morrison & foerster foundation 2014 annual report
TRANSCRIPT
Twenty-nine years and counting. As The Morrison & Foerster Foundation approaches an exciting milestone anniversary in 2016, we are delighted to share highlights of its most recent year of giving.
The Foundation supports charitable organizations serving the communities in which the people of Morrison & Foerster LLP live and work. Funded primarily by the firm’s generous lawyers and staff, the Foundation’s programs also encourage community engagement among Morrison & Foerster personnel.
Our 2014 charitable giving totaled nearly $3.6 million. Of that, 77 percent was directed to organizations serving disadvantaged youth or providing free legal services to low-income people.
One of the oldest law firm-affiliated charitable foundations in the United States, the Foundation has contributed $44 million to nonprofit organizations since its founding in 1986. This long-standing commitment to charitable giving remains one of the hallmarks of the Morrison & Foerster community.
As always, we especially thank the firm’s partners for their support. We hope you share our pride in the Foundation’s commitment to community-based giving.
MESSAGE FROM THE CHAIR
Paul T. FriedmanChair 1997 – 2014 The Morrison & Foerster Foundation
Jamie A. LevittChair 2015 – The Morrison & Foerster Foundation
05 Focus
07 Giving
09 Children + Youth
13 Legal Aid
15 Fellowships + Scholarships
19 Health
21 Food + Shelter
23 Arts
25 Matching
26 Giving Guidelines
26 Contact Us
27 2014 Contributions
INSIDE
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The Morrison & Foerster Foundation enables the people of Morrison & Foerster to focus their charitable giving on nonprofit organizations serving the communities in which they live and work. Funds are distributed at the discretion of the Foundation’s board of directors, which consists of partners from each of the firm’s geographic regions.
Donations target programs serving disadvantaged children and youth, or providing free legal services to low-income people. We support these initiatives primarily through contributions, recommended by Morrison & Foerster lawyers and staff, to organizations that provide direct community services.
In addition, we support fellowship and scholarship programs that benefit children and youth, help inspire others to engage in public service, and encourage diversity in higher education and the legal profession.
As part of the Foundation’s commitment to local communities, we also make a smaller number of contributions to charitable causes involving food and shelter, health, and the arts. Many of these contributions also focus on programs serving disadvantaged youth.
We offer annual matching-gift programs to firm lawyers and staff. We also organize special programs to raise and match relief funds in response to certain natural disasters.
FOCUS
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In 2014, The Morrison & Foerster Foundation’s annual charitable giving was nearly $3.6 million.*
Donations ranged in size from $55 to $367,000; the median donation was $3,000.
GIVING
28% Community Grants
3% Scholarships + Fellowships (Legal)
8% Food + Shelter
3% Arts
8% Health
3% Matching
1% Admin.
CHILDREN +
YOU
TH 4
6%
LEGAL AID 31%
16% Scholarships + Fellowships (Youth)
6% 25th Anniversary Grants
24% Community Grants
* The numbers in this report are shown on a cash basis, and are unaudited because of the timing of the Foundation’s annual independent audit.
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We are committed to supporting programs serving disadvantaged children and youth in our communities. Over the years, we have demonstrated this commitment through local grantmaking, as well as three special multiyear, million-dollar programs. In 2014, the Foundation donated more than $1 million in special grants and community grants to organizations serving children.
25th Anniversary Grants
In 2014, we donated approximately $218,000 through our 25th Anniversary Grants Program to four local programs serving disadvantaged youth. These donations were part of a multiyear, $1.5 million program announced in 2012 in honor of the Foundation’s 25th anniversary. The grants followed two similar million-dollar grant programs announced in 2003 and 2006. All three giving programs were based entirely on projects recommended by Morrison & Foerster lawyers and staff, and focused on addressing some of the critical unmet needs of disadvantaged children and youth in our communities.
Representing the largest set of grants in the Foundation’s history, the 25th Anniversary Grants, like the two earlier million-dollar programs, were funded with amounts set aside from our annual budgets over the previous few years.
We awarded $1.25 million to the six programs described on the following page. We also gave $25,000 each to 10 other nonprofit organizations serving at-risk youth in regions where Morrison & Foerster has offices. Our 2014 contributions through our 25th Anniversary Grants Program are noted as follows.
CHILDREN + YOUTH
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$100,000BUSINESSES UNITED IN INVESTING, LENDING AND DEVELOPMENT (BUILD)WASHINGTON, D.C.www.build.org/DC
To support BUILD’s impact and strategic growth in the Washington, D.C. region by expanding the number of students who are currently served at existing BUILD schools, while adding new partner schools in the city. We distributed the full grant in 2012.
$250,000IMENTOR NEW YORKwww.imentor.org
To help launch iMentor’s College Ready Program at three New York City public high schools, ensuring that more students from low-income communities graduate from high school and become first-generation college students. We donated the full $250,000 in 2013.
$250,000NEW LEADERS SAN FRANCISCOwww.newleaders.org/locations/bay-area
To train future leaders in public education through the expansion of New Leaders’ Emerging Leaders Program for teachers, coaches, and assistant principals in Richmond, California. We completed our funding of this grant in 2013.
$277,500CHILDREN’S LAW CENTERWASHINGTON, D.C.www.childrenslawcenter.org
To launch the Children’s Law Center’s Starting Life with a Solid Foundation Program, which provides free legal services to families needing early-childhood intervention and special education services in Washington, D.C. Our 2014 installment of this multiyear grant was $93,342.
$225,000THE RICHSTONE FAMILY CENTERHAWTHORNE, CALIFORNIAwww.richstonefamily.org
To launch The Richstone Family Center’s Care-A-Van mobile unit, which provides easily accessible no- and low-cost counseling, parenting support, and community education for vulnerable children and their families at school and community sites in Southwest Los Angeles. We issued the first two of our three expected annual $75,000 installments on this grant in 2013 and 2014.
$165,000EAST BAY COLLEGE FUNDOAKLAND, CALIFORNIAwww.eastbaycollegefund.org
To develop the East Bay College Fund’s College Access Program serving students at three large Oakland high schools, and to provide a district-wide academic success and college guidance program for young African-American men. We completed this grant in 2014 with a final $50,000 distribution.
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$20,000ROOM TO READASIA PROGRAMSSAN FRANCISCOhttp://www.roomtoread.org/
Room to Read works in collaboration with communities and local governments across Asia and Africa to develop literacy skills and a habit of reading among primary school children, and supports girls in completing secondary school with the life skills they will need to succeed in school and beyond.
$5,000HATHAWAY-SYCAMORES CHILD AND FAMILY SERVICESPASADENA, CALIFORNIAhttp://www.hathaway-sycamores.org/
For more than 100 years, Hathaway-Sycamores Child and Family Services has impacted the lives of thousands of children and families throughout Los Angeles County by providing a comprehensive continuum of care through intensive, evidence-based mental health services.
$5,000RAPHAEL HOUSESAN FRANCISCOhttp://www.raphaelhouse.org/
Since 1971, Raphael House has offered homeless and low-income families in the San Francisco Bay Area a stable, homelike shelter and ongoing, comprehensive, personalized assistance with housing and job placement, while supporting the emotional and social needs of parents and children alike.
Community Grants
In 2014, charitable contributions to organizations serving children and protecting their rights continued to be at the core of our local giving programs. In addition to our 25th Anniversary Grants, we gave more than $865,000 to a wide variety of organizations providing social, developmental, educational, and legal services to at-risk youth. The following are some examples.
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The Morrison & Foerster Foundation has a long history of supporting organizations that provide legal services to persons of limited means. In 2014, we donated more than $1 million to local legal aid organizations and national nonprofit organizations engaged in impact litigation and enforcement of civil rights. Below are some of the legal aid organizations that we supported.
$10,000 CITY BAR JUSTICE CENTER NEW YORKhttp://www2.nycbar.org/citybarjusticecenter/
The City Bar Justice Center increases access to justice by mobilizing New York City lawyers, law firms, corporate legal departments, and other legal institutions to provide pro bono legal services; educating the public on legal issues; and impacting public policy.
$7,500 AIDS LEGAL REFERRAL PANEL SAN FRANCISCOhttp://www.alrp.org/
Since 1983, AIDS Legal Referral Panel has helped people living with HIV/AIDS in the San Francisco Bay Area maintain or improve their health by providing free and low-cost legal assistance and education on a wide variety of civil matters.
$5,000 JUST NEIGHBORS FALLS CHURCH, VIRGINIAhttp://www.justneighbors.org/
Just Neighbors provides immigration legal services in Northern Virginia to low-income immigrants and refugees of all faiths and nationalities, especially those who are most vulnerable, so that they can become self-sufficient, contributing members of mainstream society.
LEGAL AID
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The Foundation contributed more than $700,000 in 2014 to fellowship and scholarship programs benefiting children and youth, and encouraging public service and diversity in higher education and the legal profession.
Equal Justice Works Fellowships
Since 2000, The Morrison & Foerster Foundation has contributed $3.1 million in support of Equal Justice Works and its fellowship program. Based in Washington, D.C., this national program creates partnerships among public interest lawyers, nonprofit organizations, law firms, corporate sponsors, and other donors to give underrepresented populations effective access to the justice system.
Through Equal Justice Works, we have sponsored 38 promising new lawyers pursuing public interest legal careers at nonprofit organizations in the regions where Morrison & Foerster has offices. Most of our fellows have focused their two-year projects on improving the lives of at-risk children and youth.
In 2014, we contributed $367,000 to Equal Justice Works for its fellowship program and $50,000 to its general fund. The following is a list of our recent fellows.
FELLOWSHIPS + SCHOLARSHIPS
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FELLOW LOCATION/YEAR PROJECT
BETH KURTZ Children’s Law Center, Washington, D.C.2014–16
Advocating through legal and administrative systems to connect at-risk children in Washington, D.C., with timely, community-based, well-coordinated, and effective mental health services.
MISHA SEAY Community Legal Services in East Palo Alto, California2014–16
Providing legal advocacy to disadvantaged immigrant youth in East Palo Alto and neighboring communities, and creating a special docket to meet the needs of youth at the immigration court.
ELIZABETH ALEMAN East Bay Children’s Law Offices, Oakland, California2012–14
Advocating for Alameda County youth transitioning out of foster care and into adulthood by enforcing their rights to individualized transitional living plans and services under the new California Fostering Connections to Success Act.
RACHEL JOHNSON-FARIAS
East Bay Community Law Center, Berkeley, California2012–14
Addressing the collateral consequences confronting youth with criminal records in Alameda County, California, through comprehensive, holistic re-entry legal services and policy work.
WHITNEY RUBENSTEIN – CO-SPONSORED BY THE CLOROX COMPANY
East Bay Community Law Center, Berkeley, California2014–16
Providing a new model of holistic representation to juvenile court-involved Oakland youth and their families living in subsidized housing in order to prevent eviction and create lasting stability.
MARISA GOLD Lawyers for Children, New York2013–15
Providing sexually abused children in foster care in New York City with targeted, direct representation that addresses their particular needs, and creating a replicable model of best practices for attorneys handling these cases.
ROSIBEL MANCILLAS LOPEZ
Legal Aid Society of San Diego2013–15
Empowering indigenous Mexican immigrants in San Diego County through community organizing to reduce linguistic and cultural barriers that inhibit their understanding of and access to the legal system.
NICOLE BATES Legal Services for Children, San Francisco2014–16
Providing trauma-informed legal advocacy for children in the Bayview–Hunters Point neighborhood of San Francisco that serves as a model for future Legal Services for Children community-based clinics.
GABRIELLA BARBOSA Public Counsel, Los Angeles2013–15
Advocating for English-language learners in South Los Angeles to close the achievement gap and increase the graduation rate via direct legal representation, collaborative community education, impact litigation, and policy advocacy.
KATHLEEN GLYNN Rocky Mountain Immigrant Advocacy Network, Denver2012–14
Implementing the recommendations of the Colorado Citizenship Pathways Taskforce to improve access to social services and immigration-status options for undocumented children and their families with open child-welfare cases.
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Terraciano Scholarships
The Foundation gives renewable scholarships of up to $12,000 annually for the undergraduate education of children of Morrison & Foerster staff members through the Joseph E. Terraciano Scholarship Program. This program honors the memory of Joe Terraciano, an exceptional lawyer with the firm. Joe exhibited intelligence, initiative, leadership, the highest ethical standards, care and respect for those around him, a commitment to excellence in all that he did, and a love of diversity.
Scholarship recipients are selected based on a combination of academic achievement, financial need, and demonstrated concern for the well-being of others. Since its inception in 1990, the program has funded approximately $2.5 million in scholarships for 163 students.
Dunham Scholarships
In 2014, we funded two significant scholarships for incoming law students from groups historically underrepresented in the legal profession: The Morrison & Foerster Foundation–Stephen S. Dunham Scholarships at Golden Gate University School of Law in San Francisco, and the University of San Diego School of Law. These scholarships provide annual awards of $20,000 for up to three years.
Named for Steve Dunham, a former chair of Morrison & Foerster, the award honors Steve’s passion for education and for increasing diversity in the legal profession. The scholarships were previously awarded to students at the University of Denver Sturm College of Law; the University of Colorado Law School in Boulder, Colorado; and the University of the District of Columbia David A. Clarke School of Law in Washington, D.C.
Other Public Interest and Diversity Scholarships
The Foundation supported a variety of other public interest scholarships and programs promoting diversity in the legal profession, such as $10,000 to the California Bar Foundation’s Diversity Scholarship Program and $10,000 to the Justice & Diversity Center in San Francisco for its Bay Area Minority Law Student Scholarship Program.
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We donated approximately $280,000 in 2014 to programs addressing the health and well-being of others. Donations supported organizations assisting people living with HIV/AIDS, people with developmental and physical disabilities, and people seeking to overcome economic disadvantages. We also gave to a variety of nonprofit medical research organizations and to social service agencies seeking to strengthen local communities. Below are two examples.
$5,000 VOLUNTEERS OF AMERICA – COLORADO BRANCHVETERAN SERVICE CENTERDENVERhttp://www.voacolorado.org/
The Volunteers of America Veteran Service Center, scheduled to open in 2015, is intended to provide a central convening point for U.S. military veterans in Denver seeking support ranging from education and employment help to clothing, counseling, and legal assistance.
$1,500WELLSPRING WOMEN’S CENTERSACRAMENTOhttp://www.wellspringwomen.org/
Wellspring Women’s Center serves as a trusted neighborhood drop-in center to women and their children in the Oak Park community of Sacramento, providing nutritious breakfasts, free counseling, enrichment classes, and safety net services.
HEALTH
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The Morrison & Foerster Foundation has contributed to a number of agencies serving individuals struggling to meet their basic needs of sufficient food; a safe, clean place to sleep; and shelter from abuse. Our 2014 donations to these organizations totaled more than $275,000. Below are two examples.
$7,500FRIENDSHIP PLACEWASHINGTON, D.C.http://friendshipplace.org/
Friendship Place offers solutions to homelessness in Washington, D.C., through innovative, customized, person-focused programs that empower participants to rebuild their lives, find homes, get jobs, and reconnect with friends, family, and the community, permanently.
$5,000COALITION FOR THE HOMELESSCAMP HOMEWARD BOUNDFIRST STEP JOB TRAINING PROGRAMNEW YORKhttp://www.coalitionforthehomeless.org/
Coalition for the Homeless is an advocacy and direct service organization helping homeless men, women, and children in New York. Its Camp Homeward Bound is the nation’s first summer sleep-away camp designed specifically for homeless children. Its First Step Job Training Program helps homeless and low-income women gain the skills, experience, and confidence needed to find living-wage jobs.
FOOD + SHELTER
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In 2014, the Foundation supported organizations seeking to enrich our communities through creative and thought-provoking expression. We designated many of these donations for the recipients’ youth outreach and education programs. Our donations to arts programs totaled nearly $125,000. Below are two examples.
$5,500LA JOLLA PLAYHOUSEEDUCATION & OUTREACHLA JOLLA, CALIFORNIAhttp://www.lajollaplayhouse.org/
La Jolla Playhouse is a Tony Award-winning professional, nonprofit theatre located near San Diego. In addition to its innovative productions of classics, new plays, and musicals, the Playhouse presents a wide range of educational programs for children, students, and adults.
$2,500SAN JOSE MUSEUM OF ARTSAN JOSE, CALIFORNIAhttp://sjmusart.org/
San Jose Museum of Art is a distinguished museum of modern and contemporary art, a lively center of arts activities for the extraordinarily diverse population of Silicon Valley, and the largest provider of arts education in Santa Clara County.
ARTS
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The Foundation offers contribution-matching programs to Morrison & Foerster personnel. The purpose of these programs is to encourage private charitable giving, provide additional leverage to gifts made by the firm’s lawyers and staff, and support the charitable goals of the firm’s individual donors. In 2014, the Foundation donated $93,000 in matching gifts.
Individual Gift Matching
The Foundation matches donations, up to $500 per person annually, made by eligible lawyers and staff to a wide variety of nonprofit organizations that meet our giving guidelines. In 2014, we matched gifts to charities such as AIDS/LifeCycle in San Francisco; International Rescue Committee in New York; Los Angeles County Boys & Girls Club in Los Angeles; and Washington Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights & Urban Affairs in Washington, D.C. In total, the Foundation contributed approximately $65,000 in individual matching gifts to nearly 200 charitable organizations.
Law School Gift Matching
In a separate program, the Foundation matches donations, up to $500 per person annually, made by the firm’s lawyers to their respective law schools. In 2014, we donated approximately $28,000 in matching gifts to 29 law schools.
Challenge Grants
The Foundation occasionally offers to match the amount raised by firm personnel to benefit charitable causes of particular importance to Morrison & Foerster lawyers and staff. These challenge grants are usually issued through our community-grants or disaster-relief programs.
MATCHING
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GIVING GUIDELINES The Foundation distributes funds at the discretion of its board of directors, which consists of partners from each of the firm’s regions. Only funding requests sponsored by Morrison & Foerster lawyers and staff are considered.
Donations are made to U.S. nonprofit organizations with IRC § 501(c)(3) tax-exempt status whose programs, in the view of the Foundation’s board of directors, are aligned with the Foundation’s focus and can, in the board’s opinion, best serve the community’s needs. We prefer to support programs that can benefit greatly from even relatively modest donations. We also support a scholarship program for the children of Morrison & Foerster staff members.
We do not contribute to fraternal, religious, or political organizations; to groups that discriminate on the basis of race, religion, political affiliation, or sexual orientation; or to individuals. We do not make donations for firm-related business development or client-relations reasons. The Foundation does not purchase tickets to charitable fundraising events.
Paul T. Friedman Chair San FranciscoJamie A. Levitt President New York
W. Stephen Smith Secretary Washington, D.C.Paul D. McKenzie BeijingScott F. Llewellyn Denver
Trevor L. James LondonNancy R. Thomas Los AngelesLawrence T. Yanowitch Northern Virginia
Kenneth A. Kuwayti Palo AltoBrian M. Kramer San DiegoDale E. Caldwell Tokyo
Anne M. Ellis, Manager & Chief Operating Officer, San Francisco | [email protected] J. Blumenthal, Chief Financial Officer, San Francisco | [email protected]
CONTACT US If you are a partner or employee of Morrison & Foerster and have questions or comments, please visit the “MoFo Foundation” page on MoFo Connect for more information and a list of current Foundation representatives.
BOARD OF DIRECTORS AS OF DECEMBER 31, 2014
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2014 CONTRIBUTIONSThe following are the organizations, listed by region, that received at least $1,000 in Foundation donations during 2014. Not included are matching gifts and Terraciano Scholarship awards, which are described above. Unless otherwise noted, we designated our gifts for recipients’ general funds.
DENVER AREA $Colorado Criminal Justice Reform Coalition – Denver 1,060
Colorado Judicial Institute – Broomfield 1,060
Colorado Juvenile Defender Center – Denver 2,300
Colorado Lawyers Committee – Denver 4,110
Denver’s Road Home – Denver 1,310
Hope House of Colorado – Arvada 2,300
Legal Aid Foundation of Colorado – Denver 2,900
The Leukemia & Lymphoma Society – Denver 2,900
Rocky Mountain Children’s Law Center – Denver 4,800
Volunteers of America – Early Childhood Education Center, Veteran Service Center – Denver 10,000
LOS ANGELES AREA $ACLU Foundation of Southern California – Los Angeles 5,000
The Alliance for Children’s Rights – Los Angeles 5,000
Being Alive – West Hollywood 3,000
Bet Tzedek Legal Services – Los Angeles 5,000
Beyond Shelter – Los Angeles 1,500
Break the Cycle – Culver City 5,000
Center for Human Rights and Constitutional Law – Casa Libre/Freedom House Homeless Youth Shelter – Los Angeles 4,000
Children’s Bureau of Southern California – Los Angeles 5,000
Children’s Burn Foundation – Sherman Oaks 2,500
Children’s Hospital Los Angeles – Teen Impact Program – Los Angeles 5,000
Coalition to Abolish Slavery and Trafficking (CAST) – Los Angeles 5,000
Counsel for Justice – Los Angeles 17,500
Didi Hirsch Mental Health Services – Culver City 5,000
Equality California Institute – California Safe Schools Coalition – West Hollywood 2,000
Family Health Care Centers of Greater Los Angeles – Bell Gardens 5,000
Friends of the Los Angeles Law Library – Los Angeles 3,000
Good Shepherd Shelter – Los Angeles 5,000
Greater Los Angeles Zoo Association – Los Angeles 3,500
Harriett Buhai Center for Family Law – Los Angeles 5,000
Hathaway-Sycamores Child and Family Services – Pasadena 5,000
Homeboy Industries – Los Angeles 1,000
House of Ruth – Claremont 4,000
Inner-City Arts – Los Angeles 5,000
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Inner City Law Center – Los Angeles 5,000
JFS – SOVA Community Food & Resource Program – Van Nuys 4,000
Learning Rights Law Center – Los Angeles 5,000
Legal Aid Foundation of Los Angeles – Los Angeles 5,000
Levitt & Quinn Family Law Center – Los Angeles 5,000
Library Foundation of Los Angeles – Children’s Summer Reading Club – Los Angeles 3,500
Los Angeles Center for Law and Justice – Los Angeles 5,000
Los Angeles Lawyers Philharmonic – Los Angeles 1,200
Los Angeles LGBT Center – Los Angeles 4,000
Los Angeles Mission – Los Angeles 2,000
Los Angeles Police Foundation – VOICE Program – Los Angeles 1,000
Los Angeles Regional Food Bank – Los Angeles 5,000
Los Angeles Times Family Fund – Summer Camp Campaign – Los Angeles 3,500
Maternal and Child Health Access – Los Angeles 3,000
McKinley Children’s Center – San Dimas 1,500
Mental Health Advocacy Services – Los Angeles 5,000
The Midnight Mission – Los Angeles 2,500
Music Center – Spotlight Program – Los Angeles 5,000
My Friend’s Place – Hollywood 5,000
Ninth Judicial Circuit Historical Society – Pasadena 7,500
Para Los Niños – Los Angeles 3,000
Public Counsel – General Fund, Equal Justice Works Fellow Professional Development – Los Angeles 7,199
The Rape Foundation – Santa Monica 1,000
The Richstone Family Center – Care-A-Van Program – Hawthorne 75,000
Starlight Children’s Foundation – Los Angeles 5,000
Support for Harbor Area Women’s Lives (SHAWL) – San Pedro 5,000
Venice Family Clinic – Venice 2,000
Watts/Willowbrook Boys & Girls Club – Los Angeles 3,000
Weingart Center Association – Los Angeles 5,000
Weingart East Los Angeles YMCA – Los Angeles 5,000
Western Center on Law & Poverty – Los Angeles 5,000
NEW YORK CITY AREA $A Better Balance – New York 5,000
Advocates for Children of New York – New York 15,000
AIDS Walk New York – New York 5,000
Asian American Legal Defense and Education Fund – New York 2,000
Association to Benefit Children – New York 2,500
Big Brothers Big Sisters of New York City – New York 10,000
BRC – Bowery Residents’ Committee – New York 5,000
BronxWorks – Bronx 5,000
Brooklyn Botanic Garden – The Children’s Garden and The Discovery Garden – Brooklyn 1,500
Brooklyn Defender Services, Family Defense Practice – Brooklyn 2,500
Camp Nejeda Foundation – Stillwater, New Jersey 3,000
Children’s Museum of the Arts – New York 5,000
LOS ANGELES AREA (continued) $
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Children’s Rights – New York 2,500
Citizens’ Committee for Children of New York – New York 3,000
Citizens Union Foundation – New York 7,500
CITYarts – New York 2,500
City Bar Justice Center – New York 10,000
City Harvest – New York 1,500
Civic Builders – New York 5,000
Coalition for the Homeless – Camp Homeward Bound, First Step Job Training Program – New York 5,000
Community Impact – New York 2,500
Comprehensive Development – New York 5,000
Court Appointed Special Advocates (CASA) – New York 5,000
The Doe Fund – New York 2,500
DonorsChoose.org – New York City Programs – New York 15,000
Dress for Success – New York 5,000
East Harlem Tutorial Program – New York 5,000
Empire State Pride Agenda Foundation – New York 5,000
The Exoneration Initiative – New York 3,000
The Family Center – Brooklyn 2,500
FDNY Foundation – Brooklyn 2,500
Fund for the City of New York – ENACT School Partnership Program – New York 5,000
Girls Educational and Mentoring Services – New York 1,500
Global Language Project – New York 5,000
GO Project – New York 5,000
Grace Institute – New York 2,500
Harlem Children’s Zone – New York 2,500
Harlem RBI – New York 2,500
Hartley House – New York 2,000
Harvest Home Farmer’s Market – New York 2,500
Her Justice – New York 2,500
Hofstra University – Access to Justice Incubator – Hempstead, New York 10,000
“I Have A Dream” Foundation – New York 1,000
iMentor – New York 10,000
Inwood House – New York 1,000
John Starks Foundation – Stamford, Connecticut 5,000
Judges & Lawyers Breast Cancer Alert – New York 5,000
Lady Frenji Ltd – Hartsdale, New York 1,000
Lawyers Alliance for New York – New York 25,000
Lawyers for Children – General Fund, Equal Justice Works Fellow Professional Development – New York 6,000
Legal Action Center – New York 5,000
Legal Aid Society – New York 10,000
LeGaL Foundation – Walk-In Pro Bono Clinic – New York 5,000
Legal Information for Families Today (LIFT) – Brooklyn 2,500
Legal Outreach – College Bound Program – Long Island City 5,000
Let’s Get Ready – College Success Initiative – New York 10,000
Literacy Partners – PUSH Program – New York 5,000
NEW YORK AREA (continued) $
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Little Lamb Preschool – Staten Island 1,000
The McCarton Foundation – New York 10,000
Nazareth Housing – New York 2,500
Neighborhood Defender Service of Harlem – New York 2,500
New York Asian Women’s Center – New York 2,500
New York Lawyers for the Public Interest – New York 15,000
New York Legal Assistance Group – New York 3,500
The New York Women’s Foundation – New York 2,500
Office of the Appellate Defender – New York 5,000
Opportunities for a Better Tomorrow – Brooklyn 5,000
The Osborne Association – Reconnecting Families Program – Bronx 1,500
Pan Asian Repertory Theatre – New York 2,500
PENCIL – New York 3,000
Performance Space 122 – Brooklyn 5,000
Prisoners’ Legal Services of New York – Albany 1,500
The Public Theater – Shakespeare in the Park – New York 10,000
Randall’s Island Park Alliance – New York 2,500
Reach Out and Read of Greater New York – New York 5,000
Riverside Symphony – Music Memory Program – New York 10,000
Sanctuary for Families – New York 8,500
Spectrum Designs Foundation – Port Washington 1,000
St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital – New York 5,000
Start Small Think Big – Small Business Legal Program – Bronx 5,000
The Sylvia Center – New York 1,500
United Neighborhood Houses – New York 1,000
Volunteers of Legal Service – New York 25,000
Winthrop-University Hospital – Mineola 1,500
YAI Network – New York 5,000
YMCA of Greater New York – New York 1,000
Youth Rights Media – New Haven, Connecticut 5,000
NORTHERN VIRGINIA $Carpenter’s Shelter – Alexandria 10,000
Doorways for Women and Families – Arlington 10,000
Fairfax Court Appointed Special Advocates (CASA) – Fairfax 5,000
Fairfax Partnership for Youth – Fairfax 10,000
Friends of FANA – Reston 1,000
Just Neighbors – Falls Church 5,000
Legal Services of Northern Virginia – Fairfax 10,000
Loudoun Abused Women’s Shelter – Leesburg 10,000
PRS (Psychiatric Rehabilitation Services) – McLean 5,000
Science Museum of Virginia Foundation – STEM Essay Contest – Richmond 5,000
Volunteer Fairfax – Fairfax 10,000
NEW YORK AREA (continued) $
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SACRAMENTO AREA $El Dorado Hills Community Vision Coalition – El Dorado Hills 1,000
Sacramento Children’s Home – Sacramento 1,500
Sacramento Food Bank & Family Services – Sacramento 1,500
Sacramento Habitat for Humanity – Sacramento 1,500
Sacramento Loaves & Fishes – Sacramento 1,250
Shriners Hospitals for Children – Northern California – Sacramento 1,500
Sutter Medical Foundation – Sutter Resource Library – Sacramento 1,000
Voluntary Legal Services Program of Northern California – Sacramento 1,000
WEAVE – Sacramento 1,500
Wellspring Women’s Center – Sacramento 1,500
Wind Youth Services – Sacramento 1,250
SAN DIEGO AREA $Boys & Girls Clubs of San Dieguito – Coast Youth Foundation – Solana Beach 2,000
Casa Cornelia Law Center – San Diego 5,000
Challenged Athletes Foundation – San Diego 10,000
Children’s Advocacy Institute – San Diego 1,000
Distinguished Young Women of San Diego – Scholarship Program – Carlsbad 1,500
Family Justice Center Alliance – San Diego 5,000
Fraternity House – Escondido 1,000
Girls on the Run of San Diego – Encinitas 5,000
Imperial Court de San Diego – San Diego 5,000
Injured Marine Semper Fi Fund – Oceanside 1,000
Institute for Effective Education – San Diego 2,000
Jacobs & Cushman San Diego Food Bank – San Diego 5,000
Japan Society of San Diego & Tijuana – Tomodachi Initiative Youth Baseball Exchange – San Diego 2,500
Juma Ventures – San Diego Programs – San Francisco 10,000
Just in Time for Foster Youth – San Diego 7,500
La Jolla Playhouse – Education & Outreach, General Fund – La Jolla 5,500
Legal Aid Society of San Diego – General Fund, Equal Justice Works Fellow Professional Development – San Diego 17,000
Monarch School – San Diego 5,000
North County Solutions for Change – Vista 5,000
Ocean Discovery Institute – San Diego 2,500
Pacific Arts Movement – Reel Voices Program – San Diego 2,000
The Pegasus Rising Project – Rancho Santa Fe 1,500
Rady Children’s Hospital Auxiliary – Rancho Santa Fe 10,000
San Diego Brain Tumor Foundation – San Diego 2,000
San Diego County Bar Foundation – San Diego 10,000
San Diego Junior Lifeguard Foundation – Waterproofing San Diego Program – San Diego 2,000
San Diego Rescue Mission – Children’s Center – San Diego 2,500
San Diego Volunteer Lawyer Program – General Fund, Women’s Resource Fair – San Diego 10,500
Securing Our eCity Foundation – Cyber Defender Workshops with Boys & Girls Clubs – San Diego 5,000
UC San Diego Foundation – Christini Fund, Personalized Breast Cancer Research at UCSD Moores Cancer Center – La Jolla 10,000
USD School of Law – The Morrison & Foerster Foundation – Stephen S. Dunham Scholarship – San Diego 20,000
32 THE MORRISON & FOERSTER FOUNDATION 2014 ANNUAL REPORT
Voices for Children – San Diego 10,000
YMCA of San Diego County – San Diego 3,000
SAN FRANCISCO BAY AREA $100 Black Men of the Bay Area – Mentoring Program – Oakland 5,000
A Better Way – Berkeley 3,000
AIDS Legal Referral Panel – San Francisco 12,500
AIDS Walk San Francisco – San Francisco 1,790
Alameda County Community Food Bank – Oakland 13,500
APA Family Support Services – San Francisco 2,000
The Arc of San Francisco – San Francisco 3,500
Asian Art Museum – Education and Public Programs – San Francisco 1,000
Asian & Pacific Islander Wellness Center – San Francisco 3,000
At the Crossroads – San Francisco 2,000
Bay Area Association of Disabled Sailors – San Francisco 1,000
Bay Area Legal Aid – Oakland 70,000
Bay Area Urban Debate League – Oakland 5,260
BayBio Institute – Bay Area Bioscience Center – South San Francisco 2,500
Berkeley Repertory Theatre – Youth Education Programs – Berkeley 18,500
Big Brothers Big Sisters of the Bay Area – San Francisco 3,500
Boys Hope Girls Hope – San Francisco 1,000
Building Opportunities for Self-Sufficiency (BOSS) – Berkeley 2,500
California Bar Foundation – Diversity Scholarship Fund – San Francisco 10,000
Centro Legal de la Raza – Oakland 2,500
Challenge Day – Concord 1,000
Charlotte Maxwell Complementary Clinic – Oakland 2,500
Child Abuse Prevention Council of Contra Costa County – Concord 1,000
Child Care Law Center – San Francisco 2,500
Chronicle Season of Sharing Fund – San Francisco 25,000
Clinic by the Bay – San Francisco 1,000
Community Alliance for Special Education (CASE) – San Francisco 6,000
Crohn’s & Colitis Foundation of America – Camp Oasis – San Francisco 1,000
Disability Rights Education & Defense Fund – Berkeley 2,500
Dogs4Diabetics – Concord 1,500
DonorsChoose.org – San Francisco Bay Area Programs – New York 5,000
Earned Asset Resource Network (EARN) – San Francisco 1,000
EarthTeam – “Green News” Program – Berkeley 2,000
East Bay Agency for Children – Oakland 8,000
East Bay Children’s Law Offices – General Fund, Equal Justice Works Fellow Professional Development – Oakland 5,751
East Bay College Fund – College Access Program – Oakland 50,000
East Bay Community Law Center – Berkeley 27,000
Faith Network of the East Bay – Oakland 2,500
Family Violence Appellate Project – Berkeley 9,100
First Amendment Coalition – San Rafael 1,000
SAN DIEGO AREA (continued) $
THE MORRISON & FOERSTER FOUNDATION 2014 ANNUAL REPORT 33
First Graduate – San Francisco 5,000
First Place for Youth – Oakland 7,000
Food Bank of Contra Costa and Solano – Concord 4,000
Foundation for Youth Investment – Oakland 1,000
Fred Finch Youth Center – Oakland 1,000
George Mark Children’s House – San Leandro 2,500
Glide Foundation – San Francisco 1,000
Golden Gate University – The Morrison & Foerster Foundation – Stephen S. Dunham Scholarship – San Francisco 20,000
GRID Alternatives – Oakland 1,000
Holy Family Day Home – San Francisco 2,000
Huckleberry Youth Programs – San Francisco 8,000
Immigrant Legal Resource Center – Ninth Circuit Pro Bono Attorney Program – San Francisco 5,000
Incentive Awards Program at UC Berkeley – Berkeley 2,500
Inner City Advisors – Oakland 1,000
Jewish Community Relations Council – Jewish Coalition for Literacy – San Francisco 1,000
Jewish Family & Children’s Services – San Francisco 3,500
Jewish Family & Children’s Services of the East Bay – Berkeley 3,500
Juma Ventures – San Francisco 5,000
Justice & Diversity Center – Bay Area Minority Law Student Scholarship Program, General Fund – San Francisco 50,000
La Casa de las Madres – San Francisco 5,560
La Raza Centro Legal – Justice, Dignity & Equality for Unaccompanied Minor Children Project – San Francisco 6,000
Larkin Street Youth Services – San Francisco 10,000
Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights of the San Francisco Bay Area – San Francisco 70,000
Legal Aid of Marin – San Rafael 5,000
Legal Aid of Napa Valley – Earthquake Relief – Napa 5,000
Legal Aid Society – Employment Law Center – San Francisco 70,000
Legal Assistance to the Elderly – San Francisco 4,000
Legal Services for Children – San Francisco 18,000
Level Playing Field Institute – IDEAL Scholars Program – Oakland 3,000
Make-A-Wish Greater Bay Area – San Francisco 2,000
Marin Advocates for Children – San Rafael 2,500
Mission Graduates – San Francisco 1,000
MusicianCorps – Bay Area Programs – San Francisco 1,000
New Leaders – 2014 Educators Summit – Oakland 5,000
New Tech Network – Middle/Elementary School College Readiness Program – Napa 2,500
Oakland Museum of California Foundation – Education Programs – Oakland 6,000
Okizu Foundation – Camp Okizu – Novato 2,500
OneJustice – San Francisco 3,000
Opportunity Junction – Antioch 1,500
Options Recovery Services – Berkeley 2,000
The Other Bar Foundation – San Francisco 5,000
Partnership for Children & Youth – Oakland 1,500
Playworks – San Francisco Bay Area Program – Oakland 5,000
Project Avary – Novato 1,000
SAN FRANCISCO BAY AREA (continued) $
34 THE MORRISON & FOERSTER FOUNDATION 2014 ANNUAL REPORT
Project Open Hand – San Francisco 7,000
Raphael House – San Francisco 5,000
Reading Partners – Oakland 1,000
Rebuilding Together San Francisco – San Francisco 5,000
Rubicon Programs – Legal Services Program – Richmond 1,000
RYSE Center – Richmond 1,000
Saint Vincent’s Day Home – Oakland 3,000
San Francisco AIDS Foundation – San Francisco 46,667
San Francisco Alliance of Black School Educators – San Francisco 1,098
San Francisco and Marin Food Bank – San Francisco 9,000
San Francisco Child Abuse Prevention Center – San Francisco 2,500
San Francisco Community Land Trust – Marty’s Place – San Francisco 1,000
San Francisco Interfaith Council – San Francisco 3,500
San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SFMOMA) – School, Youth, and Family Programs – San Francisco 10,000
San Francisco Suicide Prevention – San Francisco 2,500
San Francisco Symphony – Adventures in Music Youth Education Program, General Fund – San Francisco 45,900
Seven Tepees Youth Program – College and Career Program – San Francisco 10,000
SHELTER, Inc. – Concord 1,000
STAND! For Families Free of Violence – Concord 1,000
Students Rising Above – San Francisco 2,500
Sunset Youth Services – San Francisco 1,000
Swim Across America – San Francisco 1,175
Swords to Plowshares – San Francisco 26,770
Their Angels – Richmond 1,000
UC Berkeley Foundation – SAGE Scholars Program – Berkeley 3,000
UCSF Foundation – The Kidney Project – San Francisco 1,000
United Way of the Bay Area – San Francisco 6,536
The Working Group – Not in Our Town – Not in Our School Program – Oakland 1,000
YMCA of San Francisco – Teen Programs, Urban Services YMCA – San Francisco 6,000
SILICON VALLEY $Abilities United – Palo Alto 3,000
Adolescent Counseling Services – Outlet Program – Palo Alto 2,500
Asian Americans for Community Involvement – San Jose 2,000
Asian Law Alliance – San Jose 3,000
Avenidas – Palo Alto 3,000
Bring Me a Book Foundation – Mountain View 3,000
Child Advocates of Silicon Valley – Milpitas 2,500
Children’s Health Council – Palo Alto 2,500
Cinequest – San Jose 2,500
Community Legal Services in East Palo Alto – East Palo Alto 11,000
Community Overcoming Relationship Abuse (CORA) – San Mateo 2,500
Computers for Youth – Palo Alto 1,500
CuriOdyssey – San Mateo 2,500
SAN FRANCISCO BAY AREA (continued) $
THE MORRISON & FOERSTER FOUNDATION 2014 ANNUAL REPORT 35
Eastside College Preparatory School – East Palo Alto 6,000
Ecumenical Hunger Program – East Palo Alto 2,720
Family & Children Services of Silicon Valley – Palo Alto 2,500
Family Giving Tree – Back to School Backpack Drive – Milpitas 1,780
The Fit Kids Foundation – Redwood City 1,000
Friends for Youth – Redwood City 2,500
Friends of Fitzgerald Marine Reserve – Moss Beach 3,000
HopeLab Foundation – Redwood City 1,000
InnVision Shelter Network – Menlo Park 4,700
La Raza Lawyers Charitable Foundation – San Jose 3,000
Law Foundation of Silicon Valley – San Jose 15,000
Legal Aid Society of San Mateo County – Redwood City 15,000
My New Red Shoes – Redwood City 2,500
Next Door Solutions to Domestic Violence – San Jose 1,500
Northern California Innocence Project – Santa Clara 1,000
Pacific Autism Center for Education – Santa Clara 5,000
Page Mill YMCA – Parkinson’s Exercise Program – Palo Alto 3,500
Palo Alto Art Center Foundation – Palo Alto 2,500
Parents Helping Parents – San Jose 2,500
Peninsula Bridge – Palo Alto 5,000
Peninsula Family Connections – San Carlos 2,500
Pie Ranch – Pescadero 2,500
Pro Bono Project Silicon Valley – San Jose 1,000
QuestBridge – Quest Scholar Network – Palo Alto 1,000
Ronald McDonald House at Stanford – Palo Alto 5,000
Sacred Heart Community Service – San Jose 1,000
Samaritan House – San Mateo 4,700
San Jose Museum of Art – San Jose 2,500
Santa Clara University – The Katharine & George Alexander Community Law Center – San Jose 10,000
Second Harvest Food Bank of Santa Clara and San Mateo Counties – San Jose 3,700
Silicon Valley Campaign for Legal Services – San Jose 30,000
Stanford University – Stanford Community Law Clinic – East Palo Alto 10,000
The Tech Museum of Innovation – San Jose 2,500
TheatreWorks – Palo Alto 2,500
The Tower Foundation of San Jose State University – Record Clearance Project – San Jose 2,000
Toys for Tots – San Jose 2,000
Vida Verde Nature Education – San Gregorio 1,500
WASHINGTON, D.C. AREA $ACLU of the National Capital Area – Washington, D.C. 15,000
Ayuda – Washington, D.C. 5,000
Back on My Feet – Washington, D.C. 5,000
Boys & Girls Clubs of Greater Washington – Washington, D.C. 5,000
Bread for the City – Washington, D.C. 10,000
SILICON VALLEY (continued) $
36 THE MORRISON & FOERSTER FOUNDATION 2014 ANNUAL REPORT
BUILD – Metro D.C. Programs – Washington, D.C. 8,000
Calvary Women’s Services – Washington, D.C. 2,500
Catholic Charities Foundation of the Archdiocese of Washington – Archdiocesan Legal Network – Washington, D.C. 3,000
Charitable Foundation of the Energy Bar Association – Washington, D.C. 2,500
Children’s Law Center – Starting Life with a Solid Foundation Program, General Fund – Washington, D.C. 103,342
Council for Court Excellence – Washington, D.C. 2,500
D.C. Bar Pro Bono Program – Washington, D.C. 15,000
DC Greens – Washington, D.C. 10,000
DC Volunteer Lawyers Project – Washington, D.C. 5,000
The District of Columbia Bar Foundation – Washington, D.C. 5,000
District of Columbia School of Law Foundation – Washington, D.C. 4,000
Domestic Violence Legal Empowerment and Appeals Project (DV LEAP) – Washington, D.C. 10,000
Everybody Wins! D.C. – Power Lunch Reading and Mentoring Program – Washington, D.C. 1,200
The Family Place – Washington, D.C. 15,000
Food & Friends – Washington, D.C. 10,000
Foster & Adoptive Parent Advocacy Center – Washington, D.C. 5,000
Friendship Place – Washington, D.C. 7,500
House of Ruth – Washington, D.C. 5,000
Junior Woman’s Club of Chevy Chase – Bistro BoyZ Project of the National Center for Children and Families – Chevy Chase, Maryland
2,500
Kids in Need of Defense (KIND) – General Fund, Equal Justice Works Fellow Professional Development – Washington, D.C. 12,818
Legal Aid Society of the District of Columbia – Washington, D.C. 15,000
Legal Counsel for the Elderly – Washington, D.C. 10,000
Martha’s Table – Washington, D.C. 10,000
Mid-Atlantic Innocence Project – Washington, D.C. 7,500
N Street Village – Washington, D.C. 5,000
Playworks – Washington, D.C. 5,000
Reach Incorporated – Washington, D.C. 5,000
RESET – Washington, D.C. 3,000
School Without Walls at Francis-Stevens – Home and School Association – School and Library Fund – Washington, D.C. 5,000
Sexual Minority Youth Assistance League – Washington, D.C. 5,000
Sitar Arts Center – Washington, D.C. 10,000
So Others Might Eat – Washington, D.C. 10,000
Washington Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights and Urban Affairs – Washington, D.C. 15,000
Washington Legal Clinic for the Homeless – Washington, D.C. 7,500
OTHER U.S. $Mono Lake Foundation – Lee Vining, California 1,000
Monterey Bay Aquarium Foundation – Monterey, California 2,500
Soaring with Great Eagles Foundation – Ponte Vedra, Florida 2,000
Sundance Benefit – CAMP Rehoboth – Rehoboth Beach, Delaware 1,000
Tuolumne River Trust – Modesto, California 1,500
WASHINGTON, D.C. AREA (continued) $
THE MORRISON & FOERSTER FOUNDATION 2014 ANNUAL REPORT 37
NATIONAL FOCUS $ABA Fund for Justice and Education – ABA Legal Opportunity Scholarship Fund – Chicago, Illinois 5,000
American Cancer Society – San Francisco 1,875
American Heart Association – Des Moines, Iowa 7,500
American Intellectual Property Law Education Foundation – Arlington, Virginia 5,000
Appleseed Foundation – Washington, D.C. 10,500
The Avielle Foundation – Newtown, Connecticut 1,000
Avon Foundation for Women – New York 10,000
Boys & Girls Clubs of America – Atlanta, Georgia 2,000
Brady Center to Prevent Gun Violence – Lawyers for a Safer America – Washington, D.C. 10,000
Brennan Center for Justice – New York 5,000
Center for Gender & Refugee Studies – San Francisco 2,500
Childhood Apraxia of Speech Association – Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 2,000
Constitutional Rights Foundation – Los Angeles 17,500
Disability Rights Legal Center – Los Angeles 5,000
Equal Justice Works – Fellowship Program, General Fund – Washington, D.C. 417,000
Federal Bar Foundation – White Plains, New York 5,000
Fisher House Foundation – Rockville, Maryland 3,000
Gay & Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation – Los Angeles 2,500
Immigration Equality – New York 2,500
International Court Council – Food Bank Project – Spokane, Washington 1,200
Law Center to Prevent Gun Violence – San Francisco 3,000
The Leukemia & Lymphoma Society – White Plains, New York 1,500
MarineParents.com – Columbia, Missouri 2,400
National Association of the Deaf – Silver Spring, Maryland 1,000
National Association of Women Judges – Washington, D.C. 2,500
National Center for Youth Law – Oakland, California 15,000
The National Urban Technology Center – New York 2,500
National Veterans Legal Services Program – Washington, D.C. 7,500
OutServe-SLDN – Washington, D.C. 5,000
PLUS Foundation – Minneapolis, Minnesota 1,500
Pro Bono Institute – Washington, D.C. 15,000
Pro Bono Net – New York 25,000
Save the Children – Fairfield, Connecticut 3,500
Soledad O’Brien & Brad Raymond Starfish Foundation – New York 5,000
Teach for America – New York 10,000
The Trevor Project – West Hollywood, California 2,500
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum – Washington, D.C. 10,000
Wounded Warrior Project – Topeka, Kansas 8,310
ASIA $Bethel USA – Bethel China Programs – Fort Collins, Colorado 5,000
Room to Read – Asia Programs – San Francisco 20,000
Teach for China – San Francisco 25,000
38 THE MORRISON & FOERSTER FOUNDATION 2014 ANNUAL REPORT
INTERNATIONAL FOCUS $Center for Reproductive Rights – New York 15,000
Centro de los Derechos del Migrante – Baltimore, Maryland 1,000
The Cyrus R. Vance Center for International Justice – New York 10,000
Global AIDS Interfaith Alliance – Larkspur, California 4,000
Helen Keller International – New York 2,500
International Bipolar Foundation – San Diego 5,000
Plant with Purpose – San Diego 2,500
RefugePoint – Cambridge, Massachusetts 5,000
VisionSpring – New York 10,000
UK* $Action Against Cancer – London 9,427
Alzheimer’s Society – London 9,427
Arc Nursery – London 9,427
Bliss – London 9,427
The Cardiomyopathy Association – Chesham, Buckinghamshire 9,427
The Douglas Bader Foundation – London 9,427
Headway East London – London 9,178
Ladies Who L-EARN – London 9,427
Richard House Children’s Hospice – London 9,427
Smile Train – Northampton 9,427
South Westminster Legal Advice Centre – London 9,427
* The London office of Morrison & Foerster has its own charitable giving program that is consistent with the Foundation in its level of partner support, focus, and guidelines, but that operates separately from the Foundation. In 2014, the London office’s program issued charitable grants totaling £62,952, or approximately $104,175. Those contributions, which are in addition to those of the Foundation, are listed here for informational purposes if greater than $1,000 (converted), but they are not included in this report’s financial discussion.
THE MORRISON & FOERSTER FOUNDATION425 Market Street, 32nd Floor San Francisco, CA 94105-2482 Federal Tax ID Number: 94-3006979
Financial information about The Morrison & Foerster Foundation can be obtained by writing the Foundation at 425 Market Street, 32nd Floor, San Francisco, CA 94105-2482. In addition, several states where the Foundation is required to file financial information each year also require the following disclosures: Colorado: Colorado residents may obtain copies of registration and financial documents from the office of the Secretary of State, (303) 894-2680, www.sos.state.co.us/. New York: A copy of the latest annual report can be obtained from the organization or from the Office of the Attorney General by writing the Charities Bureau, 120 Broadway, New York, NY 10271. Virginia: Financial statements are available from the Virginia Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services, P.O. Box 1163, Richmond, VA 23218. REGISTRATION IN THE ABOVE STATES DOES NOT IMPLY ENDORSEMENT, APPROVAL, OR RECOMMENDATION OF THE MORRISON & FOERSTER FOUNDATION BY THE STATES.