Top Menu Control Panel
Director's Essays

Director's Essays: 2005

How'er We Doin'?
When Ed Koch was Mayor of New York City a decade ago, he frequently asked New Yorkers, "How'm I doin'?" With a simple, open-ended query, he invited his constituents to reflect on his performance. Whether or not he always took their responses to heart is unclear, but simply by asking the question he communicated an interest in their views - and an interest in measuring his success as Mayor.

As a rule, foundations don't ask for feedback about how they're doing - and very few public critics offer it. It is not in the self-interest of grantees or grantseekers, or other foundations, for that matter, to criticize program design. Moreover, since foundations generally do not set specific, measurable goals for their grantmaking, it is hard even for them to gain a clear sense of their accomplishments, disappointments, and, yes, failures. But for all the inherent difficulties, it still seems important at some level to ask ourselves, reflectively, the Ed Koch question: "How'er we doin'?"

What are we accomplishing as a non-profit venture capitalist? What long-term challenges has this Foundation chosen to address? How valid are the strategies we are pursuing? Are we making a difference? Some checkpoints follow:

Landscape Conservation Initiatives: Northwest and Northeast.
The emergent science of conservation biology tells us that landscapes must remain connected if Nature's integrity is to be sustained. If we break Nature into terrestrial "islands" through sprawl and super highways - barriers to wildlife movements - species will vanish and ecological functions will be compromised or lost. In 1996, we began to invest in the Yellowstone to Yukon (Y2Y) Conservation Initiative. This effort covers a 2,000-mile stretch of the Northern Rockies with the long-term goal of preserving a balanced, sustainable future for all of its species, human and otherwise.

Interim progress after five years appears positive: new biological research is supporting the vision of landscape connectivity; in 2000, the National Geographic Society published Yellowstone to Yukon in its Destinations Series, recognizing the region as a distinctive place; more than a dozen foundations are investing in the Y2Y conservation concept; public agencies and private land trusts are beginning to engage the logic of the Y2Y landscape strategy; and an active U.S./Canadian transboundary network of some 160 conservation activists is flourishing.

Will the strategy of "landscape connectivity" succeed in the face of expanding, invasive human developments in the Rockies? Only if local communities recognize the long-term value of the ecological richness that surrounds them.
Grade: Encouraging and provocative, but much work remains.

The Northern Appalachian landscape (also known in the U.S.- but obviously not in Canada -as the "Northern Forest") is divided into the artificial jurisdictions of Vermont, New Hampshire, and Maine, Québec and New Brunswick. The Kendall Foundation invested in science last year to try to begin to understand this shared U.S./Canadian transboundary region in terms of Nature's needs. With this knowledge, we will likely become longer-term investors in a vision to keep this bi-national landscape connected (for Nature) over generations to come.
Grade: A hopeful beginning.

National Parks: America's Best Idea at Risk.
Our research in the mid-1990s exposed the reality that America's national parks are severely underfunded and their natural resources and physical infrastructure are deteriorating. This is an anomaly: Americans love their national parks, but Congress has been starving the parks relative to their maintenance needs. Another surprise: the national parks are declining before our eyes, but few Americans recognize this.

We engaged the financing challenge and, through the National Parks Conservation Association and the National Park Service (NPS), created the Business Plan Initiative to strengthen and legitimize the case for added funding. For the last four years Kendall and several other foundations have funded graduate MBA and Public Policy students to assist in developing "business plans" for key units of the nearly 400 NPS sites. These student "consultants" have distinguished themselves. A proven strategy is now in place to bring modern financial analytical techniques to a $2 billion public agency. Senior officials in the Bush Administration and key Representatives and Senators are now calling for these "business plans". The success of this initiative will be measured in increased public funding for vital national park needs.
Grade: A promising public policy innovation.

Gulf of Maine Ecosystem.
Marine ecosystems have been hammered around the world as fish stocks have been plundered by fishing fleets relying on new technologies to "vacuum" the ocean. Regulators have failed to regulate for sustainability. Through a series of grants dating back to 1994, the Kendall Foundation has supported many community-based groups and marine conservation organizations on both the U.S. and Canadian sides of the border.

Our grants have been exploratory, reactive, and perhaps too often lacking in strategic vision. In hindsight, we cannot say in what ways we have achieved success in marine conservation, though we have been one of the few foundations consistently active in this field.

This assessment has led us to develop a new strategy for the health and vitality of the Gulf of Maine's ecosystem. We are now seeking to build a Canadian/American initiative that focuses more directly upon local knowledge and recognizes that marine resources must increasingly be managed on smaller scales.
Grade: A slow start, but charting a new course.

Northeast Climate Change Initiative.
Persuaded that global warming and climate change currently represent the greatest threat to our way of life on this planet, and frustrated that the Kyoto Protocol to reduce greenhouse gases was going nowhere in Washington, we started a regional climate change program in 2000. Our approach includes all components of "civil society" - cities and towns, schools, hospitals, manufacturers, retailers, wholesalers, faith-based organizations, etc.- in a broad-based, voluntary effort to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. The operational center for this endeavor is Clean Air-Cool Planet, Inc. based in Portsmouth, NH.

This initiative is nearly two years old and it is much too early to look for returns on investment. But given national political obstinacy on this issue, we sense real political potential in a regional approach. While we could be wrong, we believe that eventually the entire country will be forced to abide by emission restrictions that are even more stringent than those set in the Kyoto Protocol-and New England could lead the way.
Grade: The sky's the limit.

National Watershed Management Innovations.
Our focus on national watershed management innovations may be at once our most ambitious, and possibly least successful, venture of the last decade. Knowing that nearly everything that takes place on land is registered in the quality of the water, we designed and funded a series of national workshops - in California, Washington, Florida, and Massachusetts - involving watershed association leaders and state agency representatives with the aim of energizing a national dialogue centered on watersheds as the focus for citizen-based conservation initiatives.

We continue to believe that fresh water will be the defining resource constraint in the twenty-first century, but we may have missed the mark in our attempt to bolster a national watershed movement comprised of citizen stewards. Until clean water shortages reach crisis proportions - which may happen sooner than most people anticipate - it appears that Americans will not be motivated to protect their watersheds. While we are convinced that we have supported some useful individual contributions to watershed protection, we expected more from this philanthropic venture. It could be that our timing was off.
Grade: A somewhat disappointing incomplete.

New England Grassroots Environmental Stewardship.
With counsel from many savvy participants at several "hearings" in 1996, four Massachusetts foundations (Cox, Island, John Merck and Kendall) created the New England Grassroots Environment Fund (NEGEF). NEGEF supports community and neighborhood environmental activists who normally cannot be reached by our foundations. To date NEGEF has made more than 500 grants (of up to $2,500 each) to small groups throughout New England for purposes ranging from sprawl to energy conservation to solid waste dump sitings. In addition, it provides coaching, technical assistance, training, and networking to help these groups leverage their passion with new skills and connections to statewide and regional resources-and to each other. NEGEF is now independently chartered, professionally staffed, and funded by no fewer than seventeen foundations.
Grade: Vibrant and growing.

So, "how'er we doin'?" What seems like a simple question yields far more than a simple answer. As many of our colleagues in the grantmaking community know, environmental investments require insight, patience, flexibility, and commitment. Along the path of disappointment and encouraging surprises, we continue to explore avenues for improvement. In our effort to get it right, we'll try to remember that the nature of Nature's challenges demands that we often and critically ask, "How'er we doin'?"

Theodore M. Smith
Executive Director
July, 2002

The Kendall Foundation Kendall Site Map