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Noyes News November, 2005 Welcome to the Noyes Foundation’s new e-mail newsletter. We look forward
to sharing stories on the important work of our grantees and providing
other tidbits of information. The newsletter, which will come out three
times a year, also gives us an opportunity to let you know what’s going on
at the Foundation. We invite your comments and suggestions on how to make
the newsletter more appealing and helpful to you and others in the
nonprofit community.
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| Our Grantees
Congratulations:
Sustainable
South Bronx’s executive director, Majora Carter, was selected
as a John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Fellow. She received the $500,000
prize for her work in addressing the disproportionate environmental and
public health burdens experienced by residents of the South Bronx. The
MacArthur Foundation called her a “relentless and charismatic urban
strategist.” Majora has a history of recognition. In 2001, she was named
one of the 50 New Yorkers to Watch by the Daily News.
Carter began working as an environmentalist in the mid-‘90s, when a
company proposed putting a municipal waste transfer station along the
Bronx River. With the Bronx already handling 40 percent of New York City’s
commercial waste, she felt the community had to take a stand against this
excessive burden and worked in partnership with local government,
businesses and neighborhood organizations to successfully divert the plan.
Today, Majora Carter continues to transform the quality of life in the
South Bronx by educating residents about environmental injustices and
sustainable development solutions to build momentum for change.
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Nelson Carrasquillo, the general coordinator of Comité de Apoyo a los Trabajadores
Agricolas (CATA), was named a 2005 Alston/Bannerman Fellowship
award winner for his work over the last 35 years to give those affected by
injustice the capacity to make change. CATA works in New Jersey,
Pennsylvania and the Delmarva Peninsula using popular education methods to
develop proactive farmworker leadership in workplaces and communities
addressing issues, including environmental justice and immigrant rights.
CATA was instrumental in organizing the Kaolin Workers Union, the first
group of Pennsylvania mushroom workers to secure a collective bargaining
agreement. |

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Time Magazine named Antonio Gonzalez,
president of the Southwest Voter Registration Education Project
(SVREP), as one of the 25 most influential Hispanics in America. SVREP was
one of three partners in the Campaign for Communities, which
received a $75,000 Noyes Foundation Opportunity Fund grant in 2004 for
voter registration and mobilization efforts. For more, go to: www.time.com/time/nation/article/0,8599,1093623,00.html
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Appalachian
Sustainable Development (ASD, former grantee), was recognized by
Amazon.com as one of ten U.S. organizations offering “unique approaches
and breakthrough solutions that most effectively improve their communities
or the world at large.” ASD was chosen because of its work in building
“self-reliant, ecologically sustainable communities in Central Appalachia
by providing training and market access for farmers and other
limited-resource entrepreneurs, and by linking them to consumers.”
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| Grantee Stories
Tierra
Madre, a sustainable housing development project in the desert
outside of El Paso, Texas, received its first of five Noyes grants in
1998. It is now celebrating its tenth anniversary.

Tierra Madre
is a 19.68 acre community based in Sunland Park, N.M. Tierra Madre Land
Trust offers energy efficient affordable straw-bale houses to
low/moderate income families. The idea behind the project is the
preservation of the environment, utilization of a natural energy source
(the sun) and the recycling of water and household debris. All exterior
walls are built of compacted straw bales … This method provides a high
thermal resistance value, which prevents heat transfer and loss. The
1536 sq. ft. homes consist of four bedrooms, two bathrooms, a living
area and kitchen. The end product is a thermo-mass house with guaranteed
low utility costs. Sweat-equity teamwork … ensures the homebuilder
(family) the opportunity to own an affordable home. Today, 26 houses
with more than 100 people are living in Tierra Madre. Six more houses
are in the construction process.
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The SPIN Project, a
resource for nonprofit social change organizations wanting to increase
their communications skills, recently completed an article on Communications
Capacity Building Throughout the Organizational Lifecycle,
illustrating a developmental, incremental approach to communications
capacity building. It uses SPIN Project clients as case studies and can be
downloaded as a PDF document.
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Coal River
Mountain Watch (CRMW), Kentuckians for the Commonwealth
(KFTC) and Ohio Valley
Environmental Coalition (OVEC) were among the organizations
in Appalachia rallying with activists from across the country during
Mountain Justice Summer (MJS) to call for an end to mountaintop removal
mining (MTR), a destructive technique that is devastating the southern
Appalachians. MJS participants reached out to area residents, helping
swell the memberships of local organizations; participated in rallies,
including a 500-person gathering organized by CRMW and OVEC at the West
Virginia statehouse calling on the governor to end MTR; and protested in
solidarity with residents against coal corporations' excesses, including a
march with KFTC in Pike County, KY, to the headquarters of TECO Coal
demanding that the corporation stop destroying homes, communities and the
environment, and "operate their businesses as they claim to do in their
corporate public relations."

Also
supporting MJS was Christians for the Mountains (CFM), a new organization
whose mission is "to summon faithful Christians to act responsibly to
God’s creation.” Its focus is the southern and central Appalachian
Mountain region, and it derives its stance from an array of scriptures,
including Psalm 24: “The Earth is the Lord’s, and everything in it; the
world, and all that lives upon it.” The group includes Catholics and
Protestants, and several founding members are active in secular groups
working to stop MTR. It will hold a Go Tell It On the Mountain
conference in November in Charleston, WV. More information can be found at
www.christiansforthemountains.org.
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On October 7, the Environmental Health
Coalition (EHC) won a major victory in a long, hard-fought
battle to eliminate candy as a source of lead poisoning for California's
children. Despite pressure from the National Confectioners Association
urging a veto, Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger signed a bill entitled
Adulterated Candies: Preventing Lead Poisoning. The law will require the
California Department of Health Services to regulate lead in chili,
tamarind and other ingredients in candy suspected of containing lead. It
would require the department to test candy, issue related health
advisories and order local health officials to remove contaminated candy
from store shelves. It is the first law of its kind in the nation and will
go into effect January 1, 2006. In the meantime, EHC's web site, www.environmentalhealth.org/LeadinCandyTableOct04.htm,
warns parents about candies with high lead content which are still readily
available, despite pleas to government authorities.
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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
6000, 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 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 on the
organic factory farms and is prodding the National Organic Standards Board
to pass guidelines closing the pasture loopholes.
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This summer Asian Communities for
Reproductive Justice (ACRJ) began meeting to examine chemical
ingredients used in cosmetics. One of ACRJ’s partner groups convened a
safe cosmetics summit, bringing together a group of like-minded people,
including policy-makers and cosmetic company representatives, interested
in making safer products.  When the teens began to empty their bags of lipsticks,
Chapstick, sun block, scented lotions, eye makeup and deodorant, they were
shocked to learn about the toxic ingredients in these products and became
determined to change their ways. A bill introduced in the California
Senate would require cosmetic companies to disclose any hazardous
ingredients used in cosmetic products sold in that state. This bill does
not ban any ingredients or require labeling, but it has faced intense
opposition from the $35 billion cosmetic industry. The Cosmetic, Toiletry
and Fragrance Association spent $550,000 in 2004 successfully lobbying
against legislation that would have banned a group of chemical compounds
call phthalates, found in nail polish, moisturizer, hairspray and other
products. There are 83,000 licensed manicurists in California, and 80
percent are of Vietnamese descent, mostly young immigrant women of
childbearing age.
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The National Network of Abortion Funds
(NNAF) released its latest report Abortion Funding: A Matter of
Justice this past spring. NNAF is a growing association of 106
community-based funds in 42 states and the District of Columbia that help
women pay for abortions. NNAF is one of the few national reproductive
rights advocacy groups linking the issue of access to abortion to a lack
of financial resources. According to NNAF, a significant number of
late-term abortions are directly connected to a lack of funds.
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Breast Cancer Action (BCA)
continued its strategy of shareholder activism through its Follow the
Money – An Alliance for Accountability in Breast Cancer. The
Alliance, in close collaboration with three socially responsible
investment firms – Domini Social Investments (one of the Noyes
Foundation’s investment managers), Trillium Asset Management and Walden
Asset Management – successfully placed a resolution before Avon’s
shareholders at last year’s annual meeting calling for the company to
study the feasibility of removing parabens, which may elevate breast
cancer risk, from its products. A second resolution addressing the use of
dibutyl phthalates was withdrawn prior to the meeting when Avon agreed to
remove several phthalates from its products. BCA reinforced its
shareholder activism with grassroots organizing and a media campaign
designed to raise public awareness of the conflicts inherent in Avon’s
high profile breast cancer campaign and BCA’s efforts to make the company
more responsive to the demands of breast cancer activists.

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New
Jersey Work Environment Council won a major victory when a
proposal reached between the Department of Environmental Protection (DEP)
and industry groups was scrapped. Had this proposal succeeded, it would
have allowed corporations to devise their own anti-terror and security
plans. The DEP commissioner now says he will hold public hearings on
chemical security and has announced guidelines to allow workers and union
representatives greater say in inspecting the sites. About 100 chemical
and nuclear plants, oil refineries and food and water processing plants
governed by the Toxic Catastrophe Prevention Act will be subject to
developed rules.
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Hunger Action Network of New York
State hosted a meeting in New York City on the subject of
“food justice,” addressing issues of economic empowerment through the
creation of more regionalized food systems. The New York Sustainable Agriculture Working
Group (NYSAWG) co-sponsored the event. The meeting was part
of a series of gatherings held throughout the state to develop a common
understanding among food activists and service providers of some of the
diverse issues that impact community food security, including the gap
between what farmers in the state produce and what people in New York City
eat. Not surprisingly, New York farmers produce only a tiny fraction of
what is consumed in the Big Apple. This gap, according to NYSAWG,
represents an enormous economic opportunity: selling just ten percent more
locally produced fresh food would generate 2,621 new agricultural jobs,
while selling ten percent more locally produced processed food would
generate 4,591 manufacturing jobs, adding a total of $6.8 billion in new
annual income. For a copy of the group’s Community Food Security Agenda
for New York go to www.hungeractionnys.org.
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To provide a cleaner environment
for the residents of Sunset Park, Brooklyn, UPROSE has purchased four
20-passenger hybrid electric shuttle buses. The purchase of the Citibuses
was made with funding from New York Power Authority (NYPA). UPROSE will
distribute the buses to the Al Noor School, Chinese-American Planning
Council and Sunset Park Senior Center. "Not only have these organizations
been involved with the NYPA project from the beginning, but they also
represent constituencies that range in age and ethnicity to reflect the
diversity of Sunset Park," stated Elizabeth Yeampierre, UPROSE's executive
director. "Through projects like the purchase of hybrid shuttle buses,
UPROSE hopes to raise the awareness of pollution reduction efforts."
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The Association for Neighborhood and Housing
Development and its Initiative for Neighborhood and Community
Organizing, which includes Make the Road by Walking
and Mothers on
the Move, won support from the City Council and the
Department of Housing Preservation and Development (HPD) for a new program
aimed at ensuring repairs for neglected buildings. This new program is an
important step forward in the city’s enforcement of housing code laws,
making code enforcement more strategic, proactive, and effective by
drawing on local community groups to identify buildings most in need of
repair and requiring the HPD to perform roof-to-cellar inspections in
those buildings and, whenever landlords have failed to make repairs,
guaranteeing that the City will bring court actions against them.
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Noyes Foundation’s Response
to Gulf Region Hurricanes
Eight grants, totaling $75,000, were made for
relief and recovery efforts in Alabama, Florida, Louisiana and
Mississippi.
| • Farmworker
Association of Florida |
$8,000 |
| • Federation of
Child Care Centers of Alabama |
$2,000 |
| • Federation of
Southern Cooperatives |
$15,000 |
| • Louisiana
Bucket Brigade |
$5,000 |
| • Louisiana
Environmental Action Network |
$15,000 |
| • National
Network of Abortion Funds |
$5,000 |
| • Southern
Echo |
$10,000 |
| • Southern Mutual
Help Center |
$15,000 |
The Foundation will be looking for opportunities in 2006 to provide
assistance to grantees in the region working to actively involve residents
in the planning and implementation process for rebuilding their
communities. |
Noyes In Action
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Stewardship
Principles for Family Foundations Already on the Council’s web
site for best practices for family foundations, the Noyes Foundation will
now be included in a new book, Built on Principle, which will
expand on the Council’s stewardship principles. The Noyes Foundation will
be profiled for its work on mission-related investing and diversity.
At the Council’s 2006 Family Foundation Conference, the Noyes
Foundation will present a session entitled, There’s More to It Than
Compliance: How to Have an Effective Board. The session will focus on
the foundation governance project, sponsored by the Center for Effective
Philanthropy. The Noyes Foundation board was one of 53 foundations
participating in this project.
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Kolu Zigbi, a Noyes program officer, moderated the workshop,
Sovereignty in a Globalized World: Where Food, Farmers and Funders
Fit, at the 2005 Environmental
Grantmakers Association conference. The workshop, co-sponsored by
the Sustainable Agriculture Food System Funders group and the Funders Network on Trade and
Globalization, focused on how small farmers across the globe are
engaged in a “food sovereignty” campaign in which the food system is
viewed through a human rights lens, where basic human rights include the
right to food and governments are able to enact national policies that
promote the ability of local farmers to feed their communities
unconstrained by “free trade” laws. To learn more about the Campaign for
Food Sovereignty, check out the following web sites: www.peoplesfoodsovereignty.org
and www.viacampesina.org.
At the EGA conference, Vic De Luca, Noyes’
president, participated in a luncheon discussion on foundation responses
to Hurricane Katrina. He said “Hurricane Katrina has made the entire
country focus on social justice, on the consequences of poverty and racism
in our cities and rural communities. The challenge to us in the funding
world is to look at our own grantmaking, using the same lens through which
we viewed Katrina to assess how and where we make our grants. We need to
address social justice issues each day and not just when responding to a
natural or man-made disaster.”
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National Network of
Grantmakers (NNG) As a
member of the People of Color Caucus (POCC) steering
committee, Kolu Zigbi helped plan the workshop, Working Across the Lines,
to explore ways to support racial justice through grantmaking. Led by Rinku Sen, communications director of Applied Research Center (ARC), the
workshop gave funders the opportunity to review a racial justice
grantmaking tool which ARC is beginning to field test. This important tool
will be further refined, based on input given during the workshop, which
defined justice, outlined a process for assessing the racial justice
component of a grantmaking portfolio and explored challenges around
establishing explicit programs to support racial justice work.
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Bay Area Funders Several
Bay Area-based reproductive rights funders gathered this summer to discuss
the latest trends in both philanthropy and the reproductive rights
movement. Noyes program officer Wilma Montañez attended, as did
representatives from the Richard and Rhoda Goldman Fund, Women’s
Foundation of California, and the David and Lucile Packard, Mary Wohlford,
and Compton foundations.
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The Noyes Foundation was well represented at
the National
Summit on Diversity in the Environmental Field, held at the
University of Michigan at the end of August. Noyes Foundation Board member
Dorceta Taylor, in her role as professor at the University and as program
director of the Minority Environmental Leadership Development Initiative,
was the organizer of the conference. She did a great job attracting a wide
range of presenters for the more than 225 conference participants. Vic De
Luca, Noyes’ president, was on a panel entitled Diversity in
Environmental Grantmaking Foundations. Noyes Board member Leslie Lowe
moderated a panel called Understanding the Pipeline, which dealt
with how students get positions in the environmental field. Lastly, Noyes
Board member Betty Hung moderated a panel, Mid-Career Leadership
Development, Minority Professional Associations, Networking, and
Diversity.
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Vic De Luca also spoke at: • Public
Welfare Foundation on socially responsible investing by foundations •
Leukemia & Lymphoma Society on diversifying a board of directors •
New York Regional Association of Grantmakers on foundation responses to
Hurricane Katrina.
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Sustainable Agriculture and Food Systems Funders
(SAFSF), co-chaired by Kolu, chose its new fiscal sponsor: Community
Partners, a southern California nonprofit incubator and support
organization.
Recently, SAFSF began discussions on farm labor issues through the
conference call briefing series, Passing the Field Test: the Role of
Farmworkers in Building Community Health and a Sustainable Food
System.
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Related News
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Unlikely Places
for Information on Threats to Reproductive Freedom The
potential of a high gloss magazine to become an instrument for advocacy
was evident with an article in the August issue of Self magazine:
Birth control lockdown: laws that
let pharmacists deny you the pill. Tax dollars used to pay for
anti-condom TV ads. Emergency contraception held hostage by politics.
Why, in 2005, is our access to birth control being
threatened? This
provocative article on the current status of reproductive rights for women
was sandwiched between an ad for “Lady-Like Coats” and articles entitled,
I Love to Flirt and Cheating Taught Me About Love. With
no mention of any pro-choice advocacy groups, this piece provided
accurate, in-depth information on how the current administration is
creating barriers, insurmountable in some cases, for women concerning
access to birth control, including emergency contraception. Another header
stated:
FACT: Since 2002, the Bush administration has
withheld all support for the U.N. Population Fund, which helps women
overseas prevent unplanned pregnancy and HIV/AIDS.
States with the best and worst birth control laws
were mentioned along with details about one of th groups behind much of
the restrictions – Pharmacists for Life International. Although it is
temptin to wish that the names of the advocacy groups that work to protect
women’s reproductive rights had received some recognition, nonetheless,
this article will hopefully spur women into activism.
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Northeast Sustainable Agriculture and
Research Education Program has decided to make farm labor
part of its request for proposals. In addition, beginning in 2006, the
Northeast SARE program will initiate a new grant program aimed at
reconnecting rural revitalization and development efforts with farming and
agriculture organizations, addressing issues like land use, job creation,
public policy and environmental quality. For more information go to: www.uvm.edu/~nesare/grants.html.
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You Say Star Wars and I Say Store
Wars Following the success of The Meatrix, a web-based video
produced by GRACE, which reveals the truth of confined animal feeding
operations while parodying the movie The Matrix (highlighted on
the Noyes Foundation’s web site), a new web-based video has been released
by the Organic Trade Association and Free Range Studios, called Store Wars.
Store Wars educates consumers about pesticide contamination,
irradiation and genetic engineering by spoofing the movie Star
Wars. Check it out at www.storewars.org/flash/index.html.
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Philanthropic News and Trends
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From the Foundation Center, 2005
Foundation Giving Trends:
Foundation funding declined for a second
consecutive year in 2003, as foundations continued to adjust to asset
losses from the downturn in the economy and stock market. Among the more
than 1,000 larger private and community foundations included in the
Foundation Center’s annual grants sample, giving fell 10.1 percent
between 2002 and 2003 to $14.3 billion, while the number of grants
awarded decreased by 5.5 percent, from 127,728 to 120,721. The median
grant amount remained unchanged at $25,000, but the average grant size
dropped from $124,678 to $118,649.
2005
Foundation Yearbook:
Overall, foundation giving grew an
estimated 6.9 percent to $32.4 billion in 2004, up from $30.3 billion in
2003. Foundation assets increased 9.5 percent in 2003, ending two
consecutive years of decline. Nonetheless, assets remained below the
peak levels reached in 2000.
There were a total of 66,398 foundations in
2003 with nearly $477 trillion in assets. Two percent of foundations held
seven out of ten asset dollars. The Noyes Foundation was in the top 5.4
percent. Over two-thirds of foundations, 45,685 or 69 percent, gave under
$100,000 in 2003. |
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