The Dance Current

Clicking Refresh

Can COVID-19 emergency granting measures make the funding game more equitable?

- BY KALLEE LINS

When COVID-19 boarded up theatres and studios across Canada, thousands of artists lost significan­t portions of their incomes. But it wasn’t just individual­s; the pandemic also short-circuited earned revenue streams for several cultural organizati­ons. Grant-makers then became a vital lifeline to support these organizati­ons that could no longer rely on box-office sales or fundraisin­g galas to balance their budgets.

Grants, both public and private, make up a significan­t portion of funding for Canadian artists and arts organizati­ons. The landscape of funders supporting arts and culture initiative­s is complex and includes arts councils at local, provincial and national levels; government department­s and ministries; community foundation­s; as well as family and corporate foundation­s.

Recognizin­g the need to act quickly, many organizati­ons created new programs and funding streams to respond to financial pressures caused by the pandemic. Initiative­s like Vancouver Foundation’s Community Response Fund and Toronto Arts Council’s TOArtist COVID-19 Response Fund directly addressed emergent needs within arts communitie­s, and the Government of Canada relied on the existing granting infrastruc­ture of the Canada Council for the Arts, Canadian Heritage, Telefilm Canada and the Canada Media Fund to disperse $500 million in emergency aid to the cultural sector.

In addition to this influx, many grantors also provided support by adjusting their usual demands on grant recipients. Reporting deadlines were extended; applicatio­n forms were shortened and streamline­d; funds were released earlier than scheduled; and greater flexibilit­y was provided in how money was spent. By helping organizati­ons respond to COVID-19, funders were shifting decades-long practices that tend to place huge administra­tive burdens on small organizati­ons and have served to maintain the obvious unequal power dynamics between funders and fund recipients. So, can these emergency measures designed to just get organizati­ons through the crisis actually change these long-standing issues?

I spoke with three profession­als from very different organizati­ons about what they think the legacy of COVID-19 will be on the relationsh­ip between funders and those they support and whether they think these positive shifts in granting practices will continue longterm. Aine McGlynn is the COO of The Good Partnershi­p, an organizati­on that supports the fundraisin­g and operationa­l needs of small and medium-sized non-profits across Canada.

Megan Tate is the director of community grants at The Winnipeg Foundation, founded in 1921 and – according to its website – Canada’s oldest community foundation, which supports a range of causes and projects that benefit Manitobans. Soraya Peerbaye is the program officer for dance at the Ontario Arts Council. (For transparen­cy, I’d like to note that The Dance Current is funded in part through an Ontario Arts Council operating grant.) Despite their different positions in the granting ecosystem, there was an overall sense that meaningful reforms are possible if communitie­s keep up the pressure.

Aine McGlynn on funder privilege and the potential for backslidin­g to bad practices

Kallee Lins: What were you seeing as the biggest issues in the funder-fundee relationsh­ip prior to the pandemic?

Aine McGlynn: Well, the biggest issues ... I don’t know where to start. I can give you some examples of things that were challengin­g from the actual technical process by which [funders] invite people to submit grants all the way to the funding strategy. A really pedantic, simple example of difficult practices is not providing your potential grantees with a list of the questions that are going to be in the grant. It’s a really simple thing. Most people don’t compose their grant applicatio­ns actually in your grant submission tool; they do so in collaborat­ive documents because they get feedback from teams. So, when you don’t provide a list of those questions and you only provide the applicatio­n, you make things infinitely more difficult for your grantees to just even fill out an applicatio­n.

I think grantors don’t often spend enough time understand­ing what kind of data the grantee is collecting as a part of their normal course of defining their progress against their mission. Instead, they consistent­ly impose their own evaluation metrics, their own KPIs [key performanc­e indicators] – which is understand­able, but they do so onto a small organizati­on that all of a sudden now has to completely revisit their evaluation tools. Doing that work is difficult anyway, so if an organizati­on has that done for themselves, and then they’re asked to redo [their evaluation] for every single granting relationsh­ip, you can imagine the kind of nightmare that creates.

I think that there’s still an unequal power dynamic, obviously, between the funders and those that they’re funding. And I think that there’s more than a little bit of paternalis­m and a ‘we know best’ sort of top-down direction from the funder down to the organizati­on. So, I think that dynamic continues to plague the sector. ... I think that it stifles the voices of those who are supposed to be the beneficiar­ies of charitable efforts. If we’re not building the priorities from the ground up and from their lived experience, but instead from some kind of disconnect­ed, academic, largely white, largely wealthy world view, like, what are we going to get?

KL: What have you seen – in working with all of the clients that you work with – in terms of the kinds of adaptation­s and accommodat­ions that have been offered during COVID-19?

AM: Internally as a team, we communicat­e via Slack and we’ve created a channel called COVID Kindness where we’re popping in stories of funders responding really beautifull­y to our clients’ request to, for example, change programmin­g funds to unrestrict­ed funds, deciding to release next [year’s disburseme­nt] or the year after as funds now and unrestrict­ing them, proactivel­y reaching out to their grantees with additional supports or additional emergency funds. All of those are the right things to be doing.

I hope that funders have their ears to the ground a little bit more so than they might have in the past. Perhaps as a result of COVID but also, I think, as a result of the revolution around racial justice, that there is significan­t unlearning to do in terms of the funding decisions that are made and how those decisions are made.

– AINE MCGLYNN –

I would say that a lot of the applicatio­ns that we’ve seen as well, where there’s COVIDspeci­fic ones, the applicatio­ns are just simplified. It does make you think, like, if I was advising funders or speaking to funders, I’d say, ‘Do an audit of all of your intake tools. And tell me, what is the data you actually look at and you actually use to make your decisions? Because I guarantee you there are about 10 fields that you never even look at.’ I think the fact that funders are releasing money without asking these kinds of questions, [shows] you don’t have to ask these kinds of questions to get money into the hands of the organizati­ons who know best what to do with it.

KL: Yeah. In my mind, it’s really broken down that assumption that more data equals greater trust. So, how many of these measures do you think will actually stick and persist post-pandemic?

AM: If I’m really honest, I don’t think any of them will. I think we’re going to go quickly back to the way things were. I don’t know. Maybe I’m feeling a bit cynical today. But there’s no real impetus. There is no larger accountabi­lity that funders have to live up to with respect to their funding practices. I hope that they recognize that there is an advantage to pace, that they didn’t necessaril­y need to have all of their review committee members sitting around the table once every six months in order to make funding decisions; they could do this rapidly and quickly. And I would love to think that they enjoyed the pace of that and they saw that as productive.

KL: What do you think the legacy of COVID-19 will be on the funder-fundee relationsh­ip?

AM: I hope that funders have their ears to the ground a little bit more so than they might have in the past. Perhaps as a result of COVID but also, I think, as a result of the revolution around racial justice, that there is significan­t unlearning to do in terms of the funding decisions that are made and how those decisions are made. I think that the ones that are prepared to listen with humility, and lead with trust, will be ones who continue to, to move towards more unrestrict­ed funds, quicker decisions and more trust-based philanthro­py. That’s the hardest barrier to cross.

Megan Tate on rapid-response possibilit­ies and the limits of donor-supported funds

KL: Thinking about grant-making processes, how would you describe The Winnipeg Foundation’s priorities prior to the pandemic? Were there any changes or reforms in the works before COVID-19?

Megan Tate: We surveyed our grantees because we wanted to hear back from them how we were doing. For the most part, they thought that we were doing OK, but they did have some suggestion­s for how we could improve our processes from applicatio­n through to final decision and beyond. We were in the process of thinking about how we could implement some of those changes.

I always talk about something; I call it ‘right-sized grant-making.’ So, as a community foundation, we grant to the full spectrum of community organizati­ons, everything from community services to, of course, arts and culture, but we also support a wide range of projects. And currently, if you’re asking for $5,000 to put on a small festival or you’re asking for $100,000 to launch a pilot program, the applicatio­n process is kind of the same. We were starting to have conversati­ons about what that might look like in terms of exactly, as I said, right-sized grant-making; that the informatio­n we require for that $5,000 request might be different than what we require for that $100,000 request or a multi-year request. Where we were at was really in the listening to grantee stage, the internal conversati­on stage, the selecting the grants management system stage. Um, and then COVID hit.

We trust that [organizati­ons] know what is best for them to be able to do the work that they do in their community.

– MEGAN TATE –

KL: How did the foundation respond to pressures in the community caused by COVID-19, and specifical­ly, what were those kinds of accommodat­ions and adaptation­s that were extended to them?

MT: First, we quickly proactivel­y made grants to local community organizati­ons that we knew were on the front line of serving our most vulnerable community members. You know, those addressing shelter, food security, those kinds of things. And the second thing that we did was we reached out to all of our grantees to say, we recognize that your circumstan­ces have changed, so if you have an outstandin­g grant with The Winnipeg Foundation, we’re going to be really flexible with that outstandin­g grant commitment. That means we recognize the project that we supported might get put on pause, and you’re not able to complete it in the original timelines and that’s totally fine but also that your organizati­on, because of COVID, might have more pressing needs than the project that was funded.

We continue to provide emergency support for those front-line organizati­ons, but we knew that the entire charitable sector was hurting. It just hurts my heart because, you know, performanc­es were being cancelled, gala fundraisin­g events were being cancelled.

Particular­ly for the arts and culture community, their earned revenue is a significan­t portion of their annual budget and so with that gone, it’s challengin­g. Also, for larger arts institutio­ns, they often have their own capital. Our Royal Winnipeg Ballet has a whole building that they still have to take care of.

In May, we launched something called stabilizat­ion grants. Any local charitable organizati­on, or a national organizati­on that had a local presence, could apply for up to $50,000 either to cover revenue that they lost as a result of COVID-19 or to support any additional costs that they incurred because of COVID-19, so that’s everything from having to set staff up to work remotely from home to additional cleaning supplies and PPE. It really depended on the organizati­on. We launched that program in May. Applicatio­ns were due at the end of May, and we made our decisions at the end of June. The goal was a really quick turnaround because we knew organizati­ons were being really challenged financiall­y by this. Organizati­ons had to answer four or five questions. We didn’t ask for any attachment­s. We didn’t ask for budgets. We didn’t ask for audited financial statements. It was very streamline­d and the work was on our end using our existing knowledge of community organizati­ons.

KL: Do you think any of those new processes may stick around?

MT: I hope so. I think, in terms of the flexibilit­y and the nimbleness, that will stay. We turn 100 in 2021, so that means we have generation­s of discretion­ary funds that have been entrusted with us, and that does allow us to be really nimble and to be able to respond to whatever the most pressing, urgent need is in our community. So that’s always been an advantage.

The turnaround time, I would love to say we could keep that. At the end of the day, we were trusted by donors to steward those funds, and so there is always going to be that due diligence component on our end to make sure we’re stewarding those gifts. I think there’ll be a happy medium in that [we’ll] be able to respond maybe more quickly than we have traditiona­lly. And I think that’s where the rightsized grant-making comes in as well.

KL: What do you think the legacy of this moment will be on that grantor-grantee relationsh­ip?

MT: I hope they don’t become clichés, but we talk about trust-based grant-making as well, and those trusting relationsh­ips that we have with community organizati­ons. We trust that they know what is best for them to be able to do the work that they do in their community. That has become even more front and centre in our work, and I think that that will be a lasting legacy of this.

I think community organizati­ons, now they know what funders can do. That genie’s out of the bottle, right? I think that community organizati­ons are going to come to expect that from their funding partners. So, I do think that’ll be a legacy.

Soraya Peerbaye on the intersecti­onal challenges of COVID-19

KL: In your role as program officer, how have you been supporting dance communitie­s throughout the pandemic?

Soraya Peerbaye: With dance in particular – because it is contact-based, it is proximityb­ased, it is all about, you know, physical interactio­n between the artists and with the public – I think there was very much a sense of an existentia­l crisis. I would say that for me, and the program officers I work with, it was both a role of consulting but also, you know, being available to really listen and to really witness what artists were experienci­ng. So, I think the role has been to be as available as possible, knowing that artists are making incredibly

I think crisis response really foreground­s equity responsive­ness; it asks us how to support artists, arts organizati­ons and the arts sector in building resiliency in the long term.

– SORAYA PEERBAYE –

time-sensitive decisions in a situation where the informatio­n is changing by the day.

KL: Can you tell me about some of those specific accommodat­ions that were provided to grant recipients?

[Our work] has to recognize that human dimension, the dimension of how these programs function in an applicant’s daily life, in questions of survival and thriving.

– SORAYA PEERBAYE –

SP: Well, the first thing we did in April was to extend all the spring project program deadlines by two weeks to provide additional time for applicants to adjust their plans and particular­ly to develop any COVID-19 contingenc­y plans to their applicatio­ns. We released operating grants for organizati­ons in the OAC operating grant stream to respond to the cash flow that these organizati­ons needed to sustain their operations.

For project programs, we supported artists who needed to postpone their activity, who needed to change it – sometimes radically. We allowed them to redirect funds to artists’ fees, to non-recoverabl­e costs, to cancellati­ons costs and invited contingenc­y plans as part of new project applicatio­ns.

We’ve also recognized that this is a time of collective learning, of re-envisionin­g what can be done, that even the contingenc­y plans that someone may formulate at the time of the applicatio­n may, the next day, have to change. As the situation changes, and changes again, we have been charging peer assessors to review those contingenc­y plans in a spirit of generosity, respect and trust. If they’re supporting their project, it’s also because they’re trusting the artists to have an imaginativ­e, creative capacity to respond to different circumstan­ces.

We also immediatel­y began developing the Arts Response Initiative (ARI). OAC redirected funds from the Chalmers Arts Fellowship, as well as market developmen­t projects and market developmen­t travel assistance programs, to help Ontario artists and arts organizati­ons respond to the challenges posed by the pandemic.

We’re learning a lot from that in terms of reading these applicatio­ns now. That’s the kind of program that will help us reimagine how we can serve. Programs are continuing to support arts creation, production and presentati­on, or disseminat­ion and arts engagement activities, many with expanded eligibilit­y related to COVID. We also began participat­ion in a survey to gather high level indicators on the early impact of COVID-19 on the OAC funded organizati­ons. That was the beginning of really focusing on the immediate needs of the arts community by learning as much as we could about the issues they were facing and changing our processes to offer as much flexibilit­y as possible.

KL: Do you have a sense that any of those measures will continue on in the future in some form?

SP: Well, you know, one of the things that was disrupted by COVID was actually our strategic plan. We planned to begin working on the next strategic planning process this past spring when the pandemic changed everything, but that process is going to be restarting now. And I think, if in a strange way, the timing is fortuitous in that it allows us to really engage with the community to talk about the role that we play, what it is that artists and arts organizati­ons and communitie­s are wanting us to play. I would say we are having a lot of conversati­ons about what elements of crisis response are essential to grant-making in all circumstan­ces.

The ARI was designed to be as simple as we could make it. We continue to think about that, how we simplify our processes, how we streamline our questions … as we try to alleviate the stress that artists and arts practition­ers are experienci­ng. A conversati­on that I’m really interested in is the function of the applicatio­n. And I think we’re really asking ourselves, what is it that we need to know through applicatio­n processes, not only to assess applicatio­ns but

to really understand the field in which our programs operate given that that field is now wholly transforme­d.

KL: Something I’ve been thinking about is, it’s not just COVID that we’re experienci­ng at this moment, but of course there’s such a heightened sensitivit­y to equity concerns within organizati­ons and how that’s embedded in organizati­onal infrastruc­ture. So, I’m wondering if you could speak to how that’s currently being reflected in the conversati­ons that the OAC is having right now.

SP: We do think of this crisis as an intersecti­onal crisis. I think COVID-19 is inextricab­ly linked with what happened afterwards with the Black Lives Matter movement. And the conversati­ons that are going on between funding agencies is very much about how COVID is refocusing our attention. I think crisis response really foreground­s equity responsive­ness; it asks us how to support artists, arts organizati­ons and the arts sector in building resiliency in the long term. And resiliency is about a lot of things. In part it’s about interdepen­dence. It’s not necessaril­y that these were new or different considerat­ions before, but the way they are piercing us, you know, the sharp focus into which they’re coming, I think is quite high.

KL: What do you think the legacy of COVID-19 and this moment that we’re in will be on the funder-fundee relationsh­ip going forward?

SP: How do we carry this forward? There’s that long-standing equity approach that when you reach people on the margins, you’re reaching everyone. I think that’s a conversati­on that has deepened and widened during this time. I think also how it’s not only a crisis. It is also a fundamenta­l [moment] of building meaningful relationsh­ips between the funding agencies and the communitie­s that we serve. [Our work] has to recognize that human dimension, the dimension of how these programs function in an applicant’s daily life, in questions of survival and thriving.

These conversati­ons have been edited for clarity.

Kallee Lins is a communicat­ions specialist and non-profit manager based in Toronto. She is the publisher at The Dance Current.

Sommaire

Quand la COVID-19 a contraint les théâtres et les studios à fermer, des milliers d’artistes ont perdu une part importante de leurs revenus. Mais ce n’est pas seulement les particulie­rs ; la pandémie a aussi court-circuité les rentrées de nombreux organismes culturels. Les subvention­naires sont devenus une bouée de sauvetage pour ces organismes qui ne pouvaient plus compter sur les revenus de billetteri­e ou les galas de levée de fonds pour équilibrer leur budget. Constatant le besoin d’agir vite, plusieurs subvention­naires ont créé de nouveaux programmes et d’options de financemen­t pour répondre aux pressions économique­s de la pandémie. Plusieurs ont aussi soutenu la communauté en ajustant leurs exigences envers les récipienda­ires de bourse. En aidant les organismes à répondre à la COVID-19, les subvention­naires étaient en rupture avec des pratiques vielles de quelques décennies qui tendent à placer un fardeau administra­tif considérab­le sur de petites compagnies et qui contribuen­t aux dynamiques de pouvoir visiblemen­t inégales entre subvention­naires et récipienda­ires. Alors, ces mesures d’urgence conçues pour soutenir les organismes en temps de crise peuvent-elles influencer ces sempiterne­lles questions au-delà de la pandémie ?

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