the zeist foundation, inc. place based philanthropy “act local, think global” edgewood...
DESCRIPTION
Mission Statement The Foundation seeks opportunities to leverage its investments in organizations that are innovative, collaborative, and sustainable in serving children, youth, and families in Georgia Traditional Grantmaking - State Place Based Philanthropy - Atlanta 3TRANSCRIPT
The Zeist Foundation, Inc.
Place Based Philanthropy“act local, think global”
Edgewood Neighborhood1994 - 2015
October 2015
2
Mission Statement
The Zeist Foundation embraces a holistic approach to address the needs of children, youth and families in three areas: • Education• Arts & Culture • Health & Human Services
3
Mission Statement
The Foundation seeks opportunities to leverage its investments in organizations that are innovative, collaborative, and sustainable in serving children, youth, and families in Georgia
Traditional Grantmaking - StatePlace Based Philanthropy - Atlanta
4
The Legacy• Dr. and Mrs. George W. Brumley, Jr. established The Zeist Foundation in 1989 to teach their
five children the importance of sharing their gifts with the broader community, and to give them and future generations an enduring way to continue the family’s philanthropic legacy
• The five adult children and their spouses served on the family foundation board• Focus Areas were selected and studied by all family members• The Zeist name came from the town where the family lived in Holland while Dr. Brumley
was on sabbatical
5
Place Based Philanthropy Evolution
• Health• School based Pediatric Clinic (1994)
• Health + Education• Whitefoord Community Program (1995)
• Health + Education + Housing• Mayson Avenue Cooperative (2003)
6
Edgewood Neighborhood in Atlanta
7
HealthSchool Based Clinic at Whitefoord Elementary
Ribbon cutting ceremony for clinic in 1994 with Dr. Brumley, Dr. Veda Johnson and Atlanta Public School leaders
8
Place Based Philanthropy Grantees
• Atlanta Neighborhood Charter School
• East Atlanta Kids Club• Emory University• Families First• Get Georgia Reading• Giving Point• Jackson Cluster Fund/ Atlanta
Partners for Education• Junior Achievement
• New York University• Teach for America• The Wylde Center• Power My Learning• Rollins Center for Literacy
and Learning• Whitefoord, Inc.• WonderRoot• YMCA Teen Center
9
10
Urban Health Program School Based Health Centers
In 2009, the Foundation approved a multi-year grant to the “Urban Health Program” (changed name to “Partnersfor Equity in Child and Adolescent Health”) to support the expansion of school based healthcenters across Georgia.
11
Partners for Equity in Child and Adolescent Health
• Lessons Learned – Public Private Partnerships are vital for sustainability (federal/state/county/district)– Support for children and families requires
coordination and/or integration of services (health/education/human services)
– Return on investment has short and long term dividends
(school attendance/health benefits/family stability)
12
Partners for Equity in Child and Adolescent Health
Outcomes – Local to Global: Atlanta pilot adapted for Georgia
school communities– Increased Access to Healthcare: 45,000 students– Improved Health Outcomes: asthma to obesity– Community Building: local collaboration and state
association
13
Mr. Atiba MbiwanAssociate DirectorThe Zeist Foundation, Inc.3715 Northside Parkway, NWSuite 3-195Atlanta, GA 30327-2812' 404.949.3169 - direct' 404.949.3160 – main' 404.277.9169 – mobile7 404.949.3161 - fax e-mail: [email protected]
Website: www.zeistfoundation.org