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Philanthropic Support for Flint’s Recovery Follows a Collaborative Model

Anne Eigeman
October 25, 2016
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City of Flint, Michigan water, filter distribution, and sample turn-in, on Wednesday, October 5, 2016. USDA photo by Lance Cheung / U.S. Department of Agriculture

October 21, 2016; Crain’s Detroit Business

As Flint approaches the one-year benchmark since the city’s water crisis was made a public spectacle, a recent story in Crain’s Detroit highlights the philanthropic response and provides a few examples of how some recent funders—foundations and corporations alike—became involved as supporters. Because the full effects of the crisis may not be known for years, some funders have made commitments of up to a certain level, while others have pledged flat amounts or pledges to specific programmatic areas. In all cases, the examples of a few key foundations and the specific commitment of Dr. Mona Hanna-Attisha have been critical in helping to broaden the philanthropic response.

NPQ has covered the Charles Stewart Mott Foundation’s early and generous response to Flint after the water crisis with a commitment of up to $100 million over five years. Headquartered in Flint, the foundation has been instrumental in the collaborative effort to renovate the Cummings Elementary School, which will be available free to Flint children between the ages of 2 and 5. The school is also supported by the University of Michigan–Flint, the W.K. Kellogg Foundation, the Genesee School District, and the Pritzker Family Foundation.

Interestingly, Crain’s points out that chair J.B. Pritzker of the Pritzker Family Foundation, which focuses on early childhood education, joined as a funder after speaking with Phil Hagerman of the Flint-based Hagerman Foundation and representatives from the Mott Foundation once he saw an alignment of interests. “It was out of that interaction that we came to give to the (Cummings) school,” he said. “Flint is now a city on the mind of many philanthropists around the country. Between Phil and the Mott Foundation, it is a very responsible group of people.”

Another key source of Flint funding is the Flint Child Health and Development Fund established by the Community Foundation of Greater Flint. The fund will support health and medical services for residents over the next twenty years with a goal of $50 million in the next three years and has already raised $9.2 million (the Mott Foundation has also pledged a 1:1 match of gifts to this fund up to $5 million until December 31, 2016).

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Dr. Mona Hanna-Attisha of the Hurley Medical Center, a prominent advocate for the concerns of children’s health from the beginning of the crisis, is the lead donor to the fund. In a statement, Dr. Hanna-Attisha said, “If there was ever a time to invest in our children, it is now. Our Flint children deserve every opportunity to be healthy and successful.” She added, “The creation of this Fund will further ensure that our children are afforded the resources and interventions to overcome this population-wide exposure to lead.”

Crain’s also highlights the important development that the Kellogg Foundation has reprioritized Flint this past year with a $7.1 million commitment that has supported the Cummings Elementary School, the advocacy organization Flint Rising, the Genesee County Health Department, and the Community Foundation of Greater Flint.

In the corporate sector, Crain’s notes that “leadership of the Flint & Genesee Chamber of Commerce pulled a war room together” to spur corporate philanthropy and will oversee a clearinghouse to match local needs with corporate contributions. At least one new foundation, Flint Now, has also opened in response to the crisis, and according to its founder, Detroit Pistons owner and Flint native Tom Gores, it will provide long-term programs focused on economic development nutrition and health care for residents of the city.

Bridge magazine ran a story on Flint in August, which was before Congress approved federal funding. Even at that time, Bridge estimated that “at least $13.2 million has arrived in individual donations from families, churches, clubs and companies.” That total has undoubtedly grown in the past two months and will hopefully continue to grow as residents of Flint continue to deal with this crisis. As always, but especially with the history of the undercutting of democratic processes in Flint, it is critical for the collaboration between the funders to maintain as a central principle the need to include the residents in all decisions made.—Anne Eigeman

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About the author
Anne Eigeman

Anne Eigeman is a Washington, DC-based consultant focusing on fund development and communications. Her past work in the education field developing programming for schools and museums informs the current work she does with small education organizations building organizational capacity. A news lover, she enjoys reading and analyzing media coverage both about and beyond the nonprofit sector.

More about: nonprofit collaborationCollaborationNonprofit NewsPhilanthropy

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