One of the biggest challenges that nonprofit organizations face is raising funds to cover indirect costs. Generally speaking, funders prefer to support direct program costs – leaving nonprofits scrambling to cover essentials that are not directly related to delivering services, such as administrative support and organizational software.
A bill recently introducted in the Maryland State Senate seeks to provide relief to nonprofits awarded State money. The proposed bill includes the following text:
IF A NONPROFIT ORGANIZATION IS A DIRECT RECIPIENT OR SUBRECIPIENT OF A GRANT OR CONTRACT THAT IS FUNDED EITHER PARTIALLY OR WHOLLY WITH STATE FUNDS, THE TERMS OF THE GRANT OR CONTRACT SHALL ALLOW FOR REIMBURSEMENT OF INDIRECT COSTS... OF AT LEAST 10%.
Saltzberg Consulting Founder Elise Saltzberg provided the following written testimony in support of the bill:
Thank you for the opportunity to submit this testimony on behalf of my Maryland nonprofit clients. I have worked as a fundraising consultant to nonprofit organizations in Maryland since 2000. Most of my clients are small to medium-sized nonprofits, with annual budgets in the range of $400,000 to $4 million per year. They provide a range of vital services to their communities, including: healthcare; K-12 education and afterschool enrichment; services for people with disabilities; housing for the homeless; child care; arts education; economic development and community development; and environmental education and protection.
Most of the organizations that I work with – and most nonprofit organizations in general – are operating on very thin margins with tight cash flows. They may receive funding from a variety of sources including donations from individuals, foundation grants, corporate sponsorships, and other private sector funders. But often their primary source of revenue is government grants and contracts.
What the private sector and the public sector have in common is that neither seems to ever want to pay for indirect expenses. A foundation program officer only wants to support their specific program. A corporate sponsor just wants to maximize the marketing and publicity benefits for their company. And an individual donor might say, “I don’t want my money to go to keeping the lights on.” Well somebody has to pay to keep the lights on! In my opinion, government grants and contracts are that “somebody.” If the State wishes to see nonprofits deliver necessary services in an effective manner, it needs to recognize that there are costs associated with keeping the lights on, paying the rent, paying the telephone bill, etc. These “overhead” items are part of the costs of successfully fulfilling the nonprofits’ obligations to the State, and to their clients and constituents.
In the for-profit world, 40% to 45% overhead is considered acceptable. As long as the bottom line is healthy, business owners and investors are happy. Yet in the nonprofit sector, indirect costs are expected to stay well below these percentages. Two grant applications that I wrote recently on behalf of my clients are good examples. One allowed for only 3% for indirect costs. The other allowed for zero. Both grants were awarded, but for lower amounts than we had requested. So neither grant award covered anywhere close to the true costs of delivering the desired services.
Senate Bill 1045 would help to close the gap between grant awards and the true costs of delivering effective services. A modest floor of 10% for indirect costs would be an acknowledgement by the State of the reality that nonprofits incur expenses in delivering services, that these expenses are reasonable, and that they should be covered.
The full text of Maryland Senate Bill 1045 can be found here: http://mgaleg.maryland.gov/2018RS/bills/sb/sb1045F.pdf