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JGR/PSI (Private Sector Initiatives) (9 of 10)
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JGR/PSI (Private Sector Initiatives) (9 of 10)
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Ronald Reagan Presidential Library Digital Library Collections This is a PDF of a folder from our textual collections. Collection: Roberts, John G.: Files Folder Title: JGR/PSI (Private Sector Initiatives) (9 of 10) Box: 44 To see more digitized collections visit: https://reaganlibrary.gov/archives/digital-library To see all Ronald Reagan Presidential Library inventories visit: https://reaganlibrary.gov/document-collection Contact a reference archivist at: [email protected] Citation Guidelines: https://reaganlibrary.gov/citing National Archives Catalogue: https://catalog.archives.gov/ $3.00 Community Journal of Action Vol. 1, No. 4, 1982 COMMUNITY PARTNERSHIPS Perspectives on Partnerships C. William Verity, Jr. William Aramony Hon. Pierre DuPont IV William White E. Morgan Williams Partnerships in Action Literature Reviews HOUSING Des Moines Public-Private Partnership New York in American Cities NEIGHBORHOOD REVITALIZATION Partners Kansas City Roanoke Meeting Human Needs YOUTH EMPLOYMENT Phoenix New York Corporate Philanthropy Pittsburgh Research Reports Community Service Partnerships Milton Kotler Community Development Partnerships Susan Clarke & Michael Rich Building Community Partnerships Thomas Chmura Stay current with Community Journal of "Helping Communities Action to Help Themselves" Journal of Community 0.00 the Action Sept/Oct 1981 and Donald Kent, William Schwek URBAN ENTERPRISE ZONES Pablo Eisenberg Three Policy Pers Notes from the Field: PARTICIPATION EY Funds Cash Flow Community A Research Symposium Citizen NEIGHBORHOOD AC AND URBAN CRIME THE / I Confront or Concede To subscribe, use the attached business reply card or write to: Journal of Community Action P.O. Box 42120, Northwest Station Washington, D.C. 20015 Community Journal of Action EDITOR: Nelson Rosenbaum DEPUTY EDITOR: Richard Rich MANAGING EDITOR: Milton Kotler FROM THE EDITOR 2 BUSINESS MANAGER: Pamela Farrand DESIGNER: Jeff Middour EDITORIAL ADVISORY BOARD: Bertram Beck, Cabell Brand, Delores DaLomba, Pablo Eisenberg, Carl CURRENTS 3 Johnson, Stanley Karson, Robert Landman, Don Sykes CONTRIBUTING EDITORS: Lawrence Bailis, Richard Cole, Robert Friedman, POLICY PERSPECTIVES Edward Humberger, Franklin James, Neil Mayer, John McKnight, Andy Mott, The Role of Business in Community Service 5 Stewart Perry, Janice Perlman, Hans C. William Verity, Jr. Spiegel, Larry Susskind, Jon Van Til, Don Voth, Robert Woodson, Robert Voluntary Agencies and Community Partnerships 8 Zdenek William Aramony Building Community Partnerships: The Foundation Role 11 William S. White State Government and Community Partnerships 15 Pierre S. du Pont IV Journal of Community Action, Vol. 1, Community Partnerships at Home and Abroad 17 No. 4, 1982. Published bimonthly by the Center for Responsive Governance. Sub- E. Morgan Williams scription rates: individuals $18 for one year, $32 for two years; institutions $24 for one year, $42 for two years. Single copies: $3. NOTES FROM THE FIELD 24 Editorial and business offices: c/o Center for Responsive Governance, 1100 17th Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20036. Postmaster: Send address changes to Jour- nal of Community Action, P.O. Box 42120, RECENT LITERATURE 33 Northwest Station, Washington, D.C. 20015. RESEARCH REPORTS Local Government and Community Partnerships 41 Thomas J. Chmura Partnerships in Community Service 45 Milton Kotler © Center for Responsive Governance 1981 Partnerships for Economic Development: The UDAG Experience 52 Susan E. Clarke and Michael J. Rich From the Editors This issue of the Journal concentrates upon a single laboration with business and government to deliver theme: the role of community partnerships in meeting services abroad and their example has much to teach the collective needs of American society. We believe domestic organizations interested in developing that the partnership concept, carefully conceived and partnerships. delineated, makes an important contribution to public In the Notes from the Field section, a number of in- debate and charts a useful direction for the evolution novative partnerships are analyzed in detail. Coopera- of social policy. However, the goal of this issue is not to tive efforts in Phoenix, Pittsburgh, and New York are sell the concept, but rather to inform our readers about discussed in the Note on Partnerships for Youth. The the partnership approach so that they may evaluate it focus of these efforts is generating increased oppor- for themselves. tunities for youth employment. The Note on Housing The President's Task Force on Private Sector Initia- Partnerships examines the operation of the New York tives has been the leading proponent of the partnership Neighborhood Housing Services and the Des Moines approach over the last nine months. In the Policy Per- Housing Council, two partnerships that are emerging spectives section, we asked a number of Task Force as major factors in housing construction and rehabili- members to elaborate their conception of community tation in their respective cities. Neighborhood revitali- partnership from the perspective of their institutional zation is the subject of the third Note from the Field. affiliations. Bill Verity, Chairman of the Task Force, Partnerships in Roanoke, VA and Kansas City, MO and retired Chief Executive Officer of ARMCO Steel, demonstrate how business, government, and the vol- writes from the vantage point of corporate social re- untary sector have joined together to attack neighbor- sponsibility. He maintains that joining in partnership hood decay. with government and voluntary organizations repre- In the research department of this issue, we present a sents the best way for business to express its commit- set of important articles on experiences with commu- ment to community betterment. Bill Aramony, Presi- nity partnerships. An article by Tom Chmura presents dent of United Way of America, details a number of research findings on the role of local government in partnership efforts already underway which have been community partnerships. Milton Kotler's piece analy- initiated by the voluntary sector. He focuses particu- zes the emergence of partnerships in community serv- larly on partnerships in the area of human services. Bill ice. Susan Clarke and Michael Rich provide findings White, President of the Mott Foundation, writes of the on types of partnerships operating in the urban devel- catalytic role which foundations can play in the for- opment field. mation of community partnerships. His article identi- In sum, we think this issue will help our readers to fies two prime areas of partnership building: neighbor- understand an important emerging trend in commu- hood development and community services. Governor nity action-a trend which builds upon historic tradi- Pierre Du Pont of Delaware examines the role of state tions of voluntarism and cooperation, but which also government in forging partnerships. He describes a charts new directions for the evolution of social policy creative partnership in his own state-Jobs for Dela- in the coming decades. ware Graduates-and identifies the mechanisms which In the spirit of partnership, this issue was planned in cooperation state governments have established to encourage part- with the President's Task Force on Private Sector Initiatives. We nership formation. Finally, Morgan Williams, Presi- would like to thank the members and the staff of the Task Force for dent of the Cooperative League of the U.S.A., relates their assistance. We also deeply appreciate the funds and in-kind the experience of private voluntary organizations assistance provided by the United Way of America, Gannett Foun- working in the field of international development dation, Equitable Life Assurance Society, and The Aetna Life and Casulty Foundation, which enabled us to devote extra editorial assistance. These agencies have long worked in col- effort to this issue and to distribute it to a wider audience. CURRENTS Community Partnerships Political fads wax and wane with benumbing regu- A community partnership, simply defined, is a sus- larity in American life. After a brief swirl in the news tained collaborative effort of two or more institutions media and a series of foundation-funded studies, most in which each of the partners shares in the planning of disappear without a trace. There is thus a distinct pos- projects and programs designed to meet a collective sibility that the current concept of "community part- need and contributes a portion of the resources needed nerships" may go the way of other political fashions to implement those projects and programs. This defini- that have long since departed. This would be a great tion focuses attention on the key aspects of a partner- loss. In contrast to other contemporary nostrums that ship endeavor-collaborative planning and invest- will deservedly vanish without a backward glance, the ment of independent resources-and excludes efforts idea of forming partnerships between government, which are primarily based on discrete business rela- business, voluntary organizations, and other private tionships. For example, the "privatization" of city entities to fulfill social needs deserves a prominent role services to private corporations is often included in dis- in the grammar of American politics. This is because cussions of community partnerships. Yet, if the pri- the idea is based upon a powerful historical premise: vatization agreement merely entails the award of a per- American government cannot fulfill the collective formance contract to a vendor for a service designed needs for which it has assumed responsibility solely and paid for by the city, such a simple business rela- through its own bureaucratic instrumentalities and tax- tionship should not be confused with a community ing powers. This premise is rejected by many who call partnership. Only in cases where the city and the pri- for the continued growth and bureaucratization of the vate corporation jointly plan an activity and in which state. It is also rejected by those who indulge in a both the city and the corporation independently invest romantic rejection of government responsibilities. resources in implementing the activity, do privatiza- As with most other political ideas that have any last- tion agreements fall within the partnership framework. ing value, one need not look very far to find precedents Similarly, the cooperation of business and govern- and precursors. Political platforms of both parties ment in promoting downtown economic development have made reference to the desirability of partnership is often discussed within the partnership framework efforts in various policy spheres over the last two dec- without careful examination of the crucial differences ades. Much of the growth in domestic social programs in the nature of the public/private relationship from that occurred in the 1960s and 1970s was carried out city to city. In some cities, economic development proj- through more-or-less structured partnerships between ects involve meaningful collaborative planning be- government and private, voluntary, non-profit organi- tween government and business and a sharing of zations that already provided a variety of social serv- investment, risk, and benefit. These are true commu- ices to society. Beginning in the late 1960s, successive nity partnerships. In many other cases, however, so- Administrations promoted partnerships in foreign aid called partnerships involve little more than passive city between the U.S. government and American private acceptance of privately planned and privately financed organizations operating abroad. During the Carter proposals, with minor public interest planning adjust- Administration of the late 1970s, a central theme of ments. It does not contribute to the impact of the com- urban policy was the need for public/private partner- munity partnership concept in public policy debate to ships between business and local government in the indulge in such conceptual confusion. economic development of central cities. Perhaps the central issue in policy debate about What is important about the current political cli- community partnerships is the relative role which gov- mate is that the idea of partnerships has finally ernment, business, and voluntary organizations achieved explicit recognition by a national administra- should play in initiating and sustaining partnership tion as a central policy theme. Yet, as explicated by the endeavors. Some pronouncements from the Reagan President's Task Force on Private Sector Initiatives, Administration emphasizing private initiatives and the theme is still vague and inchoate. Opportunistic volunteerism leave relatively little role for government advocates of particular policies are rushing to bring in community partnerships, apparently envisioning their proposals under the friendly umbrella of the com- collaborative efforts of business and voluntary institu- munity partnership concept without so much as a basic tions as substitutes for government efforts to meet understanding of the idea. If the concept is not to be social needs. Other pronouncements place more em- discarded after the termination of the Task Force in phasis upon the role of state and local government. A December, it is essential that the meaning of partner- healthy dose of realism is needed to ground this debate ship be clearly delineated and that certain realities of on a more productive level. organizing and operating partnerships derived from American society is distinguished by its prominent previous experience be acknowledged. tradition of voluntary service to society by non-profit COMMUNITY ACTION Vol. 1, No. 4, 1982 3 CURRENTS organizations and by the contemporary emergence of ternal efforts may also contribute to the common- corporate social responsibility. These attributes must wealth by reducing the collective demands made on be appreciated, encouraged, and engaged in our collec- government. But business cannot and should not be tive efforts to meet social needs. However, when the expected to strike off on its own with major initiatives magnitude of the collective needs facing American to fill social needs outside some publicly-established society is realistically acknowledged, there is little framework. The voluntary non-profit sector, while it question that government usually must play the prime may-have the desire and vision to fill a large portion of role in organizing modes of action at the appropriate collective needs, simply does not possess the resources scale. As indicated by the Notes from the Field and which would enable it to operate on its own. It can other examples of community partnerships discussed serve as a source of ideas for programs and projects in this issue, government is almost always centrally in- and as an agent of service delivery, but it must operate volved in partnership endeavors, assuming the role not within the agenda of government and/or business in only because of its ability to contribute more resources order to proceed effectively. than other sectors, but also because of its fundamental There appears to be little recognition in the current responsibility for collective needs. Neither business policy climate that a great deal of government pro- nor the voluntary sector can arrogate to itself the legiti- gramming and corporate social responsibility spend- macy of government's mandate to act in the interests of ing already operates through partnership arrange- society as a whole. Nor can government, unlike busi- ments in which non-profit voluntary organizations ness, expediently absolve itself of responsibility for serve as service delivery agents. The resources which social needs when profits fall. business invests in partnerships most frequently are This is not to disparage the importance of independ- dispensed as philanthropic gifts to voluntary non- ent initiatives by business and voluntary organiza- profit organizations. Government resources to meet tions. As the Note from the Field on the Kansas City domestic and international needs also flow heavily Neighborhood Alliance shows, corporations and through contracts and grants to private non-profit neighborhood associations can collaborate in a part- organizations. It would be a cruel irony of the current nership framework to accomplish useful collective policy debate over community partnerships if, in the ends on a small scale without the formal participation haste to reduce government involvement and reject the of government. Yet even in this situation, the partners heritage of the past, a valuable and productive network operate in a context established by the public sector. of existing partnerships is lost. Private funds are used primarily to supplement public In sum, the debate over the role and structure of sector funds and resources. Indeed, it is clear from community partnerships in meeting collective needs many of the examples in this issue that business and has only begun. There is no more important task facing voluntary institutions feel most comfortable in part- the President's Commission on Private Sector Initia- nership arrangements when government sets the agen- tives over the remaining months of its existence than to da and establishes the framework of cooperation. guide the debate in constructive directions that will Business can move authoritatively on its own to preserve and advance community partnerships in meet the needs of its employees through better fringe American life. This issue of the Journal of Community benefits and employee assistance programs. These in- Action is offered in pursuit of that objective. POLICY PERSPECTIVES The Role of Business in Community Service by C. William Verity, Jr. In 1919, the American Rolling Mill Company-a individual and collective effort by private America steel manufacturer in Middletown, Ohio-adopted the toward solving the problems that beset American first known "corporate responsibility" policy in communities. America: To accomplish the first mission, the Task Force has "Industry should not only keep its own house in established a computerized Project Bank to catalog order, but should support every sound constructive hundreds of innovative private initiatives and public- agency established in the community in an effort to private partnerships at work in community service make civic conditions respond to the highest needs of throughout America. It is our hope that this Project its citizens." Bank may become a clearinghouse through which More than six decades later, and in a rich variety of local and state governments and private groups can adaptations, this basic policy of corporate involve- learn from the successful-and even the not so success- ment in community service has blossomed into a multi- ful-experiences of others. We also hope that the billion dollar annual commitment by American busi- American news media will tell the story of private initi- ness to improve the quality of community life in the ative to the public at large, promoting both the recog- United States. nition these efforts deserve and the replication they Almost $3 billion was contributed by American might inspire. companies and company foundations to community For example, KAKE-TV in Wichita, Kansas, re- service projects in 1980. Company employees donated cently broadcast a ten-part series on what the private another $3 billion worth of time and talent to commu- sector is doing-and what more it might do-in serv- nity assistance programs. ice to Wichita. Together with the nearly $70 billion in funds and Among these services: services contributed in 1980 by the rest of "private The Wichita Bar Association, following the example America"-religious and civic groups, labor unions, of the New Hampshire Bar Association, has estab- philanthropies, educational institutions, professional lished a high-quality, low-cost legal aid program and trade associations, neighborhood organizations, (many services are free) for those who need help but and others-this corporate commitment helps forge an can't afford a lawyer. important private alliance for progress in our country. Wichita grocery stores, like those in Phoenix, Kan- sas City, and other cities, are regularly supplying surplus food to the community food bank run by a The President's Task Force local church group, and a local manufacturing com- pany has donated 10,000 square feet of warehouse Remarkable work is being done through private space to store the supplies. initiative to feed the hungry, heal the sick, shelter the Wichita business concerns, adapting programs un- homeless, employ the "unemployable," restore decay- derway in Indianapolis, Dallas, Oakland, and ing neighborhoods, enhance public safety, improve Corning, N.Y., are forming partnerships with local education, support the arts, and perform a multitude schools to ensure that the education process pre- of other services at the community level. pares students for success in the working world. The President's Task Force on Private Sector Initia- Practical training in homebuilding, accounting and tives seeks to celebrate these contributions which pri- other workfields gives students the kind of experi- vate America is making to improve the quality of our ence local employers are looking for. national life. It also seeks to encourage a still greater Thousands of these success stories throughout the nation testify that private initiative can be an impor- C. William Verity, Jr. is Chairman of the President's Task Force on tant supplement-even an alternative, in some cases- Private Sector Initiatives and former CEO of Armco Steel. to government action in community enterprise. COMMUNITY ACTION Vol. 1, No. 4, 1982 5 POLICY PERSPECTIVES The Corporate Role profit agencies, management and financial planning techniques for neighborhood service organizations Many, though far from all, of these success stories and many other services. trace their origins to the executive offices and the The Task Force is further requesting that businesses factory floors of American industry. The inspiration reassess the pattern and direction of past contributions for these initiatives is as varied as the people and com- and other public service involvement, to insure that panies involved. Some act out of "enlightened self- their community's most urgent social and economic interest," for the benefits to be gained directly or in- needs-not merely its most honored traditions-are directly by the company and its employees. Other busi- being properly served. nesses want to project a certain "image" or corporate And finally, the Task Force is urging businesses to "personality" with their community involvement. Still commit themselves actively to the creation of commu- others respond to peer pressure from rival companies. nity partnerships which will bring both public and Some commit their resources automatically to com- private resources to bear on the challenges of modern munity causes which grew up with the company. America. Others may simply be looking for a tax write-off. Whatever the reason, the role of business in commu- Business and Community Partnerships nity service is substantial and growing. A recent study by the Council on Foundations showed that of 219 Local chapters of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce companies surveyed, 94 percent made cash contribu- the National Alliance of Business, the National Associ- tions to community causes in 1981. Yet the average ation of Manufacturers, and other organizations are yearly contribution by business in general has re- already working to establish such partnerships mained at little more than one percent of pre-tax profit throughout the nation. -despite the fact that federal tax law has for years This forging of partnerships-among leaders of encouraged a 5 percent contribution and, with the 1981 major private sector constituencies and leaders of gov. tax bill, raised the ante to 10 percent. ernment-lies at the heart of the Task Force's work Clearly the opportunity exists for business to do The partnership concept offers American business a more. Clearly the need exists, as well. And the same promising new approach to productive involvement in Council on Foundations study indicates that the future may well see this opportunity grasped-and commu- nity needs met-more fully by the business world. Council president James A. Joseph states that Corporations can do more for a "about six in ten of the companies surveyed plan sig- community than just writing checks. nificant increases in their philanthropic contributions over the next few years, provided of course that they do not confront any significant decline in profit beyond community service. In New York City, a consortium o those of the current recession." businesses, non-profit groups and neighborhood The President's Task Force on Private Sector Initia- organizations created 10,000 summer youth jobs las tives has recommended that corporations try to double year and aims for 15,000 this year. The New York City their charitable contributions over the next four years Partnership has also provided the city governmen -to about $6 billion-raising the average level of such with loaned executives to improve subway transporta contributions to at least two percent of pre-tax profit. tion operations and crime control. A 30,000-uni Nearly a dozen cities across the country already housing project is also being financed by the boast "two percent clubs" or "five percent clubs," aver- Partnership. aging fifty business members each, which contribute In Baltimore, the Greater Baltimore Committee- far more than the national norm. The Task Force be- another private-public partnership-was the force be lieves the two-percent contribution goal is reasonable, hind Harborplace, a spectacular development of shop practical and achievable. and scenery that has made a fine old seaport city a Recognizing that corporations can do more for a major new tourist attraction as well. The Baltimor community than just writing checks, the Task Force partnership is now working on an ambitious neighbor has also recommended that businesses double their hood revitalization and housing construction voluntary and "in-kind" service contributions to com- program. munity action over the next four years. This would This partnership concept is being advanced nation raise the level of these in-kind contributions to a $6 bil- ally just as more and more executives are seeking to lion annual level, providing manpower training, dona- insure, in the Business Roundtable's words, that s tions of land for community gardens and parks, space company's "business activities make social sense just a for day-care centers, computer equipment for non- its social activities make business sense." 6 COMMUNITY ACTION Vol. 1, No. 4, 1982 POLICY PERSPECTIVES A recent U.S. Chamber of Commerce resolution put Amway Corporation has underwritten an European it this way: "As the United States enters a new era of tour by the National Symphony Orchestra, as part of turning us to greater self-reliance and less dependence Amway's strategy for penetrating the European on government, American business has a great oppor- market. tunity-and challenge-to build upon that tradition And dollars from the American Express Company and to contribute its expertise and other resources to marketing budget are being earmarked-a dollar at a help the truly needy in our society, as well as to further time-to specific local charities each time the Ameri- the arts and humanities." can Express Card is used in certain metropolitan areas. The Business Roundtable's Policy Committee A five-city test was so successful that the program is recently called upon the 200 chief executive officers of being expanded to include cities throughout the its member companies (some of the largest in the country. nation) to expand personal and company efforts in The Kansas Gas and Electric Company, working community service, including the encouragement of with the Red Cross, has established a program allow- more voluntarism by employees and the strengthening ing customers to add a dollar to their monthly bills to of community relations budgets. help defray energy costs for the elderly and to make "The spotlight has been turned on business with a emergency energy improvements and repairs. new intensity," according to Andrew Sigler, chairman of the Roundtable's corporate responsibility task force and chairman of Champion International (and a mem- Conclusion ber of the President's Task Force on Private Sector Initiatives). "Activities of member companies vary The programs discussed above, and many others greatly, and many more are already involved in a wide like them, demonstrate that business involvement in array of public service activities," Mr. Sigler said. community service has far more than sentimental "Most of us will agree, however, that a vigorous new value. It reflects good business judgment, directly and effort is required at the community level." indirectly, by improving the climate of enterprise in the This vigorous new effort is already taking root. American city. Many companies are beginning to take an active inter- est in understanding and establishing real community partnerships rather than simply writing an annual The community is a company's check to a favorite cause. Others have decided it is time to take some of the same risks in community service most important supplier. activities that are routinely taken in business activities, reaching out to elements of the community from which the company may be most distant. For example, a In a way, the community is a company's most impor- recent study commissioned by Michigan Bell Tele- tant supplier, providing the people, the land and the phone to determine Detroit's most critical needs led basic services a business needs to operate. In return, Michigan Bell to commit $100,000 to a food distribu- the business offers jobs, goods, services and tax reve- tion program for the city's hungry. In another instance, nues to the community. responding to a growing financial problem facing Chi- This symbiotic relationship has become more and cago's non-profit service community, the Amoco more apparent in recent years, and the community Foundation has sponsored a $4.7 million program to partnership movement is a product of that growing help reduce non-profit organizations' energy expenses recognition. by "retrofitting" their office buildings to make them It is a way for business to court a major supplier more energy-efficient. The savings over ten years is effectively, and it is the means by which the community estimated at $12 million, which can now go directly to at large can better understand the serious challenges service delivery. facing American business today. And while humanitarian motives serve as powerful Buinesses can't survive for long without profits, but inspiration for companies in community service, the neither can they survive for long if all around them is profit motive has a role to play, too. crumbling at their feet. Ignoring the wider world in In Minneapolis, for example, Control Data Corpo- which we do business not only brings us profit without ration opened a plant in an abandoned, inner-city honor, but will in the fullness of time bring us no profit bowling alley. The plant provides binding and collat- at all. ing services for the company. The workers are pri- American business understands that better every marily disabled persons and mothers of young chil- year. Investing its resources in community partner- dren. The hours at the plant are flexible, the work is ships can help translate that understanding into effec- valuable, and the profits are considerable. tive, positive action for many years to come. COMMUNITY ACTION Vol. 1, No. 4, 1982 7 POLICY PERSPECTIVES Voluntary Agencies and Community Partnerships by William Aramony This summer, more than 700 Kansas City teens didn't tions, and other voluntary agencies to help serve peo- have to spend their days on the streets. Instead, they ple with voluntary dollars and volunteer time. worked in hospitals, day care centers, and offices, and The focus on the "New Federalism" is shifting deci- they will be ready to go job-hunting in the fall. All this sions about services and programs from Washington, happened thanks to a special fund created by local D.C., to state legislatures and city halls around the businesses, foundations and voluntary agencies. country. At the same time, federal support of many Elderly and handicapped people in Seattle, Wash- social service programs has been drastically reduced. ington were about to lose hot meals and home care to As responsibility and decision-making shift to the budget cuts. But "Project Transition" stepped in with a local level, United Ways are increasingly called upon special fund of $1.5 million to help carry on crucial to unify local efforts. United Ways have nearly 100 services while state and county governments reorgan- years' experience in community planning, partnership- ize the distribution of federal block grants. "Project building, and fund raising. Interdependence and coop- Transition" was developed by a coalition of neighbor- eration form the core of United Way's system. Volun- hood groups, voluntary agencies, foundations, and teers from every segment of a community gather to businesses. determine local needs, set local priorities, and distrib- In Boston last summer, 37,000 youngsters enjoyed ute voluntary dollars to help meet those needs. United pools and basketball games through the auspices of a Way volunteers hav faced those tough decisions every group of voluntary agencies, foundations, and city year, even when federal budget cuts did not loom on parents. The Boston coalition formed to find financial the horizon. and volunteer support for the summer recreation pro- gram that the city of Boston had to drop from its Partnerships In Action budget. The above are only a few of the examples of how It would be impossible to describe all of the many people are helping each other through community partnerships that United Ways across the country have partnerships. In response to the country's economic helped form. The following are descriptions of just a and political realities, voluntary organizations have in- few innovative efforts. creased their activities as catalysts for new cooperative partnership arrangements. Indeed, the essential char- Allocating Human Services acteristics of voluntary organizations-people of di- One group of partnerships is working on better allo- verse backgrounds organizing to solve common prob- cation of available human service resources. Early in lems, improve their communities, or just help each 1981, for example, United Way of Southeastern Penn- other-exemplify the spirit of community partnership. sylvania committed itself to a "vigorous community This spirit of cooperation-people caring for each leadership role in promoting a careful reassessment of other in an organized fashion-lives today in commu- our local human service system." At United Way's urg- nities all over the country. In 2,100 of these communi- ing, a group of key representatives of city and state ties, United Way organizations work side by side with government, religious organizations, foundations, and their partners in voluntarism to serve local needs and labor groups, met and formed the Consortium for strengthen community ties. United Ways have been Human Services. The Consortium's goals were: to be a actively building community partnerships between forum for the exchange of information and observa- business, labor, government, neighborhood organiza- tions on problems confronting the human service sys- tem; to identify needs and priorities created by reduc- William Aramony is President of the United Way of America. tions in tax-dollar support for that system; to clarify 8 COMMUNITY ACTION Vol. 1, No. 4, 1982 POLICY PERSPECTIVES the respective roles of the public and private sectors; to Coordinating Human Services help define and realign resources available for human services; and to implement mutually acceptable In San Diego County, California, United Way is courses of action on a cooperative basis. working with the city and the California Congressional The Consortium is now working with Philadelphia's delegation to develop a strong public-private partner- Community Services Planning Council to analyze ship. San Diego United Way has helped pioneer a com- federal health and human services funding to the city, puterized data base on human services. The data base and to study the effects of federal budgetary reduc- is patterned after the United Way of America Services tions. As it completes its work, the Consortium will Identification System (UWASIS). UWASIS was de- also develop model systems for more effective opera- veloped in 1972 as a service classification system aimed tion of Pennsylvania's Social Services Block Grant at simplifying accounting methods for agencies. Program. Today, many communities use the system to define the A similar coalition is at work in Louisiana. United functions of service agencies and clarify community Way of the Greater New Orleans Area has helped bring needs. The information in the San Diego computer together several organizations to determine local classifies state, city, and federal programs, as well as service priorities in light of the federal cuts. At the state private and nonprofit services. The California group level, United Way of Louisiana has joined an alliance intends to encourage coordination among agencies to provide the state with information about human offering identical services. service needs. The state can then be expected to imple- In Newark, New Jersey, the Essex Partnership is ment its Block Grant program more effectively. seeking to reorganize the area's human service system, coordinate services among agencies, and promote effi- Supplementing Human Services cient agency management. Members of the New Jersey group include United A different example of a creative joint approach is Way of Essex and West Hudson, the Greater Essex found in Kansas City. Heart of America United Way Community Foundation, the Essex County Depart- has joined a coalition with the city government, local ment of Citizen Services, the New Jersey Department businesses, and foundations to lessen the effects of of Human Services, the Association for the Children of federal budget reductions. When it became a coalition New Jersey, the Community Affairs Group of the member last winter, United Way promptly contributed Greater Newark Chamber of Commerce, and the $700,000 from its emergency assistance fund; local Newark Coalition for Neighborhoods. This group il- businesses and foundations pledged a matching lustrates the variety among private and voluntary amount, as did the city government. organizations that are banding together to shape com- munity decisions. The Essex Partnership plans to develop a single, in- Voluntary organizations have increased clusive information system on local social and health their activities as catalysts for new services to replace three different classification systems now in use. The Partnership's computer has already cooperative partnership arrangements. compiled information on more than 600 agencies. The Partnership will also help coordinate planning among its members. It hopes to accomplish this task by The coalition has agreed to divide the $2.1 million surveying local residents regarding the services they fund between unemployment assistance and emer- need and want. This is real community planning— gency services, currently the community's most critical going to the people, not theorizing and trying to needs. United Way, through a special allocations com- impose something that won't work. mittee, is distributing $1,050,000 for emergency serv- ices in day care, programs for the elderly, needs of smaller agencies and other areas. The city is administering the other half of the fund Resources for Partnership under the supervision of the Board of City Trusts. That portion of the fund is providing summer employment New partnerships need more volunteers. Americans and training for more than 700 city youths, as well as are responding with the traditional enthusiasm and some longer-term employment for adults. Besides energy that have made voluntarism such a great force receiving welcome paychecks, youths and adults are in this country. The results of a Gallup poll commis- gaining on-the-job training that will help them in sioned last October by Independent Sector bear testi- future job-hunting. Many of the youths are working as mony to this fact. The poll shows that in 1981, close to day care attendants, hospital aides, and maintenance 84 million Americans volunteered an estimated 8.4 bil- and clerical workers. lion hours. Their time was worth about $64.5 billion COMMUNITY ACTION Vol. 1, No. 4. 1982 9 POLICY PERSPECTIVES dollars. By joining and encouraging these new partner- new organizations get started, or offer new services. ships, United Ways continue striving toward their mis- Thus, United Ways acquire the flexibility not only to sion: to increase the organized capacity of people to meet emergency needs, but to help form new commu- care for each other. nity partnerships. Economics also demand better management of In southeastern New England, a specially created existing resources. That demand is as applicable to the emergency fund has helped day care centers in Rhode voluntary nonprofit sector as it is to the profit-making Island maintain services while the centers search for businesses. United Way of America is attempting to alternatives to government support. meet the need for better management through its Vol- United Way of Southeastern New England is con- unteer Development Program. Begun in 1978 with the tributing more than $54,000 to assist the day care cen- help of the W. K. Kellogg Foundation, the program ters, and has pledged $150,000 to help other agencies trains the volunteer leaders of United Ways and agen- survive while they develop contingency funding or cies. Instruction focuses on fiscal and personnel man- service plans. To this end, United Way is training agement, long-range planning, and fund raising. By agency leaders in planning and fund raising. the end of this year, United Way of America will have 15 regional training centers, and 20 by 1983. Conclusions An important new component of the Volunteer De- velopment program is the Hispanic Volunteer Devel- United Way and other voluntary organizations rec- opment Program. It consists of workshops offered in ognize the fact that certain entitlement programs must continue to be supported through tax dollars. But some important services will no longer have govern- ment funding. The voluntary sector alone can never The voluntary sector alone can never supplant the services that have lost federal support. supplant the services that have lost Nor would it want to. Not at the expense of creating closer ties between people. Not at the loss of such an federal support. excellent opportunity to solve common problems to- gether. This renewed communication between volun- teer agencies and the private sector could not have come at a better time. Organizations in the voluntary areas with large Hispanic populations such as Chi- sector are each different in scope and goals, but they cago, Miami, Los Angeles, Dallas/Fort Worth, and share in their mission: to help people make better lives San Francisco/Santa Clara. This program will help for themselves and their children. Hispanic agencies develop private, nongovernmental But that's the dream of every American parent, sources of funding. This skill is especially important whether they are factory workers or vice presidents for now, since many of those agencies still rely primarily production; whether they are doctors or lawyers or on government support. Another program objective is bricklayers. The scope of voluntary activity is only to encourage more minority volunteers to join the vol- reined by our imagination. When we join together the untary sector's decision-makers. resources of the government, commercial, and volun- United Ways are also helping their communities use tary sectors, our potential for accomplishment is un- limited resources effectively through "venture fund- limited. Voluntary organizations like United Way are ing" projects. Many United Ways set aside a percent- committed now more than ever to meet the uncertain age of donations in special emergency trusts. This future with hope, prosperity, and well-being for mil- money can then be used to support a particularly valu- lions of Americans who are counting on our enduring able program threatened by lack of funds, or to help tradition of mutual interdependence. 10 COMMUNITY ACTION Vol. 1. No. 4, 1982 POLICY PERSPECTIVES Building Community Partnerships: The Foundation Role by William S. White It seems to me that every person always is in a ernment, business, private philanthropy, and volun- kind of an informal partnership with his commu- tary organizations into an effective problem-solving nity. His own success is dependent on a large de- organism. While public-private partnerships are not gree on that community, and the community, new-many communities can cite examples of collab- after all, is the sum total of the individuals who oration dating back decades-they take on new mean- make it up. The institutions of a community, in ings today in light of public budget cuts, and the turn, are the means by which those individuals current reassessment of the role of government. Sim- express their faith, their ideals, and their concern ply put, many of the problems confronting our cities for their fellow man.-Charles Stewart Mott and communities cannot be resolved by a single insti- tution or sector working in isolation. Charles Stewart Mott penned these words in 1963, a A need now exists for a more concerted, systematic year when he was well into a philanthropic career that development of public-private partnerships in a vari- spanned four decades. The automobile industrialist's ety of areas. concept of partnership was one that guided him and the activities of his private foundation from its earliest years. Not only are partnership and community inte- gral concepts in the work of the Mott Foundation to- The Foundation Role day, but the linkage of the two is fast gaining ground generally as a new approach to our society's ills. Our concept of "community partnership," however, Foundations have a role to play in the partnership is far more subtle than it was only a generation or two process. It is obvious that they can provide resources in ago. We now realize that many of the problems con- the form of hard cash. But perhaps the greatest contri- fronting our communities are too complex, too diffi- bution foundations today can make in the partnership cult, to be addressed on an individual basis. Instead, effort is taking on the role of an enabler. More explic- citizens at the community level are doing what Ameri- itly, they can serve as a "mediating structure", linking cans have traditionally done when faced with problems parties in the partnerships and integrating the partici- beyond their individual capacities-they have pooled pants' perspectives and roles into an effective force. their talents and efforts. A century and a half ago Any cooperative venture has an element of risk, and the foundation can act as a dreamer, convener, medi- Alexis de Tocqueville pointed out the tendency of Americans to form associations "to give fetes, found ator, and facilitator to help offset that risk. Founda- seminaries, build churches, distribute books, and send tions can nudge other sectors (government, private, missionaries to the Antipodes." If he were to return and voluntary) to contribute in a meaningful way, fos- today, he would undoubtedly cite the varied and imag- tering innovative approaches and potential solutions. inative ways Americans are forming new organiza- This is a particularly appropriate role in the case of tions, to deal with contemporary social problems. community partnerships. Every private foundation More specifically, in many town and cities, we're has a home base, whether it is New York, Chicago, seeing local voluntary organizations working hand-in- Louisville or Flint, and a community with which to get glove with government and the private sector. On the involved. There are also more than 200 community foundations with close ties to their hometowns. national level, moreover, President Ronald Reagan is advocating such partnerships through his Task Force It is important for foundations to realize that part- on Private Sector Initiatives in an effort to weld gov- nership building involves costs and that the potential for failure can be high. The process often gobbles up time and energy in huge quantities. Because of this, it William S. White is President of the Charles Stewart Mott may be easy for the members to become frustrated and Foundation in Flint, MI. discouraged. In its role as a mediator, a foundation COMMUNITY ACTION Vol. 1, No. 4, 1982 11 POLICY PERSPECTIVES must be ready and willing to nurture the relationship, munity, there are countless opportunities and a wide not unlike a parent raising a child. This process not range of issues and concerns on which to focus founda- only takes patience and a high level of energy, it also re- tion resources and energies. Two broad areas of poten- quires superb communications skills and the ability to tial partnership which many experts identify as prime truly listen to the dialogue between members. While prospects, and in which foundations have already not every foundation has personnel with these highly played significant roles, are neighborhood develop- developed skills, many do have the financial resources ment and community services. Each area encompasses to bring professionals that do into the process. interlocking economic, social and political factors that Despite good intentions, true commitment and hard are neither exclusively private nor totally public. Suc- work, partnerships do, on occasion, fail. Regardless of cess in either area requires cooperation from all sides the outcome and the associated risks, the rewards for of the fence. those that do succeed are great. Strong partnerships are a true form of democracy and accomplish goals and tasks that otherwise would never be undertaken. In the case of our cities, particularly those in the north- Two broad areas of potential east and midwest, it seems clear that those that stand partnerships in which foundations have the greatest chance for surviving the current economic already played significant roles are maelstrom will be those with strong partnerships. neighborhood development and Why the Nurturing Role? community services. There are a number of reasons why foundations can be effective in the mediating, nurturing role. First, their agendas are generally the least political Neighborhood Development and complicated of the parties involved. Because of this, they can provide leadership in initiating, develop- It seems that everywhere one turns these days, there ing and sustaining community partnerships. Since they is talk about the importance of America's neighbor- are local, they have an element of familiarity. An out- hoods. From the nation's capitol to the local city hall, growth of that familiarity-trust-has been men- the pervasive feeling is that neighborhoods are the tioned before as a key factor in the partnership build- building blocks of the city, and that vital neighbor- ing process. hoods are the "last, best hope" of the nation's troubled Second, they can facilitate communications and cities. information exchange between the parties involved. Within the last few years, however, federal agencies Community groups, particularly those in their infan- supporting neighborhood development and revitaliza- cies, are often quite unsophisticated in working with tion such as the Community Services Administration business or governmental entities. But, at the same and the Economic Development Administration have time, local residents are a key link in the community been defunded. Therefore, private initiative and sup- partnership process. Thus, their energy, interest in, port in this area becomes increasingly important. and dedication to the neighborhood and the commu- Foundation involvement in neighborhoods is not nity are major factors in any partnership venture and new. The Cleveland Foundation and the Chicago must be nourished and protected, but yet given the op- Community Trust have long worked in such neighbor- portunity to develop strength and independence. On hood policy areas as housing; criminal justice and cor- the other side, corporations and foundations wanting rections; and municipal recreation and park facilities. to support the work of community organizations often The 1950's witnessed a massive entry by the Ford hesitate to contact or meet with the neighborhood Foundation into the field. Ford continues to be among group because they are unsure of how to do so. the most active, contributing over $29.5 million to Third, foundations have the flexibility to provide in- groups such as the Bedford-Stuyvesant Restoration fusions of dollars into a project at crucial junctures. As Corporation and the Watts Labor Community Action a source of unrestricted capital, foundations have the Committee in 1980. Other foundations granting over ability to react to needs much faster than many other $120,000 for neighborhood development in their last funders, and with minimal red tape. Foundations can annual reports include the Rockefeller Brothers Fund, also provide non-monetary resources, not the least of the Heinz Endowment, the Joyce Foundation, the San which is staff technical assistance. Francisco Foundation, the Houston Endowment and Once a foundation decides to become involved in its the MacArthur Foundation. The Mellon, Hillman and community through the partnership process, the first Pittsburgh Foundations, as well as others are also question to be addressed is "how?". In any given com- heavily involved. 12 COMMUNITY ACTION Vol. 1, No. 4, 1982 POLICY PERSPECTIVES Today, the needs of any given neighborhood are as In St. Paul, the McKnight Foundation has invested diverse as the communities in which they are located. A $9 million in the Lowertown Redevelopment Project, foundation must first assess the particular situation to an urban revitalization effort that includes the renova- determine the needs and what role it might take in a tion of several historic properties and adaptation of partnership process. It is necessary to talk with busi- old warehouses to new uses. McKnight has also in- nesses, local neighborhood leaders, and civic organiza- vested $10 million in the Minneapolis-St. Paul Family tions to make these determinations and to put them Housing Fund. Half the amount will be lent to city into the perspective of the entire community. residents for up to 20 percent of the purchase price of a A number of specific issues within broad categories home. Both of these projects involve the coordination are likely to emerge. These will probably include: of large-scale public, private, and voluntary efforts in Preserving and enhancing the existing assets of partnership with the foundation. neighborhoods. Promoting new housing and commercial and indus- trial development compatible with the existing Community Services assets and character of neighborhoods. Facilitating and supporting self-help efforts. The quality of life for residents in a community is In the late 1970s, the Mott Foundation became in- determined by a host of factors-the school system, volved in a unique partnership project which involved the cultural and recreation opportunities, and even the all of the above concepts-the construction of the weather. But one of the most important contributing Hyatt Regency Hotel and Convention Center in Flint, factors is the quality and quantity of basic community the profits from which support neighborhood im- services the local government and others offer. Often provement and self-help. these services are taken for granted; that is, until gar- Mott's role in the undertaking was multi-faceted. It directly provided $6.1 million toward the $38 million bage is collected once every two weeks instead of project. It also brought together a variety of other weekly, or the police patrols of the neighborhood or central business district are reduced. funding sources, created a financing plan which the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development Maintaining decent community services has become a real burden for many municipalities. With the cur- rent shifting of services provided for federal programs back to the local community, additional stresses are Neighborhoods are the last, best hope added to the process of planning for, allocating and of the nation's troubled cities. managing these services. While this process has always been one that necessitates a working relationship be- tween the public and the private sector, many believe, later cited as a model, and insured that Flint neighbor- and probably accurately so, that an increasing burden hoods would benefit directly from the central business may well be added to the private half of that alliance. district revitalization. There is no doubt that municipalities are increasingly Key to the neighborhood participation and resulting unable to deal with growing demands for services. benefits was the $6.1 million grant, which was given to Foundations can play a nurturing and mediating the Flint Neighborhood Improvement and Preserva- role in this area. For instance, they can aid commu- tion Project (Flint NIPP) to purchase a second mort- nities in developing a process for addressing problems gage on the hotel property. Income from that mort- cooperatively, whether the problem involves devising gage finances NIPP's work providing technical assis- alternative methods of providing police protection or tance for home repair and rehabilitation to neighbor- planning a new regional park system. This agenda set- hood groups. ting assistance can take the form of dollars to help fund Other funding participation included a $6.5 million the planning process and experts to provide technical Urban Development Action Grant from HUD, a $1 assistance. The dollars can also be used to provide key million grant from the Economic Development Ad- leaders the opportunity to visit other cities and-com- ministration and $6 million from the private sector. munities that have successfully addressed similar prob- Not only did the financing have to be coordinated, but lems through partnership arrangements. so did the participation and interests of the project's An excellent example of this visitation approach is funders and partners. The Mott Foundation took this "Learning from Europe," a project of Partners for role upon itself in its home community. Livable Places, funded by the German-Marshall Fund Another example of foundation participation in of the United States. The purpose of the project is to local neighborhood development partnerships is the facilitate the transfer of innovation, imagination and "program related investment" strategy of the leadership from Europe on ways our communities can McKnight Foundation. be made better places in which to live. According to a COMMUNITY ACTION Vol. 1, No. 4. 1982 13 POLICY PERSPECTIVES study commissioned by the National League of Cities Staffing for the task force took the form of 89 man- in 1977, "attractiveness" is a key community resource agerial level staff people loaned by the business com- in sustaining a strong economic base, as it has a direct munity for up to 12 weeks each. In many cases, these impact upon retaining a stable workforce and in creat- individuals worked close to full-time on the task force. ing a desirable location for business. Thus, residential Six months later, 650 recommendations and imple- traffic restraints, urban waterfront development, and mentation strategies were submitted, 88 percent of animation of public places are far more than nice which could be implemented by executive order. It was ideas; they can be considered survival tools. In Europe, estimated that 80 percent of these recommendations these urban options have been tried and tested through were implemented, thus saving the city millions of dol- cooperation of the public, private, and voluntary sec- lars. Others are under consideration. tors. American cities have an opportunity to profit from the successes and failures of urban initiatives in Conclusion Europe and thus forgo some costly mistakes. Although the project just began in March of this year, six cities have already been involved: Hartford, As the Committee for Economic Development Richmond, Indianapolis, Pittsburgh, Memphis, and (CED) pointed out in its book, Public-Private Partner- Chattanooga. Partners for Livable Places will con- ship: An Opportunity for Urban Communities, "In tinue working with these communities, providing tech- fashioning local partnerships there is no substitute for nical assistance and acting as facilitators and catalysts. the judgment and leadership of individuals who live in While a young project, it holds every promise of being a community, are knowledgeable about its people and a very successful partnership venture. institutions, can care about its future The evidence of recent decades demonstrates that communities Foundations can also support evaluations that pro- vide information about existing and needed commu- nity services, and then find ways to link them together. And certainly foundations are often in the position of providing an outside business-related discipline and financial review that is not always available in the Building a partnership requires hard public sector. work, institutional maturity, and Two years ago, Cleveland, Ohio, was the site for sophisticated bargaining skills. such a joint venture. At that time a new mayor had been elected and was seeking the input and expertise of the business, financial and foundation communities in ways to assist his city weather the economic and man- agement problems it was having. This appeal resulted in the Operation Improvement Task Force. which actively mobilize their public and private re The task force, financed with $850,000 ($600,000 sources can deal effectively with difficult problems and from the business community, $150,000 from the create new opportunities." Building a partnership re Cleveland Foundation and $100,000 from the Gund quires hard work, institutional maturity, and sophisti Foundation) faced a three-fold charge: cated bargaining skills. It is a learning process b identification of immediate ways to improve effi- which the participants must grow to trust each other ciency in city government through administrative plan together, and work cooperatively. The reward fo orders; this kind of cooperation betwen the various sectors 0 suggest operational and managerial reorganizations our society is communities which are better able to to improve both short-term and long-term efficiency; meet their needs. Foundations have a significant role pinpoint specific areas where further in-depth analy- to play in nurturing and sustaining such partnership sis and studies were needed. over the coming years. 14 COMMUNITY ACTION Vol. I, No. 4, 1982 POLICY PERSPECTIVES State Government and Community Partnerships by Pierre S. du Pont IV The President's Task Force on Private Sector Initia- the responsibility for making it work, just as they tives has been formed to encourage the private sector shared the credit for launching this project four years and voluntary organizations to become actively in- ago. volved in areas once considered the sole province of Local businesses are enthused about the program, government: employment, education, housing for the because JDG gives them dependable workers for hard poor, nutrition, and numerous other community to fill, entry level positions. services. In September, students are assigned to JDG career The Task Force operates from the premise that gov- counselors who are also job placement experts. As the ernment and the private sector should take every school year progresses, the job specialists help the stu- opportunity to join forces in the delivery of services. dents line up interviews with prospective employers. While philanthropic institutions, religious charities, JDG helps youngsters to make a smooth transition and volunteer civic organizations already perform from school to employment by giving them the skills extraordinary deeds of community service at both the and the motivation they need. High school seniors en- local and national levels, many of these initiatives can rolled in JDG learn the "little things" no one ever be augmented and duplicated through partnerships thought to teach them-how to dress for a job inter- that blend the resources of the public and private view, how to write a resume, what an employer expects sectors. from a productive employee. Eighty-six percent of JDG's students have been placed in full-time jobs within three months of their The Delaware Experience graduation. Others are moving up the educational lad- der in post-secondary vocational schools. Last year, A successful state-level partnership that meshes alumni of the program earned an average of $4. 12 an public and private resources is illustrated by an inno- hour in their first year of employment. vative four year old project in my home state of Dela- ware: Jobs for Delaware Graduates (JDG). JDG fo- cuses upon finding full-time productive jobs for the State Level Task Forces high school seniors least likely to succeed-i.e., those all but forgotten students in general education classes who receive neither vocational training nor college In order to stimulate the formation of community preparatory instruction. Most have no career plans partnerships such as Jobs for Delaware Graduates, the and very little motivation. President's Task Force, through a committee of Gov- The JDG community partnership is organized and ernors which I chair, is encouraging each state to operated as a non-profit corporation, which receives establish a mechanism through which the partnership both public and private funding. Public funds are pro- approach may be pursued. In some states, a new state- level Task Force on Private Sector Initiatives has been vided by the Delaware Legislature and grants from the formed. In other states, a Cabinet Committee or an U.S. Department of Labor. Private funds come from local businesses and the Ford and Rockefeller existing advisory group on volunteerism and human Foundations. services has assumed the role of encouraging partner- JDG is also guided jointly by the public and private ships. In all, some 42 states have either already estab- sectors through a board of directors consisting of busi- lished a mechanism for partnership formation or are in nessmen, labor leaders, state educators, and political the process of doing so. The Task Force on Private Sector Initiatives in New leaders. Public officials and private businessmen share Jersey, established by Governor Kean in April, 1982, illustrates the mandate and operation of a newly- Pierre S. du Pont IV is Governor of Delaware. formed, state-level effort. COMMUNITY ACTION Vol. I. No. 4, 1982 15 POLICY PERSPECTIVES The mandate to the Task Force notes that public to the recession, and recipients of public assistance and private human service efforts have been operating benefits, the Governor's Task Force is providing rec- along virtually parallel lines in New Jersey, with few ommendations on policies that will promote and foster ties between the two, few direct lines of communica- public and private joint ventures in community eco- tion, and relatively few instances of cooperative use of nomic development and job creation. human and financial resources. The Task Force is A primary objective of the President's Task Force is charged with forging systematic links between the pub- to serve as a catalyst, encouraging the creation of part- lic and private sectors-an opportunity virtually ig- nerships where none currently exists or where business nored before economic troubles forced New Jersey to or government by itself has failed to address a commu- re-examine the under-utilization of its human and nity need. This desire to act as a catalyst has been the financial resources. primary driving force behind the work of the Gover- The membership of the Task Force is drawn from nor's committee. Our goal is to create as many state the corporate community, labor and education task forces as possible, to leave behind as our legacy a groups, the religious community, foundations, human vital network of task forces and partnerships that will service groups, and other non-profit agencies. Gov- carry on the work begun by the President's Task Force ernor Kean chairs the Task Force personally. The first step, currently underway, is to take inven- Conclusion tory of public and private human service programs operating in the state. The second step is to devise specific administrative and legislative steps that will One of the issues that has consistently arisen in our encourage and facilitate the formation of community work is: Who should take the lead in forming partner- ships, business or government? On a theoretical level partnerships. This may involve removing obstacles and impediments in state law as well as offering posi- arguments can be constructed on either side. Some tive incentives for coordination of efforts. argue that since the reason government exists is to serve the public interest, public officials should be Another approach to establishing a state-level focus charged with the responsibility of playing the lead role for partnership efforts is found in Kansas. In March 1982, Governor Carlin established a sub-Cabinet com- mittee on Private Sector Initiatives, composed of the Secretaries of Economic Development, Administra- tion, Aging, Human Resources, and Social and Reha- Leadership may come from either the bilitation Services as well as four individuals from the public or private sector. private sector committed to, or involved in, commu- nity partnerships. The sub-Cabinet committee imme- diately launched a survey of existing public-private partnerships in Kansas and found, to its surprise, that Still others argue that the private sector has a vested a wide variety of community partnerships were already interest in any community where it exists, so busines operating within the state. Major examples included should play the role of civic entrepreneur. However the PLUS program, a state-wide partnership with in- when we consider real problems in the real world, the dustry to provide health screening, health promotion, answer is that leadership may come from either secto and health education at the work site; and the PRIDE depending upon the particular situation. The private program, a state-wide community development effort sector may be the first to identify a problem and to sug in cooperation with the private sector. The sub-Cabi- gest a partnership to address it, or state or local go net Committee is now working to identify priority ernment officials may initiate a request for coordina areas for further development of partnerships. tion of resources in some area. What matters is that that Still another approach to state-level leadership is partnership is created, and the problems addressed- found in South Carolina, where the Governor's Coun- addressed by representatives of a broad cross-section cil on Volunteerism and the Governor's Task Force on of the community with an interest in solving the Critical Human Needs are working in tandem to problem. launch joint efforts by public organizations and pri- We have learned much from the politics of confron vate business to assist poor families and unemployed tation in this country. It is time for the politics of coop workers. eration-between levels of government and between In addition to fostering immediate action to address the public and private sector-to play a major role a human needs of workers impacted by a loss of jobs due we seek to resolve problems for the benefit of all. 16 COMMUNITY ACTION Vol. 1, No. 4, 1982 POLICY PERSPECTIVES Community Partnerships at Home and Abroad by E. Morgan Williams The President's Task Force on Private Sector Initia- management practices and the development of live- tives is currently seeking to stimulate the formation of stock breeding programs; International Voluntary community partnerships between the public and Services recruits skilled technicians internationally to private sectors to attack our pressing domestic prob- fill particular posts in community development, hous- lems. However, it is little recognized that the partner- ing and industrial development and the People-to- ship approach has long been utilized in addressing People Health Foundation of Project Hope teaches another critical set of problems: fighting hunger and modern techniques of health science to medical, den- poverty in the developing nations. For many years, a tal, nursing and health personnel in Africa, Latin cooperative effort has mobilized resources from both America and the Middle East. the public and private sectors to provide coordinated development assistance to the Third World. The ex- The experience of the organizations perience of the organizations operating in the sphere of international development assistance has much to operating in the sphere of international offer as we begin to accelerate the formation of com- development assistance has much to munity partnerships at home. offer as we begin to accelerate the Partnerships for Development formation of community partnerships at home. At the center of the cooperative relationship through which American development assistance is delivered to Third World nations are the private volun- Each year thousands of individuals and corpora- tary organizations (PVOs) which operate programs tions in the private sector contribute to PVOs in sup- and maintain staff in the recipient nations. PVOs have port of their relief and development activities. Accord- been active in international relief work globally for ing to a recent report on American voluntary agencies involved in overseas development assistance prepared more than a century. However, over the last thirty by AID, private contributions to PVOs totaled $836 years, they have focused their efforts on the poorer million in 1980. Additional millions in in-kind services nations and have developed an extensive network of and volunteer time are also provided by individuals contacts and relationships in these countries. This net- work is an invaluable resource for delivering develop- and corporations. ment assistance. The partnership effort is reflected in the support Just as the American population represents a heter- provided to PVOs by government through AID and ogeneity of interests and concerns, so do American pri- the cooperative projects undertaken abroad. Legisla- vate voluntary organizations operating abroad. A look tion that governs the relationship of U.S. PVOs with the government spells out clearly the emphasis that is at the PVOs that are registered with the U.S. Agency for International Development (AID) to engage in placed on partnership. For example, in Section 123 of development work abroad shows that activities rang- the Foreign Assistance Act of 1979 the Congress stated ing from agricultural marketing to teaching people that "participation of rural and urban poor people in how to build better roads and schools are undertaken their countries' development can be assisted and accel- by U.S. PVOs. For example, Africare supports the erated in an effective manner through an increase in development of water resources, increased food pro- activities planned and carried out by private and vol- duction and delivery of basic health care services in untary organizations." This commitment to partner- rural Africa. Food for the Hungry operates integrated ship by the U.S. Government is compatible with what most PVOs view as their objectives and serves as the rural development projects aimed at developing self- reliance through food production programs; Heifer foundation of the cooperative effort. Project International emphasizes training in good Government support has allowed PVOs to expand the scope and scale of their assistance activities beyond E. Morgan Williams is President of the Cooperative League of levels previously sustainable with private funds alone. the U.S.A. Without the support of government for PVO activities, COMMUNITY ACTION Vol. 1, No. 4, 1982 17 POLICY PERSPECTIVES the development of such large-scale projects as agri- have increased particularly sharply for the poorest cultural marketing systems, nutrition centers, hospi- members; and (3) members are investing much of their tals, and irrigation systems would be virtually impos- increased income in other productive assets, such as sible in many developing countries. land and buffalo. Based on the Kaira Union precedent, Phase I of A Partnership At Work "Operation Flood", completed in 1977, organized more than 2 million milk producers in India into hun- A major emphasis of the overseas development dreds of village milk collection cooperatives. These, in effort over the past few years has been the improve- turn, were federated into 18 integrated cooperative ment of basic agricultural production and distribution unions, in order to "flood" India's four largest cities networks in the Third World. As President Reagan with high quality, low cost milk. In Phase II, recently noted in his speech on development assistance to the completed, 28 additional cooperative unions have World Affairs Council of Philadelphia last year, been created. All of the unions operate modern, large- "Looking to the future, our emphasis will be upon the scale plants which process and market milk and dairy importance of market-oriented policies The focus products. will be on raising the productivity of the small farmer, The impact of "Operation Flood" is four fold. First, building the capacity to pursue agricultural research the milk that is sold provides an important food source and stimulating productive enterprises that generate to the Indian diet and fights malnutrition in the employment and purchasing power." country. Second, the Indian farmer gets a better return To illustrate how the partnership effort works in for his product. Third, proceeds from the sale of milk pursuit of this objective, we can examine a project provide a source of capital formation. And finally, the undertaken by my own organization, the Cooperative formation of a cooperative stabilizes the economic League of the U.S.A. In its overseas work, the Cooper- situation in the villages and brings an improved way of ative League works to bring cooperative structures and life to the people in the community. operations to bear on the problems of the Third World farmer and consumer. Conclusion For over a quarter of a century, the Cooperative League has been actively involved in developing coop- While there have been the inevitable tensions and eratives in the Third World. As noted by Congress in problems in the public-private partnership for over- 1964 in reporting on the Humphrey Amendment to the seas development assistance that attend any effort to Foreign Assistance Act, "Living and vital cooperatives coordinate large-scale efforts, the results to date have embrace the social, moral and cultural values of their been overwhelmingly positive. The U.S. PVO cannot members these are what give U.S. cooperatives do it along operating abroad. Neither can the U.S. gov- their high value as an exportable product of our ernment. We need each other. democracy." The lesson for domestic policy is that partnership is One of the current development assistance projects more than a slogan. The AID-PVO relationship has carried out by the League as a public-private partner- demonstrated that the partners can accomplish more ship is "Operation Flood" in India. Funding for this working together than by themselves. Private sector project was provided from a combination of founda- initiatives and organizations do not supplant govern- tion, government and League resources. "Operation ment activities, but they can complement and reinforce Flood" is patterned on the model of the very successful public sector efforts in striving to accomplish mutu- Kaira district Milk Production Union in Gujarat ally-agreed upon objectives. If we can take the overseas State. The Kaira Union today is composed of 850 vil- development experience into account as we proceed lage cooperatives with a membership of 300,000. with the construction of community partnerships at Major results of its operations are: (1) income has in- home, we will make faster and more effective progress creased for co-op members; (2) production and income toward meeting our urgent domestic problems. 18 COMMUNITY ACTION Vol. I, No. 4, 1982 NOTES FROM THE FIELD Housing Partnerships We present below two different and won a set of municipal and programs. The basis for the award models of community partnership in county policies that provided the was the operation of an effective housing. One, the New York City right conditions for new develop- partnership among citizens, public Neighborhood Housing Service, is a ment to proceed. The key element in agencies, and the private sector- local program of the Congressional- this partnership strategy is that the the Des Moines Housing Council, ly chartered Neighborhood Rein- Des Moines Housing Council acts Inc.-which had constructed over vestment Corporation. Its emphasis as a surrogate public agency with 200 new housing units on vacant is on rehabilitation. The second, the delegated powers from local govern- inner-city land. Des Moines Housing Council, is a ment. These powers are exercised The League of Women Voters privately initiated partnership work- from a broad representational base took the lead role in constructing the ing in the area of new construction. of neighborhood, business, and gov- partnership. League members who The Neighborhood Reinvestment ernment, rather than from govern- had served on the housing task Corporation operates on two basic ment alone. force, dismayed by their findings, premises. First, neighborhood resi- approached the president of the dents and organizations must be Des Moines Chamber of Commerce for his help: directly involved in the revitaliza- would the Chamber sponsor a tion of their older neighborhoods. Trash-strewn vacant lots. Aban- meeting of key business and govern- During the 1960s and early 1970s, doned boarded-up houses. Demor- ment people to gauge the amount of too many older neighborhoods took alized residents fleeing to the interest in revitalizing the area a defeatist view. Organized collabo- suburbs. All these signs of urban around the central business district? ration of government, business, and decay blighted the inner ring around As it turned out, everyone was voluntary organizations is required downtown Des Moines, Iowa in the interested. to break this attitude and give resi- mid-1970s. Government programs The Chamber and the city govern- dents confidence to borrow for re- showed little positive effect. The ment each agreed to provide habilitation. The second premise is League of Women Voters, in a 1975 $100,000 to establish the Des Moines Housing Council (DMHC) to coordinate housing programs in the city and to launch new initia- Signs of urban decay blighted the inner ring around tives. The Council was incorporated downtown Des Moines in the mid-1970s. Government as a non-profit organization in the programs showed little effect. spring of 1978 to develop "experi- mental and innovative programs to address the housing needs of inner- city residents through the pooling of that market rate loan funds are not study, reported that Federal pro- human, governmental and financial sufficient to revitalize a neighbor- grams-once thought to be the solu- resources and actions". The board hood. Public, below-market rate tion-had failed in Des Moines. I ne of directors included developers, funds must be used to leverage loan city's housing programs, whether lenders, neighborhood activists, money from local thrift institutions administering Federal or local leaders of business and labor, city and commercial banks and to funds, were cumbersome and inef- and county government administra- reduce the cost of revitalization. fective. Private housing organiza- tors, the state Housing Finance Our second case, the Des Moines tions were working at cross pur- Agency (IHFA) and others. One Housing Council, Inc., was initiated poses. concern of the new organization was by the Chamber of Commerce and Five years later, Des Moines its ability to move rapidly. Thus, the the League of Women Voters to re- received the All-America City by-laws of the new organization vitalize a vacant area surrounding Award from the National Municipal vested special powers in an inner city downtown. The Council advocated League for its innovative housing housing committee consisting of COMMUNITY ACTION Vol. I. No 4 1982 19 NOTES FROM THE FIELD seven members. Together with the neighborhoods. Clarke was cau- Supervisors have never superceded officers of the Council, the commit- tious, telling Crivaro, "If you are to a DMHC determination. DMHC tee members formed a workable be successful, whether with the also handles and judges developer executive council for rapid decision- public or private sector or both, you competitions. making. are going to have to make such a The program operates as follows: Another concern was developing good deal that you overcome the DMHC prepares requests for pro- an inclusive planning process and bias against the neighborhood and posals for competitive bidding by allaying resident's fear of displace- the current residents." But he agreed local builders. The county adver- ment. This was accomplished in part to help. tises, as for a regular sale; the devel- by holding regular meetings with the With the assistance of urban plan- opers respond. Proposals received Neighborhood Priority Boards, of ner, Bil Ludwig, Clarke began to are evaluated on "design criteria" as which there are six in the inner city; explore who lived in the area and well as "highest dollar criteria"- and in part by frequent DMHC fo- who owned the land. They quickly that is, the land goes to the best site rums, public meetings, public serv- discovered that Polk County owned and building plan, rather than ice announcements, and flyers for 400 properties in the prime service simply to the highest bidder. neighborhood residents. area, usually for tax delinquencies. Because of the criteria used, inno- Many of these properties had been vative and energy-efficient designs Accomplishments The Council's first foray into In 1980, Des Moines Housing Council produced 120 housing improvement focused on new housing units in the six target neighborhoods. rehabilitation. Under contract with the Housing Action Alliance, an ecumenical religious organization, vacant since the Depression. Within are submitted. Red tape is mini- the Council conducted house-to- 45 days, the two had a concept to mized. If a builder subscribers to the house rehabilitation using CETA propose, built around aggregating homeowners warranty program workers. However, the work crews the county properties in the prime (HOW), he need submit only a site were very unstable with low skill service area into a "landbank" for plan, building design, and a banker's levels, and results were discouraging. development. statement of availability of interim During the same time, DMHC Following a series of presenta- construction financing to offer a worked with the Des Moines Sav- tions to government agencies and bid. The developers, in turn, agree to ings & Loan League on an interest- commissions, with the enthusiastic pass on the land savings to buyers of subsidy loan program and financial support of DMHC leaders, the Polk the houses they build. counseling for low income residents County Land Bank was established To enhance the attractiveness of in the Council's prime service area, by the County Board of Supervisors. the land offered for sale, the city, on the ring around the downtown. Under the plan, developed by the the recommendation of the six With the lenders' enthusiastic par- county planning department and the neighborhood advisory boards and ticipation, this demonstration was County Attorney's office from the city-wide Citizens Advisory very successful and was eventually Clarke and Ludwig's initial pro- Board, use CDBG funds for curb adopted by the city government as posal, parcels owned by the county and sidewalk improvements, sewer the Below Market Interest Rate in the inner city were to be made and water hook-ups, and other pub- (BMIR) program. available only for new housing. lic services. Also, by declaring the Following this start-up period, Each existing parcel would be construction zones "urban revitali- DMHC's major focus became new "banked" until its suitability for de- zation areas", property owners can housing construction in the inner velopment had been determined. receive full property tax abatements city. Recognizing that the blighting The Board of Supervisors dele- for three years or partial abatements influence of vacant lots covering 75 gated its power to make a determi- for up to 10 years under Iowa law. percent of the land area in the tar- nation of suitability to the inner city Financing is also attractive. The geted neighborhoods was the most housing committee of DMHC. The Iowa Housing Finance Authority critical problem, DMHC's Presi- committee includes the city archi- has offered $4.82 million in mort- dent, Peter Crivaro, approached de- tect, a private architect, the city gage financing at 8% interest. The veloper Lloyd Clarke with a pro- planning director, two lenders, Greater Des Moines Board of Real- posal for new construction in the and two homebuilders. The County tors has held a loan seminar for par- 20 COMMUNITY ACTION Vol. I, No. 4, 1982 NOTES FROM THE FIELD ticipating real estate agents and a mortgage financing to meet gressional appropriation of approx- second for prospective buyers. The DMHC's goal of 100 new housing imately $13 million. realtors, Savings & Loan League, units in each year of the 1980s. There NRC originated in 1970 when and the Bankers Clearing House is some discouragement about the William Whiteside joined the Na- Association provides advice on pur- prospects for additional state and tional Home Loan Bank Board to chasing and financing. federal funds. DMHC is now inves- train executives for urban housing In 1980, the DMHC produced tigating "creative financing" and investment. By 1971, Whiteside and 120 new housing units in the six tapping the insurance companies the Bank Board had become very in- neighborhoods, mostly single fami- and pension funds. terested in a novel program in Pitts- ly homes and some townhouses. Given the difficulties of housing burgh called Neighborhood Hous- Half the purchasers were already construction in the current eco- ing Services. That program brought inner-city residents. Forty percent nomic environment, it is small together neighborhood leaders and were black, a little under thirty per- wonder that DMHC leaders are savings and loan associations for cent white, and the remainder other concerned about their ability to con- cooperative strategies of reinvest- minorities (mostly Southeast tinue meeting housing needs in the ment. By 1973, the Bank Board had Asian). Many were young, first-time city. But by creating an effective funded several demonstrations of buyers. The majority had household partnership, there is little doubt that the Pittsburgh model in Oakland, incomes of $13,000 to $19,000. It Des Moines has the energy and or- Dallas, the District of Columbia, was a busy and difficult year, but, ganization to face the future and Plainfield, NJ. It also brought says current DMHC president confidently. FDIC, the Federal Reserve System, Marilyn Staples "in 1980 we really and the U.S. Comptroller of Cur- hit our stride and started to do the rency into the structure of the innovative things we were formed to New York project. do." In 1981, DMHC produced In 1974, HUD was impressed another 110 units. enough to join in and signed an New York City Neighborhood inter-agency agreement with the Housing Services, Inc. (NHS) is a Bank Board to form a Task Force Prospects partnership of government, busi- on Neighborhood Reinvestment. ness, and neighborhoods which The other federal financial agencies With the initial success of its new funds and coordinates the activity of joined the Task Force and HUD fur- housing program, DMHC has seven Neighborhood Housing Serv- nished demonstration funds for 34 broadened its activities. For exam- ice rehabilitation loan units around new Neighborhood Housing Service ple, it lobbied for a recent ordinance the city. New York NHS, in turn, is a units. In 1977, the Credit Union Ad- reducing the city's waiting period to component of the Neighborhood ministration joined the Task Force. acquire abandoned residential prop- Reinvestment Corporation (NRC), And finally, in 1978 Congress char- erties to six months. DMHC has a Congressionally-chartered, pri- tered, authorized, and funded NRC. also started a tool lending library for vate, non-profit organization that is In the year of its congressional inner-city residents and is working mandated to improve the quality of charter, NRC decided to broaden on neighborhood commercial re- vitalization in the Logan Square project. NRC's principal tool is utilization of a revolving loan Noting that Neighborhood Hous- fund to leverage private sector investment in ing Services (which is represented on housing improvement. the DMHC board) recently ex- panded into a second neighbor- hood, DMHC would like to "move housing stock in the nation'-s older Neighborhood Housing Service into preventive measures" along the neighborhoods. NRC's prinicpal activity in New York City. At that NHS model: halting and reversing tool is utilization of a revolving loan time, there was only one Neighbor- decline before the neighborhood fund to leverage private sector in- hood Housing Service organization hits rock bottom. vestment in housing improvement. in New York, a small unit operating Continuing problems also de- NRC currently operates through in Jamaica, Queens. mand attention. The most crucial 171 Neighborhood Housing Service In its own fashion of organizing, need is to find construction and units in 126 cities and enjoys a Con- NRC began holding exploratory COMMUNITY ACTION Vol. 1, No. 4, 1982 21 NOTES FROM THE FIELD conservations about expansion with decision to commit funds to the Operations local government, neighborhood NHS revolving loan fund. Based on leadership, and the business com- this commitment, the expansion was The core program of New York munity. able to move ahead. NHS is making low-interest reha- An early meeting with the city's Department of Housing, Preserva- Organization bilitation loans from a revolving loan fund of $825,000. This fund is tion, and Development identified New York NHS is presently or- divided into seven neighborhood the possibility of leveraging substan- ganized as a non-profit corporation funds. The distribution of local tial public dollars for an expanded with seven operating neighborhood funds must be centrally approved. revolving fund, especially if there units in Brooklyn, Bronx, Queens, Local boards make loan recom- was private sector commitment. and Staten Island. These neighbor- mendations to the central corpora- NRC then met with Equitable hoods include: East Flatbush and tion. They also hire and supervise Life Assurance Society-the first Kensington/Windsor Terrace in the staff people-in most cases, a private sector party of potential in- Brooklyn; Williamsbridge/Olinville Director, an Administrative Assis- terest. Equitable was already sup- Wakefield and Soundview in tant, and a Rehabilitation Specialist portive of the neighborhood Bronx; Jamaica and Laurelton in -who operate the core program. housing service approach national- Queens; and West Brighton in At the neighborhood level, the ly, as a major"investor in Neigh- Staten Island. The Jamaica division objective is to use the revolving loan fund to increase the total dollars in- vested in housing rehabilitation. The core program of the New York Neighborhood This is done by leveraging local Housing Services is making low-interest rehabilitation financial institution loan agree- loans from a revolving loan fund of $825,000. ments. For example, a resident may need $20,000 for rehabilitation work which he cannot afford to borrow at borhood Housing Services of predated the central structure and the current 16% market rate. NHS America in Oakland, CA, which is has a larger staff and budget than might offer $10,000 at 6%, enabling the secondary mortgage purchaser the other divisions. Otherwise, the the resident to afford the other of Neighborhood Housing Service resources of New York NHS are $10,000 at market rate. In such a loans. equally divided among the neigh- case, $10,000 in NHS funds lever- Equitable did two important borhood divisions. The total operat- ages $10,000 in private funds for re- things. First, it made the initial pri- ing budget in 1982 is $1,000,000. investment in the community. vate sector contribution of $85,000 There is a 24-member central The first step in carrying out this for the creation of New York City Board of Directors which is made up program is for the NHS Rehabilita- Neighborhood Housing Services. of representatives of state and local tion Specialist to conduct a site Second, it convened a meeting of 12 government, financial institutions, examination. Rehabilitation needs other major companies in the insur- and neighborhood organizations. are carefully segmented to identify ance industry to organize additional Each neighborhood unit also has a specific components that may be support toward a goal of underwrit- Board consisting of representatives eligible for subsidization of interest ing one-third of the annual operat- from the same sectors. Two repre- rates. For example, Brooklyn Gas ing budget ($1,000,000) for an sentatives from each of the seven has a 12% loan fund for energy con- expanded NHS. An additional one- neighborhood Boards sit on the cen- version improvements. NHS might third of the operating budget was tral Board. Government representa- combine Brooklyn Gas money, its committed by the savings and loan tives on the central Board include own loan contribution at a low in- industry, and the final third by com- the State Commissioner of Housing terest rate, and a portion of market- mercial banks. Foundation grants and the city's Deputy Commissioner rate commercial loan money into a also helped to subsidize the start-up of Housing, Preservation and De- tandem loan package for a rehab costs for the expanded operation. velopment. Business representation project involving some amount of The contribution by Equitable comes from Metropolitan Life, An- energy conversion. and other private sector companies chor Savings, Chase Manhattan, There is no minimum rate on impressed the Department of Hous- Manufacturers Hanover Trust, NHS funds, nor any set duration for ing, Preservation and Development Chemical Bank, and Dollar Savings repayment. All NHS participation is and played an important role in its Bank. negotiated on the basis of the client's 22 COMMUNITY ACTION Vol. 1. No. 4, 1982 NOTES FROM THE FIELD needs and local circumstances. Be- past several years. It has exercised tions, the blending in of NHS low- yond rehabilitation loans, a NHS strong influence over partnership interest money helps sustain the unit may make an occasional pur- formation in other fields. Its politi- market rate of interest. In many chase loan if it deems that a particu- cal support, both nationally and respects, lenders prefer this to a lar property transfer is crucial to locally, is solid. NRC remains popu- directly competitive subsidized in- local revitalization. A four unit lar with the Reagan Administration, terest rate. The local NHS is also a property might be a good candidate and has strong friends in Congress. valuable tool for identifying credit- for decay under absentee landlord As is seen so clearly in New York, worthy borrowers which a small purchase, but a purchase loan to NHS offers benefits to all of the bank or savings and loan institution occupant buyers could secure the partners: government, business, and might not have the tools or financial property and add to the general neighborhood organizations. From means to identify. For insurance value of the surrounding area. the point of view of local govern- companies, NHS helps to stabilize The skill of the Rehabilitation Specialist is crucial in the loan assessment process. The revolving fund is too small to spend on cos- From the point of view of local government, NHS metic loans that are not general anchors for stabilization. The loan stretches housing dollars. It leverages private sector strategy rests on the careful dollars for moderate to middle income communities. investment of scarce funds in struc- It produces stable neighborhoods and thereby tural work, energy modernization, and other "hard" improvements maintains tax revenues. which contribute to the stability of the neighborhood. ment, NHS stretches housing dol- property values and defuses the red- Prospects lars. It leverages private sector lining issue. Finally, residents gain a dollars for moderate to middle in- pool of subsidized rehabilitation come communities. It produces loan money for the improvement of Across the country, the partner- stable neighborhoods and thereby their community, which also lever- ship approach of the NRC has en- maintains tax revenues. From the ages private investment. joyed tremendous success over the point of view of financial institu- COMMUNITY ACTION Vol. 1, No. 4, 1982 23 NOTES FROM THE FIELD Neighborhood Revitalization Partnerships The neighborhood revitalization By 1978, local officials in charge A plan worked out under the efforts discussed in this section pre- of community development realized leadership of Earl Reynolds, Direc- sent different approaches to the con- that they could not engineer private tor of the Office of Community struction of community partner- investment by themselves. They had Planning, for the City Council to ships. The Roanoke Neighborhood already involved neighborhood or- establish a new entity, initiated the Partnership was initiated by govern- ganizations in the development pro- Roanoke Neighborhood Partner- ment and reached out to the private cess through a citizen participation ship. This plan was influenced by sector for support and representa- system. The real problem was that models of neighborhood develop- tion. The Kansas City Neighbor- the cooperation of government and ment in Atlanta and Baltimore. hood Alliance, on the other hand, neighborhoods could not convince Atlanta had previously reorganized was initiated by private corpora- banks and developers to put dollars its planning process on the basis of tions and is organized around busi- and construction commitments into neighborhood plans and assigned ness-neighborhood collaboration. the older neighborhoods. The finan- planning staff to work with neigh- The Alliance relates closely, but in- cial community lacked a political borhood organizations. Baltimore dependently, to the public agency role in the community development had organized the staff of its com- for housing and community devel- process. If business could be munity development department opment in Kansas City. brought into the planning process, around neighborhood strategies. Both cases are based on the prem- then it might enter the spending The Partnership is organized ise that neighborhood revitalization process. around a Steering Committee, requires an integrated commitment of dollars, energy, and interest be- tween neighborhood organizations, Neighborhood organizations, government agencies, government agencies, and private business. Each has an important and private business all have an important stake in the stake in the stability and security of security and stability of the nation's older the nation's older neighborhoods. neighborhoods. Today, the premise seems obvious. It was not so obvious a decade ago during an era of confrontation and In 1978, the Carter Administra- adversarial relations between all which is appointed by the City tion announced its urban policy, Council to oversee neighborhood parties. which was based on the partnership development work. The Steering approach to urban revitalization. Committee enjoys official review Roanoke Federal, state, and local govern- and approval powers, similar to the ment; the business community; role of the Architectural Review The Roanoke Neighborhood neighborhoods; and voluntary insti- Board, which oversees historic pres- Partnership is a city-wide neighbor- tutions were asked to work together. ervation activities in Roanoke, or hood development program that has This policy gave Roanoke officials the Planning Commission, which brought three new sources of sup- the opportunity to offer business a approves planning decisions. The port into the community develop- role in neighborhood planning, Partnership operates directly out of ment process-the business commu- without arousing antagonism from the Office of Community Planning nityu, neighborhood organizations, the neighborhood sector. Business and is staffed by an employee of that and voluntary agencies. Until the in- responded with commitments of office, selected by the Partnership. It auguration of the Partnership in support from the Roanoke Valley has a budget of $67,000. 1980, the development process was Chamber of Commerce, the bank- There are two unique features of primarily a direct operation of the ing community, the Roanoke Valley the Partnership Steering Committee city government's Office Of Com- Board of Realtors, and the Home- which help to insure its successful munity Planning. builders Association. operation. First, it is the official 24 COMMUNITY ACTION Vol. 1. No. 4, 1982 NOTES FROM THE FIELD Community Development Board of defined work agenda. Members of came up with a convincing design the City of Roanoke. While many the neighborhood organizations which was approved by the City cities have a citizen participation were also assigned tasks to be ac- Council. A city bond issue was unit in the community development complished between meetings. All passed incorporating the drainage process, that unit is generally ap- around town, neighborhood resi- system. pointed by the community develop- dents were preparing issue sum- In the Gilmer Avenue area, the ment department as an advisory maries, neighborhood histories, local neighborhood organization unit. Community development offi- maps and surveys; then identifying, established a housing committee, cials report directly to the Council contacting and meeting new re- and brought Allstate Insurance into or Mayor, without passing through sources; and finally working closely its planning efforts. Together, All- an intervening official committee. In to negotiate and refine action plans. state and the neighborhood pre- Roanoke, however, the community At the conclusion of the work- pared and printed a guide to housing development agency has subordi- shop process, city staff, consultant, assistance programs offered by dif- nated itself to the Steering Commit- and volunteer assistance was avail- ferent federal, state, and local agen- tee in exchange for the active in- able to help groups work on priority cies. They were able to market these volvement of different sectors which projects. A small matching grant programs more successfully in the are viewed as essential to a success- fund was established to help neigh- community than the city govern- ful community development process. borhood groups reach out to the pri- ment had previously been able to do. Second, the private sector was vate sector and learn the mechanics In the Grandon Road area, the brought into the community devel- of fundraising and financial man- local neighborhood organization opment process not just in reaction agement. Four neighborhoods were worked out a plan with the business to federal cutbacks but as a positive selected for major demonstration ef- association to beautify the commer- force in building a better commu- forts. These neighborhoods repre- cial strip using volunteers for sign nity. Thus, business does not feel put sent the full range of social, eco- control, street cleaning, and tree upon to fill the "gap". nomic, and geographic characteris- planting. This Partnership project Once the Steering Committee was tics of the city. responded to a need that the city formed, the Partnership reached out government had not previously to involve a broad spectrum of indi- Accomplishments addressed. viduals and groups in Roanoke. The In the Belmont area, Allstate and basic premise of this outreach ap- The major organizational accom- Shenandoah Insurance Companies, proach was that neighborhood resi- plishment of the Partnership has as well as Kroger Foods and Ad- dents, if organized and backed by been the strengthening of neighbor- vanced Auto supplied materials to the resources of business, voluntary hood organizations as active, credi- the local neighborhood organiza- organizations and the public sector, tion for the restoration of an old ble development entities. The four could define and solve many of the firehouse and its conversion into a original demonstration neighbor- problems affecting the quality of life hoods have all developed powerful community center. The City gave in their neighborhoods. neighborhood organizations which the organization a long-term lease, In early 1981, a city-wide Neigh- compete for block grant funds and and the organization recruited 60 borhood Forum was held for the leverage private funds. volunteers for this restoration job. purpose of identifying priority A major substantive achievement needs. The Forum included work- Prospects in one demonstration neighborhood shops to: (1) define issues-positive was the City Council's approval of a The Roanoke model demonstrates and negative; (2) identify and con- $10,000,000 storm drainage system that government, business, and nect with needed resources; and (3) for Williamson Road. The William- neighborhood voluntary organiza- develop an action plan for neighbor- son Road Action Forum was organ- tions can work together construc- hood projects. The workshops were ized through the Partnership. Its tively for the betterment of their open to all neighborhood residents. leaders mobilized the business com- communities. In Roanoke, all As many as 150-200 people attended munity in that area into an associa- parties have decided that the con- each workshop, which were con- tion, and then joined with that frontational styles of an earlier era ducted by volunteer facilitators who group to study storm drainage utili- are no longer affordable. Resources were trained in group process. zation in the area. The resulting are too limited and problems too The workshop format used par- Storm Drainage Review Committee severe to indulge adversarial ticipatory small groups, each with a enlisted professional assistance and instincts. COMMUNITY ACTION Vol. I. No. 4. 1982 25 NOTES FROM THE FIELD The Steering Committee is a well- Charles Curry (Home Savings Asso- Activities established institution and will con- ciation), and Jake Mascotte (Mutu- tinue over the indefinite future as the al Benefit Life) were able to Alliance activities encompass five major mechanism for neighborhood convince their peers about the im- major goals. The first major goal is revitalization in Roanoke. portance of neighborhood revitali- to strengthen the capacity of organi- The main problem facing the zation. zations involved in revitalizing the Roanoke Partnership today is that The Civic Council formed a Task inner city. This involves supporting neighborhood demand for assis- Force on Neighborhood Revitaliza- housing rehabilitation organiza- tance has outstripped the resources tion which recommended establish- tions in four neighborhoods; pro- of the Steering Committee. The ing a citywide organization of com- viding direct administrative assis- Partnership has succeeded as a munity and business leaders to sup- tance to East Community Team, mechanism for neighborhood re- port neighborhood revitalization Inc.; and forming a development vitalization and now must catch up projects. The Task Force identified organization for the Palestine neigh- with demand. neighborhood-based leaders for the borhood. The Alliance is also pub- Two additional neighborhoods board, along with business members lishing a city-wide survey of neigh- have recently been added to the four of the Council who were interested borhood organizations. original demonstration neighbor- in revitalization. Finally, it recom- It second objective is to bring hoods for priority projects. Expan- mended a support budget of greater investment capital to Kansas sion beyond these six areas will have $450,000 for three years. These rec- City's older neighborhoods. The to await further infusion of re- ommendations were adopted, and Alliance has leveraged a $500,000 sources from public and/or private the Kansas City Alliance was grant from LISC-a national pri- funds. formed. vate investment fund for neighbor- Kansas City The Kansas City Neighborhood The Alliance was organized in 1980 as an initiative of Alliance is a city-wide neighbor- hood development partnership of the Kansas City Civic Council-an organization corporations and neighborhood consisting of 100 large corporations. associations. The Alliance was or- ganized in 1980 as an initiative of the Kansas City Civic Council-an organization consisting of 100 large corporations in Kansas City. The Alliance board consists of hood development-on a dollar for The Council has initiated four eleven members representing both dollar matching basis; and will serve major projects in recent years. It business and community interests. as the allocation vehicle for the re- spawned the Council on Education, Its Executive Director is Tony sulting million dollar loan fund. The which links the business community Salazar, and its program officer is Alliance also prepares funding ap- to the local school system. It created Jim White. Its principal funding plications for neighborhood organi- the Kansas City Corporation for In- comes from the Civic Council which zations, and identifies resourceful dustrial Development, which works has just approved a renewal grant private sector individuals to volun- closely with city government to re- for another three years at a reduced teer their time to neighborhoods. It tain large-scale employers in the funding level. The Alliance also re- acquires materials and equipment downtown and industrial areas of ceives substantial financial support from the private sector, operates a the city. It founded Kansas City from Hallmark Cards, the Kansas $200,000 revolving Weatherization Tomorrow, which trains young City Association of Trade, and the loan fund; and compiles and dis- business, community and govern- Ford Foundation. A new LISC tributes energy kits. It implements ment leaders for future responsibili- target city fund of $1,000,000 will an effective loan packaging proce- ties in the public and private sectors substitute in the future for the de- dure among different neighborhood of the city. Finally, it originated the creasing support of the Kansas City organizations and develops a con- Neighborhood Alliance after several Civic Council, and represents a siderable number of actual loans. prominent business leaders like Don strong path of growth for the The third goal of the Alliance is to Hall (Hallmark Corporation), Alliance. establish and nurture small-scale 26 COMMUNITY ACTION Vol. 1, No. 4. 1982 NOTES FROM THE FIELD working partnerships between the Prospects With regard to government par- public, private, and neighborhood ticipation in the partnership, the sectors. Currently, for example, this Alliance does not include formal involves cooperating with the The Kansas City Neighborhood representation from the city's Office Lutheran community to capitalize a Alliance is now in its third year of of Housing & Community Develop- $100,000 mortgage pool to finance growth. Some of the original sup- ment. But it does have a close coop- the rehabilitation of abandoned portive business leaders have left the erative relationship with that houses by the Westside Housing Or- city, but business commitment to agency. The agency conducts joint ganization (WHO). The Alliance neighborhood revitalization and to program planning with the Alliance will also assist WHO in acquiring its primary vehicle, the Alliance, in the rehabilitation field and the and rehabilitating the West Penway remains strong. This was ratified by two entities have co-sponsored con- Housing Project. the business community's financial ferences and workshops. Three of Fourth, the Alliance seeks to response to the LISC challenge the staff meembers of the Alliance market older neighborhoods to resi- grant. formerly worked with the Office of dents and new buyers. This involves media coverage of neighborhood news, slide presentations on neigh- Business commitment to neighborhood revitalization borhoods, mapping older neighbor- and to the Alliance remains strong. hoods, and general promotional activity. The final goal is to foster the This strength may be enough to Housing & Community Develop- acquisition of vacant property by advance two new goals of the Alli- ment and the City Council, so there neighborhood organizations so that ance. One goal is to open the United are strong personal ties of coopera- they can better control their envi- Way to support for neighborhood tion as well. ronment. This means researching organization and development. The Since the inception of the Alli- vacant land ownership, planning second goal is to use Alliance re- ance, the greatest disagreement with strategies of acquisition, holding sources to leverage a major public/ the city's community development workshops on vacant land develop- private partnership of sufficient agency has arisen from the refusal of ment, maintaining both a revolving scale to fulfill responsibilities to low- the agency to directly fund neigh- loan fund for acquisition and a bulk income citizens formerly supported borhood organizations for develop- buying program, and providing by the federal government. The ment. This policy is gradually $35,000 in interest free loans for principal target is the creation of a changing, in light of successful Alli- vacant house acquisition by six $10-$20 million capital pool for ance programs with various neigh- neighborhood organizations. low-income housing in the city. borhood organizations. COMMUNITY ACTION Vol. 1. No. 4. 1982 27 NOTES FROM THE FIELD Partnerships for Youth Of all the social problems con- The Gannett Foundation, with of youth training and employment. fronting American society, most ob- assets of more than $200 million, Programs funded in Atlanta, Battle servers agree that inadequate train- was established in 1935 by the late Creek, MI; Cocoa, FL; Denver; ing of youth and youth unemploy- founder of the Gannett Group of Oakland; Rochester; and Stockton, ment are among the most urgent. newspapers. It contributes (about CA are currently providing a wide Youth is our most precious resource. $5.4 million in 1981) to a broad range of counseling, employment If we squander its potential through range of charitable causes in more placement, and other services to poor schooling and condemn it to than 100 communities in the United youth. However, the most compre- idleness through a lack of entry-level States and Canada serviced by Gan- hensive partnership effort to attack jobs, we pay a heavy price in violent nett Co., Inc. newspapers, broad- youth problems stimulated by CPP crime, public welfare costs, and lost cast stations and outdoor advertis- is found in Phoenix. output. ing companies. Its primary national In Phoenix, the problems of The three Notes from the Field interest ($2 million in 1981 contribu- youth training and employment presented below illustrate innova- tions) is journalism education and have been at the forefront of public tive community partnerships which professionalism. The foundation concern for some time. In May, 1980 are making a noticeable dent in the and company both have headquar- Mayor Margaret Hance appointed a problems of youth training and ters in Rochester, NY, but are task force of youth service agencies, employment. None of the three legally independent of each other. business leaders, and public officials cases presents a panacea for the problems of youth. The efforts are Of all the social problems confronting American much too small and tentative to ad- dress more than a small piece of the society, inadequate training of youth and youth problem in their local communities. unemployment are among the most urgent. Yet they do lead the way toward a new way of thinking about youth In order to provide a more posi- called the Valley Youth Coalition. problems. The essence of that think- tive impact on critical local prob- The Coalition found that the ing is this: Government programs, lems, the Gannett Foundation proportion of youth dropping out of no matter how well-intentioned and launched its Community Priorities school and being charged with de- how well-financed, cannot tackle Program (CPP) in mid-1981. Local linquency was growing alarmingly, the problems alone. A coordinated chief executives of Gannett subsidi- along with the number of youth effort of government, business, and aries were invited to submit compet- gangs. It thus recommended a dra- voluntary organizations is the essen- itive applications for a total of $1 matic upgrading of employment, tial foundation of a solution. million in CPP awards, with a mini- training, and recreation opportuni- mum of $25,000 and a maximum of ties for youth. $150,000 for any one community. The difficulty with this recom- Phoenix Forty applications were received mendation, of course, was that fed- and awards were made in 20 com- eral funds for youth training and In Phoenix, a broad-based com- munities nationwide to local non- employment programs were being munity partnership focusing on em- profit organizations and govern- cut drastically during 1981 and fiscal ployment for youth in providing ments. pressures on the city and county vitally-needed services. The partner- While the awards were made in a governments made new locally- ship was initiated and principally number of categories, including financed programs problematic. funded by the Gannett Foundation's health care, day care, community About this time, the Gannett Foun- Community Priorities Program, a development, law enforcement, and dation's Community Priorities Pro- national effort to foster cooperative leadership development, the Com- gram presented a possible solution. structures for addressing commu- munity Priorities Program in 1981 The Chairman of the Valley nity problems. focused heavily upon the problems Youth Coalition was Robert Reade, 28 COMMUNITY ACTION Vol. 1, No. 4. 1982 NOTES FROM THE FIELD President of Gannett Outdoor Co. partment of Employment Security Center for Education to assist the of Arizona. Following the an- (DES). In 1981, 1,800 pledges were Phoenix public schools in establish- nouncement of the Community generated. In 1982, reflecting the ing a Dropout Clearinghouse to Priorities Program, Reade and his economic recession, only 350 were concentrate counselling and referral local Gannett colleagues, Pep produced, yielding an average of services to dropout-prone youth. Cooney, manager of Gannett's tele- two part-time jobs per pledge. How- Beyond the core employment and vision station KPNX, and Harry ever, without the summer job coor- training programs, Bob Reade and Goss of national Gannett Outdoor dinator, it is likely that far fewer the other community leaders who Advertising, began a process of pledges would have been forth- prepared the Gannett Foundation community consultation with the coming. grant application also allocated members of the Valley Youth Coali- The National Alliance of Business funds to a variety of youth recrea- tion as well as other local leaders, also received a portion of the Gan- tional activities, as well as to the that, resulted in a grant application nett Foundation grant to support its coordinating efforts of the Phoenix to the Gannett Foundation. This ap- Youth Motivational Task Force. Community Council, a non-profit plication requested the maximum Bob Amos explains this other facet agency engaged in community plan- award of $150,000 for Phoenix to of the NAB program as a group of ning and service referral. support and reinforce a broad range over 100 volunteer "witnesses", of youth programs. Over 20 commu- many from minority groups, who nity leaders-ranging from Mayor dropped out of schol, went back Prospects Hance and Reuben Ortega, Chief of later, and subsequently became suc- Police, to Lucy Quiroz, Chairman cessful. The witnesses speak to sev- The Gannett Foundation CPP of the Chicanos por La Causa Jobs eral thousand dropout-prone youth grant, while enormously useful in for Youth Committee, and Bob annually to convince them to remain supporting the work of a number of Bartlett, local director of the in school. agencies, obviously does not address National Alliance of Business- Other allocations from the grant the long-term funding needs for wrote letters of support for the pro- for job training and employment in- youth training and employment posal. The full $150,000 was granted cluded: $10,000 to Chicanos por La programs in the Phoenix area. Nor to Phoenix in December, 1981. Causa for classroom and on-the-job is it meant to. No one in Phoenix ex- training of Hispanic youth for em- pects the Gannett Foundation to Projects ployment by La Causa's subsidiary, continue funding local programs in- Sun Sol, Inc.; $5,000 to the Phoenix definitely and the amounts the The highest priority identified Urban League forhalf the operating Foundation is able to provide are through the community consulta- budget of "Youth United", a publi- very limited in relation to the overall tion process was to provide employ- cation by and for black youth that spending of the agencies involved. ment opportunities for youth. Given the magnitude of cutbacks in federal funds for employment training, the The highest priority identified through the community Gannett Foundation's private initia- consultation process in Phoenix was to provide tive filled a critical need in maintain- ing community services. employment opportunities for youth. A portion of the Gannet Founda- tion funds went to the National Alli- ance of Business to underwrite a had been discontinued due to cuts in The true significance of the Com- coordinator for summer job place- federal funding; $15,000 to Call-A- munity Priorities Program, as it has ment in 550 area companies. Ac- Teen to maintain a coordinator for operated in Phoenix and other cit- cording to Bob Amos, Chairman of their summer youth employment ies, lies not in the amount of money the Phoenix NAB, the summer program; $10,000 to the Youth allocated during a particular year Youth Campaign began with a week Service Bureau, a non-profit agency but rather in the stimulus provided long phone bank to over 3,000 local formerly part of the Maricopa to the formation of long-term com- employers in May, 1982 seeking County government, to train 100 munity partnership efforts. In this pledges of summer jobs. These agency representatives in youth regard, according to Theron Weldy, pledges were followed up by an ex- counseling and development; and director of the Youth Services Bu- ecutive loaned from the Arizona De- $15,000 to the Bostrum Alternative reau, the Gannett Foundation initi- COMMUNITY ACTION Vol. I, No. 4, 1982 29 NOTES FROM THE FIELD ative was critical because it set "an city's school board as well as the The industrial electricity teacher example of behavior for the corpo- Education Fund. After less than wrote, "We discussed the state-of- rate sector" in Phoenix. Thus, while three years, 25 companies and or- the-art of implications for the fu- a permanent partnership structure ganizations and 20 schools are ture. We also discussed the quality has not yet emerged in Phoenix, the participating. of vocational students available for area does seem to enjoy a substantial employment. There is an expanding headstart in devising a coordinated Programs need for trained electrical tradesmen approach to youth problems among and women Westinghouse is en- business, government, and volun- The operation of the Pittsburgh gaged in technological updating for tary organizations. partnership is illustrated by the pair- their employees and I believe we ing of Brashear High School and have much to offer in trained per- Westinghouse Electric. The school sonnel and possible use of our Pittsburgh has a huge new building with a fully facilities." equipped television studio, com- After a shadow day at Westing- Pittsburgh's widely acclaimed puter center, auto repair shop, and house, an English teacher designed a renaissance is attributable in part to drycleaning plant. Brashear's part- mini-course on technical writing for a long history of corporate-public nership coordinator, distributive ed- Brashear's annual "Superbowl of sector cooperation. The Allegheny ucation teacher, Judy Brant, and its Problem Solving". Westinghouse Conference on Community Devel- principal, Gene Khorey, are enthusi- employees are helping design the opment with its board of corporate astic about Brashear's partnership superbowl graphics and several will and community leaders, has been a with Westinghouse Electric. serve as judges in the competition. forum for this cooperation for 38 years. The Conference sees itself in part as a leader in bringing private sector resources into new areas and Partnerships in Education involves pairing local as a proving ground for new meth- companies with public high schools to the mutual ods of private initiatives. Recognizing the adequacy of pub- benefit of students, teachers, and employees. lic school training as a critical com- ponent of urban well-being, the Conference decided in 1978 to ele- vate public education to a more "Operation Shadow" has been Both the Westinghouse employee prominent position on its agenda. among the most successful activities. newsletter and the Brashear news- As a successful catalyst of private Brashear faculty are paired with paper regularly feature articles on sector involvement in other arenas Westinghouse employees in related the partnership. One unexpected of social concern, the Conference fields and spend one work day result of the publicity was an offer was able to generate approximately "shadowing" them, learning about from a Westinghouse senior ac- $1 million in corporate and private/ their jobs and their training require- countant to present a program to foundation contributions to endow ments. For example, the industrial Brashear students on factors neces- its Education Fund, established in electricity teacher was paired with sary for a successful career. After the 1979. The Conference strategy is to the superintendent of maintenance presentation, he asked the students foster school system improvements of the powerhouse, and the crafts to write an evaluation. He re- through selective use of special pro- teacher with metallurgists at the re- sponded to these, writing a letter to grams and policy development assis- search-and-development lab. each student, and giving prizes to the tance. Teachers derived many insights three who wrote the best evalua- One of its most effective pro- which they could use in their classes. tions. He has since offered addi- grams, Partnerships in Education, "Many of the tools and pieces of tional time for one-on-one career involves pairing local companies equipment were very similar to tools counseling with students. with public high schools to the used in our jewelry studio I am mutual benefit of students, teach- now very aware of many applica- Prospects ers, and employees. The program is tions of our metalcraft experience supported by the Greater Pittsburgh here at Brashear with industry," The participants in the Allegheny Chamber of Commerce and the wrote the crafts teacher. Conference partnership effort em- 30 COMMUNITY ACTION Vol. I, No. 4. 1982 NOTES FROM THE FIELD phasize that building relationships New York City Jobs for Youth between business and education isn't easy, but once established, the For the last two years, the New partnerships are mutually reward- York City Partnership has operated The Partnership launched its first ing. One lesson from experience is one of the largest and most effective fully coordinated effort to find sum- that schools must plan and initiate summer youth employment pro- mer placements for youth in 1981. requests for assistance. Corpora- grams in the nation. Lauded by With a grant of $100,000 from the tions want to help without intrud- President Reagan as a leading Astor Foundation, "Summer Jobs ing. They rely on the schools to set example of private sector initiative, for Youth/1981" produced 14,000 priorities and get the ball rolling. the Partnership's jobs program com- job slots for poor youth between the Second, partnerships in education bines the resources of business, gov- ages of 16 and 21, and 9,300 actual rest upon strong personal relation- ernment, and voluntary organiza- placements. This doubled previous ships. Time, patience, and frequent tions to locate summer positions private efforts in the city. In 1982, contacts are needed to overcome in- herent differences in organizational purpose and style. For example, per- sonal relationships between Bra- For the last two years, the New York City Partnership shear teachers and Westinghouse personnel forged through shadow has operated one of the largest and most effective days were an indispensable element summer youth employment programs in the nation. in the partnership. Finally, neither the schools nor the corporation should approach partnership as a gift of charity from the corporate and to fill them with disadvantaged 20,000 jobs were identified and side. Both parties have something to youth. 15,000 were actually filled. Program gain. Beyond the pure public rela- The New York City Partnership costs increased to $150,000. tions value, corporations may gain was formed in late 1979 as a collabo- The bulk of job placements for access to a better-trained pool of re- ration of two organizations that had 1982 were in the fields of food serv- liable entry-level labor. Partner- long sought a closer working rela- ice, retailing, and recreation coun- ships can also boost morale. As tionship-the New York Chamber seling. Sixty-four percent of the jobs Michaele Camp, Westinghouse of Commerce and the Economic De- were located in Manhattan, with the partnership coordinator, notes, velopment Council. It grew out of a rest spread relatively evenly among "Employees are often glad of an op- realization by business leaders that the other four boroughs. The jobs portunity to go out and tell people business was diluting its effective- were for at least 20 hours per week about what they do. Often there's no ness in civic affairs by spreading its for a minimum of seven weeks, and one else to tell, and the interest of the resources among overlapping and paid at least the minimum wage of students and their teachers is excel- uncoordinated efforts. An entity $3.35 per hour. Many jobs were for lent for employee morale." was needed to concentrate and more than 20 hours per week. It is The Allegheny Conference plans direct the energies of the business estimated by the Partnership that to have partners for all the remain- community toward the major issues between $8 million and $11 million ing high schools and middle schools facing the city: youth employment, dollars was put directly into the during the 1982-1983 school year. It mass transit, public safety, housing pockets of economically disadvan- is hoped that the program will be- and economic development. The taged youth, not to mention the in- come so successful that the Board of collaboration was cemented by an valuable experience gained for Education will take it over com- umbrella organization, known as future placement. pletely. This would free resources in SERVCO, which was created to Each year, one corporation spon- the Education Fund to support offer a variety of administrative and sors and coordinates the program other new programs. Meanwhile, program services to the Chamber under the aegis of the New York numerous other cities are experi- and EDC, as well as to serve the City Partnership. New York Tele- menting with business-public school framework for a broader partner- phone directed the 1981 drive, Citi- partnerships and it appears that the ship structure in which additional bank took responsibility for the concept may be on its way to wide- corporations could join efforts on 1982 effort, and Phillip Morris will spread national acceptance. specific programs. conduct the campaign in 1983. COMMUNITY ACTION Vol. I. No. 4, 1982 31 NOTES FROM THE FIELD Planning for the Summer Jobs for isfied with the program. Eighty- There is growing cooperation be- Youth program begins in mid- seven percent of company execu- tween the city's Department of December. In January, a public re- tives indicated that they will con- Manpower and the Partnership ef- lations campaign is launched. From tinue to participate on an annual fort. The Manpower Department February to March, young people basis. However, many feel that the operates a large CETA program for register for the program. From student workers should be better private sector training and direct March to June, job pledges are screened for proper placement and placement. In 1981, 13,000 people obtained. better prepared for work. Job site were placed directly into private Registration is a cooperative ef- supervisors generally rated the work business, while another 17,000 were fort of business, government, and of summer employees as average or taken into training for subsequent voluntary groups. The city's Man- above average, but felt some im- job placement. It is clear to all in- power Department turns over the provement in attitudes and behavior volved that the complementary ef- excess of registrants for its own was warranted. forts of the Manpower Department larger public sector summer em- Young workers were overwhelm- and the Partnership's Summer Jobs ployment program to the Partner- ingly positive about the program for Youth program must be care- ship. The City University System and indicated willingness to accept fully coordinated. (CUNY) also supplies a printout of the same job in succeeding summers. Similarly, the collaboration be- eligible students. And finally, com- The program staff for 1981 felt the tween the Partnership and the city's munity based organizations are en- program generally had gone well, Department of Education is grow- couraged to send in applications. but identified key areas for improve- ing. The Department of Education Securing job pledges is largely a ment. The most pressing need for already supplies a large portion of corporate sector responsibility. improved organization of the an- the summer job slots filled by the Partnership through the Coopera- tive Education program. Increased collaboration is evident in the recent formation of an Education Task While business can play a vital role in stimulating job Force within the New York City placements and youth employment, it cannot do the Partnership, which will serve as the vehicle for long-range cooperation job alone any more than government or the between the Education Department voluntary sector can. and private business in preparing New York youth for the job market of the next decade. The importance of the voluntary sector in the summer jobs effort is Large companies are solicited for nual program is automation of the indicated by the fact that over 4,000 slots by mailings and telephone fol- matching process between regis- job placements in 1982 were in non- low-ups. The annual sponsoring trants and job pledges. profit agencies. In addition, a num- corporation promotes the program ber of private universities and com- to small businesses in the neighbor- munity development organizations hoods of New York through its own Prospects played key roles in the planning and marketing apparatus. The City De- execution of the 1982 summer partment of Education also organ- campaign. izes job pledges (7,000 in 1982), Plans for the Partnership's 1983 What this indicates is that while which it contributes to the Partner- Summer Jobs for Youth campaign business can play a vital role in stim- ship Program. Finally, the Private are already far advanced and a basic ulating job placements and youth Industry Council sponsors a certain commitment has been made to con- employment, it cannot do the job number of job placements through tinue the program over the indefi- alone any more than government or its own apparatus which become nite future. The prime direction for the voluntary sector can. Collabora- part of the Partnership effort. future evolution appears to be one tion and coordination of limited re- A careful evaluation of the 1981 of ever closer collaboration and co- sources is essential if we hope to program demonstrates that partici- ordination with government and address the problems of youth pating employers were generally sat- non-profit organizations. effectively. 32 COMMUNITY ACTION Vol. 1. No. 4, 1982 RECENT LITERATURE Development network of civic organizations. This for example, Pastora Cafferty and background is then used as the basis William McCready highlight the im- Duet for a narrative summary of three or portance of the physical and social four major projects, which illustrate proximity of the business commu- partnerships in action. The list of nity operating in the Loop and the projects examined includes many of particular political style and by the best known and most successful approach of Mayor Richard Daley. Nelson Rosenbaum urban redevelopment projects of the Neither of these factors is easily rep- last two decades: Niccolet Mall in licable. In Minneapolis/St. Paul, Minneapolis, Harbor Place in Balti- according to John Brandl and Public-Private Partnership in more, Pittsburgh's Gateway Center, Ronnie Brooks, a particular ethos of American Cities. Edited by Scott the Reunion Complex in Dallas. business responsibility for the com- Fosler and Renee Berger (Lexing- From the accumulated experience munity has pervaded the metropoli- of the seven cities, the editors derive ton, MA: Lexington Books, 1982); tan area for many decades has been 363 pp.; $24.95, cloth; $12.50, paper. two major findings about "what passed on to succeeding generations works and why". First, successful of business executives through a This volume of edited essays, public-private partnerships rest carefully-nurtured set of institutions sponsored by the Committee on upon a set of "civic foundations", in- and processes. While other cities Economic Development, examines cluding a positive civic culture that might wish to emulate the Twin public-private partnerships in seven encourages widespread participa- Cities, there is no simple formula or American cities: Chicago, Pitts- tion in public affairs, a commonly action through which such an ethos accepted vision of the community's can be created. burgh, Baltimore, Minneapolis/St. Paul, Portland, Atlanta, and Dallas. future, an effective group of civic This is not to say that the seven The cities were selected as "success organizations, a network of infor- cities studied are unique in their stories" of sustained working rela- mal communication among key ability to generate public-private tionships between the public and leaders, and continuity in key partnerships. Many other cities have private sectors. While the volume's aspects of public policy. Second, accomplished revitalization of their building public-private partnerships downtown business districts stated objective is to examine pub- lic-private interaction across a wide requires "effective leadership". through the creative leveraging of range of problems-economic stag- Leadership may come from the pub- public and private resources. Yet the nation, malfunctioning public serv- lic sector, from the private sector, or case study cities do seem to benefit from both, but some set of indi- ices, neighborhood deterioration, from an unusually strong set of cir- viduals and institutions must take cumstances which facilitate sus- etc.-the essays focus principally upon downtown revitalization and the entrepreneurial, initiating role in tained partnership efforts. Other real estate development. This focus getting matters off the ground. jurisdictions can certainly admire is hardly surprising since most pub- lic-private cooperation over the past Public-private partnerships are rooted in historical two decades has occurred in this arena. circumstances and idiosyncracies of leadership and The essays follow a common for- personality that cannot be engineered. mat established by the editors. Each author initially analyzes the local context of partnership efforts: the While these findings may seem these cities, but they cannot neces- historical development of the city, obvious, they do point to an impor- sarily aspire to be like them. its demographic composition, its tant conclusion that is not drawn One problem with this volume is economic base and changing eco- out by the editors: public-private that it may confuse rather than nomic character, its political system partnerships are not easily repli- clarify the concept of public-private and government structure, and its cable from city to city. Rather, they partnership. Many of the projects are rooted in historical circum- examined hardly seem to fall within stances and idiosyncracies of leader- the category of partnership, in the Nelson Rosenbaum is President of the ship and personality that cannot be sense that the partners share the Center for Responsive Governance and engineered by any explicit policy risks and rewards of a particular Editor of this Journal. changes. In their essay on Chicago, course of action. In Baltimore, for 33 COMMUNITY ACTION Vol. 1. No. 4, 1982 RECENT LITERATURE example, the development of ter development, the city explicitly fail to highlight and draw out the Charles Center was almost entirely a sought a certain number of jobs for significance of the different privately planned and supported minority residents in the Harbor approaches taken to resolving this venture. While the City of Baltimore Place project. This type of complex, issue. cooperated with supportive zoning mutually-rewarding project that Despite its conceptual ambiguity changes and infrastructure improve- neither the public nor private sectors and its failure to come to grips ments, characterizing the Charles can pull off alone represents the squarely with the question of repli- Center redevelopment as a partner- cutting edge of the partnership cability from city to city, this volume ship seems to be stretching the con- approach. is a useful catalogue of major public- cept. Similar conceptual ambiguity One of the significant issues that private revitalization efforts in attends another of the Baltimore arose in the development of Harbor American cities. There are a wealth projects-the development of Cold- Place as well as in many of the other of practical lessons to be learned spring Newtown. This project was projects examined in this volume is from careful examination of each planned by the city and financed al- how to bring citizen participation case study essay. The inexperienced most entirely from public sources, and neighborhood involvement into "civic entrepreneur" will certainly including city revenues, HUD the partnership process. The opera- wish to proceed with caution after grants, EDA loans, and tax-exempt tion of city government has changed absorbing this material. The volume mortgage-bond financing. The de- dramatically since the 1950s and also contains a good deal of political veloper of the project was brought in 1960s. No longer can the top leaders insight and personality portraiture on a strictly-defined contractual of city government commit the juris- that makes for lively reading. In basis as builder and general con- diction authoritatively without con- sum, the book will occupy a signifi- tractor, with profits and fees care- sulting the citizenry and involving cant place on the short list of vol- fully specified. When the construc- neighborhood residents in the plan- umes concerned with public-private tion costs ballooned, the city took ning and negotiating process. This partnerships in America. the loss. Again, it seems to stretch challenge has been handled with dif- the conventional meaning of the fering degrees of success in the seven term to call Coldspring a public- case study cities. In Portland and Corporate- private partnership. Minneapolis/St. Paul, for example, Community Consensus by Richard Rich One of the significant issues is how to bring citizen participation and neighborhood involvement into Partners by Ranae Hanson and the partnership process. John Mc Namara (Minneapolis: The Dayton Hudson Foundation, 1981), 218 pp., $15.00 paper. Partners examines public-private neighborhood revitalization efforts By contrast, perhaps the best ex- citizens were brought into the pro- from the perspective of the commu- ample of a true public-private part- cess with great sensitivity and little nity. The book is presented as a nership is also found in Baltimore: business opposition during the practical "how-to-do-it" description the Harbor Place/Inner Harbor 1970s. In Atlanta, on the other of public-private partnerships, but it project. Here, public and private hand, the business community be- contains a strong dose of "cheer- funds in substantial amounts are came estranged from a mayor who leading" as well. There is a good deal mingled in the same project and was perceived as "favoring" the of philosophy and rhetoric designed both public and private sectors neighborhoods over the interests of to pursuade the reluctant or skep- stand to gain directly from the proj- downtown. This perception frus- tical community member that neigh- ect. For example, in contrast to its trated the progress of partnership Richard C. Rich is Deputy Editor of the passive posture in the Charles Cen- efforts. Unfortunately, the editors Journal of Community Action. COMMUNITY ACTION Vol. 1, No. 4, 1982 34 RECENT LITERATURE borhood revitalization is possible rehabilitating the housing stock, apolis case can read only the more through the cooperation of private and mounting effective evaluations general discussions. Yet, the case firms, neighborhood organizations, of the organization and its projects. study is there to provide concrete and local government. It is written Within each of these larger topics illustrations of the principles pre- to be read by anyone interested in there are discussions of subjects like- sented in the more abstract chapters. community development, but seems ly to be of great interest to neighbor- especially aimed at leaders and ac- hood activists. There are, for For all these positive features, Partners is not without its flaws and tivists in neighborhood organiza- example, informative treatments of limitations. First, if breadth is its tions which have not yet embarked community crime prevention, the structural relationships among staff chief strength, its principal weak- on serious development efforts. ness is the mirror image of that Funded by the Dayton-Hudson and board members, and strategies Foundation, this large and hand- for promoting housing renovation. breadth superficiality. The book is some book seeks to educate readers Most sections include some highly not an analysis of partnership as a in the basics of public-private part- concrete recommendations, check strategy for neighborhood develop- nerships. While examples are drawn lists of items to be concerned with, ment, but an argument for it. Thus, from all over the U.S., the primary decision rules, and transferable the authors make no serious attempt vehicle for presenting these princi- tools like sample forms used in resi- to evaluate the impact of the part- ples is an extended and detailed case dent surveys and housing stock nership arrangement on the neigh- study of the partnership among the borhood organization or the course assessments. Dayton-Hudson Corporation, the This broad coverage is made even of development in the neighbor- hood. There is little or no considera- City of Minneapolis, and the Whit- more useful by the nearly flawless tier Neighborhood Alliance. The organization of the book. Informa- tion of alternatives to the partner- authors move smoothly back and tion is presented in a step-by-step ship approach, or of opportunities forth between general rules and the fashion allowing neighborhood foregone in order to take that ap- specifics of the case study. The associations at all stages of develop- proach. There is no analysis of who benefited and who lost from the Whittier story is told in a historical ment to take from it only that which fashion which enables readers to they most need. Activists might ex- actions of the partnership, and no critical assessment of whose inter- visualize the tranformation of the pect to return to the book again and neighborhood. The readibilty of the again as their organization under- ests were served in the redevelop- book is enhanced by an extensive ar- takes new projects or moves to new ment process. ray of topical photos (many from stages of development. The Whittier/Dayton-Hudson/ the Minneapolis area), planning In many ways, Partners is two Minneapolis partnership may well maps, and colorful and functional books in one, a general guide to pub- have been a generally positive ex- graphics. lic-private partnerships, and a re- perience for all concerned, and there may be good reasons to expect ele- ments of that experience to be repro- Dayton-Hudson believed from the start that there duced in other communities. There were benefits to be gained by the corporation in are, however, also reasons to doubt supporting neighborhood revitalization. that the Whittier experience can be duplicated elsewhere. Not only are there questions about the unique- The major strength of the book is port on the Whittier experience. ness of the Whittier neighborhood in its comprehensiveness. Every Each section is divided into two and the political culture of the Twin major issue likely to confront a parts; one general and one on Whit- Cities region where business has neighborhood seeking to stimulate tier. There is, for example, a chapter long displayed a strong civic con- and manage revitalization is ad- on the neighborhood planning pro- science, but, far more importantly, dressed. Principal topics include cess or housing rehabilitation fol- there is the crucial point that the how to form and structure a neigh- lowed by a chapter on how the Whit- Dayton-Hudson Corporation, not borhood organization, how to es- tier neighborhood developed its the neighborhood, initiated the tablish a working partnership, plan- plan or sought ot revitalize its hous- partnership. ning for neighborhood revitaliza- ing stock. The advantage to this is Dayton-Hudson manifested an tion, providing human services, that those readers who do not want enlightened attitude toward its re- stimulating economic development, to follow the details of the Minne- lationship with the community, and 35 COMMUNITY ACTION Vol. 1, No. 4, 1982 RECENT LITERATURE believed from the outset that there leaders are thus likely to encounter oping the level of formal structure were benefits to be gained by the more difficulty in both establishing and the capacity for planning and corporation in supporting neighbor- and maintaining partnerships with project implementation described hood revitalization. Indeed, there business than this book leads them by the authors requires a massive was even a moral conviction that the to anticipate, and will probably find investment of time, energy, and firm had a moral responsibility to it necessary to orchestrate small money. Many community groups invest in its community. Moreover, grants from many firms to forge a are simply unable to mobilize this it was apparently willing to trust the partnership at all, and to avoid ex- kind of commitment from local neighborhood association to make cessive dependence on a single residents. almost all decisions about the direc- benefactor. Second, becoming bureaucratized tion the development process was to Similarly, the cooperation which in order to deal with business and take. Whittier enjoyed from the city gov- government is directly contrary to the widespread Alinsky approach to community organization. This school of organizing holds that The neighborhood must become an institution if it is neighborhoods (especially low in- to enter a successful partnership. come and minority neighborhoods) obtain whatever measure of power they have by remaining formally un- Few neighborhood groups are ernment was probably largely lever- organized and unpredictable while likely to be in this fortunate posi- aged by Dayton-Hudson's strong building a strong social network to tion. They are more likely to find it support, and facilitated by Minne- support direct action. To commu- necessary to convince businesses of apolis' commitment to the neighbor- nity organizers of this school, part- the wisdom of strong support for hood concept. Other community nership means that community peo- community development. The groups may well encounter more ple must accept government's and authors of Partners make the case hostile and hard-pressed city gov- businesses' definition of neighbor- for business involvement in their ernments. hood problems. This can prevent first chapter, and there clearly are A final limitation of the book is local organizations from addressing benefits for firms in helping their that the approach it suggests is inap- the root causes of decline and disin- communities. These benefits, how- propriate for many neighborhoods. vestment. Obviously, Partners will ever, are very diffuse and often sym- It demands more than many are be of little utility to organizations bolic. Whether they are realized at ready for or willing to undertake. that take this perspective. all depends on the success of a very Throughout the book a major theme Despite these limitations, Part- delicate and complex neighborhood is that the neighborhood must be- ners is an important contribution to revitalization process, and the "pay come an institution if it is to enter the bookshelf of any neighborhood back period" for corporate invest- into a successful partnership. Busi- organization or any business leader ments in community development nesses and governments must be or public official seeking to enter is, even under the best conditions, able to deal with some entity which into relations with such organiza- quite lengthy. speaks for the neighborhood, can tions. Even those organizations commit it to a course of action, and which cannot emulate the model of a Corporate officers are thus likely can be held accountable for funds highly developed neighborhood to regard support for neighborhood and legal obligations. The commu- association set out in the book can improvements as more a philan- nity thus needs a stable, rationally benefit from specific advice con- thropic activity than a sound inv st- structured organization with sub- tained in it. If the purpose of Part- ment. Where they can be persua led stantial popular support and admin- ners is to stimulate creative thinking to join because of anticipated bene- istrative capacity. about solving neighborhood prob- fits to the company (rather than out This is obviously a sound conclu- lems through the illustration of of a perceived moral responsibility sion, and I would agree that those creative organizational approaches, of the firm to the community), they neighborhoods which become insti- it is well suited to that purpose. In may wish to exercise a good deal of tutionalized will accomplish a great fact, perhaps its greatest contribu- control over how their funds are deal more than those that do not. tion is in dispelling the image many used in order to insure the efficacy of There are, however, two counter- hold of neighborhood revitalization their investment. Neighborhood veiling considerations. First, devel- as limited to planting flowers and COMMUNITY ACTION Vol. 1, No. 4, 1982 36 RECENT LITERATURE picking up trash. Partners shows The philosophical essay in this neighborhood organizations argues that neighborhood associations, volume is by William Schambra, that mediating structures, or indige- working with business and govern- who addresses the obvious question nous social arrangements, are more ment, can mount sophisticated at- for private initiatives: how can effective agents of social welfare tacks on basic social and economic social obligation be nurtured in than the "New Class' of profes- problems through complex legal, fi- nancial, and social arrangements. It may not provide a blueprint for every community, but it certainly offers an inspiration for the forma- Our American beginnings were as much filled with tion of community partnerships in Biblical sources of obligation to the poor as they were many areas. with the creed of self-interest. Who Needs America when American life is sionals and experts which has grown Government? rooted in a tradition of self-interest. since the New Deal. According to Social obligation has to struggle Woodson, changing emphasis from against this basic tendency. government financed professional by Schambra argues that the liberal agencies to private non-profit neigh- approach of building social obliga- borhood initiatives would result in Milton Kotler tion upon a sense of national com- vastly improved services. But who munity which transcends narrow would finance these services? With- self-interest, has collapsed after fifty out some degree of government sup- Meeting Human Needs. Edited by years. President Reagan is attempt- port it is not clear what neighbor- Jack A. Meyer, (Washington, D.C., ing to reconstruct social obligation hood organizations could accom- American Enterprise Institute, upon another ground-voluntary plish. Woodson offers no new lode 1982), 469 pp., $13.95 paper. action and local community. He of private sector funding to neigh- walks in the shoes of Alexis De- borhood groups. Toqueville. The President's pro- Woodson suggests that neighbor- Jack Meyer introduces this vol- gram of private sector initiatives is hood organizations can meet com- ume of essays with the careful dis- an attempt to stimulate social obli- munity needs if government will claimer that private sector initiatives gation upon this ground. remove "barriers" to service and are not a compensatory fund for lost But what fuels voluntarism as a development. Granted that zoning federal dollars. Nor, he maintains, is basis of obligation? Our American barriers are often a needless hin- it an article of faith that the private beginnings were as much filled with drance to starting a day care center, sector can outperform government Biblical sources of obligation to the it still takes money to operate the in every aspect of public service and poor as they were with the creed of facility. How can women pay $2 an development. Instead, he stakes out self-interest. In fact, those same hour for day care when they are the "sober mission of highlighting Biblical sources implanted obliga- earning $3.20 an hour before taxes? the potential of private sector tion in the liberal vision of national Nor does it contribute to a serious approaches to social problems". To community. Never once does discussion of community economic examine this theme in a number of Schambra analyze the contempo- development to suggest that the lack fields, the American Enterprise In- rary religious basis for voluntarism of access to capital and credit is a stitute summoned an impressive col- and social obligation. However "barrier" imposed by government. legium of social analysts. weak that tradition may be in What law could be removed that modern times, lacking a genuine would result in a new gush of capital Biblical passion for the poor, the and credit to poor communities? Milton Kotler is Vice President of the Center proposed alternative has little Poor communities need positive for Responsive Governance and Managing chance of success. public and private sector interven- Editor of this Journal. Robert Woodson's essay on tion to insure that credit and capital 37 COMMUNITY ACTION Vol. 1, No. 4, 1982 RECENT LITERATURE go there. Indeed, that is the core idea health cost containment. The basic Tax Equity and Fiscal Responsibil- of the community partnerships con- theme running through most of the ity Act of 1982, much talk emanated cept that the President's Task Force essays is the same as that in the from the Reagan White House on Private Sector Initiatives is chapters by Woodson and Pryde: about the prospect of grateful cor- advocating. our society would be far better off if porations plowing portions of their The debate over the relative government left the fulfillment of new tax savings into benevolent and merits of "New Class" professional- pharmaceutical development and altruistic purposes. ism vis a vis neighborhood voluntar- social needs to private mediating James S. Rosebush, then a presi- ism is a useful framework for discus- structures. While the evidence pre- dential assistant in charge of private sion, but Woodson confuses the sented to support this proposition is sector initiatives, said in a Septem- issue by assuming that neighbor- certainly not overwhelming, the ber 1981 interview, that the business hood organizations neither need nor thesis is at least worthy of serious community, in effect, was on notice welcome outside financial support. debate. to demonstrate a new surge of public A related article on community Meeting Human Needs reflects a spiritedness. "The tax provisions are economic development by Paul profound distrust of the role of gov- well known," said Rosebush. "The Pryde offers a number of sensible ernment, extending not only to the people will be watching to see if it suggestions for economic growth in federal government, but to state and means more jobs or safer and more distressed cities. He draws on David local government as well. The vol- sound communities. We won't point Birch's work on the relation of small ume thus forms a challenging coun- out the bad performances, but I business to employment growth to terpoint to the concept of commu- think the American people will." stress the importance of assisting nity partnerships in which state and A year later, Rosebush has moved new firms with tax incentives such as local governments play a promi- on to head the first lady's staff and allowing investments in new firms to nent, active role. Those who wish to Reagan has won passage of new tax be written off by investors in the consider the future of our society in legislation imposing some $48.6 bil- year the investment is made, defer- terms of a highly-restricted govern- lion in new business taxes over the ring capital gains taxes on such ment role, will find this volume a next three years-wiping out more investments so long as proceeds are valuable source of ideas. than half the tax savings conferred reinvested in similar firms, and tar- upon the business community the geting industrial bonds to specific previous year. areas. He also wisely advises that the In the wake of Reagan's second development process must be a tax measure, speculation about the managed operation. future of corporate philanthropy is The problem in Pryde's argument The Limits likely to become considerably more is his failure to focus on the only unit guarded and realistic. A timely of government that has a real incentive for community develop- of Charity guide for sober assessment of the challenges and limitations facing ment. That unit is the distressed city. business givers has been provided by Community development must rest the Washington-based Council on on the active public entrepreneur- by Foundations in its June, 1982 re- ship of city government, working in Dick Kirschten port, Corporate Philanthropy. constructive partnerships with busi- The report is useful in providing ness. UDAG is a concrete example. an independent perspective on That kind of public-private partner- Corporate Philanthropy (Washing- social responsibility, as viewed from ship has to be amplified and encour- ton, D.C.: The Council on Founda- the executive suite or the corporate aged. It is not enough to simply tions, 1982) 160 pp., $12 paper. boardroom. It helps to separate the enact tax incentive for central city issue from the ups and downs of the investment. In the brief but euphoric interim "Reaganomics" program. The re- There are many other contribu- between passage of the Economic port makes clear that corporate tions in this massive volume cover- Recovery Tax Act of 1981 and the philanthropy is neither a by-product ing private sector initiatives in such of supply side tax cuts nor a panacea familiar areas as transportation, for David Stockman budget cuts. housing and education as well as Dick Kirschten covers the White House for Long before White House image some less familiar areas such as the National Journal. makers thought of creating an office COMMUNITY ACTION Vol. 1, No. 4, 1982 38 RECENT LITERATURE of private sector initiatives, enlight- own and foreign governments re- Avoy raises a point that is likely to ened self-interest had drawn an in- sponsibly, and acts in the public sec- trouble many corporate executives. creasing number of business con- tor responsibly." "Corporations should not do cerns into the field of charitable By no means the least of the cor- what is better done by the political good works. In one of some three poration's charitable contributions system," he writes. "The corpora- dozen essays in the Council's report, is the influence it does or does not tion is structured to maximize Exxon Corp. chairman Clifton C. exert over the activities of its em- the return on investment to share- Garvin, Jr. points out that "con- ployees. Ira S. Hirschfield, execu- holders. It is undemocratic in its de- tributions by U.S. businesses and tive director of the Levi-Strauss cision-making and legally protected corporations are the fastest growing Foundation, discusses company from most judicial second-guessing segment of private philanthropy. programs designed to engage of its business judgment Any Since 1970, annual giving by U.S. workers in community volunteer attempt to democratize the corpora- corporations has increased 220 per programs as well as incentives to in- tion would undermine its pursuit of cent Indeed, since 1979 corpo- crease cash contributions by em- economic objectives." rate contributions have exceeded ployees. Hirschfield stresses the Among those who dispute Mac- those of foundations for the first importance of strengthening "social Avoy's argument as shortsighted is time since the 1950s." networks and employees' awareness James F. Bere, chairman and chief executive officer of Borg-Warner Corp. Bere writes, "As business- By no means the least of the corporation's charitable men, we understand that corpora- tions and society are tightly inter- contributions is the influence it does or does not exert woven. Unless we intensify our long- over the activities of its employees. term social efforts, our own viability may be threatened." And, rather than fearing democratization of the Despite that healthy rate of of community concerns." He makes corporate decision-making process, growth, the report points out that a strong argument for involving Bere advocates it. only one-fourth of the nation's cor- employees in corporate decisions as The Borg-Warner official argues porations engage in charitable to which charitable causes to that corporate philanthropy must be giving. It also points out that busi- support. expanded beyond the "old boy net- ness giving-$2.7 billion in 1980 Hirschfield and other contribu- work" that used to concentrate gifts (and $3 billion in 1981)-amounts tors to the report touch upon the among "a relatively few outlets- to only 5.6 per cent of total charita- sensitive issue of accountability for schools, museums, symphonies, ble contributions, the vastest por- the difficult choices that must be hospitals." He calls for "risk-taking" tion (nearly 85 per cent) of which made among various claimants for in the dispensation of corporate gifts comes from individuals. both corporate contributions and in order to foster change and inno- However, as Council of Founda- the individual contributions that are vation. He argues that it is impor- tions president James A. Joseph made through company charity tant to support newer organizations notes in his foreward to the report, campaigns. Hirschfield also notes that often have difficulty gaining counting the cash receipts is too nar- that some companies promote indi- membership in traditional distribu- row a view of the corporate sector's vidual giving among their workers tion networks such as the United contribution to the well-being of the by providing matching gifts. Way. community. "Corporate philan- The question of the corporation's "Executives are uncomfortable thropy," writes Joseph, "is only one accountability for the disposition of with social service risk-taking, Bere kind of initiative from the private philanthropic largesse is identified writes. "They avoid innovative or sector that can help alleviate social as a red flag issue by Yale University dramatic approaches, choosing in- problems, extend social benefits, economist Paul W. MacAvoy who stead to contribute to established and contribute to desirable social writes in the report that corpora- causes. That's a mistake." change. A responsible corporation tions "should only pursue those C. William Verity, the former is one that locates a site responsibly, social objectives that are consistent Armco, Inc., chief executive, who produces goods or delivers services with long-term profit goals." Al- now heads President Reagan's task responsibly, sets prices responsibly, though his is a minority view among force on private sector initiatives, deals with local communities and its the report's various essayists, Mac- challenges business leaders to 39 COMMUNITY ACTION Vol. 1, No. 4, 1982 RECENT LITERATURE broaden the philanthropic decision- cate that federal budget cuts from philanthropic area. making process by joining in com- social programs will total $131 bil- William D. Ruckelshaus, senior munity partnerships that include lion over the next three years vice president of the Weyerhauser "leaders of religious, neighborhood, Some estimates indicate that a 50- Co., wrote somewhat presciently and civic groups, labor unions, fold increase in corporate donations prior to this year's tax legislation volunteer and educational organiza- would be needed to fill the gap, and that failure on the part of business to tions, as well as leaders from that's just not possible." help fill unmet social needs could be government." But whether "the gap" can be costly. "We may not only lose the Throughout the report, one filled or not, the consensus among new-found tax and regulatory in- senses an underlying theme of ap- contributors to the report is that the centives needed for prosperity, but prehension that more is suddenly business community will be well also face a national environment far being expected of the business com- advised to do the very best that it can more hostile to the success of free munity in the way of charitable good and to put more thought and effort enterprise." works than can possibly be deliv- into getting the most out of those ered. As Bere puts it, "reports indi- investments it is able to make in the COMMUNITY ACTION Vol. 1, No. 4, 1982 40 RESEARCH REPORTS Local Government and Community Partnerships by Thomas J. Chmura Private sector initiatives, voluntarism, corporate together local government and business for the pur- social responsbility and public/private partnerships pose of fostering new public/private ventures. Through are the new buzz words of the 1980s, as responsibility this set of diverse activities, a number of important in- for meeting many community needs shifts from federal sights about the process and factors involved in build- to local governments and public to private sectors. ing local partnerships have been gained, particularly However, one of these terms-public/private partner- regarding the changing role of local governments. ship-is qualitatively different from the others. For What is the appropriate local government role in some people, there seems to be a simplistic belief that encouraging greater private sector involvement? the private sector will, on its own, simply step in to Under what conditions can local partnerships develop assume substantially more responsibility for solving and prosper? What kind of problems can be addressed social problems. What is significant about the concept effectively by partnerships? These are the issues that of partnership, however, is the recognition that there is are addressed in this article. an essential and continuing role for government in pro- moting and facilitating private sector involvement in community problem-solving. It implies an under- The Challenge for Local Officials standing that private initiative does not simply "just happen" and that private resources alone cannot solve Even before the Reagan administration took office, every community problem. Only by linking reforms in local governments began to recognize important shifts public policy with the considerable resources and in public attitude about the appropriate role of govern- talents of the private sector can new, more effective ment in community problem-solving. After decades of community problem-solving approaches be developed. public sector growth, strong concern about the size, Over the past three years, the Public Policy Center at cost and effectiveness of many government-funded SRI International has undertaken a number of studies programs was evident. Large-scale public bureaucra- pertaining to public/private partnerships (Chmura, cies are seen as increasingly unresponsive, and many 1982; Grindley, 1980; Hentzell, et al., 1980; Waldhorn, public service programs are viewed as ineffective. et al., 1981). The project is aimed at developing an Critics charge that some public programs actually dis- understanding of how local government and business courage private sector and individual initiative. can develop collaborative approaches to community At the same time, however, there are clearly many problem-solving. social needs to be met. Public opinion polls suggest The thrust of this work is to document, analyze and continuing citizen concern about protecting the envi- synthesize information about the process and factors ronment, assisting the truly needy, promoting sound involved in developing local partnerships. The study community development and stimulating job creation. primarily focuses on acquiring information from local This puts the local official in a difficult position: how practitioners through extensive field work. Over 25 does one meet continuing social needs with con- local communities were visited, dozens of local busi- strained public budgets and citizen resistance to new ness and government leaders were interviewed, and public programs? over 100 examples of partnerships were studied. In Most officials enter "public service" to do what the addition, first-hand experience was gained in 6 com- job title implies-deliver public services. Most entered munities (Macon, San Antonio, Tacoma, Toledo, Buf- their profession during a period of dramatic public falo, and Worcester) where SRI and the Conference sector growth. Board provided technical assistance to help bring Now, quite clearly, the challenge is different. In the past, when a community problem arose, the standard Thomas J. Chmura is a Senior Public Policy Analyst at the Public question was: What kind of program, publicly-funded Policy Center of SRI International. and publicly-administered, do we develop to solve the 41 COMMUNITY ACTION Vol. 1, No. 4, 1982 RESEARCH REPORTS problem? Now and in the future, the question has be- guage, and way of looking at the world. come: how can government help to bring the full range Both parties are often guilty of stereotyping the of resources (public and private, fiscal and non-fiscal) other and being insensitive to the constraints under into the problem-solving process? which each operates. Some in government tend to see The role of local officials is thus changing from that business as small-minded, greedy, and lacking in con- of direct service provider to that of convener, catalyst, cern for the public interest. Many in business view gov- and mobilizer of community resources. Accepting re- ernment people as bureaucratic, meddlesome, incon- sponsibility for a problem no longer necessarily means sistent, would be do-gooders. Government typically developing a government program to address it. sees the public interest responsibility of business as extending beyond everyday production and opera- tions activities. Business usually believes that the Building Partnerships goods and services it produces are its most important contribution to the public interest. Attitudes about "corporate social responsibility" Public/private partnerships are not new. Most communities can cite individual examples of collabo- will vary from business to business and community to ration between government and business dating back community. Yet government must recognize that, for decades. What is new at this time, when public whatever the corporation's attitude, there are real budgets are being cut and the role of government is limits to corporate philanthropy and to activities that are seen as "charity". Partnerships find a much firmer being reconsidered, is the need for more concerted and systematic development of public/private partner- footing in activities that relate to businesses' direct self- interest. ships in a wider variety of areas. For example, many firms are coming to realize that Public/private partnerships may be defined as concerted activities jointly undertaken by government inadequate public education and public infrastructure systems affect their operating costs, that local housing and business to solve community problems in a way that yields benefits to both the firm(s) and the commu- and transit problems create upward pressure on wages, and that low quality of life precipitates employment nity at large. Analysis of numerous examples across the country suggests that there are several important turnover at middle and upper management levels. To the extent that certain local problems are not resolved, factors which condition the prospects for building the costs and difficulties of doing business in a commu- partnerships. nity will increase. The lesson to local officials is clear: Local Context partnerships work best when the business community is approached on the basis of mutual self-interest Every community is different, and several aspects of rather than charity or abstract notions of "social a community's local context affect the kind of public/ responsibility". private partnerships that can take place there. The degree of trust between business and govern- Availability of Private Sector Resources ment clearly affects what kinds of partnerships are pos- sible. In Cleveland, a few years back, antagonism be- Research suggests that partnerships work best when tween the two sectors seriously constrained oppor- private sector resource contributions are broadly con- tunities for significant new partnerships. In such a ceived and flexibly utilized. case, it might be necessary to start with modest efforts There is a wide range of private sector resources that and build a record of success before embarking on creative and entrepreneurial local officials can tap for major new initiatives. In Saint Paul, however, where community problem-solving. Different problem areas there is a strong history of collaboration, more sub- will require the packaging of different kinds of corpo- stantive efforts may be possible. Social and economic rate resources (e.g., the city payroll department might conditions also determine the kinds of opportunities borrow a corporate executive, while the neighborhood on which partnerships may be focused. A weak econ- development program may seek corporate investments omy and limited corporate profits, for example, clearly in a housing rehabilitation fund). can inhibit new private initiatives in employment and Cash donations made by private firms have often been seen as the principal corporate resource for part- training programs. nerships. Philanthropy is usually a highly visible Attitudes Toward Social Responsibility activity. However, it would be a mistake for local offi- cials to over-emphasize the value of philanthropy. Government and business are different. They exist Even the most optimistic projections of increased cor- for different purposes. They attract different kinds of porate giving represent only a small fraction of recent people who have different values, motivations, and reductions in federal aid. Clearly, other private re- measures of success. Each side has its own culture, lan- sources need to be tapped as well. COMMUNITY ACTION Vol. 1, No. 4, 1982 42 RESEARCH REPORTS Corporations take in and pay out huge amounts of be a need to "invent" new kinds of organizations or cash on a continual basis. Their financial holdings can processes to take vantage of the potential of partner- be used in ways that help meet community needs. They ship approaches to community problem-solving. can decide for example, to deposit some of their cash in local or minority-owned banks as a means of support- ing the local economy. Corporate operational deci- Areas of Opportunity sions concerning hiring, employee benefits, purchasing of goods and services, and facility locations also affect Evidence from the field suggests that partnerships work best when they are focused on specific commu- the local community in which it is located. Special efforts to hire minority youth, develop training pro- nity problems that both government and business see as important and where both have an interest in seeing grams for the handicapped, and implement flexible work schedules represent some of the ways that corpo- that the problem is resolved. Areas of particular op- rations can help meet human needs in the community portunity are economic development and job creation, and reduce the burden on public agencies. Corpora- community development and housing, education and tions can also donate or lend resources on an in-kind training, human development, and public services and facilities. basis. Managers and technical specialists can be loaned In economic development, the withdrawal of federal to city agencies to apply their business skills in areas assistance and the increased recognition of the impact like cash management or scheduling. Corporate equip- of local policies on private firms suggest the need for ment (e.g., trucks, tools), facilities (e.g., cafeterias, more collaborative arrangements. Thus, in Phoenix, meeting rooms) and services (e.g., computer software, large corporations are working with the city govern- mailroom services) can also be made available for ment-sponsored Business Development Center to community activities at little or no cost to the firm if provide management and technical assistance to the timing and use are carefully thought out. Finally, minority-owned small businesses. individual firms or groups of firms can use their pres- In community development, new understandings tige (call it "clout") to help address community prob- about the roles of realtors, lending institutions and lems. For example, a chief executive active in commu- other private actors are encouraging partnership. In nity affairs might encourage other firms to get involved Pittsburgh, Neighborhood Housing Services brings in local problem-solving efforts. banks, local government and neighborhood residents The Work of Facilitators together to stabilize inner-city communities. The failure of public manpower programs not linked It is no accident that some of the more successful and to private employment opportunities shows the impor- long-lasting partnerships have been linked to an tance of partnerships in training and education. Thus, organizational vehicle or process that goes beyond any in Washington, D.C., five major corporations are individual corporation or local government. working with the D.C. school district to develop new As local governments strive to develop more con- "career high schools" in computer sciences, engineer- certed partnerships with the private sector on a wider ing, communications, hotel management and finance. range of issues, it will be increasingly important to The realization that publicly financed social service move beyond current ad hoc and informal arrange- programs cannot meet all human needs has encour- ments to some kind of structured negotiation process. aged new approaches in this area as well. Efforts such The need is for a facilitating mechanism that can bring as the continuation of legal aid in Montgomery both parties together in order to develop specific part- County, Maryland through a partnership between the nerships. There are a variety of organizational options County Bar Association and the county government that appear to work, such as: (1) Business civic com- respond to these realities. mittees (e.g., the corporate-sponsored Bay Area Coun- Lastly, local spending and tax limitations make cil in the San Francisco area); (2) Public/private fo- clear the necessity of privatization of some public serv- rums (e.g., the Citizens League in Minneapolis/St. ices and facilities. The development of a wide range of Paul); and (3) Local foundations (e.g., the Mott Foun- private sector options to municipal services by the Citi- dation in Flint). zens' League in Minneapolis/St Paul is an example of There is, of course, no one "right" vehicle that a this approach. community should use for public/private partner- ships. In a few cases, the appropriate vehicle(s) may already be in place. In others, an existing organization Conclusions like the Chamber of Commerce or a community foun- dation might be able to play the appropriate role in The key message of this article is that partnerships stimulating, developing or implementing a partner- don't just happen. Rather, leadership is required. In ship. However, it is likely that in many places there will the headquarters cities like Pittsburgh, or in special 43 COMMUNITY ACTION Vol. 1, No. 4, 1982 RESEARCH REPORTS places like Minneapolis/St. Paul, the business com- -public and private, fiscal and non-fiscal-to address munity may provide that leadership. In many other its problems. In light of very real and continuing bud- communities, local governments will need to take a get constraints at all levels of government, new kinds of more active leadership role. problem-solving partnerships with the private sector Local officials in the 1980s will need to be more would seem to be the best hope for communities in the aggressive and entrepreneurial in developing partner- years ahead. ships, moving away from their traditional role of direct service provider to a new role as mobilizer of public References Cited and private resources for community problem-solving. Specifically, local government leaders will need to: Chmura, Thomas J.. Developing Public-Private Approaches to Take the lead in reaching out to other sectors in the Community Problem-Solving: A Guide for Local Officials. community to organize concerted, problem-solving (Menlo Park, California: SRI International, 1982.) efforts with business and community-based interests. Grindley, William. Making and Measuring Corporate Urban Ventures. (Menlo Park, California: SRI International, 1980.) Review local laws, regulations and policies to deter- Hentzell, S. W., Fletcher, T. W., Grindley, W. C. and McGwire, mine how they might be changed so as to provide J. M. Exploring Urban Action Optionsfor Local Firms. (Menlo greater incentives for, or remove barriers to, private Park, California: SRI International, 1980.) sector involvement. Waldhorn, Steven A., Gollub, James O., et al. Rediscovering Work with other sectors to develop new intermedi- Governance: Using Nonservice Approaches to Address Social ary mechanisms for partnership development. Welfare Problems. (Menlo Park, California: SRI International, 1981.) The opportunities for moving local communities toward new, more effective kinds of problem-solving have never been greater-or more needed-than they The research upon which this article is based was primarily are now. Effectively moving in this direction will not supported by the Office of Community Planning and Development fill the "gap" left from budget cutbacks or bring about of the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. The author wishes to thank Tom Fletcher, William Grindley and instantaneous solutions to long-standing community Steven Waldhorn of SRI's research program in public/private problems, but it will help assure that a community partnerships. However, the views expressed in this article are is making the best use of the full range of its resources strictly those of the author. COMMUNITY ACTION Vol. 1, No. 4, 1982 44 RESEARCH REPORTS Partnerships in Community Service by Milton Kotler As a result of funding cutbacks, local government is received money from Community Development Block seeking alternative means of service delivery that are Grants, Title XX Social Service grants, Law Enforce- less costly than traditional governmental administra- ment Assistance Grants, CETA grants, and so on were tion. One method that is emerging is the establishment encouraged to utilize neighborhood groups as con- of community partnerships with neighborhood organ- tractors for direct delivery of services. By the late izations that are capable of delivering public services. 1970s, many neighborhood organizations had built a From the city side, partnerships are attractive because strong track record of practical experience in carrying they produce more service out of the same, or fewer, out service delivery contracts within these programs. dollars. From the neighborhood perspective, commu- nity partnerships promise better service delivery and a steady source of annual revenue for local organizations. This article reports briefly on the findings of re- City governments are increasingly forced search and consultation by the Center for Responsive to look for economies in service delivery. Governance on community service partnerships in fif- teen cities (see Kotler, 1981; Kotler, 1982). We first describe the various types of partnerships that have emerged over the past few years, and illustrate these Throughout the 1970s, however, there were almost types with case studies from selected cities. This analy- no neighborhood service contracts drawn directly sis is followed by a discussion of some of the generic from municipal revenues for mainline city service func- issues and obstacles that arise in the development of tions such as trash collection, public safety, park main- community service partnerships. Finally, we present a tenance, recreation, etc. Urban jurisdictions reserved set of prescriptions for encouraging further expansion internally-generated revenues for their own direct serv- of the partnership approach. ice operations while transferring some portion of fed- eral grant funds to neighborhood groups. Within the The Emergence of Partnerships last few years, this perspective has changed. As federal grants are cut, capped, and blocked, local revenues can The involvement of neighborhood organizations in no longer be reserved for traditional service delivery. the planning and delivery of community services is not Instead, city governments are increasingly forced to new. Over the last twenty years of change in municipal look for economies in service delivery that can loosen administration, citizen participation in budgeting and up funds for other areas previously supported by fed- planning has evolved into a highly institutionalized eral funds. Thus, community service partnerships for form. For example, some twenty cities across the mainline public services have begun to form. These country now operate elaborate, formal neighborhood partnerships are based on the management capability council systems through which the views of neighbor- and performance record established by neighborhood hood residents are sought on issues of service distribu- groups during the previous period of citizen participa- tion (Rosenbaum, 1981; Rosenbaum and Rich, 1982). tion in planning and federally funded service delivery, Within the last decade, largely under the aegis of but they are moving into areas once reserved exclu- federally sponsored programs, neighborhood groups sively for traditional municipal administration. have also moved into the actual delivery of services. To date, the formation of community service part- With federal encouragement and support, cities that nerships is heavily concentrated in the areas of envi- ronmental services, public works, and facility manage- Milton Kotler is Vice President of the Center for Responsive ment. This is not surprising because these are also the Governance and Managing Editor for The Journal of Community prime areas in which cities are experimenting with the Action. "privatization" of city services to profit-making con- 45 COMMUNITY ACTION Vol. 1. No. 4, 1982 RESEARCH REPORTS tractors. Indeed, community service partnerships with sponsibility for direct service delivery held by each of neighborhood organizations can be viewed as one the partners. aspect of the larger movement toward increased com- At one end of the spectrum, is the partnership ar- petition and diversity in municipal service delivery rangement in which city government retains primary mechanisms. Some of the specific service functions in- responsibility for the delivery of services, but seeks volved in community partnerships which either al- assistance from neighborhood organizations through ready exist or are in the process of being formed are part-time employment of neighborhood residents noted in Figure 1. and/or recruitment of neighborhood volunteers. This type of arrangement is the least formal of the partner- ship approaches. The neighborhood organization is generally asked to locate potential part-time workers and/or volunteers to coordinate their activities. There Figure 1 may or may not be a formal financial relationship be- tween the city and the neighborhood organization. Environmental Services and Public Works Volunteers and part-time workers are generally as- signed the least skilled tasks within a given service area, Cleaning and maintenance of vacant freeing up full-time public employees for more difficult lots and structures. tasks. (New York, NY; Philadelphia, PA) Street and sidewalk maintenance. (Kansas City, MO; Louisville, KY) Formation of community partnerships is Park maintenance. heavily concentrated in the areas of (Baltimore, MD, Columbus, OH; environmental services, public works, San Diego, CA) and facility management. Facility Management A second approach to partnership organization, in- volving a greater sharing of service delivery responsi- Social service center management. bility, may be termed the co-production model. In this (Jacksonville, FL) approach, city government and neighborhood organi- Alcohol detox center management. zations segment a particular service delivery responsi- (Multnomah County, OR) bility into component tasks and then divide the tasks among themselves. Neighborhood groups thus accept independent responsibility for completion of specific jobs on a systematic basis. This model usually involves Other Service Areas some assistance by city government to the neighbor- hood group in the form of training, technical assis- Building code inspection. tance, or financial support. In addition, the neighbor- (Kansas City, MO) hood is usually assigned the easier and less skilled jobs Youth counseling. within a particular service function. Nevertheless, the (San Diego, CA) co-production model does represent a significant step in neighborhood responsibility beyond volunteer co- Services to the elderly. ordination or recruitment of supplementary em- (Essex County, NJ) ployees. The third approach to the formation of community partnerships transfers prime responsibility for service delivery to the neighborhood organization through performance contracts. City government retains While the development of community service part- responsibility for monitoring and supervision, but the nerships is still in an early stage, it is already evident service function itself is carried out by the neighbor- that different types of partnerships are being utilized hood organization with its own personnel. These from city to city and across different service areas. At contracts may include a cost-sharing element, least three distinct "partnership models" are in use. involving a contribution of volunteer effort or funds by The different models vary primarily in the degree of re- the neighborhood group. This makes the partnership COMMUNITY ACTION Vol. 1, No. 4. 1982 46 RESEARCH REPORTS spirit; (3) to augment service delivery through the use highly attractive for financially-pressed city govern- of volunteers; and (4) to build citizen self-reliance. ments. Indeed, in some cases, the partnership with The city hopes that the neighborhoods will eventu- neighborhood organizations has evolved through a ally be able to provide services with wholly volunteer competitive bidding process, in which the neighbor- work forces. This would reduce the transportation hood group was able to underbid other potential con- costs of public employees to and from the neighbor- tractors due to its cost-sharing ability. In most cases, hood centers, and also reduce the number of salaried however, contracts with neighborhood groups are let public employees. The Department will train neigh- under a deliberate city policy of partnership building borhood personnel and assist the neighborhoods in and the city tries to establish the best possible financial assuming service functions. terms in the negotiation process. Multnomah County, Or (Portland) Cases The Department of Human Services in Multnomah The following are illustrative examples of commu- County, OR is pursuing a policy of building service nity service partnerships currently being negotiated or partnerships with qualified neighborhood organiza- in operation. They are not presented as an exhaustive tions and community-based agencies. Within the last catalogue of the various approaches to constructing year, responsibility for managing the county nursing partnerships, but they do incorporate considerable home was transferred by contract to a community- variation. based group. The county also plans to transfer its men- tal health clinics to neighborhood organizations by July, 1983. Jacksonville The basic reasons for this policy are: (1) to expand The city of Jacksonville, FL has a long history of services by merging public expenditures with resources privatizing a variety of physical and social services. which private, non-profit organizations may generate; One source of this practice is the tremendous size of (2) to increase the cost effectiveness of public expendi- Jacksonville. Its vast jurisdictional territory, which ex- tures; (3) to empower the community with service re- ceeds 700 square miles, makes it second only to An- sponsibilities, and (4) to reduce the growth of govern- chorage, AK in size. In the past two years, the city's ment. Department of Community Development has worked Most recently, Multnomah issued a $1.07 million to transfer the management of social services from a contract to the Burnside Consortium to manage an centralized administration to neighborhood-based alcohol detoxification center. The contract involves multi-service centers. As part of this policy, the depart- medical supervision and the operation of a sobering ment is presently negotiating contracts with the Ocean station, licensed by the state to detain violaters of the Way Improvement Council and the Robinson's Addi- state's public inebriation statutes. Public drunkenness tion Improvement Association for the management has been decriminalized in Oregon, but it remains a and operation of two such centers, carrying senior citi- misdemeanor. Police and Burnside personnel may zen, nutritional, recreational, and other programs cur- place alleged violators in civil hold within Burnside rently provided by the city. facilities. The contract finances the operation of two Burnside radio-dispatched cars which transport de- tainees to the civil hold in lieu of police transportation. In most cases, contracts with Burnside is principally a neighborhood develop- neighborhood groups are being let under ment organization which owns and manages 300 units a deliberate city policy of of housing. The detoxification contract fulfills Burn- side's objective to better serve its residents and to partnership building. attract new revenues for the organization's improved operations. Burnside won this contract in a competi- These two neighborhood organizations were se- tive process. Prior to this contract, the county-run lected because of their experience in managing and detoxification facility was housed in a building owned providing neighborhood-based services and their and managed by the Consortium. ability to mobilize volunteers. Other neighborhood organizations will be considered as their management Baltimore capability improves. Until then, the city will continue An interesting approach to co-production as a part- to manage services directly in those neighborhoods. nership model is the Baltimore Sparkle Program, From the city's perspective, there are four objectives which was introduced to the neighborhood organiza- in multi-service center transfer to neighborhood tions of the city early in 1981. Project Sparkle involves, groups: (1) to reduce cost; (2) to enhance community " a partnership arrangement in which the commu- 47 COMMUNITY ACTION Vol. 1. No. 4, 1982 RESEARCH REPORTS nity performs on a self-help principle and city forces borhood groups for the delivery of city services. The complement community efforts to improve commu- guiding policy behind this process is to implement spe- nity appearance and maintain those improvements cialized service roles by neighborhood organizations which have been identified as needed by community which would reduce the overall cost of municipal serv- organizations." The program is limited to activities ice. For example, neighborhood organizations can which improve or maintain the appearance of real identify potholes at an early stage of formation and property, open spaces, public buildings and grounds, make minor repairs. This early action will reduce long- commercial establishments and installations, and run repair costs. Neighborhood organizations can public thoroughfares or which aid in rat control and identify and seal vacant property more quickly than eradication. the city. This reduces property damage and subsequent The program is basically an invitation by the city to rehabilitation costs. neighborhood organizations to identify their service The Managing Director of the city has conducted needs in these areas and to divide responsibility with meetings over the past 10 months with neighborhood the city for meeting those needs. Negotiated co- leaders in 23 districts of the city to identify reasonable production schemes are expressed in written compacts areas of service sharing and to enlist interested and and signed by both neighborhood organizations and capable neighborhood organizations into partner- the city government. ships. Teams of neighborhood and city personnel will be organized in these districts to oversee the perform- ance of the contract. These neighborhood meetings have identified the Negotiated co-production schemes are following areas of partnership: expressed in written compacts and vacant lot cleaning and maintenance; signed by both neighborhood cleaning and securing of vacant buildings, (involv- ing the boarding up of vandalized vacant buildings organization and the city government. and the organization of surveillance activities); street maintenance (including the repair of potholes with "cold patches", the repair of some cracks as pre- The operation of the Sparkle Program is illustrated ventive maintenance, and the inspection and report- by a co-production agreement with the Mayfield Com- ing of more extensive damage to the Street Depart- ment; munity Organization to clean and maintain the stream in Herring Run Park. The city provided a truck for park and/or recreation area maintenance (involving cleaning and litter control of neighborhood parks hauling away numerous truck loads of trash and the and the Hunting Park system). neighborhood provided the manpower to clean the The city administration will award five to seven con- streambed. The city has since maintained a follow-up tracts in these areas of service delivery. Bids will be re- program of stream cleaning. The Mayor's representa- ceived and evaluated on a competitive basis with the tive in the Harbel Multi-Service Center is authorized following minimal criteria governing the kind of to continue further co-production efforts on the organization considered for selection: stream, as well as handle complaints. the bidding organization must be located and recog- Another co-production agreement covers a city- owned tot lot in the Poinsor Hills neighborhood. The nized as working in a particular geographical area; the organization must possess private, non-profit neighborhood organization does weekly trash removal, which the city then picks up. The organiza- status; tion also maintains a citizen park watch program to the organization must have a proven record of serv- discourage private truckers from dumping garbage in ice or experience in related tasks; the organization must have experience in the man- the park, while the city has provided guard rails agement of public funds; and, around the park to prevent dumping. Finally, the neighborhood group periodica Ily spreads wood chips the organization must propose to satisfy the service needs and demands of the District Council in the which the city provides. Baltimore anticipates that at least thirty other neigh- geographical service area. borhood organizations will participate in the Sparkle At present, Philadelphia's city administration has described the services to be bid and the equipment and Program over the next few years. supplies that will be required by neighborhood groups performing the service; identified an initial set of Philadelphia capable neighborhood organizations that will bid on The city government in Philadelphia has initiated a the city offer; and ascertained ballpark costs for the process of establishing formal partnerships with neigh- different service contracts. COMMUNITY ACTION Vol. I. No. 4. 1982 48 RESEARCH REPORTS Louisville Overcoming Obstacles The transfer of service responsibility to neighbor- The city of Louisville has been contracting with hood development organizations to any significant neighborhood organizations for housing development degree causes justifiable concern among public services since 1976. These services were primarily the employees and their unions. Any service partnership, purchase and rehabilitation of residences. In 1979, the from contracting through co-production to volunteer city began a $500,000 project of sidewalk construction recruitment, creates fear of job displacement. In order in the Butchertown area. The local neighborhood to prevent this fear from becoming an obstacle to organization, Butchertown Neighborhood Govern- expansion of the partnership approach, it is vital that ment (BNG) welcomed this public improvement proj- this issue be treated with utmost sensitivity. ect as an enhancement to its housing revitalization A number of cities have entered into service partner- work. ship negotiations under the ground rule that no present The city faced enormous problems in carrying out employee will be displaced. Full-time public em- the sidewalk construction program. Neighborhood ployees may be re-trained for new assignments and residents and owners of commercial establishments transferred, but they need not fear for their positions. complained about faulty design and torn-up thorough- This approach seems to be working well, although fares. In 1980, the city asked Butchertown Neighbor- there is not yet enough experience to reach any firm hood Government if they would take over the project conclusions. Further analysis of this issue is of great and complete the sidewalk construction. BNG had importance. strong community support as well as proven technical and managerial capabilities for this kind of work. BNG negotiated a contract for $150,000 and has carried out its responsibilities successfully. Any service partnership creates fear An interesting aspect of this performance arose from of job displacement. a city ordinance requiring commercial businesses to pay one-half the cost of sidewalk repair. BNG negoti- ated an agreement with commercial establishments Another "obstacle" issue that frequently arises in- that it would lay sidewalks at no charge to these estab- volves the management of liability risks involved in lishments, providing that the businesses invested one- delivering public services. While cities are willing to half the cost of their new sidewalks in the physical im- carry liability coverage for certain services, they are provement of their properties. inclined to transfer some part of this burden to neigh- In 1982, the city negotiated a second sidewalk con- borhood organizations under partnership agreements. struction contract with BNG for $73,000. The public Neighborhood groups, on the other hand, have little improvement in this instance will be targeted to spe- experience with such risks and approach liability cov- cific areas where housing development is planned. erage with extreme caution. Development of a widely BNG is moving in two further directions. It has accepted approach to resolution of this issue would begun negotiations with the city for a co-production greatly facilitate the building of community service agreement on sanitation and recycling services. These partnerships. negotiations aim to divide the sanitation functions of Finally, there are many specific legal obstacles in the neighborhood's geographic area into those parts state statutes and city ordinances which inhibit the for- which the city can best serve and those parts which can mation of partnerships. For example, in one city, best be served by the neighborhood organization. partnership formation was held up over the issue of BNG also plans to expand its public service work in the whether the city could legally transfer public works area of general street and sidewalk repair. equipment to a neighborhood non-profit organiza- tion. In other cities, there have been delays and prob- lems over particular procurement methods utilized in Issues negotiating contracts. While each particular case may ultimately be resolvable within the local context, there is a clear need for a broad-based review of legal issues Our research and technical assistance has uncovered which stand in the way of forming community service a number of generic issues which arise as local govern- partnerships. ment and neighborhood, non-profit organizations attempt to build community service partnerships. Improving Capacities These may be loosely categorized under the headings Beyond the specific obstacles discussed above, there of "Overcoming Obstacles" and "Improving Capaci- are also a number of issues concerning the internal ties". capacities of neighborhood organizations which bear 49 COMMUNITY ACTION Vol. 1. No. 4, 1982 RESEARCH REPORTS upon the expansion of the community partnership sions of most neighborhood groups. While the attrac- approach. tion of directly improving services for their commu- One issue concerns the ability of neighborhood nities is great, the leadership of neighborhood groups organizations to participate in a competitive contract cannot be sure that the citizens they represent will environment. While some kinds of community service endorse the shift. Clearly, the formation of community partnerships are targeted to specific organizations, service partnerships needs to be handled with great regular contracting presents a different picture. care and full consultation between the leadership and Under the rules of competitive bidding, contracting the community. out for the operation of a neighborhood-based service Fourth, neighborhood organizations actively enter- may involve bids from both the profit and non-profit ing the service contract market must begin to adjust sectors, including bids from large, efficient out-of- their relations with City Hall and the municipal and town firms. In this context, neighborhood groups will county agencies. They have to relate professionally to have to become thoroughly versed in local procure- the agency staff. They have to build a political relation- ment practices, marketing analysis, and the drafting of ship to the Mayor and the City Council, so that there responses to purchase orders. They have to know who are mutual advantages for service agreements. And their competition is and how to out-price and out- they have to relate in a businesslike manner to private perform that competition. sector companies which will be involved with them in Another issue concerns the ability of community service performance. groups to establish appropriate personnel policies and productivity standards. As long as partnerships are limited to volunteer efforts and recruitment of part- time workers for the city, neighborhood groups do not Conclusion have to concern themselves with personnel policy. However, as soon as partnerships move into co- Community service partnerships are a permanent production schemes or contracts, the ability to manage new element in the changing picture of city govern- large numbers of paid personnel becomes an issue. ment and neighborhood relations. They have evolved over the past 20 years out of citizen participation in service delivery and service decentralization as well as recent budget cutbacks and revenue declines. Within the coming years, community service part- Neighborhood groups that enter into nerships will become as prominent as development service partnerships will have to make partnerships have been during the past ten years. sure that they have the full support of Returns from neighborhood development have been sluggish in the present economy, and enterprising their communities behind them. neighborhood organizations will turn to the service market for sound business and political reasons. At the same time, cities will be looking at various cost effec- tive options to retain neighborhood based services. The two partners are meeting and setting an agenda for Neighborhood groups typically operate with a small the 1980s. staff of highly-motivated, low-paid community workers. Assumption of service delivery responsibili- References Cited ties involves a completely different set of personnel. Kotler, M. (1981). Report and Recommendations on Neighbor- For the first time, many neighborhood groups will hood Service Delivery. Washington, D.C. Center for Respon- have to deal with concerns such as pensions, career sive Governance, Report to HUD. advancement, overtime, employee security, and so on. Kotler, M. (1982). Community Service Partnerships. Washington, Building such personnel management capacity will D.C., Center for Responsive Governance, Working Paper Series. take time and a great deal of effort. Third, neighborhood groups that propose to enter Rosenbaum, N. (1981). Neighborhood Councils and the New Federalism. Washington, D.C. Center for Responsive Govern- into service partnerships will have to make sure that nance, Working Paper Series. they have the full support of their communities behind Rosenbaum, N. and Rich, R. (1982). "Neighborhood Councils in them. Service delivery represents a significant change Urban Politics," Paper presented at the 1982 meetings of the from advocacy and citizen participation, the key mis- Midwest Political Science Association, Milwaukee, Wisconsin. COMMUNITY ACTION Vol. 1, No. 4. 1982 50 RESEARCH REPORTS Partnerships for Economic Development: The UDAG Experience by Susan E. Clarke and Michael J. Rich Community partnerships are being promoted as gram (1978-1981), as well as interviews with economic solutions to a range of urban problems, but rhetorical development officials in over 50 cities, indicates that fervor outweighs conceptual rigor in popular usage of contemporary partnership arrangements reflect the term. Our objective in this article is to examine a changes along several key dimensions: formality and number of issues concerning the composition of part- representation, scope of activity and goal complexity, nerships formed for economic development: Who is and local fiscal roles. involved in such public-private partnerships? Under what conditions do they participate? Do cities act as Formality and Representation public interest entrepreneurs in these partnerships or do they cater to the needs of the private sector? Contemporary, public-private partnerships involve A major difficulty in analyzing urban public-private formal arrangements for cooperative activities among partnerships is the lack of any systematic standardized two or more groups and individuals from the public information about these arrangements. However, the and private sectors. The private sector, as here defined, mandated partnerships of the Urban Development includes both profit-making and non-profit firms and Action Grant Program offer an opportunity to over- organizations. Partnerships are based on the proposi- come these constraints. The Action Grant program, tion that some goods and services are best provided by cornerstone of President Carter's national urban a cooperative mix of public agencies and private policy announced in 1978, is designed to encourage organizations, rather than by either sector alone. innovative partnerships for community and economic The new wave of public-private partnerships is char- development. acterized by explicit contractual agreements, including In the first section of this paper, we briefly discuss the major dimensions of the contemporary partnership concept; we then describe UDAG project-specific part- nerships and develop a typology for classifying public- The formality of contemporary private partnerships; in the final section we note fac- partnerships tends to politicize the arena tors that may account for variations in partnership composition and the city's fiscal role. of economic development. The Partnership Concept public documentation of the partnership arrangement Business, government, and civic organizations have and specification of the expectations and responsibili- long been partners in community development in most ties of each partner. American cities, based upon close, informal working The formality of contemporary partnerships tends to relationships among local elites. Contemporary pub- politicize the arena of economic development. The lic-private partnerships, while building on these his- public sector role in local development opens the door torical relationships, represent important changes in to all sorts of groups interested in participating. For- this long-standing tradition. Our research, based on an mality and visibility also invite challenges from groups examination of nearly 400 partnership agreements not included. For example, challenges to UDAG part- executed during the first four years of the UDAG pro- nerships have included existing firms' objections to public subsidization of their competitors, complaints Susan Clarke is Assistant Professor in the Department of Political about the absence of minority contractors, and claims Science at Northwestern University. Michael Rich is a PhD. candi- that the neighborhood business impacts of UDAG date in the same department. projects have not been fully taken into account. In 51 COMMUNITY ACTION Vol. I. No. 4. 1982 RESEARCH REPORTS short, formal partnerships require explicit, active, ing, site selection, construction marketing, and utiliza- public policy choices concerning representation. In tion. Such coordinated partnership arrangements entering the realm of "political architecture" (Ander- appear more effective at some stages than at others son, 1979) local officials must carefully consider the but, in general, the city's entrepreneurial fiscal role is a appropriate extent of competing firms, low-income in- distinctive aspect of contemporary partnerships. dividuals, and so on. The legitimacy of administra- tively-designed partnerships appears to rest to a sig- The Action Grant Experience nificant degree on the inclusion of relevant interests and groups inside the partnership. The Urban Development Action Grant Program, adopted as part of the Housing and Community De- Scope and Complexity velopment Act of 1977, is designed to increase jobs and In contrast to the limited, functional scope of most tax revenues in distressed cities through the stimula- previous public-private relationship, cities are today tion of private investment that would not have oc- building broad-based partnerships linking public and curred "but for" the UDAG injection of public capital. private interests in new institutional arrangements. This effort to stimulate economic development These joint development institutions encompass a through private sector initiative and participation is an variety of organizational forms: mayoral task forces explicit acknowledgement that the public sector can- on economic development, quasi-public development not and should not attempt urban economic revitaliza- tion without significant private sector involvement in project design and implementation. Urban develop- ment action grants are awarded by HUD on a competi- Joint development institutions tive basis among eligible cities. Cities qualify for par- encompass a variety of organizational ticipation in the action grant program by demonstrat- ing significant community development need as meas- forms. ured by the age of housing, poverty, unemployment, per capita income, job lag/decline and population lag/ decline. As of June 1982, more than 1,321 action grant projects in 429 cities had been approved by HUD, rep- corporations, special authorities, and economic devel- resenting more than $2.2 billion in federal assistance. opment corporations (CUED, 1978). Public-private partnership ventures are organized These new institutions are being vested with a wide around specific development projects prior to submis- range of powers from advisory to policy-making func- sion of the application for funding to the Department tions, and may involve both policy formulation and of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). UDAG policy implementation responsibilities. The redevelop- projects are primarily initiated by private sector inter- ment activities carried out by these new entities often ests. For example, in over 50 percent of the projects involve large-scale projects operating over extended time periods, and investment climates characterized by significant uncertainty and relatively high risk. The public sector cannot and should not attempt urban economic revitalization City Fiscal Roles without significant private sector involvement. Traditional public-private relations in American cities usually involve an exchange of resources and privileges among the two sectors. Cities, for example, sampled in a HUD evaluation study of UDAG im- reduce taxes, build sewers, or ease zoning variations to pacts, private sector interests initiated the develop- encourage investment in particular areas. Private in- ment project (HUD, 1982: vi). Furthermore, the feasi- vestors may promise new jobs. purchase of particular bility of action grant projects is determined primarily land parcels, or employment of specific social groups. by private lenders' willingness to commit funds for a The new genre of partnerships is distinguished from particular project (HUD, 1982: 34). the old by the increasing use of joint development The action grant program is designed to give cities activities in which the city shares in the costs and risks considerable discretion in the types of activities they of economic development. As detailed below, city may undertake with their action grant funds. UDAG fiscal roles are limited only by the imagination-and grants may be used for a variety of direct and indirect legal constraints-of the partners. Coordinated part- incentives for development activities, including below- nership functions may occur at every stage of the devel- market rate loans, land write downs, demolition and opment process, from project design to project financ- clearance, relocation of businesses and families, site COMMUNITY ACTION Vol. I, No. 4, 1982 52 RESEARCH REPORTS improvements, and public infrastructure activities. munity development) assumes direct responsibility for HUD classifies the types of projects it will consider carrying out program functions such as land acquisi- into three categories-neighborhood, commercial, tion, site preparation and public improvements itself and industrial-and strives to maintain a balance or whether it transfers responsibility and funds to among them in making action grant awards. However, another public entity, such as a local redevelopment several researchers (e.g., Gist, 1980; Jacobs and Roi- authority; or (b) whether or nor non-profit groups are stacher, 1980; Webman, 1981; and Rich, 1982) have included as participating parties in the partnership in shown that while a balance has generally been achieved addition to private business. Capsule illustrations of in terms of the numbers of projects funded, UDAG prototypical partnership models, in descending order dollars are skewed towards commercial activities. of complexity, are as follows: More than one-half of all UDAG dollars allocated have been awarded for commercial projects. 1. City/Private. The city uses its UDAG funds to finance the extension of a sewer line to enable a Types of Partnership Arrangements private manufacturing firm to expand its facilities. While each action grant project requires a minimum 2. Public/Private. The city transfers its action of at least two participants (one public, one private), grant funds to the local redevelopment author- there do not appear to be any boundaries on either the ity which uses those funds for land acquisition, number or type of parties included or the complexity demolition and clearance, and infrastructure of legal responsibilities each partnership entails. The improvements. The redevelopment authority simplest partnership arrangement is one that involves then leases the site to a private developer who the city government and a single private sector partici- has agreed to construct a new hotel on the site. pant, such as a local manufacturing firm. Generally, as 3. Nonprofit/Private. The city transfers its UDAG the size and scope of development activity increases so funds to a non-profit organization based in one does the number of participating partners and the of the city's community development target complexity of the partnership. Oakland, California, areas. The nonprofit uses the UDAG funds to establish a revolving loan fund for housing re- habilitation loans. A consortium of private As the size and scope of development lending institutions agrees to participate in the program and provides the bulk of the funds activity increases, so do the number of necessary for the rehabilitation work. participating partners. 4. City/Nonprofit/Private. The city loans UDAG funds to a non-profit neighborhood develop- ment corporation which uses those funds for the completion of a neighborhood shopping plaza it for example, lists more than 10 participating partners has been developing. Income generated from (including the city's redevelopment agency, the Eco- the plaza's tenants is used to repay the UDAG nomic Development Administration, a private devel- loan and to establish a revolving commercial oper, a Canadian development corporation, a local loan fund to assist minority businesses. bank, and a Canadian bank) in its grant agreement for 5. Public/Private/Nonprofit The city tansfers its an action grant project designed to construct a major UDAG funds to the local redevelopment au- new downtown hotel and convention center complex. thority which in turn acquires and prepares a An even more complex partnership in Minneapolis site for a private developer. The developer then and St. Paul, MN involves the respective housing and constructs 200 housing units, of which a portion redevelopment authorities of the two cities, a private are set aside for low-and moderate-income fam- foundation, a pension fund, and several contractors, ilies. A neighborhood nonprofit organization, developers, and individual homeowners. This project, using funds received from the city's CDBG pro- in tandem with a $170 million housing mortgage reve- gram, administers a home purchase assistance nue bond issue jointly sponsored by the two cities, will program in which funds are lent to low- and provide home ownership assistance to low- and mod- moderate-income families for down payments erate-income families in the Twin Cities area. on the newly constructed homes. We have developed a typology of prototypical pub- In most of the cases in which responsibility and lic-private partnership arrangements under the action funds are transferred to another public entity, local grant program. These arrangements vary along two governments lack the legal authority and/or the ad- basic dimensions: (a) whether the general purpose ministrative capacity to fulfill the public sector's proj- local government (e.g., the city's department of com- ect obligations (e.g., land acquisition through eminent RESEARCH REPORTS domain, execution of loans or grants to the private tation, neighborhood public improvements, and loans sector, issuance of bonds for supplemental project for commercial and industrial enterprises. financing). In most action grant projects that generate program The inclusion of nonprofit organizations in action income, the designated functional reuse of the pro- grant partnerships, either as transfer agents or as oper- ceeds is closely related to the initial project. For ating partners, is usually motivated by the desire to example, one of the most common uses of program lend legitimacy to a development effort or to insure income has been the establishment or supplementation that affected interests in low income communities of revolving loan funds. Proceeds from commercial benefit financially. In some cases, inclusion is also and industrial loans have generally been used to make generated by the demonstrated competence of non- additional commercial and industrial loans. Similarly, profit groups in specific functional areas, such as the payments on UDAG-funded housing rehabilitation administration of housing rehabilitation and neigh- and home purchase loans have been recycled for addi- borhood revitalization groups. tional home improvement and mortgage assistance loans. Public Fiscal Roles The major mechanisms through which UDAG funds are recaptured and program income is generated A distinctive feature of the UDAG program is its are as follows: recent transformation from primarily a grant program in which cities or public authorities used their action Land Disposition. Cities have traditionally used grant funds for one-time development expenditures to federal grant-in-aid proceeds for land acquisition and an investment program in which government agencies site preparation. Program income is generated loan their action grant funds to private or nonprofit through the disposition of land to the private sector. participants, enabling the public sector to recapture its However, because cities have generally used their UDAG funds and recycle them for future housing and federal development funds to write down the cost of community development activities. A recent HUD land as an incentive to stimulate private investment, study reports that the proportion of UDAG projects land disposition proceeds generally can only partially recapture public funds expended on a particular devel- opment activity. Lease Agreements and Municipal Enterprises. Local The proportion of UDAG projects governments have also generated program income through the use of land and/or facility lease agree- containing provisions for the recapture ments. Frequently cities will acquire and clear a parcel of public funds has increased. of land for development and then lease the site to a de- veloper. In other instances cities may construct an underground parking garage and lease the air rights to a private developer. Cities have also used their action grant funds to construct facilities which in themselves containing provisions for the recapture of public funds generate revenues. Perhaps the most frequently occur- has increased from 30 percent in 1978 to 62 percent in ring example is the construction of municipal parking 1980 (HUD, 1982: p. 147). garages in which the city generates income through the We call cities that recapture none or only a small collection of parking fees. In some instances the city portion of their action grant funds "donor" cities, as may lease a specified number of parking spaces to a they are in essence making a public contribution to a developer or private firm. Similarly, several cities have private development. We label cities at the other end of constructed other facilities with the specific goal of the continuum "entrepreneurial" cities that are able to revenue generation-e.g., neighborhood shopping "make money" with their acti on grant. centers, trade centers, exhibition halls, and industrial Perhaps one reason why ci ies are becoming more parks. entrepreneurial in the use of t heir action grant dollars Loans. Inreasingly, cities are using their urban is that all UDAG funds recaptured by the city stay in development action grant funds as loans to private and the city; there are no provisions for returning recap- nonprofit participants. A recent HUD evaluation tured program funds to the federal government. The study found that about one-third of all UDAG funds only restriction is that recaptured UDAG funds must awarded through FY 1980 were executed as loans as be allocated for activities that are eligible under Title I opposed to grants (HUD, 1982: 149). Generally of the Housing and Community Development Act of UDAG funds are used for loans at below market inter- 1974, as amended. Thus, cities may use their UDAG est rates although in a few cities loans have been ex- program income for activities such as housing rehabili- ecuted at or near the prevailing market rate. In a few COMMUNITY ACTION Vol. I, No. 4. 1982 54 RESEARCH REPORTS cities, a sliding interest scale has been employed in partnership participation because they are more acces- which interest rates increase over the term of the loan. sible to such groups' demands. Unreformed cities may Net Cash Flow and Equity Participation. Finally, be pushed to more entrepreneurial styles with greater and perhaps most noteworthy, several projects have public benefits through pressures from these interests included "kicker" provisions into their action grant but these competing interests may also impede agreements which permit the city or its agent (e.g., a re- evolution of newer fiscal roles aimed at recapturing development authority, nonprofit organization) to and recycling funds. share in the net cash flow after a specified return to the Organizational and bureaucratic needs also shape developer. Generally, there are three different types of partnership composition. Organizing for economic de- net cash flow participation. Under the first type, in velopment usually occurs in a milieu crowded with which the project's profits are used to repay an out- planning units, special authorities, and bureaucracies standing UDAG loan, net cash flow participation rep- from previous Federal programs. Weak mayoral resents no real advantage for the city. That is, the city is control over development resources and business com- setting back its UDAG funds, generally with interest, munity pressures for a more visible, coherent public and nothing more. The real advantage in this situation appears to rest with the private sector whose debt serv- ice payments only begin once the development activity generates a profit. Furthermore, these agreements usually include provisions which allow the developer Many mayors are reluctant to include to defer debt service payment in years in which the "kicker" provisions that would possibly project does not generate sufficient net cash flow. jeopardize private sector participation. A second type of net cash flow participation is one in which the city receives a portion of the net cash flow as an "additional interest payment" on its UDAG loan. In these instances, net cash flow participation represents a bonus payment to the city since the city already is re- development partner often lead to delegation of eco- ceiving principal and interest payments on its UDAG nomic development responsibility to public authorities loan. outside the city government line departments. The third type of net cash flow participation occurs Finally, national bureaucratic influence seems to be when the city uses its UDAG funds as an equity invest- a particularly important influence in the evaluation of ment and thus, shares in the profits of the development local fiscal roles in UDAG partnerships. Many mayors activity in proportion to its investment. Cities have are reluctant to include "kicker" provisions and other thus far used their UDAG funds for equity contribu- non-market conditions in UDAG agreements that tions in such diverse activities as hotels, office towers, would increase the potential public benefits but pos- shopping plazas, and housing developments. sibly jeopardize private sector participation. National HUD officials thus sometimes play a broker role be- Explaining Partnerships tween local political and economic interests. When applications proposing projects with substantial profit What accounts for the variation between cities in the margins are submitted, HUD officials may propose composition and organization of urban development inclusion of "kickers" both to test whether or not the partnerships? First, local political structure appears to private benefit has been correctly estimated and to significantly influence partnership composition and increase the city's rate of return on its investment. local fiscal roles. Urban public-private partnerships HUD's brokerage role is an important factor in under- seem the latest in a long line of urban "reforms"-from standing the increasing prevalence of more entrepre- special authorities through urban renewal and model neurial roles in action grant partnerships. cities-that attempt to isolate "technical" development activities from politics. Thus, reform cities with city managers and nonpartisan, at-large elections seem Conclusions most receptive to partnerships which transfer authority and funds to special administrative units. To recapitulate, our research found that contempo- Administrative specialization also is likely to allow rary urban development partnerships are based on more entrepreneurial roles, both because of greater formal agreements among partners rather than infor- administrative capacity and less political interference. mal bargains. They tend to be extensive in scope and to Unreformed cities, on the other hand, are more likely involve multi-goal development projects rather than to keep control directly in city government and more distribution of discrete resources. They also reflect a likely to be responsive to nonprofit and neighborhood range of local fiscal roles, with cities steadily shifting 55 RESEARCH REPORTS from a donor mentality to a more entrepreneurial, rev- also an issue of distributional politics, involving the enue-generating perspective. costs and benefits to various neighborhood and com- The recapture of action grant funds for future devel- munity-based groups that represent them. The in- opment activities has a number of important implica- volvement of community-based groups is thus a per- tions. First, it represents a movement by the cities away sistent equity issue in local policy-making on partner- from their dependency on the federal government and ships. The UDAG experience includes a number of towards local self-sufficiency. In addition, it also creative ways of building inclusive partnerships. Per- points out that given the difficulties in raising revenue haps even more importantly, given declining resource from alternative sources-e.g., declining federal aid, bases and decreasing federal support, cities must citizen and business resistance to increased taxes, voter develop more entrepreneurial approaches to every rejection of major capital bond issues, and the tighten- policy area they are responsible for. The UDAG ex- ing of the capital market-recycling public develop- perience may again point the way. ment funds may be the only way in which cities can assure themselves of the future revenues they will need References Cited for housing, community and economic development activities. Anderson, Charles W. (1979). "Political Design and the Represen- Significantly, the entrepreneurial city roles we tation of Interests," pp. 271-297 in Phillipe C. Schmitter and describe for the UDAG program are becoming evident Gerhard Lehmbruch (eds.), Trends Toward Corporatist Inter- in other program areas. For example, some cities have mediation. Beverly Hills: Sage Publications. drawn down their unexpended CDBG entitlement Clarke, Susan (1982a). "The Private Use of The Public Interest." funds to "float" loans for other development activities Paper presented at the 1982 meetings of the Southwestern Politi- cal Science Association, San Antonio, Texas. of their choosing. The prinicipal payments received on these outstanding loans must be earmarked to the Clarke, Susan (1982b). "Trends Toward Local Corporatism: Insti- tutionalising Local Business/Government Relations." Paper CDBG projects to which they were originally allo- presented at the 1982 meetings of the Midwest Political Science cated, but the city is free to use the interest earned on Association, Milwaukee, Wisconsin. these loans for a variety of housing, community, and Committee for Economic Development (1982). Public-Private economic development activities. Thus, federal devel- Partnerships: An Opportunity for Urban Communities. New opment programs appear to increasingly function as York: Committee for Economic Development. investment capital pools through which the more Council for Urban Economic Development (1978). Coordinated entrepreneurial cities leverage private investment. Urban Economic Development: A Case Study Analysis. Wash- ington, D.C.: National Council for Urban Economic Develop- The irony in these conclusions is that two contradic- ment. tory developments seem to be at work: greater business Gist, John R. (1980). "Urban Development Action Grants: Design interest in joint development activities with city gov- and Implementation," in Donald Rosenthal (ed.), Urban Re- ernment but declining federal funds for local participa- vitalization. Beverly Hills, Calif.: Sage Publications. tion in such partnerships. As one Midwestern official Jacobs, Susan S. and Elizabeth A. Roistacher (1980). "The Urban notes: "There seems to be more cooperation lately Impacts of HUD's Urban Development Action Grant Program, because of the economic decline. There is a recognition or Where's the Action in Action Grants?" pp. 335-362 in Nor- of a common need". A Pacific Northwest administra- man Glickman (ed.) The Urban Impacts of Federal Policies. tor reports that: "The economic climate is rapidly Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. changing. Private firms are now beginning to look Rich, Michael J. (1982). "Hitting the Target: The Distributional favorably upon government involvement as 'risk- Impacts of the Urban Development Action Grant Program," Urban Affairs Quarterly. 17 (March): 285-301. sharers' in development projects". Yet many officials point out that Federal budget cuts are eliminating U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (1982). An Impact Evaluation of the Urban Development Action Grant many of their resources for front-end investment in Program. Washington, D.C. joining projects as well as for the services in-kind that Webman, Jerry (1981). "UDAG: Targeting Urban Economic De- are often part of their project contribution. Continua- velopment, Political Science Quarterly. 96:189-207. tion of the UDAG progran insures some of those funds but local officials antic pate increased competi- tion for these reduced funds. The authors appreciate the assistance of Edward Goetz and Angela While the typology of partnership variations pre- Hendrix, Northwestern University, Department of Political sented here is drawn from UDAG research, we feel that Science and Center for Urban Affairs and Policy Research this analysis of structure and roles also includes lessons Fellows, in conducting the telephone interviews with local eco- nomic development officials. Partial support for this research for other policy areas of potential partnership at the came from a Northwestern University Research Grant and from local level. For example, given the territorial context the Center for Urban Affairs and Policy Research; we gratefully of local politics, every issue of developmental politics is acknowledge this assistance. COMMUNITY ACTION Vol. I. No. 4. 1982 56 ANNOUNCING Important New Working Papers from the Center for Responsive Governance Nelson M. Rosenbaum and Bruce L. R. Smith The Fiscal Status of the Voluntary Sector (Working Paper Series. 1982, 50 pp., $5.00) This study is a path-breaking analysis of the financial condition of voluntary non-profit organizations and their prospects for future revenue growth. Based upon Internal Revenue Service data and recent scholarly research. the paper provides the first comprehensive overview of the scope of the voluntary sector and the composition of its revenue base. The major sub-sectors and clusters of related organizations within the voluntary sector are clearly delineated and their financial outlook is compared and contrasted. This paper is essential reading for all those concerned with the future of voluntary organizations in the United States. Milton Kotler Community Service Partnerships (Working Paper Series, 1982, 60 pp., $6.00) In an era of concern about the ability of municipal governments to pay for and deliver essential services. alternative methods of service delivery are at the forefront of public attention. This study breaks new ground in assessing the capacity of neighborhood organizations to assume responsibility for delivery of public services through contractual agreements with city governments. Based upon a review of specific examples in nine cities with experience in contractual service delivery by neighborhood groups. the paper outlines the major issues in negotiating a contract and monitoring performance, The technical assistance needs of both city governments and neighborhood groups in under- taking this new relationship are identified. Citizens and public officials concerned with urban policy and the future of neighborhood organizations will find this paper an important source of ideas and insights. Order by mailing the attached business reply card or by writing to Center for Responsive Governance Publications, P.O. Box 42120, North West Station, Washington, D.C. 20015. CENTER FOR RESPONSIVE GOVERNANCE PUBLICATIONS ON CITIZEN PARTICIPATION Nan Aron, Funding Public Interest Advocacy (Seminar Series, 1980, $2.50) J. Vincent Buck, Citizen Participation in Federal Land Management (Working Paper Series, 1980, $3.00) Barry Checkoway, Citizen Participation in Health Planning (Seminar Series, 1981, $2.50) David Cohen, Open Government and Citizen Participation (Seminar Series, 1980, $2.50) Martha G. Curry and Michael T. Wood, Citizen Participation in Transportation Planning (Working Paper Series, 1980, $3.00) Pablo Eisenberg, Monitoring Government Programs as a Strategy of Citizen Participation (Seminar Series, 1980, $2.50) David R. Godschalk, Citizen Participation in Environmental/Land Use Management (Working Paper Series, 1980, $3.00) Solomon G. Jacobson, Citizen Participation in Human Service Planning (Working Paper Series, 1980, $3.00) Daniel A. Mazmanian, Citizen Participation in Water Resources Planning (Working Paper Series, 1980, $3.00) Brian Murphy, Public Participation and the Federal Advisory Committee Act (Seminar Series, 1981, $2.50) Nelson Rosenbaum (editor), Citizen Participation: Models and Methods of Evaluation (Working Paper Series, 1981, $5.00) Glenn Smith, Tax System Implications for Public Participation (Seminar Series, 1981, $2.50) Donald E. Voth and Virginia N. Jackson, Citizen Participation in Rural Development (Working Paper Series, 1980, $3.00) To order, write to: Center for Responsive Governance Publications, P.O. Box 42120, N.W. Station, Washington, D.C. 20015.