A Declaration of Nonprofit Rights

Sunrise on Wall Street in New York City

Sunrise on Wall Street in New York City Shutterstock

Wild Apricot has the details on dozens of free nonprofit-related webinars happening this month. The offerings include a crash course in engaging the volunteers of the future, crowdfunding, fundraising, media relations, and the ins and outs of catching a thief in your midst. Check out the full list here.

 

The Metropolitan Council On Jewish Poverty has won a $1.46 million contract from the New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene. The money will fund senior services, according to the City Record.

 

The Fortune Society will livestream a discussion this morning on solitary confinement. Albert Woodfox, author of “Solitary: Unbroken by Four Decades in Solitary Confinement. My Story of Transformation and Hope” will take part in the conversation, along with juvenile justice reformer Vincent Schiraldi, and David Rothenberg, founder of The Fortune Society, according to a press release. Watch the event starting at 10:30 a.m., via the Queens-based nonprofit’s Facebook page.

 

The deadline is approaching for the New York State Child Welfare Worker Loan Forgiveness Incentive Program. Eligible direct services workers can get up to $10,000 per year in student debt relief for up to five years. The deadline to apply is April 4.

 

The Nonprofit Coordinating Committee of New York has released its Declaration of Nonprofit Rights. The document will serve to guide the NPCCNY and the nonprofits it serves by articulating the overriding needs of the sector. “The Declaration of Nonprofit Rights was created in response to listening to the challenges our members – and the whole nonprofit sector – face,” said Sharon Stapel, president of the NPCCNY. “The Declaration’s principles outline what nonprofits need to be agents of change in their communities, and throughout the City.”

Here are the four principles, taken verbatim from the declaration:

  • We have a right to sustainable resources and a responsibility to serve our communities well.
  • We have a right to engage in advocacy and a responsibility to share our expertise.
  • We have a right to be fairly treated as a workforce and a responsibility to champion equity.
  • We have a right to be powerful forces of change and a responsibility to advance the future of all communities.

Like the U.S. Constitution, the declaration can be amended. Feedback can be provided through this survey.