The Eastern West Virginia Community Foundation awarded more than $1 million in grants and scholarships in 2021. To learn more about the outstanding work being done by our organization, take a look at the slides we prepared for a recent News@Noon presentation to members of the Martinsburg-Berkeley County Chamber of Commerce. Rebecca and Michael are happy to make similar presentations to civic groups and nonprofit boards if you are interested. We’ve compiled the slides into the flipbook below.
Community Foundation Awards $20,000 Grant to Martinsburg Union Rescue Mission
The Eastern West Virginia Community Foundation Solomon Fine Memorial Fund awarded the organization’s final grant of the year on December 31st. The Community Foundation’s $20,000 contribution to the Martinsburg Union Rescue Mission raised the total amount of grants and scholarships awarded by EWVCF to over $1 million this year.
The Solomon Fine Memorial Fund annually presents a substantial grant to one Martinsburg-Berkeley County nonprofit organization that has done exceptional work during the year. The grant to the Rescue Mission was made even more meaningful as the members of the advisory committee recommended the grant be presented in memory of Martinsburg Mayor Harriet Johnson who was a great supporter of the Rescue Mission and its Director Pastor Tim Guerino.
The Martinsburg Union Rescue Mission has continued operating daily throughout the pandemic. In 2021, the Rescue Mission served more than 70,000 meals, provided a safe place for homeless men to sleep, supplied clothing and shoes to families, and offered job skills training and employment opportunities throughout the community.
Currently, the Rescue Mission is engaged in a capital campaign to convert the existing structure at 604 West King street into six apartments that will provide emergency transitional housing for families. With this $20,000 grant from the Solomon Fine Memorial Fund, the campaign is halfway to its $800,000 goal.
When it is safe to do so, the check will be presented to Rescue Mission Director Pastor Tim Guerino by EWVCF President Andrew McMillan and Solomon Fine Memorial Fund Advisory Committee members Martinsburg Mayor Kevin Knowles, Berkeley County Schools Superintendent Patrick Murphy, Gerrardstown Presbyterian Church Pastor Karen Greenawalt, and Good Samaritan Free Health Care Director Karen Newell.
EWVCF Awards More Than $120K to Support Youth and Education Programs
The Eastern West Virginia Community Foundation recently awarded 49 grants, totaling $123,661.21, to 40 groups in the Eastern Panhandle dealing with issues related to youth and education.
These grants were made possible thanks to gifts from generous donors, who established the C. Scott and Elizabeth C. Shade Youth Fund, the Jane P. Snyder Youth Fund, the Tom and Virginia Seely Morgan County Children’s Fund, the EWVCF Endowment for the Community, the Bonn Poland Family Roundhouse Recreation Fund, the Frada Fine Berkeley Education Fund, the Calarma Farm Fund, the EWVCF Endowment for Recreation, and the EWVCF Endowment for the Arts.
Nine of these grants, totaling $32,500, went to organizations serving more than one county in the Eastern Panhandle, including CASA of the Eastern Panhandle, Wind Dance Farm & Earth Education Center, and Faith Community Coalition for the Homeless. 21 grants totaling $40,012.37 went to organizations serving Berkeley County. 12 totaling $27,798.84 went to Jefferson County-focused organizations; 7 totaling $23,350 to Morgan County organizations.
The majority of funding went to programs addressing basic needs in our area, with $40,500 being used to buy diapers, wipes, formula, food, and clothes, and to provide shelter for the most vulnerable populations. Karen Reyes of Renewed Life Ministries, Inc., a group serving both Jefferson and Berkeley counties that received a $3,000 Youth grant, kindly wrote that the Foundation “will probably never know what [their] support does for our local families […] with you, we can help.”
Public schools in the Eastern Panhandle received $40,311.21. Katlin Grantham at Washington High School plans to use her grants to install Water Tower Gardens and to further fund the Washington’s FFA Community Meals. Susie Howell and MJ Pavlik will use their grant to fund a dedicated playground for their Pre-K program housed at Musselman Middle School. Laura Bohrer, a 6th grade science teacher at Spring Mills Middle School, received exactly $785, which she will use to buy an Ultraviolet Sterilization Goggle Cabinet and twenty extra pairs of goggles, ensuring hygiene and safety for her students.
Programs tackling the social and emotional health of our youth received $12,650. Berkeley Heights Elementary School will now be able to implement a Calming Corner, which will be especially helpful for students with autism, ADHD, and/or Attachment disorders. The Martin Robison Delany Opportunity Learning Center will be able to continue to provide Yoga sessions, shown to decrease behavioral referrals and increase GPA in their students.
Art-based Youth programs received $10,600 in funding. Black Cat Music Cooperative’s $2,600 grant will allow them to invite Dominic “Shodekeh” Talifero, Innovator-in-Residence at Towson University’s College of Fine Arts and Communication, to participate in their Youth Mentorship Program. Taylor Fox and Kelli Polen of South Jefferson Elementary plan to use their $1,000 grant to create a mural in their school made of ceramic tiles decorated by students.
Other issues receiving funding include recreation programs, receiving $9,200; traditional educational programs, receiving $22,953.84; technological and equipment upgrades, receiving $15,335.37; and educational programs related to environmental, agricultural, and conservation issues, receiving $12,422.
Potomac Valley Audubon Society, who received four grants totaling $8,500, will be able to continue to host their “Nature in the Neighborhood” summer camps for children in high poverty neighborhoods in both Berkeley and Jefferson counties. Caitlin Mitchell, a physical education teacher at North Jefferson Elementary School, was awarded a $2,500 grant to install a rock climbing wall in the school’s gym. Rock climbing “teaches focus, concentration, body mindfulness, […] stability, […] [and] full body resistance strength,” Mitchell wrote in the application. Other teachers and educators will use their grants to buy books, math games, and to upgrade classroom technology. April Bageant of Bunker Hill Elementary School impressed our Grants committee with her plan to purchase letter magnets and cookie sheets for a guided reading program for her very young students.
Kenny Roberts Joins EWVCF Board
We are pleased to announce that Kenny Roberts has joined the Board of Directors of the Eastern West Virginia Community Foundation. Roberts was raised in Berkeley County and graduated from Martinsburg High School. He currently serves as Director at Invariant, a government relations and communications firm in Washington, D.C., handling energy, infrastructure, labor, and DEI issues. Earlier in his career, Roberts worked for former West Virginia Senator Jay Rockefeller IV. He’s been named one of DC’s Top Lobbyists by The Hill, and he formerly worked as the national advance lead staffer for former first lady Hillary Clinton’s 2016 presidential campaign. He was recently appointed Chairman of the Berkeley County Democratic Executive Committee and is an Advisory Board Member for the Bank of Charles Town. He also serves on EWVCF’s Investment Committee! Kenny splits his time between Washington, D.C., and the Eastern Panhandle. He’s an avid tennis player and traveler and enjoys spending time with his friends and family.
Historic Preservation Fund Reaches Goal
CHARLES TOWN — Historic properties in Jefferson County will soon have the opportunity to apply for some much-needed funding as the Jefferson County Historic Landmarks Commission announced earlier this week that it reached its initial goal of $100,000 for the Jefferson County Historic Preservation Fund. Established at the Eastern West Virginia Community Foundation just over four years ago, this Agency-Endowed Fund is one of the fastest-growing in recent memory.
Falling in line with the county’s comprehensive plan, the purpose of the money is to create a funding mechanism that supports historic preservation, restoration, and reuse throughout Jefferson County. Distributions from the fund will be made to the Jefferson County Historic Landmarks Commission which is developing a grants program to help facilitate repairs of historic properties in Charles Town, Harpers Ferry, and Shepherdstown.
As for what’s next for Jefferson County Historic Landmarks Commission, almost immediately after the Historic Preservation Fund reached its goal, Burke said that the next milestone he envisions for the Fund is $250,000.
For information about the fund or to contribute to support historic preservation in Jefferson County, visit the Eastern WV Community Foundation website at www.EWVCF.org.
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