NeighborWorks America was built on a foundation of equity, inclusion, integrity and service. This month, the national nonprofit has named two individuals as the 2023 recipients of the NeighborWorks Founders Award, presented to those who embody NeighborWorks' core values and whose lasting contributions shaped both NeighborWorks and its network: Rev. Norman Fong and Donald R. Phoenix.
During National Arts and Humanities Month, NeighborWorks America offers another look at what organizations do to incorporate arts in their communities.
For J'Tanya Adams, resident leadership is the key to unlocking possibilities. "Projects have to be community driven," explains Adams, who started Historic West End Partners, a nonprofit that focuses on economic and cultural development in Charlotte, North Carolina's West End. "Community leaders can recognize community needs and identify pain points and potential wins.
For decades, the Mission District in San Francisco has been a hub for working-class Latino immigrants. As immigrants from other places arrived, too, the district maintained its Latino centricity with a supportive, vibrant ecosystem. Then, gentrification, arm in arm with the tech industry, began to change the neighborhood – both the people who could afford to live there and the businesses they frequented.
Release date: 3/30/2022
NeighborWorks America has its foundation in resident leadership, the idea that those living and working in a community know best how to make their community stronger – and how to lead others in the effort. Each year, NeighborWorks honors some of those leaders with the Dorothy Richardson Award for Resident Leadership while also bringing attention to the work of resident leaders everywhere.