Daily News Roundup: 32-Year Juilliard Leader Stepping Down
Also, Doctors Without Borders re-creates the refugee experience in Washington, and Michelle Obama gets corporate support to maintain the White House vegetable garden.
Grants Roundup: Ohio State U. Gets $39 Million to Boost Veterinary Program
Other notable awards included $10 million from the Walton Family Foundation to help low- and middle-income students attend the University of the Ozarks.
Daily News Roundup: Trump Charity Gave to Right-Wing Groups in Run-Up to Race
Also, the Clinton Foundation belatedly fills gaps in its filings with New York State regulators, and the vice-presidential candidates spar over their running mates’ charity work.
Millennials Drive Big Changes in Giving Patterns, Study Says
Young people are “pushing the boundaries of what giving looks like” through their use of technology and demands for data about nonprofits’ effectiveness, a Fidelity Charitable study concludes.
Philanthropy Urged to Invest $500 Million to Track Results
Controversial author and marketing consultant Dan Pallotta argued for an expensive alternative to using overhead ratios as the primary measurement of a charity’s efficiency.
Daily News Roundup: Wilson Foundation Starts 20-Year, $1.2 Billion Giveaway
Also, Louisiana government documents show strong criticism of the Red Cross’s response to August’s catastrophic floods, and 74 Clinton Foundation employees are getting pink slips.
CEO Pay Is Nearly $10 Million for 2 Nonprofit CEOs, Database Shows
The Chronicle’s newly updated database tracking nonprofit leaders’ compensation also shows some university presidents topping $4 million.
New ideas about philanthropy are springing up from all sorts of places. Meet some of the innovators who are helping nonprofits break the mold.
New Venture Connects Socially Minded Artists With Cash
Laura Callanan worries that “new philanthropy,” which tends to focus on creative investments in education and social-service nonprofits, will leave cultural causes behind.
Former Rabble-Rouser Works With ‘the System’ to Cut Recidivism
A Boston-area nonprofit leader and investors like Goldman Sachs and the Kresge Foundation gamble on the nation’s largest pay-for-success program, with seven years to show results.