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Banking on benevolence
Yellowknife Community Foundation opens its heart
Daron Letts Northern News Services Published Tuesday, February 16, 2010
On Saturday night the charitable organization held its first annual Valentine's Gala. The black tie event filled the Explorer Hotel with guests eager to support its initiatives with more than $50,000 in donations, Dolynny said. "The gala was an incredible success for us," Dolynny said. "And now the community is aware of the stuff we do." The foundation formed in 1993 with a mandate to support community-based projects that enhance quality of life in Yellowknife through the Community Fund. Tax-deductible donations to the foundation, which oversees more than $2 million in donations, are placed in a permanent capital fund. About $100,000 is invested back into the community every year. This includes grants for local registered charities that address poverty, sports and recreation development, educational programs, medical services and arts and cultural organizations. On Monday morning, the foundation announced a new educational scholarship being awarded later this year. The Elaine Whitford Scholarship was established by the family of NWT Commissioner Tony Whitford in support of Northern social work and nursing students. The fund honours the memory of Whitford's late wife, Mary Elaine (Sweet) Whitford, whose dedication and compassion was known throughout the North. "She'd always had a desire to get more people working and trained in the field of social work," he said. "She encouraged a lot of people." The program is designed to assist mature students with an award of $1,000 toward their second or subsequent year of post-secondary study. Priority will be given to aboriginal students who are returning to school while raising a family. Deadline to apply for the inaugural scholarship is May 15. "The Community Fund is able to administer the scholarship than I could in my own way," Whitford said. "Long after I'm gone and my sons have grown and had children their children will still see this scholarship in their great-grandmother's name." The Yellowknife Guild of Arts and Crafts received a grant of $4,500 from the Community Fund last year for the purchase of a new kiln for the pottery workshop in Kam Lake. "This is really tremendous," said guild member John Argue. "Kilns are the heart of the ceramics operation. If you don't have reliable kilns you can't produce good artwork." About 100 people use the guild's three kilns each month. The new kiln is quicker and more reliable than the temperamental old machine it replaced. "The firing time is shorter with the new kiln and there is a consistency of heat between the shelves," said ceramic instructor Wendy Stephenson. "The new kiln is an energy saver, as well. We're all very grateful."
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