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EJAF's 2006 grants totaled
nearly $5 million – this marks the largest
and most ambitious annual investment in HIV/AIDS
grant making in EJAF’s 15-year history.
This grant-making achievement was made possible
because of a strategic 12 month review conducted
by EJAF which identified key areas in which EJAF
funding could make a significant impact, including
HIV prevention in poor communities of the Southern
U.S. and the Caribbean, among young people, among
injection drug users, and among incarcerated individuals
and people newly released from prison.
Below is a comprehensive list of EJAF's 2006 grant
recipients.
Project Descriptions for MBNA EJAF Credit Card
Program Grants
AIDS Project Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA, $13,096.52
One of the nation’s largest AIDS service
organizations, provides direct services to more
than 10,000 men, women and children living with
HIV and AIDS in Los Angeles County. Services include
prevention education, a food bank, professional
dental care, housing assistance, mental health
counseling, women’s specifics services and
case management.
AIDS Action Committee
of Massachusetts, $13,096.52
A community-based health organization whose mission
is to stop the HIV/AIDS epidemic by preventing
new infections and optimizing the health of those
already infected. Through a cooperative and mutually
supportive effort between over 70 staff and hundreds
of volunteers, AIDS Action seeks to assist and
constructively work with people of all cultures
by providing services, education, advocacy and
prevention.
San Francisco
AIDS Foundation, San Francisco, CA, $13,096.52
One of the oldest and largest community-based
AIDS service organizations in the United States,
the San Francisco AIDS Foundation provides direct
services to thousands of people living with or
at risk for HIV/AIDS, supplying information about
HIV treatment and related issues, promoting HIV
prevention and awareness in the community, and
advocating for sound HIV/AIDS policies at all
levels of government.
Gay Men’s
Health Crisis (GMHC), New York, NY, $13,096.52
A volunteer-supported, community-based organization
committed to national leadership in the fight
against AIDS, GMHC’s mission is to reduce
the spread of HIV disease, help people with HIV
maintain and improve their health and independence,
and keep the prevention, treatment and cure of
HIV an urgent national and local priority. In
fulfilling this mission, GMHC is committed to
fighting homophobia and affirming the individual
dignity of all gay men and lesbians.
amfAR, The Foundation
for AIDS Research, New York, NY, $13,096.52
One of the world's leading nonprofit organizations
dedicated to ending the AIDS epidemic through
innovative research. With its freedom and flexibility
to respond quickly to emerging opportunities and
its determination to invest in cutting-edge science,
amfAR plays a unique, catalytic role in accelerating
the pace of HIV/AIDS research and achieving real
breakthroughs.
Lifelong AIDS Alliance, Seattle, WA, $13,096.52
Committed to preventing the spread of HIV, and
to providing practical support services and advocating
for those whose lives are affected by HIV and
AIDS. Lifelong AIDS Alliance was formed in 2001
through the merger of Chicken Soup Brigade and
Northwest AIDS Foundation.
Project Descriptions for Grants Awarded in January
2006
January
2006 Independent Grants
Aid for AIDS, New York, NY, $25,000
Aid For AIDS collects donated HIV/AIDS medications
from the US and Canada and then distributes them
to people living with HIV/AIDS in developing countries
who cannot afford their own medication. Aid for
AIDS is using its EJAF grant to augment its efforts
to collect medications and to distribute them
free of cost to people living with HIV/AIDS in
the Carribean.
AIDS Service Center,
Pasadena, CA, $7,500
The AIDS Service Center is committed to improving
the quality of life of poor, disenfranchised,
and underserved families affected by HIV/AIDS
in Eastern Los Angeles County. This EJAF grant
is providing nutritious meals to people affected
by the disease.
amfAR, The Foundation for AIDS Research, New York,
NY, $50,000
In an effort to support syringe exchange programs,
amfAR is documenting the proven efficacy of such
programs in reducing HIV infection. amfAR supports
the only national annual survey of syringe exchange
organizations, conducted by Beth Israel Medical
Center, which is used by syringe exchange programs
for advocacy and educational purposes. Because
of the current ban on the use of US government
funds to support syringe exchange, and an increasing
number of political attacks against harm reduction
models, amfAR is committed to disseminating irrefutable
evidence of the efficacy of such programs.
Bruce House, Ottawa,
Ontario, Canada, $15,000
Bruce House is a hospice in Ottawa providing housing
and support services for people living with HIV/AIDS.
The House itself has seven beds (up from five
due to recent renovations) and an apartment complex
that houses 60 residents. Services and facilities
provided to Bruce House residents include counseling,
collective kitchens, financial assistance, and
living skills assistance.
Hope’s Voice,
San Francisco, CA, $25,000
Hope’s Voice is an HIV/AIDS prevention and
education program comprised of a troupe of experienced
traveling speakers who tour mostly to high schools
and colleges. Their speakers are HIV positive,
and their focal message is that HIV does not discriminate:
it is a disease that can affect anyone. Speakers
are selected based on their personal stories and
their ability to be engaging public speakers.
International Center for Research on Women, Washington,
DC, $25,000
This grants supports ICRW’s one-day conference
on reducing AIDS-related stigma and discrimination.
This conference took place on August 13, 2006
at the onset of the XVI International AIDS Conference
in Toronto. 150 international AIDS practitioners,
researchers, and advocates, as well as representatives
of the international media attended the event.
MANNA, Philadelphia,
PA, $25,000
MANNA delivers meals and provides nutritional
counseling to people living with HIV/AIDS in New
Jersey, Delaware, and Pennsylvania. This EJAF
grant provides over 10,000 meals to PLWHAs in
this region.
Our Lady of Perpetual
Support for People Living with AIDS and Orphans,
Nyanza, Kenya, $97,452
OLPS is a well established nongovernmental organization
that currently reaches 5,000 orphans and vulnerable
children and 600 care-givers with varied but well
linked interventions that compliment each other.
Project activities include the physical expansion
and renovation of their clinic to improve quality
of out-patient medical services; providing user
friendly services for children and their care-givers;
improved quality, quantity and variety of medical
care including timely and accurate diagnosis and
treatment of opportunistic infections in HIV positive
children and care-givers; improved monitoring
and compliance of patients on anti-retroviral
treatments.
Project Open Hand, Atlanta, GA, $27,000
Project Open Hand's meal program provides meals
to people suffering with HIV/AIDS and other serious
ailments that preclude their ability to cook for
themselves. This grant funds a total of 5,242
meals. Project Open Hand relies on a force of
over 18,000 volunteers to accomplish its work.
Project Descriptions for Grants Awarded in July
2006
Expanding Community
Partnerships for HIV Prevention and Care in the
South, National AIDS Fund Challenge Grant Program,
$501,000
The South represents a little more than one-third
of the U.S. population (38%), yet it now accounts
for 46% of the estimated number of new AIDS cases.
Additionally, seven of the ten US states with
the highest rates of HIV infections are located
in the South. The South is a geographic area identified
in EJAF's strategic grantmaking report as a region
in need of funding and the building of infrastructure.
In response to this, the National AIDS Fund is
expanding its Community Partnership program in
three to five Southern states, with the goals
of building collaborative leadership, catalyzing
private sector investment, and strengthening the
HIV/AIDS infrastructure and services in the South.
Strengthening
HIV Prevention and Care Services for the Incarcerated
or Those Recently Released from Correctional Settings,
National AIDS Fund Challenge Grant Program, $250,000
While there are high HIV/AIDS prevalence
rates in prisons, there is limited institutional
support for HIV prevention and care activities.
Corrections institutions typically do not prioritize
protecting inmates’ health, and it is common
for HIV positive inmates to be released with no
pre-release planning, such as referrals to care
providers, and with only a few days worth of HIV-related
medications. The National AIDS Fund is launching
a national grant-making and technical assistance
initiative to support existing programs working
in this area and to catalyze new programs in communities
where none currently exist.
Advocates for
Youth, Washington, DC, $200,000
Advocates for Youth is launching a comprehensive
campaign, mobilizing young people to address challenges
presented by abstinence-only programs and policies.
AIDS Survival
Project, Atlanta, GA, $25,000
This grant supports the AIDS Survival Project’s
HIV Advocacy Program. The goals of this program
are (1) to ensure fair representation of HIV positive
individuals on public policy; (2) to ensure that
prevention and education legislation is informed
in response to the HIV positive community by educating
legislators and decision makers; (3) to educate
individuals to become self advocates; and (4)
to produce events and publications that educate
the public on HIV prevention and treatment issues.
Brotherhood Sister
Sol, New York, NY, $10,000
The Brotherhood Sister Sol is an organization
dedicated to providing supportive programs for
Black and Latino youth in New York City. The program
currently services about 200 youths and offers
after school programs, summer programs, and leadership
development institutes. With funding from EJAF,
Brotherhood Sister Sol is strengthening its programs
related to the confrontation of sexism and misogyny;
sexual health and responsibility (which includes
education about HIV/AIDS and its disproportionate
effects on the Black and Latino communities);
and conflict resolution and bias reduction to
include the reduction of homophobia.
Chattanooga Cares, Chattanooga, TN, $20,000
Chattanooga Cares provides an array of services
and programs including safe sex workshops, condom
distribution, an AIDS hotline, and prevention
education workshops throughout the Tennessee Valley.
Chattanooga Cares's staff of 19 provides medical
care to over 400 patients and prevention education
to over 18,000 people each year. The new Chattanooga
Cares facility is located close to the city's
most at risk populations -- African Americans
and Hispanics.
Clinical Familiar
Luis Angel Garcia (CFLAG), Hospital General San
Juan de Dies, Guatemala, $20,000
With support from the EJAF, CFLAG developed the
first program in Guatemala specifically geared
to meet the needs of children living with HIV.
With a committed staff of general practitioners,
gynecologists, pediatricians, psychotherapists,
counselors, nurses, and nutritionists, CFLAG has
been able to effectively identify and address
the specific needs of its young patients and their
families. To date, 260 workshops offering counseling
and nutritional support have been conducted with
children, parents, and caregivers.
The Collaborative Fund, Caribbean, $222,774
The Collaborative Fund supports HIV treatment
access and education initiatives through a community-driven
small grants program, along with resource provision
for technical assistance, regional network support
and program evaluation around the world. This
grant supports the Collaborative Fund's work in
the Caribbean. The Collaborative Fund is a partnership
of the International Treatment Preparedness Coalition,
an association of people living with HIV and other
community treatment advocates, and the Tides Network,
a U.S.-based public charity with 30 years experience
in supporting community mobilization efforts.
Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health,
New York, NY, $6,500
The Columbia University Mailman School of Public
Health uses this grant to provide partial support
for the filming of a meeting of 19 doctors who
have been involved in caring for people living
with AIDS since the earliest days of the epidemic.
Participating doctors have experiences with the
epidemic in the US, Africa, and Asia. This film
will create an important historical document of
firsthand accounts of the AIDS epidemic and its
effects here and abroad.
The Firelight
Foundation, Santa Cruz, CA, $42,548
The mission of the Firelight Foundation is to
support and advocate for the needs and rights
of children who are orphaned or affected by HIV/AIDS
in Sub-Saharan Africa. Community based organizations
funded by the Firelight Foundation provide a variety
of services to children and their caregivers,
including education and job training for orphans
and other vulnerable children; meals programs
for children living with HIV/AIDS that also provide
boxed lunches for students; financial and psychological
support for grandmothers who have become increasingly
involved in childcare in the context of this epidemic;
and domestic assistance for families in which
the primary caregiver is living with HIV/AIDS.
The Kaiser Family Foundation, Menlo Park, CA,
$200,000
The Kaiser Family Foundation has invited EJAF
to join with them and the Caribbean Broadcasting
Union as a core partner for its Caribbean Broadcast
Media Partnership on HIV/AIDS (CBMP). The CBMP
is an unprecedented collaboration of leading broadcasters
in the Caribbean to develop a coordinated regional
awareness campaign on HIV/AIDS. The CBMP promotes
collaboration and leverages resources among media
in the Caribbean with the goal of extending the
reach and effectiveness of HIV messaging. CBMP
is a pervasive campaign that includes entertainment,
PSA's, news and public affairs programming. Specific
emphasis will be on reaching vulnerable populations
and youth.
The Los Angeles
Free Clinic, Los Angeles, CA, $15,000
Founded in 1967, the Los Angeles Free Clinic is
the oldest continuously operating free clinic
in the United States. At three clinical sites
in Los Angeles, over 80,000 clients, the overwhelming
majority of which are low income and uninsured,
receive services annually that include medical
care and counseling, case management, and referrals.
This grant supports the Clinic’s HIV services
including testing, counseling and referrals, and
education and outreach to high-risk individuals
in the Los Angeles area.
Prisoners with
HIV/AIDS Support Action Network (PASAN), Toronto,
Ontario, Canada, $5,000
This grant assists PASAN in providing prevention
education programs in five federal prisons in
Ontario. PASAN is initiating this project at the
request of the Black Inmates and Friends Assembly.
PASAN has done advocacy work in the form of several
articles and manuals about HIV in prisons that
have been distributed across Canada. PASAN’s
prevention programs will train inmates so that
the program can be self-sustaining. PASAN currently
provides prevention education to 18 adult and
45 youth custody facilities in Ontario.
Syringe Access Fund, The Tides Foundation, New
York, NY, $250,000
This grant to Tides Foundation supports the Syringe
Access Fund’s third round of grant making,
which will focus on expanding its outreach through
direct funding of equipment, supplies, related
staff and volunteer salaries and stipends, and
on-going training and technical support.
YouthPride, Atlanta,
GA, $25,000
The primary goal of this program is to reduce
high risk sexual behaviors among YouthPride’s
900 members, and to extend this influence to the
social networks of YouthPride members. MY LIFE
seeks to accomplish this goal by mobilizing GLBTQ
youth to learn risk reduction and prevention methods
through collaboration with AIDS service organizations.
These peer leaders then facilitate safe sex workshops,
special events, and weekly discussion groups to
promote safe sexual behavior.
Project Descriptions
for Grants Awarded in December 2006
AIDS Community
Research Initiative of America (ACRIA), New York,
NY, $75,000 ($25,000 per year for 3 years)
ACRIA is an AIDS research and HIV health literacy
and treatment education center. ACRIA's HIV Health
Literacy Program aims to provide people living
with HIV/AIDS with the information and skills
they need to participate actively and knowledgably
in their own healthcare. ACRIA makes information
accessible to all by presenting in clear, "nonscientific"
language, and in Spanish when appropriate. In
2005, ACRIA conducted 354 HIV health literacy
workshops, attended by 6,513 people; 94% were
people of color.
Bailey House,
New York, NY, $10,000
Established in 1983, Bailey House was the nation's
first organization to provide supportive housing
to individuals and families affected by HIV/AIDS.
Clients are referred to Bailey House by the New
York City HIV/AIDS Services Administration; these
clients are homeless, and are often afflicted
with malnutrition, mental illness, and substance
abuse issues. Bailey House currently operates
167 housing units, 116 for individuals and 51
for families. Clients are able to receive an array
of services including health monitoring, mental
health counseling, substance abuse counseling,
nutrition education, and case management.
Boys and Girls
Clubs Wake County, NC, $25,000
The Boys and Girls Club of Wake County's Act SMART
(Act Skills Mastery And Resistance Training) program
is a youth-oriented HIV/AIDS prevention education
program that was developed in collaboration with
the American Red Cross. Currently, over 700 club
members have completed this program. 65% of participants
were African American, 17% Caucasian, 14% Hispanic/Latino,
and 4% mixed race.
The Children’s
Museum of Indianapolis, Indianapolis, IN, $15,000
Founded in 1925, The Children's Museum of Indianapolis
is the largest children's museum in the world,
hosting more than one million children and their
families each year. In November of 2007, The Museum
will open "The Power of Children: Making
a Difference," a permanent exhibition featuring
children who have encountered discrimination during
various historical moments and whose actions have
delivered an impactful message of tolerance and
hope. The exhibition will feature Anne Frank's
struggle to escape the Nazis, Ruby Bridges' defiance
of school segregation in New Orleans in the 1960s,
and Ryan White's activism during the early days
of the AIDS epidemic.
Minority AIDS
Project, Los Angeles, CA, $25,000
Minority AIDS Project (MAP) is using this grant
to continue HIV/AIDS prevention education programming
that targets minority women at high risk for HIV
infection, as well as to provide direct support
services for women living with HIV/AIDS. MAP currently
employs 44 staff members and enlists more than
100 volunteers to provide services for 1,200 clients
per month who are living with HIV/AIDS, as well
as providing prevention education programs to
16,000 people each year.
National Association of People with AIDS (NAPWA),
Silver Springs, MD, $25,000
Founded in 1983, the National Association of People
with AIDS (NAPWA) is the oldest national AIDS
organization in the United States. This grant
is being used to enhance NAPWA’s public
policy program. The project's goals include the
development of HIV public policy position papers;
the analysis and monitoring of Congressional bills
related to HIV/AIDS; making recommendations to
pending HIV/AIDS legislation and the dissemination
of this information to NAPWA's constituents and
community based organizations; the presentation
of a cohesive platform of HIV/AIDS priority issues;
and the improvement of existing mechanisms for
mobilizing constituents.
Rescate Foundation, Santiago, Chile, $50,000
The Rescate Foundation in Chile operates two centers
in Santiago that provide an array of services
for young people at risk for transmission of HIV
and people living with HIV/AIDS. One of the centers
provides housing and care for homeless people
living with HIV/AIDS; the other facility provides
necessities such as food and clothing, medical
care, mental health care, and prevention education,
as well as counseling related to educational opportunities
and employment. It is the goal of the Rescate
Foundation to stabilize the physical and mental
health of its young clients, and to subsequently
integrate them back into society with supportive
social networks, adherence to medical regimen,
and with jobs that will help sustain them.
The Robert Brewster Chorale, New York, NY, $15,000
Dr. Robert Brewster began informally using song
as a means of providing emotional support for
those affected by HIV/AIDS in the early 1980s
as his friends and colleagues became infected
with the disease. As he sang informally for friends
living with HIV/AIDS, and noticed the positive
impact that song had on these people's spirits,
he decided to form The Robert Brewster Chorale,
which is now comprised of 30 males, 90% of which
are HIV positive. The Chorale performs at churches,
hospitals, tenant associations, hospices, and
social service agencies with the goals of lifting
the spirits of people living with HIV/AIDS and
educating audiences about prevention.
Shelter Resources,
New Orleans, LA, $125,000
Since 1992, Shelter Resources has been providing
housing and assisted living for individuals and
families living with HIV/AIDS in New Orleans.
Shelter Resources owns two houses in New Orleans
for this purpose, and they are using this grant
from EJAF to build a third facility, Belle Grace,
an 8-bed assisted living facility. With the completion
of this third facility, Shelter Resources will
be able to provide housing for 27-29 people.
NAF Community
Partnership Grants
The Foundation also
awarded $1.53 million in Community Partnership
Challenge Grants and $170,000 in Community Partnership
Leadership Grants through its relationship with
the National AIDS Fund (NAF). The NAF has 29 community
partners throughout the U.S. that raise local
funds for HIV/AIDS prevention and make local grants
based on the unique needs of each community. The
challenge grants EJAF awards through this program
must be matched two-to-one by funds raised locally.
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