The Community Foundation - Rochester Area The Community Foundation

Voices of change 

cat•a•lyst, n. a person or thing that precipitates an event or change

Joe U. Posner, one of Rochester Area Community Foundation’s founders, was that kind of person. When he talked about charitable giving and its impact, he reminded people that only concerned citizens, by donations of time and money, could actually solve social problems.

Former Joe U. Founders Award RecipientsThe philanthropists pictured at right are some of our community’s best examples of catalysts for community change. For that reason, they and a handful of others were honored with our Joe U. Posner Founders Award over the years.

For them, playing a role in making positive changes in our community is just what they have always done and continue to do. “Being charitable is significant to being a complete person,” says Bruce B. Bates. But fitting philanthropy into your life isn’t always easy. “It takes real courage to sit down and determine what is of value and what kind of philanthropy will guide the future of both parents and children,” say Sally and Benn Forsyth.

The key to truly making a difference in our community lies within each of us. Joe Briggs believes that this quality is absorbed by a person over time. “Those who reject this trait are missing a great deal of satisfaction — even joy — from helping others,” he says. Don’t miss out. Join us and the philanthropists featured below in becoming catalysts for community change.

Jerry Fisher and Joyce DeHaan plan for the future
of our community
Paul and Kelly Halsch reach out to help
Bob and Catherine “Katie” Sykes encourage their children to give

Bob and Catherine "Katie" SykesBob and Katie Sykes began their relationship with the Community Foundation in 1983, when they donated stock in Sykes Datatronics and created a donor advised fund in their names.

Over the next 20-plus years, this Brighton couple quietly made regular donations to their college alma maters — Bucknell University, Harvard Business School and Wheelock College — and more than two dozen local organizations.

Community giving came naturally to the Sykes, with Bob and Katie seeing first-hand its impact through the work of their fathers.  Both were active in The Community Chest, forerunner of United Way of Greater Rochester. Bob’s father, Wadsworth Sykes, collected contributions from friends, neighbors and business associates. Katie’s father, Thomas Jean Hargrave, led the campaign in the late 1940s.

In 2009, the Sykes giving philosophy changed direction. The couple, married for 59 years, closed their fund and diverted the balance into four new donor advised funds, one for each of their adult children and their spouses.

For Bob, this move was “a foolproof way to make sure my family keeps giving when I’m gone.” 

The funds, which were a total surprise to the Sykes children — Kate Massie, Peter, Bill and David — came with no strings attached. Bob didn’t want to influence their thinking about how to distribute money from their new funds.  Katie says she isn’t asking a lot of questions, but “I’m curious to know what they support.”

David, who lives in Pittsford, embraced the new fund as “a good way to continue on what my parents had been doing already.”  He was also excited to learn that this vehicle for charitable giving existed.

Kate, the oldest who lives next door to her parents in Brighton, says that her parents’ giving has been a very personal endeavor. Aside from seeing their names in event programs or annual reports acknowledging a gift or sponsorship, she has no idea what they have supported over the years.

Bob admits that he hasn’t discussed charitable giving with his children or grandchildren, although he keeps a master list of 30 to 40 organizations of projects he has supported.

She views this new fund as a “gift” that will help her and her husband and their four children are more focused and thoughtful in their approach to giving. But that can have ripple effects. “There are a lot of great areas here that have needs and focused giving would close other things off,” she says.

The needs in the community are very evident and Bill Sykes, who lives in Penfield, says it won’t be difficult to “find things worthwhile to support.” After all, his two children have been doing just that with their own money for quite awhile.

For the past 10 years, his now-teenage children have been setting aside 25 percent of their allowance for charity. Every couple of months, after enough money has accumulated, they decide where they want their money to go.

“Sometimes it’s something on their minds — like cancer (maybe a friend or friend’s family has been affected) or leukemia or Haiti (or other national or international disasters). … It’s whatever gets their attention.”

For David, his parent’s gesture prompted him to also think about the future. “I could be doing the same thing for myself and my children.” The giving, he says, “should go on and on.”

Now the Sykes tradition of generosity in our community will be an enduring legacy.

The physicians of Elizabeth Wende
Breast Care, LLC create a fund
NextGen Rochester members discover the joy of giving