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Nina Mason Pulliam believed that every person should give
back to his or her community in order to make it a better
place. Enriching Community Life is one of the three
grantmaking areas of the Nina Mason Pulliam Charitable Trust,
focusing specifically on two fields, Arts and Culture
and Community Building and Civic Revitalization. Since
the Trust began grantmaking in 1998, it has awarded $15,356,685
to 92 nonprofit organizations in the Indianapolis and Phoenix
communities to enrich community life. In 2004 the Trust awarded
$762,500 to 15 organizations, including family museums, youth
art programs, homeownership programs and agencies providing
technical assistance to other nonprofits.
Arts and Culture
In 2004, the Trust's grantmaking in this field was sharpened
to focus on programs that bring arts and cultural experiences
to children and adults most likely to be served by the Trust's
Helping People in Need program area. Two organizations
that exemplify the Trust's interest in the arts and culture
activities directed at this population are Free Arts of Arizona
and Young Audiences of Indiana.
Free
Arts of Arizona, founded in 1993, provides
therapeutic creative arts programs to 5,500 children annually
who have been abused, neglected or homeless, working with
partner organizations that operate residential treatment centers,
group homes and domestic violence shelters throughout Maricopa
County. By recruiting creative volunteers to share their talents
in the visual arts, music, theater, dance, creative writing
and other artistic projects, Free Arts of Arizona helps children
build self-esteem by unlocking their imaginations. The Trust
has provided $60,000 to support the Strengthening Families
through the Arts Program at 18 domestic violence and homeless
shelters to improve communication and develop positive parent-child
relationships in homeless families.
In Indianapolis, Young
Audiences of Indiana
works with teachers, artists and arts organizations
to present live programs appropriate to the age and educational
needs of students, always with an effort to provide equal
access to its programs. The program provides opportunities
for unique, personal and meaningful experiences in the arts
otherwise not included in many school curricula. The Trust
committed $273,000 to Young Audiences to pilot Young-at-Arts,
a program to help child care workers and artists expand their
skills in providing developmentally appropriate arts experiences
for low-income and disadvantaged preschool children, who have
few opportunities for exposure to the arts. The program has
served 600 children and 70 teachers in Indianapolis by offering
educational workshops and interactive performances with local
artists in music, dance, theater and visual arts.
In efforts to further develop the community's participation
in the arts and culture, the Trust has also supported other
organizations that enrich community life in this area. In
Indianapolis, this includes the President Benjamin Harrison
Foundation, Inc., the Indianapolis Children's Choir, International
Center of Indianapolis, Storytelling Arts of Indiana and the
Writers' Center of Indianapolis. In Arizona, the Trust has
funded the Phoenix Family Museum and the West Valley Arts
Council.
Community Building and Civic Revitalization
Through this grantmaking area, the Trust supports organizations
and programs that assist neighborhoods in decline, increase
the level of resident involvement, and/or contribute to the
overall vitality and quality of life in the Trust's priority
communities of Indianapolis and Phoenix. Awards to Chicanos
por la Causa, Rebuilding the Wall, Inc. and NPower are illustrations
of Trust funding in this field.
Chicanos
por la Causa provides programs and services
that address the economic development, social service, education,
housing and cultural development needs of the community and
serves 100,000 or more individuals annually. Since the agency's
beginning 36 years ago, CPLC has purchased and managed more
than 4,000 units of affordable multi-family apartments for
low-income renters and constructed more than 600 single-family
homes and numerous commercial office buildings. CPLC received
a $150,000 award from the Trust for the construction of a
commercial/retail building to house small businesses in Nuestro
Barrio, a low-income, minority neighborhood located in a federally
designated Enterprise Community in south central Phoenix.
This project provides employment opportunities and contributes
to the redevelopment and restoration of the neighborhood.
The retail center houses eight small businesses, including
a utility bill payment center, a dry cleaner and laundry,
a deli-style restaurant, and a beauty/cosmetology school.
Rebuilding
the Wall, Inc. (RTW), is a faith-based
organization working on the near east side of Indianapolis
to rebuild its neighborhood by building relationships across
racial and socioeconomic lines and through the rebuilding
of vacant and dilapidated houses. By providing safe and affordable
rentals, transitional housing, and homeownership opportunities,
RTW plans to preserve houses for the indigenous poor. The
Trust recently provided operating support to help the executive
director and project manager implement the housing rehabilitation
program. Through the unique homeownership opportunity that
RTW provides, families can share in the redevelopment of our
community rather than be displaced.
NPower
Arizona and NPower
Indiana (both affiliates of a national network
of NPower organizations) have each received Trust funds to
meet the technology needs of nonprofit organizations serving
the Indianapolis and Phoenix communities. Both agencies provide
technology services to member nonprofits and the nonprofit
community at large, including technology planning, consulting
and project management, scheduled network support, web and
application development, and software training. NPower Arizona
currently works with more than 65 nonprofits in Maricopa County,
while NPower Indiana works with 200 nonprofits in central
Indiana.
Other agencies that have received Trust grants in the community
building and civic revitalization area in Indianapolis include
Executive Service Corps, Inc., Irvington Historical Society,
Inc., and Rebuilding the Wall, Inc. Arizona grantees include
Neighborhood Partners, Inc. and Collaboration for a New Century.
The Trust remains committed to funding nonprofits that enrich
community life especially for underserved and/or disadvantaged
individuals. If your organization is interested in applying
to the Trust for funding under this category and have questions,
please contact Lee
Ann Hoy, grants programs manager in Indiana, or
Belen
Martinez, grants programs manager in Arizona.
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