1951 Coffee Company
To provide job training for living wage jobs in the gourmet coffee sector to recently-arrived refugees and asylees who reside in Alameda, Contra Costa, and San Francisco Counties.
To provide job training for living wage jobs in the gourmet coffee sector to recently-arrived refugees and asylees who reside in Alameda, Contra Costa, and San Francisco Counties.
To support a program that addresses the information and safety needs of Arab, Middle Eastern, Muslim, and South Asian immigrant communities through Know Your Rights education, policy advocacy, and strengthened partnerships with state and local immigrants’ rights networks.
To support a partnership among East Bay immigration organizations that pool resources to provide community education, outreach and naturalization services to citizenship-eligible immigrants in Alameda and Contra Costa Counties.
To support a program that provides direct legal representation, consultation, and case management services to low income immigrant women, girls, and single mothers with children who are victims of domestic violence, human trafficking, forced marriage, and other forms of violence.
To support an effort aimed at transforming the nail salon industry in the Bay Area to one that achieves economic security for workers and ensures the sustainability of small, immigrant-run businesses.
To support a statewide project that engages foundations and local governments in efforts to develop and invest in strategies that advance the integration of immigrants and refugees at the local and state levels.
To support the provision of immigration legal services and community education and outreach to immigrants and refugees residing in Marin and other North Bay counties.
To support an organization in western Sonoma County that provides a structured and dignified setting for immigrant workers to find employment, gain access to social and educational services that promote health and well-being, and become engaged in the local community.
To support a regional community education and outreach effort aimed at increasing awareness among students, parents, educators, and community allies about the challenges and concrete opportunities facing undocumented young people as they pursue college, professional careers, and lawful immigration status in the United States.
To support a membership organization that provides a structured and dignified setting for immigrant workers to find employment, gain access to social and educational services that promote health and well-being, and become engaged in the local community.
To support immigration legal services, information and referral, and community education and outreach to immigrant youth in the Bay Area who have been detained by U.S. immigration authorities or are at risk of deportation.
To support family-based immigration legal services and community education and outreach to low-income immigrants and refugees in SanMateo, Alameda, Sonoma, and Contra Costa Counties
To support family-based immigration legal services, citizenship test preparation classes and community education and outreach to low-income immigrants and refugees residing in the rural coastal communities of San Mateo County.
To support an information and referral program that connects low income immigrants in the Sonoma Valley to an array of community services and resources that contribute to family wellbeing including health, education, immigration legal services, and financial security.
To support a dedicated space on the Oakland International High School campus that provides a broad range of co-located social services, information and referral for community resources, ESL classes, and leadership opportunities that help facilitate the integration of the school’s recently-arrived immigrant students and their families as they transition into school and community life
To support the provision of resettlement services for Afghan refugees who served as translators for U.S. troops and had to flee Afghanistan under threats from the Taliban and extremists.
To support a membership organization located in Concord’s low-income Monument Corridor neighborhood that provides a structured and dignified setting for immigrant workers to find employment, gain access to social and educational services that promote health and well-being, and become engaged in the local community.
To support a program that provides family-based immigration legal services, citizenship test preparation, and community education and outreach to low-income immigrants in northern Sonoma County.
To support provision of legal services for asylum seekers who are LGBTQIA+ and to build the capacity of the field to represent this population by providing training and mentorship to pro bono attorneys and law students.
To support a dedicated space on campus that provides a broad range of co-located social services, information and referral for community resources, adult education, and family engagement opportunities that collectively support the successful integration of students and families.
To support a volunteer-based network that provides emergency assistance to asylum applicants and other detainees who are released from immigration detention facilities within San Francisco Immigration Court’s jurisdiction.
To support a program designed to increase the financial self-sufficiency and social advancement of Latina immigrant women in Contra Costa County through training and technical assistance in microenterprise development and financial literacy.
To support a partnership with the McDowell Family Resource Center and the International Institute of the Bay Area to engage volunteer attorneys and law students in the provision of?immigrant rights workshops and immigration legal services clinics for low income Petaluma residents.
To support a legal clinic that will utilize the mechanic’s lien process and popular education as a means of addressing the rampant wage theft experienced by immigrant workers in the construction sector.