To be a catalyst for community renewal and enrichment to the Jubilee Park Neighborhood, a 62-block area in southeast Dallas.
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Leadership
Marissa Castro Mikoy President & CEO
David Martin Chair
Will Snyder Vice Chair
Grady Schleier Vice President & Treasurer
Stewart Thomas Vice President & Secretary
Kristy Romo Assistant Treasurer
Board of Directors
Squeaky Connolly
Matt Davies
Tiffany Davis
Michael Gagne
Reverend Dr. Chris Girata
Alex Halbardier
Tom Harbison
Kathryn McCartney
Mary Martha Pickens
Gigi Poglitsch
Paul Polanco
Mary Stewart Ramsey
Gunnar Rawlings
Darrel Rice
Joanna Ridgway
J.C. Snead
Matt Waller
COUNCIL OF HONOR
Bill Addy
Bob Axley
Don Baty
Bob Bowie
Ginger Brown
Jorge Correa
Florencia Velasco Fortner
Davis Hamlin
Walt Humann
Bill Johnson
Allen Lassiter
Jeanie Laube
Wil McCall
Pauline Medrano
Zulema Ortiz
Bill Pardoe
Pat Prestidge
Mary Stewart Ramsey
Darrel Rice
Jeff Rice
Arden Showalter
Ellis Skinner
Jim Skochdopole
Wanda Smith
Carol Towne
Patrick White
Above: Folklórico dancers at National Night Out
A WORD FROM OUR BOARD CHAIR
Dear friends,
As I look back on 2019, I cannot help but be astounded by how much can change in only one year’s time. I think back to last summer when our campers took their “Passports Around the World” to journey across the metroplex, and I hope it will not be much longer until we can embark on a new set of adventures.
It is difficult to look back when so much of our attention has been consumed by the present, but I invite you to reflect on 2019 and celebrate all that we accomplished with your help. In 2019, we saw tremendous gains in education with recordshattering enrollment in both our after-school and summer camp programs. Last year we also piloted our Family Empowerment and Workforce Certification programs as part of our Opportunity initiative. Through these programs, our residents have learned how to launch their careers, become homeowners, and strengthen their families.
While 2020 has brought considerable change, it has also brought incredible growth for Jubilee Park. In July, we welcomed Marissa Castro Mikoy as our new President and CEO in the midst of a global pandemic. Under her leadership, we have been able to ensure that our Jubilee neighbors’ emergency needs are met. Marissa’s compassion and commitment to our community are apparent in all that she does, and I could not be more confident that she is the right leader to guide our organization forward.
In these pages, you will read stories of compassion and resilience. I hope that you will take pride in knowing that your contribution has profoundly changed the trajectory of someone’s life.
Although this year has sent shockwaves throughout the Dallas community, the foundation our community is built on is strong. I know that our community will recover and that we will build back better and stronger than ever.
I would be very remiss in this letter if I did not take the opportunity to express our extreme gratitude to our former President and CEO, Ben Leal. His leadership, dedication, and commitment to Jubilee have enabled tremendous progress over the last nine years, and we all wish him the very best in his new role as President of The Addy Foundation. Ben has been and will continue to be, a great friend of Jubilee.
Yours in service,
David Martin
DAVID MARTIN Chair, Board of Directors
MARISSA
President & CEO
CASTRO MIKOY
A WORD FROM OUR PRESIDENT & CEO
To our Jubilee Family,
When I accepted the position of President & CEO just a few months ago, I had no idea what the future would hold for our organization. We were in the middle of a COVID-19 spike that showed no signs of letting up and had newly launched our first-ever virtual summer camp. Although so much was uncertain, I quickly learned that the compassion and generosity of our Jubilee Family would remain a constant through it all.
For years, I had admired Jubilee Park & Community Center as a true model for community engagement and revitalization. However, throughout these past few months, I have seen that Jubilee is far more than an organization; it’s a family. I have been blown away by the show of support I have witnessed over the past few months as our donors and volunteers worked around the clock to ensure that our community received the resources they needed to stay afloat.
Friends, believe me when I say that you have made a measurable impact in someone’s life. By supporting our programs, you have helped strengthen our community by empowering our neighbors to find new hope and strength in the face of hardship.
Our organization has the chance to become a powerful advocate for change by elevating the voices of our neighbors in Southeast Dallas. It is my hope that Jubilee will come to serve as a convener and community builder; a place that brings neighbors and community stakeholders together to address systemic barriers in underserved communities of color.
It is my vision that we will grow to extend our reach across the Southeast Dallas community, advocating for equity of resources and access to affordable housing, high-quality education, compassionate healthcare, and economic opportunities for all. Our neighbors deserve the right to access these pathways to progress so that our families can thrive and contribute to a strong, unified Dallas community.
It is an honor to serve you as Jubilee’s President & CEO, and I want to thank the entire Jubilee Family for the warm welcome I have received. I look forward to working together to create a place where neighbors come together to connect, support, and find strength in their collective voice for generations to come.
Humbly,
Marissa Castro Mikoy
2020 Action Plan
Launch of Parkland telehealth services
Free transportation in partnership with Uber
Work with SMU CORE to complete full evaluation of S3 program
Expansion of Teen Program through high school
Core Values
We are Authentic
We are Compassionate
We are Inclusive
We are Purposeful
We are Resilient
We are Jubilee.
Above: Students at Jubilee’s award-winning afterschool program at Oran M Roberts Elementary School
Before our organization ever existed, our Jubilee neighbors fought for a better future in the face of inequality. Jubilee residents to take on the task of community revitalization alongside us. By equipping our neighbors
In Jubilee Park, we celebrate the resilient spirit of our neighborhood and strive to empower our neighbors with the tools they need to succeed, we can inspire a culture of multi-generational achievement.
Jubilee Park & Community
inequality.
TO LEAD HEALTHY LIVES
Most of us know that getting checkups regularly or eating the proverbial “apple a day” is key to leading a healthy life. But did you know that health is determined by far more than nutrition, fitness, and healthcare? Several factors determine our health outcomes like life expectancy and health status. In fact, 70% of our overall health is determined by our social, economic, and physical living conditions.
Healthy individuals come from healthy communities. Imagine for a moment that your goal is to lose weight. You are put in a room without gym equipment, instruction, and healthy foods but with unlimited access to junk food. No matter how determined you are, you find that it is impossible to achieve your goal because your environment has set you up to fail. The same applies to every aspect of our neighbors’ health: How can we expect our neighbors to be healthy if they do not have the tools or environment to help them get healthy?
At Jubilee Park, we work to address the full spectrum of social health determinants, from ensuring that our residents have access to fresh foods, to supporting our child and adult learners in the classroom.
ECONOMIC STABILITY
Employment
Income
Expenses
HEALTHCARE
ENVIRONMENT
• Debt
• Medical Bills
• Support
• Literacy
• Vocational training
• Early childhood education
• Hunger
• Access to healthy food
• Health coverage
• Accessibility
• Provider cultural competency
• Green spaces
• Walkability
• Housing
• Transportation
• Community engagement
• Support Systems
WORK HARD, PLAY HARDER:
Access to a green space directly impacts health outcomes like life expectancy and health status. Although 47.6% and 46.4% of Latinos and African Americans do not meet federal exercise guidelines, they are also less likely to live within walking distance to a park. The soccer fields, basketball courts, walking track, and playground at Jubilee Park provide our neighbors with the only safe place to walk, run, and play in the area.
WE’VE GOT GAME!
Children from low-income families are half as likely to participate in team sports when compared to their more affluent peers. At Jubilee, we understand that a healthy lifestyle is critical in improving outcomes for children in our community. Participation in team sports can improve confidence, overall health, and academic performance. Last year, nearly 250 children participated in team sports at Jubilee Park!
Left: Highland Park High School students at soccer clinic in the park at Jubilee
Doris’s Story:
WE ARE RESILIENT
Mrs. Doris couldn’t remember the last time she felt well. She had been experiencing intense lower abdomen pain for weeks, but as a fulltime housecleaner and mother of two, she knew she did not have the time, money, or resources to worry about herself. She was struggling to stay afloat, and because she was not insured, she knew that seeing the doctor would come at great sacrifice for her family.
Doris decided to prioritize family and push through the pain, but as she felt sicker and sicker, she knew she had to see the doctor. Reluctantly, she called to schedule her appointment only to find that the automated system did not have a Spanish translation. She hung up and tried to drive the pain from her mind.
Another week went by and her symptoms worsened. Although she would have to miss out on a day’s wages by calling in sick, Doris was scared. She boarded the bus and took a two-hour trip to visit the local clinic that was only three miles away. With no appointment, she was turned away, scheduled for an appointment two months out, and given paperwork to apply for a low-income plan to cover her costs. Defeated, Doris returned to Jubilee Park where she received assistance with her application and was reminded that she could go to the clinic early in the morning when people most often canceled their appointments. On the third try, Doris was seen. All it took was three days of lost wages, twelve hours wasted on transportation, and months of pain and fear. Unfortunately, Doris’s story is all too common. That is why we are so excited to announce the launch of telehealth services and free transportation for essential errands like medical appointments and grocery shopping! These services, in partnership with Parkland and Uber, will provide care to our community by eliminating transportation and cost as a barrier to healthcare access.
Right: Volunteers providing free flu shots in partnership with Walgreens for our Jubilee Park residents
Above: Zumba class at our annual Health Prevention Expo
Marjorie Murat and Councilman Adam Medrano at Uber groundbreaking in Deep Ellum
TO DEFY EXPECTATIONS
By building academic confidence and sparking curiosity, our teachers help inspire a love of learning that bears dividends well beyond the classroom. Jubilee’s award-winning OST (out-of-school-time) programs implement a diverse curriculum to keep students engaged while addressing the core components that determine academic success: STEM, reading, enrichment, health and wellness, and social-emotional learning.
IGNITING PASSION INSPIRING EXCELLENCE
2018 vs. 2019 Summer Camp Enrollment
Reading achievement for 2018-2019 school year
MULTI-GENERATIONAL ACHIEVEMENT
My parents were immigrants and I just thought you were supposed to get a job and try and survive. I never thought about college. Now, [my daughter’s] in 7th grade and plans to go to college. I told her, ‘where there’s a will there’s a way.’
We will make it happen.
-Erica
INVESTING IN TOMORROW
Did you know that every $1 invested in afterschool programs saves $3 by increasing kids’ earning potential, improving performance at school, and reducing crime rates and welfare costs? As the only free program in Southeast Dallas providing high-quality academic enrichment, Jubilee plays a critical role in helping to close the opportunity gap by providing low-income students with the resources that they need to thrive both inside and outside the classroom. This year, Jubilee sought to bring academic equity to even more students in Southeast Dallas through a new partnership with DISD. The busing program, which launched late 2018, provided program participants from two local elementary schools with transportation to Jubilee Park. In 2019 alone, attendance from Mount Auburn and Eduardo Mata Elementary doubled!
Left: Jubilee’s afterschool students boarding the bus
Right: Children at OM Roberts enjoying Easy Sliders courtesy of Ylang 23
WE ARE INCLUSIVE
Above: Dr. Ranita Dement, S3 Coordinator
Interventions offered: -Literacy -Behavorial help
-Social-emotional learning - Enrichment
19 students served
Dr. Ranita Dement is a self-described lifelong learner. With several advanced degrees and over 20 years of teaching under her belt, Ranita is most in her element in the classroom, though seeing the inside of a school seemed like an impossible dream when Ranita was born with severe epilepsy that kept her out of school until age seven. Because Ranita was so far behind, she was placed in a special education classroom that she describes as “like an emergency room.” In a special education classroom, Ranita explained, students from all grade levels and abilities are crammed into a singular classroom so “teaching skills like reading was not the protocol. The emphasis was to get them back in general ed.”
That experience inspired her to major in Special Education at the University of Central Arkansas where she later earned a Master’s in Elementary Education with an emphasis in reading. “I was called to it; I knew what it was like to feel singled out. I knew kids felt embarrassed to be in special education.” While teaching and later serving as assistant superintendent, Ranita never stopped learning and went on to earn two M.A’s and a Doctorate in Education Leadership and Policy from the University of Missouri.
After so many years in education, when Ranita moved to Dallas in 2018, she planned to finally retire. But destiny had bigger things in store for her. One day at the beauty parlor, Ranita ran into her friend Marjorie who was then working at Jubilee Park. “She was picking my brain about Jubilee’s new S3 program and I told her if this was going to work, you needed a special education teacher, and someone with administrative experience. When she said, ‘So, someone like you?’ I laughed. I said, no way, I just retired!” But when Ranita came to tour Jubilee Park, she couldn’t say no. “The park, the neighborhood, the cute kids-- that’s how they get you!”
Ranita joined with a bold and overarching vision for the program and has since been joined by two certified interventionists, Kendra Spears and Andrea Alvarez. With a bigger team, Ranita has big plans for 2020.
“I want to show kids that it doesn’t matter what your diagnosis is. If you have grit and stay the course, you can achieve anything.”
TO THRIVE AT EVERY AGE
From childhood through the golden years, Jubilee Park strives to empower all of our residents to reach their fullest potential. By encouraging independence and igniting passion, we help our aging populations lead healthy and vibrant lives. Last year, our Jubilee seniors took part in a broad range of enrichment classes that included health and nutrition topics, safety classes, arts and culture activities, financial literacy workshops, field trips to Dallas institutions, and – of course – bingo!
Our seniors love to spread the word about their favorite programs, and in 2019 we experienced an increase of new seniors by a staggering 62%. To keep up with demand, we added two additional hours of programming each week – nearly doubling the total program enrichment hours.
17 Senior Home Visits
393 Seniors Served
3,484 senior meals and food boxes served, a 20% increase from 2018!
Left: Ms. Virginia at our Halloween Bingo Bash
From left to right: Senior caretaker, Jubilinks Chair Johanna Corrigan, and Ms. Dye, Jubilee Park’s oldest resident, at the Christmas Senior Luncheon
SENIOR KITCHEN BEFORE
SENIOR KITCHEN IN PROGRESS
WE ARE COMPASSIONATE
In 2019, the Housing Task Force piloted a repair program for elderly neighbors in Jubilee Park who own their homes but cannot afford to make much-needed repairs. The volunteers were stunned by the condition of many of the candidates—imagine a couple who have worked their entire lives and paid off their family home trying to navigate rotting floors, non-existing ceilings, plastic bags over windows, and inaccessible bathrooms. Some elderly neighbors shared that they had to take ‘sink baths’ to clean themselves because of how inaccessible their bathrooms are.
One example is Ms. Toni’s home, where the lady of the house couldn’t enter her bathroom or even get to her sink because the door and walkway could not accommodate her wheelchair. Volunteers assessed the situation, budgeted improvements to make it possible for Ms. Toni to bathe herself and access the sink, and started shopping for deals on the refurbishment.
The roll-in shower, accessible toilet, shallower cabinet, and wider doorframe have done wonders for Ms. Toni’s quality of life.
Just like Ms. Toni’s bathroom, the Housing Task Force has set to work fixing wheelchair ramps, repairing broken floors, installing donated air conditioners, and much more. It’s a heartwarming feeling to know that volunteer time, expertise, and energy can go such a long way in making someone’s house a home.
SENIOR HOME REPAIR PILOT PROGRAM BY THE NUMBERS
COST BREAKDOWN OF SENIOR HOUSING REPAIRS
11 TOTAL HOMES REPAIRED
10 AC UNITS INSTALLED
TO BUILD STRONG COMMUNITIES
Amazing things can happen when a community comes together around a shared vision. At Jubilee, our neighbors are involved in our mission of community revitalization on every level: residents police their own neighborhoods, tutor in our classrooms, and even help design our programs and events.
By involving our neighbors every step of the way, we seek to create programs that are firmly anchored in community need. That is why we created a new role in 2019 to provide a direct line for our residents. Our Community Support Specialist and Jubilee neighbor Alejandra Saldaña is a fierce advocate for her community, working tirelessly to connect families with the care and services that they need. In 2019 alone, Alejandra introduced long-term case management and completed an incredible 173 sessions for 105 clients. These sessions include financial assistance, advocacy, and empowerment.
A COMMUNITY IN ACTION:
In 2019, community members participating in Jubilee’s Family Empowerment Program decided to use their family service project to plan a family-friendly gathering where families could meet their neighbors. The Winter Wonderland ball inaugurated the first-ever event thrown by our Family Empowerment Club, and it was a hit! The club secured in-kind donations for food and decorations, worked with allotted budget, organized free childcare, and advertised the event. Everyone was dressed to the nines in their holiday best to enjoy a rare parents-night-out. We can’t wait to see what’s to come from this special group in 2020 as they form our community events committee!
Left: Family Empowerment graduates at Wonderland Ball
Right: Caterer hired by the Family Empowerment Club
WE ARE PURPOSEFUL
When a nightclub opened just down the street, fighting and the sound of gunshots regularly rang out in the night air. Rattled by the sudden uptick in crime, our Jubilee neighbors began to strategize how to shut down the nightclub. It would prove to be a difficult task, but our Jubilee residents had suceeded in reducing their neighborhood’s crime rate by 74% since 1997 and refused to surrender the peace they had fought so hard for. The first person they turned to was Dale Rettman, Jubilee Park’s own Plant Manager. Dale has worked with our residents for years to keep the community safe, and was ready to fight alongside his neighbors to reclaim their neighborhood.
What happened next was amazing. Community members poured into Crime Watch meetings to collaborate with DPD and Jubilee Park on a multi-pronged effort to shut down the nightclub. They brought code violations to the city, but the nightclub evaded justice time and again and violent crime continued. Finally, the community met with Councilman Adam Bazaldua who told the Jubilee residents that they could try and shut down the nightclub by collecting signatures from local businesses and residents. But there was a catch-- the next City Council meeting was only three days away. In the next 72 hours, residents and Jubilee staff sprang into action to canvas the 62-block neighborhood in a coordinated awareness campaign to gather signatures in support of a crackdown. By the third day, they had collected 137 signatures from residents, businesses, and employees in the area. After weeks of organizing, the nightclub finally closed its doors for good. The neighborhood had won!
Above: Sergeant Bridget Wilson-Jones blockwalking with Jubilee senior
TO DREAM AND ACHIEVE
At Jubilee, we believe that to revitalize a neighborhood, you have to invest in its people. That’s why in 2018, we announced the addition of our Opportunity pillar with the mission to create a bridge built on the knowledge, the resources, and the power to make a change. This year, as part of Jubilee’s Opportunity initiative, we piloted our Adult Skills and Family Empowerment programs.
PUBLIC HEALTH 5%
The Family Empowerment Program (FEP), which kicked off in March, is a partnership between Toyota and the National Center for Families Learning (NCFL); it works to break the generational cycle of poverty through family literacy by empowering parents and children to better reach their full potential. Toyota Family Learning offers adult-skill building and helps parents become more involved in their children’s school and the community by creating and enhancing social networks. It includes Parent and Child Together (PACT) Time®, Parent Time classes and Family Service Learning projects.
We are excited to announce that in 2020, the FEP will transition into the Family Empowerment Committee-- an entirely community-led events and programs planning club!
I really like to learn English in order to get better at my work, and people that I speak with and understanding more and I can answer people when they talk to me.
-ESL Participant
Above:
I've taken the challenge and have stepped up; I've made a commitment to go to every class and it has paid off. It's helping me be a better mom for my kids, a better sister for my siblings. To me it's very empowering.
-FEP participant
FAMILY EMPOWERMENT AND ADULT SKILLS BUILDING BY THE NUMBERS:
• 155 adult participants
• 40 children
• 256 enrichment hours
• 92% reported that the Career Advancement course prepared them to enter into or advance employment
• 38% reported either gaining employment or advancing employment
Mother and daughter at Jubilee
WE ARE AUTHENTIC
SJ’s Family Empowerment Program Graduation Address
Hello, my name is SJ and I am from Mexico. I am a single mother of three. My highest level of education was 11th grade.
My favorite part of the program was when the psychologist came to do a workshop because I was able to get to know the group while we expressed ourselves and reminisced on our youth. I also enjoyed that the psychologist was bilingual so I was able to express myself properly in my language. I also really enjoyed when we learned about life insurance. It made me realize how important it is to prepare myself so that my family won’t struggle very much.
My goal in participating in the program was to learn to love myself again. I had the opportunity to meet new people and hear about our shared struggles. It made me feel like I was not alone. At first I used to dread having to leave my house and now I can’t wait to come to the program. Leaving my house helped me overcome my struggle with depression. Before I spent too much time alone at home, and this program gave me a reason to leave and learn how to be better for my family.
Participating here has given me hope. When I come to Jubilee I see people from many places talking and playing together. It gives me hope and peace within a world full of pain and chaos. The community and the employees here make me feel accepted. I feel like this is a place of refuge for adults, because I always was greeted with a huge smile by [the program leader] that made me feel at peace. Also, one of my classmates would encourage me a lot because despite her struggles with having a child with disabilities, she would always make it to class, sometimes running in late, but always carrying a smile. Seeing her would give me strength to keep fighting through my battles as well. Another one of my classmates calls and checks up on me and tells me that she is there for me for whatever I may need.
This program has given me the support to continue fighting for my family.
-SJ, Family Empowerment Program Participant
WE ARE JUBILEE
Jubilee Park runs on volunteers. From corporate groups, to service leagues, to community members, our volunteers hail from every corner of DFW and every walk of life. In 2019, we had 1,820 volunteers visits to Jubilee Park!
In 2018, art enthusiast Judy Gass and a team of volunteers led an effort to grow the art program at Jubilee Summer Camp to offer high-quality art lessons that our students did not have access to in their schools. Through Jubilee’s new Summer Art Program, students worked directly with local artists like Bart Forbes and Brenda Bogart of Blue Print Gallery. The kids loved working with new, high-quality materials and experimenting with new mediums! Our Jubilee kids are already excited to see what amazing art experiences Summer Camp 2020 will bring!
Above: Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas volunteer at our annual Reading Days
Above: Kate Juett, volunteer artist, helps teen during Summer Art Program
Above: Saint Michael volunteers wrapping presents for I Believe In Angels
VERITEX COMMUNITY BANK ADOPTS A CLASS:
In 2019, Veritex Community Bank adopted one of our Jubilee classrooms! As part of our corporate Adopt-A-Class program, Veritex employees volunteered in our afterschool classrooms and awarded a grant of $20,000 to support Jubilee’s afterschool program!
This year, we had the biggest turnout ever for the Women of Saint Michael annual Day of Service! Volunteers met with seniors, watched babies at Jeanie’s Place, read to our Jubilee kids, and planted flowers in the Jubilee garden!
Above: The Women of Saint Michael at their annual Day of Service
Above: Veritex Community Bank volunteers helping out at Jubilee’s afterschool
Above: Jubilee Young Leaders and Jubilee Board Members at toy sorting party for holiday angel project
THE WOMEN OF SAINT MICHAEL GIVE BACK:
Visionaries ($100,000+)
The Crystal Charity Ball
The Moody Foundation
ISN Software Corp
The Perot Foundation
United Way of Metropolitan Dallas
Bank of America
Trailblazers
($50,000-$99,999)
Anonymous Foundation (2)
Lydia and Bill Addy
The Dallas Foundation
Esping Family Foundation
Sara and Robert Hallam
J. Davis and Winnie Hamlin
Hoblitzelle Foundation
National Center for Families Learning
Mary Stewart and James Ramsey
The Rees-Jones Foundation
Saint Michael and All Angels Episcopal Church
Sammons Enterprises Inc.
George A. and Nancy P. Shutt Foundation
Innovators
($25,000-$49,999)
Anonymous
Harry W. Bass Jr. Foundation
Capital for Kids
Katherine C Carmody Charitable
Katherine and Harlan Crow
Nancy Selby Engle
The Hersh Foundation
The Hoglund Foundation
Jubilee Park & Community Center Endowment
Fund
Ben E. Keith Foundation
PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP
Robert and Katherine Penn
Advocates
($10,000-$24,999)
Anonymous Individual
Capital One Bank
Christensen Family Foundation
Community Council of Greater Dallas
CPS Foundation
Holloway Family Foundation
Head Start of Greater Dallas
William and Anne Johnson
Oncor
Karen and William Pardoe
The Real Estate Council Foundation
Darrel and Jeff Rice
State Fair of Texas
Stemmons Foundation
Suntrust Foundation
Elizabeth Toon Charities
Trust
Veritex Community Bank
Vizient
Women of Saint Michael
Gordon Worsham
Champions
($5,000-$9,999)
Anonymous Foundation
Arkay Foundation
Michele and Robert Axley
Donald Baty
BBVA Compass
Big Thought
Alice E. and Joseph C. Blewett Foundation
Gail and Jim Browne
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Connolly
Exchange Club of East Dallas
Episcopal Health Foundation of Dallas
Florence Foundation
Whitney and Jay Grogan
Mary Ann and Allen Lassiter
Laughlin-Beers Foundation
Mark Foundation IM
Kay Y. Moran Harry S. Moss Foundation
Carrie S. Orleans Trust
Paratus Finanacial Inc.
Paycor INC
SJL Design Group LLC
Jeanne and J.C. Snead
Ellis M. and Linda Skinner
James and Nancy Skochdopole
John and Nancy Solana
Texas Instruments (matching gifts)
Emily and James Traweek
Tolleson Private Bank
Mr. and Mrs. Lucian Touchstone Fund
Mary and Matt Waller
The Gil and Dody Weaver Foundation
Partners
($2,500-$4,999)
Ginger Brown
Tiffany and Brad Davis
Peggy Dear
Dollar General Literacy Foundation
Ecolab Foundation
The Fan Law Office
Forman Foundation
Beverly and Rick Herrscher Hispanic100 Giving
Circle of the Texas Women’s Foundation
Michelle and Stewart Thomas
Microsoft
Dana and Charles Nearburg
Elizabeth Norwood
Pegasus Bank
John W. Peavy III
The Aileen and Jack Pratt Foundation
Texas Recycling Inc.
Ben Leal and Cesar Reyna
Kristy and Raymond Romo
Deedie Rose
Kara Schillaci
Mary Elizabeth and Grady Schleier
Simmons Bank
Watkins Family Advised Fund
Jaime and Patrick White
Julia Work
Neighbors
($1,000-$2,499)
Margaret and Mark Anschutz
Arch Insurance Group
Patricia Beall
Edward and Kalita Blessing
Allison and Chris Bovard
Mary A. Brumbach
Judy Canon
Becky & Mike Casey
Teri & Eric Chang-Tung
Jane Cole
Jean and George Coleman
Betty and John Crawford
Mike Davis and Richard Kelley
Michael & Katie Gagne
Sarah Gentry
Dare and Dale Gillette
Joyce and Mike Ernst
Sharon and Steve Folsom
Kristi and Bill Francis
Nicole and Chris Girata
Grace Bible Church, Troop 125 BSA
Mary Jalonick
Sharon Kane
Bill Knox
Paul Hale
Kris and Larry Hawkins
Cheryl Henry
Hegi Family Foundation
Joseph and Beth Hise
Stephanie Holt
Patricia Houston
Walter and Beatrice Humann
Nancy Perot and Rod Jones
Karen and Grant Laughlin
Kathleen and Frank Lauinger
Dana Ledergerber
Sarah and Alan Losinger
March Family Foundation
Cora and Harry Mason
Mary Ruth and Steve McKenney
Francis K McGinnis, III
The Meadows Foundation Matching Gifts
Program
Vicki Vaughan Miller
Jan and David Miller
Michael W. Moroney
Paula Rayer Nemec
Paul Polanco
Rick and Sandra Porter
Beth and John Puckett III
Joanna and Eric Ridgeway
Nancy G. Riddle
Kara Schillaci
Mardie and Alan Schoellkopf
Joe and Linda Staley
Joan Stansbury
Carolyn Swann
Byrd Fuertes Teague
Christi Tipps Wade
Evy Kay and Dick Washburne
Kay J. and Leo Whelan
Kathy and John Yeaman
Supporters (Up to $999)
Anonymous
Lindsay Abernethy
Ralph L. Arrell
Amounts listed reflect support of all Jubilee programs including special donations to Jubilee’s 20th Anniversary Specialized Student Support Initiative, as of January 31, 2018.
Jane Altavilla
Jennifer and John Alexander
Aline Bass
James E. Bass (Trinbrook Fund)
Steve Beckham
Nell O. Beck
Mary Frances Bellman
Katrina and Ian Benedict
Monique and Tom Black
Erica Blanco
Jonathan Blum
Joanne Bondy (Stocks & Bondy)
Thomas Bowen
Sam Boyd
Nicholas P Bodmer
Adele Broughton
Carolyn and Steve Brown
David Burrows
Adrienne Bullard
Lynne Campbell
Joseph Cahoon
Peggy Carr
Christie Carter
Emily and Jason Cassady
Karrie and Bob Cato
Margaret Cervin
Laura Colhouer and Riz Chand
Alicia and John Cheek
Mary K. Craig Class
Anne Coke
Claudia G. Coker
Joan and Mark Coleman
Susie and Randy Courtney
John C. Creuzot
Rebekah Dalton
Jennifer Dickerson
Sean and Susan Donohue
Alan Dorantes
Gwendolynne and William Downs
Ann and Bob Dyer
Allison and Jerry Earle
Sally Earnest
East Dallas Church of Christ
Edgemere Retirement Community
Elliot Medical Solutions
Joan Faubion
Whitney Farley
Brownlee Fielder
Courtney Flanagan
Allison Flume
Julia Forrester
Sarah and Dean Galaro
Judith Gardere
Ruthie Garrett
Bob and Judy Gass
Elizabeth Hoffman Gerber
Barbara R. and Bill C. Gilbert, Jr.
Courtney Gilberg
Anne and Dan Girata
Craig & Barbara Gray
Louise and Guy Griffeth
Flor Griffis
Justin Goertz
Margaret and Wade Goodrich
Marilyn and Tom Harbison
Allen Hart
Lois and Bob Hart
Lauren Havens
Steve and Kay Head
Tricia Heaney
Sheri Hemby
Tuck and Rue Henry
Mark and Linda Hill
Dolores Hill
Marta and Colin Holden
Todd Howard
Carl Hudiburg
Jim Ferguson and Alisa Hurley
Leigh Huseman
Elizabeth and Cliff Hutchinson
Joe Ibarra
Allison and Michael Iyescas
Paula Jacobs
Jubilee Family Empowerment Program
Jane Douglas Chapter, NSDAR
Norma (Pat) Jackson
Kathy and Patrick Jenevein
Marvin Johnson
Mignon Jones
Pam and Frank Jordan
Kate Juett
Carol Kennedy
Ellen Keenan
Patty Kendrick
Henry and Cincha Kostman
Lake Highlands Bridge Club
The Law Office of Ted Steinke
Sydney and Ken Lawder
Karen Lawrence
Gracie Lewis
Jaclyn Fraker Marshall
Alison Thais Reiff-Martin
Mike and Sissy Massad
Mary Haney Massengale
Carol Mason
Virginia McAlester
Debra and Wil McCall
Mrs. Jennifer McCombs
Anne McGilvray
Pauline Medrano
W.J. “Bud” Melton
Lindsay Melvin
Clifford R. and Barbara J. Miercort
Jessica Miller
Vernon Monzingo
Barbara and Jim Moroney
Suellen Murchison
Matthew Murcotte
Robert and Ellen Muth
Dorothy J. Nash
Diana Newton
Carrie and Robert Nicoud
Carol Oakes
Ron Odlozil
Thomas Oliver
Sue and Bob Patton
Liz and Ralph Perry-Miller
Maria Perez
Jane M. Pfaff
Lisa Yvette Pierce, MD
Gigi and Jerry Poglitsch
Angelica Portillo
Emmy Lou Prescott
Reed and Jody Prospere
Pat and Claude Prestidge
Diane and Maurice Purnell, Jr.
Maureen Milligan & Vasu Raja
Gregory and Michelle Randall
Cassandra and John Rauschuber
Ann A. Ratelle
Gaby and Gunnar Rawlings
Deborah and Tomas Rhodus
Christy Riddle
Samuel Roberts
Laura Roberts
Jennifer and Thomas Russell
Juhyune Ryu
For additions, corrections, or more information, please contact Haley Coates at 214-887-1364 or email donate@jubileecenter.org.
Cynthia C. Sample
Joy Sandager
Judith and Thomas Sanger
Sally and Chris Schupp
Gail Schoellkopf
Ann and Irwin Sentilles III
Marillyn and Gus Seeberger
Michael Selman
Rob Sesser
Jade Shank
Faye Slater
Rick and Bettye Slaven
Jane and George Slover Jr.
Jean and Neal Smith
Smitty and Bridget Smith
Wanda Smith
Arden Showalter John and Beverly Snyder
Sandra Snyder
Sharon and Will Snyder
Margaret and Jaime Spellings
Nelson Hunter Spencer
Srg Partnership
Rosemary Stewart
Swiss Avenue Women’s Guild
Betty and John Taylor
Madalyn Teal
Gretchen and Thaddeus Thigpen
Christy Thompson
Zachary B. Turner
Mary Lee and Robert Virden
Madison Visinsky
Tish and Matthew Visinsky
Kimberly M. Vowell
Roy Washburn
Wells Fargo Matching Gifts Program
Robert West
Linda and Robert Westerburg
Catherine and Jack Wetzel
Suzanne Williams
Ralph Lamar Wilson
Bridget Wilson-Jones
Jeff and Chandler Winslow
Anja and Jeff Woodson
Kelly Worrell
Phil and Sheryl Wylie
Marvin Yeager
Rick Zieve
Xiang Ziwei
Marilyn G. Zieve
Your time, attention, talents, and financial support make a difference in thousands of lives each month.
• Volunteer at an event or organize a supplies drive!
• Become a monthly supporter or donate today by visiting jubileecenter.org/donate.
• Build a legacy of revitalization by including Jubilee in your will or estate plan. Did you know?
• Jubilee is one of the highest quality community revitalization programs in
• North Texas, with the lowest cost per person among our peers.
• Your investment of time and money is matched by thousands of volunteer hour each year!
• On average, every hour served at Jubilee by someone from outside the Jubilee area is matched by two hours served by Jubilee neighbors. Want to know more?