Pamela Ellen Davis

For other people named Pamela Davis, see Pamela Davis (disambiguation).
Pamela Davis
Born Pamela Ellen Davis
Mansfield, Ohio
Residence Santa Cruz, CA
Title Founder, President and CEO of the Nonprofits Insurance Alliance Group
Website insurancefornonprofits.org

Pamela Ellen Davis is the founder, President and CEO of the Nonprofits Insurance Alliance Group, a 501(c)(3) nonprofit insurance cooperative that provides liability insurance to more than 15,000 nonprofit organizations in the United States.[1] In addition to her nonprofit insurance work, she is a public policy advocate and nonprofit sector thought leader who has spearheaded legislative change at both the California state and Federal level, and overseen projects to increase nonprofits' access to credit and improve the financial expertise of the nonprofit sector.

Personal life

Davis was born in Mansfield, Ohio and attended Ohio University for a year and a half, before moving to Harlan County, KY to work for an environmental education school. After three years in Kentucky, she returned to Ohio where she became involved in the natural food movement and opened a health food store and restaurant. At the age of 30, she sold her restaurant and moved to California, where she went on to earn a bachelor's degree in economics from UC Santa Cruz and a master's degree in public policy from the University of California, Berkeley.[2]

Leadership in Nonprofit Insurance

Master's Thesis on the Nonprofit Insurance Crisis

In 1987, Davis was a master's degree candidate at University of California, Berkeley. Her master's thesis, supported by the California Community Foundation and the Conrad N. Hilton Foundation, documented the effect of the mid-1980s liability insurance crisis on nonprofit organization's ability to obtain liability insurance. Nonprofits were seeing their premiums rise drastically, and many organizations couldn't obtain coverage from any insurer, leading them to go out of business.[3] In 1987, she testified before the California General Assembly that:

Between 1984 and 1986, general liability insurance premiums increased 200 percent or more for one out of four charitable nonprofit organizations in California. During that same period, insurance companies canceled or refused to renew the general liability policies of one out of five California charitable nonprofits. Some important human service programs, such as childcare, foster care, group homes and health service were forced to dramatically cut services or close because they couldn’t find affordable insurance.[4]

Nonprofits Insurance Alliance of California (NIAC)

Based on her mater's thesis research, Davis was convinced that conventional insurers did not fully understand insurance risk in the nonprofit sector, so she set out to create a nonprofit risk pool that could better meet the needs of nonprofits in California.[5] In 1989, Davis secured $1.3 million in loans from nonprofit partners and foundations to create the Nonprofits Insurance Alliance of California (NIAC).[6]

Alliance of Nonprofits for Insurance (ANI)

Over the next decade, NIAC grew to serve thousands of nonprofits, but its operations were limited to the state of California. In order to replicate the NIAC model nationwide, Davis secured $5 million from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and $5 million from the David & Lucile Packard Foundation to found the Alliance of Nonprofits for Insurance, Risk Retention Group (ANI).[7][8]

NIAC and ANI are the primary insurers forming the Nonprofits Insurance Alliance Group. The Group insures over 15,000 nonprofits in 32 states and Washington D.C., and controls over $380 million in assets.

Legislative Initiatives

Throughout her career, Pamela Davis has spearheaded multiple efforts to pass legislation strengthening nonprofit self-insurance pools and expanding the services they are allowed to provide:

Leadership in the Nonprofit Sector

American Nonprofits

In 2012, Davis and a group of nonprofit leaders formed American Nonprofits, a nonprofit organization with a two-fold mission. The first is to create a platform for research, dialog, and debate among nonprofit finance professionals and thought leaders on topics related to finance, accountability, capital, and strategy. Davis saw that there were institutions in the nonprofit sector that provided information and support to nonprofits about fundraising, grantmaking, and public policy efforts, but none provided resources relevant to the day-to-day financial operations of most nonprofits.

The second goal of the organization is to create a democratically governed financial institution (a federal credit union) owned by the nonprofit sector to which nonprofits, foundations and individuals can move their deposits, and see their deposits and fees used to support the nonprofit sector. In 2013, Davis and the American Nonprofits board explored the viability of creating a national credit union;[11] they received preliminary field of membership approval from the National Credit Union Administration to serve 501(c)(3) nonprofits, their employees, volunteers and stakeholders, and they created a start-up and 4-year business plan. At the beginning of 2014, Davis announced that, while many parties were interested in the credit union project, American Nonprofits was not able to raise $10.5 million in starting capital at that time, so the credit union was temporarily put on hold.[12]

NIAC Member Loan Fund

Through feedback from nonprofit customers, Davis became aware that many nonprofits struggled to obtain credit from traditional lenders. Many lenders required personal guarantees or collateral, and many did not offer nonprofits small working capital loans. In order to better understand nonprofits' credit needs and the feasibility of offering small working capital loans, Davis created the NIAC Member Loan Fund, a pilot program that makes 1-year working capital loans of up to $50,000 to NIAC insurance customers.[13] These loans have no personal guarantee or collateral requirements and take less than a month for review and approval. NIAC is using data from the loan fund to develop risk models specific to nonprofit borrowers. These models allow NIAC and other lenders to underwrite these loans more easily and offer them at a larger scale.[14]

Thought Leadership

As an expert on insurance and nonprofit sector issues, Davis frequently contributes to conferences and publications such as the Social Capital Markets Conference,[15] Insurance Journal,[16] the Nonprofit Times,[17] the Nonprofit Quarterly,[18] the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation's Markets for Good,[19] and Blue Avocado.[20]

In 2014, Davis collaborated with CalNonProfits and CompassPoint to hold the first StrongerTogether Nonprofit Conference. The following year's 2015 StrongerTogether conference in Los Angeles sold-out and featured 20 guest speakers discussing topics such as advocacy, employment, insurance, leadership, management, risk management and strategy.[21]

Honors and Awards

The Emmy-nominated documentary series Visionaries profiled Pamela Davis and the Nonprofits Insurance Alliance Group twice, showing the growth of the organization from 1,500 member-insureds in 1997 to the Group's current status as "one of the most successful national nonprofit organizations in America."[22][23] Other honors and awards include:

References

  1. "Senior Leadership". Nonprofits Insurance Alliance Group.
  2. "Eclectic Entrepreneur Pamela Davis Puts her Stamp on the Insurance Industry". Center for Creative Leadership.
  3. Davis, Pamela. "Nonprofit and Liability Insurance: Problems, Options, and Prospects". Nonprofits Insurance Alliance Group.
  4. "Mission & History". Nonprofits Insurance Alliance Group.
  5. Olney, Kathryn. "Managing Risk: Nonprofits Insurance Alliance of California is thriving, despite taking on clients that no one else would". Stanford Social Innovation Review.
  6. Pittman, Jennifer. "Santa Cruz nonprofit insurance provider marks milestone, expansion". Santa Cruz Sentinel.
  7. "Nonprofits' Insurance Alliance of California Gets $5 Million Boost from Bill and Melinda Gates". Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.
  8. Tapia, Catherine. "Calif. Nonprofits Charitable Risk Pool Plans National Expansion". Insurance Journal.
  9. "Senate Bill No. 1011". California State Legislature.
  10. "H.R.3794 - Nonprofit Property Protection Act". Library of Congress.
  11. Boss, Suzie. "Overdue Credit for Nonprofits". Stanford Social Innovation Review.
  12. "Notes from the President". American Nonprofits.
  13. "Loans For California Nonprofits". The NonProfit Times.
  14. "NIAC Member Loan Fund". Nonprofits Insurance Alliance Group.
  15. "Unlocking Non-Profit Potential Through Access to Credit". Social Capital Markets.
  16. Wells, Andrea. "How Insurance for Nonprofits Has Changed for the Better". Insurance Journal.
  17. "Ten Questions for the CEO" (PDF). The Nonprofit Times.
  18. Davis, Pamela. "Directors and Officers Liability Insurance: Why It's Worth the Cost". Nonprofit Quarterly.
  19. "An Exciting Lens Through Which To View Nonprofits: Insurance (Yes, Insurance)". Markets for Good.
  20. "A Board Member's Guide to Nonprofit Insurance". Blue Avocado.
  21. "StrongerTogether Conference". Nonprofits Insurance Alliance Group.
  22. "Season 4". Visionaries.
  23. "Season 16". Visionaries.
  24. "The 2015 Power & Influence Top 50" (PDF). Nonprofit Times.
  25. "Alumni Recognition". Goldman School of Public Policy.
  26. "The Best and the Brightest". Greenleaf Center for Servant Leadership.
  27. "Leaders, innovators are selected as 'Women to Watch'". Business Insurance.
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