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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: Barbara Camacho, YNPN Advisory Board Member,
510/681-7899, BarbaraC@compasspoint.org
SAN FRANCISCO MAYOR NAMES NOVEMBER 9TH YOUNG NONPROFIT
PROFESSIONALS DAY
Three Bay Area Young Nonprofit Professionals Honored
for Service by YNPN:
Curt Yagi, Gwyneth Borden, Lisa Stringer
San Francisco, CA - November 7, 2006 - Young
Nonprofit Professionals Network (YNPN) is proud to announce
that Mayor Gavin Newsom of San Francisco has named Thursday,
November 9, 2006, Young Nonprofit Professionals Day.
To recognize the importance of the strong and growing
young nonprofit community in the Bay Area, YNPN San
Francisco Bay Area will honor three highly effective
nonprofit leaders on that day.
The evening celebration will also honor the 9th Anniversary
of YNPN. YNPN is a national organization that promotes
an efficient, viable and inclusive nonprofit sector
that supports the growth, learning and development of
young professionals. Members receive special access
to enhanced professional development opportunities and
financial discounts.
The Honorees will receive certificates of recognition
signed by the Mayor of San Francisco and presented by
a YNPN Board Member and a Jossey-Bass book bundle of
5 nonprofit related books.
Event Details
What: YNPN 9th Anniversary Celebration and Awards
Ceremony
When: Thursday, November 9, 2006 - 6pm - 9pm
Where: Mr. Smiths - 34 Seventh Street, SF, CA 94103
(between Mission and Market St)
Tickets: $10 for Members / $15 for Non-Members / $40
to purchase or renew Membership
Tickets available for purchase online at
http://ynpn.org/sfba/sfba-events/index.asp#anniversary
until noon Nov 9th, or at the door.
Honorees
Young Executive Director of the Year: Curt Yagi,
Executive Director of Real Options for City Kids (ROCK)
Curt Yagi is Executive Director of ROCK, an organization
that was founded in September 1994 in response to the
needs within San Francisco for enhanced public education
programs and positive after school activities. ROCK
serves children from Visitacion Valley, a community
of children who are posed with countless social and
economic challenges, where many come from single parent
homes and live in one of the community's four public
housing developments. Since 1998, Curt Yagi has dedicated
himself to this low income, under-served community of
San Francisco. Initially, when ROCK was at its infancy,
Curt began as a volunteer while working his corporate
consulting job. After becoming more and more involved,
Curt gave up his successful corporate job to dedicate
himself full time to the organization, becoming Executive
Director in 2003. Since that time, Curt has utilized
his corporate experience to help create a professional
and sustainable organization. Over the past three years,
he has increased ROCK's budget by over 50%, diversified
the organization's funding sources by establishing relationships
in the corporate sector as well as with high-worth individuals.
This past year, Curt was accepted to both LeaderSpring,
a two-year, on-the-job leadership training program for
nonprofit Executive Directors in the San Francisco Bay
Area, and the prestigious Leadership San Francisco,
a one-year program dedicated to educating and developing
community trustees who will make a significant contribution
to strengthen and transform the community. For his participation
in Leadership San Francisco, Curt was the sole recipient
of a scholarship offered by the Evelyn and Walter Haas
Jr. fund.
Young Board Member of the Year: Gwyneth Borden,
Board Member of SPUR (San Francisco Planning and Urban
Research)
Gwyneth Borden is the Manager of Corporate Community
Relations Northwestern United States for IBM and manages
the philanthropic and volunteer activities focusing
on preK-12 education, adult literacy and workforce development.
Prior to IBM, Gwyneth was the director of government
relations for the San Francisco Chamber of Commerce,
leading advocacy and public policy efforts at the local,
state and federal levels. Before joining the Chamber,
Gwyneth was a legislative aide to San Francisco Mayor
Gavin Newsom, when he was on the Board of Supervisors.
Other positions she has held include project manager,
GCA Strategies, Inc., project assistant, Rockefeller
Brothers Fund's Project on World Security and staff
assistant, U.S. Senator Barbara Boxer's office. Gwyneth
is involved in a number of civic and philanthropic organizations.
Gwyneth serves on the board of Emerge - Women Leaders
for a Democratic Future, the San Francisco Art Institute's
InSight and the San Francisco Planning and Urban Research
Association (SPUR) where she co-founded the Young Urbanists,
a new auxiliary group for SPUR. Additionally, Gwyneth
is on the California State Superintendent's Technology
Working Group and serves on the steering committee for
the Commonwealth Club of California's Voices of Reform
Project. Gwyneth holds a BA in policy studies from Dickinson
College.
Young Nonprofit Professional of the Year: Lisa Stringer,
Skills Center Director, Episcopal Community Services
Lisa Stringer is the director of the Skills Center,
an education and vocational program within Episcopal
Community Services (ECS). This program serves approximately
1,300 adult students each year with personal problems,
mental health issues, homelessness, learning disabilities,
and debilitating low self-confidence. When Lisa started
at the Skills Center as a teacher eight years ago there
was one class with all levels of students. Lisa has
worked to grow the Skills Center and has served as the
director for the past five years. The program now has
basic and secondary literacy classes, life skills classes,
computer classes, GED classes, a cooking program, and
a job placement component for people in homeless shelters.
Instead of working to fix a problem, the aim of the
Skills Center is to help people set goals, work to earn
their education, find their vocation, find a job, and
to feel success and self-confidence for possibly the
first time is their lives. Lisa feels privileged to
have the opportunity to be a part of other people's
self-discovery. She holds a bachelor's degree in sociology.
About the Young Nonprofit Professionals Network (YNPN)
The Young Nonprofit Professionals Network engages and
supports future nonprofit and community leaders through
professional development, networking, and social opportunities
designed for young people involved in the Bay Area's
nonprofit community. Formed in July 1997 as a project
of CompassPoint Nonprofit Services (formerly the Support
Center), YNPN San Francisco Bay Area aims to provide
a peer network to Bay Area's young nonprofit professionals.
Though YNPN welcomes people of all ages, most of its
members are in their 20s and 30s or are transitioning
into the nonprofit sector.
Entirely volunteer led and coordinated, YNPN is a national
organization that has grown tremendously over the past
eight years and has become an active voice for young
nonprofit leaders in the Bay Area. Today YNPN provides
a wide-variety of services including an e-mail list
where more than 1,200 community participants exchange
information and referrals, learn about special events
and workshops, post and receive job announcements, and
share ideas on issues facing the sector; an interactive
website linking the nonprofit community to information
and resources; monthly networking social hours held
at various locations throughout the Bay Area; and access
to a wide range of career development workshops and
panels for its members. The newly launched membership
program provides paying members with special access
to enhanced professional development opportunities and
financial discounts. By fostering discussion, networking,
and information-sharing, YNPN creates a supportive atmosphere
for members to make valuable connections.
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