Category: Uncategorized
Eric Fraint Named to Fels Institute Position
Your Part-Time Controller Founder and President Eric Fraint, CPA has been appointed to a teaching position at the prestigious Fels Institute of Government at the University of Pennsylvania. Fraint will be
WHYY 2010 Radiothon Gets Boost from YPTC
The broadcast studios of WHYY-FM were filled with hubbub on Oct. 20, 2010, when 20 staff members of Your Part-Time Controller gathered to assist the public radio station with its
GPCA Names Fraint to Board
Eric Fraint meets withAlbert LeCoff of theWood Turning Center atGPCA's Annual Meeting Eric Fraint, President and Founder of Your Part-Time Controller, has been named to the Board of Directors of
Awards Established for Educational Excellence
Two long-serving teachers at a Jewish day school in South Jersey are the first recipients of an annual award for excellence in education established by Eric Fraint, President and Founder
Eric Fraint Chairs Audit Committee
Eric Fraint, President and Founder of Your Part-Time Controller, LLC has been named the chair of the Audit Committee at The Philadelphia Foundation. The newly-formed committee assists the Board of Managers
YPTC Sleuthing Uncovers Embezzlement
While Your Part-Time Controller is more well-known for helping nonprofits improve their general financial and accounting practices, occasionally our associates' investigations uncover suspected criminal acts. The desire to keep digging and
Racing for a Cure for Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy
In 1999, YPTC Partner Jen Alleva learned that the son of her best friend had been diagnosed with Duchenne muscular dystrophy. Like some 20,000 other boys diagnosed each year with
YPTC Takes “Steps” to Fight Lung Disease
The American Lung Association calls its annual Fight for Air stair climbs “a vertical road race.” Staged in skyscrapers and stadiums in cities across the U.S., the events attract participants
YPTC Associate Honored for Community Service
Jerilyn Keit Dressler, CPA, began her commitment to community service when she was a 6th-grader in Queens, N.Y. The precocious 11-year-old gave away her classmates’ leftover food and snacks to