Archive for November, 2009

The Year-End Financial Juggle - Budget Time

Monday, November 23rd, 2009

It seems that at the end of the year, every year, budget issues start to come up more and more.  Families discuss their finances: How much should we spend on holiday gifts?  Should we buy the plane tickets to visit grandma? What about making charitable donations before December 31  - and getting a tax deduction?  While these discussions are going on across the kitchen table, corporations are undertaking the same exercise across conference room tables and asking the same kind of questions:  where are we against our plan for this year and how much budget will we have next year?   It seems that it’s the time of year when everyone tries to juggle all of the competing financial needs without dropping a ball that has to be caught.

As a foundation, we’re doing the same thing.  Our budget gets divided up a lot like everyone else’s: 1) the gotta dos, 2) the wanna dos and 3) the wish we could, but can’t dos.  We have multi-year commitments to fulfill and core partnerships that we know we will fund; these are the “gotta does,” much like a family has mortgage payments and utilities.  Of course, we make grants throughout the year as nonprofits request support, and we set a budget for how much we will distribute in each of the different areas we support.  It’s akin to treating each grant program we have like a child with an allowance to spend.  They can use it for whatever they want - that is, what ever they “wanna do”, but as I tell my real kids, “When it’s gone, it’s gone.”

And finally, there are the multitude of very worthwhile causes, organizations and people we would like to be able to support, but we just can’t.  This may be because a nonprofit is working in an area that is outside our focus on healthy, affordable homes and sustainable communities.  It may be because a request is related to our focus area, but we don’t think it will produce enough impact or it is too expensive for the outcomes the nonprofit is anticipating.  Our deciding not to fund a request may also be for a reason entirely unrelated to the nonprofit and the request - maybe we’ve already made a number of investments in that city or the timing doesn’t work.

At the end of each year, in fact throughout each day, we are all making choices, and that’s all the more true when it comes to money.  And as we think about charitable giving, the requests seem to grow as we near the end of the year - it is, after all, the season of giving.  So in thinking about what we’ve done this year, what we’ll be able to do during the remainder of it and what we’ll plan to do in 2010, I hope that we’ve made sound decisions.  We know that there are more organizations, more causes and more people who need - who deserve - grants than we would ever be able to support.  We can always wish for additional money, but knowing that our budget is unlikely to increase in the near term,  I hope that we’ve made the most of the funds we do have, that we’re correct in defining what we must do and chose well when we decide what we are able to do.

Celebrating Sustainable Affordable Housing

Friday, November 13th, 2009

This has been an exciting week for all of us at The Home Depot Foundation. Many of us have attended USGBC’s Greenbuild conference as well as the National League of Cities annual conference. At both conferences, we’ve been inspired by the amazing examples of businesses, cities and organizations who are making real progress in building and fostering sustainable communities across the country.

Along with many of the attendees at each of these conferences, the Foundation focuses our work on creating healthy, affordable housing as the cornerstone of creating communities that aren’t just surviving, but are thriving. We all face the same kind of challenges as we try to accomplish this goal:

  • How to created housing that’s healthy and efficient, while also affordable to live in, not just to move into
  • How to ensure there are safe and green outside places for families to walk, play and learn and
  • How to ensure that people have access to good jobs, good schools and the stores and services they need

There’s no question that balancing the economics with the environment – to be sustainable while being affordable – can be difficult. But it can be done with thoughtful design, appropriate product selection and responsible building.

This morning, The Home Depot Foundation is especially proud to be recognizing some impressive examples of affordable housing developments that show that finding that balance not only can be done, but that it can be done extraordinarily well. At this morning’s closing plenary session at Greenbuild in Phoenix, we are announcing the winners of our annual Awards of Excellence for Affordable Housing. Through this awards program, we celebrate the innovative and creative work of the nonprofit sector in building affordable housing to “green” standards. We have presented these awards for five years now, and we continue to be blown away by the quality of the nominated projects. We know you will be as impressed and inspired by our winners as we are.

The awards are given in two different categories: homeownership and rental housing. The award recipients were selected based on a number of criteria, including the physical design and building performance, as well as how well they met the needs of the local community while maintaining affordability for the residents.

The first place winner in the Home Ownership category is Habitat for Humanity, St. Louis, MO. The project they completed in the Jeff-Vander-Lou neighborhood in Midtown St. Louis is amazing. They built 27 single family homes that are 49 percent more energy efficient than homes built to code. In addition, the homes meet the U.S. Green Building Council’s LEED Platinum standards and earned the EPA’s Indoor Air Package (IAP) certification. The economics of the project were equally amazing – HFHSL was able to build to green standards without adding any incremental costs to the development by utilizing available rebates and incentives. View the case study and the video.

The first place winner in the Rental category is National Community Renaissance (National CORE), La Quinta, CA. This landmark project turned a distressed mobile home park into a beautiful and affordable 80-unit green housing development, called Vista Dunes, which meets LEED Platinum standards. Meeting this stringent certification standard added no incremental costs to the project. As a result of energy-efficient building, residents typically have 67% lower utility bills than homes built to standard code in the area. View the case study and the video.

The runner up in the Rental category is the Office of Rural Farm-Worker Housing in Yakima, WA.. The 26 rental townhomes they built at Pear Tree Place are certified by Enterprise’s Green Communities program. As a result of the quality construction, residents, who typically earn less than $40,000 annually usually save 35 percent on their energy bills and 31 percent on their water bills, yet greening the project added less than 1% to the total development costs. View the case study and the video.

I hope that you will take a few minutes to read the case studies and view the videos about each of these winners. What they’ve been able to do not only demonstrates the practicality of building green, but they are also making a substantial difference in the lives of hundreds of low to moderate income families by ensuring they have access to quality, healthy housing that is affordable to live in over the long-term.

Congrats to both Greenbuild and NLC for organizing great, informative conferences this week. And thanks for letting The Home Depot Foundation be part of both!

Greenbuild Begins with Real Progress

Wednesday, November 11th, 2009

I’m in Phoenix at Greenbuild, the US Green Building Council’s annual mass gathering of enviro building professionals.  USGBC started out just focusing on commercial buildings - skyscrapers and fancy office buildings, but yesterday we were here talking about affordable housing.  We had about 130 representatives of nonprofit organizations, architecture firms, city housing officials and greenbuilding experts, each of whom wanted to learn more about how to create homes that are more affordable and healthier for families of modest means.  In particular, we talked about rehabbing existing homes, senior housing and transit-oriented developments, which is a fancy way of saying homes near train and subway stations and bus stops.

The speakers and panels were great and imparted a huge amount of information about existing projects, best practices and lessons learned.  In the afternoon, though, the real action began when we broke up into small working groups to discuss 9 projects from throughout the country that are still in the pre-development or design phase.  The key here was that the construction manager was able to talk to experts and peers about how to make their projects more efficient and healthier while still staying within their budget.   Because these are projects that are going to be built and that are still in a phase where changes can be made, all the participants were very engaged and excited about the conversation.  It wasn’t just a theoretical exercise.

At the end of the day, each group did a short report out.  Without exception, every project manager saw that they could build a project that would meet a national green building standard (in several cases, LEED Platinum) and stay withing their budget - WOW!  That’s a real accomplishment with 9 projects that ranged from a large Hope VI redevelopment of public housing to the renovation of a high school to be an apartment building to a Habitat house!  Even better, in just a few hours, we had project managers come to see that green wasn’t scary, overly complicated or expensive.  One even proclaimed to the crowd that he had been cynical about green building, but that he had been converted!

We’ll keep tabs on what happens as these projects come out of the ground and families actually move into them, and report back to you.  The 30,000 attendees of the Greenbuild conference are streaming into Phoenix, with meetings starting today.  On Friday, we’ll be presenting the Foundation’s Awards of Excellence for Affordable Housing Built Responsibly - check back for the winners and case studies - to an audience of almost 10,000.  But, in terms of real progress and truly making a difference, I think Greenbuild has already been a success.

An Exciting Day in Atlanta

Wednesday, November 4th, 2009

It’s an exciting day for us.  I know, it’s just Wednesday, it’s November 4th, election results are in, Halloween’s passed, Thanksgiving’s not here yet and it’s getting a little cold.  But in Atlanta, for The Home Depot Foundation, it’s our 4th annual “Building Community Day.”  It’s exciting for us because on this day each year, we select 20 nonprofits in the area who work outside of our focus on healthy, affordable housing, and we recognize and celebrate the outstanding work they do to impact our community and make Atlanta a better place.

As you’ll see below, they work in a diverse range of issues, but each makes a significant contribution.  The Foundation is typically very focused in our work, believing that we can only have a significant, tangible impact if we limit the investments we make to housing and sustainability.  In our hometown, however, we make exceptions to that, and we support a number of organizations that enhance Atlanta in different ways.  After all, we are all working to make this a better community, we just come at it from different vantages, whether that be from the perspective of bringing the arts to life, improving healthcare or educating young people.

Amazingly, even after four years, the participants don’t know that at the end of the day, they will each receive $20,000 to support their work however their Board chair directs.  We will have the recipients from prior years - all of whom seem to be good a keeping a “secret” -  there to celebrate with their colleagues.  Even in this day of $1 million gifts and of federal budgets in the billions and trillions, an unexpected gift like this will make a great difference for nonprofits working to help people through this trying economic time.  Stayed tuned and we’ll share their stories of what their grant allowed them to do.

Now, I’m trusting you to keep the secret, but here are the organizations that will share in the $400,000 of grants we are making today and a statement of their mission.  I hope you join me in congratulating them and support them or similar organizations in your community.

Arthritis Foundation, Georgia Chapter: To improve lives through leadership in the prevention, control and cure of arthritis and related diseases

Atlanta Legal Aid:  To provide referrals and legal representation to people who otherwise cannot obtain access to the court system

Boy Scouts of American, Atlanta Area Council:  To prepare young people to make ethical choices over their lifetimes by instilling in them the values of the Scout oath and law

Bremen Jewish Heritage Museum: To collect, preserve, interpret and teach about Jewish history, in particular the Holocaust and the experiences of Jews

Camp Twin Lakes: To offer year-round recreation, therapeutic and educational programs for children facing serious illnesses and other physical, emotional and life challenges

Center for Pan Asian Community Services: To create and deliver culturally competent and comprehensive social and healthy services to counteract problems faces by immigrants, refugees, and racial-ethnic minorities

Communities in Schools Georgia: To improve student and school success by providing needed support and services to students and schools

Ferst Foundation for Childhood Literacy:  To promote family involvement in achieving early school success for their children and to address adult illiteracy by motivating parents to read daily to their children

Foster Care Support Foundation:  To strengthen the ability of foster families to meet the needs of their foster children by providing a community based resource and education

Girl Scouts of Northwest Georgia:  To help hirls develop self-esteem, develop meaningful values for their lives and improve society through service

HeroBox:  To provide custom support to our solidiers deployed overseas, by providing items they need and want while they are away from home defending our freedom

Historic Oakland Foundation: To cultivate resources to assist the City of Atlanta in the preservation, restoration and beautification of historic Oakland Cemetery and to promote it as a local cultural resource and as a historic site of national importance

Junior Achievement of Georgia:  Using hands-on experiences, JA of Georgia brings the real world to over 100,000 students each year, opening their minds to their full potential by bridging the business and education communities

Komen for the Cure: To eradicate breast cancer as a life-threatening disease by advancing research, education, screening and treatments

Salvation Army:  To preach the gospel of Jesus Christ and meet human needs in Jesus’ name without discrimination

Special Olympics Georgia:  To provide year-round sports training and athletic competition for children and adults with intellectual disabilities

Tommy Nobis Center:  To develop and provide job training and employment for youth and adults with disabilities and other barriers to employment

Travelers Aid (Hope Atlanta):  Dedicated to the prevention of homelessness in our community and combating it whenever it arises

WPBA:  Public Broadcasting Atlanta educates, entertains and empowers by broadcasting perspectives, creating joy, expanding knowledge and connecting people to each other and the world

YWCA of Northwest Georgia:  To eliminate racism, empower women and promote peach, justice, freedom and dignity for all