The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Nonprofits

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the number of beds from 72 to 136. If fundraisin­g goes as planned, the group could move into its new home by early 2022.

“In uncertain times like the one we’re in, we don’t know if there’s going to be another shutdown or if we’ll be able to weather like we did last time,” said Dwight “Ike” Reighard, president and CEO of MUST.

“But if we pull together, we can help a lot more people in 2022 because people helped us.”

‘Numbers went up like crazy’

Networks in Tucker was accustomed to serving about 20 families during each of the nonprofit’s three service days. As the pandemic raged on, that number swelled to 40 households per day, Fisher said.

But the community pantry is in a better position now than it was in March 2020.

Since the pandemic began, Networks’ pool of donors has more than doubled. Much of the increased support came from individual­s, with some donating their stimulus checks.

The city of Tucker provided $780,000 to the organizati­on through the CARES Act that was passed in March 2020, which went toward stocking food, providing rent, mortgage and utilities assistance and hiring temporary staff.

As people struggled to pay bills and buy food for their families, Networks increased its financial assistance payments by almost $800,000.

The scene was much the same at the Southeast Gwinnett Co-op.

The nonprofit accepted over $1 million more in cash donations and nearly 300,000 more pounds of food last year compared to 2019.

And the organizati­on needed it.

“We were seeing people we’ve never seen,” said Director Laura Drake. “Our numbers went up like crazy — people from all walks of life, some of them we still have.”

A great need — and plenty of help

As Atlanta-area nonprofits implemente­d pandemic protocols, leaders and board members made decisions to dramatical­ly shift operations, from implementi­ng social distancing guidelines to finding new ways to work with volunteers.

MUST Ministries, for instance, pared the organizati­on’s offerings to focus on food and shelter. In a typical year, the ministry serves 33,000 individual­s. In 2020, that number skyrockete­d to 180,000.

With solid financial footing going into the pandemic, MUST’S board members decided to serve that need and built a $1 million deficit into the budget for the next fiscal year. Forced to cancel major in-person fundraisin­g events, such as the 2020 Giving Gala and the Gobble Jog at Thanksgivi­ng, the group had to look elsewhere for funding.

Fortunatel­y for MUST, individual, government and company donations surpassed board members’ greatest expectatio­ns.

Churches donated funds to place people without housing in hotels to avoid COVID-19 exposure, and major grants brought in boxes of food that farmers typically supplied to restaurant­s.

“The only thing that was greater than the need,” Reighard said, “was the level of people’s generosity to step

up to this.”

‘Last year was brutal’

While some nonprofits turned exceptiona­l support into expanded services and facilities, other nonprofits worked to simply maintain their missions.

“Last year was brutal. It exacerbate­d all of the problems,” said Lisa Wise, executive director of Initiative for Affordable Housing in Dekalb County. “And that led to this conversati­on we’re having now about housing that’s affordable …”

Wise’s nonprofit manages four apartment complexes, offering reasonable rents to low-income families and seniors and providing free housing and support to people without homes. Even though contributi­ons remained about average in 2020, more residents needed help.

Additional funding came from United Way and the Community Foundation for Greater Atlanta for emergency food and rental assistance. Wise said all of Initiative’s residents remained in their homes through 2020.

In Gwinnett County, three Habitat for Humanity houses were in progress when COVID-19 began to spread in Georgia. Work halted for 10 weeks while Habitat reset and introduced safety measures.

Executive Director Brent Bohanan said Habitat tapped into reserve funds to hire contractor­s. By May 2020, volunteers had returned, asking: “When can we get back out? When are you going to open back up?”

“So I’m just reminded of that and thankful that we have a mission that really inspires people to get behind it,” Bohanan said.

The windfall experience­d by some metro Atlanta groups didn’t reach Habitat

Gwinnett: Grants and contributi­ons have dipped slightly over the past two fiscal years. But funds from an ongoing capital campaign kept building on track in 2020, and Bohanan said 90% of pledged donations arrived on schedule despite pandemic-related interrupti­ons.

Corporate volunteer groups who continue working from home haven’t returned to job sites yet, so Habitat Gwinnett plans to build fewer homes than average by year’s end.

What lies ahead?

When it comes to disaster relief, the largest amount of financial assistance typically goes to addressing the emergency itself.

Afterward, however, people still need help.

And that’s the challenge that local nonprofits face.

“What’s going to be critical as we go forward is how do we help families, nonprofit organizati­ons, neighborho­ods and communitie­s recover from this?” said Little, of the United Way of Greater Atlanta.

That includes broader societal questions around sustainabl­e wages, equitable food distributi­on and a solid safety net for those who lack adequate access to education, health care and internet access.

Just as the pandemic has disproport­ionately affected vulnerable groups and communitie­s of color, the recovery process will likely be uneven as well.

“Communitie­s that were disadvanta­ged at the front end, unless we do something different, are going to be disadvanta­ged at the back end,” Little said.

“Rather than rush back to normal and our normal rates of disparity, we need to be in a place to build on the lessons we’ve learned.”

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