What if
the more attention we paid to issues of equity
and
race, the more supporters and funders of
"community causes" dried up? That's the
question I posed at two events last week. For
me, the issue is whether we are prepared
to lose precious support by seeking to see and
hear all people in our
communities, or will we take the path of least
resistance and follow the
money?
First, some important
context: The ease with which we can
actively turn away from those we don't wish to
see or hear makes it increasingly
difficult to address issues of equity and race.
For instance, we can pick and
choose our own news on the Internet, screening
out unwanted or undesirable
stories. Meanwhile, many of us have retreated
into close-knit circles of families
and friends, essentially turning away from
public life and those who are not
like us. According to The Big Sort, a
new book by Bill Bishop and Robert
G. Cushing, more of us are moving into
increasingly homogeneous areas. And many
people report feeling "fatigued" by pictures
and news from one tragic disaster and
horrific war after another.
Against this backdrop I
found myself face-to-face with these
concerns last week. First, in a small
conference room over delivered pizza, I
met with a handful of incredible school and
community change-agents in
Baltimore. We talked about their efforts to
re-engage parents, neighborhood
leaders, businesspeople, and others in support
of community-based schools. These change agents believe
their current
efforts give them a real chance to move beyond
lip service in seeking to
achieve their goals; but they know that if they
are successful, they might just
upend the ill-fated status quo in the city and
the web of relationships that
support it.
Traveling just a handful
of blocks to the imposing Baltimore
Convention Center, which for me was like
entering a parallel universe, I
moderated a discussion in a gigantic ballroom
filled with nearly 2,000
attendees at the United Way of America
Community Leadership Conference. The topic:
"Advancing the Common Good."
At the conference, Brian
Gallagher, the visionary head of
United Way of America, unveiled their new
campaign and tagline: LIVE UNITED. It's
a terrific approach (a topic I'll leave for
another day). But my point is this:
to "live united" means seeing and hearing one
another; it means that the poor,
minorities, people living in particular
neighborhoods, would not be pushed aside
and be made invisible; that the voices of such
people would be heard and
heeded; that people's concerns would be on the
public agenda and actively addressed.
If we were to live in a community united,
people would not be seen as victims
or wards of the state, somehow incapable of
managing their own lives - but as
individuals with crucial knowledge and passion
and agency.
In both sessions I asked,
if funders and donors supporting
groups like local United Ways, community
foundations, public broadcasting,
local education and community groups would
continue their support as we
aggressively sought to live united - that is,
as we worked to see and hear everyone
in communities. More to the point will funders
and supporters see their discomfort
increase as they confront issues and situations
that are not easily solved,
that are not amendable to simply to giving
hand-outs, that require genuine
change - even change in relationships and
power? Will they balk and backtrack when
they realize that to have true impact may mean
shifting funding from their "favorite"
groups to others whom they do not know and may
have dismissed in the past?
If we are serious about
seeing and hearing all people - if
we wish to act on issues of equity and race -
then we must be prepared for some
funders and supporters to say, "No, thank you."
We must be ready to see some of
our money and support pulled. We must know that
our very operations must become
more ruthlessly focused, and that we may lose
support in some quarters before
we can marshal new support in others.
Of course, none of this is
easy, it is riddled with
uncertainty and ambiguity. There are no
guarantees that new money and support
will follow, even as we pursue a path we know
will make our communities
stronger and healthier. And we know that in
tackling issues of equity and race,
progress can be slow, and supporters can become
impatient.
But there is a silver
lining here. My good friend Paul
Light, a thought-leader on high-performing
non-profits, says his research shows
that Americans will support groups that do good
work and produce real impact. To
produce impact means that we must turn toward
to our communities to understand
and work with them; and we must develop new
pathways for making progress. When
we do, I believe, we will find new supporters
and donors - individuals who know
we can do better in our society and who
themselves yearn to have an impact. But
that may require us to let go of the money now
in our own grasp to reap the
potential benefits of a clear-headed decision.
To explore other key questions facing those working in public life, read Rich's latest essay: Make Hope Real. You can download a free copy from our website.