Archive for the Fund for DC Category

Funder tour recap: Supporting community organizing as a strategy for change
By Michael Coffey
Source: Giving Matters, e-newsletter of the Washington Regional Association of Grantmakers

Date: November 20, 2008

  

Last month, the Hill-Snowdon Foundation hosted a learning tour through 3 distinct District neighborhoods: Brentwood, Anacostia and Shaw. It is tradition for our Foundation to supplement board meetings with neighborhood tours as a board education strategy. This time we invited local funder allies from the Butler Family Fund, Community Foundation for the National Capital Region, Consumer Health Foundation, Herb Block Foundation, Moriah Fund and World Bank.

Mackenzie Baris with DC Jobs with Justice, Jonathan Stith with the Youth Education Alliance and Dominic Moulden with ONE DC, and their colleagues, facilitated conversations about worker rights, education reform, and affordable housing issues. Parisa Norouzi with Empower DC provided insights regarding the critical issues facing low- to moderate-income District residents.

These community leaders and their colleagues helped us get a better feel for the challenges of building a worker center for African American and Latino day laborers, increasing the quantity and quality of guidance counseling in the DC Public School system and preserving affordable housing. Our stops included the Home Depot and Israel Baptist Church in northeast; Anacostia High School, Barry Farms and Poplar Point in southeast and Parcels 33 and 42 in northwest.

Participants appreciated the opportunity to learn about these issues and expressed interest in having similar group learning experiences on a regular basis. For more information about the tour and the importance of supporting community organizing as a strategy for change, contact Nat Chioke Williams, Executive Director of the Hill-Snowdon Foundation, at (202) 833-8600 or nwilliams@hillsnowdon.org.


                  


The Praxis Project has announced the themes for their 2009 Learning Circles: Communicating to Advance Racial Justice (January 23-25), Community Organizing: Building Toward Long-Term Change (March 13-15) and Policy Advocacy: Creating Better Policies (May 29-31). Intended for individuals interested in advancing health justice in their communities, these sessions will be held in Silver Spring, Maryland at the National Labor College. For more information, contact Ditra Edwards (Director of Training) at ditra@thepraxisproject.org or (202) 234-2689.