St. Paul’s Seeking Angels

by Al Raymond, The Messenger, July/August 2006

Since Easter 2006, a sub-committee, chaired by Senior Warden, Pat Micklow, of the Sesquicentennial Committee has been conducting a “Silent” Campaign to solicit pledges for a Capital Funds Drive. As of this writing in late June, almost $100,000 in pledges has been raised from members of the Vestry and the Sesquicentennial Committee. This has been Phase I of the fund-drive.

Phase II, to solicit other members of the congregation, persons with past connections to St. Paul’s, and foundations interested in supporting programs such as those included in St. Paul’s outreach and congregational development, will be launched in early July and concluded by the anniversary celebration on August 20. The campaign will feature personal solicitation using materials prepared by the fund drive committee. The goal is to raise $300,000 over a three-year period ending in Easter 2009.

Background By 2001, it became evident that the church roof at St. Paul’s needed to be repaired or replaced, since it was over one hundred years old and was leaking. It was obvious it had to be fixed. The question was: “How to fund the $100,000 required?” A “Blue Ribbon Committee” was formed to explore answers to this question.

The Committee considered that the congregation had recently completed two fund-raising drives totaling one and a half million dollars and spanning fifteen years, to replace the Guild Hall and restore the stained glass windows. These were in addition to the annual pledge drives. The Committee concluded that the congregation needed a break in capital fundraising and that the roof repair be funded by a loan from Wells Fargo Bank, with our trust endowments of approximately three-quarters of a million dollars as collateral. The Committee observed that the Sesquicentennial Celebration of the incorporation of St. Paul’s Church in 2006 would energize a campaign to raise monies to repair the roof. So a loan was arranged, with interest-only payments of about $800 per month.

The Vestry has decided the time has come to retire this loan and end the drain on our cash flow. It has recognized that the celebration of the sesquicentennial not only provides the energy to do this, but also provides the opportunity to implement the motto of the celebration: “ Remember, Rejoice, and Renew.”

The Vestry believes that we are not just about bricks and mortar, but also what we do with each other as a congregation and the outside world.

So the Vestry has established the following goal and purposes for a capital fundraising campaign to celebrate our Sesquicentennial Anniversary:

To raise $300,000 to pay off the roof loan and to fund in-house and out-reach programs into perpetuity. If expenditures are restricted to no more than 5% of the endowment’s assets each year, excess earnings (dividends, interest, and capital gains) are reinvested to compensate for inflation and recessions in future years and to grow the endowment.

Purposes