In fall of 2022, Rise Together leaders issued $400,000 in Circle of Support Grants to advance the five goals of our coalition. We’re thrilled to share grant updates from 15 Rise Together member organizations and will continue to update the community as other projects reach the stage with stories to share.
For the Aztecas Youth Club House—a safe space for health education, life-skills, tutoring, and mentoring.
The Club House has a stable physical location for 25 – 30 program participants to visit regularly and get the support needed to graduate high school, pursue higher education, gain life and job seeking skills, mentorship, and pro-social supports. After the floods we had four youth come to get all their meals with us, rest, and get the support they needed.
For programs and resources that reduce barriers to outdoor spaces, water, and surfing for the BIPOC (Black, Indigenous, People of Color) community.
In the past year, Black Surf Club Santa Cruz has supported 300 participants, gained access to Cowell’s Beach for trainings and programs, trained diverse coaches reflective of Santa Cruz County’s population, and is promoting mental, physical, spiritual, and communal healing through surfing, education, advocacy, and wellness through their classes and special events.
For reorganizing as a community center encompassing film and cultural education.
The Rise Together grant allowed our organization to keep paid, trained staff and make major projects come to life. We moved into a physical location and can serve students and patrons much better with Westside Video (YA Film School, screenings, biggest library in state), AAVE Cafe (community cooking show, barista training program), Mystery Coast Productions (Set School), and EDI Educators (diverse youth program, discussion facilitation, HR policy development, trainings and panels around gender, sexuality, race, ethnicity, accessibility) all under one roof. The grant has created 14 more cooking show episodes, with an average of 60 watchers and 27 nutritious meals delivered per episode. We've been able to launch BIPOC, LGBTQ+, disabled, and neurodivergent focused youth programming with about 40 participants.
To start a Doula Program to train farmworkers to advocate and support each other through births. To offer womb care and personal hygiene kits, and modest emergency financial assistance.
Campesina Womb Justice helps farm workers exercise freedom to practice ancestral womb medicine, rooted in reproductive, menstrual, farmworker, healing justice. We had to delay our Mixteco Doula Training to assist Pajaro flood evacuees in March. But so far this year we’ve served over 500 families between our flood relief funds and monthly healing clinics. We did start a Volunteer Doula Program at Watsonville Community Hospital, training 22 bilingual doulas who will be volunteering to support farmworkers during their births and in the early postpartum period. After this program is a well-established part of the hospital, we’ll start the Mixteca Doula Training.
To help inform the next Community Action Plan—a tool that help decision-makers respond to needs—grant will pay a consultant of color to help design a plan, and support surveys, interviews, focus groups, to gather info and pay participants to be compensated for their time.
The Rise Together grant supported the work on our Community Action Plan Process where we build a snapshot of poverty by engaging with voices who normally do not have the opportunity to share their experience. The funding helped us engage with an evaluator and compensate participants (who have an average annual income of $5,000). Offering a stipend to the approximately 400 participants brought forth unique and unheard perspectives in a sacred, respectful way. The data will help build the narrative of the economic realities of our community to educate and impact systemic transformation.
Provide youth in Watsonville and surrounding area with the skills to pursue careers in multimedia and to share positive stories of their community.
During the 2022 – 2023 academic year, we offered 13 courses in Digital Arts and Technology, with an average of 25 youth in each course. Overall, NEST participants produced one short film, which premiered at the Watsonville Film Festival and two mini commercials.
To provide an inter-generational, cross cultural experience for participants. 28 adult and student dancers will travel to Veracruz, Mexico to learn from master folklorico instructors.
This summer, dancers, instructors, and their families (42 total) from Estrellas de Esperanza and Esperanza del Valle are participating in an immersive 12-day cultural learning experience in Veracruz, Mexico. The Simposio Internacional de Danza "Migrantes con Raiz Veracruzana” is examining and how dance has had a positive impact on the lives of first-generation immigrants and their children and grandchildren. The funds helped provide each travelling dancer $500 to offset airfare and lodging costs. Dancers will be visiting the towns of Mixtequilla and Tlacotlapan, learning from experts who have worked over many years to rescue and revive the dance and music of the style Son Tradicional Fandango.
To build capacity to promote and advocate for affordable housing while staying focused on maintaining the priority of DEI throughout Santa Cruz County.
As reported by Elaine Johnson, Housing Santa Cruz County’s first Executive Director, the Rise Together funding has been instrumental in hiring a BIPOC executive coach who “supports me to build on my strengths and to have agency to be a successful black leader in this community.” The funding is also going to help Elaine build organizational capacity through diversity, equity, and inclusion training for her board and staff. Elaine says she is excited about “the momentum we are gathering to help bring about equity in housing. We start by helping people change their narratives, to see beyond individual viewpoints, and be more inclusive in our thinking.”
Support overall organizational capacity for sustainability and growth.
PDCR provides trauma informed, developmentally appropriate, culturally responsive, tri-lingual education for families. Thanks to the Rise Together grant, we’ve been able to sustain our program assistant position and bring on a program manager fueling our ability to be of service. When our south county community faced storms and floods, we were there in immediate response. PDCR was able to flex our strengthened team and served an additional 230+ flood affected families from Pajaro, specifically the pregnant and postpartum families with children 0-5 years old.
To support staffing, curation of events, and continued operations of BMHI.
Funding from Rise Together helped scale up staffing for our Youth Ambassadors program which then positioned us to apply for and receive a major grant from the Sierra Foundation to support Black youth in Santa Cruz County.
To help fund events and activities related to the restoration and maintenance of the Black Lives Matter mural.
We have organized our next mural repaint and are using the Rise Together grant funds for paint, permitting, as well as planning and organizing for the community restorative justice dialogue, and hiring a facilitator for a somatic healing event open to the public aimed specifically for addressing healing in our BIPOC community. This process of restorative justice—which needed to happen to get us to repainting the mural—has not been linear. We've discovered more layers to address as we do the work. This has changed our timeline, but we’re committed to addressing actual harm done and not just repainting the mural to signal undue virtue. Therefore, we’ve had to inch along in this process at the pace of trust and real progress.
For a part-time position to create free bilingual news that addresses information needs of Latinos in Santa Cruz County.
The Rise Together funding helped us kick off a $72,000 fundraising drive—a goal we met in March. We hired Fidel M. Soto, a journalist with 30 years’ experience serving Spanish-speaking residents of the Pajaro Valley and Fidel started work in mid-June. In May, Santa Cruz Local won the “Next Challenge for Media and Journalism Future of News award.” This competition celebrates startups that are reinventing local media. We won the award for our plan to serve Pajaro Valley residents with Spanish news and our broader community-focused journalism. The award came with a $20,000 prize which will also help fund this position.
To compensate five Senderos dance and music teachers—who were previously volunteers—equitably for their time teaching.
Rise Together funds were used to help pay our dance and music instructors—many of whom have been teaching since the founding of the program 20 years ago. The grant has helped us move towards becoming a more equitable organization that values the labor of our teachers. It has also set the precedent to value the work of cultural preservation. Each teacher has about 10 - 15 students and we encourage their parents to be active participants. We estimate having a direct impact on 100 Santa Cruz residents—youth and family members. With the support of compensating our teachers, we are able to focus on the needs of each class and students—creating healthier space for people to learn and practice their traditions.
To provide payment to community members we work with, provide scanners and hard drives to community members so they can begin scanning materials they choose.
Rise Together funds enabled me to purchase nine scanners and portable hard drives, making it possible for us to start planning workshops and information sessions. Additionally, we’re purchasing gift cards to compensate community members for participation in discussion groups. We will be using the scanners at a summer institute planned in collaboration with Film & Digital Media and Special Collections and Archives.
For the Cine Se Puede Fellowship which supports a cohort of emerging Latine filmmakers at any stage of their film project for one year.
Thanks to the Rise Together grant, we are supporting four emerging filmmakers and six past fellows by providing funding, mentorship, peer to peer support and networking opportunities. Our 2023 Cine Se Puede Fellows have had day-long workshops with Hollywood screenwriter Ligiah Villalobos, Ariel winning Mexican director Carlos Perez Osorio, and Bay Area award-winning director / producer Vickie Ponce. Our current fellows are finishing their scripts and getting ready to start their pre-production plans. We will take them to the Bay Area Media Makers Summit in August to expand their horizons and networking opportunities. Our Cine Se Puede Fellows are collaborating on different projects, including a documentary film about the devastating effects of flooding and evacuations in Pajaro.
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