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Noyes
News
May,
2008
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![]() The
National
Latina Institute for Reproductive Health was
selected for its leadership efforts to ensure the
fundamental human right to reproductive health for Latinas, their
families and communities. The $100,000 Jessie Smith Noyes Foundation
Award, initiated in 1998, is designed to
strengthen and sustain key organizations working to advance social
justice. NLIRH is the 22nd recipient.
Founded
in 1994, NLIRH
places reproductive health rights within a broader social justice
framework that seeks to bring an end to poverty and discrimination and
affirms human dignity and the right to self-determination. NLIRH
engages in public education, policy advocacy and community mobilization
to protect and advance reproductive justice. “We
are
extremely honored and grateful for this award. It will help us continue
to influence policy, organize a diverse constituency, and ensure that
Latina leadership and perspectives are front and center in the
reproductive justice movement” said Silvia Henriquez,
NLIRH’s executive director. “The Noyes Award will
help with our sustainability, providing resources to open a satellite
office in Washington, DC, strengthen donor cultivation and expand
organizing efforts in Texas. “We
are
particularly happy to have selected a strong women’s rights
organization in 2007, the year of our 60th anniversary,” said
Victor De Luca, president of the Noyes Foundation. “Jessie
Smith Noyes was an advocate for women and girls in the early 1900s with
the YWCA of Brooklyn. She would be proud to see the Foundation honor an
important organization like the National Latina Institute for
Reproductive Health, which works across the nation to improve the lives
of women and their families.” Previous
recipients of
Noyes Awards are: |
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Bruce Kahn and Ben Lovell have been appointed to the Foundation’s Board of Directors for six year terms (2008 – 2013).
Ben, who lives in Maine, is vice-president with Robert Brooke Zevin Associates in Boston. He has been managing socially responsible investments since 1985. Ben has also been involved with a number of nonprofits, including Maine Businesses for Social Responsibility, the Maine Initiatives Fund, the Seacoast Anti-Pollution League and the endowment committee of York Hospital. |
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Grantee Stories
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Jennifer, Crystal and Judith received Imagen Awards, which honor Latino/as for their positive influences in television and film, and in society. The awards were presented at the Imagen Foundation’s Women’s History Month event and the honorees were profiled in Latina Magazine. |
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Since
the birth of the environmental justice movement, communities of color
have challenged the mainstream environmental movement to broaden its
definition of the environment and to include a variety of voices and
viewpoints. The EJ movement’s current dilemma is to ensure
that poor people and people of color are included in the green movement
addressing global climate change. Robby Rodriquez is director of the SouthWest
Organizing Project,
a 28-year-old New Mexico social justice organization that was at the
center of the EJ movement from the beginning. His thoughtful article in
the current issue of Colorlines
challenges mainline environmentalists to ensure that equity and justice
are at the center of their climate change solutions, and challenges EJ
activists not to sit around and complain that few of the ideas of the
"green wave" are new, but instead to do something about it. It is a
double challenge worth reading and heeding.
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Local
Food a Hit in South Dakota, New York City
and Washington State |
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Dakota Rural Action’s South Dakota Local Foods Directory lists over 75 local food producers and farmers’ markets statewide, features original artwork, and offers tips on using and storing locally-grown food. We're thrilled with the great response…Demand for the directory proves what our committee already knew: people want to eat fresh, quality food from local producers. Now it's even easier to find it. Kristianna Gehant, co-chair of Dakota Rural Action’s Small Farms Committee. If you would like a free copy, contact DRA at (605) 697-5204 or by email. Otherwise, check it out online.
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Just Food reports that New York City’s community supported agriculture movement continues to grow! In 2001, there were 19 CSA programs through which urban community residents bought shares in local farmers’ harvests. Today there are 56 CSAs, involving more than 11,000 New Yorkers. The CSAs have provided markets to over 40 regional growers – many of whom say CSAs account for more than 80 percent of their business.
Just Food continues to work on strategies that will enable a greater number of New Yorkers of all income levels to participate in the CSA movement. Over 30 of the 50 sites utilize flexible payment options, including paying for a share in installments and/or using food-stamps to purchase a share. |
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Combine support from over 50 farm enterprises and nonprofits with an equal number of organizations championing children’s health and community development, along with support from the faith community, school districts, teachers and nutritionists, and what do you get? Local Farms – Healthy Kids, one of the most comprehensive local food programs in the nation.
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The appeal is only one front in the campaign for clean energy. Check out the WARN-produced video satire of Duke’s Chief Operating Officer, which includes a call for action you can take, wherever you live and breathe. WARN’s website lists the following sobering statistics, among others: *Home Depot is planting 300,000 trees in the U.S. to help absorb carbon dioxide emissions. The CO2 emissions from the proposed new Cliffside plant, in just SIX DAYS of operations, would negate the entire effort. * Wal-Mart is investing 1/2 billion dollars to reduce energy consumption and CO2 emissions from its existing buildings over the next seven years. If every Wal-Mart supercenter met this target, the CO2 emissions from the proposed Cliffside plant, in less than THREE WEEKS of operation, would negate this entire effort. WARN proposes solutions too. A year ago, it joined 12 other organizations in issuing The Power to Choose: North Carolina's Clean-Energy Future, a blueprint for how the state can meet its energy needs without adding more polluting facilities. |
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Investing in renewable energy development and energy efficiency could provide more jobs and economic benefits for the Navajo Nation than building the proposed $3 billion Desert Rock Energy Project, according to an economic analysis released in January by Diné Citizens Against Ruining Our Environment. It contradicts assumptions in the U.S. Bureau of Indian Affairs Draft Environmental Impact Statement on the proposed 1,500-megawatt pulverized coal plant. The report found, for example, that developing clean energy would create 80 percent more construction jobs and five times as many long-term operations and maintenance jobs as the Desert Rock plant. By investing in wind and solar resources, said Dailan Long of Diné CARE: "The Nation could be a leader in renewable technology, boost the economy, protect public and environmental health, and, altogether, do so in accordance with the Navajo Fundamental Laws." |
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The
#1 New
York Times
bestseller, 50
Simple Things You Can
Do to Save the
Earth, is back. And this
time, the authors have joined forces with 50
leading environmental groups... including Ohio
Valley Environmental
Coalition.
The piece on OVEC asks: “How
valuable is watching an extra half hour of television every night? Is
it worth sacrificing a mountain?” It goes on to describe what
mountaintop removal coal mining is doing to Appalachia, and recommends
steps concerned citizens can take if they want to help. You can read
the OVEC
portion online through
April 25, the last day of Earth Week 2008. Or you can buy the
book, and check out all 50 inspiring stories.
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This effort comes from the dedication and determination of a committed group of residents that live on the mesa to improve their quality of life. It truly represents what the spirit of grassroots community organizing is all about. Robby Rodriguez, Executive Director of SWOP. This huge victory has been long awaited, but it’s only the first victory of many more to come, Rodriquez notes. Residents also need public roads for emergency services, electricity and alternative energy. |
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In March, Francisca Herrera and Abraham Candelario, parents of Carlitos Herrera, reached a confidential settlement with Ag-Mart Produce, Inc. on behalf of their two-year old son, Carlitos. Carlitos was born without limbs and was one of three children with severe birth defects born to Ag-Mart employees over a three-month period in 2006. While the terms of the settlement are confidential, the parent's attorney, Andrew Yaffa, said that he and his clients are "very happy."
Although the terms of the settlement are confidential, the evidence gathered by the plaintiffs' attorneys is public. Yaffa will make this information available to other advocates representing victims of pesticide poisoning. Farmworker Association of Florida and other groups working to improve the condition of farmworkers expressed hope that this information will encourage state enforcement officials in Florida and North Carolina to pursue their administrative actions against Ag-Mart. |
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The 2008 Grassroots Global Justice Membership Assembly in March brought together representatives from 42 member organizations to debate, discuss, celebrate and plan for the next 20 years of participating in struggles for global justice. Following a key role in the first United States Social Forum, GGJ members developed a vision of where the movements would be in 20 years, and formed some initial steps toward that vision. Delegates also elected a new coordinating council with diverse representation from across the nation, and established working groups to deepen member involvement in the alliance’s work. |
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The Brooklyn Young Mothers Collective is about to launch free doula care and services to pregnant and parenting young mothers in the community with the goal of improving birth outcomes and early parenting practices. A doula is a professional birth attendant who provides physical, emotional and informational support during birth, as well as education during and after pregnancy. The use of a doula in randomized trials has proven to reduce c-section rates, facilitate shorter labor, lessen the use of medications during labor and delivery, increase success in breastfeeding, increase maternal satisfaction, and reduce rates of newborn complications. |
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The Alliance for Reproductive Justice is the new name for the Alaska Pro-Choice Alliance. In an Op-Ed in the Anchorage Daily News, the Alliance's executive director, Geran Tarr, wrote: The movement needed to change to more accurately reflect the experience of women, to be more inclusive and to incorporate the experience of women of color. The reproductive justice movement emerged. It includes abortion rights and also includes those who want to have children and related issues, such as access to reproductive health care, environmental health, family friendly employment policies and supportive communities and laws. Geran's Op-Ed spoke about the many women who live in Alaska communities with limited access to reproductive health care, have limited or no medical insurance and cannot afford to pay for health care services. These issues, combined with other socio-economic factors, affect a woman’s ability to make sound reproductive health decisions. |
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At a recent anniversary celebration, former students and educators shared stories about their personal and professional experiences with Saludpromujer. The festivities concluded with the debute of the CD: De Esto No Se Habla – El Aborto En Puerto Rico (Of This We Don’t Speak Of: Abortion in Puerto Rico). The CD features eight raps on sexual and reproductive health, and emergency contraception messages created in hip-hop style for radio. These controversial and popular radio spots have become important educational tools. |
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Make
the Road New York organized
a massive community meeting with over 700 members from Staten Island,
Brooklyn and Queens, gathering for an afternoon of political
engagement,
music and theater. Community members presented MRNY's policy priorities
for 2008. They shared personal stories of mistreatment and
discrimination, and performed political theater to highlight the need
for:
The
federal, state and local elected officials present offered their
support for the policies promising to work for immigration reform,
adequate school funding and tenants’ rights. |
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The
South Bronx group, Youth
Ministries for Peace and Justice, has
launched Greenternships,
an apprenticeship and
training program offering employment opportunities in environmental
careers. The interns will explore issues of personal identity,
oppression
and social justice, and receive training in organizing,
leadership development, political education and civic
participation. Greenternships is an opportunity for participants to
bridge that critical gap between its youth programs and the job market.
YMPJ has identified a number of public- and private-sector career tracks with local organizations and businesses in fields such as stormwater management, streetscape beautification, urban forestry, urban planning and gardening. For example, Youth Organizers who have received Citizen Street Tree Pruner certification can pursue this career track further through a Greenternship as a Climber-Pruner, a well-paying entry-level job with New York City’s Parks Department. |
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Sustainable agriculture and food systems work is described as resting on three legs: ecological sustainability, economic viability and social justice. The question is justice for whom? And, why is it so hard to achieve justice for all? Like our housing and educational systems, our food system is stratified along the lines of race and class. Farmworkers tend to be people of color. Farm owners tend to be white. Consumers able to access farm-fresh food tend to be middle-class and affluent whites. Black and brown people disproportionately suffer from food insecurity, and disproportionately high rates of nutrition-related illness.
On March 27th, the Foundation sponsored a web-based seminar, entitled Structural Racism and Our Food: Understanding the Problem and Identifying Solutions, delivered by Maya Wiley, a civil rights attorney and founding director of the Center for Social Inclusion. Maya explained why the concept of structural racism is important and explored the application of a “structural race lens” to the food system. The “webinar” can be accessed on the Center’s website through June 4th. We are happy that this conversation will continue at the Kellogg Foundation Food and Society conference, where Maya will be a featured speaker. And, we are eager to hear about the experiences of grantees as they apply a structural racism lens to help ensure that our three-leg stool doesn’t topple over. |
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Noyes In Action |
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What
the Staff’s Been Saying and Doing
Diversity
and inclusiveness
were key topics for the staff:
Vic
was profiled in Corporate Board
Member
magazine in Foundations Join the
Ranks of Shareholder Activists,
an article that featured the work of the Noyes and Nathan Cummings
foundations and Rockefeller Philanthropy Advisers. Noyes was also
highlighted in SocialFunds.com, Foundations
Move Toward
Mission Related Investing, One
Foundation at a Time.
And Noyes’ investment policy was included as a model in Mission-Related
Investing: A Policy and Implementation Guide for Foundation Trustees,
a booklet published by Rockefeller Philanthropy Advisers
Millie co-authored
with two other funder colleagues an article for the Environmental
Grantmakers Association's Journal, Mountaintop
Removal
Mining: The True Cost of Coal. |
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Related News
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Large
Foundations Boost Giving in 2006 The Foundation Center reported that the nation’s largest 1,300 foundations made $19.1 billion in grants in 2006. This was more than a 16 percent increase over the previous year. The Center attributes this growth to the large grant Warren Buffet made to the Gates Foundation and to a strong stock market. The study showed that health charities received the most funding ($4.4 billion), outpacing education support ($4.3 billion) for the first time in 20 years. Support for the environment and animals totaled $1.145 billion, and public affairs and society benefits, which includes civil rights and social action, community improvement and development, philanthropy and volunteerism, and public affairs totaled $2.04 billion. Due largely to the Gates Foundation, West Coast foundations provide more grant funding than their counterparts in the East, the first time that has happened since the Center started issuing its reports. Charities in the Northeast sill received more foundation funding than any other part of the country. Corporate foundations preferred to fund educational purposes, while community foundations gave the most to human services groups. Independent foundations, which include family foundations, provided grants to organizations working in the fields of health, international affairs, science and social-science. More information on the report, Foundation Giving Trends, can be found at the Foundation Center. |
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Where’s
The Beef?
We
are not sure about
that, but an interesting report from the
Foundation Center shows where the money was in 2006 among the 34,687
family foundations they identified. In March, the Center released Key
Facts on Family Foundations. Although giving by family foundations amounted to $17 billion, 49 percent of the family foundations reported giving less than $50,000 that year. The largest was the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, which gave almost $3 billion in 2006, over 17 percent of the total for family foundations. While Gates had an asset level of $33 billion, 60 percent of family foundations had less than $1 million in assets. With $60 million in assets, the Noyes Foundation falls within the top two percent of family foundations. Noyes also falls within the top six percent of giving for family foundations with its annual grantmaking of $3 million. The Center found that 80 percent of family foundations were established since 1980, with 27 percent coming on line in the 2000s. In contrast, the Noyes Foundation was created in 1947 when only two percent of family foundations were established. A sample survey of 577 larger family foundations showed that health and education grants were favored in 2006. This set of foundations also preferred program giving over general support or capital and research needs. Also, only fifteen percent of larger family foundations had paid staff; including paid staff at only about a third of the 5,000 family foundations with assets of $5 million or more. |
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Who
Will Lead Non-Profits?
In
a recent survey, two-thirds of almost 6,000 potential nonprofit
leaders said "no" or were unsure when asked if they would like to be a
nonprofit executive director. The sponsors of the survey, conducted in
September of 2007, were the Annie E. Casey Foundation, CompassPoint
Nonprofit Services, Idealist.org, and the Eugene and Agnes E. Meyer
Foundation. It is expected that thousands of senior-level positions
will be available over the next ten years due to the retirement
of waves of baby boomers. The majority of survey respondents worked in the nonprofit sector. Among their concerns were the long hours required, negative effects on personal lives and financial concerns, including inadequate compensation given the demands of the job and not having enough saved for retirement. Additionally, the survey found that the traditional duties of an executive director were unappealing and there was little in the way of training for the next generation of leaders. People of color more strongly expressed an interest in heading up a nonprofit than did whites. The same goes for respondents who grew up in a low-income family and were born outside the U.S. Clink here to get a free copy of the report: Ready to Lead? Next Generation Leaders Speak Out. |
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Are
Charities Spending Too Much on Overhead?
According to a poll done by Ellison Research of Phoenix, 62 percent of Americans thinks that charities are spending too much for fund raising and administration. The public thinks that overhead should cost 22 cents per dollar but believes that charities spend 36 cents of each dollar they receive for overhead. Among adults under 35, 44 percent felt this way, while 70 percent of those age 55 and older believed too much was spent on overhead. Conversely, 20 percent of African American respondents said that too little was spent on overhead, double the responses for whites and Latinos. Just over 1,000 people across the country were surveyed. |
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| Our
Trip to El Paso
by Kolu Zigbi, Noyes Program Officer |
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In March, the Foundation convened representatives from the ten organizations around the country that it funds through the Diversifying Leadership for Sustainable Food Policy Initiative. Twenty-five participants came to this west Texas border town to share achievements and lessons learned, view first-hand the effects in U.S. and Mexican communities of the North American Free Trade Agreement, and learn more about the anti-immigrant movement.
It was rather quick and easy to get into Mexico, the wait and anxiety came when we crossed back into the U.S. We drove along the outskirts of Ciudad Jaurez, a city of 1.2 million inhabitants, passing large, state-of-the-art maquiladoras (export assembly plants) where workers toiled for hourly wages of less than one dollar. Along the side of the highway ran a narrow river of water, black with runoff from the factories and from Ciudad Jaurez’s untreated sewage. In addition to the low wages, corporations are attracted to the border’s “free-trade” zone because they are not required to pay taxes. As a result, workers’ housing, “colonias,” lack basic infrastructure. We passed tiny one-room homes, without electricity, crowded together in tight rows and painted rosy colors.
We joined local residents in a large community room, where we listened to a representative from the Frento Democratico Campesinos Di Chihuahua talk about NAFTA’s impact: how U.S. corn imports have driven down sale prices for area farmers; how water pollution from the maquiladora plants has made it dangerous to eat locally-produced food; and how the region’s farmers are increasingly leaving their communities to seek new livelihoods to support their families. It is estimated that since NAFTA was passed in 1994 over two million Mexican farmers have joined the stream of immigrants and migrant workers into the U.S. We learned about massive demonstrations against NAFTA’s final phased-in deregulation of sugar, dairy products and beans. Farmers from the Chihuahua joined protesters from every region of the country in caravans than converged in Mexico City on January 31st.
The next morning, Eric Ward, coordinator of the Building Democracy project at the Center for New Community, described the history of the anti-immigrant, or “nativist” movement. He linked immigrants’ rights to the civil rights movement, and explained how laws and policies aimed at restricting and controlling undocumented immigrants will have significant direct impacts on all communities of color within the U.S., including the African American community.
Our convening ended with a conversation about the messages we needed to bring back to our organizations, and the ways to engage the broader movements we are part of in a dialog on the intersection of food, agriculture, trade, racism, xenophobia and immigration policies.
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| Previous newsletter: November, 2007 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 - 2008, The Jessie Smith Noyes Foundation, Revised: April, 2008 Please send comments or corrections on this page to noyes@noyes.org |