Sacred Places Fall 2016 | Page 13

CASE STUDY Invisible Safety Net: Invisible Safety Net — By providing free or inexpensive space to secular nonprofits and community–serving programs, congregations subsidize the operations of small programs ranging from substance abuse groups to after school programs, and add to the social safety net of the community. This economic value includes the value of the space that is shared, as well as volunteer time, and in-kind support. The average contribution of a congregation in our study via its invisible safety net was $100,296 (with a low of $35,237 and a high of $674,830). As a whole the safety net value was less than one tenth of the average congregation’s total contribution to the local economy (6.6%). In this area, volunteer hours contributed to congregation–led programs and community–led programs accounted for 49.5%of the total effect; space that is shared accounted for 25.7%; in-kind support for community-serving programs accounted for 12.3%; and unbudgeted, unplanned financial support for community-serving programs accounted for 11.3%. First Christian Church A cornerstone of the Fort Worth community since 1885, First Christian Church has maintained a tradition of innovation from its founding through the present day. As membership has decreased over the decades and the building’s previously well-used spaces have fallen silent—as is common among many Mainline Protestant congregations—the church has evolved to best reflect its strengths as a congregation and its physical assets. Because First Christian Church is centrally located and open to sharing underutilized space, it was able to connect with the University of Houston’s College of Optometry and the University of the Incarnate Word’s School of Optometry, which was seeking space to house a teaching clinic, in 2013. Beneficiaries of Community Programs; Members vs. Non-Members An eye exam in progress at the Community Eye Clinic of Fort Worth. Courtesy of First Christian Church. First Christian Church is now home to the Community Eye Clinic of Fort Worth, which is the largest clinic of its kind in the United States. It provides high quality healthcare to Fort Worth’s most underserved populations. This innovative public/private partnership also gives patients access to critical social services, some of which are provided by First Christian Church. Occupying the entire second floor of First Christian Church, the state-of-the-art clinic houses seven exam rooms, two testing areas, a cinema classroom, and a dispensary. 13