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St Joseph Infant & Maternity Home
Dan Connors leads St. Joseph Home, the 1873-founded Cincinnati nonprofit providing disability care, backed by a foundation endowment.
St Joseph Infant & Maternity Home
St. Joseph Home was founded in 1873 as St. Joseph's Infant Asylum by the Sisters of Charity of Cincinnati. Its original mission was to care for unmarried mothers and their infants at a time when few institutions offered refuge. Today, under President and CEO Dan Connors, it operates as a sponsored ministry of the Sisters of Charity, focused entirely on supporting children and adults with complex disabilities through medical care, residential housing, and day programs. The organization manages a campus in Cincinnati and multiple community-based residential homes — including Alice's House on Madison Road and properties in Sharonville, College Hill, and Loveland — alongside an adult day program facility in Blue Ash. The operating model integrates fee-for-service Medicaid revenue and county partnerships with the income generated by the St. Joseph Home of Cincinnati Foundation. That foundation holds a publicly traded securities portfolio, administered in part by the Greater Cincinnati Foundation, which provides a structural endowment buffer against fluctuations in public funding. The foundation's investment portfolio adds an institutional allocation layer not typical for social-service nonprofits. Former Board Chair Michael F. Kennedy, who retired from Fifth Third Institutional Asset Management, brought institutional portfolio oversight to the role. The partnership with Hamilton County Developmental Disabilities Services (HCDDS) on Alice's House Respite Center further anchors the balance sheet in government-supported service contracts. St. Joseph Home maintains membership in the Leadership Council for Nonprofits and the Human Services Chamber of Hamilton County. Structurally, St. Joseph Home differs from standard charitable endowments because it operates the service-delivery assets itself — it is both the grantmaker and the operator. The foundation holds and stewards the invested corpus, while the operating entity runs the real assets. This layered separation between endowment management and care delivery allows the mission to survive political funding cycles, which is a genuine structural differentiator among asset-owning human-service nonprofits.
General information
Firm type
Endowment / Foundation
Year founded
1873
AUM
Undisclosed
Location
Region
North America
Country
United States
City
Cincinnati
Corporate office
10722 Wyscarver Rd, Cincinnati, OH 45241
Principals
Dan Connors
President and CEO
Michael F. Kennedy
Former Board Chairperson
Sector focus
Frequently asked questions
Who runs investment decisions at St. Joseph Home?
Investment oversight resides with the board of the St. Joseph Home of Cincinnati Foundation. Former Board Chair Michael F. Kennedy brought institutional asset-management expertise from his career at Fifth Third Institutional Asset Management. The foundation's publicly traded securities portfolio is administered in partnership with the Greater Cincinnati Foundation.
How is St. Joseph Home related to the Sisters of Charity?
St. Joseph Home is a sponsored ministry of the Sisters of Charity of Cincinnati. The congregation founded the institution in 1873 as St. Joseph's Infant Asylum. While it operates with lay professional leadership under President and CEO Dan Connors, the mission and governance remain tied to the Sisters' sponsorship.
What real assets does St. Joseph Home own?
The organization owns its main campus on Wyscarver Road in Cincinnati, plus several community-based residential homes: Alice's House on Madison Road, and properties in Sharonville, College Hill, and Loveland. It also operates an adult day program facility in Blue Ash, Ohio.
How is St. Joseph Home's operating budget funded?
Funding combines revenue from Hamilton County Developmental Disabilities Services contracts, Medicaid fee-for-service reimbursements, and income from the St. Joseph Home of Cincinnati Foundation's investment portfolio. The foundation's corpus, including a publicly traded securities portfolio, is administered in part by the Greater Cincinnati Foundation.
Does St. Joseph Home maintain philanthropic structures, and how are they separated?
Yes. The St. Joseph Home of Cincinnati Foundation is the dedicated philanthropic and endowment-holding arm. It operates as a separate entity from the care-delivery organization, stewarding the invested portfolio while the operating nonprofit runs the residential, medical, and day-program services.
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