1 / 24

Southeastern North Carolina Nonprofit Sector Analysis

Southeastern North Carolina Nonprofit Sector Analysis. Nonprofit Sector Analysis Report. Baseline understanding of characteristics of the nonprofit sector in Southeastern NC Rural counties (Bladen, Columbus, Robeson, Sampson) New Hanover Pender Brunswick Cumberland Onslow

saima
Download Presentation

Southeastern North Carolina Nonprofit Sector Analysis

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. Southeastern North CarolinaNonprofit Sector Analysis

  2. Nonprofit Sector Analysis Report • Baseline understanding of characteristics of the nonprofit sector in Southeastern NC • Rural counties (Bladen, Columbus, Robeson, Sampson) • New Hanover • Pender • Brunswick • Cumberland • Onslow • Secondary data –IRS 990 report • Trends, regional comparisons

  3. Today’s Briefing • What is the size and scope of the sector? • What are the characteristics of the sector? • Age, revenue characteristics • What is the “reach” of the sector? • Implications?

  4. Why is This Important? • Increasingly important role in public service delivery • Important indicators of community quality of life: • Pathways of civic participation • Cultural opportunities • Current economic strains • Increased demand • Constrained resources

  5. Rapid Growth

  6. Diverse Purposes

  7. Financially Significant Total expenditures—Millions of $

  8. Young Sector 48 % HS Organizations

  9. Voluntary Organizations

  10. Heavy Reliance on Contributions

  11. Fragile Sector • 18% of the registered nonprofits (2000) “failed” by 2007 (vs. 15% statewide)

  12. Decreasing Positive Net Income

  13. Mid Sized Organizations Lagging 1: excludes hospitals, universities & grant making organizations 2 : adjusted for inflation

  14. Serving the Region

  15. NP Service Capacity

  16. NP Capacity Relative to Need

  17. Philanthropic Disparities

  18. Not Slipping as Fast…. 1: excludes hospitals, universities & grant making organizations 2 : adjusted for inflation

  19. Competing for Resources? …. as density increases, per capita expenditures increase…..

  20. Summary • New Hanover County is a regional center • Concentration of nonprofits and philanthropic resources • Characteristics and trends similar to rest of the state • But, less resources per capita

  21. Summary • Rural regions are particularly fragile • Younger, less likely to “professionalize” • More reliant on contributions, limited access to philanthropic resources • Less resources to meet persistent need of the region

  22. Implications • Emphasis on “growing philanthropy” • Strengthening philanthropic institutions • Encouraging community philanthropy • Coordinated efforts for regional mentoring • Infrastructure development

  23. Next Steps for Nonprofit Analysis • First start • Misses organizations that don’t file independently – affiliates, faith based • Need more information about service delivery patterns –where, whom • Bi-annual survey of nonprofits in the region

  24. For More Information • Full report QENO website • Late January • Contact information: Laurie E. Paarlberg QENO -- UNCW paarlbergl@uncw.edu

More Related