Title: Introduction to Community Foundations
1Introduction to Community Foundations
- The Hope Institute
- The Beautiful Foundation
- Barnett F. Baron
- The Asia Foundation
- February 13, 2008
2What is a community foundation?
- An independent, nonprofit, grantmaking
organization - Usually limits its grantmaking to a defined
geographic area (city, county, urban or rural
area) - Governed by a voluntary board of directors
usually composed of representatives of the
communities it serves - Provides the legal framework to manage multiple
separate funds or endowments named for specific
donors, or created for specific purposes or
locations - Funded from multiple sources individuals,
families, corporations, foundations, sometimes
local governments - Provides expert staff advice and services to
multiple community donors and grantees - Seeks to initiate, engage, or facilitate
community discussion about critical community
issues
3U.S. community foundation statistics (2005)
- 707 community foundations (413 in 1995)
- 44.5 billion in assets (the total has more
than tripled since 1995, but half of all
community foundations still have assets of less
than 10 million) - 5.6 billion in gifts received in 2005
- 3.2 billion in grants made in 2005 (400 growth
since 1995, but three-fifths give less than 1
million) - Account for 1 of grantmaking foundations but 9
of total giving (compared to 10 by corporate
foundations and 68 by independent foundations) - Source Foundation Center, Key Facts on
Community Foundations, September 2007 and
Community Foundation Giving and Assets 1981 to
2005, available at foundationcenter.org/findfunder
s/statistics/pdf/02_found_growth/00_05.pdf.
4Top 10 Community Foundations (2006)
5Community leadership roles
- Convening stakeholders around a common problem or
theme - Forging partnership to leverage additional public
or private resources - Brokering new relationships within community,
including bringing contending parties together - Providing training and technical assistance to
nonprofit grantees - Speaking out on issues to the media
- Commissioning research and needs assessments to
identify service needs - Collaborate in creating new institutions (e.g.,
Martin Luther King Library in Atlanta, Georgia)
6Community foundation advantages
- Located in the communities they serve, community
foundations are closer to and may be more
responsive to community needs - You do not have to be wealthy to donate gifts
can be made at any level - Alternative to setting up a private foundation
- Provide expert staff services to donors and
grantees - Governance structures are more likely to reflect
the demography and politics of local communities
than the governing boards of independent,
corporate, or family foundations
7Community foundation advantages
- Community foundations have contributed to the
democratization of philanthropy in the U.S.,
through - Donor-advised funds
- Providing relatively more support for basic human
services
8Donor-Advised Funds (DAFs) Creating a Charitable
Checking Account
- Separately managed charitable giving accounts
that exist under the umbrella of a larger public
charity, such as a community foundation - DAFs can be as little as 10,000 or as large as
several millions anyone can be a
philanthropist - Donors receive an immediate tax benefit
- Distributions (grants) can be made over time
- Donor has the privilege of advising to whom the
grants can be made - Donor gets the benefit of expert staff who work
for the community foundation - Donor does no administrative work
- An alternative to establishing a private
foundation
9Donor Advised Funds
- Fastest growing segment of the US charitable
sector - Assets under management have more than tripled in
the last decade - Offered by both philanthropic institutions (such
as community foundations) and commercial
financial firms (e.g., Fidelity Charitable Gift
Fund) - In 2007, Fidelity had 4.6 billion in assets in
42,000 separate DAFs. It made 995 million in
donor advised grants. - Between 1991 and 2007, Fidelity made 7 billion
in grants to 111,000 organizations.
10Fidelity Charitable Gift Fund 1991 2007
11Charitable divide in the U.S.
- Research shows that less than 10 percent of the
money Americans give to charity addresses basic
human needs, like sheltering the homeless,
feeding the hungry and caring for the indigent
sick, and that the wealthiest typically devote an
even smaller portion of their giving to such
causes than everyone else. - Stephanie Strom, Big gifts, tax breaks, and a
debate on charity, New York Times, September 6,
2007 Nicole Wallace, Donors overestimate their
antipoverty giving, Chronicle of Philanthropy,
January 24, 2008.
12Charitable divide in the U.S.
- 80 of donations of 10 million or more go to
elite colleges or universities, medical
institutions, or arts and cultural institutions. - Households with annual incomes below 100k
provide 49 of all contributions to organizations
that provide food, shelter, and other basic
necessities to needy people. -
- Holly Hall, A Charitable Divide As wealthy
institutions report record fund-raising gains,
social service groups struggle to stay afloat,
Chronicle of Philanthropy, January 10, 2008,
citing Gary A. Tobin and Aryeh K. Weinberg,
Megagifts in American Philanthropy, Institute for
Jewish Community Research, December 2007,
available at www/jewishresearch.org/PDFs/MegaGift.
EWeb.07.pdf.
13Charitable Gifts of 1 Million or More
- Private higher education 25
- Public higher education 19
- Health and medical 16
- Arts and culture 12 72
- Public and society benefit 5
- Human services 5
- Secondary/elem education 4
- General educ 4
- Environment 4
- International 3
- Religion 2
- Federated appeals 2
- Other 1
14Grant Priorities
15Community foundation grant priorities (2005)
- Education 23
- Human Services 22
- Health 14
- Arts Culture 14
- Public Affairs/Benefit 12
- Environ/Animals 6
- Religion 4
- Science/Tech 3
- International 2
- Other 1
16Grant Priorities
17Human services
- Not only do community foundations provide more
support to human services organizations, but
within the human services category, community
foundations are more likely to than either
independent or corporate foundations to focus on
people with disabilities, the aging, victims of
crime or abuse, and substance abusers.
18Globalizing the community foundation model
- Cleveland Community Foundation 1914 Winnipeg
Foundation 1921 - US model originally based on gifts from wealthy
local families and corporations - Later expanded to middle-class through DAF and
pooled funds - UK in 1980s prominent role of government
funding for start-up costs and basic operations
(Community Foundation for Northern Ireland) - Central, Eastern Europe, Russia, and Africa
strong role of USAID and international ODA
community. Mott Fdtn, CAF - Asia role of international NGOs and foundations
(Ford, Synergos). - Growth of international support organizations
WINGS-CF, World Bank - WINGS now identifies 1175 community foundations
in 46 countries (274 outside the US, UK, and
Canada) -
-
19Issues What is a community?
- There are widespread Asian traditions of
- Clan associations
- Guild associations
- Religious trusts
- Self-help associations for internal migrants and
international immigrants based on place-of-origin - Village self-help organizations
- There are even examples of clan-based endowed
agricultural estates during the Sung dynasty in
China, which distributed grain and money to needy
members of the clan. -
- Are these good models for contemporary community
foundations? Or are they obstacles?
20Issues Confucian ideals?
- Benevolent government is the best philanthropy.
- Beyond ones own network of personal and family
relationships, is benevolence the duty of
government? - Why does Asia lag in the growth and popularity of
community foundations? - Does The Beautiful Foundation represent a break
from those traditions? Can it be a model for
other Asian (Confucian) societies?
21Issues Dependence on Foreign Aid?
- The recent surge in interest in community
foundations around the world has been largely
initiated and funded by external donor agencies,
including foundations, international NGOs, USAID,
and the World Bank. - Can funding for local community foundations be
sustained by local sources? At what levels?
22Resources WINGS
- WINGS Worldwide Initiatives for Grantmaker
Support - 2005 Community Foundation Global Status Report,
at www.wingsweb.org/download/GSR2005_p1a.pdf - International Connections Resources that
support the growth and development of community
foundations globally, at www.wingsweb.orf/download
/InternationalConnections. - pdf