What’s old is new again in NYC

Check out this post from our friend Michael Seltzer (formerly ED of NYRAG) about the article Stephanie Strom wrote in the New York Times. It just goes to show you that nonprofits fight more than just for their cause!

Join Us on Capitol Hill on June 4th!

Hello Nonprofit Congress Participants
(and those of you who are lurking ‘fence-sitters’),

The delegation from New York is happy to have representatives from a diverse geographic area – and we’re excited to take our message about nonprofits, our strength, our impact on communities and our desire to see the National Capacity Building Initiative become a reality directly to Capitol Hill.

I know many of you are wondering what is happening for lobbying day on June 4th and I wanted to give you a little information just so you know what we are planning (of course, this is if all goes well, plans are subject to change.)

1.      The NYS Delegation is going to be divided up into teams of 3-4.

2.      Each team will have a team “leader” that has either had lobbying experience (or is willing to learn quickly!) Each team will also have a representative from CCSNYS as well. Each team will be assigned 2-3 meetings.

3.      So far we are awaiting word on appointments from:

·         Senators Schumer and Clinton and;

·         Representative Charles B. Rangel of Congressional District number 15 of New York

·         Representative Kirsten Gillibrand of Congressional District number 20 of New York

·         Representative Nita M. Lowey of Congressional District number 18 of New York

·         Representative John Hall of Congressional District number 19 of New York

·         Representative Michael R. McNulty of Congressional District number 21 of New York

·         Representative James T. Walsh of Congressional District number 25 of New York

·         Representative Brian M. Higgins of Congressional District number 27 of New York

If you have a strong preference either way of who you would like to meet with, please let me know. Otherwise I will assign you to a team that will be visiting a Representatives from your area.

To prepare yourself for lobby day, please read below. These resources will help you with background on the national nonprofit sector and information on the Nonprofit Congress and the National Capacity Building Initiative.  (From NCNA)

Learn more in preparation for Lobby Day:
Read about the Members of Congress with whom you will be visiting. Visit their websites (see links above) and learn more about the issues they champion and on which committees they serve.

Brief yourself on the key content:

o    Building and enhancing awareness of the Nonprofit Sector as “one voice”
Fast facts about the Nonprofit Sector
Nonprofit Sector Priorities

o    Nonprofit Capacity Building Initiative (NCBI)
Overview of NCBI
OpEd piece about NCBI
State Association Endorsements

·         Read Nonprofit Advocacy and Lobbying Basics from the Center for Lobbying in the Public Interest (CLPI)

·         Learn what nonprofits are doing to engage voters by visiting the Nonprofit Voter Engagement Network

 

If you would like to brush up on your lobbying skills or any of the issues, please click here for more information on workshops you should attend during the Nonprofit Congress.

I will be contacting you before June 1st to let you know who your team ‘members’ are, what Senator(s) and/or Representatives you will be visiting, and your appointment time(s).

We will all be meeting from 4pm to 5:30pm  on June 3rd for the “Lobby Day Launch Session” to go over any final details and/or changes.

In the meantime, if you have any questions, please feel free to contact me at (800) 515-5012, ext. 121 or email me at vvenezia@ccsnys.org.

Thank You, and I look forward to seeing you all soon,

Valerie
Valerie Venezia
VP of Membership & Marketing
Council of Community Services of NYS, Inc. (CCSNYS)

Outcome of Town Hall Meetings

I know it’s long overdue (who needs a little refresher on how to keep up a blog?) but we wanted to post the results of the Nonprofit Town Hall Meetings here:

On April 9, 10 and 15, the Nonprofit Coordinating Committee of New York and the Council of Community Services of New York State convened three Town Halls of New York State nonprofits to discuss the Nonprofit Congress held this June in Washington DC, and to solicit thoughts, ideas, and responses to the following questions.

 

Below are the responses from each of the town halls.



 

If nonprofits (both in this room & throughout New York State) were fulfilling all of our promise, what would we be doing?

NYC

         Collaboration to address constituents’ needs effectively

         Influencing policy while leveraging resources

         Want good PR for the sector/demonstrate excellence by the vast majority of the sector

         Our outlook should be positive & be the force of the positive outlook

         PR image/no more scandals!

         Communicating our accountability & transparency & value of our work to the general public & our constituents that we serve

         Maintain our differences from the for-profit sector

         Bring light to certain issues

         As we get larger, help more grassroots organizations’ thrive

         Mission driven organizations

         Reduction of ignorance, increased tolerance, strengthening communities

         Build stronger boards and stay mission driven

         Customer Service as an institutional culture

         Access to information and public trust

Albany

         Spend more time fulfilling mission, instead of chasing $$

         Adequate and predictable resources/funding

         Act as catalyst of change and greater impact in our community

         Reconcile differences between subsectors

         Reducing competiveness

         Be serving all of our constituencies – no waiting list for services

         There would be no need that we were not meeting

Virtual

         Meeting the needs of all our clients

         Seen as an equal partner – a group that is invested in by the community and that government covers our expenses better

 

How would you describe your vision of the ideal nonprofit community in New York?

Albany

         All nonprofits have a voice!

         Collaboration is a good thing!

         Perceived as generating progress and key part of society

         Balance between corporate and mission needs

         Have a voice with policy makers to develop/report metrics

         Build the perception as meeting critical needs of our nation which left unmet would be crippling

         People are committed to the mission, rather than the individual organization within that mission.

Virtual

         Well-funded and well-respected

 

If there is one message you could convey to a political candidate (national, state, local) what would it be?

NYC

         We do your work – work with us as real partners  (funding & strategy)

         The power of the nonprofit sector (how many voters in your area are affected/use/work for nonprofits)

         Largest community employer – biggest voting block is the senior citizen bracket – economic stabilization

         Implement cultural diversity and differences and values into daily agenda

         Hold yourselves to the highest standard that you expect from us. Do cost benefit analysis for your constituents that we serve.

         Nonprofits should be a part of the input into the funding cycle

Albany

         Nonprofits provide a critical service that needs to be addressed; more collaboration between nonprofits and government to meet those needs.

         Try a day without nonprofits

         “If you cut us, do our communities (your votes) not bleed?”

         Use us to benefit and build the communities

         We are the backbone and the heart of society/of our communities

Virtual

         Charitable giving is no replacement for government funding

         Increase the administrative funding from government (there is hypocrisy in that the government’s administrative fees are much higher than what they allow nonprofits to have)

 

How can the strengths of the New York nonprofit community be used to support the work in the state on any Top Priority

Albany

         www.nycharities.org

         Use of grassroots efforts to talk to the media Op/Ed pieces

         Community Profit instead of “Nonprofit”

         More media savvy, press releases, letters to editors

         www.google.com/alerts & Yahoo feeds

         Number of nonprofits in NYS and throughout the country! CCS has nonprofit statewide report on #’s

         Access to large, influential nonprofits and highly recognizable celebrity-driven organizations

Virtual

         We harness the energy from the subsectors into the whole sector which creates a large voice for the sector

         Use/create more multi-tenet centers to save on rental costs, administrative fees.

 

What are you doing to support the priorities?

Albany

         Internal accountability and best practices

         Creating a communication tool for the nonprofit sector (NY Nonprofit Press)

         Building awareness through their advocacy to media and elected officials (systems Advocacy Network) [required collaboration!]

         Good at promoting towards youth

         Civic engagement that’s more meaningful than “shelving books”

NYC

         Acct/BP: Review our services, self evaluations;

         L: Developing leaders thru our daily trials

         L: Development of interns into F/T employees

         L: Encouraging youth’s ideas into action

         OE: Training & Prof Dev. T&TA/ Capacity building/Grants & Scholarships

         Ad: Legislative breakfasts/ Advocacy Day in Albany/Policy testimonies/Convene coalitions for issues/conversations with electeds

         Support: Management/TA

         Strategy building

         Articulating role within community/collaborating with other organizations

         Pursuit of excellence in management/leadership

         Support: Seeking to tell our stories to funders/electeds/community

Virtual

         Economic impact study for the local county

         Raising awareness of the nonprofit’s accountability

         At a few symposiums updatae, they’ve effectively matched nonprofits and government to partner more and interact better

         Executive Director retreat on succession planning

         Starting a Center for Nonprofit Excellence in Oswego

 

Collaboration in Action

NYC

         Continue the collaboration that has begun here/maintain the motivation

         Effort to get information out to our constituents that are not here (regular email updates)

         Nationally – communicating the value of our sector (without the burden)

         Filling the voids in our society.

Albany

         Convene thematic groups (subsectors) to encourage talking to each other and possibly collaborate more (done strategically!)

         Models for sharing costs/tasks – greater efficiencies

         Press release templates/guides to dealing with media, and how to tie in the local issues with the greater nonprofit sector

         The new media: how do you make it work for your nonprofit?

         Web 2.0 tools – nyned.org presentation

Virtual

         Convene more of these town halls!

         Lobby Day with both State & Federal government for nonprofits

         Work to get information about this into the Legislative Gazette in Albany to help raise awareness of these issues and take action

         Video campaign about the impact of nonprofits

         Multi-tenet centers

         Shared training and build the skills of nonprofit staff

 

 

What could Happen on the Federal Level to Support the State initiatives?

Virtual

         New President

         Cabinet level position for nonprofits, or an advisory board

         Adequate funding for essential services

         Need to get some concrete action steps to present to officials

 

 

Why Google? iGoogle. And Google Grants.

(First, Sorry for the cross posting from the NYNED Blog!)

Do any of you use iGoogle as your homepage? It’s a virtual dashboard of your work (or home) life at a glance.

I don’t know, maybe I’m just too excited about these kinds of things but I see nonprofits everyday struggle with problems of efficiency, with project management, scheduling meetings, keeping track of the million things on their ‘to-do’ list without ever starting a ’stop doing’ list (that’s Jim Collins’ idea, not mine).

Met some people from Google at the Nonprofit Tech Conference in New Orleans…they are GOOD people and want to help you do your job. You should take 10 minutes getting to know Google. See how much time and money it can save your nonprofit organization.  Want to see what my iGoogle looks like?

On another note important to those dedicated NY Nonprofit Congress “devotees” (hi, mom!)….

Google has a wonderful program called “Google Grants.” No, Google’s not giving you a check anytime soon, but they are giving you something extremely valuable – exposure. You know those featured ads on Google search pages that companies pay a heck of a lot of money for? Well, through the Google Grants program, they are free to you and me (nonprofits).

If that wasn’t good enough for you, here’s another piece of good news. If you belong to the Nonprofit Technology Network, Google will expedite your grant application!

(If you don’t know what NTEN is…click here. If you still need more convincing email me or Craig. Lucky members of CCSNYS and NPCC- you get NTEN membership at a discount.)

There are how many nonprofits?!?!

Fascinating post here on the number of charities approved by the IRS last year. At our first Nonprofit Congress meeting, the New York delegates dined together and spawned a detailed “conversation” on the number of nonprofits throughout the country.  According to the IRS business master file, New York has close to 100,000 nonprofits throughout the state! Empire State indeed! How many of them are actually operating is a question to be seen, however the new requirements for filing and the new 990 will possibly help shrink that number.

Does this mean increased competition for funding? Yes.  Does this mean some consolidation? Probably. Does this signify that there are too many nonprofits? Not so clear.

I’ve experienced the debate between there are too many nonprofits, and new nonprofits means increased innovation, and spurs on increased accountability.

What’s your point of view?

Let us know. This may come up in our town halls (New York City, Albany, Online) and at the Congress as well.

Update on Town Halls – We Need Your Voice!

Update: We Need Your Voice to Shape the Nonprofit Sector in New York State…Our town hall meeting dates have changed. Please take save the dates!

NYC - April 9th at the NPCC Office
Albany – April 10tth at the CCSNYS Main Office
Online – April 15th (Yes, tax day. Take your mind off it and do something fun!)

You can register for any of the Town Hall Meetings by clicking here.

Craig Weinrich and I got together for a rare face-to-face meeting yesterday to discuss the next steps in the NYS Nonprofit Congress Town Hall Meetings.  The last time we were ‘face-to-face’ it was caught on camera. You might have seen us on the National Nonprofit Congress Brochure. See how much we love each other? Come to the Town Halls. Share the Love.

State Coordinators at First Nonprofit Congress

Spitzer Establishes Joint Task Force on Employee Misclassification

For years we have been assisting members who had questions on how to classify employees and independent contractors.  It has apparently come to light recently in NYS, as the Governor has recently established the Joint Task Forc on Employee Misclassification.

If you have any questions about your employees classifications please contact Valerie Venezia (if you are a CCSNYS Member) or Craig Weinrich (if you are a NPCC Member).

Not the publicity the sector wants

The Daily News broke this story over the weekend about a nonprofit in Brooklyn that has some severe management problems and unscrupulous behavior. Despite the 2006 Nonprofit Congress identifying “a priority of the nonprofit sector is to increase public understanding and support so that nonprofits can continue to do their best work,” this is not the publicity we had in mind. (This story, however, is good publicity!)  Fortunately, though there are many places for nonprofit managers to go and learn about what is considered “best practices” for nonprofit management.

NPCC and CCSNYS, of course, are two very good starting points (full disclosure: I work at NPCC), but there is a wealth of resources too that people can go to learn why what Mr. Phillips did was considered wrong.

A short list to start:

www.ncna.org to find your state association of nonprofits.

www.idealist.org to access the Nonprofit FAQs

www.nytimesawards.fcny.org to learn about excellently managed nonprofits in the NYC area

The New York State Charities Bureau of the Attorney General

The New York Nonprofit Press

What other sites or resources do you think can help with nonprofit management?

Town Hall Meetings – Save the Date

This just in…New York’s “Town Hall” Meetings will take place on April 8th (Albany), 9th (NYC) and 10th (in ‘cyberspace).

These meetings will be a great place to get an update on what’s been going on nationally and in our state with the Nonprofit Congress movement.

During this meeting we will:

  1. identify what we are currently doing to address the Top Priorities and learn what others across the state are doing;

  2. focus on building on our individual successes, growing collaboration, and appreciating where we have collaborated well; and
  3. consider how we can grow more collaboration and support for each other going forward.

We want to see and hear from you. Please save the date. Registration will be online soon!

The Nonprofit Primary Project – Making a Difference

Were you interested in the primary results in New Hampshire? You can bet New Hampshire nonprofits were…New Hampshire nonprofits, in an unprecedented initiative, raised awareness of the importance of the nonprofit sector by engaging in continued dialogue with the candidates in various forums across New Hampshire

Every candidate was asked three basic – but important questions:

  • What role has a nonprofit organization played in your life or career?
  • How would you strengthen the economic and social capacity of such organizations?
  • How would you work with nonprofit groups to achieve your vision for America?
  • They got interesting responses from many of the candidates.

    Take a look at this great video. A wonderful way to get right to the heart of why nonprofits are an important and unified voice in our country.

    Are you ready to be the voice of the NYS Nonprofit Sector? We are planning NYS Town Hall Meetings for the month of April. We’ll post the dates here soon or feel free to contact us for more information.

    P.S. If you’re interested in hearing Robert Egger speak about poverty and a bit about the Primary Project, check out the NYS Community Action Poverty Symposium in Albany on February 25th & 26th .