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Children's Home & Aid Society Foundation
Children's Home & Aid Society Foundation, led by Michael Shaver, funds Brightpoint's 140-year-old network of Illinois child-welfare programs.
Children's Home & Aid Society Foundation
Children's Home & Aid Society Foundation was established in 1883 as the financial backbone for what is now Brightpoint, an Illinois child and family service agency. Its sole mission is to support this operating nonprofit, which reaches thousands of children, youth, and families across 40 Illinois counties each year. The foundation's endowment is not a discretionary pool of capital — it is the long-term funding engine for specific community-based programs in early childhood, mental health, and juvenile justice. Grants flow exclusively to Brightpoint's operations, which span direct-service centers, advocacy, and family counseling. The real-asset footprint includes named facilities such as the Rice Child & Family Center in Evanston and the Mitzi Freidheim Englewood Child & Family Center in Chicago. Revenue sources beyond the endowment include government contracts and private philanthropy, with historical co-funding from institutions like the MacArthur Foundation and The Rice Foundation. Michael Shaver holds the dual role of President and CEO of both the foundation and its operating beneficiary, a governance structure that aligns investment decisions tightly with programmatic needs. The foundation maintains a traditional endowment portfolio while Brightpoint functions as a social-service employer and real-estate operator in Chicago, Bloomington, and Carpentersville. The foundation's structural differentiator is its singularity of purpose: one endowment, one operating entity, and a 140-year lineage of converting invested capital directly into child-welfare services. Unlike diversified foundations that act as institutional LPs, this foundation behaves as a captive funding arm for a single mission-driven enterprise, with all financial decisions measured against program impact rather than absolute return benchmarks.
General information
Firm type
Endowment / Foundation
Year founded
1883
AUM
Undisclosed
Location
Region
North America
Country
United States
City
Chicago
Corporate office
Chicago, IL, United States
Principals
Michael Shaver
President and CEO
Sector focus
Frequently asked questions
Who runs investment decisions at the Foundation?
Michael Shaver serves as President and CEO of both the Foundation and its sole operating beneficiary, Brightpoint. This unified leadership structure means investment policy is set with direct input from the program side. Day-to-day portfolio management responsibilities, including any external advisor relationships, are not publicly disclosed.
Is the Foundation structured as a grantmaker or does it directly operate programs?
It functions as the endowment arm for a direct-service operating entity. The Foundation itself does not run community programs; Brightpoint (the dba for Children's Home & Aid Society of Illinois) is the operating organization that delivers over 70 social-service programs. Grants flow from the endowment exclusively to Brightpoint's activities.
Does the Foundation participate in fund commitments or make direct investments?
The Foundation's capital is structured as a traditional endowment portfolio to provide a steady funding stream to its operating entity. There is no public evidence of direct company investments, co-investments, or private fund commitments as part of an institutional alternatives program.
Which regions does the Foundation's capital support?
All grantmaking supports Brightpoint's programs, which operate exclusively within Illinois across 40 counties. The foundation's real-asset footprint includes named facilities in Chicago, Evanston, Carpentersville, Hoffman Estates, and Bloomington.
What is the relationship between the Foundation and Brightpoint?
Brightpoint is the operating name for Children's Home & Aid Society of Illinois, the sole beneficiary of the Foundation's endowment. Michael Shaver is President and CEO of both entities, which share a common mission, governance, and physical headquarters in Chicago.
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