the place based approach for grant funding
Post on 21-Oct-2014
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DETAILING THE PLACE-BASED APPROACH
Illinois ResourceNet
Three-Component Strategy
What Has IRN Learned?
Prime Condition for Federal Grant Development
Training and TA are most likely to yield federal grants when delivered at the intersection of organizational readiness and federal opportunity.
A process that yields ongoing resultsA unit of TA resources can generate the most value in federal grant development when one proposal can lead to another … and another … in a process of continuous proposal building. Proposal success is cumulative, especially when carried out in collaborative networks where data can be shared, partnerships can be forged, learning can take place, different program areas can be linked, and diverse resources can be leveraged.
Premises Behind the Place-Based Strategy
First-rate community and regional (or place-based) planning creates the best conditions for continuous grant development in linked, multiple program areas
Some organizations can succeed on their own in the federal grants process, but all organizations are more likely to succeed routinely when working in partnerships.
Partnerships are most likely to form and be sustained in places
The best way for Illinois to move up in the federal grants game is to play the game through great regional and community partnerships – the cumulative opportunities for federal grant development can’t be created at such a scale any other way
IRN’s experience supports the place-based strategy
It’s efficient to work in place: Over half of the proposals IRN has helped to submit originated in three regions: Crawford County area, Henderson County area, and Southland
Regional planning organizations are already “in place,” but IRN provides the valued-added, “laser focus” on federal grants that can support the projects that emerge from their plans
IRN fills a vitally important niche in the place-based development process through its focus on, and expertise in, federal grants
Regional and Community Plans Provide a Matrix for Links with Federal Grant Opportunities
The strategies on the left are among those contained in a Quality of Life Plan in one of Chicago’s community areas. The federal programs across the top are described in the Catalogue of Federal Domestic Assistance. Some matches are very direct; others are indirect in that the federal program’s intent corresponds to some of the local strategy’s intent.
Minority business enterprise centers 11.800
CDFI program 21.020
Safe & drug free schools & communities 84.184
Parental information & resource centers 84.310
Healthy homes technical studies grants 14.906
Parent patrol groups in schools
Community school
Cultural awareness through the arts
Student motivation through urban agriculture
Community health awareness
Center for working families
The value of place-based TAAn investment of resources in TA is most likely to lead to continuous proposal building at the points where readiness meets opportunity; this occurrence can be exploited when the TA provider is well positioned within regional and community networks. Such positioning enables the TA provider to see current and future opportunities & the partnerships that can form to capitalize on them.
IRN Value-Added Role in Place-Based Planning
Whether at the level of planning councils or in entities that do their own planning (municipalities, schools, workforce development boards, for example), IRN provides a vitally important service by being the entity with the continuous focus and the expertise about federal grant possibilities. When positioned in place, IRN TA and training can match local goals and strategies to current and coming federal grant opportunities. Such grants can fund the implementation of local strategies.
IRN Training & TA
Federal Grants
Local planning cycle
The approachAt the community or regional level, propose a one-two-year contract in which IRN would work with existing collaboratives to deliver (not write, but shepherd through intensive TA) at least six federal grant proposals with a combined value far in excess of a $80k-$100k contract. Funders: community foundations, local governments, and state agencies.
IRN has also
learned that …
Although most workshops have not led them directly to grants,
most participants in IRN training value highly the
information and skill-building that they receive. IRN’s
services demystify the federal grants process and show in
practical terms what it takes to be successful in it. There is a hunger for more knowledge and
skill-building.
A Proposed Response for Those Most Hungry: IRN’s Membership-based Federal Grants Academy
eAccess NewslettereAlerts about grant opportunitiesSignificant discounts on registration for IRN workshops and conference
Special training and networking events at IRN annual conference
Special webinars with federal grants experts
A Menu of Offerings for Non-Members
eAccess newsletter subscriptionWorkshops (fee-based - where possible, subsidized by agency or foundation) Stand-alone offerings Offerings in clusters in particular program/policy areas
On-line seminars (fee-based – where possible, subsidized)
Annual conference (fee-based – where possible, subsidized)
Specialized TA (contract-based)
The Test
Would these participants in an IRN workshop on brownfield grants see enough value in IRN membership benefits to subscribe, and at what level? Would their employers?
We’ll continue to test the waters
Listening sessions and individual meetings with clients will help us gauge precisely what they value most from IRN and for what services they or their organizations would be willing to pay.