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Archive for October, 2009
Upcoming Bug Hunts!
Oct 31st
As we near completion of the 2.9 milestone, it’s that time of dev cycle again, when we ask all you community developers who’ve been putting off contributing to core to dust off your dev environments and help us get closer to being release-ready. How? Bug hunts! Yes, that time-honored tradition (in the time of WordPress, anyway) of everyone pitching in to test patches and report the results, working on solutions to major bugs, and helping to clear out Trac has come around again, and we’re scheduling not one, but two bug hunts over the next couple of weeks to ensure that everyone has enough time to prepare and participate.
#1 – The first bug hunt of 2.9 will be Thursday through Saturday, November 5-7, 2009. This should give people a few days to plan for it, upgrade their dev environments if they haven’t been following trunk, and figure out how to allot their time. We’re stretching over both weekdays and weekend to try and accommodate everyone’s schedule.
#2 - The second bug hunt will be a week later, Saturday through Monday, November 14-16, 2009. This should make it possible for anyone who needs more than a week to set some time aside to participate. This bug hunt will coincide with WordCamp NYC, where a special Hacker Room will be set aside for people to go and work on 2.9 bug tickets alongside regular core contributors including Mark Jaquith and Matt Martz (sivel from IRC).
The Goals
Test, test, test existing patches! You can see all tickets with patches that need testing by checking this report. When you’ve tested a patch, report your results in the ticket comments, so core committers can see how the patch is faring.
Fix known bugs! You can see the bugs that need patches by checking this report. Look for the ones that seem that they’ll affect the most people or have the biggest impact by being fixed. Edge case bugs should be lower priority.
Report new bugs! As you’re testing out the development version, if you come across a bug, search trac to see if someone has reported it yet. If so, add a comment with your experience to the ticket so we’ll know it’s affecting more than one person. If no ticket exists yet, create one.
Core committers will be around (in the #wordpress-dev channel at irc.freenode.com) both weekends to review patches that have been thoroughly tested, answer questions as needed, and give feedback on patches that need more work before being commit-worthy.
If you’ve never participated in a WordPress bug hunt before, but you’d like to get involved, we’d love to have you join us! To prepare, you’ll want to set up a test environment, start using the current development version/maybe install the beta testing plugin, join us in the #wordpress-dev IRC channel, and read up on automated testing.
Struggle With Pension Benefits Poses Serious Threat, Study Says
Oct 30th
A new study concludes that many nonprofit organizations are having major problems trying to sustain the benefits they provide employees through pension plans.
Numerous organizations are coping by offering less generous retirement benefits and reducing the scope and scale of their plans’ coverage, “actions which have serious implications for nonprofit workers and their families,” said the report by the Johns Hopkins University’s Listening Post Project.
The project, which is supported by the Johns Hopkins Center for Civil Society Studies and 10 other nonprofit organizations, conducted a survey of its national sample of nonprofit human-service, community-development, and cultural organizations. The report did not identify the organizations that responded.
The report — “Escalating Pension Benefit Costs: Another Threat to Nonprofit Survival?” — said struggling organizations include those that offer so-called defined-benefit plans as well as those that offer defined-contribution plans.
Defined-benefit plans provide set amounts of money to retired workers. Employers take on the full cost and risk of saving for their employees and making guaranteed retirement payments to them. Fifteen percent of organizations — generally larger groups with greater numbers of employees — said they offered such plans, the report said.
Defined-contribution plans, such as 403(b) plans, allow employees to save before-tax earnings through payroll deductions; employers may contribute to them. Fifty-eight percent of survey respondents said they had such programs for workers, the report said.
‘Under Stress’
Seventy-six percent of surveyed organizations that offer defined-benefit pension plans said that their plans are currently “under stress,” the report said. Forty-three percent of those with defined-benefit plans said the stress was “severe” or “very severe.”
The report said that the stock-market crash has left many nonprofit organizations with defined-benefit plans having trouble setting aside money for future payments to retired employees.
The report noted that a federal law, the Pension Protection Act of 2006, significantly increased the defined-benefit pension obligations of charities and other employers as organizations guarantee that they will have enough money to pay retired workers.
The law requires organizations to have money in place to fully cover these plans “and to make up any shortfall resulting from market fluctuations through increased contributions into their pension funds over a seven-year period,” the report said.
“Because the recent economic downturn has resulted in significant reductions in the value of pension-plan investments, however,” the report said, “this 2006 Act requirement is subjecting these organizations to rather severe obligations, and, as a result, many are having to divert resources from their program operations to their pension plans at a time when needs are growing and resources are shrinking.”
In response, the report said, nonprofit and other employers are pressing for legislation that will temporarily give them more time to bring their pension plans back to fully funded status. (Earlier this week, two members of Congress introduced legislation that would ease the rules.)
Between 2007 and 2008, average defined-benefit plan pension costs faced by nonprofit groups increased by 6 percent, which is double the inflation rate, the report said. “What is more, these organizations’ average unfunded liability more than doubled, jumping from $658,104 in FY 2007 to nearly $1.4-million in FY 2008,” the report said.
Orchestras were more than twice as likely as organizations in other fields to have defined-benefit plans, the report said, in part because a significant portion of musicians are members of a union “and have collectively bargained for defined-benefit plans.” In contrast, the report said, “no theater respondents reported offering defined-benefit plans.”
Orchestras were more likely than other groups to offer their employees both defined-benefit and defined-contribution plans, the report said. “Orchestra administrative staff and musicians are often offered different plans,” it said.
Employer Matches
The Listening Post Project report said that, “somewhat surprisingly,” a sizable majority — 58 percent — of organizations that offer defined-contribution pension plans such as 403(b) plans said that their programs are currently “under stress.” Eighteen percent of those offering defined-contribution plans said this stress was “severe” or “very severe.” (Defined-contribution plans are not covered by the Pension Protection Act.)
One major source of the stress seems to be the “employer match,” the report said, which is the contribution some employers add to the money that their workers have put into their retirement funds.
“These matches have been common at nonprofits, with 86 percent of organizations with defined-contribution plans indicating that they make some type of employer match,” the report said.
“As evidence that such matches seem to be a source of nonprofit strain, a considerable majority (60 percent) of organizations with employer matches noted that their defined-contribution plan is currently under stress,” the report said. “By contrast, only 40 percent of organizations that do not offer such matches reported that their plan is under stress.”
The report said that, importantly, “while 42 percent of organizations with defined-contribution plans reported that their plan has just ‘minimal stress,’ these data may be hinting at another issue nonprofits are dealing with: low employee participation in nonprofit retirement benefit plans, as low wages, particularly in a depressed economy, make the option of directing wages towards retirement too prohibitive.”
The report said that organizations that help older people with housing and other services “were somewhat more likely than those in other fields to offer defined-contribution plans.”
Cutting Costs
One approach that nonprofit organizations with defined-benefit plans are taking to reduce costs is to reduce the scope and scale of their coverage, the report said. “This can be done by closing the plan to new employees or stopping future benefit accruals for some or all employees (commonly referred to as ‘partial’ or ‘hard’ freezes, respectively),” the report said.
Twenty-eight percent of nonprofit groups that sponsor a defined-benefit plan have prohibited new employees from participating, the report said. Twenty-two percent of groups with such plans have ended future benefit accruals for all participating employees and another 9 percent have blocked future benefit accruals for some workers.
Numerous nonprofit organizations with defined-contribution plans are deciding to reduce their “employer match,” the report said. In the past year alone, 14 percent of respondents offering a match have reduced it and another 3 percent have eliminated their match altogether.
“Interestingly, orchestras and the largest organizations were considerably more likely than organizations representing other fields and size classes to have decreased or eliminated employer matches, suggesting that they are feeling particular strain,” the report said.
Turn-Over Concerns
Pressures on organizations to sustain retirement benefits for their employees have already had significant consequences, the report said.
One respondent to the survey said: “This nonprofit is about to lose very valuable staff because of the inability to provide benefits.” Another said: “We worry that not being able to supply a pension plan to our administrative staff is contributing to high staff turnover and will have a serious long-term effect on the orchestra’s ability to fulfill its mission in the best possible way.”
The report from the Listening Post Project will be available online on Thursday, November 5.
Advice for moving from a regional nonprofit job to a national nonprofit job
Oct 30th
Here is the advice I provided to get a national nonprofit job:
- Get involved in some national nonprofit committees and attend national conferences to get your name out there and build your reputation. Network, network, network.
- Revise your resume to target the national nonprofit that you would like to work for.
- Contact a national nonprofit search firm: (Commongood Careers, Nonprofit HR Solutions, Nonprofit Professionals Advisory Group, Dewey & Kaye) to see if they can find an ideal position for you or give you advice on how to get your ideal position.
- Get a graduate level certificate or degree in nonprofit management if you want to expand your nonprofit management skills.
Late Houston Philanthropist’s Family in Court Fight Over Arts Bequests
Oct 30th
The daughter of a major benefactor of the arts in Houston is contesting her father’s final will, alleging that his lawyers pressured him to leave most of his money to cultural charities, The Houston Chronicle reports.
In the last of his nine wills, signed in 2003, five years before his death at age 95, the oilman and philanthropist Alfred C. Glassell Jr. left the bulk of his $500-million estate to the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, and a family foundation that supports the arts. His daughter, Curry Glassell, would receive about $1.6-million after taxes.
In a trial set to begin Monday, Ms. Glassell will seek reinstatement of an earlier document that would give her about $100-million. She says her father’s lawyers took advantage of his frail condition to coerce him into leaving more to the museum, for which their firm did pro bono work. Her mother and brother, who runs the family foundation, favor the 2003 will.
Joe Jamail, a lawyer for the art museum, said that because Vinson & Elkins does the museum work pro bono, it had nothing to gain. A spokesman for the law firm said its lawyers might testify in the lawsuit and therefore had no comment.
Donor Offers $100-Million Guaranty to Reopen L.A. Hospital
Oct 30th
The pharmaceuticals mogul Patrick Soon-Shiong has offered the University of California regents a $100-million guaranty to underwrite the reopening of Martin Luther King Jr.-Harbor Hospital, the Los Angeles Times reports.
Mr. Soon-Shiong said the funds come with “no strings attached” and are intended to reassure regents hesitant to reopen the Los Angeles facility, which shut down inpatient services two years amid questions over medical errors and patient deaths. The regents are expected to vote November 19 on a plan to reopen the hospital.
Mr. Soon-Shiong, a former UCLA surgeon who has made billions in biotechnology and drug development, has become a major player in health-care philanthropy in recent years. Earlier this month he and his wife, the actress Michele B. Chan, pledged $65-million to the St. John’s Health Center in Santa Monica, Calif.
(Free registration is required to view the Times article.)
United Way Error Bumps Three D.C. Groups From Federal Campaign
Oct 30th
Three Washington-area charities were left off the list of eligible recipients for this year’s Combined Federal Campaign due to an error by the region’s United Way chapter, according to The Washington Post.
The affected groups — the Jewish Federation of Greater Washington, the animal-rescue service Animal Allies, and the Northern Virginia Resource Center for Deaf and Hard of Hearing Persons — took in a combined $70,000 to $80,000 in payroll deductions from government employees last year.
Bill Hanbury, chief executive of the United Way of the National Capital Area, said the three organizations fell through the cracks of a paperwork pile-up stemming from new, more stringent submission procedures for participating charities. He said the United Way would make up their expected losses out of its own budget.
(Free registration is required to view this article.)
TV Series ‘The Wire’ Helps Shape Program for Troubled Youths
Oct 30th
The gritty TV crime drama “The Wire” and one of its stars are part of a new effort by Boston officials and activists to help troubled young people explore ways to change their lives, The Boston Globe reports.
A curriculum developed over the past year by the actress Sonja Sohn, who played the detective Shakima Griggs on the acclaimed HBO series, and James Dauphine of Boston’s Ella J. Baker House will involve screenings of the show and question-and-answer sessions with participants about its parallels to their lives.
Ms. Sohn conducted a pilot of the program, called Rewired for Life, in Baltimore, where the series was set and filmed. The effort is an offshoot of Rewired for Change, a nonprofit group the actress founded with other “Wire” veterans to work in disadvantaged neighborhoods.
(Free registration is required to view this article.)
In the Arts: Activists Blast ‘Miracle Worker’ Casting, and More
Oct 30th
Advocates for blind and deaf performers are criticizing the casting of a seeing and hearing actress to play Helen Keller in a forthcoming off-Broadway production of The Miracle Worker, says The New York Times.
“We do not think it’s OK for reputable producers to cast this lead role without seriously considering an actress from our community,” said Sharon Johnson, executive director of the Alliance for Inclusion in the Arts, of the choice of Abigail Breslin, the Oscar-nominated co-star of Little Miss Sunshine.
David Richenthal said his chief criterion in casting the role was to line up a prominent actress, saying it would be “financially irresponsible” to mount a major revival “without making a serious effort to get a star.”
In other arts news, Chicago’s Grant Park Music Festival has hired Elizabeth Hurley, the Metropolitan Opera’s top fund raiser, as its executive director, according to the Chicago Tribune.
And Boston’s Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum plans to issue $35-million in bonds to raise money for the construction of a planned new building and to renovate its existing facility, according to the Boston Business Journal.
(Free registration is required to view the Times and Tribune articles.)
Strapped Scottish Preservation Agency Sells Headquarters
Oct 30th
The National Trust for Scotland, the organization in charge of managing many of the country’s key historic properties, has sold its Edinburgh headquarters for an estimated $14.4-million to a private developer, writes The Times.
Roiled by money troubles, the trust has cut more than 40 positions and temporarily closed some of its properties, setting off an internal dispute over its leadership and direction. Kate Mavor, chief executive of the organization, said the move to a new headquarters “will free up significant resources for our charity” to pursue its cultural-heritage mission.
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