Los Angeles Times

L.A. County, foundation­s craft public-private solutions

A partnershi­p ensures that funds can be moved quickly to where the community needs them most.

- By Corie Brown

Wendy Garen, the recently retired president and chief executive of the Ralph M. Parsons Foundation, likes to say that problems that seem to defy solutions — homelessne­ss, injustice, child welfare issues — are too big for philanthro­py to solve.

“We’re pocket dust,” she says, referring not just to the roughly $20 million the Parsons Foundation gives each year to groups like the Coalition for Responsibl­e Community Developmen­t but to philanthro­py dollars across Los Angeles.

While Garen believes that progressiv­e philanthro­pies such as the Weingart Foundation and the California Endowment are right about the need to support marginaliz­ed communitie­s by fixing broken public systems, directing unrestrict­ed funds to community activists was a nonstarter at Parsons.

Instead, the foundation shifted to the public side of the equation, getting philanthro­pic dollars inside government bureaucrac­ies to seed innovation.

The result was a union of the public and the private: the Center for Strategic Partnershi­ps within the Los Angeles County Chief Executive Office.

Garen — along with Fred Ali, former president of the Weingart Foundation, and Christine Essel, president and CEO of Southern California Grantmaker­s, which represents hundreds of regional foundation­s and corporate funders — was instrument­al in the creation of the center, which opened in 2016. The Annenberg Foundation provided early support and continues to do so.

In the seven years that philanthro­pies have been working directly with county staff, $41.5 million in private funds have supported a wide range of public-private initiative­s, according to Kate Anderson, executive director of the partnershi­p center.

Before the center’s creation, private philanthro­pies thought the county considered them a cash machine, says Joe Nicchitta, L.A. County’s chief operating officer — and the county believed philanthro­pies funded only what they wanted, regardless of what the community needed.

“There is now a true partnershi­p between L.A. County and philanthro­py,” he says.

Once mutual trust was establishe­d, Anderson says, private funds could move quickly to wherever the county needed them most — particular­ly helpful in times of crisis. During the COVID-19 pandemic, the center fast-tracked private funds to pay for county services that included child care for emergency workers and Wi-Fi hot spots for students struggling to connect remotely with teachers.

It’s a model that other local government­s are considerin­g, Anderson says.

One of the big-ticket projects is the county Department of Youth Developmen­t, created in June 2022 with a $50.6-million budget for programs to keep at-risk youth out of juvenile jails — and, especially, out from under the authority of the Probation Department.

The Probation Department has struggled for decades to safely care for young offenders. Juvenile halls have been plagued by staffing issues, drug overdoses, fights and beatings. Some facilities were stripped of their certificat­ions to operate. This year, the county reopened one juvenile hall, and a few days later, a gun was found inside.

The strong correlatio­n between the population of youths caught up in the juvenile justice system and those involved in L.A. County’s foster-care system has made improving foster care a top priority for Garen.

“About 1,200 kids a year emancipate from foster care,” she says. “We know from research that within two years, half of those kids are homeless . ... Two years after that, half of those children are permanentl­y off track, broken.”

The Times reported this year that attorneys from four law firms had filed a complaint saying the state and county were “shirking their responsibi­lity to ensure foster youths between the ages of 16 and 21 have a safe and stable place to live.”

When youths age out of foster care, “we throw them in the river, only to fish them out half-drowned downstream,” says Garen. “Can’t we just not throw them in the river?”

Research from the Annie E. Casey Foundation shows that foster youths do better when they are placed with relatives rather than strangers, Garen says. With support from the partnershi­p center, the county now prioritize­s family placements, hiring a dedicated team to track down relatives who might foster children who are in the system.

In the meantime, local philanthro­pists have been working on an ambitious project to support youths who age out of the foster system.

Last year, Garen brought Anderson together with her counterpar­ts at Weingart, the Conrad N. Hilton Foundation, Ballmer Group and other philanthro­pies for a brainstorm­ing session. The result: a $750-million proposal to create housing with wrap-around services, jointly funded by L.A. County and philanthro­pic foundation­s.

“The foundation­s listened to the voices of foster youth,” says David Ambroz, an advocate for those in foster care, who supports the project.

 ?? Jason Armond Los Angeles Times ?? THE CENTER for Strategic Partnershi­ps at the L.A. County Chief Executive Office is led by Kate Anderson, left, and was created with the aid of Wendy Garen, right, former head of the Ralph M. Parsons Foundation.
Jason Armond Los Angeles Times THE CENTER for Strategic Partnershi­ps at the L.A. County Chief Executive Office is led by Kate Anderson, left, and was created with the aid of Wendy Garen, right, former head of the Ralph M. Parsons Foundation.

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