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RESIDENTNEWS.NET | JUNE 2020, VOL. 14, ISSUE 06
Nonprofits face uncertain future due to COVID-19
By Marcia Hodgson Resident Community News
Filling the Pews
The Very Rev. Kate Moorehead poses in the interior of St. John’s Cathedral where photos of church members are now taped to the pews. During this time of COVID-19, church members have spent their Sundays watching services online, but on May 3, they decided to take an extra step and not only join the service in spirit but also to fill the pews with their photos as a surprise for the clergy. “The sight of the photos made me cry,” said Moorehead. “We are all there together, just in a different way.” READ MORE, PAGE 16
Stimulus bills offer monetary relief to struggling businesses, nonprofits By Jennifer Edwards Resident Community News
Sensitive to the plight of small businesses, many of which have struggled to survive since the Coronavirus pandemic descended in March, Jacksonville City Council members voted unanimously May 26 to offer a financial lifeline to help kickstart their endeavors to reopen. The bill, which was introduced by District 5 Councilwoman LeAnna Cumber of San Marco and co-sponsored by 10 council members, sets aside $9 million to create the city’s Small Business Relief Grant Program, CONTINUED ON PAGE 14
Celebrating our 2020 Graduates
Pre-COVID State of the Sector Coughlin began her talk by giving analysis and an overview of the nonprofit sector in Northeast Florida, which has been done in partnership with research funding from the Jessie Ball duPont Fund. Using information gathered from 990 and 990EZ forms from the Internal Revenue Service, Coughlin said there are 8,027 nonprofit organizations on the First Coast, but that 6,336 do not file a 990 form, so their data has not been used in the analysis. Instead data is derived from the 1,320 organizations that filed in 2016. There has been substantial growth in the 18-year span from 1998 until 2016, when the sector grew from
Bishop Kenny graduates safely social distanced during their in-person ceremony on the waterfront in William Johnston Stadium May 23. FOR MORE SEE PAGE 37
A “Wild West” kind of climate has affected many businesses since the Coronavirus descended in March, but perhaps no other group has been as heavily impacted as Jacksonville’s nonprofit sector. Many of Jacksonville’s charitable organizations were holding their own until COVID-19 hit, leaving the Nonprofit Center of Northeast Florida, Jacksonville’s vital support system for the region’s not-for-profit entities, scrambling to figure out what is needed to assist its clientele as it works to safely re-open and re-enter the economy. In a State of the Sector talk given on the Zoom video conference platform May 14, Rena Coughlin, CEO of the Nonprofit Center, discussed the state of the nonprofit sector pre- and post-virus with members of the Planned Giving Council of Northeast Florida. “We need to understand what indicators we should be measuring to determine how well a nonprofit will emerge from this recessionary economy,” said Coughlin, noting the Nonprofit Center has been hosting weekly COVID-19 resource calls, flash polls, and has set up four subcommittees to create and collect resources for the sector. It also has been asking nonprofits to fill out a “changes in the sector” survey so it can “better get a handle on everything as we move into a summer with lots of unknowns.” “It’s important to take the survey because it’s important that we benchmark what the sector is doing. I’ve been approached by funders and by those in local government who have been basically accusing the sector of not taking advantage of the relief that has been offered,” she said.
Photo courtesy of With the Wind Productions
CONTINUED ON PAGE 4
Hanging with my bestie
Jane Slater with her pup, Annie, (left) joins Stovall family dog Erin Noel (middle), and Janet Rodriguez with her dog, Cody, (right) as residents of Jacksonville’s historic districts who have found working alongside their furry best friends has helped in dealing with the social isolation of the Coronavirus pandemic. VIEW MORE, PAGE 27
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