaks to what most people do. We all can think of exceptions to the rule. Regardless, it would behoove the charities of Door County to try to better understand the motivations and actions of those people upon whose generosity the charitable work depends.

This article, written by President and CEO of the Community Foundation Bret Bicoy, originally appeared in the Peninsula Pulse.