“rare cancer seen in 41 homosexuals.” - chicago house · pepsico , inc. perkins and will ......
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“Rare Cancer Seen in 41 Homosexuals.” The New York Times, July 3, 1981 Dear Chicago House Supporters, Those of us who remember that headline remember the fear…and the shame…and the hysteria…that followed soon after. It was a full year before the reason for that “rare cancer” had a name: Acquired Immunity Deficiency Syndrome/AIDS. And it was even longer before a safety net was in place to catch those falling victim to HIV. In 1985 Chicago House opened its doors as the as the first provider of AIDS Housing and Support Services in the Midwest, offering eight beds that would allow those with AIDS a place to die with dignity. Many of those first residents were gay men. At least one of our first residents was a straight woman. From the start our founders, our staff, our board and our residents were people from all walks of life who were: unified in fighting poverty and homelessness, unified in support of LGBTQ, and unified in serving those with HIV/AIDS. It is now 30 years later, and thankfully HIV/AIDS has eased from crisis mode. Antiretroviral medications are now so effective that people who are positive are not only living healthy lives but also not passing on HIV thanks to undetectable viral loads, and concurrently PrEP (among other advancements) is now available to help assure that those who are HIV negative remain negative. LGBTQ legal equality has similarly achieved unprecedented success and progress. In 1985 the founders of Chicago House gathered around a table at The Baton in downtown Chicago to help provide an answer and some relief to the greatest needs of the LGBTQ Community. We can only try to imagine their joy had they been able to see the advancements achieved over these last 30 years. Unfortunately the gains we have made in HIV/AIDS and in LGBTQ Equality have not been shared by those experiencing the last of our three founding calls to action: poverty and homelessness. In fact, those living with HIV/AIDS and those who identify as LGBTQ remain disproportionately affected by poverty and homelessness. Those who are low income are over five times more likely to have HIV, and 29% of all LGBTQ people experienced food insecurity over the last year. It is in the face of those facts that Chicago House recently cut the ribbon on the TranLife Center, and it is in the face of those facts that we continue working tirelessly to serve those most marginalized and most in need in LGBTQ and HIV. 30 years of service offers many good reasons to celebrate, but the reality of disproportionate homelessness and poverty offers even better reasons to fight harder than ever for the people that we serve. Thank you so much for remaining with us in the fight. Chicago House: There at the Beginning. Here to meet the challenge. The Reverend Stan J. Sloan Edward Laginess Chief Executive Officer Chair, Board of Trustees
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$100,000 + ⌂ Anonymous
AIDS Foundation of Chicago
Alphawood Foundation BMO Harris Bank
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Chicago Department of Family and Support Services
Chicago Department of Public Health
Illinois Department of Human Services
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development
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Janssen Theraputics
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American Airlines Political Action Committee
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Gail Morse and Lauren Verdich
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George L. Jewell
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Ginger and Del Hall Goldstar Events
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Holly Hunt
House of Roland, Inc.
HSBC Bank USA, N.A.
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New Trier High School
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Outerwall, Inc.
Parenti & Raffaelli Ltd.
Patrick and Brigid Hughes
PepsiCo
Performance Contracting,
Inc.
Perkins and Will
Commercial Builders
Philip Palmer and Michael
Noonan
Pheobe Helm
Quenten Schumacher and
Dr. Steven Geiermann
Ralph P. Alberto and
David McGee
Reinhart Food Service
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Michael J. Kaczmarek
Robyn L. Brooks and
Norman S. Brooks
SAGIN, LLC
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Sg2
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Soo Choi and Stephen
Swedlow
St. Michael’s Episcopal Church
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Group
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Kinner
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Slotten
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Foundation
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Charitable Foundation
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Sloan
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Lassiter
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Study
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Quinn
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Armbruster
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J Bland
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Knutson
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Yerich
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Feinberg
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Grunwald
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Schwendimann
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E. LaHaie
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Vriesendorp
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Jane Jampole
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Nick G. Kluding and Dr.
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Scott Gordon
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Steve Waynick
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Murray
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Smith
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Allen
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Robert Perry
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Putz
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Spyros Petros
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Ronald L. Bauer
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Ranald and Stacey N.
Stearns
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Steege
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Waller
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Study
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Malek Tayara
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Robert Thompson
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Marybeth McAvoy
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Kent Bartram
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Robert Wollmann
Stephen Wright
Brady Young
Abbott Fund
Admiral Heating and
Ventilating, Inc.
After School Matters
Ascher Brothers Co., Inc.
Blount, Inc.
Blue Plate Catering
Chicago Coalition of
Welcoming Churches
FE Moran
Flooring Resources
Corporation
Gibson Electric Company
Inc.
Grabby's
Kaufman Segal Design,
Ltd.
Kelso-Burnett Company
Kleiger & Kleigher
Attorneys
Modernfold Doors of
Chicago
MTH Industries
Phoenix Systems
Rampart Brokerage Corp
Sidetrack Blues Softball
Team
Spray Insulations
Stone Installation and
Maintenance, Inc
Strategic Wealth Partners,
LLC
Titan Electric Contracting
LLC
U.S. Dismantlement LLC
Underwriters
Laboratories, Inc
We are pleased to report that our fiscal year 2014 Total Support and Revenue increased by 3.7% in large part due to a 60% increase in revenue from Special Events and a 7.5% increase in Government Grants. These increases, coupled with strong efforts to manage our expenses, resulted in a $240,296 operating surplus for the year. As we have said repeatedly through the years, we will continue to operate in a prudent manner to protect our financial health. We appreciate all that our donors do for us and we remain committed to maintaining a high level of client services while embracing conservative financial policies. *Figures have been adjusted for inflation
Support & Revenue 2014 % 2013 %
Government Grants $4,160,767 61% $3,809,200 59% Foundations/Corporations $800,493 12% $980,631 15% Individuals $683,977 10% $830,564 13% United Way $40,000 0.6% $40,000 1% Special Events $887,399 13% $543,913 8% Client Fees $191,724 3% $176,025 3% Other $23,472 0.3% $59,293 1% Total $6,787,832 100% $6,439,626 100%
Expenses 2014 % 2013 %
Housing Program $3,648,697 52% $2,972,811 48% Case Management $397,191 6% $346,660 6% Prevention Programs $757,506 11% $696,365 11% Employment Programs $746,921 11% $823,168 13% Other Program Services $0 0% Fundraising $725,653 10% $678,086 11% Management & General $752,160 11% $638,542 10% Total $7,028,128 100% $6,155,632 100%
Summary Change in Net Assets 2013 2013
Change in Net Assets $240,296 $283,994 Net Assets, Beginning of Year $7,390,003 $7,106,009 Net Assets, End of Year $7,149,707 $7,390,003
For the year ended June 30, 2014 (with comparative totals for 2013)
Our Mission: Chicago House and Social Service Agency serves individuals and families who are disenfranchised by HIV/AIDS, LGBTQ marginalization, poverty, homelessness, and/or gender nonconformity by providing housing, employment services, medical linkage and retention services, HIV prevention services, legal services, and other supportive programs. Throughout our history, Chicago House has served thousands of clients whose lives have been impacted by HIV/AIDS. We were there at the beginning in the mid 1980’s, as we provided a place to call home to gay men who were dying of what was then a new, strange, and horrible disease. Most of our earlier clients were not the product of homelessness or poverty, but quickly found themselves without care or a place to live as they became unable to work and provide for themselves. Early on, the AIDS virus really didn’t care a whole lot about someone’s economic status. At that point our mission was relatively simple – to provide housing to those in need so they could live out their lives with dignity. Today, much has changed. As the impact of HIV/AIDS has unfolded, we have had to adapt. We have always focused on serving those most at-risk and vulnerable to HIV infection. As a result, we have evolved from serving primarily gay men to also serving other at-risk and vulnerable populations including individuals and families impacted by intravenous drug use, homelessness and poverty. Our response has been to tailor our programs to our clients’ needs by providing housing, employment services, case management, HIV prevention services, and other pertinent programs. We have endeavored to provide programs in a way that can actually reach our clients as evidenced by the services provided to the transgender community through the TransLife Center. As we have adapted, we are more clearly seeing the negative impact of LGBTQ marginalization and poverty on some of our client base. We are particularly concerned about how these issues impact LGBTQ youth and make them more at risk for HIV infection. This is something we plan to continue to explore and discuss as we further refine our services. Just a few statistics below serve to highlight this concern:
LGBTQ youth experience homelessness at a disproportionate rate. Studies indicate that between 20 and 40 percent of all homeless youth identify as lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgender
Homeless LGBTQ youth are without economic support, often engage in drug use and risky sexual behaviors, and often develop mental health disorders
Gay men earn up to 32 percent less than similarly qualified heterosexual men
Up to 64 percent of transgender people report incomes below $25,000 At Chicago House, we plan to continue the discussion about what role we can play in addressing or responding to some of the root causes that contribute to higher levels of risk for HIV infection.
Chicago House—and the work it does—is emotional for me. And it is deeply personal. It is wrapped up in feelings about my sweet brother Brian Hughes, someone I miss every day, and my feelings about how important it is to provide care for people like Brian. From the very beginning, my parents realized that Brian was unusual. He was bright, incredibly sensitive, and needed a lot of attention. For years, they tried to figure out how best to support him, but his was not a physical illness, it was a mental one. At that time, it was hard to get doctors to help. In high school, he began self-medicating with drugs and alcohol, and he spiraled out of control. Brian was diagnosed with AIDS in the late 90’s. No one in my family had ever known anyone with AIDS/HIV before, and the news came as a huge shock. At the time my brother was in prison in Texas for drug possession and criminal trespassing. Brian had lived for many years as an undiagnosed bipolar schizophrenic. In prison, he was on countless drugs, some to treat his HIV and some to treat his mental illness. He received treatment, but it was erratic. When Brian was released from prison he lived with our parents on house arrest for two years. Freedom was stressful for Brian. For him, there was an incredible strain in managing all that was his life—taking his medications, following a routine, finding and keeping a job, attending meetings, and staying sober. He could not do it on his own, and our family—despite the best efforts of my parents and their seven other children—couldn’t do it for him. When Brian was released from house arrest, and after several failed attempts at living on his own, he moved into Chicago House on Augusta Street. He found a place there that accepted him, supported him, and took care of him. He made friends, and found a stable environment. He kept a job. He went to meetings. He stayed sober. And I know everyone in my family looks back at this time as a gift—a time with Brian when he had help managing his life, and we could be with him. Brian passed away in 2007. Chicago House extended his life for years, in ways that allowed him to live with dignity. I cannot describe how grateful I am—how grateful we all are—for everything that Chicago House did for him and for us. I am proud to have been on the Chicago House Board for the last seven years. There is no other organization that does work like this one—work that helps Brian and all of the others like him—and no organization that continues to grow to find new ways to support the many marginalized members of our community as well as their families. Thank you Stan and the many people that make Chicago House home, Nora Hughes
1925 N Clybourn Avenue Suite 401 Chicago, Illinois 60614 (773) 248.5200 www.chicagohouse.org EXECUTIVE BOARD SENIOR STAFF Edward Laginess, Chair Reverend Stan Sloan, Chief Executive Officer Raymond Lechner, Internal Vice Chair Kiki Dorn, Chief Financial Officer Todd Hamilton, External Vice Chair Judy Perloff, Chief Program Officer Joyce Carson, Treasurer Michael Herman, Chief Development Officer Nora Hughes, Secretary TRUSTEES Chris Bagley J. Cory Faulkner Cheresse Leonard Dan Baldino Drew Ferguson Micheal Macken, M.D. Christopher Barrett Politan Jeff Grinspoon Craig Nadborne April Bernard, Ph.D Trisha Lee Holloway James C. Perry Mary Boeder Christopher Hubbard Kinley Preston Blake Brasher Emma Joy Jampole Michael Robert Rodriguez Soo Choi CJ Jensen Thomas Smith Vince Daniels Julie Ketay Daryl Sneed Jay Paul Deratany Ray J. Koenig Robyn Wall-Berto Clyde Ebanks Larry Leive Karin Winslow, Ph.D. LIFETIME TRUSTEES Stevie Ball Michael Clune Rob Murphy, M.D. Mary Boeder Ron Huberman W. Bradley Werner Nancy Carper Gary Lee CHICAGO HOUSE MISSION
Chicago House and Social Service Agency serves individuals and families who are
disenfranchised by HIV/AIDS, LGBTQ marginalization, poverty, homelessness,
and/or gender nonconformity by providing housing, employment services, medical
linkage and retention services, HIV prevention services, legal services, and other
supportive programs.
1925 N Clybourn Avenue Suite 401 Chicago, Illinois 60614 (773) 248.5200 www.chicagohouse.org EXECUTIVE BOARD SENIOR STAFF Edward Laginess, Chair Reverend Stan Sloan, Chief Executive Officer Raymond Lechner, Internal Vice Chair Kiki Dorn, Chief Financial Officer Todd Hamilton, External Vice Chair Judy Perloff, Chief Program Officer Joyce Carson, Treasurer Michael Herman, Chief Development Officer Nora Hughes, Secretary TRUSTEES Chris Bagley J. Cory Faulkner Cheresse Leonard Dan Baldino Drew Ferguson Micheal Macken, M.D. Christopher Barrett Politan Jeff Grinspoon Craig Nadborne April Bernard, Ph.D Trisha Lee Holloway James C. Perry Mary Boeder Christopher Hubbard Kinley Preston Blake Brasher Emma Joy Jampole Michael Robert Rodriguez Soo Choi CJ Jensen Thomas Smith Vince Daniels Julie Ketay Daryl Sneed Jay Paul Deratany Ray J. Koenig Robyn Wall-Berto Clyde Ebanks Larry Leive Karin Winslow, Ph.D. LIFETIME TRUSTEES Stevie Ball Michael Clune Rob Murphy, M.D. Mary Boeder Ron Huberman W. Bradley Werner Nancy Carper Gary Lee CHICAGO HOUSE MISSION
Chicago House and Social Service Agency serves individuals and families who are
disenfranchised by HIV/AIDS, LGBTQ marginalization, poverty, homelessness,
and/or gender nonconformity by providing housing, employment services, medical
linkage and retention services, HIV prevention services, legal services, and other
supportive programs.