
Francisco Park Conservancy
Francisco Park Conservancy
Want to make a donation using Daffy?
Lower your income taxes with a charitable deduction this year when you donate to this non-profit via Daffy.
Daffy covers the bank/ACH transaction fees so 100% of your donation goes to your favorite charities. Daffy also waives fees for your first credit or debit card donation up to $1,000. After that, there is a 2.9% surcharge to cover fees charged by payment processors.
Do you work for Francisco Park Conservancy? Learn more here.
By donating on this page you are making an irrevocable contribution to Daffy Charitable Fund, a 501(c)(3) public charity, and a subsequent donation recommendation to the charity listed above, subject to our Member Agreement. Contributions are generally eligible for a charitable tax-deduction and a yearly consolidated receipt will be provided by Daffy. Processing fees may be applied and will reduce the value available to send to the end charity. The recipient organizations have not provided permission for this listing and have not reviewed the content.
Donations to organizations are distributed as soon as the donation is approved and the funds are available. In the rare event that Daffy is unable to fulfill the donation request to this charity, you will be notified and given the opportunity to choose another charity. This may occur if the charity is unresponsive or if the charity is no longer in good standing with regulatory authorities.
More about this organization
Mission
To build and maintain a park on the site known as Francisco Reservoir.
About
On July 22, 2014 the San Francisco Board of Supervisors transferred the defunct Francisco Reservoir from the SFPUC to the Recreation & Park Department to create a new public park for San Francisco. Since then the Francisco Park Conservancy was created and applied for and received tax exempt status. The Board of the FPC have contracted with an architectural firm, a civil engineering firm and a landscape architectural firm to facilitate the creation of the park. In addition to the $55,399 in program expenses, FPC incurred capitalized costs of $5,367,182 during the year in support of construction of a public park.