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March, 2006 |
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Grantee Stories
The Noyes Award, initiated in 1998, is designed to strengthen and sustain key organizations working to advance social justice. ICCR is the 20th award recipient. |
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| Better
Safe Than Sorry The Environmental Research Foundation and the Science and Environmental Health Network, leading proponents of the precautionary principle, are sponsoring a series of Precaution Academies. These intensive weekend-long trainings will prepare participants to apply precautionary thinking to a wide range of issues in their communities and workplaces. The precautionary principle says that if there is a reasonable suspicion that an activity will cause harm, and scientific uncertainty about cause and effect, there is a duty to take action to prevent harm. It’s the scientific formulation of “better be safe than sorry.” The
first Academy is in |
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Miami
Activists Score Win
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National
Campaign for
Sustainable Agriculture |
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Federal Commodity Programs - The Biggest Slice of the Pie Federal commodity programs now consume 75 percent of the federal tax dollars spent on agriculture. While the program was first designed to support market prices and provide stable incomes for farmers, critics have overwhelming evidence that this program supports environmentally damaging overproduction, low market prices that drive farmers out of business and an expansion of exports. Last year the National Campaign launched the Commodity Policy Dialogue (CPD). The
CPD
has resulted in a set of broadly supported principles that will help
groups assess the effect of any specific policy proposal on the
sustainability of agriculture, as well as to lay out a unified vision
of what In addition, the National Campaign is serving as a coordinator of the National Organic Action Plan (NOAP), a cooperative process through which stakeholders in the organic community will create a long-range plan for the organic movement. The scope will include social, economic, agricultural and policy goals for the future direction of organic agriculture. People
Influencing Money: Grassroots Appropriations Advocacy For some programs, grassroots advocacy resulted in real gains. For example, after several years of trying, a new $1 million, direct-marketing grants program is being funded for 2006. President Bush proposed “zero-budgeting” the Appropriate Technology Transfer for Rural Areas program and the Organic Transition grants program, both of which emerged from the long and tortuous appropriations process with level-funding at $2.5 million and $1.9 million, respectively. The Conservation Security Program, which rewards farmers for good ecological stewardship, was also proposed for elimination, but kept alive by the strong support it enjoys at the grassroots and in the advocacy community. How can you help? Send a note to your members and allies asking if they'd like to be on the National Campaign's action alert and resource database; when speaking at conferences, ask audience members to sign up to get updates on policy issues; circulate signup sheets; and urge people who care about building and protecting our federal policy gains to sign up. Anyone can help build the sustainable agriculture movement's power base. A first and easy step is to sign up at National Campaign or call 845-361-2501. |
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| Cornucopia
Institute The Aurora Dairy produces about ten million gallons a year of milk and specializes in processing "private-label" organic milk for many grocery chains, including Wild Oats, Trader Joe's and Costco. Organic watchdog group, the Cornucopia Institute filed a formal complaint about suspect organic livestock management practices associated with the Aurora Organic Dairy in
Cornucopia’s
senior farm policy analyst was invited to visit A September New York Times article described efforts by John Mackey, the CEO of organic foods retailer Whole Foods, to set in-store product standards for compassionate care of animals in agriculture. The move followed discussions with the Cornucopia Institute, which has been pushing for U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) enforcement of rules requiring the pasturing of dairy cows. Loopholes in the federal organic law are being exploited by factory farms and their large corporate partners. The giant farms, with herds numbering up to 6,000, are confining their milk cows to small drylots, or buildings and feeding them concentrated rations instead of pasture. The management strategy allows them to squeeze more milk from the animals while milking them three times a day. It’s also a huge cost-cutting approach that threatens to run the nation’s family-scale organic dairy operators out of business. These smaller farmers, who built the coveted reputation of the organic label, have been dutifully following organic production rules and are now being placed at a competitive disadvantage. A November New York Times article cited the Institute’s work as an advocate for organic integrity and family farmers. The Institute has filed formal complaints with the USDA against the confinement practices of organic factory farms and is prodding the National Organic Standards Board to pass guidelines closing the pasture loopholes. |
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Want to learn about sustainable production practices? The Southern Sustainable Agriculture Working Group's (SSAWG) video series, Natural Farming Systems in the South, provides an easy, economical way to take a virtual tour, chocked full of special learning opportunities from some highly successful farming operations in the region. Compiled in partnership with the USDA's Risk Management Agency, these broadcast-quality videos focus on featured farmers who relate, in detailed plain-spoken terms, the whole farming system and each component unique to their particular operation. The series includes video on small-scale organic vegetable and flower farms, management intensive grazing of beef cattle, pastured turkey and cut flower production. These broadcast-quality videos can be purchased for $15.00 on SSAWG’s web site. |
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| Just Food helps bring fresh, regionally grown, affordable food to neighborhoods all over To
learn
more about Just Food and the community controlled food movement it is
spawning, check out these articles: Community
Farmers Cultivate
Cross-Cultural Exchange, by
Heather Haddon (Norwood News Vol. 19,
No. 3 Feb. 9 - 22, 2006) [PDF]; New
York's Grocery Gap, by Gail
Robinson (November 21, 2005) [PDF]; South
Bronx to South Bay: The
Culture in Agriculture, by Roger Repohl
(November 7, 2005) [PDF]; Fresh
Food Cheap: How the Bronx is Eating
Well, by Lisa Gross (New York
Press Vol
18 Issue 44 - November 2-8, 2005) [PDF]. For information on joining a
CSA in |
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The National Asian Pacific American Women’s Forum (NAPAWF) released its 2005 national agenda for action report, Reclaiming Choice, Broadening the Movement: Sexual and Reproductive Justice and Asian Pacific American Women. The report is the result of extensive research and input from NAPAWF’s constituents and supporters nationwide: “With the publication of this Agenda for Action, NAPAWF hopes to reinsert APA women and girls into the national dialogue about abortion rights, health care, welfare reform and violence against women.” The Agenda for Action includes an economic and political profile of APA women, thier reproductive and sexual health trends, and barriers that prevent APA women and girls from receiving appropriate health care services. “A Call to Action” presents NAPAWF’s eight priority areas, and offers recommendations for policymakers, advocates, allied organizations and community leaders to address these issues. |
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Last
September, the National
Latina Institute for
Reproductive Health
’s (NLIRH) Mujeres
Latinas in Accion
held a Latinas for Justice breakfast in |
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The Southern Bronx
River Watershed
Alliance is a
coalition committed to envisioning and
realizing a new future for communities along the southern reaches of
the |
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Post
Hurricane Katrina
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The
Gulf
Coast Justice and Solidarity Tour in November 2005 brought
representatives from 35 organizations to areas of |
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The National
Latina Institute for Reproductive Health’s
(NLIRH) newsletter, Instantes,
featured
the Feminist Women’s
Health Center in |
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Noyes In Action |
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In
January, Heather Findlay,
great-granddaughter of Charles Noyes and
chair of the Foundation’s Board, and Vic De Luca, its
president,
presented a session at the Council on
Foundations
Family
Foundation Conference in Hawaii, entitled There’s
More To It
Than Compliance: How To Have An Effective Board.
Here, Heather and
Vic are fielding questions from the 65 session participants. Another
presenter was Sarah DiTroia
from the
Center for Effective Philanthropy, who reported on the
Center’s
foundation governance project. During the conference, Vic participated
in a dialogue between Steve Gunderson, the Council’s new
president, and CEOs of a dozen foundations.
Built on Principle – A Guide to Family Foundation Stewardship, quotes Vic on shareholder activism, diversity and exit interviews of retiring board members. The book also contains a quote from Edith Muma, Jessie Smith Noyes’ daughter, on the benefits of broadening the diversity of the Noyes Board and a passage from the Noyes Diversity Brochure. |
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| Bay
Area Reproductive
Rights Funders The Bay Area Donors held its first meeting of the year, with more than ten foundations represented, including Noyes program officer for reproductive rights, Wilma Montanez. The meeting focused on the Campaign to Defeat Proposition 73, a proposition requiring parental involvement for minors seeking abortion services in California. Presentations were made by representatives from Planned Parenthood of California, ACLU of Northern California, and the Reproductive Health Technology Project. Many factors contributed to this victory, including years of preparation, the broadening of the coalition to better reflect the state’s demographic reality, and a willingness by all the players to change the language and framing of this issue so that its message would resonate with a wide range of communities across the state. The defeat of Proposition 73 has given reproductive rights advocates around the country an impetus to continue their work. |
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| In December, the Sustainable Agriculture and Food Systems Funders sponsored a phone briefing, moderated by Kolu Zigbi, program officer for sustainable agriculture and food systems. Ron Strochlic, executive director of the California Institute for Rural Studies, reported on findings from interviews and surveys done of farm labor practices on twelve organic farms in California. Not surprisingly, having a satisfied workforce translates into benefits for farm owners, such as reduced training costs and higher worker retention rates. The good news - many positive workplace practices are no- or low-cost! Social Equity in Sustainable Agriculture is now available on the CIRS web site. |
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| What
the Staff’s Been Saying and Doing
Vic De Luca spoke to the Connecticut Health Foundation’s board on proxy voting and shareholder activism. He also is co-chair of the New York Regional Association of Grantmakers fundraising campaign, The New NYRAG: Tools for Philanthropy in the 21st Century. Kolu Zigbi spoke at the First Annual Chicago Food Policy Summit. Her talk entitled, Food System Sustainability and Foundation Support: Jargon, Oxymoron, Mystery or Just a Piece of the Pie, explored the role of foundations in supporting the transition toward a more sustainable food system. Kolu also is advising Island Press on a publication dealing with the future of sustainable agriculture. She is co-chair of the Sustainable Agriculture and Food Systems Funders group and is on its planning committee for this year’s annual conference, which will be in Maine. Wilma Montanez, spoke at the conference of the Young Women’s Collaborative, which was held in Tucson, AZ. |
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In
January, Carol Kuhre and LaDonna Redmond began six-year terms on the
Foundation’s Board. Carol lives in rural Ohio and is the
former executive director of Rural Action, having served in that
capacity for 13 years. She now is a fund and organizational development
trainer and consultant. LaDonna lives in Chicago and is the founder and
president of the Institute for Community Resource Development (the
Institute). She is an experienced community activist, now focusing on
sustainable food security. Rural Action was a grantee from 1995
– 2002 and the Institute is a more recent grantee of the
Foundation.
There are 16 members of
the Foundation’s Board: six
family
members and ten non-family members. Board members live in eleven
states, from New York to California and from Minnesota to Maryland. The
Board is composed of nine (56 percent) females and seven (44 percent)
males. The race and ethnicity breakdown of the entire Board is ten
whites (62 percent) and six people of color (38 percent). The race and ethnicity breakdown of the nine non-family and non-tenured members is three white (33 percent) and six people of color (67 percent), |
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Noyes
Numbers for 2005 |
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$2,979,020
in grants and contributions 326 total funding requests 100 grants awarded (does not include annual contributions and board discretionary grants) 77 percent of grantee organizations have budgets under $750,000 (42 percent with budgets of $250,000 or less) 38 percent of grantees led and governed by people of color |
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Noyes
As an Investor |
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Philanthropic News and Trends |
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Key Facts on Family Foundations According to the Foundation Center, in 2004 there were more than 33,100 family foundations in the U.S. Of that number, the Center has financial data for 31,347, showing total assets of $209 billion and grants of $12.6 billion in 2004. The overwhelming majority of these foundations are small, with 63 percent having assets of less than $1 million. In addition, 65 percent of these foundations reported giving less than $100,000 in 2004. Based on the Foundation Center’s numbers, in 2004 the Noyes Foundation was in the top two percent of family foundations in terms of asset size and in the top five percent in terms of giving. |
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What We're Thinking |
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Building a More Equitable Agriculture and Food System by Kolu Zigbi The Noyes Foundation values diverse social movements as a means toward: more equitable social policies and institutions; authentic leadership committed to community needs; fresh insights and new perspectives resulting in better solutions to social problems; and greater accountability. The Foundation’s staff and board have been thinking about ways to support even greater diversity among groups engaging in food systems change work. We’ve looked at the factors that have limited the Foundation’s support to people-of-color-led groups in the sustainable agriculture and food systems field. As a result we expect to fund more organizations working on food and farm issues at a local level. At the same time, our overall strategy will continue – supporting organizing and advocacy for policy change. Our interest in collaborative work between groups in this movement, as well as alliances with groups in other movements, remains strong. We value the long-term relationships we’ve developed with many key organizations in the sustainable agriculture and food systems movement and will continue to make a high percentage of renewal grants. The Foundation also looked at characteristics of the sustainable agriculture and food systems field that may make it difficult for more people-of-color-led groups to actively engage as leaders for food systems change. We plan to engage in a broader dialogue about the types of investments (of money, attention, time, talent) needed to build the diversity of this field at every level. Thankfully, there has been significant progress in building the diversity of this movement. One venue is the growing community food security movement, where the emphasis on food access provides an entry point for leadership by people from under-served communities of color. Another is the national focus on over-weight children and the nutrition-related illnesses they suffer. The reauthorized Child Nutrition and WIC Reauthorization Act of 2004 mandates creation of school wellness plans and committees in districts across the U.S. by the start of the 2006-2007 school year. This is an opportunity to involve new leaders, including people of color, in consciousness raising and policy-making to support healthy food options and choices in schools. From our vantage point, we are pleased to see evidence that key coalitions in the sustainable agriculture and food systems movement are preparing to more effectively build diverse leadership for a more equitable food system. |
| Previous newsletter: November, 2005 Noyes News |
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Phone: 212-684-6577 Fax: 212-689-6549 Email: noyes@noyes.org Web: www.noyes.org All contents copyright © 1996 - 2006, The Jessie Smith Noyes Foundation, Revised: March, 2006 Please send comments or corrections on this page to noyes@noyes.org |