The Columbus Dispatch

Columbus Foundation makes $500K donation to Urban League

Group’s CEO says, ‘It’s a game-changer for us’

- Erica Thompson

With a desire to advance racial equity in the region, the Columbus Foundation announced on Wednesday that it will invest $500,000 in the Columbus Urban League.

The unrestrict­ed donation will fund personnel, technology and management systems. That support will bolster the organizati­on’s social justice efforts and work on economic equality.

“It’s a game-changer for us,” said Stephanie Hightower, president and CEO at the Columbus Urban League. “It is really geared toward giving us the ability to work on our social justice and economic empowermen­t nine-pillar agenda. But it’s also going to give us an opportunit­y to innovate and help build capacity (to do the work).”

The Columbus Foundation has funded the Columbus Urban League in the past, but this investment is the largest to date, said Dan Sharpe, vice president for community research and grants management.

“We see this investment as a prime opportunit­y to more deeply invest in an organizati­on’s mission, so they can do their work the best they can,” he said. “We want them to be best positioned to be as strong as they can be.”

While the Columbus Foundation has made a point to support diverse commu

“Right now, we’re in the thick of housing stabilizat­ion. For Black-led female heads of households, the numbers are really huge here in Columbus as it relates to homelessne­ss.”

Stephanie Hightower

Columbus Urban League president and CEO nities for many years, Sharpe said the social justice movement over the past year had an impact.

“We are in a position to absolutely do better, and we’re committed to this over the long-term,” he said. “Philanthro­py is better when we’re informed, and as profession­al grant-makers, we certainly need the relationsh­ips with organizati­ons like the Columbus Urban League to continuous­ly help us be informed about where those needs are in the community so that we can be responsive with philanthro­pic dollars.”

The Columbus Urban League’s nine-pillar agenda includes COVID relief, education, workforce developmen­t, criminal justice reform, voting rights, health care, small business support, access to technology and housing.

“Right now, we’re in the thick of housing stabilizat­ion,” Hightower said. “For Black-led female heads of households, the numbers are really huge here in Columbus as it relates to homelessne­ss.”

Later this month, the organizati­on will host a forum on rebuilding trust between the Black community and police.

The investment by the Columbus Foundation is especially important given “historic philanthro­pic redlining practices” and a pattern of programmin­g-only grants to Black-led organizati­ons, Hightower said. She cited research by Echoing Green and the Bridgespan Group, which shows that unrestrict­ed net assets held by Blackled organizati­ons are 76 percent smaller than their white-led counterpar­ts.

Sharpe said it’s important for the philanthro­pic community to be intentiona­l about those gaps.

“We’re pleased to lead and look forward to our donors co-investing and following us to strengthen Black-led and Black-serving organizati­ons, in addition to all of our residents,” he said.

Though the Columbus Urban League has received an influx of grant support, there were limitation­s on paying for administra­tive costs, Hightower said. That’s why she is “excited and grateful” for the foundation’s investment.

“I have really dedicated people here who are mission-driven in their work,” she said. “What I want to try to do is create an environmen­t where I can help them to work more efficiently, so that they can continue to be effective in this very demanding time. We are at the tip of the spear in this community as it relates to social justice and economic empowermen­t, but I have to have the tools so that we can continue to serve more people.” ethompson@dispatch.com @miss_ethompson

 ?? TIM JOHNSON/CEO ?? Stephanie Hightower, CEO of the Columbus Urban League.
TIM JOHNSON/CEO Stephanie Hightower, CEO of the Columbus Urban League.

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