Baltimore Community Foundation

The Baltimore Community Foundation (BCF) is a community foundation created by the community of Baltimore to serve the current and future needs of the Baltimore region.

Baltimore Community Foundation, Inc.
Formation1972
TypeNon-Profit Community Foundation
23-7180620
Location
  • Baltimore, Maryland
Coordinates39.2998027°N 76.615487°W / 39.2998027; -76.615487
Area served
Greater Baltimore, Maryland
MethodDonations and Grants
30
Key people
  • Laura L. Gamble (Chair)
  • Tedd Alexander III (Vice Chair & Treasurer)
  • Josh E. Fidler (Vice Chair)
  • Marsha Y. Reeves (Secretary) Shanaysha Sauls (President & CEO)
Staff
33
Websitewww.bcf.org
Member of the Maryland Association of Nonprofit Organizations

BCF offers donors customized support for their individual philanthropic goals, expert assistance in learning more about the causes they care about, and the opportunity to join others with similar interests to learn and give together.

The Baltimore Community Foundation distributed $18 million in 2018 to hundreds of nonprofit organizations in the Baltimore region and beyond.[1] BCF comprises more than 800 different charitable funds created by a diverse group of individuals, families, and corporations.[1]

Recognized as one of the country's most civically engaged community foundations, BCF's role as advocate was highlighted in FSG Social Impact Advisors’ 2009 report, Raising Money While Raising Hell.[2]

History

In 1972, leaders of Baltimore's five major banks of that time joined together to establish the Community Foundation of the Greater Baltimore Area. Inspired by the success of the nation's first community foundation in Cleveland, Ohio, and a rapidly growing network of community foundations nationwide, co-founder Robert Levi of Mercantile-Safe Deposit and Trust, who would become the fledgling organization's first chairman, felt strongly that Baltimore needed “a philanthropic organization that was a gathering of all people—no color line, no religious affiliation, no special cause.”[3]

Governance

BCF is governed by a 30-member board of trustees, selected to represent diverse community interests.[4] The foundation's staff includes professionals in community investment, donor services, development, finance and administration, and communications.[5]

Initiatives

A number of key initiatives of the Baltimore Community Foundation are:

  • Middle Grades Partnership offers academically promising Baltimore middle school students the opportunity to excel in the city's most challenging high schools by providing them with comprehensive summer and after-school learning opportunities.[6]
  • Central Maryland Transportation Alliance is a coalition of Greater Baltimore's business, environmental and community leaders dedicated to improving travel efficiency in Central Maryland.[7]
gollark: I think a big reason for inefficiency is that some sites seem obsessed with shipping big images with their content even when it's not meaningful or helpful.
gollark: I've designed my website to be very lightweight, though, so it's reasonably good for people on slow connections and loads very fast.
gollark: I'm on a 30something Mbps VDSL connection, which I consider bad but which is actually somehow better than many people I interact with.
gollark: I don't think that would work, maybe do `WHERE selector LIKE ?` and substitute in `%whatever%` instead.
gollark: Maybe if you want to interact with anything but lock-in-y Apple stuff an iPad was a bad choice, though.

References

  1. "About the Baltimore Community Foundation". www.bcf.org. Retrieved 2019-10-30.
  2. Kania, John, et al. Raising Money While Raising Hell. FSG Social Impact Advisors, Fall 2009, p. 2-3. Archived 2013-10-17 at the Wayback Machine
  3. Levi, Robert H. Interview with Suzanne Wolff. 28 February 1994.
  4. "BCF's Board of Trustees". www.bcf.org. Retrieved 2019-10-30.
  5. "Staff of the Baltimore Community Foundation". www.bcf.org. Retrieved 2019-10-30.
  6. "History – Middle Grades Partnership". middlegradespartnership.org. Retrieved 2019-10-30.
  7. "Sponsors – Central Maryland Transportation Alliance". Retrieved 2019-10-30.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.