Bay Area social entrepreneurs receive $1.1M to tackle health disparity barriers
Did you know that one in five residents in the Bay Area is living in poverty? It is a reality that has persisted since the pandemic and is why some people live healthier than others.
The American Heart Association’s mission is to make the world a healthier place for all. The company infused $1.1 million in six social companies in the Bay Area. With this third cycle of funding, the AHA’s Bernard J. Tyson Impact Fund has invested a collective $2.48 million across the Bay Area in support of community-led solutions.
“Where someone lives should not dictate how long or how well a person lives – but it does,” said Laura Steinfeldt, region senior vice president, and Bay Area executive director for the American Heart Association.
“Through the American Heart Association’s commitment to addressing social determinants of health, communities across the Bay Area will benefit from the creative solutions of these social enterprises who join our mission to ensure every person has the same opportunity for a full and healthy life.”
Investing with a higher purpose, Social Impact Funds provide resources to both non-profit and for-profit social enterprises. To ensure that their investments have maximum effect on improving access to health and healthcare, economic resiliency, and food security, a special governance committee composed of American Heart Association volunteers and executives assesses each proposal.
The three main components include:
- The potential to drive meaningful change in under-resourced communities.
- Meaningful involvement from these communities.
- An ability to effectively increase impact through scale.
The Bay Area's third round of Bernard J. Tyson Impact Fund grantees are:
- Farming Hope is a non-profit organization devoted to creating job opportunities for individuals facing employment challenges such as former incarceration or homelessness. With their 12-week training program, Apprentices are given paid culinary and hospitality education while making meals for food insecure community members. It is an excellent garden-to-table initiative allowing people to gain stability in the workforce.
- Firebrand is a mission-based bakery that hires returning citizens and formerly homeless people into high-quality jobs to enable them to become active and vibrant members of the community. Workers receive a decent wage, substantial work training, and financial literacy assistance in order to break the cycle of poverty and recidivism.
- Growing Together is a non-profit organization that promotes the health and sustainability of school communities by greening schoolyards, teaching gardens, and expanding access to fresh food. Farms to settings, their produce distribution program, is addressing food insecurity in low-income, low-food-access school settings while also enhancing market accessibility for small local farms.
- Saba Grocers is a digital health engagement firm that powers community-driven behavioral change under the premise that "the opposite of addiction is connection." The platform is a decentralized mental health support tool that encourages people to help others recover.
- Sober Sidekick Sober Sidekick is a digital health engagement firm that powers community-driven behavioral change based on the idea that "the opposite of addiction is connection." The platform is a decentralized mental health support tool that motivates people to help others recover.
- Urban Ed Academy a Black-led NGO, is to achieve educational fairness through representative leadership in and around schools. The group's ultimate goal is to recruit, train, and assist Black males into the teaching profession so that every student has at least one Black male teacher by sixth grade.
The American Heart Association's Social Impact Funds, including the Bernard J. Tyson Impact Fund, have invested in more than 100 local social enterprises around the country since its creation in 2018 and initial community investments in 2019.
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Credits American Heart Association,
Bay Area social entrepreneurs receive $1.1M to tackle health disparity barriers,
https://newsroom.heart.org/news/bay-area-social-entrepreneurs-receive-1-1m-to-tackle-health-disparity-barriers









