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recent grantees

Funds for these grants
come from general contributions by individuals, as well as targeted
contributions to the Southern Outlook Fund, Grassroots Fund, and the
Modjeska Simkins Fund. Several private foundations also support FSC
grantmaking, including the Fonda Family Foundation, the Gill Foundation,
Jessie Smith Noyes Foundation, the Turner Foundation, and the Vanguard
Public Foundation.
Grantees
by Category of Work
Culture/Media
| Community Organizing | Constituency
Organizing | Disability Rights | Environment
| Gay/Lesbian | Anti-Racist
Work | Resources For Organizing | Women's
Rights | Youth | Helen's
Fund | Southern Funders Collaborative | Organizational
Development | Donor Advised Fund Grants |
Culture/Media
City at Peace-Charlotte;
Charlotte, NC $1,000
This youth theater group produces and performs multi-media productions
designed to help young people successfully cope with the increasingly
diverse world in which they are growing up. Dealing with issues of race,
discrimination, sexual identity, and violence prevention, the program
targets both its own "cast" members, and the audiences they
perform for, as the beneficiaries of the awareness building work they
do.
Working Films;
Wilmington, NC $2,000
Using film and video as tools for organizing is the aim of this new
NC based group. With films such as "From Farm to Fast Food: On
the Job in NC", "Invisible Revolution" and "Tobacco
Blues" the issues of workers' rights, race, sexual orientation,
abortion rights, and economic justice issues are raised by high quality
filmmakers. Working Films then works with schools, churches and community
groups to insure the productions are seen, and discussed in such a way
that people are encouraged to act on the messages in the films. back
to top
Community
Organizing
Citizens United for Progress;
Red Springs, NC $3,500
In Southeastern NC the Center for Community Action has long worked to
build a multi-racial citizens' organization among Native American, African
American and European American groups. Citizens United for Progress
has emerged as a local membership group of this larger organization,
working for public school excellence, leadership development, accountable
public officials, and encouraging citizen participation in public affairs.
Constituency
Organizing
Athens Justice Project; Athens, GA $3,000
This new community-based effort is working to combine effective
legal representation and social services for indigent persons involved
in the criminal justice system. With a strong emphasis on needed alcohol
and drug treatment the project works to increase the chances a person
will successfully work their way free of the judicial system and maintain
the effective social ties needed to remain productive. back
to top
Disability
Rights
Public Housing Advocacy for Disability
and Diversity;
Atlanta, GA $4,000
Low income people with disabilities living in Atlanta's public housing
can use as many friends as they can get, but need to learn to actively
advocate for their own rights as well. "Public Housing Advocacy
for Disability and Diversity" not only represents the interest
of residents with disabilities, but also provides training opportunities
so people can become advocates on their own. back
to top
Environment
Anson County Citizens Against Chemical Toxins in Underground Storage
(CACTUS);
Wadesboro, NC $2,500
With over 300 members, CACTUS represents local citizens in a range of
efforts to protect the environment and low-income communities in the
area from environmental contamination. It's present battle is against
a multi-state solid waste landfill adjacent to an African-American community
in Polkton. They plan their own air quality monitoring as a means of
obtaining better information on pollution than the state currently gathers.
Concerned Citizens of Vance Co. Hwy 39N;
Henderson, NC $8,000
When the water smelled too bad to even take a shower, people were
fed up. Lead by four neighborhood women "Concerned Citizens
"
raised enough ruckus to force the County to admit the wells in the Black
and Latino communities were in fact so contaminated that even showering
was a health hazard due to the fumes in the steam! With a deserted city
dump, a waste-water treatment facility, a County land-fill, and a Solid
Waste Transfer Station all in a two mile stretch of highway, it's little
surprise the ground water had become contaminated. After several stops
and starts, cleaner city water may finally be on the way, but only because
people have forced officials to face a problem they wanted to ignore.
Georgia Poultry
Justice Alliance;
Atlanta, GA $2,500
This alliance of farmworkers, unions, religious groups, environmentalists
and family chicken farmers is working to develop a sustainable model
of for the production of poultry. The ideal model would provide safe
working conditions, fair wages and benefits for plant workers and catchers;
fair contracts for poultry growers and reasonable environmental controls
to adequately protect Georgia's waterways and drinking supplies.
Glynn Environmental
Coalition;
Brunswick, GA $2,500
This broad network of people addresses a range of community environmental
issues including deserted toxic waste sites, pesticide spraying in schools,
and operating polluting industries. With Glynn Co. home to seventeen
identifies hazardous waste sites, four Superfund Sites, and six actively
polluting industries, the Coalition fortunately has a loyal band of
volunteers to maintain the needed public pressure to get things done.
Their years of experience, and success, also has lead them to providing
assistance to newer groups facing environmental threats for the first
time.
Harambee House;
Savannah, GA $7,500
With a special focus on minority youth, Harambee House works to
increase citizen input into public and environmental policy decision
making. They have become leaders in community education around the technology
of Mixed Oxide Fuel Fabrication that is being proposed as a primary
method of disposing of surplus plutonium at the Savannah River Site.
Newtown Florist
Club;
Gainesville, GA $7,500
Continuing its work to protect the environmental health of community
residents, this group is also forming closer alliances with the growing
Hispanic population in the area. With its history of successful youth
leadership development, voting rights activism, and anti-racism campaigns,
the Florist Club is still expanding its model of community organizing
that other communities continue to benefit from.
North Carolina
Environmental Justice Network;
Tillery, NC $7,000
Linking various minority-community efforts to protect themselves
from existing environmental dangers, or head off newly emerging environmental
threats, this network is supporting a range of causes as it encourages
cooperation and peer support among its membership.
People Working
for People;
Tifton, GA $5,000
In South Georgia the African-American community has long fought
for clean-up of toxic waste sites left by deserted industrial operations.
The community organizing has also lead to a successful youth leadership
development program, and broadly ranging community health education
efforts. They are continuing to work to develop more skilled and active
community leaders to insure that the voices of low-income residents
are heard, and listened to.
Southeast Georgia Communities Project;
Lyons, GA $7,000
Working with the growing Latino population in south Georgia, primarily
agricultural workers, this project is working to insure worker safety
through both their own awareness of worker rights, and safer practices
by growers. They produce their own Sunday Spanish language radio show,
publish a newsletter, provide English as a second language classes,
and host a legal clinic dealing with immigration issues. The health
and safety focus on pesticide use both trains workers on safety issues
around pesticides, how they can report abuses, and also advocates for
more responsible practices by growers. back
to top
Gay/Lesbian
Carolina Rainbow Family Coalition;
Columbia, SC $1,000
Building a more active state-wide group of activists and an enlarged
network of organizations representing lesbian/gay/bisexual/transgender
people in the state, is the goal of this organization, as they "work
peacefully to achieve equal protection under the law for all South Carolinians."
EN-ACTE Program;
Atlanta, GA $2,000
EN-ACTE involves youth in the development and presentation of theatre-based
sexual health education messages. Age-appropriate plays are developed
and workshops presented that include messages about HIV/AIDS, early
pregnancy, sexual identity and STD prevention. Working with schools,
after school programs, and youth organizations in rural areas, EN-ACTE
works to remind youth that they have a choice, and the power, to make
healthy decisions for themselves.
Equality NC Project;
Raleigh, NC $1,000
Equality NC encourages broad participation in the public policy making
process in the state, focusing on awareness building around policies
to insure justice and equal rights for lesbian/gay/bisexual/transgender
people.
Lesbian Health Resource Center;
Durham, NC $1,000
This new Resource Center will be developing a "Lesbian Health
Curricula" aimed at medical providers in the Triangle area, and
will be producing and distributing a listing of providers who deliver
culturally sensitive health care services.
Macon Pride;
Macon, GA $1,000
Sponsoring a range of social, political, educational and cultural
activities, Macon Pride works to support and strengthen middle Georgia's
lgbt community, as well as promoting community wide tolerance.
Southerners on
New Ground (SONG);
Durham, NC $3,000
Yes, homophobia exists within civil rights and environmental groups,
the same way racism exists within lgbt groups. Working with other groups
around the South, SONG educates and activates groups to counter hate,
discrimination and injustice, and to understand relationships and the
interconnectedness of issues. SONG encourages people to understand and
acknowledge that economic justice and race issues should be dealt with
purposefully by all groups. SONG helps people "connect the dots"
among sometimes seemingly diverse issue areas.
Triangle Community
Works;
Raleigh, NC $1,000
TCW is working to establish and maintain a coalition of people,
organizations and programs in the Triangle, to insure a safe, healthy,
and life-affirming environment. The FSC grant will support a "Listening
Project" to help build "A Safer Place Youth Network",
focused in Wake County.back to top
Anti-Racist
Work
Cook County Advocates for Social
and Economic Justice;
Sparks, GA $ 3,000
Countering decades of discrimination, while trying to "win
friends and influence people" can be a thin tight-rope on which
to maintain your balance. This group is working to build and empower
its membership within the African-American community, while pressuring
the broader community for employment and judicial reforms. If local
organizing is not enough, they will be working with legal and organizing
experts from around the South to seek the justice they are demanding
in South Georgia. back to top
Resources For Organizing
Project South;
Atlanta,
GA $ 1,500
Project South produces popular education materials and works with
low-income communities to build community awareness of organizing strategies
and issues affecting working people. The "Georgia Research Project"
will include residents in gathering oral histories and statistical information
from low-income rural and urban communities, designed to provide the
information, and the training, that can lead to people transforming
their own communities. back to top
Women's
Rights
Atlanta Working Women -- 9 to 5;
Atlanta, GA $1,500
For support of a "Living Wage Campaign" in the city of Atlanta,
seeking to increase the minimum wage for workers to lift people above
the federally defined poverty level. Successful campaigns in other cities
have forced firms with government contracts, or publicly supported subsidies,
to increase their minimum pay dramatically. The concept is simple-public
money should not be used to subsidize poverty wage work! Living Wage
policies now exist in over 50 communities, and have not led to the loss
of jobs that nay-sayers predicted would occur.
Center for Women's
Economic Alternatives; Murfreesboro, NC $1,500
Low-income African-American women in Northeastern NC are becoming totally
disabled at alarming rates while working on processing lines in poultry
plants and sewing factories. When injuries occur, workers are often
terminated, and companies try to avoid any responsibility, while women
are left with no way to sustain their families. CWEA is building membership
groups of affected workers to advocate for worker rights, safety, and
benefits, providing leadership training to women willing to step forward
and be leaders. back to top
Youth
Center for Educational Equity;
Greenville, SC $4,000
Focusing on insuring that every child gets a quality public school education,
this group is working on increased parent involvement as a key means
to improving children's education. Focusing especially in low-income
communities, CEE is increasing the commitment of parents to continue
to push for the best for their kids, and showing that parent involvement
can make a big difference.
I T E C Youth Services;
Summerville, SC $ 1,500
With successful after-school programs in public housing, and youth leadership
development training already in place, ITEC is expanding to provide
a mobile tutoring program, utilizing a computer equiped RV and bus to
reach rural areas for after-school activities, including peer tutoring
and youth lead programs.
Mekye Center;
Durham, NC $1,500
Focusing on children with different learning styles, the Mekye Center
is providing out of school and weekend learning opportunities while
also advocating to improve public school programs for children with
special needs. back to top
2001
Helen's Fund Awards Presented
"Helen's Fund" at the Fund for Southern Communities is pleased
to announce the winners of the 2001 Awards for Excellence in work affecting
young people in the South. The awards, endowed by Westy and Betsy Fenhagen
of North Carolina, recognize groups that have demonstrated successful
work to impact and improve the lives of young people. The 2001 winners
are:
Center for Educational
Equity,
Greenville, SC $1,300
Working to increase public school parent involvement for quality
education.
Durham County
Teen Court
and Restitution Program,
Durham, NC $5,000
Working for fair treatment of youthful offenders.
NC Lambda Youth
Network,
Durham, NC $2,000
Supporting lesbian/gay/bisexual/transgender and questioning youth.
back to top
The
Southern Funders Collaborative Awards Multiple year grants
The Fund
for Southern Communities is pleased to be a part of the Southern Funders
Collaborative, along with Appalachian Community Fund, and the Southern
Partners Fund. Through a grant received from the Ford Foundation, this
collaborative made its first round of grants, totaling $356,900 to 11
groups spread across the Collaborative's seven state range. The multi-year
grants are designed to increase the capacity of community organizing
groups in the South.
The following groups
received multi-year grants:
- Black Workers
for Justice -
Riverdale, Georgia
- Carolina Alliance
for Fair Employment -
Greenville, South Carolina
- Center for Community
Action -
Lumberton, North Carolina
- Citizens for
Quality Education, Inc -
Lexington, Mississippi
- Community Farm
Alliance -
Frankfort, Kentucky
- Concerned Citizens
for Tunica County -
Tunica, Mississippi
- Esperanza Peace
and Justice Center -
San Antonio, Texas
- LaMujer Obrera
Program -
El Paso, Texas
- Solutions to
Issues of Concern -
Knoxville, Tennessee
- Southerners On
New Ground -
Durham, North Carolina
- Tennesseans for
Fair Taxation -
Knoxville, Tennessee back to top
Organizational
Development Grants
Recipients of program grants from FSC are eligible to receive additional
"training" monies to improve their operational capacity from
FSC's "Organizational Development Fund", supported by the
Mary Reynolds Babcock Foundation with matching money from the Fonda
Family Foundation and many FSC contributors. Recent grants have been
awarded to:
- Atlanta Lesbian
Cancer Initiative,
Atlanta, $1,000
- Center for Women's
Economic Alternatives,
Ahoskie, NC $2,000
- Concerned Citizens
of Vance Co.,
Henderson, NC $336
- Golden Gate Christian
Academy,
Timmonsville, SC $680
- My Brothaz H.O.M.E.,
Savannah, GA $1,000
- Newtown Florist
Club,
Gainesville, GA $422
- Piedmont Peace
Project,
Kannapolis, NC $2,000
- Women's Policy
Group,
Atlanta $1,500
- Woolfolk Citizens
Response Group,
Ft. Valley,
GA $1,000
- ZAMI, Decatur,
GA $2,000 back to top
Donor
Advised Fund Grants
Major contributors to FSC may also established Donor Advised Accounts,
enabling them to recommend specific groups to receive grants. The following
grants were recently approved by the FSC Board:
- Dandelion Fund,
in Western NC
- Access Independent
Living; Asheville, $950
- Asheville Global
Report; Asheville $600
- Canary Coalition,
Whittier, NC $700
- Community of
Compassion, Asheville $100
- Livid Puppets,
Asheville, $300
- Revitalize, Energize,
Educate & Prepare,
Murphy, NC $1,000
- ROOTS, Asheville,
$950
- Rural Southern
Voice for Peace,
Burnsville, NC $700
- Students of Active
Resistance;
Asheville $400
Recently approved
grants recommended by people who wish to remain anonymous include:
- Asociacion Movimiento
de Mujeres "Melida Anaya Montes"; El Salvador, $2,000
- TransFair, USA;
Oakland, CA $1,150
back
to top
©1996-2003
Fund for Southern Communities
315 West Ponce De Leon Ave, Suite 1061 · Decatur, GA 30030
404-371-8404 · Fax: 404-371-8496
email: fsc@fundforsouth.org
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