they have names. - beyond housing · normandy high school gave quentin the opportunity ......
TRANSCRIPT
Back to Table of Contents
TABLE OF CONTENTSP. 1 Letter from the President and ChairmanP. 2-3 Quentin (Education)P. 4-5 VisionP. 6-7 Laquette (Health)P. 8-9 An Ongoing Effort: The 24:1 InitiativeP. 10 Robby (Financial Health)P. 11 Mae (Jobs)P. 12-13 2015 AccomplishmentsP. 14 Curfrances (Housing)P. 15 FinancialsP. 16-20 DonorsP. 21 Board of Directors
1Back to Table of Contents
Mae. Robby. Laquette. Quentin. Curfrances.They have mothers and fathers and children and grandchildren. They have jobs and homes and bills and dreams and goals.They are not just faceless composites of people. They are real people, and they have all received support from Beyond Housing – which means that if you’ve been a Beyond Housing donor, they’re actually receiving support from you. Their stories are shared with you here so that you can learn more about just a few of the people working all over the region with Beyond Housing.
But, they are only a small representation of nearly 10,000 individuals helped by Beyond Housing every year. They all have names as well – and jobs and homes and bills and dreams and goals.
The entire reason for the existence of Beyond Housing is to help people just like Mae and Robby and Laquette and Quentin and Curfrances create the lives of their dreams in the communities they love. It’s really that simple.
So read on to learn more, celebrate all the good that’s been done this year, and look forward to the future at Beyond Housing. I know I am, and I bet Mae and Robby and Laquette and Quentin and Curfrances are as well.
Sincerely,
They have names.
Chris KrehmeyerPresident and CEO
Craig S. OwensChairman
2 Back to Table of Contents Back to Table of Contents
Actually, Quentin has had a plan since 2013, when as a sophomore in high school he realized his love of beautifully designed buildings and homes could
translate into a career as an architect. Since then, Quentin has been laser-focused on achieving his career goal, racking
up one achievement after another and building a resume that would make people 20 years older than him envious.
Quentin’s quest started through the College Summit program, a national push to
get students from low-income communities connected to college and career. College Summit’s partnership with Normandy High School gave Quentin the opportunity to visit eight college campuses in Missouri and Kansas, educating him on how to choose the best college for his goals and fueling his desire for higher education.
That was all Quentin needed to take off. By his senior year, he’d completed internships with Beyond Housing and
real estate development firm McCormack Baron Salazar, along with serving on the Beyond Housing 24:1 Community board. He also
served as captain of Normandy’s varsity football team, led his school’s chess team to a city-wide championship through the Chess Initiative program, wrestled his way to a #3 city ranking
in his weight class, and made invaluable business contacts through his prestigious appointment as an Alpha Kappa Alpha debutant cotillion escort.
By his senior year, Quentin took classes full-time at
St. Louis Community College-Florissant Valley through the Gateway to College program, earning both his high school diploma and 28 college credits. He also served as a Collegiate Student Government representative and joined the National Society of Black Engineers.
Through it all, Quentin saved every penny so he could earn maximum benefits from our Viking Advantage Program.
A savings account program for students, Viking Advantage offers a 3:1 match on savings, giving students $3 for every $1 they save for college. Of course, Quentin first had to decide which college to attend – he was accepted to 16 universities around the country,
Quentin Eddings Jr. has a plan.
Through it all, Quentin saved every penny so he could earn maximum benefits from the Viking Advantage Program.
Quentin will graduate with a master’s degree from Kansas State University, one of the top 10 architecture schools in the country.
S E D U C A T I O N S
T H E Y H A V E N A M E S
3Back to Table of Contents
including Washington University in St. Louis, Morehouse College, and Clark University. In the end, Quentin chose the joint University of Missouri Kansas City (UMKC)/Kansas State University (KSU) program that in five years will see him graduate with a master’s degree in architec-ture from KSU, one of the top 10 architecture schools in the country.
So what did Quentin use his Viking Advantage funds for? A special MacBook for architecture students, which he’s currently using until all hours of the night
in one of the UMKC libraries as a freshman architecture student. He’s a perfectionist, you see, so every design he completes has to be perfect. It’s that kind of drive that’s gotten him this far, we will see him back at McCormack
Baron Salazar again next summer as an intern, and will open more doors for him after graduation in 2021.
Quentin has a plan, and with the support of Beyond Housing, his plan has been built on a firm foundation – more than fitting for a future leader in the architectural industry.
We’re proud of you, Quentin, and we can’t wait to watch you achieve all of
your dreams.
Quentin Eddings Jr. has a plan.
His plan has been built on a firm foundation.
T H E Y H A V E N A M E S
4 Back to Table of Contents Back to Table of Contents
Beyond Housing exists because home
matters. We began with actual houses
and housing preservation, focusing
on quality and stability to give people a place
to start. But there is more to a home than
the house – home is about the life that happens in and around
the house, as well as the life that fuels and draws out the best
of the people within it. Our focus is on improving people’s lives
in a holistic manner and in helping entire communities become
better places to live. While specific challenges and priorities vary
BEYOND HOUSING Helping entire communities become better places to live.
5Back to Table of Contents
by community, all successful and thriving
communities require integrated strategies
that range from individual to systemic and
policy level efforts in the areas of education,
housing, health, employment readiness and
access, economic development, and personal finance with focus on collective impact,
capacity building, and community engagement.
We bring civic leaders, targeted nonprofits, and corporate partners together to accomplish
more for their communities than they could ever hope to achieve
working alone. Our holistic vision and innovative framework
provides a backbone of proven best practices that make a multitude
of programs and efforts far more effective. We take an “ask, align,
act” approach, where we continuously use the voice of the people
to drive our actions. We build committees to listen to the community, each staffed by Beyond
Housing and chaired by a community resident. Our role is to listen, lead with vision, bring
resources and stakeholders together, influence change, and offer our contributions to the
community for its benefit. Our goal has always been to help communities become better
places to live, and then equip people to thrive. From health and nutrition programs to leading
edge personal finance initiatives, Beyond Housing meets communities exactly where they
are, providing help according to the needs
they identify. Together with our partners,
we are proud of what our efforts have
been able to do for our community, and
we think you will be as well.
6 Back to Table of Contents Back to Table of Contents
Cooking food, that is. So much so that her dream is to run her own food stand (or truck or restaurant – she’d be happy with any of those) with her children
working alongside her in the family business. Laquette discovered her talent via several health
programs offered through Beyond Housing. Before those programs, the concept of cooking for a living wasn’t even on Laquette’s radar. She was too busy trying to keep a roof over
the heads of her three children, working impossibly long hours and bouncing from place to place as emergencies arose and money ran out.
Then a friend told her about Beyond Housing, and Laquette’s family soon found their permanent home. In the five years she and her children have been Beyond Housing homeowners, not only has Laquette been able to take classes in everything
from home ownership to budget management, but she’s also learned that she has quite the knack for whipping up delicious and nutritious meals.
“I want to spread the word that nutritious food doesn’t automatically mean expensive food,” says Laquette, “and I also want to show that nutritious food can be quite good. My kids are 15, 12, and 10 and, but for the past five years I’ve been deliberately exposing them to different fruits and
Laquette Collins has a talent for food.
“I want to spread the word that nutritious food doesn’t automatically mean expensive food.”
S H E A L T H S
T H E Y H A V E N A M E S
7Back to Table of Contents
vegetables, helping them develop good eating habits that will serve them well in college and beyond.”
The best part? Laquette’s children are so eager to learn more about healthy eating that they actively participate with her in several programs that help
them learn to prepare complete healthy meals without mom. “My 12 year old daughter is so confident about her food preparation skills that she now helps teach a Cooking Matters class for kids while I’m teaching the parents,” Laquette says.
Laquette and her family also help with Grocery Store Tours at Save-A-Lot, which gives shoppers “passports” to be stamped as they check in at various locations around the grocery store and receive healthy cooking tips. Once a shopper’s “passport” is filled, they receive a $10-15 credit to use for more groceries.
But this family doesn’t sit around and wait for the grocery store to deliver food to them – they grow their own in a greenhouse on the St. Louis Science Center’s campus through a health initiative with St. Vincent Community Center and Hosco Foods International. Not only do they eat the fruits and veggies they themselves grow, they also sell the fruits (quite literally) of their labor to local growers such as Local Harvest and The Treehouse, both in Tower Grove.
To supplement their harvesting efforts, Laquette takes part in the Community Action Agency’s co-op share, purchasing a $12 “big box” of fresh fruits and veggies usually worth more than double that amount. They also work the Beyond Housing produce stand stocked with fruits and vegetables to sell at First Fridays’, festivals, ice cream socials, and other community events. In her spare time, Laquette is faithfully participating in a culinary project that will give her “Serve Safe” certification and allow her to start her own
business when she’s ready. “My family and I have learned so much about meal
preparation, but beyond that, we’ve also learned self-suf-ficiency, resilience, and integrity,” she said “We’re learning
ways to eat healthy without blowing your budget, knife safety, and persistence – skills that will stay with us for a lifetime.”
Laquette, thanks for trusting Beyond Housing to help you and your children be as healthy as possible and provide so many of the tools you need to someday build a sustain-able, successful food business and make your vision a reality.
“My 12 year old daughter is so confident about her food preparation skills that she now helps teach a Cooking Matters class for kids while I’m teaching the parents.”
T H E Y H A V E N A M E S
8 Back to Table of Contents Back to Table of Contents
Residents of 24:1 continue to witness significant changes in the physical land-
scape of the community as Beyond Housing unceasingly works to ensure growth within the footprint. In 2015, we welcomed a new Wealth Accumulation Center, the 24:1 Cinema and Pagedale Town Center.
AN ONGOING EFFORT (2010-2015) THE 24:1 INITIATIVE
We celebrate the building of Save-A-Lot grocery store, the first grocery store in Pagedale in over 40 years.
Partnership with Midwest BankCentre brought Pagedale its first-ever full-service banking facility with products designed for low-to moderate-income families.
Upscale senior housing center Rosie Shields Manor provides not only 42 units of affordable housing, but increases the quality of life, wellness and social lives of seniors in Pagedale and Pine Lawn.
We created groundbreaking opportunities for families like Promise Accounts that offer a free $500 college savings plan to all kindergartners as well as matched savings accounts for high school students.
Beyond Housing built the 24:1 Cinema in the heart of Pagedale. This four–screen, 350 seat theatre creates jobs and family-friendly entertainment for the entire 24:1 community.
Pagedale Town Center was developed to enrich the 24:1 landscape, serving as a hub to create jobs, and invite new businesses, desired retail and other services.
9Back to Table of Contents
To date, Beyond Housing has raised more than $90 million
dollars that has been invested in the 24:1 community since 2010.
We formed a Community Land Trust to facilitate home ownership and keep the investments in the hands of the residents of the community.
The Wealth Accumulation Center, or WAC for short, is a one stop destination for financial empowerment that will offer the 24:1 Community access to affordable financial services and free financial education. The WAC includes RedDough® a non-profit alternative to fringe banking services. The Excel Center, a financial literacy center helps clients set reasonable goals and get the assistance they need to achieve their financial dreams.
We partnered with United 4 Children to create the 24:1 Early Childhood Learning Center designed to provide quality early childhood education for those previously unable to afford it.
We helped form the 24:1 Municipal Government Partnership with mayors, police chiefs, and key municipal staff share best practices and examine the potential for cost savings and collaboration between municipalities on essential public services.
Beyond Housing partnered with the Normandy Schools Collaborative and the Missouri Foundation for Health to improve access to healthy food and safe places to play.
10 Back to Table of Contents Back to Table of Contents
More specifically, Robby wanted to buy a home – but as an ex-offender with a low credit score, it wasn’t an easy prospect. Fortunately, Robby
found Beyond Housing through our partner organization Project H.O.P.E., which helps ex-offenders transition to home ownership.
Beyond Housing matched Robby with a housing counselor, and as Robby says now, the help arrived in the nick of time. In his haste to buy a home, Robby had been considering a lease-purchase option that was poorly structured and expensive. His housing counselor showed him the drawbacks to the deal, and instead turned
Robby to both a home buying and a managing money seminar through Beyond Housing. “I learned how to fix my credit,” says Robby, “and they took me step-by-step through the home buying and closing process. I was able to fully understand then what I needed to do to get a home.”
After almost a year of work with St. Louis Credit Repair, Robby had a credit score of 735
– good enough to be approved for a home loan. He also had a down payment and closing costs covered, thanks to
hard work and his enrollment in Beyond Housing’s matched savings Individual Development Account (IDA) and several Down Payment Assistance (DPA) programs. Within a month
of officially starting his new home search, Robby found his long-desired home only 1½ blocks from his mother’s house.
Today, Robby enjoys mowing the lawn around his home, simply because it’s all his own. He also enjoys talking about the invaluable guidance Beyond Housing offered him in his quest for homeownership. “I don’t think I could have done it without Beyond Housing,” says Robby. “It was a pretty frustrating experience, but every time I talked with Gloria (his housing counselor), she would set my mind at ease and cheer me on.”
Congratulations Robby – we’re happy to see you in the home you’ve always wanted, and we’re glad to have had the opportunity to help you achieve your dream.
Robby Luepker needed guidance.
“I learned how to fix my credit, and they [Beyond Housing] took me step-by-step through the home buying and closing process. I was able to fully understand then what I needed to do to get a home.”
S F I N A N C I A L H E A L T H S
T H E Y H A V E N A M E S
11Back to Table of Contents
Granted, Mae usually leans toward old movies such as “The Oxbow Incident” and
“Imitation of Life,” but she’ll rarely turn down an opportunity to see the newest movies either. So when the 24:1 Cinema opened right across the street from Rosie Shields Manor apartments, where Mae has had an apartment since 2013, she jumped at the opportunity to be a supervisor.
“It’s so interesting to work at the theater,” says Mae. “It’s fun to see all the different people come in, and I love interacting with them. I love the people in our community.”
For Mae, the 24:1 Cinema job is enjoyable, but very different from the career with Greyhound she held for 28 years. Mae drove a Greyhound bus for 20 years across Texas and Virginia, then spent the next eight years as a driver instructor, training new bus drivers. Retirement saw her settle in Richmond, Va., which she loved for both the people and the beautifully
lush landscape, but health problems made essential a move back to her family in St. Louis.
“I have a son, eight
grandchildren, and lots of extended family,” says Mae, “and many of them live in St. Louis. I love being surrounded by my family, so that made coming back to St. Louis an
easy decision.” As a St. Louis native, Mae
is happy to see the communi-ties growing and improving in the Beyond Housing 24:1 footprint. The movie theater is just one
of the amenities Mae believes is excellent for the community, and she’s happy to be in the middle of the fun at the 24:1 Cinema.
We’re happy to have you, Mae, welcoming everyone into such an integral part of the community. We hope you’ll continue to enjoy working at the 24:1 Cinema, and we’ll see what we can do about getting a “Wuthering Heights” (1939 version, naturally) retro night on the cinema’s calendar.
Mae Washington loves movies.
So when the 24:1 Cinema opened right across the street from Rosie Shields
Manor apartments, where Mae has had an apartment since 2013, she jumped at
the opportunity to be a supervisor.
S J O B S S
T H E Y H A V E N A M E S
Back to Table of Contents Back to Table of Contents12
BEYOND HOUSING: 2015 ACCOMPLISHMENTS
C O M M U N I T Y E N G A G E M E N T
H E A L T H
H O U S I N G
240 children – with engaged
police officers and volunteers serving as
coaches – participated in a police basketball league
200 community members
participated in the Week of the Young
Child Event
Over 400 community members
provided input on new specific types of
retail businesses along Natural Bridge
24:1 Cinema constructed and
opened
155 Big Brothers Big Sisters student/mentor teams
located in the 24:1 footprint through our partnership
with the Normandy School Collaborative
1,500 shoppers provided with healthy affordable fresh
produce through the 24:1 produce stand
285 participants in
5K Walk/Run & Health Festival
240 participants in Redbird
Rookies youth baseball program
324 registered
participants in our Passport to
Health Program
77 graduates of our 6 week healthy food preparation class
“Cooking Matters”
405 total number of
rental units
82 homes assisted with repairs and
maintenance
$111,018 average home
sale price
70% increase in loan closings in 2015
$613,700 in home
repair funds
24 CLT homes purchased
The interdependent nature of the holistic solutions makes them difficult to track in isolated metrics. And yet, we remain focused on practical solutions and data
sustained results. With that said, we see the results of our efforts in these data points and remain optimistic and committed to the place we call home.
Missouri
Back to Table of Contents 13
E D U C A T I O N
P E R S O N A L F I N A N C E
E M P L O Y M E N T M U N I C I P A L
500+ kids took advantage of tutoring, after school
programs, summer programming,
and youth sports
1,123 kindergarten students
enrolled in $500 promise accounts
1,616 parent liaison
referrals
1,200homework assignments
completed last school year during the
Beyond Housing Afterschool Program
90% of children spent
25,000 minutes of reading this summer
during Beyond Housing’s Freedom
Schools program
956 people completed home buyer education training
255 families participated in tax
assistance program
$2.3 Million in down payment
loans issued
701 foreclosure counseling
sessions
87 new jobs created on
Natural Bridge
23,000 sq ft of new retail businesses
on Natural Bridge
$1 Million
saved on public services
$750,000 DOJ grant for Student Resource Officers to
promote positive young people/police relations
6 YearsNormandy police
department achieved accreditation 6 years ahead
of Senate Bill 5 mandate
D
14 Back to Table of Contents Back to Table of Contents
Not an apartment or a rental house that wasn’t really hers and held no permanence for Curfran-ces or her family. She needed a home of her own
– a home base for her family to enjoy special gatherings. A warm, welcoming, permanent place for Curfrances to hang family photos on the walls, prepare big holiday meals, and watch her nieces and nephews play in the backyard.
It was Curfrances’ biggest dream, but it seemed an impossi-ble one until she found Beyond Housing’s 24:1 Community Land Trust (CLT). “When I read up on all the benefits the 24:1 CLT offered to homeowners, it was just too
good to pass up,” said Curfrances. “They do one-on-one counseling to better your credit. They give you information on owning a home and down payment assistance, so you can buy a new home. And, you’re also helping build within the community—your community.”
In July 2014, Curfrances’ dream came true. She purchased a 24:1 CLT home, and it’s even sweeter than she imagined. Not only does she now have the home for her family and friends to gather and make memories that will
last for generations, Curfrances has an investment that will benefit the entire community and can be passed down to her daughter. It’s a legacy that generations to come can enjoy, and there’s nothing that delights Curfrances more than seeing this family legacy grow in such a positive way.
“This is not a house,” said Curfrances, “it’s a home to me. It’s something that I love coming home to. I love having family gatherings here. I love coming here. I love having pictures of family here. I love it.”
We love having you in the 24:1 CLT, Curfrances.
Curfrances Wright wanted to own a home.
S H O U S I N G S
“This is not a house. It’s a home to me. I love it.”
T H E Y H A V E N A M E S
15Back to Table of Contents
SUPPORT AND REVENUEDonations and Grants, Including In Kind ......... $16,562,618Dues and Fees ...........................................................$561,506Rental Income, Net .............................................. $3,067,555Interest Income ...........................................................$515,169Loss on Sale of Property and Equipment ............($100,718)Cinema Revenues .......................................................$62,494Miscellaneous ............................................................. $231,643 Total Income ....................................... $20,900,267
NET ASSETS/EQUITYAt the start of year ............................................. $61,909,004
Increase in Equity and Net Assets ......................$6,651,050Capital Contributions .............................................. $967,006At the end of year ...............................................$69,527,060
Increase ................................................... $7,618,056
EXPENSESProgram ................................................. 87% .......$12,439,979Administration .......................................10% ..........$1,371,086Fundraising ...............................................3% ............ $438,152 Total Expenses .........................................$14,249,217
NOTEThe Consolidated and Combined Statement of Activities herein presented represents a condensed version of what was furnished by our certified public accountant, CliftonLarsonAllen LLP. The complete 2015 audit report is available upon request.
Beyond Housing, Inc., Subsidiaries and AffiliatesConsolidated and Combined Statement of Activities for the Year Ended December 31, 2015
16 Back to Table of Contents Back to Table of Contents
CORPORATIONS & BUSINESSESAmana InvestmentsBSI Constructors Inc.Central Bank of St. LouisCentral Trust CompanyCitiCliftonLarsonAllen, LLPCommerce BankCurtis, Heinz, Garrett and O’KeefeE.M. Harris Construction CompanyEdward JonesEmerson Electric CompanyEmployees Community Fund of BoeingEnterprise Bank and TrustFundisha EnterprisesHoover Avenue DesignsHunter Engineering CompanyInsight Title Company, LLCJ.W. Terrill, Inc.Koman GroupKornerstone Childcare LLCLewis, Rice and Fingersh, L.C.Major CateringMcKee InvestmentsMiami GrillMidland States BankMidwest BankCentreMissouriCareMontgomery BankMontgomery Real Estate BrokerageMutual of AmericaNorthern Trust CompanyO’Donnell CommunicationsOpen Source ArchitectPlatinum RealtyPNC BankPrivateBank and Trust CompanyRegions Bank
Rosenblum GoldenhershRubicon CorporationS&K Real Estate Investment LLCScottrade BankSodexo, Inc. and AffiliatesSt. Louis Community Credit UnionSt. Louis Equity Fund, Inc.Steris CorporationTee’s Total Care CenterThe Boeing CompanyThe Rome Group, Inc.The Ryan Group LLCTIAA Direct, TIAA-CREF Trust Company, FSBUS Bancorp Community Development CorporationUS BankVoiles LandscapingWalsh & Associates, Inc.We’re Ready Construction LLCWolff & D’Agrosa, LLC
FAITH COMMUNITYCentral Reform CongregationChrist Evangelical Lutheran ChurchEliot Unitarian Chapel - KirkwoodEthical Society of St. LouisFirst Congregational Church of St. LouisFirst Congregational Church of Webster GrovesGood Shepherd Lutheran Church of ManchesterHamilton Christian ChurchImmacolata Ladies SocietyKirkwood Baptist ChurchMt. Beulah Missionary Baptist ChurchSisters of the Most Precious BloodSt. Augustine Scholarship FundSt. Mark Presbyterian ChurchSt. Peter Catholic Church
St. Peter’s Episcopal ChurchUniversity Bible Fellowship St. LouisWebster Groves Presbyterian Church
FOUNDATIONSAnonymousAbe Graber Memorial FundAlbers/Kuhn Family FoundationAmazon Smile FoundationAnita L.C. and William S. Cassilly Charitable Fund Bank of America Charitable Foundation, Inc.Bellwether FoundationCommerce Bancshares FoundationCove Charitable TrustDana Brown Charitable Trust, U.S. Bank TrusteeDCA Family FoundationDeaconess FoundationGeorge Herbert Walker FoundationGreater Missouri Leadership Foundation, Inc.Greater St. Louis Community FoundationGuth Foundation Charitable TrustHauck Charitable FoundationHerman T. and Phenie R. Pott FoundationHorizon Housing FoundationIncarnate Word FoundationJane M. and Bruce P. Robert Charitable FoundationJohn R. Woods FoundationJP Morgan Chase FoundationMargaret C. Schmidt FoundationMillstone FoundationMing-Nash Family Charitable FundMissouri Foundation for HealthNeighborWorksNorman J. Stupp FoundationPeterson Family FoundationP. Wayne and Jane B. Goode Foundation
Our Donors
17Back to Table of Contents
Risberg Family Gift FundRobert and Cathy Lachky Charitable FundShepard Family FoundationSidener FoundationSt. Louis Rams FoundationStupp Brothers Bridge and Iron Company FoundationThe Adorjan Family FoundationThe Sant FoundationTrio Foundation of St. LouisU.S. Bank FoundationVeiled Prophet FoundationWhite-RodgersWilliam R. Orthwein, Jr. and Laura Rand Orthwein Foundation
INDIVIDUAL DONORSup to $99AnonymousMonica Allen Lea ArmstrongCaroline and Aaron BanPaige V BanetM. Joyce BarnesKate BarryJudy and Marvin BerkowitzTamara R BishopBobbie BoClairRichard BoseJack and Joan BotwinickRonald BradleyCharles and Marsha BrancaTom and Barbara BuschmannMarijane and Michael ChehvalNatalie M ClayDennis ClowVikki CollierJohn C. CollinsMary Lou and George ConvyAmelia and Arthur D.BondBarbara Cotton Dean E. and Virginia R. DanzerJames E. and Susan DearingJeffrey and Susan Dean Dee
Carol DeVaughanPaul Dever and Elizabeth FathmanSandra Dew-GaineyCorey DickensKathleen DolsonMichael and Jennifer EssonJames FargasonStephen Findley and Pascale PerraudinWindy FisherGeorge L. FonyoAlex Forest Tanner ForryBruce Frank and Enid Weisberg-FrankLloyd FrostAgnes L. and David P. GarinoTracie GoffeBeth GrecoBeth GriffinMarletta GuytonColleen HafnerEsther HamiltonCraig and Marcia HansenDenise HarperJade HarrellCurt HartogLowell G. and Susan C. HaymanSteven P. and Julie R. HealeyKaren and Patrick HeathAshley HolmesLinda IngramDwayne JamesVanessa JamesSuzie and Tom JenkinsSara and Derek JensenJustin JohnsonMary Wheeler JonesJoseph and Lindsay JovanovichJohn KennedyCatherine L KennedyPaula D. KnightChristina LampaEllen LegowDavid Lewis
David M. LiebermanFreda LohrJennifer Anne LoughmanAnn MandelstammDeLenn MaplesJoAnn MattisonLouis and Margaret MaullJennifer MaxfieldVontriece McDowellJames McGowanChristopher J McInnisPatricia McLaughlinJudith MedoffLeah MilesSusan R. MoloneyCindy MonroeMargaret MooneyHerbert L. and Arlene J. NickelsGail NoblotCarol NoellschMark Daniel O’BryanAnne OrsoLydia PadillaShanti ParikhPeter PhillipsKaren PierreJim N PolarineErica A and Benjamin A PomerenkePrincella PotterKevin D PurdyMary and Elliot RaizmanAnn RandazzoGillian and Cecil RawChris and Julie ReimerRebecca ReinhartCarey RhoadsAllison RicksJosh and Julie RinebergLinda RobinsonJohn E RosenkranzCynthia Ann RussellKaren SandersJackie Schirin
18 Back to Table of Contents Back to Table of Contents
Jean S. SchneiderPaul and Michelle SchultzJane SheaTracy and Scott ShefflerTasha ShellMargaret B. ShepleyRobert O. and Margaret T. SherwoodSteve ShoresMark and Michelle ShukwitShulamith SimonArlyn SmallRuth SmithValerie SmithJeanne SparlinKimberly L SpenceJessie SteffanKaren Kerwin StiersDennis J. and Sarina A. StrackMary and Michael SullivanShanika ThomasJoseph G. and Kathleen A. ThompsonMary Ann TiptonDeborah A. Trachsel Timothy TuckerJanice ViethJoseph and Lisa VonderHaarEric WaldenLaura WangAnne L. WeaverSabrina WelchKevin M. and Allison M. WilliamsKaren WintersNichole WisemanNicole and Stephen WohlfordJulie WoodShonte Young
$100-$299John G. and Katherine AndersonNicholas and Laura ArgyresCharles Avery and Ellen DennisSusan L. Dean-Baar and John F. BaarDavid and Dee Ban
Clifford and Vincenza BelloneCherry S. BlairScot W and Joanne M BoultonBenjamin and Gloria BrainsbyDianne Bryant-MillerWilliam F. and Louise C. BullockMayor Mary CarterMarion ClarkLatecia ClayVirginia L. ConleeThomas and Carlyle ConradAngela CorvingtonLynn CourierNicholas CrouseNatalia D.Paul D’AgrosaRoger N. and Diane R. DavenportReginald D. Dickson and Illona W. DicksonAnne S. and Mary EinspanierSondra EllisClayton Evans and Josephine Goode-EvansDan and Jackie FaberBrian and Kristin FaussEric FriedmanJames P. and Susan Z. GambleWilliam R. Gilbert, II and Loura M. GilbertBob GioiaDaniel Gladden, IISusan M. GreenbergKarl and Jillian GuentherTim HamiltonMichael G. and Nancy M. HartmanJohn and Harrison HeilAaron HempelBarbara W. and Carol A. HemphillAnne HetlageRita HiscocksLinda and Vance HodgeMarilyn R. HolmesJacqueline Buck HortonHowlette and Monica HuddlestonBrian and Joan HumesRobert E. Huson, Jr. and Lynn-Relic Huson
Steve JansenSean JoeDavid JohnsonMike KellyRobert J. and Abigail W. KlevornEugene KornblumKaren KrehmeyerBrian KruegerLeanne LatudaAndy and Karen LeonardAnne M. LeveroneRobert D. LitzBrian and Jazzy LoyalDennis K. Lutz Ingrid V. ManningTimothy McBrideMayor James McGeeScott McNettConstantine and Maria MichaelidesDavid and Vicky MilesKirk MillsPatrick J. and Ellen M. MurphyMayor Viola MurphyLynn NicholsMichael and Rebecca NolanMichael L. Nonet and Barbara N. KunkelEileen PaganoCharles James PearsonPatrick PooleStanley R. and Phyllis B. PylipowFred RathjenCharles E. Reis, IV and Constance S. ReisPatsy RodriguezVictor W. and Florence R. SaegerPeter W. Salsich, Jr. and Barbara B. SalsichFaith SandlerBev ScanlonTom SchmittgensMark J and Katherine B SchmitzKate SchoenhardMichael W. and Margaret S. SherradenKeisha SmithBeverly Sporleder
19Back to Table of Contents
Jeffry and Wendy SporlederJames P and Julie L StackhouseDaniel C. and Jane M. SternKaren StuckenschmidtJerome and Margaret ThomassonDonna and Jacques ThroCharles H. and Jane H. VogtMelisa and Enrique Von RohrDavid T. and Cristina C. WaldenDavid WalentikGloria WallsJames WatsonChristopher WillErika WilliamsJames M. and Barbara G. WillockMichael and Rebecca ZaccarelloEric and Deysl Zegel Maureen ZegelSteve Zegel
$300-$999AnonymousLois W. BlissDavid Brown and Cheryl GreenJoseph A. and Linda M. CavatoKen and Sarah ChristianRobert A. and Angela M. DaltonFridou and Deb DombarKevin and Anna DoyleJohn G. and Kathryn O. DubuquePhil and Monica FingerhutFrank R Greguska IIIStephanie GriseMichael and Kay HaganMichael Greenfield and Claire HalpernJacqueline HamiltonRichard N. and Lynn Z. HillRichard HoffStephanie Horeis and Rod AndersonSharon D. HudsonJames and Eliza JohnsonJames and Peg KileyDebra A. Kramer and James W. Van Becelaere
Warren B. Lammert, Jr. and Susan R. LammertStephen P. and Sandra N. MarshMichael D. Maskus and Catherine A. AugustinRyan and Elizabeth McClurePatrick McMackinJerry F MeyerLarry J and A Lynette MillesJohn R. MonterubioCorey and Heather MoomeyBrian and Nina MurphyNick P. OverkampFred H. and Ida F. PeraboGordon W. and Susan Berger PhilpottDonald and Susan PolingRev. James H. and Emma PurdyJason PurnellMatt and Linda G. RennerJoseph M. and Catherine S. RieboldJohn B. and Kerri F. RoweDavid and Laura ScobeeRev. Dr. EG Shields, Sr.Joe and Susan SivewrightSharon Slane and Martin HerbertSteven Salstrom and Kay JenningsKelly B. and Susan C. SullivanKaren TokarzRandall WellerRobert A. WellsWilliam Paul and Gina WischmeyerTim B. Wooldridge and Becky L. Wooldridge
$1000 - $4999Doug BlackRay Boshara and Lora IannottiMaxine K. Clark and Robert N. FoxJohn M. Clear and Isabel M. Bone Jean CodyPatrick and Marianne HagertyChancellor Thomas F. George and Barbara C. HarbachDavid A. HilliardLaura Horwitz
James E. and Phyllis C. HuettnerDiana and Robert JacksonRalonda JasperNancy F. KalishmanJ. Mark and Jane F. KlamerWard M. and Carol S. KleinChris and Christine L. KrehmeyerKeith and Erin LinnenbringerRandy and Ann LiptonCyrus MalikDorothy MartinPaul E. and Georgia R. MartinJonathan J. MendelsonJohn and Laura MeyerJohn and Anita O’ConnellJohn A. and Janice B. OexemanCraig and Elizabeth OwensS. Jerome and Barbara S. PratterJohn and Mary RisbergAmy Rome and Henry HummertFrederick K. Rudolph, Jr. and Janet KupferbergShane and Amorette RussellThomas F SchlaflyGlen A. and Shelley H. SmithMary and Thomas StillmanKris SwitzerLawrence E. ThomasChristine WaltzElisa Nunnally Wang and R. Randall WangMichael and Christina WilliamsSheila G. Williams
$5000+AnonymousPatrick J. Arnall and Tommye FlemingJeffrey and Amy CallPamela CarterRobert E. Concannon, Jr.Robert M. Cox, Jr.Christopher P and Elizabeth F DorrJoanne C. KellyRuth L. Siteman
20 Back to Table of Contents Back to Table of Contents
CIVIC ORGANIZATION AND GOVERNMENTBaseball Industry Growth Fund, LLCCardinals CareCity of PagedaleCity of Vinita ParkCivic ProgressNetwork for GoodNormandy Post OfficeOptimist Club of St. LouisRegional Arts CommissionReinvest North County FundSt. Louis Economic Development PartnershipThe Benevity Community Impact FundUnited Way of Greater St. Louis SiemerVillage of Bel-RidgeWMU Alternative Spring Break
GIFT IN KINDSAntonio Barber SchoolPatrick J. Arnall and Tommye FlemingAtomic CowboyRonald T. and Mary A. BarnesAngie BernardRay Boshara and Lora IannottiPatty BoydCareLinc OptionsLaurie CarsonJoe CavatoCiti BankDDT LiquorDiamond CutzE.M. Harris Construction CompanyAlan EichornExpress Braids and WeavesFinal Touch Hand Car and Motorcycle Wash and DetailingMaxine K. Clark and Robert N. FoxGemini BarberShawn and Heidi GravesGray Design Group, Inc.Andrea HaleAnita and Mark HaleJacqueline Hamilton
Laura HefeleAmanda HolguinJewish Community Relations CouncilEmily KomosChris and Christine L. KrehmeyerLynne and Gary LaneJames and Peggy LangfordLaura McCarthy Real EstateRobirda LeeAnnie LenzLeroy’sElisa Leyva-GuerreroMajor BrandsMaritzCandace MartzJohn and Donna McCarthyJohn McHugh and Barbara NewsomeSandy McKinneyMicrosoftMidwest BankCentreLeah MilesBeth MolloyCorey and Heather MoomeyKim MooreJanet MuddeMaria NashLinda NguyenOpenlanderCraig and Elizabeth OwensRenee ParadowskiGreg and Allison PonitzTeresa QuinnPeggy RassieurMark ReedReitz and Jens, Inc.Sarah RocheMichael and Judy RuffusSayles Transportation Corp.Patrick and Brigid SheaMark and Michelle ShukwitSuzy SindelarJeffry and Wendy SporlederSt. Peter Catholic Church
Jill StarrsSteris CorporationSuper Dollar BusterMichelle ThompsonDana TrokeySheila G. Williams
TRIBUTES 2015Incarnate Word Foundation in honor of Ron BarnesMark J and Katherine B Schmitz in honor of Julie BrunsGreater Missouri Leadership Foundation, Inc. in honor of Maxine ClarkCecil J G Raw in honor of Diane DavenportFreda Lohr in honor of Shirley EllisAllison Ricks in honor of Susan HaymanLowell G. and Susan C. Hayman in honor of Allison RicksAnne Hetlage in honor of John and Mary RisbergWilliam Paul and Gina Wischmeyer in honor of John and Mary Risberg
In Memory of….Network for Good in memory of Ruth MartinezRoger N. and Diane R. Davenport in memory of Jim Sporleder
Back to Table of Contents
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Craig S. Owens (Chair), City of Clayton
Ralonda Jasper (Vice Chairman), Express Scripts
Nick Overkamp (Treasurer), Enterprise Bank & Trust
Mayor Mary Carter (Secretary), City of Pagedale
Douglas Black, BJC Healthcare, West County
Ray Boshara, Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
Pamela D. Carter, Boeing
Maxine Clark, Founder, Build-A-Bear Workshop
Jean Cody, Private Practice, CPA
Robert Cox, Emerson Electric, Retired
Reginald Dickson, BYW Investment Advisors
Chancellor Thomas George, University of Missouri-St. Louis
Mayor James McGee, City of Vinita Park
Paul Martin, Bank of America, U.S. Trust Divison
John Meyer, Jr., Capes, Sokol, Goodman & Sarachan, PC
Mayor Viola Murphy, City of Cool Valley
Rev. James H. Purdy, Retired Pastor
Jason Purnell, George Warren Brown School of Social Work,
Washington University
John Risberg, Maritz
Rev. Dr. E.G. Shields Sr, Pastor, Mt. Buelah Baptist Church
Kris Switzer, U.S. Bancorp Community Dev Corp
James Watson, Midwest BankCentre, President & CEO
Randy Weller, Citi, Director of Community Development
Erika Williams, BJC Healthcare
Michael Williams, Edward Jones
Sheila Williams, Normandy School District
4156 Manchester AvenueSt. Louis, MO 63110314-533-0600beyondhousing.org
Beyond Housing
@BeyondHousingMo