1 The Philanthropic Leadership Fund Update: 2014 The Philanthropic Leadership Fund at the Vermont Community Foundation supports activities that expand the impact of giving throughout the state. Since its inception in 2006, the Philanthropic Leadership Fund has helped donors and nonprofits learn more about community needs, identify and cultivate promising ideas, inspire others to give, and strengthen the nonprofit sector. We’re excited to share with you what we’ve been able to accomplish in the past year through the generosity and vision of the individuals who’ve contributed to this unique fund. Connecting the local food movement with the fight against hunger Our latest Understanding Vermont publication, Local Food For Healthy Communities, explores an interesting challenge: while Vermont’s nationally recognized local food system is bringing health and community benefits across the state, many Vermonters still experience hunger on a regular basis. The report highlights where there are opportunities to connect these two issues to ensure that all Vermonters have access to healthy, local food. The strategies in the report form the cornerstone of the Community Foundation’s Food and Farm Initiative, and the Philanthropic Leadership Fund has made possible broad outreach efforts and local events featuring speakers like former USDA Secretary Kathleen Merrigan, to attract additional support for the Initiative. The Philanthropic Leadership Fund also supports Results Based Accountability training for the Food and Farm Initiative grantees, so that they can set and track goals for the change they effect in the community. Helping nonprofits tell their stories effectively An important part of any organization’s efforts to inspire awareness and grow support for their work is the ability to tell their story clearly and compellingly. This is especially true in today’s world of fast-paced
4
Embed
The Philanthropic Leadership Fund Update: 2014 · 2014-10-21 · why the Community Foundation has offered support in this area since 2010. This past year, the Philanthropic Leadership
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
1
The Philanthropic Leadership Fund Update: 2014The Philanthropic Leadership Fund at the Vermont Community Foundation supports activitiesthat expand the impact of giving throughout the state. Since its inception in 2006, the Philanthropic Leadership Fund has helped donors and nonprofits learn more about community needs, identify and cultivate promising ideas, inspire others to give, and strengthen the nonprofit sector.
We’re excited to share with you what we’ve been able to accomplish in the past year through the generosity and vision of the individuals who’ve contributed to this unique fund.
Connecting the local food movement with the fight against hunger
Our latest Understanding Vermont publication, Local Food For Healthy Communities, explores an interesting challenge: while Vermont’s nationally recognized local food system is bringing health and community benefits across the state, many Vermonters still experience hunger on a regular basis.
The report highlights where there are opportunities to connect these two issues to ensure that all Vermonters have access to healthy, local food. The strategies in the report form the cornerstone of the Community Foundation’s Food and Farm Initiative, and the Philanthropic Leadership Fund has made possible broad outreach efforts and local events featuring speakers like former USDA Secretary Kathleen Merrigan, to attract additional support for the Initiative.
The Philanthropic Leadership Fund also supports Results Based Accountability training for the Food and Farm Initiative grantees, so that they can set and track goals for the change they effect in the community.
Helping nonprofits tell their stories effectively
An important part of any organization’s efforts to inspire awareness and grow support for their work is the ability to tell their story clearly and compellingly. This is especially true in today’s world of fast-paced
2
news and information sharing and it’s a big part of why the Community Foundation has offered support in this area since 2010.
This past year, the Philanthropic Leadership Fund, in partnership with the Ben & Jerry’s Foundation, allowed the Community Foundation to offer, free-of-charge, a series of 12 storytelling workshops across the state, focused on basic storytelling skills, storytelling through social media, and using storytelling to do community building. The workshops were geared towards organizations that don’t have their own marketing and development staff, or that would like guidance in identifying the right stories for their audiences.
The skills developed by nonprofit staff in these workshops are helpful in everything from fundraising to reporting back on the difference the organization is able to make in the community.
To date, more than 200 individuals have participated in the workshops, and we know from experience that nonprofits continue to need support in this area as the need for philanthropic resources grows.
Connecting nonprofits with grant opportunities
The Community Foundation is always interested in helping nonprofits find support for their good work, whether that support comes from within our family of funds or from other Vermont-focused foundations.
Thanks to the Philanthropic Leadership Fund, we’ve been able to partner with the Foundation Center in Washington, DC since 2007 to make available, free-of-charge, the Vermont Directory of Foundations, an online resource that allows grantseekers to research funding opportunities anytime, from anywhere they have an internet connection. The directory has more than 2,500 users per year, and saves grantseekers time and money that they can better spend on running their organizations.
Advancing mission investing
The idea that foundations can use their invested assets to further their philanthropic goals has gained a lot of traction lately, and for good reason. “Mission investing” or “impact investing” offers grantmakers the possibility of generating both a financial and a social return by making capital more available for initiatives that benefit the communities they serve. The Vermont Community Foundation was among the first community foundations in the country to adopt a formal mission investment policy and is considered a leader in the field.
This past year, the Philanthropic Leadership Fund made it possible for the Community Foundation’s president to step up as co-chair of the steering committee of Mission Investors Exchange—a group of over 230 foundations that help one another develop and spread the use of these innovative programs— and produce the “Community Foundation Field Guide To Impact Investing”.
3
Supporting community-defined civic spaces
The city of Burlington’s proposed plan for redevelopment of the abandoned Moran Power Plant is both ambitious and inspiring, and a last chance to save this remnant of mid-20th century Vermont. Significantly, the city’s plan offers an opportunity to create a public showcase for local food, energy efficiency, and the creative arts, among other things, demonstrating what’s possible with homegrown vision and planning. Support from the Philanthropic Leadership Fund helped move the project through the planning process, as well as supporting architectural, feasibility, and fundraising studies.
Helping to strengthen nonprofit governance
When a Community Foundation fundholder approached us with an idea to strengthen the boards of Addison County nonprofit organizations, the Philanthropic Leadership Fund stepped up to partner with the United Way of Addison County and provide matching funds to present workshops on governance, strategic planning, and monitoring financial indicators of health. Workshops were held every other month, attendance was sometimes standing room only, and the resounding feedback on the post-workshop evaluations was “more, more, more!” This has inspired the fundholder and the Community Foundation to work with capacity building groups like Common Good Vermont and Marlboro College to develop more programming to meet this need.
Bringing grantmakers together
Since 2009, the Leadership Fund has supported the Vermont Funders Network, which brings together local and national grantmakers who do a significant amount of grantmaking in Vermont, to share information and find new ways of working together.
At the February 2014 meeting, Vermont funders had the opportunity to hear from staff of the state’s federal delegation about issues in which legislators and grantmakers can work more closely together.
On Generator’s opening night, kids were particularly enthralled with the Oculus Rift technology.
The August 2014 meeting was hosted at Generator in Burlington (pictured above) and focused on the Maker Movement and the rapid growth in focus on creativity in education, society, and the economy—an area that is ripe for philanthropic investment.
Fostering collaboration for greater access to postsecondary education
In partnership with the J. Warren and Lois McClure Foundation, the Philanthropic Leadership Fund supported the McClure Foundation’s fifth annual education summit to discuss accomplishments, challenges, and opportunities related to building access to college and career education.
For the first time in summit history, the fall summit of 2013 took the shape of a learning seminar for Vermont-based funders and grantmakers with an interest in workforce education. Keynote Speaker Lawrence Miller, then Secretary of the Vermont Agency of Commerce and Community Development, joined panelists from leading nonprofits and state agencies to discuss the roles of funders and the business community in encouraging workforce development and opportunities for work-based learning.