The Goodness Web 2024 Annual Report

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ANNUAL REPORT 2024

LETTER FROM THE CEO

Dear trusted friends and supporters of The Goodness Web,

We are so excited to share the progress we’ve made over the past year! 2024 marked a series of important growth milestones in the short history of The Goodness Web. We deeply appreciate each one of you who has made our expansion and impact possible. Our founders set out a few years ago with a vision of a “Web” of connected leaders with big hearts making bold bets to transform youth mental health. That vision is coming to life in powerful ways around the country!

This year, we celebrate:

Our grantees. We are incredibly proud of the impact our grantees are having, which you’ll read about in the following pages. For several grantees, we have supported their work for multiple years and are seeing how a substantial, longer-term investment can catalyze exponential growth. At the other end of the spectrum, we were a part of launching two new initiatives this year and are impressed by the headway they’ve made out of the gates.

Our donor community. Because of your donations, we were able to give over $3 million in grants, more than in any single prior year. The size of our donor community grew faster than ever, and by December we had surpassed $17 million in cumulative pledges since our founding. Your generosity inspires us to be highly committed to deploying those resources to leverage the big changes young people need.

Our shared leadership model. As most of you know, I came on board as TGW’s inaugural CEO in the spring. You may wonder what that means for the involvement of our team of founders. Partnering with them is the best part of my job! They remain as committed as ever to rolling up their sleeves on fundraising, grantmaking, event planning, whatever it takes. They are the active beating heart of this enterprise. We have strengthened our organizational infrastructure and are poised for growth in the near term. As in the past, our founders and Board of Directors funded all operating expenses in 2024, meaning 100% of the dollars you donated to TGW went directly to our path-breaking grantee partners.

Yours in partnership and gratitude,

Goodness Web

FEBRUARY

Nationwide search for inaugural CEO underway

In review 2024

SEPTEMBER

Launched new monthly newsletter

OCTOBER

Dallas, TX Salon

NYC Salon feat. U.S. Surgeon General

NOVEMBER

TGW launched Insider Briefings to keep donors connected to the work of our grantees

JANUARY

Launched a new organization, Young Futures, in partnership with Melinda French Gates’ Pivotal Ventures and the Susan Crown Exchange

MARCH

Houston, TX Salon event

APRIL

Second Boston, MA Salon

Second Chicago, IL Salon

MAY

Celine Coggins joins TGW as inaugural CEO

JUNE

Orange County, CA Salon

JULY

TGW featured in industry leading publication, Inside Philanthropy

AUGUST

Seattle, WA Salon

DECEMBER

First full-scale end-of-year mail campaign, sharing the progress of our grantees and the success of the year

GRANTEE IMPACT

GRANTEE IMPACT

PREVENTION AND EARLY INTERVENTION

TGW Grant: $1.5 million over 3 years

The Jed Foundation (JED) protects mental health and prevents suicide for teens and young adults by:

Strengthening schools. Work directly with over 1,200 high schools, districts, and colleges to strengthen their mental health, substance misuse, and suicide prevention programs, representing 6.8 million students.

Equipping teens and young adults. Provide skills and knowledge to help young people help themselves and each other through programs, digital channels, partnerships, and media.

6.8M students

1,200+ schools & colleges

Mobilizing communities. Promote community awareness, understanding, and action to support young adult mental health through leadership, education, and advocacy efforts.

Impact highlights:

25% decrease in likelihood to attempt suicide

In 2024, JED released research on the effectiveness of its first ten years of programming. It showed that schools implementing the JED Campus program experienced significant improvements in school functioning and student outcomes. These include positive shifts in depression and anxiety scores, as well as increased rates of retention and graduation. Most importantly, students reported a 10% reduction in suicidal ideation, 13% reduction in suicide planning, and a 25% decrease in the likelihood to attempt suicide.

GRANTEE IMPACT

PREVENTION AND EARLY INTERVENTION

TGW Grant: $2.02 million over 4 years

The Collaborative Primary Care Project, a collaboration between Think:Kids and the Meadows Mental Health Policy Institute, aims to scale a proven model for helping young people build emotional regulation skills. By offering caregivers access to a self-paced course in Collaborative Problem Solving, parents across Texas receive tools to support their children’s psychological development as part of routine pediatric visits. The program is geared toward caregivers whose children are experiencing mild to moderate behavioral health needs.

94%

Providers trained in “Introduction to Collaborative Problem Solving”, preparing them to help parents understand value of course and access it

Caregivers responding that “the course taught me strategies I can use right away”

46%

In a peer-reviewed setting, demonstrates a 46% improvement in a child's emotional regulation for those whose caregivers learn CPS

Impact highlights:

Completed development of the “Collaborative Problem-Solving Course for Caregivers”, an asynchronous, online version of the evidence-based training program designed by Think:Kids’ Founder & Director Dr. Stuart Ablon

Translated the course into Spanish

Launched the course in 28 pediatric practices

Expanded course access to 66 community-based and school-based programs serving thousands of children and families

GRANTEE IMPACT

POLICY AND COALITIONBUILDING

57 decisive policy wins 33M people reached $700M unlocked

TGW Grant: $800 thousand over 2 years

Inseparable, Inc. utilizes a nonpartisan campaign-style approach to policy/advocacy that results in fast and meaningful progress by running campaigns, releasing reports, and building hope for those suffering with mental health challenges

Inseparable, Inc. is driving policy change across a growing number of U.S. states to ensure increased funding and increased access to evidence-based mental health support for tens of thousands of young people. They advocate for changes in government, schools, and in the way insurance providers reimburse mental health services.

Impact highlights:

In just one legislative session, Inseparable, Inc. notched 57 decisive policy wins across 20 states (both right- and left-leaning). A key result was driving at least $700 million of funding to mental health, especially for youth and in school settings. During the two years of TGW support, Inseparable, Inc. has grown from a 5-state presence to a 20-state presence.

GRANTEE IMPACT

POLICY AND COALITIONBUILDING

TGW Grant: $1.8 million over 3 years

Path Forward is a coalition that works to ensure equitable access to mental healthcare and substance use care for all Americans. The Goodness Web played the leading role in launching this much-needed collaboration.

The group convenes employers, providers, and industry experts to advocate for and facilitate meaningful changes in access to evidence-based mental healthcare.

Impact highlights:

In under two years, Path Forward’s efforts have shaped policy and practice change quickly – not just in Washington, but around the country, including:

Expanded Medicaid Collaborative Care billing codes to 34 states, led by coalition member American Psychiatric Association (APA)

Secured over $55 million of federal funding for the Collaborative Care Model (dollars are now rolling out to states)

Influenced federal screening guidance for faster youth mental health access

Established a national technical assistance center for integration via a partner collaboration, funded at $3 million per year for 5 years

Scaled local philanthropic efforts in Texas, Michigan, and Illinois

Grew coalition to include the National Council for Mental Wellbeing and their network of 500 certified community behavioral health clinics (CCBHs), and National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI) and their 650 local affiliates

GRANTEE IMPACT

PREVENTION AND EARLY INTERVENTION

Young Futures selects, supports, and mentors a portfolio of early-stage nonprofits focused on digital youth mental health solutions.

Young Futures aims to make the digital world an easier place to grow up.

IN PARTNERSHIP WITH

In 2024, 400 applicants answered two separate public calls for new digital youth solutions to compete for 20 grants total across two cohorts.

Young Futures drives a more productive conversation that brings youth toward healthy engagement with the digital world by advancing innovations that promote social connection, teen belonging, and well-being.

400

20

cumulative applications received over their first two cohorts from organizations across 42 states grantees selected for first two Young Futures Innovators cohorts

190k

young people served by grantee organizations in 2024

GRANTEE IMPACT

PREVENTION AND EARLY INTERVENTION

TGW Grant: $1 million over 2 challenges

IN PARTNERSHIP WITH

Impact highlights:

In early 2024, Young Futures selected its first cohort of social enterprise “Innovators” and is providing them the support, including funding, that will allow their ventures to scale. TGW donors serve as mentors. In this first cohort alone, they received over 200 applications for 10 spots. Each organization helps young people navigate and build the real connections that are critical to supporting youth mental health. They include:

Only7Seconds On a mission to end the youth loneliness epidemic through awareness initiatives, education resources, and empowerment programs.

ReThink Citizens Tackling cyberbullying and online harassment by equipping all youth with the skills they need to be responsible digital citizens.

agapi.kids AI-driven tool to foster the skills of relational intelligence necessary to build human connection.

#HalftheStory First youth-centric nonprofit to empower the next generation’s relationship with technology through education and advocacy.

Be Loud Studios Amplifies confidence through radio production in New Orleans.

Sesame 3G Mentoring program bringing together preschoolers, teens, and older adults through joyful social-emotional learning curriculum.

Weird Enough Productions Diverse stories to empower young people and the adults who support them.

We Are Family South Carolina’s oldest nonprofit that provides life-affirming and lifesaving programs for LGBTQ+ young people.

#Hip Hop Into Learning Believes in the power of Lyrics to Action.

Civics Unplugged Equips young people with the training, funding, and community they need to become civic innovators.

In late 2024, Young Futures led the selection process for their second cohort of Innovators with an equally robust pool of applicants, totaling to 400 cumulative applications received over their first two cohorts from organizations across 42 states.

GRANTEE IMPACT

EXPANDING ACCESS TO CARE

in partnership with Massachusetts Association for Mental Health (MAMH)

In this regional project, currently in stage 2, MAMH is working to accelerate the uptake of the Collaborative Care Model (CoCM) in Massachusetts.

Driving breakthroughs in mapping the brain’s wiring.

With support from the One Mind-Ben Langford and Nicholas Hall Rising Star Award, Dr. Arpiar Saunders is pioneering a powerful new technology that allows scientists to map how brain cells connect across large regions of the brain. His breakthrough tool opens up entirely new possibilities for understanding how information flows through the brain.

Laying the groundwork for future personalized treatments.

By identifying exactly where and how brain wiring goes wrong, Dr. Saunders is helping to chart a path toward targeted, personalized therapies — treatments designed to repair the specific circuits impacted by a disorder. The long-term goal is a future where healthy brain function can be restored in people with schizophrenia and other mental health conditions, dramatically improving lives.

The Collaborative Care Model, or CoCM, is an evidence-based approach that treats common mental health conditions in medical settings such as primary care offices to improve health outcomes and reduce costs. CoCM enables prevention and earlier intervention, diagnosis, and treatment of mental health conditions to help avoid symptom escalation and health crises.

Impacthighlights:

In2024,completedalandscapeanalysisof potentialforimplementationacross Massachusetts

Spokewith40healthcareproviders,payer organizations,andthought/policyleaders

Producedareportidentifyinghealthsystems ripeforimplementation

Preparingforaneventtogalvanize stakeholdersaschampionsfor implementation

Comingsoonin2025:Invitationtohospital systemstoparticipateinnextstage

GRANTEE IMPACT

2023 ONE MIND-BEN LANGFORD AND NICHOLAS HALL RISING STAR AWARD

in partnership with TGW Founding Family members Elizabeth and Bram Hall

Uncovering how faulty brain wiring contributes to mental disorders. Growing evidence suggests that serious mental health conditions are rooted in faulty brain wiring. This work aims to answer a critical question: are these wiring changes driving the illness, or are they just a side effect? The answer could transform how we diagnose and treat mental health conditions.

BY THE NUMBERS 2024

BUILDING OUR COMMUNITY AND IMPACT

$4.7M

in new commitments to TGW, 3x our 2023 pledges

$3.2M

7 in funds given to grantees

new families joined our donor community

280 events across the country to bring families together, our largest number ever

99 increase in social media followers

133% all-time donors to TGW

252 attendees at TGW events

SALONEVENTSNEARYOU BUILDING THE TGW COMMUNITY

The Goodness Web leaders travel across the country to host events for our supporters nationwide and their respective networks. The objectives of The Goodness Web Salon Series include:

Cultivating a learning community of families passionate about transforming mental health

Deepening understanding of the complex youth mental health landscape

Sharing TGW’s impact on accelerating progress among our nonprofit grantees

Highlighting areas of hope, inspiring optimism, and imparting actionable learnings

Contact us at info@thegoodnessweb.org if you’re interested in hosting a salon in your home city!

NYC 2024

Featuring U.S. Surgeon General Dr. Vivek Murthy

“For the kids in our lives, we want them all to be happy, healthy and fulfilled. The key to that fulfillment is meaning and belonging. Community gives us that meaning and belonging. In The Goodness Web, you’re building a true community that can give you all that sense of meaning, and belonging, and service to others.”

Dr. Vivek Murthy

InOctober2024,then-U.S.SurgeonGeneral Dr.VivekMurthyjoinedusforaninformative andinspiringdiscussionatourfirst-ever NewYorkCitySalonevent.

Theafternoonalsofeaturedopeningand closingremarksfromTGW'sfoundersJanand RobSwartz&GinaandMarkVerdi,andCEO CelineCogginsfacilitatedthediscussionand Q&AwiththeSurgeonGeneral.

Heartfeltthanksto:

TGWAcceleratorFamilymemberChris AbbinanteandtheNewYorkCity-based SidleyAustinLLPteamforhosting

TGWFoundingFamilymemberRickBates andtheRxSenseteamforproviding photographyandvideographysupport

OfficeoftheSurgeonGeneral team, includingKatieDealy,TraciDoromal,and AnnaLowenthal,fortheirpartnership

HOUSTON March 2024

Hosts:

Ellen and John Bender

Jon and Carole Gilbreath

Fiona and Shea Guinn

The Hackett Family

Jenny and Niko Lorentzatos

Clare and David McLeroy

Shannon and Andrew Newsom

Carol Ann and Bob Paddock

Carolyn and Karl Rathjen

Heather and Mike Simpson

Mary Eliza and Park Shaper

Jan and Rob Swartz

Barb and Bob Zorich

Expert speaker: Andy Keller, Meadows Mental Health Policy Institute

Number of guests: 110

BOSTON

April 2024

CHICAGO

April 2024

Hosts:

Martha and Chris Abbinante

Marny and Matt Zimmer

Expert speaker:

Kevin Connors, Susan Crown Exchange

Number of guests: 45

Hosts

Included:

Stephanie and John Connaughton

Sandy and Paul Edgerley

Gwill York and Paul Maeder

Expert speakers:

Dr. Stuart Ablon, Think:Kids

Margaret Boasberg, The Bridgespan Group

Bill Smith, Inseparable

Number of guests: 40

ORANGE COUNTY

June 2024

Hosts:

Evelyne and Jeffrey Marks

Steve Elieff

Featured speakers:

Jan and Rob Swartz, TGW Co-Founders

Number of guests: 25

DALLAS

October 2024

Hosts: Ken Hersh and Regen Horchow

SEATTLE

August 2024

Hosts:

Amy and Bob Bautista

Kathleen and Chris Kosmos

Featured speakers:

Sara Bathum, Pivotal Ventures

Jan and Rob Swartz, TGW Co-Founders

Number of guests: 35

Featured speakers:

Karl Rathjen, MD, TGW Board Member Celine Coggins, TGW CEO

Number of guests: 25

BUILDING THE TGW COMMUNITY

INTERGENERATIONAL LEARNING WITH TGW’S INAUGURAL CORPORATE PARTNER, RXSENSE

In July 2024, The Goodness Web hosted Boston-based summer interns of their inaugural corporate partner, RxSense, to discuss The Goodness Web, community engagement, and

After meeting with TGW Co-Founder Mark Verdi and CEO Celine Coggins, they all shared their feedback. One participant summed up his takeaway as:

"Financial and personal goals are extremely valuable and important, but never lose sight of your purpose that drives your belief to make a positive impact on our society."

We couldn’t agree more with these inspiring young people!

If you are interested in exploring how you might create additional corporate partnerships between The Goodness Web and a company with which you have a relationship, please reach out to our team (info@thegoodnessweb.org)

BUILDING THE TGW COMMUNITY

TGW DONORS VOLUNTEERING THEIR EXPERTISE WITH NEXT-GEN ENTREPRENEURS TO ADDRESS THE YOUTH MENTAL HEALTH CRISIS

TGW Founding Family member CeCe Morken served as a mentor to one of the Young Futures “YF Innovators”, Trisha Prabhu, founder of ReThink Citizens. Trisha is on a mission to tackle cyberbullying and improve digital social connection for young people. CeCe, the former President and CEO of Headspace, brought her passion for youth mental health and her decades of executive leadership experience to coaching Trisha. In CeCe’s words:

Like so many of us, members of my family and close friends suffered from mental health issues, and it all started in their youth. If not treated, it can lead to a lifelong challenge with depression and anxiety, or much worse. Youth mental health is critical, given its long-lasting impact on an individual's well-being, development, and social integration. The relationship to technology is particularly important today because it shapes how young people interact, learn, and experience the world.

The mentoring relationship had two-way benefits. CeCe shared that she was able to coach Trisha to “do less better”, supporting her on time management and prioritization. At the same time, she learned from and was inspired by Trisha. The relationship revealed:

The power of channeling adversity you've experienced into a driving force for positive change. Trisha turned her experiences with online bullying into a powerful mission to prevent and reduce cyberbullying through technology. Leveraging technology for good. Trisha leveraged the very technology that is at the root of the problem and combined this with AI to build an accessible, user-friendly platform to detect and stop cyberbullying. We need our youth more than ever. Trisha is a young adult, and her ability to engage with the youth demographic in the development process was impressive, ensuring that her solutions were relevant and effective. Often, people closest to the problem are the best ones to innovate the solutions.

Young Futures will be partnering with TGW again in 2026 to invite experienced business leaders in our network to become mentors. Please reach out to info@thegoodnessweb.org if you are interested in learning more.

BUILDING A WEB OF PARTNERS RADICAL COLLABORATION

Influential philanthropic partnerships

A growing donor base of major foundations

BUILDING A WEB OF PARTNERS RADICAL COLLABORATION

Anchor corporate donor

Radical collaboration across hundreds of donor families from 30 states

Looking ahead to 2025 Looking ahead to 2025

IN LOVING MEMORY

Sister of TGW Co-Founder Jan Swartz

Beloved Wendy Helena Gilbreath, 51, passed away on March 6, 2024. She was born in Summit, New Jersey, on May 25, 1972, to Jon and Carole Gilbreath. A devoted member of St. Martin's Episcopal Church, Wendy grew up in Houston, Texas. She loved her summers at Camp Mystic, and graduated with honors from Memorial High School. She earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in Advertising at Southern Methodist University where she served as Rush Chair of Kappa Kappa Gamma. Wendy applied her creative skills in the fields of advertising, digital media, design, and construction.

Wendy will be remembered for the light and love she shared with so many friends, colleagues, and family. Wendy's bright personality shared her loving energy so generously that anyone who crossed her path felt as if they had a new friend. Her sweetness was matched only by her strength and determination. While fighting challenging illnesses throughout her adult life, Wendy exhibited remarkable courage and stamina as she sought solutions. Wendy was truly an inspiration to those who witnessed her bravery every day.

Wendy deeply loved her family: her parents Jonathan Lowry Gilbreath and Carole Anderson Gilbreath, sister Janet Gilbreath Swartz, brother-in-law Robert Daniel Swartz, and nieces Samantha Ann Swartz and Lauren Elizabeth Swartz. She adored her cats Hampton and Peter Pan.

Thank you very much to all who generously donated to The Goodness Web in loving memory of Wendy Gilbreath, including:

Ellen and Hank Bachmann

The Camp Mystic Inmaides of 2nd Term 1989:

Eileen Baird Askew

Suzie Dyer Bacon

Debbie Bonner Brown

Coco Cochran

Jennifer Tietz Gwin

Catherine Jones

Molly Noble Kidd

Ann-Tyler Chote Konradi

Amy Goforth Lary

Linna Gibbs Mooring

Shelly Terry Pace

Erin Moore Thiebert

Laura Eubank Wexler

Paige and Chip Barnett

Jennifer and Matt Bates

The Bayazit-Besson Family

Julie and Bruce Krumrine

Allison and Jim Bloom

Ted Brady

Phil and Mary Beth Canfield

Minnie and Ed Cappel

Jennifer Cronin

Emily and Holcombe Crosswell

Annie Deets-McHugh

Christine Duffy

Courtney Hill

Edward G. and Catherine M. Galante

Ann and Jim Gibbs

Lisa Gilbreath

Carol Goforth

KKG Sisters Celebration of Life

Kristen M. Lewis

Randy Locke & The Locke Family

Mary Nell and Malcolm Lovett

Susan and Neil McLaurin

The McLeroy Family

Stacey Merchant

Christa Fairchild Midkiff

The Miguez Family

Jane Moore

Sara and Bill Morgan

Gwen Mullins

Carol Ann and Bob Paddock

Sharon and Steve Paskoff

John and Betty Peet

Christina Harrison Pittman

The Saccaro Family

Greg Schenck

Heather and Mike Simpson

Priscilla and George Slocum

Maxine and Ben Steinberg

Robert Stephens

Marcia and Larry Swartz

Susie and Stu Swartz

Diane Taaffe

Valerie Tompson

Karen Marshall Vandersea

Jody Venturoni & Family

Together with Elizabeth Brooks Parks:

Emily Holleman Costas

Beth Bridges Cozby

Aimee Brennig Dodson

Courtney Bawcom Garrett

Kristi Boyd Goldenberg

Maggie Binder Holsomback

Kay Dannenbaum Lawsom

Vanessa Redman

Shannon Saafield Thompson

Anonymous donor families

THANK YOU TO OUR GENEROUS 2024 SUPPORTERS

Our Founding Families, Accelerator Families, and contributors make the work of The Goodness Web possible. Thank you for your generosity and partnership!

Martha and Chris Abbinante

Kate and Ajay Agarwal

The Allen Family

Dirk and Michelle Andringa

The Aronoff Family

Around The Table Foundation

Arthur M. Blank Family Foundation

Ellen and Hank Bachmann

Mary and Jack Balagia

Deborah Bald

Barnes Family Charitable Fund

The Bayazit-Besson Family

Carrie and Adam Beard

The Bender Family

The Bernstein-Deitcher Family Fund

Allison and Jim Bloom

Samantha Trotman Burman and Mitchell Burman

Betty and John T. Cabaniss

The Mary H. Cain Foundation

The Caruso Family

The Cebula Family

The Clymer Family

Celine Coggins Wambold and Randall Wambold

The Conigliaro Family

John and Stephanie Connaughton

Kent and Liz Dauten

The Donnelly Family

Dovetail Impact Foundation

Corrie and Tom Dretler

Echo Creek Charitable Fund

Paul and Sandy Edgerley

Michael and Laurie Ewald

Falls Run Family Foundation

David and Olivia Freed

Jeanette Gilbreath

Carole and Jon Gilbreath

Katie and Brent Gledhill

Goldstein Family Foundation

Robin Gross and Anthony Lehv

Jay Grossman and Family

The Anne Hackney Family

Andrew Hagopian

Elizabeth and Bram Hall

Courtney Harman

Teresa Wilton Harmon and Donald F. Harmon

Dawn and Chip Hawkins

Hayes Family Fund

Kim and Lee Henderson

The Hersh Foundation | Ken Hersh and Regen Horchow

Julie and Jordan Hitch

Gordon K. Ho and Suzy I. Li Charitable Fund

Claire and Derek Holland

Granicus | Mark and Wendy Hynes

Mary Chris Jammet

Neil and Gretchen Kalvelage

The Kaufman Family

Debra Kelly-Ennis

Karla Kennedy

Marie Louise and David Kinder

Kingsbury Family Fund

The Klessel Family

Drs. Adam Koppel & Brenda Haynes

Corey and Lisa Kotlarz

Langenstein Family Fund

Ruth and Dinesh Lathi

Dee and David Lawrence

The Lawrence Family

Charlie and Rebecca Ledley

Joey and Meryl Levin

Julie and Billy Levine

Kristen M. Lewis

Jane and John Loose

The Loose-Norman Family

The Lorentzatos Family

The Lynch Foundation

The Manji Family

The McCaslin Family

Keith and Melissa Meister

Julie and Joel Miller

Jane Moore

Michael Mork and Jason Ballew

CeCelia and Mitch Morken

Danish Munir, GreyMatter

Sandra and Avi Nash & the Indira Foundation

Mary and Jim Nelson

The Newsom Family

The Norman Family

North Point Mergers and Acquisitions, Inc.

Palmer Charitable Trust

Chris & Susan Pappas Family Foundation

Geoff Pardo

Alfred Park

Jennifer and Jason Park

Sajal and Jay Patel

Nancy Perot Family Foundation at The Dallas Foundation

Kristin and Matthew Porter

Felicia and Gideon Powell

Donella Rapier and Andy Pickett

Bette Rathjen Foundation for Emotional Health

Gary and Cindy Reedy

Patty & Doug Reid Family Foundation

Laurie Rendall and David Rendall

Jason Rice

Mary K. and Richard C. Roberts

Beth and Chase Robison RxSense

The Saccaro Family

The Schneider Family

Carrie and Greg Schulze

Ellen and Steven Segal

Alice and Larry Shaw

Heather and Mike Simpson

Todd and Sarah Simpson

The Somer Family

Ari Spitzer

Michael Spolan

The Srinivasan Family

Allan Stillerman, MD

Jan and Rob Swartz

Lisa and Rick Swartz

Ronnie and Sharyn Swartz

Susie and Stu Swartz

The TBDB Charitable Fund

Kristin and Court Thomas TMCity

Amanda Todd

The Tricolli Family

Betsy S. Vaughan

Alei Verdi

The Verdi Family

Jerry Waldman and Judi Belzer

Mark and Randi Wesley

Todd and Abigail Williams Family Fund at The Dallas Foundation

Frank Williams and Jodi Bricker

The Williams Family

Gwill York

Brent and Amy Zacky

Janet and Stephen Zide |

The Zide Family Foundation

Matt and Marny Zimmer

Zorich Family Foundation

Anonymous donor families

FINANCIALS

The Goodness Web maintains the highest standard for nonprofit fiduciary responsibility. 100% of operating and infrastructure costs in 2024 were covered by our founders and Board of Directors.

TGW’s sound financial health is due to our hundreds of generous families.

Total Current Assets: $9,200,044

Total Liabilities: $1,307,885

Total Revenue: $4,776,799

Total Expenses: $639,823

The Goodness Web deeply values financial transparency: if you would like to review a detailed financial statement, please reach out to our team (info@thegoodnessweb.org) for more information.

Board of Directors

Chris E. Abbinante

Steve Loose, Chief Investment Officer

Karl Rathjen, MD

Gary Reedy

Jane Saccaro

Jan Swartz

Rob Swartz

Gina Verdi, Treasurer

Mark Verdi, President

Gwill York Staff

Celine Coggins, Chief Executive Officer

Jessie Shaw, Strategy and Operations Manager

WE THANK YOU FOR YOUR PARTNERSHIP

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