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Henrie M. Treadwell, Ph.D. Director: Community Voices and Men’s Health Initiative

PHILANTHROPY AND COMMUNITY CHANGE Substance Use Disorder and HIV/AIDS in Latinos Linking Research with the Community. Henrie M. Treadwell, Ph.D. Director: Community Voices and Men’s Health Initiative Research Professor: Community Health and Preventative Medicine

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Henrie M. Treadwell, Ph.D. Director: Community Voices and Men’s Health Initiative

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  1. PHILANTHROPY AND COMMUNITY CHANGE Substance Use Disorder and HIV/AIDS in Latinos Linking Research with the Community Henrie M. Treadwell, Ph.D. Director: Community Voices and Men’s Health Initiative Research Professor: Community Health and Preventative Medicine Morehouse School of Medicine C-SALUD BI-ANNUAL Conference 2011 Miami, FL. April 26th

  2. The Language of Philanthropy • Research versus Evaluation • Research versus Community-Based Participatory Research • Formative, Summative, Qualitative, Summative • Benchmarks as evaluation metric

  3. Goals of the Independent Sector • Shape Public Policy • Increase Effectiveness • Strengthen Accountability • Build Connections • Understand the Sector • www.INDEPENDENTSECTOR.org

  4. Major National Philanthropies… • W.K. Kellogg Foundation (www.wkkf.org) • Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (www.rwjf.org) • Kresge Foundation (www.kresge.org) • California Endowment (www.calendow.org) • John S. and James L. Knight Foundation (www.knightfoundation.org) • Ford Foundation (www.fordfound.org) • Charles Stewart Mott Foundation (www.mott.org) • MacArthur Foundation (www.macfound.org)

  5. Florida Foundations: Top Giving • See GrantDomain – The Grantsmanship Center’s exclusive online database. http://www.tgci.com • Also: http://tgci.com/funding/top.asp?statename=Florida&statecode=FL • Also: http://www.floridafunding.com

  6. Philosophical or Ideological Perspectives • Liberal • Progressive • Centrist • Ideological • Conservative • Does it matter? How does one take the ‘measure’ of the philanthropic organization to determine a philosophical and programmatic fit?

  7. Top Giving Florida Organizations Foundation NAMETOTAL ANNUAL GIVING • KNIGHT FOUNDATION $121,201,077 • Arthur S. DeMoss Foundation $37,684,147 • Publix Super Market Charities $32,172,727 • The Community Foundation in Jacksonville $23,530,192

  8. Top Giving - Continued • The Picower Foundation $23,424,401 • Walter H. Coulter Foundation $23,408,313. • Ted Arison Foundation USA, Inc. $17,145,685 • Community Foundation of Tampa Bay, Inc. $13,677,534 • Jesse Ball DuPont Fund $13,327,443 • Koch Foundation $9,383,201 • The Quantum Foundation, Inc. $8,415,640

  9. Top Giving in Florida- continued • Huizenga Family Foundation, Inc. $7,627,245 • The Community Foundation of Sarasota County, Inc - $7, 595,922 • Theodore R. and Vivian M. Johnson Scholarship Foundation, Inc. - $7. 359,145 • Dade Community Foundation - $7, 245, 280 • Community Foundation for Palm Beach and Martin Counties, Inc. $6,851, 903

  10. Top Giving in Florida - continued • Community Foundation of Greater Lakeland - $5,773, 281 • Community Foundation of Broward - $ $5,254, 794 • Darden Restaurants, Inc. Foundation - $5, 196, 106 • Scaife Family Foundation - $5, 042, 429 • Forest C and Frances H. Lattner Foundation - $4, 622, 197

  11. Top Giving in Florida - continued • Whitehall Foundation, Inc. $4, 811, 667 • William G. Selby and Marie Selby Foundation - $4, 622, 197 • George B. Storer Foundation, Inc. - $4, 590,000 • Multiple Sclerosis Foundation - $4, 560, 447 • William H. Pitt Foundation, Inc. - $4, 539, 779 • The Lattner Family Foundation - $4, 514, 000

  12. Top Giving in Florida - continued • The Council for Education Change - $4, 395, 648 • The Lucy Gooding Charitable Foundation Trust - $ 4, 112, 345 • The Engelberg Foundation - $4, 001, 590 • The Southwest Florida Community Foundation, Inc. - $ 3, 889, 625 • The William J. von Liebig Foundation - $ 3, 858, 161

  13. Top Giving in Florida - continued • The George and Mary Kremer Foundation - $3, 207, 515 • Community Foundation of Central Florida - $ 3, 176, 521 • The Believers Foundation, Inc. - $3, 121, 281 • Harcourt M. And Virginia W. Sylvester Foundation, Inc. - $3, 113, 500 • McKnight Brain Research Foundation - $2, 875, 000

  14. Top Giving in Florida - continued • SWS Charitable Foundation, Inc. - $ 2, 873, 431 • Aurora Foundation - $2, 809, 197 • The Chatios Foundation, Inc. - $2, 780, 394 • AND this is only the top 40.

  15. What makes you SPECIAL??? • What is it about your organization that makes you unique and able to uniquely contribute? • What is it about the population that you serve that makes this a defining issue for this generation or this time in this nation? • Why are you the ‘best organization’ to make a difference? • Who are your friends and collaborators?

  16. Does anybody care what you think or about what you might learn? • What is the POLICY issue that you seek to inform? • What should the new policy be? • Who will you tell? • Who do you know who is a key informant to policymaking? • EVIDENCE of your ability to inform policy? If no evidence, what steps will you use in the future?

  17. Evidence based information to show change and significance? • Benchmarks of success • Benchmarks to show significance • SO…you enrolled people in HIV/AIDS care. But did you get them mental health counselling? • Is substance use disorder a part of the problem in the community? Why does this matter?

  18. Criminal Justice System and Your Community of Change • Is incarceration an issue for the population you seek to serve? • If so, how much does the criminal justice system drain away from more positive programs? • How will your program help to show how to redirect funds flow? • Are those in the criminal justice system a part of your collaborative? Any other unusual suspects?

  19. YOUR STORY OF CHANGE • Can you tell the story in a very few pages without appendices? • Can you find ‘friends’ to whom you can tell your story and who will give you honest feedback that you will accept, if valid? • Have you told your local community newspapers and do they tell your story?

  20. The Written Word - Proposal • Goal ( to include POLICY change) • Objective (who, what, why) • Innovation (Significance of this new approach) • Methodology – Intervention Plan • Evaluation Plan • Policy Impact (public and marketplace policy)

  21. Networking, Networking, Networking • Who do you know to help you open doors? • If you do not know anybody, how will you set about meeting new people who can buy into your dreams? • How will you build your collaborative to include new friends including those that may not totally agree with EVERYTHING that you think and believe.

  22. Sustainbility • Can you tell the prospective funder how you will sustain your work if it is funded? (NOBODY stays with you forever so what is your plan.) • Does your sustainability plan include redirection of funds flow through policy change/practice change? • If you are not around to do the work, what will be the impact on community?

  23. Novel Resources • What will the community learn about as resources as a result of your work? • What new and permanent resources will you leave in the community as a part of your work and how will it be sustained?

  24. Community Voices • Kellogg Foundation support for many years. • Policy Briefs, Fact Sheets, Books • Web Sites • Many, many friends and supporters

  25. BOOKS, POLICY BRIEFS, ETC…

  26. BOOKS, POLICY BRIEFS, ETC…

  27. BOOKS, POLICY BRIEFS, ETC…

  28. BOOKS, POLICY BRIEFS, ETC…

  29. www.reentryga.org

  30. Community Voices Resources • www.communityvoices.org • www.georgiareentry.org • Childhood obesity – ‘ImagineME!’

  31. QUESTIONS and COMMENTS

  32. FOR MORE INFORMATION...... 720 Westview Dr. Atlanta, GA 30310 404.756.8914 – Phone 404.752.1198 – Fax

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