2012 yocha dehe community fund annual report

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Partners in Philanropy Yocha Dehe Community Fund | 2012 Annual Report “All things share the same breath—the beast, the tree, the man—the air shares its spirit with all the life it supports.” Chief Seattle

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2012 annual report showcasing the collective achievements of Yocha Dehe Community Fund's partners in philanthropy.

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Partners in Philanthropy

Yocha Dehe Community Fund | 2012 Annual Report

“All things share the same breath—the beast, the tree, the man—the air shares its spirit with all the life it supports.”

Chief Seattle

Dear Neighbors and Partners,

While we come from different backgrounds, our struggles and our dreams bring us together. We are united as we work together to support the health and well-being of our families, protect our natural environment, foster education for our children and build better communities for all.

I am humbled and gratified to report that the Yocha Dehe Community Fund has just completed its eleventh year funding nonprofit organizations involved in good works in our region and across the country. We have brought our total number of grantees to 296, and have contributed more than 19 million dollars in total funding.

Reflecting on our activities for 2011, it is clear that our Board recognized the urgent need of many local social service organizations whose funding shortfalls were the result of severe budget cuts. We are deeply aware that government funded programs are struggling, and the consequent shortage of funding dollars for all nonprofits has been felt across the board. In this light, we focused heavily last year on supporting our neighbors and partners in Yolo County, while still maintaining our funding for important programs that operate in Indian Country.

The 77 organizations that the Community Fund supported last year share a remarkable dedication to building a better future. We are honored to stand with them. Giving and serving others are core values of our tribal culture. We are proud of our community and neighbors who, through the strength of their work and actions, deliver hope, generate pride and create optimism for those around them.

We thank you for your commitment to building stronger communities and joining us as Partners in Philanthropy.

Wile bo,

Marshall McKayYocha Dehe Tribal Chairman

Partners in Philanthropy

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“We have to work with each other. Our earth is crying. And it’s crying for help. In the everyday movement of our country, you can make a difference. You can make a difference.”

Billy Frank Jr., Nisqually

The Yocha Dehe Community Fund is dedicated to creating a healthy community through engaged philanthropy, deep community knowledge and awareness, and active leadership. Focusing on six core areas, the Community Fund uses philanthropy in ways that can effectively build a high quality of life for Yolo County residents and Native people wherever they live.

The tradition of giving and sharing is practiced in many ways among Native American tribes, all of them reaching back through centuries of honoring community members and sharing wealth and resources in a spirit of generosity. In many tribal cultures, giving away possessions is part of an entire way of life – one that creates powerful social bonds. When we are held in a web of trust and connection, we can give generously, knowing that when it is our turn we will be supported.

The traditional values of giving and sharing and managing resources in a thoughtful way is nowhere more apparent than in the foundation and operation of the Yocha Dehe Community Fund.

This philanthropic fund has created a remarkable demonstration of partnership with the community and region. The Community Fund is recognized as one of the first to be established formally by a Native American tribe in California and is a leader in local charitable giving. The Fund exists wholly independently from the Tribe’s obligations with Yolo County, and the Tribe receives no tax advantage for making these charitable contributions.

The Yocha Dehe Community Fund provides philanthropic support to a variety of organizations with the overarching goal of building a better quality of life for Yolo County residents and Native people. The Tribe works in partnership with their neighbors and the wider community to ensure that their philanthropic contributions are strategically targeted to those organizations that are most likely to engender sustainable outcomes. Such strategic investments require significant levels of leadership, community engagement, knowledge and awareness.

Since 2000, the Fund has contributed more than 19 million dollars in financial support to organizations involved in education, community health, arts and culture, environment, community development and social services. While Community Fund contributions are made to a variety of organizations throughout the region, state and nation, there is a significant focus on Yolo County programs.

A Tradition of Giving

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“Children were encouraged to develop strict discipline and a high regard for sharing. When a girl picked her first berries and dug her first roots, they were given away to an elder so she would share her future success.”

Mourning Dove, Salish

The Yocha Dehe Community Fund is governed by a Board of Directors made up of tribal members and supported by government staff. The Board meets monthly to review requests for support, and to evaluate applications from organizations that have met the general requirements.

Board members are actively involved in the funding process, participating in site visits and reviewing the progress and outcomes of funded partners. Consistent with its mission, the Board strives to develop strategic partnerships that will result in long-lasting community impacts.

Focusing on six core areas, the Community Fund uses philanthropy in ways that can effectively build a high quality of life for Yolo County residents and Native people wherever they live.

Six Core Areas of GivingEducationAccess to quality education is critical to personal advancement and the escape from poverty and other difficult circumstances. The Yocha Dehe Community Fund supports organizations that improve the quality of learning and community access to education. Securing education for succeeding generations of our people is of paramount importance.

Helping People Help ThemselvesIt is important for people to take an active role in improving their own circumstances. The Yocha Dehe Community Fund supports organizations helping people make a difference in their own lives, whether this takes the form of job skills training, temporary economic assistance or facilitating access to information services.

Native Health and WellnessNative health and wellness is central to the survival and well-being of Native communities. The Fund is dedicated to working to improve the health of Native people, especially in the areas of diabetes, obesity and stroke, including the promotion of improved nutrition and access to healthy food options. Supporting nutrition education and better access to fresh, healthy food is of prime concern.

Native Rights and Tribal SovereigntyTribal sovereignty is essential for Native communities to thrive. The Yocha Dehe Community Fund supports organizations that allow tribes to exercise their inherent right to maintain distinct identities, traditions, laws and human rights. The broader public is generally unaware of the issues surrounding Native rights and sovereignty and a critical part of education is capturing and disseminating the history of tribal governmental relations.

Steward the Natural EnvironmentAll people should strive to be in harmony with the earth. The Fund supports efforts to promote better environmental stewardship, reduced and more effective use of natural resources, and planning that explicitly includes the interests of succeeding generations. Exposing children to natural beauty and stewardship of the environment will result in greater levels of awareness and responsibility in future generations of adults.

Native Arts and CultureLanguage and the arts are necessary components of cultural identity. The Yocha Dehe Community Fund supports organizations that nurture the arts as expressions of culture. The Tribe is committed to the preservation and protection of Native art and culture, and to ensuring that languages of Native people be preserved and taught.

Please visit the tribal website at www.yochadehe.org for details about the Community Fund application process.

Partnering with Our Community

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“Civic involvement is a fertile earth from which leadership grows. But also know who you are — your family, your culture, your values, goals and purpose. You can’t look forward unless you know where you came from.”

Peggy Flanagan, White Earth Band of Ojibwe

Allocation of Funding for 2011

1 Education $ 220,380

2 Helping People Help Themselves $ 1,156,790

3 Native Health and Wellness $ 72,000

4 Native Rights and Tribal Sovereignty $ 505,550

5 Steward the Natural Environment $ 35,500

6 Native Arts and Culture $ 19,000

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Advocates for Indigenous California Language Survival is an organization devoted to implementing and supporting the revitalization of indigenous California languages. Its mission is to assist California Indians in language maintenance and renewal.

ALS Association is leading the fight to treat and cure ALS through global research and nationwide advocacy while also empowering people with Lou Gehrig’s Disease and their families to live fuller lives by providing them with compassionate care and support.

American Indian Film Institute has established itself as the premiere Native film festival in North America. This year’s selection continues to celebrate the Festival’s tradition of excellence and diversity with powerful performances and new cinematic expression by cutting-edge media makers.

Ark Preschool is a faith based nonprofit organization that provides tuition-free, balanced and hands-on education for children from very low-income families for the purpose of thriving in kindergarten.

Audubon California established its mission to conserve and restore natural ecosystems, focusing on birds and other wildlife and their habitats for the benefit of humanity and biological diversity.

California Health Collaborative is committed to enhancing the quality of life and health of the people of California, particularly the underserved and underrepresented.

California Indian Conference is an annual event for the exchange of perspectives and knowledge concerning the First Peoples of the place now known as California, past to present.

California Indian Heritage Center honors the diversity and history of California Indian people by preserving cultural and tribal traditions, nurturing contemporary expressions, and facilitating research and education for California, the nation and the world.

California Native American Heritage Commission provides protection to Native American burials from vandalism and inadvertent destruction, procedures for the notification of most likely descendants regarding the discovery of Native American human remains and associated grave goods, brings legal action to prevent severe and irreparable damage to sacred shrines, ceremonial sites, sanctified cemeteries and places of worship on public property, and maintains an inventory of sacred places.

Capay Valley Vision was created to enhance ongoing communication within the diverse community of the Capay Valley, reflecting all opinions and searching for common ground on the vision for the Valley’s future.

Catching the Dream strives to assist Native American tribes, communities and tribal organizations with improving the quality of life in Indian communities through the higher education of Indian people.

Center for Land-Based Learning seeks to inspire and motivate people of all ages, especially youth, to promote a healthy interplay between agriculture, nature and society through their own actions and as leaders in their communities.

Citizens Who Care seeks to improve quality of life for the elderly and their caregivers by providing them with companionship and social support.

Community Assistance for the Retarded and Handicapped strives to enrich the lives of local citizens with intellectual disabilities by providing social and recreational services that may not be offered by other private or governmental agencies.

Dancing Earth Creations supports indigenous dance and related arts, to encourage and revitalize awareness of diversity through artistic expression for the education and wellness of all peoples.

Davis Odd Fellows is a fraternal and social organization with a focus on good community works, providing support to many charitable organizations.

EMQ Families First offers mental health treatment, foster care and social services that help families recover from trauma, abuse and addiction.

Esparto High School strives to prepare all students to be life-long learners by providing an environment that motivates them to grow to their highest potential and become community-minded, responsible citizens.

Esparto Junior Spartans provides the local youth an opportunity to play an organized team sport that promotes physical fitness, a sense of being part of something bigger than themselves and camaraderie.

Esparto PTA works to make every child’s potential a reality by engaging and empowering families and communities to advocate for all children.

Explorit Science Center is dedicated to an awareness and understanding of science, as it relates to all aspects of our lives, and the critical thinking skills necessary to interact with an increasingly complex technological society.

Firefighters Burn Institute was founded by the Sacramento Area Firefighters Local 522 in 1973, for the purpose of establishing a local burn treatment facility, providing recovery programs for burn survivors, providing fire and burn prevention through public education, funding education for burn team professionals, firefighters, and burn survivors, and supporting burn treatment and rehabilitation research.

Food Bank of Yolo County is dedicated to alleviating hunger and malnutrition in Yolo County by coordinating the solicitation, storage and distribution of food from an established network of growers, manufacturers, distributors, wholesalers and grocery stores.

Friends of the Woodland Library focuses attention on library services and facilities to encourage greater use of library services, and to enrich the cultural and civic life of Woodland.

Heyday into California promotes widespread awareness and celebration of California’s many cultures, landscapes, and boundary-breaking ideas through well-crafted books, public events and innovative outreach programs.

Hoes Down Harvest Festival is dedicated to honoring and promoting the knowledge of agricultural arts and sustainable rural living through inspiration and education.

Indian Youth of America provides opportunities and experiences that will aid Indian children in their educational, career, cultural and personal growth while fostering a positive sense of self and heritage.

Institute for Advancing Unity is an education organization whose mission is to create transformational experiences where people learn about the consequences of prejudice and violence, practice tools that foster harmony, and make choices that empower themselves and others to build unity.

International Indian Treaty Council is focused on dissemination, networking, coalition building, technical assistance, organizing and facilitating the effective participation of traditional Peoples in local, regional, national and international forums, events and gatherings.

Junior Achievement of Sacramento seeks to inspire and prepare young people to succeed in a global economy.

2011 Community Fund Grantees

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“We’re not here to serve ourselves. Creator made everything for a purpose and that purpose is to serve others–all things, all of nature–it is about serving others. We do so in life and in death.”

Pete Sidney, Elder, Carcross/Tagish First Nation

Karuk Tribe is dedicated to promoting the general welfare of all Karuk people, establishing equality and justice for the Tribe, restoring and preserving tribal traditions, customs, language and ancestral rights, and securing the power to exercise the inherent rights of self governance.

Kiwanis Family House established its mission to provide temporary housing and support to families of seriously ill or injured children and adults being treated at University of California Davis Medical Center, Sacramento.

KVIE Public Television strives to educate, enrich, enlighten and inspire diverse audiences and individuals with high quality television programming and related services that enhance the quality of life for people throughout Northern California.

La Raza Galeria Posada has worked since 1972 to advance, celebrate and preserve the art and culture of Chicano, Latino and Native populations for present and future generations.

Loaves & Fishes feeds the hungry and shelters the homeless, in a spirit of love and hospitality, providing an oasis of welcome, safety and cleanliness for homeless men, women and children seeking survival services.

Make a Wish Foundation grants the wishes of children with life-threatening medical conditions to enrich the human experience with hope, strength and joy.

Mexican American Concilio of Yolo County provides scholarships and other assistance to promising low and moderate-income students, and provides assistance to low-income families in need.

My Sister’s House serves the needs of Asian and Pacific Islander women and children impacted by domestic violence by providing a culturally appropriate and responsive safe haven and community services.

Native American Rights Fund, founded in 1970, is the oldest and largest nonprofit law firm dedicated to asserting and defending the rights of Indian tribes, organizations and individuals nationwide.

Nevada Urban Indians strives to promote American Indian and Alaskan Native culture, health and well-being.

New Seasons Development Corporation was created to provide economic vitality to western Yolo County with an emphasis on the Capay Valley community and downtown Esparto.

NorCal Services for Deaf and Hard of Hearing strives to empower, educate and advocate for deaf and hard of hearing individuals in our society.

Northern California Children’s Therapy Center provides physical therapy, occupational therapy, speech therapy and child development services to children aged birth through adolescence with disabilities, regardless of their ability to pay.

Planned Parenthood Mar Monte strives to ensure that every individual has the knowledge, opportunity and freedom to make every child a wanted child and every family a healthy family. Resources For Indian Student Education works to help Native American children better themselves by counseling, educating, listening, guiding and participating in their daily lives.

Rural Innovations in Social Economics (RISE) serves the rural community to enhance the quality of life and opportunity for self-sufficiency.

Sacramento Asian Pacific Chamber of Commerce works to strengthen underserved, diverse communities through leadership, educational and work force development programs.

Sacramento Children’s Home is committed to helping build strong families, opening doors to the future, maximizing potential and ending the cycle of child abuse.

Safetyville Children’s Safety Program provides life-saving safety education through its unique Safetyville USA program.

2011 Community Fund Grantees

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Williams Fire Protection Authority serves to protect the citizens of the City of Williams and the Williams Fire Protection District from all disasters, natural or man-made.

Wind Youth Services engages youth experiencing homelessness who need safety from the streets and access to resources to help them move from crisis to healthy functioning and independence.

Winters Combined Parent Teacher Association actively supports enrichment curriculum at Waggoner and Rominger Schools in Winters, CA.

Woodland Healthcare Foundation works with physicians and staff encouraging public interest and support of the Woodland Healthcare campuses, funding capital equipment needs, encouraging development of programs, education and services.

Woodland High School provides and advocates for a quality education for all students, which emphasizes high expectations, personal responsibility and clear academic standards.

Woodland Professional Police Employees Association members are focused on making Woodland a safe place to live, work and raise children, and lead the fight against gangs, drugs and domestic violence in Woodland.

YoloArts works to cultivate and advocate for support for all the arts, to participate in advancement in arts education in our schools and community, and to foster communication among artists, businesses, education, government and residents of Yolo County.

Yolo Children’s Fund is dedicated to enhancing the quality of a disadvantaged child’s life by providing funds for a special project, gift, need or opportunity that would otherwise go unmet.

Yolo County Children’s Alliance works to strengthen and support the continuum of prevention, intervention, and rehabilitation services and resources for children, youth and their families.

Yolo Family Resource Center believes that every child should have a safe, nurturing and stimulating environment in which to learn and grow, every youth should have positive social and work connections, and every family should be stable and self-sufficient.

Yolo Family Service Agency strives to provide high quality and affordable counseling, educational and community services that support children, help individuals and strengthen families.

The Yolo Wayfarer Center pledges to feed, clothe and shelter those in need, to share the love of Jesus Christ in word and in action.

Young Leaders Program is a school based leadership development program that offers mentorship and guidance to community students.

Seva Foundation, for more than 30 years, has served people around the world who are struggling for health, cultural survival and sustainable communities.

Soroptimist International of Greater Davis works to improve the lives of women and girls in local communities and throughout the world.

Southwest Youth Services provides positive youth development programming through educational, health and wellness and youth leadership components in partnership with Native American communities and organizations.

Special Olympics Northern California provides athletic opportunities to children and adults with intellectual disabilities, instilling the confidence they need to succeed in life.

St. John’s Retirement Village honors its residents’ dignity, independence and spirituality by providing them with a safe, supportive and caring environment in which to live.

St. John’s Shelter of Women and Children supports homeless women and children in advancing from a point of crisis to a position of self-sufficiency.

Stanford American Indian Organization was originally dedicated to improving the recruitment and retention of American Indian and Alaska Native students, staff, and faculty; institutionalizing culturally relevant curriculum; establishing a community center and theme house; and the permanently removing of the Stanford “Indian” mascot.

Studios for the Performing Arts is a unique and extraordinary collaboration of the four principal performing arts organizations in the Sacramento region – The Sacramento Ballet, California Musical Theatre, the Sacramento Opera Company and the Sacramento Philharmonic Orchestra.

Tower of Youth is dedicated to organizing and promoting digital literacy, a world class media workforce and economic and community development through its training, partnerships, networking and media showcase programs.

Tribal Economic and Social Solutions Agency serves as a licensed Indian Foster Family Agency for American Indian and Alaska Native families with culturally relevant foster placement and support systems to assist families in the reunification process.

Taylor Family Foundation was established to preserve the wellness and enhance the quality of life for children in Northern California living with life-threatening and chronic illnesses, developmental disabilities and youth-at-risk through unique therapeutic experiences and support.

UC Davis Department of Native American Studies conceives and practices the humanities and social sciences as an enterprise of creativity in diversity and the constant search for social justice and cultural democracy.

Volunteer Center of Sacramento works to strengthen the Sacramento community by connecting volunteers with opportunities to serve.

VSA Arts of California assists individuals of all abilities to find opportunity through creative arts based education, professional training, talent recognition, career based preparation, advocacy and the basic joy of expression.

WEAVE is dedicated to bringing an end to domestic violence and sexual assault in partnership with our community. WEAVE’s vision is a community free of violence and abuse.

2011 Community Fund Grantees

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“When one sits in the Hoop of the People, one must be responsible because all of creation is related. And the hurt of one is the hurt of all. And the honor of one is the honor of all. And whatever we do effects everything in the universe.”

White Buffalo Calf Woman

A Touch of Understanding, Inc. Advocates for Indigenous California Language Survival African American Prostate Cancer InitiativeAgency for Hearing AISES - American Indian Science & Engineering Society, UC DavisALS AssociationAmerican Indian Film InstituteArk PreschoolArthritis Foundation of NE CaliforniaArts ExchangeAsian Pacific Rim FoundationAssistance League of Sacramento Association of California Symphony OrchestrasAudubon California Autry National Center Backpacks for Kids Beamer Elementary School, WJUSDBest of BroadwayBeyond the ProsceniumBig Brothers Big Sisters of the Greater Sacramento Area Blood SourceBoys & Girls Club of Greater Sacramento Bread of Life CenterCache Creek Conservancy Cache Creek High SchoolCache Creek Lodge California Consultancy for Arts Education, Inc.California Fire Exploring Scholarship FundCalifornia Health Collaborative California Indian Basket WeaversCalifornia Indian ConferenceCalifornia Indian Heritage Foundation California Lawyers for the Arts California Military MuseumCalifornia Rural Legal Assistance Foundation California Shock Trauma Air Rescue (CalStar)California State Library FoundationCalifornia State University of SacramentoCalifornia State University, Dr. Hankins ResearchCalifornia Waterfowl Capay Valley - American Youth Soccer OrganizationCapay Valley Vision Catching the DreamC.E. Dingle Elementary School, WJUSDCenter for Fathers and Families Center for Land-Based LearningCenter for Multicultural Cooperation Center for Youth CitizenshipCheyenne River Sioux Tribe

Children’s Receiving HomeCitizens for EducationCitizens Who Care City of WintersClean and Sober Community Action Substance Abuse CenterCommunity Assistance for the Retarded and HandicappedCommunicare Health CentersCortina Environmental Protection AgencyCristo Rey High SchoolCrocker Art Museum Dancing Earth CreationsDavis Art CenterDavis Bridge Education FoundationDavis Community MealsDavis Farm to School ConnectionDavis Farmers MarketDavis Musical Theater Company Davis Odd Fellows-Haiti Disaster ReliefDavis Police DepartmentDiabetes Society of Solano CountyDiogenes Youth ServicesDisabled Sports USA Far WestDunnigan Fire Protection District Eagle Vision Educational NetworkEinstein Education School Elderly Nutrition ProgramEsparto District Chamber of CommerceEsparto Elementary SchoolEsparto Future Farmers of AmericaEsparto High SchoolEsparto Jr. Spartans Esparto Parent Teacher AssociationEsparto Volunteer Fire DepartmentExplorit Science Center Families First, Inc. Families in Self Help, Inc.Firefighters Burn Institute First 5 Yolo County Folklorico Latino de WoodlandFood Bank of Yolo CountyFrancis House Friends of Ecos - Environmental Council of SacramentoFriends of Esparto Regional LibraryFriends of NAACP Sacramento Friends of the Mission Friends of the Woodland LibraryFriends of Yolo Adult Day Health CareGet a Brick Foundation

Girl Scouts of Tierra del Oro Gold Rush Park FoundationGoodwill IndustriesGrafton Elementary School, WJUSDHabitat for HumanityHeidrick Ag History CenterHeyday Books Hoes Down Harvest FestivalHoopa Valley TribeIndian Dispute Resolution Services, Inc.Indian Youth of AmericaInstitute for Advancing UnityInternational Indian Treaty CouncilJim Thorpe Area Sports Hall of FameJunior Achievement of Sacramento, Inc.Juvenile DiabetesKaruk TribeKiwanis Family House Klamath River Early College of the RedwoodsKnight’s Landing Children’s Center KVIE Public TelevisionLand Trust of Napa County La Raza Galleria PosadaLee Middle School, WJUSDLEED - Leadership in Energy and Environmental DesignLinkage to Education Los Rios Community CollegeLos Rios Foundation Madison Community Service District Madison Fire Protection DistrictMake A Wish FoundationMaxwell Elementary School, WJUSDMcClatchy MusicMcClellan Aviation Museum Mercy Perinatal Recovery NetworkMexican American ConcilioMy Sister’s House Native American College Motivation DayNative American Heritage FoundationNative American Rights FundNative Arts and Cultures Foundation Nevada Urban Indians, Inc.New Seasons Development CorporationNorthern California Children’s Therapy Center Nonprofit Resource CenterNorcal Center On Deafness Oak Park PreschoolPara TransitPence Art Gallery

People Reaching Out, Inc. Pinoleville Pomo NationPlainfield Elementary School, WJUSDPlanned Parenthood Prairie Elementary School, WJUSDProgress Ranch Putah Creek Council Rebuilding Together Resources for Indian Student Education, Inc. River City Community ServiceRiver Delta Unified School District River Oak Center for Children Roberts Family Development Ronald McDonald House CharitiesRudolph Steiner CollegeRural Innovations in Social Economics, Inc. (RISE)Sacramento Area Emergency Housing Center Sacramento Asian Pacific Chamber of CommerceSacramento Ballet Sacramento Children’s Home Sacramento Chinese Community Service Center Sacramento Choral Society & OrchestraSacramento Construction Management Education FoundationSacramento Court Appointed Special Advocates ProgramSacramento Crisis Nursery Sacramento Food Bank & Family Services Sacramento Gay & Lesbian Center Sacramento Homeless Organizing CommitteeSacramento Loaves & Fishes Sacramento Native American Health Center, Inc.Sacramento News & Review Sacramento OperaSacramento Philharmonic OrchestraSacramento Theater CompanySacramento Tree Foundation Sacramento Urban Indian Health, Inc.Sacramento Youth Symphony Sacramento Zoo Safety Center, Inc.Samaritan CenterSay GolfSenior Center of DavisSexual Assault and Domestic Violence CenterShort Term Emergency Aid Committee - STEACSierra 2 CenterSierra Adoption Services Sierra Service ProjectSociety for EthnobiologySociety for the Blind

Community Fund Recipients / 2000-Present

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Sojourner Truth Multicultural Art MuseumSouthwest Youth ServicesSpecial Olympics Northern California SPIRIT - Strategic Positive Intent to Restore Native TraditionSt. Hope Academy St. John’s Retirement VillageSt. John’s Shelter Program Stanford Home for Children / Stanford Family V.O.I.C.E.Stanford Pow WowStanford Settlement Neighborhood CenterStop the Violence Coalition, Inc.Studios for the Performing Arts Suicide Prevention and Crisis Services of Yolo County Summer BridgeSummer House Supported Life Institute Sutter Medical Center FoundationThe California MuseumThe Effort, Inc. The First TeeThe Taylor Family FoundationTower of Youth Tree DavisTribal Economic and Social Solutions Agency, Inc. - TESSATuleyome UC Berkeley UC Davis Children’s Hospital UC Davis FoundationUC Davis Medical CenterUC Davis Native American StudiesUC Davis Performing ArtsUC Davis School of Veterinary MedicineUC Davis University Advancement UC IrvineUC Regents United Cerebral Palsy of Greater SacramentoUnited Christian CenterValley VisionVolunteer Center of SacramentoVolunteer ConnectionVolunteers of AmericaVSA Arts of CaliforniaWater Environmental Protection AgencyWhitehead Elementary School, WJUSDWilliams Fire Protection Authority Wind Youth Services Winters Center for the Arts Winters Combined PTAWinters Friends of the Library

Winters Healthcare FoundationWinters High School Winters Participation GalleryWomen Escaping a Violent Environment (WEAVE)Women’s EmpowermentWonder, Inc.Woodland Chamber Singers Woodland Community Care Car Woodland Healthcare Foundation Woodland High Healthy StartWoodland High School, WJUSDWoodland Joint Unified School District Woodland Literacy CouncilWoodland Little League Woodland Opera House Woodland Parent Teacher Association Woodland Professional Police Employees AssociationWoodland Public Library Literacy Service Woodland Recreation FoundationWoodland Senior Center Computer Club Woodland Toy Library Woodland Volunteer Food Closet Y-Me National Breast Cancer Organization Yolo Adult Day Health CareYolo Ag Futures AllianceYolo Arts Yolo Basin Foundation Yolo Children’s Fund Yolo Community CareYolo Connections Yolo County Children’s AllianceYolo County Court Appointed Special Advocates - CASAYolo County Historical Museum Yolo County American Red CrossYolo County Resource Conservation DistrictYolo County Retired Peace Officers AssociationYolo County Veterans Coalition Yolo County YMCA Yolo Employment ServicesYolo Family Resource Center Yolo Family Service Agency Yolo Hospice Children’s Bereavement ProgramYolo Solano Building Teachers SupportYolo Wayfarer Center Christian Mission Young Leaders ProgramYouth Development Network Youth in Focus Zamora Elementary School, WJUSD

Community Fund Recipients / 2000-Present

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Community Fund Board of Directors 2011

Marshall McKay, ChairMia Durham, Vice ChairJames KinterAnthony RobertsYvonne PerkinsRaul LorenzoMatt Lowell, Sr.Josh AvilaLorena Lopez

Yocha Dehe Community FundKristine Stanfill, Director

Yocha Dehe Wintun NationP.O. Box 18Brooks, CA 95606530.796.3400

www.yochadehe.org

The Yocha Dehe Tribal Council evaluates and supports recommendations by the Community Fund Board of Directors, passing resolutions to implement funding, and reviewing ongoing performance reports.

Yocha Dehe Community Fund

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