The Levin Center at Wayne State University Law School in Detroit is the recipient of a three-year, $1 million grant from the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation to continue its work advancing accountability and bipartisanship in U.S. governance.
The grant is the Levin Center’s largest to date from a private foundation. The grant was awarded by the Hewlett Foundation’s U.S. Democracy program, which seeks to strengthen the values and norms of America’s governing institutions.
“The Levin Center is reinvigorating the legislative oversight process at all levels of government through bipartisan training, academic research and action,” said Wayne State University Law School Dean Richard A. Bierschbach. “We are deeply grateful to the Hewlett Foundation for recognizing the critical nature of the Levin Center’s work and for Hewlett’s continued investment in the center’s mission.”
The grant will enable the Levin Center to build on its foundation of promoting fact-based, bipartisan oversight and civil discourse, officials at the center said.
The funding will be used to expand the center’s state and local oversight training program, according to center officials, and deepen academic research into the role of oversight in policymaking and checks and balances among the branches of government. At the same time, it will help educate students and the public about using fact-finding to strengthen governance and accountability.
Since its founding in 2015, the center has, in collaboration with the Project on Government Oversight and The Lugar Center, trained more than 250 congressional staff in the techniques of bipartisan, fact-based oversight.
“The Levin Center is honored and inspired by this tremendous support from the Hewlett Foundation which will help it become an even stronger force in reestablishing and expanding bipartisan, fact-based oversight in Congress and across the United States,” said former U.S. Sen. Carl Levin, founder and chair of the Levin Center.
Jim Townsend, center director, said bipartisan, in-depth legislative oversight was a major part of Levin’s work during his 36 years in the Senate and his eight years on the Detroit City Council.
“This grant will allow the Levin Center to carry on that legacy at the national, state, and local level,” he said. “The COVID-19 pandemic has made even more apparent the necessity of oversight by the federal government and the states to keep Americans safe from threats to public health and safety.”
With the foundation’s funding, Levin said, the center “will strengthen the ability of legislators at all levels of government to work in a bipartisan fashion to ask tough questions, get answers that the American people deserve, and ensure that government programs are effective and efficient.
Jean Bordewich, program officer in the U.S. Democracy Center, said the foundation shares the center’s goal “of elevating bipartisanship in Congress.”
“The center has delivered consistently outstanding results in its focus areas of federal and state oversight,” she said, “as well as in combining scholarship and practice, all despite limited resources.
The Levin Center recently launched oversightcases.org to track how courts are handling oversight information requests by Congress.
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