PfS pursues funding options

Published 5:15 pm Tuesday, October 22, 2013

While it’s operating on reserves, the Partnership for the Sounds is taking a holistic approach to finding funds to replace the state money it lost this summer.

“We’re in the process of developing a major fundraising strategy. We pretty much have the strategy in place, the plan in place,” said Jackie Peoples Woolard, executive director of PfS.”Now we are going about methodically to implement it. You can lose funding in a snap of the finger, but you can’t create funding with that same snap. It’s a real process. The state is trying to develop the best plan for the Partnership and its facilities and go about securing our immediate stability and our long-range stability as well.”

The Partnership is a private nonprofit that operates the North Carolina Estuarium in Washington, the Roanoke/Cashie River Center in Windsor and the Columbia Theater Cultural Center and Tyrrell County Visitors Center in Columbia. In addition, PfS works with Hyde County groups, local governments, schools and a variety of organizations throughout the Albemarle-Pamlico peninsula to promote activities, education and tourism related to the area’s natural resources and cultural heritage.

PfS is preparing to launch fundraising initiatives in each community where it has a facility, with each initiative customized for the facility it is targeting, Woolard said.

“We will be doing fundraising specifically for the Estuarium, specifically for our facility in Windsor, specifically for the Columbia theater — that sort of thing. We are trying to position ourselves for future legislative sessions. It’s pretty much a holistic approach for having to include it all,” Woolard said.

Since its founding in 1993, the Partnership had received an appropriation from the state that helped sustain 15 full-time and over 15 part-time jobs in four counties (Beaufort, Bertie, Hyde and Tyrrell) that have struggled economically for generations.

When the state’s budget was approved earlier this year, the nonprofit lost $391,000 in state funds to help pay for its operations. The nonprofit received $58,000 in state funds for the current fiscal year to only operate the Estuarium. That amount covers only about one-fifth of annual operating costs for that facility.

“We’ve done some more trimming of staff, but we’re trying very hard to not let the facilities themselves be impacted in terms of operating hours. Specifically at the Estuarium, the hours have not changed,” Woolard noted.

 

About Mike Voss

Mike Voss is the contributing editor at the Washington Daily News. He has a daughter and four grandchildren. Except for nearly six years he worked at the Free Lance-Star in Fredericksburg, Va., in the early to mid-1990s, he has been at the Daily News since April 1986.
Journalism awards:
• Pulitzer Prize for Meritorious Public Service, 1990.
• Society of Professional Journalists: Sigma Delta Chi Award, Bronze Medallion.
• Associated Press Managing Editors’ Public Service Award.
• Investigative Reporters & Editors’ Award.
• North Carolina Press Association, First Place, Public Service Award, 1989.
• North Carolina Press Association, Second Place, Investigative Reporting, 1990.
All those were for the articles he and Betty Gray wrote about the city’s contaminated water system in 1989-1990.
• North Carolina Press Association, First Place, Investigative Reporting, 1991.
• North Carolina Press Association, Third Place, General News Reporting, 2005.
• North Carolina Press Association, Second Place, Lighter Columns, 2006.
Recently learned he will receive another award.
• North Carolina Press Association, First Place, Lighter Columns, 2010.
4. Lectured at or served on seminar panels at journalism schools at UNC-Chapel Hill, University of Maryland, Columbia University, Mary Washington University and Francis Marion University.

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