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<strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> <strong>Nonprofit</strong> <strong>Press</strong><br />

<strong>September</strong> <strong>2004</strong> . Volume 3 . Issue 8 . www.nynp.biz serving people who serve people<br />

JOBS JOBS JOBS<br />

Employment<br />

Opportunities<br />

Start on Page 21<br />

<strong>New</strong> Faces<br />

at the Top<br />

FREE<br />

NEWS<br />

Leadership Changes<br />

at NYANA<br />

Page 7<br />

FOUNDATIONS<br />

NY Women’s Foundation<br />

Seeks Grant Proposals<br />

Page 15<br />

FINANCE<br />

A Ten Point Check List<br />

Page 18<br />

During the first half of this year,<br />

several executives have taken over the<br />

top leadership spots at some leading local<br />

nonprofit organizations. Three are<br />

relatively new either to the area, nonprofits,<br />

or the human service sector in<br />

particular.<br />

Jack Lund (pictured above right)<br />

traveled the longest geographic distance<br />

to take the helm as<br />

President/CEO of the YMCA of Greater<br />

<strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong>. A life-long nonprofit professional,<br />

Lund previously served as CEO<br />

of the Milwaukee YMCA and had been<br />

Chief Operating Officer for the “Y” in<br />

Chicago. He is confident that his 30-<br />

year history with the “Y” and experience<br />

in building partnerships with local<br />

community leaders will serve him well<br />

in his new role.<br />

Patrick Foye (pictured above left)<br />

made the seemingly perilous transition<br />

from one world to another when he became<br />

President/CEO of United Way of<br />

Long Island. An attorney who grew up<br />

in Queens and has lived his adult life<br />

on Long Island, Foye comes from the<br />

for profit sector where he has served as<br />

mergers and acquisitions partner for a<br />

top law firm and Executive Vice President<br />

of a <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> Stock Exchangelisted<br />

real estate investment trust.<br />

Luckily, Foye’s experience as head of<br />

his firm’s Brussels, Budapest and<br />

Moscow offices has already trained him<br />

in the art of crossing broad cultural divides.<br />

Theresa A. Bischoff (above center)<br />

only traveled across town and slightly<br />

north to take over as Chief Executive<br />

Officer at the American Red Cross in<br />

Greater <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong>. Bischoff previously<br />

served as President at NYU Medical<br />

Center, a position she held for the past<br />

16 years. While no newcomer to the<br />

nonprofit sector, Bischoff’s role at the<br />

Red Cross should still offer a whole<br />

new set of challenges for someone just<br />

getting out of the hospital.<br />

All three of these new CEOs have<br />

taken over well established organizations<br />

with important roles in the community<br />

and long histories of accomplishment.<br />

Like most nonprofits,<br />

however, they also face their own particular<br />

challenges. Now that they have<br />

settled into their new positions,<br />

Bischoff, Foye and Lund were kind<br />

enough to share their thoughts with<br />

NYNP on what they’ve learned and<br />

what the see as their most important<br />

agenda items. The three interviews begin<br />

on page 8.<br />

(Photo Credit: Theresa Bischoff’s picture was taken by<br />

Lou Manna .)<br />

AGENCY OF<br />

THE MONTH<br />

Big Brothers Big Sisters<br />

of <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> City<br />

<strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> <strong>Nonprofit</strong> <strong>Press</strong><br />

P.O Box 338<br />

Chatham, NY 12037<br />

PRSRT STD<br />

U.S Postage<br />

PAID<br />

Pittsfield, MA 01201<br />

Permit # 137<br />

Page 12


<strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> <strong>Nonprofit</strong> <strong>Press</strong><br />

serving people who serve people<br />

<strong>September</strong> <strong>2004</strong><br />

Calendar of<br />

<strong>Nonprofit</strong><br />

Events<br />

<strong>September</strong> 9, 10, 11 – Self-Advocacy Association<br />

of <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> State presents its 13th Annual<br />

Conference at the Albany Marriott Hotel, 189 Wolf Road,<br />

Albany. For information call 518-382-1454 or 1-866-<br />

42SHARE or email: sanys@capital.net.<br />

ON THE COVER<br />

<strong>New</strong> Faces at the Top 1<br />

CALENDAR 3<br />

POINT OF VIEW<br />

<strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> City’s Budget Process 5<br />

NEWS 6<br />

AGENCY OF THE MONTH<br />

Big Brothers Big Sisters of NYC 12<br />

FOUNDATIONS 15<br />

<strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> Women’s Foundation Seeks<br />

Grant Proposals<br />

FINANCE 16<br />

A Ten Point Check List<br />

PEOPLE 17<br />

EVENTS 20<br />

Interboro Foundation<br />

CLASSIFIEDS 21<br />

<strong>September</strong> 10 - The Federation of Organizations<br />

will host its 23rd Annual Long Island Community<br />

Mental Health Awards Luncheon featuring Patricia E.<br />

Deegan from 12:00 noon to 3:00 p.m. at the Huntington<br />

Hilton. For information call 631-669-5355 or visit www.fedoforg.org.<br />

<strong>September</strong> 14 - Suffolk Community Council's<br />

Educational Seminar Series - Pursuing <strong>New</strong><br />

Revenue Sources for Your Agency, featuring Weyman<br />

Jones, Dick Oehmler & Charlotte Lee of the National<br />

Executive Service Corps. 9:00AM - 11:00AM at Suffolk<br />

Community College Brentwood Campus, Captree<br />

Commons Bldg, Room C114. $25 fee includes a light breakfast.<br />

Visa/MasterCard accepted. To register at (631) 434-<br />

9277.<br />

<strong>September</strong> 14 – Turning the Tables on AIDS will<br />

feature Chef Marc Weiss and benefit the Long Island<br />

Association for AIDS Care. For information visit<br />

www.liaac.org.<br />

<strong>September</strong> 20 – United Hospice of Rockland will<br />

hold its 4th Annual Golf and Tennis Classic at<br />

Dellwood Country Club in <strong>New</strong> City. For information contact<br />

CJ Miller or Connie Grunfeld at 845-634-4974 or visit<br />

www.hospiceofrockland.org.<br />

<strong>September</strong> 22 – So Help Me God: Substance<br />

Abuse, Religion and Spirituality, a special CASA CON-<br />

CALENDAR OF EVENTS continued on page 23<br />

Program<br />

Announcement<br />

Child and Adult Care<br />

Food Program<br />

The Citizens Advice Bureau Family Childcare Network is<br />

pleased to announce the sponsorship of the Child and<br />

Adult Care Food Program (CACFP). Under this program<br />

all children in attendance will be offered the same meals<br />

at no separate charge, with no physical segregation of, or<br />

other discriminatory action against, any child because of<br />

race, color, age, national origin, sex or disability.<br />

If you want more information regarding the inception of<br />

this important program please call CAB at (718) 742-1402.<br />

<strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> <strong>Nonprofit</strong> <strong>Press</strong><br />

FRED SCAGLIONE, Editor<br />

MARCIA RODMAN KAMMERER, Art Director<br />

ROBERT LONG, Publisher<br />

editor@nynp.biz<br />

art@nynp.biz<br />

publisher@nynp.biz<br />

SUSAN AXELROD, BRUCE A. HURWITZ, PH.D. Contributing Writers<br />

MARY JASCH, VALERIE L. MERAHN<br />

<strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> <strong>Nonprofit</strong> <strong>Press</strong> is published monthly. Subscriptions are free. Editorial Office: P.O. Box 338, Chatham, NY 12037 Tel.: 888-933-6967.<br />

Advertising and Circulation Office: 86 Montgomery Street, Rhinebeck, NY 12572 Tel.: 866-336-6967. POSTMASTER: Please send address changes to: 86 Montgomery Street, Rhinebeck, NY 12572<br />

Vol. 3, No.8<br />

Editor Fax: 518-392-8327 www.nynp.biz Publisher Fax: 845-876-5288


4 <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> <strong>Nonprofit</strong> <strong>Press</strong> www.nynp.biz <strong>September</strong> <strong>2004</strong><br />

The Dead Horse Just Twitched<br />

EDITORIAL<br />

For the past several months, we have been<br />

using this editorial space to beat the dead horse<br />

of our State government’s absolute fiscal irresponsibility<br />

in failing to pass a budget. Every day<br />

establishes a new record for failure as our leaders<br />

ignore their governance responsibility to<br />

agree upon and fund the services which will be<br />

provided to <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong>’s citizens. The effects of<br />

this ongoing travesty on nonprofit human service<br />

agencies -- and the vulnerable clients they serve<br />

– are easy to see. They are the bloody spot<br />

where that rock keeps hitting the hard place.<br />

On August 12th, the Senate and Assembly<br />

followed a course similar to last year’s when they<br />

joined to pass their own legislative budget without<br />

input or agreement from the Governor. The legislative<br />

budget, which exceeded the Governor’s<br />

original proposal by over $1.8 billion, was largely<br />

seen as a positive by the nonprofit community in<br />

that it restored many of his original program cuts.<br />

It even added a few new initiatives, like a Tuitition<br />

Forgiveness Program for social workers and funding<br />

to support higher congregate care rates for<br />

NYC foster care providers.<br />

Advocates, however, were far from ecstatic<br />

since it seemed clear that the Governor would<br />

merely veto large portions of the legislative submission.<br />

The legislature’s action might best be seen as<br />

throwing you know what on the wall which stands in<br />

the way of good government. Sure, it was a nice<br />

gesture, but the real question is what will stick.<br />

On August 20th, the day before we went to<br />

press, Governor Pataki made good on his<br />

threats and vetoed $1.8 billion in spending<br />

increases and borrowing from the Legislature's<br />

budget. In the end, the budget still wound up<br />

coming in at $101.3 billion, only a few hundred<br />

million below the legislative submission, and<br />

well above his own January proposal of $99.8<br />

billion. Still, the impacts on human service programs<br />

are severe.<br />

The Governor’s nearly 200 line item vetoes<br />

read like a litany of essential services: $12.5<br />

million for the Nursing Home Facility viability<br />

adjustment; $10 million for foster care rates;<br />

$4.5 million for mental health community services;<br />

$1.2 million for Youth Development and<br />

Delinquency Prevention; $1.4 million for<br />

“Settlement House Programs” and on and on<br />

and on.<br />

"The programs that I'm vetoing I love,"<br />

Pataki said in announcing his cuts. "But the reality<br />

has got to set in."<br />

Last year, the legislature simply overrode<br />

the Governor’s vetoes and pushed virtually their<br />

budget into law. This year, that outcome seems<br />

less certain.<br />

As a result, we are now more than one-third<br />

of the way through the fiscal year and no one<br />

knows what services, contracts and programs<br />

are budgeted and what aren’t.<br />

Yes, it would be nice if Albany got real.<br />

Dear Editor,<br />

We wanted to express our appreciation<br />

for your wonderful article on<br />

High 5 in the <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> <strong>Nonprofit</strong><br />

<strong>Press</strong>. I thought you might like to<br />

know that we have gotten at least four<br />

new youth group customers from the<br />

article.<br />

A new catalogue with more $5 events<br />

will be ready in mid-<strong>September</strong> and<br />

Dear Editor,<br />

My advice to your readers is always<br />

read the job classifieds to the end.<br />

With such a bounty of opportunities<br />

for social service professionals,<br />

readers may very well find what<br />

they're looking for in the beginning<br />

or the middle. But don't forget the<br />

end. I'm grateful for that one line at<br />

two TRaC programs are gearing up for<br />

October.<br />

Thank you for promoting our services.<br />

Ada Ciniglio<br />

Executive Director<br />

High 5 Tickets to the Arts<br />

the bottom that caught my eye and<br />

made my day. Thanks,<br />

Carl Blumenthal<br />

Brooklyn, <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong>


<strong>September</strong> <strong>2004</strong> <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> <strong>Nonprofit</strong> <strong>Press</strong> www.nynp.biz 5<br />

Any business person knows that planning<br />

is the key to successful management,<br />

and that budgeting is an indispensable part<br />

of the planning process. Yet, <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong><br />

City’s budgeting process routinely prevents<br />

not-for-profit providers of human services<br />

from following these basic principles, wasting<br />

the scarce resources allocated to this vital<br />

support system – a reality that is particularly<br />

ironic given Mayor Bloomberg’s<br />

former role as a highly<br />

effective CEO.<br />

Unlike most other<br />

services funded by<br />

the City, much of the<br />

City financing to support<br />

critical human<br />

services is not included<br />

in the Mayor’s<br />

long-term spending<br />

plan. His proposed<br />

plan automatically<br />

fails to renew or<br />

“baseline” funding<br />

for some services for<br />

seniors, at risk and<br />

abused children,<br />

youth, immigrants,<br />

the mentally ill, the<br />

homeless, the disabled,<br />

and others at<br />

the end of every fiscal<br />

year, leaving both the<br />

providers and recipients<br />

with an unclear<br />

picture of the future.<br />

According to a<br />

spokesperson for<br />

Mayor Bloomberg,<br />

this funding is “not<br />

baselined because the<br />

[City] Council’s priorities<br />

shift year to<br />

year” (Jewish Week,<br />

7/2/04). This statement is baffling to human<br />

services providers not only because<br />

many such programs were actually originated<br />

by the executive branch of City government,<br />

but also because these ongoing<br />

services are critical to the overall health<br />

and safety of the City. Contrary to what the<br />

Mayor’s spokesperson would seemingly<br />

have us believe, the programs he sees fit to<br />

cut were created because of long-term and<br />

deep-seated need.<br />

POINT OF VIEW<br />

NYC's Budget Process Must Protect<br />

- Not Politicize- Human Services<br />

These comments reflect the<br />

point of view of the following<br />

organizations:<br />

• Catholic Charities BK/ QNS<br />

• Child Care Inc.<br />

• Coalition of Voluntary Mental<br />

Health Agencies<br />

• Council of Family and Child Caring<br />

Agencies<br />

• Council on Homeless Policies and<br />

Services<br />

• Council on Senior Centers and<br />

Services<br />

• Day Care Council<br />

• Federation of Protestant Welfare<br />

Agencies<br />

• Human Services Council<br />

• Neighborhood Family Services<br />

Coalition<br />

• NYC Employment and Training<br />

Coalition<br />

• <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> Immigration Coalition<br />

• United Jewish Appeals-Federation<br />

• United Neighborhood Houses<br />

The Mayor’s long-term plan, for example,<br />

cuts $9 million dollars for child care<br />

slots. Though the need for child care will<br />

certainly not disappear at the end of the<br />

fiscal year, the City is unwilling to make<br />

support of this program a permanent part<br />

of the City’s budget. Similarly, $7.8 million<br />

for services to prevent children from entering<br />

the foster care system will vanish at the<br />

end of June, despite the fact that these programs<br />

save the City<br />

millions of dollars<br />

by focusing on prevention<br />

rather than<br />

aftercare. In the case<br />

of foster care, a mandated<br />

City responsibility,<br />

$19.4 million<br />

are now automatically<br />

eliminated<br />

from future budget<br />

plans. Other such<br />

on-going citywide<br />

priorities include,<br />

Beacon Schools for<br />

youth, food programs<br />

for seniors,<br />

mental health services,<br />

homeless prevention,<br />

and more.<br />

The exclusion of<br />

these and other programs<br />

from the<br />

City’s budget each<br />

year forces<br />

providers that contract<br />

with the City to<br />

devote precious resources<br />

and time to<br />

advocating City<br />

Council members<br />

during the highly<br />

politicized budgetary<br />

process, pulling<br />

their focus from management, planning,<br />

fundraising, and most importantly, the delivery<br />

of services to the poor and vulnera-<br />

port their clients. Some not-for-profit<br />

providers have had to layoff staff, restrict<br />

access to services, or even close their doors<br />

because of the budgetary uncertainties they<br />

face each Spring. Over the last three years<br />

alone more than 600 families in the child<br />

welfare preventive system have been<br />

forced to change providers or stopped receiving<br />

services for some period of time because<br />

of program closures resulting from<br />

unstable City funding.<br />

While campaigning for office, Mayor<br />

Bloomberg recognized the insensible nature<br />

and harmful effects of this process and<br />

promised not to engage in it. Further, after<br />

taking office, Mayor Bloomberg claimed that<br />

any necessary reductions in the City budget<br />

would be made equitably across City government.<br />

This year, however, cuts will fall,<br />

once again, disproportionately on human<br />

services. Providers of human services are<br />

alarmed because approximately $180 million<br />

in human services funding is already missing<br />

from the Fiscal 2006 budget and there is<br />

a projected deficit of some $3 billion. Services<br />

to the poor and vulnerable are then,<br />

more clearly at risk of elimination than those<br />

services that have been baselined.<br />

The human services sector has united<br />

to highlight the impractical nature of this<br />

ble. This process severely hampers<br />

providers’ ability to develop the strategic<br />

budgetary and programmatic plans needed<br />

to direct their scarce resources to best<br />

meet client needs. Each Spring providers<br />

spend countless hours meeting with elected<br />

officials to ensure that their funding is<br />

renewed so that they may continue to supaspect<br />

of the City’s budgeting process and<br />

is urging the Mayor to permanently include<br />

this sector’s critical programming in<br />

his Financial Plan. This effort will be challenging,<br />

in part because of the lack of public<br />

awareness about these damaging cuts.<br />

Last year, for example, the preliminary<br />

budget was presented (and reported on) as<br />

a “good news” budget despite the glaring<br />

absence of funding for several vital human<br />

services. The media did not understand<br />

that the practice of not baselining human<br />

service funding actually left many programs<br />

without a guarantee that services<br />

would still be funded.<br />

It is not only bad business practice to<br />

exclude essential human services funding<br />

from the City’s long-term spending plan,<br />

but also profoundly disruptive. Each program<br />

exists to meet a real and often longterm<br />

need. Without these services many<br />

<strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong>ers would have nowhere to turn,<br />

swelling the City’s social problems, and<br />

gravely impacting the quality of life enjoyed<br />

by all residents. Just as we need to<br />

maintain roads, fire and police services, we<br />

need to maintain human services. They<br />

are simply too important to be subject to<br />

the yearly political battles that rage each<br />

Spring on the steps of City Hall. We respectfully<br />

ask Mayor Bloomberg to put all<br />

human service funding streams included<br />

in the City’s adopted Fiscal Year 2005 Budget<br />

in his Fiscal Year 2006 January Financial<br />

Plan.<br />

Let NYNP<br />

Tell Your Story<br />

Call<br />

NYNP<br />

Custom<br />

Publishing<br />

888-933-6967<br />

• Annual Reports<br />

• <strong>New</strong>sletters<br />

• Agency Histories


6 <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> <strong>Nonprofit</strong> <strong>Press</strong> www.nynp.biz <strong>September</strong> <strong>2004</strong><br />

NEWS<br />

VESID to Hold Town Meetings<br />

to Plan Service Delivery System<br />

The <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> State Office of Vocational and<br />

Educational Services for Individuals with Disabilities<br />

(VESID) will hold nine town meetings and a virtual<br />

town meeting. As part of the State Plan development,<br />

VESID will seek public comment on a proposed<br />

process for designing a future vocational<br />

rehabilitation service delivery system that will:<br />

- meet VESID's quality standards while<br />

ensuring fiscal accountability;<br />

- foster collaboration among State and community<br />

partners; and<br />

- support personnel planning that allows for<br />

creative use of staff skills and regional partnerships.<br />

VESID staff will facilitate the discussion and<br />

collect public comment on the State Plan.<br />

Individual oral comment will not be scheduled.<br />

Until November 12, <strong>2004</strong>, a Virtual Town<br />

Meeting will be held at http://discus.nysed.gov/discus-vesid/<br />

The other meetings are scheduled as follows:<br />

• <strong>September</strong> 9 - State Rehabilitation Council<br />

(SRC), Albany Best Western, 1228 Western<br />

Ave. Albany, NY 10:00 a.m. to 11:30 a.m.<br />

• <strong>September</strong> 10 - Self-Advocacy Association<br />

Conference, Albany Marriott, 189 Wolf Road,<br />

Albany. This town meeting is only open to conference<br />

attendees 9:30 a.m. to 11:15 a.m.<br />

• <strong>September</strong> 10 - <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> State Independent<br />

Living Council (NYSILC) Conference, Holiday<br />

Turf Inn, 205 Wolf Road, Albany, 9:00 a.m. to<br />

10:00 a.m.<br />

• <strong>September</strong> 20 – Two Sessions at the <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong><br />

State Independent Living Council (NYSILC)<br />

Conference, Holiday Turf Inn, 205 Wolf Road<br />

Albany, 9:00 a.m.to 10:15 a.m. and 1:15 p.m.<br />

to 2:45 p.m.<br />

• <strong>September</strong> 21 - <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> State Rehabilitation<br />

Association (NYSRA) Conference, The<br />

Desmond, 660 Albany-Shaker Road, Albany,<br />

3:45 p.m. to 4:45 p.m. [4:45-5:00 Break] 5:00<br />

p.m. to 6:00 p.m.<br />

• Week of October 18, NY Association of<br />

Training and Employment (NYATEP)<br />

Professional Conference, Adam's Mark and<br />

Conference Center, 120 Church Street<br />

Buffalo, Time and date to be announced.<br />

• October 25 - Cerebral Palsy Association of<br />

NYS Conference, The Desmond, 660 Albany-<br />

Shaker Road, Albany, 3:30 p.m. to 5:00 p.m.<br />

• November 8 - NYS Association for Persons in<br />

Supported Employment Conference<br />

(NYAPSE), Lake Placid Hilton, Lake Placid,<br />

2:30 p.m. to 4:30 p.m.<br />

While the VESID town meetings are held this<br />

year in conjunction with professional conferences,<br />

the meetings are open to the public (except where<br />

noted) during the scheduled times listed above.<br />

The public comment period extends from<br />

<strong>September</strong> 9, <strong>2004</strong> through November 12, <strong>2004</strong>.<br />

Individual recommendations can be submitted in<br />

writing to VESID, VR Policy and Partnerships Unit-<br />

Room 1603 (OCP), NYS Education Department,<br />

Albany, NY 12234. Electronic submission can be<br />

sent to VRpolicy@mail.nysed.gov or through the<br />

Virtual Town Meeting,<br />

http://discus.nysed.gov/discus-vesid/.<br />

Interpreters will be provided only<br />

upon request. Copies of materials are<br />

also available upon request in alternate<br />

format. To request accommodations<br />

contact VESID by calling 1-800-<br />

222-5627 (voice or TTY) at least 10<br />

days in advance of the meeting and<br />

referencing "State Plan meeting.<br />

Day Care Workers Greet <strong>New</strong><br />

ACS Commissioner on First Day<br />

John Mattingly, the new Commissioner of<br />

the Administration for Children’s Services,<br />

showed up on his first day at work on August<br />

16th only to be greeted at the front door by<br />

day care workers who have been without a<br />

contract since December 2000.<br />

“We wanted the<br />

Commissioner to know that former<br />

Commissioner Bell left<br />

some unfinished business on<br />

his desk,” said Michael Green,<br />

Director of Day Care Head<br />

Start for District Council 1707.<br />

Mattingly reportedly<br />

chatted with the workers<br />

and their union representatives<br />

and indicated a willingness<br />

to listen to their concerns.<br />

The City is offering a<br />

5% increase to cover a 4<br />

Local Providers Receive<br />

Federal Mentoring Grants<br />

Six local nonprofits are among 168<br />

provider organizations throughout the country<br />

to receive $35 million in federal grants supporting<br />

mentoring programs for the children of prisoners.<br />

The grants are part of a three-year initiative<br />

outlined by President Bush during his<br />

2003 State of the Union Address.<br />

Locally, the grant recipients are:<br />

• Big Brothers Big Sisters of Ulster County,<br />

$417,000;<br />

• <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> City Mission Society, $200,000;<br />

• Big Brothers Big Sisters of <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> City,<br />

$150,000;<br />

• Phoenix House of <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong>, Inc.<br />

$124,000;<br />

• Puerto Rican Family Institute, $120,000;<br />

year period during which the cost of living<br />

has gone up over 13%, a union<br />

spokesman stated. DC1707 represents<br />

public Day Care employees who care for<br />

nearly 50,000 children in 350 centers<br />

throughout the City.<br />

• Family Services of Westchester,<br />

Inc.,$90,000.<br />

“It is great,” said Andre Pabon, Director of<br />

the Juvenile Justice Mentoring Project at Big<br />

Brothers Big Sisters of <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> City. “We are<br />

now going to be reaching out to more children<br />

whose parents have been incarcerated.”<br />

The grantees were selected from over 500<br />

proposals which were submitted.<br />

In addition, two <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> City agencies<br />

funded during last year’s initial round of grants<br />

received their second year grant allocations of<br />

$75,000. These were:<br />

• Edwin Gould Services for Children and<br />

Families; and<br />

• The Osborne Association.<br />

Photo credit:David Buxenbaum


<strong>September</strong> <strong>2004</strong> <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> <strong>Nonprofit</strong> <strong>Press</strong> www.nynp.biz 7<br />

BREAKING NEWS<br />

Breaking <strong>New</strong>s<br />

As we went to press, the following stories were unfolding.<br />

For continuing developments on these and other Breaking <strong>New</strong>s stories go to our website at www.nynp.biz.<br />

To receive our regular Email <strong>New</strong>s Updates, simply email us at editor@nynp.biz<br />

Governor Vetoes Budget Submission<br />

Final Outcome Uncertain<br />

On August 20th, Governor Pataki vetoed<br />

$1.8 billion worth of spending increases from the<br />

$101.6 billion State budget for FY<strong>2004</strong>-2005<br />

which had been passed jointly by the Assembly<br />

and Senate a week earlier. The vetoes reinstated<br />

significant cuts to human services which had been<br />

included in the Governor’s original $99.8 billion<br />

budget proposal.<br />

The Governor’s actions consisted of 195<br />

separate line item vetoes striking down specific<br />

appropriations. Last year, when the Governor<br />

struck down elements of a similar joint legislative<br />

budget submission, the Senate and Assembly<br />

simply overrode the vetoes. This year, a similar<br />

outcome is less certain. Neither the Senate nor<br />

Assembly had indicated what steps they would<br />

take in response to the Governor’s vetoes.<br />

The Governor’s list of vetoes impacted<br />

many human services programs. Among the<br />

most significant vetoes were:<br />

• Nursing Home Facility Viability Adjustment<br />

$12.5 million<br />

• Foster Care Funding for NYC Congregate Care Rates<br />

10.0 million<br />

• Temporary Assistance Programs<br />

4.4 million<br />

• SSI Increase<br />

3.0 million<br />

• Mental health community services<br />

4.5 million<br />

• VESID Case Services<br />

2.0 million<br />

• Extended Day/School Violence Proram<br />

1.5 million<br />

• Youth Development and Delinquency Prevention<br />

1.2 million<br />

• Settlement House Programs<br />

1.4 million<br />

• Licensed Social Worker Loan Forgiveness<br />

1.0 million<br />

• Family Preservation Centers 560,000<br />

• Independent Living Centers 536,600<br />

• Expanded In-Home Services for the Elderly 528,030<br />

• Education and Assistance Corporation 450,000<br />

• Runaway and Homeless Youth 307,800<br />

• Child Advocacy Centers 307,800<br />

• Elder Abuse Prevention Project 300,000<br />

• Domestic Violence Training Program 135,000<br />

Handelman Leaves NYANA<br />

Mark Handelman resigned his position as<br />

President and CEO of the <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> Association<br />

for <strong>New</strong> Americans (NYANA) on August 13th after<br />

leading the organization for more than 25 years.<br />

Handelman “decided to leave NYANA in order to<br />

start his own consulting firm to assist non-profits in<br />

the area of management, strategic planning, and<br />

fundraising,” the agency reported in a statement<br />

issued on August 20th. “Mark is particularly interested<br />

in working with organizations that serve children<br />

with disabilities and special needs.”<br />

Jose Valencia, formerly NYANA’s Chief<br />

Operating Officer and Chief Financial Officer, has<br />

replaced Handelman as President and CEO.<br />

NYANA, which had resettled 250,000 Jewish<br />

refugees from the former Soviet Union, had seen<br />

a sharp decline in this program in recent years as<br />

a result of tightened federal refugee policies following<br />

<strong>September</strong> 11th. An August 20th article<br />

published by The Jewish Week, a newspaper<br />

serving the Jewish community, tied Handelman’s<br />

resignation to this decline and resulting financial<br />

and organizational pressures on the agency. The<br />

article went on to state that “Handelman’s sudden<br />

resignation is said to have caused consternation<br />

among some staffers, who fear that NYANA, a<br />

venerable social service agency founded in the<br />

aftermath of World War II to resettle Holocaust<br />

survivors, may not survive much longer.”<br />

Handelman refuted the article’s assertions in<br />

a written response to The Jewish Week editor.<br />

“The article would lead the reader to believe that I<br />

left due to frustration with the organization and that<br />

the agency’s future is doubtful. Nothing could be<br />

further from the truth,” he stated. “Despite a dramatic<br />

downturn in refugee arrivals, NYANA annually<br />

provides important culturally sensitive social<br />

services to over 8000 immigrants, many of them<br />

former resettlement clients from the Soviet Jewish<br />

émigré community. After being at the helm of this<br />

wonderful organization for twenty-five years, I simply<br />

felt that it was the right time to seek new professional<br />

challenges for myself and thus decided<br />

to separate from the agency.”<br />

Valencia stated that NYANA had significantly<br />

expanded the range of services it offers to its<br />

existing refugee client base. “The target<br />

popoulaiton has remained the same but this is a<br />

multi-service agency now,” he said. “We have two<br />

clinics – a substance abuse clinic and a mental<br />

health clinic. We have ESL, legal services,<br />

domestic violence programs. We have one of the<br />

largest employment services contract with the City<br />

of <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> and training programs with the State.”<br />

Free E-<strong>New</strong>sletter<br />

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8 <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> <strong>Nonprofit</strong> <strong>Press</strong> www.nynp.biz <strong>September</strong> <strong>2004</strong><br />

NEW FACES F<br />

AT THE TOP<br />

Theresa A. Bischoff<br />

Chief Executive Officer<br />

American Red Cross in Greater <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong><br />

The American Red Cross in Greater <strong>New</strong><br />

<strong>York</strong> is always there at times of crisis. “We<br />

have a history of responding to eight emergencies<br />

or disasters a day here in the <strong>New</strong><br />

<strong>York</strong> area,” says Theresa A. Bischoff who<br />

joined the organization as CEO in January. Yet<br />

the events of <strong>September</strong> 11th have made the<br />

Red Cross’ mission even more important as<br />

<strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong>ers face the need to prepare for<br />

calamities ranging from hurricanes to terrorist<br />

attacks of almost incomprehensible scale.<br />

“After 9/11, there was a lot of listening to<br />

what people felt the needs were and what the<br />

Red Cross had to do,” says Bischoff. “The<br />

‘preparedness’ mission is key.<br />

“We are committed to working with our<br />

government, other nonprofits and corporate<br />

partners to ensure that all 8.5 million people<br />

in our area are prepared for whatever emergency<br />

or disaster might happen. Whether it is<br />

a house fire, a blackout or a terrorist event, we<br />

want people to be prepared. That is a new focus<br />

and challenge for us.”<br />

In late February, ARC-GNY commissioned<br />

a survey to assess the state of readiness<br />

of individuals and small businesses for future<br />

crises. There was good news and bad news.<br />

“Over 90% of the people we surveyed said<br />

they knew they should be prepared,” says<br />

Bischoff. “About 40% said they had done<br />

something to prepare but only 22% had gotten<br />

fully prepared with a plan and a kit.”<br />

Why aren’t people taking steps to prepare<br />

for potential emergencies when they<br />

know how important it can be?<br />

“They told us they didn’t know what<br />

they were preparing for,” explains Bischoff.<br />

“We can help them with that. Preparing is<br />

something we can do for a whole range of<br />

things that might happen to us, anything<br />

from a single family fire or a water main<br />

break to a larger scale event like a blackout or<br />

a terrorist event. We can help them get over<br />

that barrier.”<br />

Bischoff stresses that fear of terrorism isn’t<br />

the only reason to plan ahead. “We got<br />

wonderful letters after the blackout from people<br />

who were prepared – people who had water,<br />

flashlights and comfortable shoes in their<br />

offices so they could walk home that night.<br />

They had taken our preparedness course in<br />

response to 9/11 but it was so helpful to them<br />

in dealing with the blackout.”<br />

The Red Cross survey also showed that<br />

people wanted hands on training to take<br />

them through the process of emergency planning.<br />

Since October of 2001, ARC-GNY has<br />

taught “Preparing for the Unexpected”, a free<br />

Photo Credit: Lou Manna<br />

60-minute class which teaches families what<br />

steps to take prior to and during an emergency,<br />

how to develop a plan and put together<br />

a disaster kit.<br />

“We offer it every week here at our headquarters<br />

and at our chapter locations,” says<br />

Bischoff. “We offered it to the City Council, to<br />

our State government supporters and we are<br />

participating with other groups to get the<br />

word out. We are probably offering it<br />

through every route you can imagine.<br />

“We are now partnering with corporations<br />

to offer it as ‘lunch and learn’ programs<br />

so their employees will have opportunities to<br />

get prepared,” Bischoff continues. “We are<br />

doing more and more of that.”<br />

ARC-NYC is also working closely with<br />

government organizations in its preparedness<br />

campaign. “We partner with OEM (<strong>New</strong><br />

<strong>York</strong> City’s Office of Emergency Management)<br />

in finding opportunities,” says<br />

Bischoff. “In <strong>September</strong>, as part of the Preparedness<br />

Month, we will be doing eight<br />

evenings of ‘Ready <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong>’ around the<br />

five boroughs, bringing all the programs we<br />

talk about -- making a plan, preparing a kit,<br />

getting trained in things like CPR, volunteering<br />

and giving blood.”<br />

In order to accommodate its enhanced<br />

disaster preparedness training effort, ARC-<br />

GNY’s has refined its organizational focus, divesting<br />

some programs less central to this<br />

new mandate. Until FY2003, homelessness<br />

shelters and programs accounted for approximately<br />

25% of ARC-GNY’s programmatic<br />

expenditures. “Over the past year, we have<br />

transitioned our homeless programs to other<br />

organizations,” says Bischoff. “So, we were<br />

able to assure that those programs got transferred<br />

as whole vital programs while allowing<br />

us to focus on our core mission.” While<br />

the strategic decision to divest these programs<br />

came prior to Bischoff’s arrival, she is<br />

fully supportive of the move. “Clearly, our<br />

new focus was going to take a lot of organizational<br />

energy. I think these were very good<br />

decisions.”<br />

Bischoff believes that ARC-GNY’s $30<br />

million annual budget fails to convey the true<br />

scope of the organization’s activity. “What<br />

you don’t see in that budget is the thousands<br />

and thousands of hours of volunteer time and<br />

in kind support we get,” she explains. “This<br />

organization is quite unique and extraordinary<br />

in the role that volunteers<br />

play. We have 7,000 volunteers,<br />

many of them highly trained and<br />

many of them who actually go<br />

out and do the core work of the<br />

organization. When we have a<br />

fire, it is very often only volunteers<br />

who, after very significant training, go<br />

out to provide the services that people expect<br />

from the Red Cross.”<br />

Bischoff is also confident that the work of<br />

these volunteers and the relief they provide to<br />

<strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong>ers in crisis connects with potential<br />

donors. “The stories really are compelling,”<br />

says Bischoff. “On Father’s Day, we had a<br />

large fire in northern Manhattan and suddenly<br />

30 families were out on the street watching<br />

their building burn. Within minutes, the Red<br />

Cross was there making sure that people had<br />

blankets and clothes to put on and starting<br />

the process of thinking about how they would<br />

recover after losing their home and possessions.<br />

When you arrive on the scene of these<br />

disasters, wearing that Red Cross jacket, those<br />

we are there to help feel the sense of relief that<br />

help has arrived.”<br />

Now, Bischoff wants to get the word out.<br />

“Next year is our 100th birthday so it gives us<br />

an opportunity to re-acquaint ourselves with<br />

a lot of the audiences in <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> who recognize<br />

the symbol but may not be as familiar<br />

with the work that we are doing today,” she<br />

says.<br />

And, she maintains, ARC-GNY needs<br />

that support. “We are able to do our work<br />

only because of the generosity and contributions<br />

of our donors,” she says. And, the<br />

fundraising environment has become more<br />

challenging. “What we saw substantially<br />

across all nonprofit organizations after 9/11<br />

was donor exhaustion and then, of course, the<br />

economic slowdown. I think we experienced<br />

that in a way that was consistent with other<br />

nonprofits. We are looking forward to the economic<br />

recovery and seeing more opportunities<br />

to fundraise.”<br />

Bischoff, who came to ARC-GNY after<br />

serving as President of NYU Medical Center,<br />

also wants to ramp up the organization’s<br />

own fundraising efforts. “In the past,<br />

a substantial amount of our funding had<br />

come through the United Way campaign.<br />

They have made some changes so we need<br />

to have that direct connection to our communities<br />

so they can provide us with the<br />

support we need.<br />

“We are looking forward to our centennial<br />

year as an opportunity to both share our<br />

work and engage corporations, individuals<br />

and government in supporting us in our mission<br />

to help all <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong>ers.”


<strong>September</strong> <strong>2004</strong> <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> <strong>Nonprofit</strong> <strong>Press</strong> www.nynp.biz 9<br />

NEW FACES F<br />

AT THE TOP<br />

Patrick Foye<br />

President/CEO<br />

United Way of Long Island<br />

Five months into his new position as<br />

President/CEO of United Way of Long Island,<br />

Patrick Foye admits that he is having<br />

fun. “It has been a real learning experience<br />

for me given that I come out of the legal and<br />

corporate worlds. This is a terrific organization.<br />

United Way of Long Island has been at<br />

this for 40 years and it has been doing terrific<br />

things for all that time. I think we are at the<br />

point of taking it to the next level.”<br />

Despite UWLI’s record of accomplishment,<br />

Foye was recruited to help energize an<br />

organization experiencing tough times. The<br />

Long Island Campaign, UWLI’s own local<br />

fundraising effort, had produced declining<br />

revenues since 2000. “It has been a challenging<br />

period for United Way of Long Island and<br />

for United Way of America generally,” says<br />

Foye. “That was exacerbated by 9/11 which<br />

had an effect on a lot of charities, both here<br />

and in the tri-state area. The trends are down<br />

for a number of years. I think my predecessor<br />

worked hard and effectively through that and<br />

I think we have some momentum.”<br />

In fact, UWLI may well have turned the<br />

corner already by stemming the tide of declining<br />

local campaign contributions. “We<br />

think this will be the first time in a number of<br />

years that the LI Campaign will be up,” Foye<br />

explains, based on preliminary results for the<br />

2003-<strong>2004</strong> campaign which ended earlier this<br />

summer. “I have had very little to do with<br />

that. It is really due to the work of Mike<br />

Cooney, Senior Vice President of Resource Development,<br />

and his team. Hopefully this will<br />

be a platform for growth in the future. We are<br />

looking for double digit growth in the <strong>2004</strong>-05<br />

Campaign which we are just beginning. That<br />

is ambitious, but I think doable.”<br />

Expanding UWLI’s base of contributions<br />

is Job One for Foye, who recognizes the difficulties<br />

faced by Long Island’s nonprofit community.<br />

“Since I have been here, four or five<br />

of our agencies have gone out of business,” he<br />

says. “It is very challenging time. There have<br />

been funding cutbacks at all levels and the<br />

only reasonable expectation is that those cutbacks<br />

are not likely to be reversed. If anything<br />

they are likely to continue at the State and local<br />

level.” As a result, UWLI’s member agencies<br />

are looking more and more towards private<br />

sources of funding. “It is incumbent on<br />

us to do whatever we can to increase our revenue<br />

base.”<br />

Workplace payroll campaigns are the key<br />

to UWLI’s fundraising efforts and, like United<br />

Way organizations everywhere, UWLI has<br />

struggled in recent years with both declining<br />

enrollments and increasing donor designations<br />

of their gifts to nonprofits of their own<br />

choosing.<br />

In response, UWLI stresses two key messages<br />

as part of its campaign. “One is that, despite<br />

the perceived affluence, there are very<br />

significant health and welfare issues here on<br />

Long Island,” says Foye. “There are some<br />

very significant pockets of poverty and homelessness.<br />

Forty thousand children go to bed<br />

hungry every night. Donors need to think<br />

about investing their money in what matters<br />

here on Long Island.—how we can change<br />

people’s lives for the better”<br />

Secondly, Foye wants to emphasize that<br />

donations to UWLI are a smart, philanthropic<br />

investment. “We deliver value and we will<br />

help, together with our community impact<br />

partners, to address these issues.”<br />

In this context, UWLI, like United Ways<br />

across the country, is considering a transition to<br />

a Community Impact model for its own grant<br />

allocations. The basic strategy targets United<br />

Way funding to selected “Community Impact”<br />

projects where it hopes to achieve specific and<br />

measurable outcomes. As a result, United<br />

Ways hope to attract increased<br />

donations based<br />

on a proven ability to<br />

make a difference. (See<br />

“A <strong>New</strong> Way at United<br />

Way,” NYNP, March<br />

2003.)<br />

“This is something<br />

that has been talked<br />

about here since before I<br />

joined,” says Foye. “My<br />

predecessor, Willie Edlow<br />

had introduced the<br />

concept and it has been<br />

germinating for some<br />

time.” (See “On Long<br />

Island: Building a Consensus<br />

for Change,”<br />

NYNP, March 2003.)<br />

“Exactly what<br />

Community Impact<br />

means on Long Island and for UWLI is unclear.<br />

We are still at an early stage in the<br />

process. I think it is likely that there will be<br />

four or five focus areas of which Community<br />

Health Issues will probably be one. Early<br />

Childhood Education will probably be<br />

another. There has been a Success by Six<br />

United Way initiative that I think we can<br />

take to the next level. We are also looking at<br />

programs for families of Long Island-based<br />

reservists who have been called off to service<br />

in Iraq or Afghanistan. Those families<br />

are suffering temporary financial pressure<br />

or other issues as a result of that and we are<br />

trying to figure out how we can be helpful<br />

in that arena. We are looking at a couple of<br />

other areas that are consistent with the mission<br />

of UWLI and United Way generally for<br />

the past 40 years.”<br />

What a transition to Community<br />

Impact will mean for UWLI’s 170 member<br />

agencies who traditionally receive<br />

basic grants to support their efforts in a<br />

wide range of programmatic areas is also<br />

unclear. A full-fledged Community Impact<br />

model does away with the basic<br />

membership grant and can leave many<br />

nonprofits hanging if they fall outside<br />

the funding focus.<br />

“One of the things we are seriously<br />

considering is some hybrid model in which<br />

we continue to have relationships with our<br />

member agencies -- including funding relationships<br />

-- but also focus on these four or<br />

five community impact areas,” says Foye<br />

who goes on to emphasize that “We are not<br />

about to get into the direct service delivery<br />

business. It is not what we are. It is not what<br />

we are good at. It is not a core competency.”<br />

Foye expects the process of defining<br />

how UWLI will adapt Community Impact<br />

to the needs of Long Island to play out over<br />

the next six to nine months. “We have developed<br />

a task force of representatives from<br />

FOYE continued on page 10


10 <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> <strong>Nonprofit</strong> <strong>Press</strong> www.nynp.biz <strong>September</strong> <strong>2004</strong><br />

NEW FACES F<br />

AT THE TOP<br />

FOYE continued from page 9<br />

the board. We are going to have input from<br />

the Agency Executive Council which includes<br />

representatives of member agencies.<br />

We are going to be reaching out to public officials<br />

in both counties and talking to our<br />

member agencies directly.”<br />

UWLI is already taking steps to incorporate<br />

Community Impact principles in some<br />

of its existing grant programs. In the past,<br />

UWLI’s Targeted Care Grant program was a<br />

pool of approximately $300,000 which was<br />

allocated into small grants for a large number<br />

of member agencies. “Starting in the fall,<br />

we will be making 12 or so grants of about<br />

$25,000 each,” says Foye. “The grants will be<br />

much more focused. This is a way for us to<br />

dip our toe in the Community Impact pool<br />

while we are still developing the strategy<br />

overall.”<br />

Foye also intends to broaden the ways<br />

in which UWLI reaches out to potential<br />

donors. One step was the recent recruitment<br />

of Sean Phillips as Senior Vice President of<br />

Major Gifts. Phillips comes to UWLI from<br />

Family and Children’s Association where he<br />

served in a similar capacity. “Sean’s joining<br />

us gives us another leg to the stool,” says<br />

Foye. “He is a major presence on Long Island<br />

in the major gifts and planned giving areas.<br />

He has a tremendous amount of experience<br />

and credibility as well as relationships with<br />

major players in the philanthropic world on<br />

Long Island.”<br />

In addition, Foye hopes to ramp up<br />

UWLI’s special events fundraising. “Except<br />

for the Long Island insurance event, which is<br />

celebrating its 10th anniversary, we haven’t<br />

had a major presence in special events and<br />

we are looking to change that on a selective<br />

basis,” he says. “We are doing a special gala<br />

celebration of our 40th anniversary in October.<br />

Attorney General Spitzer is the keynote<br />

speaker and John Durso, President of Local<br />

338 of the Retail Wholesale Department Store<br />

Union/United Food Commercial Workers<br />

on Long Island, is the honoree. That is another<br />

arrow in our quiver.”<br />

Community Impact also means increased<br />

coordination in terms of grant making<br />

and service delivery. “One of the things<br />

that have struck me as a newcomer to this<br />

world is how fragmented it is,” says Foye.<br />

“We want to figure out an appropriate way<br />

to coordinate our activities, which is an easy<br />

thing to say but not an easy thing to accomplish.”<br />

He cites the existing work of the<br />

Long Island Funders’ Exchange in this area<br />

and looks forward to expanding partnerships<br />

with key grant makers including the<br />

Long Island Community Foundation, the<br />

Rauch Foundation and others. One possibility,<br />

he explains, might be an effort by the<br />

philanthropic community to “adopt” selected<br />

villages or towns in Nassau and Suffolk<br />

for targeted grant-making projects.<br />

UWLI’s new President/CEO acknowledges<br />

his status as a relative novice in the<br />

nonprofit arena. “Frankly everybody in this<br />

world has more experience and knowledge<br />

than I do,” he says.<br />

However, Foye brings valuable corporate<br />

experience and business contacts to his<br />

new position. He has been Executive Vice<br />

President of Apartment Investment and<br />

Management Company, a <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> Stock<br />

Exchange-listed multi-family real estate investment<br />

trust. Previously, he was a Mergers<br />

and Acquisitions Partner at Skadden, Arps,<br />

Slate, Meagher & Flom and Managing Partner<br />

of the firm’s Brussels, Budapest and<br />

Moscow offices.<br />

“I am a Long Islander,” says Foye. “I<br />

have spent my entire life in <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> City or<br />

Long Island, except for three years when I<br />

was exiled to Europe by my law firm. I<br />

know the community and I know the business<br />

community. I am Vice Chairman of the<br />

Long Island Power Authority and I think<br />

that has been helpful in exposing me to opinion<br />

leaders on Long Island. I am hopeful that<br />

these business strengths will outweigh my<br />

weaknesses as I get up to speed on the health<br />

and human service world”<br />

So far, Foye feels that he has received a<br />

warm reception from a community eager to<br />

see the UWLI re-energize its fundraising efforts.<br />

“The <strong>Nonprofit</strong> community has a stake<br />

in the success of UWLI. They recognize it<br />

and we recognize it. I think it is our job to<br />

work together to be more effective.”<br />

Jack Lund<br />

President/CEO<br />

YMCA of Greater <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong><br />

Jack Lund may have been new to the<br />

region when he took over as the YMCA of<br />

Greater <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong>’s President on April 1st,<br />

but he is certainly not new to the field.<br />

“I have been a nonprofit professional<br />

for almost 35 years,” he says.<br />

Nor does the size and scope of the<br />

<strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> “Y”, with 4,500 employees and a<br />

total budget of $115 million, scare him. “I<br />

have run some pretty large and diverse organizations<br />

before,” says Lund who was<br />

Chief Operating Officer for the Chicago<br />

YMCA and most recently CEO in Milwaukee,<br />

which had 17 branches, only two shy<br />

of <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong>’s total of 19. “Each time I enter<br />

a city, I take a pretty similar approach --<br />

the full immersion strategy,” says Lund. “I<br />

get out and connect with people, learn<br />

about the organization and how we are<br />

seen, who the leaders are. Certainly in<br />

<strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong>, that is challenging because the<br />

leadership network is wider and deeper.<br />

Right now, I am doing a 100 day listening<br />

tour.<br />

“I also have the comfort of knowing<br />

how YMCAs work,” he explains. “Having<br />

done this for about 30 years, I can walk into<br />

a “Y” and instantly tell you whether things<br />

are good or not -- and why.”<br />

So far, Lund likes what he sees.


<strong>September</strong> <strong>2004</strong> <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> <strong>Nonprofit</strong> <strong>Press</strong> www.nynp.biz 11<br />

NEW FACES F<br />

AT THE TOP<br />

“The YMCA of Greater <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> has a<br />

lot of strengths and a very good foundation<br />

of financial resources, people and properties,”<br />

says Lund.<br />

“Our branch staff is very proud of<br />

what we do, particularly the work we do<br />

with kids which was a real hallmark of the<br />

last president and the last administration.”<br />

Lund has heard a desire for greater emphasis<br />

on staff development. “Helping people<br />

to build their careers and get the appropriate<br />

academics and other kinds of support,”<br />

he explains. “Since that is a priority for<br />

them, it is a priority for me.”<br />

“With our board, we have a great<br />

group of people that are very passionate<br />

about our work,” he continues. Nevertheless,<br />

he says that there is a consensus<br />

among its members that the board can go<br />

from “good” to “great”. With several existing<br />

board vacancies, “we want to be strategic<br />

about developing the board,” says<br />

Lund. “We want to really begin to think<br />

about leadership succession planning. That<br />

will be a priority.”<br />

“One of the other things the board feels<br />

very good about is the success we have had<br />

with corporate and foundation fundraising,<br />

but they acknowledge that there is still lots<br />

of upside. There are still a lot of untapped<br />

resources and the fact that we have such an<br />

enormous appetite for serving kids -- and<br />

serving kids in programs that are almost<br />

100% subsidized -- means that we have to<br />

find a continual renewable source of funds.<br />

“We have a very diverse and somewhat<br />

fragile funding mix that works for<br />

us,” says Lund, “a combination of earned<br />

revenue, contributed income, support from<br />

the public sector and some endowment<br />

earning. Some of our branches generate<br />

revenues over expense and share resources<br />

with those branches that, by design, do not<br />

generate revenue over expense.”<br />

Looking forward, Lund sees three major<br />

issues on the horizon.<br />

“One is that we continue to focus on<br />

our work with kids. We want to reach<br />

everybody, but we particularly want to emphasize<br />

our work with kids. We want to<br />

continually find more ways to reach kids<br />

and reach them in more effective ways.<br />

“Second, during the last several years,<br />

this organization has begun what can be<br />

called the first true strategic comprehensive<br />

recapitalization program in 100 years.<br />

When we opened up McBurney, it is my<br />

understanding that that is the first new “Y”<br />

we have opened up in 50 years. So, we are<br />

somewhat behind the trends in the country<br />

in terms of having contemporary capital assets.<br />

Continuing that process of renewing<br />

our facilities and making sure they are up<br />

to date will be a priority for us.<br />

“The final thing is, as we look out over<br />

a map of the city, what are the neighborhoods<br />

where the “Y” should really have a<br />

presence and at this time doesn’t. I am particularly<br />

interested in partnering with organizations<br />

and having a presence in the<br />

South Bronx, Washington Heights and a<br />

couple of neighborhoods in Brooklyn.”<br />

Lund has experience expanding the<br />

“Y’s” presence. “While I was in Milwaukee,<br />

we opened seven new YMCAs in low<br />

income neighborhoods,” he says. “Philosophically,<br />

we have a mission to serve<br />

everybody. That is saying a lot, but I don’t<br />

know any other organization that has a<br />

presence in as many diverse communities<br />

as we do in <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> City. We are in those<br />

neighborhoods by design. The things we<br />

do will vary from neighborhood to neighborhood<br />

because the needs are very different.<br />

What comes along with that is a financial<br />

formula that allows us to generate<br />

revenue in one neighborhood and have it<br />

available to be consumed in another neighborhood.<br />

That will continue to be fundamental<br />

to the success of the “Y” in <strong>New</strong><br />

<strong>York</strong> City.”<br />

For Lund, talk of new branches and programs<br />

doesn’t only mean added bricks and<br />

mortar. “We have 19 branches but we are in<br />

340 locations,” he says. “We operate out of<br />

several hundred schools. There is a duality of<br />

our geography. I don’t ever see us not being<br />

a branch and facility-based organization, because<br />

it is a model that continues to work for<br />

us, but I think the really great “Ys” are the<br />

ones that are willing to get outside their walls<br />

and find other ways to serve.”<br />

Lund also has some thoughts about<br />

program areas he sees the YMCA exploring.<br />

“We are very well positioned to have a<br />

more positive impact on kids’ health than<br />

we are currently,” he says. “At a time<br />

when kids’ health numbers – obesity, diseases<br />

of childhood -- are just collapsing,<br />

what can we do to begin to turn some of<br />

those around?<br />

A lot of resources that had traditionally<br />

been available just aren’t there. I am<br />

thinking about health programs and gym<br />

class. Is there a role for the “Y” to<br />

play, either as the ‘gym teacher’ for<br />

<strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> City schools or as a place<br />

the schools can take advantage of<br />

by using our expertise and facilities?”<br />

In Milwaukee, Lund developed a charter<br />

school as a partnership between the “Y”<br />

and a small academic institution. “We<br />

brought the administrative strength; they<br />

brought the academic strengths,” he says.<br />

“We already are very much in an educational<br />

support role through our after-school<br />

programs and some other things we do.<br />

We want to continue figuring out how we<br />

can support not only public education, but<br />

education broadly defined.”<br />

YMCA membership is something<br />

Lund wants to make available for all <strong>New</strong><br />

<strong>York</strong> City children. “One of the things we<br />

have done in other cities is to create a Youth<br />

City Membership. For $5, a kid can become<br />

a member of the Y,” he explains, noting that<br />

they were usually willing to waive the $5<br />

fee. “The amazing thing to me was that all<br />

these kids got membership cards with their<br />

picture on them. For kids living in low income<br />

communities, that was the first thing<br />

they ever had in their possession that said<br />

they were important and they were connected<br />

to something. We didn’t know that<br />

was going to happen but it was wonderful<br />

experience and we kept doing it. Maybe<br />

we should do that here.”<br />

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12 <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> <strong>Nonprofit</strong> <strong>Press</strong> www.nynp.biz <strong>September</strong> <strong>2004</strong><br />

AGENCY OF THE MONTH<br />

Big Brothers Big Sisters of NYC<br />

A Hundred Years Young<br />

“Mentoring has become one of the<br />

‘in’ buzzwords in social services,” says<br />

Allan Luks, Executive Director of Big<br />

Brothers/Big Sisters of <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> City<br />

(BBBS). “Bush talked about mentoring<br />

in his State of the Union address. Clinton<br />

had a giant meeting on mentoring<br />

when he was president. Right now, we<br />

are ‘in’, but who knows for how long.”<br />

That is OK. BBBS has been involved<br />

with mentoring since before it was ‘in’.<br />

In fact, BBBS established the movement<br />

100 years ago when its founder, Ernest<br />

K. Coulter, a clerk in <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> Children's<br />

Court, called upon a local men’s<br />

club to work with the youngsters he<br />

saw every day. Over the intervening<br />

century, Big Brothers/Big Sisters has<br />

become synonymous with mentoring –<br />

a brand name like Coca Cola or Xerox<br />

which effectively defined this specific<br />

form of youth development program.<br />

Today, BBBS directly connects 3,000<br />

children from low income, single parent<br />

homes with carefully-screened adult<br />

companions. It also serves as a vanguard<br />

for research and advocacy on<br />

mentoring issues as well as providing<br />

technical assistance and training for<br />

other mentoring programs. “We like to<br />

think of ourselves as a ‘training hospital’,”<br />

says Luks.<br />

The Big Brother/Big Sister service<br />

model is remarkably straight forward.<br />

“Bigs” commit to spend several hours<br />

with their Little Brothers or Sisters at<br />

least twice a month for a minimum of<br />

one year. The pairs go to ball games and<br />

museums, go bowling, spend time at<br />

the park, and talk. In the process, the<br />

Bigs offer a simple, yet powerful combination<br />

of friendship, guidance, support.<br />

Every relationship is monitored and<br />

supported by a social worker.<br />

This relatively straightforward program<br />

also has proven to be surprisingly<br />

successful. An independent and randomized<br />

1992 national study of the Big<br />

Brother/Big Sister movement found<br />

that it reduced first time drug use by 46<br />

percent, cut school absenteeism by 52<br />

percent, and lowered violent behavior<br />

by 33 percent. And, this sample population<br />

was no collection of cream puffs.<br />

Over 80 percent of the kids came from<br />

impoverished families, and almost all<br />

were being raised by a single parent.<br />

Approximately 40 percent were from<br />

homes with a history of drug or alcohol<br />

abuse and nearly 30 percent came from<br />

families with a record of domestic violence.<br />

In fact, the simpler the form of the<br />

relationship, the more valuable is the<br />

experience. Another long term study<br />

found that those “Bigs” who merely offered<br />

friendship and support -- rather<br />

than those trying to “straighten kids<br />

out” -- were far more likely to gain the<br />

trust necessary to create a positive influence.<br />

For most of its hundred year history,<br />

BBBS has offered its “traditional”<br />

program. Parents, typically low-income<br />

single moms or dads, learned<br />

about Big Brothers/Big Sisters through<br />

TV, subway ads or roadside billboards.<br />

The parents call and then come in to enroll<br />

their kids.<br />

Volunteers learn about the program<br />

the same way – through a broad-based<br />

advertising campaign as well as word<br />

of mouth from other volunteers. They<br />

attend general orientation meetings<br />

which are held regularly and, if still interested,<br />

go through an in-depth interview<br />

with a BBBS social worker. “It<br />

takes about an hour and a half,” says<br />

Vidhya R. Kelly, M.S.W., Director of<br />

BBBS’ Borough and Special Priority<br />

Programs. “It is a full psycho-social.<br />

We ask the volunteers everything about<br />

their background, their relationship history,<br />

their academic history, their family<br />

history, how they grew up, their occupation,<br />

what they do.”<br />

Volunteers who make it through<br />

the interview must then provide references.<br />

“We ask for three -- at least one<br />

from an academic advisor or work supervisor,”<br />

says Kelly. “We get a national<br />

background check. Then we check<br />

the sex offender list. It is expensive at<br />

the front end.”<br />

Roughly 60% of those who come in<br />

for the orientation go on to the interview,<br />

says Luks. Then about 60% of<br />

those will go on to be accepted. It leaves<br />

us about 36% who go on to become Big<br />

Brothers or Big Sisters. Most of the falloff<br />

results from self selection on the part<br />

of volunteers.<br />

“Usually it is not our rejection,”<br />

says Luks. “They will drop out once<br />

they learn about the level of commitment.<br />

It is four hours every other week.<br />

In a terrible economy when people are<br />

worried about losing their jobs or<br />

falling behind, that is real.<br />

“The biggest thing you worry about<br />

is whether the man or woman is going<br />

to continue the relationship,” he continues.<br />

“These kids all have problems. The<br />

last thing you want is for the Big Brother<br />

or Big Sister to walk away two<br />

months later.”<br />

In fact, while BBBS asks volunteers<br />

and kids for a one year commitment,<br />

the average match currently lasts two<br />

years, six months. “We have alumni<br />

networks where matches have gone on<br />

for 25 and 35 years and they still come<br />

back to different events,” says Kelly.<br />

The screening also is designed to<br />

guard against any risk to the child.<br />

“You are always worried about a pedophile,”<br />

says Luks, who maintains<br />

that BBBS has not experienced any<br />

abuse cases during its 100 year history.<br />

The pairing of Bigs and Littles is<br />

based on a variety of factors and BBBS<br />

social workers, typically MSWs, supervise<br />

the initial meetings when potential<br />

matches are broached to the parents,<br />

the Bigs and the Littles. All parties have<br />

to agree and a Mentoring Agreement<br />

spells out the requirements and responsibilities<br />

of the program. Social Workers<br />

offer lots of up front support to help the<br />

new relationship take root and provide<br />

ongoing oversight throughout the life<br />

of the match. “For the first several<br />

Allan Luks, Executive Director, Big Brothers/Big<br />

Sisters of <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> City<br />

months there is involvement by the social<br />

worker on a weekly basis,” says<br />

Luks. “They call the volunteer, call the<br />

kid, call the mother. Then, they may go<br />

to monthly contacts.”<br />

All volunteers take a mandatory<br />

five hour training program on mentoring<br />

skills, and BBBS offers lots of other<br />

events and services to help support volunteers,<br />

kids and parents.<br />

“There are agency events where all<br />

the matches come together,” says Kelly.<br />

“We just had our Annual Picnic with<br />

1,300 people in Central Park. It is a time<br />

to meet other matches so the Bigs don’t<br />

feel all alone and the kids who have<br />

been isolated can see that there are other<br />

kids doing this -- that it’s OK and it’s<br />

cool. We offer events like that all<br />

throughout the year. We also do kids<br />

events separately from the Bigs where<br />

the social worker will take the kids out<br />

by themselves and do things so they<br />

can make connections with other kids<br />

in program.”<br />

BBBS arranges many group trips,<br />

helps volunteers identify inexpensive<br />

and appropriate activities and even<br />

runs groups for parents.<br />

Luks joined BBBS 15 years ago and<br />

has been building a whole new tradition<br />

of innovative programming ever


<strong>September</strong> <strong>2004</strong> <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> <strong>Nonprofit</strong> <strong>Press</strong> www.nynp.biz 13<br />

AGENCY OF THE MONTH<br />

Mentoring <strong>New</strong> Americans<br />

BBBS’ special 9/11 Program brought together<br />

Little Brother Daniel Palombo and Big Brother<br />

Paul Barbara. Both of their fathers were firefighters<br />

who perished on <strong>September</strong> 11th.<br />

since.<br />

“In the traditional program, the<br />

parents call us and, of course, it is the<br />

parents who are most together who<br />

call,” says Luks. “We want to take on<br />

the kids who are least likely to call us.<br />

We want to reach out to kids from the<br />

most troubled families, families who<br />

themselves do alcohol or drugs or<br />

where the parents have been arrested.<br />

They are not going to call.”<br />

A first step in this new direction<br />

was development of the Juvenile Justice<br />

Mentoring Project (JJMP) which started<br />

in 1992. “It began as a pilot with one<br />

police precinct – the 84th– in Brooklyn,”<br />

says Luks. “We got the Community Affairs<br />

officer and asked them to give our<br />

information to parents when kids were<br />

arrested. Of course they still never<br />

called. Then we got the Precinct to ask<br />

parents if it would be OK if we called<br />

them. That worked.”<br />

Today, JJMP is a City-wide program.<br />

“At this point, we get our referrals<br />

directly from law enforcement officers<br />

and professionals who are working<br />

with these youth,” says Andre Pabon,<br />

Director of the program. “We collaborate<br />

with precincts, judges, probation<br />

officers and other social work professionals<br />

who refer them specifically for<br />

mentoring services.” (See “Juvenile<br />

Justice Mentoring Program Reaches<br />

Kids Who Need it Most,” page 13.)<br />

Since then, BBBS has developed a broad<br />

range of similarly targeted programs<br />

which reach out to underserved groups<br />

of youngsters.<br />

In 2001, BBBS began its <strong>New</strong> Americans<br />

program which matches Bigs with<br />

children of immigrant families. “It<br />

started in Queens, the most ethnically<br />

diverse county in the nation,” says Kelly,<br />

who developed the project. “Right<br />

now the matches in this program represent<br />

50 different nations. We were finding<br />

that a lot of these kids were feeling<br />

really isolated. There were language<br />

barriers. They looked different. They<br />

sounded different. Their parents were<br />

working 24/7 struggling for a better<br />

life. The kids just weren’t feeling supported.<br />

There were also higher suicide<br />

rates in this population.”<br />

“She tells people that I am her ‘aunt’ which means that I am an older<br />

person who commands respect,” says Maeve Pryce, who actually is a Big<br />

Sister to Dan Dan, a 16 year old Chinese girl living in Queens. “It is very<br />

unusual to see a Chinese child with a non-Chinese adult so other Asian people<br />

always ask her who I am.”<br />

The question of her cultural role is just one of the special issues confronting<br />

Maeve, Dan Dan and the 90 other ‘Big’/ ‘Little’ matches in the <strong>New</strong><br />

Americans program offered by Big Brothers Big Sisters of <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> City.<br />

The program began in Queens two and a half years ago in an effort to serve<br />

children of immigrant families. Many of these kids struggle with a strong<br />

sense of personal and social isolation.<br />

“She is an only child and her parents are working 27 hours a day,” says<br />

Maeve. “She is not allowed to go anywhere by herself.”<br />

These family stresses are then compounded as youngsters try to adapt<br />

to an entirely new culture.Vidhya Kelly, Director of Borough and Special Programs for BBBS, recalls her own challenges growing up in a<br />

first generation South Asian immigrant family. “I looked different.My parents dressed different. My parents wanted me to have an arranged<br />

marriage.”<br />

Allowing a stranger into their child’s life is not something which comes naturally to most immigrant families. “Most of these families<br />

are very insular,” says Kelly. “They don’t want to go outside to ask for help.You aren’t supposed to tell other people about your problems.”<br />

BBBS reaches out to these immigrant families through a network of community-based partners.Among the groups they have worked<br />

with are SAYA (South Asian Youth Action), Queens Child Guidance Center which has an Asian Outreach Center and the South Asian<br />

Women’s Center.<br />

The <strong>New</strong> Americans program staff is as diverse as the groups it serves. “We have staff from India, Singapore, China, Ecuador,” says<br />

Kelly. “We rotate. If we are going to a group that is Indian, I will speak because they will feel closer to me. I know how to greet them.<br />

I know their values. Maeve’s social worker, Jennifer Chang, is Chinese. She goes to Chinese organizations and can speak to parents. Senior<br />

Program Coordinator Tamanna Vaswani grew up in Singapore and is fluent in Malay, Hindi and Italian, making it easier for her to connect<br />

and communicate with other groups”<br />

Language barriers are an issue of particular importance for volunteers in the <strong>New</strong> Americans program. “I have very little contact<br />

with Dan Dan’s parents because they don’t speak any English,” says Maeve, who relays messages through Dan Dan. “I always try to be<br />

very clear about when I will pick her up, what we will be doing and when I will drop her off so there won’t be any misunderstandings.”<br />

BBBS provides its <strong>New</strong> Americans volunteers with special cultural sensitivity training to help bridge some of these issues.<br />

Maeve also had some initial security about whether she could meet the emotional and cultural needs of a 15-year-old Chinese girl<br />

new to this country. “Her English was good, but it wasn’t great,” she explains. “The first weekend I went home exhausted. I didn’t know<br />

if I could do this. How was I going to translate <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> City for this young girl?”<br />

Then, Maeve went back to the BBBS basics. She was there simply to be a friend and supporter. “I relaxed. After two or three<br />

weeks, she just started to talk and she hasn’t stopped since. She is loving <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> and her English is getting better every hour.”<br />

Here, too, there is a new focus on<br />

outreach and partnerships with other<br />

human service providers. “For most of<br />

our programs, the families are coming<br />

to us,” says Kelly. “This program is different.<br />

We have been going out to other<br />

social service programs<br />

that already work with these<br />

populations, whether it is in<br />

counseling, recreation or academic<br />

activities. We are<br />

coming in knowing that<br />

there are already some barriers<br />

that have been broken<br />

down because families are<br />

engaging in some kind of<br />

services.” (See “Mentoring<br />

<strong>New</strong> Americans”, above.)<br />

A similar pilot is BBBS’<br />

Young Mothers program<br />

which focuses on the mentoring<br />

needs of teens who already<br />

find that they themselves<br />

are parents. “It is<br />

untraditional, but it is<br />

great,” says Kelly. “These<br />

are kids who, right after<br />

school, go home to take care<br />

of their kids. Then they are<br />

up all night with them. This<br />

program is different in that<br />

we spend time with the kids<br />

but also time with the babies.<br />

The volunteers act as<br />

kind of an advisor, a resource<br />

on dealing with housing,<br />

child care, job training and education.”<br />

Based in the Bronx, the Young<br />

Mothers program currently has 36<br />

matches.<br />

BBBS also developed specialized<br />

programming for victims of <strong>September</strong><br />

BBBS’ <strong>New</strong> Americans Program matched Big Sister Kazumi<br />

Ogawa, born in Japan and raised in the US, with Sarina Sherpa,<br />

who was born in Nepal and lives in Brooklyn.<br />

11th. “We have one program for kids<br />

who lost a parent and one for kids who<br />

lived or went to school downtown and<br />

saw what happened and, for example,<br />

BIG BROTHER BIG SISTER continued on page 14


14 <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> <strong>Nonprofit</strong> <strong>Press</strong> www.nynp.biz <strong>September</strong> <strong>2004</strong><br />

AGENCY OF THE MONTH<br />

BIG BROTHER BIG SISTER continued from page 13<br />

may be fearful about going outside,”<br />

says Kelly. In a particularly moving partnership<br />

with the <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> City Fire Department,<br />

BBBS also matches firefighters<br />

and firefighter families with kids who<br />

lost a firefighter father. A total of 400<br />

kids participate in 9/11 programs.<br />

Luks has overseen the expansion of<br />

BBBS programming beyond its traditional<br />

30th Street headquarters on the East<br />

Side of Manhattan. “We found that the<br />

majority of the kids on our wait lists were<br />

coming from the outer boroughs,” says<br />

Kelly. The agency opened a Bronx Office<br />

in 1997 and a Queens office in 1999 to<br />

make the program more accessible. Another<br />

office, focusing on foster care prevention,<br />

is in East <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong>, Brooklyn.<br />

The agency has also built a new institutional<br />

infrastructure for its matches<br />

through school-based and work-place<br />

programs. The school-based programs,<br />

which began in 2000, bring adult volunteers<br />

to the Littles’ school once a week<br />

during their lunch hour. The program<br />

focuses on children specifically referred<br />

by teachers and school guidance counselors<br />

and several Manhattan schools<br />

are currently participating.<br />

Luks is excited about the Work-<br />

Place Mentoring programs which BBBS<br />

runs in cooperation with 32 local corporations.<br />

The program brings kids to<br />

corporate offices for a few hours twice a<br />

month where they can do homework,<br />

learn about careers and acquire life<br />

skills. Kids benefit from the experience.<br />

And, so do the participating corporations<br />

and their employee volunteers. In<br />

a 2003 study, a great majority of volunteers<br />

reported positive feelings regarding<br />

the program’s effect on their work<br />

life, interaction with co-workers, loyalty<br />

to their corporation and self esteem.<br />

“This is going to be an area of major<br />

growth,” says Luks. “We have to convince<br />

more and more companies that<br />

these statistics are real.” The program,<br />

which is 14 years old, currently serves<br />

600 children. Its staff currently occupies<br />

the major part of BBBS’ new office<br />

space on Fifth Avenue and 28th street.<br />

In addition to running its own mentoring<br />

programs, BBBS has become a<br />

primary source of training and technical<br />

support for other social service<br />

agencies wanting to add mentoring<br />

components.<br />

In 1992, the agency opened its Center<br />

for Training and Professional Development<br />

and began offering one-day<br />

workshops for other agencies interested<br />

in learning more about mentoring.<br />

Over time, interest grew and in 1998<br />

BBBS partnered with Fordham University<br />

School of Social Work to offer a semester-long,<br />

32 hour Mentoring Supervisor<br />

Certificate Program. The<br />

program covers such topics as volunteer<br />

screening, liability and insurance<br />

issues, matching adults and youth, supervision<br />

of volunteers, identifying risk<br />

factors, group work and how to close<br />

out the Big-Little relationship.<br />

“Initially, we had one group of students<br />

each fall and spring,” says Karen<br />

Heindel, Director of the Center. “That<br />

grew into two groups each fall and<br />

spring and then we added a summer<br />

session. We currently run five different<br />

sessions each year training 125 individuals.<br />

Since the fall of 1998, we have<br />

trained 592 individuals, representing<br />

386 agencies.”<br />

BBBS also offers a range of technical<br />

assistance for other mentoring programs<br />

as well. “Once people take the<br />

course, we are available to them for ongoing<br />

TA at no charge if they want us to<br />

sit down and review their recruitment<br />

materials, their interview forms, their<br />

application or help them develop their<br />

curriculum for training their volunteers.”<br />

BBBS will even provide on-site<br />

training for volunteers at other mentoring<br />

agencies.<br />

The agency also operates Borough<br />

Mentoring Networks in each of the boroughs<br />

where staff of mentoring programs<br />

can meet monthly to share<br />

knowledge, skills and resources. A Professional<br />

Development Workshop Series<br />

geared to the needs of professionals<br />

offers sessions on a variety of mentoring-related<br />

topics.<br />

BBBS supports an additional 4,000<br />

volunteer/child matches at other mentoring<br />

agencies through these training<br />

and technical assistance programs, says<br />

Luks.<br />

Juvenile Justice Mentoring Program Reaches Kids Who Need it Most<br />

When Big Brothers Big Sisters of <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> City (BBBS) began its<br />

Juvenile Justice Mentoring Program (JJMP) as a pilot project in 1992, it was<br />

something different. Historically, parents reached out to BBBS seeking<br />

supportive adult role models that might help keep their kids out of trouble.<br />

JJMP turned this approach on its head. The new program went out<br />

looking for reluctant parents and kids who already were in trouble.<br />

“The negative thing is that the kids have been in trouble,” says<br />

Andre Pabon, Director of the program. “The positive thing is that they<br />

have been caught. So, we know who we are working with. We are able<br />

to identify and address the problems. Everything is out in the open.”<br />

JJMP serves four separate types of youngsters – kids who are<br />

already involved in the court system and are adjudicated, kids who are<br />

delinquent and acting out, siblings of court-involved youth and children of<br />

incarcerated parents.<br />

“The kids in our program are usually first time offenders,” says<br />

Pabon, “with offenses ranging from robbery and assault to weapons possession.”<br />

Ricardo Torres was referred to JJMP and his Big Brother Jimmy<br />

Crespo after getting into trouble. Ricardo looks to Jimmy<br />

as a positive role-model.<br />

Pabon acknowledges that working one-on-one in an unsupervised situation with a teen who has already been convicted of a<br />

crime might seem pretty intimidating to potential volunteers.<br />

“This program also isn’t right for every kid,” explains Pabon.“These are kids who have been caught up with groups of friends.<br />

They are followers who want to be in the ‘in-crowd’ and don’t know how to say no.We are trying to get them back on the right<br />

path so they don’t get re-arrested.”<br />

JJMP provides extra training for volunteers and lots of additional social work support. “Every social worker has a beeper where<br />

parents, youth and volunteers can contact us at anytime of the day -- 24 hours -- to help deal with issues and problems.” At JJMP,<br />

social workers supervise only 35-40 mentor pairs compared to 55 or 60 in the traditional BBBS program.<br />

“We get a really great cluster of volunteers who feel this is something where they can make a bigger impact in turning a kid’s<br />

life around,” says Pabon. “It is much more of a challenge for some volunteers.<br />

“We joke around that volunteers don’t have to have been arrested themselves to be in this program,” Pabon continues. “It is a<br />

plus if a volunteer has grown up in the inner city and understands what youth are going through. But, if someone just has the capacity<br />

to relate with youth, we will help them with training and support from the social workers and these relationships work just as well.”<br />

Youth are usually somewhat skeptical about an initial referral to JJMP. “Most of the time the youth are reluctant at first,” says<br />

Pabon. “That is something we have come to accept.” JJMP actively sells the program to the youth and families who are referred<br />

by police, judges, and the Departments of Probation and Juvenile Justice. “We do our orientations one on one with the youth and<br />

their parent,” says Pabon.“We take them through it step-by-step and show them what is in it for them.” In the end, Pabon believes<br />

that most kids and parents come to see the program an opportunity.<br />

As with the traditional BBBS programs, participation in JJMP pays off. BBBS reports that rearrest rates for those previouslyarrested<br />

youth who came to JJMP was less than 20% compared to 78% for youth released from state facilities run by the Office of<br />

Children and Family Services.


<strong>September</strong> <strong>2004</strong> <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> <strong>Nonprofit</strong> <strong>Press</strong> www.nynp.biz 15<br />

AGENCY OF THE MONTH<br />

FOUNDATIONS<br />

<strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> Women’s Foundation<br />

Seeks Grant Proposals<br />

Council Member Magarita Lopez (left) with BBBS Board Chair Ed Gardner and Board President Laura<br />

Parsons. celebrate the renaming of 30th Street as Big Brothers Big Sisters of <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> City Way<br />

in honor of the organization’s 100th anniversary.<br />

The work with these widely varied<br />

mentoring efforts has lead Luks and<br />

BBBS to be strong advocates for the development<br />

of standards to accredit mentoring<br />

programs and mentoring supervisors.<br />

“This is a field involving intimate relationships<br />

but without standards,” says<br />

Luks. He cites United Way estimates that<br />

there are as many as 25,000 volunteers<br />

working in mentoring relationships<br />

mostly as add-on components to local after-school,<br />

recreational and youth development<br />

programs. “When we ask them<br />

how they match kids and adults, they tell<br />

us that Mr. Jones down the street is a nice<br />

guy and Johnny doesn’t have a father,”<br />

says Kelly.<br />

“When a mother drops her child off<br />

at a program, she should know that the<br />

staff have skills and the volunteer has<br />

had a background check,” says Luks. He<br />

emphasizes his point by noting that outside<br />

research showed 90% of programs<br />

completing the Mentoring Supervisor<br />

Certificate Program go back and change<br />

their method of screening volunteers.<br />

The answer? Training, staff certification<br />

and program accreditation, says<br />

Luks. To this end, BBBS has been a<br />

leading advocate, as part of a 140 member<br />

statewide coalition, for the Safe<br />

Mentoring Act legislation introduced<br />

by State Senator Nicholae Spano (R-<br />

Yonkers) and Assemblywoman Vivian<br />

Cook (D-Queens). The bill would establish<br />

a voluntary certification program<br />

for mentoring supervisors, and<br />

require mentoring programs to conduct<br />

criminal background checks for all potential<br />

mentors. The certification program<br />

would be administered by the Office<br />

of Children and Family Services,<br />

while individual agencies would be responsible<br />

for ensuring that criminal<br />

background checks are conducted.<br />

Despite the growth in mentoring<br />

programming at BBBS and elsewhere,<br />

there is still a strong need for additional<br />

mentoring opportunities. “We support<br />

3,000 matches ourselves and 4,000<br />

through other agencies for a total of<br />

7,000,” says Luks. “In <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> City<br />

alone, there are 650,000 kids living in<br />

single parent homes of which 365,000<br />

are below the poverty line.”<br />

For information about Big Brothers<br />

Big Sisters of <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> City programs<br />

contact 1-888-BigsNYC or<br />

www.Bigsnyc.org.<br />

The <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> Women’s foundation<br />

(NYWF) is accepting applications<br />

for its <strong>2004</strong>-2005 grant year. Programs<br />

that help low-income women and girls<br />

and that are focused on community<br />

organizing, economic security, girls’<br />

positive development, health and<br />

reproductive rights, or violence against<br />

women will be considered for grants of<br />

up to $35,000 each.<br />

“The <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> Women’s<br />

Foundation funding makes a difference<br />

in the lives of women and girls in <strong>New</strong><br />

<strong>York</strong> City. NYWF’s grants promote<br />

innovate solutions to problems low<br />

income women and girls face—solutions<br />

developed by the women and<br />

girls themselves,” said Angie Wang, the<br />

Foundation’s Program Director.<br />

The deadline to submit an application<br />

is Septembr 21, <strong>2004</strong>. More information<br />

is available at NYWF’s website,<br />

www.nywf.org.<br />

The Foundation is frequently the<br />

first institution to offer significant support<br />

to women-led community-based<br />

nonprofits. Last year the Foundation<br />

gave away over $1 million to 40 organizations.<br />

Since its inception, the NYWF<br />

has given away over $8 million.<br />

Advertise with NYNP<br />

It’s Effective, Inexpensive and Fast!


16 <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> <strong>Nonprofit</strong> <strong>Press</strong> www.nynp.biz <strong>September</strong> <strong>2004</strong><br />

FINANCE<br />

A Ten Point Checklist to Evaluate<br />

Your Financial Management<br />

Unfortunately, it is not uncommon to read about financial<br />

failings at even well known and well established nonprofits. At<br />

these times, a question often arises: how do board members<br />

and executive directors, many of whom do not have financial<br />

backgrounds, determine if their finances are managed well. Finances<br />

are, after all, the life-blood of nonprofits.<br />

I believe that boards and CEOs can quickly assess the<br />

strength of their agency’s financial management by rating the<br />

efficiency of their accounting or finance department. While this<br />

simple checklist may not reveal deep seated financial flaws i.e.<br />

structural deficits or revenue risks, it is based on the truism that<br />

how an accounting or finance department functions determines<br />

how well their finances are managed.<br />

Sanjay Shah<br />

HOW DOES YOUR AGENCY STACK UP?<br />

❑ 1. Does your accounting department give you timely and accurate “bird’s eye view”<br />

reports every month?<br />

These should be 3 or 4 pages long, with the first page comparing monthly<br />

and year-to-date operations with budget targets, followed by “drilleddown”<br />

reports of either groups of programs or funds and a page of notes<br />

explaining the “variances.”<br />

❑ 2. Are these reports automated, coming right out of the accounting system?<br />

In many instances, accounting/finance personnel spend inordinate<br />

amounts of time preparing reports because their accounting systems don’t<br />

or can’t produce them in the format they or their board want. Besides the<br />

time savings, reports coming right from accounting systems help to assure<br />

the integrity of the numbers.<br />

❑ 3. Does your accounting department prepare monthly reports within 10 days after<br />

a month ends?<br />

Unless there is a specific and compelling reason for delays, your accounting/finance<br />

department should be able to give “timely” reports. Regular<br />

delays of more than 10 days may be due to problems with basic “processing”<br />

functions i.e. payroll, accounts payable, etc.<br />

❑ 4. Do the reports prepared by your accounting department give a clear sense of<br />

what’s going on and where the problems lie?<br />

Clarity & brevity, as opposed to volumes of tiny details, are more important,<br />

especially when it comes to reports for the board of directors.<br />

The reports should show overall results (surplus or deficit), where the<br />

problems lie – i.e. Program A caused 71% of deficit because of higher<br />

salaries (39%), rent (11%) & lower revenue (21%) - and what management<br />

intends to do about it. More often, the reports and discussions get<br />

bogged down in questions like “Why is our telephone bill $200 higher<br />

than last month?” and miss the big picture.<br />

❑ 5.<br />

Does your accounting department provide quick answers to your questions?<br />

Ideally, they should anticipate the questions and provide explanations.<br />

However, if they take 2 hours to answer a question like “how did we do<br />

in Program A for July compared with last year?”, then you have a problem<br />

❑ 6. Does the accounting department provide a Statement of Activities (Revenue<br />

& Expense Report) and a Statement of Position (Balance Sheet) at the same time?<br />

A well-run accounting/finance department is up-to-date with all processing<br />

functions, monthly closings, adjustments, bank reconciliations,<br />

etc., essential to producing Statement of Activities & Statement of Position<br />

reports simultaneously. A department that is on top of their financial<br />

statements is also likely to be on top of financial matters concerning<br />

their organization.<br />

❑ 7. Does your accounting department provide you cash flow projections and analyses<br />

of accounts payable and receivable?<br />

Many nonprofits struggle with cash flow and one way of managing it is<br />

to have regularly updated cash flow projections so you can appropriately<br />

manage accounts receivable, accounts payable and working capital<br />

needs. Cash flow projections should be based on historical data and adjusted<br />

for the knowledge about current events.<br />

❑ 8. Can your accounting department complete an external CPA audit in 3 months<br />

after a fiscal year ends and do your final audited numbers differ substantially<br />

from the unaudited numbers?<br />

An independent CPA audit is the ultimate test of your financial reports.<br />

How quickly is your accounting department ready to meet with outside<br />

auditors? Not many nonprofits of any size actually complete a CPA audit<br />

within three months, but a well-functioning department should be<br />

prepared for one at that point. Also, while there is always some variation<br />

between internal financial reports and final audited results, substantial<br />

differences are a sign of trouble.<br />

❑ 9. Does your accounting department provide you with financial projections – for the<br />

current year as well as next year?<br />

An ability to create financial projections, depending on the complexity of<br />

the operations, may require financial modeling and/or advanced<br />

spreadsheet skills. The payoff is an ability to manage your finance<br />

“proactively.”<br />

❑ 10. Does your accounting department follow FASB 116 requirements regarding<br />

unrestricted, temporarily restricted and permanently restricted funds in recording<br />

all receipts?<br />

It is extremely important to delineate unrestricted funds from temporarily<br />

and permanently restricted funds at the transaction level, for the simple<br />

reason that nonprofits have discretion over where, when & how they<br />

can spend these funds and they should correctly record and track these<br />

receipts.<br />

CHECK YOUR RESULTS:<br />

Yes to 5 or less – Needs significant improvements<br />

Yes to 6 or 7 – Needs some improvements<br />

Yes to 8 or more – Needs marginal improvements<br />

What can you expect if you meet all or 8 or more tests? Four major benefits:<br />

a) Good financial management and planning<br />

b) Well-educated decisions to meet your short-term and long-term goals<br />

c) Proactive management to avert impending problems<br />

d) Efficient use of all of your resources – time, people, and money<br />

What do you need to pass these tests? Three things as follows:<br />

• Clearly defined and automated processes with checks and balances<br />

•Well implemented systems to meet your organization’s needs & goals<br />

•Trained staff – both in the processes and the systems, and knowledgeable in financial/accounting<br />

matters<br />

Sanjay Shah is the President of Paragon Management Group. He has worked as CFO and<br />

consultant for many large and small nonprofits. He can be reached at sshah@paragon.mgt.com


<strong>September</strong> <strong>2004</strong> <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> <strong>Nonprofit</strong> <strong>Press</strong> www.nynp.biz 17<br />

PEOPLE SERVING PEOPLE<br />

Mattingly <strong>New</strong> Commissioner at<br />

Administration for Children’s Services<br />

Abbott House Names Meyers<br />

<strong>New</strong> Executive Director/CEO<br />

John B. Mattingly has been appointed<br />

Commissioner of <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> City’s Administration<br />

for Children's Services. Mattingly was<br />

previously Director of Human Service Reforms<br />

at the Annie E. Casey Foundation.<br />

Over the past five years, he has worked closely<br />

with ACS, serving as a member of the <strong>New</strong><br />

<strong>York</strong> City Special Child Welfare Advisory<br />

Panel which has helped to resolve the Marisol<br />

and Wilder federal class action lawsuits.<br />

"John Mattingly is well-known to the<br />

<strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> City children's services community<br />

of practitioners and advocates, and we are<br />

incredibly fortunate that he has decided to<br />

join our team," said Mayor Bloomberg.<br />

"Knowing from personal experience the<br />

business of child welfare both in <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong><br />

and other cities around the country, I have no<br />

illusions that this will be an easy task,” said<br />

Mattingly. “On the other hand, I also have<br />

seen the progress made by Commissioner<br />

Scoppetta and Commissioner Bell in the past<br />

eight years, and I hope to build on that work<br />

in the coming years."<br />

“We have worked with him in the past<br />

and look forward to working with him<br />

again,” said Jim Purcell, Executive Director of<br />

the Council of Family and Child Caring<br />

Agencies (COFCCA). “We are very impressed<br />

with his vision and his knowledge of<br />

the child welfare system.”<br />

"John Mattingly is clearly the right person<br />

for the job, coming to <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> City with<br />

a demonstrated record of accomplishments<br />

John Mattingly<br />

and expertise in the field and a long history<br />

of success in national child welfare reform<br />

efforts," said Gail B. Nayowith, Executive<br />

Director, Citizens' Committee for Children<br />

of <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong>.<br />

At the Annie E. Casey Foundation,<br />

Mattingly designed and managed the<br />

"Family to Family" foster care initiative, and<br />

was also the Foundation's team leader for<br />

child welfare policy. "Family to Family" focuses<br />

on strengthening the network of families<br />

available to care for abused and neglected<br />

children in their own communities;<br />

and tracking outcomes for children and<br />

families. He also mediated a class action<br />

case against the State of Tennessee in 2001.<br />

Claude B. Meyers<br />

Claude B. Meyers has been selected to<br />

be the new Executive Director and CEO of<br />

Abbott House, located in Irvington, <strong>New</strong><br />

<strong>York</strong>. She will succeed Denis Barry who had<br />

announced his intention to retire earlier this<br />

year.<br />

Meyers brings over 35 years of experience<br />

in <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> social services to her new<br />

position. She has been both a top administrator<br />

with the Child Welfare Administration<br />

(now ACS) and a senior executive at<br />

two direct service nonprofit agencies.<br />

“I am most grateful to have been selected<br />

by the Board of Directors to succeed Denis,<br />

to continue his splendid and valuable<br />

work and, hopefully, to bring Abbott House<br />

to an even higher level of excellence,” said<br />

Meyers. “It gives me enormous pleasure to<br />

be associated with this caring community.”<br />

“Claude is a wonderful person with<br />

character, experience and leadership skills,”<br />

said Barry.<br />

For the past seven years, Meyers has<br />

served as Associate Executive Director of<br />

Episcopal Social Services of <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong><br />

where she oversaw the agency’s operations<br />

and led its expansion into preventive services,<br />

special needs foster boarding homes, early<br />

intervention and federal Early Head Start.<br />

During a 30-year career with <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong><br />

City government, Meyers rose to lead the<br />

Child Welfare Administration as Executive<br />

Deputy Commissioner in 1994. Prior to that,<br />

she served as Assistant Deputy Commissioner<br />

for Policy and Planning, Director of<br />

Foster Care Development, Director of<br />

Contract Management and in a variety of<br />

program management and direct service<br />

positions. After leaving CWA in 1995, she<br />

spent approximately two years with<br />

HeartShare Human Services.<br />

Meyers will join Abbott House on October<br />

18th. Barry will retire at the end of<br />

October.<br />

Abbott House provides care for over<br />

1,000 abused, neglected and developmentally-disabled<br />

children and young adults<br />

at its 16-acre campus, a foster boarding<br />

home program and 26 community-based<br />

group homes.<br />

Gutheil Next Executive Director<br />

at Episcopal Social Services<br />

Women’s Foundation Welcomes<br />

Cohen as Executive Director<br />

Robert Gutheil has been selected to<br />

become the next Executive Director of<br />

Episcopal Social Services. Gutheil will begin<br />

work at ESS on <strong>September</strong> 7 and take<br />

full title on January 1, 2005, when current<br />

Executive Director Stephen J. Chinlund retires<br />

after 16 years of service.<br />

Gutheil has over 30 years of experience<br />

in <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> social services, most recently<br />

as Executive Director of The Salvation<br />

Army Social Services for Children.<br />

During his tenure Gutheil oversaw the expansion<br />

of high-quality programs into<br />

group homes for adolescents, residences<br />

for the developmentally disabled, foster<br />

boarding home care and adoption, day<br />

care centers, family preservation programs,<br />

and support services for people<br />

with HIV/AIDS.<br />

“I look forward with enormous enthusiasm<br />

to joining the outstanding Board<br />

and staff leadership team at ESS,” said<br />

Gutheil. “It’s an agency I already know<br />

well and consider one of the best in the<br />

field. We’ll move forward together to even<br />

higher levels of service to the children,<br />

families and individuals of our great city.”<br />

The Salvation Army has honored<br />

Gutheil with its prestigious National<br />

Award for Excellence in Social Work. He<br />

has also been presented with the Leadership<br />

Award by Life Services for the Handicapped<br />

and the Unsung Heroes Award by<br />

the Day Care Council of <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong>.<br />

Gutheil serves on the Boards of Day<br />

Care Council of <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong>, United Neighbors<br />

of East Midtown, Life Services for the<br />

Robert Gutheil<br />

Handicapped, The Open Congregation,<br />

and Episcopal Charities. Previously he<br />

has been a member of the National Advisory<br />

Council of Executives for the<br />

Child Welfare League of America and<br />

served on both the Board and Downstate<br />

Steering Committee of the <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong><br />

State Council of Family and Child Care<br />

Agencies.<br />

ESS, which traces its history back to<br />

1831, operates 16 separate programs including<br />

foster boarding homes, adoption<br />

services, group homes and foster care<br />

prevention; community residences for<br />

the developmentally disabled, early<br />

head start; early intervention; the Murray<br />

Hill Senior Center and a prison services<br />

network.<br />

The <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> Women’s Foundation<br />

has welcomed Hollis Cohen as its new Executive<br />

Director. Cohen comes to the Foundation<br />

with 20 years of experience working<br />

for nationally-recognized organizations<br />

helping underserved populations.<br />

“The Foundation’s work in the communities<br />

of <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> City and its in-depth<br />

knowledge of the issues facing low-income<br />

women and girls contribute to its profound<br />

effect upon poverty in this city,” said Cohen.<br />

“I am looking forward to being part of<br />

the Foundation as its position in <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong><br />

City grows even stronger.”<br />

Before joining The <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> Women's<br />

Foundation (NYWF), Cohen was Lighthouse<br />

International’s Vice President for Development<br />

and later served as their Vice President<br />

for Technology Enterprises and Special Assistant<br />

to the President for Program Development.<br />

At the Lighthouse, she developed<br />

and funded cutting-edge initiatives to ensure<br />

access to new technologies for those who are<br />

blind or visually impaired. Through innovative<br />

partnerships in the public and private<br />

sectors, she developed new resources for efforts<br />

aimed at ensuring equality for disabled<br />

individuals of all ages.<br />

Cohen developed some of the first<br />

“cause-marketing” campaigns, bridging<br />

corporate marketing interests with not-forprofit<br />

goals. She consulted to American Express<br />

on its “Charge Against Hunger” campaign.<br />

For the Association for a Better <strong>New</strong><br />

Hollis Cohen<br />

visit our website at www.nynp.biz<br />

<strong>York</strong>, she developed the first co-op marketing<br />

program to support the City’s cultural<br />

institutions. She began her nonprofit<br />

career at Citymeals-on-Wheels,<br />

where she ultimately served as Executive<br />

Director, developing model programs in<br />

order to provide annual funding to over<br />

100 community organizations across the<br />

city delivering meals and emergency food<br />

supplies to the frail and homebound elderly.<br />

During her tenure, she oversaw the<br />

organization’s move from a program of<br />

the <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> City Department of the Aging<br />

to an independent non-profit in “public/private”<br />

partnership with the City.


18 <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> <strong>Nonprofit</strong> <strong>Press</strong> www.nynp.biz <strong>September</strong> <strong>2004</strong><br />

PEOPLE SERVING PEOPLE<br />

Rosenberg Replaces Josephson<br />

as Head of Charities Bureau<br />

Gerry Rosenberg is taking over as Chief<br />

of the Charities Bureau of the <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong><br />

State Department of Law, replacing William<br />

Josephson who has held the position since<br />

1999.<br />

Rosenberg is a long-time partner at the<br />

<strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> law firm, KMZ Rosenman, where<br />

he specialized in litigation, trusts and estates,<br />

non-profit corporation law and tax<br />

law. Before joining the law firm, Rosenberg<br />

was an Assistant United States Attorney in<br />

the Southern District of <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong>. Rosenberg,<br />

a graduate of Yale College and Harvard<br />

Law School, is a member of the American<br />

Law Institute, <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> Lawyers for<br />

the Public Interest, the Parks Council and<br />

the Central Park Conservancy. He is founding<br />

director of the Non-Profit Coordinating<br />

Committee of <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> and a director of<br />

the Lawyers Committee for Civil Rights Under<br />

Law.<br />

"He is person of impeccable credentials<br />

and integrity,” said Attorney General Eliot<br />

Spitzer of Rosenberg when announcing the<br />

appointment in June. “I am confident that<br />

he will continue and enhance the office's<br />

reputation as a national leader in the field of<br />

not-for-profit regulation."<br />

Josephson, a pioneer in the development<br />

of the Peace Corps and other federal<br />

programs, was long-time partner at Fried,<br />

Frank, Harris, Shriver & Jacobsen prior to<br />

joining the Attorney General's office. He<br />

United Way of Long Island Names<br />

Phillips Senior Vice President<br />

Sean J. Phillips has joined United Way<br />

of Long Island as Senior Vice President of<br />

Major Gifts. Phillips comes to UWLI from<br />

Family and Children’s Association where<br />

he served for seven years as Vice President<br />

and Director of Resource Development and<br />

Public Relations. At Family and Children’s,<br />

Phillips was responsible for all fundraising<br />

activities and public relations. During his<br />

time with Family and Children’s, he successfully<br />

completed a $6 million<br />

Capital/Endowment campaign and<br />

achieved an annual $2 million fundraising<br />

goal. Prior to his work at Family and Children’s,<br />

Phillips was Development Director<br />

at Catholic Medical Center, a 1400-bed multi-hospital<br />

system, for seven years. Phillips<br />

has found time for pro bono work with the<br />

Hagedorn Cleft Palate Institute at<br />

Northshore/LIJ Healthcare System and<br />

Long Island Council on Alcoholism and<br />

Drug Dependence.<br />

“I am excited to have the opportunity to<br />

help advance the mission of United Way of<br />

Long Island through major, endowed and<br />

planned gifts,” said Phillips. “With greater<br />

generosity from the community, greater results<br />

can be achieved, positively changing<br />

Tell Us About YOUR People<br />

email editor@nynp.biz<br />

Tell Us About YOUR People<br />

was widely regarded for his work in representing<br />

public and private foundations.<br />

He is a well-known author of articles on<br />

tax exempt organizations, legal ethics and<br />

other issues. He served as counsel to leading<br />

public agencies and was a member of<br />

numerous civic groups.<br />

"Over the past five years, the Charities<br />

Bureau has brought precedent-setting<br />

enforcement actions and undertaken significant<br />

legislative and policy initiatives.<br />

Bill Josephson, as the leader of those efforts,<br />

has served the people of <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong><br />

with vigor and distinction," Spitzer said.<br />

Gerry Rosenberg<br />

the lives of many Long Islanders.”<br />

“We're delighted to have Sean join<br />

United Way of Long Island as we enhance<br />

our ability to make a greater impact in solving<br />

some of Long Island's pressing social issues,”<br />

said Patrick Foye, UWLI’s President<br />

and CEO. “Sean's track record of success in<br />

mobilizing people and resources will enable<br />

us to do more to help Long Islanders<br />

help those in need."<br />

Sean J. Phillips<br />

email editor@nynp.biz<br />

Tell Us About YOUR People<br />

email editor@nynp.biz<br />

LESC Appoints Sullivan<br />

Executive Vice President<br />

Judith Cohen has joined UCP Suffolk<br />

as Assistant Executive Director for Development.<br />

The new position has been created<br />

to enhance the agency’s development<br />

programs. Cohen will be<br />

responsible for major and special gifts;<br />

foundation and planned giving; major<br />

donor development and recognition;<br />

board development and stewardship and<br />

foundation and corporate and government<br />

grants.<br />

Cohen has spent the past 11 years with<br />

UJA Federation of <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong>, most recently<br />

in the position of Co-Campaign Director.<br />

Cohen has also been a UCP Suffolk board<br />

member for the past 12 years. During that<br />

period, she has served as Vice President of<br />

Government Activities and Advocacy and<br />

has been a long-time member of the Yearbook<br />

Committee.<br />

Dr. Martha Adams Sullivan<br />

Dr. Martha Adams Sullivan has assumed<br />

the new position of Executive Vice<br />

President of Program Services at LESC. Previously,<br />

Sullivan was with the NYC Department<br />

of Health and Mental Hygiene where<br />

she served as deputy commissioner of the<br />

Bureau of Community Liaison and Training.<br />

“Martha’s diverse professional experience<br />

will enhance our ability to accomplish<br />

the LESC vision expressed in our <strong>2004</strong>-2005<br />

Strategic Plan,” said Alan Mathis, President<br />

and CEO of LESC. “Additionally, Dr. Sullivan’s<br />

tenure as director, Department of Behavioral<br />

Health at Gouverneur Diagnostic<br />

and Treatment Center, where she had oversight<br />

responsibilities for mental health and<br />

substance abuse, has built her understanding<br />

of the varied needs of LESC clients.”<br />

Sullivan has published many articles<br />

on family systems theory, mental health and<br />

alcoholism, social workers and the chemically<br />

dependent, developing family oriented<br />

mental health programs, and the mental<br />

health of people of color, women and the<br />

elderly.<br />

She has also been the recipient of numerous<br />

social awards for her contributions<br />

to social justice, and her service to the elderly<br />

and the community.<br />

Sullivan earned her doctorate of social<br />

welfare in 1991 from the City University<br />

of <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong>, and a master of social<br />

work in 1976 from Hunter College. In addition<br />

to her academic work, she has also<br />

earned a Clinical Fellow from the Council<br />

on Social Work Education, and an Advanced<br />

Certificate in Family Therapy/Supervision<br />

from Minuchin Center for the<br />

Family.<br />

Cohen Joins UCP Suffolk as<br />

Assistant Executive Director<br />

DeRidder Promoted to Clinic Director<br />

Nelly De Ridder, PhD, of White Plains<br />

has been promoted to Clinic Director for the<br />

Family Mental Health Clinics operated by<br />

Westchester Jewish Community Services<br />

(WJCS) in <strong>New</strong> Rochelle and Mamaroneck.<br />

Dr. DeRidder has been with WJCS since<br />

1990 first working as a clinician in the AIDS<br />

Satellite Program at ARCS and then at the<br />

Mt. Vernon Family Mental Health Clinic.<br />

Most recently she was a counselor in the<br />

WJCS Treatment Center for Trauma &<br />

Abuse in Hartsdale.<br />

Dr. DeRidder earned an BS from Mercy<br />

College and an MSW and PhD in Clinical<br />

Social Work from <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> University.<br />

Judith Cohen<br />

Cohen has a BA in special education<br />

from Boston University.<br />

Nelly De Ridder, PhD


<strong>September</strong> <strong>2004</strong> <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> <strong>Nonprofit</strong> <strong>Press</strong> www.nynp.biz 19<br />

PEOPLE SERVING PEOPLE<br />

<strong>New</strong> Chief Operating Officer at<br />

Neighborhood Housing Services<br />

Bernell Grier has been appointed the new<br />

Chief Operating Officer for NHS. Grier brings<br />

more than 30 years of banking experience to<br />

her new post. Her career includes service<br />

with CHASE and NatWest USA. She most recently<br />

served as an Executive Vice President<br />

at Fleet.<br />

“Her evident passion for NHS’ mission<br />

will assist us in further improving our programs<br />

to meet the needs of the underserved,” said<br />

Sarah Gerecke, NHS’ Chief Executive Officer.<br />

Grier currently serves as the chair of the<br />

Harlem YMCA Board of Directors and is a<br />

member of the board of Harlem Congregations<br />

for Community Improvement, Neighborhood<br />

Restore and Operation HOPE. A graduate of<br />

the City University of <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong>, Grier received<br />

The Network Journal Top 25 Women of<br />

Influence Award, the <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> Women’s<br />

Agenda STAR Award, among others.<br />

Grier coordinated the training of 100 loan<br />

officer trainees when managing NatWest’s<br />

Loan Officer Development Program. She was<br />

a Senior Vice President and Director of Community<br />

Development for Fleet where she<br />

Bernell Grier<br />

achieved outstanding CRA ratings for the<br />

bank and managed the Metro <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong>,<br />

<strong>New</strong> Jersey and Florida Community Development<br />

Unit. While at Fleet, Ms. Grier successfully<br />

started up a 67-branch Fleet Community<br />

Bank network.<br />

Covenant House <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> Names<br />

Egan Director of Development<br />

Mary Egan has been named the Director<br />

of Development for Covenant House<br />

<strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong>, and is now responsible for<br />

fundraising and donor relations for the organization.<br />

Egan's non-profit experience includes<br />

six years at the United Way of Greater Toronto,<br />

where she served as Senior Manager of<br />

Promotion and Special Events from 1994-<br />

2000. She moved to <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> in November<br />

2000 to join the <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> branch of the United<br />

Way as a Senior Director of Marketing.<br />

Egan helped to develop and organize the<br />

United Way <strong>September</strong> 11th Fund program,<br />

which raised over $10 million to assist victims<br />

of the World Trade Center Attacks.<br />

Felix Lopez has been named General<br />

Counsel of Safe Horizon. An outspoken advocate<br />

for the under-represented throughout<br />

his career, Lopez will lead Safe Horizon's signature<br />

legal assistance programs for people<br />

experiencing crime, torture, and abuse and<br />

direct corporate and government affairs.<br />

Mr. Lopez was most recently the Executive<br />

Director of the National Latino Council<br />

on Alcohol and Tobacco Prevention in<br />

Washington, DC. Previously, he served as<br />

Director of the Puerto Rico Federal Affairs<br />

Administration, <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> Region. Lopez<br />

was also Director of the Arthur Liman Policy<br />

Institute of the Legal Action Center in<br />

<strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> City, where he was a vocal proponent<br />

for people with HIV, those in recovery,<br />

and ex-offenders.<br />

Lopez received his Juris Doctor from<br />

the Yale Law School in 1991, where he was<br />

appointed the J. Skelly Wright Fellow and<br />

Visiting Lecturer in Law in 2001. His undergraduate<br />

studies were completed at the<br />

Egan has also worked as a personal<br />

marketing consultant to various<br />

non-profit organizations and businesses,<br />

including the Canadian<br />

Prostate Cancer Research Foundation.<br />

She also worked at George Brown College<br />

in Toronto, Ontario, Rogers Cantel<br />

Inc. in Vancouver, British Columbia<br />

and Baker Lovick Advertising in<br />

Calgary, Alberta.<br />

Covenant House <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> assists<br />

over 9,000 runaway, at-risk and homeless<br />

young people between the ages of 18-21,<br />

24 hours a day, through its Crisis Center<br />

and community outreach programs located<br />

in all five boroughs.<br />

Safe Horizon Selects Lopez<br />

to be General Counsel<br />

Felix Lopez<br />

University of Michigan.<br />

Safe Horizon is a leading non-profit<br />

victim services organization which assists<br />

350,000 <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong>ers each year.<br />

Long Island Head Start Appoints<br />

Fiorentino Director of Operations<br />

JoAnn C. Fiorentino has been named<br />

Director of Operations for Long Island<br />

Child & Family Development Services –<br />

Long Island Head Start. Fiorentino previously<br />

served as Senior Vice President of<br />

Marketing and Communications at United<br />

Way of Long Island which she joined in<br />

2001.<br />

Fiorentino will be responsible for<br />

Marketing, Building and Grounds, Finance,<br />

Human Resources and MIS at the<br />

Patchouge-based agency which operates<br />

Head Start programs at 14 sites in Suffolk<br />

County.<br />

Prior to United Way of Long Island,<br />

Fiorentino worked for Allstate Insurance<br />

Company, where she rose through a series<br />

of management positions and was named<br />

to the newly created position of Community<br />

Affairs Manager in 1992.<br />

She served as a chairperson for the<br />

Allstate Foundation of <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> State.<br />

She is the former chairperson for Suffolk<br />

County Crime Stoppers and currently<br />

serves on their Board of Directors. She<br />

was also the former chairperson of the<br />

Long Island Insurance Services Committee<br />

for CDC of Long Island.<br />

She is a graduate of St. Joseph’s college<br />

with dual certification in elementary<br />

and special education.<br />

Janet Palazzolo has been appointed<br />

Administrator of Residential Services<br />

at the Wartburg Adult Care Community.<br />

Palazzolo had previously worked<br />

at Wartburg from 1996 through 1998 as<br />

a social work case manager. Since then,<br />

JoAnn C. Fiorentino<br />

Fiorentino was awarded the Women<br />

of Distinction Award by State Senator<br />

Caesar Trunzo in 2000. She has worked<br />

as a volunteer with Suffolk County<br />

Emergency Medical Council, Long Island<br />

Network for Community Support,<br />

Friends Assisting Nassau Seniors, <strong>New</strong><br />

<strong>York</strong> Coalition for Transportation Safety,<br />

Mothers Against Drunk Driving and<br />

Suffolk County Anti-Graffiti Task Force.<br />

She was also the former chairperson of<br />

the Long Island Insurance Services Committee<br />

for CDC of Long Island.<br />

Palazzolo <strong>New</strong> Administrator of<br />

Residential Services at Wartburg<br />

Lisa Fulgoni, RN, has been appointed<br />

assistant director of admissions<br />

at Sarah Neuman Center for Healthcare<br />

and Rehabilitation. She is responsible<br />

for supervising patient review instruments,<br />

managing nurses in the field,<br />

maintaining census, conducting tours<br />

and meeting with families.<br />

Fulgoni joined the staff in January<br />

2001 and previously served as registered<br />

nurse coordinator and supervisor<br />

of the Admissions Department at the<br />

300-bed nursing home and rehabilitation<br />

center, the Westchester Division of<br />

The Jewish Home and Hospital Lifecare<br />

System.<br />

Ms. Fulgoni earned her bachelor of<br />

science in nursing at the College of<br />

<strong>New</strong> Rochelle and previously worked<br />

she has been Director of Career Development<br />

and a Counselor at Concordia<br />

College in Bronxville.<br />

She received her MSW form<br />

Fordham University and a BSW from<br />

Concordia where she graduated<br />

Magna Cum Laude.<br />

Assistant Director of Admissions<br />

at Sarah Neuman Center<br />

Tell Us About YOUR People<br />

Lisa Fulgoni<br />

at <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> Hospital in <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong><br />

City.<br />

email editor@nynp.biz


20 <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> <strong>Nonprofit</strong> <strong>Press</strong> www.nynp.biz <strong>September</strong> <strong>2004</strong><br />

PEOPLE SERVING PEOPLE<br />

Emerging Social Entrepreneurs<br />

Honored by Echoing Green<br />

Five leaders of three regional nonprofits<br />

have been honored as the world’s “Best<br />

Emerging Social Entrepreneurs” based<br />

upon their innovative efforts to use entrepreneurial<br />

practices to create lasting social<br />

change. The groups were among nine organizations<br />

selected to receive <strong>2004</strong> Echoing<br />

Green Fellowships. The local honorees are:<br />

• Furman Brown of Generation Schools in<br />

Brooklyn;<br />

• Patricia Kakalec and Daniel Werner of<br />

the Workers’ Rights Law Center of <strong>New</strong><br />

<strong>York</strong> (WRLC) in Kingston; and<br />

• Tameka Robinson and Risë Wilson of The<br />

Laundromat Project (TLP), Brooklyn, NY<br />

The Fellows, which were chosen from<br />

nearly 700 applicants in 37 countries, receive<br />

grants of $60,000 for individuals or<br />

$90,000 for partners. All fellows receive<br />

technical support, an invitation to fellowship<br />

conferences and consulting assistance<br />

as they launch their nonprofit organizations.<br />

Founded in 1987 with the support of<br />

General Atlantic Partners (GAP), a private<br />

Got <strong>New</strong>s?<br />

equity firm, and The Atlantic Philanthropies<br />

(USA), Inc., Echoing Green has<br />

invested $22 million to help more than<br />

380 leaders create positive change in 30<br />

countries.<br />

Generation Schools is planning to pioneer<br />

a new primary school model that<br />

offers a 6-to-1 student-teacher ratio by<br />

partnering veteran lead teachers with nationally<br />

recruited new teacher fellows<br />

WRLC is a workplace justice project<br />

for low-income and immigrant workers<br />

which includes an innovative Small<br />

Claims Court project and increased immigrant<br />

worker involvement in unions.<br />

The Laundromat Project is establishing<br />

a laundromat-based arts center in the<br />

working class neighborhood of Bedford-<br />

Stuyvesant in Brooklyn.<br />

“The <strong>2004</strong> recipients represent a new<br />

type of community leader that uses entrepreneurial<br />

practices to transform communities.”<br />

said Dr. Cheryl Dorsey, Echoing<br />

Green’s President.<br />

Email editor@nynp.biz<br />

UWNYC <strong>Nonprofit</strong> Leadership<br />

Development Institute Names<br />

Junior Fellows<br />

The United Way of <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> City’s<br />

<strong>Nonprofit</strong> Leadership Development Institute<br />

(NLDI) has announced its first class of<br />

Junior Fellows. The Fellows will participate<br />

in a 10-week seminar series starting in <strong>September</strong><br />

and covering such topics as Mission,<br />

Strategy and Management, Budgets and Accounting,<br />

Boards and Governance, Human<br />

Resources, Performance Evaluation, etc.<br />

The 25 Junior Fellows are:<br />

• Ms. Kristy Apostolides, Program Coordinator,<br />

Just Foods;<br />

• Ms. Tinisha L. Beckles, Marketing and<br />

Customer Service Manager, Neighbors<br />

Helping Neighbors, Inc.;<br />

• Ms. Kathleen Bielsa, Deputy Executive<br />

Director, Northfield Community Development<br />

Corp. of Staten Island;<br />

• Ms. Meggan Jayne Christman, Policy Advocate,<br />

Coalition of Voluntary Mental<br />

Health Agencies;<br />

• Ms. Colleen M. Devery, Director of Special<br />

Events, Girls Incorporated;<br />

• Ms. Jessyca D. Feliciano, Assistant Director<br />

of Childcare Services and Outreach<br />

Coordinator, Committee for Hispanic<br />

Children and Families;<br />

• Mr. Julio C. Grajales, Finance Associate,<br />

Doctors Without Borders/Medecins Sans<br />

Frontieres;<br />

• Ms. Annie P. Huang, Associate Program<br />

Director, Queens, The Bridge Fund of<br />

<strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> City;<br />

• Ms. Steffie Kinglake, Director of Operations,<br />

Project FAIR;<br />

• Ms. Ilana Rae Miller, Communications<br />

Coordinator, Independent <strong>Press</strong> Association<br />

of <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong>;<br />

• Ms. Nancy Miranda, Director of Quality<br />

Assurance; Damon House of <strong>New</strong><br />

<strong>York</strong>, Inc.;<br />

• Ms. Rolinda Ordonez, Residence Director,<br />

YWCA of Brooklyn;<br />

• Ms. Kathleen A.M. McTigue, The City<br />

Farms Program Coordinator, Just<br />

Food;<br />

• Ms. Anne Rascon, Director of Training,<br />

Nontraditional Employment for<br />

Women;<br />

• Ms. Michele Rattien, Director of Programs,<br />

Catholic Big Brothers for Boys<br />

and Girls;<br />

• Ms. Jacqueline L. Redd, Human Resources<br />

Specialist, Steinway Child and<br />

Family Services, Inc.;<br />

• Ms. Alison L. Ross, Board Relations,<br />

Volunteer Services and Special Projects<br />

Associate, City Harvest, Inc.<br />

• Ms. Amanda V. Sabicer, Senior Project<br />

Manager, Brooklyn Workforce Innovations;<br />

• Ms. Erica C. Shipstead, Development<br />

Assistant, inMotion, Inc.;<br />

• Mr. Mark L. Thiry, Assistant Administrator,<br />

Project Renewal, Inc.;<br />

• Ms. Jill A. Vertes, Program Manager,<br />

American-Italian Cancer Foundation;<br />

• Mr. Marcus F. Walton, Program Manager,<br />

Highbridge Community Life<br />

Center;<br />

• Ms. Ursula M. Watson, Social Worker,<br />

Cobble Hill Health Center;<br />

• Mr. Stephen D. Weyer, Director of Outreach<br />

Ministry, St. Francis Xavier Mission;<br />

• Ms. Alia D. Winters, Assistant to the<br />

President/Board Relations, Community<br />

Service Society of <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong>.<br />

EVENTS<br />

Interboro Foundation<br />

Raises Money for College<br />

Photo credit: Steve Butera<br />

On August 16th “Interboro at the Apollo” featured performing artists Ashford &<br />

Simpson, Deborah A. Cox, Meli’sa Morgan, Stephanie Mills and George Faison in a<br />

benefit concert for the Interboro Foundation to support “Making College a Reality<br />

for Everyone.”


<strong>September</strong> <strong>2004</strong> <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> <strong>Nonprofit</strong> <strong>Press</strong> www.nynp.biz 21<br />

JOBS<br />

JOBS<br />

JOBS<br />

MSWs<br />

Leake and Watts Residential Treatment Center seeks the following:<br />

SOCIAL WORKER<br />

You will work with a multidisciplinary treatment team,<br />

serving as primary therapist and case manager for emotionally<br />

disturbed adolescents and their families.<br />

These opportunites require basic computer knowledge.<br />

Our southern Westchester campus is conveniently<br />

located to <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> City. We offer a competitive salary<br />

and benefits. Please send resume indicating position of<br />

interest to:<br />

Mr. John Albert Rivera,<br />

Recruitment Mgr.<br />

Leake and Watts Services, Inc.<br />

463 Hawthorne Ave.<br />

Yonkers, NY 10705<br />

Fax: 914-375-8901<br />

Email: jrivera@leakeandwatts.org<br />

Project Hospitality, a growing nonprofit serving the<br />

homeless and HIV+ populations on Staten Island,<br />

NY, located near the ferry, is expanding our administrative<br />

infrastructure and seeks committed professionals<br />

for the following positions:<br />

DEPUTY EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR<br />

PROGRAM AND CONTRACT<br />

MANAGEMENT<br />

<strong>New</strong> opportunity for highly skilled full time administrator, CSW or related<br />

Master's with at least twelve years of management experience, preferably in<br />

homeless and housing services. Looking for multi-talented manager with<br />

progressively greater responsibilities in program supervision, contract and<br />

fiscal management, quality improvement and program evaluation. Must<br />

have background with multiple federal, state, city, government funding<br />

streams. Fast paced environment requiring excellent written skills as well<br />

as decision making and negotiation capabilities. Self directed professional<br />

capable of motivating others toward program and clinical excellence as part<br />

of a team. Position is part of the executive management structure of the<br />

agency. Send cover letter with salary requirements and resume.<br />

DIRECTOR OF PLANNING<br />

AND EVALUATION<br />

We seek a Psy.D/Ph.D OR Ph.D candidate for an exciting management<br />

opportunity to establish outcome measures/benchmarks and audit program<br />

services to enhance our quality of care. Experience in statistical<br />

testing/analyses required. Experience working with mentally ill, chemically<br />

dependent and HIV/AIDS pops. Success with health/mental health care outcome<br />

projects important. Computer literacy a must. Salary to $70-80K<br />

based on experience.<br />

We offer a comprehensive benefits package. Send resume to Fax #<br />

718-720-5476 Email Judeutsch@Projecthospitality.org or mail to Project<br />

Hospitality HR Director, 100 Park Avenue, Staten Island, NY 10302,<br />

EOE M/F/V/H.<br />

COMMUNITY WORKER<br />

F/T – NYC OFFICE<br />

Experienced in child welfare and community services. Must have a BA/BS<br />

degree. Bi-lingual a plus. Must have valid NYS drivers license. Some<br />

weekends required.<br />

YOUTH COUNSELORS<br />

FULL TIME DAYS P/T WEEKEND SHIFTS<br />

Experienced in residential setting.<br />

TRAINER – P/T FOR HR DEPARTMENT<br />

Flexible Hours – Duties include staff development and training – Prior<br />

experience required.<br />

NURSE COORDINATOR – F/T<br />

Health Center – 2 yrs. Nurse management. Experience including directing<br />

and developing staff. RN/BSN required. Must be able to promote a<br />

positive professional attitude.<br />

Forward resume w/salary requirements to<br />

Human Resources,<br />

P.O. Box 600, Lincolndale, NY 10540<br />

Fax 914-248-6193<br />

or e-mail Mkrzos@lincolnhall.org<br />

LINCOLN HALL<br />

Registered<br />

Nurses<br />

(P/T & F/T)<br />

Various positions available<br />

in our Group Homes for<br />

Teens on S.I., Manhattan,<br />

& Bronx. Low caseloads and clinical<br />

team approach. Candidate possess<br />

NYS RN license & valid driver’s license.<br />

Competitive salary for all positions,<br />

excellent benefits for F/T. Send<br />

resume: Ed Higgins, Director of<br />

Human Resources, Catholic Guardian<br />

Society, 1011 First Ave, NY, NY 10022,<br />

Fax: 212-421-1709 or email: ehigg@<br />

catholicguard.org<br />

Equal Opportunity Employer<br />

The Children’s Village, a nationally renowned Childcare Agency, has the<br />

following position available:<br />

TRAINING SPECIALIST<br />

The Training Specialist supports the Director of Training and Staff<br />

Development in the design and delivery of key training programs. The<br />

specialist will help design, facilitate and have accountability for training<br />

programs, communicate training activities and deliver assigned in-house<br />

training sessions (e.g. CVOT, TCI, etc). The Training Specialist will be the<br />

lead TCI instructor and will facilitate other trainings as required by the needs<br />

of the agency, while under the direct guidance and support of the Director<br />

of Training.<br />

Bachelor’s Degree in Communications, Psychology, Educ, Org Dev or other<br />

rel field. Min1-2 years exp in adult training, group facilitation, and instructional<br />

design, or a Master’s degree and some exp. Residential treatment exp and<br />

certification in Therapeutic Crisis Intervention highly preferred. Other certifications<br />

(CPR, defensive driving instruction etc.) desirable.<br />

Excel benefits, (medical effective 1st of month following employment),<br />

on-site day care, excel training. Bilingual (Spanish) a plus. Please send res<br />

w/salary req to:<br />

HR, TCV, Dobbs Ferry, NY 10522.<br />

Fax: 914-674-4512<br />

email: recruiter@childrensvillage.org.<br />

Visit our website: www.childrenvillage.org.<br />

EOE. Encouraging a diverse workforce.<br />

Agency: THE MENTAL HEALTH<br />

ASSOCIATION OF NYC<br />

Position:<br />

JOB DEVELOPER<br />

Program/Locations: Bronx and<br />

Manhattan<br />

Description:<br />

MHA of NYC seeks experienced,<br />

committed, consumer-centered vocational<br />

rehabilitation professional with<br />

excellent interpersonal skills for an<br />

award winning individualized placement<br />

and support (IPS) model program<br />

and a new VESID supported<br />

employment initiative.<br />

Market supported employment programs/participants<br />

to the business<br />

community. Develop individualized<br />

job placements for adults in recovery<br />

from psychiatric and/or co-occurring<br />

disabilities. Must be able to develop<br />

jobs through cold calling if needed.<br />

BA/S strongly preferred, ability to<br />

function as part of a team necessary.<br />

Knowledge of psychiatric rehabilitation<br />

and ability to lead employment<br />

skills groups required. Bi-lingual a<br />

plus. Having current referral/job bank<br />

strongly preferred.<br />

Email/Fax/Mail cover letter/resume to:<br />

SDudasik@mhaofnyc.org<br />

Fax: (212) 964- 7302<br />

Mailing Address: 157 Chambers<br />

Street, 9th floor, NY, 10007<br />

c/o Steve Dudasik<br />

MHA OF NYC IS AN EO EMPLOYER<br />

Adver<br />

ertise with NYNP It Works! W<br />

23 PEOPLE NEEDED<br />

IMMEDIATELY !<br />

Work from your home ONLINE.<br />

flexible schedule. Great pay.<br />

$1500 - $7800 per month.<br />

PT/FT<br />

Email me @ tcruz246@aol.com<br />

EDUCATIONAL<br />

DIRECTOR<br />

The Montessori Day School of<br />

Brooklyn provides high-quality early<br />

education and nurturing care to over<br />

100 children, aged 8 months to 6<br />

years.<br />

Responsibilities include: Developing<br />

curriculum with teachers, coordinating<br />

staff schedules, supervising<br />

teachers, organizing in-service training/staff<br />

development and steering<br />

the school through NAEYC accreditation.<br />

Qualifications: MA in Early<br />

Childhood Education, NYS certification,<br />

four years preschool teaching<br />

experience, demonstrated leadership<br />

qualities, and ability to work with<br />

a diverse mix of staff and families.<br />

Send resume, cover letter and<br />

salary requirements to:<br />

Mike Fagan, Executive Director,<br />

MDS of Brooklyn, 30 Third<br />

Avenue, POB 170556, Brooklyn,<br />

NY 11217. mikef@mentalhelp.net<br />

CHILDREN’S CENTER GROUP TEACHER<br />

Chelsea-based multi-service organization seeks a Group Teacher in our<br />

Early Childhood Program for participants ages 2-5. Must have a Master’s<br />

Degree in Early Childhood Education, N-6 NYS certification and experience<br />

working with children ages 2-5. Salary based on education and<br />

experience.<br />

MSW GROUP SERVICES COORDINATOR<br />

Hudson Guild, a not-for-profit settlement house located in Manhattan’s<br />

Chelsea community, seeks an experienced, creative and motivated candidate<br />

for group services coordination responsibilities at its Adult Services<br />

Program. This unique job will provide an opportunity to impact the lives of<br />

hundreds of older adults (55+). Position responsibilities include developing/facilitating<br />

groups, increasing roster of enrichment activities and conducting<br />

outreach for participation, especially among residents of public<br />

housing. Bilingual English/Spanish preferred. Salary commensurate with<br />

experience.<br />

ASSOCIATE DIRECTOR OF EXTERNAL<br />

RELATIONS (F/T)<br />

Hudson Guild, a non-profit social service agency in the Chelsea section of<br />

Manhattan, seeks Associate Director of External Relations to be fully<br />

responsible for day-to-day running of the department; coordinate fundraising;<br />

manage staff and consultants. Build strong relationships with donors;<br />

create and manage Annual Fund appeal, including trustee solicitations<br />

and direct mail appeals; create and oversee all special events. Must have<br />

5-7 years experience in fundraising with specific experience in individual<br />

cultivation, institutional gift solicitation, communications, volunteer programming<br />

and special events. Excellent writing/verbal skills and strong<br />

management capacity. Salary commensurate with experience.<br />

IAC/HUDSON GUILD<br />

VOLUNTEER COORDINATOR<br />

Hudson Guild, a <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> City settlement house serving more than<br />

11,000 individuals in Chelsea, and IAC/InterActiveCorp (IAC), a leading<br />

multi-brand interactive commerce company with future corporate headquarters<br />

in Chelsea, seek an individual to develop and run a volunteer<br />

program for Hudson Guild. Design and implement specific IAC volunteer<br />

program activities for the benefit of Hudson Guild, as well as the Guild’s<br />

ongoing volunteer program. Help develop goals, objectives and policies<br />

for volunteer program. Interview, screen and assign individual volunteers.<br />

Develop and implement strategies for volunteer recruitment on corporate<br />

and individual basis; develop resources for volunteer programs; serve as<br />

liaison between agency and community to promote volunteerism. B.A.<br />

degree; 3 years+ related experience in a not-for-profit community service<br />

based setting, must be able to handle multiple projects, work both independently<br />

and flexibly as part of a team and meet deadlines. Good interpersonal<br />

and communications skills required. Experience in coordinating<br />

volunteer-related events a plus. Should have Word and Excel skills.<br />

Competitive salary and full benefits. Only qualified individuals will be contacted.<br />

Please include salary requirements.<br />

DEVELOPMENT ASSOCIATE SPECIAL<br />

EVENTS, ANNUAL FUND APPEAL<br />

AND COMMUNICATIONS<br />

Hudson Guild, a <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> City settlement house in Chelsea, seeks creative<br />

Development Associate to coordinate Special Events, Annual Fund<br />

Appeal and Communications within busy 6-person development team.<br />

Work with Director of Development to plan and coordinate agency’s special<br />

events, coordinate production of internal and external agency communications,<br />

including agency newsletters, promotional materials for special<br />

events, fundraising letters, and other items. Update Web site copy, produce<br />

appeal mailings and handle daily administrative tasks. B.A. degree,<br />

demonstrated ability to coordinate a range of special events, write clearly<br />

and persuasively. Must be able to handle multiple projects, work both<br />

independently and flexibly as part of a team and meet deadlines. Minimum<br />

of 2 years related experience in community service non-profit setting.<br />

Should be skilled in Word, Excel and Outlook, knowledge of Publisher and<br />

HTML a plus. Competitive salary and full benefits. Only qualified individuals<br />

will be contacted. Please include salary requirements.<br />

Send cover letter and resume to:<br />

jobs<strong>2004</strong>@nyc.rr.com or fax: 212-924-6872<br />

UNITED WAY is seeking an I & R DATABASE MANAGER<br />

to build and maintain a 7-county regional database of health and<br />

human service organizations for use by I&R professionals. Position<br />

will also be responsible for identifying emerging service needs<br />

based on trends analysis. BS in Health and Human Svcs and/or<br />

Libríy Sciences with 3+ yrs relíd exper. Windows & Microsoft Off.<br />

applications, to include Access required, w/working knowledge of<br />

REFER a +. Send res w/ salary requirements to UWWP, Attn. HR-<br />

DM, 336 Central Avenue, White Plains, 10606. Fax 914-949-6438.<br />

E/O/E<br />

orks! CALL 866-336-6967<br />

"


22 <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> <strong>Nonprofit</strong> <strong>Press</strong> www.nynp.biz <strong>September</strong> <strong>2004</strong><br />

JOBS<br />

JOBS<br />

JOBS<br />

SECRETARY<br />

ADMINISTRATIVE<br />

ASSISTANT<br />

<strong>Nonprofit</strong> psychiatric rehabilitation<br />

program seeks a Secretary/Admin.<br />

For its fund raising team.<br />

Only candidates with relevant professional,<br />

job history assisting executive<br />

level staff will be considered (at least<br />

three years secretarial and administrative<br />

experience). Must be a team<br />

player.<br />

Duties include working closely with<br />

Director of Development; scheduling<br />

and organizing meetings, assisting w.<br />

all fundraising activities and special<br />

events; processing foundation proposals;<br />

heavy contact with Board of<br />

Directors, ect. Draft correspondence,<br />

memos, create spreadsheets, ect.<br />

And secretarial duties. Some managing<br />

of electronic donor records.<br />

Must be mature, detailed oriented,<br />

extremely organized, a self-starter with<br />

excellent grammer – spoken and written;<br />

and a graceful communicator –<br />

tactful, diplomatic and professional at<br />

all times. Must know work processing,<br />

spreadsheets and various softwares.<br />

Excellent Sal and ben. in a thriving,<br />

supportive and energetic work environment.<br />

BA pref’d. Fax or send<br />

resume to:<br />

Hilarie Mahon<br />

FOUNTAIN HOUSE<br />

425 W. 47th St.NY, NY 10036<br />

(212) 977-5396, fax<br />

No phone Calls Please. EOE<br />

PART-TIME<br />

SOCIAL WORKER<br />

Geriatric mental health agency in<br />

Manhattan seeks Clinical Social<br />

Worker 20 hrs/wk for dementia adult<br />

day program. CSW & exp. with elderly<br />

required. Fax resume to 212-787-1230<br />

or e-mail SPOPamyberg@aol.com<br />

QUALITY<br />

CONTROL MANAGER<br />

For-Profit is seeking to add a Quality<br />

Control Manager, with Human<br />

Services background and good<br />

communicaton skills are necessary.<br />

Experience with NYCWAY system<br />

an asset. College backround preferred.<br />

Contact: Tammi Meyers, at<br />

tmeyers@arbornyc.com or fax resume<br />

with coverletter to (212)967-2735.<br />

ACCOUNT EXECUTIVE<br />

Expanding <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> City for-Profit<br />

company is seeking an seasoned<br />

Account Excutive. This position is<br />

located in Midtown Manhattan and<br />

offers an opportunity to work with businesses<br />

on assessing their human<br />

resourse needs and matching qualfications<br />

to our customers. Marketing and<br />

Sales backround with good communication<br />

skills, computer skills an asset.<br />

College backround is prefered.<br />

Contact: Nancy Ramos, Director-<br />

Arbor E&T E-mail resume to<br />

nramos@arbornyc.com or Fax resume<br />

with cover letter(646) 733-9191<br />

EDUCATION<br />

DIRECTOR<br />

Year-round Early Education Program<br />

seeks a qualified and motivated educational<br />

leader. The Candidate will possess<br />

a strong foundation in early childhood<br />

education and child development.<br />

Must have a Masters in Education and<br />

<strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> State Certification N-6. Join a<br />

dynamic and professional team in a recognized<br />

quality early education program<br />

in the Bronx. Bi-lingual a+ please FAX<br />

Resume and Cover Letter to (718) 839-<br />

1187. Salary and benefits competitive.<br />

www.nynp.biz<br />

<strong>2004</strong><br />

Human Service Referral<br />

Directory of NYC<br />

Comprehensive Guide to Health and Human Services in NYC<br />

Better Than Ever…<br />

• Thousands of listings arranged by categories<br />

and subcategories<br />

• At-a-glance table of contents makes it easier to locate the<br />

most convenient resources<br />

$6900 + shipping, handling & tax<br />

nynp.biz<br />

Call to Order 866-336-6967<br />

CONTROLLER<br />

The Children’s Village, a nationally renowned Childcare Agency, has an<br />

immediate opening for a Controller. This position is a highly visible accounting<br />

management position reporting to the Vice President Administration and<br />

Finance. Responsibilities include managing the overall accounting activities<br />

of the agency, including ensuring that all accounting transactions are properly<br />

authorized and recorded, that all financial reporting is timely and accurate;<br />

monitoring, reporting, and assisting in cash forecasting, and continuously<br />

reviewing operating and internal control procedures.<br />

The successful candidate will have demonstrated exp with the specifics of<br />

not-for-profit accounting and reporting and child welfare funding. Experience<br />

with Medicaid, foster care, federal, state, and city funding agencies is desirable.<br />

Bachelor’s Degree in accounting with CPA or 5 – 7 years experience.<br />

Excel benefits, (medical effective 1st of month following employment), onsite<br />

day care. Please send res w/salary req to:<br />

HR, TCV, Dobbs Ferry, NY 10522. Fax:<br />

(914) 674-4512,<br />

email: recruiter@childrensvillage.org.<br />

Visit our website:<br />

www.childrensvillage.org .<br />

EOE. Encouraging a diverse workforce.<br />

Social Work Supervisor<br />

Group Home Services (GHS)<br />

QUEENS<br />

Dynamic & highly-involved individual<br />

needed to supervise case-planning of<br />

adolescent males in foster care. Train<br />

& supervise staff. Ensure compliance<br />

w/govt mandates. MSW + 2 yrs post-<br />

MSW paid similarexp req. CSW/LMSW<br />

req. within 1 yr. IL exp & NYS driver’s<br />

lic. pref. Flexible/evening hrs req. In~<br />

volves travel between sites. Generous<br />

benefits pkg incl Medical/Dental/Life<br />

ins + 4 wks vac + personal days & holi~<br />

daysoff, pension, 401(k) & 403(b)plans,<br />

flex-spending plans, & a dedicated,<br />

professional, family environment.<br />

Mail/fax resume to Personnel Director,<br />

ST. VINCENT’S SERVICES<br />

66 Boerum Place, Brooklyn, NY 11201<br />

Fax: (718) 422-2312. EOE M/F/D/V<br />

Diversity is part of our mission.<br />

SOCIAL WORK<br />

ST. VINCENT’S SERVICES<br />

Foster Care Caseworker<br />

Opportunity on Staten Island<br />

Provide casework and permanency<br />

planning to adolescents in foster care<br />

group homes, preparing them for Inde~<br />

pendent Living. Maintain supportive<br />

relationships with youths and natural<br />

families. Assess their needs and make<br />

appropriate referrals. Schedule & com~<br />

plete field visits. Maintain all pert~<br />

inent documentation. BA/BS plus one<br />

year similar paid exp. req’d. MSW<br />

pref’d; salary commensurate w/educa~<br />

tion & exp plus extensive benefits<br />

pkg. Mail resumes to:<br />

Personnel Director<br />

ST. VINCENT’S SERVICES INC.<br />

66 Boerum Place<br />

Brooklyn, NY 11201<br />

(718) 422-2312<br />

M/F/D/V<br />

Diversity is part of our mission.<br />

PSYCHOLOGIST<br />

MR/DD ADULTS -BROOKLYN, NY<br />

Eval/prepare plans for MR/DD adults.<br />

Participate in treatment team meet~<br />

ings & maintain OMRDD-required doc~<br />

umentation. Train direct care staff.<br />

MS in Psychology req, exp w/MR/DD<br />

pref. 21 hours/week. Medical/Dental<br />

benefits + pension. Send resume to:<br />

BOX RP-649, 71 Fifth Avenue<br />

<strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong>, NY 10003<br />

Social Work Supervisor<br />

Group Home Services (GHS)<br />

Social Work Supervisor<br />

Family Foster Services (FFS)<br />

Two dynamic & highly-involved indivi~<br />

dual needed to supervise case-plan~<br />

ning & IL development of adolescents<br />

in foster care. Train & supervise<br />

staff. Ensure compliance w/govt man~<br />

dates. MSW + 2 yrs post-MSW paid<br />

similar exp req. CSW/LMSW req.<br />

within 1 yr. IL exp & NYS driver’s<br />

lic. pref. Flexible/ evening hrs req.<br />

Generous benefits pkg incl Med/Den~<br />

tal/Life ins + 4 wks vac + personal<br />

days & holidays off, pension, 401(k) &<br />

403(b) plans, flex-spending plans, & a<br />

dedicated, professional, family environ~<br />

ment. Mail/fax resume to:<br />

Personnel Director<br />

ST. VINCENT’S SERVICES<br />

66 Boerum Place<br />

Brooklyn, NY 11201<br />

Fax: (718) 422-2312<br />

EOE M/F/D/V<br />

Diversity is part of our mission.<br />

The Visiting Nurse Service of NY (VNSNY) is a nearly $1 billion, not-forprofit<br />

health care organization with 10,000 employees. We are currently<br />

seeking talented individuals for our growing internal consulting unit –<br />

Performance Improvement. Focusing on senior management’s top agenda,<br />

Performance Improvement works on a range of issues that directly impact<br />

VNSNY’s bottom line as well as the quality of service we deliver to our<br />

patients.<br />

INTERNAL CONSULTANTS<br />

Performance Improvement is seeking talented mid- and junior-level consultants.<br />

Responsibilities will encompass research and data collection, financial<br />

analysis, business process analysis, performance measurement and operational<br />

risk/control analysis. You will also handle day-to-day management of<br />

projects, create/track/monitor project work plans, and develop and deliver<br />

presentations. Ideal candidates will have experience in management consulting,<br />

strong analytical skills, and excellent written and verbal communication<br />

skills. Strong proficiency in Word, Excel, and PowerPoint is also<br />

required. MBA, MPA, or graduate degree in a related field preferred<br />

For immediate consideration, please submit your resume to<br />

Attn: G. Gangadeen<br />

With AD Code NYP083004<br />

Online:www.vnsny.org (preferred) E-mail:careers@vnsny.org<br />

Fax: 212-504-7938 Call: 1-866-VNS-TODAY EOE M/F/D/V<br />

DIRECTOR OF GRANTSMANSHIP<br />

The Brooklyn Bureau of Community Service, a 134 year old not-forprofit<br />

providing vital services to families, children and adults with disabilities<br />

in need, seeks fund-raiser to oversee the solicitation of private<br />

and corporate foundations, and governmental entities to raise substantial<br />

revenues for general support and critical private initiatives. Position<br />

will supervise research; write and oversee development of proposals;<br />

prepare annual fundraising strategy; liaise with Board, foundations, government<br />

agencies and collaborative organizations; and hold key role in<br />

program development process, managing a staff of two<br />

writer/researchers. Candidate must posses superior writing, interpersonal,<br />

organization and analytical skills , be an effective collaborator;<br />

be able to meet many deadlines; handle multiple tasks; and cultivate<br />

productive liaisons with a variety of constituencies. B.A., supervisory<br />

experience, success in grantsmanshhip and minimum 5 years development<br />

experience with progressively increasing responsibilities required.<br />

M.A. preferred. Please send resume, salary history and/or requirements<br />

and writing samples to: Norma Martin, BBCS, 285 Schermerhorn<br />

St., Brooklyn, NY 11217. E-mail: nmartin@bbcs.org. EOE<br />

The <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> AIDS Coalition<br />

(NYAC) seeks a dynamic and wellorganized<br />

individual to serve as its<br />

Office Coordinator.<br />

This individual must possess stellar<br />

administrative skills and be able to<br />

work in a demanding and fast-paced<br />

environment. This person must be<br />

computer savvy and must be proficient<br />

in Microsoft Excel, Outlook, Word and<br />

should have training in database management.<br />

Should have experience<br />

with special event planning and implementation.<br />

Please direct all resumes<br />

with cover letter to Keith Wayne at<br />

kwayne@nyaidsc.org or via fax to<br />

212-629-8403 no later than Friday,<br />

Sept. 24th. You can also mail info to<br />

NYAC, 231 W. 29th Street, #1002,<br />

<strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong>, NY 10001 attn: K. Wayne.<br />

PHONE CALLS WILL NOT BE<br />

ACCEPTED. Salary: Low $30s.<br />

BOROUGH NETWORK<br />

MANAGER/TRAINING<br />

FACILITATOR<br />

Prominent youth organization seeks<br />

individual to coordinate coalitions of<br />

youth service providers in all 5 boroughs,<br />

coordinate volunteer program<br />

that links volunteers with business<br />

skills to nonprofit organizations, and<br />

facilitate a variety of workshops.<br />

Excellent community organizing,<br />

advocacy, organization, presentation<br />

skills, ability to multi-task, and attention<br />

to detail a must. Experience in<br />

youth services and mentoring helpful.<br />

Master's degree and 2-3+ years experience<br />

preferred. Submit appropriate<br />

cover letter, resume, and salary<br />

requirement to:<br />

K. Heindl,<br />

BIG BROTHERS BIG SISTERS<br />

OF NYC,<br />

245 5th Ave. Suite 702 NY, NY<br />

10016, fax 646-274-6073 or email to<br />

kheindl@bigsnyc.org.<br />

No phone calls please. EOE<br />

VOCATIONAL<br />

REHABILITATION<br />

SPECIALIST<br />

Description: The Mental Health<br />

Association of <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> City seeks<br />

an individual to perform educational and<br />

vocational assessments to SPMI/MICA<br />

consumers. Refer consumers to appropriate<br />

educational, vocational, and/or<br />

employment services. Assist with<br />

VESID applications. Maintain stipend<br />

component of Recovery Works. Act as<br />

liaison to MHA’s Work Services<br />

Programs to facilitate inter-agency referrals<br />

and establish communication<br />

between programs.<br />

Qualifications:<br />

Minimum AA degree, BA preferred. 2<br />

years experience in vocational rehabilitation<br />

programs serving persons with<br />

psychiatric, substance abuse, or cooccurring<br />

disabilities. Individual and<br />

group counseling skills, rehabilitation<br />

goal development and planning skills<br />

required. Knowledge of community<br />

resources strongly preferred. Team oriented<br />

with good communication skills<br />

necessary. Basic computer knowledge<br />

(Word) required.<br />

Contact:<br />

Cover letter/Resume to Louise<br />

Lasson, LLasson@mhaofnyc.org<br />

Fax: (212) 860-3658<br />

DIRECTOR OF<br />

FINANCE &<br />

ADMINISTRATION<br />

Leading provider of pro bono business<br />

law services to nonprofits seeks<br />

a Director of Finance & Administration<br />

with 5+ years experience working in<br />

finance and administration in the nonprofit<br />

sector, including supervisory<br />

experience. Please visit the <strong>New</strong>s<br />

section of www.lany.org for details.<br />

Send resume to: SCD, Lawyers<br />

Alliance for <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong>, 330 Seventh<br />

Avenue, 19th Floor, NYC 10001. Fax:<br />

(212) 941-7458. No phone inquiries.


<strong>September</strong> <strong>2004</strong> <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> <strong>Nonprofit</strong> <strong>Press</strong> www.nynp.biz 23<br />

CLASSIFIEDS/RESOURCE CE DIRECTOR<br />

ORY<br />

Social Work<br />

PROGRAM DIRECTOR,<br />

Chemical Dependency Services<br />

St. Vincent’s Services, anestablished &<br />

innovative social services organiza~<br />

tion, is seeking a Program Director for<br />

Chemical Dependency Services. Have<br />

full managerial authority over all as~<br />

pects of rapidly-expanding OASASlicensed<br />

program w/multiple sites in<br />

Brooklyn, Queens & S.I. Oversee pro~<br />

gram operation. Set & implement stan~<br />

dards for treatment provided to clients<br />

w/Alcohol/Sub Abuse issues, & monitor<br />

quality. Maintain treatment policies in<br />

accordance w/OASAS mandates while<br />

maintaining cost-effectiveness. Select,<br />

supervise & evaluate professional<br />

staff. Maintain linkages w/local orgs.<br />

& arrange outreach programming.<br />

Req: CSW and CASAC + 10 yrs. post-<br />

MSW exp, incl. min. 6 yrs mgt exp in<br />

multi-site prgm of similar type & size.<br />

Valid NYS driver’s lic. req’d & fluency<br />

in Spanish pref’d. Salary commensur~<br />

ate w/exp. Very extensive benefits pkg.<br />

Mail/fax resume to Personnel Director,<br />

ST. VINCENT’S SERVICES<br />

66 Boerum Place, Brooklyn, NY 11201<br />

Fax: (718) 422-2312. EOE M/F/D/V<br />

Diversity is part of our mission.<br />

YOUR AD HERE<br />

YOUR AD HERE<br />

YOUR AD HERE<br />

RESOURCE DIRECTORY<br />

REAL ESTATE<br />

MISC.<br />

SOCIAL WORK<br />

Child Advocate in D/V shelter.<br />

BA + experience with children.<br />

Licensed driver with car.<br />

Spanish speaking a must.<br />

Excellent Benefits. FAX: LINDA<br />

@ 516-572-0715. E-mail:<br />

contacts@cadvnc.org<br />

SOCIAL<br />

SERVICES<br />

PROGRAM<br />

MANAGER<br />

Creative MSW to direct services (case<br />

management, counseling, group<br />

work, referrals) and staff in permanent<br />

supportive housing and provide leadership<br />

in multi-program setting. Must<br />

have: MSW or Masters in<br />

Counseling/Psychology; experience<br />

with special needs populations<br />

(homeless, substance abuse,<br />

HIV/AIDS, mentally ill); housing<br />

knowledge; patience; energy; excellent<br />

interpersonal, writing, and case<br />

recording skills; computer literacy;<br />

commitment to diverse work environment.<br />

$65K & benefits. Upper<br />

Manhattan location. Fax resume &<br />

introductory letter highlighting related<br />

experience to: 718-602-9107. EOE<br />

www.nynp.biz<br />

Wanted: Space in Lower Manhattan/Chinatown<br />

3,500 sq feet for evening training classes; need two, secure rooms asap.<br />

Will lease or sublease for 2-3 years. 212-366-6160x100<br />

FINANCE EXECUTIVE<br />

Assignment or Special Projects<br />

CFO/CONTROLLER with 15 years in nonprofit Financial Management.<br />

• Accounting • Audit • Controls • Process Improvements • Reporting<br />

• Forecasts • Budget • Contracts • Software • Cash Flow •<br />

Phone: 212-866-8178<br />

Email:rcharlson@acedsl.com<br />

CPA @ REASONABLE RATES<br />

Audits, Accounting & Bookkeeping/Software, Taxes,<br />

Grant/Contract Management and Budget<br />

SKD Partners LLP<br />

212-868-1175 - rsatyadeo@skdpartners.com<br />

BRUCEHURWITZ.COM<br />

A NON-PROFIT CONSULTANCY<br />

Specializing in...<br />

Fundraising Campaigns and Events • Grantsmanship • Management •<br />

Marketing • Planned Giving • Public Relations • Volunteer/Board<br />

Development • Employment Search Services for Professionals<br />

555 Gorge Road, 5G, Cliffside Park, NJ 07010<br />

Phone/Fax 201-313-7019 Cell: 201-674-8858<br />

E-mail: bh@brucehurwitz.com www.brucehurwitz.com<br />

P/T CHILD<br />

ADVOCATE IN<br />

D/V SHELTER<br />

Spanish speaking a +. 1 weekend<br />

day and 1 weekday. Fax<br />

resume: Linda @ 516-572-0715.<br />

E-mail: contacts@cadvnc.org<br />

SOCIAL SERVICES<br />

RESIDENCE MANAGER<br />

HOME FOR MR/DD ADULTS-BKLYN<br />

Manage home for MR/DD adults. Su~<br />

pervise & coordinate their program~<br />

ming. Supvse staff. BA/BS or QMRP<br />

pref + NYS Driver’s lic. & 2 yrs exp.<br />

Salary commensurate w/educ. & exp.<br />

Medical/Dental benefits + pension.<br />

Send resume to: BOX RP-650, 71Fifth<br />

Avenue, <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong>, NY 10003<br />

YOUR AD HERE YOUR AD<br />

HERE YOUR AD HERE YOUR<br />

AD HERE YOUR AD HERE<br />

PRINITING<br />

PRINTING<br />

Events Organizers and your Agencies can benefit by receiving timely service,<br />

the highest quality and the best price in the developing and printing of your<br />

events collateral material.<br />

At Wescan, fast turnarounds is our specialty. Call Sam or John at<br />

212-924-3600 to discuss your Journals, Program Books and Invitation printing.<br />

Wescan Color Inc., 175 Varick Street, <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong>, NY 10014<br />

Tel: 212-924-3600. Fax: 212-924-1080. Email: wescan@aol.com<br />

MAGIC CIRCLE PRINTING<br />

Environmentally<br />

recycled<br />

papers<br />

Responsible<br />

COBRA SITE<br />

MANAGER<br />

Supervise case mgmt staff; monitors<br />

all client services; conducts case<br />

reviews; provides direct client svcs.,<br />

exp working w/HIV infected clients,<br />

strong supervisory & interpersonal<br />

skills. Cobra exp. A +Reqs Master in<br />

Social Work Brooklyn location. If interested<br />

please forward/fax your resume<br />

to the Human Resources Department<br />

at 79 Madison Avenue <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong>, NY<br />

10016 www.chnnyc.org or fax to (212)<br />

807-0250. (no phone calls please)<br />

Your Ad Here<br />

Call 866-336-6967<br />

Your Ad Here<br />

Call TOLL FREE 866-336-6967<br />

Your Ad Here<br />

Call 866-336-6967<br />

Your Ad Here<br />

Call TOLL FREE<br />

866-336-6967<br />

(NYNP)<br />

For Late Breaking <strong>New</strong>s & The Latest Job Listings<br />

Subscribe for the NYNP Email <strong>New</strong>s Updates<br />

EMAIL:EDITOR@NYNP.BIZ<br />

Stationery<br />

Booklets<br />

Flyers<br />

<strong>New</strong>sletters<br />

Business cards<br />

Office: (212) 675.3043<br />

Printshop: (973) 746.5354<br />

89 Walnut Street Montclair, NJ 07042<br />

magiccircleprint@aol.com<br />

CONSULTING SERVICES<br />

Experienced nonprofit executive<br />

available for consultations on<br />

strategic planning, program development,<br />

grant writing, financial<br />

management, rate reviews and<br />

speech writing.<br />

Call 888-933-6967<br />

For Resource Directory Prices Call Toll Free 1-866-336-6967<br />

or email publisher@nynp.biz<br />

CALENDAR OF EVENTS continued from page 3<br />

FERENCE, will be held at CASA's Zena and Michael A.<br />

Wiener Conference Center in <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> City. For full<br />

conference and registration information, log on to<br />

www.casacolumbia.org<br />

<strong>September</strong> 23 – The United Way of Long<br />

Island will benefit from the Long Island Insurance<br />

Community’s 10h Annual Gala, 4:30 at the Bourne<br />

Mansion in Oakdale, NY. Honorees will be Michael D.<br />

Davidson, Vice President and Senior Officer of<br />

Independent Agents Organization from MetLife Auto &<br />

Home and Joseph DiBetta, National Director of Claims<br />

from CNA Specialty Lines. For more information about<br />

this event please call Lois Grant at 631-940-3746 or visit<br />

www.unitedwayli.org<br />

<strong>September</strong> 28 – The Federation of Protestant<br />

Welfare Agencies Center for Professional<br />

Development will host a Workshop on Beginner<br />

Basics of Proposal Writing. Fee is $65 for members<br />

and $80 for non-members. 9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., 281<br />

Park Avenue South, <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong>, NY. For information contact<br />

Marie C. Paul at 212-801-1336 or visit<br />

www.fpwa.org.<br />

<strong>September</strong> 29 - The Suffolk Community<br />

Council will hold a Legislative Reception and<br />

Public Forum with Special Guest Speaker Suffolk<br />

County Executive Steve Levy and Department<br />

Heads.8:00 a.m. to 10:30 a.m. at the Stonebridge<br />

Country Club,N.Veterans Hwy.,Hauppauge.Registration<br />

is $30 for Council members, $40 for non-members and<br />

includes breakfast. Contact the Council office at 631-<br />

434-9277 to register.<br />

Sept. 29-Oct. 3 - The <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> Association of<br />

Psychiatric Rehabilitation Services will hold its<br />

22nd Annual Conference, ‘"The Recovery<br />

Revolution: Reformation and Transformation Through<br />

Collaboration" at the Nevele Grand Resort in Ellenville,<br />

NY. For information go to www.nyaprs.org.<br />

October 3 - Support Connection, a not-for-profit<br />

organization that offers free and confidential<br />

support services to people affected by breast and<br />

ovarian cancer, is planning it 10th Annual support-A-<br />

Walk. at FDR State Park, located off the Taconic Parkway<br />

on Route 202 in <strong>York</strong>town Heights. The Walk will begin<br />

at 10:00 am with pre-Walk activities beginning at 9:00<br />

am.Anyone interested in becoming a Walk sponsor, placing<br />

an advertisement in the Walk Journal, or forming a<br />

team should contact Walk Chairperson Donna Corti at<br />

(914) 962-6402.<br />

October 6-7 - Camp Finance,a two-day retreat for<br />

Executive Directors,Key Fiancial Staff ,Development<br />

Directors and Board Members will be hosted by the<br />

Council of Community Services of <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> State at<br />

Mohonk Mountain House. For information contact Traci<br />

Adkins at tadkins@ccsnys.org or call 800-515-501C ext.108.<br />

October 7 - United Way of Long Island’s 40th<br />

Anniversary Celebration will feature Special Guest:<br />

The Honorable Eliot Spitzer, Attorney General State of<br />

<strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> and honor John R. Durso, President Local 338<br />

Retail Wholesale Department Store Union/United Food<br />

Commercial Workers, 6:00 p.m., Oheka Castle, Cold Spring<br />

Hills. For more information, contact Julie Dade-Howard at<br />

631.940.3750.<br />

To submit calendar items for publication, send information by<br />

mail to: Editor, NYNP, P.O. Box 338, Chatham, NY 12037 or<br />

via email to editor@nynp.biz. Include a contact name and<br />

phone number. For information call 888-933-6967.

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