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 Pass Forward Social Innovation
 
  
 
Sonal Shaw

"We didn't want innovation to be limited only to technology innovation," says Sonal Shah, head of global development for Google.org, the search engine's philanthropic arm, who was a member of the Obama transition project's advisory board and co-chair of the technology working group. "Let's not just make it innovation in terms of broadband or something like that, but also innovation in terms of what civil society is doing."

Ms. Shah and her colleagues say they explored how government can provide money to results-oriented social projects, or "what works"; how to set up a social-investment fund; how government and nonprofit groups can join forces to achieve some of the president's goals, such as weatherizing homes or closing education gaps; and how to use new technology to get more Americans involved in community-service projects. 


THE BRIEFING ROOM

THE WHITE HOUSE

Office of the Press Secretary
____________________________________________________________________
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE                                             May 5, 2009

President Obama to Request $50 Million to Identify and Expand Effective,
Innovative Non-Profits
White House Office of Social Innovation and Civic Participation to Coordinate Efforts


WASHINGTON – President Barack Obama, in his FY2010 budget, will ask Congress to provide $50 million in seed capital for the Social Innovation Fund to identify the most promising, results-oriented non-profit programs and expand their reach throughout the country. 

Many solutions to our nation’s most challenging social problems are being generated outside of Washington; the Social Innovation Fund will identify what is working in communities across the country, provide growth capital for these programs, and improve the use of data and evaluation to raise the bar on what programs the government funds. 

"The idea is simple: to find the most effective programs out there and then provide the capital needed to replicate their success in communities around the country that are facing similar challenges," First Lady Michelle Obama will say Tuesday at the Time 100 Most Influential People Awards in New York City, according to her prepared remarks. "By focusing on high-impact, result-oriented non-profits, we will ensure that government dollars are spent in a way that is effective, accountable and worthy of the public trust."

Melody Barnes, Assistant to the President and Director of the Domestic Policy Council, also highlighted the Fund Tuesday in a keynote speech to the Council on Foundations.  "The Social Innovation Fund reflects the President’s new governing philosophy: finding and investing in what works; and partnering with and supporting others who are leading change in their communities," Barnes said.  "We are also working with Federal agencies across the government to identify new solutions to problems that have resisted traditional approaches."

The Social Innovation Fund was authorized in the recent Edward M. Kennedy Serve America Act.  The Fund will focus on priority policy areas, including education, health care, and economic opportunity.  It will partner with foundations, philanthropists, and corporations which will commit matching resources, funding, and technical assistance. 

The White House Office of Social Innovation and Civic Participation will coordinate efforts to enlist all Americans –individuals, non-profits, social entrepreneurs, corporations and foundations – as partners in solving our great challenges.  Located within the Domestic Policy Council, it will:

  • Catalyze partnerships between the government and nonprofits, businesses and philanthropists in order to make progress on the President’s policy agenda
  • Identify and support the rigorous evaluation and scaling of innovative, promising ideas that are transforming communities like, for example, Harlem Children’s Zone, YouthVillages, Nurse-Family Partnership, and Citizen Schools.
  • Support greater civic participation through new media tools
  • Promote national service. 
Mrs. Obama’s full remarks at the Time 100 Most Influential People Awards in New York City will be released later in the day.