Hartford Business Journal

February 1, 2016

Issue link: https://nebusinessmedia.uberflip.com/i/633456

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 17 of 23

18 Hartford Business Journal • February 1, 2016 www.HartfordBusiness.com NONPROFIT NOTEBOOK NONPROFIT PROFILE United Way of Connecticut 1344 Silas Deane Highway, Rocky Hill, CT | CTUnitedWay.org MISSION To help meet the needs of Connecticut and its residents by providing information, education and connections to services. TOP EXECUTIVE SERVICES Richard J. Porth, President & CEO Health and human services and child- care programs. FY 2015 SUMMARY 2014 2015 Total Employees 231 255 Total Assets $4,489,387 $4,563,689 Total Liabilities $2,660,168 $2,612,288 REVENUES Contributions & Grants $13,820,388 $16,078,063 Program Service Revenue $638,897 $577,590 Investment Income $0 $0 Other $36,235 $45,713 TOTAL $14,495,520 $16,701,366 EXPENSES Grants $0 $0 Member Benefits $0 $0 Salaries/Employee Benefits $10,735,505 $11,535,537 Fundraising Fees $0 $0 Other $3,526,306 $5,043,647 TOTAL $14,261,811 $16,579,184 MARGIN $233,709 $122,182 TOP PAID EXECUTIVES (FY 2015) Base Salary Total Compensation & Benefits Richard Porth, President/CEO $178,837 $217,330 Leo Pellerin, Chief Information Officer $128,744 $162,236 Cheryl Sutera, SR VP Child Care $123,133 $155,881 S O U R C E : G U I D E S T A R I R S 9 9 0 T A X F O R M The Petit Family Foundation has awarded a $4,000 grant to the Boys & Girls Club of Bristol Family Center to under- write the Venture Crew program. This newly created program will give inner-city girls ages 14-18, a chance to experience activities that are fun and challenging in areas that may be foreign to them. The Petit Family Foundation honors the memories of Jennifer Hawke-Petit, Hayley Elizabeth Petit and Michaela Rose Petit by continuing the kindness, idealism and activism that defined their lives. Pictured (from left) are: Dawn Burke, director of corpo- rate, foundation and donor relations at Boys & Girls Club of Bristol; and Dr. William Petit, Petit Foundation board member. • • • Boys & Girls Clubs of Hartford received a $40,000 grant from the Comcast Founda- tion, to help expand the My.Future technol- ogy initiative, a hands-on technology training to equip kids with the skills needed to com- pete in a 21 st -century economy. The grant will provide Club staff with an expansion of volun- teer efforts and the recruitment of an addition- al 200 mentors to work with students twice a month to provide help with schoolwork, social activities and coaching life skills. • • • The Nutmeg Foundation announced a $35,000 grant to Workforce Solutions Col- laborative of Metro Hartford to support its efforts to assist low-income individuals secure and advance in jobs that lead to fam- ily-sustaining employment and also provide employers with a qualified workforce. • • • The National Endowment for the Arts has announced awards totaling more than $27.6 million in its first round of funding for fiscal year 2016, including an Art Works award of $10,000 to the Hartford Stage to provide production support for the new musi- cal, Anastasia, in May. • • • The Farmington Bank Community Foundation presented a $2,000 donation to the East Longmeadow Educational Endow- ment Fund during the opening of its new branch in East Longmeadow, Mass. The bank celebrated its role as a community partner with donations to area nonprofit organizations. (From left) Damon D'Amico, Endowment Fund; John Patrick, Farmington Bank; and Chris Traczyk, Farmington Bank Community Foundation. P H O T O | C O N T R I B U T E D P H O T O | C O N T R I B U T E D UConn names new education school dean Gladis Kersaint has been named the new dean of UConn's Neag School of Education and will begin work in July. Kersaint has been the associate dean of the College of Education at the University of South Florida since 2011, where she is also a professor of mathematics education. Kersaint also held the David C. Anchin Endowed Chair in Education Innovation and from 2011 to 2014 served as director of the David C. Anchin Center, which supports innovation and the advance- ment of teaching. QU administrator elected to association board Seann Kalagher, associate dean of student af- fairs at Quinnipiac University, has been elected to the board of directors of the Association for Student Conduct Administration (ASCA). He will serve a two- year term beginning in February. Kalagher came to Quinnipiac in 2009 as assistant dean of student affairs before switching to his current position in 2013. He also is the deputy Title IX coordi- nator for students. KBE Building Corp. promotes two longtime team members KBE Building Corp. in Farmington has promoted Ross Mezzanotte and Bob Nelson to senior project managers. Mezzanotte joined KBE in 1995. Formerly a proj- ect manager, he has also been a project administra- tor and project estimator. Nelson, who joined KBE in 1996, served as a project superintendent before becoming a project manager. CHC appoints associate director of Weitzman Institute Community Health Center Inc., a Middletown-based primary care provider for underserved populations, re- cently named Wanda Montalvo associate director of the Weitzman Institute. Montalvo will expand the institute's work promoting innovation in primary care through research, quality improvement and training. Kaman SVP gets additional titles, responsibilities Kaman Industrial Technologies Corp. in Bloom- field has appointed Tribby Warfield to the addition- al role of senior vice president and general man- ager of its automation, control and energy platform. Warfield joined Kaman Distribution in Aug. 2014 as senior vice president and general manager of its fluid power platform, a position she retains. Before joining Kaman, Warfield was president, North America commercial for Gates Corp., where she led all commercial activity for Gates power transmission and fluid power in the U.S., Canada and Mexico. St. Francis appoints surgical oncology chief Dr. James F. Flaherty has been appointed chief of surgical oncology at St. Francis Hospital and Medical Center as a member of St. Francis Medical Group. Flaherty is an expert in the surgical care of pa- tients with upper gastrointestinal cancers and has been an attending surgeon at St. Francis since 1995. He currently serves as an assistant clinical profes- sor of surgery at the UConn School of Medicine and is a fellow of the American College of Surgeons. He's also a captain in the U.S. Naval Reserve. CCMC chief to chair American Hospital Assoc. council Dr. Jim Shmerling, president and CEO of Connecti- cut Children's Medical Center, is the new 2016 chair of the American Hospital Association's Section for Maternal and Child Health Governing Council, a 15-member group of CEOs and senior executives from the nation's wom- en's and children's hospitals and healthcare providers. As chair, Shmerling will lead the AHA Constituency Section for Maternal and Child Health Council on dis- cussions focused on public policy issues concerning women's and children's health, hospitals serving that patient population and AHA member service strategies. Leadership Greater Hartford announces new Quest program director Leadership Greater Hartford recently announced that Julie Connolly joined the Leadership Greater Hartford team as the new program director for Quest, which helps participants build leadership skills. Connolly brings more than 20 years of business experience, having served in various leadership positions in private industry and public accounting, where she managed, developed and trained people and teams. She is a certified coach through the In- ternational Coach Federation. Capital Workforce Partners hires youth-programming leader Capital Workforce Partners announced the addition of Kelly Fitzgerald to its staff as youth employment lead, managing employment and development pro- grams for youth in the north-central Connecticut region. Fitzgerald spent the last six years developing and strengthening partnerships to support implementa- tion of new educational and workforce initiatives. Her last role was as associate director of workforce and education initiatives at Connecticut Women's Educa- tion and Legal Fund. Computer Management Services adds staff Computer Management Services, based in West- brook, recently added Alex McCollam, Yoseni Dun- phy, Mary Beth Gossart, Al Mrosek and Lesley Olsen as a result of recent growth and acquisitions. MOVERS & SHAKERS Seann Kalagher Tribby Warfield Bob Nelson Dr. Jim Shmerling Ross Mezzanotte Dr. James F. Flaherty Wanda Montalvo Julie Connolly

Articles in this issue

Links on this page

Archives of this issue

view archives of Hartford Business Journal - February 1, 2016