Sunday, April 26, 2009

Non Profits Need New Mission

 Non Profits are looking up from the bottom of the same hole that federal, state and local governments are distressed with; how did we get here?

    Answer: Mission creep.
    I  see the same set of  circumstances today as have developed over the years, and ever more apparent today.
   Namely, non-profits, primarily charitable organizations, have allowed themselves to be convinced that their mission MUST expand because of the “need” and because Directors want larger organization to support more individual and staff pay.
   So where do they wind up?
   Not enough funds to cover expanded missions, but giving levels which would have been sufficient for their original mission.
   Why less funds? Partly because Directors are usually paid, and as NP’s get larger, some paid staff is added as well.
   More volunteers are needed, more space, more overhead and occupancy costs, and here’s the killer; each year the percentage of revenues devoted to salaries and overhead increase, absent a top line revenue growth occasioned by extraordinary fund-raising.
   So Directors expect more money (after all they are running a larger organization, and have more responsibility, right?), staff deserve raises, there ARE costs in acquiring, managing, and insuring volunteers, among other things.
   It all adds up to a self-serving expansion, and much whining, and gnashing of teeth when donations and fund-raising “dry up.”
   So if you want a suggestion for NP’s, here it is;
   Get Real! Reshape and rebuild your mission to one that normal levels of fund raising can support, even if that means forgoing expansion into another area, or adding new clients.
   It doesn’t help that NP’s are part of the fastest growing “industry” in the U.S., each justifying their creation and the “needs” that spur them, each in isolation to be commended for altruism.
   But, I wonder how they would manage their egos and motives if they had to devote their talents to supporting already existing NP’s with the same or very similar missions, locations, and importantly, fund-raising and donation sources.
   Think of how much more efficiently, and productively their “clients ” would benefit; how costs would go down, and revenues devoted to clients would go up.
   Anyone who thinks that NP’s don’t compete for Donors has their head in the sand. Anyone who thinks that NP directors don’t drive Boards to authorize ever-increasing efforts just hasn’t been there.
   It’s time to re-think fund raising and commit to an “endowment” goal in which a percentage of each years fund-raising is set aside, with the ten-year goal of generating enough inflation-adjusted income to support the basic mission, with a smaller percentage each year contributed to the trust, which would shortly allow for increasing support levels for Clients. And, the Board must absolutely be sufficiently independent to make sure that the endowment is used or diluted because of the “need.”
   Nobody will starve, counseling will occur, missions will be maintained.
   But, in the end, more will be done for more clients, and NP’s will have created an institution that doesn’t close shop because an economic downturn forces a re-examination of budgets and costs which have become onerous ,and/or a closure or reduction in services to those in “need.”
 
Posted by Mediaman at 18:12:11 | Permalink | No Comments »

Friday, April 24, 2009

Cap and Trade Wrong Solution, Much Better Ways to Manage Pollution

   Isn’t this discussion about Cap and Trade, misdirected? If you believe that Cap and Trade is just a substitute for Zero Pollution legislation, why would we allow anyone to pollute; allow anyone to profit from ephemeral “pollution licenses for non-polluting by accident of plant design or type.”   
   Worse, allow polluters to buy “pollution licenses” in a market set up by government? The goals and paths to reaching them should be:
   1. No pollution allowed from any new commercial or manufacturing activity. This means that any new manufacturing, extraction of any commercial or institutional activity would only get a license when demonstrating that they will treat all emissions to Zero pollution outcomes, and remanufacture, transform or design processes to utilize waste streams so that waste is 100% recycled or, if directed to landfills, a charge equivalent to the cost of processing and storage is enacted.
   2. Existing manufacturing, power production, extraction or any other commercial activity must develop a ten year (seven-year?) plan for closing the polluting facility, or redesigning and rebuilding facilities or operations to Zero pollution output. Replacement with new technology like coal gasification if we want coal utilization, Tax incentives could be provided to assist in the transition and development process.
   The Cap and Trade premise is specious; that pollution is “allowed” or grandfathered, or in any way permitted. Manufacturing, commercial activity, and other activities that generate pollution should be “Zero” output targets; with plant designs that emit zero process pollution.
   Humans emit CO(2), what about licensing them? Ridiculous, right? Same for farm and recreational animals, right? Dogs, Cats, Cattle, Horses.
   So, population control by means of a Cap and Trade for each birth would be helpful, right? Well, maybe not.
   I am one who believes that lack of population planning and population growth is driving many of the world’s problems, yet certain countries and areas are mismanaged to the detriment of encouraging healthy populations, while others are not operating “closed loop” societies, absorbing more resources than they generate.  The point is giving license to existing polluters is wrong; forcing Zero pollution through tax incentives, plant and process replacement would be better use of tax policy, and lead to better outcomes, quicker. (How about a $1.50-2.00 per-gallon-tax on gasoline, and transportation equivalents?
   Same for other energy resources to quickly encourage conservation and replacement). We could save four to six million barrels of oil a day just though “Cloud Commuting.”   
   There are plenty of technologically and culturally compatible alternatives to Cap and Trade; CAP just seems to be the politically desirable approach right now, and gives the government (surprise) control of a LOT more money, a dubious result in any case.
Posted by Mediaman at 18:40:45 | Permalink | No Comments »