Lots of bloviating on community organizing has occurred on cable news shows and in various newspaper opinion pieces in recent months due to Senator Barack Obama’s background as a “community organizer.” Regardless of what Senator Obama did as a community organizer, almost all of the commentary is wrong. A good example is Peter Applebome’s New [...]
Entries Tagged as 'Stories'
Community Organizing and the Presidential Election: One Commentator Finally Gets it More or Less Right
September 15th, 2008 · 2 Comments
Tags: Stories
It’s a Grant, Not a Gift: A Primer on Grants Management
September 3rd, 2008 · 3 Comments
I was in LA over Labor Day weekend and, at a pool party, chatted with a semi-retired CPA who has been hired by a large nonprofit hospital to help with an audit of a federal grant. The audit is being performed under the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) Circular No. A-133. OMB publishes a [...]
Tags: Advice · Grants · Stories
That’ll Be The Day: Searching for Grant Writing Truths in Monument Valley
August 16th, 2008 · No Comments
Faithful readers know of my Blue Highways post about driving to LA with my daughter following her college graduation last spring. This is my year for road trips, as I recently drove with Jake from Seattle to his new life as a English Literature Ph. D. candidate at the University of Arizona in Tucson. I [...]
Reformers Come and Go, But HUD Abides
July 27th, 2008 · 1 Comment
Sudhir Venkatesh*, a Columbia University Sociologist, wrote To Fight Poverty, Tear Down HUD for the New York Times, and in it he suggests imploding HUD like the infamous Pruitt-Igoe Housing Project to increase regional collaboration. Having just finished a HUD proposal, it made me think about HUD’s evolution and my experience with previous attempts to [...]
Adventures in Bureaucracy and the Long Tale of Deciphering Eligibility: A Farce Featuring the Department of Education’s Erin Pfeltz
July 9th, 2008 · 7 Comments
There are numerous good reasons why we often make fun of the Department of Education. One recently appeared in the Seliger Funding Report. Subscribers saw the “Charter Schools Program (CSP) Grants to Non-State Educational Agencies for Planning, Program Design, and Implementation and for Dissemination” program in the June 16 newsletter. The eligibility criteria for it, [...]
Tags: Advice · Grants · How-to · Stories
Deconstructing the Question: How to Parse a Confused RFP
June 8th, 2008 · 4 Comments
The breathless SAMHSA RFP, “Targeted Capacity Expansion Program for Substance Abuse Treatment and HIV/AIDS Services (Short Title: TCE/HIV)” (.pdf link to the RFP) has already been mentioned and also features one of my favorite proposal verbal quirks: the automatic success assumption. The last bullet in Section C (page 26) says: Demonstrate success in referring, and [...]
Tags: Advice · Grants · Stories
Blue Highways: Reflections of a Grant Writer Retracing His Steps 35 Years Later
June 1st, 2008 · 2 Comments
One of my favorite books is William Least Heat-Moon’s Blue Highways, an ode to the spiritual healing powers of exploring America and one’s self by driving the roads literally less traveled. From my first road trip at age 16 with my buddy Tom in his ’53 Chevy from Minneapolis north towards the Iron Range, I’ve [...]
Tags: Advice · Grants · Stories
Further Information Regarding the Department of Redundancy Department
May 15th, 2008 · 2 Comments
Last week I discussed repetitive RFP questions and where they spring from, and this week, in honor of the RFPs themselves, I’ll go over the issue from the angle of SAMHSA‘s “Targeted Capacity Expansion Program for Substance Abuse Treatment and HIV/AIDS Services (Short Title: TCE/HIV)” RFP (warning: .pdf link). It’s a model of modern inanity [...]
Tags: Advice · Grants · Stories
RFP Lunacy and Answering Repetitive or Impossible Questions
May 7th, 2008 · 3 Comments
I’ve talked before about RFP absurdity, and now I’ll talk about lunacy: the HRSA “Service Expansion in Mental Health/Substance Services, Oral Health and Comprehensive Pharmacy Services” program (see the RFP in a Word file here) asks in Section 2.6, “Applicant describes how oral health services will be provided for special populations, such as MSFWs, homeless [...]
Tags: Advice · Clients · Grants · Stories
Stuck on Stupid: Hiring Lobbyists to Chase Earmarks
April 19th, 2008 · 1 Comment
A faithful Grant Writing Confidential reader and fellow grant writer, Katherine, sent an email wanting my take on a public agency hiring a lobbying firm to seek federal earmarks. For those not familiar with the term, it means getting a member of Congress to slip a favored local project into a bill, bypassing normal reviews [...]