Community Philanthropy Update

Greetings Friend,

Did you know that despite 84% of community foundations experiencing a year over year decrease in assets, the median foundation increased grantmaking by 7% in 2022? Or that DAFs were responsible for two-thirds of all 2022 grant dollars?

These findings come directly from CF Insights, which has tracked the growth and evolution of community foundations for nearly 20 years and has been back at the Council for a full year, providing key benchmarking data to improve your organization’s performance and sustainability. But this tool only works when we share our knowledge with our peers, which is why we’re encouraging you to participate in the Fiscal Year 2023 CF Insights Survey that opened today. 

The data you submit will reveal growth trends, asset distribution across fund types, donor-advised fund (DAF) activity, revenue mix, and more. You’ll also appear on our annual community foundation rankings by assets, distribution rate, number of transactions, and gifts per capita, to use as a benchmarking or communications tool.

These trends can help you demonstrate your impact to stakeholders and set you up for future success – like how the Park County Community Foundation used the findings to guide their internal decision-making. And if you join over 100 of your peers by joining the Council with a Plus membership, your community foundation will have full access to our peer benchmarking data tool, customized dashboards prepared by our staff, and one-on-one assistance to help you make meaning of the results.

If you have any questions about the survey, please feel free to reach out – I’m happy to help. Thank you for helping us create a stronger, more informed community. 

Best,

Rosado-David_Square-600

David Rosado
Senior Advisor, Community Philanthropy
david.rosado@cof.org

PS — The Community Foundations National Standards Board is looking for new members to join the board, and they just extended the deadline to August 31. So submit the online application and CFNSB staff will reach out about next steps.

Upcoming Events

Virtual Meet-Up: Community Foundation Donor Services

August 21 | Virtual | Peer Discussion

Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion - Peer Learning Circle

August 29 | Virtual | Peer Discussion

National Standards Monthly Session - September 2024

September 11 | Virtual | Webinar

Legal Matters for Community Foundations

September 11-12 | Virtual | Training

Peer Benchmarking for Community Foundations: A Guided Tour of CF Insights

September 18 | Virtual | Webinar

Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion - Peer Learning Circle

September 26 | Virtual | Peer Discussion

Global Grantmaking Essentials

October 9, 10, 16 | Virtual | Training

Retreat for New Community Foundation Executive Leaders

October 16-17 | San Francisco, CA | Executive Retreat

Leading Locally 2025

June 10-12, 2025 | Minneapolis, MN | Sector Event

New Member Spotlight

Welcome to the community foundations that have joined as new Council members since our last newsletter! We're excited to have Community Foundation of Grant County, Indiana and Hillsboro Community Foundation as new members.

Community Foundation of Grant County, Indiana Hillsboro Community Foundation

Resources You Can Use

Legal Question of the Month with Remy Barnwell, Staff Counsel

Question: Hello – we very much appreciated the briefing “Considerations for Working with NIL Collections” you published in the past year. We were hoping that you could provide affirmation on the actions we have taken with donor-advised fund recommendations to our big NIL collective nearby. They have organized with both a for-profit side and a nonprofit side, classified as a public charity.

At this point, our thought is that we would be willing to make a grant for a specific purpose that was charitable according to the IRS definition, but that would not include events raising money for or to directly pay specific student athlete groups. Would it be advisable to not allow DAFs for general support and/or events that benefit private individuals (such as paying a certain group of athletes) now as we are currently doing?

Remy-BarnwellAnswer: I’m glad that you have found our piece on “Considerations for Working with NIL Collectives” helpful in your work. I do suggest limiting distributions to those that serve a clearly defined charitable purpose. I would advise against general support grants or grants that are clearly earmarked for individuals of a particular sports team because donor-advised funds may not make distributions to individuals under any circumstances. You want to ensure that any distribution made clearly furthers a tax-exempt, charitable purpose.

If you grant for a specific charitable purpose, it is enough to state that in the grant agreement. I don’t recommend continuing to make any grant that isn’t for a clearly charitable purpose, regardless of the organization’s tax-exempt status. Please don’t hesitate to reach out with any follow up questions you may have.

Council members are able to send their questions to our legal team for expert advice and analysis. You can take advantage of this member benefit by becoming a member today.


Highlighter--Streamline-Core (2) CF Insights Highlight

Inform Your Operations with CF Insights Benchmarking

Did you know that there’s a rich, growing dataset reflecting the operations of community foundations across the country that’s available to search anytime? With hundreds of community foundations participating in the CF Insights Annual Survey each year, you can find a relevant peer group to help you make informed operational decisions. Search using over 100 criteria including asset composition, staffing allocation, revenue mix, and many more to discover your peers and download comparative reports.

Want to learn more? Visit cof.org/cfinsights, email cfinsights@cof.org, and join us on September 18 for a walk-through of CF Insights to learn how to put the platform to use at your foundation.


Retreat for New Community Foundation Executive Leaders

Are you a community foundation executive who is new to your role? Join your peers at the San Francisco Foundation on October 16-17 for our new executive leaders retreat, which will equip early-tenure community foundation executives with the skills and relationships needed to be successful. We'll cover the work of navigating change and staff expectations, business model innovations, and building institutions for the future. The New Executive Leaders Retreat is intended for executive leaders (CEOs, Presidents, Executive Directors) of mid- and large-sized community foundations who have been in their role for four years or less. Register today.


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Keep in Touch!

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cofcommunications@cof.org.

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Shared purpose. Collective voice. Greater impact.