Los Angeles Examiners

Walid Nasserdeen
Los Angeles Finance Examiner
Most Recent Post
Bull/Bear Ratio: A Contrarian Indicator
R.E. Xavier
Los Angeles Small Business Examiner
Most Recent Post
Discover Your Business Calling (from the Small Business Doctor)
 
 

Multimedia News

World AIDS Day: Observing a global epidemic
20 photos
Children from the Andile School choir sing du...
This weekend in sports
20 photos
Venezuela's boxer Jorge Linares, left, exchan...
Holiday gift ideas: Toys, games and more
20 photos
A child holds a newly released mobile phone c...
Black Friday frenzy
20 photos
Early bird shoppers run into a Target store i...
Mumbai massacre
20 photos
A police officer watches the Taj Hotel, Mumba...

Weinberg Foundation donates to 17 nonprofits

Jul 11, 2007 12:00 AM (510 days ago) by Elizabeth Skalski, The Examiner
This story ranks Not ranked
Related Topics: BALTIMORE
Barry Schloss, left, a trustee of The Harry and Jeanette Weinberg Foundation, Inc., talks with a representative of the Saint Joseph’s Center before a luncheon at the Camden Club in Baltimore on Tuesday.
(Chris Ammann/Examiner)
Barry Schloss, left, a trustee of The Harry and Jeanette Weinberg Foundation, Inc., talks with a representative of the Saint Joseph’s Center before a luncheon at the Camden Club in Baltimore on Tuesday.
BALTIMORE (Map, News) - Summer is the season of giving for the Weinberg Foundation.

Following a luncheon at the Camden Club on Tuesday, the Harry and Jeanette Weinberg Foundation Inc. allocated $10,000 grants to 17 Baltimore nonprofit organizations as part of its first employee giving program.

“Each [Weinberg] employee chooses one organization and presents it to the trustees who review the grants,” said Denise Stonesifer, grants intake manager for the foundation.

All the grants that were reviewed received approval. Recipients included local organizations such as The House of Ruth, Way Station, YANA, Urban Leadership Institute and the YMCA of Central Maryland. The grants enable organizations to expand their efforts in the community.

This story continues below
Advertisement

The Baltimore-based Harry and Jeanette Weinberg Foundation is dedicated to serving the poor by supporting charitable organizations in Baltimore and around the world that provide shelter, nutrition, health and socialization, or by enhancing an individual’s ability to meet those needs. According to its Web site, it has assets of about $2 billion.

Co-founder Harry Weinberg got his start selling trinkets to parade-goers celebrating the end of World War I in downtown Baltimore at age 10. In his 20s, the entrepreneur helped German Jews escape to America by pledging financial support.

That legacy continues to affect many local nonprofits.

Sidney Ford, founder of YANA — You Are Never Alone — a Baltimore nonprofit organization that reaches out to women who are prostitutes and involved in human trafficking, received a $10,000 grant. The group helps 3,500 women each year.

“[We work with] victims of prostitution, and these girls, these women, have lives that are worth living and supporting,” Ford said. “Even though the day is hard, tomorrow will be a little easier.”

Also receiving $10,000 was the Urban Leadership Institute, which mentors and teaches young black males in the city.

“We want to show boys going into sixth grade that their lives are more than Park Heights and Edmondson Avenue,” said David Miller, chief visionary officer of the Urban Leadership Institute.

eskalski@baltimoreexaminer.com

Add a Comment


Name: (required)
Comments:
characters left
Comments are regulated by the Terms of Use.

There are no comments available.
Advertisement