Hartford Business Journal

January 30, 2017

Issue link: https://nebusinessmedia.uberflip.com/i/778179

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 17 of 23

18 Hartford Business Journal • January 30, 2017 www.HartfordBusiness.com NONPROFIT NOTEBOOK NONPROFIT PROFILE The Village for Families and Children 1680 Albany Ave., Hartford | www.villageforchildren.org MISSION To build a community of strong, healthy families that protect and nurture children. TOP EXECUTIVE SERVICES Galo Rodriguez, President & CEO Behavioral health treatment, foster care and adoption and community support services. FY 2015 SUMMARY 2014 2015 Total Employees 523 532 Total Assets $100,633,943 $100,459,995 Total Liabilities $15,174,014 $18,419,118 REVENUES Contributions & Grants $13,260,320 $15,027,595 Program Service Revenue $11,634,420 $11,387,415 Investment Income $3,180,175 $3,269,836 Other $59,213 $97,267 TOTAL $28,134,128 $29,782,113 EXPENSES Grants $0 $0 Member Benefits $0 $0 Salaries/Employee Benefits $19,829,337 $19,643,089 Fundraising Fees $0 $0 Other $7,839,882 $8,688,052 TOTAL $27,669,219 $28,331,141 MARGIN $464,909 $1,450,972 TOP PAID EXECUTIVES (FY 2015) Base Salary Total Compensation & Benefits Galo Rodriguez, President & CEO $230,029 $250,653 Diana Sabagh, Psychiatrist $174,208 $186,639 Edward Hackett, Treasurer & CFO $136,504 $150,814 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 Law firm Locke Lord elects partner in Hartford office Locke Lord has promoted 12 lawyers from seven offices and four practice groups to partnership level, including Julie Mahaney in its Hartford office. Mahaney practices insurance regulatory and gen- eral corporate law. She advises clients in all sectors of the insurance and financial services industries on mergers and acquisitions and corporate law gover- nance. She also represents clients on a broad range of insurance regulatory and compliance matters. Quinnipiac Univ. professor re-elected president of engineering group A. Corey Kiassat, assistant professor of industrial engineering at the Quinnipiac University School of Engi- neering, has been re-elected president of the Institute of Industrial and Systems Engineers, professional chapter 75, serving Connecticut and western Massachusetts. Kiassat joined Quinnipiac as an assistant professor of engineering in 2013, became the program director of industrial engineering in 2015 and the interim as- sociate dean of the School of Engineering in 2016. Duncaster retirement community hires social services director Paula Jasminski has joined Duncaster's Caleb Hitchcock Healthcare Center in Bloomfield as the di- rector of social services. She is responsible for the as- sessment, planning and implementation of the social- services program for long- and short-term residents. Jasminski previously worked as the director of social services at the Bickford Health Care Center in Windsor Locks. WSP | Parsons Brinckerhoff's CT office names senior manager Laura Toole has been named a senior manager for public involvement in the Connecticut area office of WSP | Parsons Brinckerhoff, a global engineering and professional services organization. Toole will be responsible for planning and managing all commu- nication and public involvement services for a di- verse range of projects from her Glastonbury office. Previously, Toole was general manager for a na- tional engineering consulting firm. Coldwell Banker names manager for WH residential brokerage office Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage in Con- necticut and Westchester County, N.Y., announced that Kara Flanagan has been appointed branch vice president and brokerage manager of the com- pany's West Hartford office. Flanagan will oversee approximately 60 affiliated real estate professionals serving homebuyers and sellers in Greater Hartford. Prior to her new role, Flanagan, who has 17 years of real estate experience, was affiliated with the Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage West Hartford office. New Britain art museum re-elects Webster Bank SVP to board John M. Jezowski, senior vice president of Webster Private Bank, was recently re-elected to his second term on the board of trustees for the New Britain Mu- seum of American Art and appointed as chairman of the museum's investment committee. St. Francis Hospital and Medical Center adds specialists Dr. Kelly A. Flynn has joined the medical staff of St. Francis Hospital and Medical Center as a spe- cialist in obstetrics and gynecology with St. Francis Medical Group and Dr. Laura A. Dove has joined the medical staff as a specialist in psychiatry with St. Francis Behavioral Health Group. Flynn is board certified in obstetrics and gyne- cology and her clinical interests include gynecologic ultrasound and centering pregnancy. She is a clini- cal instructor of obstetrics and gynecology at Har- vard Medical School. Dove is board certified in psychiatry and, in addition to English, speaks French, Italian and some Spanish. Day Pitney elects two attorneys to partner in Hartford office Day Pitney announced five attorneys have been elected as partners, including Marie Bertrand and Matt Shiroma in the firm's Hartford office. Bertrand is in Day Pitney's transactional depart- ment. She represents institutional investors in con- nection with the acquisition, disposition, joint venture, development and financing of various types of com- mercial real estate. Prior to joining Day Pitney, Ber- trand worked in a boutique real estate firm in New York City for four years. Shiroma is in the firm's litigation department. His practice is primarily in insurance and reinsur- ance disputes. Prior to rejoining Day Pitney, Shiroma served as a law clerk to the U.S. District Judge Mi- chael P. Shea for the District of Connecticut. Search Integrations names director of brand management Vernon digital marketing firm Search Integra- tions has named David Yaffee as director of brand management. Yaffee has spent the last 25 years in the music manufacturing and financial services in- dustries, most recently as senior vice president for United Bank, where he managed financial advisers throughout the bank's 50 branches. Hoffman promotes family member at Hoffman Audi Hoffman Auto Group has promoted Zachary Hoff- man, a fourth generation Hoffman family member, to general sales manager at Hoffman Audi of East Hartford. Previously, Hoffman was a sales manager at Hoffman Toyota in Avon. MOVERS & SHAKERS Julie Mahaney Dr. Kelly A. Flynn Paula Jasminski Marie Bertrand A. Corey Kiassat Dr. Laura A. Dove John M. Jezowski Matt Shiroma KNOX Inc. has received a $35,000 grant from the Lincoln Financial Foun- dation in support of its "Hartford Grown Headquarters" urban farming program. The program provides land and resources to gardeners who are ready to turn grow- ing fresh produce into a business. The grant will fund the planning and build-out of sat- ellite farms on vacant lots in Hartford. • • • The Seniors Job Bank has received a $3,000 grant from the Hartford Founda- tion for Public Giving. The grant will help the Seniors Job Bank continue to connect people over age 50 seeking work to local busi- nesses and households with jobs to be filled. • • • Girl Scouts of Connecticut has received a $25,000 grant from Travelers to provide Girl Scouting to nearly 900 girls in Hartford. Girl Scouts of Connecticut strives to make its leadership development programs available to every girl in the state who wants to participate, regardless of her family's resources. • • • The Community Foundation of Great- er New Britain has concluded its 2016 grantmaking year with more than $230,000 in grants and scholarships. The grants ben- efit nonprofit organizations and programs serving Berlin, New Britain, Plainville and Southington. • • • The Hartford Foundation for Public Giving is providing grants totaling more than $1.1 million to six nonprofits working to end homelessness in Greater Hartford. Grants were awarded to AIDS Connecti- cut ($102,000), Connecticut Coalition to End Homelessness ($30,000), Corporation for Supportive Housing ($300,000), ImmaCare ($144,000), My Sisters' Place ($220,000) and The Salvation Army ($326,544). The groups are expected to provide a broad range of services aimed at preventing homelessness to more than 1,500 Greater Hartford individuals and families. A Hartford resident tends to an urban garden. P H O T O | C O N T R I B U T E D

Articles in this issue

Links on this page

Archives of this issue

view archives of Hartford Business Journal - January 30, 2017