Governor J.B. Pritzker has signed two pieces of legislation that will increase giving. The Quad Cities region’s three community foundations all celebrate the historic effort.
Read MoreThirty-four local nonprofits are receiving $577,262 through the Quad Cities Community Foundation’s Operations and Program Grants.
Read MorePresident and CEO Sherry Ristau shares her gratitude to the community during her final week as president and CEO of the Quad Cities Community Foundation.
Read MoreAfter seven years leading the Quad Cities Community Foundation, President and CEO Sherry Ristau will step down from her position at the end of August to make way for further organizational—and regional—transformation.
Read MoreMore than $1.8 million was granted from the Quad Cities Disaster Recovery Fund at the Quad Cities Community Foundation to support the region during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Read MoreWhen disaster strikes, communities must come together to work together to figure out how to respond immediately, and recover long-term.
Read MoreThe advent of the new Women’s Mental Health Endowment at Vera French, started at the Quad Cities Community Foundation, will not only honor Dr. Vera French, but continue to provide resources for her life’s work.
Read MoreOn her first day as Quad Cities Community Foundation’s new administrative assistant, Luann Polissaint was handed a jar of Play-Doh during an informal staff meeting.
Read MoreWe are proud to be a champion of the Quad Cities regional vision, and today, we want to take a moment to shout that to the masses once again.
Read MoreThe Mississippi Valley Blues Society is here to stay. That’s the message volunteers and board members hope the community embraces after the society recently opened an endowment with the Quad Cities Community Foundation.
Read MoreThe Quad Cities Community Foundation will host a 20-minute lunchtime conversation on YouTube and Facebook about the Socially Responsive Investment Pool: what it is, how fundholders can add it to their portfolio, and talk about the 15.6 percent rate of return it achieved in 2020.
Read MoreReturns for two investment pools surpassed the 10 percent national average in 2020, with the Strategic Growth Pool and Socially Responsive Pool returning 15.5 percent and 15.6 percent, respectively.
Read MoreIt seems like only yesterday—and a lifetime ago at the same time—that I was sitting with my colleagues Kelly Thompson and Anne Calder in the Quad Cities Community Foundation office on March 12, 2020, an otherwise uneventful Thursday afternoon were it not for the emerging news about the novel coronavirus.
Read MoreThe additional grant brings the Community Foundation’s total support of the United for Equity Fund to $100,000, with hopes of it having a profound impact on the social and economic wellbeing of people of color in the Quad Cities.
Read MoreThe Glassman Fund recently awarded $20,000 to the East Moline and United Township School Districts for their comprehensive, multiphase plan to provide an extensive WiFi network for students.
Read MoreWith the added benefit of investing in society’s positive characteristics, the Socially Responsive Pool is seeing a remarkably high return rate. In fact, the pool outperformed all other funds at the Community Foundation last year, achieving a 15.6 percent return rate in 2020.
Read MoreThe Quad Cities Community Foundation has welcomed two new board members this month: Quad-City Times Publisher Debbie Anselm, and Attorney Mark Schwiebert.
Read MoreBoard Chairperson Randy Moore writes about his earliest memories of generosity, and how those lessons guide him as he begins his tenure as the head of the Community Foundation’s board of directors.
Read MoreTeens for Tomorrow will be awarding a total of $10,000 to nonprofits dealing with one of three issues that are especially critical to address today: education equity, racial injustice, and social inequities.
Read More“I wish you could have seen the expression on his face when I told him he was going to get to bring home his very own desk,” Ann Schwickerath, executive director at Project Renewal, recalled.
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