2020 Riverside Foundation Year in Review

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YEAR IN REVIEW 2020

Table of Contents toCommitmentRiverside’sOurCommunity

3 A MESSAGE FROM THE BOARD CHAIRMAN 4 A NOTE FROM THE EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR 5 FOUNDATIONRIVERSIDE 6 FINANCIAL UPDATE 7 SCHOLARSHIPS 8 PATRIOTS COLONY 9 DISTINGUISHED PROVIDER AND CITIZENDISTINGUISHED 14 GRATITUDE 16 SIMULATION LAB 19 RIVERSIDE DAY OF GIVING 20 A LIFE WELL LIVED 21-28 COVID-19 RESPONSE 29 COMMUNITY IMPACT 30 CORPORATE PARTNERS 32 TEAM MEMBER CAMPAIGN 33 RIVERSIDE HELP FUND 34 MEMORY REGIONALNAVIGATIONCAREUPDATES 36 Eastern Shore 37 Tappahannock 38 Middle Peninsula 39 Williamsburg 40 Peninsula 41 UNCORKED 42 FOUNDER’S SOCIETY 44 1915 CLUB 21-28 3016

Riverside Health System, as a not-for-profit organization, is firmly committed to providing health care services to everyone in our communities. This includes making health care as affordable as possible and providing services to thousands of un- and under-insured Additionally,patients. Riverside supports the communities it serves in other ways including partnerships with community service organizations, free screenings and wellness initiatives, and expert guidance on how to stay healthy.

We are grateful for your continued support. Together we are stronger than ever.

Our mission - to care for others as we would care for those we love – is displayed all over the pages ahead. This year’s edition of Remarkable, the Foundation’s annual report to our community, aims to share stories of gratitude from every corner of southeastern Virginia. As we march forward into a new year with its own unique challenges, we know we are still in this together every step of the way.

The outpouring of support since the COVID-19 pandemic began over a year ago has been Remarkable. The Riverside Foundation received in-kind donations worth over $250,000; cash donations to our COVID-19 response efforts totaling more than $204,000; and over 15,000 handmade cloth face masks with those numbers continuing to increase. The countless well-wishes received in the mail, on social media and through the everyday displays of solidarity fueled our team members and propel us into tomorrow.

Conway Sheild, III, Chairman Riverside Foundation Board of Directors

A Message from the Board Chairman

During a year like no other, the need for a strong, not-for-profit communitybased health organization has never been more apparent. Through the strength of our caregivers and the generosity of our neighbors, Riverside continued to provide the absolute best care and services to the communities we serve.

Welcome to the latest edition of Remarkable, the Riverside Foundation’s annual report to our community.

Last year, a phrase that echoed in our ears was: “these are unprecedented times.” Very quickly, ordinary things like a trip to the grocery store, back-to-school shopping or our commute to work changed from routine and simple to different and uncharted.

As we all work toward getting “back to normal,” I know that the Riverside mission never stopped being our day-to-day commitment: to care for others as we would care for those we love.

We are proud to be a steadfast part of the communities we serve. Thank you for being our unwavering champions.

A Note from the Executive Director

But what I also noticed was that there were certain things that never changed. The resilience of a caregiver doing patient rounds. The commitment of physicians to compassionate care. The support of the community through every display of encouragement to a health care hero. Those stories of hope, healing, recovery and gratitude are displayed on the pages ahead.

Kristen Beam Witt, M.S. Riverside Health System Foundation

Senior Consultant

Susan Martin

Front row, left to right: Amy Ryan, Cynthia Jackson, Kristen Witt, Jennifer Frank, Julia Bowditch

Foundation Team

W. William Austin, Jr. Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Julie PatriciaBadgerBarry, M.D.

William B. Downey Chief Executive Officer

Board Members

Nancy Littlefield, DNP, RN Executive Vice President and Chief Nursing Officer

Faye Petro Gargiulo Bill QuentinGraceKidd, Ph.D.

Riverside Foundation

* Photo taken pre-pandemic

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Michael Dacey, M.D. President and Chief Operating Officer

Back row, left to right: Allison Fonner Onesty, Leanne Rodriguez Criner, Ryan King

James TheresaFrancesBurnettEllisEmory, M.D.

Conway Sheild, III, Chairman

Middle row, left to right: Fonda Christopher, Sally Schreiber, Whitney Kimmet

Ron VerneetaSteveMurraySpainWilliams, M.D.

In 2020, more than 2,600 donors contributed $3,305,163 (including bequest intentions) to the Riverside Foundation to support several focus areas and regions.

n Patient Assistance

n Areas of Greatest Need

Scholarships for aspiring health care professionals Facility and EnhancementsTechnology

As a not-for-profit health care system, Riverside relies on partnerships with the communities we serve. Philanthropic support allows us to achieve a higher standard of treatment and comfort for those in our care. We greatly appreciate each donor and the passion each brings to supporting Riverside. We are honored to share our 2020 successes with the patients we serve and the donors who made it possible.

New $4,877,067

Vital resources for cancer, hospice and memory care patients

Allowing us to care for others as we would care for those we love Program Support

With the generous support of motivated donors in 2020, Riverside is investing $773,996 in the following areas throughout our communities:

Report2020FoundationRiversideYear-End

n

n

Patient care equipment, patient and visitor hospitality, and physician support items

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Unmet needs such as medication and transportation

Gifts and Pledges: $3,305,163 Health System Grants and Awards: $1,571,904 Total Revenue:

n Education

All new gifts and pledges by focus area Other $68,580 (2%)Cancer Care $ 289,204 (9%) Memory Support, Aging Well, Hospice and Palliative Care $838,659 (25%) Make a Difference Fund $1,208,085Simulation(37%)Lab$367,877 (11%) Education and Scholarships $532,758 (16%) Areas of Impact 17%14%7%26% 36% FINANCIAL UPDATE

Often, we receive personal thank you letters from students to our amazing donors. The 2020 Petro & Sanderson Educational Scholarship award recipient, Jordan Stellmacher, recently shared her words of gratitude with Faye Petro Garguilo and Dr. J. Frank Sanderson in a personal note.

Willie P. Francis Education Scholarship

SCHOLARSHIPS

The Health Care Heroes Scholarship honors the memories of several cherished Riverside team members including Leslie D. Mask, Anna Weston, Judy Lee, Joyce Johnson, Robyn Gohsman and Lydia Hall. Their collective contributions as extraordinary medical professionals made them true heroes to all who knew them. Since 2008, this annual award provides educational assistance to qualified local students pursuing a future career in health care.

Sign donated by Not Another Pancake House & Fine Signs and Graphics

“One of my dreams in life is to help people. I believe in demonstrating kindness to others, and this gracious award proves how powerful an outcome a kind act can provide for even just one person. I really hope that I can help other people the way your kindness has helped me.”

You can give aspiring health care providers an opportunity to act on their passion and expand their knowledge by contributing any amount. Riverside will use your contribution to create additional scholarships or increase an existing award.  Last year, 265 students received $304,899 in educational assistance through the support of generous donors. To learn how you can make a difference for an aspiring health care provider, please call us at 757-234-8740.

The Willie P. Francis thatnursingandtoestablishedScholarshipEducationwasin2003honorherserviceleadershipineducationspanned46years at Riverside Regional Medical Center. This annual award is presented to qualified nursing students enrolled at Riverside’s College of Health Careers who wish to pursue a career in the field of maternal-child health.

Health Care Heroes Scholarship

Petro & Sanderson Scholarship

Continuing Education Helps Team Members Provide Leading Edge Care

Congratulations to the 2020 Willie P. Francis scholar, Morgan Carpenter.

Congratulations to the 2020 Health Care Heroes Scholarship recipient, Taylor Crumbley.

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* Willie P. Francis photo taken pre-pandemic

• Rebecca DeRosier earned a special certification as a geriatric physical therapist.

The Patriots Colony Team Member Scholarship was established by residents who serve on the facility’s Philanthropy Committee, including Jim Edwards, who provided the principal gift to establish the scholarship in memory of his mother and her career as a registered nurse. The scholarship provides funds for Patriots Colony team members to continue their education in health care at Riverside. The committee’s generosity has inspired many other Patriots Colony residents to support this scholarship as well.

PATRIOTS COLONY

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Coming full circle, 2019 scholarship awardee Jessica Garrenton earned a nursing degree and is now working at Riverside Doctors’ Hospital Williamsburg, giving back to the organization with skills made possible by the scholarship.

The Scholarship Committee awarded eight scholarships in 2020, a phenomenal achievement for a small team of dedicated residents and staff leadership.

Scholarship winners at Patriots Colony

• Chris McHose is pursuing a master’s degree in health care administration and has twice been awarded a scholarship.

• Kymari Raven Stubbs is pursuing a certificate in medical billing and coding.

• Dominque Faulks is pursuing an RN degree.

• Russell LaVere is pursuing an RN degree.

• Anthony Kangea is working towards a nurse practitioner degree specializing in geriatrics.

This impressive group has endowed $200,000 of scholarships in just three years. Committee members are quick to explain to others that the power of philanthropy is in its ability to change lives and communities for the better.

• Jessica Williams is pursuing an RN degree.

Changing Lives atPatriots Colony

And now, each year, the Foundation will add to this powerhouse list by naming a distinguished provider and a distinguished citizen of the year. These indomitable supporters have thrown their enthusiasm and engagement behind the Foundation to ensure the best in treatment and comfort for our patients.

We are proud to announce 2020’s Distinguished Provider, Gary S. Kavit, M.D., and Distinguished Citizen, Patti St. Clair.

During a challenging year, the Riverside Foundation continued the tradition of celebrating our dedicated supporters, a tradition set in motion in 2019 with the recognition of twenty of the most remarkable people and entities who built the Foundation into what it is today.

Riverside Foundation Announces 2020 Distinguished Provider and Distinguished Citizen

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Above: Honorees at Riverside Foundation’s 20th Anniversary event, May 2019.

Even before COVID-19 disruptions, Dr. Kavit was an enthusiastic proponent of a Foundation initiative, the Simulation Training Lab that is part of the Huntington Ingalls Industries Education & Training Center. “The Sim Lab was not my idea, but I became all-in as soon as I heard about it,” Dr. Kavit said. “This type of training facility is extremely important for Riverside as a whole and uniquely important to our emergency care service line.”

Dr. Kavit’s spirit of giving was instilled in him by his father, who was a frugal man but generous to his community. He stressed the importance of this to his young son. Dr. Kavit remembers, “Early in my career, whenever my father visited, he brought along articles and mail from worthy organizations that needed community support just so I could see and understand their needs.” He gives his father much credit and recognizes his own satisfaction in seeing the rewards of supporting a good cause. In the case of the Simulation Lab gift, he feels a sense of pride in knowing that he and his peers are personally

Gary S. Kavit, M.D., is a board-certified emergency medical physician, Riverside’s service line chief for Emergency Services, and medical director at Riverside Regional Medical Center, which offers the only accredited Level II Emergency and Trauma Center in the region. Dr. Kavit’s leadership of the talented and dedicated teams in all five of Riverside’s emergency rooms has always been outstanding, but it required an increased level of focus and coordination throughout the COVID-19 pandemic. Hospital ERs have been on the front lines of the pandemic, treating affected patients even while the body of knowledge about the virus evolves daily.

Dr. Kavit has been an unwavering voice of reason and Covid-19throughoutexpertisethepandemic.

Dr. Kavit knows there is more good to come from the Sim Lab, named in memory of Dr. Brandon D. Rogers, a family medicine resident at Riverside who passed away tragically in 2017. When he learned about the plans for the lab a few years ago, Dr. Kavit and his wife, Judith, wanted to contribute in a meaningful way.

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practice complex and infrequent high-risk procedures, ultrasounds, and team training for trauma scenarios. This and other types of critical training can now be held more frequently and onsite, rather than staff having to travel elsewhere to receive it. Skills that are learned or refreshed in the Sim Lab will directly benefit patients in the ER and can improve team member job satisfaction, which translates to retaining a highly skilled work force.

In April, the Sim Lab will hold its first large-scale clinical skills program, involving a variety of work stations where ER staff will

Dr. Kavit acknowledges that cooperation and support from the community and from his physician peers were critical to the success that Riverside’s ERs experienced in treating patients during this challenging time. The community listened to the advice of experts to stay safe, and physicians across Riverside pulled together to ensure each patient was receiving the best possible treatment based on the most current evidence.

They worked with the Riverside Foundation to establish a matching gift program that would encourage emergency department physicians to participate. To date, the Kavits’ matching gift has generated four times their original contribution and will go a long way in supporting this important training facility.

Patti has always been passionate in how she gives of her time, talent and treasure. Whether it is meeting with a hospital administrator or another volunteer, Patti says, “I love talking and working with people who have the same passion as I do. Together, we can make a difference.” It is this passion that she wants others to feel as they

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Raised to embrace the rewards of giving back to her community, Patti led many volunteer and fundraising efforts throughout her life that benefited museums, horse-industry non-profit organizations, and her children’s schools. In the health care arena, she has focused her boundless energy on cancer prevention, treatment, and education. As Riverside’s 2020 Distinguished Citizen of the Year, Patti St. Clair stands as a model of philanthropic spirit and has been generous in helping Riverside work toward visionary goals.

Patti understands the benefits of collaboration on many levels. Two years ago, she inspired the creation of a ladies’ health advocacy group – a quarterly gathering of community donors, cancer survivors, clinicians and Riverside administrators. They receive updates on Riverside’s efforts to improve cancer treatment and education, and they each take an active role in their respective areas to encourage these efforts and other related

Patti has always been passionate in how she gives of her time, talent and treasure.

Of the many volunteer titles she has earned over the years including founder, board chair, donor, and visionary, the title that best describes Patti St. Clair is philanthropist. Patti has channeled her lifetime of service to benefit those most in need and wherever the opportunity presented itself.

Patti finds that the constant advances in cancer treatment are some of the most exciting developments in health care. She fully supports Riverside’s focus on local, leading-edge, world-class cancer treatment that keeps the patient close to home. Along these lines, Patti was thrilled to see the collaboration efforts between Riverside and VCU’s Massey Cancer Center to learn new approaches to cancer treatment.

Becausegoals.cancer

involved in making what is important to their daily work become a successful venture.

consider becoming involved in a philanthropic way. “The rewards of giving come when you see the impact of your efforts,” she says.

As Dr. Kavit sees the everyday tangible results of his philanthropy to Riverside, he hopes to be a positive role model for all physicians. “It is a two-way street,” he says. “The more successful Riverside is, the more our providers will flourish. Likewise, the more successful our providers are, the more Riverside will thrive.”

has affected Patti’s loved ones, including her late husband, Lew, and her parents, she knows more can be done to ease the burden of dealing with the disease and even help prevent it. Recently, she has seen a close friend with breast cancer receive leadingedge cancer therapy and become cancer free, all while receiving an individualized and integrative approach to her care.

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Patti is not afraid of big aspirations, and she encourages others to dream about how they can have a positive philanthropic impact and the true happiness that comes with the rewards. “When you volunteer, you look for the opportunities that you can build into strengths. Success in that is your reward,” says Patti, who knows just how that feels.

“Dr. Sutton keeps me inspired in reaching my goals with my health issues.”

Riverside celebrated Doctors Day on March 30th with expressions of appreciation. Many donors made gifts in gratitude for their care from our warmhearted and skilled providers. Here is what they had to say about their experiences:

“Before saying that you are an EXTRAORDINARY DOCTOR, I want to tell you that you’re an EXTRAORDINARY PERSON. Thanks for showing so much care and concern.”

“Dr. Kerbin listened to our wishes and shared her insights. Through her skill, encouragement and compassion, she has given us five more years to enjoy with family, friends and each other so far. Three weddings, five new grandkids, two proud graduations and assorted gatherings of our 11 grandkids and their eight parents have brought us tremendous joy, and we have Dr. Kerbin to thank for this continued Wonderful Life.”

GRATITUDE GIFTS

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“Dr. Larrazabal is the best PCP I have ever had. She is very attentive, caring and displays sincere interest and empathy. She is efficient and a good listener. She has a wonderful disposition and personality.”

“I had a reoccurrence of cancer in 2017, after being cancer free for 11 years. Dr. Kostov has worked tirelessly to help me fight this disease. She treats the whole person with love, compassion, understanding and support to my husband and daughter. We love her!”

The word “gratitude” comes from the word “grace,” which describes the inherent understanding of the gift of life. Gratitude elicits feelings of joy, passion, meaning and purpose. By expressing our gratitude through words, behaviors and deeds, we can positively impact the world around us. During the stress and uncertainty of a health incident, many patients and family members feel a surge of gratitude for Riverside’s mission-driven providers who weave care and dignity into their treatment of every patient. This personal engagement in the health of our patients brings about gifts of gratitude, just a few of which are highlighted here.

“Dr. Alaeddini saved my life. He is a fine and brilliant doctor.”

“Thank you, Dr. Converse, for saving my “Dr.life.”Longfellow was a very compassionate caregiver to our father and advisor to our family after my father’s stroke. He helped make what time my father had left pass in comfort with dignity and respect. Thank you.”

Gratitude Impacts Patients

Doctors Day Donors Thank Their Providers

Newlyweds Dave and Xanadu Biondi recently said their “I do’s” in a relaxed ceremony and celebrated at a reception that included a bounce house. Their guests included some of the nurses who helped Dave through his cancer journey.

Just about a year before the wedding, Dave was surprised by a cancer diagnosis. A regular exerciser in pretty good health, Dave at first assumed the pain in his back and abdomen was something relatively minor. But just before Thanksgiving of 2019, Dave was referred to Dr. Miller.

Appreciating His Cancer Team

After consulting with Dr. Miller on his patients’ needs, the Whitbecks thoughtfully donated funds for a state-of-the-art exam table in Dr. Miller’s practice that is specifically suited for low-mobility patients. Patients who are in a wheelchair or have dizziness brought on by their disease or their medications can sometimes find it difficult to “climb up” onto an examination table. This specialized device lowers for easy access and then rises again so that Dr. Miller can properly assess and examine the patient.

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After Hunt Whitbeck was diagnosed with prostate cancer and after more than 15 years of treatment, his prognosis was uncertain. In fact, in 2016 he was referred to hospice for the comfort care they provide, usually at the end of life. In a happy turn of events, years later Hunt is alive and well and credits his oncologist, Dr. John F. Miller, with saving his life.

In the span of roughly one week, Dave underwent a biopsy, was given a cancer diagnosis, had a port surgically inserted for the administration of repeated intravenous medications, and received his first chemotherapy treatment.

The chemotherapy worked wonders on the mass growing in a surgically risky area near Dave’s pancreas, aorta and vena cava. Within one week he stopped having pain as the mass shrank and allowed his organs to return to their normal placement. He says he is on an “energy roller coaster” from day to day and week to week, but feels good enough to resume running for exercise. He ran a half marathon in October, less than one year after his diagnosis.

Dave was inspired to make a donation to the Riverside Foundation to honor Dr. Miller and the team that cared for him. His gift is being used to ease the financial burden of other patients. “Over three months, my treatment cycle was all day long for one week and then two weeks with just one day,” he said. “I was sitting there all day long, and I met the other patients and overheard what they were going through. I wanted to do something for them and to recognize the Riverside team and all they do.”

In addition, Dave gave a memorial gift for fellow chemotherapy patient Rob Rubenstein who passed away. And, recognizing that they already owned all of the material things they would need in their married life, Dave and Xanadu requested that their wedding guests make donations to Riverside in lieu of wedding gifts.

“You can never appreciate the nurses and the staff as much as they deserve,” said Dave.

Benefitting Future Patients

Dr. Miller practices at Peninsula Cancer Institute in Williamsburg and is beloved by his patients. Hunt and his wife, Kathy, wanted to show their gratitude for Dr. Miller in a way that would benefit future patients who were also affected by cancer.

Dave and Xanadu Biondi

A Virtual Celebration of Education and Gratitude

opening. Attendees participated in virtual tours and technology demonstrations and had the opportunity to engage with the presenters in a live question and answer period.

For the Rogers family, the event represented the culmination of their multi-year partnership with the Riverside Foundation to honor Dr. Rogers and his remarkable life. On the eve of what would have been his 33rd birthday, the brand-new simulation training spaces were dedicated to Dr. Rogers. Featuring music by alumni members of the University of Virginia’s acapella group REMIX, heartfelt messages from family and friends, and a special appearance from America’s Got Talent’s Simon Cowell, it was a night to remember. The Rogers

This fall, the family and friends of the late Dr. Brandon Rogers and hundreds of supporters tuned in online to celebrate Dr. Rogers’ birthday and to commemorate the opening of the Huntington Ingalls Industries Education and Training Center in Dr. Rogers’

Dubbedmemory.the

“Launch Party Series & Health Care Simulation Week,” the digital event brought state-of-the-art simulation manikins and training procedures into the spotlight in easy-to-understand detail. Over the course of a week, the fascinating capabilities of the Lab were broadcast over social media to a much larger audience than might have been able to attend in a pre-pandemic grand

The Rogers family with a manikin from the Simulation Lab

SIMULATION LAB

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The 8,400-square-foot Lab is designed to give medical personnel experience providing care for “once-in-a-career” medical issues. Four specialty-specific areas recreate a medical intensive care ward, a labor and delivery suite, an emergency medicine trauma bay and a procedural skills suite. Participants can practice life-saving skills on dedicated models and can “test drive” an innovative solution or approach to care in a nonurgent learning environment.

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When Debbie retired from her role as executive director of the Riverside Foundation in 2017, Dexter, who is a retired engineer, told her, “I want to give something to Riverside to honor your retirement.” Debbie wanted the gift to express her gratitude for 30 years of employment with Riverside. As a lifelong educator, Debbie’s original position was as a perinatal educator in an OB/GYN residency program. As careers sometimes do, hers evolved into the leadership role at the newly-formed Riverside Foundation. She took her passion for education and health care and channeled it in a new direction. Riverside gave her the support and flexibility to run with it.

“We changed as people because of the relationships we made through my years at Riverside,” Debbie said. “Our giving is all about our gratitude for them.” The Atkinsons are donors who want to be engaged with the cause.

As long-time supporters of Riverside and the first donors to The Dr. Mark E. Ellis Endowment Fund in 2009, Debbie and Dexter Atkinson have long been motivated by the work of others who make a meaningful difference in our community.

It is this relationship with the organization and the many team members and donors that has affected Debbie and Dexter in such a positive way.

family also had a surprise of their own. A donation of $10,000 from the Brandon D. Rogers Memorial Fund was presented to the Riverside Foundation’s Executive Director Kristen Witt and the Center’s Medical Director Dr. John Alex. Those funds will continue to educate future and current clinicians on leadingedge technology as health care makes technological advances.

The Lab also allows entire teams to practice together or even work with other team members in an interdisciplinary environment. “The entire center is designed for anyone affiliated with the health system,” explained the Lab’s director, Dr. John Alex. “It’s not just for physicians, not just nurses, but for anybody who takes care of patients as part of our team, so that collectively we can provide the best care.” Lead partners Huntington Ingalls Industries and Newport News Shipbuilding, who use simulation modeling in their everyday business, also shared the importance of investing in education, training and technology, which has been shown to improve patient safety and improve health care competency especially for highrisk procedures. In addition, Riverside’s medical staff made significant contributions to implement the project, as did G.C. Commercial, W.M. Jordan, Spain Commercial, TowneBank and more than 400 community members.

The couple also acknowledged their gratitude toward Riverside for caring for their family for more than 70 years. This bond strongly informs their giving decisions. Debbie and Dexter shared how gratifying it has been to reflect on their careers and the opportunities afforded by their work. They have seen how, through giving, they are able to contribute to extraordinary change. “It has been extremely meaningful and personally satisfying,” they both said. “It honors our past.”

“The cause must be transformative,” said Debbie, “and associated directly with people.”

Meaningful and Personally Satisfying

Debbie and Dexter Atkinson

So, when the Atkinsons were invited to attend a dedication ceremony for the Riverside Simulation Training Lab in memory of Dr. Brandon D. Rogers, they had an “a-ha” moment. They were inspired by Lab Director Dr. Alex’s passion, and they agreed to tour the facility. Upon seeing the labor and delivery simulation suite, the couple stared at each other with knowing eyes. They had found their ultimate gift in support of lifelong learning that would encompass the values and motivations that are so important to them.

“It is an honor to fill the wise and wonderful shoes of Debbie Atkinson, the Foundation’s first executive director,” said Kristen Witt. “One of the first initiatives I took on as Debbie and I transitioned was this meaningful project to honor Dr. Rogers. What a joy it was to be with Debbie the first time she was able to see the fully completed center.”

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Riverside Day of Giving Fully Funds Innovative Programs

Airway Trainers for Riverside’s Nursing Students: The Riverside College of Health Careers raised $7,125 to fund three airway management trainers. These technologically advanced manikins allow nursing students to practice airway management skills such as ventilation, suction techniques, and bronchoscopy assistance. After perfecting their skills with the manikins, nurses are well trained when they join our workforce, ready to provide the highest level of care possible to our communities.

Once again this year, we celebrated our Founder’s Day with a 24-hour fundraising campaign for four innovative projects across the health system. These projects were proposed by team members with the goal of improving the lives of our patients and elevating the level of care in our community. We were overwhelmed by the response and generosity of those who support us.

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Dementia-friendly Care Within Our Hospitals: A Riverside priority project is promoting dementia awareness throughout the health care system

Hand in Hand Violence Intervention Program: Our team assists victims of violence and provides them the resources necessary to move their lives in a positive direction after their injury. Specifically, Hand in Hand provides support, personalized care plans, and other tangible resources needed to heal such as food, a safe living space, or transportation assistance. This project raised $6,908 to support the average costs for 24 patients.

A new holiday tradition

RIVERSIDE DAY OF GIVING

Rob was a supporter of the Riverside Foundation and continued to support Cancer Care after benefitting from our integrative approach during his own battle. He especially appreciated our cancer navigators who help guide patients through their treatment journey.

and specifically at our acute care facilities. Our Center for Excellence in Aging and Lifelong Health in partnership with Riverside Doctors’ Hospital Williamsburg (RDHW) raised $8,181 to make this three-part project possible. First, RDHW team members will receive training and materials to increase sensitivity and understanding in working with dementia patients. Next, nursing units will use a dementia-patient room indicator so that team members can use dementia-specific communication techniques. And finally, family and caregivers will receive supplemental materials to support care after the patient leaves the hospital.

A Life Well Lived

Rob and Leah Rubenstein

More than 150 loved ones were honored or memorialized in this way in 2020. Funding will continue to support some of our most vulnerable patients.

Riverside is so grateful for the team members, patients and friends who found it in their hearts to support these projects. We offer an extra thanks to our team members who suggested and promoted these projects, and to our Foundation Board Chair Conway Sheild and Foundation Board Member Steve Spain for providing matching funds for this day.

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Reflections of Endless Love: Members of our community came together to raise more than $18,000 for Hospice, Cancer Care, and our regional Make a Difference funds supporting the greatest needs of our communities. Families and community members purchased holiday ornaments to be engraved in honor of or in memory of family members and loved ones. The idea for this project came from a poem by Emily

“Determination” and “hope” are apt descriptors for Rob Rubenstein. Rob received a diagnosis of advanced-stage cancer in 2019, and the outlook was not good. Despite being told to expect a quick decline, Rob made it, against all odds, over a year past his diagnosis, all the while visiting with friends and family and filling his life with music, art, and history. Rob trusted his care team at Riverside and knew he was receiving the best care in his area from Dr. John Miller and the Peninsula Cancer Institute team.

“WeWarburton:areeach of us a snowflake, not two of us the same, reflections of the endless love, the source from where we came.”

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Rob was involved at Riverside in many ways. He and his wife, Leah, were ardent and supportive volunteers at Riverside Doctors’ Hospital Williamsburg (RDHW) for many years, and Rob also served on the Make a Difference Committee at RDHW. The Rubensteins will be greatly missed as part of the Riverside community, but we look forward to honoring their memory each year as Founder’s Society members.

Community salute to RWRH

Health care workers have earned new respect for their long-standing commitment to saving lives. While the rest of the world stayed safely in their homes, Riverside’s team bravely stared down the virus in hospitals and provider offices every day. Hundreds of community members and organizations across the region and across the country looked for ways to express their appreciation.

Giving Back Helps Riverside and Patients Weather the Pandemic

> CONTINUED ON PAGE 22 COVID-19 response

Above left: RTH Incident Command team

RSMH Food and Nutrition Services team

Above right: RDHW Incident Command team

Below: RRMC Incident Command team

Left: First responders salute RRMC

Below right: Sanders Retirement Community COVID parade

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during this period were first-time donors to Riverside. In ways small and large, community

members recognized the dedication of our team members and responded with thoughtful, meaningful gifts. This support in turn nurtured resilience in our team at a time when innovation, quick action and agility were necessary to be prepared for the changing environment.

In the early spring, the Eastern Shore experienced a COVID-19 patient surge long before cases rose in the rest of the Commonwealth. The Shore team worked tirelessly to care for their friends and neighbors with back up from Riverside Regional Medical Center, showcasing the power of an integrated health care system to care for its communities. Shore residents responded in gratifying numbers to a special solicitation to

Top left: RSMH team member; Left: Sanders Retirement Community COVID parade; RWRH Incident Command team

The Riverside Foundation has fielded abundant offers of support, from thousands of hand-sewn masks, to donations of personal protective equipment, hand sanitizer and cleaning supplies when those items were hard to come by, to cards, banners and posters letting our team members know how valued their work was, to comfort items for rejuvenating tired team members. And oh, the delicious food! Our hardworking team might not have had time to bake quarantine bread, but we feasted on thousands of meals, snacks and treats donated by our generous Hundredsneighbors.ofourdonors

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On the Eastern Shore, both Tyson Foods and Perdue Farms have been generous in donating chicken products to Riverside team members in thanks for the dedication displayed toward caring for the sick and toward keeping virus transmission in Justcheck.before

Rosie’s Gaming Emporium in Hampton was closed for business in the spring due to COVID-19. With their facilities closed, they used their idle kitchens to provide 2,300 free pizza meals for our local health care heroes.

2020 came to a close, the COVID-19 vaccine became available for health care workers and other essential front-line health professionals. Riverside stood up vaccine clinics to start getting “shots in arms” as quickly as possible.

Above: RSMH Incident Command team; Top right and right: RSMH team members

25 support their local health care team. In the early stages of the pandemic, when finding PPE was a challenge, Newport News Shipbuilding (NNS) came to Riverside’s rescue. There was an urgent need for face shields and N95 masks. NNS donated PPE off their tool-room shelves to help meet immediate needs and connected local health care organizations with shipyard vendors who could provide additional supplies.

“They’re the front lines. If they get sick, they can’t take care of us. It only makes sense,” said NNS General Foreman Warren Doyle. “As the tool room, we’re a service organization by definition. Helping is what we do.” Shipbuilders also looked into opportunities to use NNS’s 3D printing capabilities to manufacture critical equipment for health care.

26

Above: RMG Incident Command team

Top right and far right: RDHW team members

Right: Rosie’s Gaming Emporium delivers pizzas

Top: Liberty Live Church donates meals to RRMC

27

Lifelong Health Incident Command team

Left: Dr. Perez

Above: Carrabba’s and Rose & Womble Realty donate meals to RRMC

200+donationsindividual of PPE facerespirators,includingshields,glovesandtechnology More than 15,000+ cloth facemasks donated 150+ individual donations of food and care items, including 172 gift cards $54,000 in support of our team member help fund COVID-19 RESPONSE FUND Top: RSMH team member Left: RRDHW team member Far Left: RSMH team member 28 RSMH team member receives the COVID-19 vaccine on the first day it is available

RIVERSIDEONLINE.COM/FOUNDATION 29

We’re so proud to have been recognized by Coastal Virginia Magazine as part of their 2020 Annual Giving Back and Community Impact Awards honoring the Riverside Foundation as a nonprofit committed to making Eastern Virginia a better place for all.

“Riverside achieves its mission by going far beyond what others may call ‘good’ enough. This higher standard of care comes with a cost, which is not compensated, but Riverside unwaveringly strides past the financial obstacles to achieve its mission.”—Theresa Emory, M.D., donor, Pathologist at Peninsula Pathology Associates.

• Each year, the Riverside Foundation invests hundreds of thousands of dollars in privately donated funds into patient assistance reserves to help with patients’ utility bills, rent for those at risk of losing housing during cancer treatments and access to safe transportation to Riverside facilities.

How Riverside Is Making a Difference

Foundation Recognized for Community Impact

• Riverside Patient Navigators eliminate barriers for healing by offering support and guidance for treatment options.

• In 2019 (the most recent year calculated), Riverside provided uninsured and underinsured patients with $246 million worth of uncompensated care.

• Our 600 providers and 10,000 team members provide specialized care in cancer, heart and vascular treatment, as well as radiology and surgical specialties in general, oncology, neurosurgery, urology and orthopedics.

Riverside’s priority is to provide the highest quality of care, regardless of a patient’s insurance coverage or financial capabilities. Riverside is also dedicated to ensuring the patient is served beyond treatment facility walls.

• Riverside annually performs hundreds of free breast cancer screenings and mammograms to underserved women throughout the Peninsula, Middle Peninsula and Northern Neck.

In addition to expressions of gratitude from patients and loved ones, charitable gifts from corporations and local businesses play an important role in Riverside’s ability to sustain and improve health care in the communities we serve. Often there is common ground where an organization’s philanthropic goals intersect with areas that fuel Riverside’s work and mission. These shared objectives create opportunities for meaningful impact.

Locally based Cox Communications and BayPort Credit Union are keenly aware of the value of having strong local health care. Their tremendous gifts totaling $100,000 to our COVID relief fund helped to advance Riverside’s preparedness efforts and allowed us to remain stocked with resources such as personal protective equipment and testing reagents and to expand telehealth capabilities to benefit our rural community members and lifelong health facility residents. Cox Communications explained their motivation for donating at a time when others were conserving financial resources: “We deeply appreciate the selfless efforts and sacrifices that our hospital partners and their staff are making to meet the health care needs of our community at this time,” said Margaret-Hunter Wade, director of public affairs at Cox.

When businesses and communities share goals for better health care, great things happen. The Foundation was delighted to welcome so many new members to our donor family in 2020. During a time like no other, the outpouring of support since the COVID-19 pandemic began has been remarkable. The Riverside Foundation received inkind donations worth more than $250,000 and cash donations to our COVID-19 response efforts totaling more than $204,000.

Corporate Partners Fuel Riverside’s Mission

Ferguson Enterprises donates N95 masks

care needs, and more quickly acquire new skills as techniques and equipment continually evolve. Other lead corporate donors included AON Risk Services Inc., ESa, GC Commercial, MEDNAX, Spain Commercial, TowneBank and W.M. Jordan Company.

Many organizations continued to provide vital funds in support of

CORPORATE PARTNERS

Lead partners Huntington Ingalls Industries and Newport News Shipbuilding, who use simulation modeling in their own businesses, recognized the importance of investing in education, training and technology in health care as routes to improve patient safety and health care competency. The Huntington Ingalls Education & Training Center at Riverside Regional Medical Center now houses a state-of-the-art simulation lab. Virtual reality tools enable clinicians to maintain and frequently update skills, enhance their dexterity with high-risk procedures, plan innovative solutions to complex medical

2020 RIVERSIDE FOUNDATION YEAR IN REVIEW30

local cancer patients. Many more patients faced financial hardship during their care due to the pandemic and needed help to fulfill their treatment regimen. In addition, our dedicated caregivers were innovating to safely deliver life-saving treatments for our vulnerable patients, screenings for at-risk populations and community prevention education. Gifts from Epic Systems Corporation and Spain Commercial along with fundraising activities for World Cancer Day in February by Blarney Stone Pub, Mallard’s at the Wharf, Tradition Brewing, Hayashi Sushi & Grill, Paul’s Deli New Town, and Olivia’s in the Village, all helped fuel this important work.

Double Your Gift

Many companies will match donations by their employees, spouses and recent retirees. The best part? Requesting a matching gift is easy and allows you to double the impact of your gift.

The generosity of our corporate partners through charitable gifts, sponsorships, and in-kind contributions aid our doctors, nurses and facilities in meeting the needs of every patient who turns to us for care and healing. We are grateful for the Businessessupport. that are interested in a future partnership with Riverside can experience firsthand the joy of making great things happen. We would be honored to help you achieve your charitable goals while elevating the care Riverside provides right here at home. Please contact us for more information.

Phone (757) 234-8740 or FuneralWarwickWilliamsburgAuxiliary;RiversidePhillipsHouse;Truck;Control;David,Inc.;CreditAbbittHeroesOurfromthatprovidersgratitudecaregiverswithlargeInriversidefoundation@rivhs.comemailMayof2020,communitybusinessesandsmallenthusiasticallypartneredustoshowtheirsupportforRiversideandteammembers.Theirforthededicationofourfrontlinewasexpressedthroughdonationsinturnprovidedteammembermealslocalrestaurantsandfoodtrucks.specialthankstotheseHealthCaresponsors:Realty;APGraphics;BayPortUnion;CABarrsContractor,CSTMechanical;DamuthTrane;Kamp&Frank,LLC;Epling’sPestEssexBank;GetCheesyFoodKBPFoods;NotAnotherPancakePattyHeathStateFarmInsurance;Energy;RiverlandInsurers;ShoreMemorialHospitalSonabank;TowneBank;VirginiaNaturalGas;MechanicalGroup;WeymouthHome.

Anthem,Allstate LockheedHSBCDominionDeltaCoca-ColaCaterpillarBankAmerigroupInc.ofAmericaAirlinesEnergyMartin VirginiaUPSTowneBankStatePepsiCoPNCNorthropGrummanBankFarmNaturalGas

RIVERSIDEONLINE.COM/FOUNDATION 31

Simply contact your employer’s Human Resources or Community Giving department or search for their matching gift program details online. If you have questions, we can help. Please call (757) 234-8740 or email us at Someriversidefoundation@rivhs.comcompaniesinourareathat have matching gift programs:

Giving Back

TEAM MEMBER CAMPAIGN

2020 RIVERSIDE FOUNDATION YEAR IN REVIEW32

In a remarkable additional gesture of gratitude, Riverside’s leadership recognized the immense sacrifices of the team during COVID-19 with a thoughtful one-time “thank you” payment. Scores of our team members in turn gave part or all of this recognition back to the Foundation to the tune of more than $7,500.

Riverside team members are always looking for ways to raise the standard of care. Each year they come together to philanthropically support how Riverside carries out its mission. The pandemic changed the way the Foundation implemented the 2020 team member fundraising campaign, but our dedicated team rose to the occasion, donating more than $286,000 during the year.

In a year when furloughs were commonplace in other health systems, Riverside made a commitment early on to minimize any employment disruptions to our team members, who are our most valuable asset. This commitment was a great comfort to team members at a time when many other aspects of life were unstable.

Wearing Pink for Breast Cancer Awareness

On October 23, Riverside team members showed their support for breast cancer awareness on National Pink Out Day. Team members made a donation and dressed in their best pink attire (wigs included!) to support Riverside Cancer Care in providing prevention education and breast cancer screenings to underserved women in our community.

Team Members Show Unwavering Support

Team members dress up for National Pink Out Day

In a time of critical need, the Riverside family and the communities it serves have stepped up to make sure that local health care heroes were able to focus on caring for patients despite personal pressures due to the pandemic. That is the Riverside Care Difference put into action.

RIVERSIDEONLINE.COM/FOUNDATION 33

In 2020, COVID-19 created financial hardship for many team members due to the loss of employment of someone in their household or to unanticipated childcare expenses when schools shut down.

In 2020, 29 team members found financial relief for housing after a house fire, utilities, funeral expenses and transportation needs. Many of these needs were made more pressing than usual by the simultaneous hardships posed by COVID-19.

RRMC team members

RIVERSIDE HELP FUND

The Riverside Help Fund provides assistance to team members who experience a significant disruption to their household finances. Sometimes this disruption is a house fire, a flood, or the death of a loved one, all of which can contribute to unexpected and significant expenses.

Recognizing that so many team members were facing unforeseen hardships, Riverside colleagues donated to the Help Fund with recordbreaking generosity, as did members of the communities Riverside serves.

Team Members Support Their Colleagues

emotional, psychological and physical effects of dementia.

MEMORY CARE NAVIGATION

2020 RIVERSIDE FOUNDATION YEAR IN REVIEW34

The Spain family

“When Dad was diagnosed with dementia, it was sad,” Steve said. “This was a guy who did crossword puzzles all the time in the paper and was just a really intelligent guy. Dementia is a really horrible

Thanks to a generous donation by Spain Commercial, Riverside Health System will soon offer memory care navigation to help caregivers, family members and loved ones walking that path.

“Mr. Steve Spain of Spain Commercial, with all of his philanthropic heart and generosity, came to us wanting to honor his dad, George Spain, who suffered from dementia,” said Riverside Executive Vice President and Chief Nursing Officer Nancy Littlefield, DNP, MSHA, RN, FACHE, NEA-BC. “Steve’s experience caring for his dad was similar to the experience of others before him. Family members and loved ones who are caregivers want and need support to reach out to, to talk to. This new memory care navigator position will guide caregivers through a difficult time and help them find resources to make the journey a little easier.”

Navigating the care for a loved one with dementia can be a daunting and, at times, overwhelming journey

The navigator position is grounded in an evidence-based program that the health system implemented through a federal grant at the Riverside Center for Excellence in Aging and Lifelong Health (CEALH). The navigator will support approximately 50 families per year, helping patients, family members and caregivers cope with the

Riverside Creates Memory Care Navigator Position to Serve Caregivers and Patients Living with Dementia

all the health care that I’m around, I didn’t know who to call or where to go,” said Steve. His commercial contracting business, Spain Commercial, Inc., builds health care and lifelong health facilities throughout the region. Ultimately, Steve moved his father into a memory care facility where his dad could have additional resources to ensure his safety and well-being.

“At the Riverside Foundation, we say there are three reasons we raise money,” said executive director Kristen Witt. “We fill the gaps between what insurance covers and what families need; we help our health system go from good to great by using donations to recruit the best doctors, build the best facilities and provide the best treatment; and we provide a tangible way for people to show their gratitude for the care and support they’ve received.”

Other goals of the memory care navigator include expanding personalized care and support by implementing initial and follow-up in-home visits, or via telehealth if circumstances require, with the goal of minimizing stress for caregivers who are supporting a loved one with this chronic disease.

The position will launch first on the Peninsula and ideally will garner additional interest from other donors to help expand the program.

RIVERSIDEONLINE.COM/FOUNDATION 35

“The navigator position is such a positive thing,” Steve said. “I’m just hoping that this will help families and their loved ones along their journey. We have been so blessed, and we want to bless others. Riverside does so much for our community, and I’m honored to help out with such a great cause like this.”

The gift from the Spain family fits squarely into all three important reasons for giving.

When Steve heard about the opportunity to help fund a memory care navigator position, he said he immediately thought, “If I had had somebody like that who I could call, it would have really helped me.”

“Eventhings.”with

disease,” Steve said. “I thought I could take him in and take care of him, but that was difficult. He wouldn’t sleep, and he would try to get out of the house. We ended up having to get a full-time caretaker to help, and all the while we wondered if we were doing all the right

“Mr. Spain sets an amazing example not just for his family and his company, but also for this entire community,” Kristen said.

Further support for memory care came from the Lions Club in Smithfield who fundraised with the goal of implementing the Music and Memory program at the Riverside Healthy Living CommunitySmithfield. This gift, from a small group of people, will make a big difference to many people for years to come.

Music and Memory is a patented program developed through extensive neurological research and is aimed at helping individuals with memory care diseases to engage with the world, ease pain, and reclaim their humanity through the use of personalized music playlists. Research shows that music activates regions of the brain spared by Alzheimer’s. Studies have demonstrated that familiar music may facilitate attention, reward and motivation, which in turn helps to manage the emotional distress that can sometimes be exhibited by Alzheimer’s patients.

REGIONAL UPDATES

The Shore Health Foundation was established in 2009 when Shore Memorial Hospital joined Riverside Health System to ensure that previously donated endowment funds could continue to support local patient care. In 2020, the Foundation made the lead gift for advanced endoscopy equipment at RSMH, thus continuing the tradition of bringing leading-edge technology to this rural community.

from the Althea Shelton Carousel Gift Shop located in the lobby at Riverside Shore Memorial Hospital, from the annual Festival of Lights in December, and from the annual Hospital Ball, which sadly was cancelled in 2020 due to the pandemic.

Even in a year that was difficult for fundraising, the Riverside Shore Memorial Hospital Auxiliary was able to finish paying their four-year pledge on electrocardiography equipment a year earlier than planned. In 2018, the Auxiliary pledged $100,000 to be paid over four years for equipment that is vital in the diagnosis of heart disease. Armed with resources from generous Shore donors, the Auxiliary paid the installments for years three and four together in year three. They then ambitiously moved on to commit to a multiyear pledge for advanced endoscopy equipment at the region’s only Fundinghospital.

2020 RIVERSIDE FOUNDATION YEAR IN REVIEW36

Riverside Shore Memorial Hospital Auxiliary and the Shore Health Foundation Focus on Patient Care Equipment

RSMH Auxiliary completes their $100,000 pledge

for the RSMH Auxiliary comes from membership dues,

Eastern Shore

In October, Riverside Health System and VCU Health System finalized the purchase agreement for VCU Health System to acquire Riverside’s hospital and physician practices in the Northern Neck and upper Middle Peninsula region of Virginia, including Riverside Tappahannock Hospital effective January 1, 2021.

Tappahannock

The shared leadership and incredible accomplishments of both Liz and Frances have elevated the work of the Foundation as well as Riverside’s ability to deliver remarkable care in Tappahannock for our patients, their families and our communities.  It has been an incredible honor, and we are immensely grateful.

a urologist who faithfully served the Tappahannock and Northern Neck community for more than 25 years.  In looking back over her tenure in Tappahannock, she’s proudest of what Riverside has given back to the community, both in terms of enhanced medical care and philanthropy.

“It has been an honor to serve the Northern Neck community,” said Riverside CEO Bill Downey. “Riverside Health System and VCU Health share the same values and commitment to improving the health of our communities by expanding access to quality care and providing leadingedge, compassionate and effective health care close to home.”

RIVERSIDEONLINE.COM/FOUNDATION 37

Farewell to Part of Our Family

Hospital President Liz Martin helped support fundraising efforts and oversee the multi-million dollar private room conversion completed in 2017.  Liz joined Riverside Health System in 1989.  Before arriving in Tappahannock, Virginia, she planned, supervised and coordinated outpatient care across the health system. In 1995, Liz became the chief executive for the recently acquired Riverside Tappahannock Hospital.   Her belief in and commitment to the Riverside mission has been instrumental in guiding this close-knit family of caregivers.  Liz also led the effort to establish a scholarship in memory of Dr. Jeffery M. Haskins,

The first community hospital in Tappahannock opened its doors in 1964 and joined the Riverside family in 1989.  Over the years, we have forged incredible friendships in the community. Prominent among those friendships has been the leadership and vision to elevate care in Tappahannock through philanthropy by two very special women.

As a member of the Riverside Foundation Board of Directors, Frances Ellis has been an outspoken advocate of the need for private support for Riverside Tappahannock Hospital. At the recommendation of the Board of Directors in 2012, Frances and Marion Rowe formed a community committee and embarked on a capital campaign to convert existing patient rooms into private care settings. In 2019 Riverside was grateful for the opportunity to honor Frances’ many contributions as a part of our 20th Anniversary celebration. We have recently created a lasting tribute to Frances, and her beloved late husband, Ben, by naming the emergency medicine/trauma training suite within the Simulation Training Lab at Riverside Regional Medical Center in their honor.

Left to right: Liz Martin, Nancy Weakley and Frances Ellis

“Her leadership will have an impact on our work for decades to come,” said Kristen Witt, executive director of the Riverside Health System Foundation.  “To be able to recognize her accomplishments alongside of Ben, who lived a life of distinction and service, means so much to us.”

* Above photo taken pre-pandemic

Special thanks to our generous presenting sponsor, Spain Commercial Inc., and our dinner sponsors, C.A. Barrs Contractor, Inc., Bowditch Ford and DPR Construction. Our virtual program

Expand the Cancer Center

We will be doubling the Oncology Infusion Center capacity, expanding nurse work stations, renovating the lab, creating additional exam rooms, and adding an enclosed connector between the Cancer Center and the hospital.

Party packs of holiday cheer specially curated for our guests made their homes the center of sparkling festivities. They joined us for a live and interactive broadcast while supporting cancer patients at Riverside through an online auction, raffles and paddle raise.

We delivered gourmet meals to participants, including a custom menu from Gloucester’s own Scoot’s BBQ and Olivia’s in the Village, specialty wine from the Williamsburg Winery, signature Tree of Lights Toddy ingredients and sweets to bake.

Middle Peninsula

Riverside’s primary focus has always been to protect the safety of our community and team members. These uncertain times called on all of us to focus on our wellness. While we couldn’t be under the tent at Little England Farm, we still “came together” virtually to support our patients and their families.

2020 RIVERSIDE FOUNDATION YEAR IN REVIEW38

was made possible by Consociate Media, Sara Harris of Sara Harris Photography and Steve and Karen Barrs.

A New and Record-Setting Kind of Celebration

On Friday, December 4, we celebrated Tree of Lights – Home for the Holidays virtually. The 10th annual Riverside Walter Reed Hospital fundraiser set out to make a big impact despite not being able to celebrate together at Little England Farm.

Tree of Lights event hosts Steve and Karen Barrs

“It is through our community’s continued support that we can provide the best medical care to our community,” said Riverside Walter Reed Hospital President Esther Desimini. “Gifts are directly invested in our patients, caregivers, facilities and life-saving technology, helping us meet the needs of every patient who comes through our doors for care.”

Tree of Lights raises more than $94,000 to expand Walter Reed Infusion Center and enhance breast cancer diagnostics

Over $94,000 Raised to help

Build A New Breast Health Center

This spa-like clinic for women will offer digital and 3D mammography, ultrasound, breast MRIs and also house our oncology nurse navigators, a vital resource and support system for patients and families from diagnosis through treatment.

Partnership with Williamsburg Winery

This joyous occasion would ultimately be the last in-person event we had in 2020. Guests kicked off the evening with a cocktail hour sponsored by The Cheese Shop of Williamsburg and the Powers family. They then enjoyed a four-course meal by Opus 9, Kingsmill Resort, Two Rivers Country Club and Colonial AWilliamsburg.specialthank

In February, friends, family and community members gathered to celebrate the legacy of John Randolph and Dr. Mark E. Ellis, two men who led the fight against cancer in Williamsburg.

Above: Event sponsors Dave and Xanadu Biondi along with members of the PCI Williamsburg team.

When it comes to breast cancer, NO ONE FIGHTS ALONE! And in a first-of-its-kind partnership, the Riverside Foundation and Williamsburg Winery teamed up to offer a limited release rosé. Thirty percent of every bottle purchased supported breast cancer patients in our community.

you to event organizers Bobby and Patti Dwyer and their planning committee for making this event such a success.

Left: Event organizers Patti and Bobby Dwyer

RIVERSIDEONLINE.COM/FOUNDATION 39

* Photos taken pre-pandemic

Event Celebrates 26th Year Supporting Cancer Patients in Williamsburg Williamsburg

Stay Up to Date with the Foundation

Follow our Riverside Foundation Facebook and Instagram pages to:

• Meet our champions and medical experts.

Caring for Our Community

In June, Riverside Brentwood Medical Center was selected as recipient of a health grant from Impact 100 of the Greater Peninsula. Thanks to their generosity, we purchased 300 digital thermometers for at-risk patients in our care. Thermometers are tremendous tools in monitoring personal health and can also detect the first signs of COVID-19.

Our special thanks to the Peninsula Community Foundation for their support of Riverside’s smallest patients. A grant from the Children’s Holiday Fund helped to support families in need by providing 110 take home Halo Sleep Sacks for our NICU babies. Sleep sacks replace loose blankets in the crib that can cover a baby’s face and interfere with breathing. The sleep sack is roomy but cannot be kicked off, so baby sleeps better and more comfortably. The gift helps to ensure that baby’s first months at home are as safe as possible.

• Hear patient and family stories.

Peninsula

Our thanks to Impact 100 and the Peninsula Community Foundation for helping Riverside fulfill our mission to care for others as we would care for those we love.

• Get notifications about our new events.

2020 RIVERSIDE FOUNDATION YEAR IN REVIEW40

Plus, follow us for great giveaways and special callEmailWantopportunities.Facebook.com/riversidehealthfoundation@RiversidehealthfoundationonInstagramtomakesurewehaveyouremailaddress?usat:riversidefoundation@rivhs.comor(757)234-8740.AFacebookaccountisnotrequiredtoviewourpageinyourwebbrowser.Simplyholdyourphone’scameraovertheQRcodeforthisandmore.

• Learn about exciting new projects and programs.

• Experience gift impact across all areas of Riverside.

UNCORKED EVENT

In 2020, the Riverside Foundation shifted our annual gatherings to a virtual format. In the fall, with support from our generous community partners at The Williamsburg Winery, the Foundation proudly celebrated our Founder’s Society and 1915 Club donors across the Peninsula and Eastern Shore with a Riverside Uncorked broadcast event.

Riverside Uncorked

More than 140 donors tuned in to hear the latest from Riverside leadership and physicians while tasting a selection of wines delivered to their homes. The wine tasting was complete with commentary from The Williamsburg Winery’s winemaker, Matthew Meyer. Riverside Chief Nursing Officer Dr. Nancy Littlefield and Foundation Executive Director Kristen Witt led a toast to a remarkable year of generosity and resilience.

Left: Aaron Williams and family enjoy Riverside Uncorked Center: Riverside Uncorked Broadcast

Above: Foundation Executive Director Kristen Witt

RIVERSIDEONLINE.COM/FOUNDATION 41

Dr. Mark E. and Lynn H. Ellis Drs. Roger and Theresa Emory* First Uniform, Inc.

Jane D. McKinney, Ph.D. Newport News Shipbuilding Riverside Shore Memorial Hospital SteveAuxiliarySpain, Spain Commercial ^ W.M. Jordan Company

* Denotes legacy contributors who have chosen to support Riverside through a bequest or other deferred gift.

2020 RIVERSIDE FOUNDATION YEAR IN REVIEW42

$1,000,000 and above

Nancy E. Bates ^ Thomas J. Bayne, Jr. and Family ^ Pierre and Catherine Dohet* Dolores L. HuntingtonFolds*Ingalls Industries, Inc.

Riverside Regional Medical Center Volunteers

Robert and Susan McCreary* North American Partners in RiversideAnesthesiaRegional Medical Center Education Foundation

Dr. J. Frank Sanderson, Jr. and Faye Petro Gargiulo* Judith RichardCaramineGindhart*KellamJ.andCatherine

Douglas Y. Hicks

Robert B. Lantz Foundation + Matt and Adele Lockhart Dr. Hugh and Sherrill McCormick William S. Phillips*

Riverside Regional Medical Staff Riverside Tappahannock Hospital Volunteers Riverside Walter Reed Hospital Volunteers

Founder’s Society

The Founder’s Society honors and celebrates the cumulative, lifetime commitments of our most treasured supporters. Please help us welcome our newest Founder’s Society members (denoted by a +) and recognize those members whose continued contributions have elevated their recognition to a new level (denoted by a ^).

Guardian Circle $250,000 and above

Members as of December 31, 2020.

Dr. Patricia Barry Cremation Society of VirginiaWilliamPeninsula/NN+andCarol Downey Jesse Doswell Dutton*

Second Century Circle $100,000 and above

Carolyn Abbitt, Stephen Abbitt and Joe Steele, III Dr. Biral and Amitee Amin Dexter and Debbie Atkinson ^ BayPort Credit Union ^ Wade and Amy Broughman Pat and Debra Roob Costello

Caregiver Circle $500,000 and above

B. Pearce* Peninsula Pathology Associates ^ PNC PatriciaBankR. St. Clair ^ Ruth J. Thornton* Paul and Mary Agnes Truttschel* Turner Construction Company

Mission Circle

Humanitarian Circle $50,000 and above

Ruby Pope Drumm* Lettie Pate ShoreFoundation,WhiteheadInc.HealthFoundation

Dr. Anthony and Carol Santoro Conway and Kay Sheild Tangier Island Health Foundation TowneBank

The James M. Cox Foundation + James N. Edwards, Jr., USN, Ret. Epic Systems Corporation ^ Barbara Fanney ^ GC Commercial, Inc.

$25,000 and above

HuntingtonHousleyGarden Club

Sam and Dr. Lori Gillespie Charlie and Golden Bethune Hill

Dr. James and Emily McDaniel Medical JohnThePMAJohnJohnPeninsulaFrancesMelanieCliffordDr.ParadiseDianneRonPimPeterMednaxPhysics,RadiationInc.Services,Inc.andKerryMellette*MontgomeryandMaryMurrayL.Nichols+OceanClub+PatrickandCatherineParcellsandMargaretParkerParkhurstE.Parsons*PiecemakersQuiltGuild+PetermanandTinaPhillipsArchitectureRainesFamilyandEricaRandolph

Susan G. Komen Central and Eastern Virginia + Dr. James and Trina Lesnick Robert and Claudia McDermott

Bob and Sue Evans, USN, Ret. Jason and Jennifer Frank Drs. Charles and Lisa Frazier FTI Consulting, Inc. The Garden Club of the Eastern TerrisKBPDr.Dr.KaufmanSteveKasperskyJohnRickJasonMargueriteDr.CherylChuckDr.GeorgeHancock,CWOAngeloDr.GregCharlieGraceRoydenGeraldineShoreT.Gladding*andMarthaGoodsonIndustriesandAmandaGrahamGarrettRealtyBarryGross“Gus”GuastaferroHarveyandSherriHammDaniel&Johnson,P.C.HandleyRobertandNancyHardingandSallyHartmanL.Heard+JeffreyandRebeccaHenkeHopkins*andKeriHouserandDonnaJackson*andCarolJamisonLabandCarrieKarnes&Canoles,P.C.GaryandJudithKavitThomasandMaryKayrouz+Foods+E.Kennedy,Ph.D.,R.N.

Rosie’s Gaming Emporium + Len and Faith Shartzer ^ Janie and Leo Slade, Jr + RhysMildredTayloredSonabankPrintingThomas*andNancyWeakley

ElizabethBrentRandolph Carmichael* CSX Transportation, Inc.

David and Xanadu Biondi + P. Gray and Julia Bowditch BPOE Lodge #315

The Main PreservationStreetTrust + Drs. H. Blair and Luisa Marsteller Pat and Liz Martin Masters Mechanical Corporation HughElizabethand McCormick

Ray and Rita Arnold Wanda M. Austin

Diana L. LoVecchio

John F. LibertyLeachBarbaraKourmadasLabonte+WallaceAssociates,Inc.LiveChurch + Nancy W. Littlefield, DNP, RN and Glen Littlefield Lee and Elishia Lockwood

W. William and Rebecca Austin Bay Electric Company

RIVERSIDEONLINE.COM/FOUNDATION 43

Adams Outdoor Advertising Advis, Inc. +

Benjamin and Frances H. Ellis ^ Essex FriendsBankofDavid Doughty ^

AON Risk Services, Inc. + Mac and Margaret Armstrong, USAF, Ret.

$10,000 and above

Dr. John C. and Paula P. Maddox

Navigator Circle

Willie and Debra Campbell Chesapeake Bank and Wealth ESaEasternDr.JackDavidDominionDr.PauletteMargaretDrs.ManagementThomasandAnastasiaClearyCookDawsonLucyE.DeFantiEnergyServices,Inc.+andMabelDriverandCarolDubbsJamesandCarolynDudleyShoreCruisers,LLC+Architects

DPR WesleyConstructionandLucinda Dudley

LisaHouriganGross

Jeff Tiller and Paula Burcher Callison RTKL, Inc.

Healing Circle

Abingdon Ruritan Club C.A. Barrs Contractor, Inc. ^ Stephen and Karen Barrs Mason

Bill and Michelle Brauer

Jerry and Danette Allen Ameritone, Inc.

David W. K. Peacock, Jr.* Luis H. PeninsulaPena*Radiological Associates

Lisa DavidBenjaminandXanadu Biondi

44 Abbitt Family Foundation Stephen M. Abbitt and Joe Steele, III Accomack County Sheriff’s Office Ace AESAdvis,HardwareInc.Consulting Engineers Prem and Leena Agarwal Elizabeth M. Albaugh John E. Alex, M.D. and Jennifer Alex Wilma Allen

Thomas J. Bayne, Jr. and Family BayPort Credit Union

Kenneth Blair, N.P. and Marissa Blair, C.N.M. Dwayne and Vivian Blake BowditchBojangle’s Ford P. Gray and Julia Bowditch William and Michelle Brauer Michael E. Brookman Douglas and Betsy Brown Cole and Pamela Brundage Jeff Tiller and Paula O. Burcher Scott V. Burgess, M.D. James and Jennifer Burnett Dee Ann Calhoun Canon Virginia, Inc. Carrabba’s Italian Grill Newport News

Gene T. Allender Trust Ameritone, Inc. Biral S. Amin, M.D., MBA and Amitee Amin Analytical AONLisaAssociates,MechanicsInc.E.AndersonRiskServices,Inc.

Dr. Christopher and Lisa Stolle Dr. Eric and Sharon Stone + Dr. Damian J. Tagliente Paul and Rosemary Trible Tyson Foods, Inc. + Vansant and Gusler, Inc. Virginia Beach Billfish Foundation, Inc. + Jerry Eng and Rhonda Waldrop-Eng The Walker and Wells Family Hill and Alice Wellford William NathanielSusanneandWellfordG.Wesley, Jr. + Stuart and Cindy Williams Tom and Liz Williams* Alan and Debbie Witt Lewis and Minta Wood + Philip Yosway, USN, Ret.

Mary Archer Ray and Rita Arnold Brandon and Margaret Atkins Dexter and Debbie Atkinson Stephen and Kathie Atkinson Atlantic High School Class of 1969 Wanda M. Austin W. William Austin and Rebecca Austin Tannis Baldwin

> CONTINUED

Golf League

Inc.

D. Marshall Barry, Ph.D. and Patricia P. Barry, M.D. Lisa BayNancyBartelliE.BatesCreekWomens

Riverside Health System’s remarkable history began in 1915 with the first hospital planned for Newport News. To honor that legacy, the 1915 Club honors donors of $1,000 or more annually.

In its third year, the 1915 Club broke records with a membership of 328 donors. Through their generous gifts, the 1915 Club provides immediate and direct impact on Riverside Health System and helps to provide the greatest quality of care in each local community.

1915 Club

Randy and Cara Randolph Charles and Sally Gayle Revere Riverside Regional Medical Center Facilities Engineering RLPS Architects

Drs. Michael and Cherry Schwartz

Col. Roy D. Rogers, USA, Ret. + Dr. Brandon D. Rogers, D.O. Memorial Fund + Robert and Leah Rubenstein E. Blake and Sally Ryan

Albert J. C.A.GertrudeBanwellBarlowBarrsContractor,

County

Michael SoroptimistSandraDr.CharlesShannonandShumateandJeriSibleyDavidM.SmithMillerSnapp,MSA,R.N.ClubofAccomack

Members as of December 31, 2020. † Denotes deceased contributors.

Tom and Esther Desimini

William and Carol Downey

CrossroadsMiriamPeninsula/NNB.CromwellCommunity Church

Bob and Sue Evans, USN, Ret. Exmore Rotary Club Foundation, Inc.

JamesEasternDonaldRichardDavidConstructionandMabelDriverK.Dunn,M.D.andAlisonE.Dunn,M.D.andJoanDykstraShoreCruisers,LLCN.Edwards,Jr.,USN, Ret.

Barbara B. Fanney Paul P. Ferguson

Debra Anne Cooper

David Cohen, M.D. and Betsy Cohen

Alvin and Jo Day

Lynn H. Ellis

Roger E. Emory, M.D. and Theresa S. Emory, M.D. Epic Systems Corporation Epling’s Pest Control Susanne Erikson

The Graceful Rose Boutique Charles and Amanda Graham Greg Garrett Realty Ronald Gregory

CST Mechanical Inc.

Lisa A. Casanova, M.D. and John ChesapeakeGillespieBankand Wealth

William R. Ermatinger Essex Bank

J. Frank Sanderson, Jr., M.D. and Faye Petro Gargiulo GC Commercial, Inc.

Lori K. Gillespie, M.D. and Samuel E. Gillespie Garnet L. Gilmore Good Shepherd Lutheran Church Rose Goode Jon and Jesse Goodrich G. Royden and Martha Goodson, III Arthur W. Grace

Sara C. CremationTracyCreditTheCOVIDCoughenourTechConnectJamesM.CoxFoundationControlCorporationG.CreechSocietyofVirginia -

Robert E. and Betsy D. Gremp Tiena M. Griffith, L.P.N. W.T. and Melissa Guthrie

Nick and Crystal Chuquin D. Matt Church

Friends from The Daffodil Shop Friends of David Doughty The Garden Club of the Eastern Shore

Frances H. Ellis

Tywanda S. Johnson-Bibbins, R.N. David F. Jones, M.D. and Traci G. Jones Margery B. Jones Michele B. Jones Juan’s Mexican Cafe Julie’s Vinyl Touch Steve and Carrie Karnes Vladimir Karpov, M.D. Kaufman & Canoles, P.C. Gary S. Kavit, M.D. and Judith Kavit Thomas Kayrouz, M.D. and Mary Kayrouz KBP

Chick-Fil-AManagementof Yoder Plaza Christ United Methodist Church

Lucy E. DeFanti, D.O.

Terris E. Kennedy, Ph.D., R.N. Quentin Kidd, Ph.D and Holly Kidd Jason and Robin Kilgore John F. Kourmadas John and Emily Krikorian Barbara Labonte Robert B. Lantz Foundation

Patricia E. Emerson

Thomas Cleary, M.D. and Anastasia Cleary, M.D.

Edward Chu, M.D.

First Uniform, Inc. Food Lion, LLC Erin JasonFoxand Jennifer Frank Robert Fry and Katherine Randolph Fry Charles Frazier, M.D. and Lisa Frazier, LPC, LMFT Freedom Life Church

LloydCaramineFoodsKellamJ.Kellam,III, M.D. Lawrence Kennedy

Jo L. Hadley, R.N. Enoch and Kathy Haley

International Association of Odd Fellows

Damuth Trane Emmeth Daniel, M.D. and Barbara Daniel Royden and Ruth Daniels David, Kamp & Frank, L.L.C.

Consociate Media, LLC

Terry DominionCharlesDillonL.DodgeEnergy Services, Inc.

RIVERSIDEONLINE.COM/FOUNDATION 45

DPR

Hampton Roads Survivors of Suicide Support Group, Inc. Handicraft Shop @ Patriots Colony Robert R. Harding, M.D. and Nancy G. Harding Chuck and Sally Hartman Hayashi Sushi & Grill Cheryl L. Heard Edward and Michelle Heckler Jeffrey Henke, M.D. and Rebecca Henke Douglas Y. Hicks Jewell HospiceHodsonSupport Services, Inc.

JasonHouriganand Keri Houser Huntington Ingalls Industries, Inc. Impact 100 Greater Peninsula

Patricia S. Curlin

Johnsen

Sandra E. Halvorson, R.N. Harvey and Sherri Hamm Jimmie D. Hamm, Jr.

Cara Marie Jackson, D.O. Leland and Marion James Christine J. Jensen, Ph.D. and Emile V. SteveJensenandBarbara

Let’s Breathe - McLean Lettie Pate CatherineMarthaLibertyFoundation,WhiteheadInc.LiveChurchLieboldR.Lintzenich, M.D.

The Main Street Preservation Trust Melinda Marshall

Not Another Pancake House Ocean OnancockDeliElks Lodge

Elizabeth N. May

John E. Orman, Jr.

Robin Nelhuebel, Ph.D., RN, RT and Kevin Nelhuebel

Rick and Lara Overy

Troy V. Mothershead

Clifford and Margaret Parker Linda RussellKellamA.Pearce, III and Nancy G. Pearce

Lisa B. DavidAndreaSlavickN.SmithSmith,M.D. and Gloria Smith

Lee and Elishia Lockwood LPL DavidFinancialandElizabeth Lucas

Amber E. Morgan Morgan Properties

Jennifer K. Morris

Robert W. and Susan A. McCreary James L. McDaniel, M.D. and Emily D. McDaniel

John F. Miller, M.D. and Monika F. Miller

Judith O. Matthews

Nancy W. Littlefield, DNP, RN and Glen Littlefield

Peninsula Pathology Associates

MastersJohnMaskforceMastersMechanical Corporation

Oyster Cove Boatworks & Yacht Brokerage Inc.

Riverside Brentwood Medical Center - Family Medicine Riverside Shore Memorial Hospital

Col. Roy D. Rogers, USA, Ret. Dr. Brandon D. Rogers, D.O. Memorial Fund

Rosie’s Gaming Emporium Glenn and Charlene Rother Robert and Leah Rubenstein † E. Blake and Sally Ryan Robert and Lisa Salsberry Elizabeth W. Santini

The Honorable Patricia P. Satterfield

Ronald L. Saunders

CarolynMargaretRevereRandyJohnKalpanaProvidencePNCPhillipsPetermanEnergy,Inc.BankBaptistChurchRaikarandEricaRandolphandCaraRandolphFamilyFoundationA.ReynoldsW.Richardson

Paradise Ocean Club

Conway H. Sheild, III and Kay Sheild Justine R. Shields Shore Health Foundation

Michael and Shannon Shumate Janie and Leo Slade

Sandra M. Snapp, MSA, RN John W. Snyder, Jr., M.D. and Ann M. Snyder

SteveSonabankSpain, Spain Commercial Cowles M. Spencer Patricia R. St. Clair Scott and Beth Stabler Roy and Linda Stallings Alexander Starodub, M.D., Ph.D. Duane and Andrea Staskiel Eric Stone, M.D. and Sharon Stone Strata TimothySolarand Anne Sullivan Sunrise Pizzeria Susan G. Komen Central and Eastern Virginia Teresa C. Sweaney Damian J. Tagliente, M.D. Robert and SadieTayloredTarkington-DealRamonaPrintingJ.Thurman,M.S., RN,C.E.N. Janice W. TraditionWilliamTowneBankTowneTownsleyBrewing Company

Michael Schwartz, M.D. and Cherry Schwartz, PharmD. Charles and Michelle Seal Sentinel Robotics Solutions, LLC Sewa International Len and Faith Shartzer

John and Carolyn McHale Linda McKee

Lisa M. Robb

Norma L. Turner Tyson Foods, Inc.

H. Blair Marsteller, M.D. and Luisa P. Marsteller, M.D. Pat and Elizabeth Martin

James W. McCorry, M.D.

Susan W. Miller

One Source Consulting, LLC

2020 RIVERSIDE FOUNDATION YEAR IN REVIEW46

Peninsula Community Foundation, Children’s Holiday Fund

Nell W. Minton

Michele E. Macklin

Linwood S. and Andrea K. Nelson New NewportRavennaNews Shipbuilding

Jane D. McKinney, Ph.D. Medical Radiation Physics, Inc.

Peninsula Piecemakers Quilt Guild Peninsula Quilters Guild Peninsula Radiological Associates Perdue Farms Inc.

Sara Harris Photography

Smithfield Lions Club

John P.

Dianne L. Nichols

UTZ Quality Foods, LLC Jacob Lambert and Adria Vanhoozier

Look for our 2020 donor honor roll and tribute donor lists at riversideonline.com/2020donors.

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Thomas M. Richardson

RiversideAuxiliaryWilliamsburg Neurology & Sleep Specialists

Bryan and Kristen Witt

Plan your future to honor your past. Fortunately, it is fairly easy and overwhelmingly rewarding. With even a simple plan, you can protect your family and leave a legacy that reflects your life’s work.

Virginia Beach

Copyright 2020 Crescendo Interactive, Inc.

Jerry Eng and Rhonda Waldrop-Eng Warwick Mechanical Group

Rhys and Nancy Weakley

Alan and Debbie Witt

B. Hunt Whitbeck, Jr. and Katherine Whitbeck

Billfish Foundation, Inc.

John T. White, III and Susan Murdoch

Used by permission. 19AB69

Virginia Natural Gas/AGL Resources

Tom and Elisabeth Williams Williams Landscape & Design, Inc. Williamsburg Knitting Guild

There is no better time to think about your future. As you do, reflect on all you have done with your life. If you do not have a will or estate plan, now is the time to create or update yours. When you do, you will find ways to:

Jerry and Edna Watts

Eileen A. Varnson

Irene StuartWhiteandCindy Williams

Truman N. Wise

Lewis and Minta Wood York River Flooring, LLC

• Leave more for your family and the organizations you hold dear.

Nathaniel G. Wesley, Jr.

• Ensure you leave the legacy you want.

Call us at (757) 234-8740 or email us at riversidefoundation@rivhs.com. We have tools and ideas to help you.

Ross Younger, M.D. and Sarah Younger, M.D.

Howard and Sandy Waters Waters Edge Church

Forrest and Susan West West Rock Paper Mill

Robyn A. Vargo, D.O.

Weymouth Funeral Home, Inc.

A Simple Plan Provides Peace

• Protect yourself, your spouse, and your family.

Dan, Max and Danielle Weintraub

701 Town Center Drive, Suite 1000 Newport News, VA 23606

Address Service Requested

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