![]() |
|||
![]() |
|||
Renewal Letters Sent | |||
Renewal Letters went out April 18. To make sure your Areas of Interest are considered by the Research Committee, renew (with pledge, check, credit card, or gift of stock) by May 9. Also please talk with the friends whose names you gave us for membership invitations. Thanks to Carol Palladini for organizing the mailing and to the members who helped, including our Short Term Project Volunteers and Committee Members. Email Subcommittee of Oversight Gets Us on Track: Thanks to Fran Adams, Oversight Co-chair, and her committee of Carol Betker, Dana Istre and Yolanda Van Wingerden for updating members' email addresses so that all receive the monthly newsletter and other information. Remember to put us on your receiving list so that the newsletter is not caught by your anti-spam programs. Last Two 2007 Recipients Receive Checks: It is very gratifying to see your renewals pouring in…to make a difference in our community. Happy Spring. Giving money away isn’t hard. The challenge for the Women’s Fund is to invest it wisely in sustainable solutions for women, children and families in our community. As volunteers and donors, we regularly face the question of how to intelligently make a difference. The Research Committee has begun to identify and explore programs that meet critical community needs, and their annual panel discussion on April 17 provided valuable information. The panel of foundation leaders included Pam Hamlin, Executive Director of the Hutton Foundation, Jon Clark, Executive Director of the James S. Bower Foundation, Lois Mitchell, President of the Orfalea Foundations, and Catherine Brozowski, Vice President-Programs for the Santa Barbara Foundation. A few highlights of the lively discussion: • Upcoming government budget cuts will reduce community services – in areas like adult mental health and education – impacting nonprofits providing the services and their clients who receive them. Nonprofits can be more efficient than government in providing services. Often they match dollars paid by government contracts with volunteer hours or fundraised and grant dollars. • The first step in measuring success of an agency or program is to define desired outcomes. Ask what change will occur if the agency or program is successful. Then focus on measuring outcomes and results, not simply activities. • Some of the important questions to ask nonprofits seeking funds: What services do you plan to provide and how will you provide them? Who are your clients and how do you know they need and want the services you offer? How do you differentiate yourselves from other agencies providing similar services? • Funders collaborate with each other and support collaboration among nonprofits, but only if agencies sharing resources result in better or longer lasting results for clients they serve. Women’s Fund members were indeed fortunate to benefit from the thoughtful insights and expertise of these community leaders and seasoned funders. Care Givers, Benevolent Babes: What Do They have in Common? Both are groups of friends who formed a Women’s Fund Group. The Care Givers started the first year of the Fund in 2004 and are still active. Benevolent Babes formed in 2007. In between are 28 other groups—all with very creative names! From A-Team to Z Group are groups from neighborhoods as Birds of a Feather(hill) and Buena Vista Social Club to altruistic named groups as Friends for Giving, and Women on a Mission. Foreign names abound: Ayudamos, Esperanza, Les Femmes du Monde, The Brits. How about Terrific Twosome or Fearsome Foursome? We’ve got Educators, SB Women’s Healthcare Professionals and MOMS 1, 2. Some groups are named for names: GK, Kathleen’s and Sheridan’s groups. From Fab 5 to Take 5 to Legacy 5, the women forming their groups show their creativity and generosity. |
|||
|