Top 10 Nonprofit Employment Law Mistakes (and How to Avoid Them)

FREE WEBINAR | Tuesday, April 17, 2012 1:00PM – 2:00PM

Employment law compliance is tricky, and many nonprofits think they are safe just doing what all the other employers are doing. As a labor & employment risk manager for the Nonprofits Insurance Alliance Group, Ellen Aldridge (yes, co-author of Ask Rita in HR) advises hundreds of nonprofits every year, which gives her a unique perspective on the HR issues commonly faced by the sector. Through a thoughtful discussion of the top 10 mistakes, webinar participants will receive a general overview of common issues facing Human Resource professionals and how to properly handle them. This webinar will touch on material appropriate for the HR novice as well as experienced practitioners, including wage and hour compliance, administering leave laws, employee misclassification, disability accommodation and employee use of social media. Find out if every other nonprofit is doing it, should you?

Blue Avocado Special Offer – Registration for this FREE webinar will only be accepted from March 20 – March 23
.

This webinar is free thanks to the Nonprofits Insurance Alliance Group.

REGISTRATION and MORE DETAILS

Unleashing Innovation: Using Everyday Technology to Improve Your Services

Can nonprofits take better advantage of available technologies to improve the services they deliver, and the ways in which they deliver them? Idealware’s research with new partners at MAP for Nonprofits reveals a number of innovative approaches that make the most of new and existing technology. Find inspiration to transform how, and how effectively, your organization meets its mission in the free report MAP and Idealware produced together, Unleashing Innovation: Using Everyday Technology to Improve Nonprofit Services.

Download the report HERE.

2012–13 Competitive Grant Announcement

21st Century Community Learning Centers

 
As part of the No Child Left Behind Act, the South Carolina Department of Education (SCDE) will award over $6.0 million, contingent upon funding from the US Department of Education, in 21st Century Community Learning Centers (21st CCLC ) grants for the 2012–2013 school year. These funds—available to schools, districts, institutions of higher education, city or county government agencies, and non-profit and for-profit organizations—must be used to provide academic instruction, enrichment activities, and family literacy services to students of primarily high-poverty and low-performing schools.
 
All applications are due by 4:30 p.m. on or before Monday, April 30, 2012, and must be submitted electronically. CLICK HERE for a draft of the 2012-13 request for proposal.
 
To assist potential applicants, the SCDE will host a technical assistance workshop on Friday, March 23, 2012, at the South Carolina Department of Archives and History, 8301 Parklane Road, Columbia, SC 29223. The workshop will begin at 9:00 a.m. and conclude at 12:00 p.m. Attendance at the workshop is not mandatory to apply for grant funds; however, attendance is recommended.
 
REGISTER for the workshop
 
For additional information about the 21st Century Community Learning Centers grant competition, contact Jesse Outen at 803-734-8291 or jouten@ed.sc.gov. You can also visit the website.

Service Learning Grants from State Farm

The State Farm Youth Advisory Board is currently funding service-learning projects between $25,000 and $100,000 that address the root cause of the following issue areas:

Access to Higher Education/Closing the Achievement Gap
Every 26 seconds, a child drops out of school. By developing innovative strategies for empowering students to care about and take control of their education, our grantees hope to reduce and eliminate this crisis.

Financial Literacy
The need for a greater understanding of finance is clearer than ever in light of the ongoing financial crisis. Equipping students with the skills they need to be successful and informed about their current and future finances is the vision of our financial literacy grantees.

Community Safety and Natural Disaster Preparedness
Tens of millions of Americans are victims of crime and natural disasters every year. By empowering students, innovative solutions to these issues can be developed and implemented in our communities.

Social Health & Wellness Issues
The issue of social health and wellness has received unprecedented attention in the wakes of school shootings such as at Columbine and Virginia Tech, nutritional imbalances across the country, and the growing rate of sexual transmitted diseases and sexual assault. The State Farm Youth Advisory Board encourages projects within Societal Health and Wellness that address many of these issues, focus on threats or challenges to, and promote mental, physical, and sexual health.

Environmental Responsibility
From global climate change and environmental education to wildlife conservation and land preservation, our grantees create and implement powerful service-learning projects that improve both our local and global environment.

Applications are being accepted now through May 4, 2012.

How to Apply for State Farm YAB Grant – Tutorial Video

Annual Conference Wrap-Up

As the clutter slowly begins to clear and we unwrap one last chocolate mint, we remind ourselves of the tremendous success of this year’s annual conference.  We hope those who attended returned to their communities excited to share their new ideas!

If you missed the conference this year or just can’t get enough of it, we’ve created a web page just for you.  On our post conference details page, you will find all the important things you missed, like speaker presentations,  a copy of our program, and the winners of our nonprofit excellence awards.  Most importantly, for those who attended, please take time to fill out our short survey.  Your comments are most valuable especially as we begin to plan 2013′s Annual Conference in Greenville, SC.

 

Did You Hear the Good News?

Awarding Nonprofit Excellence is one of our most favorite things to do around here at SCANPO. This year 3 well deserving recipients were recognized at our Annual Nonprofit Conference held just last week at the Columbia Convention Center.

The Erin Hardwick Award for Excellence in Nonprofit Management was presented to Memory Matters and Literacy Volunteers of the Lowcountry, both based out of Beaufort County.

Memory Matters provides support and educational services for families coping with Alzheimer’s disease or dementia while Literacy Volunteers of the Lowcountry aims to increase adult literacy, providing leadership, creating awareness and offering quality instructional services.

Additionally, Cecilia Meggs of Lighthouse Ministries was recognized as an outstanding individual in the nonprofit field with Francis Marion University’s Nonprofit Leadership Institute’s Excellence in Nonprofit Leadership Award. Lighthouse ministries provides financial assistance to families and individuals with limited resources. It helps with mortgages, rent, utilities, medicine prescriptions, traveler’s aid, food, and assists the participant tin finding additional resources to move beyond their crisis.

Congratulations to all of our winners!

A Big Win at the ADDY Awards Gala for 2 SCANPO Members

In case you missed it, the Central Carolina Community Foundation and Riggs Partners CreateAthon came home from the ADDY Awards Gala with a BIG win!  CreateAthon took home Best of Show and Best of Print for their Talk About Giving Initiative created for the Central Carolina Community Foundation.

Talk About Giving is a program that encourages philanthropic families to include younger generations in their conversations about giving. At the heart of the initiative is the Talk About Giving Game, a box that includes a booklet about giving and 60 questions to spark conversation about philanthropy. (You can order the game here.)

The ADDY Awards are the nation’s largest juried competition recognizing creative excellence in advertising. The local ADDY Awards is the first of a three-tier, national competition conducted annually by the American Advertising Federation. Winners of AAF of the Midlands ADDYs will move on to the District Three competition, which includes work from agencies in South Carolina, North Carolina and Virginia.

Congratulations to both Central Carolina Community Foundation and CreatAthon!

 

A Little Conference Love and The Powerful Dance

Greetings Colleagues,

SCANPO has always been about working together for our communities and for our sector.

This year, the tradition continues at the annual conference as we bring together grantmakers and operating nonprofits.

I have the pleasure of facilitating the closing session, The Powerful Dance Between Foundations and Operating Nonprofits.

In this three-part discussion we’ll engage in conversation with Janine Lee of SECF, SC Funders and, most importantly, with YOU.

Come ready to share your ideas and help identify new ways SCANPO can help strengthen working relations and collaboration within our field.

Yours in Philanthropy,

Tom

Tom Keith
2012 Conference Committee Member
Sisters of Charity Foundation of South Carolina

Your BOGO To Our Annual Conference

Man, do we have the deal of the century for you.  This year at our Annual Conference we’re bringing you a man of many talents.  An outstanding speaker, author and community leader, we’re thrilled to have Robert Egger join us as our keynote speaker.  We hope you’ll help welcome him to Columbia!

Begging For Change—The Dollars and Sense of Making Nonprofits Responsive, Efficient and Rewarding for All
By Robert Egger

Robert Egger

Robert Egger

Robert Egger is President of Washington D.C. based D.C. Central Kitchen, and has been described as a straight talking futurist in the non-profit world, speaking throughout the county on the need to restore the purpose of nonprofits.  He will challenge you, and make you examine the lack of logic, the duplication, waste, and ineffectiveness in the non-profit sector.  In 2004 when the book was released, Robert stated “We’ve reached a point where we’ve got two million nonprofits slugging it out with one another for a skeptical donor pool.” He also made a startling assertion that there are too many nonprofits. “If there were a quarter less nonprofits, we’d be a stronger, more vital sector.” He also implores nonprofits to Stop focusing on “raising more money”. Focus on raising more “IMPACT!”

“…Over the last 50 years, the structure of nonprofit has evolved for optimum SURVIVAL, not optimum RESULTS.” “It’s no longer about dollars raised, or percentage of money that goes to causes. It’s about effectiveness and results…but it’s also about fewer programs getting more of the money.”
Robert also asserts (in 2004) that not one city in American has any concept of how much collectively is being spent on charity. “Everyone’s been giving money away, with the best of intentions, but with zero communication. There’s no strategy, no shared common goals.”

Now, fast forward to 2012. Are we in the nonprofit community any better today than 10 years ago? With so many nonprofits struggling and fighting for survival, do we have too many nonprofits? We are seeing many newly retired baby boomers wanting to start non-profits! Many of these same boomers who have been caught in the worst economic decline since the Great Depression have become members of the new poor.

Robert’s approach at D.C. Kitchen is to teach those who were the down and out in Washington D.C. employable skills in the hospitality/(food service sector) and able to rejoin the workforce, paying taxes, and going off the welfare or unemployment roles. D.C. Kitchens is one of the nation’s leading social enterprise organizations with total revenue in 2010 of over $8 million, converting left over food into 1.8 million meals prepared and delivered to over 88 agencies and saving these non-profits nearly $5 million in expenses. They graduated 92 individuals from the Culinary Job Training program, with 90% of those graduates becoming fully employed after graduation. The graduates earned $2.3 million in annual salaries, and contributed $285,000 in payroll taxes back to their community last year.

Robert sees the Millennials as the generation to restore the purpose of nonprofits. D.C. Central Kitchen’s national program—student powered hunger relief on 28 college campus has 5,200 student volunteers serving 265,000 meals from college campus leftovers to support 28 communities in 19 states.

I had the good fortune of meeting Robert in Atlanta in 2004, and corresponding with him for several months about his philosophy and accomplishments. Read his book and visit the D.C. Central Kitchen website to learn more. Non-profits and those in SCANPO can strengthen our state’s nonprofit community if we consider and put into practice his recommendations.

Gerald Sweitzer
Dec. 20, 2011


Gerald (Jerry) Sweitzer is founder and principal of Non-Profit Success. He provides capacity building consulting to nonprofit organizations. Mr. Sweitzer served over 20 years as Business Manager of several Ga. nonprofit organizations. He served as a board member for two metro Atlanta nonprofit organizations, and has been a national trainer for Habitat for Humanity.

His civic activities include past Chairman of the Pickens County Vision 2025, board member of the Pickens County United Way, and the United Way Association of S.C. He’s also served on the board of Ten At The Top, the Upstate region visioning organization. He is a an approved consultant with the South Carolina Association of Nonprofits, and the Social Enterprise Alliance.

Gerald received an MBA from Georgia State University, and completed executive programs at both Dartmouth College, and the Candler School of Theology at Emory University.

We’re Getting Excited, Are You?

Hello Friends,

Finding it hard to get excited about yet another conference?

As committee co-chair, I admit bias, but it has been years since I’ve been this excited about actually attending specific sessions.

Of the 35 sessions, over 20 are rated “general” or “advanced”.  Robert Egger’s breakout session, Letting Go of Leadership, is sure to appeal to long-timers like myself. Read the session grid carefully. You’ll see respected leaders from across the state are presenting. Take note of their plans for “conversations” and “interactive sessions” and come ready to share your ideas.

What better way to celebrate SCANPO’s 15th Anniversary!

See you in Famously Hot Columbia.

Mac

Mac Bennett
2012 Conference Co-Chair