This is STAGING. For front-end user testing and QA.
The Chronicle of Philanthropy logo

Finance and Revenue

(page 36 of 111)

Daily News Roundup: Hillary Clinton Starts Political-Action Nonprofit

Also, the Trump administration expands the antiabortion “gag rule” on U.S. funding for global health programs, and the Obama Foundation reports ramped-up fundraising and hires a program chief.

Daily News Roundup: Trump’s Refugee Crackdown Hits Resettlement Charities’ Budgets

Also, nonprofits that hold galas at Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago estate have reported a fundraising boost at events since the election, and the foundation building Barack Obama’s presidential library opts out of traditional federal support for such institutions.

2 New Marketplaces Bring Impact Investors and Products Together

2 New Marketplaces Bring Impact Investors and Products Together

The services aim to expand mission investing by helping funds and enterprises raise capital faster and more efficiently.

Daily News Roundup: New Amazon Building Will Include Homeless Shelter

The tech giant will give over part of a structure in its planned office campus in downtown Seattle to a homelessness charity. Also, an Illinois appeals court rules that a public college’s fundraising foundation is subject to open-records laws.

Daily News Roundup: Houston Tries to Steer ‘Spare Change’ to Homelessness Charity

A City Hall-led campaign encourages people to pass up panhandlers in favor of supporting a charitable housing fund. Also, a look at the state of local nonprofit newsrooms and an accountant’s view of a major New York charity’s fiscal meltdown.

Daily News Roundup: Hacked Records Highlight Conservative Foundation’s Reach

The documents detail the Lynde and Harry Bradley Foundation’s plans to carry its success promoting conservative causes in Wisconsin to other states. Also, an atheism organization files a court challenge to President Trump’s order on politicking by religious groups.

Daily News Roundup: Gates Critics Question Sway at WHO

Some global-health leaders say the U.N. agency is adopting the agenda of its second-biggest donor, the Gates Foundation. Also, a nonprofit group allied with Missouri’s new governor widens ad attacks on state legislators, and Minnesota’s attorney general targets a national car-donation charity’s spending and fundraising.

Value of New Donors Is Largely Offset by Loss of Previous Donors, Study Finds

For every $100 organizations gained last year from new contributors or those increasing gifts, they lost $95 through donor attrition and reduced monthly giving.

Women and Minority Investment Managers Get Little Business From Foundations, Study Shows

Despite investment performance that is on par with their peers, women and minority-owned firms control only 1 percent of the $71 trillion in assets managed by the nation’s financial firms, according to a Knight Foundation study.

How to Build a Strong Women’s Philanthropy Program

What it takes to attract female donors to your cause, plus six easy ways to build long-term relationships with women.

Federal Budget Deal Largely Preserves Spending on Nonprofit Priorities

Programs benefiting low-income families, veterans, the homeless, and community development will remain mostly intact, at least through September, under a new spending bill President Trump pledged to sign this week.

Daily News Roundup: Jim DeMint Reportedly Out at Heritage Foundation

Also, Feed the Children looks within its own ranks in naming a new CEO, and the head of University of Utah Health System resigns after clashing with megadonor Jon Huntsman Sr.

Daily News Roundup: Metropolitan Museum of Art Mulls Ticket Charge for Non-New Yorkers

Mayor Bill de Blasio endorsed the deficit-plagued museum’s proposal to make entrance fees mandatory for visitors from outside the city. Also, Livestrong says it’s turning a fundraising corner after three years of plunging donations, and an African charity teams with dating app Tinder to help super-rare rhinos breed.

Daily News Roundup: Donna Shalala Steps Down as Clinton Foundation President

Also, the University of Utah reinstates the head of the Huntsman Cancer Institute after encountering furious resistance from its benefactor, and tension grows at the University of Nevada at Las Vegas over fundraising for a new medical school.

Daily News Roundup: Fear of Terror Financing Hinders Aid Work

Relief groups say urgent humanitarian work is being delayed by banks’ reluctance to wire money into countries where terrorist activity takes place. Also, how big charities’ brand recognition widens inequality in the nonprofit world, and the Robin Hood Foundation names a new leader.

What Nonprofits Can Do to Prepare for a Government Shutdown

What Nonprofits Can Do to Prepare for a Government Shutdown

Charities should be doing extensive planning now in case Congress can’t reach a budget deal by the end of the week, nonprofit experts say.