EVERYCRSReport.com: Project of Demand Progress (a 501©3 + 501©4 each w/ fiscal agent~New Venture Fund (formerly Arabella Legacy Fund), Sixteen Thirty Fund), the R Street Institute (formerly DC Progress). So, Will the Real Sponsors Step Out from behind their Fiscal Agents, WITH NameTags, or Shall I Continue Outing Them?) [Last revised Sept.11, published “As-Is” Sept. 21, 2017] » Screen Shot 2017-09-08 at 5.00.54 PM
The rest of Bruce Boyd caption at “Arabella Advisors.” Boyd is mentioned in earlier NVF tax returns. (Bio blurb not all visible at once, thanks to the display technology):
Bruce Boyd
Principal and Senior Managing Director
Bruce Boyd joined Arabella Advisors as a principal and senior managing director in 2007 after spending 20 years building and leading for-profit and nonprofit ventures. Bruce is based in Chicago and has worked with Arabella’s individual, family, foundation, and corporate clients, helping them to effectively and efficiently deploy philanthropic and investment capital. Those engagements have focused on strategic planning, due diligence, program development, implementation, and evaluation of impact. Bruce has worked on regional, national, and international projects stretching across a range of issues, including community development, human rights, education, and the environment.
In addition to his work at Arabella, Bruce serves as an advisor to the New Venture Fund and the Hopewell Fund, and on the board of the Windward Fund—all 501(c)(3) fiscal sponsors and grant-making intermediaries often used by Arabella clients. Bruce also serves on the boards of the Morrison Family Foundation, Forefront, and his own family’s foundation. He writes and speaks widely about philanthropy and the nonprofit sector.
Prior to joining Arabella, Bruce served for 13 years as a senior manager at the Nature Conservancy, where he led the Illinois Program, the Upper Mississippi River Project, and the four-continent Great Rivers Partnership. He is also a former member of the board of the Environmental Grantmakers Association, Opportunity International, and the Merit School of Music in Chicago. Bruce started his career in law but left legal practice to buy a manufacturing company out of bankruptcy, which he ran and later sold to a Fortune 500 company.
Bruce graduated magna cum laude from Middlebury College, earned his law degree from the University of Chicago, and studied business at Northwestern’s Kellogg School of Management.
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