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The Changing Government-Nonprofit Relationship in the United States

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Public organizations spinning off nonprofits - Seattle Port Authority, Port Jobs ... Churches spinning off nonprofits to accept public and private grants and contracts ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Changing Government-Nonprofit Relationship in the United States


1
The Changing Government-Nonprofit Relationship in
the United States
Steven Rathgeb Smith Evans School of Public
Affairs University of Washington Presentation in
Wellington, New Zealand 22 September 2008
2
Growth in Nonprofit Organizations By Type
Sources National Center for Charitable
Statistics- IRS Business Master File 01/2007
(with modifications by the National Center for
Charitable Statistics at the Urban Institute to
exclude foreign and governmental organizations).
3
  • Extensive government funding dates to the 1960s,
    with a buildup of federal grants and contract.
  • Diversification in the tools of government
    financial support
  • Initially government funding was in the form of
    grants and contracts
  • Increasingly government funds nonprofits through
    a direct and indirect financing mechanisms
    including
  • Tax credits
  • Tax exempt bonds
  • Vouchers
  • Health Insurance funding through Medicaid and
    Medicare

4
  • Diversification in Organizational forms and
    structures
  • Government contracting with nonprofits and
    for-profits represented a blurring of
    organizational boundaries to a degree
  • New in recent years is the rise in what might be
    called hybrid organizations
  • Public organizations spinning off nonprofits -
    Seattle Port Authority, Port Jobs to work with
    disadvantaged
  • Churches spinning off nonprofits to accept public
    and private grants and contracts
  • Nonprofits establishing for-profit subsidiaries
  • Nonprofit-for-profit contracts e.g. Starbucks
    has contracts with local workforce training
    programs employ disadvantaged workers
  • A local nonprofit agency for at risk youth is
    operating an ice-cream store staffed by these
    at-risk youth

5
Management and Policy Challenges
6
Pressure for Accountability and Performance
Evaluation
  • More monitoring and regulation of contract agency
    finances
  • Shift to performance contracting with
    reimbursement tied to meeting specific
    program-related outcome targets
  • Shift by private funders including the United Way
    and major foundations to an outcome-based grant
    model
  • Nonprofits and government often struggle to
    develop appropriate performance targets
  • Funding also often not present for extensive
    evaluation

7
  • Concern about program accountability has
    dovetailed with widespread concern about the
    accountability of nonprofits to the public
  • Especially true in the wake of well-publicized
    scandals involving nonprofits
  • Diversification of organizational forms and
    regulations around the appropriate use of
    different legal categories

8
Competition for Resources
  • Failure of the public sector to keep pace with
    rising costs of nonprofits
  • Huge number of nonprofits, vying for public and
    private grants in a very competitive environment

9
Capacity Building and Infrastructure Support
  • Big growth in nonprofits is concentrated in the
    smaller community organizations
  • Undercapitalized, underfunding, small boards,
    lack of extensive community base of support, have
    a lot of dedication
  • Difficult to respond to the increased demands for
    accountability

10
Steps to Improving the Effectiveness and
Representative Role of Nonprofit Organizations
11
General Approach
  • Emphasize the need for a problem-solving approach
    that entails all relevant stakeholders and
    involves the public and philanthropic sectors
  • Specific areas
  • Addressing the Resource Problems
  • Reinventing Technical Assistance
  • Governance
  • New Approaches to Standard-Setting
  • Political Voice and Participation

12
Addressing the Resource Problems
  • Solving this conundrum is not easy
  • Any solution would require placing nonprofits on
    a firmer financial footing
  • Nonprofits must be able to cross-subsidize the
    public goods aspect of operations
  • This could entail a number of possible
    strategies
  • More generous rates for government-funded
    services
  • Foundation funding of operational expenses
  • Longer-term foundation grants
  • Access to tax-exempt bond funding for capital
    expenses
  • Performance-based contracts allowing nonprofit
    agencies to keep surplus revenues

13
  • Greater flexibility in the types of government
    support and the organizational structure
  • The city of Seattle for example might own the
    land on which a nonprofit sits as way of reducing
    its costs
  • Economic Development Authorities have issues
    tax-exempt bonds to support capital needs of
    nonprofits
  • As a way of broadening political and community
    support, contract agencies could be more flexible
    in terms of
  • Structure
  • Creating advisory committees
  • New means of community membership
  • Support

14
Reinventing Technical Assistance
  • Funders and nonprofit agencies must rethink their
    ongoing relationship and develop ways in which
    they can work together to solve perennial issues
  • Board recruitment
  • Funding
  • Staff-board relations
  • Funders must think of themselves as investors
    with an ongoing commitment to the success of
    their grantees

15
  • Developing new technical assistance relationships
    is often complicated by the reluctance of
    nonprofits to seek assistance from funders
  • Many fear it may be perceived as a sign of
    trouble and threaten current or future funding
  • Public and private funders are trying to overcome
    this problem by supporting technical assistance
    provided by third party organizations
  • Includes nonprofit assistance centers
  • Umbrella organizations of nonprofit agencies have
    received support for technical assistance to
    their members
  • Importance of intermediary organizations

16
Governance
  • Related to Technical Assistance and Improving
    Capacity in Revisiting Governance in both Public
    and Nonprofit agencies
  • The traditional lines of authority within
    government, etween government and nonprofits, and
    within nonprofits must be rethought
  • Government must be more collaborative in working
    across departments to develop policies that are
    appropriate to the complex world of public
    services

17
  • Government and nonprofits must address the
    accountability and performance assessment issue
  • Already happening in many service categories such
    as child welfare as housing policy
  • Nonprofits must be more accountable to their
    communities and their members
  • Many nonprofits have only very weak links to
    their communities and are often not very
    accountable to them
  • Nonprofits, especially those receiving public
    funds, must be more connected to their
    communities
  • Many models aiming to revamp the board and
    advisory committee structure to provide more
    community governance and accountability exist

18
New Approaches to Standard-Setting
  • In the current environment, there is a tendency
    toward over-regulation or inappropriate
    regulation
  • In response, there is much greater interest in
    the US in various types of self-regulation
  • Some efforts are by nonprofit associations that
    try to certify nonprofits who abide by certain
    ethical practices
  • Other means of self-regulation are more
    programmatic
  • E.g. Child welfare agencies attempting to create
    a type of peer review system
  • Success has been uneven and is still unfolding
  • Government should help support these efforts and
    work with the nonprofit sector where appropriate

19
Political Voice and Participation
  • Many of these changes hinge on the effective
    political voice of nonprofit agencies
  • Nonprofits may be reluctant to participate in the
    political process due to concerns about
    governments reaction
  • This directly affects those receiving direct
    government funds
  • Nonprofits may be worried that political advocacy
    may jeopardize a tax exempt status
  • This is a special concern in newly democratizing
    countries where nonprofits are less established
  • It is also a concern in the US and other
    countries where overly aggressive political
    action has invited scrutiny and even audits

20
  • Many nonprofit volunteers and staff are
    unfamiliar with the political process
  • Smaller organizations may not have the resources
  • Given the differences among nonprofits and the
    dynamism of the government-nonprofit
    relationship, it is not possible to solve these
    political challenges
  • Education of government and nonprofit staff will
    help
  • Many nonprofit staff and volunteers are not
    well-versed in the laws and regulations governing
    political activities
  • Model agreements between government and
    nonprofits may assuage concerns and promote
    greater cooperation
  • Compact arrangement in the UK and US.

21
  • Government can provide incentives for nonprofits
    to reach out to communities and build new social
    networks
  • Government should approach its involvement with
    nonprofits as a political development issue
    requiring a long-term commitment to building
    civic infrastructure

22
Concluding Thoughts
  • In the last 25 years, governments relationship
    to the nonprofit sector has undergone a profound
    transformation
  • Privatization of a sort has occurred for some
    services
  • However, most new nonprofit provide previously
    unavailable services
  • Increases in fee income are largely from public
    funds, especially through Medicaid but to a
    lesser extent other public programs
  • Some fear a shift to private nonprofits has been
    accompanied by an abandonment of public goals in
    favor of private goals
  • Whether true or not, most nonprofits receiving
    public funding are tied to public priorities and
    regulations

23
  • The diversification of policy tools has produced
    an explosion in partnerships, coalitions,
    collaborations, and hybrid organizations
  • The rhetoric of privatization minimizes the need
    for additional public resources, resulting in
  • Difficulties for advocates of nonprofit-provided
    programs to successfully argue for government
    support
  • Risk of even incremental adjustments to key
    funding programs not being immediately apparent
  • Finally, government financing focuses the
    attention of nonprofits, government
    administrators, and policymakers on performance
    efficiency and effectiveness measures
  • Civic contributions of nonprofits can be
    overlooked or minimized
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