Several years ago (2004), I visited with the leadership of the Foundation Center to talk about my interest in mapping place-based grants and the potential value of such mapping to the philanthropic sector. While I had a very cordial and educational visit with some very smart people, they were clear that this was just too hard to do and too low on their list of priorities. Since the state of mapping technology and its ability to handle such large data-sets wasn't an objection that I could take seriously (and is today, no objection at all), I was most interested in their practical objections to such mapping.
The first practical objection was that you just don't know where the money was spent when you extract the information that you're mapping from the 990-PF's. This is as true today as it was 5 years ago since what you see is the location of the nonprofit headquarters where the grant check was sent. There's no getting around this problem in an automated way until grantmakers start requiring that their grantees supply information on where grant money will be spent (in the case of place-based grants). With tools like Google Earth freely available, it would be trivial to require grant-seekers to supply location information in any application for a place-based grant. Without going into detail, Google Earth and similar programs from ESRI and Microsoft, allow users to quickly and easily map and export any kind of geographic feature in a format that is readable by any program that might potentially have a use for it.
A similar problem that the Foundation Center people brought up was the question of organizations that re-grant money or serve as donor collaboratives. While a solution in this case is less obvious, and thus harder to map, a discussion with the agency's director will usually clear the situation up enough so that you can determine where most of the money was spent. It is important to be clear here that the number of place-based grants that come through collaboratives or are re-grants is still much smaller than the number of grants made directly to the non-profits that will spend the money in a given location. One should also note that this is really a subset of the initial objection, because even when it is clear who will ultimately spend the money, it still may not be clear where the money will actually be spent.
So, what's the step in the right direction? The Foundation Center is now mapping grants in their Foundation Directory Online Professional, BUT they weren't able to deal with their own chief objection to mapping grants: you can't tell where the money was really spent. They've done a great job of mapping the headquarters locations of most of the major non-profits in the country, but after looking at their very attractive maps, you're no closer to knowing where money was actually spent than you were before. If all you care about is how much money went to organizations in given fields in states, cities, zip-codes, or Congressional districts, then you'll be satisfied with their effort. If you want to know where place-based grant money was actually spent, you're still out of luck.
I think the Foundation Center made a good first step here but now it's time for national funders and data-providers to get together and agree on a standard for locating place-based grants and a method for collecting such data so that this incredibly useful technology can be as useful in the non-profit world as it is in the for-profit world.
Kenyan Election Open Data
13 years ago
