Entering the New Millennium
“Considering the ESA
Foundation’s Past”
(Part I)
By Verneene Forssberg
As we enter the new millennium, it is a time for reflection. One thousand years has past us by and we are
now entering an era of the 21st century that is more exciting than ever
before. What new potentials lie ahead
of us as we forge into the unknown?
Judging from how we have scratched the surface on so many new
possibilities, I’m here to tell you that I believe we have “wondrous”
things ahead of us. As members of the
ESA Foundation and ESA International are we truly prepared to face what is
ahead of us? Or are we going to remain
stagnate in our ways and unreceptive to a vast untapped potential of our future? What is the legacy that we will leave
behind on January 1, 2000? I guess only
time will answer those questions, but if I am any judge of character I believe
the venturesome natures of our souls will get the better of us. ESA in any form cannot resist a
challenge.
For my purposes I would like to reserve my comments to the ESA
Foundation and what its potential is for the new millennium. This will be Part I of a three-part
series. First I’ll give you a little
history followed by commentary on the present activities and last how all this
will catapult the ESA Foundation into the 21st century. “Indeed,” these are very exciting
times for us.
We have many sisters of ESA that are charter members of the ESA
Foundation. Our charter dates back to
1970. Although the concept of the
Foundation was good, it garnered a slow start.
The membership of any organization is driven, maintained, and developed
by the mission it seeks to fulfill and the Foundation was no exception. We are all aware that the Foundation is a
501(C) 3 organization recognized by the Internal Revenue Service giving us tax
exemption. We are a “nonprofit”
organization and cannot be “self serving” in any way. Over the years this has always been a source of confusion to the
membership, as the ESA International is a 501(C) 4 which means it is a “for
profit” organization and it can be “self serving.” Member chapters and individual members of
the Foundation can filter their charitable donations through the Foundation in
the form of Grants in order to protect the tax-exempt status of their fund
raising. These are called the Turn
Around Funds.
The early years were filled with struggles to find an identity that met
the needs of our mission. Starting with
trying to design and construct a building to house the Foundation and its
operations under the name of ESA World Center Foundation, the basic
premise was to be a conduit in which businesses and individuals who were not
members of ESA could donate their charitable giving. From there it branched its mission to accepting projects
supporting the American Cancer Society, CARE, and a St Jude Children’s Research
Hospital fellowship.
The Foundation was beginning to find its place after its first
decade. It adopted the ADAPT Program as
a project, sold the Foundation building, and headed for a new future. The building had not been a sound investment
but the Directors would not be deterred from their progressive thinking.
Seeking to serve the needs of its members, the co-sponsorship program
was started along with the Women Helping Women program library. However, it was the scholarship and grant
program that begins to take shape and promise new and exciting things to come
in the 1980s. It began with a promise
of earning 10% with each endowed scholarship.
This will be a promise that will come to haunt future Directors as we
swing into the 1990s. Now the Board of
Directors becomes active in their fiduciary responsibilities to manage the
growing assets and investments of the Foundation. It had taken almost two decades to build the assets of the
Foundation to a significant level.
Although the growth of assets had been rather slow, it seems to
constantly increase by small measures.
It was in 1995 when the Board had to take a very serious look at the
Perpetual Endowment agreements.
America’s economy had been suffering along with the interest rates that
investments and savings were making.
Interest rates dropped to a serious 1.5% and sometimes would rebound to
2%. The perpetual endowment agreement
promised a 10% return and this was jeopardizing the Foundation’s ability to
maintain its programs and operations.
The Directors had to take a cold hard look at what had to be done if the
Foundation was to remain viable. It
took the steps to make the endowment program support itself with the interest
earned on the investments. The
scholarship program had become one of its most popular programs and this sent
shock waves through the membership.
The following year applications and donations dropped as adjustments
were made. The membership of the Foundation demonstrated its faith in the
mission of the Foundation as from this time to the present day the scholarship
program as well as the Foundation’s assets will realize unprecedented growth.
It was a sound decision that was to set the Foundation on the road to
excellence and sound financial management.
“Considering the ESA Foundation’s Present”
(Part II: Entering the New Millennium)
The ESA Foundation is currently in a state of evolution. It has finally become the Foundation that
its charter members had dreamed it would become. The most fascinating part of this reality is that its potential
is still unrealized. There are miles to
go, growth to be realized, potential to be taped, new programs to be developed. It is a most exciting time for the
Foundation.
One of the most wonderful aspects about the Foundation’s progress is
its growth of assets. Total assets have
grown from $411,610 in 1995 to $708,128 in 1999. It is the Board’s fiduciary responsibility to see that these
assets continue to grow and that is one whole new area that is opening up for
the Foundation. Over the years we have
built our endowment funds by the generous members who ask us to hold their
endowment funds. It’s this trust that
continues to give us the support to build these assets. These gifts will provide “forever.” A planned giving program is being developed
as this is being written.
The program development of the Foundation has continued growth in three
specific areas: (1) scholarship (2) grants and (3) Women Helping Women
programs. Long range planning has been instrumental in meeting and planning for
the needs of these programs as they continue to demonstrate progress. The Directors have developed a policy of
building in a means to pay for the programs as they grow. Our programs depend upon a volunteer army
of members who give of their time to maintain these programs and promote their
excellence. We run it by an
all-volunteer staff.
The grants which are now being established are to meet educational
needs not specifically designated within the scholarship program. The Foundation has started utilizing funds
that have been placed in a partially restricted fund for the purpose of
supporting educational grants which may be applied for directly through the
Board of Directors. The new ADAPT Grant
has been initiated to activate our participation and support of auditory
processing and reading development, one of the most serious problems in
education today. This was a definite
“change with the times” move on the part of the Board. This area of grant development is on the
brink of another Foundation explosion of growth. Watch for it!
The emphasis on the Women Helping Women library has totally revised the
old programs and added new programs in recent years. Additionally, the long range plan includes plans to set up a
method of continuous updates for the library and the program is currently
paying for itself. It was purposely set
up only to pay for itself, not to make a profit. The Board has been 100% successful in this effort.
Other programs that have been established and are ready to support the
efforts of the Foundation are the following: (1) Life Active Membership program
(2) Extra Boost Award (3) Humanitarian Award program (4) Service Grants (5)
Corporate Seminars. The Board continues
to seek ways to serve human need. The
fund-raising efforts are for the express purpose of supporting its programs and
continue building its assets.
While serving along side of the International Council, the ESA
Foundation Board of Directors has found a good partnership. The relationship between the two boards will
have its highs and lows over the years but in the recent times these two boards
have worked very hard to maintain positive communications. There has been a search for ways in which
both can assist the other in their assigned mission for their respective
memberships.
The long range plans have addressed the issue of computer upgrades and
preparing for what the new millennium will bring for the Foundation and its
membership. This is a Board that is
looking to the future with optimism and great enthusiasm.
I hope you are ready for what I see is possible for the future of this
Foundation.
“Considering the ESA Foundation’s Future”
(Part III: Entering the New Millennium)
The future of the ESA Foundation can be found in the African term “ESAMAU”
or “the light yet to shine.”
There are limitless possibilities for this association because of the
membership’s enthusiastic and hungry appetite for “growth.” As the Foundation has taken shape over the
past decade it is fairly easy to predict the areas that will emerge as focus
points of that growth: building the foundation’s assets, grants, and education
and leadership program development.
The Foundation’s
assets have traditionally been placed in bonds. This has been a very conservative approach to protecting the
assets of the Foundation. This has
served the Foundation well as we built the funds and conducted the affairs of
the Foundation. It meant that the Board
had to depend upon the interest rates that often were fluxuating to dangerously
low levels. As described previously the
Foundation Board developed financial planning which promoted program growth and
dependence upon its ability to pay for itself which aided in the growth of the
year-end balance. Due to the solid
foundation that has been established by the Board, it is now time for the
Foundation to shift into a different type of investment planning which will
include growth investment. The
Board took the first steps to venture into the area of Investment planning with
the establishment of an Endowment Committee this year. Working hard to define a planned giving
program and establish an investment policy, the Board will move into the market
place dividing its assets between equities and fixed income. The Board believes this action is prudent
for it allows us to diversify our assets and maximize the growth of our assets.
It is a
prediction that even though it will still have to live off of the interest and
investment income the Foundation’s assets will reach over $1,000,000 in the
next four years. Due to the change in
investment planning and the increased interest from the membership to invest in
the Foundation’s programs it is further predicted that in the next ten years
the Foundation will be looking at $2,000,000 in assets.
Recently, the membership has noticed the
announcement of new grants which the Foundation has moved to sponsor. As the assets grow so will the number and
the nature of these grants. The
Foundation has found a new way to answer its purpose to serve human need
through such grants.
It is predicted
that the ADAPT grants will become a popular way in which to support the
Lindamood-Bell Learning Processes. We
have started with one per year and by the end of this decade we predict we will
be giving no less than 5 yearly. This
would account for $3000 annually.
The
Board has already made a commitment to establish Educational Grants to be
supported by the Life Active Membership fund.
These grants will support various areas of education and training in
amounts to be established by the Board.
I predict that by the end of this decade the Foundation will be awarding
no less than six educational grants annually.
This means that our Life Active memberships will double within the next
decade to support more grants. Since these grants will be for various amounts to be determined
by the Board it is difficult to determine the amount given annually but it
could amount up to $6000 annually depending on the interest income of the Life
Active fund by the end of the decade.
Should the Educational Grants spark the interest of the membership a
future Board may decide to support them from other sources besides the Life
Active Membership fund which would mean a considerable jump in the amount of
money given in this area. This has
exciting potential as the Board will continue to seek new and innovative
educational projects to support.
In the area of leadership and education there
are some obvious and not so obvious potentials to be realized. First, the present scholarship program that
is supported by the Foundation has already reached dynamic proportions. In the last decade the Board moved to
establish a process to address the growth that the program has
experienced. If the program continues
to grow, and we predict it will, this will be a major challenge for the Board
to address. Most programs the size and
scope of the Foundation’s scholarship program has a paid staff of 30 people to
handle the volume of paperwork. The
Foundation handles its scholarship program with a volunteer force. Currently there are over 80 endowments, most
of which are active, administered by the Board with over $40,000 given
annually. There is an average of five
new endowments added each year. If that
trend continues, and we see no reason to believe that it won’t, the Board will be
administering over 130 endowments by the end of the next decade. This will mean an increase in scholarship
money distributed throughout the United States and Australia. It will also mean that the Board will have
to take a serious look at the administration of the scholarships to make sure
it maintains its effective operation.
With almost 5000 scholarship applications being processed yearly this
will double by the end of the decade.
It is predicted that by the end of
the next decade the ESA Foundation will be giving $100,000 annually in
scholarships to students in the United States and Australia.
It is predicted that the use of
the new web site for the ESA Foundation will aid in doubling the number of
applications received for Foundation Scholarships. It will also bring new attention to the ESA Foundation, it
programs, and good works.
Education being a primary force that drives
the work of the Foundation, the Women Helping Women program will emerge into an
entirely new program of assistance for the general population. We have seen this program develop into an
excellent library which emphasizes topics which are of interest to women. There are several ways this can expand.
This program could expand its
reach to senior citizens, men, and teens through the development of educational
programs as well as information placed on the web site for people around the
world to access. A specific area of
emphasis will be the support groups in such areas as breast cancer, partners of
Alzheimer’s patients, or grandparents raising grandchildren, etc.
The library will be expanded into
topics of interest to men and teenagers.
As these areas expand so will the participation of these groups in the affairs
of the Foundation.
A whole new area of concern is the needs of
America’s youth which could open up with the Corporate Seminar should this
program ever take root. The ESA
Foundation will become involved in a partnership with corporate America to
develop leaders and volunteers for future generations.
If the Corporate Seminar is
emphasized by the Board, it is predicted it will become a major source of
support for the Foundation’s programs and grants.
The Corporate Seminar has the
potential to offer the opportunity for a partnership between the International
Council and ESA Headquarters should future leadership wish to pursue such a
partnership.
This program will open up another
program area for the Foundation of working with youth leadership training.
The future of the ESA Foundation is excellent
and as we look at what could be accomplished in the 21st century it
is exciting to think about. We might
not accomplish everything I’ve listed, but we certainly could if we set it up
in our long range planning and elect leadership that believes in all the
Foundation can accomplish by seeking areas of human need and answering that
call. These ideas may take a different
form, shape or direction depending upon the interests of the membership, but it
gives us a large clue as to where we could go if the desire remains within our
hearts to grow. All in all this bring
us back to ESAMAU. The ESA
Foundation is a “light yet to shine” in the 21st century.
“ESAMAU”