Grant Partners

Massachusetts Immigrant and Refugee Advocacy Coalition

Year: 2024 *Multi-year Grant: 2023
Amount:$68,978
Boston

MIRA Coalition is the only statewide advocacy organization exclusively devoted to the well-being of immigrants and refugees. MIRA partners with other health care advocates to ensure that the needs of immigrants and refugees are supported and appropriately communicated through various channels. MIRA plays a critical education, outreach, and advocacy role at a time when access to health care for immigrants continues to be challenging.

Cambridge Economic Opportunity Committee

Year: 2024 *Multi-year Grant: 2022, 2023
Amount:$153,000
Cambridge

Cambridge Economic Opportunity Committee’s (CEOC) mission is to empower people and mobilize resources to fight the impact and causes of poverty through education and organizing. CEOC envisions an inclusive and diverse Cambridge without poverty, where everyone has affordable housing, quality health care, education, food security, and economic stability. CEOC will provide the Journey to the Hope program (the organization’s PM+ intervention program); increase staff members' knowledge, comfort, and confidence in discussing mental health and delivering Journey to Hope to community members.

Tufts University’s Center for Black Maternal Health & Reproductive Justice

Year: 2024
Amount:$30,000
Statewide

Tufts University’s Center for Black Maternal Health & Reproductive Justice will create a digital toolkit to assist doulas with the MassHealth enrollment process and improve access to doula services for Black and Brown pregnant people. 

Centre Street Food Pantry

Year: 2024
Amount:$5,029
Middlesex, Norfolk
Program Area: Catalyst Fund

Funding requested to upgrade the organization’s technology infrastructure that will enable the pantry to serve more constituents and improve members access to healthy foods. 

Massachusetts Organization for Addiction Recovery - Fiscal Sponsor - Bay State Community Services, Inc.

Year: 2024 *Multi-year Grant: 2023
Amount:$63,672
Boston

The Massachusetts Organization for Addiction Recovery (MOAR) educates the public about the value of addiction recovery. The organization's central concerns are to reduce: the social stigma of addiction; the shortage of timely treatment to promote recovery and reduce overdose risk; the lack of long-term treatment; and the disproportionate effects of addiction on populations such as veterans, pregnant women, non-English speakers, communities of color, and recently incarcerated people. MOAR is led by people in recovery and engages people with lived experience to identify recovery barriers and solutions through individual peer work, group work, and coalition-building efforts. Bay State Community Services, Inc. serves as MOAR’s fiscal sponsor for this grant.

Fishing Partnership Health Plan Corporation

Year: 2024
Amount:$50,000
Gloucester, New Bedford, Plymouth, and Chatham
Program Area: Special Initiatives

The Fishing Partnership (TFP) will increase behavioral health equity in Massachusetts fishing communities by promoting the availability and accessibility of behavioral health support with a focus on cultural competency and language accessibility. This funding will allow TFP to integrate behavioral health access within its existing community health worker program by training TFP Navigators in behavioral health with Riverside Trauma Center (RTC). This will enhance the Navigators’ ability to respond to traumatic incidents in the fishing industry alongside the RTC team of clinicians.

Luminosity Behavioral Health Services

Year: 2024
Amount:$50,000
Brockton
Program Area: Special Initiatives

Luminosity Behavioral Health Services will develop an improved responsive behavioral health model in communities of color throughout southeastern Massachusetts.  As the co-convenor and fiscal agent for the South East Multicultural Providers Association (SEMPA), Luminosity and its collaborative partners are aiming to end the “scavenger hunt” for supportive, culturally sensitive therapeutic interventions that exist in the region.  SEMPA members will implement cross-agency agreements to address the availability of services, youth advocacy and referrals.  The goal is to train and certify 60 staff members in applying trauma-specific interventions, create a standardized referral process and policies to reduce long waitlists across the participating organizations, and increase the pool of multicultural health professionals and youth mentors serving the needs of Brockton families.

Propa City Community Outreach

Year: 2024
Amount:$20,000
Boston

Propa City Community Outreach will provide its services focused on perinatal health education and peer support to Boston’s communities of color who are dealing with pregnancy loss. 

Agencia ALPHA

Year: 2024 *Multi-year Grant: 2023
Amount:$61,200
Suffolk County

Agencia ALPHA, an immigrant-led, grassroots organization in Boston, plans to add Certified Application Counselors to its team and expand its member outreach around MassHealth redeterminations and enrollment in health coverage.

The Tomato Fairy

Year: 2024
Amount:$3,800
Essex, Middlesex, Norfolk, Plymouth, Suffolk, Worcester Counties
Program Area: Catalyst Fund

Funding to purchase equipment to print and distribute materials to increase organization’s efficiency and efforts to address food insecurity.

Worcester RISE for Health

Year: 2024
Amount:$7,500
Worcester
Program Area: Catalyst Fund

Funding to implement electronic Emergency Medical Records to provide high quality care to clients – allowing the organization to fully integrate their medical records with a large hospital system which also serves its clients. 

It Takes a Village

Year: 2024
Amount:$7,500
Berkshire County
Program Area: Catalyst Fund

Funding to translate digital and print resources to languages spoken by their clients: Spanish, Haitian Creole, Russian, Ukrainian, Pashto, Urdu, and Arabic. This investment will strengthen capacity to provide culturally respectful care and create a more welcoming environment.

Massachusetts Law Reform Institute

Year: 2024 *Multi-year Grant: 2023
Amount:$79,590
Boston

MLRI has effectively directed its legal advocacy expertise to benefit numerous coalitions, including those focused on immigrants, health care reform, and people with disabilities. MLRI’s legal analyses and policy expertise are critical to improving access to care and the social determinants of health for consumers. MLRI has demonstrated a history of strong working relationships with state agencies and defends coverage and access for marginalized populations.

Enhance Asian Community on Health (EACH), Inc.

Year: 2024 *Multi-year Grant: 2023
Amount:$61,200
Suffolk County

Enhance Asian Community on Health (EACH), a community-based organization,  will provide outreach and enrollment supports to  the Asian community in key geographic areas, including Boston’s Chinatown neighborhood and Malden, Newton, Quincy and Somerville.

Berkshire Nursing Families

Year: 2024
Amount:$40,000
Berkshire County

Berkshire Nursing Families will implement the next phase of its partnership with Springfield Family Doulas to train and mentor Black doulas and lactation counselors in Berkshire County.