Why Grantmaking?
Grantmaking is the founding program and tool that The Women’s Fund Miami-Dade (WFMD) has used throughout its history to fulfill its mission of leveraging resources on behalf of women and girls and addressing systemic barriers.
In 2021-2022, WFMD successfully resumed grantmaking after a 5-year hiatus. A diversely talented Grantmaking Committee was established to design, develop and implement grantmaking strategy, process and plan to deploy these funds aligned with WFMD’s mission and goals. The inaugural grant-making cycle started midway through the pandemic, which had revealed the many economic, health and family security, and safety burdens that disproportionately fall on women.
Marya Meyer, WFMD Executive Director and Miriam Altman-Reyes PowerSchool VP Strategy & Partnerships
Line behind sign:
What it means for Economic Mobility
The crises in early education and childcare, rooted in labor issues and business models, rose to the fore in Grant Committee discussions. This broken system with a direct impact on women, and especially, women of color who both represented the bulk of the childcare workforce and center ownership as well as the “primary consumer” who is in search of quality and affordable childcare for their children. After informed discussion and “deep dive” research, the Grants Committee recommended directing available funds to community-based efforts that offer and/or contribute to lasting solutions to the financial sustainability problems of the childcare system in Miami-Dade as a strategy to advance women’s economic mobility.
WFMD understands problems in the early education and childcare system from the perspective of the women who worked in the system and the women who utilized it as parents for safe quality care so they would be able to go to work to provide for their families and to advance themselves. Since many organizations focus directly on the child outcomes of the system, we maintain focus on the business and labor issues of the system as they affect women. This perspective is novel within the established intermediary organizations of the childcare system, which allows WFMD an opportunity to take a leadership role in directing resources to a hole in the funding landscape.
We are responding with urgency to problems exacerbated by the pandemic, which has revealed many systemic issues that disproportionately affect women and their economic security and well-being. Among these is an inadequately supported childcare and early education system (Childcare System) that remains unaffordable to many. Both the women who work in the childcare sector and the women who rely on it so they can go to work themselves, have suffered disproportionately from a fractured system.
Get to know our current grantees:
2022 Systems Change Grantees
Challenge | Opportunity | Results
The Empowering Youth / Sheyes Learning Centers partnership was awarded a two year grant of $84,000 to develop the Empowering Early Learning Educators group into an effective advocacy arm of a collective of child care centers.
empoweringearlylearningeducators.com, empoweringyouthinc.org and sheyeslearningcenters.org
Empowering Youth / Sheyes Foundation: Andrea Wanza & Juanita Walker
The Business and Leaderships Institute (BLI) was awarded a two-year grant of $54,000 in support of its pilot program, Educator to Entrepreneur (E2E), which exposes, educates, and supports students in launching childcare sector careers.
bliel.org
Overtown Children & Youth, Sant La, Connect Familias was awarded a one-year grant of $50,000 to support C3’s its work to connect stakeholders in the childcare system.
overtowncyc.org, www.santla.org, connectfamilias.org
C3 Overtown Anthony Robinson, Sant La Leonie Hermantin and Connect Familias, Betty Alonso
Eligibility: All non-profit organizations and any individually led or group efforts or programs or coalitions under the umbrella of a non-profit organization were eligible to apply for funds. WFMD encouraged organizations and individuals to consider applying as a partnership, group, and/or coalition if a collaborative structure best supports the proposed solution.
In this cycle, WFMD has awarded grants to community-based efforts that offer and/or contribute to lasting solutions to the multi-faceted challenges of the early childhood education system in Miami-Dade.
Examples of support WFMD can provide to our grantee partners in all current and future cohorts, include:
Capacity:
- Current data and evidence-based research on relevant issues
- Development of impact metrics, data collection advice and reporting tools
- Exposure to potential funders
- Exposure to best practices
- Website and content support (limited cases)
- Introductions to potential partners, advisors and staff
- Strategic planning input
Visibility/Leadership Support:
- Integration of grantees’ work into our Impact Collaborative series
- Support public awareness of grantee work, including speaking opportunities, introductions to media, recorded interviews, social media, newsletter & website features
- Advocacy
Community:
- Convenings between organizations working on related issues and building collaborative relationships through these connections
HerStory Videos – Hear from Grantees
Robyn Perlman
Business & Leadership Institute
Leonie Hermantin
Sant La
Dr. Andrea Wanza
Executive Director of Empowering Youth Inc.
Graylyn Swilley-Wood
Overtown Children & Youth
Mark Needle & Rebecca Shearer
Ideas Consortium – UM
Get involved.
Our respectful request for your ongoing investment in our Community
Your Women’s Fund invites you to continue to work through us to create a stronger fabric of Miami-Dade. Your investment in the problem-solving recipients of our relaunched core Grants Program, and in our operational team, in 2022 and again in 2023, would contribute to the replenishment of the $200,000 grant pool we have guaranteed and enable our team to increase our capacity to engage additional funders while delivering on our expanded programs.
2022 Grantees and Women’s Fund Staff
Past Grantees
Our Past Grantees Have Made a Tremendous Impact on Our Community