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GreenLight Selects Family Independence Initiative (FII) as Newest Portfolio Organization
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The
GreenLight Fund has selected the Family Independence Initiative (FII) as its
fifth portfolio organization. GreenLight
will provide $800,000 and other support to FII over four years and joins a
coalition of funders behind the program's move to the city, including Boston
Rising and The Boston Foundation.
GreenLight
arrives at the selection of FII after a nine-month selection process that focused
on innovative approaches to helping low-income families achieve financial
security. These families have been
particularly hard hit by the economic recession, and their ranks have grown
with the housing bust and high unemployment rates.
Founded
in Oakland, CA, in 2002, FII's mission is to create an opportunity rich
environment that invests resources in low-income communities based on the
strengths and initiatives families demonstrate to improve their lives and those
of others in their communities.
FII's
work is based on the belief that this country can reduce poverty by helping
very low-income working families move to a more stable middle class status if
the responsibility and resources for change are shifted to the very families
who experience poverty.
FII
provides families computers, access to small amounts of capital, and
connections to opportunities. FII
challenges low-income families to develop their own solutions and move their
own agendas, with the support of family, friends and each other.
In
FII's first eight years working in Oakland, Hawaii and San Francisco, families
have demonstrated resilience and resourcefulness, and have made significant
progress in helping themselves and creating a positive ripple effect in their
greater communities. In Oakland, FII's
first site, average household income increased by 26%, savings increased 144%
and nine of 25 families purchased homes in the first two years. In San Francisco, average household income
increased 20.9% over the first 15 months of the program. Among 36 adults, six new businesses were
started. Out of 16 families, two bought
homes.
"FII
is one of the most innovative approaches we've seen to how our community and
country can address poverty," said GreenLight Fund Executive Director Margaret
Hall."We believe FII has huge potential
for how we, other funders, nonprofits and policy-makers work to help low-income
families make lasting economic progress."

CEO and President Maurice Lim Miller (far left) with FII San Francisco participants at an open house.
To visit the FII website, click here.
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2010 VCs vs. Entrepreneurs Golf Tournament Raises a Record $230,000 for the GreenLight Portfolio
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Under
sunny skies and warm temperatures on June 15, entrepreneurs and VCs gathered at
The International golf club in Bolton, MA, to compete in the sixth annual VCs vs.
Entrepreneurs Golf Tournament. The
tournament, benefitting GreenLight's portfolio organizations, raised a record amount
of over $230,000. These funds will go
directly to support the work of Friends of the Children-Boston, Raising A
Reader-MA, Peer Health Exchange and Youth Villages' Transitional Living
program.
The
entrepreneurs won back the trophy from last year's winners, the VCs, in a 45.5
to 35.5 victory. While the entrepreneurs
were victorious, a great day was had by all complete with a silent auction and
a cocktail reception that included scotch and cigar tastings sponsored by The
Glenlivet and Luis Tiant as well as mini-massages courtesy of Sports Club/LA.

The
2010 trophy presentation. From left to right: Lou Volpe, David Baum,
Jim Lippie, Mike Trethewey, John Landry, Pete Cannone, Sung Park, John
Simon, Elliot Katzman and Woody Benson.
The
success of the golf tournament would not have been possible without the incredible
support of this year's sponsors: Polachi Access Executive Search, Square 1
Bank, General Catalyst Partners, Commonwealth Capital Ventures, FamaPR, Goodwin
Procter LLP, North Bridge Venture Partners, CitationAir, .406 Ventures,
Breakaway Ventures, Credit Suisse, Deloitte, Foley & Lardner LLP, Grant
Thornton LLP, JDJ Resources, Kodiak Venture Partners, Lazard, Morgan Stanley Smith Barney/Zimmerman Trethewey Group, Oracle, Prism
VentureWorks, SAP America, Inc., Stage 1 Ventures, Summerhill Venture Partners,
Summit Partners and Venator Partners.
Special
thanks to in-kind sponsors Bowne of Boston, Monderer Design, Tesla Motors, The Glenlivet and Sports Club/LA.
To view photos from the event, click here.
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2010 GreenLight Gala: Spotlight on FII
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The
sixth annual GreenLight Gala will be held on Thursday, September 16 at The Colonnade Boston Hotel. The Gala will showcase
GreenLight's newest addition to its portfolio, Family Independence Initiative
(FII). Please
contact Melanie Damsker at 671.252.2815 or mdamsker@greenlightfund.org for sponsorship
opportunities and more information. Click here for more details about this year's Gala.
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Raising A Reader-MA Expands to Brockton, Lowell
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Raising
A Reader-MA (RAR-MA) continues its growth in Massachusetts this fall by expanding
into Brockton and Lowell.The Brockton expansion
is funded by the Edith Click Shoolman Foundation while the Lowell program is
supported by the United Way of Massachusetts Bay and Merrimack Valley.
With
this expansion, RAR-MA will now be reaching 14 communities including Boston,
Cambridge, Chelsea, East Boston, Everett, Lawrence, Malden, Medford, Revere,
Somerville, Stoneham and Winthrop.

To
visit the RAR-MA website, click here.
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Youth Villages Featured at The Boston Foundation Forum
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The
Boston Foundation (TBF) forum on June 30, Human
Services in Massachusetts: Maximizing the Value of Our Human Services Dollars,
featured Youth Villages' Massachusetts State Manager Matt Stone as a panelist.
The
forum is part of the Foundation's Utility
of Trouble series, which is exploring the opportunities presented by the
economic downturn. "The current economic climate impels us to closely examine how to manage our resources
and look for changes that reduce costs," said Paul Grogan, president and CEO of
TBF. "When we find potential savings
that are aligned with better services, it forms a compelling case for reform."
The forum focused on the presentations of two
reports released by The Boston Foundation making the case that vulnerable
clients of the state's Office of Human Services can be better served by changes
that also promise significant savings in government costs.
As a panelist,
Matt provided Youth Villages' Intercept program as an example of how it is possible to achieve better outcomes for
children and families, while saving costs in human services. Youth Villages' Intercept program
specializes in diverting youth from foster care and other state out-of-home
placements by helping their families safely maintain youth in their home environment. Intercept also focuses on reunifying youth who are already in
a residential treatment facility or foster home setting.
Marylou Sudders, president of the
Massachusetts Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children and a former commissioner
of the Department of Mental Health, moderated the panel discussion which also included
Hon. Barbara L'Italien, vice chair of the House Ways and Means Committee;
Angelo McClain, commissioner of the Massachusetts Department of Children and
Families; and Christine Lewis Shane, assistant professor at Fitchburg State
College.
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Youth Villages Massachusetts Places Three in Scholars Program
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Youth
Villages recently selected 12 young men and women nationally in its Transitional Living program who have
demonstrated academic excellence to participate in the organization's first YV
Scholars program. Three of the 12 are
from Massachusetts.
Counselors
of the more than 500 young adults currently
enrolled in the Transitional Living program around the country referred
academically outstanding TL participants to the selection committee for the YV
Scholars program. Youth Villages designed the scholars program
to help students excel in college and prepare them for post-college
careers. In August, the scholars will
travel to Memphis for a week-long orientation to prepare for the fall
semester. Youth Villages will match YV Scholars with a Youth Villages mentor to provide them with guidance to help them
achieve their academic, career and life goals. Scholars also will have a chance to go on
educational trips, receive unique, individualized support from Youth Villages,
gain hands-on work experience and serve as role models for other young people. Youth Villages hopes to grow the scholars
program next year and in the years to come.
Young
people in Youth Villages' Transitional Living program have aged out of foster
care at age 18, without families or other support to turn to.

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GreenLight Fund Portfolio Organizations
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| The GreenLight Team
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