Catholic Campaign for Human Development 2013 Grants
Catholic Sentinel: 2013 CCHD grants support social justice programs
These organization are chosen by the CCHD Committee. These programs are funded year after year supporting values against the Catholic church. Sometimes fungible funding makes grantees seem in accordance with Church teachings, but this actually lets them use monies to work against the Church.
When CCHD collections are not supported the Catholic church organizations are forced to find other avenues of revenue which is really a good thing. We need to be good stewards of our collection plate.
We need to know who's on the CCHD Board and their biographies and if they are being open to all people and not just their friends.
CATHOLIC CAMPAIGN FOR HUMAN DEVELOPMENT 2013 GRANT RECIPIENTS
The
Catholic Campaign for Human Development
has awarded three Oregon organizations with its 2012-13 national
grants. Two additional organizations were awarded Technical Assistance
Grants. The Archdiocese of Portland's Catholic Campaign for Human
Development has also awarded its 2013 local grants to five programs that
aim to fight the root causes of poverty.
CCHD is the Catholic Church's domestic anti-poverty program. The
campaign assists local anti-poverty groups in organizing programs by and
for poor and marginalized people.
Grant applicants are assessed on their ability to find solutions to local problems and to improve local economic conditions.
CCHD supports programs that
- respect human life
- foster human dignity
- empower the disadvantaged to take control of their own lives by
having and maintaining a strong voice in the organization's leadership
- strive to create economic opportunity or bring about institutional
change by addressing the root causes of poverty in the U.S. through
change to our laws, culture, corporations, stereotypes, or unjust social
structures
2013 NATIONAL GRANT RECIPIENTS
Community Alliance of Tenants
(CAT) is Oregon's only grassroots, tenant-led, tenant-rights
organization. CAT educates, organizes and develops low-income tenants
into community leaders to challenge unjust housing policies and
practices and obtain safe, stable and affordable housing.
CAT's Housing Justice Program organizes buildings' tenants and empowers
them to secure housing improvements and repairs.
Organizing apartment buildings develops tenant leaders and increases
tenant knowledge and power.
Tenant leaders become advocates, organizing renter-identified housing
policy campaigns including: increased funding for affordable housing,
rental inspections, and barrier free housing opportunities within the
Oregon Landlord/Tenant statues and local policy.
This CCHD grant will fund the
Housing Justice Program's
efforts to mobilize and empower low-income tenants in buildings with
serious repair problems to win immediate improvements; work for
long-term funding for affordable housing; developing leaders to initiate
campaigns for improved protections for tenants; and develop a
comprehensive response to unsafe housing.
CAT is the epitome of CCHD and Catholic principles of listening to the cries of the poor and empowering them.
Hacienda Community Development Corporation (HCDC) works with a group of low-income Latino entrepreneurs to develop metro Portland's first Latino Public Market (
the Mercado), owned and operated by a cooperative of the market vendors themselves. The Market is currently in a start-up phase.
While most of the Latino-focused CCHD-funded organizations in
Portland work on metro, county and state immigrant right, all
legislative issues, Hacienda CDC works on issues of economic opportunity
for working Latino families and others in Oregon by promoting healthy
living and economic advancement. HCDC is unique.
(Below is an organization following the Saul Alinsky anti-Catholic values formula.)
MACG Vision
is the only established community organization with an identifiable
faith-based -- Catholic -- element. Its organizing efforts are in the
Latino communities of Catholic parishes.
MACG Vision applies the tools learned through training to change the
culture of their parishes to ones that are based in strong
relationships, shared leadership, and accountability among members.
Routinely in Catholic churches, skills learned through leadership
training are used to share stories and strengthen community
relationships.
This CCHD grant will fund its
Latino Organizing
outreach efforts to current and prospective member institutions with
low-income and/or minority populations, focusing especially on the
diverse, low-income East Portland/East Multnomah County areas, and fund a
Latino organizer who will organize Latino members of these current and
prospective member institutions.
2013 LOCAL GRANT RECIPIENTS
Huerto de la Familia
offers Latino families a place to connect with their roots and the
earth by growing their own food. Its vision is to cultivate community
integration and economic self-sufficiency by offering opportunities and
training in organic gardening and farming, and the development of food
and farm-based micro-enterprises.
Thirty-percent of Oregon Latinos live below the Federal Poverty Level. The
Cambios Micro Development Program
offers business training and business counseling to Spanish-speaking
individuals who want to create or enhance food and farm businesses and
transition from laborers to business owners. Specifically, the program
supports individuals in developing business plans, financial literacy,
and marketing skills.
Huerto de la Familia has previously been awarded local and national
CCHD grant. It is the only CCHD-funded organization in the Eugene
Metropolitan area. We are glad to continue a wonderful relationship.
(Below is something for pregnant women that is a positive move)
Madonna's Center
is a uniquely-designed response in Clackamas County serving Madonna's
Center serves teens (age19 and under) who are “with child” and without
essential family/financial support or not eligible for government-funded
programs because of age/circumstances, and are assuming primary
responsibility for parenting their children (age 3 and under) while also
working towards self-sufficiency.
Madonna's Center serves Clackamas County, has Catholic roots, and is dedicated to protecting new life.
This CCHD grant funds the teen parents' efforts to mobilize to
advocate for changes in public laws/policies regarding housing solutions
for teen parents. Teen parents advocating for changes to unjust
structures that are keeping them from succeeding. CCHD funded them two
years ago for another project and it was remarkable to see the
confidence instilled in these women.
Salem-Keizer Coalition for Equality
(SKCE) organized in the Latino migrant community to develop meaningful
parental involvement to increase the graduation rate for, and
educational outcomes of, low income and minority students in
Salem-Keizer.
Education is the surest way out of poverty.
SKCE is located in Salem, with workshops in Corvallis and Southern Oregon.
This CCHD grant will partially fund Reading Together We Advance
(Leyendo Avanzamos),
a parent-led, outcome-based family literacy project empowering
low-income, Spanish-speaking parents of struggling or at risk
pre-kindergarten, kindergarten, first-, or second-grade students to
become engaged in their children's school.
Unete is a
volunteer-led movement of farmworkers and immigrants in rural Southern
Oregon educating their community and advocating for worker rights,
humane immigration policy, and full participation in the decision-making
processes affecting their lives.
The CCHD funds Unete's organizing efforts --
Voces Unidas
-- to improve educational outcomes for Latino students in the Medford
School district. This program includes Parent Education, Peer Tutoring
for Elementary through High school students, and parent leadership
development, which gives parents the tools to advocate for their
children in the public school setting.
Unete is the only Latino-led non-profit in the Rogue Valley and would be the only CCHD-funded organization in southern Oregon.
Voz Workers' Rights Education Project (Voz)
is a worker-led organization that empowers day laborers to advocate for
their own just working conditions through leadership development,
community organizing, and policy reform. Voz operates the Martin Luther
King, Jr. Worker Center, where day laborers find work and build
community skills.
Voz is recognized as a leader for immigrant rights, especially at the
local level but also at the state level, with an office at St. Francis
Catholic Church.
CCHD funds will support Voz's efforts in its
"Save the Center Campaign,"
mobilizing day laborers and community members to advocate the City of
Portland government for a permanent solution for a Worker Center.
2013 TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE GRANT RECIPIENTS
New City Kitchen and Catering is a project of
New City Initiative
that provides employment training and opportunity to people who have
experienced homelessness. It also creates its own employment
opportunities through a newly-launched catering program.
By creating employment opportunity, New City Kitchen supports respect
for human life and dignity as well as cultural diversity (racial
minorities are disproportionately represented in the homeless
population).
This social enterprise has a promising future. To solidify this
promise, New City will receive a Technical Assistance Grant for Business
Planning.
OPAL Environmental Justice Oregon
(OPAL) is a grassroots community-based organization working to educate,
engage and empower low-income communities of color to build leadership
and capacity to effectively participate in the civic process to protect
their community health and interests.
It is the only membership-controlled, environmental justice organization supported by CCHD.
OPAL receives a Technical Assistance Grant for Strategic Planning for its
Bus Riders Unite (BRU) membership program, focusing on developing BRU's core leadership, membership retention, and membership-driven campaign work.
This project seeks to educate and mobilize transit-dependent riders
in East Portland to engage in a community-driven project to increase the
accessibility, safety and connectivity of transit, and to build
awareness of the connections between transit and positive health
outcomes.
The project will also create opportunities for meaningful engagement
in local decision-making and advocate for prioritizing the needs of
transit-dependent communities. Organizing a voice for the voiceless.