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| February 2004 |
Vol. 8, No.
6 |
Funding Matters: A Warning And An Opportunity
Recommendations: A Road To Travel
The workshop, Funding Matters: A Warning and An Opportunity, took place
November 25, 2003. Over one hundred and fifty individuals attended. The event
was presented by Community Development Halton in partnership with the Canadian
Council on Social Development, the Ontario Social Development Council and the
Halton Learning Foundation.
Introduction
The purpose of this workshop was to provide an opportunity for Halton
nonprofit and voluntary agencies as well as other representatives of the
community to dialogue about:
- the changing funding landscape in Canada, Ontario and the Region of
Halton
- the impact of these changes on the financial capacity and long term
sustainability of nonprofit and voluntary organizations
- the economic and social contribution of nonprofit and voluntary
organizations
- the nature of the funding regime and the restructuring of the
nonprofit and voluntary sector and
- needed changes to build the capacity of nonprofit organizations and
the voluntary sector in Halton
The keynote speaker, Katherine Scott, highlighted the salient findings of
her important study, Funding Matters: The Impact of Canada’s New Funding
Regime on Nonprofit and Voluntary Organizations. Panelists, with diverse
experience and knowledge of Halton, commented from their vantage point on the
ideas and analysis presented. They were: Theresa Greer, Executive Director,
Halton Helping Hands; Adelina Urbanski, Commissioner, Community and Social
Services, Regional Municipality of Halton; Chris Stoate, President,
LaserNetworks; Marg Garey, Director, Peel-Halton-Dufferin Human Resources
Development Canada; and Winston Tinglin, CEO, United Way of Burlington and
Greater Hamilton. Peter Clutterbuck, Consultant to the Social Planning Council
of Ontario, concluded the presentations with insights on the Social Sector’s
Economic Contribution.
The proceedings of this workshop are hosted on Community Development
Halton’s website at www.cdhalton.ca and are
comprised of: i) five Community Dispatches summarizing
the important findings from the document, Funding Matters: The Impact of
Canada’s New Funding Regime on Nonprofit and Voluntary Organizations; ii)
the PowerPoint presentations of conference speakers Katherine Scott and Peter
Clutterbuck; and iii) the conference recommendations entitled
Recommendations: A Road to Travel.
Joey Edwardh
Executive Director
Context
The last section, Recommendations: A Road to Travel, of the proceedings flows
from the deliberation of conference participants around three questions.
- Does the report, Funding Matters: The Impact of Canada’s New Funding
Regime on Nonprofit and Voluntary Organizations, the commentary of the panel,
the observations regarding the economic contribution of the sector and the
discussions of the day reflect the situation of Halton nonprofit and voluntary
organizations, funders and funded?
- What do you consider to be the most important or most urgent concerns in
relation to the situation of the nonprofit and voluntary sector?
- What recommendations for action do you believe are necessary to give
leadership to addressing and resolving the concerns raised today?
The recorded notes of the participant’s commentary at the roundtable
discussions are also available on CDH’s website. There is overwhelming consensus
by conference participants that the dimensions and characteristics of the
funding regime that emerged during the 1990s have been identified clearly in the
study, Funding Matters: The Impact of Canada’s New Funding Regime on Nonprofit
and Voluntary Organizations. Those present observe that the nature of funding to
the nonprofit and voluntary sector, along with the ramifications of this funding
model, affect the capacity and sustainability of the sector in Halton. In other
words, Halton’s local reality is described accurately by this study. Comments
such as “Katherine Scott’s analysis is exactly on target” are noted
continuously. Other observations capture the complexity of the issues such that
the need for a profound and broad-based community dialogue emerges.
The conference participants in their response to question 2 reiterate and
confirm the points made by the keynote speakers and panelists but elaborate from
their Halton experience. They identified some important issues that separate the
Halton experience from that of many communities. They are:
- The geography of Halton with its diverse and quite distinct communities of
Burlington, Oakville, Milton and Halton Hills present challenges to the nonprofit and voluntary sector to meet service needs across this urban/rural
space. For example, communication about the work of the nonprofit and voluntary
sector also represents a challenge as each municipality has its own newspaper.
There is not one easy source of community news and information that spans
Halton. This applies to all forms of media not just the print media.
- The history of Halton and its communities has produced the perception that
the development of the human service infrastructure has lagged behind that of
other areas. However, the demographics of Halton and its municipalities are
changing; thus, the demand for diverse and accessible human services is growing.
While there is acknowledgement of Halton’s changing human face, there has not
been a corresponding investment in the social infrastructure necessary to
accommodate the needs of its changing population.
- The nonprofit and voluntary sector has a strong history of partnership and
collaboration that constitutes a community asset on which to reinvest in social
infrastructure.
- The existence of four United Ways, each located in one of the four
municipalities that comprise Halton, distinguishes service provision in this
area from that of other communities. One or more of these United Ways funds many
human service agencies serving Halton. The diagnosis of the workshop
participants is that four United Ways create inefficiencies in the funding
regime, foster confusion, erode collaboration, dissipate energies in responding
to four separate organizations, complicate communication and create fundraising
difficulties that may affect the overall amount of campaign. This structure of
four United Ways dilutes the infrastructure of caring that exists and that is
needed in our community.
The conference participants are in search of leadership to articulate a
social vision for Halton, followed by thoughtful and sustainable changes, based
on the collective ingenuity of all community actors, as to how charitable
dollars and government grants can best support and nurture the work of nonprofit
and voluntary sector.
Recommendations
Funding model
The present funding model is not sustainable and affects negatively in multiple
ways the nonprofit and voluntary sector and, ultimately, the community as
documented in the study, Funding Matters: The Impact of Canada’s New Funding
Regime on Nonprofit and Voluntary Organizations, and as substantiated in the
commentary flowing from the conference. In fact, the sector is being
restructured and the combined stresses it faces are threatening the capacity of
nonprofit and voluntary agencies to sustain their activities. Trends show bigger
agencies and groups are better able to weather the storm of funding change than
smaller agencies and groups. Ultimately, a funding model reflects the value
placed on the sector not only as a source of caring but also as a foundation for
building social capital and creating democratic processes in a community. The
challenge associated with the well being of the sector is quite simply, what do
we want as a society, what do we consider to be a public good and, thus, not
dispensable. It challenges us to face the real cost of delivering services.
- The Conference participants recommend that Regional Chairman, Joyce Savoline, convene a round table to actively engage a broad representation of
community and of the funded and the funders to address and resolve the issues of
inadequate and diminishing infrastructure faced by Halton nonprofit and
voluntary sector organizations, many of them outlined in Funding Matters: The
Impact of Canada’s New Funding Regime on Nonprofit and Voluntary Organization.
In addition, the round table will work to inform the public of the impact on
community of the funding issues. Of particular importance are:
- Common understandings of the nature of the sector
- Data and information needs that sustain a cohesive and caring community
- Stability and predictability of core funding
- Funding regime – funding source, funding mix, and funding mechanisms
- Financial volatility and loss of infrastructure
- Mission drift
- Timeframes – Annual vs. Multi-year
- Adequacy – levels of service vs. levels of funding, disparities in funding
between jurisdictions, rising costs of doing business
- Project funding – restructuring, competition
- Grant requirements, onerous paperwork and accountability demands
- Partnership, real and imagined
- Role of respective governments and other funders; who subsidizes who;
downloading
- Role of private sector, private sector partnership – viability
- Trust – diminishing, yet a necessary condition in building social and human
capital
- Human resources – hiring, maintenance, retention and capacity development
- Building the capacity of agencies – ongoing and of high quality
An important subtext of the deliberations of this roundtable is a special
subcommittee to explore the issue of four United Ways serving Halton.
Four United Ways
The agencies and community assembled in this workshop indicate unequivocally
that the presence of four independent United Ways is a barrier to the continued
development of a human service infrastructure in Halton. There were multiple
reasons given for this assessment.
- The conference participants recommend that the four United Ways – the
United Way of Burlington and Greater Hamilton, the United Way of Oakville, the
United Way of Milton and the United Way of Halton Hills – under the umbrella of
the Regional Chair’s round table form a task force with the active participation
of local corporate leadership, community based leadership, municipal and
Regional leadership and human service system leadership along with national and
provincial leaders in the United Way movement with a view to unify their
activities to act as one powerful community investment force in Halton.
Policies, administrative functions, fundraising, strategic directions,
priorities, allocation strategies and standards must be such that the nonprofit
and voluntary sector no longer negotiate with four separate organizations.
Funders
Conference participants identify a paradox described as a lack of understanding
of the issues of the sector by funders and, conversely, a lack of understanding
of the needs of funders. The issues and needs of both groups have to be clearly
articulated and shared in order for the two to work together to build a viable
and vibrant nonprofit and voluntary sector.
- The conference participants recommend that the Halton Major Funders
Committee open a dialogue with the agency community so that understanding is
created. In some situations, participants recommend that the Halton Major
Funders Committee invite members of the agency community to the table to inform
discussion and enhance knowledge of the sector.
- The conference participants recommend that funders, through the Halton
Major Funders Committee, open a broad dialogue about best practices in funding
and develop strategies to implement them.
- The conference participants recommend that funders in Halton become
proactive in resolving the issues facing the sector, not only assuming
leadership in recognizing the impact of the present funding model but also
providing leadership in transforming it.
Accountability
The conference participants recognize the importance of accountability and that
charitable dollars are well invested. However, they believe that accountability
must be revisited to reflect the needs of the sector to be accountable to their
multiple publics, that accountability to the community or public must take
precedence over accountability defined by business type deliverables, and that
accountability expectations be reasonable and proportionate to risk, so that
onerous demands are not placed on agencies and organizations.
- The conference participants recommend that a dialogue table comprised of
funders and funded be constituted to revisit what is accountability and what are
reasonable ways of “rendering accountable” to the multiple publics of a
nonprofit and voluntary sector organization. The requirements of funders and
those of the agencies need to be better communicated and mutually understood so
that the interests of both can be served. Venues for dialogue are to be created
by the Halton Major Funders Committee and a newly constituted leadership group
of Halton’s nonprofit and voluntary sector to address the issue of
accountability.
- The conference participants recommend that the Halton Major Funders
Committee organize a session where their learnings, over the past decade, about
best practices be shared with the community of nonprofit and voluntary
organizations.
Volunteers and Voluntary Sector
The nonprofit and voluntary sector brings together many members of the community
to contribute to its social and economic development. The activities of
nonprofit and voluntary organizations often represent that place where the
active engagement of community residents occurs. This involvement is important
in creating awareness about community and provides a vehicle for participatory
democracy. When given an economic value, this volunteer contribution is worth
hundreds of thousands of dollars to a community. The rich interaction of
volunteers, a community’s social capital, must be nurtured and supported
adequately. However, common perceptions associated with volunteer organizations
and their needs must be dispelled in order to respect and use the talents of
volunteers in an agency and in the community.
- The conference participants recommend that in the community dialogues
flowing from this conference, the role of volunteers, their contribution to
community and their needs be adequately recognized and taken into consideration
by all. Moreover, the relationship between the funding model and its impact on
volunteers needs to be acknowledged.
Sector Mobilization
The conference participants concur with the description of the state of the
social sector presented in the study, Funding Matters: The Impact of Canada’s
New Funding Regime on Nonprofit and Voluntary Organizations. Strong sentiment
suggests that the sector must mobilize in order to educate citizens as to its
role and importance and to advocate for funding practices and program
partnerships that build the capacity of the sector to contribute to human well
being and democratic citizenship. The funding crisis of the social sector is a
political issue.
- The conference participants recommend that the nonprofit and voluntary
agencies of Halton come together and unite to form a collaborative that will
give leadership to the issues restructuring the sector, document the changing
circumstances of the sector, paint a picture of community life without the
sector, articulate the sector’s needs in order to carry out their mandates and
advocate with one voice to government and the general public.
- The conference participants recommend that Community Development Halton
take an active role in convening Halton’s nonprofit and voluntary sector.
Advocacy
Evidence based advocacy is an area of activity central to the role and mandate
of many organizations in the nonprofit and voluntary sector. Historically, the
roots of the sector grew out of giving voice and support to those most
vulnerable. Participants concurred that advocacy activities and the research
substantiating the situation of people as they live in our communities have not
been supported over the decade of the 1990s and, in fact, have been silenced.
Advocacy is part of strengthening leadership in the sector and is part of the
dialogue moving human services from those based on charity to those based on
justice and human rights.
- The conference participants recommend the role of advocacy be recognized
as critical to raising the awareness of the public and as essential in creating
a full dialogue on understanding and resolving the issues that affect the well
being and quality of life of people and the communities in which they live.
- The conference participants recommend that community based information,
the basis of program planning and advocacy, be recognized as a necessary and
valued function in strengthening the nonprofit and voluntary sector.
Community Awareness
The nonprofit and voluntary sector is often described as one of the pillars of a
democratic and civic society. Yet, conference participants identify the
invisibility of the sector as a major detriment to public understanding of their
work and its importance in building caring and socially inclusive communities
where opportunity exists for all. Even less discussed is the economic role and
contribution of the nonprofit and voluntary sector in a community. Conference
participants also note that the public remains unaware of the impact of the
downloading of human services to Regional government and then the impact of
further downloading on to the nonprofit and voluntary sector.
- The conference participants recommend that a promotional strategy be
elaborated to educate the public, business and the mass media on the
contribution of this sector to the quality of people’s lives and its impact on
the prosperity of the community. The promotional campaign is to make the sector
visible and recognized as essential. This activity would be a focus of the newly
created Halton nonprofit and voluntary sector leadership collaborative.
For more information on the Funding Matters: A Warning and An
Opportunity, please see the
Funding Matters workshop materials
page.
For more information on Funding Matters: The Impact of Canada's New
Funding Regime on Nonprofit and Voluntary Organizations, visit the CCSD
website at: http://www.ccsd.ca/pubs/2003/fm/
PDF: 101k
Produced by Community Development Halton
860 Harrington Court
Burlington, Ontario L7N 3N4
(905) 632-1975, (905) 878-0955; Fax: (905) 632-0778; E-mail:
office@cdhalton.ca
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