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Back in October, we reported on the first-ever Coaches Care Success Summit, a five day event held in June that was intended to raise money to support a network of coaching-related charitable efforts.
James Komosinski, who created The Coaches Care Project as a “charitable giving program” of his for-profit Practice Pay Solutions company, told us in October he hoped to build a “legacy to my career in terms of giving back to the coaching profession.”
The dollars, though, didn’t materialize. “We fell short,” said Komosinski in October.
At the time of our report, Komosinski estimated the Coaches Care Success Summit brought in “roughly” $10,000. His company, Practice Pay Solutions, promised on its “www.coachescare.org” website “full disclosure of all revenues received and distributed…available upon request every December.”
We’ve made that request–on December 2nd–and have yet to receive any accounting of what money was raised by The Coaches Care Project or how that money was spent.
In a brief meeting in Orlando, where Komosinski and his company hosted a “cyber center” providing coffee and internet access to attendees at the ICF’s annual conference, Komosinski apologized for failing to respond to our request, saying he’d been swamped in preparations for the Orlando event.
We’ll let you know when and if we get the accounting the Coaches Care Project promises on its site.
Read our original story here.

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