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Suzette's Funding Letter November 20, 2015

Publications

White House Announces Four Big Data Regional Innovation Hubs

As a part of the Obama administration’s Big Data Research and Development Initiative, the National Science Foundation (NSF) announced four awards this week, totaling more than $5 million, to establish four Big Data Regional Innovation Hubs (BD Hubs). The four BD Hubs divide the U.S. into regional collaborations, each focused on different Big Data challenges. In addition to the BD Hubs, NSF also announced this week the release of a new solicitation (due February 25, 2016) for projects that will leverage the BD Hubs’ data – the BD Spokes initiative.

 

Wharton School Study: Impact Investment Funds Achieve Results Comparable to Market Indices

Findings suggest that – in certain market segments – investors might not need to expect lower returns as a tradeoff for impact, according to a new study from the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania. In the study, researchers look at two of the most important aspects of impact investing: financial returns and long-term impact. They conclude that impact investing firms seeking a return on investment can perform similar to leading market indices. In another recent study from Omidyar Network, the authors conclude that there should be a shift in the current venture capital paradigm that will lead to larger returns and social impacts by investing in companies making impacts on low- to lower-middle-income people in emerging markets.

Dashboards of Shared Metrics Support Coordination, Effective Benchmarking

The development of common metrics is increasingly used at the state and regional level as a method to ensure the coordination of likeminded stakeholders. While choosing which metrics to use is at the root of this process, identifying ways in which to communicate this information to interested parties is also important. With an emphasis on innovation and entrepreneurship, this article highlights the ways in which governments and nonprofits are using dashboards to highlight their successes, identify their shortcomings, and gather data to inform next steps.

 

2015 Health Gaps reports released   for all 50 states
 
 
 

The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and the University of   Wisconsin Population Health Institute released their first-ever set of   reports that identify significant gaps in opportunities for good health in   each state and make recommendations for improvement.

The 2015 County Health Rankings Health Gaps Reports   examine the number of premature deaths that could be prevented in each state   if residents of all counties had the same opportunities to be healthy;   discuss the factors influencing residents’ health; and, identify what states   and communities can do to reduce these gaps.

The County Health Rankings & Roadmaps program   offers free community coaching, a database of evidence-based policies   and programs, and   other tools and resources to help communities throughout their journey in   building a Culture of Health for all of their citizens. 

Examine all 50 state Health Gaps   Reports >

New Regulations for Projects   Financed with Tax-Exempt Bonds

The Treasury and IRS published final regulations concerning   the treatment of "mixed-use" projects financed with tax-exempt   bonds. These new regulations have particular importance for 501(c)(3) health   care organizations that are borrowers of tax-exempt bonds.

Treasury, IRS Issue Rules that Will   Help Facilitate P3s

The Treasury and IRS have released final allocation and   accounting rules that bond lawyers say will help in administering   public-private partnerships for transportation and joint ventures involving   hospitals.

One   in four food-insecure households visited food pantries in 2014

Fourteen percent of U.S. households (17.4 million   households) were food insecure in 2014, meaning that at some time during the   year, these households were unable to acquire adequate food for one or more   household members due to a lack of resources. For a subset of food-insecure   households—households with very low food security—food intake of one or more   members was reduced and normal eating patterns were disrupted. Households   having trouble putting food on the table may rely on emergency food   providers, such as food pantries and emergency kitchens. Food pantries   distribute unprepared foods for offsite use. Emergency kitchens (sometimes   referred to as soup kitchens) provide individuals with prepared food to eat   at the site. In 2014, 5.5 percent of all U.S. households acquired emergency   food from a food pantry, and less than 1.0 percent obtained meals from   emergency kitchens. Food-insecure households were more likely to use these   assistance options; more than one in four food-insecure households (27.1   percent) used food pantries in 2014, while 3.0 percent used emergency   kitchens. An estimated 36.7 percent of households with very low food security   visited food pantries, and 5.7 percent visited an emergency kitchen. The   statistics for this chart are from Statistical Supplement to Household Food Security   in the United States in 2014, September 2015.

Tools/Learning

New Handbook to Support Conservation on Organic Farms

A new NRCS Organic Farming Handbook was just released to help better prepare NRCS conservationists for working with the growing number of organic, and transitioning to organic, producers across the country. 

The Handbook describes organic systems and a range of conservation practices and key resources for use on organic operations.

Though this information is specifically for conservation on organic and transitioning-to-organic operations, producers of all kinds can benefit from many of the practices in the handbook.

Learn more 

 

Why Big Co-ops Fail

Like all forms of enterprise, big co-ops can fail. Presenter Peter Couchman and Centre Director Murray Fulton claim that there is a repeating pattern with the world’s largest co-op failures — a pattern which, if understood, can be used to avoid collapse. This presentation was first given at the recent International Co-operative Alliance Congress in Antalya, Turkey.

Monday, 30 November 2015, 12:00 – 1:00 pm

University of Saskatchewan
Live streamed at http://live.usask.ca/?sn=15096-1

New Guide Explores the Field of Indigenous Philanthropy

Funding Indigenous Peoples: Strategies for Support explores how funders collaborate with and bring support to indigenous communities around the world. Developed by GrantCraft, a service of Foundation Center, in partnership with International Funders for Indigenous Peoples, this guide reveals compatibility between the goals of donors and practices of indigenous communities worldwide, especially in the areas of environmental defense, climate change, and global food security. Download the guide

 

Free eGuide: The Year-End Fundraising Plan Worksheet

December is the biggest fundraising opportunity of the year. To make the most of it, you'll need a clear plan, a rock-solid message, and a strategy to convert and retain your donors. This easy, fill-in-the-blanks workbook will help you quickly create a foundation for your year-end fundraising efforts.

Get your copy now to:

  • Organize key elements of your campaign;
  • Write a more effective appeal that inspires donors take action and give;
  • Optimize your giving experience to convert more donors and increase average gift size;
  • Create an acknowledgement plan that will help you retain more donors in 2016 and beyond.

Download now!

 

CDFI Funding for CED and CED-HFFI Projects Webinar

The recording and materials for the CDFI Funding for CED and CED-HFFI Projects Webinar, which took place on October 22, 2015, are now available.

The materials from this webinar can be accessed on the CDFI Funding for CED and CED-HFFI Projects Webinar page, which you can also access from the CED Leveraging Additional Funding Resources page. The materials include the presentation slides and a transcript. The full audio visual recording will be available shortly.

Spotlighting Communities that are Successfully Coordinating Healthcare & Housing Resources to End Veteran Homelessness Webinar - Now Available

HUD's Office of Special Needs Assistance Programs (SNAPs) and Office of HIV/AIDS Housing (OHH) are pleased to announce the availability of the recently recorded ‘Hear from Your Peers’ webinar. This webinar focuses on the strong bonds forged between HUD-funded housing and service programs, as well as mainstream resources and benefits, to ensure U.S. military veterans successfully receive and maintain housing. It also provides information about Veterans Affairs and locally-funded healthcare services, such as targeted case management, and substance and mental health treatment.

You can listen to peer leaders offering firsthand knowledge on how two innovative communities - Las Vegas/Clark County, NV and Seattle/King County, WA - have developed cross-systems partnerships to assist homeless and at-risk veterans with effectively accessing the housing, supportive services and healthcare resources they need. Discussants describe the approaches taken in their community to assure that all veterans are able to benefit from these resources, including permanent supportive housing. The webinar can be viewed on the course page here: Spotlighting Two Communities that are Successfully Coordinating Healthcare and Housing Resources to End Veteran Homelessness - A "Hear from Your Peers" Webinar.

Break the Chains, Build a Bridge (Elain Ellerbe)

Thursday, December 3, 2015, 11:00am-12:00pm CST

After 25 years of providing various evidence-based life skills programs to incarcerated populations and families affected by the criminal justice system, nationally trained Bridges/Getting Ahead/R Rules facilitator Elain Ellerbe will share her insights into and implementation experience with these key programs. Individuals who are experiencing incarceration, as well as family members they leave behind, have unique needs, with most living in either generational or situational poverty.

Participants will learn why the Bridges Out of Poverty philosophy is effective with these populations, a step-by-step process of implementation (from approaching corrections to gaining access and working within a facility), sample budget/funding options, and how to gain the trust of participants and access to family members. Additionally, Elain will describe how programs based on the Bridges philosophy can be used effectively alongside other life skills programs such as job readiness, parenting, money management, and values clarification, key components of any corrections-based reentry program. 

 

Elain, who lives in Louisiana (the state that has ranked No. 1 in the world in incarcerating its citizens for more than two decades), oversees a reentry program that is the first of its kind in the state. Her work has garnered state and national recognition. 

 

Elain Ellerbe is the President and CEO of Refined By Fire Ministries in Jackson, Louisiana.

Register here

 

Mindset, Motivation, and the Argument for Change (Jim Ott)

January 21, 2016, 11:00am-12:00pm CST

Jim Ott, a school psychologist and Bridges Out of Poverty Consultant with aha! Process, will discuss A Framework for Understanding Poverty and Bridges Out of Poverty principles and their application through Getting Ahead in a Just-Gettin’-By World

Jim will focus on these issues from a psychologist’s perspective – why the principles work and how we can apply them individually and systemically to facilitate real change in individuals and families.

Register Here

 

A Bridges Out of Poverty Overview (Spanish) (Dr. Emilia O’Neill)

Thursday, January 28, 2016, 11:00am-12:00pm CST

 

Join Dr. Emilia O’Neill as she provides a one-hour Bridges Out of Poverty overview in Spanish. Topics will include: the definition of poverty, mental models of class, the four research areas on the causes of poverty, a few of the hidden rules and an introduction to the resources needed to maintain a stable life.

 

Acompaña a la Dra. Emilia O´Neill es esta presentación de una hora, en la que presentará el trabajo de Puentes para Salir de la Pobreza. Hablaremos de la definición de pobreza desde este modelo, los modelos mentales de clase, las 4 áreas de investigación relacionadas con las causas de la pobreza, algunas reglas escondidas de las diferentes clases socio-económicas y, finalmente, los recursos que requerimos para lograr y mantener una vida estable.

Register Here

 

Find the full list of upcoming webinars in 2015 and register on our website here.

Newsletters and email from which we gather this information include:

v  Foundation Center RFP Service -  To subscribe visit: http://foundationcenter.org/newsletters/

v  To subscribe to the RAC Health Listserv - click here to go to the subscription form.

v  Electronic newsletter of the RUPRI Center for Rural Entrepreneurship, Rural Entrepreneurship NewsTo subscribe, http://team.energizingentrepreneurs.org/news2/public_html/lists/?p=subscribe  

v  Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City newsletter: http://www.kansascityfed.org/alert/

v  Blue Avocado Nonprofit Magazine - They have a newsletter on boards and nonprofit management, down-to-earth and useful.  http://www.blueavocado.org/

v  Rural LISC e-newsletter - http://www.lisc.org/rural

v  National Association for Development Organizations (NADO) – www.nado.org

v  ERS - A notification service is provided by USDA's Economic Research Service for Charts of Note and other research to keep you informed of the latest and most relevant research on the topics that interest you. You can subscribe at http://www.ers.usda.gov/Updates/

v  Orton Family Foundation – email sign-up - http://www.orton.org/sign_up

 

 

Andres Letter, November 9, 2015

PUBLICATIONS

 

Large Foundations Making 'Big Bets' on Social Change

A growing number of large, national foundations are making "big bets" on structural solutions to complex problems in an effort to bring about lasting social change, the New York Times reports. Earlier this year, for example, the Ford Foundationannounced that it was refocusing its grantmaking — about $500 million annually — on inequality in all its forms, while the Rockefeller and MacArthur foundations announced that they are redoubling their commitments in the areas of climate change, urban resilience, and criminal justice reform. Philanthropic organizations have long supported efforts to alleviate poverty and inequities, of course, but many of the largest increasingly are seeking to address not just the symptoms but the structural causes of those problems — inspired, in part, by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation's efforts to not only treat or prevent diseases such as polio and malaria but to eradicate them altogether, the Times suggests.

Large Companies Claim Majority of Economic Development Deals, Dollars

Despite the important role that small- and medium-sized businesses play in job creation and economic growth, economic development incentives are consistently awarded to large companies, according to a reportby Good Jobs First with support from both the Surdna Foundation and the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation. In an analysis of more than 4,200 economic development incentive awards from 16 programs across 14 states, large companies received anywhere between 80 percent and 96 percent of total dollar values. Read more...

Rural school districts and those in the Southwest reported largest lunch price increases

Paid-lunch prices rose by an average of 6.8 percent for school districts in the Southwest and 4.8 percent in the Mid-Atlantic between school years 2010-11 and 2011-12, according to ERS calculations using data from a USDA-sponsored study. Rural school districts reported an average increase of 4.7 percent in paid-lunch prices compared to an increase of 3.4 percent for city districts. Areas with higher price increases may experience greater reductions in paid-lunch participation since research shows that some families cut back on school lunch purchases when lunch prices rise. This chart appears in “A Look at What’s Driving Lower Purchases of School Lunches” in the October 2015 issue of ERS’s Amber Waves magazine.    

 

Enabling Entrepreneurial Ecosystems

This report from the Kauffman Foundation is a valuable read for anyone interested in growing an entrepreneurial economy.

 

Becoming "the place" for local food firms

Read how one Iowa town is building an economy around the local food and farm sector as a way to attract young people and entrepreneurs.

 

KCSourceLink Shares their Story.

Another great example of an annual report that effectively communicates the outcomes of entrepreneurial efforts. Check out their focus on measuring results!

Ten Principles for Responsible Tourism.

This article from UrbanLand magazine is a must read for any community interested in improving their tourism development game plan.

 

SEC Adopts Rules to Permit Equity Crowdfunding for Non-Accredited Investors

On April 5, 2012, President Obama signed Jumpstart Our Business Startups Act (JOBS Act) into law with the intent of helping small businesses and startups raise capital through several changes to long-standing securities regulations, including a change that would allow companies to raise equity from both accredited and non-accredited investors through a publicly solicited crowdfunding campaign (Title III of the Jobs Act). However, it took over three years for the Securities Exchange Commission (SEC) to finally adopt the rules that will permit companies to offer and sell securities through crowdfunding. The new rules also include amendments to existing Securities Act rules to facilitate intrastate and regional securities offerings. The new crowdfunding rules and forms will be effective 180 days after they are published in the Federal Register. The forms enabling funding portals to register with the Commission will be effective January 29, 2016.  Read the Press Release.

 

EVENTS

 

“Building Native CDFIs’ Sustainability and Impact” Training Webinar

The “Is a CDFI Credit Union Right for Your Native Community?” webinar will be held on November 19, 2015. Participants will learn what makes a credit union unique and hear about key considerations to assist with their decision making process.  The webinar will provide an overview of the start-up process, focusing on common challenges, resources, and how a credit union might impact the operations of an existing CDFI loan fund serving the Native community.  Throughout the webinar, representatives from two Native credit unions – Lakota Federal Credit Union and Northern Eagle Federal Credit Union – will share their experiences and perspectives.  Representatives of the National Credit Union Administration will also be available to assist with questions. The webinar is free and open to the general public, but advanced registration is required to access the presentation. Registration may be completed up until the start time listed for the session. Click here to register.

To learn more about “Building Native CDFIs’ Sustainability and Impact” series and the other training series available under the Capacity Building Initiative, please visit www.cdfifund.gov/cbi.

EDA to Host Conference Call for 2016 Hannover Messe International Trade Show

On Friday, November 6, at 10:00 A.M. ET, the Economic Development Administration will host a conference call for economic development organizations that are interested in participating in Hannover Messe 2016 – the world’s largest trade show for industrial goods, technology, and R&D. The conference call agenda includes information on U.S. Industry Pavilions for SMES/Export Services; the show’s Research & Technology Pavilion; and, a Q&A with SelectUSA, U.S. Export Assistance Centers, Deutsche Messe AG, and Hannover Fairs USA. To register, please e-mail Micah Escobedo (This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.).

LEARNING

Top Ten Lessons Learned from the Sustainable Communities Initiatives

This prerecorded webinar gives an overview of the groundbreaking grant program, The Sustainable Communities Initiative. The webinar will touch upon the lessons learned from this program and highlights from locally-led collaborative efforts that brought together diverse interests from the many municipalities in a region to determine how best to target housing, economic and workforce development, and infrastructure investments to create more jobs and regional economic activity. This webinar also explores how the SCI grantees developed the Six Livability Principles into strategies that direct long-term development and reinvestment and used data to set and monitor progress towards performance goals.

 

Free Webinar: Leveraging Peer-to-Peer for Your Fundraising Campaign

Did you know that donors are three times more likely to give when asked by a friend? Peer-to-peer fundraising is an easy and affordable way to extend your reach, acquire more new donors, and raise more money through the networks of your supporters.

 

The Affordable Care Act 101 Webinar Series 

Find out how to navigate the opportunities in health care through the Affordable Care Act 101 webinar series. Registration is free, but required.   

The webinar takes place every other Thursday at 2 PM ET

The Affordable Care Act 101 in Spanish takes place once monthly on Tuesdays at 4 pm ET/1 pm PT. 

For more information on what the health care law means for small businesses, check out www.sba.gov/healthcare

WV BAD Buildings Program Launches Website & Toolkit

As reported by WVU Today, WV BAD Buildings Program has launched their website and toolkit. The BAD Buildings toolkit is an invaluable resource designed specifically for West Virginia communities to help them address the issue of blighted, abandoned, and dilapidated properties.

Investments in Arts Fertilize Growth in Rural Towns

Sauk County, Wisconsin is linking local culture and the arts with the unique attributes of the community to grow the economy. According to Star Tribune, Sauk County is one of only three counties in the state, and the only rural county that has a public arts funding program.

 

New from BALLE.

A strong entrepreneurial ecosystem includes supportive policy as well as direct assistance to entrepreneurs. Check out BALLE's Local Policy Toolkit for policy ideas to better support small businesses and an economy that works for all.

 

23 entrepreneurs share their lessons learned.

Check out this blog and share it with entrepreneurs in your community

 

E3 Conference (and its FREE)

The inaugural 2015 E3 Conference Education and Entrepreneurship as Economic Engines Conference has been met with great interest and anticipation, and we are looking forward to November 19th,

Dr. Holden Thorp, provost and executive vice chancellor for Academic Affairs at Washington University in St. Louis and the Rita Levi-Montalcini Distinguished University Professor, will talk about the importance of innovation and entrepreneurship not as buzz words that will fade in a decade, but as core principles of higher education 

Mr. Kris Kimel, president of the Kentucky Science & Technology Corporation, will moderate a panel of CEOs, discussing the differences between credentials and skill sets, and the value of each in the job market in the coming years

Mr. Marc Nager, Chief Community Officer of Techstars and Mr. Brian Raney, CEO of Awesome, Inc. will discuss how higher education can be a catalyst for entrepreneurial ecosystems to transcend any political, social, or geographic boundary

Leaders in higher education from across the state will investigate the different innovations, disruptions, and economic drivers that will occur in Kentucky over the next generation

here at Eastern Kentucky University.

Through the extraordinary generosity of our corporate partners – we are pleased to announce that the registration fee has been waived and all those who have registered will be refunded their registration fee.

 

Our partnering organizations truly believe in the value of entrepreneurial education and want this event to be available to as many people as possible. 

Please follow this link to register: http://e3conference.eku.edu/e3-conference-registration

We ask that you register quickly, as we have limited seating still available for the event. 

- Tom and David

                       

  

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