Nuestro agradecimiento a la Empresa de Hormigón Elaborado por su colaboración.
----------- RECIBIDOS: ----------
Buenos días Raúl F. Alesanco:
Estamos realizando una actualización de datos de las organizaciones que participan de la Red de Apoyo al Trabajo Popular coordinada por el INTI. En tal sentido, solicitamos nos confirmen por este medio los datos formales que a continuación se detallan y nos informen los cambios que se hayan dado.
La idea es corroborar la existencia actual de la organización, el nombre del contacto para con el INTI y los demás datos que permitan una comunicación ágil. Es imprescindible contar con esta información a la brevedad ya que se darán de baja aquellas organizaciones de las que no contemos con información actualizada.
Datos Formales
Nombre de la organización: “Red RADAR Nodo Trelew”
Nombre del referente: “Raúl F. Alesanco”
Teléfono: “02965 429973”
Otro teléfono de contacto: “”
Mail: “infomara2003@yahoo.com.ar”
Dirección: “Posadas Nte y Crucero Belgrano”
Localidad: “Trelew”
Provincia: “Chubut”
Código Postal: “”
Cordialmente.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ing. Paula Binder
INSTITUTO NACIONAL DE TECNOLOGIA INDUSTRIAL
Gerencia de Asistencia Tecnológica para la Demanda Social
Capacitación y Asistencia Técnica a Emprendedores
Apoyo al Trabajo Popular
Tel.: (54 11) 4724-6200/6300/6400 Int. 6783
www.trabajopopular.org.ar
www.inti.gob.ar (0800 444 4004
--------------------
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Agradecemos su confianza en nosotros y esperamos atender sus futuras necesidades de envío.
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FedEx Express Corporation
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January 29, 2013 Volume 19, Issue 5
This week's PND poll wants to know: Are deficits and the federal debt a threat to the economy?
To cast your vote, visit our home page.
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"Johns Hopkins University has been an important part of my life since I first set foot on campus more than five decades ago. Each dollar I have given has been well-spent improving the institution and, just as importantly, making its education available to students who might otherwise not be able to afford it. Giving is only meaningful if the money will make a difference in people's lives, and I know of no other institution that can make a bigger difference in lives around the world through its groundbreaking research — especially in the field of public health....."
– New York City mayor Michael Bloomberg (Johns Hopkins University Press Release 1/26/13)
The Web version of PND offers abstracts of philanthropy news items each day. The following are the top stories from the past week and their date of posting.
- Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria Announces New Funding From Germany (1/25/13)
- GAVI Alliance Receives Pledges Totaling $25 Million in Matched Funds (1/28/13)
- GAVI Alliance Receives Pledges Totaling $25 Million in Matched Funds (1/28/13)
- New Taiwanese Foundation to Award 'Asia's Nobel Prizes' (1/29/13)
- New York City Foodbanks Still Recovering From Superstorm Sandy (1/27/13)
- Health Care Foundation of Greater Kansas City to Receive $162 Million in Settlement (1/28/13)
- Duke University Receives $50 Million for Collaborative Education (1/28/13)
- Next-Gen Donors Focused on Values, Impact, Hands-On Engagement, Report Finds (1/29/13)
- Community Foundation Update (1/26/13)
- People in the News (1/27/13)
- Schools Question Whether to Accept Funds From Walmart, Walton Family Foundation (1/23/13)
- Tax Credit Scholarship Program Channels Funds to Private Schools With Anti-Gay Policies, Report Finds (1/24/13)
- 2012 Playwright Commissioning Award Winners Announced (1/28/13)
- Nonprofit Launched in Support of Asian-American Artists Announces Second Program (1/27/13)
- Canadian Hospital Receives $50 Million Gift From Longtime Supporters (1/23/13)
- Salk Institute Receives $42 Million From Helmsley Charitable Trust to Create Research Center for Genomic Medicine (1/24/13)
- Children's Hospital of Orange County Receives $27 Million Gift (1/25/13)
- Lustgarten Foundation Awards $25 Million for Pancreatic Cancer Research (1/25/13)
- Bank of America Awards $22 Million to Address Immediate Needs (1/24/13)
- Wood Family Trust Invests Nearly $12 Million in Rwandan Tea Factories (1/23/13)
- Science Museum Oklahoma Receives $12 Million From Donald W. Reynolds Foundation (1/27/13)
- Glenn Family Foundation Gives $10 Million for Breast Cancer Research and Treatment Center (1/24/13)
- Arizona Community Foundation Awards $9 Million in Grants (1/26/13)
- SAP Commits More Than $7 Million to Support Emerging Entrepreneurs Initiative, Offset Carbon Emissions (1/26/13)
1. Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria Announces New Funding From Germany
The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria has announced a new commitment of more than $1.3 billion from Germany.
Announced at the World Economic Forum in Davos, the €1 billion commitment will enable the Global Fund to continue its efforts to prevent and treat the three diseases in developing nations and advance progress on health-related Millennium Development Goals. The commitment represents a continuation of Germany's initial pledge to the fund of €200 million a year over five years, through 2016.
Sustained funding from donor nations coupled with contributions from local governments has allowed developing countries to step up their fight against the highly infectious diseases. With support from the Global Fund, HIV transmission rates are falling, TB mortality has declined by more than a third since the 1990s, and insecticide-treated bed nets are being used to protect millions of families from malaria.
"We can defeat AIDS, tuberculosis, and malaria," said Global Fund executive director Mark Dybul. "We need funding to get it done. We are at a critical moment for funding, and we need a big push this year."
2. GAVI Alliance Receives Pledges Totaling $25 Million in Matched Funds
The GAVI Alliance, a Geneva-based nongovernmental organization that works to deliver life-saving vaccines to developing countries, has announced commitments totaling $12.5 million from Comic Relief, LDS Charities, and Vodafone.
Announced at the World Economic Forum in Davos, the pledges will be matched by the UK Department for International Development and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation through the GAVI Matching Fund. Comic Relief, a London-based charity that uses the power of entertainment to fight poverty and social injustice, committed £5 million ($8 million), bringing its total commitment to the alliance to $12 million, while LDS Charities, the relief and development arm of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, pledged $3 million, bringing its total commitment to $4.5 million. Vodafone, a leading mobile communications company, pledged in-kind contributions valued at $1.5 million to explore how mobile technology can help boost childhood vaccination levels in sub-Saharan Africa.
Launched in 2011, the GAVI Matching Fund provides a one-to-one match for donations to GAVI from private organizations, their employees, and customers. The latest pledges bring the total raised through the matching initiative to $78 million.
"These new pledges point to the power of public-private partnerships in helping immunize the world's poorest children," said GAVI Alliance board chair Dagfinn Høybråten. "The generous investments by our partners Comic Relief, LDS Charities, and Vodafone bring not only critical funding, but also strong advocates for children's immunization who can bring significant visibility to this issue."
3. With Latest $350 Million Gift to Johns Hopkins, Bloomberg Surpasses $1 Billion in Giving to Alma Mater
Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore has announced a $350 million gift from longtime supporter and New York City mayor Michael R. Bloomberg.
The gift, which boosts Bloomberg's total giving to the university during his lifetime to $1 billion, includes $250 million in support of a $1 billion effort to facilitate cross-disciplinary work across the university. Among other things, the funding will be used to endow fifty Bloomberg Distinguished Professors in areas such as water resource sustainability, individualized healthcare delivery, global health, the science of learning, and urban revitalization.
The remaining $100 million will be used to provide Bloomberg Scholarships to twenty-six hundred undergrads over the next ten years, ensuring that the most talented and driven students can attend the university, regardless of economic circumstance.
Bloomberg, who earned his bachelor's degree in engineering from the university in 1964, made his first donation to the school, a gift of $5, in 1965. In the decades since, he has been a devoted supporter of the university, contributing a total of $336 million in support of research projects, $289 million to the Bloomberg School of Public Health, $240 million for various capital and infrastructure projects, and $219 million in support of need-based financial aid.
"Johns Hopkins University has been an important part of my life since I first set foot on campus more than five decades ago," said Mayor Bloomberg. "Each dollar I have given has been well-spent improving the institution and, just as importantly, making its education available to students who might otherwise not be able to afford it. Giving is only meaningful if the money will make a difference in people's lives, and I know of no other institution that can make a bigger difference in lives around the world through its groundbreaking research — especially in the field of public health."
4. New Taiwanese Foundation to Award 'Asia's Nobel Prizes'
Taiwanese tycoon and Ruentex Group head Samuel Yin has announced the creation of a foundation to support what local media in Taiwan are calling "Asia's Nobel Prizes," the Associated Press reports.
Starting next year, the Tang Prize Foundation will fund biennial prizes of $1.7 million to international leaders in fields that have "intrinsic importance for humanity" but are not eligible for the Nobel Prize, which since 1901 has been awarded for outstanding achievements in chemistry, literature, physics, physiology or medicine, and peace. Named after the Chinese dynasty that ruled the country from 618-907 A.D., the Tang Prizes will be awarded in the fields of biopharmaceutical science, sustainable development, the study of China, and the rule of law, with winners to be chosen by special committees set up by the Academia Sinica, a highly regarded research institution in Taiwan.
According to the AP, Yin — who pledged last year to donate the bulk of his $3.38 billion estate to charity — has given generously to various causes during his lifetime. In addition to helping fund construction of a 155-mile railway in eastern China, Yin has provided scholarships to thousands of Chinese students and supported the development of Peking University's Guanghua School of Management.
5. New York City Foodbanks Still Recovering From Superstorm Sandy
Foodbanks and pantries in New York City have yet to recover from the effects of Superstorm Sandy, which depleted the resources of a system already struggling to provide food to the needy, the Wall Street Journal reports.
One of the largest hunger-relief organizations in the region, the Food Bank for New York City, was forced to rely on state and city reserves to supplement its own resources after the storm hit. And while a recent agreement with the American Red Cross will help the organization finance deliveries to especially hard-hit areas, Food Bank NYC president and CEO Margarette Purvis told the Journal that the organization came into the year with very little food on hand. "We could not have afforded to do what we did without the City of New York, without the state, and without the federal government," said Purvis. "We would've spent all the money we raised in a couple of weeks."
Indeed, the city's foodbanks and soup kitchen were under pressure well before Sandy hit. According to a report (8 pages, PDF) issued by Food Bank NYC based on a survey conducted before the storm by the Institute for Public Opinion at Marist College, 32 percent of New Yorkers, some 2.6 million people, reported having difficulty affording food — a lower percentage than at the height of the recession in 2008 (48 percent) but higher than in 2003 (25 percent). The report also found that a significant number of city residents said they went without food at some point over the past twelve months so they could pay their rent (17 percent), utilities (16 percent), transportation (14 percent), or medicine or medical care (13 percent).
Sandy only made matters worse. The Yorkville Common Pantry saw the number of its Saturday drop-ins increase from four hundred to about six hundred and fifty after the storm, said program director Daniel Reyes, while Melony Samuels, executive director of the Bed-Stuy Campaign Against Hunger, said her organization served twenty-one thousand people in a single month, ten thousand more than usual.
Meanwhile, Food Bank NYC is paying close attention to the debt debate in Washington, hoping that cuts in public assistance programs such as the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children (WIC) can be averted, the Journal reports. "The thing that's making us the most nervous is the idea that WIC could be cut," said Purvis. "WIC is one of those programs that keeps people off our line."
Bischof, Jackie. “City Food Banks Still Recovering From Sandy.” Wall Street Journal 1/15/13.
6. Health Care Foundation of Greater Kansas City to Receive $162 Million in Settlement
The for-profit Hospital Corporation of America system has been ordered to pay $162 million to the Health Care Foundation of Greater Kansas City after a Missouri judge ruled that HCA failed to abide by an agreement to repair several rundown community hospitals it purchased in the Kansas City area from Health Midwest, the New York Times reports.
HCA acquired the hospitals in 2003 from the nonprofit healthcare system on the condition that it make capital improvements to the facilities and maintain the level of care that had been provided to low-income residents by Health Midwest. But a 2004 report provided by HCA to the foundation, which was created with a portion of the proceeds from the sale of the hospitals, revealed that the company was failing to deliver on its commitments. Indeed, in the first two years after its acquisition of the hospitals, HCA only spent about $50 million of the $300 million it had agreed to spend, while the level of care provided at the system's large inner-city hospital dropped, even as charitable care at its more affluent suburban hospital rose.
Pleading its case in Jackson County Circuit Court, HCA argued that it spent hundreds of millions of dollars constructing two new hospitals rather than on repairing older facilities. But Judge John Torrence ruled that the agreement called for improvements to existing hospitals and that HCA still owed $162 million, the Times reports.
The settlement funds will be used by the Health Care Foundation to provide care for uninsured or underinsured Kansas City residents. In the meantime, a court-appointed accountant is working to determine whether HCA provided the level of charitable care it said it would. If it didn't, said Paul Seyferth, the foundation's legal counsel, HCA might end up paying even more to the foundation. And, added Seyferth, "We think they're going to have a tremendously difficult time convincing anybody that they spent what they claim they spent."
Creswell, Julie. “Judge Orders HCA to Pay $162 Million to Foundation.” New York Times 1/24/13.
7. Duke University Receives $50 Million for Collaborative Education
Duke University has announced a $50 million gift from Anne T. and Robert M. Bass to launch an initiative to encourage students and faculty to collaborate across traditional academic boundaries.
The gift will fund the Bass Connections initiative, which aims to create new educational pathways for Duke's undergraduate, graduate, and professional students to develop the broad expertise and perspective needed to address complex societal problems. Building on earlier multidisciplinary efforts at the university, the initiative will focus initially on five areas: brain and society, education and human development, energy, global health, and information, society, and culture. The university will allocate half the gift to a matching program to encourage additional support from others.
The Basses have supported the university for two decades, most notably through the Bass Program for Excellence in Undergraduate Education and the FOCUS program, which offers integrated courses developed around interdisciplinary themes. Anne Bass has been a Duke trustee since 2003 and is one of three co-chairs of the $3.25 billion Duke Forward campaign.
"Because Bass Connections will involve students and faculty at all ten Duke schools, it will have a transformative impact on our entire campus," said Duke University president Richard H. Brodhead. "Students will pursue new educational pathways and join with faculty on interdisciplinary teams to apply their knowledge and skills to urgent social challenges. Simultaneously, Bass Connections will highlight the importance of disciplinary approaches for enabling meaningful collaboration."
“New Initiative Prepares Students for Society's Challenges.” Duke University Press Release 1/22/13.
8. Next-Gen Donors Focused on Values, Impact, Hands-On Engagement, Report Finds
When it comes to philanthropy, Gen X and Gen Y/Millennial donors are keenly interested in personal values, measurable impact, and hands-on engagement, a new report from the Johnson Center for Philanthropy at Grand Valley State University and 21/64, a nonprofit consulting practice specializing in next-gen and multi-generational strategic philanthropy, finds.
Based on a national online survey of and interviews with young philanthropists, the report, Next Gen Donors: Respecting Legacy, Revolutionizing Philanthropy (80 pages, PDF), found that a relatively small group of Gen Xers (born between 1964 and 1980) and Gen Y/Millennials (born between 1981 and 2000) will inherit more than $40 trillion over the coming decades. And while they are not necessarily more charitably inclined than their parents or grandparents, the sheer volume of funds, foundations, and other types of giving by high-net-worth families is expanding to unprecedented levels, putting them in a position to wield more philanthropic power than any previous generation in American history. The report also found that next-gen donors seem to be driven by values rather than "valuables"; that they see philanthropic "strategy" as the major distinguishing factor between themselves and previous generations and intend to change how philanthropic decisions and due diligence are conducted; that they want to develop close, hands-on relationships with the organizations or causes they support; and that, as engaged as they already are, they are still figuring out what kind of donors they want to be.
Funded by the Frey Chair for Family Philanthropy program at the Johnson Center for Philanthropy, the Andrea and Charles Bronfman Philanthropies, the Max M. and Marjorie S. Fisher Foundation, the Eugene and Agnes E. Meyer Foundation, and an anonymous donor, the report was unveiled over the weekend at the Council on Foundations 2013 Family Philanthropy Conference.
In conjunction with the report's release, the Johnson Center and 21/64 allowed GrantCraft, a joint project of the Foundation Center and the European Foundation Centre in Brussels, to conduct a parallel analysis of their interviews with major next-gen donors. Next Gen Donors: Shaping the Future of Philanthropy (12 pages, PDF), the report based on that analysis, highlights the "practical wisdom" and insights of next-gen donors with respect to their hunger for engagement, new ways of learning, and making a difference sooner rather than later. "The idea that I'm going to have one trusted advisor or a limited set of trusted advisors, I totally don't feel at all," one young philanthropist told the report's authors. "I mean, I want everyone to help me and some things are going to make more sense than others."
9. Community Foundation Update
Alaska
The Anchorage-based Alaska Community Foundation has announced four new Affiliate community foundations: the Kodiak Community Foundation, the Ketchikan Community Foundation, the Greater Sitka Legacy Fund, and the Golden Heart Community Foundation (Fairbanks and surrounding areas). With support from the Rasmuson Foundation, the newly formed affiliates will work to establish permanent endowments in their respective communities to support local philanthropic goals today and into the future.
California
The Fresno Regional Foundation has announced grants totaling $600,000 to five community organizations working to help children living in poverty succeed in school. Grants were awarded to Community Services Employment Training, the Boys and Girls Clubs of Fresno County, Reading and Beyond, Californians for Pesticide Reform, and Woodlake Family Resource Center.
The Santa Barbara Foundation has elected Diane Adam, Fred Gluck, and Chris Slaughter to three-year terms on its board.
Connecticut
The Waterbury-based Connecticut Community Foundation has announced its slate of officers for 2013: Jack Baker, chair; Margaret W. Field, vice chair; and Wayne McCormack, secretary. The trustees also re-elected Charles Boulier III as treasurer.
Louisiana
The Greater New Orleans Foundation has announced that it awarded a two-year, $200,000 grant to the Center for Planning Excellence, which, in partnership with local, state, and national entities, will work to identify what coastal towns and settlements in Louisiana need in order to adapt to the many challenges, including land loss, of living in a coastal environment. The project, which also is receiving support from the Ford Foundation, will educate residents on future perils, what their options are, and what tools they will need in order to adapt. Recently updated by the state's Coastal Protection and Restoration Authority, the Coastal Master Plan clearly identifies a need for more human-centered approaches to helping communities cope with land loss, especially in Terrebonne and Lafourche parishes.
Ohio
The Greater Cincinnati Foundation has named Michele Carey as its senior giving strategies officer, Laura Shamp as its giving strategies officer, and Shelly Espich as its giving strategies coordinator.
Texas
Meals on Wheels Plus has announced that it received a grant of $20,000 from the Community Foundation of Abilene to provide home-delivered meals to people on a waiting list. The meals are provided to frail individuals who are unable to provide balanced meals for themselves on a daily basis and need the service. Most clients are low income and receive their meals free of charge.
Wyoming
The Lander Community Foundation has announced that it awarded grants totaling $7,250 to eleven organizations during 2012. Recipients include Help for Health Hospice Care, Injury Prevention, the Fremont County Orchestra, and the Lander Cycling Club.
“Foundation Welcomes New Employees.” Greater Cincinnati Foundation Press Release 1/16/13.
“Community Foundation Elects New Officers.” Connecticut Community Foundation Press Release 1/24/13.
10. People in the News: Appointments, Promotions, and Obituaries
The William and Flora Hewlett Foundation has announced the planned departure of vice president and co-chief investment officer LAURANCE R. "LAURIE" HOAGLAND, JR., effective June 30, and the promotion of ANA WEICHERS-MARSHALL, currently the foundation's co-chief investment officer, to the position Hoagland is vacating, effective July 1.
By a unanimous vote of its board, the Poetry Foundation has appointed ROBERT POLITO as president, effective July 8.
The Charles Stewart Mott Foundation has announced the appointment of KYLE CALDWELL as program director of its Pathways Out of Poverty team.
Rockefeller Philanthropy Advisors has announced the appointment of four new board members: JUANITA T. JAMES, president and CEO of the Fairfield County Community Foundation; DARREN WALKER, vice president of the Ford Foundation; STEVEN WAYNE, founding CEO of the Jensen Group; and ADAM WOLFENSOHN, managing director of Wolfensohn Fund Management.
The Heinz Endowments has announced the appointment of JARED L. COHON to its board.
Commonfund has announced the appointment of BRADFORD K. GALLAGHER as board chair./p>
Bayer USA has announced the appointment of SARAH TOULOUSE as donations officer for the company and executive director of the Bayer USA Foundation, effective January 21.
The Minnesota Council on Foundations has announced a new slate of board officers and directors: KEVIN WALKER, president and CEO of Northwest Area Foundation, as board chair; CAROLYN ROBY, vice president of the Wells Fargo Foundation Minnesota, as vice chair; KARI SUZUKI, director of operations at the Otto Bremer Foundation, as secretary; and BRAD KRUSE, program director at the Hugh J. Andersen Foundation, as treasurer. New directors include KATHLEEN ANNETTE, president and CEO of the Blandin Foundation; JOANN BIRKHOLZ, foundation manager at the Medica Foundation; MIKE NEWMAN, vice president and director of community relations at the Travelers Foundation; and JUNE NORONHA, senior manager at the Bush Foundation.
Southern California Grantmakers has announced the appointment of three new board members: MELISSA HARMAN, partner at Moss Adams, LLP and senior manager of the Moss Adams Foundation; DEIDRE LIND, director of corporate affairs for Mattel, Inc. and executive director of the Mattel Children's Foundation; and DEBORAH M. IVES, vice president and treasurer of the Weingart Foundation.
Blackbaud has announced the planned departure of president and CEO MARC CHARDON by the end of this year.
KEVIN KLOSE has been named acting president and CEO of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, the University of Maryland reports.
In other news, PND notes the passing of homeowner rights activist INEZ KILLINGSWORTH on January 17. Killingsworth, president of Empowering and Strengthening Ohio's People, fought against predatory lending and foreclosures as early as 1993, when she founded the East Side Organizing Project, which she then developed into the statewide organization ESOP. Based in the Union-Miles neighborhood of Cleveland, where she also worked as a public school janitor, an auxiliary police officer, and was a trustee of her church, Killingsworth co-chaired the Ohio Organizing Collaborative, Community Shares, and National People's Action, and served on the boards of several other community-based organizations, including Neighborhood Progress, the National Training and Information Center, and New Cleveland Food Basket. In 2010, she was awarded a Purpose Prize by Civic Ventures in recognition of her work to prevent foreclosures in Ohio and her advocacy efforts at the national level.
PND also notes the passing of Balkans activist JILL BENDERLY on January 10. Benderly, a Tides Foundation grantee, co-directed World Learning's STAR Network (Strategies, Training, Advocacy and Resources); was founder and academic director for SIT Study Abroad's program on gender, transformation, and civil society in the Balkans; and served as associate academic dean for Europe at World Learning/SIT Study Abroad. Prior to her work in the Balkans, Benderly was active for many years in reproductive rights organizing and alternative journalism in Brooklyn, New York.
“C.S. Mott Foundation Hires New Program Director.” C.S. Mott Foundation Press Release 1/22/13.
“Blackbaud Announces CEO Transition Plan.” Blackbaud Press Release 1/23/13.
“Bayer Corporation Names U.S. Donations Officer.” Bayer Corporation Press Release 1/23/13.
“Carnegie Mellon President Joins Endowments Board.” Heinz Endowments Press Release 1/22/13.
“Poetry Foundation Appoints Robert Polito New President.” Poetry Foundation Press Release 1/23/13.
“In Memoriam: Jill Benderly.” Tides Foundation Statement 1/22/13.
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