2021 Grants
Our Grassroots Grants program supports underfunded organizations and communities addressing a myriad of environmental and social justice issues, with a focus on fights over water privatization and plastic pollution.
Rise St. James:
Protecting St. James from New Petrochemical Plants
Founded by Sharon Lavigne, a retired special needs teacher and winner of the 2021 Goldman Environmental Prize, Rise St. James is a grassroots organization based in St. James, Louisiana. Sharon has dedicated herself to keeping multibillion dollar chemical plants out of her community. We’re so proud to tell her story in the next installment of The World We Need, an animated series that offers a vivid look at the inspiring frontline activists protecting America’s communities against environmental degradation and racism.
Over the past two years, we’ve provided $10,000 to Rise St. James to support their fight for racial and environmental justice. In addition to this grant support, our Community joined Rise St. James’ campaign to stop Formosa Plastics from building a massive plastics factory on the banks of the Mississippi River in St. James, Louisiana. A new petrochemical plant would pose serious public health risks to this predominantly African American community, due to the toxic discharge of chemicals into the air and water. 5,000 of our community members helped deliver a powerful message to the Army Corps of Engineers against Formosa, adding their names to a total of 40,000 comments urging the Corps to revoke the project’s permit. The Army Corps has since suspended Formosa’s construction license. The campaign is ongoing.
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Michigan Citizens for Water Conservation:
Nestlé’s Troubled Waters
Michigan Citizens for Water Conservation (MCWC) is a grassroots, all-volunteer group dedicated to the conservation of water into the 7th generation and beyond. MCWC first organized in 2000 to protect water resources in Mecosta County, where Nestlé Waters North America was extracting 400 gallons of water per minute. While nearby communities like Flint lack access to safe, public, drinking water, Nestlé (now BlueTriton) is seeking to ramp up its water extraction, leading to an ongoing fight to keep corporate bottlers out of this area.
MCWC participated in our March 2021 virtual rally, and has been a Nestlé’s Troubled Waters campaign partner since 2017. In Q1 of 2021, we supported MCWC with a $4,000 grant to help offset the costs of filing a legal complaint over their state environmental regulator’s dismissal of MCWC’s challenge to Nestlé’s permit to draw water in Evart, MI. This is the second grassroots grant received by MCWC since 2017, an example of Story of Stuff Project’s long term commitment to supporting local organizations.
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Community Water Justice:
Nestlé’s Troubled Waters
Community Water Justice is a network of frontline communities against water privatization in Maine. Determined to secure protections, rights, and accessibility to groundwater, this group focuses on educating the public about the integral significance of the water commons, proactively protecting the commons at the municipal level, and modernizing state laws to safeguard groundwater under public stewardship that takes into account the rights of Nature.
As one of our Nestlé’s Troubled Waters campaign partners, we have worked closely with Community Water Justice since 2018, and collaborated on key campaigns, communications, and events like our March 2021 virtual rally to raise awareness and funds for critical water site fights like Maine’s Evergreen Spring, and several others across North America.
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Unbottle and Protect Chaffee County Water:
Stopping Nestlé’s Permit
Ten years ago, concerned citizens of Chaffee County rallied to put up a fight when Nestlé Waters North America applied for a permit to build a pipeline and extract water from Ruby Mountain Springs. Amid broken promises and bitter public opposition, Nestlé/BlueTriton is seeking to extend its permit to extract water for another decade. Now, Un-bottle & Protect continues to fight for the interest of Chaffee County residents by calling for an end to such permits once and for all.
Unbottle & Protect joined our March 2021 virtual rally as a featured partner, and has been a campaign partner for several years.
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Our Santa Fe River:
Nestlé’s Troubled Waters
Our Santa Fe River is composed of concerned citizens working to protect the waters and lands supporting the aquifer, springs, and rivers within the watershed of the Santa Fe River. This volunteer-run organization promotes public awareness pertaining to the ecology, quality, and quantity of these iconic freshwater springs, which are threatened by Nestlé/BlurTriton’s push to increase withdrawals to over 1 million gallons a day.
We partner with Our Santa Fe Springs as part of our Nestlé’s Troubled Waters campaign, and are committed to supporting our campaign partners until access to safe drinking water becomes a public and universal right.
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Ka’ala Farm:
Preserving Traditional Taro Stewardship
Ka’ala Farm restored an ancient agricultural complex in the Wai’anae Valley to produce taro in the same way that the indigenous people of this part of Hawaii did for centuries. For founder Eric Enos, the ancestral way of taro farming is a way to reconnect with the cycles of the land, protect the soil and water, and teach responsible stewardship to his people. Ka’ala Farm also serves as a cultural center, offering youth programs, internship opportunities, and counseling centers to help guide at-risk youth and struggling adults back into the community.
We tell Eric’s story to restore land, water, and culture in the first installment of The World We Need video series.
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SWaCH:
Wastepickers Collective
Rio Grande International Study Center:
Break Free From Plastic Brand Audit
Port Arthur Community Action Network
Southern Sector Rising:
Stand with Marsha / Move the Mountain
AGUA Coalition (La Asociación de Gente Unida por el Agua):
Agua Es Vida
The AGUA Coalition is a regional, grassroots coalition of impacted community residents and allied non-profit organizations dedicated to securing safe, clean, and affordable drinking water for San Joaquin Valley communities.
AGUA was formed in 2006 in response to widespread contamination of valley drinking water. Residents saw the need to form a unified voice to push for solutions to address the root causes of drinking water contamination; share information on drinking water problems, opportunities, and solutions; and mobilize residents to take action
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California Institute for Rural Studies:
Rural Justice Summit
As in many agricultural regions, rural California communities face deep-rooted barriers to sustainable development that have been inadequately addressed by public policy. Since 1977, CIRS has focused on rural and agricultural issues, seeking sustainable solutions. They take particular pride in forging beneficial relationships with grassroots stakeholder organizations while maintaining the respect and cooperation of research institutions in the state. Agencies and policy makers also look to CIRS substantive analysis of current public policy issues.
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Sure We Can:
Save Sure We Can!
Sure We Can is a non-profit recycling center, community space and sustainability hub in Brooklyn where canners, who are people that collect cans and bottles from to streets to make a living, come together with students and neighbors through recycling, composting, gardening and arts. Their mission is to support the local community, particularly the most vulnerable residents, and promote social inclusion, environmental awareness and economic empowerment. For over 10 years, Sure We Can has served the community of canners, and today it has evolved into a community center that promotes a sustainable urban culture and facilitates a circular economy.
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Ohio Valley Environmental Coalition:
Studying Plastic/Petrochemicals Effect on People/Environment
The Ohio Valley Environmental Coalition, formed in 1987, is a 501-c-3 nonprofit organization with a mission to organize and maintain a diverse grassroots organization dedicated to the improvement and preservation of the environment and communities through education, grassroots organizing and coalition building, leadership development, strategic litigation and media outreach. Their work encompasses much of West Virginia and the Ohio River Valley.
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East Yard Communities for Environmental Justice:
Shut Down Long Beach Incinerator
East Yard Communities for Environmental Justice (EYCEJ) is a community-based organization that works to facilitate self-advocates in East Los Angeles, Southeast Los Angeles and Long Beach. By providing workshops and trainings, EYCEJ prepares community members to engage in the decision-making processes that directly impact their health and quality of life. EYCEJ emerges from years of unheard community voices that have silently suffered the effects of pollution in their neighborhoods. Through grassroots organizing and leadership building skills, EYCEJ works to enable under-represented communities to be heard, which in turn influences policy change, policy makers and agencies that can institute health protective environmental justice policies.
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Cooperation Jackson:
Freedom Farms and Green Teams
Cooperation Jackson is an emerging vehicle for sustainable community development, economic democracy, and community ownership. Cooperation Jackson believes that we can replace the current socio-economic system of exploitation, exclusion and the destruction of the environment with a proven democratic alternative. An alternative built on equity, cooperation, worker democracy, and environmental sustainability to provide meaningful living wage jobs, reduce racial inequities, and build community wealth. It is our position and experience, that when marginalized and excluded workers and communities are organized in democratic organizations and social movements they become a force capable of making transformative social advances.
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Louisiana Environmental Action Network (LEAN):
Concerned Citizens of St. John
The purpose of the Louisiana Environmental Action Network (LEAN) is to foster cooperation and communication between individual citizens and corporate and government organizations in an effort to assess and mend the environmental problems in Louisiana. LEAN’s goal is the creation and maintenance of a cleaner and healthier environment for all of the inhabitants of this state.
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Azul:
Plastics Programming
Azul is the only ocean conservation organization in the U.S. that focuses specifically on working within Latinx communities. Using culturally relevant communication techniques, Azul leverages both localized grassroots and “grass tops” strategies to engage Latinxs as long term conservationists with a pragmatic and common sense approach to resources use and protection. Azul has been instrumental in driving several California-based policy “wins” including banning of single use plastic bags, banning the sale and possession of shark fins, and creating legal remedies that allow fining private property owners who illegally block public access to California’s beaches.
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Green Latinos:
GreenLatinos is a national non-profit organization that convenes a broad coalition of Latino leaders committed to addressing national, regional and local environmental, natural resources and conservation issues that significantly affect the health and welfare of the Latino community in the United States.
GreenLatinos provides an inclusive table at which its members establish collaborative partnerships and networks to improve the environment; protect and promote conservation of land and other natural resources; amplify the voices of low-income and tribal communities; and train, mentor, and promote the current and future generations of Latino environmental leaders for the benefit of the Latino community and beyond.
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