Hawaii lawmakers budgeted significantly more state money for nonprofits and community groups this year compared to last, but the process of choosing who got what remains murky.
The Legislature approved 104 grants in aid totaling $36.7 million for fiscal 2017, which starts July 1. Lawmakers winnowed this down from 276 applications for $147.6 million.
The Blood Bank of Hawaii, Bishop Museum and Molokai Homestead Farmers Alliance were among the chosen, while Maui Economic Opportunity, Hawaii Habitat for Humanity and Legal Aid Society didn鈥檛 make the cut, to name just a few.
Last year, 91 groups received $27.9 million. Lawmakers pared that聽from roughly 280 applicants seeking nearly $190 million.
Hundreds of organizations apply for state grants in aid at the beginning of each legislative session in January. They explain in why they need taxpayer money for their projects or services, and many make their pitch in person to a panel of lawmakers midway through the session in March.
But the deliberations over who gets what 鈥 and why 鈥 happen behind closed doors. Only in late April, as the session draws to a close, is the final list announced with little or no explanation.
“Generally I鈥檝e heard from nonprofit applicants that the process was still cumbersome, decision-making was not transparent.” 鈥 Lisa Maruyama, Hawaii Alliance of Nonprofit Organizations
There have been some reforms to the process, such as additional questions on the application, but no major overhaul, like creating an independent review board as Honolulu did at the city level for its grants-in-aid process.
鈥淕enerally I’ve heard from nonprofit applicants that the process was still cumbersome, decision-making was not transparent, and there is still concern that even if they were awarded the GIA, they may not see the likes of it for a while,鈥 Lisa Maruyama, president and CEO of the Hawaii Alliance of Nonprofit Organizations, said Thursday.
Rep. Ty Cullen handled grants-in-aid requests on the House side, and Sens. Jill Tokuda and Donovan Dela Cruz split the duty on the Senate side. Cullen and Tokuda could not be reached for comment.
Dela Cruz said there was an effort to ensure grants went to groups in each county, and that lawmakers considered the applicants鈥 past history of receiving funds, ability to spend down funds quickly if not immediately, whether projects were shovel-ready, impact to the community, amount requested and the community need.
He said they also considered whether the groups had previously received state grant money and if the administration has released that money.
Lobbyists, nonprofit presidents and even legislators say they remain dissatisfied with the process, which they have called 鈥渕ysterious鈥 and 鈥減olitical.鈥
Lawmakers often fight to secure grants for their district, and tout the earmarked money they secure 鈥 particularly in an election year like this one when the entire House is up for re-election and half the Senate.
On the last day of the legislative session, which ended May 5, the six House聽lawmakers聽representing Maui聽sent out a news release highlighting $8.5 million in grants for nonprofits in their districts.
Art, Blood, Housing And Farming
The requested by far, the biggest grant at $13.25 million for its art school. The next highest was $5.5 million, which Hale Mahaolu Ewalu for an affordable senior housing project on Maui.
The museum, which received a $1.5 million grant last year, wants the state to help fund a 12,000-square-foot expansion to increase the amount of people it can serve.
Stephan Jost, the museum鈥檚 director, said in that the grant would also leverage $5.25 million in private funding. In the end, lawmakers approved $700,000.
ended up getting $1.5 million, the second-highest amount awarded to any group. Only the Molokai Homestead Farmers Alliance got more, receiving all $1.7 million that it requested.
Rep. Lynn DeCoite served on the alliance from 2006 until聽2015 when she was appointed by Gov. David Ige to fill the House seat vacated by the late Mele Carroll.
Faith Tuipulotu, the alliance’s current president, wrote in that the 10-year-old group of homestead farmers provides education to farmers and the community by updating them on laws pertaining to food and safety, water issues, certifications, trainings and innovative technology tools for farmers to expand their production.
The alliance plans to use the grant to renovate its Lanikeha Center, including an alternative energy system to offset high electricity costs. The center is used by farmers to process their products and by the community to conduct events.
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The received the third-biggest grant at nearly $1.5 million, making a strong case in its application that the nonprofit needs the money to offset the impact of the Honolulu rail project.
The is looking to take part of the Blood Bank鈥檚 headquarters property for the realignment of Dillingham Boulevard as part of the 20-mile rail project, the Blood Bank鈥檚 director of marketing explained in the January application.
鈥淏BH is in a crisis due to the rail construction, proposed taking and easement, which will have a deleterious impact for BBH and result in total loss,鈥 Maura Dolormente .
The Blood Bank opened a new facility on Young Street in January, but wants the state to help pay for the cost of relocating its remaining operations from its headquarters on Dillingham.
The nonprofit estimates the total relocation costs at $2.3 million and asked for a $1.9 million grant.
The Legislature avoided what could have been a messy situation over separation of church and state 鈥 similar to what Honolulu officials experienced last month 鈥 by nixing for $1 million.
Honolulu City Council Chair Ernie Martin abandoned his proposal to give $250,000 to New Hope Oahu. Councilman Joey Manahan had also requested money for the Christian evangelical church.
City rules prohibit grants from funding events that 鈥渁dvance or inhibit religion鈥 or are 鈥減redominately religious in nature.鈥 But in that instance, the councilmen had pursued the money outside the regular grants-in-aid process.
The state grants in aid get rolled into the overall state spending plan and become earmarked items in departmental budgets.
While 38 percent of grant applications got a legislative OK this year, that doesn鈥檛 mean Gov. David Ige will release the money. Or that the grants his administration supports will receive their funding in a timely manner.
Maruyama has said there are numerous complaints from nonprofits about delays in payments, which can put other funding sources in jeopardy.
Lawmakers have said they see grants in aid as 鈥渟eed money鈥 that the state can provide to help a group deliver services more efficiently and less expensively. The grants also help nonprofits and others leverage private, county and federal funds.
While some reforms聽have been made over the years, such as posting the applications online, the Legislature has ignored calls to create an outside body to review and recommend what grants should be approved.
The city of Honolulu has an independent commission that vets the applications, but even that has been subject to political infighting between the Mayor鈥檚 Office and City Council. Voters created Honolulu鈥檚 grants-in-aid program in 2012, which calls for setting aside 0.5 percent of the city鈥檚 general fund revenues for charities and nonprofits.
Reform Falls Short
There have been some reforms to the grants-in-aid process in recent years.
Tokuda added two questions last year that applicants had to answer when applying for the grants. One was a sustainability question, the other was a requirement that the groups show proof that they are registered to do business in Hawaii.
The latter had become an issue because the Legislature would award a grant to a nonprofit but the executive branch would be unable to release the money because the group was based on the mainland. That鈥檚 funding that could have gone to a different organization that year.
The sustainability question asked what the nonprofit would do if it didn鈥檛 receive the grant and what it would do the following year if it did get the money.
Tokuda introduced this past legislative session to establish new standards for the grant appropriation process.
The measure initially called for making appropriations for grants during the regular session of each odd-numbered year for the ensuing fiscal biennium; appropriating money for not more than one grant for each grant recipient during a fiscal biennium; and placing a low priority on requests to fund general and administrative expenses, according to a legislative report.
Tokuda, who chairs the Ways and Means Committee, wrote in her committee report on the bill that 鈥渋t is necessary to provide clarity and guidance in the legislative grant program,鈥 and that the proposed policies 鈥渟eek to create a more equitable distribution of funds and place a priority on direct services.鈥
The House Finance Committee, chaired by Rep. Sylvia Luke, amended the bill and it ultimately died after the two chambers were unable to negotiate an agreement on the final language.
The House version called for requiring an organization to pay back a聽grant if聽it discontinues its activities or disposes of its facilities.
The House draft also would have required organizations to publicly recognize that a project was supported by the state when awarded a grant.
Nonprofits had concerns about the bill, especially placing a low priority on requests for administrative expenses.
鈥淥verhead is part and parcel of any project and essentially ensures success in project deliverables,鈥 Maruyama said in her February testimony on the bill.
鈥淩esearch consistently shows that failure by governments and others to reimburse nonprofits for their legitimate indirect costs (sometimes called administrative or overhead costs) reduces efficiency and effectiveness, and threatens the sustainability and viability of the nonprofits on which governments depend to deliver services in communities,鈥 she said. 鈥淚n our sector, we call this the nonprofit starvation cycle.鈥
Child & Family Service recommended that the Legislature establish an independent review committee that sets scoring criteria for GIA proposals similar to Honolulu.
鈥淭hat would create a level playing field for nonprofits to compete for these grand funds,鈥 Howard Garval, Child & Family Service president and CEO, told lawmakers in April.
Below is a聽list of grants-in-aid that were approved for fiscal 2017. View the applications of all the groups that applied and details of each request .
ORGANIZATION | FY 17 AWARD |
Molokai Homestead Farmers Alliance | $1,700,000 |
Hale Mahaolu Ewalu 1 | $1,500,000 |
Blood Bank of Hawaii | $1,488,000 |
Kalamaula Homesteaders Association | $1,300,000 |
Bishop Museum | $1,200,000 |
Kailapa Community Association | $1,000,000 |
La鈥榠鈥榦pua 2020 1 | $1,000,000 |
Pana鈥榚wa Community Alliance 2 | $1,000,000 |
Boy Scouts of America, Aloha Council | $1,000,000 |
Hawaii Island Portuguese Chamber of Commerce | $1,000,000 |
Hawaii Korean Cultural Center | $1,000,000 |
Waimanalo Health Center | $1,000,000 |
Kaupo Community Association, Inc. | $975,000 |
Kuakini Medical Center | $800,000 |
National Kidney Foundation of Hawaii | $750,000 |
Kupu | $750,000 |
Honolulu Academy of Arts | $700,000 |
Special Olympics Hawaii, Inc. | $700,000 |
Wahiawa Center for Community Health | $700,000 |
J. Walter Cameron Center, Inc. | $600,000 |
Ho鈥榦la Na Pua, Inc. | $600,000 |
Homestead Community Development Corporation 1 | $600,000 |
Ho鈥榦ulu Lahui Inc. | $535,000 |
Young Women’s Christian Association of Oahu | $520,000 |
Lyman House Memorial Museum | $500,000 |
Aha Hui E Kala | $500,000 |
Hawaii Farm Bureau Federation | $400,000 |
Hawaii Institute for Public Affairs (HIPA) | $350,000 |
Hawaiian Humane Society | $350,000 |
Hale Makua Health Services | $350,000 |
Impact Hub Honolulu | $350,000 |
Oceanic Institute of Hawaii Pacific University | $350,000 |
Hui Malama Learning Center | $300,000 |
Guide Dogs of Hawaii | $300,000 |
Hawaii Floriculture and Nursery Association | $300,000 |
Hawaii Heritage Center | $300,000 |
Hawaii Theatre Center | $300,000 |
Hawaii Island Community Development Corporation | $300,000 |
Na Leo Kakoo o Oahu, Inc. | $269,000 |
Hale Mahaolu Ewalu 2 | $250,000 |
Pacific Aviation Museum Pearl Harbor | $250,000 |
Honolulu Biennial foundation | $250,000 |
Hamakua Health Center, Inc. (1) | $250,000 |
Ho’opulapula Haraguchi Rice Mill | $247,000 |
Women Helping Women | $246,550 |
Hawaii County Economic Opportunity Council 2 | $217,435 |
Kualoa-Heeia Ecumenical Youth Project | $205,362 |
Adult Friends for Youth | $200,000 |
After-School All-Stars Hawaii | $200,000 |
Empower Oahu | $200,000 |
Hawaii County Economic Opportunity Council 1 | $200,000 |
ALS Ohana of Hawaii | $200,000 |
Friends of Waipahu Cultural Garden Park | $200,000 |
Malama Pono Health Services | $200,000 |
Pacific Historic Parks 3 | $200,000 |
YMCA of Honolulu | $200,000 |
La鈥榠鈥榦pua 2020 2 | $199,843 |
Arc of Maui County | $192,000 |
Poi Dogs and Popoki | $190,000 |
Pacific Gateway Center | $185,000 |
Parents And Children Together 1 | $181,428 |
Keep the Hawaiian Islands Beautiful | $175,200 |
Na Kama Kai | $175,000 |
Friends of Kona Pacific Public Charter School | $171,000 |
Project Vision Hawaii | $160,000 |
Aloha Medical Mission | $158,678 |
Hawaii Wildfire Management Organization | $158,000 |
Life Foundation | $150,000 |
Nisei Veterans Legacy Center | $150,000 |
Hawaii Opera Theater | $150,000 |
Pana’ewa Community Alliance 1 | $150,000 |
The 442nd Veterans Club | $150,000 |
Kona Historical Society | $150,000 |
Kauai Hospice, Inc | $137,500 |
Lanakila Pacific | $115,000 |
Papakolea Community Development Corporation | $114,650 |
Catholic Charities Hawaii | $100,000 |
Child and Family Service 2 | $100,000 |
Hawaii Agricultural Foundation | $100,000 |
Hawaii Pops Orchestra | $100,000 |
Ballet Hawaii | $100,000 |
Chamber of Commerce Hawaii | $100,000 |
Friends of Challenger Center Hawaii, Inc. | $100,000 |
Kumano I Ke Ala O Makaweli | $100,000 |
Read Aloud America | $100,000 |
Read to Me International | $100,000 |
Shade Group, LLC | $100,000 |
Ko’olauloa Community Health and Wellness Center | $100,000 |
Hawaii Professional Firefighters Foundation | $95,000 |
Ke Ola Mamo | $93,000 |
Anekona Ouli Kanehoa VFD Company | $88,000 |
KAMP Hawaii Incorportated | $75,000 |
Waikiki Community Center | $75,000 |
Grow Some Good | $65,814 |
Moiliili Community Center | $60,000 |
Whitmore Economic Development Group | $55,000 |
Hawaii Family Law Clinic 1 | $50,000 |
Hawaii Family Law Clinic 2 | $50,000 |
Mental Health Kokua | $50,000 |
The Filipino Community Center, Inc. | $50,000 |
Hamakua Youth Foundation | $40,000 |
Holualoa Foundation for Arts and Culture | $35,000 |
Kauai Economic Opportunity, Incorporated (1) | $33,500 |
Maui High School Band Booster Club | $10,000 |
TOTAL | $36,691,960 |
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Nathan Eagle is a deputy editor for Civil Beat. You can reach him by email at neagle@civilbeat.org or follow him on Twitter at , Facebook and Instagram .