1 / 32

Advocacy 101 : How Foundations Can/ Cannot Engage in Public Policy and Advocacy

Advocacy 101 : How Foundations Can/ Cannot Engage in Public Policy and Advocacy . Andrew Schulz VP Legal & Public Policy Council on Foundations. Agenda. Legal Issues Public Policy as a Strategy Readiness for Public Policy Work. Legal Issues. Lobbying. Private Foundations may:

aya
Download Presentation

Advocacy 101 : How Foundations Can/ Cannot Engage in Public Policy and Advocacy

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Advocacy 101:How Foundations Can/ Cannot Engage in Public Policy and Advocacy Andrew Schulz VP Legal & Public Policy Council on Foundations

  2. Agenda • Legal Issues • Public Policy as a Strategy • Readiness for Public Policy Work

  3. Legal Issues

  4. Lobbying • Private Foundations may: • Engage in legislative communications • Nonpartisan analysis, study or research • Self-defense communications • Communicate with government officials about projects funded jointly

  5. Lobbying continued • Private Foundations may not: • Engage in lobbying as defined by the IRS without incurring prohibitive taxable expenditures • i.e., supporting or opposing specific legislation directly to a legislative body or indirectly through a public call to action.

  6. Direct Lobbying • Communication • With a legislator • Expressing a view • About specific legislation

  7. Grassroots Lobbying • Communication • With the general public • Expressing a view • About specific legislation • Including a call to action

  8. Legislators Defined • Federal, state & local level representatives and their staff • Executive officials when participating in formulation of legislation • The public, if it is a ballot measure • Not members of special purpose boards (planning commissions, zoning commissions, school board)

  9. Advocacy • Non-lobbying • Regulatory work • Litigation • Talking to legislators about your foundation’s work • Lobbying • Asking legislative staff to support funding for local homeless shelter • Asking public to ask County Council members to support increased taxes for education

  10. What is not lobbying? • Activity that does not meet the definition (direct or grassroots) • Regulatory exceptions: • Examinations and discussions of broad social, economic, and similar problems • Nonpartisan analysis, study, or research • Requests for technical advice or assistance • Self-defense

  11. Nonpartisan Research/Analysis • Required elements: • Full and fair discussion of the facts • Report may advocate a position on an issue • May discuss legislative issues • May not directly call the recipient toaction • Appropriate distribution

  12. Self-Defense • May express a view to legislators about issues affecting the charity’s: • existence • tax-exempt status • powers and duties • the deductibility of contributions • Can be used proactively • Not applicable to grassroots lobbying

  13. Funding Advocacy • Not required to prohibit the use of grant funds for lobbying unless grant requires “expenditure responsibility”* • General support grants to public charities not considered lobbying expenses unless earmarked for lobbying

  14. Funding Advocacy • Specific project grants to public charities that lobby are not lobbying if: • Fund up to the non-lobbying amount of the project budget • Reasonable reliance on budget from grantee is permitted • Grant not earmarked for the lobbying activity

  15. Public Policy as a Strategy

  16. Why Engage in Public Policy? • It’s the mission • It’s enlightened self-interest • It’s solving social problems • It’s democracy • It’s relationship building

  17. Resistance • It can’t be legal • Inappropriate for us, too public • Can’t make a difference • Lack capacity, time, expertise or resources • Reputation • Takes too long • Results aren’t measurable

  18. Benefits • Advances mission • Leverages grant funds • Increases impact • Solidifies relationships • Builds credibility & legitimacy • Distinguishes from the crowd

  19. Readiness for Policy Work

  20. Building Blocks A. Values, culture, and will B. Relationships C. Resources D. Understanding and skills

  21. Values, Culture, and Will • Dedicated to long-term and broadly-shared solutions • Willing to use position of influence • In for the long haul • Willing to commit resources

  22. Relationships • Trusted, perceived as credible source • Well-connected board and staff • Established relationships in the community • Relationships with policymakers

  23. Resources • Decision-making process • Staff time • Communication systems • Internal knowledge management system • Recordkeeping system • Assessment process

  24. Skills and Knowledge • Facilitation skills • Relationship-building skills • Knowledge about policy context and players • Policy skills • Strategy development • IRS rules • Issue expertise

  25. Getting Policy Expertise • Hire experienced staff • Develop in-house capacity through training, TA, mentoring, on-the-job experience • Collaboration • Grantees

  26. Role of CEO, Board Members • CEO’s set the tone for policy avenues • Board members serve in the following advocacy roles: • Ambassadors • Door-openers • Cultivators • Closers

  27. Choosing Issues • Consider positions when: • Aligned with your mission. • You care about (passion). • Important to the community. • Foundation has expertise on the issues.

  28. Timing • Is a policy issue ripe for action? • What is the political context? • Do we have potential partners? • What is public sentiment? • Is there a viable solution? • Is the policy making window open?

  29. Resources - Publications

  30. Questions?

  31. Thank you!

More Related