The Wall Street Journal accidentally connects the dots between two current scandals making it plain that compensation issues are at the heart of management problems with US organizations: non-profit and for-profit, small and large.
Continue reading "Acorn and Wall Street Have the Same Problem" »
Changing priorities at two foundations affect funding for hundreds of small scale advocacy groups across the US. It looks as though free lance advocacy is losing out to the broader strategic objectives of political campaigning.
Continue reading "Doors Closing for Small Scale Advocacy Organizations" »
Although the vast majority of Hawai'i's 5,000 public charities follow the rules and have financial safeguards in place, the Honolulu Advertiser thinks they should have to pay for the misdeeds of a few. There is no evidence offered to demonstrate that registration reduces fraud in other states.
Continue reading "Honolulu Newspaper Presses Case for Charity Registration" »
The USAID Partner Vetting Program wants specifics on who is receiving aid using their funds, but just in the West Bank and Gaza—for now. The proposal highlights the curious variability in the expectations of transparency—one organization advocating for vetting doesn't turn up in databases of registered nonprofit organizations.
Continue reading "USAID Kicks Associates & Takes Names" »
Hitching a charity's reputation to a single individual is a high-risk strategy that pays off—until it doesn't.
Continue reading "Jerry Lewis & Don Imus: The Downside of Charity-Celebrity Co-Dependency" »
A study of more than fifty organizations in Baltimore with income from $1 million to $50 million shows that close to 90% rely on just one line on the Form 990 for more than half their income. Even more notable: the lion's share of private contributions go to organizations that make private contributions their primary source of income.
Continue reading "Diversity in Funding Sources More Talked About Than Practiced" »
When a huge foundation initiative failed to show much progress, they brought in outside help to turn it around, completely revamped the project, and wrote it all up for the world to see.
Continue reading "James Irvine Foundation Turns Whoops into White Paper" »