Corporate Giving 12 Philanthropy Journal of North Carolina Giving to schools The BellSouth Foundation has award ed $2 milhon to 21 schools, universities and community groups in the southeast for school reform efforts. July 1996 Company support for community relations rises Corporate America views commu nity relations as a growing and important part of company activ ities, according to a survey by the Boston-based Center for Corporate Community Relations. By Sean Bailey A new survey of corporate profes sionals indicates that support for community reiations rose sUghtly in 1995 among U.S. businesses. The poll, conducted by the Center for Corporate Community Relations at Boston Coliege, indicates that cor porate support for involvement with communities is continumg to rise. “It 'seems to us that community relations seems to have soUdified its place among corporate America,” says Steven RochUn, research man ager at the center. The center conducted a study of 190 community relations profession als who attended the center’s profes sional deveiopment programs in 1995. Most surveyed indicated that corporate support for community reiations had increased sUghtly over the past year. None surveyed indicat ed that support for community reia tions had decreased or remained the same, and none indicated that their support for community relations was Sprint to enlist retirees as volunteers A competitive phone service mar ket means Sprint needs to pay attention to business while stay ing active in the community. By Sean Bailey Wake Forest Faced with rising competition and deregulation in the phone service market, Sprint is adjusting how it works with nonprofits. AAARKETING Sprint, the third-largest phone company in the state, intends to keep its commitments to education, chil dren, health and senior citizens. But it’s iooking for new ways to assist the many nonprofits that approach it for assistance in 70 Tar Heel counties. Jan Dempster, director of corpo rate communications for Sprint Mid- Atlantic Telecom, says the company will enhst the help of a corps of Sprint retirees to work with local nonprofits. The retired volunteers will fill a function normally carried out by Sprint’s local community relations managers. Dempster says those managers now need to concentrate on Sprint’s business operation. “We have activated our retirees and they are going to help us in our community-based events and let the community relations managers help Look for SPRINT, page 13 Pete and Roena Kulynych donat ed their Wilkesboro home to Bowman Gray/Baptist Hospital Medical Center. A neighborly gift Retired Lowe’s chief donates home Bowman Gray/Baptist Hospital in M^ston-Salem is getting a Wilkesboro home as an unre stricted gift. By Ashley Peay Wilkesboro Over the years, Pete Kulynych and his wife, Roena, have made numerous gifts to the Bowman Gray/Baptist Hospital Medical Center in Winston- Salem. Now, the couple is giving the med ical center its home in the Fbrest Hills nei^borhood of AVilkesboro. 'The couple will continue to live in the house for up to 10 years, but can opt to turn it over to the medical cen ter at any time during that period. 'The ^ is not restricted, and the medical center may use it for any pur pose, including selling it for cash. Kulynych, the foundation director and retired chairman of the hoard of Lowe’s Companies, says the gift was a practical one based on his growing sense of mortality. “What prompted me to give the house is simple,” he says. “I’m 75 years old and don’t want my wife to be left with the house shoidd I pre cede her.” What’s more, he says, he’s in a high tax bracket, and making a planned gift of his house was a logical Look for LOWE'S, page 13 up greatly or up sharply Over the last 15 years, Rochlin says, more and more U.S. corpora tions have taken steps to develop community relations activities as the benefit of such activities has become more apparent. More than 53 percent of the companies included in the sur vey say that community relations is pak of their corporate strategic plan. “More firms are seeing the (hrect value-added that community rela tions can provide flams in their quest to become an employer of choice,” says Rochlin. The increase in community rela tions support is consistent with a 5 percent increase in corporate giving for the same period, according to the most recent figures in Giving USA. When it comes to measuring the performance of corporate managers. Look for SURVEY, page 15 Corporate notebook By Barbara Solow Crunching the numbers Corporate giving was up overall last year, but down as a percentage of company pre-tax income. Giving by U.S. corporations rose by 7.5 percent in 1995 to $7.4 bilhon, according to “Giving USA 1996,” the annual survey by the American Association of Fund Raising Counsel’s Trust for Philanthropy That amount was 1.2 percent of pre-tax Income, compared to 1.3 per cent of company income in 1994. Corporate ^s to charity repre sented 5.1 percent of total giving, which reached $143.85 bilhon in 1995. Most corporate doUars went to educa tion (33.5 percent) and health and human services (25.3 percent). The “Giving USA” survey has become a trusted resource for researchers, poUcymakers and non profit leaders. But because the giving figures are estimates, they are revised each year as new data comes in - sometimes by hhUons of doUars. In fact, the estimates for corpo rate giving in 1994 were revised upwards to include giving by growing U.S. service industries. Originally, “Giving USA’ had reported only a 1 percent increase in corporate giving in 1994, but that was revised to show that companies actuahy gave 10 per cent more than in 1993. Copies of this year’s survey are available for $49.95 plus shipping and handling. Call (800) 462-2372. Workshop focuses on media relations 'The biggest concern corporate giving officials have about working with the media is “how do we do it?,” says PhiUip Fleming, director of com munity projects for Carolina Power & Light Co. in Ralei^. Fleming, a former newspaper and television reporter, hosted a work shop on the topic at a recent Califomia conference sponsored by the Center for Corporate Community Relations. This is the second time he has led media workshops for the Boston-based center. At the California gathering, par ticipants shared experiences in deal ing with the media and revealed a number of misconceptions about how to handle reporters, Fleming says. “Many people seem to feel that if they don’t make a comment, the press is not going to run a story But that’s far away from the truth. My own thou^ts are that if you can’t com ment at one time, be honest with the press and develop some statement that you can comment on. If you miss the first deadline, keep working.” To reach the center call (617) 552- 4545 or on the World Wide Web, go to: http:www.bc.edu/bc_org/avp/acav p/cccr/ Dangerous giving habits Do corporations often give to charities that are working against their business interests? A new book pubUshed by The Capital Research Center in Washington says, “yes.” In “Patterns of Corporate Philanthropy: Giving in the Clinton Era,” authors Austin Fulk and Stuart Nolan assert that many corporations are giving to causes that clash with their company philosophy. For example, Atlantic Richfield and Chevron give to the National Audubon Society, the book says. The nonprofit group opposes exploration for oil in Alaska’s Arctic National Wildlife Refuge - an area the two oil companies would like to develop. Another example is Exxon’s $5,000-a-year donation to the Environmental Law Institute. The institute helped develop the legal case against Exxon after the Valdez oil spill in Alaska. Despite the small amounts of the gifts involved, the authors say such practices work against the philan thropic goals of many companies. The Capital Research Center is at (202) 393-2600. BRIEFLY Business groups to address AIDS The National AIDS Fund is holding a forum prior to the opening of this month's International AIDS Conference in Vancouver. The forum is designed to educate business leaders about the economic impact of the AIDS pandemic, including rising health insur ance costs, lower employee productivity and devastation among global trading part ners where the virus is spreading. The Washington- based National AIDS Fund recently merged with the National Leadership Coalition on AIDS - a group that had focused on AIDS prevention in the workplace. Call (202) 408-4848. Partnership saves river data station A cost-sharing agreement between Alcoa/Yadkin Inc. and Carolina Power & Light Co. in Raleigh has reopened a water quality research sta tion on the Yadkin River. The two companies will pay for costs of operating the station, which had beeen closed because of federal cutbacks. Allstate invests in Durham YMCA Allstate Insurance Co. of Illinois has invested $9 mil lion in a proposed new downtown YMCA community center in Durham. Allstate bought bonds from the YMCA, which is planning to begin building a new facility - this month on a three-acre site donated by the city and county. UNC-Charlotte receives $3 million Irwin Belk, retired executive of Belk Stores Group, has donated $3 million to the University of North Carolina at Charlotte for endowed chairs in health promotion, kinesiology and biology and to support athletic scholar ships. The scholarship fund is named in honor of Belk's wife, Carol Grotnes Belk. Black achievers fund begins The Garner Road Family YMCA in Raleigh has kicked off its annual Black Achievers Program campaign with a goal of $56,000. The pro gram provides mentoring for more than 100 black teenagers, and scholarships for graduating seniors.