INSIDE
FROM OUR DIRECTOR 2025 BY THE NUMBERS
3 WINS FOR KIDS RECOGNITION & THANKS

ADDRESSING ONLINE SAFETY

Our Mission: To lead our region’s response to child abuse.
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FROM OUR DIRECTOR 2025 BY THE NUMBERS
3 WINS FOR KIDS RECOGNITION & THANKS


Our Mission: To lead our region’s response to child abuse.
“The staff were very friendly and welcoming. They were very understanding and made us feel comfortable throughout the entire process.“
Parent of a KIDS Center client
“KIDS Center helped my son take back his power.”
Parent of a KIDS Center client
“KIDS Center makes learning about cyber safety interactive and fun! It’s not just another lecture.”
—7th grade student, Seven Peaks School
“We love KIDS Center’s presentation on internet safety for our health classes at Bend High. KIDS Center presents a fun and interactive lesson, where students are engaged and learning.”
—Michelle O’Connell, Bend Senior High Health and First Aid/CPR Teacher
“We skipped Christmas the last couple of years... I am so happy I can give my kids Christmas this year.”
Parent served by KIDS Center, receiving toys from our holiday Toy & Gift Card Drive
Leash Guy introduced me to all the amazing professionals at KIDS Center, all of whom daily help keep our kids safe and make them whole. Thank you, KIDS Center, for all of the amazing things you do.
—Cache, an Electronic Storage Detection K9 for the Deschutes County Sheriff’s Office, posting on his Instagram account @esd_k9_cache with a little help from his handler, “Leash Guy” (Detective Pat Hartley).

Board of Directors
Leslie Neugebauer—Board Chair
Cory Darling—Vice Chair
Ali Dietz—Secretary
Yolanda Saporito—Treasurer
Talena Barker
Sandy Cummings
Christine Frazer
Lynn Freeman
David Gilmore
Dr. Jeff Meyrowitz
René Mitchell
Stacy Neil
Annie Nelson
Mark Sole
Sofia Stranieri, Board Intern
KIDS Center Leadership
Gil Levy Executive Director glevy@kidscenter.org
Guitar Hanna Medical Director ghanna@kidscenter.org
Gabrielle Allender Director of Client Programs & Prevention gallender@kidscenter.org
Anna Leavitt Finance Director aleavitt@kidscenter.org
Ginger Theis-Stevens Director of Development & Marketing gtstevens@kidscenter.org
Cynthia Hunt Director of Human Resources & Administration chunt@kidscenter.org

Dear Friends,
These rapidly changing times have created unique challenges for us as a Children’s Advocacy Center. As technologies evolve at an unprecedented pace, so do the risks facing children. Online exploitation, digital coercion, and technology-facilitated child abuse continue to grow more complex—and more dangerous. At KIDS Center, we are not standing still. Alongside our community partners, we are strengthening our expertise, adapting our practices and our training curriculum, and responding to these emerging threats with urgency and care. You can read more about how we’re addressing these challenges on page 4 of this report.
This past year also required resilience in the face of ongoing funding uncertainty. Following a lengthy delay, the federal government released a limited amount of Victims of Crime Act (VOCA) grant funds, allowing essential evaluation services for children to continue for now, but the stability of this longstanding federal resource for Children’s Advocacy Centers remains uncertain. We are actively monitoring legislative changes and advocating for sustainable funding solutions at the federal, state, and local levels to ensure that grants like these continue to cover a portion of our expenses. This helps make certain that Central Oregon children and families can rely on care from KIDS Center when they need it most.
In the midst of these challenges, we are deeply grateful for the extraordinary support of our community. Because of your generosity and our team’s careful financial management, we were able to meet and exceed our budgeted annual revenue, ensuring uninterrupted services for children and families, continued support for our wonderful staff, and a positive beginning to the 2026 fiscal year. With your help, our ability to achieve our mission remains strong, even in unpredictable times.
Thanks to you, 2025 was also a year of record impact for KIDS Center. We served more children than ever before. As we move forward, and as referrals for evaluation and treatment continue to increase, particularly in rural areas, we are excited about the potential of our mobile clinic to bring essential services directly to children who might otherwise go without them.
Every number highlighted in this report represents a child who was heard, believed, and supported—and none of it would be possible without you. Thank you for making such a meaningful difference in the lives of children and families across our region.
With gratitude,
Gil Levy Executive Director
A new wave of online threats is putting young people at risk. Learn how KIDS Center and community partners are working to protect kids...and learn what you can do at home.
Note: The intent of this article is not to provoke fear, but rather to raise awareness, share knowledge, and provide actionable steps to help keep children safe.
As children have shifted more of their social lives online, they’ve become more accessible to people who engage in harmful behavior. These virtual spaces provide more cover for predators. In chat rooms, messaging apps, and social media platforms, youth can be deceived and manipulated by adults posing as peers.
Today’s young people are quick to adopt new apps and technology—without fully understanding the risks involved. In 2025, the expansion of generative AI tools created an “unprecedented” threat to kids’ safety, according to the FBI. Generative AI has made it easier to exploit and entrap children through deep fakes and sextortion.
New AI “companions”—readily embraced by kids and teens— carry risks to a young person’s development and well-being.
(See “3 Online Threats”.)

“Currently, 9 out of 10 internet crimes against children start on Discord, Roblox or Snapchat.”—Detective Alyssa Snyder, Bend Police Dept.
When Detective Thomas Lilienthal joined Deschutes County Sheriff’s Office in 2017, his duties as a digital forensics investigator included analyzing the cellphone data of children who had been sexually exploited online.
“These types of investigations require special technical expertise,” explained Detective Lilienthal. “That expertise is essential for holding child sex offenders accountable and protecting children in our community.” Detective Lilienthal advocated for a specialized investigator, and in 2023, the Sheriff’s Office hired Central Oregon’s first dedicated Internet Crimes Against Children (ICAC) investigator, Detective Mitch Meyer.
Detective Meyer focuses on the hundreds of CyberTips sent over by the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children (NCMEC).
Federal law requires public and tech companies (like internet service providers, social media companies, and phone companies) to report online enticement, child abuse, and explicit images of children. Reports go to NCMEC’s CyberTipline. NCMEC then sends out these tips to the appropriate law enforcement agency.
“We’ve seen a huge rise in CyberTips in the last five years,” notes Lilienthal, now a Detective Sergeant leading the county’s Digital Forensics and Internet Crimes Against Children unit. Across Oregon, state agencies received 3,767 CyberTips in 2020. In 2025, the number of tips jumped to more than 18,000—a 388% increase.
The growing threat to children prompted the creation of a multi-agency task force with investigators from Deschutes County Sheriff’s Office, FBI, Homeland Security, and Oregon State Police. “This partnership has dramatically increased our ability to pursue CyberTips,” says Lilienthal. “Tips rarely wait more than seven days before we’re digging in.”
Bend Police Department has taken its own steps to protect children. The agency hired a dedicated detective to investigate CSAM
New AI tools—that can alter a photo to make a clothed person appear to be undressed—fueled an explosion of AI-generated child sexual material in 2025. The National Center for Missing and Exploited Children called the more than 6000% increase in explicit AIgenerated material “a wake-up call.”
NCMEC reported 440,419 instances of AI-generated child sexual abuse material in the first six months of 2025.
Sextortion is a form of online blackmail. People who harm use coercion to gain explicit images of a child—or use generative AI to create explicit images using a child’s photo found online. The blackmailer then threatens to distribute those images unless the child complies with their demands. Sextortion can be used for financial gain or to drive dangerous or harmful behavior. Kids and teens are typically targeted. Sextortion can also be peer-to-peer. 1 in 5 teens have experienced some form of online sextortion.
AI “companions” are chatbots that mimic emotional intimacy by echoing opinions and mirroring tone. These chatbots can give the user a strong illusion of being understood. The danger? AI can blur reality and stunt a child’s ability to distinguish fact from fiction. These fake “relationships” can impact a child’s mental development and social skills. Common Sense Media and Stanford School of Medicine found AI companions produced harmful content and encouraged self-harm and violence. These organizations are currently recommending no one under 18 should use AI companions. Half of teens use AI companions.
(Child Sexual Abuse Material). Four Bend PD detectives are assigned to the Child Victim Unit, including Detective Alyssa Snyder, who pursues CyberTips. Due to the volume of tips coming in, all personnel take a share of these cases. According to Snyder, most of the tips she investigates involve local individuals who have shared or downloaded CSAM.
Detective Snyder feels a keen sense of urgency in pursing those cases. “Statistics show that within one year of viewing CSAM, 80% of those people will go after their first live victim. So it’s essential that we catch a would-be predator before they harm a child.”
Some CyberTips can also uncover dozens of young victims who unknowingly created CSAM.
notes Gabrielle Allender, Director of Client Programs & Prevention.
“There is real danger in giving kids unsupervised, unrestricted access to the internet.”
Detective Snyder acknowledges, “It’s incredibly helpful to have KIDS Center recognize children are still victims even if there was no in-person abuse.” As part of the child abuse evaluation, KIDS Center screens for online abuse. Professional forensic interviewers are trained to ask kids about their favorite apps and games, who their online friends are, and if they’ve experienced anything inappropriate online. This information is documented for partners involved in the child abuse investigation.
—Detective Sergeant Thomas Lilienthal, Deschutes County Sheriff’s Office Internet Crimes Against Children Unit
“Kids have a false sense of security with apps like Snapchat,” says Snyder. On Snapchat, images and videos disappear immediately after being viewed, so kids think it’s safe to share inappropriate photos or videos. But there are third-party tools that can download or record files sent via Snapchat. “In 2025, we had one CyberTip that led us to 60 child victims. These kids thought they were chatting with a peer, and they were sharing explicit images through Snapchat. They had no idea there was an adult on the other end, saving those images and distributing them. No app is truly safe.”
Beyond investigating CyberTips, local law enforcement agencies are also working proactively to prevent abuse. Says Lilienthal, “At Deschutes County, we’ve expanded our pool of deputies and detectives trained to pose as kids online.” The department has successfully caught and prosecuted predators attempting to meet with children.
Many of the child abuse cases documented by KIDS Center have an online component, with chats or text messages indicating grooming, manipulation or abuse. “We also see some cases of strictly online exploitation,”
This evidence can be used to build a case. “Each time we successfully prosecute a perpetrator, we prevent the future exploitation of dozens of children,” says Snyder.
“Our goal is always to prevent kids from ever experiencing abuse or any kind of online exploitation,” says Rachel Visser, KIDS Center’s Prevention Education Manager.
KIDS Center offers a free training, SafetyNet: Smart Cyber Choices®, specifically focused on online safety. This training is continually updated to cover emerging threats.
In 2025, KIDS Center partnered with Healthy Schools, an initiative through Deschutes County Health Services and Bend-La Pine Schools. Through this partnership, KIDS Center brought SafetyNet to Bend-LaPine parents with students in grades 4-10.
Two other prevention trainings—Darkness to Light and Let’s Talk About It—have new sections dedicated to internet safety.
“Because so much abuse can originate online, we need to talk about it in every prevention training we offer,” says Visser.
Working together makes a difference.
We all play a role in keeping kids safe. What can you do? See the next page. >
Kids get lots of guidance on how to be safe out in the world—from wearing helmets to crossing streets to saying “no” to unwanted touch.
“Online safety talks are just as important as physical safety talks,” says KIDS Center’s Prevention Education Manager, Rachel Visser. Statistics point to a staggering number of young kids discovering inappropriate content online, interacting with strangers on gaming chats and messaging apps, and witnessing or experiencing cyberbullying.
Don’t be afraid of what you don’t know.
New technology can be daunting. You’re not alone if you feel out of touch with the latest apps and platforms your kids or grandkids are using online. “The important thing is to learn,” says Visser. “Things can only change if we sit in spaces and learn together.”
Grab a friend, neighbor or coworker and take a free SafetyNet training. You’ll find tips on how to talk with kids about online safety, along with actionable steps to protect your kid’s privacy. Scan the QR code below to get started.
Start sitting down with your child.
Check your child’s privacy and location settings. Develop rules for sharing private information online. Be clear on which apps your child can download. Look into parental controls or filtering and blocking software which can restrict adult websites from your home network.
“Start early and talk often with your child about what it means to be safe online,” says Visser. “You can also protect your child by being an askable adult. Let them know they can come to you with any question or problem.”



512 received child abuse evaluation services. children
86 received ongoing therapy (in 974 therapy sessions) children, siblings, & caregivers
580 adults were trained in child safety to prevent abuse.

347 were connected to community resources by a family advocate. families
902 youths & volunteer hours
87 Expert testimonies provided by KIDS Center staff at trial.


380 Community partners trained to meet state requirements.

87
1077 given in support of our mission.
Families received mental health support during an evaluation.


Hotline calls answered.
104
Community support was strong in ‘25.
Cork & Barrel events drew more than 1,000 attendees and raised the largest amount ever for KIDS Center. The community donated a record number of toys and gift cards for our holiday Toy & Gift Card Drive.
444 new donors joined KIDS Center— almost double from the previous year.
We’re grateful for the many people who connect with our mission and support hope and healing for children.
KIDS Center’s Forensic Interviewers attended several specialized trainings in 2025. These trainings helped our team better serve diverse groups of kids, including:
• preschoolers
• children on the autism spectrum
• child victims of sex trafficking, and
• children who have witnessed violence
The mobile clinic moved forward.
Several foundations and individuals helped fund the purchase and construction of our new mobile clinic. The clinic will begin operating in Spring 2026, covering our six-county region and serving children and families who are unable to reach KIDS Center for a child abuse evaluation. The clinic arrives at a critical moment. In 2025, a record 36% of the referrals received by KIDS Center came from rural areas.

Anonymous (7)
Gabrielle & Darren Allender
Terri Andreasen
Danielle Andrus
Solena Andrus Montalieu
Angelina Anello-Dennee
Jennifer Ashley
Brad & Lisa Bailey
John & Gussie Baker
Jaida Ball
Chelsea Baraff
Talena & Kurt Barker
Bob & Jean Bennett
Rebecca & Steve Berry
Scott Biddinger
Steve & Mary Biehn
Archie Bleyer
Lindsay Boyd
Joe Emerson & Ann
Brayfield
Maria & John Britton
Pam Bronson
Jenny Brown
Allan & Ann Bruckner
Cece & David Buchanan
Mike & Priscilla Buck
Tona Buck
Larry & Pat Burch
Pam & Bob Caine
Capacity Performance
Therapy
Robert & Kim Carrick
Steve & Muffer Carroll
Cascades AcademyCommunity 101
Donnie & Heidi Castleman
Laurie Chesley
Jonathan Choe
Kevin & Robi Cole
Emily Conlee
Catherine Conlon
Jack & Helen Crowell
Bruce & Sandy Cummings
Cory Darling and Molly
Wells Darling
Keith & Vicki Darnall
Philip Dean & Linda
Church
Robert Dee
Kathy Deggendorfer
Gifts totaling $1000 or more during the period Jan 1-Dec 31, 2025. Names in bold have been members for the last 5 years.
The Desert Pine Group (at
Morgan Stanley)
Jim & Dory Delp
Evan & Chelsea Dickens
Bob & Carolyn Dietz
Ali West Dietz & Adam
Dietz
James & Julane Dover
Eileen & Bruce Drake
Theresa & Rick Drulard
Dave & Sandy Dunahay
Kathryn & Paul Eckman
Ecotek NW LLC
Kristin Ethier
Marcia & Gary Everton
Jacob & Lisa Fain
Nancy Faries
Andrea & Kyle Fetzer
Zelia & Dennis Flannery
Katie Formuzis
Fortis Construction
Christine Frazer
Steve & Lynn Freeman
Stan & Gail Fridstein
Harlan & Gwen Friesen
Karen Fryling
Kelli Gehrs
Gentle Lion
Liz Gienger
Scott Woods & David Gilmore
Kip & Beverly Gladder
Paul & Cara Golden
Don Groth
Stephen Gunnels
Mark & Dana
Hagenbaugh
Beth & Ron Hanson
Judy Heck
Steve & Cheri Helt
Kathryn Henderson
High Desert ESD
Barbry Hogue
Sandra Holloway
Peter & Carol Holzer
Pamela & Peter Horan
Steven & Debra Howell
David & Heather Hughes
Paul & Cathy Imwalle
Maggie Jackson
John & Nancy James
Larry & Kathy Janssen
Andy Jordan & Marcia
Morgan
Page Huber & Dana
Jorgensen
Kris & Doug Judish
Paul Karr
Cameron Karr
Dusty & Connie Kaser
Calvin & Teresa Kaufman
Bob & Lynn Keener
Tim & Lisa Kerns
Max King & Dory Koehler-
King
Jeff & Michelle Klein
Steve & Amanda Klingman
Cristy Lanfri
Mike & Jean Larraneta
Tom Lau
Sally & Lon Leneve
Gil & Tara Levy
Thomas & Elsa Lilienthal
William & Ann Lincoln
Scott & Christine Lucas
Sandra Stryker & Andrew
Loomis
Patsy & Stephen Macnab
Kathleen Malcher
Sheryl Manning & Steve
Janik
Don & Vicki Marvel
Jennifer Masl-Shea
Russell & Sheri Massine
Amy Van Blaricom & Matt
Nutt
Milt McConnell & Ilene Style
Ken & Jan McCumber
Matthew McFarland
John & Jackie McGlynn
Shannon McNeil
Herm & Jayne Meister
Becky & Jim Merryman
Shelli & Rick Mikesell
David Miller
Leslie Miller
Rocky & Barbara Miner
Michelle Miracle
Sally Morcos
Tara & Scott Mortenson
Curt & Martha Morvec
Kristi Muzynoski
Courtney Myers
Garrett & Leslie
Neugebauer
David & Heidi Newbold
Bob & Vicky Nippert
The Nolte Group
Anne & Sean O’Leary
Kathie Olson
Linda & Brian Opdycke
Outside In Bend
Joyce Ownby
Pacific Window Master Inc.
Maria Papaleo
Ed Payne
Darwyn & Denise Pearl
Amy Pellman
William Perez & Jane Van
Dyke-Perez
John Peterson
Derek Philliber
Tiffany Pieper
Rhonda Pietrowski
Emily Pietrzak
Maureen & Zack Porter
Jean Pozzi
Teresa & David Pritchard
Thomas & Susan Puttman
Andie Quinn
R Interior Design, LLC
Cindy & Dave Rasmussen
Sue & Peter Rawlinson
Craig French & Laura Reidt
Joe & Sue Reinhart
Nathan & Terry Reynolds
Tom & Laury Riley
Jeff & Margi Robberson
Martha & John Ross
Wendy & William Rudy
Matt & Shelby Sabelman
Martha & Rick Samco
Niki Sands
Alexis Scharff
Jan Schnetzky
Stephen Schrank
Tim & Jane Schutz
Ron & Diane Seals
Lawrence Shaw
Sue & Stan Shepardson
Kari Silver
Casey Simms
Leanne & Todd Skoog
Dave & Deanna Skoviak
Keith & Nautique Slater
Bob & Sue Smit
Elizabeth Ann Spinas & Liz
Black
Michael & Deborah Stalker
Annie & Matt Stanley
Alicia Stearns
Steve & Elizabeth Weeks
Blair & Trebor Struble
Michael & Jan Sullivan
Nancy Swanton
Taylor Northwest LLC
Ron & Pam Theis
Bob Thomas
Stephanie Trautman & Ross Kranz
Jen Treber & Dustin
Whitaker
Joan & Tom Triplett
Cindy & Daymen Tuscano
UBS Financial Services Inc.
Paul & Lois Vallerga
Cherith & Raymond Velez
Scott & Kristin von Eschen
Rutledge & Lori
Waterhouse
Waypoint Consulting
Larry Weinberg
Steven Wernke
We are deeply grateful to everyone who supported our work in the region in 2025. Thank you for making a difference. If
Warren & La Juana West
Jan & Chris Wick
Stacey Wilkinson
Regina & David Willingham
Sally Wilson
Beverly & Michael Wilson
Ellen & Ron Wolff
Bob & Mary Anne Woodell
Douglas & Mary Ann Wray
Rick & Jessica Yozamp
Anonymous (4)
Toby Abraham-Rhine
Kimberly Baltunis
Bobbie Bashian
Nancy Boileau
Becky Boyd
Gabe & Amanda Burchfield
Shelby Carter
Janice Castelbaum
Chrissy & Carl
Christoferson
Lindsey Clements
Bill & Lois Clements
Dawn Cofer
Emily Conlee
Tina Cook
Jenn Davis
Amanda & James Dayton
Hans & Karen Doorn
Tammy Doty
Katherine Dube
Jacob & Lisa Fain
Garth & Sarah Fuller
Debra Gallino
Cliff & Sherry George
Caroline Greenlaw
Tammy Gregory
Carla Grinuck-Wood
Jenni Griswold
Stephen Gunnels
Jill & Pat Hartley
Jan 1-Dec 31, 2025 / Names in bold have given for the last 5 years.
Christi Haynes
Amy & Jonathan Hiatt
Martha & Brad Hinman
Terry Lynch & Teresa Hogue
Rhonda Holland
Ken & Kaye House
Steven & Debra Howell
Pat & Charlie Jones
Joslyn Kite
Barbara Krumwiede
Lori Law
JoAnn Lawrence
Liz LeCuyer
Thomas & Elsa Lilienthal
Boyd Lyle & Pamela Keyes
Lyle
Patsy & Stephen Macnab
Russell & Sheri Massine
Ellie Millan
Rocky & Barbara Miner
Cynthia Murray
Annie & Matthew Nelson
Garrett & Leslie Neugebauer
Kathryn Nihill
Marylou Paterson
Kristin Paulson
Sheila Perry
Rhonda Pietrowski
Emily Pietrzak
Kathie Reid-Bevington
Sponsors Jan 1-Dec 31, 2025 / Names in bold have provided support for the last 5 years.
4-R Equipment, LLC
541 Roofing
Avion Water Company
Backyard Media
BASX Inc.
Bend Police Association
Bigfoot Beverages
Brooks Resources Corporation
Brown & Brown Insurance Services Inc.
Cascade Hasson
Sotheby’s International Realty
Cascade Heating & Specialties, Inc.
Central Oregon Daily
Central Oregon Garage Door, Inc.
Cascades East Association of REALTORS®
Central Oregon Independent Practice Association
Central Oregon Pediatric Associates
Central Oregon Radiology Associates PC
Central Oregon Tree Experts
The Cigar Chapel Combined Communications
Compass Physical Therapy
Bruce & Sandy Cummings
Deschutes County Sheriff’s Office
Deschutes County Sheriff’s
Employee Association
East Bend Dental
East Cascade Women’s
Group
First Interstate Bank
Stan Fridstein
That Furrow Crew
Hanai Center
Horizon Broadcasting Group
Hooker Creek Companies, LLC
Jack Robinson & Sons Inc.
Jones & Roth CPAs & Business Advisors
Klein Investment Strategies
Kollective Technology
Les Schwab Tire Centers
Lonza
Mainspring Wealth Advisors
Mid Oregon Credit Union
Miller Lumber
Northwest Foundation
NW Natural Water
OnPoint Community Credit Union
Pahlisch Homes, Inc
Plateau Forest Products
Rosendin Electric Inc. Saalfeld Griggs, PC
Carol Reinhard
Dan & Michelle Richwine
Theresa & Arlen Schmidt
Summer Sears
Jon & Lori Small
Bob & Sue Smit
Elizabeth Ann Spinas & Liz Black
Gayle Stamler
Don & Anita Stelle
RJ & Kacy Strickland
Blair & Trebor Struble
Michael & Jan Sullivan
Roberta Vallejo
Gary Whitley & Linda
McCaul Whitley
SELCO Community Credit Union
Simplicity by Hayden Homes, LLC
St. Charles Health System
Steele Associates
Architects LLC
Summit Health
TDS
Team Fitch Real Estate
Tennant Developments
Ron and Pam Theis
Transworld Business Advisors of Central Oregon
Umpqua Bank
Woods Orthodontics LLC
Foundations & Partners Jan 1-Dec 31, 2025 / Names in bold have provided support for the last 5 years.
Anonymous (5)
Bend Police Department
Benge Family Foundation
Broken Top Club
Buckner Fanning
Evangelistic Foundation
The Burns Family Legacy Fund
Carlson Sign
Campbell Family Charitable Trust
Casey Family Fund
Central Oregon Health Quality Alliance
The Clabough Foundation
Conrad & Glenn Voelz
Cow Creek Umpqua Indian Foundation
The Crevier Family Foundation
Crook County
Cudd Foundation
The Dahl & Donald Guinn Family Fund
Deenihan Family Fund*
Deschutes County
Deschutes County Behavioral Health
Deschutes County Health Services
Deschutes County Sheriff’s Office
Dottie & Eli Ashley Fund*
Echo Fund
Enterprise Mobility Foundation
F.J. Hodecker Family Fund
First Interstate Bancsystem Foundation Inc.
The Ford Family Foundation
Give Lively Foundation, Inc.
Harney County
Herbert A. Templeton Foundation
Hickok Wallace Donor
Advised Fund
Hollern Family Fund*
*Advised Fund of Oregon Community Foundation
The Hooter Fund II*
James & Shirley Rippey Family Foundation
James M. and Margaret V. Stine Foundation
Janet & Earl Seekins Family Foundation*
Larry & Kathy Janssen Trust
Jeffrey L Rippey Family Charitable Fund
Jefferson County District Attorney Office
Jefferson County
The Kent Family Charitable Fund
Lambert Family Fund*
The Langerman Foundation
Mahoney Family Fund
Marie Lamfrom Charitable Foundation
M.J. Murdock Charitable Trust
MountainStar Family Relief Nursery
The Muller Family Foundation
Multifamily NW Foundation
National Children’s Alliance
National Christian Foundation Northwest
NeighborhoodImpact Northwest Foundation
Oregon Community Foundation
Oregon Department of Justice
Greg & Michelle Quesnal Family Fund
Pacific Power Foundation
The Pahlisch Family Giving Fund
The Palmer Family Foundation
Redmond Police Department
Penelope A Gerbode Charitable Fund
Renton Family Foundation
Republic Services
River House Charitable Riverhouse on the Deschutes
Ronald W. Naito MD Foundation
The Roundhouse Foundation
Sandgren Family Charitable Fund
Scharpf Fund*
Sherman County Sheriff’s Office
SCP Foundation, Inc
The Springer Family Trust
St. Charles Health System
Stadnisky Family Foundation
Sunriver Women’s Club
Tavolacci Family Trust
TKO’Gorman Fund
Twin Peaks Foundation
Va Piano Vineyards
Williamson Family Fund
Wheeler County
1375
—Doris Lessing

Healing Hearts Luncheon
March 31, 2026
Child Abuse Prevention Month
April 2026
Winemaker Dinner: Silver Oak Cellars & The Lake House at Caldera Springs
April 14, 2026
Not’cho Grandma’s Bingo at Silver Moon Brewery
May 24, 2026
Cork & Barrel Weekend
July 16-18, 2026
Open House & Mobile Clinic Tours
September 16, 2026
Masquerade Ball
October 16, 2026
Poker Night
November 12, 2026
Giving Tuesday Dec 1, 2026
