Issue link: https://nebusinessmedia.uberflip.com/i/1126594
18 Hartford Business Journal • June 10, 2019 • www.HartfordBusiness.com Movers & Shakers Robin Sharp was hired as executive director of the Alzheimer's Association's Connecticut chapter. Sharp previously served as executive director of New Britain's YWCA for 15 years. Jim Parise has been named president of Kelser Corp., a Glastonbury technology consulting firm. Parise was previously vice president of professional services and an enterprise solutions executive at Kelser. Following its acquisition of Pure Power Technologies Inc., Windsor fuel- injection systems company Stanadyne announced Jerry Sweetland has been named Stanadyne's president of diesel products, and David Zimmerman is now president of gasoline products. Sweetland previously served as president and chief executive of Pure Power. Zimmerman was previously Stanadyne's managing director of the Americas. Lori Coleman has joined YHB Investment Advisors Inc., an independent advisory firm in West Hartford, as an operations associate. Coleman previously taught history at the college level and worked as a graphic designer and bookkeeper. In her new role, she will provide operations, marketing and compliance support. Psychiatrist Dr. David Chen has been added to the rehabilitation staff of Gaylord Specialty Healthcare, a Wallingford long- term healthcare facility. Chen comes to Gaylord from Edith Nourse Rogers Memorial Veterans Hospital in Bedford, Mass., where he provided physical medicine, rehabilitation clinical care and served as the chief health informatics officer. Bridget M. D'Angelo has been elected to the executive board of the George W. Crawford Black Bar Association, a volunteer statewide organization of attorneys, judges, and law students. D'Angelo, who will serve as the board's treasurer, is an associate attorney in the business and finance department of Hartford law firm Murtha Cullina LLP. She represents clients in the areas of general corporate law, real estate and financing. Steven Kmiec has been promoted to director of manufacturing at OKAY Industries Inc., a New Britain contract manufacturer that engineers medical, automotive and speciality components. Kmiec was previously a senior manufacturing engineer at OKAY Industries. In his new role, he will oversee the daily manufacturing operations at OKAY Industries' domestic facilities in New Britain and Berlin, and will also support production activities for the company's Costa Rica facility. Sarah Eisele- Dyrli has joined the Connecticut Data Collaborative, a public-private partnership that advocates for the public availability of open and accessible data, as data-engagement specialist. Eisele-Dyrli spent seven years at Everyday Democracy, a national organization based in Hartford, focusing on research, evaluation and learning. She also founded Social Impact Compass, a consulting business to social enterprise companies. Michael J. Daglio was named to the board of directors of Make-A-Wish Connecticut. Daglio is a Hartford HealthCare (HHC) senior vice president and president of HHC's Fairfield region and chief transition officer. Prior to his appointment at HHC, Daglio served as an executive with Western Connecticut Health Network. Robin Sharp Dr. David Chen Bridget M. D'Angelo Jim Parise Steven Kmiec Jerry Sweetland Lori Coleman David Zimmerman Sarah Eisele-Dyrli Michael J. Daglio The United Bank Foundation Connecticut presented a $10,000 check to The Connecticut Science Center to support the Center's summer science camp program and scholarships for summer campers. The foundation also presented $10,000 to the Interval House, a Hartford-based organization dedicated to ending domestic violence. Talcott Resolution, a Windsor-based life insurance company, recently donated $2,500 to the Connecticut Humane Society on behalf of its new quarterly charitable giving program. The donation will help provide vaccines, medical tests and lifesaving procedures for pets. St. Francis Hospital and Medical Center and St. Mary's Hospital each received a $75,000 grant from the Connecticut Health and Education Facilities Authority (CHEFA) to support simulation-based medical education. The grants will be used to purchase cutting-edge technology and equipment that will be used to train practitioners and first responders in a wide variety of critical medical procedures. St. Francis Hospital has created a simulation studio with medical simulation technology that allows care givers to develop their skills without the risk of harming live patients in the process. The Hartford Foundation for Public Giving has granted $325,000 to the Initiative for a Competitive Inner City (ICIC) to support the Hartford Area Inner City Capital Connections (ICCC) program, a tuition-free, high-level, executive- education program targeted at inner- city businesses. Sixty-seven local businesses have registered for the first class of the program, which focuses on three critical elements for sustainable growth: capacity-building education, coaching and connections to capital and capital providers. Nonprofit Notebook NONPROFIT PROFILE Greater Hartford Arts Council 100 Pearl Street, Hartford | letsgoarts.org Mission: To inspire all people to participate and invest in the arts. Top Executive: Catherine Malloy, CEO Services: Financial and organizational resources for the arts and cultural sector. FY 2017 SUMMARY 2016 2017 Total Employees 14 17 Total Assets $1,844,928 $1,863,695 Total Liabilities $713,651 $709,876 REVENUES Contributions & Grants $2,474,539 $2,361,776 Program Service Revenue $0 $0 Investment Income $4,791 $8,502 Other $11,572 $66,873 Total $2,490,902 $2,437,151 EXPENSES Grants $995,740 $1,019,970 Member Benefits $0 $0 Salaries/Employee Benefits $927,166 $875,061 Fundraising Fees $0 $0 Other $446,750 $469,578 Total $2,369,656 $2,364,609 Margin $121,246 $72,542 TOP PAID EXECUTIVES (FY 2017) Base salary Comp. & Benef. Catherine Malloy, CEO $165,000 $167,600 Brett Thompson, COO $85,000 $93,100 Source: Guidestar IRS 990 Tax Form