|
Carol
A. Goss, Member
President & CEO
The Skillman Foundation
Carol A. Goss is President & CEO of the Detroit-based
Skillman Foundation, a private independent foundation
whose mission is to improve the lives of children in Metropolitan
Detroit by strengthening their schools and neighborhoods.
Involved in philanthropy for the past 20 years, Ms. Goss
joined The Skillman Foundation in March 1998 as a senior
program officer. She was named President & CEO of
the Foundation in 2004. She has also worked as a program
officer at the Stuart Foundation in San Francisco and
as program director at the W. K. Kellogg Foundation in
Battle Creek, Michigan. Ms. Goss was named the 2007 James
A. Joseph Lecturer by the Association of Black Foundation
Executives. Crain’s Detroit Business cited her as
one of Southeast Michigan’s Most Influential Women,
an honor that the respected weekly bestows every five
years to the region’s most dynamic and powerful
women.
Ms. Goss' professional career also includes nearly 20 years experience in child welfare,
family services, and youth development in Detroit and Oakland, California. A native Detroiter,
Ms. Goss has a BA in sociology and an MSW from the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor.
"Family is very important to me." Ms. Goss says. "My husband, Tom, and I have
more than 30 children in our extended families.
I am passionate about children - especially children who never get the opportunity to succeed."
In addition to running The Skillman Foundation, which
has assets of $560 million and an annual grants budget
of $25 million, Ms. Goss is active with numerous nonprofits
a nd philanthropy organizations. In her free time, she
sings in her church's choir and is an avid runner. "Running
helps me stay healthy and also helps me put things into
perspective."
The Skillman Foundation recently fine-tuned its program
areas to focus efforts on six impoverished neighborhoods
in Detroit and on identifying and supporting innovative
schools throughout the city of Detroit.
“We want to make Detroit work for children,”
Ms. Goss says. “Despite all the hardships this city
– my hometown – has faced over the past 40
years - ordinary Detroiters are incredibly eager to roll
up their sleeves and work with us to make Detroit work
for children. We have a long road ahead, but I am emboldened
by the good will and enthusiasm in the neighborhoods and
in the schools, and I know that if we can keep marching
ahead together we will reach our destination.”
|