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14 Hartford Business Journal • April 18, 2016 www.HartfordBusiness.com NONPROFIT NOTEBOOK NONPROFIT PROFILE CT Council for Philanthropy 221 Main St., Hartford | www.ctphilanthropy.org MISSION To promote and support effective philanthropy for the public good. TOP EXECUTIVE SERVICES Maggie Osborn, President Offers programs, resources, services, networking opportunities, insight and news about grantmaking and philanthropy. FY 2014 SUMMARY 2013 2014 Total Employees 8 9 Total Assets $608,606 $846,937 Total Liabilities $227,005 $398,656 REVENUES Contributions & Grants $429,425 $601,352 Program Service Revenue $48,840 $20,627 Investment Income $360 $321 Other $0 $0 TOTAL $478,625 $622,300 EXPENSES Grants $0 $0 Member Benefits $0 $0 Salaries/Employee Benefits $382,356 $417,247 Fundraising Fees $0 $0 Other $186,391 $138,373 TOTAL $568,747 $555,620 MARGIN $(90,122) $66,680 TOP PAID EXECUTIVES (FY 2014) Base Salary Total Compensation & Benefits Maggie Osborn, President $123,200 $134,389 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 Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage appoints pair of VPs Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage in Con- necticut and Westchester County, N.Y., has appointed Brendan B. Grady as regional vice president of the company's Connecticut east region and Charles "Chuck" Cusson as vice president of operations. Grady will be responsible for the oversight and pro- ductivity of the company's 18 sales offices throughout Greater Hartford, the eastern shoreline and New Haven County. Grady's real estate experience includes vari- ous leadership roles with Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage, most recently as the company's regional vice president overseeing nine offices throughout New Haven County for 10 years. Cusson will oversee the operational aspects of several departments within the company, including the relocation, education, marketing and adminis- trative support teams. Cusson previously served as regional vice presi- dent of education for NRT's eastern seaboard and Northeast regions. Anchor Engineering Services announces principals Anchor Engineering Services Inc. in Glastonbury announced that Matthew N. Brown and Dennis A. Garceau are now principals of the firm. Brown has 13 years with the firm as a project manager and licensed professional engineer, and also has previous experience as a senior engineer with TRC Cos. of Windsor. He has been an associate of the firm since 2008. Garceau recently rejoined Anchor as its chief struc- tural engineer after previously serving with the firm from 1996 to 2000. Garceau brings 26 years of project management, bridge design and structural engineer- ing experience to the firm, including 19 years as a con- sulting licensed professional engineer in Connecticut. NYMBUS names Glastonbury EVP, chief strategy officer Miami Beach-based NYMBUS, which has de- veloped a cloud-based banking software, recently named David Mitchell executive vice president and chief strategy officer. Mitchell, based out of Glastonbury, will be re- sponsible for supporting the overall direction and planning of the company's market strategy. Mitchell also will work with NYMBUS' executive leadership team to develop the company's global vision and identify market opportunities. Mitchell most recently was president of Fortress Risk Management in Wethersfield. Hartford Healthcare names Cancer Institute physician-in-chief Hartford Healthcare has appointed Dr. Peter Paul Yu as the first physician-in-chief of the Hartford Healthcare Cancer Institute. Yu will work closely with physicians and nurses who practice within the Hart- ford Healthcare Cancer Institute to ensure a single standard of care for patients with various types and stages of cancer. In 2015, Yu served as president of the American Society of Clinical Oncology, which represents nearly 40,000 professionals in all cancer subspecialties. A medical oncologist and hematologist, Yu comes to Hartford Healthcare from Palo Alto Medical Foundation in California, where he worked since 1989. Simsbury Bank names mortgage loan adviser Simsbury Bank an- nounced that Paul Ramoya has joined its home loans team as a mortgage loan adviser. Ramoya will work close- ly with homebuyers, Re- altors, financial advisers and attorneys in central Connecticut. Ramoya has more than 27 years of mortgage origi- nation experience. Most recently, he was a mortgage loan officer and sales manager with Empire Mortgage. SS&C Technologies names SVP Windsor-based SS&C Technologies Holdings Inc. has appointed Stephanie Miller as senior vice president. She will report to the head of SS&C alter- native assets. Formerly head of J.P. Morgan's fund administra- tion business, Miller brings nearly 15 years running top 10 fund administration businesses. Webster Bank names EVP, director of business banking Webster Bank has promoted John Guy to execu- tive vice president, director of business banking. Guy joined Webster in Dec. 2010 as senior vice president, business banking. Business Networking International names CT franchise director Windsor Locks-based BNI Western New England announced the appointment of Richard Stroiney as executive director for franchise operations in Con- necticut and western Massachusetts. BNI focuses on helping businesses through the development and exchange of quality business referrals. CT Health Foundation names new program officer, three board members The Connecticut Health Foundation (CT Health) has named Garrick Wong as its new program officer. Wong will work to ensure CT Health achieves its stra- tegic goals via focused grant making, policy advocacy, capacity building and leadership development. Previously, Garrick served as a community ben- efit specialist at El Camino Hospital in California. Also, the foundation's board of directors recently added three new members: John J. Crawford (pres- ident of New Haven-based Strategem LLC), Chek- esha Kidd (vice president of group life and voluntary products at The Hartford) and MaryAnn Perez-Bres- cia (assistant professor of nursing at Three Rivers Community College). Oasis Outsourcing adds two to Hartford office Kelly Solway and Lisa Barre have joined Oasis Outsourcing, a national professional employer orga- nization, as professional employer consultants. They will work out of the Hartford office located at 175 Capitol Ave. Solway and Barre will be primarily responsible for providing consultation on human resources products and services for small and medium- sized businesses within targeted markets in the Hartford area. MOVERS & SHAKERS Brendan B. Grady Paul Ramoya David Mitchell Charles "Chuck" Cusson Dr. Peter Paul Yu Dr. Prasad Srinivasan and his wife Kala Prasad have made a gift of $50,000 to Hartford Hospital to support the training and education provided through the hospital's Center for Education, Simu- lation and Innovation. Their gift will establish the Srinivasan Fund at the hospital and will support the Cen- ter for Education, Simulation and Innovation, a state-of-the-art training facility where phy- sicians and other healthcare professionals learn to use the newest technology in a safe, simulated environment. Srinivasan is also a state representative. • • • Paula S. Gilberto has officially assumed the role of president and CEO of United Way of Central and Northeastern Connecticut fol- lowing the retirement of Susan B. Dunn. Gilberto, formerly the United Way's senior vice president, helped United Way kick off its Working Families Initiative, raising aware- ness of challenges faced by lower-income families; chaired Hartford's nationally rec- ognized Campaign for Grade-Level Reading; and led the development of Workforce Solu- tions Collaborative of Metro Hartford. • • • KBE Building Corp. recently complet- ed construction of the NICU library at the UConn Medical Center in Farmington at no cost to Connecticut Children's Medi- cal Center. The library will allow parents to have a peaceful retreat to help them as they deal with the stress of a child in the NICU. • • • The Hartford Foundation for Pub- lic Giving awarded more than $900,000 in grants to five local agencies to help fight homelessness. Grants were awarded to: The Salva- tion Army ($325,000); My Sisters' Place ($220,000); Journey Home ($199,197); Imma- Care ($174,000); and Connecticut Coalition to End Homelessness ($15,000). Funding will allow organizations to con- tinue and/or expand services and create a more collaborative and coordinated way to address the issue of ending homelessness. • • • Bob's Discount Furniture recently expanded its partnership with Autism Speaks, pledging over $120,000 to the organization this year. Over the past three years, they have contributed a total of $200,000 through sponsorships, Café Col- lections for a Cause and gift card donations. • • • The First Niagara Foundation raised $5,000 through a recent social media cam- paign on National Random Acts of Kindness Day. For every Like and Re-Tweet, the Foun- dation donated $1 to a food pantry or food bank across its Northeast footprint, including Connecticut Food Bank and Foodshare. Dr. Prasad Srinivasan and his wife Kala Prasad. P H O T O | C O N T R I B U T E D