Non-profit

National Committee for Responsive Philanthropy

Website:

www.ncrp.org

Location:

WASHINGTON, DC

Tax ID:

52-1072749

Tax-Exempt Status:

501(c)(3)

Budget (2022):

Revenue: $3,191,607
Expenses: $3,446,342
Assets: $4,922,590

Type:

Philanthropic advocacy group

Formation:

1976

CEO:

Aaron Dorfman

Budget (2023):

Revenue: $3,373,013
Expenses: $4,545,763
Assets: $4,356,852

Contact InfluenceWatch with suggested edits or tips for additional profiles.

The National Committee for Responsive Philanthropy (NCRP) is a left-of-center advocacy and watchdog group that monitors charitable giving in the United States. It was established in 1976 and is based in Washington, D.C. It advocates for a greater focus on left-leaning causes and advocacy giving in the philanthropic sector. 1

Founding

The National Committee for Responsive Philanthropy was founded in 1976 by left-leaning nonprofit activists Pablo Eisenberg, Thomas R. Asher, and James Abernathy. The three were prominent members of the “Donee Group,” a group of nonprofit leaders and grant recipients that was started to represent the interests of the nonprofit sector before the Commission on Private Philanthropy and Public Needs (called the “Filer Commission” after its chair, John Filer, the chair of Aetna Insurance). The Filer Commission was founded by philanthropist John D. Rockefeller III and was composed of foundation leaders, business and university executives, and academics who investigated charitable giving and the operations and influence of large grantmaking philanthropies from 1973 to 1975. 2 3

The Donee Group was founded after Eisenberg published an article criticizing the Filer Commission for failing to include the perspectives of grant recipients in its work, especially groups working with low-income and minority populations. The Commission gave the Donee Group a $60,000 grant to formalize its operations and work with the Commission staff in preparing the Filer Commission’s final report. Abernathy became the Donee Group’s first executive director and, eventually, interim director of NCRP. 3 4

After the Filer Commission disbanded, the Donee Group decided to “transform itself into a permanent watchdog organization representing nonprofits,” according to Eisenberg. NCRP was founded with initial support from Rockefeller, Filer, and the Rockefeller Brothers Fund. 3 2

Two years after NCRP was founded, a scholar at the conservative Heritage Foundation argued that NCRP “should be taken seriously as an agent of radical change, in coming years, in philanthropic practices and possibly in the laws governing foundations and charitable contributions,” and that NCRP would capitalize on ignorance of the philanthropic system to urge “a quasi-governmental system dominated by an elite who ‘truly’ perceive ‘the public interest.” 5

Major Initiatives

“Charity War” With United Way

One of NCRP’s first efforts was to attack the United Way, a national coalition of local offices collecting donations for area charities. The United Way pioneered “workplace giving,” which permitted employees to direct a percentage of their pay to local charities chosen by the United Way. NCRP and other critics of the United Way argued that the group’s giving leaned heavily toward traditional charities such as churches, Boy Scout troops, and universities, and refused to sponsor charities that worked with low-income and minority groups or that engaged in political advocacy, especially advocacy for left-leaning causes. 6

The NCRP issued a report in 1978 calling for a repeal of United Way policies “which insist on a monopoly of workplace solicitation” by the United Way and its affiliates. The report criticized the way United Way affiliates “have presented themselves to the public … as if they were the only charity drive to meet all charities’ needs,” while purportedly excluding most neighborhood groups and smaller charities. 7 The NCRP and its allies pressured labor unions and workers to give to alternative charitable federations, accusing the United Way of “pressure tactics to extract contributions so their executives can hang gold plaques in their offices … while leaving you completely out of the decision-making.” 6

Much of the criticism of the United Way coalesced around the United Way of Roanoke Rapids, North Carolina, which refused to sponsor or permit donations to the Brown Lung Association, a group representing local textile workers diagnosed with byssinosis, or “brown lung disease,” and other respiratory diseases caused by inhaling cotton dust in textile mills. In a Washington Post article from 1979 on what came to be known as the “Charity War,” NCRP organizers accused the United Way chapters of being “dominated by businessmen and their wives.” 6

NCRP also criticized television networks for broadcasting United Way public service announcements during National Football League games and petitioned the Federal Communications Commission to force the networks to present “the other side” under the so-called “fairness doctrine.” Robert Bothwell, the first permanent executive director of NCRP, said the NFL’s public service announcements gave “a fraudulent and inaccurate impression of American philanthropy.” 8

From 1979 to 2005, NCRP would help to create alternative charitable federations focused on giving to causes associated with minority and low-income populations, women’s groups, and groups that supported left-leaning causes including abortion access, environmentalism, and labor unions. 5

Attack on the Combined Federal Campaign

In 1979, NCRP launched an effort to open the Combined Federal Campaign (“CFC”)—the nation’s largest workplace charitable drive, which permits federal employees to donate a portion of their paycheck to charity—to smaller charities, neighborhood groups, and advocacy groups working on left-leaning issues. The effort succeeded under the administration of President Jimmy Carter. 5

Bothwell and the NCRP promised lawsuits after the Reagan Administration implemented rules in 1982 limiting CFC donations to “direct services” providers and prohibiting CFC donations to groups engaged in political and litigation advocacy. 9 These rules, NCRP executives charged, were designed to “kick out groups like the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, the National Black United Fund, the Puerto Rican Legal Defense Fund, and the Native American Rights Fund,” as well as women’s and environmental advocacy groups. 10

Ultimately, the Supreme Court upheld the federal rules, with Associate Justice Sandra Day O’Connor writing that “The President could reasonably conclude that a dollar directly spent on providing food or shelter to the needy is more beneficial than a dollar spent on litigation that might or might not result in aid to the needy.” 11 However, Congress later enacted legislation permitting advocacy groups to participate in the CFC. 5

Advocacy on Transparency, Spending, and Impact

NCRP has criticized grantmakers for their lack of transparency about funding and procedures, as well as inattention to impact. In 1980, it released the report Foundations and Public Information: Sunshine or Shadow. This report noted that many foundations refused to provide lists of grantees, make grant procedures public, and provide information about salaries or expenses. While some of this information was reported to the Internal Revenue Service, it was often not made available to the public or only available for viewing inside regional IRS offices. 5

The study noted that this lack of transparency often masked charitable giving more focused on marquee arts and educational institutions than on advocacy groups and community groups working with minority and low-income populations. For example, the report noted that in the Washington, D.C., area, one private high school (the prestigious St. Albans School) received more philanthropic support “than the entire category of housing and neighborhood development.” 12 NCRP’s efforts would eventually lead to the IRS expanding the information private foundations must report annually on IRS Form 990-PF. 5

NCRP has long been an advocate of mandating increased spending by foundations, above the 5 percent of endowment that foundations are required to spend annually. In 2000, in the middle of a stock market boom that increased endowments substantially, NCRP co-founder Pablo Eisenberg argued that “Foundations can afford to give out a hell of a lot more than they have given out.” 13 In 2003, NCRP also supported proposed legislation that would have increased mandated foundation giving by excluding administrative expenses, salaries, and rent payments from the mandated 5 percent payout. 14

In the 2000s, NCRP called for the IRS to increase auditing and oversight of charitable groups and foundations, and especially to monitor increases in employees’ salaries and benefits that, it alleged, were diverting charitable dollars from these group’s missions. 15

In 2014, NCRP launched Philamplify, a website that solicits assessments of foundation effectiveness not only from foundation executives and employees, but also grant recipients. The assessment system gives equal weight to objective metrics of philanthropic impact and “a commitment to equity, asking that foundations confront systems that perpetuate inequality, specifically target underserved communities, and involve all those affected by philanthropy in the grantmaking process.” The assessments include “a series of recommendations along these lines that the public can vote on and offers a comment section” for readers and assessors. 16

Criticism of Conservative Philanthropy

In the mid-1990s, NCRP offered several critiques of “conservative philanthropy,” noting that smaller, right-leaning foundations such as the Lynde and Harry Bradley Foundation and the John M. Olin Foundation had donated more than $200 million to conservative causes in the preceding several years. 17  These reports noted that conservative foundations had been “effective in building an infrastructure for developing conservative public policy, even with a relatively smaller portion of total foundation assets.” 5

In 2004, when longtime Bradley Foundation President Michael Joyce retired, NCRP criticized the lump-sum payment of $737,923 in deferred compensation he received, as well as a $1.86 million retirement payment. “I think people would be shocked this is going on,” Jeff Krehely, NCRP’s deputy director, told the Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel. 18

COVID and Black Lives Matter Response

In response to the COVID-19 pandemic of 2020-2021, NCRP called repeatedly for foundations to increase their giving above the legally required 5 percent of endowments. In March 2020, NCRP Chief Executive Officer Aaron Dorfman (with Ellen Dorsey, executive director of the Wallace Global Fund) argued that philanthropists should use their assets—which he described as largely “ill-gotten gains from the Trump administration’s tax cuts”—to “promot[e] social justice,” including increasing taxes on capital gains and on high incomes. 19

In March 2021, Dorfman and Dorsey called again for foundations to increase spending in order to “step up and do more to address inequality, racial and economic injustices, and environmental destruction or fight to maintain a corrupt status quo.” Dorfman and Dorsey argued that foundations that “choose to expand their endowments by massive percentages year-on-year while paying out the bare minimum during multiple global economic, public-health, climate, and societal crises,” will become the targets of “[a]ctivists campaigning to #EatTheRich and #BanBillionaires.” 20

Dorfman also predicted that foundations would increase giving to the Black Lives Matter movement and other groups associated with racial issues, and that he hoped it would become a major component of foundation giving in the future. “A lot of us who are proponents of racial justice and social justice are really hoping that this newfound commitment continues,” he said. “It’s an open question as to if it really will.” 21

In August 2023, NCRP complained that foundations only gave one percent of their money to Black-run nonprofits and causes, leading to what it called the underfunding of Black groups by $2 billion. 22

Immigration Advocacy

In 2022, the National Committee for Responsive Philanthropy released a report complaining that foundations underfunded pro-expanded immigration groups and that their financial resources were not growing as fast as foundation wealth did. Despite foundation wealth quadrupling between 2011 and 2019, donations to immigration-expansionist groups never exceeded 0.4 percent of total foundation giving. 23

In November 2022, NCRP published an article calling on foundations to demand the environmental and population control funder Colcom Foundation stop funding anti-immigration groups and instead devote the entirety of its funding to environmentalist and civic groups. 24

In October 2023, NCRP published an article calling for more funding to pro-expanded immigration groups to combat states that cracked down on illegal immigration. 25

Sex Work Advocacy

In March 2022, the National Committee for Responsive Philanthropy published an issue of Responsive Philanthropy dedicated to supporting sex work and sex workers. NCRP complains that sex worker groups are underfunded, only receiving one percent of foundation human rights funding between 2015 and 2019. 26

Abortion and Transgender Advocacy

In January 2022, the National Committee for Responsive Philanthropy urged donors to increase their support for abortions for transgender people. NCRP complained that abortions for transgender people were underfunded, and that transgender people ran a great risk of being misgendered. 27

In June 2022, NCRP urged donors to give more to abortion funds, which focus on providing money for women to get abortions, along with paying for things like childcare, travel, and support. After the Dobbs decision allowed states to regulate abortion leaked in May 2022, abortion funds saw an increase in donations due to “rage giving,” but NCRP called it harmful and warned that pro-abortion nonprofits should not rely too much on that. NCRP also complained that many abortion funds could not stay open for an entire month because they were so underfunded, which NCRP saw as threatening the right to an abortion. 28

In July 2022, NCRP complained about the proliferation and funding of pro-life crisis pregnancy centers. NCRP alleged that “they use false advertising and medical misinformation to target and pressure abortion seekers to carry unwanted pregnancies to term.” NCRP instead urged funders to donate to abortion funds, pro-abortion advocacy groups, and abortion clinics to mitigate the alleged financial advantage crisis pregnancy centers have. In addition, NCRP urged donors to cut off crisis pregnancy centers. 29

In July 2023, NCRP complained about pro-abortion groups that did not prioritize “reproductive justice.” The group claimed, “the problem with Planned Parenthood is in many ways, the problem with everything: capitalism, white supremacy, and the genocidal tendencies of these two forces in tandem.” 30

Anti-Police Advocacy

In February 2023, the National Committee for Responsive Philanthropy issued a press release describing how philanthropy can help support anti-police causes in the wake of the shooting of Tyre Nichols by police officers. NCRP claimed, “every Black person in America is one police or Karen encounter away from never coming back home to their loved ones.” 31

In April 2024, NCRP published an article claiming that a proposed Atlanta Police Department training facility, dubbed “Cop City” by its opponents, threatened both the environment and “reproductive justice.” The group urged supporters to give money to the Atlanta Solidarity Fund, Community Movement Builders, the American Friends Service Committee, the Forest Justice Defense Fund, and the NAACP Legal Defense Fund. 32

Fighting Medical Racism

In June 2023, the National Committee for Responsive Philanthropy published an article claiming that Black women had a higher maternal death rate than white women due to medical racism. The group claimed, “the white supremacist systems within the medical community that deliver dangerously unequal care to those who need it the most.” 33

Indian Child Welfare Act

In June 2023, the National Committee for Responsive Philanthropy applauded the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision to uphold the Indian Child Welfare Act, claiming it was a win for tribal sovereignty and reproductive justice. The release also denounced corporations for exploiting mineral resources on tribal lands. 34

Racial Reparations

In January 2024, the National Committee for Responsive Philanthropy issued a call for philanthropy to help secure reparations for Black Americans in the Washington, D.C. area. The report claimed that the exploitation of Black Americans made possible the great wealth that led to philanthropy in the area in the first place. Eventually, NCRP planned to expand the model of reparations across the entire nation. 35

In October 2024, NCRP published an article detailing how philanthropy could move away from supporting an extractive economy and towards reparations and more “equitable” approaches. The article urged a five-point plan: “confront the historical harms associated with their wealth, engage directly with impacted communities, make reparations, decolonize institutional policies and practices, and advocate publicly for broader reparations.” 36

Climate Change Advocacy

In July 2023, the National Committee for Responsive Philanthropy published an issue of Responsive Philanthropy which urged funders to “turn toward viable community-oriented solutions to address the crisis and away from billionaire vanity projects that do more to repeat the systemic mistakes of the past than forge a just and healthy planet.” The report also denounced billionaires for offering “false solutions” to climate change. 37

In April 2024, NCRP published a report criticizing billionaire-led climate change efforts such as the Bezos Earth Fund for not funding more radical climate change advocacy efforts and instead funding what it called “disproportionately resourced, predominantly white–led, Big Green organizations.” 38

Election 2024 and Aftermath

In September 2024, the National Committee for Responsive Philanthropy published a report complaining that funders were not giving enough to support voter registration efforts, especially in states that passed election integrity measures. NCRP demanded larger and more multi-year grants to support voter registration efforts. 39

In October 2024, NCRP published an issue of its journal, Responsive Philanthropy, which urged donors to fund “democracy movement groups” year-round instead of just during election cycles. NCRP urged funders to fund groups led by non-whites and LGBT people. NCRP’s contributors also support for groups working on transgender-related issues and support for Palestinian nationalism. 40

In November 2024, NCRP urged “radical solidarity” and called for funders to give more to fund voter registration, immigration groups, climate change groups, and pro-abortion groups. NCRP also warned of a legal climate that was more hostile to left-of-center groups due to lawsuits against bail funds and other left-of-center groups. 41

In December 2024, NCRP published an article denouncing funders who would not fund a “resistance” to President Donald Trump as “appeasement.” NCRP called for funders to fund left-of-center agitation groups as a way of creating true pluralism. The article claimed, “an entire ascendant far-right movement is actively pursuing a white ethnonational state with riches crowded even further at the top, bodily autonomy for the few, an overheating planet, and the criminalization of entire communities for just existing.” The article also complained that philanthropy underfunded left-of-center causes and that philanthropy was more white, more male, and more right-wing than the rest of the country. There were also more complaints about how the influence of billionaires was growing and that most did not support the destruction of capitalism. The writer also claimed that a genocide occurred in Gaza and was angry that some funders pulled back from Palestinian nationalist causes. NCRP also urged the funding of “resistance” groups even during a Democratic administration. 42

Leadership

The National Committee for Responsive Philanthropy’s president and CEO is Aaron Dorfman, who joined the group in 2007. He previously worked for 15 years as a community organizer. He holds a bachelor’s degree in political science from Carleton College, a master’s degree in philanthropic studies from the Lilly Family School of Philanthropy at Indiana University, and sits on the boards of Capital and Main, the Center for Popular Democracy, and re:power. 43

Dr. Wayne Proctor is the chair of the board and works as the president and CEO of the Missouri Foundation for Health. 43

Financials

According to the National Committee for Responsive Philanthropy’s 2023 tax returns, the group had $3,373,013 in revenue, $4,545,763 in expenses, and $4,356,852 in assets. 44

Since 1983, the MacArthur Foundation has given $760,000 to NCRP. 45

Since 2002, the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation has given $2,660,000 to the NCRP. 46

In June 2021, MacKenzie Scott awarded a grant to the NCRP. 47

The NCRP awarded a $40,250 grant to Justice Funders in 2023. 44

References

  1. “About Us.” NCRP, November 14, 2023. https://ncrp.org/about-us/.
  2. “The Filer Commission And The Birth Of NCRP.” HistPhil.com. March 2, 2016. Accessed June 5, 2021. https://histphil.org/2016/03/02/the-filer-commission-and-the-birth-of-ncrp/.
  3. “The Donee Group Founded NCRP.” National Committee for Responsive Philanthropy. Archived from the original September 29, 2023. Accessed February 5, 2023. https://web.archive.org/web/20230929102836/https://www.ncrp.org/timeline/the-donee-group-founded-ncrp
  4. “The Filer Commission And The Birth Of NCRP.” HistPhil.com. March 2, 2016. Accessed June 5, 2021. https://histphil.org/2016/03/02/the-filer-commission-and-the-birth-of-ncrp/.    
  5. “30 Years: A History from 1976 to 2006.” National Committee for Responsive Philanthropy. http://www.ncrp.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/11/NCRPhistory_HighRes.pdf.
  6. Ed McConville. “United Way Comes Under Increasing Fire in ‘Charity War.’” Washington Post. November 23, 1979. Accessed June 5, 2021. https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/politics/1979/11/23/united-way-comes-under-increasing-fire-in-charity-war/eb401b8b-b79e-4287-9b2f-7060e39c58b4/.
  7. Warren Brown. “United Way Criticized as ‘Monopoly.’” Washington Post. December 14, 1978. Accessed June 5, 2021. https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/politics/1978/12/14/united-way-criticized-as-monopoly/7339794b-4800-4e1d-bd6d-eddf25550e99/.
  8. Ernest Holsendolph. “Group Says United Way’s TV Ads Violate Fairness Doctrine of F.C.C.; Reaction of United Way.” New York Times. November 13, 1979. Accessed June 5, 2021. https://www.nytimes.com/1979/11/13/archives/group-says-united-ways-tv-ads-violate-fairness-doctrine-of-fcc.html.
  9. Karlyn Barker. “Limits on Organizations Eligible for Fund Drive Contributions Proposed.” May 11, 1982. Accessed on Westlaw (1982 WLNR 548777) June 5, 2021.
  10. Robert A. Jordan. “Attack on Minority Charities.” Boston Globe. June 8, 1982. Accessed on Westlaw (1982 WLNR 38713) June 5, 2021.
  11. “Charity Drive’s Bar to Advocacy Groups Upheld.” Associated Press. July 2, 1985. Accessed June 5, 2021. https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1985-07-02-mn-560-story.html.
  12. Spencer Rich. “Charity Groups’ Secrecy Criticized.” Washington Post. June 5, 1980. Accessed June 5, 2021. https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/politics/1980/06/05/charity-groups-secrecy-criticized/23c51feb-408e-4eb8-95cb-ec55c9a15852/.
  13. Mary Jacoby. “Foundations Resist Pressure to Give More.” St. Petersburg Times. February 14, 2000. Accessed on Westlaw (2000 WLNR 2518178) June 5, 2021.
  14. Stephanie Strom. “House bill would require American foundations to give away more money each year.” International Herald-Tribune. May 20, 2003. Accessed on Westlaw (2003 WLNR 5339065) June 5, 2021.
  15. “IRS Unable to Monitor Nonprofit Groups.” San Jose Mercury-News. April 17, 2003. Accessed on Westlaw June 5, 2021.
  16. Benjamin Soskis. “How a Zagat-Style Website Will Make Philanthropy More Accountable.” The Atlantic. May 20, 2014. Accessed May 28, 2021. https://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2014/05/how-a-zagat-style-website-will-make-philanthropy-more-accountable/371236/.
  17. “Who buys the right?” The Nation. November 18, 1996. Accessed on Westlaw (1996 WLNR 6302409) June 5, 2021.
  18. Bruce Murphy. “Rising Fortunes—How We Pay CEOs: Foundation leaders’ salaries rise with assets.” Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel. October 13, 2004. Accessed on Westlaw (2004 WLNR 17250396) June 5, 2021.
  19. Aaron Dorfman and Ellen Dorsey. “Dorfman (with Ellen Dorsey, executive director of the Wallace Global Fund).” Chronicle of Philanthropy. March 19, 2020. Accessed May 28, 2021. https://www.philanthropy.com/article/now-is-the-time-for-philanthropy-to-give-more-not-less/.
  20. Aaron Dorfman and Ellen Dorsey. “Do the Math: Foundations Can Afford to Advance the Nation’s Covid Reset.” Chronicle of Philanthropy. March 24, 2021. Accessed May 28, 2021. https://www.philanthropy.com/article/do-the-math-foundations-can-afford-to-advance-the-nations-covid-reset?cid=gen_sign_in.
  21. Glenn Gamboa. “A year later, racial reckoning yields uncertainty in giving.” Associated Press. June 3, 2021. Accessed June 5, 2021. https://www.dailyherald.com/article/20210602/business/306029943.
  22. “BackBlack Initiative to Address Funding Gap for Black-Led Nonprofits .” Philanthropy News Digest, August 8, 2023. https://philanthropynewsdigest.org/news/backblack-initiative-to-address-funding-gap-for-black-led-nonprofits.
  23. “Immigrant Rights Funding Diversifying but Still ‘Vastly Underfunded’ .” Philanthropy News Digest, July 25, 2023. https://philanthropynewsdigest.org/news/immigrant-rights-funding-diversifying-but-still-vastly-underfunded.
  24. Oren, Avigail. “The COLCOM Foundation and the Culture of Civility Endanger Americans. Peer Foundations Can Speak out and Help Make Us All Safer.” NCRP, November 22, 2022. https://ncrp.org/2022/11/the-colcom-foundation-and-the-culture-of-civility-endanger-americans-peer-foundations-can-speak-out-and-help-make-us-all-safer/.
  25. Jessie. “Philanthropy’s Vital Role in Supporting Frontline Migrant Justice Organizations Must Start with More Funding.” NCRP, October 12, 2023. https://ncrp.org/2023/10/philanthropys-vital-role-in-supporting-frontline-migrant-justice-organizations-must-start-with-more-funding/
  26. “NCRP Stresses the Importance of Understanding & Investing in Sex Worker Movement.” NCRP, March 31, 2022. https://ncrp.org/2022/03/ncrp-stresses-the-importance-of-understanding-investing-in-sex-worker-movement/.
  27. “Health Equity – and Abortion Access – Must Be Gender Affirming.” NCRP, January 14, 2022. https://ncrp.org/2022/01/ncrp-health-equity-and-abortion-access-must-be-gender-affirming/.
  28. Beaty, Thalia. “Abortion Funds Feel Frustration, Gratitude at ‘Rage Giving.’” PBS, June 10, 2022. https://www.pbs.org/newshour/health/abortion-funds-feel-frustration-gratitude-at-rage-giving.
  29. “New Research: Crisis Pregnancy Centers Hold a 5:1 Funding Advantage over Legitimate Abortion Clinics and Funds Nationwide.” NCRP, July 21, 2022. https://ncrp.org/2022/07/new-research-crisis-pregnancy-centers-hold-a-51-funding-advantage-over-legitimate-abortion-clinics-and-funds-nationwide/.
  30. “Building an Uncompromising Movement for Abortion Access.” NCRP, June 22, 2023. https://ncrp.org/2023/06/building-an-uncompromising-movement-for-abortion-access/.
  31. “How Funders Can Help Stop America’s Destructive Dependency on Abuse & Power.” NCRP, February 3, 2023. https://ncrp.org/2023/02/ncrp-how-funders-can-help-stop-americas-destructive-dependency-on-abuse-power/.
  32. Collins-Calhoun, Brandi, and Senowa Mize-Fox. “A Dual Threat: Cop City’s Danger to Both Climate and Reproductive Justice.” NCRP, April 11, 2024. https://ncrp.org/2024/04/a-dual-threat-cop-citys-danger-to-both-climate-and-reproductive-justice/.
  33. Collins-Calhoun, Brandi. “Are You Really Funding Birth Justice or Is Your Grantmaking Romanticizing a Crisis Leaving Black Families and Communities Grieving?” NCRP, June 29, 2023. https://ncrp.org/2023/06/are-you-really-funding-birth-justice-or-is-your-grantmaking-romanticizing-a-crisis-leaving-black-families-and-communities-grieving/.
  34. “One Step, but Many More Needed to Fully Support Tribal Sovereignty.” NCRP, June 16, 2023. https://ncrp.org/2023/06/one-step-but-many-more-needed-to-fully-support-tribal-sovereignty/.
  35.  [1] “Ncrp Report: Philanthropy Must Play an Active Role in Reparations for Black People.” NCRP, January 30, 2024. https://ncrp.org/2024/01/0130_philanthropy_reparations/.
  36. Glover, Adrianne. “Rethinking Evaluation and Philanthropy for a Just and Liberated Future.” NCRP, October 23, 2024. https://ncrp.org/2024/10/rethinking-evaluation-and-philanthropy-for-a-just-and-liberated-future/.
  37. “Climate Justice Requires Intersectional Solidarity & Philanthropic Partners Willing to Buck Billionaire Trend.” NCRP, July 12, 2023. https://ncrp.org/2023/07/climate-justice-requires-intersectional-solidarity-philanthropic-partners-willing-to-buck-billionaire-trend/
  38.  “Good, Bad, Bezos, and Beyond: Climate Philanthropy and the Grassroots.” NCRP, April 22, 2024. https://ncrp.org/2024/04/ncrp-bezos-report/.
  39. “The Cost to Protect Democracy Has Skyrocketed – so Why Haven’t Grants Kept Up?” NCRP, September 30, 2024. https://ncrp.org/2024/09/voting-obstacles-2024/.
  40. “Leaders Urge Philanthropy to Provide Sustainable Support before, during and after Election Years.” NCRP, October 14, 2024. https://ncrp.org/2024/10/leaders-urge-philanthropy-to-provide-sustainable-support-before-during-and-after-election-years/.
  41. “A Time for Radical Solidarity.” NCRP, November 6, 2024. https://ncrp.org/2024/11/a_time_for_radical_solidarity/.
  42. Barge, Ben. “Playing It Safe Won’t Save Us.” NCRP, December 3, 2024. https://ncrp.org/2024/12/playing-it-safe-wont-save-us/.
  43. “Our Team.” NCRP. Accessed January 27, 2025. https://ncrp.org/our-team/.
  44. “National Committee for Responsive Philanthropy, Full Filing – Nonprofit Explorer.” ProPublica. Accessed January 27, 2025. https://projects.propublica.org/nonprofits/organizations/521072749/202420899349301502/full.
  45. “National Committee for Responsive Philanthropy .” MacArthur Foundation. Accessed January 27, 2025. https://www.macfound.org/grantee/national-committee-for-responsive-philanthropy-167/.
  46. “Grants.” Hewlett Foundation. Accessed January 27, 2025. https://hewlett.org/grants/?_grant_search=National+Committee+for+Responsive+Philanthropy.
  47. Baker, Damare. “38 DC-Area Organizations Received Donations from Mackenzie Scott. Here’s What They Do.” Washingtonian, June 16, 2021. https://www.washingtonian.com/2021/06/16/38-dc-area-organizations-received-donations-from-mackenzie-scott-heres-what-they-do/
  See an error? Let us know!

Nonprofit Information

  • Accounting Period: September - August
  • Tax Exemption Received: January 1, 1977

  • Available Filings

    Period Form Type Total revenue Total functional expenses Total assets (EOY) Total liabilities (EOY) Unrelated business income? Total contributions Program service revenue Investment income Comp. of current officers, directors, etc. Form 990
    2022 Sep Form 990 $3,191,607 $3,446,342 $4,922,590 $347,243 N $3,122,495 $5,000 $81,036 $466,288
    2021 Sep Form 990 $5,728,825 $2,885,800 $5,842,653 $460,648 N $5,637,593 $20,000 $23,012 $487,584
    2020 Sep Form 990 $3,027,231 $2,706,727 $3,111,988 $623,458 N $2,973,379 $24,000 $23,615 $430,620 PDF
    2019 Sep Form 990 $2,380,805 $2,631,610 $2,384,488 $238,748 N $2,339,979 $10,000 $30,922 $262,969 PDF
    2018 Sep Form 990 $2,798,726 $2,427,819 $2,629,015 $237,216 Y $2,743,332 $34,400 $17,304 $210,495 PDF
    2017 Sep Form 990 $2,368,379 $2,248,388 $2,197,319 $177,666 N $2,328,977 $27,200 $11,093 $196,555
    2016 Sep Form 990 $2,125,444 $1,927,967 $1,966,471 $91,593 N $2,094,740 $17,174 $13,109 $182,623 PDF
    2015 Sep Form 990 $1,961,149 $1,912,630 $1,761,837 $103,976 N $1,940,168 $240 $16,258 $171,552 PDF
    2014 Sep Form 990 $1,980,455 $2,108,484 $1,712,423 $88,964 N $1,973,670 $1,045 $5,131 $166,496 PDF
    2013 Sep Form 990 $1,541,645 $1,658,993 $1,844,222 $88,166 N $1,499,720 $35,305 $6,390 $154,152 PDF
    2012 Sep Form 990 $1,634,183 $1,421,050 $1,944,893 $71,489 N $1,611,885 $1,698 $19,015 $145,356 PDF
    2011 Sep Form 990 $1,197,785 $1,658,707 $1,746,356 $86,085 N $1,173,278 $1,270 $21,921 $141,594 PDF

    Additional Filings (PDFs)

    National Committee for Responsive Philanthropy

    1900 L ST NW STE 825
    WASHINGTON, DC 20036-5009