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12 Hartford Business Journal • October 24, 2016 www.HartfordBusiness.com NONPROFIT NOTEBOOK NONPROFIT PROFILE CT State Medical Society 127 Washington Ave., North Haven | www.csms.org MISSION To unite and support Connecticut physicians in promoting the health of its citizens. TOP EXECUTIVE SERVICES Matthew Katz, CEO A federation of eight county medical associations, with total membership exceeding 7,000 physicians. FY 2014 SUMMARY 2013 2014 Total Employees 14 12 Total Assets $3,696,720 $3,781,719 Total Liabilities $1,472,070 $1,652,727 REVENUES Contributions & Grants $1,927,103 $1,792,577 Program Service Revenue $538,374 $240,084 Investment Income $613,369 $202,741 Other $145,500 $149,321 TOTAL $3,224,346 $2,384,723 EXPENSES Grants $0 $0 Member Benefits $0 $0 Salaries/Employee Benefits $1,637,685 $1,512,032 Fundraising Fees $0 $0 Other $1,218,162 $947,608 TOTAL $2,855,847 $2,459,640 MARGIN $368,499 $(74,917) TOP PAID EXECUTIVES (FY 2014) Base Salary Total Compensation & Benefits Matthew Katz, CEO $280,125 $304,436 Kenneth Ferrucci, Senior VP $133,272 $145,320 Layne Gakos, General Counsel $113,093 $120,529 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 Chief of endocrinology among two new doctors at St. Francis Dr. Kamal Shoukri has joined the medical staff of St. Francis Hospital and Medical Center as chief of endocrinology and Dr. Jonathan P. Shepherd has joined as a fellowship-trained urogynecologist with St. Francis Medical Group. Shoukri also will serve as the site director for the endocrinology fellowship training program at St. Francis. He joins St. Francis after serving as the endocrinology fellowship director at Tufts Univer- sity School of Medicine/Baystate Medical Center in Springfield for 10 years. Shoukri has been in clinical practice for 26 years, focusing on endocrinology, di- abetes and metabolism with special interest in met- abolic bone disease, thyroid disease and endocrine neoplasia. He is board certified in internal medicine and endocrinology, diabetes and metabolism. Shepherd has been in practice for six years, and is board certified in female pelvic medicine and re- constructive surgery. His clinical interests include prolapse and incontinence. PURA chairman now cyber chief Art House of Simsbury has been appointed to the newly created position of the state's chief cyber security risk officer. House, one of three commissioners and chair- man of the Connecticut Public Utilities Regulatory Authority (PURA), will be responsible for working to enhance comprehensive cybersecurity prevention and protection efforts. Malloy said he made the appointment to position Connecticut as a leader in safeguarding critical in- frastructure from cybersecurity threats. House has been one of three PURA commission- ers since 2012, and has played an extensive role in developing the state's Cybersecurity Action Plan, released earlier this year. Prior to joining PURA, House served as chief of the communications group for the National Geospa- tial-Intelligence Agency, a combat support agency of the U.S. Department of Defense and the nation's primary source of geospatial intelligence. State treasurer names new deputy chief for retirement plans Connecticut State Treasurer Denise L. Nappier has appointed Laurie Martin deputy chief invest- ment officer for the $30 billion Connecticut Retire- ment Plans and Trust Funds (CRPTF). Martin joins the Connecticut Treasury after serving 12 years as director of treasury services at Baystate Health Inc. Prior to Baystate Health, Martin held in- vestment accounting positions at ITT Hartford and Mass Mutual Life Insurance Co. She began her career at KPMG Peat Marwick as an audit and tax specialist. Martin succeeds Deborah Spalding who had served as deputy chief investment officer from 2013 to 2015, at which time Spalding was named chief investment officer. Hartford Foundation for Public Giving adds CT Supreme Court judge to board Connecticut Supreme Court Associate Justice Richard N. Palmer has been appointed to the board of directors of the Hartford Foundation for Public Giving, the community foundation for Hartford and 28 surrounding towns. Palmer's appointment by Connecticut Supreme Court Chief Justice Chase T. Rogers took effect Sept. 14 and will run through Dec. 31 to complete the unex- pired term of the late Judge David M. Borden. Palmer will then serve one full five-year term on the founda- tion's board from Jan. 1, 2017, through Dec. 31, 2021. Palmer has served on the state Supreme Court since 1993. Previously, he served as chief state's attorney for the state of Connecticut and as U.S. at- torney general in Connecticut. USI Consulting Group names VP of retirement services in Glastonbury USI Consulting Group said Ryan Savage has joined the company as assistant vice president of retirement services, based in Glastonbury. Savage brings more than 15 years of experience working exclusively with employer-sponsored retirement plans in the private and public sectors, spending the last eight years with Voya Financial. Savage consults on fiduciary coverage, vendor selection, plan design, investments and employee education. He is dedicated to emerging plans and is a registered representative of USI Securities Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of USI Consulting Group. Simsbury Bank adds mortgage loan adviser Simsbury Bank has hired Susan Bernier as a mort- gage loan adviser on its home loans team. Bernier will work with homebuyers on their mortgages through clos- ing and also work closely with clients, Realtors, financial advisers and attorneys. While based at the bank's West Hartford branch, she also will focus on lending through- out southern Connecticut, including Fairfield County. Bernier has more than 23 years of mortgage- origination experience, most recently as a mortgage loan officer with United Bank. St. Francis adds physician couple specializing in geriatrics Drs. Aileen R. Pangilinan and Vincent M. Varil- la have joined the medical staff of St. Francis Hos- pital and Medical Center as specialists in geriatrics with St. Francis Medical Group. Married, both are board certified in internal medicine and geriatrics. Pangilinan and Varilla completed fellowship train- ing in geriatric medicine at UConn Health and resi- dency training in internal medicine at UConn Health, and both serve as assistant professors of the de- partment of medicine at UConn Health. Sonia Plumb Dance Co. announces new executive director Sonia Plumb Dance Co. has announced the hir- ing of Michelle Serra as its executive director after several years writing grants and organizing events for the nonprofit arts institution located in Hartford. Serra was immersed in the artistic side of dance for many years, and began working with Artistic Di- rector Sonia Plumb in 1990 as an original company member. She has taught dance for the University of Hartford, Amherst Ballet Co. and Deerfield Academy. MOVERS & SHAKERS Dr. Kamal Shoukri Laurie Martin Dr. Aileen R. Pangilinan Dr. Jonathan P. Shepherd Susan Bernier Dr. Vincent M. Varilla Sovita Chiropractic Center presented a $1,000 check to a group of youth members at the Asylum Hill Boys & Girls Club in Har- ford. The funds were raised by Sovita's team members through workshops, wellness days, stress relief and staff appreciation programs. • • • The Greater Hartford Arts Council received $10,000 from UnitedHealthcare to support the 2017 "Arts & Wellness" grant program. The program will support four local arts organizations in producing pro- grams to engage adults with physical dis- abilities in creative therapy. • • • Legrand of West Hartford made a $50,000 donation to the American Red Cross disaster-relief fund. Legrand's donation will be used to help the Red Cross prepare for, respond to and help people recover from disasters. • • • The Dime Bank Foundation in Nor- wich has awarded Channel 3 Kids Camp a $2,500 grant. The fund- ing will be used specifically to pro- vide camp scholar- ships to children from New Lon- don County. • • • Goodwin Col- lege in East Hart- ford has been awarded a $15,000 grant (shown below) for scholarship support by the Gene Haas Foundation, based in Oxnard, Calif. The Haas Foundation's goal is to intro- duce students to careers in machine technol- ogy and manufacturing. Pictured (from left) are: Justine Piercy, Cliff Thermer, Len Walsh, Lorraine Palmer, Jeff Boulden and Chip Thermer. Asylum Hill Boys & Girls Club members accept a check from Sovita Chiropractic. 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