Annual Report for the fiscal year ended September 30, 2018
Mission Statement
Realizing the healthcare crisis in our country, the Board of Washington Square Health Foundation, Inc. recognizes that no one foundation can meet all the challenges of the healthcare environment. However, the Foundation has developed a program of grant making which is designed to be both a catalyst and guide for other foundations and grant making organizations in meeting the various needs of the Chicagoland healthcare community.
The Washington Square Health Foundation, Inc. grants funds in order to promote and maintain access to adequate healthcare for all people in the Chicagoland area regardless of race, sex, creed or financial need. The Foundation meets this goal through its grants for medical and nursing education, medical research and direct healthcare services.
As a guide to other foundations and other service providers and as a part of the Board’s stewardship of charitable funds, the Washington Square Health Foundation, Inc. has developed a grant evaluation system to ensure that the objectives of various projects are carried out in the manner prescribed by the approved grant.
The Foundation wishes to impress on the philanthropic community that the careful evaluation of the outcomes of grant projects is as important as the appropriate selection of grant recipients.
Board Chair’s Message
WSHF Board Chair’s 2019 Newsletter
A Three Legged Stool
It’s been said that Americans consider their health care like a three legged stool. The legs are represented by high quality, ready access and affordable services. Let’s propose this model to be the ideal compared to the existing state of health care. Quality can vary across providers or regions resulting in uneven quality of care and outcomes. Access to care may be challenging from scheduling patient appointments to timeliness of therapies and treatments. Many people find health care coverage to be unaffordable with high deductibles, co-payments and insurance premiums.
Health care has proven to be an essential portion of our political environment. Pundits attribute the Democratic party’s majority in the US House of Representatives after the 2018 mid-term elections to concerns about health care. It appears that health care will remain a critical factor in the upcoming 2020 elections. So what’s being proposed by potential candidates to repair the broken three legged stool.
Republicans have been attacking President Obama’s signature legislative achievement, the Affordable Care Act (ACA) of 2010. Attempts by Congress to “repeal and replace” the ACA have largely failed. Instead, the Trump administration and Republican majorities in Congress and at the state level have been reversing portions of the ACA such as the individual mandate. Republican state attorneys general have been bring law suits to invalidate components of the ACA. Last year, a federal judge in Texas found the entire ACA to be unconstitutional based on the repeal of the required mandates. While that judgement has been stayed or delayed pending further opinions by higher courts, the pressing concern is that if indeed the ACA is struck down, millions of people will lose their health insurance. To date, there is no remedy to provide alternative coverage.
On the Democratic side, there have a wide array of proposals from incrementally addressing the gaps in the ACA to “Medicare for all.” It seems that each presidential candidate has a scheme to improve health care. In my opinion, there simply is insufficient information about the candidates’ proposals to make an informed judgment. Questions range from how to pay for health care to the impact of eliminating the private insurance market? How will equitable access to care and quality be assured? These will be essential concerns that candidates will need to clearly address and articulate their policy positions beyond slogans and “feel good” statements.
In the end, do we need to reconsider the three legged stool model? Will we always have unequal access to quality, efficient, effective and affordable health care. And will the model be constantly changing based on which political party in in control. Is the goal of a stable health care system not a reasonable one in view of our deeply divided country?
William N. Werner, M.D., M.P.H., F.A.C.P.
Board Chair
Statement of Activities
Year ended September 30, 2018 | ||
Grants & Program Related Investment | $646,779 | |
Estimated Administrative Expense (Non-Charitable Expense) | $75,872 | |
Professional Legal and Accounting Fees | $42,585 | |
Provision for federal excise tax | $12,000 | |
Total Assets | $19,768,524 | |
The official and complete audit as certified by Crowe Horwath LLP.![]() |
Fiscal Year 2017-2018 Grant Recipients
- A Silver Lining Foundation
- Access Community Health Network
- Addison Township Food Pantry
- Advocate Charitable Foundation
- Alexian Brothers Bonaventure House
- Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children’s Hospital of Chicago
- Breakthrough Urban Ministries
- Chicago Chesed Fund
- Chicago Hearing Society
- Chicago Women’s Health Center
- City of Hope
- CJE SeniorLife
- CommunityHealth, NFP
- Council on Foundations
- Covenant World Relief
- Forefront
- Gilda’s Club Chicago
- Goldie’s Place
- Grantmakers in Health
- Health and Medicine Policy Research Group
- Heartland Alliance
- Howard Brown Health Center
- Illinois Association of Free & Charitable Clinics, Inc.
- Jackson Hole Children’s Museum
- JourneyCare
- Keshet
- La Rabida Children’s Hospital
- Libenu Foundation
- Meals on Wheels
- Mercy Housing Lakefront
- Mobile C.A.R.E. Foundation
- Mount Sinai Hospital and Medical Center
- North Park Friendship Center
- North Park University
- Northwestern
- Project Seed of Suburban Chicago, Inc.
- Ray Graham Association for People with Disabilities
- Roseland Community Medical Center
- Second Sense
- Shirley Ryan AbilityLab
- Sisters Place, Inc
- Sonoma Ecology Center
- St. John’s Episcopal Church
- St. John’s Hospital
- St. Leonard’s House
- Swedish Covenant Hospital
- Team Spirit Institute
- The Children’s Clinic
- The Kedzie Center
- The Night Ministry
- Torah Academy of Buffalo Grove
- Trinity Episcopal Church
- Wood Dale Community United Methodist Church