// A LETTER FROM MIRENDA MEGHELLI // NOVEMBER 18, 2022
Dear Colleagues,
Often during U.S. elections, I think about my grandmother. She served as a poll worker for several years and encouraged her loved ones to vote. Now I am struck by the fact that my daughter will likely grow up fighting to regain rights that seemed settled in my grandmother's lifetime.
This November, some winning candidates promised to preserve and advance the rights of women and other marginalized genders, yet others are set on reversing our progress. That's why the work of women's funds is more critical than ever. In many places, we're an integral part of a collaborative force working to improve the economic security of women, girls, and nonbinary people, as well as to ensure bodily autonomy, prevent gender-based violence, and protect access to healthcare, including abortions.
Now is the time for women's funds to work with state and local lawmakers on policies that prioritize gender and racial equity through all these areas. Reproductive justice offers a helpful framework we can use to move forward in this moment: connecting abortion access, birth justice, climate and economic justice, and many forms of bodily autonomy, including freedom from state violence.
I remain inspired by your work. For instance, Women's Fund of Rhode Island is hosting a giving circle to support reproductive health and justice in the state. Women's Foundation for the State of Arizona advocated for expanding postpartum Medicaid coverage from 60 days to a year to improve maternal health outcomes. Women's Foundation California played a critical role in the campaign to pass the College Right to Access Act, which will require all public California universities to provide medication abortion. These are a few among so many fighting for change.
Let's work harder than ever before to help our communities create policies that support women, girls, and nonbinary folks. Let us build a future where everyone can thrive. In Solidarity,
Mirenda Meghelli
Women’s Funding Network
Senior Manager of Policy and Programs
Last week, The Village Giving Circle at Texas Women’s Foundation delivered $186,000 in grants to 16 nonprofit organizations whose missions support the African American community in North Texas. Organized in 2017, the mission of The Village Giving Circle is to honor, sustain and expand the legacy of African American women’s philanthropy by funding organizations and initiatives that positively impact
the African American community in North Texas.
The Unity Summit, one of the largest convening in philanthropy, will return as a *hybrid virtual AND in-person conference* October 16th-19th, 2023 in Los Angeles. Bringing together, more than 1,000 diverse participants this event will focus on advancing equity with an intersectional lens, and community at the center of discussions.
8 women who made history this midterm election: ‘We’re still capable of change and progress’. — CNBC
Ukrainian women on the front line struggle to find uniforms that fit. One couple aims to fix that. - CNN
Women's work is never done: a trio of art books showcasing women. — NPR
Iranian Feminism and “All These Different Kinds of Veils” - The New Yorker
Last week, Georgia's 97th District elected Ruwa Romman to the state legislature, making her the first Muslim woman in Georgia's state House of Representatives.
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