BCBusiness

August 2015 The Sharing Game

With a mission to inform, empower, celebrate and advocate for British Columbia's current and aspiring business leaders, BCBusiness go behind the headlines and bring readers face to face with the key issues and people driving business in B.C.

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S p e c i a l F e a t u r e C R E A T E A L E G A C Y of Prostate Cancer Canada. This national foundation also contributes to prevention campaigns. David Walker, vice president of the Western Canada ofice, gives credit to the ongoing support of legacy donors for making signiicant gains. "These thoughtful major gifts are helping to arrest the mortality rate and signiicantly stop the disease," he says. "We're seeing 2,400 more dads, uncles, sons and grandfathers alive today than 20 years ago, because of the advance of research and also growing awareness among men about getting a PSA test done." Changing Lives Donors to the Children's Wish Foundation of Canada also feel a sense of connection. The average cost of granting a wish to a seriously ill child is $10,000, and so donors know exactly what their gift is accomplishing. "A donor can change a child's life," says Jennifer Petersen, director of the British Columbia & Yukon Chapter. "It's easy for a donor to understand the power of a wish, and there's great joy in it." Legacy gifts have allowed the organization to continue offering a ive-year window to any child whose wish is approved. This window is a unique feature of the Children's Wish Foundation, and a crucial part of the wish-granting process. Some children are undergoing chemotherapy or other treatment and are not stable enough to travel or enjoy whatever experience they have chosen, so this flexibility allows them to fulill their wish. The Foundation is now expanding its eligibility criteria and granting wishes to children who have serious genetic and neurological illnesses. "We are changing the world of wish granting and we need the support to help us along the path," says Petersen. "We anticipate 200 new children over the next 18 months, and we are working hard to ind the funds to grant wishes to these kids." Sustaining Growth Any organization envisioning growth must be able to count on long-term support. The Ronald McDonald House of British Columbia (RMHBC) recently celebrated the irst anniversary of two new facilities, one on the grounds of BC Children's Hospital and another in the new wing of Surrey Memorial Hospital. These residences are for families who must travel from a distance for treatments for their children. Richard Pass, CEO of the RMHBC, says that the annual operational budget has grown from about $900,000 to $2.6 million. "Now that the new houses are built, everything that we're doing is about raising funds to continue to support families in new and better ways," he says. "Legacy gifts provide that sustainability for a long time." The Ronald McDonald House is an independently owned and operated local

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