| Instruction (salaries for 46 teachers and other
teaching expenses) |
$2.1 million |
| Administration (salaries
and
other administration expenses) |
$1.4 million |
| Student Financial Aid
(scholarship grants for 305 students) |
$1.3 million |
| Debt Service (see above) |
$1.0 million |
| Maintenance of facilities |
$800,00 |
| Development (staff,
publications, mailings, and events) |
$500,000 |
| Athletics and Activities (staff
salaries, uniforms, equipment, entry fees, officials, theater, and other school clubs) |
$400,000 |
| Boarding Program (55
students received toward room and board costs) |
$200,000 |
| Computing |
$100,000 |
| Guidance |
$70,000 |
| All
Other (hard-to-categorize expenses) |
$300,000 |
Why does St. Benedict's need my money?
St. Benedict's needs contributions, large and small, mainly for two reasons.
First, the majority of the students that we want to educate and who need
us most cannot afford to pay what it costs us to give them good teachers, lots of extra-curricular activities (which we feel are critical to their success) and good
facilities. If you look at our budget, it costs us
$6 million to operate the school each year, and we have 560 students; that means it costs us about
$11,000 per
student, a cost we could not possibly charge each student. Instead, we
charge about $5900 for tuition, and 60% of the students receive financial aid from us to pay
that. In the end, we collect about $1.8 million in tuition each year, so we
must provide the other $4.2 million from other
sources. The second impact any gift makes,
no matter the size, is it tells us that we have supporters now and will have supporters in the future who believe in what we are doing and
who are willing to help
us accomplish it, and that alumni feel that St. Benedict's helped them and continues to be an institution worth supporting.
Why can't St. Benedict's largest donors, such
as corporations and foundations, give the school all the money it needs?
St. Benedict's is supported tremendously by corporations and foundations (in the 2000-2001 school year, they contributed about $2 million out of the
$6 million
St. Benedict's needed to operate). However, corporations
and foundations are more interested in helping those who help themselves. They like to see proof that the
people at the school and those who graduated from it believe in the school themselves. The financial contributions of alumni provide that proof, and St. Benedict's
is blessed to have grateful alumni.
Here is a breakdown of how St. Benedict's gets the
$6 million that it needs to pay its annual bills:
Shouldn't I wait until I'm in my 40's and at the top of my career to give a large
donation?
What helps St. Benedict's most is knowing that its graduates stand behind their Alma Mater. Any
gift, from $1 to $1 million communicates the same message. We ask alumni not to wait until they feel
they can make a "respectable" gift. To continue this work day-to-day, we need the morale boost that
your support gives us. Giving is always a sacrifice, and we ask alumni to proudly contribute whatever
their present income allows.
Why wasn't I listed as a donor in the Annual
Report when I sent $20 in to the Alumni Association?
The Alumni Association is a separate entity from St. Benedict's. Though they use St. Benedict's mailing address
and work closely with us, the dues that they collect do not go directly to St. Benedict's. Instead, the Alumni Association
uses them to pay for the publication of an Alumni Directory every few years and to sponsor such events as reunions at sporting
events. Some of the money does go to St. Benedict's, as the Alumni Association often responds to requests from the St. Benedict's
teams and clubs for funding for equipment and trips. Paying your annual dues to the Alumni Association makes you an "active"
member of the Association, entitling you to a free copy of the Alumni Directory,
and other benefits.
Please explain why, if I sent a gift in July,
I was not listed in the Annual Report I received the
following January?
A "fund year" at St. Benedict's runs from July 1 of one year to June 30 of the next. The Annual Report that you receive in the
fall or winter of one year is actually a report on the previous
"fund year" which ended June 30. So, if you send a gift in July, your gift will count toward the
current " fund year." You will be listed in the
Annual Report published
the following fall or winter.
Example:
Gift sent in August 2002 is a gift for the 2002-2003 school year.
Annual Report for 2001-2002 school year published in
November 2002 will not include August 2002 gift.
Gift will be reported in Annual Report for
2002-2003, which will be published in December 2003.