Dayton Daily News

STUDY: PANDEMIC PUTS 1 IN 3 NONPROFITS AT SERIOUS RISK

- By Glenn Gamboa

More than onethird NEW YORK — of U.S. nonprofits are in jeopardy of closing within two years because of the financial harm inflicted by the viral pandemic, according to a study by the philanthro­py research group Candid and the Center for Disaster Philanthro­py.

The study’s findings underscore the perils for nonprofits and charities whose financial needs have escalated over the past year, well in excess of the donations that most have received from individual­s and foundation­s. The researcher­s analyzed how roughly 300,000 nonprofits would fare under 20 scenarios of varying severity. The worstcase scenario led to the closings of 38% of the nonprofits. Even the scenarios seen as more realistic resulted in closures well into double digit percentage­s.

Officials of Candid, which includes the philanthro­pic informatio­n resources GuideStar and Foundation Center, and the Center for Disaster Philanthro­py, which analyzes charitable giving during crises, said the most dire scenarios could be avoided if donations were to increase substantia­lly — from the government as well as from private contributo­rs.

“If you are a donor who cares about an organizati­on that is rooted in place and relies on revenue from in-person services, now is the time probably to give more,” said Jacob Harold, Candid’s executive vice president.

Among the most vulnerable nonprofits, the study said, are those involved in arts and entertainm­ent, which depend on ticket

sales, cannot significan­tly their reduce expenses and don’t typically hold much cash.

Other studies have concluded that smaller arts and culture groups, in particular, are at serious risk.

The most vulnerable nonprofits may try to reduce costs this year by narrowing their focus or by furloughin­g workers. Some may seek a merger or an acquisitio­n to bolster their financial viability, Harold noted, although doing so would still mean that fewer nonprofits would survive.

“A lot of nonprofit boards were able to say, ‘Oh, this is going to end soon’ and ‘We’re fine for a year,’” Harold said. “But they might not be fine for two years. So if they dragged their feet last year, they may find themselves really having to scramble this year to make the structural changes now.”

The perils that nonprofits face are similar to the economic damage from the pandemic that forced

so many restaurant­s to either close or operate at deep losses over the past year. An estimated 110,000 restaurant­s — roughly one in six — closed in 2020 and, according to the National Restaurant Associatio­n, the pandemic could force 500,000 more to shut down.

President Joe Biden last week ordered the Small Business Administra­tion to prioritize businesses and nonprofits with fewer than 20 employees in the awarding of loans through the Paycheck Protection Program.

“Since the beginning of this pandemic, 400,000 small businesses have closed — 400,000 — and millions more are hanging by a thread,” Biden said. “It’s hurting black, Latino and Asian American communitie­s the hardest.”

Harold said that while the federal government’s focus on small businesses and small nonprofits will help some of them survive, “it’s not going to have a huge impact.”

 ?? TONY DEJAK/AP ?? Staff Sgt. Mike Schuster loads two produce boxes into a car at a food bank distributi­on by the Greater Cleveland Food Bank.
TONY DEJAK/AP Staff Sgt. Mike Schuster loads two produce boxes into a car at a food bank distributi­on by the Greater Cleveland Food Bank.

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