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http://charitychannel.com/cc/pauline-annarino
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Posts: Rank: New to Forums Level: Last Activity: 6/22/2011 Member Since: 6/22/2011
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About Me
Pauline Annarino, M.S. has been a member of the grants community for more than twenty-five years, serving as a grant developer, program development director, nonprofit administrator and independent consultant.
She began her career in the grants field like many of her peers. As a director within higher education, her dean made a "leap of faith" entrusting her with the development of a number of disability-related grants. Following twelve years in higher education, Ms. Annarino spent 13 years as the Director of Program Development for a mid sized advocacy-based and community services nonprofit. During her tenure at the Greater Los Angeles Council on Deafness (GLAD), she helped diversify the organization’s funding base from predominantly government (95%) to a more balanced 60% government and 40% private sector, and grew the organization’s annual grant revenue from $1.5 million to $6.5 million. In addition, she coordinated all aspects of a $7.2 million one-of-a-kind Deaf Community Center capital undertaking and created new nonprofit subsidiaries, bringing the organization’s overall structure from a single organization to a parent agency with six related subsidiaries.
Upon leaving GLAD, Ms. Annarino established her own consulting firm, Nonprofit Navigators, which she continues to run today. More recently, she has found herself back in higher education as a Director of the Western Regional Interpreter Education Center at El Camino College in Torrance Colorado. The Center is one of a U.S. Department of Education-funded six-center National Consortium charged with improving sign language interpreter education.
Most significantly, Ms Annarino has been involved with the development of credentialing tools beginning in 1985. Since that time, she has been involved or led the development of three certification tools for sign language interpreters. In 2000, she left the development of another certification to focus on AAGP's credentialing initiative. She has been actively involved in GPCI and the development of the grant professional's credential ever since.
Pauline joined AAGP in 1999 and served on the Credentialing and Finance Committee. In 2003, she joined the Board of Directors, serving as board member, Vice President and President. Ms. Annarino has also served on the GPCI board since its inception and was its first President.
Ms. Annarino is a native Midwesterner who now makes Los Angeles her home. She is a certified sign language interpreter and specializes in deafness-related initiatives.
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About Me
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Biography:
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Pauline Annarino, M.S. has been a member of the grants community for more than twenty-five years, serving as a grant developer, program development director, nonprofit administrator and independent consultant.
She began her career in the grants field like many of her peers. As a director within higher education, her dean made a "leap of faith" entrusting her with the development of a number of disability-related grants. Following twelve years in higher education, Ms. Annarino spent 13 years as the Director of Program Development for a mid sized advocacy-based and community services nonprofit. During her tenure at the Greater Los Angeles Council on Deafness (GLAD), she helped diversify the organization’s funding base from predominantly government (95%) to a more balanced 60% government and 40% private sector, and grew the organization’s annual grant revenue from $1.5 million to $6.5 million. In addition, she coordinated all aspects of a $7.2 million one-of-a-kind Deaf Community Center capital undertaking and created new nonprofit subsidiaries, bringing the organization’s overall structure from a single organization to a parent agency with six related subsidiaries.
Upon leaving GLAD, Ms. Annarino established her own consulting firm, Nonprofit Navigators, which she continues to run today. More recently, she has found herself back in higher education as a Director of the Western Regional Interpreter Education Center at El Camino College in Torrance Colorado. The Center is one of a U.S. Department of Education-funded six-center National Consortium charged with improving sign language interpreter education.
Most significantly, Ms Annarino has been involved with the development of credentialing tools beginning in 1985. Since that time, she has been involved or led the development of three certification tools for sign language interpreters. In 2000, she left the development of another certification to focus on AAGP's credentialing initiative. She has been actively involved in GPCI and the development of the grant professional's credential ever since.
Pauline joined AAGP in 1999 and served on the Credentialing and Finance Committee. In 2003, she joined the Board of Directors, serving as board member, Vice President and President. Ms. Annarino has also served on the GPCI board since its inception and was its first President.
Ms. Annarino is a native Midwesterner who now makes Los Angeles her home. She is a certified sign language interpreter and specializes in deafness-related initiatives.
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About Me
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