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"Stronger Together," the annual report for the Jefferson County Community Foundation, as published by the Port Townsend & Jefferson County Leader.

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Page 1: Jefferson County Community Foundation 2012

stronger

Jefferson County Community foundation

Page 2: Jefferson County Community Foundation 2012

Stronger2Jefferson County Community FoundationNovember 2011

Working TogetherFor Jefferson County’s philanthropic donors and nonprofit agen-cies, working together is more important than ever. In this time of change to the “new normal” of decreased public funding and increased need for services, the very survival of some institutions is at stake.

Going forward, organizations will need to work together to increase effectiveness and minimize duplicated activities and functions. Those that are able to come together around a shared set of values and sense of purpose will make Jefferson County a better place to live and work.

Working together can mean forging partnerships, consolidat-ing programs with other organizations, networking through the Nonprofit Alliance of the Jefferson County Community Foundation (page 4), taking workshops together, pooling resources, sharing information, engaging one another in con-

versations about the importance and function of agencies, and solving problems together to meet our community’s needs.

In 2011 the Jefferson County Community Foundation—your community foundation—has employed many of these strategies. JCCF worked together with the Clallam Community Foundation to sponsor a seminar on legacy giving opportunities for attorneys, accoun-tants and nonprofit leaders. Cooperation with members of local bar associations secured Continuing Legal Education (CLE) credits for attorneys attending the seminar.

Fiscal sponsorship by JCCF enabled Working Image (page 9) to accept tax-deductible dona-tions while the agency, recently restructured as an independent nonprofit, awaits approval by the Internal Revenue Service of its application for 501(c)(3) status.

A grant from Philanthropy Northwest, written collaboratively with United Good Neighbors, has brought capacity-building workshops to nonprofits supporting safety net services (page 4). Another collaboration between UGN and JCCF helped bring new life to the threatened Senior Meals program in Port Townsend.

Partnership and collaboration will grow more critical as government resources continue to shrink. Nonprofit agencies and individual donors have every right to ask: If we invest our endowment funds with JCCF or commit our charitable dollars to a Donor Advised Fund, can we be sure the Community Foundation is joining forces throughout the community to become more efficient and more effective?

As we look to 2012, the Jefferson County Community Foundation pledges to help build com-munity through serious dialogue about sustainable growth. Already public and private lead-ers throughout the county are asking, “What can we do differently to help our community?” Working together to become more innovative and collaborative will help us meet the chal-lenge.

As Bob Dylan sang a generation ago: “Come gather ’round, people … for the times, they are a–changin.’”

Anne SchneiderAnne Schneider

President

JCCF

About this sectionOur focus this year is on collabora-tion and partnership. Jefferson County Community Foundation and United Good Neighbors of Jefferson County have teamed up to focus on building capacity of safety net providers. Our county has a host of nonprofits who provide essen-tial services to those in need from providing meals or food at the food bank to emergency housing and homeless shelter to crisis interven-tion and mental health services. Our safety net providers are doing more with less resources. We aim to help find community-based solutions to emerging needs.

In this special supplement to The Leader, you ‘ll find profiles of many community volunteers and groups that make Jefferson County a great place to live as well as the nonprofit directory. You will learn how community endowment grants are making a difference to local nonprofits, the origin of two of the scholarship funds at the Community Foundation, and the impact the giv-ing circle grantmaking is having in Chimacum and Quilcene. We hope you’ll find the information about the Jefferson Legacy Society intrigu-ing. We believe legacy giving is for everybody...not just the wealthy. It represents a meaningful way to reflect and express one’s values. And, it strengthens the causes we care about for the long term. To find out more, go to the Foundation’s website at jccfgives.org or contact any member of the JCCF board of directors - you’ll find them listed on this page - or JCCF’s executive direc-tor, Kris Mayer at [email protected].

Finally, our thanks to the folks who have made this section possible. JCCF Founding Investors Scott Wilson and Jennifer James-Wilson, owners of The Leader, generously contrib-uted editorial and layout assistance - thanks Sara Radka and Kathy Busic. Prepress production and distribution costs, including inserting more than 7,500 copies in the November 16 issue of The Leader were generously funded by the supplement’s corpo-rate sponsors, Allstate Insurance and First Federal. First Federal’s lead sponsorship ad is on page 12 and Allstate’s ad is on page 8.

Jefferson County Community FoundationBoArd of directors

tim caldwell, DirectorScholarship Chair Manager, Puget Sound Energy Community Partnerships and Port Townsend Customer Service Office

Herb cook, TreasurerInvestment Committee Chair Retired Chairman and Editor, CM Media, Inc.

david Goldsmith, DirectorSole Proprietor, DRG Sound Solutions

cindy Hill-finnie, Vice PresidentMarket Distribution Leader, Allstate Insurance

Karen Nichols, SecretaryOlympic Cosmetic & Restorative Dentistry

Anne Schneider, PresidentFounder, Working Image

Liesl slabaugh, DirectorDevelopment Director Port Townsend Marine Science Center

debbi steele, DirectorChair, Fund for Women and Girls Retired ATT Strategic Account Manager

doug Van Allen cfP®, DirectorMarathon Wealth Management

Kristina Mayer, Executive Director

Cover: Community Collage .............1Letter from JCCF President Anne Schneider ...............................2JCCF Founding Investors .................3Community Partners .......................4JCCF Community Endowment Grantees .....................5Nonprofit Directory .................6, 7Allstate Sponsorship Ad ..................8Community Giving: Giving Circles & Fiscal Sponsorship ..9Scholarships .................................10Legacy Giving: Fund Your Passion .......................11First Federal Sponsorship Ad ......12

What’s inside

Anne schneider

Liesl Slabaugh development director, Port townsend Marine science center“I am truly amazed and inspired by the diversity and productivity of the nonprofits that enrich and strengthen our community. I support the JCCF because I want these nonprofits to be able to continue their good work into the future. I know that through the Community Foundation, my gifts will be stewarded and directed in the most thoughtful and impactful way possible.”

Cover Photo Credits

Marine Science Center photos and main image by Al McCleese; Judith Bird photo by Shelly Randall; Working Image photo by Juliette Sterner.

Page 3: Jefferson County Community Foundation 2012

Together3

Jefferson County Community Foundation

November 2011

By Herb cookJCCF, Treasurer

Growing up in Ohio, I wanted to be like my

Grandfather. His name was Preston Davis, and his compa-ny published My Weekly Reader and Current Events, the news-papers that were distributed to millions of kids in classrooms across the country. Grandpa Davis set me on the path to a career in journalism and pub-lishing. He also taught me to play chess and warned me that he’d never let me win, just to be kind. I was probably 14 years old when I finally beat him, fair and square. Success feels best when you’ve earned it.

Grandpa Davis also taught me something else. In 1943, when I was one year old, he made the very first gift to the Columbus Foundation, one of the earliest community founda-tions in the country. Grandpa and some other business lead-ers had decided that Central Ohio needed a fund that could

receive donations from those who had done well, and use the earnings on that money to support worthwhile charitable causes throughout the region.

Being still in diapers, I didn’t know much about the Columbus Foundation in 1943. In fact, I didn’t know a lot about the charitable side of Grandpa Davis’s life until more than 20 years later, when I was home on leave from the Navy and attended a luncheon in his honor. There I heard for the first time a phrase from the letter he had sent along with his check in 1943. Grandpa described his founding contribu-tion as “a little something with which the Foundation can show what it could do if it had more.”

Preston Davis died in 1967, but the Preston Davis Fund remains alive and well at the Columbus Foundation. Today there’s also the Davis-Cook Fund, created by my parents and advised by me and my sib-lings. Together those funds pro-

vide annual support to a num-ber of institutions in Central Ohio.

When my wife Kathe and I decided we would retire on the Olympic Peninsula, we had a number of tasks to accom-plish. Buy a pickup truck to haul gravel, mulch and manure. Done. Build a home in Gardiner, just across the road from one of the places Kathe lived while growing up. Done. Get involved in the community. Hmmm, that one’s not so simple when you’ve spent most of your life in Ohio and don’t know many people on the Peninsula.

But wait! Here’s a story in The Leader about the Jefferson County Community Foundation. It’s just getting started, and it’s looking for Founding Investors who’ll give $10,000 over five years to support operations. Well, that’s a no-brainer. Let’s send our first check.

And so, for a few months, we became known as JCCF’s “mystery investors,” the ones whom nobody knew. The ones

who sent a check without being asked. That was nearly five years ago, and today I no lon-ger feel like a stranger in a strange land. We’ve gotten to know many of JCCF’s founders, and—through them—others in the community who are work-ing hard to support a variety of worthwhile causes.

Last year, Kathe and I decid-ed to create a Donor Advised

Fund at the Community Foundation—a tangible demon-stration of our confidence that JCCF will continue to be a posi-tive force in Jefferson County. We hope the grants from our DAF will be “little somethings with which the recipients can show what they could do if they had more.”

Grandpa Davis, I think, would be pleased.

Grandpa davis’s Legacy

When asked to join the Board of the JCCF, Doug

Van Allen was splitting his time between Portland and Port Townsend. In Portland he has a well-established financial plan-ning practice. In 2008, after nine years of remodeling houses in Port Townsend, Doug and his artist wife, Nancy, decided to make P.T. their new home … even though it would take sev-eral years for Doug to transition his business from Portland.

As the Van Allens began inte-grating into Jefferson County, it became apparent that the level of volunteerism and the diver-sity of nonprofits were excep-tional. Although Nancy and Doug have different charitable inter-ests, they did agree that sup-porting JCCF would be a good way to enhance the effectiveness of many worthwhile causes. It would also be a way to get a bet-ter handle on what’s going on in their new home county.

After a year on the JCCF Board, Doug has been impressed by the impact the foundation is having. From grant making,

to coaching other nonprofits in ways to be more effective and accountable, to providing a venue for individuals and couples to express their unique charitable intents, JCCF is making a dif-ference. Doug is now focusing on creating long-term funding for foundation operations and programs through the Jefferson Legacy Society. Meanwhile, Nancy has plugged into support-ing a number of activities related to art, dance and the Fund for Women and Girls (an endowed area-of-interest fund with JCCF).

As Doug transitions his busi-ness to Port Townsend, Nancy has been exhibiting her work at the Port Townsend Gallery. When not engaged in their occu-pations, volunteering or enter-taining, they can be found work-ing on their home, gardening, walking around town and build-ing a 17-foot dory. Nancy enjoys dance and movement, while Doug is an avid motorcyclist and leather braider. They find the vibrant culture of Port Townsend and Jefferson County makes it a perfect place to call home.

From Portland to Port Townsend

founding investors: doug and Nancy Van Allen

Meet Jccf investorsThe JCCF Founding 100 Investors CircleMembers of The Founding 100 Investors Circle show their support for the community foundation and the work it can accomplish in Jefferson County by pledging $10,000 to be paid over time. They make a gift of unrestricted money – separate from the endow-ment – that is used to develop and maintain the infrastructure of the foundation. It pays for staff, office space and professional consulting – all the ingredients necessary to run a successful organization.

The first 100 families, individuals, businesses or foundations that make this pledge will be recognized for their community vision and for making an early commitment to the success of the community foundation. They will be listed on the foundation’s website, in press announcements, the annual report and other appropriate communication mate-rial. Investors may make their donations through cash or gifts of stock.

Each member of the JCCF Board has already joined The Founding 100 Investors Circle.

Anonymous (4)

Sharon Black

Bill & Sue Conklin

Herb & Kathe Cook

Malcolm Dorn

Grace Dumenil

Hugh Ferguson

Joe & Cindy Hill Finnie

Rocky Friedman

Teresa & David Goldsmith

Christiane Bradford Hale

Matthew & Tara Henery

Mike & Jane Henery

Suzanne Lagoni

Carla Main & Brad West

Kristin Manwaring Insurance Associates, Inc.

Kristina Mayer

Bruce & Teri McComas

Carol McGough & Marilyn Penitsch

Kathleen Mitchell & Scott Landis

Jesse & Dawn Mohrbacher

Carolyn & Jon Muellner

Kristen Nelson

Dr. Henry & Karen Nichols

Michelle Sandoval & Marty Gay

Satterberg Foundation

Schneider Family Fund

Sam & Berry Shoen

Brent Shirley

Liesl Slabaugh & Joseph Bednarik

Debbi Steele & Dennis Daneau

Josh & Keely Stranahan

Quimper Foundation

Doug & Nancy Van Allen

Vince & Mary Ann Verneuil

Scott Wilson & Jennifer James-Wilson

Martha & Loretta Trolin Atkins Fund of the New Mexico Community Foundation

founding investors: Herb and Kathe cook

Page 4: Jefferson County Community Foundation 2012

Stronger4Jefferson County Community FoundationNovember 2011

Preserving Jefferson county’s past: the Historical society research center

Despite budget cuts and other economic challeng-

es, there is good news for local nonprofit organizations. The Jefferson County Community Foundation (JCCF) and United Good Neighbors of Jefferson County (UGN) have joined forces to help nonprofits build collab-orative relationships that support systemic change and sustainabil-ity. A $15,000 grant awarded to JCCF by Philanthropy Northwest supports this capacity-building effort.

Already the JCCF-UGN collab-oration has shown positive results. After Olympic Community Action Programs (OlyCAP) defunded the Senior Meals Program at the Port Townsend Community Center in July, JCCF and UGN convened a task force of local nonprofit and government leaders.

Soon individuals, faith com-munities and civic groups stepped up to volunteer food and time. The Port Townsend Senior Association now schedules and coordinates volunteers. Laurie Medlicott, a member of the Port Townsend City Council, vol-unteered to be head cook. The Senior Meals Program has con-tinued without interruption.

During the summer, Kris Mayer, Executive Director of JCCF, and Carla Caldwell,

Executive Director of UGN, met with several nonprofit organiza-tions to assist them with issues involving board development, staffing and mission clarification. Currently, Mayer and Caldwell are planning a series of work-shops for nonprofit executives, board members, and volunteer coordinators.

“When people working in the nonprofit world come together to share their experiences, problems, and solutions, everyone is ener-gized and organizations become more efficient,” says Mayer.

Caldwell says UGN’s “primary mission is to raise funds to sup-port health and human services in the county. Our advocacy work with JCCF will raise awareness of and appreciation for the excel-lent services provided by so many nonprofits in Jefferson County.”

Together JCCF and UGN will sponsor networking sessions, seminars and workshops that focus on bringing together local nonprofits to strengthen their capacity.

Attendance fee for network-ing sessions, held at Creativity Cove from 11:30 a.m. to 1:00 p.m., is $10. The current schedule includes sessions for Executive Directors on January 17 and April 3, 2012; for Board Chairs and Directors on January 24 and April 10, 2012; for Volunteer

Managers on November 29, 2011, February 28 and May 1, 2012; and for Development Staff on December 6, 2011, March 6 and June 5, 2012.

While the seminar schedule for 2012 is still developing, sever-al sessions already are scheduled: Communications and Marketing in Fundraising, presented by Susan Howlett at the Northwest Maritime Center on January 10; the annual Safety Net Meeting for Jefferson County nonprofit organizations, presented by Carla Caldwell and Kris Mayer at Creativity Cove on February 7; and Volunteer Management, presented by Nikki Russell at Creativity Cove on March 22 (ten-tative).

For more information, contact Kris Mayer ([email protected] or 360-379-3667) or Carla Caldwell ([email protected] or 360-385-3797).

Funds generated by the Barbara Marseille Endowment at the

Jefferson County Community Foundation are earmarked for support of the Jefferson County Historical Society Research Center. Barbara was instrumen-tal in establishing the Research Center to hold the society’s half million documents related to the history of Jefferson County. The center opened in 2003 and was soon crowded with researchers and artifacts calling for more space. A major expansion of the facility is nearing completion, on time and on budget. The nearly 9,000 square foot addition will join the original 2,000 square foot building creating additional room for researchers and collections. The new wing will house all of the society’s artifacts, a conser-vation laboratory, and an exhibit prep room. Separately monitored areas will provide optimal envi-ronments for the various arti-

facts being housed whether they are photographs, textiles, wood, or metal. Housing all of the historical society’s collections on one site will allow research-ers to access three dimensional artifacts along with paper docu-ments. The Jefferson County Genealogical Society, a partner in the Research Center opera-

tion, will gain more space for its work in the original building.

The $1.6 million structure was completely funded by gen-erous donations from local res-idents and major grants from the Washington State Heritage Capital Projects Fund, M.J. Murdock Charitable Trust, Seattle Foundation, Hugh and Jane Ferguson Foundation, and the Norcliffe Foundation.

Even as the finishing touches are being added to the building, the relocation of artifacts from temporary storage spaces around Port Townsend has begun. Moving thousands of artifacts will take several months, but the historical society promises a major public grand opening when the move is completed. “This is an exciting advance for heritage preservation and we invite the public to share that excitement,” said Julie Marston, JCHS presi-dent.

By Wendy dyson

Chimacum C o r n e r

Garden is a vibrant, out-door commu-nity gather-ing space and c l a s s r o o m where people connect to each other,

the land, and their food. In 2011 approximately 175 com-munity members participat-ed in workshops and events hosted by the Garden, and hundreds more enjoyed the ambience while shopping at Chimacum Corner Farmstand and Farmers Market.

The year’s accomplishments included building an herb gar-den and greenhouse, hosting a gardening class for Chimacum elementary school students, five Master Gardener workshops, the Brainstorm for Education study group and the Greater Tri-Area Scavenger Hunt. The Garden has been supported by a grant from the Women Who Care Giving Circle of the Jefferson County Community Foundation, with additional grant support from the Jefferson County Master Gardeners and more than 25 community volunteers.

Here’s a look at some of Chimacum Corner Garden’s successes in 2011:

In April, 10 community mem-bers planted four herb beds. The Master Gardener grant supported the purchase of 22 types of herbs through Midori Farm and Henery’s Garden Center. Henery’s discounted the herbs, and Roger Short and WallyWorks donated supplies.

In June, a class of 25 Chimacum Elementary School students planted two varieties of edible sun-flower seeds at the Garden. Volunteer Michele Shoeman led the class.

A handful of volunteers tended the Garden during the summer. Skookum volun-teers took over maintenance in September, led by Corner staff person and Garden vol-unteer Ellen Sabina.

In July, a soil build-ing demonstration site was established in one herb bed by Master Gardener Dorian Curry. Buckwheat was plant-ed as a summer cover crop and tilled into the soil in August. In September, Dorian used this section of the garden in his soil building workshop—one of five classes held in partnership with Jefferson County Master Gardeners.

In September, volunteer work parties led by John Bellow of Spring Rain Farm raised a 20-by-24-foot green-house for community use.

On October 8, the Farmstand and Garden hosted the Greater Tri-Area Scavenger Hunt, celebrating local food, farming and his-tory. More than 75 partici-pants visited farms, restau-rants, businesses and com-munity groups on a 26-mile loop, solving riddles, meeting challenges and competing for more than $1,000 in prizes. During the award ceremony participants enjoyed lemon-ade and spiced shortbread from Anca’s Pastry by Design, courtesy of the Friends of Jefferson County Library.

Wendy Dyson is Director of the Chimacum Corner Garden.

A Garden Grows in chimacum Jccf and UGN: Partners for Progress

JcHs collections manager Becky schurmann with one of the first items to be moved into the society’s new build-ing—a wooden horse-drawn sleigh that had been stored in the Port townsend fire Bell tower.

carla caldwell, executive director of UGN

Kris Mayer, executive director of Jccf

Karen Nicholssecretary, Jccf

“JCCF is a way to create a true legacy of giving in our community. Creating synergy with nonprofits through educa-tion and financial support, establishing new funds to meet our community’s needs and funding a community endow-ment creates a sustainable vehicle of support for our com-munity now and into the future. I am grateful to be part of such an effective and vital organization.”

Page 5: Jefferson County Community Foundation 2012

Together5

Jefferson County Community Foundation

November 2011

Deborah Steele Jccf director and chair, steering committee fund for Women & Girls“Having been involved in a California community foundation prior to moving here, I am impressed and inspired by all they do for a community. I am excited to be involved with a group that is focused on improving the community/county through local nonprofits. I look forward to increasing the community’s awareness of JCCF. The more people know of our mission, the better off we will be as a community.”

centrum’s Young Artists Project

inspiring Girls to Pursue science A family safety NetWith support from the

Jefferson County Community Foundation’s Fund for Women and Girls, six girls from Port Townsend and Chimacum took part in an eight-week program called Girls in Real-Life Science (GIRLS). The intensive project, organized by the Port Townsend Marine Science Center (PTMSC) intro-duced the students to the world of scientific research.

PTMSC is engaged in a vari-ety of science-related projects, several of which are conduct-ed by motivated young women with strong interests in science. Valerie Lindberg and Julia Ledbetter, two Americorps staff members, took the lead on the GIRLS Project. Each of the six girls who joined the project was motivated by a unique and per-sonal interest in science. The group met regularly to explore a variety of topics inspired by the scientific activities going on at PTMSC.

Lindberg’s and Ledbetter’s own research focused on the presence of plastics in the diet of the glaucous-winged gulls nest-ing on nearby Protection Island. The girls got a good introduction to the way scientists work as they helped the two women dis-sect and analyze the contents of seagull boluses (pellets of undi-

gested material regurgitated by birds) and prepare the data for publication.

The project also looked at other impacts plastics are hav-ing on marine life. The students sampled local beaches for the presence of microplastics par-ticles in the sand. After conduct-ing a beach clean-up, they incor-porated the litter they collected in creative arts projects to edu-cate people about the amount of plastic now moving about in marine environments.

The girls used a seine net to catch and count marine ani-mals living in an eelgrass bed. They carried out a beach survey as part of Naturemapping for Beaches, a program coordinated by researchers at the University

of Washington that monitors the biodiversity of intertidal life. In a lighter vein, the girls used sci-entific procedures to study the properties of bubble gum!

As the program came to an end in May, the girls shared their own research projects with an appreciative audience at the annual JCCF Women and Girls Fund event.

Studies show that many girls are enthusiastic about science at a young age, but often lose their interest by middle or high school, usually because they lack motivating science experi-ences and female role models who are excited about science themselves. The GIRLS project provided both experiences and role models.

Presenting their research at the Women and Girls fund annual event were, from left, Kreea Baabahar, Anda Yoshina, Becca stewart and rosie Wilcox. Not in the photo were Alethea Westlund and Britta Janssen.

Centrum’s Young Artists Project—a collection of

programs serving students in grades 5 through 12—is a worthwhile component of Centrum’s broader education mission. That much is easy to grasp through observation. But funders, legislators and other educators want—and deserve—more systematic, quantifiable assessments of the project’s impact.

Thanks to a grant from the Community Endowment of the Jefferson County Community Foundation, Centrum has been

able to create an evaluation process that accurately reflects the goals for the Young Artists Project, and assesses how well the project’s week-long sessions are achieving those goals.

Consultant Claudia Bach of Advisarts worked with Centrum program manager Martha Worthley to identify key areas for student reflection and pro-gram evaluation. The project is now making consistent use of a number of tools for documenta-tion and evaluation of program sessions.

Registration information will be modified to gather more relevant data. Youth, faculty, staff, and chaperone participant surveys have been redesigned and are completed at the end of each session.

A Final Presentation Checklist gathers input from board members and educators

during student presentations.A faculty and staff debrief

meeting is convened to review the results of student, faculty, and chaperone surveys.

Using Survey Monkey as the tool for collating data also increased Centrum’s capacity for analyzing results and helped staff gain fluency and comfort with the process. Consistent final reporting will be valuable as Centrum seeks the contri-butions needed to underwrite future programs for youth.

The JCCF grant has helped Centrum build capacity, strengthen the Young Artists Project and provide fundraising and marketing tools critical to sustaining programs for youth. Centrum will continue to use those tools to shape its pro-grams for greater impact and success.

Raising children may truly be the “toughest job you’ll

ever love.” In the best of times, parents can find support for their round-the-clock role from close friends and fam-ily. But sometimes challenges arise that require additional attention and care. Jumping Mouse Children’s Center is here for those times.

Jumping Mouse’s Securing Connections program, launched in 2010, assists and encourages parents whose children are healing from trau-ma or loss. The center’s men-tal health therapy program for children has always included support for families, helping them understand and respond to their child’s unique needs. In recent years, as family sys-tems and circumstances have grown more complex, many parents have expressed a need for more intensive community support.

In response, Jumping Mouse developed Securing Connections. Directed by parent clinician Catharine Robinson, the program offers parents individual weekly ses-sions that help them focus on their child’s developmental stages, identify and change unhealthy patterns, and gain parenting skills and confi-dence.

Among those who have benefited from Securing Connections are parents cop-ing with their own childhood traumas, grandparents as they raise a second generation, and foster parents attempting to bond with a child who has a history of neglect. In these situations, caring for children often feels overwhelming; Securing Connections provides tools that can help.

Karen, a single mom in the

program, struggled with low self-esteem and poor physical health after many years as a victim of domestic violence. She was concerned when she saw her own destructive pat-terns repeating themselves in her two children. Her eight-year-old daughter came to Jumping Mouse to cope with depression and withdrawal, and Karen enrolled in Securing Connections. There, she con-fronted her own past abuse, learning to take care of and value herself in order to model healthy behavior for her chil-dren. “I feel supported for the first time in my life,” Karen says. “I don’t feel so alone. And my daughter is doing really well now, too.”

Grant funding from Jefferson County Community Foundation supports this important program, which is offered at no charge to fami-lies enrolled at Jumping Mouse. On average, parents in Securing Connections meet weekly for about six months, but meetings may extend over a longer period if necessary.

The JCCF Women Who Care Giving Circle helped to launch this program with a challenge grant of $13,000 in 2009/10. This past year, Jumping Mouse Children’s Center was selected by the grant panel at the Annual JCCF Grantmaker’s Forum to receive one of two $2500 community endowment grants awarded through a competitive process. The focus of the Grantmaker’s Forum was writing effective outcome statements and JMCC exhibited the ability to not only identify potent outcomes but to articulate a strong case for the benefit to the individual, the family and the community.

Page 6: Jefferson County Community Foundation 2012

6Jefferson County Community FoundationNovember 2011

7Jefferson County

Community FoundationNovember 2011

Community Nonprofit Directory

We apologize if we omitted a nonprofit in Jefferson County. If you know of additional nonprofits, please let us know and we will include them in future publications. Contact [email protected].

AdmirAlty Audubon SocietyInitiates, promotes, assists and encourages the understanding and appreciation of nature and conservation of wildlife, wilderness, natural resources and natural beauty.

Rosemary Sikes .................360 385 0307

AmericAn ASSociAtion of univerSity Women (AAuW)

Advances equity for women and girls through advocacy, education, philanthropy and research.

Mary Weeding ...................360 385 9986

AmericAn red croSSThe American Red Cross shelters, feeds and provides emotional support to victims of disasters; supplies nearly half of the nation’s blood; teaches lifesaving skills; provides international humanitarian aid; and supports military members and their families.

Michelle Kelley ..................360 457 7933

Andy mAckie muSic foundAtionProvides free instruments, free lessons and scholarships to any child who wants to learn.

..............................................360 316 9556

boiler room inc.All-ages venue for music, art, poetry and theatre, a youth-run business/social experiment and a free soup kitchen.

.............................................360 379 8247

brinnon volunteer fire depArtment Women’S AuxiliAry

Purchasing equipment for the volunteer fire department.

Evelyn Cemper .................360 796 3432

center vAlley AnimAl reScueRehabilitates domestic and farm animals with the goal of adoption to a permanent home.

Sara Penhallegon ..............360 765 0598

centrum foundAtionWelcomes artists of all ages for workshops, performances and artist residencies.

John MacElwee .................360 385 3102

chAmber muSic Society of port toWnSend

Arranges concerts and gives scholarships. .............................................360 385 4599

combAt veterAnS internAtionAlProvides assistance to veterans and their families.

Don Itterley ........................360 385 0548

college plAnning netWorkAssists in college selection, admission, financial and scholarship processes.

Douglas Breithaupt ..........360 385 9515

combAtAnt crAft of AmericAPreserves, maintains and brings up to operating conditions military vessels and shares their military history.

.............................................206 947 2303

community choruS of port toWnSend And eASt JefferSon county

Educational, artistic, recreational organization which provides concerts.

Peggy Albers......................360 385 4180

community enterpriSe AlliAnceProvides education and philanthropy.

Mary Stewart .....................360 437 8140

conSumer credit And debt counSeling ServiceS

Provides consumer credit and debt counseling services.

Laura Piper .........................360 385 0555

copper cAnyon preSSPublisher of poetry, fosters the work of emerging, established and world-renowned poets.

Joseph Roberts.................360 385 4925

dAughterS of the britiSh empire, engliSh roSe chApter

Support local charity and nursing home in CA.Heather Mitchell ...............360 385 7093

diSAbility AWAreneSS StArtS hereDisability awareness.

Lynn Gressley ....................360 379 0274

domeStic violence/SexuAl ASSAult progrAm of JefferSon county

Providing free crisis intervention and advocacy to victims of domestic and sexual violence.

Beulaha Kingsolver ..........360 385 5292

eASt JefferSon recreAtion clubProviding programs and activities for the developmentally disabled.

.............................................360 385 4980

echho (ecumenicAl chriStiAn helping hAndS orgAnizAtion)

Collaborates to provide services to persons who are elderly, disabled or of limited means.

Lori Oberlander .................360 379 3246

edenSAW community cAncer foundAtion (eccf)

Raises and distributes funds to residents of Jefferson County who are struggling financially due to the costs associated with the cancer treatments they are having.

Jim Ferris ...........................360 385 7878

friendS of chimAcum SchoolS educAtion foundAtion

Provides resources (beyond budget) for Chimacum students within the classroom.

Karen Newman ..................360 379 4977

friendS of fort flAglerRestoring, preserving and protecting historical Fort Flagler.

Bob Suther .........................360 385 3701

friendS of kAh tAiEducating the community and local governments of the enviornmental value of and to promote protection of Kah Tail Lagoon Nature Park.Friends of Fort TownsendBenefits, supports and promotes Fort Townsend State Park

Nancy Steinberg ...............360 385 2998

friendS of fort Worden StAte pArk

Providing financial and volunteer support for park programs and improvements.

Rick Sepler .........................360 344 4459

friendS of the JefferSon county librAry

Lends support by funding programs and purchasing items that the Library could not otherwise afford.

.............................................360 385 6544

friendS of the JefferSon county pArkS And recreAtion

Promote and support programs.Jane Storm ........................360 385 2291

friendS of the port toWnSend public librAry

Provide services, programs and materials for the library that are beyond the means of the City budget.

Geralynn Rackowski .........360 385 1206

gAtheringplAceOffering enrichment classes and their annual Port Townsend Calendar.

Linda Ferris ........................360 385 4172

hAbitAt for humAnity of eASt JefferSon county

Builds simple, decent houses in partnership with people in need.

Jamie Maciejewski ............360 379 2827

homeWArd bound community lAnd truSt

Acquiring land for permanently affordable home ownership opportunities for working families and individuals.

Mellinda Szatlocky ...........360 565 2068

hoSpice foundAtion of JefferSon county

Informs and educates the Jefferson County community about the important patient and family end-of-life services provided by Hospice of Jefferson Healthcare and supports those in need of those services.

Michael Kubec ...................360 385 2041

humAne Society of JefferSon county

Aids, supports and assists the Jefferson County Animal Shelter and promotes the wellbeing and humane treatment of animals.

.............................................360 437 9805

JefferSon AidS ServiceAl Hernandez ....................360 765 0700

Jc mAShFacilitates access to primary medical care and prescriptions for Jefferson County residents.

Steven Rafoth ...................360 385 5068

JefferSon clemente foundAtioncollaborate to develop educational programs and resources for hard to serve populations.

Lela Hilton ..........................360 732 0007

JefferSon community SchoolGuiding students to become compassionate, thoughtful, global citizens who have both the skills and wills to create a more peaceful and sustainable future.

Paulette Lack .....................360 385 0622

JefferSon county chAmber of commerce

Focuses on building business and community.Theresa Verraes .................360 385 7869

JefferSon county community foundAtion

Promotes philanthropy and build the capacity of local nonprofits.

Kristina Mayer ...................360 379 3667

JefferSon county fArmerS mArketS

Supports the development of local sustainable farming and celebrates local farmers, food producers, and artisans.

Will O’Donnell ...................360 379 9098

JefferSon county fAmily ymcAEnhancing the lives of all people within the county through programs designed to develop spirit, mind and body.

Erica Delma .......................360 385 5811

JefferSon county food bAnk ASSociAtion

Open 1 day/week to provide food for those in need.

Phil Flynn ............................360 385 6321

JefferSon county hiStoricAl Society

Actively discovers, collects, preserves and promotes the heritage of Jefferson County.

Bill Tennant ........................360 385 1003

JefferSon county mASter gArdener

Enhancing and supplementing the community educational efforts of the WSU Master Gardener Program.

Mike Mc Fadden ................360 379 5510

JefferSon county public heAlthProtecting the health of Jefferson County residents.

Jean Baldwin .....................360 385 9400

JefferSon county Sheriff’S foundAtion

Promote community welfare through support of public safety and volunteer programs.

.............................................360 437 0831

JefferSon equeStriAn ASSociAtion

Facilitate development of equestrian facilities.Jefferson Healthcare Hospital AuxiliaryRaising funds for hospital equipment.

Barbara Sepersky ..............360 385 0297

JefferSon lAnd truStHelping the community preserve open space, working lands and habitat forever.

Sarah Spaeth .....................360 379 9501

JefferSon SeArch And reScueDedicated to search, rescue and public education for people of the Olympic Peninsula

Robert Foster .....................360 379 0117

JefferSon mentAl heAlth ServiceS

Provides mental health services to Jefferson County residents of all ages.

Janet Polley ........................360 385 0321

JefferSon teen centerAfter school drop in recreation center.

Kate Pike ............. 360 732 4090 ext 365

Jumping mouSe children’S centerHelping children mend and strengthening their web of support.

Kris Becker .........................360 379 5109

Jung Society of port toWnSendSponsors lectures, films, discussion groups, and seminars to make the psychological realities Jung brought to light more accessible to the general public.

John Wood .........................360 385 3622

kelly Art deco light muSeumExhibits art deco lights.

.............................................360 379 9030

key city public theAtreFosters artistic expression that entertains, educates and engages our community .

Denise Winter ....................360 379 0195

lA leche leAgueProvides education, information, support and encouragement to women who want to breastfeed.

.............................................360 385 5815

literAcy council of JefferSon county

Coordinate resources to enhance literacy.Cindy Lesh .........................360 765 4024

look both WAyS foundAtionProvide internet safety curriculum and educational media to help people stay safe in the online world.

Lizanne Coker ....................360 821 9688

mAke WAveS in port toWnSendDeveloping a multipurpose aquatic, recreation and fitness center.

Karen Nelson .....................360 379 2885

mArroWStone iSlAnd foundAtion

Philanthropic for Marrowstone Island needs.Robert Barrett ...................360 385 1481

nAtionAl AlliAnce on mentAl heAlth

Provides support groups, education and advocacy for mentally ill adults and family members and care givers of mentally ill children, adolescents and adults.

Elaine Nelson .....................360 379 9949

neW old time chAutAuquAPresents family oriented educational and entertainment programs and fundraising efforts to support educational and entertainment programs.

.............................................360 385 2212

nordlAnd gArden clubIncreasing knowledge of horticulture, promoting conservation of resources, gardening and gardening skills; protecting native trees, plants and birds.

Jean Eichman ....................360 379 9566

north olympic SAlmon coAlitionProvides funding, guidance, technical assistance and ongoing support for salmon habitat restoration and enhancement.

Rebecca Benjamin ............360 379 8051

northWeSt kiWAniS cAmpProvides recreational, therapeutic and educational activities to children with medical and developmental disabilities.

Sharron Sherfick ...............360 732 7222

northWeSt mAritime center & Wooden boAt foundAtion

Engaging and educating people in traditional and contemporary maritime life.

Jake Beattie........................360 385 3628

northWeSt nAturAl reSource group

Promotes innovative forest management strategies.

Dan Stonington ................360 379 9421

northWeSt School of Wooden boAt building

Teaching and preserving the skills and crafts associated with fine wooden boat building and other traditional maritime arts.

Bill Mahler ..........................360 385 4948

northWeSt WAterShed inStituteProvides scientific and technical support to protect and restore fish and wildlife habitats and watershed ecosystems.

Peter Bahls .........................360 385 6786

northWind ArtS AlliAnceDedicated to promoting the arts in the region.

Jeanette Best .....................360 379 1086

olympic AreA Agency on AgingHelping elderly individuals and persons with disabilities.

Roy B. Walker .....................360 379 5064

olympic chApter of the WAShington nAtive plAnt Society

Appreciate, conserve and study native plants.Sharon Schlentner ............360 379 9810

olympic community Action progrAmS

Strengthening the community by providing supportive services that help people to help themselves.

Tim Hockett .......................360 385 2571

olympic environmentAl councilEducating abut and protecting the Olumpic Peninsula environmental resourcesOlympic Mountain Pet PalsProvides financial assistance for spay/neuter cats and dogs.

Phyllis Becker ....................360 437 9085

olympic muSic feStivAlConcerts provided with the intention of making chamber music more accessible.

.............................................360 732 4800

olympic peninSulA chApter of the AmericAn red croSS

Shelters, feeds and counsels victims of disaster.Michelle Kelley ..................360 385 2737

olympic peninSulA mycologicAl Society

Dedicated to learning about and enjoying wild mushrooms and their environments.

.............................................360 477 4228

orgAnic Seed AlliAnceSupports ethical development and stewardship of seed.

Micala Colley .....................360 385 7192

point WilSon SAil And poWer SquAdron

Promote boating safety through education and free vessel safety checks.

Natalie Hutton ...................360 385 3118

port ludloW firefighterS ASSociAtion

Supports services provided by Jefferson County Fire District #3 and other agencies.

Kurt Vaness ........................360 437 2236

port toWnSend Aero muSeumRestores, displays and fly classic and antique aircraft.

Jerry Thuotte .....................360 379 5244

port toWnSend Art guildArrange art fairs.

Donna Harding..................360 379 3813

port toWnSend community orcheStrA

Musicians who volunteer to play together each week to provide four free concerts per year.

Pat Kenna ..........................360 385 2048

port toWnSend cooperAtive plAySchool

Creative play and social interaction for children while offering their parents early childhood education.

Jen Kingfisher ....................360 379 5681

port toWnSend educAtion foundAtion

Raising funds that support public education and enhance academic achievement.

Karen Chrisman.................360 385 1979

port toWnSend film inStituteDeepens media literacy thru independent film festivals, curriculum content for schools in our region and guest lecturers from the industry throughout the year.

Janette Force .....................360 379 1333

port toWnSend mAin Street progrAm

Committed to the preservation and economic vitality of the historic business districts.

Mari Mullen ........................360 385 7911

port toWnSend mArine Science center

Promoting marine and costal education and conservation.

Anne Murphy .....................360 385 5582

port toWnSend peAce movementPursues activities which bring about peace and justice in our world.

Dan Bishop ................................................

port toWnSend public librAry foundAtion

Supplements the Library’s tax-based support. .............................................360 385 3181

port toWnSend SAiling ASSociAtion

Provides opportunities to learn and improve sailing competitively and recreationally.Port Townsend Summer BandProvides band music in free programs in the park reminiscent of a hundred years ago.

Karl Bach ............................360 385 3658

pregnAncy And fAmily reSource ServiceS of JefferSon county

Meeting the spiritual, social and physical needs of pregnant women and local families.

Kris Shapiro ........................360 390 4467

quilcene-brinnon dollArS for ScholArS

Providing and managing scholarship opportunities for post secondary education to members of our community. (Quilcene and Brinnon)

Jim Hodgson ......................360 316 1131

quilcene fAir And pArAde ASSociAtion

Celebrating Quilcene without cost to its residents or visitors.

Lisa Hames .........................360 765 3361

quilcene hiStoricAl muSeumQuilcene community history.

Mari ....................................360 765 4848

rAinShAdoW chorAleChamber choir of select local singers devoted to classical choral repertoire.

Helen Lauritzen .................360 379 2987

rAt iSlAnd roWing And Sculling club

Provides opportunities for youth and adults to learn and improve sweep and scull rowing skills, preserve and celebrate the legacy of traditional wooden racing shells.

Sally Giesler ...............................................

rAdio port toWnSend kptzProvides broad-based inclusive radio that reflects a wide range of perspectives and ideas.

.............................................360 379 6886

Schooner mArthA foundAtionProvides sail training and educational opportunities concerning maritime history and maintains and operates the schooner Martha.

Robert d’Arcy .................... 206 310-8573

Society of St. vincent de pAulOffers emergency assistance to those in need on a person-to-person basis. UGN funds are used primarily for housing and utility assistance.

Marian Meany ...................360 385 7363

Skookum educAtion progrAmSCreating opportunities for people with disabilities.

.............................................360 385 4980

SongWriting WorkS educAtionAl foundAtion

Restore health and community through song.Judith-Kate Friedman ..... 360 385-1160

Sound experienceDay and overnight programs aboard the historic schooner Adventuress.

Catherine Collins...............360 379 0438

Sunfield fArm & SchoolProvides programs in education and sustainable land stewardship.

Jake Meyer .........................360 385 3658

SWAn SchoolAcademic excellence aligned with creativity and personal expression.

Russell Yates ......................360 385 7340

10,000 yeArS inStitutePromote sustainable land use practices and ecosystem services through education and advocacy.

Jill Silver ..............................360 385 0715

the internAtionAl feline foundAtion

Supports medical research into medical problems affecting cats.

Steven Savant ............................................

the pArAdiSe theAtre SchoolProfessional education and performance for a discerning audience.

Pattie and Erik Miles Van Beuzekom ..................360 643 3493

the puget Sound coASt Artillery muSeum

Preserving and interpreting coast artillery history.Alfred Chiswell .................360 385 0373

united good neighborS fund of JefferSon county

Raise and distribute funds for charitable organizations in Jefferson County.

Carla Caldwell ....................360 385 3797

victoriAn Society in AmericA-northWeSt chApter

Committed to historic preservation, protection, education, and enjoyment of our nineteenth century heritage.

Nina Dortch .......................360 379 2847

vietnAm Wooden boAt foundAtion

Dedicated to preserving the maritime history of Vietnam and Vietnamese boat building.

.............................................360 385 3896

Women in trAnSition-WinSupports any woman being released from prison in Washington State with transition services.

Reta Miller ..........................360 765 3191

Page 7: Jefferson County Community Foundation 2012

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Page 8: Jefferson County Community Foundation 2012

Together9

Jefferson County Community Foundation

November 2011

It’s been more than a year now since Habitat for

Humanity of East Jefferson County launched the Quilcene Neighborhood Revitalization Initiative (NRI). The new program’s goal is to serve more families in need of safe, decent housing by repairing homeowner occupied homes. However, the real story is that this program is built from a foundation poured by the com-munity.

August 2011 marked the completion of the first year of the three-year pilot program. This year was focused on com-munity engagement and col-laboration. Habitat needed to know whether Quilcene resi-dents wanted Habitat to begin a new home repair program in their community. After all, Habitat is a volunteer-driven organization and without local support, the program would not succeed.

Now, 11 months after Quilcene was officially named the pilot community for NRI, many innovative ideas came to fruition with the help, sup-port, and expertise of Quilcene residents.

First, local residents advised Habitat to target the Quilcene

core area for the pilot pro-gram. Next residents advised Habitat on the types of repair projects Habitat should under-take in the first year of imple-mentation. Finally, residents raised questions, edited, and advised Habitat on the home repair policy guidelines. The policies were approved by the Habitat Board of Directors in September 2011.

The community engage-ment resulted is a comprehen-sive plan to help low-income homeowners who cannot afford their needed exterior home repairs. The program will fol-

low the same guiding principles as Habitat’s new home con-struction. Families must be low income, have a housing need, able to repay a repair loan, and willing to put in sweat equity. From roofs to siding and windows to doors, Habitat

for Humanity will ensure that families’ homes are protected from outside elements.

Beyond the repair planning, Habitat had an opportunity to open a second Habitat for Humanity Store in Quilcene. Habitat realized that the best people to launch a store

in Quilcene are people from Quilcene. With much generos-ity and energy, a group of ded-icated residents planned the opening of the Quilcene Habitat Store in seven weeks. One hundred percent of the funds raised from the store support the Quilcene Neighborhood Revitalization Initiative.

After nearly a year of plan-ning, applications for the NRI Home Repair Program are now available, and the organiza-tion’s leaders couldn’t be more pleased.

This is a new and excit-ing program for Habitat for Humanity, made possible because of the volunteers and donors who have given their time and resources to ensure that Habitat’s NRI Home Repair Program helps those in need of a safer, healthier home.

Women Who careBy Carol McGough

Habitat’s newly formed family selection committee for the Quilcene Neighborhood revitalization initiative. Members include (left to right): Habitat family services coordinator Brian Kienle, Jan Brainard, Joy Mcfadden, and Gabe ornelas. Members not pictured include Jim Munn and Habitat Board Member dave eekhoff.

Quilcene residents essential to Habitat’s New Program

I love that you don’tneed a lot ... to give a lot.

There is a collective powerthat happens when peoplecan see beyond whatis known ... and comfortable.

There is much to gain and very little to lose.

Women bound by nothingother than faithand a willingnesss to listento those who need to be heard.

A shared goalto make a differenceand to keep eyesfirmly planted on the future.

Raising the barWith gentle guidance.

Heightened expectationsassuming that the bestwill surface with the helpof friends and neighbors.

Isn’t that reallyall that one ever needs?and wants?and hopes for?

Someone to careenough to understandto believeand to give.

Open eyes ...Open hearts ...Open arms.

It is a way of embracing and a new way of giving.

carol McGough, a Founder and former member of the Board of Directors of the Jefferson County Community Foundation, and is a member of the Women Who Care Giving Circle, which made grants totaling $39,000 to community orga-nizations from 2008 through 2010.

By Juliette sterner

After a number of years under the umbrella of

Olympic Community Action Programs (OlyCAP), Working Image evolved in 2011 to become an independent orga-nization, serving women whose own lives are evolving in new directions. Reaching beyond its original mission of provid-ing clothing and accessories to women seeking employment, Working Image now assists women in violent situations, pregnant women, homeless teenagers, women living in cars and those who have suf-fered fire losses.

A Washington nonprofit corpo-ration, Working Image is awaiting Internal Revenue Service approv-al of its application for 501(c)(3) status as a public charity. Meanwhile, the Jefferson County Community Foundation (JCCF) serves as Working Image’s fis-cal sponsor, which permits donors to receive tax deductions for the value of their gifts.

To better meet the growing need for services, Working Image

has moved to larger quarters at Mountain View Commons. The program now occupies two class-rooms in the former elementary school building at 1925 Blaine St. in Port Townsend. There women who are referred through cooper-ating agencies and organizations are assisted during private, indi-vidualized appointments.

Mountain View commons is easy to find, and on a Jefferson Transit bus line. The room where clients are seen and served was renovated and painted with dona-tions of time and materials by Henery Hardware, Peninsula Paint, Hadlock Building Supply, Potpourri Northwest, Strait Floors, the Boeing Bluebills and many volunteers.

All clothing, shoes, accessories, jewelry—everything Working Image offers clients—has been donated. In the program’s second room these material donations are sorted for suitability, sized, steamed and hung for inclusion in the client boutique. Donations of clean, new or lightly worn cloth-ing, accessories and jewelry are welcomed. Monetary donations to JCCF for the program are also

greatly appreciated.With a Board of Directors

headed by Zoe Ann Dudley and Executive Director Juliette Sterner, Working Image is an all-volunteer organization. Its space is across the hall from the Port Townsend Food Bank; the Red Cross, KPTZ-FM, the YMCA and the Port Townsend Police Department are fellow Mountain View Tenants.

Each Wednesday Working Image offers Food Bank clients free items that are not needed to serve Working Image’s own clients. The Food Bank, in turn, passes along to Working Image donations suitable for WI clients. The weekly giveaways are helping to create a real community focus at Mountain View Commons as others add books, puzzles, toys, clothing—whatever they are able to share.

With a referral base of about 50 agencies, Working Image’s pur-pose remains to provide appropri-ate clothing to any woman in need, in order to promote confidence, assist in finding employment, and encourage self sufficiency.

Working Image: expanding Women’s Horizons

The ten members of the JCCF Gifting the Future Giving Circle launched

the initial NRI fundraising campaign with a $10,000 donation in March 2011.

The challenge grant leveraged an additional $25,000 by September

2011, showing a county-wide commitment to

community revitalization.

Page 9: Jefferson County Community Foundation 2012

Stronger10Jefferson County Community FoundationNovember 2011

By tim caldwellJccf, director

The funding that today sup-ports the Jefferson County

Technical Trades Scholarship Fund started with a traffic vio-lation. It was May, 1998, and a carload of Port Townsend High School seniors were frantical-ly driving the streets of Port Angeles, looking for Peninsula College. They were hurrying to make it to the campus in time to take the Scholastic Aptitude Test (SAT)—a criti-cal part of the college entrance process.

Before they found the cam-pus, the students were found instead by a local police offi-cer. After citing the driver for speeding, the officer provided her with directions to the col-lege. Although they arrived in time, the stress of a speeding ticket was added to the stress of doing well on the all-impor-tant exam.

A few days later, I relayed this story from my daughter, the driver, to Deb Johnson, who was then the dean of Peninsula College’s branch campus in East Jefferson County. After some reminisc-ing about PT students’ annual spring trek to Port Angeles for the SAT, Deb asked, “Since Peninsula College is here in

deb Johnson’s LegacyChapter 1

scholarships at Jccf

Cindy Hill FinnieJccf Vice President and Member, scholarship committee

“Port Townsend faces enormous challenges in funding an array of social, health, art, education, and youth-related projects and services. Fortunately, our community has a deep heritage of philanthropy. I believe the Foundation can and will lead the community, donors, and nonprofits, becoming a key vehicle for change and a bridge to the future as we address these challenges in the 21st century.”

“My initial involvement with JCCF began because I was invited to join; the potential to leave a lasting leg-acy for my community keeps me involved. My family’s heritage, and connection to the community provides the passion that I bring to the Community Foundation.”

Tim CaldwellJccf director and chair, scholarship committee

town, why can’t we test here?” Thus began her year-long quest to certify Port Townsend as an SAT test center. The city hosted its inaugural SAT exam in October, 1999.

So how did what Deb envi-sioned as a service for Jefferson County high school students lead to an endowed scholarship fund for local residents wishing to pursue training in the tech-nical trades? Well, SAT exams must be monitored by adult proctors, and those proctors—or the nonprofit organizations that supply them—are entitled to honoraria.

Today the Port Townsend Sunrise Rotary Club supervises and proctors six testing dates each school year, beginning in October and ending in June. The Club donates the hono-raria to an endowed Technical Trades Scholarship Fund man-

aged by the Jefferson County Community Foundation. The endowment, currently at $28,000, will grow at least $3,000 annually, thanks to the seed planted by Deb and con-tinually nurtured through the efforts of Rotary.

Future Tech Trades Scholarship recipients won’t know it, but they’re indebted to a carload of lost PTHS stu-dents, Class of 1999. And to the late Deb Johnson, a wise and persistent advocate for higher education in Jefferson County.

Tim Caldwell, commu-nity partnerships manager for Puget Sound Energy, is a member of the Jefferson County Community Foundation Board of Directors and chairs the Foundation’s Scholarship Committee.

deb Johnson’s LegacyChapter 2

Each scholarship fund at JCCF is admin-istered according to the Foundation’s Scholarship Guidelines and Policy, however, some scholarship funds may also involve community partners such as University Women’s Foundation (UWF) or Key City Public Theatre. The JCCF Scholarship Committee has determined that scholar-ships managed by JCCF will begin offering awards once the distribution from the fund reaches $1,000. Those scholarships already offered in collaboration with oth-ers have their own unique funding param-eters and distribution plans.

Beginning in 2012, the Jefferson County Community Foundation will utilize theWashBoard.org, a free, web-based scholarship clearing house site which can match Jefferson County scholarship seekers with Washington scholarship providers. In

one stop, students may search and apply for multiple scholarships specific to their academic interests, or offered by their pre-ferred college, university or trade school.

Unlike other sites, theWashBoard.org car-ries no advertising, is spam-free and will never sell a scholarship seeker’s personal information. Scholarship providers benefit from the exposure, flexible administrative options, reduced paperwork, and access to statewide scholarship data.

At theWashBoard.org, students and parents will soon be able to find infor-mation on all of the scholarship funds listed below, which are overseen by the Jefferson County Community Foundation’s Scholarship Committee: Tim Caldwell (Chair), Stan Cummings, Lee Springgate and Cindy Hill-Finnie.

Barbara Marseille endowed Arts scholarship (Committee: Richard Berg, Lucy Hanson, Dana Petrick)

deb Johnson endowed scholarship fund (Committee: Mark Hildt, Craig Johnson, Rob Sears, Jennifer James-Wilson)

Jefferson county technical trades scholarship (Committee: Dave Brader, Heather Dudley-Nollete)

sy Kahn Memorial scholarship endowment fund (Committee: Marj Iuro, Denise Winter, Eligius Wolodkeiwtsch) Administered in collaboration with Key City Public Theatre

University Women’s foundation scholarship (Committee: Chosen each year by UWF members) Administered in collaboration with AAUW/UWF of Jefferson County.

By scott Wilson

Deborah Belezos Johnson was a donor in the broad-

est sense of the word. She spent her almost 20 years in Port Townsend giving, and cre-ating ways that she could give some more.

Having passed away far too young in early 2011 from cancer, the giving continues in Johnson’s name through the Deb Johnson Endowed Scholarship Fund, managed by JCCF, used to help civic-mind-ed high school seniors from throughout the county achieve their college dreams.

From 1992 to 2009, Johnson was the dean of Peninsula College’s Jefferson County branch, guiding its growth in programs, students and facili-ties so well that it outgrew its Waterman & Katz location and had to move to the Schoolhouse at Fort Worden State Park. So determined was she to see local students succeed that at times, privately, she paid for part or all of their tuition from her own pocket.

Students recognized in her a friend and ally. College staff recognized a relentlessly positive force for growth and improvement. Community friends recognized a wicked sense of humor, a very sharp mind, and a love of life that car-ried others along as well.

With husband Craig Johnson, a contractor, she moved to Port Townsend from Maui, Hawaii in 1992. A Massachusetts native, she was drawn from a young age toward helping young people achieve their goals. In New England, she worked for an outdoor

adventure program. Moving to Hawaii, she met Craig through involvement in the Big Brothers/Big Sisters program. The two were married three weeks later.

Moving to Port Townsend, she immediately linked up with Peninsula College to help it grow in Jefferson County. Under her leadership, at its peak, it had 75 classes and hundreds of students. She began a job fair for graduates and helped countless young adults navigate their way into and through this or other col-leges. She was especially keen to assist women, giving them clothing and helping them pre-pare for job interviews.

Her love of life was expressed through extensive travels, her photography, being a founding member of the Port Townsend Lawn Chair Drill Team, and her involvement with many close friends.

Today, her giving continues through reflections on her life, and through the scholarship fund that bears her name.

deborah Johnson

Page 10: Jefferson County Community Foundation 2012

Together11

Jefferson County Community Foundation

November 2011

Want to be part of

an important group that is contributing to the qual-ity of life in J e f f e r s o n C o u n t y ?

Consider joining the Jefferson Legacy Society.

The Society is made up of individuals and couples who have committed to the future of Jefferson County by includ-ing the Jefferson County Community Foundation in their long-term giving plans. Some have specific charities or causes they want to support by creat-ing or adding to a permanent, endowed fund at JCCF. The Foundation already holds funds that provide funding for the Port Townsend Library, the Jefferson County Historical Society, the Northwest Maritime Center, the Jefferson Land Trust, Seattle Children’s Hospital and a num-ber of scholarships.

Other Legacy Society mem-bers are more focused on sup-porting JCCF itself—an umbrel-la foundation that assists and

trains non-profits to be more effective, creates area-of-inter-est funds such as the Fund for Women and Girls, and makes annual grants to nonprofits from the Jefferson Community Endowment.

If long-term charitable planning appeals to you, it is easy to join the JLS. Although current contributions are cer-tainly welcome, the Jefferson Legacy Society was created for those who want to make future gifts to the Jefferson County Community Foundation, per-haps at a level that is not afford-able right now. This can be as simple as including JCCF in your will, either through a direct bequest or as a beneficiary of a retirement plan or life insurance policy.

For those who would like to minimize taxes on appreciated assets and those who may be interested in receiving both a lifetime stream of income and the tax benefits of charitable giving, there are a number of tax-advantaged options avail-able.

If you’re interested in explor-ing your legacy giving possibili-

ties, the JCCF can help. We’ll be glad to send some basic materi-als to get you started, and we can refer you to well-qualified attorneys and financial planners who know how to incorporate your charitable interests in your estate plan.

When you join the Jefferson Legacy Society, there’s no need to disclose the details of your future charitable plans. All you need to do is let us know that you have included the Jefferson County Community Foundation in those plans. We’ll make sure you’re listed as a JLS member—or not listed, if you prefer—and we’ll keep you informed about the Foundation’s programs.

For more informtion, please contact JCCF Executive Director Kris Mayer at 360-379-3667, or by email: [email protected].

Doug Van Allen is a Certified Financial Planner®practioner with offices in Port Townsend and Portland, Oregon. He is a member of the Board of Directors of the Jefferson County Community Foundation and is responsible for the Foundation’s Legacy Giving initiatives.

stronger together: Giving time, talent, treasureYes! I/we want to contribue to the Jefferson County Community Foundation by mak-ing a gift in the following amount (all gifts are tax-deductible to the extent allowed by law.):

❒ $5,000 ❒ $2,500 ❒ $1.500 ❒ $1,000 ❒ $500 ❒ $250 ❒ Other____________

The gift is ❒ enclosed by check or ❒ to be paid in installments on the following dates:

______________________________________________________________________

Name(s)________________________________________________________________

Address________________________________________________________________

City________________________________ State___________ Zip________________

Telephone____________________ Email_____________________________________

recognition:

❒ Please list my/our name as it appears above.

❒ Please list my/our donation as anonymous.

What’s your Legacy?By doug Van Allen cfP®

Jccf director and Member, investment committee

Please send me information on how to:

❒ Give to the Community Endowment

❒ Join the Jefferson Legacy Society to Leave a Legacy Gift

❒ Start a Donor Advised Fund

❒ Make a Tribute Gift

❒ Give to a Scholarship

❒ Give to the Fund for Women & Girls

❒ Volunteer with the Community Foundation

Contact me by ❒ Mail ❒ Email ❒ Telephone

Thank you for your generosity. Support the Jefferson County Community Foundation by mailing this form along with your donation to: JCCF, P.O. Box 1955, Port Townsend, WA 98368. Want to know more? Contact Kris Mayer, [email protected]

David Goldsmithdirector and Member, investment committee

“Having spent more than 30 years in public service, I have witnessed firsthand how necessary and effective nonprofit orga-nizations are in addressing community and individual needs. JCCF is designed to strengthen the fabric and richness of our com-munity by creating a sustaining endowment and a helping hand. The values of the Foundation match my personal values of service: to make a positive difference, now and for future generations.”

The Port Townsend Library Foundation endowment,

invested with the JCCF, pro-vides annual distributions from endowment income to supple-ment the library’s materials budget.

In 2010 the library used a $1,000 distribution to purchase audio books on DVD, replacing worn materials on tape cassette and increasing the annual allo-cation for audio books by 25 percent.

In 2011 the library is using a distribution of $1,300 from the endowment to add to its DVD collection—an increase of 26 percent to the DVD budget

allocation. Worn video tapes are being replaced by DVDs, and the library is increasing its collection of classic mov-ies from the American Film Institute’s Top 500 Films list, as well as purchasing much-loved series from the BBC.

Both audio book and DVD collections have experienced higher demand and circulation in the last two years. The Port Townsend Library is fortunate to be able to respond to patron requests by utilizing supple-mental donations from the Port Townsend Library Foundation’s endowed fund at JCCF.

endowment funds Buy New Library Materials

the Port townsend school of Woodworking and Preservation trades (PtsWPt) is a growing center for education in fine woodworking and historic preservation. the woodworking program includes hand tool woodworking, furniture making and cabinetmaking. the historic preservation program currently focuses in the restoration of historic wooden buildings. the Jefferson county community foundation served as fiscal sponsor for PtsWPt in 2010 and 2011, enabling the school’s supporters to make tax-deductible contributions while PtsWPt was in the process of securing irs approval as a 501(c)(3) public charity.

Woodworking & Historic Preservation:A Winning combination at fort Worden

Page 11: Jefferson County Community Foundation 2012

800-800-1577 ourfirstfed.com

Working together makes a difference.Invest in your community.

*First Federal was voted Best Place to Bank and Best Customer Service in 2011 Peninsula Daily News ‘Best of the Peninsula’ poll.

Come see why we’ve been voted Best Place to Bank for 16 years.*

Member FDIC

Page 12: Jefferson County Community Foundation 2012

Together13

Jefferson County Community Foundation

November 2011

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figuring out how much copy will fill your space (a math puzzle).If you are planning to keep the type and styles of a previous edition, you have the advantage of knowing how many “words per inch” you need to fill your pages.

If we assume that you are keeping the previous year’s header/date-line arrangement, your page can be broken down into a space that is composed of 5 columns (wide) by 10.5 inches tall.

5 columns x 10.5 = 52.5 column inches /page

When we fill a page with text (and count the words) we come up with a count of 1,586 words to fill the page.

1,586 words ÷ 52.5” = 30.2, call it 30 words/column inch.

This is your word count.

The rest of the game is math. When you want to include a photo, let’s say 2 columns by 3” deep, you subtract 6” from your available space and redo your word count. You can get really close to the right amount of copy to fill a page using this method.

Have fun! See you next year!

Marian Roh

Leader Production: 360.385.2900x109

Getting the count in Word: From the menu, choose “tools”: then “word count.”

You will get this window. There’s your count for the document.