SUPPORTING NATURE IN TIPP CITY

SUPPORTING NATURE IN TIPP CITY

If you would like to support the dreams of Roger Presley and Warren Miltenberger to keep nature in Tipp City as accessible as possible, please consider a gift to the Warren E. Miltenberger Parkland Fund.

Caring for our natural areas is the role of one Tipp City Foundation endowment fund.  The Warren E. Miltenberger Parkland Fund, founded in 2008, annually partners with the City of Tipp City’s work in the out-of-doors through the upkeep, maintenance, and preservation of public parkland and natural areas.

Recently, grants from this fund have included projects to…
Expand the walking path around City Park with a 180’ addition
Quench the thirst of folks on the go (and their 4-legged pals) by purchasing pet-friendly drinking fountains in Kyle & Canal Lock Parks
Build the Canal Lock Park pavilion and equip it with a picnic table, grill and bike rack
Support equestrian trails with the purchase of an information kiosk, mounting block, hitching rail and other amenities for riders
The Parks Department relies on this partnership to fill in financial gaps for amenities sometimes not in the budget. The Roger Presley Nature Trail is a project the City plans to turn to the Foundation for next.

To support the Warren E. Miltenberger Parkland Fund or learn how the Tipp City Foundation impacts the Tipp City and Bethel communities, please visit www.tippfoundation.org.

STAY CONNECTED
We’d love to stay in touch. Stay connected with the Tipp City Foundation by: Following us on Facebook or IInstagram
Visiting our Website
Sending us an Email

THANK YOU TO OUR SPONSORS
All marketing activities of the Foundation is 100% underwritten by generous sponsors. Please contact us at info@tippfoundation.org for information on how your business or organization can become our partner in philanthropy. 

  • Silver Sponsor – Thrivent Financial (Matt Buehrer)
  • Bronze Sponsors – Advanced Machinery Companies; Dunaway Family Foundation; Dungan & LeFevre; Ever-Green Turf & Landscape; Gibson Law Offices; Monroe Federal Savings and Loan; New Carlisle Federal Savings Bank; Pickrel, Schaeffer and Ebeling; Unity National Bank
  • Friend Sponsors – Captor Corp.; Edward Jones (Neil Nehring); Frings & Bayliff Funeral Home; Minster Bank; RSM US; Turnstone Financial; US Bank

GOOD NEWS IS WORTH SHARING
Use the links below to share the TIPPing Point with friends and neighbors. Not a subscriber? Sign up here! If there is something you would like to see in future installments, please email news@tippfoundation.org. Your input is welcome and appreciated!

EMOTIONAL WELLBEING CONTINUES TO ATTRACT GRANTS

EMOTIONAL WELLBEING CONTINUES TO ATTRACT GRANTS

We have a new look! Thanks to Rob Bertke at Bertke Creative for updating our website and to The Troy Foundation for making online donations to the Tipp City Foundation effortless. Check it out here!

For the second straight quarter, grant requests presented to the Tipp City Foundation weighted towards supporting pressing emotional and behavioral health issues.  Two of the grant awards – Hope House and Hope Squad – are new initiatives to the Foundation. As is often the case, the needs within the community outweigh the available dollars to award.

Some of the grant awards listed represent urgent social issues to our region. Opioid addiction services and teen suicide prevention could not be more critical to a healthy community. The Foundation is proud to support those on the front lines addressing these crises.

Ultimately, six organizations were chosen to receive eight awards totaling $17.890.00. The following is a list of recipients, award levels and the impact grants will make.

Bethel Local Schools, $3,850.00, helps send 70 students to Nashville in Spring 2020 to participate in the Nashville Heritage Festival. The visit includes the opportunity to participate in a masterclass with musical clinicians.

Miami County Recovery Council, $3,000.00, defrays operating expenses for Hope House, a residential opiate withdrawal management facility. Located in Troy, it is the only facility of its kind in the Miami Valley.

Ronald McDonald House Charities of the Miami Valley Region, $1,000.00, aids families as they grapple with their child’s illness during their stay at Dayton Children’s Hospital. Last year, 43 families from the Bethel/Tipp City community benefitted from their support. Services include a bite to eat, a place to do laundry and a private spot for a quick shower…all while staying close to their hospitalized child.

Tipp City Exempted Village Schools, $3,000.00, supports Hope Squad in the high school, promoting mental wellness, hope and a positive environment towards suicide prevention. This peer-based program is the first of its kind in Miami County.

Tipp City Exempted Village Schools, $540.00, buys the middle school’s Academic Quiz Team new buzzer systems for practice and competition. 

Tipp City Exempted Village Schools, $500.00, invites Madcap Puppets to a one-week Artist in Residency program at Nevin Coppock Elementary School. Blending world literature, fine and performing arts and storytelling, kindergarten and 1st graders will have hands-on experiences with an art form dating back to 5th Century BC.

Tippecanoe STEM Education, Inc., $1,000.00, upgrades the high school science department equipment to more closely reflect what students will encounter in college and on the job. Specifically, Vernier LabQuest2 Bluetooth-enabled sensors will now round out the testing lab. 

We Care Arts, $5,000.00, opens the doors for young people with profound physical and developmental disabilities as they participate in Transition to Work and after-school classes. This learning is available year-round in Downtown Tipp City and in Tippecanoe High School during the school year.

The deadline for 4Q grant submissions is December 1. If you would like information about how to apply for a grant, please contact Jim Ranft at (937) 528-2482.

STAY CONNECTED
We’d love to stay in touch. Stay connected with the Tipp City Foundation by: Following us on Facebook or Instagram
Visiting our Website
Sending us an Email

THANK YOU TO OUR SPONSORS
All marketing activities of the Foundation is 100% underwritten by generous sponsors. Please contact us at info@tippfoundation.org for information on how your business or organization can become our partner in philanthropy. 

  • Silver Sponsor – Thrivent Financial (Matt Buehrer)
  • Bronze Sponsors – Advanced Machinery Companies; Dunaway Family Foundation; Dungan & LeFevre; Ever-Green Turf & Landscape; Gibson Law Offices; Greenville Federal; Monroe Federal Savings and Loan; New Carlisle Federal Savings Bank; Pickrel, Schaeffer and Ebeling; Unity National Bank
  • Friend Sponsors – Captor Corp.; Edward Jones (Neil Nehring); Frings & Bayliff Funeral Home; Minster Bank; RSM US; Turnstone Financial; US Bank

GOOD NEWS IS WORTH SHARING
Use the links below to share the TIPPing Point with friends and neighbors. Not a subscriber? Sign up here! If there is something you would like to see in future installments, please email news@tippfoundation.org. Your input is welcome and appreciated!

Looking Into Our Past

Looking Into Our Past

The history of the Tipp City Foundation is an example of how one person’s investment in their community can grow into a major component of the area’s quality of life. The seed for the future was planted in 1943 when the Tipp City Foundation, a community trust, was born thanks to a $1,300 gift from Ed Timmer. This was the Foundation’s first endowment fund.

The fund grew during the early years and in 1950 the first legacy gift was received from the estate of Emma Henke Warner. This gift was in memory of her father, August Henke who, when he passed in 1923, was known as “Tippecanoe’s Oldest Man.” The gift gave life to the August Henke Comfort for the Needy Fund.

Handwritten succinct minutes of the Foundation’s Distribution Committee available beginning in 1950 tell of votes to support community programs such as Tipp City Youth Inc., the Women’s Relief Corps, the Band Club, and the Home School Club. Initial awards ranged from around $200 to more than $1,000 per year by the late 1950s.

By the 1970s, the list of community supported projects continued to grow with a 1974 meeting including approval of $500 for clinic beds for Tipp City schools and $50 for Tipp City bikeways.

In 1987, the estate of Helen Timmer presented the Foundation with a check for $1 million. Mrs. Nel Rodenberg said that Helen Timmer wanted her money “to be used by the Tipp Foundation to do its best for Tipp City and help its people,” meeting minutes by Secretary O. Jesse Chamberlain read

The maturing Foundation expanded its offerings from the traditional trust option to include an option for endowments. Under the leadership of Chairman Jim Kyle, this somewhat complicated change was implemented in 1999 to accommodate growth.

Since that time, the Tipp City Foundation has celebrated a number of milestones including expanding their service area to include neighboring Bethel Township in 2000 and reaching an impressive $1 million in grantmaking in 2001.

The Foundation has also found creative ways to expand their connection to the community by introducing a new way of giving and a new way of saying thank you. The Legacy Society was formed in 2011 welcoming 11 members. A legacy gift to the Foundation is activated upon asset transfer after the donor’s death. The Foundation introduced a Philanthropist of the Year Award in 2013. The inaugural recipients were Bob and Jackie Wahl.

Meanwhile, the numbers kept growing. In 2014, the endowment fund assets exceeded $3 million and in 2016, The Foundation was proud to celebrate $2 million in grants distributed to the community.

The Foundation observed its 75th year in 2018 with a yearlong Diamond Jubilee celebration. Among activities was the Arbor Day dedication of a Tree Grove at the Tipp City’s Kyle Park. The tree grove honors those who have established endowment funds of $25,000 or more through the Foundation.

Over the Foundation’s first 75 years, $2.2 million in grants have been made and 43 endowment funds have been established.

Although the foundation has grown and undergone numerous changes over the year, its goal remains the same: To promote local community endeavors and advance charitable giving through an unwavering commitment to future generations.

Thanks to Nancy Bowman for researching and crafting this account of the Tipp City Foundation’s history. 

STAY CONNECTED
We’d love to stay in touch. Stay connected with the Tipp City Foundation by:

Following us on Facebook or Instagram
Visiting our Website
Sending us an Email

THANK YOU TO OUR SPONSORS
All marketing activities of the Foundation is 100% underwritten by generous sponsors. Please contact us at info@tippfoundation.org for information on how your business or organization can become our partner in philanthropy. 

  • Silver Sponsor – Thrivent Financial (Matt Buehrer)
  • Bronze Sponsors – Advanced Machinery Companies; Dunaway Family Foundation; Dungan & LeFevre; Ever-Green Turf & Landscape; Gibson Law Offices; Monroe Federal Savings and Loan; New Carlisle Federal Savings Bank; Pickrel, Schaeffer and Ebeling; Unity National Bank
  • Friend Sponsors – Captor Corp.; Edward Jones (Neil Nehring); Frings & Bayliff Funeral Home; Minster Bank; RSM US; Turnstone Financial; US Bank

GOOD NEWS IS WORTH SHARING
Use the links below to share the TIPPing Point with friends and neighbors. Not a subscriber? Sign up here! If there is something you would like to see in future installments, please email news@tippfoundation.org. Your input is welcome and appreciated!

IF YOU LISTEN CLOSELY…

IF YOU LISTEN CLOSELY…

I like a nice summer night – relaxing with the windows open and a cool breeze gently swaying the blinds. The kind of night where the crackle of a storm echoes through the radio and the soothing sound of a train whistle reverberates through the valley below. It provides a calming effect that declares all things are good in and around small-town Tipp City.

And speaking of trains, I′ve come to know a man who is weII-versed in trains. In fact, so well-versed that he′s spent his entire life “working on the railroad.′′ His name is Mr. Tim Drake. I got a chance to sit and chat with Tim and his wife Mindy in their cozy kitchen nook recently where they walked me through how their pursuit of a greater picture of community began. l was intrigued and got the sense of a strong bond, not with each other, although that was apparent, but with the community of which they are a part. While their bond with each other started in the late ’60s as childhood sweethearts at Tippecanoe, it culminated in a greater way when they spoke their vows in 1976. It was then that the bond with their beloved community became an active part of the Drake family.

As their story unfolds, I sense a Iot of excitement to the beginning of a worthwhile story, akin to sunflowers in the field rising high to an early morning spring sun. Soon after vows were spoken, Tim began his lengthy career as a civil engineer on the NorfoIk & Western railroad, now known as NorfoIk Southern railroad. Their Iife’s journey quickly took them away from small-town Tipp City with a move to Roanoke, Virginia. This move was the first of many for Tim and Mindy, as they moved eleven times in just over 14 years, spending time in areas such as Roanoke, VA, then Bellevue, OH, on to Portsmouth and Cleveland, OH, next to Atlanta, GA, and then off to Ft. Wayne, IN.

Through the first 14 years, their family grew as well. With the addition of four young ones along the way, this kept the Drake home alive and active. However, after so many moves with their children in tow, Mindy noted that ′’the kids were starting to show some “wear and tear’’ from all the moving. It was now 1990, and as Mindy went on to explain, both she and Tim decided “it was time for some stability in their lives,” with their oldest daughter Jennifer starting 7th grade. That′s when they put down stakes and built their home, where they still reside today, in Tipp City.

When it comes to railroads, Tim has covered a lot of ground. His knowledge of railroad supervision and infrastructure from being a Division Engineer and in charge of 2,500 miIes of tracks and a staff of more than 400 to a responsibility of managing 7,500 empIoyees and 21,000 miIes of track, he′s pretty much done it all. From maintaining a complex web of tracks, bridges, signals, right of ways and everything else in between, he puts the meaning behind “l’ve been working on the railroad.” To put that in perspective, that is the area from Buffalo to Chicago, Detroit to Cincinnati, and ultimately the entire eastern United States east of the Mississippi.

Meanwhile, Mindy, honing her skills as an LPN, began working at the Hyatt Center in Tipp. But her biggest responsibility was raising the children since Tim was often gone. As Tim modestly shares, she’s the “glue that held things together” with his travel schedule being as it was. But this didn’t sIow their vision for a better tomorrow for their community.

While the tracks have taken the children in different directions through the years and with a few of their children moving away, the family stays in close contact. Daughter Jennifer lives in Smithville, Missouri, with her husband and son. Another daughter Jessica lives in PIeasant Hill with her husband and two children. Youngest son Aaron, the “movie star/singer”  lives in St. Petersburg, Florida. And across the street is son Andy who is, as Tim states, his “savior”, handling the day-to-day functions of the Drake’s, as well as assisting with their raiIroad consulting company, known as TDCU.

Tim and Mindy Drake always held a spot in their heart for Tipp City and sought a way to give back, but figuring out the best way to impact the lives of fellow residents took some time. As Tim states, “peopIe are special here” and the thought held by both Tim and Mindy was “how can we give back to this place we have a passion for and love?” They decided to give back through the Tipp City Foundation and reached out to Mike LightIe, the Tipp City Foundation board president at that time. It was here that Tim and Mindy’s gift began to change lives – making broad strides in earIy-testing for peopIe with Parkinson’s and helping identify warning signs that are key to recognizing this terrible disease. The couple feIt that Parkinson’s was not getting the attention it deserved, and after Tim’s dad passed from Parkinson’s, they elevated their desire to help to a much higher level. Through meeting with officials at the state Ievel, along with Jenny Jones, they further strengthened the “Delay the Disease” program, an exercise program aimed with those afflicted with Parkinson′s. That is where they felt was a perfect place to start making an impact.

With this thinking, the Drake FamiIy Fund was born. As part of this, all funding of enrollment costs towards this program and related testing costs are covered, with more than forty individuaIs last year alone taking advantage of these resources. “We feeI blessed to be able to provide through this commitment to the community.” But their giving doesn′t stop there. Through an innovative outreach, they also support Miami Bucks. This program provides trikes and bikes for special needs children, where bikes are custom made for each individual, thereby making the lives of these sometimes forgotten little ones much easier. But not only that, this outreach aIso bridges the gap for seniors and disabled aduIts, providing for mobility solutions needed to make their lives more fulfilling and rewarding.

Still feeling the need to fund additional outreaches, the Drakes have been involved lateIy with Heart & Soul, a community outreach in Pleasant Hill. This program assists those with the growing financial burdens related to dealing with medical issues. As Tim states, “we′ve seen the need of those type of difficuIties come to the forefront” with their son-in-law, who was recentIy diagnosed with cancer. That’s when Tim and Mindy felt a calling to do something more than what they were doing. Mindy is all too familiar with this disease, as her mother’s life was shortened by cancer. The Drakes′ goal is to eventually bring a similar program to the Tipp City area.

“The heart of our intentions is knowing what it’s Iike to deal with Parkinson’s and someone battling cancer. There are people in our community who are in dire need of help and those diseases test each family’s ability to stay resilient under the pressure.”

So, the next time you hear a train in the distance or are waiting at a railroad crossing, stop and think of the work of Tim who just started out by working on the railroad. Through both he and his wife’s consistent message of always giving back to their community and the feeling of making a difference in the lives of so many, you can do the same.

In fact, if you listen cIoseIy I think l hear a distant whistIe. Do you? All aboard!

Donate to the Drake Family Fund

STAY CONNECTED
We’d love to stay in touch. Stay connected with the Tipp City Foundation by: Following us on Facebook or Instagram
Visiting our Website
Sending us an Email

THANK YOU TO OUR SPONSORS
All marketing activities of the Foundation is 100% underwritten by generous sponsors. Please contact us at info@tippfoundation.org for information on how your business or organization can become our partner in philanthropy. 

  • Silver Sponsor – Thrivent Financial (Matt Buehrer)
  • Bronze Sponsors – Advanced Machinery Companies; Dunaway Family Foundation; Dungan & LeFevre; Ever-Green Turf & Landscape; Gibson Law Offices; Monroe Federal Savings and Loan; New Carlisle Federal Savings Bank; Pickrel, Schaeffer and Ebeling; Unity National Bank
  • Friend Sponsors – Captor Corp.; Edward Jones (Neil Nehring); Frings & Bayliff Funeral Home; Minster Bank; RSM US; Turnstone Financial; US Bank

GOOD NEWS IS WORTH SHARING
Use the links below to share the TIPPing Point with friends and neighbors. Not a subscriber? Sign up here! If there is something you would like to see in future installments, please email news@tippfoundation.org. Your input is welcome and appreciated!

SCHOLARS BENEFIT FROM LOCAL ENDOWMENTS

SCHOLARS BENEFIT FROM LOCAL ENDOWMENTS

The Tipp City Foundation recently awarded over $28,000 in scholarships. Many scholarships went to graduating high school seniors while $12,000 went to renewable awards from prior years.

Of the 44 endowment funds within the Foundation, 13 represent scholarships. Often these funds commemorate inspirational values of the scholarship founder; when this is the case, applicants are measured against those standards. Winners are determined through a vetting process led by an independent body of judges. To read more about the stories behind each of the scholarship funds or to apply for future scholarships, visit www.tippfoundation.org.

Graduates from Bethel, Miami East, Tippecanoe, and Troy Schools are represented. Scholarships were distributed during school and organization awards ceremonies.

Lester & Cleon Bowers Family Scholarship – Alivia Bevan

Jeanette C. Gaston Memorial Music Scholarship – Aubrey Beaty

Gilmore Family Scholarship – Leena Vyas

Life is a Journey: Don’t Stop Believing Scholarship – Katherine Castaneda

Katherine G. Lobo Memorial Scholarship – Savannah Koogler

McKee Family Matthew 5:16 Scholarship – Jackson Yeager

Sarah Merritt Memorial Scholarship – Brooke Aselage

John and Louise Miller Memorial Scholarship – Jessica Gilbride

Robert E. Nessle Memorial Scholarship – Abigail Cartwright

Elizabeth Spano Scholarship – Melanie Schall

Tipp City Rotary Club Scholarship – McKenzie Dean, Jessica Gilbride, Leena Vyas

Tipp City Rotary Club Renewal Scholarship – Taylor Haggerty, Evan Hawthorn, Jessica Hemmelgarn, Rachel Herrick, Maddie Loges, Jacob Miller, Kennedy Reeder, Olivia Rust, Merlinda Sewavi, Dylan Shomper, Alexis Turnbull, and Nicholas Wannamaker

Wenzlau Family Scholarship – Shannon Saylors

STAY CONNECTED
We’d love to stay in touch. Stay connected with the Tipp City Foundation by: Following us on Facebook or Instagram
Visiting our Website
Sending us an Email

THANK YOU TO OUR SPONSORS
All marketing activities of the Foundation is 100% underwritten by generous sponsors. Please contact us at info@tippfoundation.org for information on how your business or organization can become our partner in philanthropy. 

  • Silver Sponsor – Thrivent Financial (Matt Buehrer)
  • Bronze Sponsors – Advanced Machinery Companies; Dunaway Family Foundation; Dungan & LeFevre; Ever-Green Turf & Landscape; Gibson Law Offices; Monroe Federal Savings and Loan; New Carlisle Federal Savings Bank; Pickrel, Schaeffer and Ebeling; Unity National Bank
  • Friend Sponsors – Captor Corp.; Edward Jones (Neil Nehring); Frings & Bayliff Funeral Home; Minster Bank; RSM US; Turnstone Financial; US Bank

GOOD NEWS IS WORTH SHARING
Use the links below to share the TIPPing Point with friends and neighbors. Not a subscriber? Sign up here! If there is something you would like to see in future installments, please email news@tippfoundation.org. Your input is welcome and appreciated!

SEVERAL NEW INITIATIVES GRAB GRANT DOLLARS

SEVERAL NEW INITIATIVES GRAB GRANT DOLLARS

Emotional and physical wellbeing were front and center among the grant applications presented for consideration at the Tipp City Foundation’s quarterly meeting.  A majority of those reviewed represented new initiatives in Southern Miami County.  As is often the case, the needs within the community outweigh the available dollars to award.

One organization new to the Foundation’s grant process received support. Tipp City EMS Auxiliary, Inc., founded in 1997, supports the community with disaster preparedness.  This group of emergency responders received the Safety First Fund’s inaugural grant.  Established in 2017, the fund’s purpose is to support public safety initiatives in Tipp City, Monroe and Bethel Townships. More on how this fund impacts public safety through the Auxiliary is detailed below.

Ultimately, six organizations were chosen to receive eight awards totaling $17,279. The following is a list of recipients, award levels and the impact grants will make.

Bethel Local Schools, $3,500.00, reinforces the work of the Social Emotional Awareness Counselor, a new position in this rapidly growing school system. Tools purchased through this grant will help students learn to have a growth mindset, build resiliency and practice self-regulation. This grant was awarded, in part, through the Bethel Community Fund, established in 2013.

Bethel Local Schools, $2,744.00, stirs the imagination of 100 high school students as they blend art history and worldwide social issues affecting teens into juried artwork. This grant was awarded through the Arts Bethel Fund in the Studebaker Tradition of Giving Back, established in 2014.

Main Street Preschool, $1,500, offsets the cost of a musical pilot program taught by The Manuel Creative Arts Academy of Dayton.

Miami County Educational Service Center, $2,000.00, brings a little monkey business to the serious task of educating preschool students identified as disabled in Bethel Township. This grant supports new playground equipment and was awarded, in part, through the Bethel Community Fund.

Miami County Educational Service Center, $400.00, explores Fulton Farms through the eyes of small children served through this early intervention program. This year’s field trip extends into the evening by including parents in hands-on fun. Science, math and literacy stations will incorporate pumpkins into family-based learning.

New Creations Counseling Center, Inc., $3,000, assists with counseling and psychiatric services for those with financial need. In the next year this organization will see 700 patients over the course of 2,200 sessions.

Tipp City EMS Auxiliary, Inc., $2,135.00, covers the costs of manikins and supplies required to train interested citizens of Tipp City and Monroe Township on the basics of CPR. Classes will be free to the public. This grant was awarded, in part, through the Safety First Fund, established by Chief Steve Kessler in 2017.

Tipp Monroe Community Services, $2,000.00, supports local competitors attending the Destination Imagination Global Competition. Creative thinking skills are put to the test as these Red Devils go head to head with students from 1,400 other teams from across the world.

The deadline for 3Q grant submissions is September 1. If you would like information about how to apply for a grant, please contact Jim Ranft at (937) 528-2482.

Since 1943, the Tipp City Foundation has awarded $2,204,926.44, through December 31, 2018. Members of the Foundation are Heather Bailey, president, Mary Bowman, Jesse Chamberlain, Diana Featherstone, Dee Gillis, vice president, Dave Grim, treasurer, Melissa Keller, Bruce McKenzie, Jim Ranft, distribution chair, Nathan Rentz, Pete Schinaman, Claire Timmer, Jackie Wahl, secretary, and Sarah Worley.

The Tipp City Foundation is a member fund of The Troy Foundation. If you would like information about how to make a tax-deductible contribution, please contact Heather Bailey at (937) 528-2482.

For more information visit www.tippfoundation.org or Tipp Foundation on Facebook and Instagram.

STAY CONNECTED
We’d love to stay in touch. Stay connected with the Tipp City Foundation by: Following us on Facebook or Instagram
Visiting our Website
Sending us an Email THANK YOU TO OUR SPONSORS
All marketing activities of the Foundation is 100% underwritten by generous sponsors. Please contact us at info@tippfoundation.org for information on how your business or organization can become our partner in philanthropy. 

  • Silver Sponsor – Thrivent Financial (Matt Buehrer)
  • Bronze Sponsors – Advanced Machinery Companies; Dunaway Family Foundation; Dungan & LeFevre; Ever-Green Turf & Landscape; Gibson Law Offices; Monroe Federal Savings and Loan; New Carlisle Federal Savings Bank; Pickrel, Schaeffer and Ebeling; Unity National Bank
  • Friend Sponsors – Captor Corp.; Edward Jones (Neil Nehring); Frings & Bayliff Funeral Home; Minster Bank; RSM US; Turnstone Financial; US Bank

GOOD NEWS IS WORTH SHARING
Use the links below to share the TIPPing Point with friends and neighbors. Not a subscriber? Sign up here! If there is something you would like to see in future installments, please email news@tippfoundation.org. Your input is welcome and appreciated!