Eastern Bank Foundation Partners With Community Organizations To Increase Last Mile Vaccination Outreach and Access in Gateway Cities of Massachusetts and New Hampshire
Recently announced $2 million in COVID-19 grants support culturally-inclusive outreach and access to vaccines
BOSTON, MA, July 28, 2021 – Eastern
Bank Foundation,
the philanthropic arm of
Boston-based Eastern Bank, recently announced an
additional $2 million in COVID-19 support to increase last mile vaccination outreach
and access. Vaccination rates, while progressing, also highlight the inequities
experienced in communities of color within Gateway Cities of
Massachusetts and New Hampshire.
The Eastern
Bank Foundation is collaborating with community health centers, foundations,
community organizations and other companies to address the disparities and
reach populations living in cities with the highest incidence rate of COVID-19
cases to get them access to the vaccine. Philanthropic support is provided in
three areas:
1. Vaccine
access—investing in the work of community health centers, mobile
vaccination vans and buses, and pop-up vaccination sites;
2. Culturally-inclusive
outreach—investing in grassroots community partners with trusting
relationships to the community members they serve, door-to-door outreach, and
multilingual vaccination resources; and
3. Advocacy—partnering with community organizations to advocate for equity in vaccine access for communities of color.
In
Massachusetts, grant recipients include:
·
Asian
American Civic Association
·
Asian
Community Development Corporation
·
Black
Boston COVID-19 Coalition (BBCC)
·
Community Health Center of Cape Cod
·
East
Boston Neighborhood Health Center
·
Essex
County Community Foundation
· Inquilinos Boricuas en Acción
(IBA) Boston
·
Lawyers
for Civil Rights and
·
Massachusetts
Immigrant & Refugee Advocacy Coalition
In New Hampshire, grant recipients include:
·
Building
Community in New Hampshire and
·
International
Institute of New England in Manchester
“It is clear that COVID-19 is still having its greatest impact in our gateway cities. We are so very thankful to our community health centers, trusted community-based organizations, and public-private partnerships for their focus on last mile vaccination outreach, and their commitment to ensuring no one is left behind,” said Nancy Huntington Stager, President and CEO of the Eastern Bank Foundation. “These next several months are critical to getting as many people as possible vaccinated, and the timing of this grant funding is intended to boost efforts that overcome barriers to vaccination.”
Vanessa Calderón-Rosado, Ph.D. and Chief Executive Officer of Inquilinos Boricuas en Acción (IBA) Boston, said, “Thanks to the support of the Eastern Bank Foundation we have expanded our efforts to bring expert information to our community about the importance of the COVID-19 vaccine, and to coordinate vaccine appointments and rides to them. It is critical that we keep these vaccination efforts up, as new coronavirus variants take hold in our country, state and community. As we experienced the disproportionate negative impact of the pandemic in low-income communities of color, we are committed to prevent this from happening again.”
Beth Francis, President and CEO of Essex County Community Foundation, said, “With Eastern Bank Foundation’s grant, we are able to expand our efforts to vaccine equity for populations who have been hardest hit by the pandemic. We’re committed to getting underserved communities vaccinated and offering the crucial support needed at this time, and hiring local residents and working with our community health centers and experienced marketing and media partners like Archipelago Strategies Group and El Mundo to get this done in the most meaningful and trusting way possible.”
Angie Liou, Executive Director of Asian Community Development Corporation (ACDC), said, “Asian Community Development Corporation is grateful for Eastern Bank Foundation’s commitment to vaccine equity. The Foundation’s generous grant supports our collaborative efforts with community partners in Chinatown, Dorchester, Lowell, Malden and Quincy to serve immigrant communities with the culturally competent services and resources that they need to get vaccinated and stay safe.”
Rick Minard, Executive Director of Building Community in New Hampshire (BCNH), said, “Most members of the refugee communities that BCNH serves have already been vaccinated. The Eastern Bank Foundation donation enables us to mobilize vaccinated community members to reach out to their hesitant neighbors, probably one at a time. BCNH works primarily with Bhutanese, Congolese and Rohingya refugees in Concord, Manchester and Nashua. This project will allow us to include in that community other immigrants and people of color. We expect the impact to be profoundly beneficial.”
In 2020, the Eastern Bank Foundation supported COVID-19 efforts with donations to 665 community-based organizations totaling more than $13 million, in such areas as aid to immigrants, the elderly, victims of domestic violence, mental health services and community health centers, food banks and pantries, multi-service providers and community foundations, early childhood development providers, safe and affordable housing providers, and organizations assisting businesses of color. The $2 million in COVID-19 relief for last mile vaccination efforts brings the Foundation’s total COVID-19 support to $15 million.
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