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The following articles appeared in Left Business Observer #70,
November 1995. They retain their copyright and may
not be reprinted or redistributed in any form - print, electronic,
facsimile, anything - without the permission of LBO.

Foundation culture

by Gina Neff (writing as Gina Graham)

Gina Graham once lived in the world she wrote about, so that wasn't
her real
name. It can now be revealed that her real name is Gina Neff and she
lives
in New York City. Her piece on microcredit and the Grameen Bank is on
this
site.

Most civilians don't think much about the role foundations play in
shaping
our public lives. A new generation of right-wing foundations has
funded
America's rightward drift. And despite their aura of generosity and
liberalism, mainstream and even "progressive" foundations often act as
a
constraint on politics.

Foundations may spread around wealth but their purses come with
strings. IRS
regulations on tax exempt giving limit foundation funding for
political
activities and lobbying. More important, and more powerful, are the
limits
that foundations place on themselves. Program Officers describe
funding
decisions as "maximizing our return," "leveraging our impact,"
"focusing our
portfolio." From cushy offices, foundations tell nonprofit groups how
to do
their work and shape policy by dictating which nonprofits, which
programs,
and which issues are worthy of their dollars.

Foundations talk about changing society, but funding for distinct,
fragmented one-cause projects does little for real change - and
funders'
preference for one-shots over general organizational support maximizes
the
funders' leverage over recipients. And, besides, it's hard to shake
the gut
feeling that someone making $134,000 a year (average CEO pay at
non-family
foundations), and giving away $7 million each year (average at
independent
foundations) isn't really in touch with the grassroots they are
"seed-funding." With the political spectrum of the boards of the large
foundations ranging from liberal-conservative to ultraconservative,
most
foundations aren't in touch with the politics of grassroots groups
either.

Altruism was rarely the motivating factor in establishing the large
independent foundations - ones like Pew, Ford, MacArthur, Robert Wood
Johnson that every NPR listener can name. The Ford Foundation was
established to help keep the company in the family without paying
estate
taxes. John D. MacArthur, founder of Bankers Life and Casualty
Company,
never made any significant charitable contributions during his
lifetime, but
left his estate of nearly $1 billion to a foundation rather than to
his
estranged children. One of the trusts founded by the Sun Oil heirs,
the J.
Howard Pew Freedom Trust, was established to "acquaint the American
people
with the evils of bureaucracy... and with the values of a free
market...to
point out the false promises of Socialism...." In one cozy office the
staff
of the Pew Charitable Trusts now give out $21 million a year of the J.
Howard Pew Freedom Trust both to right-wing groups like the Heritage
Foundation, the Manhattan Institute, and the National Right to Work
gang -
and to crunchy groups like the Tides Foundation and the Pesticide
Action
Network, under terms of a different Pew heir's will.

The right wants to limit the number of years foundations could exist.
Citing
liberal domination of the megafoundations, reactionaries argue that
donors'
original intentions would be better expressed by foundations spending
down
their capital rather than letting liberal program staff grant from
income.
Yet the dangers of the foundation culture stem not from PC liberalism,
but
from the illusion of political change it fosters, one that allows
liberals
to live untroubled by the knowledge that they are merely corporate PR
mouthpieces.

Corporate responsibility?

If foundations were as progressive as the right believes, would they
be
investing in huge stock portfolios at all? If the politics of
foundation
portfolios get any scrutiny at all, it's only through the soft-focus
lens of
corporate responsibility.

The progressive and green Jesse Smith Noyes Foundation both owns stock
in
Intel and funds the Southwest Organizing Project, which has been
protesting
Intel's plan to expand its water-hungry plant in very dry Albuquerque.
Foundation president Stephen Viederman has called on his board and
others to
dissolve the "iron curtain" between assets management and grant making
and
file stockholder resolutions in cases like Intel, and by increasing
non-corporate investments through venture capital funding and
program-related investments (below market loans or investments in the
work
of nonprofits). Viederman notes that the recent Council on Foundations
report on asset management ignores the relationship between a
foundation's
mission and its investment choices - though even Viederman's critique
doesn't question the order of things under which some people get to
manage
big portfolios while others plead for fragments of the dividends.

Viederman's voice is lonely. Big foundations rarely put any of their
capital
to philanthropic work. Typically, MacArthur devotes only 2% of its
nearly $3
billion in assets to program-related investments.

Buzz

Funding buzzwords fly off glossy foundation annual report pages as
quickly
as the philanthropic trends they symbolize will fade: Institutional
Responsiveness, Self- Sufficiency, Civil Society, Nonviolent Solutions
to
Conflict. Swings in program directives leave grantees scrambling for
less
money and have sometimes caused nonprofits to go out of business.
Entire
regions become blips on a program officer's screen - South Africa,
East and
Central Europe, Haiti, all in turn.

"I didn't get into the nonprofit sector to develop 'marketable'
programs. I
got into nonprofits to do the work that needed to be done," a
frustrated
administrator of a New England community development group said over a
buffet lunch. His group had fallen prey to the trend of funding
buzzwords.
The "community empowerment" methods they employed are now no longer
seen as
"innovative," though, by all accounts - including those of their
program
officers at the foundations that previously funded them - they were
effective.



Competition

Funders talk to one another. They network through organizations like
the
Council on Foundations and the National Network of Grantmakers.
"Clarity of
vision" for funders in these networks translates into fewer dollars
for
groups on the periphery of that vision. Wise Use guru Ron Arnold, the
sharp
free-market enemy of the Sierra Club and other fat enviro
organizations,
drew blood recently when he circulated transcripts of the
(Rockefeller-led)
Environmental Grantmakers Association (EGA) frankly plotting to shape
the
agenda of mainstream environmentalism. Occasionally, high-level
envisioning
leads to dim-witted ideas. At a foundation-organized meeting this
spring,
environmental organizations and funders discussed the use of the
Internet in
grassroots organizing. A woman pointed out that computer access alone
wouldn't do much for poor communities. Another noted that while most
grassroots groups are run by women, a small percentage of Internet
users are
women. None of the day's speakers, all white guys, had addressed these
points - though they did offer to have their legal experts look into
the
implications of Internet organizing for the IRS 501(c)(3) definition
of
"lobbying."

Foundations want to be involved in projects they fund. Seeking
"partnership"
with grant recipients, foundation staffers often help recipients
rewrite
proposals to include the language, techniques and methodology funders
see as
important. When grant writers meet, they complain of the foundations'
power
play: nonprofits pitch ideas that help a foundation shape its program
directives - directives that are translated into grants, but not
necessarily
to the groups that suggested them. Foundations also increasingly
administer
their own programs, sometimes in conjunction with an existing
nonprofit or
through a sort of philanthropic insourcing. In an annual report
describing a
leadership initiative, one progressive foundation proudly calls itself
a
"partner agency" on equal footing with two recipient organizations. In
the
ever-more competitive fundraising business, it's a buyer's market, and
the
buyers typically approach their purchases with corporate eyes.

Corporate culture, corporate pay

Perks like meditation hours and massages may soften the suit-and-heels
discipline, but corporate is the dominant culture at many foundations.
Lists
of foundation board members, even those of "progressive" foundations,
read
like a who's who of the business world.

Funders are bringing this corporatism to the operations of nonprofits
as
well. "In some cases we will jump in and have a staff member serve on
the
board of the grantee if we have an interest in the institutional
development
of the organization," the secretary-treasurer of the Rockefeller
Brothers
Fund said in an interview. Budgets are pored over line-by-line by
program
officers looking to "maximize their return." Grantmaker Cynthia Mayeda
recently warned: "We are always concerned about the margin. The small
margin
can mean greater profits.... We expect nonprofits to be equally
concerned as
well." Established groups with a wealth of individual support escape
this
scrutiny.

The World Wildlife Fund received over $232,000 in 1994 from the John
D. and
Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation. While that's more than many small
groups
could hope to raise in a year, this take will just cover President
Kathryn
Fuller's wage and benefits package. MacArthur President Adele Simmons
must
understand the delicate balance of the good life and good work: she is
listed on the Foundation's tax forms as having earned $382,349 in 1994
with
a benefits package worth over $85,000. Those apolitical free-market
environmentalists, The Nature Conservancy, who paid out over $330,000
to
their two men at the top, received over $550,000 from the MacArthur
foundation last year for their feeble attempt at environmental
protection
through leveraged buy-outs of private land. Vanilla politics and
corporate
flair seem to serve nonprofits well in the fundraising business.

In the same issue of the Chronicle of Philanthropy in which those
numbers
were reported was a blurb about a (Washington) City Paper article by
Bill
Gillford. Gillford, who is by his own definition "an eco-wage slave"
for
Greenpeace wrote, "Each summer idealistic college grads flock to
Washington,
hoping to land a job to save the planet, but the major environmental
groups
have been cutting staff of late, and competition is fierce for even
the
lowliest of positions. Many of the thwarted end up as Greenpeace
canvassers"
who are required to pull in $120 for four consecutive nights to keep
their
jobs. Last December, Tony Horwitz of the Wall Street Journal reported
that
the firm that Greenpeace contracted with to open its check-bearing
mail was
a classic modern sweatshop, combining minimal wages with maximal
high-tech
supervision.


Working for funders

Every proposal writer knows the deal: Programs must be measurable,
with a
neatly defined mission, achievable goals, clear objectives, and a
quantifiable method of evaluation written up front. Troublemaking is
never
that neat. Walk into the offices of any nonprofit and you'll see
stacks of
information on other like-minded groups, flyers and action sheets,
calls for
coalition building, sign-on letters, phones ringing with conference
calls.
Politics requires cooperation, but the disciplines of funding force
nonprofits to guard closely their foundation contacts. Organizations
send
letters in support of other organizations' work only to those
foundations
where they are not applying for funding themselves. Focusing on
individual
programs rather than general support for organizations, foundations
have
tied many hands that should have been building coalitions, and
fostered not
cooperative approaches to social problem-solving but an
individualizing
drive to innovate, to generate new projects and proposals, and, more
pungently, to compete for funding dollars. Foundations proudly state
that
their continuing encouragement of "new and innovative approaches,"
model
programs, and giving caps on individual organizations is fostering a
kind of
new society, rather than fostering atomization and volatility.

Few people working in nonprofits, as critical of the funding process
as they
are, are willing to give their names in connection with their
criticism for
fear that their funds will be cut off. One nonprofit executive told me
she
received a call from a foundation officer who said "I heard you didn't
support the position that our foundation presented at the conference."
Such
tales may lean towards paranoia, but nonetheless groups scrapping for
every
last dollar are watching their backs and keeping their voices low.
Taking on
liberal foundations for working on fragmented causes rather than
emulating
the right's strategy of helping conservatives win political power,
grantmaker Margaret C. Ayers of the Robert Sterling Clark foundation
was
quoted in the Chronicle of Philanthropy as saying, "I don't see any
grant
maker who considers themselves progressive or liberal articulating
what a
progressive future would look like." Unconstrained by their lack of
vision,
grantmakers nonetheless have lots of money to spread around, and with
it,
influence both agenda and organizational style.



The business end

by Doug Henwood

In economic terms, the larger nonprofits could be thought of as giant
stock
portfolios, often with marketing operations grafted on.

In 1992 (the most recent year available), nonprofits as a whole held
$1
trillion in financial assets, more than twice as much as just five
years
earlier, making them almost as large as state and local government
retirement funds, and just under half as large as private pension
funds. The
size of their kitties and their preference for blue-chip paper - 42%
of
their money is in stocks, and 25% in bonds - makes them big on Wall
Street.
"Nonprofits" is a broad category, including foundations, private
universities, hospitals, the Red Cross, volunteer fire departments,
unions,the Odd Fellows, and B'nai B'rith. It's a vast, tax-sheltered -
publicly subsidized - enterprise run privately, largely by what used
to be
called the ruling class. The sector's 1991 revenue of $615 billion was
11%
of GDP - $60 billion more than total nonresidential investment.

The funders in Gina Neff's article are what the IRS calls
"organizations
supporting other charitable organizations." In 1991, they had assets
of $180
billion, and disbursed $38 billion. Their wealth is highly
concentrated; in
1991, under 2% of the nation's 149,544 charitable organizations held
72% of
total assets.

Portfolios of the giant foundations are indistinguishable from those
of
other high-end institutional rentiers. In 1991, the Rockefeller
Foundation
had $2.1 billion in investments. Among the stocks this dear friend of
the
earth owned were Boise Cascade, Coors, Enron, Exxon (the family
business),
Waste Management, and Weyerhauser. The most influential of all enviro
funders, the Rockefeller Brothers Fund (the younger hipper wing of The
Family), held all those stocks plus American Barrick (great exploiter
of
cheap public minerals), and Freeport McMoRan. (Thanks to Jeff St.
Clair of
Wild Forest Review for info on the Bros.) The sweetly liberal Carnegie
Corp.
didn't name its stocks, but did disclose it held derivatives on the
Spanish
peseta, New Zealand dollar, and Malaysian ringgit.

Do stockholdings matter? As Mark Dowie wrote in the Chronicle of
Philanthropy, big environmental organizations "obey an unspoken
dictum: Do
nothing to jeopardize the value of your benefactor's endowment. In a
social
movement where the antagonist is so often private enterprise, that is
a
limiting edict." Polluting corporations, says Dowie, are members of
the
Environmental Grantmakers Association, and their executives dot the
boards
of grantmaking foundations. Add to this the "community" foundations
that are
really in the grip of financiers and developers and you have a mighty
conservatizing force. (Of course, there is a huge net of very
right-wing
foundations and think tanks - but they're almost too easy a target.)

Rockefellers needn't worry about keeping the mail full of checks, but
smaller nonprofits must. In a special supplement to DM News, the trade
paper
for direct marketers, one Tom Gaffny, a VP for "creative services,"
touted
great advances in "donor recognition" - techniques to treat donors
like
friends, not mere moneybags. Laser-wielding "charitable marketers" can
now
"produce mail that looks as much like the 'real thing' as a letter
from your
favorite aunt." Designers can choose from a cascade of fonts: from
"upscale
calligraphy" to "handwriting" to fonts with "special icons like a
smiling
face or a heart." One Harlem-based charity "used a downscale font,
with
broken letters and filled-in type, which fit perfectly with the
organization's image of a poor, desperate, needy charity. Donations
went
up!" Send donors birthday cards or thank you letters - and donations
will go
up! Copy headlined with a "please" or with a "thank you" in the lead
"consistently outpulls copy that directly asks for help." Tell the
truth,
but tell it slant.

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