Finalists announced for 12th annual Invest in Others Awards

Finalists announced for 12th annual Invest in Others Awards
Fifteen advisers and six companies have been named finalists for their work with nonprofits.
JUL 16, 2018

Fifteen advisers and six companies have been named as finalists for the 12th annual Invest in Others Awards. The Invest in Others Charitable Foundation honors financial advisers and firms that have demonstrated commitment to their communities through their passion, commitment and leadership. The advisers and firms work with nonprofits that are focused on various causes, including youth development, poverty prevention and medical research. The 15 advisers are being honored across five adviser categories. Six companies are honored across two corporate philanthropy award categories. The adviser finalists collectively have raised more than $11 million annually and volunteered 350 hours each month for their charities. The six corporate finalists have affected their local communities through financial support, volunteer hours and corporate programs that offer matching gifts and time off to volunteer. Finalists will be honored for their philanthropy at a gala in Boston on Sept. 27. This year's finalists by category are: For the Catalyst Award: Carrie Coghill at Coghill Investment Strategies in Pittsburgh for her work at the Magee-Womens Research Institute & Foundation, which is the largest institute in the U.S. devoted to women's health research; Cullen Douglass at Northwestern Mutual in Nashville, Tenn., for his work with Family and Children's Services, which works in child abuse prevention and foster care; and Paul Wetmore at Merrill Lynch in Los Angeles for his work at Al Wooten Jr. Heritage Center, a youth center that offers after-school programs. For the Community Service Award: Brenda Blisk at Blisk Financial Group in McLean, Va., for her work at the American Red Cross in the National Capital Region; Bryan Drowos at Wells Fargo Advisors in Boca Raton, Fla., for work at the Jewish Federation of South Palm Beach County; and Timothy Rice at Lakeside Wealth Management in Chesterton, Ind., for his work at the Boys and Girls Clubs of Greater Northwest Indiana. For the Global Impact Award: Jim Quigley at Barrington Wealth Management in Chicago for his work at Hope's In, an international service group that works in garbage-dump communities in Guatemala; David Shnitzer at Ameriprise Financial in Boston for his work at CameroonONE & ONETrack International, a global child advocacy program for orphan care; and Bob Solis at Morgan Stanley in Peoria, Ariz., for founding Open Arms Home for Children, which provides support to children orphaned by the AIDS pandemic in South Africa. For the Volunteer of the Year Award: Pat Henry at Hanson McClain Advisors in Sacramento, Calif., for his work at Okizu, which works with families affected by childhood cancer; Sacha Millstone at The Millstone Evans Group of Raymond James in Boulder, Colo., for her work with Funding the Future, which teaches financial literacy to American students; and Stephen Rudolph at HW Financial Advisors in Beachwood, Ohio, for his work with Milestones Autism Resources, which provides autism-related services. For the Lifetime Achievement Award: William Lervaag from Masterplan Financial Group in Peoria, Ill., for his work at Heart of Illinois Harvest, a food distribution program; Stephen Plain at SEP Financial Services in Goshen, N.Y., for his work with the Town of Wallkill Boys & Girls Clubs; and Pat Sullivan with Private Advisor Group in Morristown, N.J., for his work with Good Grief. For Corporate Philanthropy, Advisory Firms: Cassaday & Co. Inc. in McLean, Va; Centinel Financial Group in Needham Heights, Mass.; and SkyOak Wealth in Medford, Ore. For Corporate Philanthropy, Financial Institutions: Berkshire Bank in Boston; Main Street Financial Services in Luverne, Minn.; and Raymond James in St. Petersburg, Fla.

Latest News

Crypto has arrived in the brokerage account but what does it mean for advisors?
Crypto has arrived in the brokerage account but what does it mean for advisors?

Prometheum's Aaron Kaplan on why clearing ETH inside a US brokerage account changes the conversation and what still needs to happen before adoption scales.

Technology Is Moving Fast. Adoption Shouldn’t Be Rushed
Technology Is Moving Fast. Adoption Shouldn’t Be Rushed

The tools are evolving rapidly, but in wealth management, the real challenge isn’t access. It’s integration, security, and discipline.

Lawyer exits case of former JPMorgan Chase banker whose sexual assault claims went viral
Lawyer exits case of former JPMorgan Chase banker whose sexual assault claims went viral

Chirayu Rana’s lawsuit has garnered massive attention on Wall Street.

Schwab advisor arrested for domestic violence charges
Schwab advisor arrested for domestic violence charges

Terrance L. Hayes was arrested April 20 and charged with two felonies.

Most Americans are at risk of outliving their retirement savings
Most Americans are at risk of outliving their retirement savings

People are living longer, but new research warns that many may outlive their savings.

SPONSORED When Growth Outruns the System

According to Flyer Financial Technologies, rising portfolio complexity is exposing the limits of legacy infrastructure and widening the gap between automation and reality

SPONSORED Why strategy matters more than performance

In volatile markets, the advisors who win aren't the ones with the best calls - they're the ones whose clients stay the course.