2003 a Nnual R Eport

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2003 a Nnual R Eport 2003 ANNUAL R EPORT The History of Rose Community Foundation MAJOR GENERAL ROSE MEDICAL CENTER MAURICE ROSE In the year prior to General Rose’s death, a group of Rose Community Jewish business and professional leaders, led by Maurice Foundation derives Shwayder, had started to organize an effort to build a new its name from hospital that would fill a gap in the Denver community. Major General Denver had a critical shortage of hospital beds, and many Maurice Rose, physicians returning from World War II had difficulty one of America’s finding places to practice. The new hospital would be most decorated open to doctors and patients of all creeds, races and military leaders origins, and dedicated to excellence in medical care. The of the 20th campaign to raise funds for the new hospital gained century. The son momentum when the organizers decided to name the new and grandson of hospital in honor of General Rose, and formed the Orthodox Jewish General Rose Memorial Hospital Association. The group rabbis, Maurice undertook an intensive local and national fundraising Rose was born in campaign, enlisting the support of well-known Jewish Connecticut in 1899, celebrities of the time. On August 31, 1948, General then moved to Denver with Dwight D. Eisenhower laid the cornerstone for the main his family in 1902. From early building of the hospital. childhood, he was drawn to military life, joining the Adopting the motto, “Our standards are simply higher,” National Guard at age 15 after finishing his studies at East Rose Medical Center was an innovator, bringing to Denver High School. He was later sent home when it became the region’s first coronary-care unit, the Rocky Mountain known that he had falsified his age. At 17, Rose was area’s primary center for the treatment of arthritis and accepted for Officer Candidate School, and at 18 was rheumatic diseases, and one of the region’s most wounded in a World War I battle in France. He returned progressive programs in obstetrics, gynecology, and to work in Colorado briefly after the war, but soon newborn care. The hospital was also a focal point for returned to Army life. community service and philanthropy. Several generations During World War II, Major General Rose led a number of from the same families supported the hospital as doctors, successful military drives in North Africa and Europe, donors, volunteers, and staff professionals. including one of the first assaults on German forces occupying Omaha Beach one day after D-Day. In 1944, he ROSE COMMUNITY FOUNDATION became commander of the U.S. Army’s 3rd Armored In 1995, Rose Medical Center’s trustees, after assessing the Division, which moved through France, Belgium and was dramatic shifts in the economics of health care, the first military unit to penetrate Germany during World understood that an independent nonprofit hospital could War II. General Rose was killed on the battlefield March not easily endure in the emerging economic climate. On 30, 1945. During his career, he received many military April 25, 1995, following a national trend among honors including the Distinguished Service Medal. Upon independent nonprofit hospitals, Rose Medical Center was his death, The New York Times wrote, “The American acquired by a health-care corporation. With the proceeds Army was deprived of one of its most skilled and gallant of the sale, approximately $170 million, the hospital officers and a man of rare personal charm…” trustees decided to form Rose Community Foundation as a vehicle to perpetuate the legacy of the hospital: its standards of excellence, its tradition of philanthropy, and its commitment to serve the entire community. FOUNDING TRUSTEES Stephen S. Kurtz, Chair Jeannie Fuller Martin H. Shore Linda G. Alvarado Norman Levy Robert A. Silverberg Joseph M. Aragon Sister Lydia M. Peña, Ph.D. Richard B. Tucker David C. Boyles David M. Pollock Albert C. Yates, Ph.D. Fred T. Davine Richard L. Robinson Steven W. Farber Stephen H. Shogan, M.D. Donald L. Kortz, Founding President and CEO 2003 GRANTMAKING Table of Contents SUMMARY In 2003, Rose Community THE STATE OF THE FOUNDATION 4 Foundation approved 750 PROGRAM AREAS grants totaling $8,119,000 in financial support to the Greater AGING 6 Denver community. This CHILD AND FAMILY DEVELOPMENT 11 includes all grants awarded from the Foundation’s 2003 EDUCATION 16 grantmaking budget as well as HEALTH 21 $215,000 in funds received from other foundations and JEWISH LIFE 26 organizations to support COMMUNITY BUILDING GRANTS 33 collaborative projects, and managed and disbursed by Rose HE NITIATIVE T BOOST I 34 Community Foundation. It also MATCHING GIFTS AND DISCRETIONARY GRANTS 36 includes grants from Matching Gifts and Discretionary Grants ROSE BIOMEDICAL 38 ($223,000 – see page 34), ROSE WOMEN’S ORGANIZATION 40 Rose Women’s Organization ($97,000 – see page 38), and DONOR AND ENDOWMENT SERVICES 42 Donor-Advised Funds and DONOR PROFILE 43 Supporting Organizations ($1,401,000 – see page 43). DONOR FUNDS 44 DONORS TO ROSE COMMUNITY FOUNDATION 46 GUIDELINES FOR GRANT PROPOSALS 49 ROSE COMMUNITY FOUNDATION IS AFFILIATED 2003 FINANCIAL STATEMENTS 50 WITH THE FOLLOWING BOARD OF TRUSTEES AND COMMITTEE MEMBERS 52 PROFESSIONAL GROUPS: American Society on Aging – ROSE COMMUNITY FOUNDATION STAFF 54 asaging.org Colorado Association of Funders – coloradofunders.org Cover art by Barbara Froula Colorado Association of Nonprofit The watercolor art on the cover depicts a view of Garden Place Academy in Globeville, Organizations – canpo.org a North Denver neighborhood. Colorado Planned Giving Denver-based artist Barbara Froula’s widely-commissioned paintings of the city reflect Roundtable – cpgr.org her background in architecture and her love for the urban landscape. She also enjoys traveling and painting on location. In 2004, Froula and Czech author Václav Cílek The Communications Network – published Prague: Between History and Dreams. The book combines 100 of Froula’s comnetwork.org paintings with a written tour of the magical city of Prague and its environs, including the historic Jewish Quarter and Terezin, a former concentration camp. For more Council on Foundations – cof.org information, visit barbarafroula.com. Grantmakers for Children, Youth and Families – gcyf.org Rose Community Foundation Editorial Staff: Grantmakers for Education – Jaci Arkin, Communications Assistant Susan Knudten, Communications Officer edfunders.org Phil Nash, Vice President for Communications Grantmakers for Effective Organizations – geofunders.org Graphic Design: Laurie Shields Design Grantmakers in Aging – giaging.org Grantmakers in Health – gih.org Photography: Chris Takagi Exceptions: Photo on page 25 courtesy of The Maurice B. Shwayder Camp Grants Managers Network – Rose Community Foundation board photo on page 50, Eric Weber gmnetwork.org Rose Community Foundation staff photos on pages 52-53, Katy Tartakoff Rose Community Foundation file photos on inside front cover, pages 2-3 Hispanics in Philanthropy – hiponline.org Printer: A.B. Hirschfeld Press Jewish Funders Network – jfunders.org 3 The State of the Foundation We are pleased to present Rose Colorado Health Institute (CHI) media attention and drew the interest Community Foundation’s Annual opened its doors in mid-2003, and is of the state’s policymakers and Report for 2003. It was a year marked on its way to becoming the state’s prominent health-care providers. The by significant accomplishments, leading source for health-data Mental Health Funders Collaborative financial challenges and thoughtful resources and policy analysis (see page continues to meet and will announce a deliberation about the 21). CHI is a joint joint funding project later in 2004. foundation’s future. initiative of Rose Community In December, the Denver Teacher When Rose Community Foundation, Caring for Compensation Project completed an Foundation’s founding Colorado Foundation exhaustive study in the Denver Public trustees set the found- and The Colorado Schools demonstrating a strong ation in motion in Trust. Each foundation correlation between performance- 1995, they envisioned pledged nearly $2 based pay and student achievement. an organization that million to provide CHI Rose Community Foundation granted would have a far- with $6 million to fund more than $2 million to support the reaching impact on the its operations over the four-year project. The findings were a community. To do so Institute’s first five key factor in the joint efforts of Denver would take more than years. The three Public Schools and the Denver money; it would take foundations also Classroom Teachers Association to leadership, knowledge, appoint members to develop a revolutionary new trust, and perhaps CHI’s board of trustees. compensation system that most important, it Steven W. Farber CHI’s mission is to substantially elevates the value of would take time. advance the health of proven classroom performance and Many of the grants we made in the people of Colorado by serving as professional evaluation in determining earlier years represented an independent and impartial source an individual teacher’s compensation. investments in change that would of reliable and relevant health-related In March 2004, teachers voted to require years to reach maturity. information for policymakers, health adopt the new compensation system, Equally important, many of the planners, the business and nonprofit making Denver one of the first public- grants we’ve made in previous years communities, advocacy and consumer school systems in the nation to put have paved the way for current and groups, health-care providers, funders, classroom performance front and future initiatives that will help many and the media. Rose Community center in salary structure. The eventual people lead better lives and make Foundation’s longstanding success of the new our community stronger. In 2003, support for health-policy system hinges on we saw the fruition of several leadership contributed voter approval of a important efforts that had their substantially to the design future mill-levy beginnings much earlier in the and development of CHI.
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