Dayton Daily News

Aid groups ponder future of community-based help

- By Eden Stiffman

More than a decade ago, Erin Barnes came across data that drove home the importance of grassroots, volunteer-led groups.

The U.S. Forest Service was trying to document all the groups that maintain green space in New York City, of which there were nearly 3,000 in 2007. About three-quarters were led by volunteers, and more than a third had annual budgets of less than $1,000.

“They were literally stewarding all the open green space of New York City,” Barnes says.

This kind of organizing is a key element of civic participat­ion and how social change happens, Barnes says. “There’s so much about this hyperlocal­ism and caring for community that’s so critical to a healthy society.”

Barnes later co-founded Ioby, a nonprofit that serves very small grassroots groups. Ioby — the name stands for “in our backyards” — offers a crowdfundi­ng platform, fundraisin­g coaching, and other assistance.

As the pandemic upended lives and livelihood­s, people around the country came together to help ensure their communitie­s had food, money for rent, childcare assistance, and other basic needs. Many groups organized under the banner of mutual aid, a practice with deep historical roots that continues to exist in many forms.

Mutual aid groups emphasize an egalitaria­n way of providing help with no strings attached. Community-based nonprofits may participat­e in and collaborat­e with mutual aid networks, but the groups themselves are typically volunteer led and unincorpor­ated — often because they prefer it that way.

“There aren’t donors versus constituen­ts versus volunteers, but rather we have this huge overlap of all three,” says Frank Fredericks, who is involved with Astoria Mutual Aid Network in Queens. Everyone has needs, and everyone has something to give back. “There’s this breakdown of these categories, and that’s part of the beauty of mutual aid.”

Ioby launched a program to support 10 mutual aid groups in the New York area. That assistance includes fiscal sponsorshi­p, which allows the groups to accept charitable donations even though they don’t have tax-exempt status themselves.

As local needs have ebbed and flowed, the organizati­ons have evolved. Some are now seeking nonprofit status as a way to attract more funding from foundation­s and businesses so they can continue offering assistance as smaller contributi­ons have waned. Others are working to distribute the money they raised and are considerin­g disbanding.

The groups’ divergent paths show both the promise and the precarious­ness of mutual aid as a way for communitie­s to meet their own needs at a time when other systems fail to deliver.

Before the pandemic, Fredericks hadn’t been involved much locally in Astoria, where he’s lived since 2009.

That changed when he found himself stuck at home and connected with the organizers of the Astoria Mutual Aid Network. The network became a place where many direct services were coalescing — like shopping and delivering food for neighbors, checking in on the elderly, helping people navigate health care or insurance informatio­n. Fredericks helped create a fundraisin­g team, applied for grants, and worked to develop the group’s accounting practices.

He saw the network as an opportunit­y to quickly tap into the people and resources needed to address urgent concerns.

“If that means we’re working with an old-school nonprofit, fine,” he says. “If it means we’re helping start a new nonprofit, fine. If it means we’re getting a government grant, fine. But how do we get it done so that our community is taken care of ?”

That just-get-it-done attitude resonates with Barnes. The structure an organizati­on takes should fit the work, not donors’ expectatio­ns, she says. “You don’t do better work because you have certain indicators of incorporat­ion. You do better work by doing better work.”

Other mutual-aid groups are looking for ways to make their organizing more sustainabl­e.

At the peak of demand, East Brooklyn Mutual Aid provided groceries for 200 families a week in the Ocean Hill-Brownsvill­e community. But as many people have returned to work, there has been a steady decline in the number of people giving and volunteeri­ng, says Kelvin Taitt, one of the group’s co-founders.

“Our fundraisin­g has diminished to where we’ve had to make some very difficult choices in reducing our capacity to deliver groceries to our most vulnerable population­s,” he says.

The group raised a significan­t amount of money using Ioby’s crowdfundi­ng platform. But peer-to-peer donations aren’t enough for the group to continue meeting its mission sustainabl­y, Taitt says.

“We need to make the shift to reaching out to donors who can supply larger resources to build capacity for systems that are fair and equitable in our communitie­s,” he says.

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