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The great global trend towards giving

Community foundations are booming around the world, as charities benefit


The Ottawa Citizen
July 2, 2005
Charles Enman

Page E2

Posted with permission from The Ottawa Citizen

It was a kind of philanthropic high summit: The heads of community foundations from 13 North American and European countries, all part of the Transatlantic Community Foundation Network, spent five days -- in Ottawa in early May -- in discussions on how best to promote a new form of philanthropy that is quietly sweeping the world.

"Everywhere you go, community foundations seem to be the best-kept secrets in town," says Barbara McInnes, president and CEO of the Community Foundation of Ottawa. "The global trend toward this new form of giving is unprecedented -- it's moving into countries everywhere, in a wave that has delivered great things and promises a lot more in the near future."

Community foundations build endowment funds to support causes and issues in their community. Area leaders and residents manage the donations and make sure money goes where the community's need is greatest. The benefit for donors is that they don't have to get involved with administration nor do their own research on where the urgent needs are.

Canada is a leading participant in the movement; the 28 foundations in 1992 have grown to more than 145 today. Last year, Canadian community foundations gave $95 million to local charities.

In 17 years, the Community Foundation of Ottawa has developed an endowment of $81 million, while giving away more than $28 million. Average annual disbursements in recent years have been between $4 million and $5 million.

Ottawa, in fact, is highly respected by other foundations. Dorothea Jaeger, foundation head in Hannover, Germany, says, "The Community Foundation of Ottawa has seemed like an example of 'best practice' to many foundations here in Germany -- an exceptionally convincing model of how to build endowments, manage donors, and set governance policy."

Ms. McInnes acknowledges that her group reaped great benefits from the run-up in technology stock values in 2000. That year, many entrepreneurs were finally able to exercise their stock options, and did, giving Ms. McInnes's organization so many stock certificates that the endowment, over only five months, swelled from $17 million to more than $54 million. Fortuitously, Ms. McInnes and her board cashed the certificates before the bottom fell out of the technology market.

Here in Silicon Valley North, technology entrepreneurs remain important donors. Cistel Technology Inc., an IT consulting company, has established the Cistel Fund, which, over three years, has developed an endowment of $35,000 and aims for up to $500,000 over the next five years. The company's 100 employees and subcontractors make voluntary donations to the fund, which has supported, in company president Nishith Goel's words, "some of the smaller charities that fall beneath the radar screen." A bonus is that the community foundation takes care of all administrative details, Mr. Goel says.

Technology entrepreneur Coralie Lalonde has founded the Katsura Community Fund, her own private fund that supports causes she designates. "What I like is that they're a neutral broker, so I can trust their advice on what the needs out there are," she says. "If

I want to give to an animal cause, they can identify the projects and tell me what their strengths are. For me, this makes things efficient."

Still, Ms. Lalonde, like other technology entrepreneurs, likes to have her hands on at least some levers, so she joined the foundation's board a couple of years ago.

There are fascinating community foundation stories coming from around the world, Ms. McInnes says. The story of California's Silicon Valley is in some ways an inspiration for the Ottawa foundation's approach to tech entrepreneurs. And the story of the Russian oligarchs leading a surge of generosity testifies that charity can sprout in the driest of earth.

© The Ottawa Citizen 2005


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