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Sustain A Home Within’s Work With a Future Gift.

With a bequest, you can make a gift in support of future clients and volunteers and make a significant long-term impact. Read more about planned giving below.

Click the thumbnail above to view our informational PDF about planned giving at A Home Within.

About Planned Giving

Planned giving or legacy giving means planning future gifts to a nonprofit through a bequest. At this time, A Home Within is able to receive legacy gifts for unrestricted support.

Bequests are gifts that are made as part of a will or trust. A bequest can be to a person, or to a nonprofit organization, trust or foundation. Anyone can make a bequest—in any amount—to an individual or charity.

To make a bequest, you need to leave instructions, typically in a will. You can detail different types of bequests in your will and update it throughout your life as your family, priorities and wishes evolve.

How to Leave a Bequest to A Home Within

Step 1

Consult your financial or legal advisor, and add A Home Within to your will or trust.

Step 2

Draft and sign a letter to A Home Within indicating your intention to include A Home Within in your will or trust.

Step 3

Send your letter to Reed Connell at A Home Within by email to rconnell@ahomewithin.org or by mail to:

195 41st Street, #11172
Oakland CA 94611

All bequest intention letters will be formally acknowledged upon receipt.

Sample Language

"I give to A Home Within, a nonprofit corporation currently located at 195 41st Street, #11172, Oakland, CA 94611, or its successor thereto, _____ (written amount or percentage of the estate or description of property) for its unrestricted charitable use and purpose. The federal tax ID number for A Home Within is 94-3402610."

Legacy Donor Spotlight

A Home Within recently received a bequest from the estate of Dr. Shelley Fern Diamond. Dr. Fern Diamond was born in 1957 in the state of New York, and passed away in 2022. She moved to San Francisco in 1976, where she was involved in various organizations and activities. Dr. Fern Diamond worked as a reporter and producer for National Public Radio (NPR) and as a managing editor of the American Journal of Human Genetics, where she worked with UCSF professor in Human Genetics Dr. Charles Epstein. She was an activist for LGBTQ rights as well as the anti-nuclear movement and other issues. Dr. Fern Diamond published professional writing on various topics, and was also involved with alternative groups such as Processed World magazine, APA-50 zine, the SF Suicide Club, Photo Metro, and Mothertongue Feminist Reader’s Theater.

“This program has been life-changing for me, providing access to therapy that has helped me grow, heal, and better understand myself. The support is unmatched, and knowing it’s tailored specifically for former foster youth makes it even more impactful.”

– AHW Client
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At a Glance

16,000 hours of free therapy provided each year
Over 600,000 youth in foster care nationwide need access to mental healthcare
Over 500 therapists in 20 chapters across 10 states