Noyes News - July 2006
| Congratulations
In June the New York City Council inaugurated the Big Green Apple Award for Environmental Leadership. |
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Grantee Stories |
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George Naylor, National Family Farm Coalition's president and an Iowa farmer, is profiled in the opening chapter of Michael Pollan's latest New York Times bestseller, The Omnivore's Dilemma. Pollan's book looks at the industrial food system's biggest source of calories - corn. George contacted Pollan four years ago when his earlier New York Times article, The Power Steer, ignored the connection between cheap corn and the expansion of factory dairy and livestock operations across this country and in other regions of the world.
Pollan has been on a coast-to-coast speaking tour and George has joined him on a few events. They hope to do more joint appearances leading up to the Congressional debate on the 2007 Farm Bill. George and NFFC assert that current farm policy assures cheap feed for industrial livestock production and cheap calories for unhealthy, highly processed food items that generate huge profits for multinational corporations. NFFC is calling for new farm policies that will return food production to family farms and reverse the increasingly energy-intensive, environmentally-destructive form of agriculture Pollan so rightly deplores. |
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Mothers on the Move (MOM) is featured in an article entitled, A Bronx Tale , by Michelle Garcia, in the June 19th issue of The Nation. The article describes the South Bronx group's efforts to grow its membership to include Mexican and Central American neighbors. MOM's members formed a human chain on the Grand Concourse to protest Congressional bills, which proposed criminalizing immigrants or anyone who helps them. Their organizing efforts are linking campaigns for housing, environmental justice and jobs with the immigrant rights movement. As executive director Wanda Solomon said, "We live with Mexicans, we live with Central Americans, we live with Africans. The same problems that immigrants are going through, [other] people go through."
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Social justice labeling Pilot project on five organic farms El Comité de Apoyo a Los Trabajodores Agricoles |
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Social justice activists across the globe created the World Social Forum (WSF) to provide an open platform for discussing alternatives to the type of globalization defined by multi-national corporations and the world’s wealthiest nations. Those powerful entities meet each year at the World Economic Forum, formulating global strategies that rarely benefit the majority of people.
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Northwest Women's Law Center (NWWLC) joined with other Oregon advocates to pressure the Oregon Board of Pharmacy to preserve women’s rights. In June, the Board voted unanimously for a policy that protects patients from pharmacists who refuse to fill lawful prescriptions. Although the new policy allows a pharmacist not to fill prescriptions that challenge his/her moral beliefs, the Board made it clear that it is unprofessional for a pharmacist to lecture a patient on moral grounds or to destroy, confiscate or otherwise tamper with any medication. This was a collaborative victory, linking the Center’s Reproductive Freedom Network with NARAL Pro-Choice Oregon, Planned Parenthood of Columbia/Willamette, and many other groups and individuals who advocated for these policies. In a related story, things are not going as well in South Dakota. In March, Governor Mike Rounds signed the most conservative abortion law in the nation, preventing doctors from performing abortions except in cases where the mother’s life is in danger. The new law has propelled both pro- and anti-choice activists into a frenzy, each staking out next steps in this abortion battle. A recent USA Today article, Abortion in a Post-Roe World, shows that the nation is split down the middle on many of these issues. |
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Western States Center launched its Family, Community and Sexuality Project, a multi-issue, multi-constituency movement for gender justice in the Pacific Northwest, Northern Rockies and Great Basin regions of the country. This spring, the Project held a summit in Idaho and has published a report, Building a Movement from the Ground Up, which provides a step-by-step account of the inclusive process used to envision and develop a gender justice agenda around progressive family value principles. |
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![]() What do the war in Iraq, Hurricane Katrina and contaminated drinking water in the Western U.S. have in common?
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| In March 2006, on behalf of Southern Mutual Help Association, Hank Herrera of the Center for Popular Research, Education and Policy authored the above titled report, which compiles information on the storms’ impacts on agriculture, fisheries, food manufacturing and supply chains in Southern Louisiana. The costs of recovery and restoration for Louisiana’s food and agriculture sectors exceed available resources. An important next step will be a complete, detailed inventory of funding streams available for this critically important work. |
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| Noyes In Action |
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| What the Staff’s Been Saying and Doing Vic De Luca was the keynote speaker at Michigan State University Community and Economic Development Program's 19th Annual Institute, Responsibly Investing in Michigan's Future: Community Development Investment Strategies.
Kolu Zigbi was a reception speaker at the W. K. Kellogg Foundation's Food and Society Networking Conference. She described the New England Food System Funders, a regional network for funders interested in sustainable agriculture. |
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Noyes Foundation Profiled in New Book
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Earlier this year, the Minority Environmental Leadership Development Initiative at the University of Michigan’s School of Natural Resources published The Paths We Tread – Profiles of the Careers of Minority Environmental Professionals. It was edited by former Noyes board member Dorceta Taylor and includes profiles of Leslie Lowe and Chitra Staley, current Noyes board members, and staff member Kolu Zigbi. |
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| Noyes Staff Working With Other Funders
Vic was re-elected treasurer of the Funders Network on Population, Reproductive Health and Rights and as vice-chair of the New York Regional Association of Grantmakers. Millie is on the Planning Committee for the 2006 Rural Funders Forum of the Neighborhood Funders Group. She also co-sponsored the Central Appalachian Mountaintop Removal Tour for eight foundation program officers who got to meet representatives from 13 organizations working on mountaintop coal removal issues. Millie is also one of five funders working on the Blue Mountain Project Committee, evaluating ways in which to develop the capacity of grassroots environmental organizations. Kolu is co-chair of the National Network of Grantmakers’ (NNG) Strategic Directions Committee and co-chair of NNG’s Racial Equity Committee. She co-chairs and is on the 2007 forum Planning Committee for the Sustainable Agriculture and Food Systems Funders group. Wilma has been participating in the Women of Color Working Group of the Funders’ Network on Population, Reproductive Health and Rights. She is also on the Planning Committee for the Network’s 2006 annual meeting. |
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Noyes As an Investor
The Noyes Foundation, along with As You Sow and Rockefeller Philanthropy Advisors, published the Proxy Season Preview, Spring 2006. The purpose is to help foundations learn about important upcoming proxy votes and to ensure that they vote in an informed manner on social and environmental issues that are directly relevant to their missions and programs.
With total endowments of more than $500 billion, foundations are major institutional investors. Yet when it comes to using the proxy process to enhance both their missions and investments, most foundations passively follow corporate managements’ recommendations, even when they are not aligned with foundations' interests or values. Foundations annually grant five percent of their endowments to support their missions, but how many utilize the remaining 95 percent to promote those same missions? Proxy voting is an easy first step for foundations wishing to align their missions and investments.
Proxy Voting at the Noyes Foundation
In addition, we voted in favor of two shareholder resolutions, both of which required a majority of shareholder votes for the approval of board members.
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The growing attacks on lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer families, combined with the consistent chipping away of support for reproductive health and rights in state legislatures and at the ballot box, was the impetus for this project.


