Minnesotans have rallied to help nonprofits during the pandemic, but across many organizations, most of those volunteers are white.
A statewide organization is trying to change that with new research calling attention to disparities in volunteerism.
"It's about time somebody looked at this system," said Karmit Bulman, who leads the Minnesota Association for Volunteer Administration (MAVA), an advocacy organization. "We look at the school system, our criminal justice system and our health system and we all know the racial disparities … are huge. But nobody has looked at the system of volunteerism, which is really the backbone of so much of our positive community change. … It's time for change."
The state has grown increasingly diverse, with people of color making up about 21% of Minnesotans. About 50% of white people in the state say they volunteer and 34% of people of color say they do, according to 2017 census data. But Bulman said that's only part of the picture; many more people of color are likely volunteering through church or informal efforts — from coaching to helping at school. They're just not calling it volunteering.
"It's a way of life for a lot of communities of color and a lot of immigrant communities — that we help out wherever is needed," Bulman said.
But another problem is most nonprofits don't have equity strategies for volunteers, Bulman said, instead relying on a "white savior complex."
"If you go into any food shelf right now, you will see that 98% of the volunteers are white," said Bulman, who is white, adding that a mentorship program she's in has mostly white mentors helping children of color. "I'm pretty unhappy about the message that sends to the kids: that your saviors are going to be white."
Nonprofits have focused on diversifying staffing and boards. After George Floyd's death set off a global push for racial justice, the philanthropic sector boosted funding of racial justice work and sought its own reforms — from scrutinizing who makes grant decisions to which organizations get funded.