Giving Compass' Take:
- Lavea Brachman discusses the critical role of nonprofits in deploying American Rescue Plan Act funding in cities and counties across the U.S.
- What lessons can be taken away from the work of the Transforming Cities Lab in helping communities navigate an influx of funding? How can you help ensure your community uses funding in sustainable and equitable ways?
- Learn about supporting equitable federal infrastructure funding.
What is Giving Compass?
We connect donors to learning resources and ways to support community-led solutions. Learn more about us.
As the second tranche of federal American Rescue Plan Act (ARP) funding flows to municipalities around the country, new realities are surfacing about cities’ and counties’ readiness to execute on this unprecedented amount of money.
Not surprisingly, the picture is mixed. Under pressure to expedite funding allocations, local public officials must balance acute, pandemic-related relief needs with strategic, longer-term recovery expenditures. To achieve the latter, they must build internal capacity and strengthen nonprofit partners.
Launched this spring by Brookings Metro in partnership with three communities, the Transforming Cities Lab is helping communities navigate the practical and political challenges of coordinating with nonprofits—offering promising solutions to overcome these challenges and deliver more transformative economic change.
The Transforming Cities Lab is a peer learning project aimed at helping places build civic capacity and infrastructure to maximize use of federal dollars in more strategic, sustainable, and equitable ways. And it has revealed that identifying spending priorities upfront is a necessary but not sufficient component. While a vast majority of local leaders are endeavoring to meet this moment, municipalities—even larger ones—lack the capacity to plan or carry out longer-term strategic investments without nonprofit or other external partners. This challenge is particularly acute in Midwestern legacy cities, where public and nonprofit sectors have been accustomed to operating with an austerity mindset and competing for scarce dollars.
Nonprofit organizations are indispensable partners for the public sector to maximize federal dollars and leverage funds for inclusive, systemic change. Yet, to make the most of today’s historic investment opportunities, cities and nonprofits must overcome two preexisting conditions that could hinder such an approach: functionality and equity.
Read the full article about deploying federal investments by Lavea Brachman at Brookings.