Columbia, Md. based charitable organization announces it will provide additional funding to the first youth triathlon program of its kind nationwide
The Columbia Foundation seeks a dynamic President and Chief Executive Officer committed to developing significant growth of our endowment, providing leadership to staff, and working with the Board, community agencies, county government, and donors to enhance the quality of life by creating a more giving Howard County. Send resume and cover letter to barb@nancyadamspersonnel by Friday, Feb. 24, 2012. No phone calls please.
Well-known civic leader and businessman L. Earl Armiger has been appointed Acting CEO of The Columbia Foundation, Howard County's community foundation. He replaces Beverley Francis-Gibson, who resigned to pursue another professional opportunity.
With our tenth publication, the Make Believe issue, we reached our fifth year. Before the launch of the eleventh, the landmark Social Justice issue, we’re pausing to look at what we are, where we’ve been and where we’re going – Little Patuxent Review, December 2011
These are difficult times for many in our community. Unemployment remains high, paychecks don’t go very far, and public services are at times curtailed due to budget cuts. That’s why the kinds of innovative investments being made by philanthropy—particularly community foundations like The Columbia Foundation—have never been more important in Howard County.
The Columbia Foundation, Howard County’s Community Foundation, is dedicated to inspiring life-long giving and connecting people, places and organizations to worthy causes across Howard County, now and into the future. With assets of more than $12 million and more than 290 charitable funds under management, the foundation promotes philanthropy by addressing emerging community issues, managing permanent endowments, and working with individuals, families, corporations and private foundations. The Columbia Foundation supports nonprofit organizations in achieving their charitable objectives and distributes grants and scholarships that touch and transform the lives of so many Howard County residents.
It’s National Community Foundation week – a time that we recognize the vital role that The Columbia Foundation and more than 700 community foundations nationwide play in supporting essential services like health care clinics, food banks, domestic violence shelters, libraries, and volunteer fire departments. In 2010, these foundations granted an estimated $4 billion to a variety of nonprofit activities in the arts, education, health and human services, the environment, and disaster relief. Though they could never replace the role of government-funded services, community foundations can help nonprofit organizations and others by using their private resources for the public good.
Community foundations’ financial independence allows them to take risks, sometimes achieving extraordinary results and affecting change. For example, last year The Columbia Foundation was able to make grants to 89 nonprofits, plus award 12 scholarships to deserving Howard County students. During the course of the year The Columbia Foundation’s efforts helped support a comprehensive crisis intervention center for homeless families, fund transportation services for older residents, provide computers and printers to middle school students who did not have access to computer technology at home, and support the annual Columbia Festival of the Arts, and these are just a few of the worthy programs receiving grants from The Foundation. The Foundation’s support of critical human services and expanded educational, civic and cultural opportunities has benefited our citizens and contributed to the quality of life in Howard County.
Another advantage of community foundations’ philanthropy is their ability to drive innovation as an incubator for great ideas. Community foundations make a difference by developing timely solutions to pressing problems in our society. This year for example, The Columbia Foundation surveyed nearly 700 community members through our Listening Project to gain their insight on unmet needs in our community. Using their input along with data from numerous other sources, we have begun to devise a new proactive grant initiative focused on “Strengthening Families.” To support the initiative The Columbia Foundation plans to establish an endowment fund designated for supporting and developing programs that address this issue.
Community foundations like The Columbia Foundation know that the investments they make today will help people for many years to come. By marshalling the financial resources of individuals, families, and businesses, we can address problems like family resiliency, unemployment, stagnant economic growth, hunger, and poverty. By strategically working with others, community foundations can equip society to more effectively deal with such future challenges in Howard County.
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In the 2011 Iron Girl Triathlon, 20 + participants and 30+ spectators represented Team Mark.
This team is made up of family and friends of Mark Hollingsworth who died in 2010 after battling lung cancer. Mark was a devoted father and husband and he was an avid triathlete who competed in several Columbia Triathlons. He was a huge fan of the sport, and he was also at the Iron Girl in 2006-2009 to support his wife, Michelle Hollingsworth, daughter, Taylor Hollingsworth and Mother-in-law, Diane Krichmar.
Team Mark began as a way to honor and remember Mark’s generous spirit. A scholarship was started in his name at the Columbia Foundation and the first scholarship was awarded this past May to a Marriotts Ridge Graduate. Mark Hollingsworth is loved and missed and it was an honor to wear a team Mark shirt when competing in Iron Girl last Sunday.

A study on the multichannel preferences and charitable habits of Generation Y, Generation X, Baby Boomers and Matures
The Columbia Foundation has two awards available for Howard County nonprofit organizations. Please review the nomination criteria and apply if applicable.
The $2,500 Casey and Pebble Willis Making A Difference Award is available for human service nonprofit organizations in Howard County.
The Casey and Pebble Willis Making a Difference Award
The $1,000 Leadership Council Award recognizes a next generation board member and is available for Howard County nonprofit organizations.
The Columbia Foundation Leadership Council Award
Both applications are due on Wednesday, August 31, 2011 at 5 p.m.
The Columbia Foundation’s Board of Directors completed a Strategic Plan in 2009 for the Foundation which included creating a Strategic Initiatives Committee. One aspect of the strategic plan includes increasing awareness about community needs that demand attention. What better way to gather this information than to communicate with the community directly?
The Columbia Foundation, Howard County’s community foundation, announces the hire of Debbie Daskaloff as Development Officer, beginning June 1, 2011.
The Columbia Foundation will host a public forum to discuss the results of their four-month long “Listening Project” that was conducted to identify and assess the community needs of Howard County, Maryland.
Giving by community foundations declined an estimated 2.1 percent in 2010 following a 7.1 percent reduction in 2009. This is the first consecutive-year decline in community foundation giving recorded since the Foundation Center began separately tracking community foundations in 1981. The reduction in community foundation giving last year was far from universal. In fact, community foundations responding to the latest “Foundation Giving Forecast Survey” actually reported a median increase in 2010 giving (2.5 percent) while independent and corporate foundations did not (0.0 percent). However, the largest community foundations—those with giving of $10 million or more—were more likely to have reported lower funding levels in 2010.
http://foundationcenter.org/gainknowledge/research/pdf/keyfacts_comm2011.pdf
In memory of Amanda and to recognize the work of The Leukemia and Lymphoma Society, her extended family and friends will ring The NASDAQ Stock Market Closing Bell.
At its annual meeting on Monday evening, the Women’s Giving Circle of Howard County (WGC), a fund of The Columbia Foundation, marked entry into its tenth year –Ellicott City Patch,