Press

National Gay and Lesbian Task Force to Grant $500,000 to State and Local Groups Working to Advance Equality

Date: 
June 18, 2003

Community Impact Fund to Support 10 Groups Over Two Years

The National Gay and Lesbian Task Force (NGLTF) today announced that applications are being accepted for grants from the Task Force Community Impact Fund. The Fund will distribute $500,000 to support organizations and organizing projects that advance full equality for gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender (GLBT) people. Grants will be awarded to 10 state or local groups, with awardees receiving grants of up to $50,000 each, disbursed over a two-year period.

"This grant program concretely demonstrates our commitment to the essential work of our sister organizations at the state and local level," said Task Force Executive Director Matt Foreman. "These grants will strengthen our movement at the grassroots - where it counts and can deliver the most for our community."

The Fund prioritizes support for large-scale, person-to-person, collective action that builds a mass base of public support to support full equality for GLBT people. Through the Fund, the Task Force seeks to significantly increase the short and long-term capacity of state and local groups to advance a broad public policy agenda impacting the lives of GLBT people.

"We know that the only way to beat the radical right is, frankly, by doing what they've been doing for years -- going door-to-door, educating people about our needs, and identifying neighbors we know will stand with us," Foreman said. "This isn't glamorous -- it's incredibly hard -- but it works." Foreman noted that last year, 5 out of 6 of the last anti-gay referenda had been defeated because local GLBT communities, working with the Task Force, had built a strong base of non-gay support through painstaking mass action involving face to face conversations with the broader public. Prior to 2001, the radical right typically won 3 out of 4 anti-gay referenda every year that such measures have been on the ballot.

The Community Impact Fund grants are part of a larger effort by the Task Force to build grassroots strength and skills. In the past year alone, for example, NGLTF has devoted thousands of staff and volunteer hours to assist communities across the country (recent examples include Miami, FL; Tacoma, WA; Ypsilanti, MI; Westbrook, ME; Covington, KY; Cincinnati and Cleveland Heights, OH) to defeat anti-GLBT ballot measures or to introduce pro-GLBT legislation and has conducted trainings for thousands of people in California, Oregon, and the Ohio Valley.

For full application guidelines and further information, see the Community Impact Fund section of our Web site, under the state and local organizing link. Postmark deadline for grant applications is July 31, 2003.

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The mission of the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force is to build the political power of the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) community from the ground up. We do this by training activists, organizing broad-based campaigns to defeat anti-LGBT referenda and advance pro-LGBT legislation, and by building the organizational capacity of our movement. Our Policy Institute, the movement’s premier think tank, provides research and policy analysis to support the struggle for complete equality and to counter right-wing lies. As part of a broader social justice movement, we work to create a nation that respects the diversity of human expression and identity and creates opportunity for all. Headquartered in Washington, D.C., we also have offices in New York City, Los Angeles, Miami, Minneapolis and Cambridge.