Q1 - The Robin Hood Foundation
Transcription
Q1 - The Robin Hood Foundation
Cover photo: Rob Bennett PhoTOGRAPHY WINTER 2013 ISSUE 19 SaNDY RELIEF edition BOARD OF DIRECTORS Barry Sternlicht, Chair David Einhorn, Vice Chair John A. Griffin, Vice Chair Lee S. Ainslie, III Jacklyn Bezos Victoria B. Bjorklund Scott Bommer Peter F. Borish Geoffrey Canada Steven A. Cohen Anne Dinning Glenn Dubin Marian Wright Edelman Laurence D. Fink Doug Haynes Jeffrey R. Immelt Paul Tudor Jones, II, Founder Peter D. Kiernan, III Doug Morris Daniel S. Och Gwyneth Paltrow Robert Pittman David Puth Larry Robbins Alan D. Schwartz David M. Solomon Jes Staley Max Stone John Sykes David Tepper Harvey Weinstein Brian Williams Jeff Zucker winter 2013 Sandy Relief Edition ISSUE 19 EMERITUS DIRECTORS Julius Gaudio Kenneth G. Langone Mary McCormick ROB BENNETT PHOTOGRAPHY As winter’s chill sets in, it’s important to remind ourselves that, over 100 days after Hurricane Sandy, many of our neighbors remain in homes without heat or power. Others are living in mold-infested buildings because they have nowhere else to go. Our mission to help our neighbors in need was challenging enough before the storm when 20,000 children slept each night in New York City shelters. After Sandy, it only became worse. While providing for our neighbors in New York City remains our core mission, we knew that Robin Hood had to provide its support and expertise to those in need on Long Island, New Jersey and Connecticut — and in true Robin Hood fashion, our supporters rose to answer the call. LEADERSHIP COUNCIL Cecily M. Carson, Chairman Atiim Barber Within days of the hurricane, we reactivated the Robin Hood Relief Fund begun in response the attacks of 9/11. Your generosity was overwhelming. In less than a week, we raised over $10 million, and immediately distributed nearly $3 million to the organizations on the front lines of the devastation. We continued to raise funds and quickly distribute them, but it was apparent to us that the scope of the damage called for more. John D. Clark So, just six weeks after the storm, we were the beneficiaries of one of the largest charity concerts ever, the 12-12-12 Concert for Sandy Relief. The royalty of Rock and Roll appeared to help us support the recovery of the tri-state region. Jack L. Oliver, III The concert raised Robin Hood’s profile around the world, and more important, raised more than $50 million dollars (and counting), which enabled us to fund more than 250 different relief organizations providing meaningful help to people in New York City, New Jersey, Long Island and Connecticut. As we begin the New Year, we’re well aware of the challenges before us, but we are confident because we know we have people like you beside us. Thanks for being Robin Hood. David Saltzman Executive Director Anthony Davis John DiRocco Adam R. Flatto Jonathan Harris Nancy Jarecki Peter Muller Alex Navab Antonio ‘LA’ Reid VETERANS ADVISORY BOARD Steven A. Cohen, Co-Chairman Admira l Michael Mullen, Co-Chairman Lloyd C. Blankfein Tom Brokaw Cecily M. Carson Anthony Crowell Eric Greitens Doug Haynes Kenneth B. Mehlman Wes Moore Doug Morris Deborah Mullen Joseph H. Reich Jes Staley Jon Stewart Bob Woodruff 1 FEATURE | SANDY RELIEF hurricanesandy 2 Winter 2013 In late October, as we were making final preparations for our annual Heroes Breakfast, an uninvited guest arrived—someone named Sandy. It was then that we realized how many actual heroes we had in our midst. Even as the storm waters surged, everyday heroes rushed to their neighbors’ aid, guiding seniors to shelters, directing traffic at powerless intersections, carrying newborns and patients down darkened hospital stairwells. And then, when the waters receded, the next wave of heroes took over. We’re proud to say that in the forefront were many of the organizations that Robin Hood funds. Within hours of the storm, Robin Hood provided aid directly to programs rushing to the hardest-hit areas. Your donations allowed us to provide heaters to freezing families in darkened public housing apartments and deliver generators, blankets and thousands of hot meals to those living in the cold. We provided shelter to families who lost everything but the clothes they were wearing. And that was just the beginning. Three days after the storm, we reactivated the Robin Hood Relief Fund that helped thousands of survivors after the attacks on 9/11. And once again Robin Hood supporters rallied to help their city. Within six days you donated over $10 million! We immediately began to distribute those funds to the organizations on the front lines of the devastation. We knew the rescue efforts would soon transform into recovery programs. Homes, lives and families need to be rebuilt. We were well aware that, prior to Sandy, our city was already dealing with record numbers of homeless, including 20,000 children living in homeless shelters. As we pondered how to address the looming housing crisis and where the money would come from to fund these programs, new heroes stepped forward. Board members Harvey Weinstein and John Sykes, along with James Dolan, Executive Chairman of The Madison Square Garden Company, organized a concert for the ages. On the twelfth day of the twelfth month of 2012, just six weeks after the storm, 12-12-12 The Concert for Sandy Relief blew the doors off of Madison Square Garden, and the world was able to see how we react to adversity. We come together. We help each other. We move forward. At this historic concert, we raised over $50 million for the Robin Hood Relief Fund. On the following pages, you’ll learn more about some of the relief programs we have supported, and find a full list of all of our Sandy Relief grants. This list continues to grow as we make new grants to organizations helping Sandy victims in the region. You can see the latest by visiting www.robinhood.org/rhsandy. >> rob Bennett Photography When we saw the terrible destruction visited upon our neighbors on Long Island and in New Jersey and Connecticut, Robin Hood’s board of directors agreed we would extend aid to those in need outside of New York City. SANDYRelief 3 SANDY RELief | GRANTEE spotlight CONNECTICUT ▲ ▲ ▲ Responding across the REGION NEW YORK ▲ $225k Island Harvest Long Island NEW JERSEY $245k PROJECT HOSPTALITY Staten Island $1 Million AFFORDABLE HOUSING ALLIANCE New Jersey $225k Island Harvest/Long Island > Island Harvest is the largest hunger relief organization on Long Island. The day Hurricane Sandy hit, they transitioned into emergency-response mode, and have remained a constant presence in neighborhoods that were hit particularly hard, including Lindenhurst, Freeport, Island Park, Wyandanch, Long Beach and East Rockaway. Thanks in part to Robin Hood’s support, they have distributed more than 1.8 million meals since October 29. The Island Harvest staff discovered that their traumatized neighbors needed many things, from paper towels, toilet paper, eating utensils and blankets to portable heaters, clothing and cleaning supplies. But the one thing that many people needed most turned out to be the easiest to provide. A few days after Hurricane Sandy hit Long Island, Randi Shubin Dresner, Island Harvest President & CEO, was assisting with the delivery of food and assessments when she came across a woman outside the Point Lookout firehouse. “She just had this forlorn look,” Randi said. “She didn’t even know what to ask for. And when I said, ‘What can I give you, what can we help you with?’ she just was shaking her head and holding back tears.” So then I asked, “How about a hug?” “She threw her arms open and I gave her a big hug and it seemed she didn’t want to let go. And when she did she said, ‘That hug is what I needed more than anything.’” Robin Hood is proud to have been able to support Island Harvest so that they could be there for their neighbors in need. 4 Winter 2013 PHOTO: Kieth Bedford $245k Project Hospitality/Staten Island Staten Island was hit particularly hard, with more than half of the city’s deaths occurring in what residents have called “the forgotten borough.” But Robin Hood has always been there for the people of Staten Island. Robin Hood originally funded Project Hospitality as part of the 9/11 Relief Fund. In response to September 11th, Project Hospitality established a number of programs in Staten Island. It began a cooperative for day laborers, it ran support groups and created new food programs for victims’ families and displaced workers. rob Bennett Photography Following Sandy, Project Hospitality once again found itself in the center of the relief operations in Staten Island. Since the storm, Project Hospitality has provided emergency food and supplies to over 12,600 people. With funding from Robin Hood, they hired a much-needed Disaster Assistance Coordinator and an assistant to coordinate work groups, outreach teams and volunteers. They’ve also hired a housing coordinator, and used Robin Hood relief funds to pay for the costs associated with relocating families. They’ve also hired outreach teams that go door-to-door, locating families living in condemned or unsafe conditions and connecting them with emergency food, FEMA assistance, supplies and temporary housing. The work that Project Hospitality has accomplished on Staten Island has been truly unforgettable. $1 Million Affordable housing alliance/New Jersey It’s estimated that more than 72,000 homes and businesses in New Jersey were damaged or destroyed by the storm. Robin Hood is funding two projects with the Affordable Housing Alliance in Monmouth County, New Jersey that will be important first steps on the path to recovery. The first project is for the purchase, transport and installation of 17 newly manufactured homes that will be used as affordable housing for low-income residents displaced by the storm. The second project is a rental deposit assistance program that will aid those displaced by the storm who, except for lack of a security deposit, could be stably housed. Several thousand renters in Monmouth County were displaced, many were living in winter rentals not considered permanent housing, some were “under the table” rentals and some lacked signed leases, disqualifying them for FEMA assistance. And now hundreds of these families are living in motels or doubled up with friends, and lack the resources to relocate and pay the application and security deposits required by many landlords. Others looking for rentals may still be making mortgage payments for a home that either is uninhabitable or no longer exists, and thus lack the funds for security deposits. These two programs have the potential to improve the lives of thousands of low-income New Jersey families. 5 SANDY RELief | Donor spotlight SPOTLIGHT ON Hillary schafer Hillary Schafer is a native New Yorker who grew up on the Upper East Side. She is a former director of Institutional Equity Sales at Citicorp. Today, she and her husband, Mark, are raising their two children, Stella (6) and Sam (3), just blocks from Hillary’s childhood home. Through her actions, Hillary is teaching her children that we can all make a difference. When Hillary first learned about the devastation caused by Hurricane Sandy, she knew she had to do something. She struggled to identify ways to help – the needs of those affected were tremendous, and the desire of others to help was great. However, there weren’t organizations bridging those two groups together. That’s when Hillary turned to Robin Hood. “ 6 I have learned just how big the heart of New York really is. The generosity of individuals has been astounding — both in time and money — Hillary SCHAFER Winter 2013 ” . While Hillary was familiar with the poverty fighting work of Robin Hood, she had never been intimately involved with the organization before. A colleague mentioned how Robin Hood had quickly mobilized to raise a disaster relief fund, and he connected her directly to Robin Hood. She worked with Robin Hood staff and some of our grantees, St. John’s Bread and Life and City Harvest, to provide food and supplies to those in need. What started with a desire to help a few people turned into a widespread effort across the most devastated areas in Far Rockaway and Breezy Point, Queens. Q&A After the storm, you were one of the first people to jump into action. Why were you so determined to get involved? I was born and raised in NYC. It is my home. It feels like a village to me. The idea that there were so many people in my village who had been plunged into immediate need was devastating. What type of things did you do to help? On the Thursday after the storm, I delivered food and blankets out to the American Legion in Far Rockaway and discovered they were desperate for a hot meal — and so I went and bought 400 meals from a local restaurant. Then, I learned three weeks after the storm that the Rockaway Volunteer Firemen were without heat, blankets, cots, coats, thermal underwear—and yet were still out there doing their jobs. I worked with a whole host of folks to get them stuff—a mobile shower unit, cots and blankets. I think the thing they appreciated most was the 40 sets of thermal underwear that we bought for them. There were so many people out there trying to help, but what was needed most was organization and that was where Robin Hood was so crucial. I met two women who had 2,500 blankets and winter coats that they wanted to donate, but didn’t know how or where. I connected them with Robin Hood and within days all those coats and blankets were being distributed by Robin Hood grantees. What have you learned most from this experience? I have learned just how big the heart of New York really is. The generosity of individuals has been astounding— both in time and money. The generosity of the corporate community has been also extremely positive. I have witnessed individuals, local non-profits and local businesses all come together to do the right thing by their neighbors. It was a wonderful thing to witness. What would you tell those who haven’t seen firsthand the areas most impacted by the storm? The need continues to be massive. There are literally years of work ahead to rebuild NYC. As of right now, people are still living in the dark and the cold, stuffed on top of each other in shelters. They can’t even begin to envision a time in the future when they will be able to put their lives back together. The devastation may no longer be in the headlines, but there are thousands of families who need to have homes rebuilt, who will need to furnish those homes and clothe and feed their children. Hillary reminds us of why we need to help, but she also reminds us of why many of us got involved with Robin Hood to begin with. We recognize our ability to make a difference and our responsibility to do just that. rob Bennett Photography Then, I turned my apartment into a food pantry of sorts. I got my children and others involved. Over the first weekend after the storm, we made approximately 2,000 bag meals, all in bags decorated by a couple dozen kids. We then delivered those out to Rockaway. People were truly touched by those little decorations. Almost as if they said: “This was made by me for you. Someone cares about you.” 7 8 Winter 2013 FEATURE | 12.12.12. Concert BON JOVI, ERIC CLAPTON DAVE GROHL, BILLY JOEL ALICIA KEYS, CHRIS MARTIN The Rolling Stones BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN & THE E STREET BAND EDDIE VEDDER, ROGER WATERS KANYE WEST, THE WHO AND PAUL McCARTNEY 12-12-12 The Concert for Sandy Relief, presented by Chase, raised more than $50 million from ticket sales, online/tele phone contributions, corporate donations and sponsorships. It was seen all around >> Rebecca Taylor/ MSG PHOTOS Thanks to the hard work and commitment of Harvey Weinstein, John Sykes, Jim Dolan and the Robin Hood staff, we were able to hold an extraordinary concert— just six weeks after Hurricane Sandy ravaged the tri-state area. 9 FEATURE | 12.12.12. Concert > the world and generated donations from all 50 states and 90+ countries, proving that the rest of the world cares about New York as much as we do. One interesting fact was that the average online and phone donation was just under $70. Additional funds are still being raised through merchandise, CD and DVD sales. Within days, the 12-12-12 Concert CD was the top selling album on iTunes. Thanks to our generous corporate sponsors, 100% of every dollar donated to 12-12-12 The Concert for Sandy Relief will go to organ izations helping victims of Sandy throughout the tri-state area. FACTS Over 261,000 individual donations from all 50 states Top donations by state: NY, NJ, CA, FL and PA Contributions from over 90+ countries Most foreign donations received from (in order): Canada, Brazil, Australia, Mexico, Italy, United Kingdom and Japan Foreign Donors who donated the most on average (in order): Hungary, China, Philippines, Switzerland and Uganda 10 Winter 2013 Rob Bennett photography 11 FEATURE | 12.12.12. Concert Robin Hood thanks the corporate sponsors of The Concert for Sandy Relief. Because of their generous support, 100% of every dollar raised will go to help those affected by Hurricane Sandy. The Robin Hood Relief Fund committee HELPS NEW YORK ONCE AGAIN The Robin Hood Relief Fund Committee was established after the events of 9/11 and was reactivated right after Hurricane Sandy. It is chaired by board member Victoria Bjorklund who founded the Exempt Organizations Group at Simpson Thacher & Bartlett and is one of the nation’s foremost authorities on charity law. She is joined by Peter Borish, Peter Kiernan, David Puth, former board vice chairman Dirk Ziff and Moe Chessa—all members of the original Robin Hood Relief Committee. Robin Hood chair Lee Ainslie rounds out the group. 12 Winter 2013 Immediately after Sandy hit our area, they began meeting weekly with Robin Hood Relief Fund staff to provide oversight and strategic direction, learn about unmet needs, attend site visits and review and approve all grants. The committee’s emphasis is now shifting from emergency relief work (food, clothing, blankets, etc.) to overseeing recovery programs, with a focus on housing, health, mental health and employment and ensuring that all relief dollars are distributed in a timely and effective manner. rob Bennett Photography Chase, GE, Samsung GALAXY, State Farm, BlackRock, Optimum, Time Warner Cable, Verizon Foundation, Clear Channel, iHeart Radio, The Madison Square Garden Company and The Weinstein Company. WHO WE HELPED As of FEBRUARY 6, 2013 we allocated $45.3 million (67% of the fund) to over 250 organizations. We are committed to reaching our goal of allocating at least 95% of the fund by March 1, 2013. 53% 13% 12% 10% t o groups offering housing assistance, such as home repairs and renovations, mold remediation, rental assistance and moving fees. benefits /legal counseling, which includes helping people apply for FEMA and other benefits (unemployment insurance, food stamps), assistance navigating insurance claims, filing appeals for insurance/FEMA denials and other legal assistance. h as gone to provide individual and emergency assistance, such as water, blankets, cash grants and organizational support in t he immediate wake of the storm; also includes $2 million grant to the New York City NonProfit Recovery Loan Program. to medical and mental health support, including counseling services, nursing care and medical supplies 5% 6% FOOD PANTRIES & SOUP KITCHENS 1% NEW JOB TRAINING EDUCATION PROGRAMS 10% Medical & Mental HeALTH 53% Home Repairs & Renovations 12% EMERGENCY ASSISTANCE 13% Legal Counseling Allocation of Sandy relief fund as of FEBRUARY 6, 2013. 6% 5% 1% t o education programs that provided tutoring to displaced students and day care services. t o food pantries and soup kitchens that provided hundreds of thousands of meals to storm victims. t o groups helping people find/ train for new jobs. 13 SANDY RELief | GRANTEES SANDY GRANTS In a typical year, Robin Hood makes 200 grants to programs that support our core mission. The Robin Hood Relief Fund has made over 250 grants in just over three months. Relief Grantees as of 2/6/2013 1199SEIU Bill Michelson Home Care Education Fund 21 Plus AARP Foundation Accion Achiezer Adelante of Suffolk County Affordable Housing Alliance After Hours Project Afya Foundation Ali Forney Center All Hands Volunteers AmeriCorps St. Louis American Friends Service Committee Andrew Glover Youth Program ARC of Monmouth County Asian Americans for Equality Atlantic City Long Term Recovery Group B.R.B.R. (c/o Rockaway Point Fire Dept.) Bayonne Economic Opportunity Foundation Bellevue/NYU Program for Survivors of Torture Big Brothers Big Sisters of Ocean County, NJ Borough of Belmar Borough of Keansburg Trust Bowery Residents’ Committee, Inc. Breezy Point Disaster Relief Fund Broad Channel Athletic Club BronxWorks Brookdale Community College Foundation Brooklyn Jubilee Brooklyn Navy Yard Development Corporation Caffrey Conroy Learning Center Carroll Gardens Association Casa Freehold Catholic Charities of San Diego Center for Court Innovation Center for Employment Opportunities Center for Family Life in Sunset Park 14 Winter 2013 Center of United Methodist Aid to the Community (CUMAC) Center for Urban Community Services, Inc. Child Center of New York Child Mind Institute Children’s Aid Society Children’s Health Fund Children’s Storefront Chinese American Planning Council, Inc. Chuch of Grace and Peace/ Jersey Shore United Church of Grace and Peace Circulo de la Hispanidad, Inc. City Harvest City Meals on Wheels City of Hoboken, Dept. of Health and Human Services Coalition for Hispanic Family Services Coalition for the Homeless Common Ground Housing Development Fund Corp., Inc. Community Access, Inc. Community Affairs and Resources Center Community Development Corporation of Long Island Community Food Bank of New Jersey Community Health Action of Staten Island, Inc. Community Health Law Project Community Parents, Inc. Community Services, Inc. of Ocean County Community Solutions, Inc Coney Recovers Connecticut Food Bank Council of Jewish Organizations of Flatbush, Inc. County Harvest Covenant House NJ CPC Behavioral Health CUMAC ECHO CUNY Deborah Heart and Lung Center Disability Opportunity Fund East Harlem Tutorial Program East River Development Alliance Edith and Carl Marks Jewish Community House of Bensonhurst El Centro de Hospitalidad, Inc. Family and Children’s Services of Monmouth County Family Food Relief of NJ Family Service League Family to Family Fashion Delivers Federation Employment and Guidance Service, Inc. Feel Better Kids Fifth Avenue Committee (FAC/BWI Brooklyn Workforce Innovations) First Presbyterian Church of Manasquan Food Bank for New York City Food Bank for Westchester Food Bank of Monmouth and Ocean Counties/Single Stop USA Food Bank of South Jersey Fortune Society Foundation of the Friendly Sons of the Shillelagh Freeport Community Development Agency Friedberg J.C.C. Abraham Sonabend Early Childhood Center Friends of Firefighters FriendsOfRockaway.org Fuller Center Disaster ReBuilders/ Fuller Center Jersey Pines Fund for Public Health in New York - Nurse Family Partnership Fund for the City of New York - Women’s Center for Education and Career Advancement Gary Klinsky Children’s Center, Brooklyn Community Services Gerritsen Beach Cares, Inc. Gerritsen Beach Volunteer Fire Department Global Dirt GO Project Good Shepherd Services Grand Street Settlement Graybeards, LTD Green City Force HABCore Habitat for Humanity New York City Habitat for Humanity of Northeast Monmouth County Harlem Children’s Zone Harlem United: Community AIDS Center, Inc. Healing Emergency Aid Response Team 9/11 Hebrew Home for the Aged at Riverdale HELP/PSI, Inc. Henry Street Settlement Hetrick-Martin Institute Hispanic Brotherhood of Rockville Centre, Inc. Hispanic Counseling Center Hoboken Department of Health and Human Services Holy Family St. Vincent de Paul Society Homes for All Hometown Heroes Hope for Highlands Hope Force International HOPES Community Action Partnership, Inc. Housing Works, Inc. Hudson Milestones Iglesia Cristiana Metropolitana Interfaith Neighbors Interfaith Nutrition Network Intersect Fund Ironbound Community Corp. Island Harvest Jackson Women of Today Jersey Cares Jewish Child Care Association Jewish Council of Greater Coney Island Jewish Family Services of Atlantic and Cape May Counties Jewish Family Service of Central New Jersey Jewish Renaissance Foundation Korean American Sandy Relief Committee of New Jersey La Fuerza Unida Lawyers Alliance for New York Legal Aid Society Legal Services NYC Legal Services of New Jersey Little Egg Harbor Volunteer Storm Relief Committee Long Beach JCAP: Jewish Community Assistance Program Long Beach Latino Civic Association Long Beach MLK Long Beach Medical Center – The Family Care Center Long Blue Line Long Island Cares Long Island Housing Partnership Long Island Long Term Recovery Group Long Beach Island School District Long Island Volunteer Center Love in the Name of Christ Lunch Break Lutheran Family Health Centers Lutheran Social Services of New York Make the Road New York Mennonite Disaster Service Mary’s Place by the Sea Mennonite Disaster Service Mental Health Association of Monmouth County Mercy Home for Children Metropolitan Council on Jewish Poverty Middletown Disaster Relief Fund Mission Liberia Monmouth County Long Term Recovery Group Moonachie/Little Ferry Relief Fund Museum of NJ Maritime History National Day Laborer Organizing Network Nechama: Jewish Response to Disaster Neighborhood Economic Development Advocacy Project Neighborhood Housing Services of Staten Island, Inc. Neighbors Together New Alternatives for Children New Jersey Community Capital New Jersey Maritime Museum New Jersey YMCA State Alliance New York Cares New York City Non-Profit Recovery Loan Program New York City Housing & Neighborhood Recovery Donors Collaborative New York Emergency & First Response Squad of Hamilton Beach and Howard Beach, Inc. New York Foundling Hospital New York Legal Assistance Group New Yorkers for Children Newark Emergency Services for Families Newark Now Nontraditional Employment For Women North Walke Housing Corporation Oasis Christian Center Ocean City/NJ Cleanup And Recovery Effort Ocean Community Economic Action Now, Inc. Oceanside Community Service, Inc. Ocean County College Foundation Ocean County Long Term Recovery Group Ocean Mental Health Services OHEL Children’s Home and Family Services Operation Hope of Fairfield, Inc. Our Holy Redeemer Our House NJ Part Of The Solution Person-to-Person Pesach Tikvah Phipps Community Development Corporation Point Breeze Volunteer Fire Department Point Pleasant Presbyterian Church Portlight Strategies, Inc. Preferred Behavioral Health of NJ Presbyterian Disaster Assistance of West Jersey Project Hospitality Project PAUL Project Renewal Providence House Public Health Solutions Queens Congregations United for Action Reaching Out Community Services Rebuild Hoboken Relief Fund Red Hook Initiative Restaurant Opportunities Center of New York Richmond Senior Services Rockaway Beach Surf Club Rockaway Relief Fund Rutgers School of Social Work RVC Foundation Safe Horizon Sanctuary for Families Sayreville Storm Relief Center School for Children with Hidden Intelligence SCO Family of Services Selfhelp Community Services, Inc. Services for Children with Hidden Intelligence Shark River Hills Property Owners’ Association Shore Aid Single Stop USA Society of St. Vincent de Paul in the Archdiocese of Rockville Center Southwest Brooklyn Industrial Development Corporation St. Catharine of Siena Church St. Clare Disaster Relief Fund St. Francis Community Center St. Francis de Sales Parish St. John’s Bread & Life Program St. Margaret Mary Sandy Disaster Relief Fund St. Paul’s United Methodist Church St. Paul’s Lutheran Church St. Peter’s University Hospital/St. Peter’s Foundation St. Rose of Lima Parish Outreach Staten Island Mental Health Society Stephen Siller Tunnel to Towers Foundation Sunnyside Community Services Sustainable South Bronx Team Rubicon Terry Farrell Firefighters Fund Toms River Regional Schools Hurricane Relief Fund Touro Law Center’s Disaster Relief Clinic The Bridge Fund of New York, Inc. The Child Center of New York The Church of Grace and Peace The Doe Fund, Inc. The Door The Hope Center The Long Beach Christmas Angel, Inc. The River Fund Tri-City Peoples Corporation Triple C Housing United Church of Praise International Ministries, Inc. United Way of Monmouth County Union Beach Disaster Relief Fund University Settlement Society Urban Justice Center Urban League of Long Island, Inc. Union Beach Disaster Relief Fund Vision 2000 Community Development Corporation (Atlantic City Long Term Recovery Group) Vision Long Island Visiting Nurse Association Health Group Visiting Nurse Service of New York Volunteer Lawyers for Justice West Side Campaign Against Hunger Where To Turn Women’s League Community Residences, Inc. Women in Need, Inc. WomenRising, Inc. Workers Justice Project Yashar Organization (CYS (Seagate) Hurricane Relief Fund) YMCA of Greater New York YMCA of Long Island Yorkville Common Pantry You Can NOT Be Replaced Youth Consultation Services Young Families of Island Park Hurricane Relief YouthBuild USA 15 | GRANTEES Community Partners With your help, Robin Hood is able to fund the following poverty-fighting programs that teach, train, feed, shelter, heal and nurture New Yorkers in need: 1199SEIU Bill Michelson Home Care Education Fund Abyssinian Development Corporation Accion USA Achievement First Ackerman Institute for the Family Advocates for Children After Hours Project Aid for AIDS AIDS Service Center Albert Einstein College of Medicine - Early Childhood Center Ali Forney Center Andrew Glover Youth Program Argus Community, Inc. Ariva Association of the Bar of the City of New York Fund, Inc. - City Bar Justice Center Association to Benefit Children Astor Services for Children and Families Bedford Stuyvesant Restoration Corporation Beginning with Children Foundation, Inc. Bellevue/NYU Program for Survivors of Torture Benefit Data Trust Bloomingdale Family Program Blue Engine Bowery Residents’ Committee, Inc. Bronx Defenders Bronx Design and Construction Academy BronxWorks Brookdale Hospital: Healthy Families New York Brookdale Hospital: Live Light/ Live Right Brooklyn Kindergarten Society Brooklyn Navy Yard Development Corporation CASES Center for Court Innovation Center for Employment Opportunities Center for Family Life in Sunset Park Center for Immigrant Health Center for New York City Neighborhoods Center for Urban Community Services CFY 16 Winter 2013 Charles B. Wang Community Health Center Children’s Aid Society Children’s Defense Fund Children’s Health Fund Children’s Hospital of New York Presbyterian/Columbia Children’s Storefront Chinese American Planning Council, Inc. CitiWide Harm Reduction Program City Harvest City Meals on Wheels Coalition for Hispanic Family Services Coalition for the Homeless College & Community Fellowship CollegeBound Initiative, Young Women’s Leadership Network Columbia University Population Research Center Community Solutions, Inc. Common Ground Housing Development Fund Corporation, Inc. Community Access, Inc. Comprehensive Development, Inc. Cooper Union Cristo Rey New York High School CUNY - ASAP CUNY - At Home in College CUNY - Future Now at Bronx Community College CUNY - Kingsborough Community College CUNY - New Community College CUNY - Project for Return and Opportunity In Veterans Education Cypress Hills Local Development Corporation Democracy Prep Public Schools DREAM Charter School Eagle Academy Foundation East Harlem Scholars Academy East Harlem Tutorial Program East River Development Alliance East Side House Settlement Edith and Carl Marks Jewish Community House of Bensonhurst Education Reform Now Educators 4 Excellence El Centro de Hospitalidad, Inc. Episcopal Social Services Explore Schools, Inc. Federation Employment and Guidance Service, Inc. Fifth Avenue Committee Food Bank for New York City Food Bank of South Jersey Fortune Society Friends of the Children Fund for Public Health in New York - Doctor’s Initiative Fund for Public Health in New York - Nurse Family Partnership Fund for the City of New York - Women’s Center for Education and Career Advancement Fund for the City of New York/ A.I.R. Harlem Gary Klinsky Children’s Center, Brooklyn Community Services Give An Hour GO Project Goddard Riverside Community Center Good Shepherd Services Grace Institute Grameen America Grand Street Settlement Green City Force Harlem Children’s Zone Harlem RBI Harlem United: Community AIDS Center, Inc. Harlem Village Academies Health Leads Hebrew Home for the Aged at Riverdale Helmets to Hardhats HELP/PSI, Inc. Henry Street Settlement Hetrick-Martin Institute Highbridge Community Life Center HIV Law Project Hot Bread Kitchen Housing Works, Inc. iMentor Institute for Family Health Inwood House Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America Jane Barker Brooklyn Child Advocacy Center Jewish Child Care Association KIPP Foundation KIPP NYC, Inc. Lawyers for Children League Education and Treatment Center Legal Aid Society Legal Services NYC LIFT Little Sisters of the Assumption Family Health Service Lower East Side Harm Reduction Center Madison Strategies Group Make the Road New York Mayor’s Fund to Advance New York City - ACS/Acelero Mayor’s Fund to Advance New York City - Conditional Cash Transfers Mayor’s Fund to Advance New York City - Family Justice Centers Mayor’s Fund to Advance New York City - Housing Help Program Mayor’s Fund to Advance New York City - NYC Department of Small Business Services Mayor’s Fund to Advance NYC - ECHOES Program MDRC Metropolitan Council on Jewish Poverty Minkwon Mount Sinai Adolescent Health Center Mount Sinai Hepatitis C Program National College Advising Corps Neighborhood Economic Development Advocacy Project Neighborhood Trust Financial Partners Neighbors Together New Classrooms Innovation Partners New Profit Inc.’s Pathways Fund/ Social Innovation Fund New Settlement Apartments New York Cares New York City Charter School Center New York City College of Technology New York City Financial Network Action Consortium New York Community Organizing Fund, Inc. New York Foundling Hospital Project Hospitality Project Renewal PROMISE PROJECT Providence House Public Health Solutions Queens Community House Ralph Lauren Center for Cancer Care and Prevention Reaching Out Community Services Reading Partners Relay Graduate School of Education Restaurant Opportunities Center of New York Safe Horizon Sanctuary for Families SCO Family of Services SCORE Selfhelp Community Services, Inc. Single Stop USA South Brooklyn Legal Services Southwest Brooklyn Industrial Development Corporation St. John’s Bread & Life Program St. Nicks Alliance Stanley M. Isaacs Neighborhood Center Staten Island Mental Health Society Success Charter Network Sunnyside Community Service Sustainable South Bronx Teach for America National Teach for America New York The Bridge Fund of New York, Inc. The Child Center of New York IN MEMORIUM Maurice “Moe” Chessa 1933-2012 All of us at Robin Hood are deeply saddened by the loss of our great friend, mentor and board member Maurice Chessa. The Doe Fund, Inc. The Door The Family Center The Financial Clinic The HOPE Program The Jericho Project, Inc. The Mission Continues The Regents Research Fund The River Fund Turnaround for Children Turning Point (c/o Discipleship Outreach Ministries, Inc.) Uncommon Schools University Settlement Society Upwardly Global Urban Arts Partnership Urban Assembly School for Law & Justice, Adams Street Foundation Urban Health Plan, Inc. Urban Justice Center Urban Pathways, Inc. Veterans Across America Visiting Nurse Service of New York Volunteers of Legal Service West Side Campaign Against Hunger Women in Need Women’s Housing and Economic Development Corp. Year Up Yorkville Common Pantry Moe dedicated his life to serving others. A Brooklyn native, Moe held a variety of leadership positions in both the public and private sectors. His passion for human services and improving opportunities for young people culminated in his two decades as leader of the Bedford-Stuyvesant YMCA and later head of the BedfordStuyvesant I Have A Dream Foundation. Moe has been a guiding force at Robin Hood since its inception 25 years ago, when he became Robin Hood’s first employee, serving as a part time Executive Director before joining our board of directors. He provided incredible leadership in the aftermath of 9/11 as Robin Hood worked to help New Yorkers devastated Robin Hood is excited to announce the following new grants, as of January 31, 2013: Bronx Design and Construction Academy to provide counselors to help the students at this career and technical high school prepare for college or careers in the construction industry. East Harlem Scholars Academy operates a charter school in East Harlem which will serve students from kindergarten through eighth grade, with a second school to open in September 2013. National College Advising Corps recruits, trains and places recent college graduates in high schools with low college-admission rates to help students enroll in college. NEW Community Partners New York Harbor School New York Harm Reduction Educators, Inc. New York Legal Assistance Group New York Presbyterian Fund, Inc. - Audubon Family Planning Center New York Public Library New York University McSilver Institute for Poverty Policy and Research Nontraditional Employment For Women North Shore LIJ Lenox Hill Hospital’s Center for Attention and Learning Northern Manhattan Improvement Corporation Northside Center for Child Development NYC District Council of Carpenters Apprenticeship Journeyman Retraining Education & Industry Fund NYU School of Medicine Children’s Trauma Institute NYU School of Medicine - Veterans Family Support Clinic Opportunities for a Better Tomorrow Outreach Project Part Of The Solution Partnership with Children Per Scholas PHI Phipps Community Development Corporation by the attacks, and Moe continued to be a guiding force in the wake of Hurricane Sandy as an integral part of the Robin Hood Relief Committee. We will all miss his wise, practical voice. He left our world better than he found it. He left us all better for having known him. Moe’s family has established a special fund in his memory at Robin Hood to support programs serving disadvantaged youth and adults in Bedford-Stuyvesant, Brooklyn – where Moe devoted so many of his years of service. Donations to the Chessa fund can be sent to Robin Hood at 826 Broadway, 9th Floor NYC 10003 Attn: Maurice Chessa Fund. FOR MORE INFORMATION ABOUT ROBIN HOOD, VISIT THE NEW ROBINHOOD.ORG facebook.com/robinhood @RobinHoodNYC If you would rather receive this communication in digital form instead, please email info@robinhood.org with the subject “Go Green.” If you have any questions, please email info@robinhood.org. 826 Broadway, 9th floor New York, ny 10003 robinhoodnyc.tumblr.com