Grants List

Grant Guidelines

To download a .PDF version of our published grants list, please visit Resources.

 

 

Program: All Year: 2009

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Program: All For Year: 2009


CAAAV ORGANIZING ASIAN COMMUNITIES

CAAAV ORGANIZING ASIAN COMMUNITIES

718-220-7391 x22

2473 Valentine Avenue

Bronx, New York 10458

Haeyoung Yoon, Executive Director

718-220-7391 x22

http://www.caaav.org/

Size: $60,000/2 yrs

2009

Youth Development Grants


CAAAV Organizing Asian Communities (CAAAV) organizes low income Asian immigrant communities in Chinatown and the Bronx in New York City. Through the Chinatown Justice Project (CJP), launched in 2000, Fujianese immigrant youth organize low-income Chinese tenants and immigrant street vendors to challenge displacement and gentrification in Chinatown. The Youth Leadership Project (YLP) based in the Southeast Asian community in the Bronx, focuses on combating poverty by addressing issues such as economic development, employment, public education, criminal justice, immigration/anti-deportation and health justice. CAAAV was awarded a $60,000 renewal grant from Hazen to support CJP’s campaigns protecting low-income Chinatown residents from displacement and gentrification with the O.U.R. (Organizing and Uniting Residents) Waterfront Campaign and Alternatives to Mass Evictions Campaign. YLP will continue training Cambodian and Vietnamese youth as organizers to win new and improved health protections for the Southeast Asian community in the Bronx.

 



CALIFORNIANS FOR JUSTICE

CALIFORNIANS FOR JUSTICE

562-951-1015

1611 Telegraph Avenue, Suite 317

Oakland, California 94612

Jeremy Lahoud, Executive Director

562-951-1015

www.caljustice.org

Size: $30,000

2009

Youth Development Grants


Californians for Justice (CFJ) is a statewide, grassroots organization that has built a base of conscious, active youth leaders in four regions of California: Oakland, San Jose, Long Beach and Fresno. CFJ’s vision is to reframe and influence the public debate on education issues, improve the quality of education and increase opportunities to learn in school districts in which CFJ organizes and to increase education funding statewide. CFJ waged four local campaigns in 2008 and 2009, all focused on winning improved college access policies in local school districts. CFJ was awarded a $30,000 grant to support their new statewide campaign, “100 % Prepared for College and Career” and to continue developing an active core of youth leaders from low-income communities of color who lead campaigns for racial equity in California’s public schools.



CENTER FOR IMMIGRANT FAMILIES

CENTER FOR IMMIGRANT FAMILIES

(212) 531-3011

20 West 104th Street, Basement

Priscilla Gonzalez, Collective Member

info@c4if.org

(212) 531-3011

www.C4IF.org

Size: $30,000

2009

Public Education Grants


Hazen’s renewed support of $30,000 in 2009 will allow C4IF to continue its campaign to desegregate District 3 schools, ensuring the implementation of equitable admission policies for non-catchment students, eventually eliminating catchment lines and Gifted and Talented programs and to hold the schools accountable for providing adequate language services.



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