Communities of color, especially immigrant and refugee communities, struggle to be heard on almost every important community issue. Nonprofit staff from these communities, especially those who are focused on advocacy and systems-change work, are few, as there are not many pipelines to develop these leaders. If they want the voices of communities of colors at the tables addressing issues of education inequity, economic development, environmental stewardship, transportation access, etc., they must invest in developing strong leaders from within these communities. With many nonprofit leaders of color retiring in the next ten years, the gap in leadership will widen unless there is a pipeline to support the next generation of leaders to take their place.
Unfortunately, many ethnic-led organizations face constant challenges in growing their capacity, which they need in order to fully participate in civic engagement and systems-change efforts. The traditional model for capacity building tends to be top-down and/or not driven by communities, and has not been as effective as it could be. Often, assistance such as through workshops and small grants are offered, but the benefits are lost when organizations have little or no staffing to implement what is learned. Because of the lack of capacity, ethnic-led CBOs are constantly struggling for sustainability, and existing funding and partners are beyond the reach of many.
The most critical component that has been missing is staff, particularly staff who can devote the significant amount of time required to provide a “jumpstart” to building capacity. Without sufficient investment in staffing, many nonprofits will continue to face challenges in building capacity and being involved at advocacy and other areas of civic engagement.
Project model: RVC has a cohort of 10 emerging leaders from diverse communities of color; they provide them training, support, and mentorship to these emerging leaders to further develop their leadership capacity and knowledge of non-profit management, capacity building, civic engagement, and working with community dynamics; and place them to work full-time in ethnic-led CBOs to develop the organizations’ capacity. In this way, capacity and impact of ethnic-led CBOs is strengthened while leadership from within communities is deepened and supported for the long-term.
Goals:
The overarching vision and goals of Rainier Valley Corps are to ensure that:
Principles: The model is based on several key principles: responding specifically to the needs of communities of color, committing to long-term change, fostering mutual peer learning among leaders and organizations, and building on strengths that already exist.
Funders: They have received or continue to receive support from the Gates Foundation, United Way of King County, the City of Seattle, the Loom Foundation, Social Venture Partners, the Seattle Foundation Neighbor to Neighbor Fund, the Statewide Capacity Collaborative, and individual donors
Partners. Program implementation will be co-led by the Vietnamese Friendship Association (VFA) and United Way of King County (UWKC), bringing together complementary strengths in direct community services, relationships of trust and credibility within the CBO community, shared community values, and administrative and management capacity. They have also been working in collaboration with 501 Commons, the Nonprofit Assistance Center, Home Sight, the Seattle Foundation, Social Venture Partners, the City of Seattle, OneAmerica, the Loom Foundation, Social Justice Fund Northwest and others. Since the beginning, the project has had participation from over a dozen Rainier Valley immigrant- and refugee-led CBOs, many of whom are now serving on the Steering Committee.
Mission: Rainier Valley Corps promotes social justice by cultivating leaders of color, strengthening organizations led by communities of color, and fostering collaboration between diverse communities.
Vision: Rainier Valley Corps envision a world in which communities of color have the power to fulfill the dreams for communities.