2022 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.
Unbottle and Protect Chaffee County Water:
Reclaiming Public Water
Longtime ally in Story of Stuff’s Troubled Waters coalition that is campaigning to reclaim public water sources from corporate water bottlers, and a previous Grassroots Grantee. Unbottle and Protect is currently engaged in active campaigning around a Chaffee County water site, and the grant is to offset some of the associated financial costs.

One Winter Garden:
Fighting Chemical Recycling
Fighting the PureCycle plastic chemical recycling feedstock factory from being set up in their community, against the will of the community.
One Winter Garden supports a concept of unity and participation whereby individuals from within East Winter Garden and other areas of Winter Garden and West Orange come together to advocate for our historic community.

Eat Your Yard Jax:
Opening School Gardens
Sogorea Te’ Land Trust:
Land Acknowledgement
Since The Story of Stuff was founded in and is headquartered in Berkeley, this grant to the Sogorea Te Land Trust acknowledges our office sits on unceded Ohlone territory of Huchiun. This indigenous, women-led organization recently reclaimed five acres of land owned by the City of Oakland. Under their Indigenous Stewardship, the land will immediately be used for natural resource restoration, cultural practices, and public education.

East Yards for Environmental Justice:
Ecology Center:
Carrizo Comecrudo Tribal Nation:
The Carrizo Comecrudo live by the mission of preserving, maintaining, protecting, and offering services that will better tribal communities to overcome the erasure of the Original People of Texas. They promote wellness and health by providing services in times of crisis, fighting the fossil fuel industry and petrochemical buildout in ancestral lands.

Plastic Free Delaware:
In order to improve the health and welfare of humans, animals, communities and the environment, Plastic Free Delaware aims to eliminate the scourge of plastic pollution in Delaware through education & outreach, awareness building events, and policy initiatives with a current focus on single-use plastics and encouraging the principles of a zero waste culture.

we.grow.eco:
seed funding
we.grow.eco is a coalition which supports and facilitates unifying actions that promote healthy relationships between humans and the environment through voluntary action, ecocentrism, creativity, and more. The organization was born after its cofounders traveled across the country, organizing events about environmental grassroots organizing, engagement and clean up community events. we.grow.eco offers a range of hands-on, experiential programs aimed at middle school students that blend arts and environment. Their goal is not only to clean up the environment, but to catalyze a shift in habits underpinned by a shift in consciousness, which can be described as one from “anthropocentric” (human-centered) to “ecocentric” (environment-centered).

Individuals Making Positive Advancements in their Communities Together, Inc.:
Newburg Rise and Ride
Cooperation Jackson:
reclaiming public water
Cooperation Jackson is building a solidarity economy in Jackson, Mississippi, anchored by a network of cooperatives and worker-owned, democratically self-managed enterprises. The organization is deeply involved in the current drinking water crisis in Jackson, deploying methods of water catchment and filtration in community centers and homes, as well as organizing for public water reform.

Re:Wild your Campus:
Ground Up Advocacy Bootcamp
Re:wild Your Campus has a goal of seeing every university in the United States eliminate synthetic pesticides and fertilizers by 2030, and will continue to empower students until every college campus in the country is ecologically safe. In response to the growing demand from both students and community members to dive deeper into the fundamentals of organizing tactics and sustainable land management, Re:wild Your Campus designed the Ground Up Advocacy Bootcamp, which brings their cutting edge training to a broad audience of young, visionary leaders on college campuses.

Rio Grande International Study Center:
Ethylene Oxide Informational Campaign
Society of Native Nations:
Pipelines to Plastic Project
Michigan Citizens for Water Conservation:
legal funding
Long term partner in our Nestle’s Troubled Waters campaign, funds are to help pay down the remaining balance of a legal debt from an aggressive campaign against Nestle’s privatization efforts in the Great Lakes region so they can transition their focus back to advocacy, education, and base building.

Great Plains Restoration Council:
ecological restoration and education
Great Plains Restoration Council (GPRC) is an ecological health organization that helps people take care of their own health through restoring and protecting native ecosystems, particularly damaged prairies, plains, and waters. GPRC is a founder of the “Ecological Health” movement, teaches Ecological Health practices and principles around the country, and uses literary arts and other media to broaden awareness and community engagement. Projects include research and healing-centric ecological restoration and nature-oriented programming for youth who are formerly incarcerated or at risk of being incarcerated.

Sure We Can:
site funding
Sure We Can is the only non-profit, unhoused-friendly container redemption center in New York. The space serves more than 400 canners, provides educational activities for schools and universities, and promotes sustainability, recycling, and composting. The canners—people who collect used cans and bottles to redeem a 5 or 10 cent deposit—who call Sure We Can home remove tens of millions of plastic, aluminum and glass containers all over New York City every year and are integral members of the community cooperative.
The current space rented by Sure We Can is an ideal 12,000 sq ft lot in Brooklyn, in the heart of a community of canners. Despite this, the organization has been on the verge of eviction in the past, and its members face gentrification and displacement from the area. In response, Sure We Can is raising funds to permanently buy the lot after securing institutional grants to cover part of the purchase.

Plantation Park Heights Urban Farm:
project access
Plantation Park Heights Urban Farm (PPHUF) is a Black-led and -serving, intergenerational organization which aims to create a safe and healthy environment for every elementary school child and their immediate family in Park Heights. PPHUF aims to build AgriHoodBaltimore (a thriving marketplace of community farming and urban agriculture training), grow three hundred thousand pounds of food, improve their supply chain, decentralize their cold storage, expand processing, and ensure sustainable food security for their community of children and older adults in Park Heights.

Claim Our Space Now:
community support
Claim Our Space Now is Black-led and serves Afro-diasporic immigrant communities, low-income communities, and the homeless. The initiative Claim Our Food Now seeks to provide consistent community care in the form of food security for Caribbean immigrant families living in New York City, some of whom are facing the threat of deportation. The project will donate culturally specific and nutritious foods to support the community’s immediate needs while creating sustainable community programs to educate and motivate around civic engagement.

GrowHouse NYC:
when we create project
GrowHouse Community Design and Development Group empowers Black, Indigenous, and Latinx people and their allies to become developers of their neighborhoods through collective ownership of key assets such as real estate, land, essential businesses, and cultural institutions. A current goal is to execute “When We Create,” a curriculum focused on Equity Centered Community Design. A key part of this learning will include community ownership of long-vacant lots and their transformation into community spaces for gathering, food growing, and other activities.
“When We Create” will educate, train, and challenge Latinx, Black, and Indigenous youth to become leaders in designing healthy and racially equitable communities by guiding young leaders through a project-based, design-focused curriculum in which they develop 21st century skills and use them to enact change in their communities.

East New York 4 Gardens:
East Brooklyn Pro-Environment Campaign
East New York 4 Gardens is a Black-led and serving organization, with a mission to build a better environment by educating the community through environmental justice demonstrations and instructions. This includes growing herbs, composting, teaching earth and environmental studies, water irrigation system, recycling education with the Crush it Crusade (recycling education project), a project of Can’d Aid (which distributes canned water in times of disaster).

Amazon Labor Union:
This is a donation to the newly formed Amazon Labor Union to support their current historic organizing work. The union founder, Chris Smalls, is a former guest on Story of Stuff-produced series The Shift.
The Amazon Labor Union (ALU) is Black-led, with a multiracial membership of mostly BIPOC, low-income workers. ALU is an independent, worker-led, democratic labor union founded by Amazon workers in Staten Island, New York. The union was formed in April 2021 by a group of concerned workers led by ALU President Chris Smalls.
ALU has grown and won a historic victory in their first election at Amazon site JFK8, with the support of over 2,500 workers. With the signed support of thousands more workers, ALU successfully filed for an election at a second site, LDJ5, and recruited over 100 people into an Organizing Committee—making historic inroads into unionizing the Amazon workforce.

Valley Improvement Project:
fighting incineration
Valley Improvement Project (VIP) was founded in 2012 in Modesto in Stanislaus County in response to local incineration and waste issues in their community, and the negative health impact of the remaining incinerators in the state of California. The funding is to support their campaign to shut down the Stanislaus County Incinerator, one of the remaining two in California. Story of Stuff is currently in post- production of the documentary Burning Injustice featuring VIP’s multigenerational work.






