Senior center in the black
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Deirdre Newman
When Aviva Goelman took over as director of the Costa Mesa Senior
Center, it was spending $180,000 more a year than it brought in.
That was three and a half years ago.
Today, the senior center is in the black, expecting to make a net
profit of $9,000 for the second year in a row.
The nonprofit was able to erase its deficit in various ways. Chief
among them was the adoption of a business-like philosophy.
“We took a business management approach,” said Dell Heintz,
president of the center’s board of directors. “Aviva, myself and the
board said we need to provide certain programs, goals and services to
our clients. We need to grow our revenues and manage expenses, just
like other companies.”
Most senior centers are dependent on the cities where they are
housed, Heintz said. Not so for the Costa Mesa Senior Center.
When the original board members established the senior center in
1992, they set it up so the city would support it over its first five
years and then it would be self-supporting.
That didn’t quite happen, so the city renewed its contract for
another five years.
Now the senior center has a year-to-year contract with the city
but only gets one-third of its funds that way. When Heintz joined the
board in 1996, he introduced a fiscally conservative approach.
“When I came on board, I said, ‘I don’t run my business at a loss.
I have to insist we’re at least cash-flow neutral or hopefully have a
little profit,’” Heintz said. “We stopped the bleeding.”
One way the center was able to manage its expenses was to
negotiate with city officials to take advantage of the rates they get
for services such as plumbing and janitorial. The city also took over
more management of senior center affairs, including the maintenance
of the landscaping and repair of heating and air conditioning units.
Goelman was so adept at negotiation that she also got the city to
re-carpet the entire building -- something the previous eight
directors couldn’t get, Heintz said.
“Ideas are just ideas, but people who can get the job done should
get the credit,” Heintz said of Goelman.
Goelman and members of the board also realized that if they were
going to act more like a business, they needed the hallmark of a
business -- a plan. Using her contacts, Goelman got an MBA student at
Claremont College’s Peter F. Drucker Graduate School of Management to
create a business plan for the center for his thesis.
“So we have specific qualitative and quantitative data for Costa
Mesa seniors and want to implement it so we can offer goods and
services to today’s post-Depression seniors, as well as a plan for
the baby boomers,” she said.
Goelman and board members hope the plan will alleviate any
trepidation businesses might have about donating to the center.
“Most corporations don’t want to give if they don’t know what the
money will be used for,” Goelman said.
The business plan suggests the center do ongoing market research
on baby boomers generally and Costa Mesa baby boomers specifically.
Goelman and the board will consider hiring a professional market
research firm at their board meeting tonight.
Goelman’s aggressive fundraising has also paid off, as she has
brought in more revenue that way than her predecessors, Heintz said.
The selection of new board members is also done with an eye toward
staying in the black, since wealth is one of the three criteria,
Heintz said. Board member Dr. Gwyn Parry has been an especially
generous benefactor, Goelman said. On behalf of the Hoag Memorial
Presbyterian Department of Community Medicine, he has donated $80,000
for a bus and bus driver, a $10,000 grant so the hours the center
nurse works can be extended and various amounts for a grant writer.
The center also benefited financially from the first bequest it
has ever received. The center received a $650,000 bequest from the
estate of Albert Dixon at the end of December. In addition, it will
receive a smaller amount when his estate closes, Goelman said. The
board will be discussing how to invest the bequest at its meeting
tonight.
The bequest represents the personal attachment Dixon felt toward
the center, Goelman said.
“I attribute that to our relation with Albert,” she said. “The
environment made him comfortable enough that he left half of his
considerable savings.”
When news of the bequest spread through the Senior Center, it
inspired at least one patron to change his will to include the
center, Goelman said.
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