On August 9th I posted a blog about waiting lists at women’s shelters due to decreases in funding (http://www.thebusinessofme.com/the-business-of-me-blog/page/2). A recent story which appeared in The Columbus Dispatch tells the story of Tatiana and her daughter who had no choice to stay at a motel as the local shelter had no room for her (http://www.dispatch.com/content/stories/local/2011/11/27/lacking-shelter.html).  In preparation to leave Tatiana managed to save $500 but that soon dwindled to $50 after she paid the motel fees.

According to the article “Federal funding for domestic violence shelters has been dropping, as it has been for many other local services. The amount awarded through the State Victims Assistance Act dropped to $3.4 million last year from $4.5 million in 2008, according to the Ohio attorney general’s office.”

This struggle for funds has shelters in the same area fighting for dollars. As Sandra Allen, deputy director of CHOICES (a domestic violence shelter in Columbus, Ohio) stated in the article “We’re all pitted against each other for money when we really should be working together to end this problem.”

Funding levels are not going to return to the previous higher levels. As one executive director told me recently “The rug has been pulled from under us.” As I have said for many months the only way for all non-profits to remain sustainable is to become more entrepreneurial. Those who embrace this new paradigm are the ones who will not only survive but thrive.