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Collaborative Fund

Good Neighbors Initiative

Helping communities of color on Long Island

A young woman who has removed her welder’s mask.

The Good Neighbors Initiative is a collaborative fund that aims to fuel a regional consortium of local experts with the shared goal of making life better for people of color on Long Island.

This fund aims to advance infrastructure for local advocacy; facilitate people power building; strengthen organizational capacity; coordinate the work of groups focused on organizing, human services, and leadership development; connect immigration advocacy groups with other allies; and identify opportunities for expanded social justice work across Long Island.

2020 represented an unprecedented opportunity to build local power on Long Island in pursuit of statewide civic engagement and social justice agendas that echo the rising demand for equity in one of New York’s most segregated regions.

The heightened and urgent response to social justice and direct service needs revealed the need for the smaller, grassroots organizations to engage in a more collaborative approach.  In response to their call for a regional consortium, the Good Neighbor Initiative was created. The Good Neighbor Initiative, fueled by the Good Neighbor Fund, seeks to amplify these positive trends via a participatory grantmaking fund housed at the Long Island Community Foundation.

Goals of the Initiative:

  • Support region-wide social justice, social service, and civic engagement efforts on Long Island, with a focus on enhancing the infrastructure, leadership, and capacity of grassroots community-based organizations.
  • Increase broad-based and coordinated grassroots engagement with and leadership of local, regional, and statewide policy, and culture change, including with respect to both the passage and the implementation of progressive local and state legislation.
  • Strengthen links between grassroots groups on Long Island, their counterparts in other regions of New York, and statewide organizations and campaigns.
  • Contribute to transforming the relationship between institutional philanthropy and community organizations by shifting the power to allocate resources.
  • Expand foundation and individual donor connections to support this vital work.

 

Participatory Grantmaking: In line with the “people-power” focused theory of change, the Good Neighbor Initiative intends to take a participatory approach to the development and implementation of its grantmaking. It demonstrates a paradigm shift in how donors work with grantees as agents of change in their communities rather than simply as beneficiaries of funding.

The Good Neighbor Initiative convenes representatives from local organizing groups to collectively identify the scope of existing organizing, civic engagement, and leadership development work on Long Island, determine priority capacity and power-building activities and make grant decisions to support these activities, and advance policy campaigns.

Pending receipt of adequate resources, the proposed participatory grantmaking structure is informed by the practices of entities like the North Star Fund’s Community Funding Committees, Amplify Fund, and Brooklyn Community Foundation.

Theory of Change:

Good Neighbor Initiative operates with the belief that successful regional, state and national policy and culture change depend on “bottom-up” engagement with and investments in the capacity, interconnectivity, and sustainability of local grassroots groups, particularly but not exclusively in communities of color. Such power-building work—especially in a place as racially segregated, politically fragmented, and geographically diverse as Long Island—depends on breaking down barriers between groups while at the same time respecting their unique identities and localities.

Unbound Philanthropy is committed to supporting different types of grantmaking approaches and partnerships that help advance a pluralist and inclusive democracy. Having Long Island community leaders at the forefront of grant decisions is a perfect example of shifting how philanthropy operates. We are supporting the Good Neighbors Initiative because of the impact of their collective work together – and the transformative shifts that are possible when we cede power to community members.

Julia Yang-Winkenbach, Unbound Philanthropy

Funders and Peer Groups

Peer Groups

  • Choice for All
  • Gender Equality NY
  • Long Island Jobs with Justice
  • Long Island Progressive Coalition
  • New Hour for Women and Children
  • Padoquohan Medicine Lodge/ Graves Protection Warriors (Shinnecock)
  • SEPA Mujer
  • STRONG Youth
  • Women’s Diversity Network

 

Funding Partners

  • Engage NY
  • Ford Foundation
  • Jessie Smith Noyes Foundation
  • JM Kaplan Fund
  • The New York Community Trust
  • Unbound
  • Unitarian Universalist Veatch Program at Shelter Rock

Learn more

Sol Marie Alfonso-Jones

Program Director, Long Island

Email: salfonsojones@thenytrust.org

Phone: (631) 991-8800 x232

Sol Marie Alphonso-Jones