Partner with us to produce thought leadership that moves the needle on behavioral healthcare.
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We fund organizations and projects which disrupt our current behavioral health space and create impact at the individual, organizational, and societal levels.
Our participatory funds alter traditional grantmaking by shifting power
to impacted communities to direct resources and make funding decisions.
We build public and private partnerships to administer grant dollars toward targeted programs.
We provide funds at below-market interest rates that can be particularly useful to start, grow, or sustain a program, or when results cannot be achieved with grant dollars alone.
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Contact Alyson about grantmaking, program related investments, and the paper series.
Contact Samantha about program planning and evaluation consulting services.
Contact Caitlin about the Community Fund for Immigrant Wellness, the Annual Innovation Award, and trauma-informed programming.
Contact Joe about partnership opportunities, thought leadership, and the Foundation’s property.
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Justice at Work (JaW), supports low-wage workers as they pursue economic and social justice. Their service delivery model includes the provision of legal services, community education, and advocacy on issues arising out of employment.
Justice at Work (JaW), supports low-wage workers as they pursue economic and social justice. Their service delivery model includes the provision of legal services, community education, and advocacy on issues arising out of employment.
The Community Fund for Immigrant Wellness has awarded Justice at Work with a $50,000 grant to support their Expanding Mental Health Access to Exploited Immigrant Workers program. The program, which serves largely Latinx immigrants throughout the Delaware Valley, is a partnership with La Puerta Abierta to expand existing mental health services to individuals for whom they provide legal representation for workplace exploitation. The grant dollars will fill a gap in services for individuals who are in need of mental health services but are not eligible under the Department of Justice programs for which Justice at Work is funded.
Art created by Cecily Anderson at ANAGRAM