ON THE ROAD TO EQUALITY 2008 Annual Repor t GROWING EQUALITY FOR WOMEN AND GIRLS HOPES & DREAMS for Minnesota’s women & girls “That as professional women, we nurture the next generation of women leaders and guide girls to the tools they’ll need to achieve their dreams.” – Barbara, Rochester Dear Friends, We talk a lot here about the shared passion that drives our work for women’s economic, political and social equality –about the hopes and dreams that fuel our passion. “Hope” is defined as “a wish accompanied by confident expectation of its fulfillment,” and “dream” means “an aspiration, or aim.” Together, it makes for an unstoppable force. What are your hopes and dreams for women and girls? It’s a powerful question, and one we like to ask. In fact, in this report we share with you the hopes and dreams of seven Minnesotans we met during our statewide Road to Equality Tour (May-July 2008). While on the Tour, we were leading a community presentation in one of the greater Minnesota cities we visited. As we shared key findings from our new research report, Status of Girls in Minnesota (released April 2008), in walked two prominent, male community leaders to a room filled with women. While we suspected that these men weren’t used to being the “minority” gender in a room, their initial tentativeness gave way to active participation in the discussion about our girls’ research. “Let me tell you what I’m seeing,” one of the men began. “I’m sending too many of my police officers to homes in this community where woman have been beaten. And you know what really troubles me? I think we’re seeing about only 10 percent of what’s actually happening out there.” Then he added, “My hopes and dreams for women and girls in our community is that they don’t experience violence – period – and that they can fulfill their dreams of what they want to become and who they want to be.” As we analyze what we’ve learned from the 18 diverse communities we visited on the Tour, a striking similarity (l-r) Grayce Belvedere Young and Lee Roper-Batker. has emerged: the concerns, hopes and dreams that all Minnesotans share for improving the status of women and girls. To this end, in fiscal year 2008 (April 1, 2007-March 31, 2008) we awarded $965,027 in grants to 116 nonprofit organizations through the Social Change Fund, girlsBEST (girls Building Economic Success Together) Fund, Donor Advised Funds, Giving Circles, and discretionary grants. Our grantees amaze and inspire us as we watch their innovative programs bust through barriers and move equality forward. For example, while the wage gap for women persists and women continue to cluster in lowpaying jobs, Social Change Fund grantee, WomenVenture, is creating new career paths for women in the science and technical industries (see pg. 4). And girlsBEST Fund grantee, Centro, Inc., has created its own girl-run dance academy to apprentice Latina teens as dance instructors, developing their skills to claim and establish their own economic power (see pg. 15). Thank you for your continued support of the Women’s Foundation of Minnesota. Together, our collective hopes and dreams embrace future change and equality. And as you will read in these pages, this optimism is reflected throughout our programs and partnerships. Onward, LEE ROPER-BATKER PRESIDENT & CEO GRAYCE BELVEDERE YOUNG CHAIR, BOARD OF TRUSTEES 2008 AT A GLANCE Fiscal Year 2008 (April 1, 2007 – March 31, 2008) SOCIAL CHANGE GRANTMAKING. The Women’s Foundation of Minnesota distributed $965,027 in grants to 116 nonprofit organizations through its two competitive funds, Social Change Fund (SCF) and girlsBEST (girls Building Economic Success Together) Fund, combined with discretionary and administrative grants, Donor Advised Fund grants, and Giving Circle grants. SOCIAL CHANGE FUND Awards grants and provides technical assistance to nonprofits across the state working to achieve equality for women in five Cornerstone areas: 1. Creating Economic Justice for Women 2. Advancing Women’s Safety and Security 3. Guaranteeing Women’s Health and Reproductive Rights 4. Promoting Women’s Human Rights 5. Expanding Women’s Political • Convened four, statewide evaluation and capacity-building workshops: Three for grantees and one for donors. • Conducted 11 grants information sessions: Nine in greater Minnesota (Alexandria, Crookston, Duluth, Eveleth, Grand Rapids, Moorhead, Rochester, St. Cloud, Willmar) and two to diverse communities in the Twin Cities (Asian American/Pacific Islander, Native American). Representation Highlights • $313,000 in grants to 21 nonprofits; $39,500 in discretionary grants to 17 nonprofits; $32,610 in administrative grants to six nonprofits; $344,744 in Donor Advised Fund grants to 43 nonprofits; and $12,175 in Giving Circle grants to three nonprofits. • Convened statewide grantees for capacity-building conference, “Building the Movement for Women’s Equality.” FUND Awards grants to statewide programs that prepare girls for future economic well-being in three program tracks: Academics: Programs that help girls stay in school and pursue college and future career goals; build girls’ future financial and economic capacity. Entrepreneurship: Programs that teach and support girls in business planning and development. Public Education and Advocacy: Projects in which girls organize around specific issues that impact girls’ future economic well-being, such as sexual violence and body image. Highlights • Distributed $222,998 in grants to 13 new girlsBEST groups, and for the research report, Status of Girls in Minnesota. • Convened statewide grantees for “Girls in the Lead,” a day-long capacitybuilding and networking conference in partnership with Dunwoody College of Technology. COLLABORATIVE FUNDING Establishes partnerships within Minnesota’s foundation community dedicated to social change grantmaking. Highlights • Distributed $100,000 in grants to three nonprofits through the Democracy! Fund. Founded in 2004, the fund is run collaboratively by the Women’s Foundation, Headwaters Foundation for Justice, The Minneapolis Foundation, and Otto Bremer Foundation to support and advance the legal, non-partisan, political activity and effectiveness of nonprofit organizations (see pg. 13). • Sustained partnership in the Minnesota Dream Fund, a collaborative initiative to support efforts to ensure the equal educational achievement of women, people of color, and tribal communities. 2 YWCA Duluth's Girl Power! program (grantee, pg. 16) connects girls to activities and experiences intended to inspire learning and nurture curiosity as a means to future economic success. HOPES & DREAMS RESEARCH, EDUCATION AND PUBLIC POLICY Moves Minnesota forward by educating and influencing leaders, institutions and communities to invest in economic, political and social equality for women and girls. Highlights BUILDING WOMEN’S PHILANTHROPY Engaging diverse, new generations of Minnesota donors to practice social change philanthropy for women and girls. • Convened four UPStart lectures: - Patty Tanji, Pay Equity Coalition of Minnesota, “Strategies to Eliminate the Wage Gap” for Minnesota’s women & girls “That they believe in their own hopes and dreams and aspirations, tuning out all negativity and obstacles in their way.” – Shari, Willmar Highlights - Vednita Carter, Breaking Free, “Reframing the Issue: Prostitution is Systemic Violence Against Women” - Peggy Saika, Asian Americans/ Pacific Islanders in Philanthropy, “Asian American Women, Social Justice, and Philanthropy” - Sen. Patricia Torres Ray (D-District 62),“Elections Matter! Putting Women’s Issues Back on the Statewide Agenda” • Published two editorials in Star Tribune newspaper about the wage gap for women. • Published Equality Report focused on outcomes from the 2007 Legislature. • Worked on new research report, Status of Girls in Minnesota, in partnership with Institute for Women’s Policy Research. (Released in fiscal year 2009.) • Women’s Foundation chosen by the University of Minnesota’s Center for Women and Public Policy as the inaugural recipient of its 2007 Hubert H. Humphrey Institute of Public Affairs’ “Young Women’s Leadership Award.” • Women of African Descent Giving Circle distributed $12,175 in grants to three nonprofits (see pg. 17). • George Family Foundation and General Mills Foundation established the Reatha Clark King Fellowship at the Women’s Foundation to provide renewable, two-year fellowships to women of color in evaluation and research. • Welcomed 37 new members to the Leadership Circle and six new members to the Legacy Circle. • Established three new Donor Advised Funds (see pg. 17). • Established the Women of Influence Giving Circle (see pg. 17). • Engaged two Development Fellows, one Philanthropy Fellow (new Reatha Clark King Fellowship), and three Diversity Interns in Foundation work to create a pipeline of leadership opportunities for women of color in the philanthropic and nonprofit sectors (see pg. 23). FUNDING AREA 24% 3% 3% 11% 3% 11% 36% 5% 4% Statewide Southwest Southeast Other Northwest Northeast Metro Area East Central West Central FUNDING USE FUNDING BY CORNERSTONE Planning 4% General Operating 17 % Expanding Women’s Political Representation 11% Advancing Women’s Safety and Security 19% Promoting Women’s Human Rights 6% Guaranteeing Women’s Health and Reproductive Rights 11% Program 79% Creating Economic Justice for Women 53% Mujeres Unidas of the Red River Valley (grantee, pg. 5) seeks to strengthen the voices of Latina women and girls to create positive change in the Fargo-Moorhead area. 3 SOCIAL CHANGE FUND CORNERSTONE: ECONOMIC JUSTICE OUR VISION: In the future, women will thrive economically. Communities will benefit when women – as a result of education, employment opportunities, and economic development – make poverty history. In Minnesota, the road to economic equality for women has been anything but a smooth path. Today, women across the state’s 87 counties continue to make an average of $0.73 to every dollar made by a man for comparable work. So it’s no wonder in Minnesota that female-headed families with children make up the largest share of those in poverty. Across the nation, the story is much the same. Women continue to represent a disproportionate (more than 64 percent) share of minimum wage earners – and an even more disproportionate 40 percent are women of color. So why the persistent wage gap? Economists give three reasons: One-third is due to differences in skills and education; another third is because women tend to cluster in 4 Creating Economic Justice for Women low-paying jobs; and the final third is "unexplainable." But no matter how you quantify it, racism, sexism and poverty – across all races and ethnicities – continue to hold women at the bottom of the economic, political and social ladder. This is a powerful call-toaction for our grantees, working within their communities to replace these “-isms” with viable solutions towards lasting social change. In fiscal year 2008, the Women’s Foundation distributed $63,000 in grants to four nonprofit organizations working to level the economic playing field for women and girls in Minnesota. Women’s Foundation grantee, WomenVenture (St. Paul), seeks to redefine and reframe women’s access to and opportunities for success in higher paying, nontraditional jobs. The group builds strategies that focus on improving job placement in three industry sectors where women comprise less than 25 percent: construction; science, engineering and technology; and energy process. GROWING SOCIAL CHANGE Indicators of Success enable us to evaluate Social Change Fund grants. Examples of social change that FY08 grantees measured: • Effectiveness of models to achieve the collective economic power of immigrant and refugee women through enhanced business knowledge and entrepreneurial skills. • Degree to which strategies to advance women’s access to nontraditional careers were effective in improving job placement and long-term success. • Effectiveness of program strategies to identify, test and disseminate new key messages to change the public conversation about teen families to be better informed and more positive and supportive. • Numbers of Latina women and girls achieving full and equal access to educational and employment opportunities in the Red River Valley area in west central Minnesota. Grantee Partners Aishah Center for Women | $20,000 (Minneapolis) To empower immigrant and refugee women by developing models to achieve collective economic power through the integration of Western and culturally specific business practices. Minnesota Organization on Adolescent Pregnancy & Parenting | $10,000 (Minneapolis) To support the Promoting Success Among Teen Parents Initiative to reframe public understanding about teen families, train state advocates, and advance work to promote success among teen parents. WomenVenture | $15,000 (St. Paul) To support the Sector Project for Women program to improve women’s access to and opportunities for success through higher paying, nontraditional jobs. Photo: Dawn Villella Mujeres Unidas of the Red River Valley | $18,000 (Moorhead) To challenge the educational systems to increase the economic success of Latinas in the Red River Valley, and to teach Latina women and girls about the empowering role education plays in increasing economic success and reducing domestic violence. Warleah Teamah, pictured with her son Knowledge, has benefited from participation in programs offered through WomenVenture, a Women’s Foundation grantee. 5 SOCIAL CHANGE FUND CORNERSTONE: Advancing Women’s Safety & Security SAFETY & OUR VISION: We aspire to a day when women experience the world as a place of safety, and our media, policy makers, families and popular culture reject violence against them. SECURITY The road to equality for far too many women and girls in Minnesota is marred with the ravages of physical or sexual abuse. Safety and security for these victims is virtually nonexistent, and the outcomes include physical and emotional damage, homelessness, prostitution, human trafficking, and even death. According to the Minnesota Coalition for Battered Women, at least 22 women were murdered by an intimate partner or family member in 2007. And of that number, 73 percent took place in the Twin Cities and 27 percent in greater Minnesota. Poverty and violence against women often go hand-in-hand. In fact, women’s shelter providers in the economically depressed Iron Range region of north central Minnesota report a staggering 34 percent increase in services over the past two years. 6 Statistically, women of color are, quite literally, hit the hardest by violence. Of all races and ethnicities, Native American women and girls suffer from the highest rate of domestic violence in the nation, and statistically more often at the hands of non-Native perpetrators. But in the face of such odds, the Women’s Foundation and grantee partners are creating solutions that matter. In fiscal year 2008, the Foundation awarded $106,000 in grants to six nonprofits working to end violence against women. The Minnesota Indian Women’s Sexual Assault Coalition (St. Paul), a Women’s Foundation grantee, seeks to redefine and reframe the issues of prostitution and human trafficking of American Indian and Alaskan Native women and girls in Minnesota. The group will interview, document and give voice to Native women and girls prostituted and trafficked in the state. This data will feed a research project the nonprofit hopes will lead to a culturally specific resource center for survivors. Minnesota Indian Women’s Sexual Assault Coalition (grantee) is one of 16 coalitions in the nation working to end sexual violence in tribal communities. GROWING SOCIAL CHANGE Indicators of Success enable us to evaluate Social Change Fund grants. Examples of social change that FY08 grantees measured: • Mobilization of the Latino community, led by Latinas, to end domestic violence. • Ways in which the dysfunctional cultural norms and gender inequality in the Asian American/Pacific Islander (AAPI) communities are challenged that decrease the number of runaways and violence against AAPI women and girls. • Increases in the number of immigrant women and women of color reporting domestic violence to better educated, culturally sensitive government agencies. • Degree to which local criminal justice and judicial systems are better prepared to assist women of color and immigrant women in domestic abuse situations through cultural and language interpretation services. Grantee Partners Asian Media Access | $19,000 (Minneapolis) To support the Ramen Ya project to create a world of safety, equality, and self-respect for Asian American and Pacific Islander girls, with a special emphasis on Hmong runaway and homeless girls (12-18) that have experienced sexual violence. Casa de Esperanza | $15,000 (St. Paul) To develop, implement, test and document a new Latina Advocacy Framework for mainstream organizations to use to provide resources and support for battered Latina women. Minnesota Indian Women’s Resource Center | $15,000 (Minneapolis) For general operating support. The nonprofit advocates for culturally appropriate social services for Native American women and families. Minnesota Indian Women’s Sexual Assault Coalition | $19,000 (St. Paul) To create a database of interviews and documentation about American Indian and Alaskan Native women and youth being trafficked and prostituted in Minnesota; provide community education and outreach to organizations that serve Native women and youth; and identify and define the relationship between state, federal and tribal governments related to survivors’ legal issues. WATCH (grantee) works to improve the way the courts in Hennepin County handle cases of violence against women and children. Pangea World Theater | $19,000 (Minneapolis) For the Journey to Safety theater production to artistically and emotionally explore the obstacles battered immigrant women and women of color encounter when seeking help from government agencies and their communities. WATCH | $15,000 (Minneapolis) To provide leadership in monitoring the criminal justice system’s response to violence against women and children, including expansion of their role in promoting court monitoring, nationwide. 7 SOCIAL CHANGE FUND CORNERSTONE: Guaranteeing Women’s Health & Reproductive Rights HEALTH & REPRODUCTIVE RIGHTS OUR VISION: We envision a time when all women in Minnesota will have local, legal, affordable, safe and comprehensive health care. The road to women’s access to comprehensive health and reproductive services has been a volatile and uncertain one to navigate. Persistent attacks to these freedoms continues to grab headlines in the United States and polarize the populace. The impacts of such threats to women’s health and reproductive freedoms, though, are not restricted to North America, but of greater global concern. According to the United Nations’ UN Population Fund, reproductive health and gender equality are the keys to ending poverty. At the Women's Foundation, we believe that when women thrive, families and communities thrive. Simply put, when a woman has access to healthcare, her children are healthier. When she has a living-wage job, her children are lifted out of poverty. And when she has access to prevention 8 services and nutritious food, her children will break out of the cycle of childhood obesity and diabetes. GROWING SOCIAL CHANGE Together with grantees, the Women’s Foundation is working to make comprehensive health and reproductive care available to all women and girls. In fiscal year 2008, we awarded $62,000 to five nonprofits working to guarantee women’s health and reproductive rights. Indicators of Success enable us to evaluate Social Change Fund grants. Examples of social change that FY08 grantees measured: East Hillside Patch (Duluth), a Women’s Foundation grantee, understands that gaining a critical mass of support in the community is key to transforming the current health care system from one that discriminates against low-income women to one that welcomes and supports them. Through its Health Equity Project, the nonprofit trains low-income women in social change organizing, engaging and empowering them to directly affect their own future health and well-being. • Degree to which community engagement and coalitions safeguard reproductive freedoms and advance women’s health policies at the Minnesota Legislature. • Increases in the number of African American women advocating for women’s health and mobilizing other women and the larger community to action. • Level of grassroots support and public mobilization for women’s reproductive health and rights. • Legislative and public policy impacts to women’s health and reproductive rights in rural communities in northern Minnesota resulting from targeted education and lobbying presence at the state capitol. Women’s Health Center of Duluth (grantee) keeps rural women's health and reproductive rights in focus at the Minnesota Legislature. Grantee Partners East Hillside Patch | $15,000 (Duluth) To support the Health Equity Project to engage and train low-income women in social justice organizing as a way to educate and engage the community in transforming the local health care system. Kwanzaa Community Church | $14,000 (Minneapolis) To provide community-organizing training through the Wellness Support Group Project to empower women and teen girls to analyze and exert their collective power around issues of disparities in health care for the poor and the disproportionate affect of HIV/AIDS on African American women and girls of North Minneapolis. Midwest Health Center for Women | $15,000 (Minneapolis) To support the Reproductive Health Policy & Advocacy Program to drive legislative initiatives to protect and promote women’s health and reproductive freedoms at all levels of state government. Midwest Health Center for Women (grantee) is dedicated to the belief that reproductive choice is vital for the health and well-being of women. Planned Parenthood of Minnesota - South Dakota | $5,000 (St. Paul) To support the Patient Engagement Network program to educate and mobilize patients about current state legislation, and encourage women to become more involved in policies that affect their healthcare and reproductive rights. Women’s Health Center of Duluth | $13,000 (Duluth) To influence legislation and public policy pertaining to reproductive rights, with special focus on rural communities in northern Minnesota. 9 SOCIAL CHANGE FUND CORNERSTONE: Promoting Women’s Human Rights HUMAN RIGHTS OUR VISION: We look forward to a day when women’s human rights and dignity are unquestioned, when women are free from discrimination and able to act upon their dreams. It can be said that the road to equality for women got a boost on December, 10, 1948, when the United Nations adopted and proclaimed the landmark Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Truly a remarkable document, its 30 articles were created with the human family in mind, regardless of difference. In our state, the Minnesota Human Rights Act declares freedom from discrimination on the basis of “…race, color, creed, religion, national origin, sex, marital status, disability, status with regard to public assistance, sexual orientation, and age” as the key underpinning for all public policy. So with all of these significant societal declarations in place, why are women around the globe still fighting for basic human rights? Sexism, racism, heterosexism, classism, ableism and ageism continue to keep women from reaching their full economic, political and social potential. Whether its poverty, immigrant rights violations, violence, lack of full and equal access to quality education, health and child care, 10 or persistent legislative threats to the rights of LGBT people, when women are denied basic human rights, the entire community suffers. As champions of social change, the Women’s Foundation and grantee partners are determined to create a Minnesota where women and girls are valued, free from discrimination, and able to act upon their dreams. To this end, we awarded $25,000 in grants to two nonprofits promoting women’s human rights in fiscal year 2008. Waite House (Minneapolis), a Women’s Foundation grantee, seeks to engage and build the leadership skills of Latina women in the community through its Mujeres en Liderazgo internship program. The program trains Latinas to affect change in their personal life and educate the larger community about the contextualized impact of globalization and immigration on Latina women. Waite House also offers women a series of workshops on leadership, personal and professional development, immigration, and globalization in the feminist context. GROWING SOCIAL CHANGE Indicators of Success enable us to evaluate Social Change Fund grants. Examples of social change that FY08 grantees measured: • Greater contextualized understanding in both the immigrant and non-immigrant community of the impact of globalization on immigration for Latina women. • Increases in number of Latinas in positions of leadership within the community and who feel they have the authority to affect change in their personal life and society. • Increased recognition of international evangelical (Christian) scholars on women’s equality in the church and home. • Increases in the number of women pastors, overseers, and elders serving in evangelical churches and ministries. Grantee Partners Christians for Biblical Equality | $10,000 (Minneapolis) To support outreach and educational efforts to conservative evangelicals about the Bible’s support of equality and justice for women, and that traditional use of the Bible to subordinate women to male authority are misguided. Waite House | $15,000 (Minneapolis) To support Mujeres en Liderazgo, an internship-leadership development program that builds upon the strengths and assets of women participants at Waite House through surveys, leadership and professional development workshops, and community presentation opportunities. Waite House (grantee) is one of six neighborhood centers of Pillsbury United Communities, a Minneapolis-based nonprofit recognized for its innovative approaches and programs that address the complex causes and effects of social and economic inequalities in the community. 11 SOCIAL CHANGE FUND CORNERSTONE: Expanding Women’s Political Representation POLITICAL REPRESENTATION OUR VISION: Women will enjoy equal influence at all levels of government, bringing new perspectives and expertise that advance equality and justice. Obstacles, including sexism and racism, continue to impede the road to political equality for women around the world. Yet according to the United Nations, it is in developing countries and those with emerging democracies – rather than developed nations or longestablished democracies, like the United States – where women are making the greatest strides in political representation. We know that when women make up 40 percent of a political body, they achieve the critical mass necessary to impact and change the agenda. And with an historic high of 34.8 percent or 70 women now serving in the Minnesota Legislature, parity seems within reach. There is danger in complacency, however. Since the 2007 elections, there is a common misperception that women now saturate every level of political leadership in the United States. But the truth is that we rank 67th out of 195 countries in the world in terms of women's political representation. And beyond the Legislature here in Minnesota, women remain underrepresented in elected positions in local government. While its promising that 845 (37.6 percent)of the 12 state’s 2,248 public school board members are women, women make up only 999 (28.1 percent) of the state’s 3,554 city council members, 113 (13.2 percent) of its 854 mayors, and 52 (11.4 percent) of its 457 county commissioners. Moreover, Minnesota has yet to elect a woman governor, and no woman of color has ever served in its congressional delegation or in a statewide elected office. We can, and must, do better. GROWING SOCIAL CHANGE Indicators of Success enable us to evaluate Social Change Fund grants. Examples of social change that FY08 grantees measured: • Increases in the number of rural women in northeastern Minnesota engaged in programs to build women’s political leadership and representation, with particular focus on Native American women and girls. In fiscal year 2008, the Women’s Foundation awarded $57,000 in funding to four nonprofits working to expand women’s political representation across the state. • Increased representation of Native American and Alaskan Native women leaders in government to address domestic violence and human trafficking of Native women and girls. Northeast Minnesota Rural Women’s Leadership Project (Eveleth), a Women’s Foundation grantee, is affecting social change by employing strategies to challenge the sexism, racism and other barriers that prevent rural women from seeking elected office in northeastern Minnesota. And in partnership with The White House Project’s Go Run training in the Iron Range last spring, the nonprofit provided support and networking for participants, with special outreach to Native American women and girls. • Increases in the number of low-income women and women of color who run for elected office. Tri-College NEW Leadership Development Institute (grantee) teaches participants to be effective public advocates and community organizers. • Increases in the number of women running for elected office in Minnesota. Grantee Partners Northeast Minnesota Rural Women’s Leadership Project | $20,000 (Eveleth) To provide resources and support to women in northeastern Minnesota to achieve political leadership, and leadership mentors to area girls, with special outreach to Native American women and girls. Tri-College NEW Leadership Development Institute | $7,000 (Moorhead) To support annual five-day residency conference to engage women in developing leadership skills in community organizing and running for elected office. University of Minnesota’s Center on Women and Public Policy | $15,000 (Minneapolis) To reduce or eliminate the gender gap through analysis of existing political leadership training and recruitment programs, and to identify the most effective paths to elective office for women. Wellstone Action Fund – Sheila Wellstone Institute | $15,000 (St. Paul) To create and implement a voter engagement plan for survivors of Minnesota's 27 battered women's shelter programs, and build the political power within the battered women's movement through training workshops at Camp Sheila Wellstone. Liz Kuoppala (far right) of the Northeast Minnesota Rural Women's Leadership Project (grantee) helped bring several Minnesota leaders to the Iron Range Go Run training last spring, including (l-r) Virginia City Councilwoman Nevada Littlewolf, State Sen. Becky Lourey (D-District 8), and Ann Bancroft, Arctic explorer and Ann Bancroft Foundation founder and president. Democracy! Fund In fiscal year 2008, this collaborative fund of the Women’s Foundation, Headwaters Foundation for Justice, Otto Bremer Foundation, and The Minneapolis Foundation awarded $100,000 in grants to three nonprofits to support and advance the legal, nonpartisan political activity and effectiveness of nonprofits. All Parks Alliance for Change $33,333 Joint Religious Legislative Coalition $33,333 People Escaping Poverty Project $33,333 13 girls Building Economic Success Together FUND “The girlsBEST program really had an impact on my life. If I had never participated, I would never have become the person that I am today. I have learned to become a better person, a better public speaker. I have learned about becoming economically self-sufficient.” - girlsBEST Fund participant We know that the foundations of women’s economic stability and independence, academic and career opportunity, and physical and emotional well-being are established when they are girls. So…what does a healthy girl look like? She is someone who believes in herself and is secure in her talents and abilities. She respects herself and her body. She is ready to pursue her hopes and dreams and is confident she will reach them. This girl will become a resilient woman, able to meet life’s challenges head-on and ready for the opportunities that come her way. This vision for girls is at the heart of the girlsBEST (girls Building Economic Success Together) Fund. Since 2001, girlsBEST has funded programs in Minnesota that prepare girls for future economic success. And to address racial, economic and other disparities, we include critical outreach to underserved, underrepresented girls. The Fund, now permanently endowed, is the first of its kind in Minnesota, and the nation. In fiscal year 2008, we awarded $162,998 in grants to 13 nonprofits across the state that are using innovative strategies to build girls’ future economic success and well-being. 14 KFAI, Fresh Air, Inc. (grantee) is creating the next generation of diverse female leadership in public broadcasting through its project,"Youth News Initiative: Girls of Color Voicing Their Choice." In October 2007, we published an independent evaluation of the first five years of girlsBEST that confirmed the program’s success. The findings? Participation in girlsBEST raised girls’ grades, self-esteem, leadership ability, and expectations for the future. Also last year, an additional $60,000 in grants went toward publication of the Foundation’s latest research report, Status of Girls in Minnesota (released in fiscal year 2009). In partnership with the Institute for Women’s Policy Research (Washington, D.C.), the report is intended as a tool for advocates, researchers, and policy makers to develop interventions that will ensure girls’ economic, political and social equality. GROWING SOCIAL CHANGE Annually, the Women’s Foundation measures the progress of girlsBEST Fund programming against the following Indicators of Success: • Increase the readiness for individual girls to achieve economic well-being. • Create supportive environments that will lead to increased readiness of girls to achieve economic well-being. • Elevate public recognition of the value of women and girls to society and decrease sexist attitudes. • Build activism throughout Minnesota on behalf of girls’ economic well-being. • Invest girlsBEST grant dollars in underserved and underrepresented communities throughout Minnesota. Grantee Partners Centro, Inc. (Minneapolis) | $10,000 Program Track: Entrepreneurial Outcome: Increased readiness to achieve economic success. To support the Nican Tlaca Dance Academy, apprenticing Latina teens as dance instructors, developing their skills to claim and establish their own economic power. Division of Indian Work (Statewide) | $14,714 Program Track: Public Education and Advocacy Outcome: Increased public education, activism and advocacy. To support “Live It” Youth Advisory Council, convening American Indian teen girls from statewide reservations to participate in awareness and leadership training through the “Live It” Teen Pregnancy Prevention program. Girls in Action (Robbinsdale) | $10,000 Program Track: Academic Outcome: Increased public education activism and advocacy. To work with teen girls to decrease violence and increase academic engagement, focusing on personal power, leadership, service-learning, and career coaching. Girl Scouts of Minnesota and Wisconsin River Valleys (Minneapolis) | $10,000 Program Track: Academic Outcome: Increased readiness to achieve economic success. To work with African American girls on financial literacy, leadership skills, postsecondary educational options, and to build girls’ knowledge of their cultural heritage. Through the power of dance, Latina teens flourish at Centro's Nican Tlaca Dance Academy (grantee). Independent Lifestyles, Inc. (St. Cloud) | $14,714 Program Track: Academic Outcome: Increased readiness to achieve economic success. To support GIRLS program, providing skills training, self-advocacy and mentoring for teen girls with disabilities. In partnership with St. Cloud public schools. Liberian Women’s Initiatives of Minnesota (Brooklyn Park) | $10,000 Program Track: Academic Outcome: Increased readiness to achieve economic success. To support College Bound, pairing teen Liberian girls with professional Liberian women to mentor and encourage college enrollment, while maintaining cultural values. KFAI, Fresh Air, Inc. (Minneapolis) | $10,000 Program Track: Academic Outcome: Increased readiness to achieve economic success. To support Youth News Initiative: Girls of Color Voicing Their Choice, creating the next generation of diverse female leadership in public broadcasting through training and mentoring. - girlsBEST cont., next page. 15 girlsBEST Grantee Partners | cont. Pearl Crisis Center (Milaca) | $14,714 Program Track: Public Education and Advocacy Outcome: Increased public education, activism and advocacy. To support TADA (Teens Against Dating Abuse), a girl-led program to educate teen girls in the Milaca area about teen dating violence and impacts on future economic stability. The Science Center at Maltby Nature Preserve (Randolph) | $14,714 Program Track: Academic Outcome: Increased readiness to achieve economic success. To create program engaging girls (ages 10-18) in authentic science. Professional female scientists serve as mentors as girls develop social, leadership and teamwork skills. In partnership with Girl Scout Council of Cannon Valley. 16 Western Community Action (Marshall) | $14,714 Program Track: Academic Outcome: Increased readiness to achieve economic success. To support Girls Take the Lead (Marshall) and G-Girls (Windom) to develop girls’ financial empowerment, leadership and self-esteem. YouthCARE (Minneapolis) | $10,000 Program Track: Academic Outcome: Increased readiness to achieve economic success. To support Young Women’s Mentoring Program, training young women from lowincome communities to be mentors and activity leaders for programming for young girls. WINDOW (Hinckley) | $14,714 Program Track: Public Education and Advocacy Outcome: Increased readiness to achieve economic success. To support Open Window, providing a safe environment for girls (ages 10-18) to address domestic violence and its effects on individual economic well-being. YWCA Duluth (Duluth) | $14,714 Program Track: Academic Outcome: Increased readiness to achieve economic success. To support Girl Power!, providing experiential economic empowerment programming for underserved girls in Duluth (ages 9-15). The mission of the Science Center at Maltby Nature Preserve (grantee) is to nurture curiosity, stimulate imagination, and inspire the quest for knowledge through scientific inquiry. DONOR ADVISED FUNDS | GIVING CIRCLES In fiscal year 2008, charitable gifts from Donor Advised Funds and Giving Circles held at the Women’s Foundation helped move economic, political and social equality forward for women and girls in Minnesota and across the nation. DONOR ADVISED FUNDS ACORN FUND | N. Jeanne Burns Pro-Choice Resources (Minneapolis), $5,000 ARTEMIS FUND | Blanche & Thane Hawkins, Lisa Hawklove Dads and Daughters (Duluth), $500 Camp Unistar (Cass Lake), $1,000 Casa de Esperanza (St. Paul), $1,000 Changemakers (San Francisco), $25,000 Corcoran Neighborhood Organization (Minneapolis), $1,000 Dads and Daughters (Duluth), $50,000 Haymarket People’s Fund (Boston), $10,000 FairVote Minnesota (Minneapolis), $1,000 Mano a Mano Medical Resources (Mendota Heights), $1,000 Planned Parenthood of Minnesota-South Dakota (St. Paul), $500 Mind on the Media (Northfield), $25,000 The White House Project (Washington, D.C.), $7,000 Women’s Foundation of Minnesota, girlsBEST Fund (Minneapolis), $8,000 ASTIA FUND | Lee and John Roper-Batker DIANA AND ROBERT CARTER FAMILY FUND | Diana and Robert Carter Grand Central Charities (Wayzata), $25,000 Minnesota Public Radio (St. Paul), $1,000 Minnesota Women’s Consortium (St. Paul), $3,000 Mixed Blood Theater (Minneapolis), $2,000 Planned Parenthood of Minnesota-South Dakota (St. Paul), $1,000 Rainbow Families (Minneapolis), $25,000 Southern Poverty Law Center (Montgomery, AL), $1,000 Women’s Educational Media (San Francisco), $5,000 WOMEN OF AFRICAN DESCENT GIVING CIRCLE Coalition of African Women Rebuilding Our Communities (Minneapolis), $3,600 Kwanzaa Community Church (Minneapolis), $5,000 Zing! Foundation (Arlington, VA), $25,000 LEXI FUND | Lynne Hardey WOMEN OF INFLUENCE GIVING CIRCLE MEREDITH FUND | Kris Maritz Headwaters Foundation for Justice (Minneapolis), $1,000 Leadership Empowerment and Development Group (Minneapolis), $1,000 Midwest Health Center for Women (Minneapolis), $1,000 JAN MALCOLM/KRIS CARLTON FUND | Jan Malcolm, Kris Carlton Metropolitan Consortium of Community Developers (Minneapolis), $20,000 The Tandem Project (Minneapolis), $500 GIVING CIRCLES Minnesota International Center for Traditional Childbearing (Minneapolis), $3,575 HEARTLIGHT FUND | Nancy Ward JANET B. WATSON FUND | Janet B. Watson THEA MILLER WECK & WILLA WECK SANBORN FUND | Lauren Weck Midwest Health Center for Women (Minneapolis), $5,000 Pro-Choice Resources (Minneapolis), $15,000 Wellstone Action! (St. Paul), $40,000 Chicago Center for Jewish Genetic Disorders (Chicago), $500 SCHARLEMANN/BAKER FUND | Romaine Scharlemann, Richard Baker Parents United for Public Schools (St. Paul), $5,000 Women’s Initiative for Self-Empowerment (St. Paul), $5,000 Beth el Synagogue (St. Louis Park), $1,744 SALLY JOHNSON AND KAY KRAMER FUND | Sally Johnson, Kay Kramer WOMEN’S REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH FUND | Kathryn Glessing Twin Cities Public Television (St. Paul), $1,000 HARRIS FAMILY FUND | Kay and Martin Harris ROBERT FINNEY TECHNOLOGY FUND | Karen Finney, Kathryn Finney Mombo Moms (Minneapolis), $1,000 CONCOLE FUND | Barbara Smith Reis EMPOWERING PROGRESS FUND | Anonymous RENOTA FUND | Anonymous Southside Family School (Minneapolis), $1,000 Twin Cities Gay Men’s Chorus (Minneapolis), $500 KIM LUND FUND | Kim Lund Women Candidate Development Coalition (St. Paul), $500 aMAZE (Minneapolis), $25,000 YMCA Camp Widjiwagan (Ely), $1,000 HOPES & DREAMS for Minnesota’s women & girls “That more girls and girls of color pursue careers in technology and become the next generation of space explorers.” – Earle, Rochester 17 DONOR PARTNERS April 1, 2007 - March 31, 2008 We thank the following donors for their partnership in our work. $1,000,000 + Mary Lee Dayton Barbara Forster and Larry Hendrickson Alida R. Messinger $500,000-$999,999 The Bush Foundation Beverly N. Grossman Kim Lund Janet B. Watson Margaret and Angus Wurtele Foundation $250,000-$499,999 Otto Bremer Foundation Blanche and Thane Hawkins Carol and Bud Hayden W.K. Kellogg Foundation Kris Maritz Pohlad Family Foundation Valerie and Ed Spencer $50,000-$249,999 Anonymous (2) Hugh J. Andersen Foundation Blandin Foundation N. Jeanne Burns and Elizabeth A. Oppenheimer Patrick and Aimee Butler Family Foundation Charlson Foundation Julianne Corty Sherry Ann and Edward Dayton Wendy and Doug Dayton General Mills Foundation The George Family Foundation Polly Grose Joan Higinbotham Jan Malcolm and Kristen Carlton Peter Maritz Joyce H. and Richard McFarland The Minneapolis Foundation Susan and William Sands Harriet and Edson Spencer Mary W. Vaughan Joanne and Phil Von Blon $10,000-$49,999 Anonymous Ameriprise Financial Philanthropic Program Sally A. Anson Baskin Family Foundation Grayce Belvedere Young and Daniel Young Best Buy Co., Inc. Marney B. Brooks Caliber Foundation N. Judge and Reatha Clark King Family Fund of the Minneapolis Foundation Patrice D. Cooper Foundation Sage and John Cowles Andrew Duff Marion Etzwiler Karen Finney General Mills, Inc. Mr. and Mrs. James Gesell Elizabeth C. Grant Harris Family Fund Susan Haugerud Piper Jaffray Sharon D. James Kay Kramer and Sally Johnson Krisbin Foundation Karen Leonard Janet C. Leslie Oak Grove Foundation William D. Radichel Foundation Jane Ransom Reis Family Gift Fund of the Fidelity Charitable Gift Fund Lee and John Roper-Batker Romaine Scharlemann and Richard Baker Nancy Slaughter Emily Anne Tuttle Nancy Ward Terry Williams and Susan Cogger Penny and Mike Winton (Mike) Women's Funding Network $1,000-$9,999 The Allegro Fund Account B of The Saint Paul Foundation Sarah Andersen and Christopher Hayner Sally Anaya-Boyer Marion H. Andrus Endowment Fund MWF of Minneapolis Foundation Margaret and DeWalt H. Ankeny, Jr. Connie Archbald Katherine Austin Mahle Jean Backlund Connie Barry Shayna Berkowitz and Phyllis Wiener BlasegHansen Susan Boren Brown Family Foundation Sheila Carrington Diana and Robert Carter C.H. Robinson Foundation Erin Ceynar and Kevin Dalager College of St. Catherine Brenda and Jim Coulter Amy and Dave Cram Helwich Lesley Crosby Mary Lou Dasburg Judy Dayton Delta Dental Charles M. Denny, Jr. Karen Diver and Arnold Selnes Karla Ekdahl and Peter Hutchinson Sarah Farley and Betty Tisel Kathryn Finney Charlotte Flowers Connie Foote Leslie Frecon Kay Fredericks Heidi Gesell and John Edgerton III GMAC Rescap Janel Goff Goff Group Sheila and Tim Gothmann Joanne Green Susan Hill Gross Nancy Gruver and Joe Kelly Elizabeth Hannaford Mark and Kate Hanson Lynne Hardey Duchess Harris Gayle Hayhurst Hazelden Mary Ellen Hennen Jeffrey Slocum & Associates, Inc. Carol McGee Johnson Katharine Kelly KeyStone Search Laura Kinkead and Richard Neuner KLB Financial Mary Kloehn Ruth Lane Little & Company Harriet Ludwick Prisca and George Lupambo Sida Ly-Xiong Dusty and George Mairs Siri and Bob Marshall Catherine McBride McElrath Foundation Katherine and Timothy McGinley Sandra Morris Joan Moser Frances Naftalin Robin Nelson Gail Nordhaus April Oertwig Ellen Phelps Patricia Ploetz Polish Your Star, LLC Prouty Project Joyce Prudden and Michael Shoop RBC Dain Rauscher RBC Dain Rauscher Foundation Teri and Paul Richardson Roszak Financial, PLLC Ann Ryan Terry Saario and Leland Lynch Pat Samuel Patricia Bratnober Saunders Anna Schaefer Jean Schlemmer Dorothy Skobba Stablish Foundation State Farm Insurance Mrs. Irene Steiner Evelyn Swenson Thomson West Thrivent Financial for Lutherans Karen Trouba U.S. Trust Company Maxine Wallin Wenda Weekes Moore Pamela Weisdorf Wells Fargo Insurance Services Mary Wong $500-$999 Anonymous 3M for Womens Advisory Committee Jane Blanch BlueCross BlueShield of Minnesota Kim Borton Business and Professional Women's Club of Minneapolis Cincinnatus Inc. Gloria Contreras Edin Pam Elliott Franklin Bank Paula Gottschalk Debra Greer Kao Ly Ilean Her Diane and John Herman HLB Tautges Redpath, Ltd. Michele Jensrud Art and Martha Kaemmer Susan Kinder and David Vealitzek Littler Mendelson Foundation, Inc. Peggy Lucas Jennifer Martin Maren Milbert Pamela Moore Martha and Jonathan Morgan Oppenheimer, Wolff & Donnelly LLP Carolyn and Robert Papke Terese Pritschet Sharon Rozzi S&T Office Products, INC. Susan Sanger Erika Shatz and Roxanne Ornelas Ginger Sisco Jeffrey and Helene Slocum Jean Thomson Edie Thorpe Donna Thorud Jane Treston Carol and Lynn Truesdell Ruth Usem Sharon Van De North and Lee Knight Whitney Foundation Jessica Wilson Deceased 18 HOPES & DREAMS $100 -$499 Anonymous (1) Mary Adamski Alexander Design Group, Inc. Nancy Alsop Wendy Amundson Anne and Michael Andreasen Sandra Antonelli Connie Ardin John and Rebecca Arenivar Deb Bahr-Helgen and Lee Helgen Georgia Bailey Beverly Balos and Mary Louise Fellows Ann Bancroft Deborah Bancroft Margaret Barrett Kathleen Baczko Jasmine Beach-Ferrara Carol and Tom Beech Christine Belfrey Johnson Gail Belvedere Ruth Ann Benson Dan Bergeron Denise Bilbao Michael and Sally Bosanko Priscilla Braun Kelly Bretz Briggs and Morgan Ronnie Brooks Debbie Brown Elizabeth C. Bryan Sarah Bryant Gayle Burdick Jo Ann Buysse Maura Cahill Nancy Cameron and Edward Seifert Debra and James Campbell Karlyn Kohrs Campbell Alan Carlson Catherine Carlson Lois Carlson Alexina Chai Karen Chandler Lillian Clark Sheba Aldridge Coffey Community Shares Minnesota Yvonne Condell Janet Conn Susan Crawford Marilyn Cuneo Toni D'Eramo Terrell Daniels Cynthia Daube Mary Davidson Mesha Davis Mary H. Dayton Karen Desnick Glenna Dibrell Eugenia Dixon Linda Donaldson Mary-Carolyn Dorfman Mary Loomis Dorn Sharon Drews Marta Drury Duke Financial Group, Inc. Marilynn Dunbar Maryann and Robert Eliason Linda Engberg Sara Evans Wendy Evans Linda Ewing Gloria Faivre Kathleen and Bill Farley Fast Print Amy Ford Adnersen Polly Franchot Sharon Frank Nicole Fredricks Bobbie Fredsall Angela Freeman Carol Freeman Nancy Fulton Patricia Gaarder Diana Gabriel Jane Galbraith Christine Galloway Susan Gebelein Cathy and Rick Giertsen Kathleen Gill Francie Glickman Carter Graham Mary Griesedieck Katherine Hadley and Cynthia Fay Jocey Hale Janice Hammond Mary Handke Teresa A. Hanratty and Luz Maria Davis Stephanie Hansen Sunny Sundal Hansen Mary Beth Hanson Miriam Hanson Alfred and Ingrid Lenz Harrison Ellen Hatfield Alice Hawks Karen Hawley and Charlaine Tolkien Lora Hedin Marge Helmer Elayne Hengler Phillip Henoch Saanii Hernandez-Mohr Mary Kay Hicks Nell Hillsley Cecily Hines Mollie Hoben Anne Hodgson Margaret Holahan Kristin and Thomas Holtz Ruth Howe Kathryn Hoy Teresa Hudoba Dee Dee Hull Patricia Hummel and Richard Mammem Sally Hwang Qamar Ibrahim Jeff Coate and Sylvie Martinez Elizabeth Jackson Vanessa Jacobsohn Suzanne James Susan Jaqua Wayne Jennings Lois Jenson Wendy Jerome Linda Jirovec Sandra Johnson Ruth Jones Sally Jorgensen Phyllis and Donald Kahn Gretchen Kelly Laurie Kienke Wendy Klager Kristine Kniefel Linda Krach Dianna Krogstad Sharon Krumme Teresa Kruse Maureen Kucera-Walsh Carolyn and Valerian Kuechle Jean Kummerow Marleen and Richard Kurschner Susan Lacek Janis Lane-Ewart Marjorie Larson Eleanor Layton Susan Lenfestey Gwen Lerner Beryl Levine Virginia Levy Theresa Lewis Llewellyn Linde Georgia Lindeke Alice Lloyd and Jeff Crawford Marjorie Loeffler Ann Longfellow Jessica Looman Carol Ann Lowinske Kristen Lund Marilyn Maloney Phyllis Maritz Katie McElrath Heather McKay Judith McKloskey Deborah McKnight Mary McMillan Mary McNellis Helen McNulty Michele McRae Susan Melrose Jeri Meola Messerli & Kramer Foundation Camille Meyer Jill Meyer and Louise Hotka Alice Mikel Minesota Women in Marketing and Communication Minnesota Women in Networking Lois and Keichi Mizuno Ann Moll David Moore LaVonne Moore Pat Moore Diane Morehouse Louise Morgan Bonnie Mulligan Margaret Murphy Karla Myers Naviate Forward, Inc. Kimberly Nelson for Minnesota’s women & girls “That they will have full and equal rights to make every dream they have come true.” – Terra, Twin Cities Kristen Nelson Lynn Ingrid Nelson Glen and Marilyn Nelson Katherine Nevins Ann Newhall and Rick Schleuss Lynn Newman Kate Nott Ocel, Heimer & Associates, Ltd. Tracey O'Neill Ruzicka Linda Ojala Cathryn Olson Elizabeth Olson Tonja Orr Melanie Ounsworth and Shirley Shimota PCL Construction Services, Inc. Heidi Peterson Katie Pierson Sally Pillsbury Sheila Plunkett Christina Porter Catherine Przybylski Kathryn Purcell Marni Radcliffe Susan and Gary Rappaport Barbara Reichter Susan and Charles Reinhart Susan Richey Megan Roach Deborah Roesler and John Kephart Andrea and James Rubenstein Trisha Rutter Barbara W. and Roy H. Saigo Stephanie Sarantopoulos M. Patricia Schaffer and David Weissbrodt Kari Schlachtenhaufen Barbara Schubring and Molly Morton Christine Schulze Judy Schumacher MaryFrances Schurb Perry Sheffield Catherine Shreves Carolyn Shrewsbury Sara Spiess The Spiller L'Chaim Fund Caroline Stacey Susan Stacey 19 HOPES & DREAMS for Minnesota’s women & girls “That they are no longer defined by the media or by history, but by the legacy they leave behind.” – Jake, Grand Rapids Reginald Stanley Jo-Anne Stately Susan and John Stedman Kathy Stennes Marcia Stephens Judith Strong Mary Tambornino Michelle Theis Irma Thies Mary Ida Thomson Deborah Thorp Peter Tiffin Marlo Turcotte Mary Udseth Mary Van Evera Betsy Vinz Phyllis Wagner Heidi Walsh Victoria Wang Naomi Warshawsky Ruth and David Waterbury Kathleen Wedl Wendy Wehr Susan Weinberg Allison Welch Karin and David Wendt Lisa Wersal Beverly Wexler Fink Kathryn Wilson Winnidell Wilson Molly Woehrlin Sara and Doug Wolff Gail and Peter Wollan Elizabeth Wray $1-$99 Maria Aagesen-Reznecheck Abeo Consulting Group, LLC Gail Ahern Veronica Ahern Rhonda Ailts Betty Albitz Lisa Albrecht and Pat Rouse Kathryn Alexander Al Franken for Senate Lori Allen Diane Anderson Donna Anderson Gary Anderson Janice and Lawrence Anderson Joyce Anderson Karla Anderson 20 Julie Andrus Jo Ann Augdahl Alison Baker Joan Banashek Otto Bang Linda Bannigan Jodi Bantley Barbara Bassett Nell Batker Marion Bauer Walter and Louise Bauer Sally Baumgartner Caroline Beckman Tracy Belanger Barbara Belew Shawna Benson Wendy Blomseth Patricia Bloodgood Elizabeth Blue Body One Wellness, LLC Booth Law, LLC Lisa Borelli Margaret Bosshardt Susan Boutwell Sharon Bowman Sarah Bratnober Virginia and Rawley Brodeen Joanna Brofman Linda Brooks Panone Kate Brown Eileen Bujold Kathleen Burek Regina Burkhart Joy Bussert Leslie Butler Cynthia Cairney Mary and Charles Carlsen Constance Carlson Karen Carlson Linda Carr Casa de Esperanza Jodi Cedarleaf Marilou Cheple Rachel and Donald Christensen Marlys Chutich Josie Cimbura Debra Cimino Jean Clarke Rusty Cohen Beverly Conerton Marie Conway Melissa Conway Karen Coons Margie Cooper Nancy Cosgriff Laurie Coyle Julia Craig LaVonne Craig Jessica Cripps Jan Cronquist Helen Crosson Christine Custer Piyali Nath Dalal Cheryl Davis Jean Davis Patricia Davis Kathy Davis Graves Amanda Decker-Barnhouse Anna Deneui Verona Devine Burton Marilyn Dietrich Liz Brenner Dodson Sara Doure Carol Russell Drinkard Colleen Drum William Drury Sandra Duel Jennifer Duesman Mary Duroche Eagan Shirt Werks Edgestone Consulting, INC. Mary Eggen Barbara Ego Christy Eichers Kay Elliasen Kathi Ellis Sarah Emery Linda Engebretson Judith Engel Bonnie Esposito Phyllis Fairman Elizabeth Feckter Florence Felknor Suzanne Finbraaten Carmen Fish Susan Fitzke Carroll Flaten Judite Fluger Carol and Richard Flynn Fogel Law Offices PA Kathryn Foley Holly Folkers D. Forsberg Scherrie Ann Foster Julie Free Heart Patricia Frey Rosemary Froehle Sheila Fuchs Janine Fugate Mary Lou Fuller Lynn Galle Laura Garbe D. J. Gascoigne Judy Gaviser Linda Gawthrop Melissa Gennert Cynthia Gilbertson Susan Gillespie Karen and Howard Gochberg Jacqueline Gohdes Adele Gorrilla Diane Gray Emily Green D. Carol Grim Christa Groshek Gail Gruis Sylvia Gunderson Virginia Gustafson Julie Guth Adrienne Gutierrez Anne Haddad Kathryn Hanna Mildred Hanson Suzanne Hargis Diana Harms Jean Haverstock Terri and Jack Hawthorne Ruth Hayden Dawn Hayes Jennifer Hedican Jelan Heidelberg Catherine Heilman Heilman & Schlotthauer, PLLC Kelly Heirigs Kathleen Heisler Mary Hennies Dorothy Hentges Sharon Heywood Karen Hillerman Lisa Hinz Lisa Hlavacek Lisa Hoch Suzanne Hodder Marilyn Hoegemeyer Katy Holden Roseanne Hope Diana Horrigan Coral Houle Kathryn Houston Cheryl Hovik Sarah Howard Carolyn Howland Jonda Hughes Patricia Hughes Baumer Laurel Kay Humphreys Mary Hunter Thelma Hunter Mildred Huttenmaier Ange Hwang Beth Hynes-Ciernia Lillian Indeck In Food Marketing & Design Jo Irons Dawn Isackson Julia Jaakola Jacqueline Jacob Jeanne Jacobs Karen Jacobson Julie Janckila Carrie Jennings Abby Jensen Herdis Jensen Kari Jensen Thomas Alice Johnson Elizabeth E. Johnson Elizabeth G. Johnson Emily Johnson Jenelle Johnson June Johnson Leann Johnson Marion Johnson and Julie Dereschuk Jan Jones Lisa Jones Kathe Jorgenson Jostens Inc. Anita Juntti Mary Jo Kaiser David Kane Linda Kaner Keith Kapphahn Katherine Kardell Sandra Karnowski Michael Kazemek Ann Kemske Beth Kennedy Lynda Kern Judith Kim and Gary Larson Lindsay King Sheila Kiscaden Lena Kishaba Vicki Klasell Ann Kline Bonne Kluge Thomas and Lona Kluge Chrstine Kobold Phoebe Kohman Frances Kolb Kathryn Kopp Adam and Mark Adam Lynda Koren Luanne Koskinen Carol Kraft Joanne Kuehl Kathy Kuempel Charlotte Kunkel Patricia Lamb Anna Mae Lambert Louann Lanning Ruth Ann Larson Linda Lawrence Patricia Lawrence Donald Layton Don and Marlyce Lee Kathryn and Theodore Lee Angela Leigh Diane Leigh and Janet Hamilton Leonard, Street and Deinard Anne Lewis Audrey Lien Lifeshine Coaching and Consulting Lifescience Alley Beth Lilja Lindquist & Vennum Sharon Link Theresa Lippert Jill Lloyd C. Lynn Lockhart Craig Luedemann and Mary Robischon Anthony Lund Maribeth Lundeen Raymond Lundquist John and Barbara Lynskey Kathy Magnuson Constance Mahler Glenn Mahler Rita Majerle Marie Maland Julie Mall Elizabeth Malmberg Judith Malmo Howard Malmon Sara Marck and Duncan Odegard Jennifer McCord Rachel McDonough Kathleen McLaughlin and Daryl Skobba Megan McRae-Hastings Katherine Meerse and David Woodard Roberta and Robert Megard Eric Meininger Elaine Melby-Moen Maria Menendez Elizabeth Merz Margaret Meyer Linda Miller Barbara Milon The Minikahda Club Catherine Misko Tracey Mittelstadt Jean Moede Lynn Moline Forrest Moore Janie Moore Mrs. Earl Mosiman Amy Muehlbauer Dorothy Muffett Carol Mulligan Audrey Nelson Conrad Nelson Muriel and Norwood Nelson Nicole Joy Nelson Hines Vicki Nelson-Luhm Audra Newell Ralph Nordstrom Ferne Noreen Wendy Noren Grace Norris Deborah Novak Catherine O'Brien Claire Olson Viann Olson Charles and Margaret Opp Joyce and Martin Orbuch Laverne Orwoll Elizabeth Ozmon Mary Pagnucco Jeri Parkin Janet Parta Shirley Pearl Erica Pearson Mary Jean Pearson Peg Peck Chapman Patricia Pedersen Polly Penney People Incorporated Patricia Peschman Elise Peters Merrell Peters Jean Petersen Shirley Pettis Lee Pitman Maureen Plitzuweit Anna Prakash Beverly Propes Roberta Radford Kathryn Reali Red Ladder, Inc. Barbara Renshaw Susan Rheingans Arlene Roehl Connie Roehrich Sheila Ronning Barbara A. Rose and Charles O. Lentz Marilyn Rossman Linda Roszak Claire Ruebeck Debra Ruegg Ann Ruschy Anne Russell Sandra D. Sandell and Clayton F. Giese Ann Sargent Katherine Sasseville Dorothy Sauber Jodie Schafer Bonnie Schanzenbach Robin Schirmer Karen Schlotthauer Christine Schmidt Lynn Schmidtke Barbara Schmiechen Patricia Schulte Virginia Schumacher Judith Burns Schuster Kirsten Schwichtenberg Belle Scott Diana Lynn Scott and Thomas H. Scott Janice Selness Joe Selvaggio Stacy Senden Melanie Shepard and Alan Netland Lisa Shoemaker Sasha Shonoiki Shunu Shrestha Bernice Sisson Theodore Sitz Marilyn Small Carolyn Smallwood Joan Smith Susannah Smith and Matt Sobek Bea and Robert Sorenson John Spillane Spoken Impact Sandra Sponem Jeanne Stadick Jane Sternberg Melissa Stone Strategic Financial, Inc. Susan Strauss Nicole Stretar Dorothy Sunne Sandra Swami Dorothy L. Joy Swanson Bertha Jean Swisher Todd Sylvester Valerie Tanner Carol Thompson Erin Thompson Carol Tillitt Terri Tilotta Mary Toberman Maile Topliff Michael Trepkowski Janet Tschida Mildred Turner Janis Tweedy Twin Cities Tosca Margaret and Robert Twiton Patricia Vauk Jean Velleu Joyce Vincent M. Wacker Janeth Walker Bethmarie Ward Joan Warner Patricia and Ralph Watkins Dennis Watson Kathleen Watson Esther Wattenberg Sarah Watters Bonnie Wedel Deborah Weiss Wells Fargo Foundation Margaret Wenner Ellen Wersan Darrell and Judith Westby Ardis Wexler Darlene White White Space Architecture Cathy Whitman-Spear Karen Wick Barbara Butts Williams Marguerite Wilson Maureen Wilson Sara and Robert Wolf Elaine Wolter Barbara Woodhead Kristine Wyant Natalie Wyatt-Brown Joanne Youngstrom Gayle Zabel Karen Zellner HOPES & DREAMS for Minnesota’s women & girls “In my [Native American] community, that women can support each other, invoke our strengths, and create real change in the world.” – LeAnn, Duluth 21 GIFTS IN MEMORY OF JANET B. WATSON Lori Allen Jean Backlund Kathleen Baczko Deborah Bancroft Jasmine Beach-Ferrara Dan Bergeron Michael and Sally Bosanko Briggs and Morgan Debra and James Campbell Mary and Charles Carlsen Community Shares Minnesota Melissa Conway Amy Ford Andersen D. Forsberg Cathy and Rick Giertsen Susan Gross Carol and Bud Hayden Kristin and Thoams Holtz Coral Houle Sandra Johnson Ann Kemske Bonne Kluge Thomas and Lona Kluge Ruth Ann Larson Linda Lawrence Anthony Lund Constnace Mahler Glenn Mahler Helen McNulty The Minikahda Club Lee and John Roper-Batker Nancy Slaughter Susan and Jon Stedman Maxine Wallin Joan Warner Kathleen Wedl Karin and David Wendy Sara and Robert Wolf Barbara Woodhead GIFTS IN MEMORY Luella Gascoigne D. Gascoigne Meredith Horne Phyllis Maritz Molly Ivins Ann Lonstein Ellen Kapphahn Keith Kapphahn Kari Ann Koskinen Luanne Koskinen Hank Kristal Connie Barry Alice Rose Rogers Margaret Barrett Barbara J. Stuhler Jane West Helen Williams Judy Gaviser GIFTS IN HONOR Barb Abrahamson Linda Jirovec Jenny Abrahamson Linda Jirovec Terry Baker Romaine Scharlemann Dorothy Ciernia Beth Hynes-Ciernia Judy Clark Lillian Clark Andrea Earnest Barbara Schmiechen Margaret Ellis Kathi Ellis Nancy Elverum Sarah Emery Margaret Foster Sherrie Foster Sara Fulton Nancy Fulton Kathryn Glessing Sarah Cox Nancy Gruver Joe Kelly Elizabeth Hoch Lisa Hoch Katy Holden Dorothy Skobba Mary Ann Hotka Jill Meyer and Louise Hotka Jeanne Hynes Beth Hynes-Ciernia Janet Jennings Carrie Jennings DeeDee Jirovec Linda Jirovec Janet Jirovec Linda Jirovec Sue Jubert Linda Jirovec Celine Kunkel Charlotte Kunkel Marleen and Richard Kurschner Lee and John Roper-Batker Antoinette Lippert Theresa Lippert Kim Lund Sarah Farley and Betty Tisel Jean Marck Sara Marck Jacqueline Sage Maren Kay Harris Jan Marlin Allison Welch Kathleen McLaughlin Dorothy Skobba Michele McRae Megan McRae-Hastings Carol Meissner Jo Ann Augdahl Peggy Meyer Jill Meyer and Louise Hotka Shannon Monahan Linda Jirovec Linda Murchison Harriet Spencer Grayce Belvedere Young | Chair President, Organizational Performance, The Prouty Project Kim Nelson Janel Goff Sheba Coffey | Vice Chair Sales Director Kathleen Parrish Harriet Spencer Elizabeth Peters Merrell Peters Elizabeth Plitzuweit Maureen Plitzuweit Verna Cornelia Price Janel Goff Erica Quist Linda Jirovec Jane Ransom Patricia Saunders Martha Rast Ruth Usem Laura Roehl Linda Jirovec Joanne Green | Treasurer Director, Corporate Finance Training, UnitedHealth Group Kao Ly Ilean Her | Secretary Executive Director, Council on Asian-Pacific Minnesotans Kim Borton, Assistant Director, Public and Nonprofit Leadership Center, Humphrey Institute of Public Affairs Julia Classen, President, Aurora Consulting, Inc. Dorothy Russell Anne Russell Gloria Contreras Edin, Executive Director, Centro Legal, Inc. Beth Rutledge Mary Lou Fuller Barbara Forster, Community Volunteer Helen Scharlemann Romaine Scharlemann Anne Hedberg Schmiechen Barbara Schmiechen Rena Smilkstein Jonda Hughes Polly Spencer Harriet Spencer Valerie Spencer Harriet Spencer Belva Sunne Dorothy Sunne Renee Usem Ruth Usem Char Weinand Linda Jirovec Rose Weinberg Susan Weinberg Betsy Weiner Ruth Usem Micky Wherley Katherine McGinley Nate Wolf Kay Harris The Women’s Foundation of Minnesota is dedicated to ensuring the accuracy of our donor information. To update or correct donor information, please contact Amy at 612-236 -1806 or [email protected]. 22 BOARD OF TRUSTEES Saanii Hernandez-Mohr, Midwest Regional Program Manager, Hispanics in Philanthropy Joan Higinbotham, Community Volunteer Wilhelmina Holder, Executive Director, Women’s Initiative for Self Empowerment (WISE), Inc. Jan Malcolm, CEO, Courage Center Tara Mason, Director, White Earth Human Services Catherine McBride, Principal, Vincent & McBride, Inc. WOMEN’S FOUNDATION OF MINNESOTA BOARD, STAFF, COMMITTEES Melanie Peterson-Hickey, Senior Research Scientist, Center for Health Statistics, MN Dept. of Health STAFF Teresa Richardson, Director, Cash & Pension Investments, Northwest Airlines, Inc. Erin Ceynar, Assistant Development Director Valerie Spencer, Community Volunteer Sheila Carrington, Development Assistant Fellow Nicole Cooper, Program Intern Amy Cram Helwich, Development Director Anne Bryant Wight, Community Volunteer Charlotte Flowers, Program Officer Mary Wong, Vice President, Fixed Income Banking, RBC Capital Markets Sheila Gothmann, Finance and Operations Director PRESIDENT’S ADVISORS Mary Lee Dayton Karen Diver Blanche Hawkins Carol Hayden Kristine Maritz Wenda Weekes Moore Senator Mee Moua Mary Beth Hanson, Communications Director Carol McGee Johnson, Vice President of Community Philanthropy & Programs Sida Ly-Xiong, Reatha Clark King Fellow/Associate Director of Evaluation and Research Romaine Scharlemann, Senior Gift Planner Dorothy Skobba, Development Manager Heidi Walsh, Office Manager Terry Williams, Senior Gifts Officer FELLOWS/INTERNS Development Fellows Sheila Carrington Shunu Shrestha Reatha Clark King Fellow Sida Ly-Xiong Diversity Interns Nicole Cooper Kristina Thao Christine Belfrey Johnson Interns Nicole Cooper Selena Moon Monica Qiu Emily Saunoi-Sandgren April Oertwig, Executive Assistant Lee Roper-Batker, President & CEO (l-r, front) Mary Wong, Sheba Coffey, Lee Roper-Batker, Grayce Belvedere Young, Joanne Green, Anne Bryant Wight. (l-r, back) Kao Ly Ilean Her, Catherine McBride, Julia Classen, Saanii Hernandez-Mohr, Barbara Forster, Valerie Spencer, Melanie Peterson-Hickey, Joan Higinbotham, Gloria Contreras Edin. (Not pictured: Kim Borton, Wilhelmina Holder, Jan Malcolm, Tara Mason, Teresa Richardson.) (l-r, front) Sida Ly-Xiong, Romaine Scharlemann, Lee Roper-Batker, Carol McGee Johnson, Dorothy Skobba, Nicole Cooper. (l-r, back) Mary Beth Hanson, April Oertwig, Sheila Gothmann, Sheila Carrington, Heidi Walsh, Amy Cram Helwich, Erin Ceynar, Terry Williams, Selena Moon. (Not pictured: Charlotte Flowers.) COMMITTEES FINANCE Joanne Green | Chair Diana Carter Brenda Coulter Amy Cram Helwich Denise Doll-Kiefer Pauline Fofana Sheila Gothmann Mary Ellen Hennen Katy Kopp-Adam Lee Roper-Batker Anna Schaefer Jane Treston Heidi Walsh Maureen Wilson Mary Wong Fund>>Forward COMPREHENSIVE CAMPAIGN Valerie Spencer | Campaign Chair Mary Lee Dayton | Honorary Co-Chair Wenda Weekes Moore | Honorary Co-Chair Barbara Forster | Leadership Gifts Kathi Austin Mahle Connie Barry Amy Cram Helwich Karla Ekdahl Betty Grant Carol McGee Johnson Reatha Clark King Karen Leonard Ann Lonstein April Oertwig Ellen Phelps Lee Roper-Batker Romaine Scharlemann Dorothy Skobba Emily Anne Tuttle Anne Bryant Wight Terry Williams girlsBEST ADVISORY Grayce Belvedere Young | Chair Shante Carter Amy Cram Helwich Charlotte Flowers Wilhelmina Holder Ange Hwang Lorrie Janatopolous Carol McGee Johnson Andrea Larson Kerrison Caroline Kupchella* Sida Ly-Xiong Kristine Maritz Karen McElrath Katie McElrath* Eliza Messinger* Claire Muller* Rachel Amma Neil* Cammy Nelson* Marilyn Ochoa* Tracey O'Neill Ruzicka Melanie PetersonHickey Rosaura Ramos* Lee Roper-Batker Beth Rutledge Alicia Smith Elon Smith* Sarah Stinson GOVERNANCE Julia Classen | Chair Grayce Belvedere Young Alexina Chai Sheila Gothmann Mary Ellen Hennen Carol McGee Johnson Mary Kloehn Tara Mason Teresa Obrero April Oertwig Lee Roper-Batker INVESTMENT Catherine McBride | Chair Jennifer Fogg Sheila Gothmann Becky Klevan Kay Kramer April Oertwig Elizabeth Olson Teresa Richardson Lee Roper-Batker Cindy Tupy PROFESSIONAL ADVISORS Lynne Hardey | Chair Mary Adamski Nancy Buttweiler Eileen Day Ann Kirchner Sharon Krumme Ellyn Marell Rachel McDonough Lee Roper-Batker Romaine Scharlemann Terry Williams RESEARCH, EDUCATION & PUBLIC POLICY Kim Borton | Chair Sally Anaya-Boyer Margaret Boyer Amy Brenengen Ipyana Critton Stephanie Devitt Mary Beth Hanson Kao Ly Ilean Her Joan Higinbotham Qamar Ibrahim Liz Johnson Carol McGee Johnson Sida Ly-Xiong Jan Malcolm Kathleen Murphy April Oertwig Lee Roper-Batker Susan Segal Bharti Wahi SOCIAL CHANGE FUND Gloria Contreras Edin | Chair Sheba Coffey | Vice Chair Kim Borton Julia Classen Charlotte Flowers Sheila Gothmann Saanii HernandezMohr Sonia Hohnadel Carol McGee Johnson Sida Ly-Xiong Dawn Peterson Lee Roper-Batker Pat Samuel Lupe Serrano Sara Spiess Jo-Anne Stately Lonna Stevens April Sutor Heidi Walsh Pamela Weisdorf Kayva Yang * Girl Member Board Member in brown Staff Member italicized 23 FINANCIALS Summarized Financial Information Statements of Financial Position 3/31/2008 3/31/2007 Assets Cash Prepaid Expenses Contributions Receivable Property & Equipment, Net Long-Term Investments Employee Receivables Beneficial Interest in Trust Contributions and Pledges Receivable - Long-Term, Net Total Assets 549,646 33,076 1,882,460 63,496 13,050,318 6,302 60,329 1,675,321 17,320,948 243,381 42,180 1,548,088 81,728 11,846,169 6,302 0 2,015,407 15,783,255 62,950 41,098 18,935 0 122,983 39,481 46,400 45,500 14,214 145,595 2,356,876 1,911,236 12,929,853 17,197,965 17,320,948 3,293,964 1,710,812 10,632,884 15,637,660 15,783,255 3/31/2008 Total 4,039,713 86,364 -100,777 0 0 4,025,300 3/31/2007 Total 2,393,673 56,455 1,003,355 0 0 3,453,483 1,903,903 130,935 430,157 2,464,995 1,795,105 150,588 336,893 2,282,586 Liabilities and Net Assets Accounts Payable Accrued Expenses Grants Payable Capital Lease Payable Total Liabilities Unrestricted, Including Board Designated Temporarily Restricted Permanently Restricted Total Net Assets Total Liabilities and Net Assets Statements of Activities Support and Revenue Grants and Contributions Other Income Investment Income, Net Net Assets Released from Restrictions Net Asset Transfers Total Support and Revenue Expenses Grants, Research, Public Education & Convening Administration Fundraising Expenses Total Expenses Change in Net Assets Unrestricted 825,109 86,364 -100,777 637,476 79,735 1,527,907 Temporarily Restricted 887,900 Permanently Restricted 2,326,704 -637,476 -50,000 200,424 0 -29,735 2,296,969 1,903,903 130,935 430,157 2,464,995 -937,088 200,424 2,296,969 1,560,305 1,170,897 Net Assets, Beginning of Year 3,293,964 1,710,812 10,632,884 15,637,660 14,466,763 Net Assets, End of Year 2,356,876 1,911,236 12,929,853 17,197,965 15,637,660 The above financial information is summarized from our records. To receive a copy of our audited financial statement, please call Erin at the Women's Foundation of Minnesota at 612-337-5010. 24 HOPES & DREAMS for Minnesota’s women & girls “That they experience wholeness by recognizing their own value, well outside of societal expectations.” – Maureen, (left) Moorhead “That they have equal voice in all decision making.” – Deb, (right) Moorhead MISSION The Women’s Foundation of Minnesota champions economic, political and social equality for women and girls through fundraising, grantmaking, research and public advocacy. 155 FIFTH AVENUE S., SUITE 500 MINNEAPOLIS, MN 55401-2626 612.337.5010 www.wfmn.org
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