NSP Impact Report 2008
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Transcript of NSP Impact Report 2008
10Years
NATIONAL STUDENT PARTNERSHIPS | IMPACT REPORT 2007-2008
“ After I helped one of my clients, who had been hopping from one homeless shelter to another, fi nd a job, she looked me straight in the eye and said, “Thank you so much. You don’t know how much this means to me. Now I can get my life back together again.”
- NSP VOLuNTEER
2007-2008 Impact Report | 1
mission
NSP’s mission is to combat poverty in our communities by engaging our nation’s college students in this effort.
vision
We envision a day when all people in our country will have the opportunity to achieve economic security and pursue their aspirations.
TAbLE Of CONTENTSLetters from the CEO and Chairman ................. 2
Program Year Highlights .................................. 3
Our Model ...................................................... 4
10 Years of NSP ............................................. 5
Timeline ........................................................ 6
Alumni: Where Are They Now? ......................... 8
Clients: Where Are They Now? .......................... 9
Volunteer Statistics and Profile ........................ 10
Client Statistics and Profile ............................. 12
Financials ...................................................... 14
Thanking Our Donors ...................................... 15
NSP Directory ................................................ 20
2 | National Student Partnerships
“Dear Friends,
It has been a decade of remarkable growth and accomplishments for National Student Partnerships. As one who was present at the very beginning, I am both gratified and inspired that over these past 10 years NSP has helped more than 30,000 families pull away from poverty and homelessness, while graduating over 5,000 student advocates into its alumni ranks.
As I reflect on what NSP has achieved over the past ten years, I am more convinced than ever of the power of its mission to combat poverty in our communities by engaging our nation’s best and brightest college students in this effort. The individuals profiled in this report, both alumni and clients, prove that NSP has achieved success in beginning to execute this mission. We have also proved that the need is great, and I am excited and encouraged by the way NSP’s management team is meeting this challenge – deepening our presence in our communities, bringing in critical support like New Profit and Monitor Group to engage in rigorous growth planning, and making sure our brand reflects the depth of our local impact.
I look forward to working with all of our valued supporters in the year ahead as we craft a vision for NSP’s next decade of service.
With deepest appreciation for your commitment to NSP’s important work,
LETTERS fROM THE CEO AND CHAIRMANDear Friends,
I never could have imagined that at this moment – 10 years into NSP’s history – we would be facing the greatest test of our mission in our organizational lifetime. I have to confess that it has been hard for me take the time to reflect on all that we have learned and accomplished when I feel so focused on how much more we are going to need to accomplish in the next 10 years.
As the immediate sting of our nation’s financial crisis settles into a long-term reality, the recovery battle will need to be waged on two fronts. The first undoubtedly will be at the highest levels of government and finance. The second front line will be drawn from community to community across the United States as more families face unemployment, poverty, and homelessness. It will be organizations like National Student Partnerships manning that front line, helping families create a plan of action and providing hope and moral support through the tough times ahead. The good news is that our nation’s young people are activated and ready to serve now. This is NSP’s moment.
This report is really an extended thank-you letter to all of our supporters. Now, more than ever, we need your support not only to sustain, but to deepen and expand NSP’s ability to serve families in the next 10 years.
Words cannot express my gratitude for your support of NSP,
Kirsten E. LodalCEO and Co-founderNational Student Partnerships
Marne Obernauer, Jr.Chairman National Student Partnerships board of Directors
The most valuable insight I have gained as an NSP volunteer is that everyone has the capacity to change their lives and their circumstances.
2007-2008 Impact Report | 3
2008 ANNUAL LEADERSHIP SUMMIT
The Annual Leadership Summit, held February 8-10 in Washington, DC, was a huge success. Over 250 students, alumni, community partners, clients, supporters, and special guests came together to share insights, challenges, and best practices as they pursue NSP’s mission. Attendees also had the opportunity to hear remarks from such inspiring keynote speakers as General Colin Powell; Alan Khazei, CEO of Be the Change; and Dean Furbush, President of College Summit.
ANNUAL WASHINgTON, DC bENEfIT
In May, NSP honored Congresswoman Rosa DeLauro and Senator Edward Kennedy with the “Leadership in Service” award at its annual DC event. 150 of NSP’s strongest DC-area supporters gathered to celebrate NSP and the work of the Congresswoman and Senator. The two were presented with the award for their commitment to promoting volunteerism and to strengthening low-income communities both in their home states and across the country. RE-NAMINg AND RE-bRANDINg
Looking ahead to its 10th Anniversary, NSP officially launched an initiative to better match its external brand with the power of its on-the-ground work. In March, NSP was one of the first DC-based nonprofits to be awarded a “Naming and Visual Identity” grant from the Taproot Foundation. Taproot works to strengthens nonprofits by engaging business professionals in pro-bono service in the areas of marketing, HR, and IT consulting. Working with a Taproot creative team—as well as other critical thought partners— NSP’s goal is to produce a new name, logo, and overall look and feel for the organization.
LOCAL OffICE SUPPORT
Proposed in PY’08 and formally starting in PY’09, NSP is increasing the number of Program Managers from three to five, and moving them out of the National Office and into the field. To further increase the impact of the Local Offices, NSP has moved to recruit and place two Site Coordinators in every Local Office.
PROgRAM yEAR HIgHLIgHTS
General Colin Powell addresses NSP volunteers and supporters at the 2008 Annual Leadership Summit in
Washington, DC.
NSP client Anthony Newlon, Congresswoman Rosa DeLauro, and CEO and Co-Founder Kirsten Lodal gather at NSP’s 2008
Washington, DC benefit.
No one is too young, too old, too uneducated, too marginalized to make enormous impacts on their lives and the lives of others. - NSP VOLuNTEER”
4 | National Student Partnerships
“WHAT WE DO NSP operates a national network of resource centers (Local Offices) staffed by a dedicated corps of student volunteers from area colleges and universities. Working one-on-one with low-income community members (clients), NSP volunteers provide on-site and referral services that enable clients to: locate employment; further their education; become computer literate; secure affordable housing; and receive the information and skills necessary to pursue their long-term goals. Perhaps most importantly, NSP volunteers provide clients with hours of listening and support services that are rarely available in other service agencies. NSP has no eligibility requirements and provides all of its services at no cost to its clients.
HOW IT WORKS
STUDENTS
NSP is a student-driven organization. Student volunteers—with their compassion, resourcefulness, and determination—undergo leadership trainings which empower them to become knowledgeable advocates for those less well off in their communities.
CLIENTS
NSP’s clients are typically individuals aged 18-65 who lack sufficient access to the employment opportunities and social services available to them. NSP’s clientele is generally low-income and/or homeless, an even mix of males and females, and diverse in race, language spoken, religion, and ethnicity.
LOCAL ADvISORy bOARDS
All NSP offices are supported by Local Advisory Boards made up of community leaders within the human services, government, education, and private sectors. NSP’s Local Advisory Boards ensure that each Local Office responds to its host community’s culture and priorities.
COMMUNITy PARTNERS NSP enlists a network of local specialists through both its partnerships and its Local Advisory Boards to connect clients to necessary services.
For example, NSP does not provide childcare, but each NSP office forms partnerships with local childcare providers to ensure NSP clients who need those services have access to them.
vOLUNTEER LEADERSHIP
1-2 Site Coordinators—Full-time AmeriCorps-sponsored fellow(s) • provide(s) onsite supervision and management, thereby ensuring efficient volunteer performance
2-4 Local Directors—Dedicated student leaders appointed for one or • more year-long terms to provide management support
15-50 Student Volunteers (per semester)—Students who work directly • with NSP clients to identify and access appropriate services
2-3 Student Summer Directors—Full-time AmeriCorps-sponsored • fellows provide onsite client service during the summer months
NSP NATIONAL OffICE Headquartered in Washington, DC, NSP’s National Office provides Local Offices with the supervision, management, training, financial support, and tools that they need to provide consistent, high-quality client service.
OUR MODEL
We are a method of breaking down barriers between universities and their host communities. I tell everyone about the work we do and they all think it’s incredible. - NSP VOLuNTEER”
10Years
A LOOK bACK AT THE EvOLUTION Of A REvOLUTION
TO fIgHT POvERTy
6 | National Student Partnerships
“
1998NSP founded
After seeing the impact of their work with New Haven, CT residents, Yale students Kirsten Lodal and Brian Kreiter found NSP. With the generous help of Marne Obernauer, their model becomes a reality
2001U.S. Department of Labor grant
The u.S. Department of Labor awards NSP a $1 million grant to expand and professionalize its model
Summer Director Training
NSP welcomes its first set of Summer Directors at a training in Washington, DC
2000first Annual Leadership and Training Summit
NSP hosts its first leadership and training conference in Washington, DC
CORI Rollout
With the help of three technology companies’ products and services, NSP launches the CORI (Central Online Resource Index)System as its method of tracking clients and services rendered
*NSP-Cambridge
*NSP-Evanston
*NSP-DC
1999The first Offices
New Haven serves as the first Local and National Office. The National Office soon relocates to Washington, DC
One America Conference
NSP sends a delegation of student leaders to the Welfare to Work Partnership’s OneAmerica Conference, where NSPers meet with President Bill Clinton
*NSP-Pittsburgh
*NSP-Richmond
*NSP-bronx
2003Client Service Manual
NSP creates its Client Service Manual to bring client service to social work standards
*NSP-baltimore
*NSP-Chicago
*NSP-North Philadelphia
*NSP- West Philadelphia
2002AmeriCorps*vISTA
NSP’s first nine AmeriCorps*VISTA members assume their roles as Site Coordinators in the Local Offices
NSPeople
First issue of “NSPeople,” NSP’s newsletter, is published
I sincerely appreciate the work and help that this organization provides for people like myself who are desperate and need help to achieve their goals. - NSP CLIENT”
2007-2008 Impact Report | 7
”
2007New Profit Inc. Investment
New Profit Inc., a national venture philanthropy fund that provides financial and strategic support to growth-oriented social change organizations, awards NSP a $1 million, four-year investment
2004Jefferson Awards
On behalf of NSP, Kirsten Lodal and Brian Kreiter accept the prestigious Jefferson Award in recognition of Greatest Public Service by an Individual 35 Years or under
Client Satisfaction Survey
NSP introduces a new qualitative evaluation measure, the Client Satisfaction Survey
*NSP-Somerville
2005first “Hill Day”
As a complement to NSP’s Annual Leadership Summit, student volunteers meet with Congressional Representatives from their Local Office communities to convey the needs of their clients
Alumni Engagement
NSP alumni formally organize efforts to remain engaged anti-poverty leaders
2006NSP featured on NbC Nightly News
NSP’s achievements are highlighted on NBC Nightly News’ “Making A Difference” series
AmeriCorps*National Direct
Awarded to multi-state models meeting a community need, the AmeriCorps*National Direct grant gives NSP the support to staff two Site Coordinators in every Local Office
2008growth Strategy Plan
Working closely with consultants, NSP begins the process of better defining its theory of change and evaluating how to grow its program and revenue plan
Renaming and visual Identity Initiative
With the help of marketing and design professionals, NSP launches a rebranding effort to produce a name and image more reflective of its work
“
2009+Looking Ahead
NSP will implement its “go-deep” strategy in five core geographies— Boston, Chicago, New York, Philadelphia, and Washington, DC— and expand its two Site Coordinator model to effectively serve more clients in these regions
Thank you for being here—it is the most help I’ve gotten in the last five years. - NSP CLIENT”
8 | National Student Partnerships
NSP was the first place I felt like I really knew what I wanted to do. I was inspired to continue working in similar communities...
STUDENT ExPERIENCE SURvEyS CONSISTENTLy REPORT THAT OvER 80 PERCENT Of STUDENT ADvOCATES PLEDgE COMMITTMENT TO PUbLIC SERvICE OR NONPROfIT WORK fOLLOWINg THEIR NSP TENURE. WE WANTED TO HIgHLIgHT SOME Of THOSE WHO KEPT THAT PLEDgE...
DAvE WESTERvELT (NSP-PITTSbURgH, LOCAL DIRECTOR, '02-'03)
What insights did you come away with after completing your time with NSP?
“NSP showed me how much a local difference can mean. I always felt pushed towards the greater world, global thinking, global integration... but NSP brought me right back to the community, and showed me what was happening at home while I worked to make a positive change.”
SvEA STROMME (NSP-bALTIMORE, SITE COORDINATOR, '03-'04)
Did NSP influence your career path?
“A question often asked in job interviews is, ‘What is one thing you have done that you are most proud of?’ My work with NSP is always my answer...I spent one more year in AmeriCorps, then returned to school for my Masters in Social Work. My time at NSP helped me realize that I am a social worker.”
KUNAL MODI (NSP-EvANSTON vOLUNTEER '04-'06, NATIONAL OffICE PROgRAM ASSOCIATE/ AMERICORPS*vISTA '06-'07)
What do you find unique about NSP’s work?
“NSP defines grassroots change; [it] understands climbing out of homelessness or unemployment to achieve self-sufficiency will take more than a three-point plan or filling out the right form. We’re out there side-by-side with our clients — attending city council meetings, knocking on the doors of landlords, waiting in line for food stamps, visiting job fairs— fighting for the future of our clients and our community... At the end of the day, NSP is about people— a group of people more broadly defined than volunteers and clients— but rather a community that’s working together on behalf of one another.”
WHERE ARE THEy NOW? ALUMNIDave WesterveltCurrently: Working for the Peace Corps in Mauritania
Svea StrommeCurrently: AmeriCorps
NCCC alumna, graduate of Washington University
'07, MSW, Assistant Study Director at the Center
for Survey Research at the University of
Massachusetts, boston
Daryl Levine (NSP-DC Site Coordinator '05-'06)
Currently: Public Policy Specialist with the National
Association of Student Personnel Administrators
(NASPA)
Molly Day (NSP-Evanston Local Director '06-'07) and Kunal ModiCurrently: Co-founders of campusCATALyST, a consulting corps for nonprofits
fanta Waterman (Northwest Philadelphia Local Director '04)Currently: Adjunct Lecturer for the CUNy bronx Community College (Health Education, Policy and Research, with a focus on minority and underserved communities)
“
2007-2008 Impact Report | 9
10Years
...to assist others in finding their own empowerment. It has shaped the human being I have become today. - LEAH HILSEY, NSP ALuMNA
NSP ULTIMATELy DESIRES TO SEE OUR CLIENTS ACHIEvE LONg-TERM STAbILITy AND SECURITy. WE SPOKE WITH TWO CLIENTS TO HEAR THEIR SUCCESS STORIES.
JEffREy RICHbERg
Jeffrey Richberg grew up in East Harlem. After finishing high school, he was in and out of trouble, bouncing between jobs, and struggling to support himself. After seeing a television ad for the NSP-Bronx Local Office, he contacted the volunteers for help with a Section 8 housing application. “The housing authority was prolonging my case as long as they could. The volunteers looked right into it for me and made phone calls,” Jeff says. Jeff was able to settle into his new apartment and reached out to NSP to express his desire to volunteer. Site Coordinator Danielle Egic referred him to CASA, a community organization that protects tenants rights, where he now serves as a volunteer. Jeff has remained active with NSP-Bronx, continuing to visit and speaking with freshmen at Fordham University. He also continues to spread the word about NSP: “[NSP] helped me out and I thought they could do the same for other people...I would recommend [NSP] to anyone in a heartbeat.”
SHARON DANIEL
Eight years ago, Sharon Daniel left her home in Trinidad and immigrated to Washington, DC. With three children in tow and another on the way, Sharon ended an abusive relationship and was evicted from her apartment. When a health clinic referred Sharon to NSP-DC, she was living in a shelter and had just given birth to her daughter. NSP volunteers worked with Sharon to tackle the overwhelming number of obstacles before her. She located legal assistance for her custody issues and her children’s immigration issues. NSP volunteers referred her to a partner childcare center, which allowed her to enroll in a food-service training program. After completing the program, Sharon secured employment with Starbucks. She credits NSP with much of her success, saying, “It was NSP that brought me to the point where I am now. NSP helps you see that you can achieve whatever you reach for.”
WHERE ARE THEy NOW? CLIENTS
”
10 | National Student Partnerships
At any given college involvement fair, the typical freshman is bombarded with an array of service organizations—Hunger Help International, Protect the Environment, Promote Peace, Save the World—but rarely are students encouraged to devote themselves to causes in their own backyard. National Student Partnerships is one of the few organizations that recruits college students to take on the very real problem of domestic poverty plaguing the communities directly outside their often ivy-covered walls. NSP breaks down the “town-gown” divide and puts volunteers and low-income community members in the same place and on the same level.
Teaming up with clients, NSP volunteers navigate tedious housing applications and bureaucratic tax forms. They tackle employment searches in a struggling job market and they advocate for clients to landlords, lawyers, and a variety of social services offices. NSP volunteers come face-to-face with the harsh reality of poverty. They experience the red tape and the frustration that comes with it, but also the immense relief when that hurdle is cleared.
NSP volunteers also see how a community can struggle when caseworkers are overburdened and public programs are under-funded. By collaborating with area partners and participating in local events and politics, NSP volunteers become more than temporary residents; they become engaged citizens.
NSP encourages student volunteers to take this awareness and spread it, but more importantly, NSP empowers student volunteers to take this experience and change it. NSP ultimately seeks to cultivate a new generation of informed leaders and advocates with the direct exposure, the insight, and the compassion to ensure that the systemic challenges they inherit do not become the ones they pass on.
NSP is a little different than I expected and even a little bit harder...“
10 yEARS Of: vOLUNTEERS
0
100
200
300
400
500
600
Number of volunteers
00
194
01
235
02
220
03
399
04
352
05
550
06
564
07
520
08
562
Volu
ntee
rs
Program Year
NSP-Cambridge volunteers work with clients to improve their computer skills. In Program Year 2008, volunteers
completed a total of 52,100 hours of service in all 12 Local Offices.
2007-2008 Impact Report | 11
10Years
...but along with the help I am giving people, I strongly believe that I am also being helped. - NSP VOLuNTEER
Swati Shah came to NSP through a different avenue than most volunteers. Two years of working as an intern with a large banking firm gave Swati, an Economics and Community Health major, professional experience, but the opportunity to do something more hands-on was what attracted her to NSP. “With NSP, you feel a sense of your own power. There is no hierarchy because everyone is working toward the same goal. You become a leader, you’re making a difference, and you’re making a change that you can actually see.” The Tufts university sophomore landed the position of Summer Director in the NSP-Somerville Local Office and set to work bringing about that change.
To her surprise, Swati found that one of the most important changes she witnessed was the change in her perception of poverty. “Originally I assumed that most low-income or homeless people brought their [situation] on themselves,” she confesses. After struggling to help clients with great resumes find employment, she realized that a life in poverty was not always created by personal fault or mistakes. “We had a Harvard graduate who couldn’t fill out an application on her own. That could be any of us. It was shocking,” Swati says.
Swati’s NSP experience led her to realize that poverty can be a result of economic depression, lack of public housing or other benefits, rigorous regulations and slow bureaucracy surrounding public assistance, or lack of family support. As the daughter of immigrant parents from India, Swati knows how crucial family support was to her parents’ success upon arriving in the united States.
She also saw the role physical and mental disabilities played in clients’ daily struggles, causing her to reevaluate the country’s mental health care system and the adequacy to which it addresses the population’s needs.
As she advocated for clients facing these obstacles, placing numerous telephone calls and writing letters to housing authorities, employers, and offices, Swati found that “the community was out there to help.” The solution to a problem was often a matter of putting the right people in touch. This year, Swati will continue to put more people in touch with the right resources as she leads a partnership program with the Tufts Office of Sustainability and LiveCooler, an energy assistance provider that helps low-income residents exchange light bulbs for compact fluorescent lamps to save on energy costs.
Swati knows that the ability to lead will be something she looks for when choosing careers. With a growing interest in health policy, she plans to use her NSP experience as a reminder to take all community members’ views into account, saying, “In my future I see myself always looking at the other side of the coin.”
vOLUNTEER PROfILE
”
12 | National Student Partnerships
“They motivate and give you a sense of confidence. You feel that they are working with you because they want to, not because they have to. - NSP CLIENT
Sally needs a job. How does she apply for a job? Submit a resume. How does she create a resume without a computer? How does she return an interview call without a phone? How does she interview without proper business attire? How does she get to the job without a car? How does she find childcare for her two sons for the hours she works?
Over 37 million Americans struggle with these questions on a daily basis as a result of living in poverty. Those with jobs still face an uphill battle making ends meet. Even if she secured a full-time job at $8 an hour, with no work supports, Sally and her two sons would face a gap of over $27,000 between income and basic living expenses residing in the city of Chicago.
The myriad issues that contribute to a life in poverty are not easily overcome. NSP understands that triumph over these issues is not found in a “band-aid” solution, but rather in creating a comprehensive plan to address both immediate needs and larger goals.
NSP volunteers work one-on-one with clients using a strengths-based approach. In a friendly, professional, and judgment-free environment, clients are encouraged to highlight their existing skills to address their own situation and needs. By linking clients to necessary tools and resources, student volunteers provide the support; clients provide the work. This system of partnership empowers clients with confidence in their own abilities to contend with future issues.
By applying for Earned Income Tax Credit, public health insurance, and a childcare subsidy, Sally can foreseeably retain over $800 a year after expenses. With job training, she can improve her career skillset and earn a higher wage. These types of stepping stones are the keys to escaping poverty and the changes NSP volunteers seek to bring about in their clients’ lives.
10 yEARS Of: CLIENTS SERvEDTotal Services Rendered
15% Housing
36% Employment
16% Other
11% Listening and Support
FROM LEFT TO RIGHT:
2% Public Benefits0.5% Immigration3% Health Care1% Budgeting1% Clothing3% Legal Services3% Transportation3% Food0.5% Childrens Services5% Education/Job Training
Sources: “Income, Poverty, and Health Insurance Coverage: 2007, u.S. Census Bureau; National Center for Children in Poverty
”
2007-2008 Impact Report | 13
10Years
[NSP is] the best human resource organization I have had contact with in a lifetime. The kindness and efficiency are tops.” - NSP CLIENT
CLIENT PROfILEIn February 2007, faye Crump suffered a severe accident, hitting her head and injuring her right arm. The physical damage affected her memory and her full range of motion, and though capable of working, she was let go from several jobs. “Employers did not want the risk of employing me,” she says. In need of employment to pay her mounting bills and overwhelmed by the situation before her, Faye sought help from Life’sWork of Pittsburgh.
Life’sWork put Faye in touch with the volunteers at NSP-Pittsburgh. Local Director LaTrenda Leonard met with Faye to discuss her situation and together they mapped out a plan that complemented her activities with Life’sWork. She enrolled in a job training program and started meeting with NSP volunteers regularly to revise her resume, apply for jobs, and seek disability assistance.
Faye also sought advice on making her housing more affordable. Together, she and LaTrenda explored rental and utility assistance programs, as well as alternative housing options in the area. “She came in every day and was so committed. She was always asking, ‘What can we work on today?’” LaTrenda says.
LaTrenda recalls how Faye’s attitude changed over the course of their meetings. “She had so many problems and felt like she had no direction. After we laid out her goals and she saw real tasks to be completed, her mood brightened. Once we started getting the tasks done, it was a total change.”
Faye secured temporary work this past August and soon visited the office to inform the volunteers that she had been hired as a full-time housekeeper. Faye enjoys her current job immensely, saying, “I’m so happy right now. I wake up every morning and know I have a job. I’m so thankful for that.”
She continues to visit NSP-Pittsburgh regularly to update volunteers on her progress, joking that she has become “somewhat of a fixture” in the office. She recently shared her story with members of NSP-Pittsburgh’s Local Advisory Board.
What Faye remembers most about her NSP experience is the feeling of support she received from volunteers. “They genuinely care about people. They had never even met me and they worked with me like they had known me for years,” she says.
Faye’s future plans include improving her computer skills and eventually enrolling in school again. “I never understood computers before, but after I got on one, I liked it. I thought, ‘Hey, this is easy!’” She acknowledges Life’sWork and NSP-Pittsburgh’s contributions to her overall improved sense of confidence, saying, “[NSP] turned my life around. I am so happy, so positive...I am so proud of myself.”
“ ”
14 | National Student Partnerships
RevenueIndividual .......................................................................... $625,777 Foundation ....................................................................... $490,900 Corporation .......................................................................... $95,000 AmeriCorps*VISTA .............................................................. $103,750 AmeriCorps*National Direct ................................................ $284,564 In-kind Contributions ........................................................... $72,012 Other Income ....................................................................... $14,219 Total Revenue: ........................................................................ $1,686,222
Expenses
Program Costs ................................................................. $1,257,445 Management and General .................................................... $188,687 Development ..................................................................... $199,298
Total Expenses ......................................................................... $1,645,430
Change in net assets ...................................................................... $40,858
Net assets, beginning of year ...................................................... $201,915
Net assets, end of year ................................................................ $242,773
Before NSP, I did not have a lot of interest or experience in community service, but now I’m planning to get a job in nonprofits when I graduate...
REvENUE AND fINANCIALS
“
Members of the Global Printing team attend NSP’s Washington, DC event, “A Spring Celebration,” held at the
Woolly Mammoth Theatre Company in May 2008.
NSP-Bronx client Valerie Lopez poses with her family at NSP’s New York event, “City Lights,” held at the Ailey
Studios in May 2008.
2007-2008 Impact Report | 15
10Years
...because I feel the need and the responsibility to do work that makes a difference in the world.” - NSP VOLuNTEER
THANKINg OUR DONORS
gOvERNMENT PARTNERSThe Combined Federal Campaign
of the National Capital Area
The Corporation for National and Community Service/AmeriCorps*National Direct and AmeriCorps*VISTA
INvESTMENT PARTNERS New Profit Inc.
PROvOST CLUb ($50,000-74,999)Global Printing
The Goldhirsh Foundation
Laurence and Susan Hirsch
The McCormick Foundation
vALEDICTORIAN CIRCLE ($25,000-49,999)Anonymous
The Bromley Charitable Trust
The Morris & Gwendolyn Cafritz Foundation
Capital One
The Community Foundation Serving Richmond & Central Virginia
ECMC - Educational Credit Management Corporation
William and Randa Gerrity
John and Rachel Rodin
Margie and Nate Thorne
SUMMA CUM LAUDE PARTNERS ($10,000-24,999)Anonymous
The Lily Auchincloss Foundation
Bank of America
The Capital Group Companies Charitable Foundation
The Richard H. Driehaus Foundation
Lee and Mindy Foley
The Gray Charitable Trust
Richard and Carol Hochman
The Charles Jacob Foundation
JPMorgan Chase
Jan and Elizabeth Lodal
Modestus Bauer Foundation (Marc Lawrence)
Marne and Peggy Obernauer
The Prince Charitable Trusts
Verizon Foundation (Richmond)
Virginia Non-Profit Housing Coalition (Bob and Anna Lou Schaberg)
Wachovia Foundation (Philadelphia)
Wachovia Foundation (Richmond)
MAgNA CUM LAUDE PARTNERS ($5,000-9,999)Anonymous
Don and Anne Ayer
Pierre and Amy Chao
Anderson and Mae Grennan
GTCR
JHL Capital Group LLC
Eugene Keilin and Joanne Witty
Peter and Martha Kellner
Walter and Monica Noel
David Parker and Marian Davis
Powers Pyles Sutter & Verville PC
David and Susan Rahm
Peter and Suzanne Romatowski
Eugene and Iris Rotberg
Michael Ryan and Lili Lynton
Smith Rothchild Financial
Paul Sohn and Sarah Schulze
Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati
CUM LAUDE PARTNERS ($2,500-4,999) Carl and Tammy Allegretti
Daniel and Susan Christman
Bob and Sara Cusimano
CVS Caremark
Phil Deutch and Marne Levine
ExxonMobil Corporation
Kenilworth union Church
Henry and Charlotte Kimelman
Rick and Nancy Kreiter
Marc Lawrence
Robert and Marilyn Mazur
Rod Smith
Southwest Airlines
David and Anna Steinhardt
Lance and Lisa West
HONORS PARTNERS ($1,000-2,499)Anonymous (5)
Richard and Amelia Bernstein
Robert and Nancy Blank
Joseph and Christina Bliley
Arturo and Hilda Brillembourg
John and Amanda Cali
George Chopivsky and Clara Brillembourg
Citizens Bank
Melvin and Ryna Cohen
James and Mary Connelly
Dominic and Rita Cusimano
John and Pat Deutch
Kevin Downey and Michele Jolin
Tim and Elizabeth Dugan
David and Debra Eichenbaum
Steven and Judy Elbaum
John and Marie Evans
David Fischer
FBR Capital Markets
David and Andrea Goldman
Lawrence and Lorna Graev
Harold and Bonnie Himmelman
Mark and Karen Holzberg, in honor of Jeff Holzberg
Timothy and Debra Howard
Ellen Howe
Abraham and Geetha Joseph
Brian Kreiter
Jack and Lisa Langer
James and Carol Leavelle, in honor of Cannon Leavelle
Samuel Lehrman
Wendy Makins
Michael McCurdy and Lisa Ripperger
Thomas and Eileen McIntyre
Michael McNamara
Charles and Anne Mullany, in honor of Lucy Mullany
Wayne and Melodie Oldenburg
Mark Penn and Nancy Jacobson
Arnold Penner
William and Lee Perry, in honor of the wedding of Kirsten Lodal and Jeff Himmelman
Dale and Kay Pittman
Easton Ragsdale and Wendy Lee
William and Cassie Rahm
Matthew and Tina Ripperger
Larry Robbins
Charles and Barbara Rossotti
Christian Salomone and Suzanne Fine
Darryl and Alicia Sargent
Guillermo and Cecilia Schultz
Brent Scowcroft
Walter Slocombe and Ellen Seidman
Stephen and Martha Smith
Michael Sobel and Elizabeth Milbank
Arlo and Carol Sorensen
Mark Sullivan
Donald and Barbara Tober, in honor of Marne Obernauer
Catherine Tyler
Robert and Margi Vanderhye
Paul Wallace and Saundra Whitney
William and Lynda Webster
Kevin Werner
Bob Woodward and Elsa Walsh
National Student Partnerships is grateful for the support of the following individuals, foundations, corporations, government agencies, and universities whose significant contributions help to make our work possible. This list reflects all gifts received between September 1, 2007 and August 31, 2008.
REvENUE AND fINANCIALS
”
16 | National Student Partnerships
“It was not enough for me to spoon a bowl of soup for the homeless—I wanted to understand why they were homeless and how I could help them escape this cycle...
Yale Hunger and Homelessness Action Project
$500-999Anonymous (1)
Masud Akbar
Kenneth and Darcy Bacon
Tony Blinken and Evan Ryan
Dennis and Shirley Bloomquist
Kevin and Susan Brandmeyer
David and Helene Buchen
Jon and Susannah Budington
Henry and Jessica Catto
Justin Cohen and Olivia Serafini-Sauli
Robert and Jamie Craft
Donna Cusimano
Richard and Andrea Danzig
John and April Delaney
David and Stephanie Deutsch
Ricardo and Isabel Ernst
Kenneth and Diane Feinberg
Michael Feldman
Julian Flannery and Suzanne Rasmussen
Frederick and Suzie Fletcher
Fred and Susan Forman
Stanley Freeman and Cecilia Parajon
Robert and LouAnn Frome
Elizabeth Gaffney
Bryan and Laurie Garlock
Stephen and Lynn Glasser
Joshua Gotbaum and Joyce Thornhill
Michael and Marcia Greenberger
Patrick and Sheila Gross
Tom Hardart and Virginia Shore
Jason Herrick and Lindsay Smith
Stephen and Dale Hoffman
Roger Horchow
Paul and Teola Jones, in honor of the wedding of Kirsten Lodal and Jeff Himmelman
Thomas Kahn and Susie Sanchez
Armon and Barbara Kamesar, in memory of Rabbi Daniel Kamesar
David Karabell and Paula Moss
Sharon Karmazin
George and Bicky Kellner
Peter Keogh
John and Susan Landau, in honor of Katherine Conway
David and Katie Leavy
Lenzner Family Foundation
David and Karen Levites, in honor of Lauren Levites
Jim and Betsy Lewis, in honor of Anne Romatowski
John Lynch
William Maguire
Jacqueline Mars
Marcia Mayo
Stanton and Lindsay McCullough
Jason and Deborah McManus
Amreesh and Asmita Modi
Edward and Linda Morse
John and Gail Nields
Howard and Joan Oestreich
Souren and Carol Ouzounian
p.45, Chicago IL (Judy Keller and Tricia Tunstall)
Shelia Penrose and R. Ernest Mahaffey
Robert and Linda Piazza
Clifford Pollan and Peggy Kriss, in honor of Lisa Pollan and in memory of Jerome Pollan
Peter Price
Jeffrey Quinn
Wayne and Wendy Rhodes
William and Susan Rifkin
Bonnie Roe
William Rosenberg
Eric and Laurie Roth
Philip and Janet Rotner
Lawrence and Pepi Rubin
James and Heather Ruth
Roy and Sara Schotland, in honor of Marne Levine
John and Sally Simms
Warren and Florence Sinsheimer
Joel and Karen Sirkin
Warren and Susan Stern, in honor of Marilyn and Robert Mazur
Todd Stern and Jen Klein
Charles and Emilie Stetson
Elizabeth Ann Stribling Kivlan
Howard and Lorraine Tischler
George and Judith Truesdail
Philip Turbin
Antoine and Emily van Agtmael
Darrell and Ann Wells
Sidney Werkman and Nancy Folger
Kenneth and Dorothy Woodcock
James and Suzanne Woolsey
Salvatore Zizza and Patty Theis
$1-499Anonymous, in honor of Phillip
Legge
Anonymous (22)
Matt and Mary Adams
Mark and Carolyn Agnew
Blair Albeson
Brett Alessi and Kate Bennison
Robert Alexander, in honor of the wedding of Marni Weil and Jon Pastor
Rodolpho and Claudia Amboss
Regina Anderson
Stanton and Carrie Anderson
Susan Andrews
Susan Lucia Annunzio
Warren and Sue Ellen Appleman, in honor of Richard Hochman
Elyse Arezzini, in honor of Katherine Conway
Brian Auld
Carrie Baizer
Sarah Baker
Lawrence Balaban, in honor of Lisa Pollan
Eugene Bang
John Barker and Anne Witkowski
Janet Barlett
Thomas and Patricia Barron
Maury and Fran Baskin, in honor of NSP-Evanston and Marcy Baskin
William and Janet Beatty
Randy and Laura Beddoe, in honor of Christine Minutolo
John and Caroline Bellinger
Thomas and Judy Bello
Ben & Jerry’s Carytown Scoop Shop, Richmond VA
Sultana Bennett
Michael Beresik and Beth Brummel
Allen Berg, in honor of Brian Kreiter
Samuel and Susan Berger
Debbie Berger Fox
Brian and Carole Berke
Andrew and Kathy Berkman
Nancy Berman, in honor of the wedding of Marni Weil and Jon Pastor
Murrayl Berner
Rob Bertrand
David Bigelow, in honor of Carrie Hutnick
Ben and Karen Binswanger
Richard and Suzanne Bissell
Steven and Cathy Bokoff, in honor of Jen Bokoff
Joel and Joanne Bonner, in honor of Anne Romatowski
William and Irina Booth, in honor of Stan Freeman
Roger and Susan Bottum
Nick and Catharina Braden
Ben Bradlee and Sally Quinn
Bruce and Laura Brancheau
John and Jane Brickman
Sophie Brickman
Stephen Broache and Miriam Boyer, in honor of Molly Broache
Daniel Brodhead
Robert Broeksmit and Susan Bollendorf
Mary Brophy
Brothers of the Christian Schools, Narragansett RI
Amir Broumand
Ashley Brown
Sharman Brown, in honor of Gini Christman
David Browning and Nancy Lax
Edward and Marnell Bruce
Robert and Katherine Brundige
William and Nancy Brundige, in memory of Bob and Betty Brundige
Abigail Burke
Michael and Caroline Burns
William and Betty Busey
Trey Caldeyro
Sharon Cascone
Richard and Heather Cass
Steven and Beth Catlett, in honor of Samantha Catlett
Sony and Mabel Chacko, in honor of Shilpa Joseph
Lee and Wendy Chaikin
John Chappell
Sam Chasin
Peter Cherukuri and Emily Lenzner
Pramod Chetty, in honor of Nisha Joseph
David Chung
Haejin Chung
William and Elizabeth Clark, in honor of the wedding of Jaime Beuhl and Bill Reichard
Wes and Gert Clark, in honor of the wedding of Kirsten Lodal and Jeff Himmelman
Donna Cloninger
Kenneth and Elizabeth Close
Louis and Bonnie Cohen
Matthew Cohen
William and Catherine Colglazier
Jeanne Connaghan
Alicia Conway
Trina Conway
Lindsay Copeland and Carol
2007-2008 Impact Report | 17
10”Years
...In National Student Partnerships, I discovered an organization that would satisfy not only my idealism, but also my pragmatism. - NSP VOLuNTEER
Goldberg, in honor of Liz Copeland
Sean Corrigan and Devon McElwee, in memory of Frank McElwee
Robert and Margaret Crocco
Jon Cross and Rachel Whiteside
Geoffrey and Barbara Crowley, in honor of Jaime Crowley
Edward Cunha
Walter and Didi Cutler
Ivo Daalder and Elisa Harris
Warren and Ava Dahlstrom
Steve and Nancy Dankof
Anthony D’Avella
Bernard and Laura D’Avella
Andrew and Celia David
Miriam Davidow, in honor of Hillary Shayne
Lauren Davis
Marilyn Day
Dorothy de Chadenedes, in honor of Katherine Conway
Rudy and Cynthia DeCanio
Thomas and Barbara Decker
Andrew Della Ratta
Ida Mary Detweiler
Pasquale Di Benedetta
Todd Dimston
Rosemary Disney
Miles Dissinger
Jack and Robin Doerge
Jonathan Doft
Charles Doheny and Catherine Decker
Lina Dostilio
Thomas and Mary Beth Doughty
Andrew Dreskin and Maria Raven
Andi Drileck
Michael Edwards and Jennifer urquhart
Norma Egic
Sara Ehrman
Robert and Jessica Einhorn
Antony Einson, in honor of Shilpa Joseph
Pablo Eisenberg
James and Shari Erwin
Nick Eubank
Henry and Machita Eyre
Loie Fecteau, in memory of David Conway
Stephen Fee
Richard Fiesta
Heather Finn
Dennis Fischman
John and Catharine Fisher
Amy Fleming
Susan Flynn
Jim Fogel and Beth Jacob, in honor of Anna Fogel
Nelson and Cecilia Ford
Derek Fox and Erica Brindley
Michael and Cynthia Gaertner
David Gaudet
Megan Gentzler
Bert and Susie Getz
Thomas and Donna Gianino
Sam Glass
David Gleave
Juleanna Glover
Jessica Goad
Julia Goldberg
Michael and Karen Goldberg
David and Felice Goldman, in honor of Jen Bokoff
Steven and Jill Gomberg
John and Sherri Goodman
GoodSearch LLC
John and Marilyn Gordon
David and Elizabeth Gould
Kate Greene
Rhonda Greifinger
Marc Grossman and Mildred Patterson
Robert and Debbie Guy
Stephen and Sharon Haberfeld
Natalie Hahn
Thomas and Ruth Hamilton
Julie Hamos, in honor of NSP-
Evanston
Thea Handelman
Caroline Harmon, in honor of NSP-Baltimore
Ambia Harper
Roland and Donna Harris
Dana Hart
A. A. and Donna Hartman
John and Julie Headland, in honor of Sarah Mengel
Brendan and Susie Healey
Brian and Pamela Henjum
Grant Henley
Frank Henneburg and Sharon Frey
Judy Herbstman
Judi Nardella Hershman
John Hickey and Susan Epstein
Michael Higgins
J.D. and Amanda Hilburn
Ken and Caroline Himmelman
Fred and Mary Hitz
David Hodges
Kevin Hodges and Andrea Miano
Ann Hollick
Michael and Leslie Holling
Gerald Holmes and Jennifer Ludden
Linwood and Jinks Holton
Jesse and Madeleine Holzberg
Emily Horgan
David Howe
Hunt and Janet Howell
Kevin Huang
Benjamin and Gisela Huberman
Gary and Ann Hunt
Robet Hurley and Heather Wicke
Megan Hustad
William Hutnick
Robert and Jean Hutnick, in honor of Carrie Hutnick
C. Powell Hutton and Joanne Hutton
Iggie’s Pizza, Baltimore MD
Adam and Hannah Isles
Richard and Shirley Jaffee
Jerry and Isabel Jasinowski
Robert Jenkins
John and Joyce Jenusaitis
John and Pamela Jenusaitis
Collister and Carrie Johnson, in honor of the wedding of Kirsten Lodal and Jeff Himmelman
Garry and Kathy Johnson, in honor of Megan Johnson
Henry and Franny Johnston
John and Peggy Jopling
Ancy Joseph
Melissa Josephs
Peter and Beverly Jost
Jennifer Juzaitis
Tina Kamalanathan
Brian Kane
Richard Kasper and Kendra Cunningham
Billy and Ann Kaye
Sharon Kim
Donald Kimelman
Merrie King
Matt Kirby
Kiwanis of Fordham university
Sean Klimczak
Matthew and Sandy Kline
Tom and Melinda Knuppel
Sharon Kornstein, in honor of Allison Kornstein
Alan Kornstein, in honor of Allison Kornstein
Ross and Kaye Kory
Jay and Ruth Kraemer
Harry Kreiter
Mitchell and Edie Kreiter
Alan and Kusum Krishnan
Toby Kriss, in honor of Lisa Pollan
Peter Kroll and Torrie Flink
Gail Kruzel
Ronald and Nancy Kurz
Cheryl LaFleur
Elisabeth Lamotte
Will Lamson
Zach Landau
Daniel Lehmann
Terry and Margaret Lenzner
Steven Lerner and Nancy Lerner, in honor of Claire Costantino
George Levin
Michael Levinger, in honor of Lisa Pollan
Lawrence Libera and Corrine Husten, in honor of NSP-Washington DC
Richard and Susan Liblong
Sarah Licht, in honor of Katherine Conway
Quinnie Lin, in honor of Yunxue Xu
Stephen and Marcie Lindo
Terry and Eileen Lipps
Larry and Lainie Lipsher
Carolyn Little
Elliot Lobel, in honor of Annie Lobel
Ilene Lockman
Susan Lubman-Edwards, in honor of Hillary Shayne
Robert and Paula Lucas, in memory of David Conway
Edward and Dalya Luttwak
Ernest and Janice MacVicar
Madam’s Organ Restaurant & Bar, Washington DC
Tom Mahony and Cynthia Gaffney, in honor of Katherine Conway
Jay Mai, in honor of John Rodin
Luis Mancilla
Mary Marsh
Lauren Mason
Michael and Gloria Masterson
David Mausner and Gale Zemel
Theodore Mayer
”
18 | National Student Partnerships
“ “NSP has been the defining experience of my college career. I have found the experience integral to my development...“
Matthew Mazur
Sean McBride
Bruce and Suzanne McClintock
Matt and Kim McCue
Brown McCullough and Laura Ross
John and Ann McDermott
Peter and Tracey McDowell
Junius McElveen
Daniel McGee
Andrew McKey and Marcia Ely
Daniel McLaughlin
Kim McMurray
Ross McWilliams
Daniel Mehlman and Margaret Shirk
William Methot and Margie Conway
Michael and Mia Meyer
Charles and Sylvia Meyers
Robert and Mary Jo Milbank
Kris Minor
Deborah Minor Harvey
Antonio and Felice Minutolo
Evelyn Minutolo
Eric Misbach
Joonyoung Moon
Colin Moran
Andrea Moss
Edward and Sarah Mundy
Timothy and Jacqueline Murphy
David Myszkowski
Max and Ann Naylor
Brenna Neal
Michael Nemeroff and Sharon Leininger
John Nesbitt
Randolph and Nancy New
John and Elizabeth Newhouse
Eugene Newman and Maryellen Cunnion
Adam O’Byrne and Laura Smolowe
Kathy O’Hearn
William Okun
William and Pilar O’Leary
Sean O’Neill and Julia Bissell
Brighid O’Shaughnessy
Michael Paige
David and Lesley Parker
Jahn and Renee Pothier
Christopher Patusky and Kiernan Slater
Doug Perkowski
Robin Perry
Amy Peters
Gregg and Julie Petersmeyer
Michael and Monica Peterson
Joe and Kara Petrosinelli
Thomas and Alice Pickering
Jeffrey and Mary Pidot
Justin Pidot
Donald and Barbara Pilling
Roger and Nina Pitkin
Points of Light Institute
Rachel Pollack, in honor of Yunxue Xu
Elinore Pollan, in memory of Jerome Pollan
Albinas Prizgintas
Eugene Puffenberger
Matthew Raifman
Kay Ray
Jason Redlus
Joseph and Kate Reeder
Pat Richmond and Gina Rogers
Andrew and Elizabeth Right
Guy Robinson and Elizabeth Stribling
William Roe
Catherine Romatowski
Eric and Helen Rosenberg
Caroline Rowley
Roberta Rubin
Donald and Carol Rubin, in honor of Arianna Rubin
Haley Ryan
Dennis and Maureen Ryan
Rick and Claudia Rys
Peter Sakon
Paul and Bettylu Saltzman
Amy Sande-Friedman
Pablo Sanfrancisco
Emilio and Carol Santi
Shanti Sattler
Xanthe and Zoe Scharff
Laura Schiller
Joseph Schotland and Nicole Stata
Joe and Lauren Schwab, in honor of Blair Schwab
Richard Scott
John and Cheryl Seder
Tod and Kate Sedgwick
Paul Selden and Karen Singer
Laura Semine
William and Rebecca Senhauser
Rachna Sethi
Lois Shapiro
Kristin Shelden, in honor of NSP-Washington DC
Eileen Shields-West
Barbara Shiers, in honor of Julia Sternman
Joe Shipley
Sarah Shrewsbury, in honor of Kirsten Lodal
Amandeep and Jasmeet Sidhu
Andrew Silver
Richard and Linda Silverman
John and Adele Simmons
Mary Singer
Larry and Rebecca Sipos
Albert and Shirley Small
Elmer Smith
Peter Smith
William Smith and Erin Simmons
T. Reginald Solomon
Duncan Sparrell
Charles and Libby Speth
James and Cameron Speth
John and Patricia Stack
Kent and Nancy Stansberry, in honor of Elizabeth Lodal
Kenneth and Alice Starr
Bernard and Sally Stein
Michele Stephenson
Brooke Stetson
James and Rose Stoller
James Stoller and Susan Lieberman
Walter and Sheryl Stoller
Howard and Janice Stoodley
John and Katherine Stookey
Nathaniel Storch
Thomas Storch
Sarah Strauss
Charles Sussman
James and Terry Svenstrup
Lisa Sweet, in memory of Bobby Winslow
Zosia Sztykowski
Robert and Hope Taft
Jonathan and Alisa Talisman
Douglas and Laura Thompson
Suzy Thompson
Robert Tichio
Suzanne Tingley
Carl and Lina Treleaven
Isaac and Anne Tripp
Glenn and Anne Trout
Everett Truttmann, in honor of NSP-Washington DC
Tracy Tyner
Carter Vaden
Stephanie Vallejo
Phil and Melanne Verveer
Chris Visser, in honor of Katherine Conway
Carroll and Nancy Voss, in honor of Alix Brown
Timothy Voss
Carol Wait
Bradley Walker and Valerie LoCascio
Elizabeth Walker
Jenonne Walker
Stuart Walker and Nicole Bagley
Roger and Judy Wallenstein
Faye Walsh
Fredric and Lynne Weber
Geoffrey and Bonnie Weck
Craig and Shari Weil
David Weil, in honor of Marni Weil
Leon and Mabel Weil
Ari and Charlotte Weinberg
Joshua and Gail Weisberg
Jane White
Kevin and Judith White, in honor of Evelyn Satalla
Dana Wiggins
Robert and Patricia Wilburn
Jacqueline Williams
Zach and Michelle Williams
Leon and Hercilia Wilson
Molly Woehling
Paul and Susan Wojcik
Jeremy and Becky Wolsk
David Wyman
Amir Yazdanpanah and Dima Zalatimo
Joshua Young and Christiane Lemieux
Ameer Youssef
Michael Zeldin
Matt Zeller
Lauren Zucker
NSP would especially like to thank its alumni, clients, students, and staff who have made financial contributions this year.Michael Arnst, in honor of
NSP-Baltimore
Rita Axelroth
Amy Baker
Marcy Baskin
Adam Benforado
Shawn Benham
Sarah Bertozzi
Jen Bokoff
Josh Bolian
Elena Boyd
Molly Broache
Alix Brown
Mike Buchwald
2007-2008 Impact Report | 19
10”Years
...as a professional, as a member of my community, and as an individual.” - NSP VOLuNTEER
Laura Bumiller
Nidhi Chaudhary
Caroline Chefas
Meg Coady
Katherine Conway
Liz Copeland
Kirsten Cornnell
Tom Cosgrove
Claire Costantino
Megan Curran, in memory of Anne Coyne
Anna Day
Molly Day
Heather Decker
Khyati Desai
Michelle Devereux
Patrick Donohue
Danielle Egic
William Fettweis
Lisa Fishlin
Patricia Foo
Chris Foreman
Jennifer Glasser
Peter Glowatsky
Peter and Sameena Groves
Wren Haaland, in honor of NSP-Baltimore
Jessica Hamerslough
Joanne Heisey
Elyse Heyman
Jeff Himmelman and Kirsten Lodal
Carrie Hutnick
Latrice Jones
Nisha Joseph
Nathan Kamesar
Peter Keane
Caitlin King
Gina Kline
Kimbrick Knox
Mark Kurtz and Amy Hustad
Khelen Kuzmovich, in honor of Meg Newman
Cannon Leavelle
Daryl Levine, in honor of Delese
Harvey and the VISTA Class of 2006
Lauren Libera
Josh and Cory Logan
Matthew and Candace MacDonald
Lena Makaroun
Juliet Manno
Lover and Tizgel High
Brant Mayo
Melissa Mazur
Christopher and Nina McIntyre
David McNelly
Christine Minutolo
Kunal Modi
Bethsy Morales-Reid
Annie Moyer, in honor of NSP-New Haven
Shannon Murphy
Muzammil Mustufa
Meg Newman
Pearl O’Brien
Mike O’Donnell
Crispina Ojeda
Gregory and Elaine O’Loughlin
Jon and Marni Pastor, in honor of the NSP Alumni Association
Patricia Pérez
Verena Phipps
Adrienne Piazza
Sue Porter
Sangeeta Prasad
Janelle Rae, in memory of Marilyn Eigelbach
Alexander Renner
Katie Robinson
Blair Schwab, in honor of NSP-Evanston
Kate Selden
Margaret Senese
Sohil Shah
Sarah Shubitowski
Carrie Shuchart
Lia Silver
Maya Soble
Delatour and Jacqueline Spriggs, in honor of NSP-Baltimore
Jackie Stewart
Svea Stromme
Mary Svenstrup
Rachael Swanson
Laura Timko
Emily Treleaven
Gardner Tripp
Paul Vande Stouwe
Fanta Waterman
Kimberly Wenke
Craig and Marian Wiggins
Rebecca Wolff
Jessica Wyman, in honor of the wedding of Jaime Buehl and Bill Reichard
Darwin Yeung
IN-KIND SUPPORTThe Agenda for Children,
Cambridge MA
Artist & Craftsman Supplies, Cambridge MA
Barnes & Noble, Washington DC
Joseph and Christina Bliley
Boloco Inspired Burritos, Medford MA
Boys & Girls Club of Greater Washington, Washington DC
Cecil and Melanie Brown, Jr.
The Cambridge Multi-Service Center for the Homeless, Cambridge MA
The Cambridge Citywide Senior Center, Cambridge MA
Charles River Web Connections, Medfield MA
City of New Haven State Administered General Assistance Support Center, New Haven CT
Community Action Agency of Somerville, Somerville MA
CVS, Cambridge MA
Khyati Desai
Danaher Corporation
Reginald Ellis
Machita Eyre
Famous Dave’s, Richmond VA
David Freeberg / A&D Custom Framing, McLean VA
Beth Gaffney
Georgetown Cupcake, Washington DC
Global Printing
Harvard university, Cambridge MA
Illinois Employment & Training Center, Evanston IL
Gerald Jackson
Megan Johnson
Jones Day, Washington DC
Kleinbard Bell & Brecker LLP
Joseph Knox
Kroger, Richmond VA
Jan and Elizabeth Lodal
LÄRABAR
Lesley Bailey Johnson
Market Basket, Somerville MA
Michael Masullo
Middle East Restaurant, Cambridge MA
National Beer Wholesalers Association, Alexandria VA
National Women’s Law Center, Washington DC
Oxfam, Medford MA
Powers Pyles Sutter & Verville PC, Washington DC
Randolph and Nancy New
New Canaan Kitchens, New Canaan CT
Robert and Linda Piazza
Robert Rios
Peter and Suzanne Romatowski
Saxby’s Coffee, Washington DC
Jordan Seltzer
The Somerville Community Growing Center, Somerville MA
Southwest Airlines
Starbucks Coffee, Richmond, VA
STA Travel, Washington DC
STRIVE
The Tombs, Washington DC
Tufts university Oxfam Café, Medford MA
Tufts university Jonathan Tisch College of Citizenship and Public Service, Medford MA
ukrop’s Super Markets, Richmond VA
Chris Visser
Whole Foods Market, Washington DC
MATCHINg gIfTSBank of America
The Boston Consulting Group
The Capital Group Companies
Diamond Management and Technology Consultants
ExxonMobil
Follett Corporation
Goldman Sachs
JPMorgan Chase
Kingdon Capital
Lehman Brothers
Merrill Lynch & Co.
Northern Trust
The Pew Charitable Trusts
PNC Bank
united Services Automobile Association
W.W. Grainger, Inc.
”
20 | National Student Partnerships
NSP DIRECTORybOARD Of DIRECTORS
Jon Budington CEO, GLOBAL PRINTING
Rob Carmona PRESIDENT, STRIVE NATIONAL
Michelle Devereux NSP ALuMNI ASSOCIATION PRESIDENT, 2007-2008
VP, ACCOuNT GROuP SuPERVISOR, CLINE DAVIS & MANN LLC
Lee Foley MANAGING PARTNER, FOLEY, MALDONADO & O’TOOLE
Stanley A. Freeman PRINCIPAL, POWERS PYLES SuTTER & VERVILLE PC
Susan Hirsch
Richard Hochman CHAIRMAN, REGENT CAPITAL MANAGEMENT CORP.
Brian J. Kreiter (Board Chair 2001-2007) CO-FOuNDER, NATIONAL STuDENT PARTNERSHIPS
MANAGER, RESEARCH ANALYTICS, BRIDGEWATER ASSOCIATES
Marne Levine DIRECTOR PRODuCT MANAGEMENT, REVOLuTION MONEY
Kirsten E. Lodal CEO AND CO-FOuNDER, NATIONAL STuDENT PARTNERSHIPS
Marne Obernauer, Jr. (Board Chair) CHAIRMAN, BEVERAGE DISTRIBuTORS COMPANY
William D. Rahm PRINCIPAL, CENTERBRIDGE PARTNERS, L.P.
Elizabeth Riker PARTNER, NEW PROFIT INC.
Arianna Rubin NSAB STuDENT REPRESENTATIVE TO THE BOARD,
2008-2009, TuFTS uNIVERSITY
NATIONAL OffICE STAff
NSP LOCAL OffICES
Amy Baker, AmeriCorps*VISTA, Development Associate
Alix Brown, AmeriCorps*VISTA, Special Assistant to the CEO
Tony Brunswick, Director of Programs
Katherine Conway, AmeriCorps*VISTA, Program Associate
Heather Decker, Program Manager
Meghan Donaghue, AmeriCorps*VISTA, Development Associate
Colleen Flynn, AmeriCorps*VISTA, Communications Associate
Delese Harvey, Deputy Director of Programs
Amy Hustad, Chief Operating Officer
Cannon Leavelle, Development Manager
Kirsten Lodal, CEO and Co-Founder
Shannon Murphy, Program Manager
Ben Reuler, Program Manager
Anne Romatowski, AmeriCorps*VISTA, Program Associate
Marian Wiggins, Director of Finance and Operations
We also extend our appreciation to former AmeriCorps*VISTA Nisha Joseph for her work in Program Year ’08.
NSP - Baltimore c/o The PEACE Center 325 E. 25th Street, 2nd Floor Baltimore, MD 21218 (410) 235-4585
NSP - Bronx c/o Refuge House 2715 Bainbridge Avenue Bronx, NY 10458 (718) 733-3897
NSP - Cambridge c/o The Cambridge Multi-Service Center 19 Brookline Street, 1st floor Cambridge, MA 02139 (617) 349-6338
NSP - Chicago 4554 N. Broadway, Suite 329 Chicago, IL 60640 (773) 303-0700
NSP - Evanston c/o Illinois Employment and Training Center 1615 Oak Avenue Evanston, IL 60201 (847) 864-3530 x208
NSP - New Haven 254 College Street, 2nd Floor New Haven, CT 06510 (203) 624-5877
NSP- North Philadelphia c/o OIC Building 1231 North Broad St., 4th Floor Philadelphia, PA 19122 (215) 765-3430
NSP - West Philadelphia 203 S. 60th Street, 1st Floor Philadelphia, PA 19139 (215) 474-1807
NSP - Pittsburgh c/o Life’sWork of Western PA 1323 Forbes Avenue Pittsburgh, PA 15219 (412) 682-3501
NSP - Richmond c/o Daily Planet 517 West Grace Street Richmond, VA 23220 (804) 433-4394
NSP - Somerville c/o The Family Center 366 Somerville Avenue Somerville, MA 02143
(617) 591-9400
NSP - Washington, DC c/o Perry School Community Services Center 128 M Street, NW, Suite 335 Washington, DC 20001 (202) 289-2525
2007-2008 Impact Report | 21
t
NATIONAL STUDENT PARTNERSHIPS
800 7th St NW, Suite 300, Washington, DC 20001
phone: 202.289.1151 | fax: 202.289.7741
[email protected] | www.nspnet.org
Printing and Production:
Global Printing Inc.
3670 Wheeler Avenue
Alexandria, VA 22304
www.globalprinting.com
Design Consultation:
Julie Sherman
J Sherman Studio LLC
www.jshermanstudio.com
Compilation and Edits:
Colleen Flynn
Communications Associate/ AmeriCorps*VISTA