Sacred Places Spring 2011 | Page 16

THE HALO EFFECT (cont.) Individual Impact — Congregations often serve neighborhoods with the highest need, providing one-on-one services. This support helps the community by preventing or mitigating costly personal problems. Clergy help mediate struggling marriages and relationships, saving individuals from costly legal procedures and lost productivity. Programs also help individuals avert suicide, stay out of prison, and end alcohol dependence. Individual Impact: Visitation BVM Located in a low-income neighborhood, Visitation BVM provides needed social services to local residents. Its economic impact on individuals totaled $4,135,270, of which $3 million comes from youth riskavoidance programs alone. Community Development — Congregations with older buildings often provide office space to start-up organizations and businesses, many of which go on to generate growing value for the community. Co-ops, for instance, are jointly owned, providing inexpensive products and sharing profits with those involved. Cooperativelyowned credit unions similarly incorporate fairness into their business practices, offering accessible and affordable banking services. Eight of the 12 participating congregations helped to incubate fledgling groups, which contributed a benefit of over $3 million. Invisible Safety Net — Although it is common to include volunteer and in-kind support as part of an organization’s budget, the impact of this kind of support still flies under the radar. Augmenting the city’s network of social services, the typical participating congregation contributed the equivalent of two full-time volunteers, supplementing the limited capacity of many social programs. Free or inexpensive space is another benefit that congregations provide, subsidizing the operations of small programs that run the gamut from substance abuse groups to afterschool programs. Magnet Effect: The Church of St. Luke and the Epiphany Wedding attendees stay at local hotels and spend money in town. St. Luke and the Epiphany hosted weddings that had a total impact of $170,620. What Led to this Study: Valuing of Congregation-Supported Social Services Since its founding in 1989, Partners for Sacred Places has focused on understanding how congregations use their assets — including their buildings — to serve the wider public. Co-founders Bob Jaeger and Diane Cohen knew that congregations hosted a wide variety of programs, ranging from soup kitchens to day care centers to job training