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| May 09, 2003 volume 4 · issue 5 |
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LAYC Becomes VPP’s Seventh Investment Partner Early in April, VPP entered into an investment partnership with the Latin American Youth Center (LAYC), a highly successful community-based organization providing academic assistance, employability development, and wraparound social services to the most at-risk Latino and multicultural youth population. LAYC serves approximately one thousand young people in the District of Columbia on an ongoing basis and touches thousands of others with its in-school and out-of-school outreach activities. Through innovative programs like the Ben & Jerry’s Partnershop, a charter school for teen parents and others who are not succeeding in traditional schools, and a variety of educational, employment, and social programs, LAYC supports local youth and families. Through this partnership, VPP will provide LAYC with up to $250,000 and significant non-financial support, including management assistance and access to VPP’s network of contacts and resources, for strategic planning. LAYC intends to use the strategic planning process to clarify its mission and develop a plan for improving the impact of its core programs and services. LAYC hopes to map an approach for replicating a subset of its core programs elsewhere in the District of Columbia and nearby suburban neighborhoods with large Latino populations. The LAYC team will also determine the most effective way to influence public policy on issues that affect immigrant and first- and second-generation youth and families in the region. VPP’s funding will enable LAYC to engage a strategic planning firm, retain content expertise, and support agreed-upon research and best-practice analysis. Planning preparation has begun; strategic planning will begin by June 1, 2003, and will be completed on or before November 30, 2003. We are excited to have this opportunity to work with LAYC Executive Director Lori Kaplan, who is highly regarded in the community for her commitment, her talent, and her proven ability to partner with others to get things done. Her list of impressive accomplishments includes bringing the organization from a budget of $1 million to $6.5 million (projected), raising more than $5 million for capital needs, and launching a charter school and a business enterprise. Lori oversees a 29-year-old organization that has a strong history of providing innovative programs that truly captivate young people. Founded in the late 60s and incorporated as a not-for-profit organization in 1974 to serve at-risk, first-generation immigrant youth from Spanish-speaking Caribbean countries, the organization initially offered job training and programs in the visual and performing arts and crime prevention. LAYC added several social service programs in the early 80s as immigrants from war-torn Central American countries arrived in Washington, DC, and had few other places to turn. In the late 80s, LAYC responded to increasing gang violence and drug addiction in the community by creating programs to combat substance abuse and engage young people in alternative healthy and safe activities. During that time LAYC also developed residential housing and foster care services for youth in need. In the mid-90s, educational enrichment programs were created to provide enhancements and linkages to educational and career opportunities, and family mentoring programs were developed to support the challenging needs of families in the community. Learn more about LAYC. |
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| The Importance of Leverage When Jack Davies, a VPP investor and a Heads Up board member, leveraged his relationship with Scholastic Books, hundreds of students benefited. |
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| Chairman’s Corner: Should
Nonprofits Consider Mergers and Consolidations? A recent front-page article in The Washington Post highlighted the very tough times facing nonprofit organizations in the National Capital Region. Many nonprofits are cutting programs or shutting down altogether, and two rather large organizations, the Metropolitan Police Boys and Girls Clubs and the Boys and Girls Club of Greater Washington, have decided to merge in an effort to survive. The merger decision is particularly striking because it’s not often that we hear about consolidations in the nonprofit sector. But because the severe funding crisis is not going away soon, funders concerned for the very survival of their grantees and frustrated by their own reductions in available money may increasingly encourage or even demand that their grantees collaborate or consolidate. In theory, mergers, joint ventures, and consolidation of operations make a great deal of sense. Bringing organizations together—whether for-profit, governmental, or nonprofit—can be a powerful way to build stronger organizations with increased impact and reach, offering the tactical benefits of eliminating duplication, achieving greater efficiencies, coordinating services, and reducing turf battles. But in practice, consolidations can be more difficult and costly than they appear. The corporate world is rife with failed mergers and acquisitions. The nonprofit sector faces many of the same challenges as the for-profit
world and then some. Nonprofit organizations are often less driven by
earnings and revenue than by values and mission. For many nonprofit executives
and board members, the risk of losing control of mission and of their
organization in a merger or consolidation far outweighs their concern
for financial and operational efficiencies. However, nonprofit leaders’ fears regarding mergers and consolidations are justified. Although mergers and acquisitions are commonplace in business, they present formidable challenges, often having higher than expected costs, proposed synergies that are never realized, and ill-conceived, ineffective integration of products or services, to say nothing of the likelihood of layoffs and damaged employee trust at the newly merged company. Funders can be helpful in providing information about partnerships, mergers, consolidations, and resource-sharing models. They can help nonprofits think through the pros and cons of such an action, the implications it has for the organization, and what would be involved in negotiating and implementing it. Throughout this process, the underlying question must be: Does this action advance our mission? Funders can also help by pointing the nonprofits to specialists in the field who understand the issues related to nonprofit consolidations and asset transfers. Funders must be careful not to force such actions, however. The parties involved have to see value in coming together, and the impetus for the consolidation or partnership has to come from the organizations themselves. If there is a lesson to be learned from business, it is that forced mergers do not fare well. Nonprofits would be wise to keep an open mind regarding mergers, consolidations, and other restructuring options and consider them as a path to create stronger organizations and accelerate mission achievement. Organizations should spend time assessing their strengths and weaknesses. They should carefully examine the assets of their organization and of potential partners—boards, management, products/services, channels to funders, real estate, and so on—to see what might complement their operations and vice versa. And nonprofits should focus on what new opportunities would be made possible by a larger, stronger organization. In this time of shrinking resources and increasing need, it’s getting
harder and harder to go it alone. Under the right conditions, mergers
and consolidations can be effective strategic growth tools. And just as
in business, the creation of a stronger organization could actually change
the dynamics in a region or field. --Mario Morino
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| See Forever Builds Its Board David Domenici, co-founder of the See Forever Foundation’s Maya Angelou Public Charter School, notes that this year’s strategic planning process opened his eyes to new ways of thinking about how to run the organization. With plans and support from VPP and the Gates Foundation to replicate the school for at-risk students, David and the management team of See Forever knew that one of the first tasks was to build a highly skilled and well-connected board of directors. Among those recently recruited to See Forever’s board are VPP investors and board members Jack Davies and Raul Fernandez. Impressed by the comprehensive program offered at the charter school,
Jack and Raul are excited about the prospect of taking the program to
other areas of the city and influencing programs across the nation. "From
the first time I heard about See Forever and the Maya Angelou School,
I was amazed by the success they had enjoyed in helping some of the area's
most at-risk teens,” says Jack. “After visiting the school
and seeing the program, I knew that what they are doing is very special.”
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| Kruvant’s Firm Selected to Rebuild Iraqi Schools Charito Kruvant, founder and president of Creative Associates International, Inc. (CAII), and one of the VPP board members most active in civic affairs, has worked in war-torn countries around the world. Last month her company was awarded a multi-million dollar contract by the US Agency for International Development (USAID) to evaluate and help rebuild the Iraqi education system. The vast majority of CAII’s work is through USAID, including a current job in Afghanistan where staff members have helped revise and deliver textbooks and are training teachers via radio. In Guatemala, CAII helps produce a human rights radio show. The first task facing CAII in Iraq will be to determine what kinds of support and supplies are needed for 4.2 million children to start the new school year on October 1. A major challenge will be for CAII and its subcontractors to work with the Ministry of Education to develop policy and train teachers quickly. Charito points out that for a country in upheaval, having children in school is an important sign of a return to normalcy. CAII employs about 80 people in Washington, DC, and another 200 across
the globe—often in political “hot spots.” Charito told
The Washington Post, “We work in areas where conflict is
about to end and turmoil is about to begin, and we love it.” |
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| Bob Boisture: The Price We Pay Most tax attorneys are not likely to be mistaken for avid youth and public service advocates, but for Robert A. Boisture, these elements are a natural fit. Bob is an advisor to VPP’s board of directors, where his deep understanding of nonprofit issues is invaluable. He is passionate about the need for a strong national voice that will hold local and national government accountable for addressing the needs of children in the US. Bob, a Louisiana native, says he “got hooked” on public policy and nonprofit issues through a popular professor at Yale Law School. After law school and two years at Oxford, Bob was drawn to Washington, DC because “I was interested in helping to make the rules” that affected nonprofit organizations and their constituents. For most of his career, Bob has worked for the prestigious tax law firm, Caplin & Drysdale, which represents a wide swath of American nonprofits, from the Robert Wood Johnson, Kellogg, and Packard Foundations to the Natural Resources Defense Council and a host of universities and hospitals. One of Bob’s first assignments at the firm in 1980 was to help establish Independent Sector, an umbrella organization created to represent foundations and the national nonprofit operations they support. Bob also represents the Council on Foundations on tax matters. When you talk to Bob, it’s clear from his enthusiasm that the national YMCA is one of his favorite clients. The “Y” came to Caplin & Drysdale for help in 1981 when the IRS challenged the tax-exemption of YMCA fitness programs. After five years as an outside counsel, Bob went to work for the YMCA from 1986 to 1992. He opened their Washington, DC public policy office, helping them clarify their mission and develop a national and state advocacy strategy. “Working for the “Y” got me out of my legal box. I went on the road to talk and teach at local Y’s,” says Bob, who is still active with the national organization. Bob’s advocacy work with the YMCA convinced him that the myriad of issues and challenges facing children and youth—especially low income youth—begs for a very vocal and visible movement on their behalf. “My dream,” he says, is the creation of a broad-based advocacy coalition that includes service providers and funders and promotes the cost-effectiveness of meeting the developmental needs of children up front, rather than trying to put the pieces back together after kids are in crisis.” Such an effort must include careful research to build a compelling case for increased public funding for preventive services for children. A few organizations such as the Children’s Defense Fund have gained important ground, says Bob, but what’s needed is a broader effort with strong, dynamic leadership. He suggests that while “saving one child at a time” through direct services is important, the youth service field must also embrace the more “activist” strategies used by some in the environmental and anti-tobacco movements. “There’s tremendous leverage in convincing government to allocate greater resources to kids.” A voice for children is especially important given the current conservative political climate and economic downturn, Bob says. “I’m glad that we are galvanized by the current budget crisis, but the fundamental problem is not cyclical, “ he adds. Even in better times, government funding for children and families—particularly non-academic programs like child care, after-school programs, and youth centers—was woefully inadequate. And the popular notion that philanthropy and nonprofits can fill the funding and service gaps is simply wrong. Bob explains that government’s capacity to provide resources is so much greater than the giving capacity of individuals and foundations, that if government steps back from supporting youth and family-serving organizations there’s just no way they can meet the growing need for services. To this point, Bob encourages VPP to ensure that the capacity building and management assistance it provides to its investment partners includes helping them build public awareness of the need for increased public funding. Bob believes that individual donors, foundations, and enterprises like VPP that take the time to understand the work of nonprofit service organizations can be valuable public educators and advocates. When government and the private sector ignore blatant needs and dismiss opportunities to address them, society pays a heavy price in terms of lost generations of young people who are unable to contribute their talents and who instead drain resources. Says the activist tax attorney, “We need to help people—including those who are more advantaged—see that the need for creating a healthy social environment for children is just as important as creating a healthy natural environment.” |
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VPP Forum Highlights Nonprofit
Survival Key points in the discussion included:
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Contributions to VPP Still Strong |
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The Great American Bake Sale |
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If you have questions or comments about VPP News, please direct them to the editor, Sandra Gregg © 2003-2006 Venture Philanthropy Partners Privacy Policy |
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