During the pandemic, organizations across the United States distributed hundreds of millions of dollars in emergency cash. Individuals, foundations, and governments understood the immense urgency to put money into people’s hands to pay for food, shelter, and other necessities when income evaporated overnight. They knew these funds would have a positive impact on family security, and that they would be well spent.
Given The Workers Lab’s leadership over the last several years on emergency cash, we also saw this as an extraordinary moment through which we could better understand how putting emergency cash into the hands of workers might help grow the membership and power of worker-focused organizations.
Through a grant provided by the Open Society Foundation, The Workers Lab partnered with Canary, an emergency relief platform, to study six organizations that distributed emergency cash during the first year of the pandemic. The organizations ranged from national groups including One Fair Wage, the National Domestic Workers Alliance, and UpTogether (formerly Family Independence Initiative) as well as local community-based organizations like Adelante Alabama Worker Center, Twin Cities Hospitality Fund, Massachusetts Immigrant Collaborative, and Texas’s Workers Defense Project.
After talking to these groups, we learned that emergency cash can be a powerful tool for base building. Yet, it was also clear that organizations need to have operational capacity, trained organizers, clear membership ladders, and communication strategies in place to convert these touchpoints into deeper, long-term, membership engagement.
Here are our key findings:
Our interviews showed that emergency cash can lead to more individuals joining worker organizations and that it can strengthen engagement from existing members. Now, we are turning our attention to understanding how that can happen most effectively. The Workers Lab and Canary are partnering with the Workers Defense Project to dive deeper into the membership outcomes connected to the emergency cash they have distributed, including further emergency cash grants they expect to distribute. We look forward to sharing those learnings this summer and fall.
From our partners:
“When people are helped in this dire moment, there is loyalty and willingness to help and be part of the organization.” - Emily Timm, Co-Director and Co-Founder of the Workers Defense Project
Cash grants -- given the size of the industry we work in and the level of devastation -- were the most incredible recruiting opportunity available.” - Saru Jayaraman, President of One Fair Wage
“Sometimes people need some basic help before they can engage in advocacy.” - Victoria Siciliano, Interim Executive Director at Adelante Alabama Worker Center