Support Oak Hills Living Center by improving quality of life for seniors through facility improvements, programs, staff development, technology, and resident activities while ensuring dignity and compassionate care.
Oak Hills Memorial Foundation Inc centered its latest reported grant on general operating support for Highland Manor Inc in New Ulm, Minnesota, a clear sign that its giving is tightly tied to local long-term care needs. The foundation’s mission is closely linked to Oak Hills Living Center priorities, with support directed toward facility improvements, new technology, staff development, resident activities, and the Dream Come True program. That pattern points to a funder focused on day-to-day care as well as the systems that support it. The foundation also backs workforce stability for care staff through nursing school loan reimbursement and healthcare scholarships for employees pursuing long-term care and related healthcare training. Alongside those workforce programs, it funds capital and equipment needs, which places it in the category of a place-based, institution-centered foundation rather than a broad grantmaker. Its reported assets are $1,361,725, and annual grants given total $159,775.
In senior care and long-term care operations, Oak Hills Memorial Foundation Inc funds the practical pieces that shape daily care. The Building Fund supports facility improvements and capital projects at Oak Hills Living Center, while a separate funding stream covers technology, staff development, resident activities, and quality-of-life equipment. Workforce development is another clear theme. The Nursing School Loan Reimbursement Program helps RNs and LPNs employed at Oak Hills Living Center pay off nursing school loans in exchange for a work commitment. The Healthcare Scholarship Program also supports employees pursuing degrees or certifications in long-term care and related healthcare fields, covering tuition, books, and fees after other aid. These programs connect education support directly to staffing and retention. Resident programming is part of the same model: foundation funds also go toward resident activities and the Dream Come True program, linking grantmaking to day-to-day life for older adults in care.
Grant size is flat in the available record: p25, median, and p75 are all $159,775. That means the reported giving pattern centers on a single grant amount rather than a spread of award sizes. The latest 990 year on file is 2025, and the recent-grants record shows one grant in that year. The foundation’s structure is place-based and institution-centered, with programs tied to Oak Hills Living Center and related staff support. It also accepts unsolicited applications in its scholarship, loan reimbursement, and other named program streams.
$160K
$1.4M
$166K
$181K
Most grants fall between $160K and $160K, with a median of $160K.
25th Percentile
$160K
Median
$160K
75th Percentile
$160K
About 100% of grants go to recipients in MN.
MIKE FURTH
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Giving is concentrated entirely in Minnesota, with 100% of reported grants going to recipients in the HQ state. The recipient country distribution is all U.S. grants. At the city level, the latest grant went to New Ulm, MN, matching the foundation’s local footprint. The program descriptions also point to New Ulm as the core geography for building, technology, staff development, resident activity, scholarship, and loan reimbursement support.
Its named programs and summary point to senior care, long-term care, assisted living, short-term rehabilitation, staff education and scholarships, community and resident activities, facility improvements, and healthcare technology for long-term care. The focus is tightly tied to Oak Hills Living Center and to improving quality of life for older adults and staff.
The beneficiary types listed are older adults and long-term care residents, long-term care staff and healthcare workers who may receive scholarships, and Oak Hills Living Center as an institutional beneficiary. The grant programs also include loan reimbursement and scholarship support for employees pursuing healthcare training.
Yes. It runs a Nursing School Loan Reimbursement Program for RNs and LPNs employed at Oak Hills Living Center, and a Healthcare Scholarship Program for employees pursuing degrees or certifications in long-term care and related healthcare fields. Both programs are tied to staffing and retention.
Yes. The geographic scope of giving is local, the top state by grant count is Minnesota, and 100% of reported grants go to recipients in the HQ state. The recent grant record also shows a recipient in New Ulm, MN.
2025
Source: IRS Form 990-PF, fiscal year 2025.
Most recent grants reported to the IRS.
| Recipient | Location | Amount | Year | Purpose |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| HIGHLAND MANOR INC | NEW ULM, MN | $159,775 | 2025 | GENERAL OPERATING EXPENSES |
HIGHLAND MANOR INC
$159,775GENERAL OPERATING EXPENSES