CaPA Connector Filter
Fe_Sort_Orgs
Number of Orgs in Filtered Results: 4
Budget Size:
Small: Previous year budget $20,000 - $1M
CaPA States Covered:
GA
Sub-State CaPA Priority Geographies Engaged:
GA-11, GA-03, GA-04, GA-05, GA-06, GA-07, GA-09, GA-10, GA-13, GA-14
Geographic Focus:
Rural, Suburban / Ex-urban, Urban - Small city (<100k)
Core Constituencies:
Black, Women, Youth and Students (aged 17-35)
Organization Leadership:
BIPOC-led, Youth-led (aged 15-35), Women-led
Staff and Volunteer Balance:
Staff powered - Little to no volunteers involved in executing programs, Volunteer boosted - <50% of the programmatic activities are executed by volunteers
By organizing events in Clayton County, Fitzgerald, Atlanta, and Macon, Georgia ACT focused on increasing voter registration, educating low-income housing residents and college students about the impact of voting on housing policies. As a result, we registered 107 new voters, provided identification assistance to 11 people, and assisted hundreds others in verifying their voter status, empowering them with knowledge about their rights and the electoral process.
Georgia ACT is currently conducting coordinated voter engagement efforts in Georgia (including voter registration, education, and mobilization). We are doing tabling, social media campaigns, targeted canvassing, email campaigns and rallies. Our target areas are Clayton, DeKalb, Fulton, Bibb and Ben Hill Counties that include traditionally underserved lower propensity areas (i.e. low-income apartment complexes, rural communities, and HBCU campuses).
We build, support, and inform a statewide network of thriving organizations, professionals, and individuals advancing equitable housing and community development. Our Vision – All Georgia families have safe and decent housing in vibrant neighborhoods.
Budget Size:
Small: Previous year budget $20,000 - $1M
CaPA States Covered:
GA
Sub-State CaPA Priority Geographies Engaged:
GA-05, GA-13, GA-08, GA-04
Geographic Focus:
Rural, Suburban / Ex-urban, Urban - Small city (<100k), Urban - Large city (>100k)
Core Constituencies:
Black, Women, Youth and Students (aged 17-35)
Organization Leadership:
BIPOC-led, Youth-led (aged 15-35), Women-led
Staff and Volunteer Balance:
Volunteer boosted - <50% of the programmatic activities are executed by volunteers
Priority Issues:
Civic engagement, Housing, Youth activismCommunity Engagement Actions
Content Creation
Social Media Campaigns
Aligned with our core value of climate and racial justice, HDC steps up to advocate within affordable housing buildings for ballot initiatives which further these aims. In 2024, HDC rallied the sector to oppose the harmful rollbacks of state climate policies (No on I-2117 & I-2066). HDC will continue to be outspoken, public-facing advocates for climate justice policies through town halls, press conferences, voter education, and flyering affordable housing residents.
The Housing Development Consortium of Seattle-King County (HDC) is the nonprofit membership association for the affordable housing operating, development, and service sector in King County. As a membership association, HDC is uniquely positioned to bring together nonprofit, government, business, and community around a shared vision, and our member-driven programs focus on the intersection of housing, environmental sustainability, equity, health, and education. The urgency of the affordable housing crisis is entangled with a growing climate crisis and the disturbing reality of persisting institutional and structural racism. The work of HDC and our members is squarely in the nexus of these three crises. Approaches that treat each issue in isolation are no longer enough, as these facets are fundamentally interdependent.
King County is experiencing explosive growth and unprecedented inequity in access to housing. We face an affordable housing shortfall of 156,000 homes today and a projected deficit of 244,000 homes by 2040. Closing that gap requires an additional 44,000 affordable homes every five years, and capital dollars currently available to King County’s affordable housing developers are nowhere near what is needed. Enveloping all of this is the climate crisis. In recognition of the issue’s urgency and the effects of the built environment, which generates nearly 50% of annual global CO2 emissions, Washington State’s Energy Code includes bold mandates for reducing net energy consumption and greenhouse gas emissions by 2031. We also know that we must eliminate all CO2 emissions from the built environment by 2040 to meet 1.5°C climate targets.
Our climate work is driven by a bold vision for climate justice: to transform the affordable housing market by decarbonizing buildings. We know that affordable housing residents, as low-income and disproportionately BIPOC renters, bear the first and heaviest impacts. Through cross-sectoral coalitions, policy-making, pilot projects, and funding, we can secure a more just future.
Budget Size:
Medium: Previous year budget $1M - $3M
CaPA States Covered:
WA
Sub-State CaPA Priority Geographies Engaged:
WA-01, WA-07, WA-08, WA-09
Geographic Focus:
Suburban / Ex-urban, Urban - Small city (<100k), Urban - Large city (>100k)
Core Constituencies:
Multi-racial (including white), Seniors (aged 65+), Adults (aged 35-65)
Organization Leadership:
BIPOC-led, Queer-led, Women-led
Staff and Volunteer Balance:
Volunteer boosted - <50% of the programmatic activities are executed by volunteers
Priority Issues:
Housing, Climate change, EnvironmentCommunity Engagement Actions
Content Creation
Policy Development
Mailers
Social Media Campaigns
Poder Latinx is strategically positioned to empower the Latinx community, fostering a resilient progressive voting bloc through our Integrated Voter Engagement (IVE) framework. This model is grounded in six pillars: recruiting community members, fostering professional and leadership growth, executing comprehensive voter engagement throughout the electoral cycle, refining Latinx voter databases, achieving issue-based victories, and pioneering narrative and cultural shifts.
Poder Latinx targets 57,000 new and low-propensity Latinx voters through a canvassing program including door knocks, calls, and texts. Our leadership development program focuses on cultivating 25 new Latina leaders and our community organizing aims to expand our base by 5,200 members.
Poder Latinx is a civic and social justice organization. Our vision is to build political power for the Latinx community to become decision-makers in our country’s democracy and win on economic, immigrant, and environmental issues. Our mission is to build a sustained voting bloc of Latinxs in Arizona, California, Florida, Georgia, Texas, and Washington. We do this by leading an integrated voter engagement program where all aspects of voter engagement, issue-based campaigns, leadership development, voting reform and protection, and narrative change form a continuous cycle of political consciousness. Through our work, we empower and equip the Latinx community to become agents of change now.
Budget Size:
Large: Previous year budget > $3M
CaPA States Covered:
AZ, CA, FL, GA, WA, NC, TX
Sub-State CaPA Priority Geographies Engaged:
AZ-01, AZ-06, CA-13, CA-22, FL-09, FL-10, GA-04, GA-06, NC-12, TX-15, TX-34, WA-14
Geographic Focus:
Suburban / Ex-urban, Urban - Small city (<100k), Urban - Large city (>100k)
Core Constituencies:
Immigrant, Latinx, Youth and Students (aged 17-35)
Organization Leadership:
BIPOC-led, Youth-led (aged 15-35), Women-led
Priority Issues:
Civic engagement, Climate change, Immigrant rightsCommunity Engagement Actions
Content Creation
Warm List Texting
Relational Texting
Mailers
Social Media Campaigns
Digital Ads