This Case Study was written by Susan Foster, Developmental Evaluator and Lisa Attygalle, Consulting Director, Tamarack Institute.
In 2018, the Sewall Foundation initiated a community engagement process in one of its key focus areas, the twin cities of Lewiston and Auburn (LA). Seeking deeper connections with organizations in these communities, the foundation committed resources to community outreach, collective reflection to surface community priorities, and program co-design. The co-design phase (completed in 2020), facilitated by Lisa Attygalle of the Tamarack Institute, brought a group of 11 community leaders selected from diverse backgrounds and sectors together to affirm five priority areas to be addressed via a systems approach: Equitable Civic Systems, Workforce Access and Economic Development, Community Health and Wellness, Healthy Local Food Systems, and Healthy Affordable Housing.
Figure 1: Overview of Systems Approach in LA
Two general strategies would be necessary for systematic impact: to support collaboration and build capacity. The original goals for the LA community engagement process included:
Stronger non-profit leadership and collaboration
Coordinated and sustainable collaborative efforts
Improved communication across sectors
Deeper equity (centring youth and BIPOC)
Healthier land and waters
A case study describing early activities, community engagement strategies, and learning from the initial phases of the LA process can be found here. Anticipating the pilot phase of the process, participants offered their thoughts on what Sewall needed to pay attention to: people’s lack of time and resources for collaboration and planning; keeping youth at the center of the work; remaining vigilant about power dynamics; and having realistic expectations about organizations’ ability to change systems.
This case study tells the story of the program pilot, which comprised quarterly virtual gatherings of participants across four priority areas, initial participatory grantmaking and non-grant activities, alternative grant reporting, and peer learning.
This case study includes:
Participant Perceptions of the Process, Convenings, and Results
What the LA Community Engagement Process is Enabling: Early Results
This case study draws from many information sources, including quarterly convening summaries, meeting notes, and a participant survey at the end of the pilot period.
The pilot phase for the LA engagement process ran from 2022 – 2024. A phased approach was recommended by community partners:
The eventual goal should be a community-based decision-making model whereby the community—those affected by the issues and those working alongside them—will decide how available funding will be allocated. But first, some significant power struggles and dynamics among organizations and sectors in L-A need to be addressed. Currently, there is too much competition and not enough trust among organizational leaders (particularly between leaders of mainstream and grassroots organizations). Therefore, in years 1-2, the Co-Design team recommends that Sewall continue to provide unrestricted operating support and program grants directly to organizations and groups whose work aligns with program priorities. Sewall should also support relationship building, collaboration, and capacity building so that by year 3, the community will be ready to transition to community-based decision-making and leadership.
– Co-Design Summary Report, October 2020
Therefore, goals were sequenced, and piloting was built into the process to enable further trust building among LA organizations and to experiment with new ways for the community to make decisions and allocate collective resources.
The planning team—including Lauress Lawrence, Sewall Foundation; Lisa Attygalle, Tamarack Institute; and Susan Foster, Developmental Evaluator—used an emergent learning approach that is suited to collective, complex work. Instead of relying on rigid, pre-planned strategies, it involves making collective thinking visible, framing work as experiments, and continuously learning to adapt and achieve greater impact.
Participants in the LA ecosystem agreed to the following goals:
Organizations working together demonstrate greater independence, stronger relationships, an orientation to the collective, and increased shared decision-making.
Identifying and resourcing shared initiatives and/or initiatives that meet collective needs.
Shifting from Sewall convening to establishing community-led structures for convening, communication, and resource allocation that can be sustained.
Developing a network of funders in LA that coordinates their efforts in service of community-led goals.
Over the three-year pilot period, the following activities took place to work towards shared goals.
In late 2024, at the end of the pilot period, we distributed a participant survey that produced 58 responses (26% of all participants), with good distribution across priority areas (Health: 36%; Equity: 17%; Housing: 19%; Workforce: 28%). Those who filled out the survey were very experienced; 42% had been involved for over 3 years, 50% had been involved for 1-3 years, and only 8% had less than 1 year of involvement. Most had been to gatherings, but one-third had also been on a planning group, and over one-fifth had been on a steering committee.
This section of the study synthesizes participant feedback on the community engagement process and its progress toward the community-identified goals depicted in Figure 2.
Overall, participant feedback was very positive, with consistent praise for the diversity of its participants, the facilitator and the quarterly virtual gatherings, for everything they had learned, and for the relationships they had developed with other people serving the Lewiston-Auburn community.
Since 2019, the Sewall Foundation has partnered with LA on shifting from foundation-driven to community-led grantmaking, enabled by reliable, general operating funding that supports all organizations to stay involved. These years have been about relationships, learning, and incremental change. Overall, this process has made significant progress toward reaching its goals. A key success factor has been ecosystem members’ willingness to collaborate, to take responsibility, and to practice shared accountability.
We have observed some significant shifts toward community-led planning, network design, and participatory grantmaking resulting from a range of activities, participatory processes, and strategies.
System mapping, conducted in facilitated sessions just before the pilot period, enabled participants to see gaps, duplication, understand who is doing what, and to identify shared opportunities. Increased knowledge and awareness of each other’s work have led to increased cooperation and collaboration in the ecosystem.
Participatory budgeting via a virtual tool that was introduced to the ecosystem in the pilot period enabled the people doing the work to use their expertise to allocate resources to achieve common goals. Community decision-makers chose to allocate funding to collaborative infrastructure—convenors, steering committees; shared priorities—pilot projects, pooled fund for emergencies; and the existing work of collaboratives and organizations.
Community grantmaking, used to allocate funds to priority projects, enabled grantee partners to create fair, participatory processes for funding special projects. In this way, decision-making and accountability is shifting from Sewall to the ecosystem. Ecosystem members have successfully created grant funding criteria and processes for prioritizing projects; in fact, their work was a model for guiding funding allocation criteria following the mass shooting in Lewiston in October 2023. Ideally, ongoing management of the funds shifts to the community as well via a “fiscal host” organization. The fiscal host model has been more challenging to implement due to the varying capacity of community organizations for the administration of grant disbursement and management.
Community goal setting, begun in 2023-2024, will enable the ecosystem to clarify its collective work, roles, strategic priorities, and how it will measure progress.
The design of governance structures enabled ecosystem members to select the collaborative structure that would best enable them to meet their goals. Following a commonly agreed-upon protocol, members of each priority area selected different structures to meet their needs. The structure in each priority area looks quite different, spanning loose network (Health and Food Systems) to a formal collaborative (housing). As one network partner put it: “We want resources moving and action happening, but with a light touch structure for coordination” - Health and Food Systems partner.
Alternative reporting enabled ecosystem members to share what they are most proud of with each other. In its efforts to live up to its commitment to trust-based philanthropy, Sewall has been experimenting with alternatives to the traditional grantee report. In April 2024, ecosystem participants each created 1-2 slides to share their accomplishments with each other in virtual gatherings. Grantees were invited to take a “gallery walk”, to ask questions, and to reach out to each other for further information. Member feedback suggests that this activity helped people learn more about each other’s work, spur deeper communication across organizations, and generate new ideas.
Below, we share outcomes associated with each priority area, focusing on outcomes related to building capacity, supporting collaborative, and systems-focused work.
While each priority area has made progress toward its goals, progress is happening at a different pace and in a different way based on its needs, goals, and context. As participants have experimented with new ways of organizing themselves, they identified a range of ongoing challenges regarding funding, funding constraints, the fiscal host role, and continuing competition among organizations that can create barriers to system improvements. The most common challenges are discussed below.
Balancing meeting one’s own organizational and community needs against thinking as an ecosystem has been challenging for some participants. This appears to be one of the major challenges associated with community-driven change efforts, especially when the ecosystem is comprised of many small, grassroots organizations serving communities that are marginalized. Being fully present to discuss and act on broad, system-level challenges is difficult when people are in crisis. Yet the case for network-building and systems improvement was reinforced when this network, having done the work of assessing community needs and learning what different organizations do, was faced with allocating resources in the aftermath of the Lewiston shootings. This group provided essential background information and criteria for funding to funders around Maine.
More work needs to be done to give youth organizations the resources they need to participate fully in the ecosystem and to feel comfortable bringing their issues into the conversation. Participants prioritized a youth leadership program and organizational capacity building as ways to better center youth. Respondents were mixed on the idea of developing a separate youth cohort.
“Technical assistance should include leadership training for youth and youth leaders, as well as training for other marginalized groups of youth that don’t fall into the BIPOC category but who are also at great risk, such as unsheltered and unaccompanied youth.” Participant
People felt that the needs of BIPOC-led organizations were well-represented, but were less likely to agree that BIPOC-led organizations have the resources they need to fully participate in the process. The most frequently mentioned idea for better centring BIPOC-led orgs and leaders was capacity building, followed by more support for leadership development, especially for young leaders.
One of the original priorities set by participants in this process was to reduce competition in the network of nonprofits in LA. This has worked remarkably well, as evidenced by numerous examples of collective decision-making about resource allocation. Yet competition among organizations remains, particularly when they are serving (or want to serve) the same communities, or when they fear losing current funding.
Toward the end of the pilot period, there may have been too much emphasis on process versus action. While a major goal of the pilot was to build structures and processes, the team may have focused too heavily on this as opposed to shared goal setting.
LA is blessed with a comprehensive non-profit ecosystem, but a proliferation of small, nascent organizations has led to some duplication of effort and resources spread thin. There are indications that the ecosystem partners are recognizing duplication as a problem and are considering this in their funding decisions (e.g., setting criteria for exclusion if the work is duplicative or not aligned with existing efforts).
The Sewall Foundation has forged a new, collaborative way to build partnerships to live up to its commitment to trust-based philanthropy and to meet the needs of the community in the Lewiston-Auburn area. They have also brought an innovative approach to grant-making, making it much more collaborative and community-focused.
People in the LA ecosystem shared what has worked well for them regarding this experience. They loved how inclusive the process has been, especially with its attention to youth-led and BIPOC-led organizations. Consistent, transparent communication and regular convenings are greatly appreciated. Sewall has fostered a “culture of possibilities” that gives meaning to the idea that communities are able to make their own choices, collectively, about how change will occur. People also praised Sewall’s flexibility around reporting and ease of applications.
This has been “a conscious effort to bring diverse voices to the table that gives small, BIPOC-led organizations an equal voice.”
Participant
One key lesson out of the pilot period is that small grants do not enable transformative change. Rather than making larger grants, Sewall created an inclusive process whereby every organization would receive seed funding. The ecosystem grew large, so individual grants remained relatively small. Participants appreciated the funding but observed that spreading money thinly over many organizations made it more difficult to support potentially impactful, larger grants or capacity building. Some collaborative grants have been funded that focus on systemic change; for example, a grant supporting a transportation system for shift workers and a childcare collaborative that integrates BIPOC-led and mainstream organizations.
The Sewall team also struggled at times regarding how prescriptive to be and how to use its power in service to community goals. Having one person, the Sewall community partner, holding all the organizations and partners in a very relational way was hard to maintain and sometimes delayed progress. As the community assumes more of a primary governance role, this should be less of an issue.
Sewall has learned that managing a large, complex ecosystem of organizations with multiple priority areas (all with unique grant processes as determined by the community) has become increasingly challenging. The complexity of the ecosystem, the number of grants, and new, participatory grantmaking and fiscal host processes have put strain on Sewall’s grants management staff.
Another lesson learned is that shifting power to communities can add burden to stretched organizations. The idea of transferring funds to an organization to manage was more complex than anticipated. Particularly when the role involves integrating a new hire, the employee needs to be located in an organization that can not only make payroll, but also provide support, supervision, and thought partnership. It became clear that if organizations are to take over administrative, grants management, HR, and fiscal responsibilities from a foundation, they must have the capacity to do so or the assistance of the funder to build this skill set.
There are indications that participants in the community engagement process recognize that to make a greater impact, they need to reconsider how resources are allocated. As funding is limited, some participants called for having an honest conversation about funding constraints and how to meet increasing needs in the community while being impactful. It is anticipated that the community goal-setting process will help each priority area determine which kinds of grants, to which combination of organizations, will best help them reach their agreed-upon goals.
In parallel with the community’s goals, Sewall hopes that funders will work even more closely together to support the advancement of community-led goals. One story demonstrates the promise of a collaborative funder effort in LA:
In October 2023, a mass shooting in Lewiston brought the community together to provide emergency response and other collective funding to respond to community trauma and healing. Because this diverse ecosystem with experience in participatory resource allocation was already in place, MPC, Maine Community Foundation, and LA funders met to identify community priorities with input from community partners. Participants were invited to add to the Listening document on short, mid-, and long-term needs that funders then used as a shared resource. Having the ecosystem in place helped funders react more quickly and responsively to the crisis.
We are transitioning from the pilot to the next phase of our collaborative process, which Sewall will continue supporting with multi-year funding, convenings (until the community can take them over), focused support for emerging collaborative structures and capacity building for organizations. The foundation has begun to step back from implementing the process to support more community-centred leadership. The success of this shift is reliant on community leaders, emphasis on relationship building, readiness, and the belief that coordination is needed to address systemic gaps.
Lauress Lawrence, Sewall’s longtime LA community partner, shared her reflections at the end of the pilot period, paraphrased below:
Emergent learning is a commitment and has helped the process develop organically without a strict playbook. Now, we are shifting the focus to the community, and away from Sewall— “this is your work.” You’ve all been growing the equity lens, including centring youth. Having built strong relationships and trust (mostly), it’s time to shift to changing systems via big, bold ideas.
Sewall’s goal is to continue to support community-led dialogue and coordination and decision-making, such that funding from Sewall and other funders is responsive to community priorities. Sewall hopes that LA partners will benefit from larger, multiyear grants to create more transformational change. Sewall remains committed to ongoing communication with LA priority groups and has the flexibility to adapt to emerging community-identified needs and approaches. In the meantime, Sewall has committed five more years of funding to LA.
In January 2025, participants identified the following action steps for the ecosystem over the next three years.
Keep working on developing trust within the ecosystem.
Continue building healthy collaborative structures to coordinate and sustain the work.
Work more intentionally on developing coordinated efforts to shift systems. To do so, the group should ask “What will be different 3 years from now if we work together?” and discuss and name systems-focused projects which will be funded for the subsequent 3 years.
Develop a framework and strategy for youth engagement and supporting young leaders.
Implement community-led, systems-focused action for impact.
Continue to provide funding for community-based collaborative structures and community-led strategic partnerships to shift systems towards equitable outcomes.
As this process continues into its maturity, questions remain that will be answered through continued emergent learning:
Having observed in the pilot phase that funding over 70 organizations spread resources thin and limited transformative work, what would funding fewer organizations make possible, for whom?
If fewer organizations receive funding, who will benefit, and who will be harmed? How will that affect participation in the ecosystem?
Sewall has reimagined its capacity-building program to be more responsive to organizations around Maine and in Lewiston-Auburn. Is it possible that these resources could contribute to organizational capacity building and leadership development in a way that would be more impactful than in the past?
What staff and structures will enable Sewall to support LA to move from “on the edge of independence” to a self-sustaining, functional network?