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2010 IMPACT REPORT JEWISH COMMUNITY FEDERATION AND ENDOWMENT FUND Jewish Community Federation and Endowment Fund | 121 Steuart Street, San Francisco CA 94105 | 415.777.0411 | jewishfed.org Jewish Community Federation and Endowment Fund | 121 Steuart Street San Francisco CA 94105 | 415 777 0411 | jewishfed org Jewish Community Federation and Endowment Fund | 121 Steuart Street San Francisco CA 94105 | 415 777 0411 | jewishfed org J ihC it Fd ti dEd tF d | 121 St t St tS F i CA 94105 | 415 777 0411 | j i hf d BUILDING ENGAGING COLLABORATING INNOVATING EDUCATING CONNECTING LEADING SUPPORTING

2010 JCF Impact Report

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2010 Impact Report of the Jewish Community Federation and Endowment Fund.

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Page 1: 2010 JCF Impact Report

2010

IMPA

CT R

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WIS

H C

OM

MU

NIT

Y F

ED

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ION

AN

D E

ND

OW

ME

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y , j gJewish Community Federation and Endowment Fund | 121 Steuart Street, San Francisco CA 94105 | 415.777.0411 | jewishfed.orgJewish Community Federation and Endowment Fund | 121 Steuart Street San Francisco CA 94105 | 415 777 0411 | jewishfed orgJewish Community Federation and Endowment Fund | 121 Steuart Street San Francisco CA 94105 | 415 777 0411 | jewishfed orgJ i h C it F d ti d E d t F d | 121 St t St t S F i CA 94105 | 415 777 0411 | j i hf d

BUILDING

ENGAGING

COLLABORATING

INNOVATING

EDUCATING

CONNECTING

LEADING

SUPPORTING

Page 2: 2010 JCF Impact Report

Shared values, vision and focus guide our present and drive our future

In commemorating our centennial, the Federation’s dedicated network of lay leaders, professionals and donors responded with energy and creativity in 2010. There was a shared sense of reinvigoration, and our work this past year was marked by innovation and progress. We have achieved a significant milestone and we have much to be proud of. Despite a slowly recovering economy in 2010, our donors contributed nearly $24 million to the 2010 Annual Campaign and $30 million additional dollars to the Endowment Fund. As Jewish needs locally and around the globe remain pressing, we also remain committed to the most vulnerable members of our community, whether meeting basic needs of the poor or elderly, providing access to quality education for our children, or supporting social equality and pluralism in Israel. Working side by side with the Bay Area Jewish community, we have made a collective impact. As in so many aspects of life, a key driver of success is focus. Our Federation has undertaken a comprehensive strategic planning effort: We have determined that by focusing our core competencies, and playing a role for which we are uniquely suited, our ability to meet the challenges and opportunities facing our community now and into the future will be strengthened. We have taken a proactive position, bringing about new and diverse approaches into our fold - strategic advising to improve nonprofit effectiveness, inventive programming that addresses community-wide challenges, and valuable leadership and volunteer opportunities that help us engage the next generation of Jews, all while continuing to build a welcoming and inclusive society. We look to the future with great optimism, confrontingchallenges with a strong network of local Jewish institutions, dedicated leadership, and a remarkable record of generosity and activism that has made the San Francisco Jewish Community Federation a model to emulate. History proves our strength lies in our unity. One hundred years ago, Jewish settlers could never have imagined the progress their efforts would produce. Today, we’re shaping the world that our children will inherit using the same Jewish values that guided ourforebears as our compass – kehilla (community), tzedakah (righteous giving), and tikkun olam (repairing the world). Thank you for partnering with us in your philanthropy.

Nancy GrandPresidentJewish Community Federation and Endowment Fund

Jennifer S. GorovitzCEOJewish Community Federation and Endowment Fund

Page 3: 2010 JCF Impact Report

Figures below represent fiscal year-end numbers as of June 30, 2010.

2010 Annual Report and Impact Statement

Total Assets Under Management

Total Funds Raised through Campaign and Endowment

$1,596,092,000

$53,596,000

Total Assets and Funds

Number of donors

Campaign Fundraising Costs

Operating Costs 5%

Community BenefitActivities

5%

Grants Made 85%

Fundraising Costs9.5%

Supporting Foundations’ Programs and Expenses

5%

Distribution of Total Grants and Expenditures: $181,635,000

9,753

$2,284,000

Annual Campaign Funds Raised

Total Grants

Community Benefit Activities

Federation and Endowment Operating Costs

Supporting Foundations’ Programs and Expenses

$154,190,000

$9,861,000

$9,689.000

$7,895,000

$181,635,000

$23,969,000

Total Grants and Expenditures

Annual Campaign Fundraising: $23,969,000

2

This report reflects July 1, 2009 - June 30, 2010

Page 4: 2010 JCF Impact Report

$23,969,000

Category

Donor Advised Philanthropic Funds

Supporting Foundations

# of Grants

7,813

1,109

Amount

$44,268,000

$117,639,000

Donor Involved Grants through Jewish Community Endowment Fund

BUILDING A LASTING INFRASTRUCTURE

Resources from the Bay Area Jewish community provide the foundation for a vibrant Jewish life. This year Endowment Fund grants are helping pay for the construction of new homes for the Hillel at Davis/Sacramento and the Hillel of Silicon Valley. Endowment resources are also supporting the modernization of Camp Tawonga’s facilities located in the Stanislaus National Forest and the establishment of a permanent endowment for the new Magnes Collection of Jewish Art and Life, currently under construction in downtown Berkeley. This new cultural and educational hub will showcase Magnes’ preeminent collections of art, texts, music, and historical artifacts from Jews in the American West and the Global Diaspora.

$68,000,000 IN UNRESTRICTED

ENDOWMENT FUND ASSETS Visionary philanthropists, mainly through bequests in their wills and lifetime gifts, have left the Jewish Community Endow-ment Fund unrestricted assets that now exceed $68,000,000. These represent the community’s most essential funds for three purposes: responding to emergencies, seed-funding new initiatives, and providing capital grants for important new projects.

The Jewish Community Endowment Fund’s role as the community’s philanthropic engine and reserve was made all the more clear in this difficult time. The resources of the Endowment Fund were granted to meet unprecedented needs, protecting those most vulnerable in our community while continuing to fund critical projects locally, nationally, in Israel and worldwide. With nearly $1.6 billion held in over 900 donor advised philanthropic funds and 45 supporting foundations, donors recommended more than 8,900 grants to approved charities in their areas of interest.

3

Who occupies himself with the needs of the community is as though he occupies himself with Torah.

- Talmud Yerushalmi, Berakhot

“Who Whoh

occupoccup

Page 5: 2010 JCF Impact Report

Category

Caring for the Vulnerable

Educating Youth

Engaging Our Diverse Community

Israel and Overseas

Special Grants1

Total

# of Grants

133

26

82

75

10

326

# of Agencies

52

17

42

45

4

127*

Amount

$6,288,633

$3,478,671

$6,619,060

$6,759,371

$1,929,014

$25,074,749

Campaign and Endowment Fund Grants $25,074,749

1 Special Grants include dues to the Jewish Federation of North America, a security grant administered by the Jewish Community Relations Council, subscriptions to J., the Jewish News Weekly of Northern California, and a reserve for technical assistance to agencies and congregations.

Bay Area Jewish Social Service Agencies2

Jewish Community Centers

Bay Area Jewish Day & High Schools3

Synagogues and Chabad

Hillels

$4,529,874

$2,772,947

$2,349,067

$1,146,174

$781,725

Highlights of Organizations Served

Direct Grants in Israel

Outreach and Engagement

Educating Children, Teens and Young Adults

Caring for Elders

(see page 5)

(see page 9)

(see page 11)

(see page 13)

Highlights of Funding for Priority Needs

2 Includes the Bay Area Jewish Healing Center, Hebrew Free Loan Assoication, Jewish Community Free Clinic, Jewish Family and Children’s Services, Jewish Home,

Jewish Vocational Service, Menorah Park, Shalom Bayit, and the Jewish Chaplaincy at Stanford University Medical Center.

3 Includes operating support, programmatic grants, and scholarships. The Federation’s scholarship funds were greatly supplemented by a generous Emergency

Education Grant from the Jim Joseph Foundation. The scholarship awards are administered by JCF in partnership with the Jewish Federation of Silicon Valley, the

Jewish Community Federation of the Greater East Bay, and the Bureau of Jewish Education.

In order to save paper and preserve the environment, detailed lists of all grants made are available on our website at www.jewishfed.org/AR2010.

4

Page 6: 2010 JCF Impact Report

2 0 1 0 I M PA C T R E P O R T

DIRECT GRANTS IN ISRAEL

Page 7: 2010 JCF Impact Report

EMPOWERING ISRAELIS THROUGH EMPLOYMENT

Olim B'yachad (”Rising up Together”) is helping Ethiopian-Israeli university graduates and students find good jobs which help them integrate into Israeli society. In addition to job placement, the year-long program includes individual support and mentoring as well as English tutoring. With an established network of 250 committed, well-known companies and business leaders, the program has achieved remarkable success — placing 90% of the graduates in jobs commensurate with their training and education.

PROVIDING A BETTER FUTURE FOR DISADVANTAGED CHILDREN IN ISRAEL

Bakehila (”In the Community”) runs educational programming in disadvantaged neighborhoods of Jerusalem that raises student academic achievement and promotes personal and social growth. By helping these children achieve their full potential, the program works to break the cycle of poverty.

ENSURING FOOD NEVER GOES TO WASTE

Our funds cover a portion of operations at the Leket Work Project in Israel which employs Israeli Arab women to collect excess produce left behind by farmers that would otherwise go to waste. The program distributes more than 825 pounds of produce per day to Israel’s needy. And the women, who previously suffered exploitation at the hands of work contractors, receive social and health benefits and are paid a fair wage.

SUPPORTING OUR YOUTH

The Jerusalem Open House for Pride and Tolerance Youth Project offers LGBTQ and questioning youth a safe space in which to address their sexual and gender identities, a sense of belonging, and a support system that can become a lifeline. The program provides LGBTQ youth critical support and unbiased information in their personal journey of self-discovery, helps secure LGBTQ rights in Israeli society, and bridges political, ethnic and religious boundaries in order to build and unite a community in pursuit of the common goal of tolerance and mutual support.

STRENGTHENING THE CONNECTION BETWEEN SECULAR AND RELIGIOUS ISRAELIS

Through the Gvanim (“hues of a color”) program, secular Israelis explore Jewish values, traditions and culture, and religious Israelis learn about non-Orthodox expressions of Judaism. Each year, 15 leaders from diverse professional and religous backgrounds attend an intensive educational program that includes a visit to the Bay Area to showcase the broad array of Jewish life in our community. Participants return to Israel as change agents, developing "action programs" that build a pluralistic approach to Jewish identity across the country – in schools and community centers, among the business community's leadership, in the media, and in the army. The resulting ripple effect helps create social change at the system-wide level.

The Jewish Community

Federation and Endowment

Fund (the Federation)

plays a leading role in

strengthening Israeli society

and securing its future by

promoting pluralism,

democracy, and equality of

opportunity for all Israel's

citizens. Our flagship

programs aim at achieving

system-wide social change,

while our smaller grants

focus on developing

entrepreneurship and

providing incubators for

social innovation. We

work to ensure that

programs we support

have the resources they

need to achieve

significant and

lasting impact.

In order to save paper and preserve the environment, detailed lists of all grants made are available on our website at www.jewishfed.org/AR2010.

6

We must think differently, look at things in a different way. Peace requires a world of new concepts, new definitions.

- Yitzhak Rabin

“We mWe d

ires a wes a wons.ns.

Page 8: 2010 JCF Impact Report

2 0 1 0 I M PA C T R E P O R T

INNOVATION

Page 9: 2010 JCF Impact Report

ENSURING THE FUTURE OF OUR COMMUNITY INSTITUTIONS

The Community Legacy Project (CLP) is a partnership between the Federation and a diverse group of synagogues, JCCs, day schools, social service and cultural organizations that provides the leadership of these organizations with the training, tools, and investment strategies they need to secure their financial future through bequests and other planned gifts.

CONNECTING YOUNG ADULTS TO THEIR JEWISH IDENTITY

The waiting list for Birthright Israel – the international program that takes Jewish young adults on free trips to Israel – just got shorter. Through a $120,000 grant earmarked for local participants, 40 additional Bay Area students will have the opportunity to visit Israel for the first time, ensuring that youth who have been previously turned away from the program due to high demand, will now have a chance to experience and develop connections to their Jewish heritage.

ENGAGING YOUNG DONORS AND SUPPORTING INNOVATIVE LOCAL IDEAS

To provide donors with a higher level of engagement and at the same time, support local innovative proposals with the potential to generate significant community impact, The Federation launched the Impact Grants Initiative. A venture philanthropy styled program that provides a “hands-on” approach to grantmaking. The first round of this initiative will provide $1M in funding to grow new programs that engage adults between 21 and 45 years of age in Jewish life.

PROVIDING A GATEWAY FOR FAMILY ENGAGEMENT IN THE JEWISH COMMUNITY

In partnership with the Jim Joseph Foundation, the Early Childhood Education Initiative (ECEI) engages Bay Area Jewish families with young children in meaningful Jewish life and community. Recognized in the Bay Area as a center of best practice in Jewish education for children, teachers and families, the ECEI promotes ground-breaking programs, publicizes preschool and camp scholarships, creates the model for recruiting, training, and retaining high potential Jewish educators in the field, and advocates for a level of compensation that reflects the importance of their profession.

PARTNERING WITH SYNAGOGUES

Our Bay Area neighborhood synagogues continue to be a welcoming gateway to generations who value Judaism’s traditions, rich in ceremony and meaning. That’s why the Jewish Community Federation and Endowment Fund continues to partner with them on programs that help strengthen Jewish identity, support education and provide inspirational cultural activities. The Synagogue Federation Partnership is a collaboration with 30+ Bay Area synagogues to encourage broader participation within our community and bolster long-term economic sustainability of these institutions.

Guided by a century of

Jewish values, we help our

donors harness the power

of communal giving and

infuse their philanthropy

with meaning. The

Federation has a long

history of creating impact

in our community by being

innovative. We finance

ground-breaking programs

and services, foster

leadership, construct

funding strategies and

provide vital, life-changing

resources for individuals,

families and Jewish

institutions. By partnering

with our local community,

we work together to

transform innovative

ideas into meaningful

plans of action.

In order to save paper and preserve the environment, detailed lists of all grants made are available on our website at www.jewishfed.org/AR2010.

8

Innovation is the ability to see change as an opportunity.

- Albert Einstein“InnovInno

unity. nity.

Page 10: 2010 JCF Impact Report

2 0 1 0 I M PA C T R E P O R T

OUTREACH AND ENGAGEMENT

Page 11: 2010 JCF Impact Report

CREATING COMMON GROUND THROUGH COMMON INTERESTS

The Business Leadership Council (BLC) is comprised of Bay Area Jewish business leaders who find meaningful business connections through highly engaged philanthropy. Over the past year BLC events have covered newsworthy topics, provided professional development opportunities, hosted a variety of panels and featured prominent speakers from diverse industries.

Women’s Philanthropy (WP) empowers women of all ages to be socially conscious. The group’s educational, volunteer, and fundraising events provide women the opportunity to connect with one another and their community, develop leadership skills and financially support the Jewish community both here and abroad.

DEVELOPING A NEW GENERATION OF JEWISH COMMUNITY LEADERS

The Federation provides portals of Jewish engagement for people of all ages and from all walks of life. For young people in particular, there are myriad ways to participate in the Jewish community and connect with each other. The Young Adult Division (YAD) holds entertaining events, promotes volunteerism, and offers leadership development programs.

The Young Funders Forum provides a continuum of philanthropic education and networking opportunities. Their programs help participants develop philanthropic skills, teach them about effective giving strategies, and provide networking opportunities, ultimately strengthening the connection these young adults have with the Jewish community.

BUILDING JEWISH IDENTITY OVERSEAS

Budapest, Hungary may seem like an unlikely place to fund Jewish leadership development, but in fact, it is exactly the type of program that highlights the Jewish Community Federation’s commitment to providing direct aid to some of the most vulnerable Jewish communities around the world. In partnership with the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee (JDC), the Federation is investing in a major new leadership initiative in Budapest. By bringing together skilled individuals with different politics and agendas, we’re working to help create a deeper Jewish connection through participants’ engagement with one another and their Jewish community.

BRINGING PEOPLE TOGETHER THROUGH EVENTS

Every year, an estimated 20,000 people come from near and far to attend the largest Jewish gathering in the Bay Area −Israel in the Gardens. Organized by the Federation‘s Israel Center, the major clearinghouse for all Israel-related activities, the day including high profile Israeli entertainers on the main stage, accompanied by a myriad of booths representing local Jewish and Israeli agencies. There are also children’s activities, Middle Eastern food, jewelry, arts & crafts, books, films, prizes (including a chance to win free airfare to Israel) and fashions from around the world. Families and individuals alike take this opportunity to celebrate the birthday of our Jewish home together.

Our outreach efforts

are focused on creating

doorways to Jewish

experiences. With a

collaborative and

community-based

approach, we strive to

make opportunities for

Jewish life more

accessible. We

partner with agencies,

organizations, lay

leaders, donors and

volunteers who invest

their dollars, time and

energy in our collective

effort to make everyone

feel welcomed and

part of our Jewish

community.

In order to save paper and preserve the environment, detailed lists of all grants made are available on our website at www.jewishfed.org/AR2010.

10

Dare to reach out your hand into the darkness, to pull another hand into the light. - Norman B. Rice“DareDarh d

ss, to ps, to pht. ht.

Page 12: 2010 JCF Impact Report

2 0 1 0 I M PA C T R E P O R T

EDUCATING CHILDREN, TEENS AND YOUNG ADULTS

Page 13: 2010 JCF Impact Report

BRINGING YOUTH CLOSER TO THEIR CULTURAL HERITAGE

A visit to Israel is a milestone in a young person’s evolving Jewish identity and provides the foundation for building a life-long connection. But for many, cost is a formidable barrier. The Gift of Israel is a partnership savings program that includes parents, synagogues, and the Federation, and helps ensure that teenagers from all economic backgrounds can embark on this life-changing journey. The Haas-Koshland Memorial Award provides $20,000 for a year of study or personal development in Israel and Endowment grants ensure Birthright trips for Jewish young adults.

BUILDING CHILDREN’S JEWISH IDENTITY THROUGH BOOKS AND MUSIC

With Federation funding and the generosity of the Jim Joseph Foundation and the Harold Grinspoon Foundation, through The PJ Library® parents create a special time with their children to learn about and appreciate their heritage. The program sends free Jewish-content books and music on a monthly basis to children ages 6 months to 7 years.

KEEPING A QUALITY JEWISH EDUCATION WITHIN REACH

More than twenty funds and foundations provide scholarships and financial assistance for programs from preschool to college. By helping families in financial need, we make Jewish experiences more accessible and keep life-changing education affordable. The Federation awards scholarships for Jewish preschools, day schools, overnight and special-needs camps, family specialty and LGBT camps. We also provide college assistance and on-the-ground learning opportunities by funding first-time teen trips to Israel.

CREATING UNIQUE LEADERSHIP OPPORTUNITIES FOR TEENS

Through the Jewish Teen Foundations, students research Jewish and general community needs, develop mission statements, fundraise and engage in strategic grantmaking. The Diller Teen Fellows Program (funded by the Helen Diller Family Foundation) is an international leadership program for Jewish teens empowering participants to be active, effective leaders with a strong Jewish identity and a respect for pluralism. The Diller Teen Tikkun Olam Awards annually recognizes five Jewish teens for excep-tional community service and outstanding leadership. Winners receive an award of $36,000 for their college education or to further implement their vision for making the world a better place.

WELCOMING COLLEGE STUDENTS THROUGH HILLEL

For many students, college isn’t just about academics; it’s about finding a peer group and developing a broader sense of self. Hillels provide opportunities for Jewish students all over the country to explore and celebrate their Jewish identity through its global network of regional centers, campus Foundations and Hillel student organizations. The Federation provides key operating support for Northern California Hillels in eight locations, helping ensure that Bay Area students maintain their connections to the Jewish communityand their Jewish identity.

We are committed to

advancing and promoting

programs that address the

needs of the youngest

members of our community

and their families. From

preschool through grade

school to college, we

provide access to the

highest quality Jewish

education, build

understanding of and

identification with Israel,

create opportunities for

young adults to practice

philanthropy, and offer

programs that nurture

community leaders. By

empowering our youth,

we ensure future

generations who are

committed to community

service, the Jewish

people, and Israel.

In order to save paper and preserve the environment, detailed lists of all grants made are available on our website, at www.jewishfed.org/AR2010.

12

While we try to teach our children all about life, our children teach us what life is all about. - Angela Schwindt“WhileWhibb

our chilur chilout. ut.

Page 14: 2010 JCF Impact Report

2 0 1 0 I M PA C T R E P O R T

CARING FOR ELDERS

Page 15: 2010 JCF Impact Report

ENRICHING THE QUALITY OF LIFE FOR OLDER ADULTS

Federation is committed to caring for the body, mind, and spirit of our elderly. That’s why we help ensure that our senior assisted living campuses have the funds they need to operate. At the Jewish Home, where residents’ average age is 87, seniors enjoy a wide range of recreational, cultural, intellectual, creative, and religious activities. From preparing quality meals to having access to 24 hour psychiatric care to celebrating Jewish holidays with friends, residents get on-site and off-site opportunities for enhanced living

KEEPING SENIORS ACTIVE BY PROVIDING TRANSPORTATION

When seniors lose their ability to drive, they can become isolated and depressed, and eventually decline in health. Compared with older adults who drive, non-driving older adults make 65% fewer social visits, family or religious trips, and 15% fewer trips to the doctor. And among Jewish seniors, transportation is the number one unmet need. The Senior Transportation Initiative, the Get Up and Go program, and Newhouse Rides are all a lifeline, giving autonomy to many who would otherwise be home-bound. These comprehensive programs work by funding older driver training courses, providing rides so seniors can get to medical appointments and do grocery shopping, and arranging group trips to local arts and cultural activities.

FEEDING BOTH BODY AND SOUL

The Kosher Lunch Program offers nutritious kosher meals to low-income seniors who would be at risk of social isolation and nutritional deprivation. The Friendship Circle “Lunch and Learn” program not only provides a hot vegetarian buffet 2-3 times per month, but also serves as a gateway to other events including clubs and classes, thereby engaging a greater number of seniors in activities.

OFFERING INTERESTING PROGRAMMING OPTIONS FOR SENIORS

Everyone likes to feel welcome and invited. The Sonoma Friendship Circle program does just that for seniors. Through Federation funding, the JCC provides social, cultural, and educational programming for seniors in the remote outlying areas of Sonoma County. From excursions to affordable activities to an Annual Tea, the program has a tremendous impact on the social life of Jewish seniors.

SPIRITUAL CARE FOR THOSE IN NEED

The Bay Area Jewish Healing Center provides spiritual care, counseling, and education to the bereaved, to those living with illness, and to those caring for the ill. The Grief and Growing Camp takes place within the beautiful natural setting of Camp Newman in Santa Rosa and is filled with specialized workshops and activities designed to help individuals and families attend to their losses and identify tools to help them in their mourning.

From its earliest roots,

the Federation placed

importance not only on

building a strong Jewish

community, but also taking

care of the most at risk –

our elders. Many are

isolated, in frail health, and

possess limited financial

resources — struggling to

take care of their most

basic needs. Consistently

and over many years, the

Federation funds much-

needed services for seniors

in our community, helping

them remain active and

connected – to one

another and to the

Jewish community.

In order to save paper and preserve the environment, detailed lists of all grants made are available on our website at www.jewishfed.org/AR2010.

14

A test of a people is how it behaves toward the old.

- Abraham J. Heschel“A tesA te

old. old.

Page 16: 2010 JCF Impact Report

Federation Outreach and Engagement Programs

Communal Capacity Building and Benefits

Jewish Community Endowment Fund Services

$3,944,000

$3,032,000

$2,308,000

Community Benefit Activities $9,861,000

Supporting Foundation Programs and Expenses

131 Steuart Street Foundation

$5,414,000

$2,481,000

Supporting Foundations’ Programs and Expenses $7,895,000

Management and Administration

Fundraising including Campaign and Endowment

Building Costs (121 Steuart Street)

$4,201,000

$4,331,000

$1,157,000

Federation and Endowment Operating Costs $9,689,000

In order to save paper and preserve the environment, detailed lists of all grants made are available on our website at www.jewishfed.org/AR2010.

15

Page 17: 2010 JCF Impact Report

CAMPAIGN AND ENDOWED FUNDS GRANT RECIPIENTS

In order to save paper and preserve the environment, detailed lists of all grants made are available on our website at www.jewishfed.org/AR2010.

16

A Different LessonAchva BakeremAmerican & International Societies for Yad Vashem (2 grants)American Friends of Koret Israel Economic Development Fund (2 grants)American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee (10 grants)Atid Bamidbar (A Future in the Desert)Beit Tefilah in Gan YavnehBerkeley HillelOsher Marin Jewish Community Center (3 grants)Bet Tfila Israeli in Tel AvivBINA (2 grants)BlueStar PRB'nai B'rith Youth OrganizationBrandeis Hillel Day School (4 grants)Bureau of Jewish Education (29 grants)Chabad Jewish Center of Sonoma CountyChabad of Greater South BayChabad of MarinChabad of Noe ValleyChabad of North PeninsulaChai PreschoolCongregation Adath IsraelCongregation Beth AmCongregation Beth AmiCongregation Beth JacobCongregation Beth SholomCongregation B'nai Israel (2 grants)Congregation Emanu-ElCongregation Ner ShalomCongregation Rodef SholomCongregation Sherith IsraelFacing History and Ourselves National Foundation, Inc.Food Industry FoundationFriendship Circle (3 grants)

Gideon Hausner Jewish Day School (2 grants)HagarHand in HandHappy Shalom SchoolHebrew Free Loan Association (4 grants)Hillel at Davis and SacramentoHillel Foundation at Stanford UniversityHillel of Silicon Valley (2 grants)Hillel of Sonoma County (2 grants)Hillel the Foundation for Jewish Campus LifeHolocaust Center of Northern CaliforniaHolon MunicipalityI-KickInstitute on Aging (8 grants)International Association of Jewish Vocational ServicesIsrael Movement for Progressive JudaismJ - The Jewish News Weekly of Northern CaliforniaJerusalem Open HouseJewish Agency for Israel- North American Council, Inc.Jewish Communal Service AssocationJewish Community Center of San Francisco (8 grants)Jewish Community Center of Sonoma County (7 grants)Jewish Community Federation (38 grants)*Jewish Community High School of the Bay (2 grants)Jewish Community Relations Council (7 grants)Jewish Family and Children's Services (17 grants)Jewish Family and Children's Services of the East BayJewish Home & Senior Living Foundation (7 grants)Jewish Labor CommitteeJewish MilestonesJewish Partisan Educational Foundation

*For detailed list of JCF grants please visit www.jewishfed.org/ar2010-grants

$15,000 $15,000 $1,632

$80,000

$1,891,250

$35,000 $10,000 $77,000

$469,960

$100,000 $85,000 $7,000

$10,660 $331,905

$1,842,775 $3,600

$25,000 $2,645 $3,496 $4,000 $4,220 $1,000

$17,000 $4,500 $5,000 $8,692 $3,079

$10,865 $4,800 $9,000 $5,102 $6,000

$500 $40,000

$206,536 $25,000 $20,000

$3,590 $2,500

$60,095 $75,600

$329,750 $39,000 $13,860 $17,529 $30,000 $25,000

$334,961 $1,800

$35,000 $224,000

$15,000 $150,000

$900 $1,082,118

$219,904

$4,976,491 $146,395

$1,042,800 $1,639,481

$65,000

$828,962

$900 $25,000

$1,000

Page 18: 2010 JCF Impact Report

CAMPAIGN AND ENDOWED FUNDS GRANT RECIPIENTS

In order to save paper and preserve the environment, detailed lists of all grants made are available on our website at www.jewishfed.org/AR2010.

17

Jewish Public Affairs CommitteeJewish Vocational Service (11 grants)Judah L. Magnes MuseumJVP - Jerusalem Venture Partners -Bakehila (2 grants)Kav Mashve and MAASE Center (Isracorps)Kehillah Jewish High School (4 grants)Kibbutz EshbalLasova OrganizationLehrhaus JudaicaLeket (formerly: Table to Table)Link to the EnvironmentLisa Kampner Hebrew Academy of San Francisco (2 grants)Maase Center (Isracorps) (2 grants)Menorah Park (3 grants)Mercy High SchoolNISPED - Negev Institute for Strategies of Peace and DevelopmentNorthern California Board of Rabbis (3 grants)Oshman Family Jewish Community Center (9 grants)Paideia - The European Institute for Jewish Studies SwedenPalo Alto School for Jewish EducationPeninsula Jewish Community Center (4 grants)Peninsula Temple Beth El (2 grants)Peninsula Temple SholomRashi FoundationReboot, Inc.Ronald C. Wornick Jewish Day School (3 grants)San Francisco Conservatory of Music, Inc.San Francisco Hillel (2 grants)San Francisco Jewish Film Festival (2 grants)Santa Cruz Hillel FoundationSha'ar - by Kol Israel HaverimShalom Bayit (4 grants)Shalom Hartman InstituteSonoma State University Academic Foundation

South Peninsula Hebrew Day School (3 grants)Stanford Hospital and Clinics, Jewish Chaplaincy at Stanford University Medical CenterStanford UniversityTawonga Jewish Community Corporation (2 grants)Tech Careers (2 grants)Tel Hai CollegeThe Birthright Israel Foundation (2 grants)The Citizens’ Accord Forum Between Jews & Arabs in IsraelThe Contemporary Jewish Museum (2 grants)The Jewish Community Free Clinic of Sonoma County (2 grants)The Jewish Federations of North America (11 grants)The National MS SocietyThe Regents of the University of California at Berkeley (2 grants)The Susan G. Komen Breast Cancer Foundation, Inc.The Tides CenterThe Yaacov Herzog CenterThrough the Looking GlassTraveling Jewish TheatreTzeva: Youth Building a FutureUnited Kibbutz MovementUnited States Holocaust Memorial Museum (2 grants)University of Montana FoundationUpStart Bay AreaWorld Council of Jewish Communal Service AssociationYachad Modiin (2 grants)Yakov Herzog Center for Jewish StudiesYedidYesodot and Bina

$50,500 $1,441,470

$21,000 $145,000

$100,000 $1,140,232

$20,000 $20,000 $50,280 $15,000 $20,000

$178,528

$140,000 $76,500 $5,000

$50,000

$235,395 $497,729

$65,000

$8,750 $503,236 $14,000 $5,000

$40,000 $20,000

$166,579 $1,500

$119,080 $38,735 $67,340 $25,000 $91,000 $50,000 $3,675

$178,892 $10,000

$130,000 $142,170 $150,000

$60,000 $336,968

$25,000

$75,000 $40,000

$1,334,401

$180 $180,000

$180 $5,700 $7,225

$618 $24,060 $25,000 $15,000

$1,632

$1,000 $25,500

$2,500

$44,000 $15,000 $35,000 $15,000

Page 19: 2010 JCF Impact Report

Richard Fiedotin, M.D., Campaign Chair; Robert Blum, Chair, Business Leadership Council; Jeff Zlot, Vice-Chair, Business Leadership Council; Randy Maycock, Campaign Chair, Business Leadership Council; Lory Pilchik, President, Young Adult Division; Tanya Kaminsky, Campaign Chair, Young Adult Division; Arthur Slepian, Chair, LGBT Alliance; Norman Traeger, H. Michael Feldman, Marc Bernstein, Campaign Captains; Jan Reicher, President, Women’s Philanthropy; Carol Weitz, Campaign Chair, Women’s Philanthropy; Joan Eichler, Vice Campaign Chair, Women’s Philanthropy; Jenny Wolfe, Regional President, Women’s Philanthropy (Marin); Rose Barlow, Regional President, Women’s Philanthropy (Marin); Mara Langer, Regional President, Women’s Philanthropy (North Peninsula); Carol Roberts, Regional President, Women’s Philanthropy (South Peninsula); Lilly Robinson, Regional Campaign Chair, Women’s Philanthropy (South Peninsula); Ellen Fellenz, Regional Campaign Chair, Women’s Philanthropy (North Peninsula); Lisa Wertheim, Regional Campaign Chair, Women’s Philanthropy (Marin), and hundreds of volunteer solicitors.

Development Professionals: Maxine Epstein, Roxanne Cohen, Jeanne Miller, Lisa Finkelstein; Alia Gorkin, Debbie Berkowitz; Jill Davis, Jonathan Friedman, Stephanie Rosenbaum; Denise Ron, Ariella Leafer, Elizabeth Leep, Robyn Carmel, Emily Whitehead

2010 CAMPAIGN VOLUNTEERS AND PROFESSIONAL FUNDRAISERS

Lynn Bunim, Chair; Laura Lauder, Vice Chair; Phil Strause, Vice Chair; Joan Levison; Jim Davis; Liki Abrams; Susie Sorkin; Roselyn Swig; Betty Schafer; Gale Mondry; Judy Shulman; Jeff Zlot; Josh Smith; Dana Corvin; David Steirman; Judy Huret; Phil Schlein; Rick Lenat; Nancy Grand (ex-officio)

EXECUTIVE ALLOCATIONS COMMITTEE

CAPITAL PLANNING AND ALLOCATIONS SUBCOMMITTEES

Capital Planning Committee: Dan Safier, Chair; Michael Adler; Rick Baum; Ann Bear; Natalie Berg; Steve Carroll; Adele Corvin; Sue Diamond; Jeff Farber; Steven Fayne; H. Michael Feldman; Howard Fine; Andrew Friedman; David Friedman; Tom Kasten; Robin Kennedy; Jim Koshland; Susan Lowenberg; Mark Myers; John Pritzker; Richard Rosenberg; Alan Rothenberg; Lynn Sedway; Richard Seiler; Stuart Seiler; Scott Seligman; Gary Shapiro; Josh Smith ; Gayle Starr; Joelle Steefel; David Steirman; Michael Strunsky; Sandy Tandowsky; Howard Zack

Caring for the Vulnerable Subcommittee: Joan Levison, Chair; Jim Davis, Vice Chair; Adele Corvin; Eileen Lynette; Karen Aidem Maring;Joan Davis; Daniel Lurie

Israel & Overseas Subcommittee: Liki Abrams, Chair; Susie Sorkin, Vice Chair; Mark Abelson; Kevin Waldman; Michael Futterman; Riva Berelson; Alan Rothenberg; Sam Lauter; Sophie Beraznik; Carol Traeger; Ellen Saliman; Brian Perlman; Murray Zucker

Education & Youth Subcommittee: Judy Shulman, Chair; Gayle Mondry, Co-Chair; Nanette Freedland; Paul Robbins; Len Lehmann; Rosanne Levitt; Kathy Williams; Marc Dollinger

Culture & Public Affairs Subcommittee: Roselyn Swig, Chair; Betty Schafer, Vice-Chair; Mark Schlesinger; Valli Benesch Tandler;Al Baum; Sue Morris

JEWISH COMMUNITY FEDERATION EXECUTIVE TEAM

JEWISH COMMUNITY FEDERATION OFFICES

Jennifer Gorovitz, Chief Executive Officer

Mark Reisbaum, Chief Endowment Officer

Maxine Epstein, Chief Development Officer

Steve Leibman, Chief Human Resources Officer

Jim Offel, Chief Operations Officer

Mark Koenig, Chief Finance Officer

Andrew Fradkin, Chief Policy Officer and

Lori Warren, Senior Marketing and Communication

San Francisco main office 121 Steuart StreetSan Francisco, CA 94105

415.777.0411

South Peninsula Taube-Koret Campus for Jewish Life 3921 Fabian Way, Suite A-017Palo Alto, CA 94303

650.852.9020

North Peninsula 800 Foster City Blvd.Foster City, CA 94404

650.349.1523

Marin 200 N. San Pedro Road, Suite A-220San Rafael, CA 94903

415.499.1223

Sonoma 1301 Farmers Lane, Ste. 103 Santa Rosa, CA 95405

707.568.6207

Israel JDC-Hill P.O. Box 3489Jerusalem ISRAEL 91034

011.972.02.655.723318

Director of Funds & Foundations

Director

Page 20: 2010 JCF Impact Report

President: James M. Koshland

Vice Presidents: Danny Grossman, Leadership; Lynn Bunim, Domestic Commissions & Agency Relationships;

Sue Diamond, Affinity Groups; Tom Kasten, Regional Councils; Liki Abrams, Israel Initiatives

Treasurer: Steven N. Fayne

Secretary: Karen Perlman

At Large EC Member/President Elect: Nancy Grand

Campaign Chair: Richard Fiedotin

Endowment Committee Chair: F. Warren Hellman

Immediate Past President: John Pritzker

Jewish Community Endowment Fund, Chair F. Warren Hellman

Endowment Allocations, Chair Laura Lauder

Legacy Development, Chair John Freidenrich

Investment Committee, Chair John S. Osterweis

2010 JEWISH COMMUNITY FEDERATION EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE

JEWISH COMMUNITY FEDERATION BOARD OF TRUSTEES

JEWISH COMMUNITY FEDERATION BOARD OF GOVERNORS

ENDOWMENT FUND COMMITTEE

David AggerAlvin H. Baum, Jr.Riva BerelsonMatt BerlerJerome BraunNathan BrillLynn BunimAdele CorvinDana CorvinAnnette Dobbs

Steven FayneNanci FredkinJohn FreidenrichRobert FriendJohn GoldmanNancy GrandFrances GreenDouglas HellerF. Warren HellmanJudy Huret

Tom KastenRon KaufmanJames KoshlandLaura LauderGinny LawrenceLen LehmannJoan LevisonAlvin LevittSusan MoldawMervin Morris

Bernard OsherJohn OsterweisLisa PritzkerJohn PritzkerRichard RosenbergAlan RothenbergDan SafierJackie SafierJack SchaferPhil Schlein

Mark SchlesingerDon SeilerLydia ShorensteinSarah E. SteinDavid SteirmanPhil StrauseRoselyne C. SwigValli Benesch TandlerDavid WagonfeldHarold Zlot

Liki AbramsDavid AggerValli Benesch Tandler Mark BernsteinLynn BunimAdele CorvinDana Corvin

Sue DiamondSteven FayneH. Michael Feldman Richard Fiedotin Lawrence GallantNancy GrandDanny Grossman

F. Warren HellmanMichael JacobsTom KastenRon KaufmanJames M. KoshlandRick LenatJoan Levison

Galina LeytesKaren PerlmanLory PilchikLisa PortnoyJohn PritzkerJan ReicherAlan Rothenberg

Dan SafierJosh SmithDavid SteirmanDiane ZackJeffrey Zlot

Liki AbramsMichael AdlerDavid AggerAnn BearValli Benesch Tandler Mark BernsteinRuvim BraudeJerome I. BraunLynn BunimAnne CookAdele CorvinDana CorvinSue DiamondMolly DickAnnette DobbsSteven FayneH. Michael Feldman

Elliot FelsonRabbi Joey Felsen Richard Fiedotin Nanette Freedland David Friedman Vanessa FriedmanMichael Futterman Lawrence GallantJudith GoldkrandJohn D. GoldmanSusan GolovinNancy GrandFrances D. GreenDanny GrossmanScott HartleyDouglas M. HellerF. Warren Hellman

Alex IngersollMichael JacobsTom KastenRon KaufmanJames M. Koshland Laura LauderRick LenatJoan LevisonGalina LeytesDaryl MessingerJeff MaltzLeonid MezhvinskyLarry MoskowitzAdam NoilyJohn OsterweisKaren PerlmanLory Pilchik

Janis PoppLisa PortnoyJohn PritzkerShira RabinJan ReicherOrli RinatRichard RosenbergAlan RothenbergToby RubinDan SafierDonald H. SeilerJordan SillsArthur SlepianSusie SorkinJosh SmithJoelle SteefelDavid Steirman

Phil StrauseRabbi Josh Strulowitz Marlene SturmRoselyne C. SwigBob TandlerCarol TraegerDavid WagonfeldGina WaldmanKevin WaldmanRabbi Eric WeissKathy WilliamsDiane ZackHoward ZackHarold ZlotJeffrey Zlot