Grants
Portfolio
Select organizations Eos helps support include:
Center for Women & Enterprise (CWE)
www.cweonline.org
CWE helps women start and grow their own businesses by offering education, training, technical assistance, certification and access to capital.
CWE clients represent a wide variety of racial, ethnic and socio-economic backgrounds. Fifty percent of CWE clients are low-income.
Children’s Healthwatch
http://www.childrenshealthwatch.org/
Children's Healthwatch is a research and public policy center led by a national network of pediatricians and public health researchers, dedicated to the health and nutrition of low-income children ages
The Food Project (TFP)
www.thefoodproject.org
The Food Project helps youth from diverse backgrounds build sustainable food systems and develop individual leadership skills. TFP teams grow nearly a quarter-million pounds of food without chemical pesticides each year, and donate half to local shelters.
Growing Places Garden Project (GPGP)
www.growingplaces.org
GPGP is dedicated to enhancing the food security of people with limited economic means by donating raised-bed vegetable gardens and helping recipients grow their own food.
Medical-Legal Partnership for Children (MLPC)
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The Medical-Legal Partnership | Boston allies health care providers with lawyers to improve the health and well-being of vulnerable populations. Combining the strengths of law and medicine, MLP | Boston ensures that patients’ basic needs – for housing, food, education, health care and personal and family stability – are met.
Spotlight on Poverty and Opportunity
www.spotlightonpoverty.com
The Spotlight on Poverty and Opportunity initiative engages national policymakers in a national dialogue on poverty and opportunity in the United States. Serving as the most current source for commentary, debate, and policy options, Spotlight works to keep poverty issues in the forefront of public attention.
Thrive in Five
Thrive in Five is a comprehensive school readiness framework that aims to ensure that Boston’s children are ready to succeed in school by age five.
