Two Quad Cities-area groups have been awarded Transformation Grants from the Quad Cities Community Foundation to bring transformative solutions to the bi-state region.
Read MoreThe Quad Cities Community Foundation will host a 30-minute lunchtime conversation on YouTube and Facebook to celebrate Carol and John Willard, and share how the couple went about creating their philanthropic legacy.
Read MoreHere’s the headline: Three-quarters of responding Quad Cities nonprofits are still operating at or above pre-pandemic capacity—providing the same or greater services as before.
Read MoreOne of the special things about our work at the Quad Cities Community Foundation is the opportunity to act on the generosity Quad Citizens entrust with us. I’d like to share how one couple did that.
Read MoreToday, the Nourish Program provides between 1,500-2,100 meals per day (yes, per day!) to children in Rock Island County. “It’s a matter of a rising tide lifting all boats,” Jeff Cornelius says. “We can only succeed when we all come together.”
Read MoreAs executive director, Ami Porter is growing the Quad Cities Botanical Center’s endowment so that the flora and fauna—and the educational programs the Center offers—are around forever.
Read MoreSavoring the beauty was something John Willard and his wife Carol did throughout their life. They also spread goodness throughout the Quad Cities—in the stories John told while he and Carol were alive, and now, through a generous estate gift of about $3 million placed in the trusting hands of the Quad Cities Community Foundation.
Read MoreThe Community Foundation is targeting the persistent racial disparities that impact the social and economic well-being of Quad Citizens of color with a $50,000 Transformation Grant to United Way.
Read MoreThanks to improvements in how charitable dollars are invested, Quad Cities Community Foundation donors are now able to grant even more from their funds each year to the community—and to causes meaningful to them.
Read MoreDiane and Hunt Harris of Moline have made a $10,000 grant to the Figge Art Museum from their Harris Family Charitable Gift Fund at to support an upcoming exhibition “For America.”
Read MoreAs the days grow short and the nights get cool, we invite you to share in the benefits of year-end giving. Gifts of cash or property (real estate or stock) may provide you with a charitable tax deduction.
Read MoreFemale students attending medical school will now benefit from the life of Dr. Anita L. Pinc through a memorial scholarship that celebrates her legacy, and advances her passion for women in medicine.
Read MoreThe Clyde Mayfield Memorial Scholarship has been established at the Quad Cities Community Foundation to celebrate his life and provide scholarships through a partnership with the Davenport Schools Foundation.
Read MoreWini Aboyure believes philanthropy is all about contributing to the good of the community, with whatever resources you have. "My generation is a generation of empathy—and Teens for Tomorrow gives us an opportunity to practice that.” Read more
Read More“We’ve received so much over the years,” Gene Vincent said.. “It’s kind of a payback—the good kind of payback.”
Read MoreWhen the future seems uncertain, we tend to hold tighter to our resources. However, now—right now—is the right season to extend our hands further, to dig deeper and give more, to seek out opportunities that strengthen our neighbors, and to invest in transforming our community for the better.
Read MoreThe Quad Cities Community Foundation recently sat down with Erie D. Johnson, a local trust officer, who works with his clients to manage their wealth and establish estate plans.
Read More“I’m just so happy to be involved with this—to be able to do this,” Dr. Raj Sekharen said from his home in the Quad Cities, where he has been quarantining during the COVID-19 pandemic. “I don’t get out very much these days, you know.”
Read MoreBringing home a newborn during a global pandemic has its challenges, which is why nurse home and telehealth visits through the Genesis Health System Community Health Program have become even more critical this year.
Read MoreTwenty-seven nonprofits were awarded just over $470,000 in grants from the Quad Cities Community Foundation’s Coordinated Field of Interest Grant Program. The grant program includes awards from 10 funds made possible by donors at the Quad Cities Community Foundation.
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