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About DVG

 

Special Projects and Partnerships

 

 

In its role to encourage leadership and strengthen cooperation, DVG has often served as the convener and sometimes partner for a variety of collaborative efforts. Some examples include:

In 2003, DVG received a grant from the Asset Building and Community Development Program at The Ford Foundation to support the convening and education of our members on the power of regional equity strategies to improve distressed communities. During the coming year, DVG will work in partnership with The Ford Foundation to provide opportunities for our members to explore the nexus between smart growth and economic, social and racial equity as it relates to many of the issues grantmakers care about, including community development, housing, education, jobs and transportation in our region.

In May 2002, DVG partnered with the Association of Small Foundations to present “Building a Strong Foundation,” a two-day regional conference for foundations with few or no staff. Sponsored by The Glenmede Trust Company, the first day of the conference was a “Trustee Leadership Seminar” for foundation board members. The second day, titled “Managing Your Small Foundation” was open to both foundation staff and trustees, and featured concurrent sessions focusing on funding issues, management and governance concerns, and skills-building matters.
In 2000, DVG entered into a partnership with the Grantmakers of Western Pennsylvania and Community Foundations for Pennsylvania to commission the first Pennsylvania statewide giving report. The Nonprofit Center at LaSalle University was selected to manage the project with input from the Foundation Center in New York. The report, entitled “Common Wealth: Giving in Pennsylvania- A Report on the State’s Philanthropy”, was officially unveiled at DVG’s annual conference in October, 2001, and the same month was also introduced to state legislators in a special ceremony at the capitol building in Harrisburg. (Note: The complete report is posted online at www.dvg.org/commonwealth.)
DVG applied for national funds and in January 1999 was awarded a $25,000 planning grant to design and develop strategies for its own outreach initiative to new givers. To implement this project, DVG was awarded a three-year implementation grant of $157,500 in January 2000 from the New Ventures in Philanthropy initiative. For this project, DVG will provide print and electronic resources to new givers in order to help provide them with the knowledge and tools they need to become informed and effective donors.
As part of its mission to be an information resource to new donors, DVG directed a portion of its New Ventures in Philanthropy grant dollars toward cataloging its extensive collection of publications and creating a Resource Library Database. Unveiled in 2001, this new searchable database is an invaluable tool that aids DVG staff in directing both new givers and current DVG members to the information they need to be more effective in their work.
In 1996, DVG convened a Promotion of Philanthropy committee as part of its ongoing efforts to foster a culture of giving and increase philanthropic resources for the region. With the added incentive of grant dollars available through a national project aimed at promoting philanthropy, DVG expanded its discussions in 1998 to include regional partners in its planning efforts.
Between 1993 and 1996 DVG co-sponsored and participated in three Pennsylvania statewide grantmakers’ conferences in Harrisburg. Working in cooperation with Community Foundations for Pennsylvania, Grantmakers of Western Pennsylvania, and a committee of grantmakers from across the state, these conferences were designed to connect grantmakers with each other and with policy makers at the state level. Although the last formal conference took place in 1996, DVG has continued to use this established network to examine ways that grantmakers can be more proactive in state policy and is currently exploring ways for funders to contribute to the dialogue around the 2002 gubernatorial election.
The Emma Lazarus Partnership of Southeastern Pennsylvania was founded in 1997 as the result of an opportunity to leverage national grant dollars from the Open Society Institute to aid local immigrant and refugee communities. Over the past several years DVG has served as the convener for this partnership, which has brought together over a dozen local funders and has successfully raised over $500,000 in local and national dollars to benefit this target community.
As part of an effort to reach out to women of wealth, DVG partnered with several organizations including the Stockton Rush Bartol Foundation, Black United Fund of PA, Bread & Roses Community Fund, The Philadelphia Foundation, and WOMENS WAY to form the working group, Women & Philanthropy. DVG served as the fiscal agent for this group, which received grants in support of two conferences in 1995 and 1997 that addressed and encouraged women’s participation in philanthropy.

 

 

 

 

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