Published January 25th, 2017
Moraga Education Foundation Celebrates 35 Years of Unwavering Community Support
By Sophie Braccini
Original MEF board members pose during a recent event: From left, Sandy Ruliffson, Marna Eyring, Fred Weil, Barby Eppinger, Lee Marona, Peggy Cabaniss, Judith Glickman, Bill Jasper, Stephany Gooch and Sam Sperry. Not pictured: Jack Balousek, Pat Elam, Joan Evans, David Goodman, Carol MacNulty and Bill Osborne. Photo provided
It took some vision and creativity for a group of 15 Moraga residents 35 years ago to form the Moraga Education Foundation. Their goal was to supplement declining funding for schools. MEF started with a modest goal for their first campaign - $50,000.
Thirty-five years later MEF is on its way to raising $2.2 million for the Moraga School District and Campolindo High School. A gala on March 11 will celebrate past and future achievements and raise funds for MEF's endowment.
Peggy Cabaniss remembers the growing discontent over schools' funding in the late 1970s when she was serving on the MSD school board. Sam Sperry explains that Proposition 13 had frozen the percentage of property tax that Moraga would ever get to a very low level, and adding to this shortcoming, Moraga was never eligible to get money that was directed to disadvantaged school districts. The desire grew in some Moraga residents to look for a source of revenue that would be independent of the state funding and property taxes revenues. "We had to constantly cut back programs, teachers were getting frustrated because we could not get them any raises and they were thinking that the board was being mean," remembers Cabaniss. "We were not mean, we had no money!"
The frustrated parents heard about a school district in Marin County and one in Piedmont that had started foundations to supplement state funding. Fred Weil, a Moraga lawyer and father, got information from both. They had competing funding models, one drew from membership dues, and the other on fundraising. The first MEF volunteers decided on the latter, thinking there was more potential for growth there.
The first year 15 people joined the MEF board. Sperry said he put himself on the board due to his prior involvement at Rheem School and to secure school buses program.Cabaniss represented the school board, Ruth Habbot, a teacher, was invited to be on the board, as well as Judy Glickman, the MSD superintendent at the time who, according to the former board members, was of great help and support. The legal structure was established in December of 1981. The first campaign started in the spring of 1982 with a phone-a-thon and a lofty goal of $50,000.
"One problem we had was that retired people felt that they had already put their children through school, and they did not have the means or the inclination to contribute to MEF," recalls former board member Joan Evans. Sperry added that it took a while for these people to realize that they were still MSD stakeholders as the value of their homes were tightly related to the value of the schools. Sperry credits the real estate professionals for joining MEF in carrying that message.
Today's MEF president Heather Davis reports that 27 percent of all donors do not have kids in the schools - community members represent 24 percent and business and civic sponsors represent 3.3 percent of donations. The bulk of donors remain the residents who have children in schools with 73 percent of all contributions. She adds that about 58 percent of parents give to MEF.
The group was very pleased and surprise to reach their goal for the first campaign. The objective for the 1982/83 school year grew significantly to $186,000. Davis adds that MEF today is responding to the same political and economic conditions that motivated the founders 35 years ago, and that communities - like Moraga and Lafayette - are getting together to support the classes and programs funded by MEF that have become essentials in all the schools.
MEF's goal this year is to raise $2.2 million. The trend of increase in funding made a significant jump in the early 2000s when MEF funding increased from $1 to $2 million between 2007 and 2013. Today MEF funds teaching positions - art, music, PE, and 15 class sections in high school, as well as programs such as writing programs, teacher aids, technology instructors, tutors, counseling and several grants. Davis is adamant that MEF does not decide how the money is used; this decision is made by the school boards (MSD or Acalanes Union High School District). As the foundation tag line says, MEF serves every student, every day.
The celebration gala will be held at the Claremont Hotel. MEF expects 360 residents to join in the dinner, dancing, and live and silent auctions. The proceeds will contribute to the MEF endowment that has recently reached the half a million dollars level. The $150 tickets for the gala "Under the City Lights" are on sale on the website www.MEF35th.com.






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