“The illiterate of the 21st century will not be those who cannot read and write, but those who cannot learn, unlearn, and relearn.” -Alvin Toffler

Friday, July 3, 2020

New funding opportunities and resources. July 2020

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july 3

Funding Alert: July 3, 2020 Issue

We know how important it is to have access to capital to support mission critical operations.
The Funding Alert, a free, bi-weekly resource produced by Serve DC, highlights grant opportunities and resources for community-based, faith-based, 501 (c) (3) nonprofits, and District government agencies. In response to the District’s current public health emergency, the Funding Alert also includes coronavirus (COVID-19) related funding opportunities!

Follow Serve DC on social media and sign up to ensure you receive your issue of the bi-weekly funding alert.

_____________________________________

Access the full funding alert at the link below:
Serve DC Funding Alert: July 3rd Update

New funding opportunities and resources in this issue:

COVID-19 Grant Funds

Wherewithal Recovery Grants
·       Deadline: 7/10/2020
·       Available Funds: $1,000 per award 

Relief, Recovery and Resilience Fund
·       Deadline: Rolling
·       Available Funds: up to $15,000 per award 

Supporting our Community: Lyft's COVID-19 Response
·       Deadline: Rolling
·       Available Funds: varies 

Arts and Culture Leaders of Color Emergency Fund
·       Deadline: Rolling
·       Available Funds: $200 micro grants 

Inclusive Growth and Recovery Challenge
·       Deadline: 7/17/2020
·       Available Funds: Awards up to $10,000 to $10M; potentially additional opportunities

"Hoy Invita Simón” Small Grant Food Program
·       Deadline: 7/3/2020
·       Available Funds: $20,000 

Funding Opportunities

CHEJ Small Grants Program
·       Deadline: 7/17/2020
·       Available Funds: Range from $1,000 to $20,000 per size of organization/budget

Human Trafficking Youth Prevention Education (HTYPE) Demonstration Grants
·       Deadline: 7/31/2020
·       Available Funds: $3.5M; $600,000 award ceiling

Faith In/And Democracy
·       Deadline: 7/7/2020
·       Available Funds: Up to $50,000

Honor the Earth Grantmaking Program
·       Deadline: 7/20/2020
·       Available Funds: Range from $1,000 to $5,000

Pillars Board of Trustees
·       Deadline: 8/1/2020
·       Available Funds: Varies

Assessment Tools for Biotechnology Products
·       Deadline: 7/15/2020
·       Available Funds: $4.4M total award monies available

Research Grants
·       Deadline: 8/23/2020
·       Available Funds: $5,000 per award

Mobilize Power Fund
·       Deadline: 7/7/2020
·       Available Funds: $10,000

Increasing Public Awareness and Provider Education About Primary Immunodeficiency Disease
·       Deadline: 7/10/2020
·       Available Funds: $5.6M

Internationalizing Teacher Preparation
·       Deadline: 7/17/2020
·       Available Funds: In addition to capacity building support, $350,000

Workforce Opportunity for Rural Communities (WORC)
·       Deadline: 7/29/2020
·       Available Funds: Range from $150,000 to $1.5M

Capacity Building Resources

The Emergency Action for Resident and Partner Stability Program

Web series: Google Tools to Empower Your Nonprofit Organization - Part 1
July 27, 2020 12-1PM

misuse of antibiotics on animals. “Better Burgers: Why It’s High Time the U.S. Beef Industry Kicked Its Antibiotics Habit”


SECOND OPINION:

Overuse on cattle feedlots is a key factor in antibiotic resistance, report says

By Susan Perry | 06/29/2020
In 2018, nearly as many antibiotics of medical importance were sold for use in cattle as for human use.

REUTERS/Ross Courtney

In 2018, nearly as many antibiotics of medical importance were sold for use in cattle as for human use.

Cattle producers purchased 42 percent of all medically important antibiotics sold for livestock use in the United States in 2018 — about the same amount sold for chicken and pork production combined, according to a scathing report published this month by the Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC).

In fact, in 2018, nearly as many antibiotics of medical importance were sold for use in cattle (5.6 million pounds) as for human use (7.5 million pounds).

Most of those antibiotics wouldn’t be necessary if the U.S. beef industry made changes in how they raise cattle and produce meat. Cattle producers in the U.S. use antibiotics three to six times more intensively than do their counterparts in the European Union, the report points out. That’s because the drugs are fed routinely to cattle on U.S. feedlots — even when no animals are sick.

The European Union, which is the third-largest beef producer globally, not only discourages the routine feeding of antibiotics to cattle, it has announced that it will no longer allow the practice starting in 2022.

And with good reason. The overuse and misuse of antibiotics in cattle and other livestock has been a key contributor to the growing crisis of antibiotic resistance, which, as the NRDC report stresses, is “one of the gravest threats” to human health.

Right now, of course, the world is focused on a deadly viral infection — COVID-19 — for which, as yet, there is no vaccine or curative medicines.  But antibiotic-resistant bacterial infections — ones that are extremely difficult or impossible to treat with any type of drug — have been with us longer and have reached epidemic proportions as well.

Each year, 2.8 million Americans develop an antibiotic-resistant bacterial infection. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) estimates that those infections lead to about 35,000 deaths annually, although others have estimated the number to be much higher — more than 162,000 deaths annually.

‘A dangerous crutch’

In the U.S., the beef industry is dominated by giant feedlots in a handful of states (Texas, Colorado, Nebraska, Iowa and Kansas), and it’s on those feedlots where antibiotics are most likely to be misused, the NRDC report says. Practices such as crowding the cattle together and feeding them a diet high in grains, to which the animals’ ruminant stomachs are not well adapted, leave the cattle susceptible to liver abscesses and bovine respiratory disease (also known as “shipping fever”).

Cattle producers and their veterinarians say the routine use of antibiotics is needed to keep the animals from getting these and other illnesses. But as the NRDC report describes in detail, most of the antibiotics could be avoided if changes were made to the cattle’s living conditions in the feedlots.

“Overusing precious antibiotics is a dangerous crutch for feedlots that want to put off or ignore the need for real changes in how cattle are being produced,” writes Dr. David Wallinga, the report’s author and a senior health adviser with NRDC, in a blog posting that accompanies the report.

“If anything, U.S. feedlots today are experiencing more cattle illnesses and deaths due to liver abscesses and shipping fever, not less, according to industry vets and infrequent [U.S. Department of Agriculture] surveys,” he adds. “The paradox is that feedlot cattle seem to be getting sicker at the same time that feeding them antibiotics routinely is touted as an essential tool for preventing disease.”

Change is possible

The beef industry is not transparent about its antibiotic use, for it doesn’t have to give a direct accounting to government regulators of the drugs it puts in its feed, the report says. And the industry apparently doesn’t feel any urgency to do so.

That could change, says Wallinga, if one or more of the four major meatpacking companies (Cargill, Tyson Foods, JBS and National Beef) were to put policies in place to end routine antibiotic use on feedlots.

“The chicken industry proved that changes in meat supply chains can happen quickly,” he writes. “By the end of 2018, more than 90 percent of chicken sold in the United States was being produced without the routine use of medically important antibiotics — nearly double the amount from just a few years before. Some U.S. producers including Perdue, Foster Farms, and Tyson, as well as fast food giants like McDonald’s, Subway, and KFC, provided critical leadership in making that change happen.”

Chickens now account for only 4 percent of all medically important drugs sold for use in U.S. livestock, he adds.

It’s time — long past time — for cattle producers to take similar steps.

“Sometime in the future, many or even most of us will suffer a superbug infection that may turn life-threatening. When that happens, will antibiotics be left that work?” asks Wallinga.

“On our current course, that is every much in questions,” he says. “But if the nation’s beef companies and their suppliers change their practices, that could make a tremendous difference and help change the course of this approaching storm.”

FMI: You can read the full report, “Better Burgers: Why It’s High Time the U.S. Beef Industry Kicked Its Antibiotics Habit” on the NRDC website.

Related Tags:antibiotic-resistant bacteriaantibioticsinfectiousmeat consumption

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

Susan Perry
Susan Perry writes Second Opinion for MinnPost, covering consumer health. She has written several health-related books, and her articles have appeared in a wide variety of publications.
COMMENTS (1)

SUBMITTED BY BRUCE POMERANTZ ON 06/29/2020 - 09:12 PM.

The Natural Resources Defense Council study confirms previousl studies of misuse of antibiotics on animals. However, Ms. Perry’s description of 5.6 million pounds of antibiotics for animal use as “nearly equal” to 7.5 million pounds for human use is inaccurate because 5.6 is 75% of 7.5. A difference of 25% does not equate to “nearly equal” unless you subtract the amount of unneeded use of antibiotics on humans.

National Latino Farmers & Ranchers Trade Association 
1029 Vermont Avenue, NW, Suite 601
Washington, DC 20005
Office: (202) 628-8833
Fax No.: (202) 393-1816
Twitter: @NLFRTA
Website: www.NLFRTA.org 


Jamaica Diaspora Education Task Force hosts its first-ever Virtual Advancement in Education Summit





FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

 The Jamaica Diaspora Education Task Force hosts its first-ever
Virtual Advancement in Education Summit

July 3, 2020 - The Jamaica Diaspora Education Task Force (JDETF) will host its Virtual Advancement in Education Summit on July 7-9, 2020.  The annual flagship event is JDETF's fifth summit and its first virtual staging since its inception in 2014.

“The summit is highlighting significant areas of education as we embark on fulfilling the objectives of Jamaica’s 2030 vision,” Dr. Dyce JDETF Chairman stated while adding that now in its 5th year,  “it is a vital part of the educational norm.” 

Workshops will be held: 12 pm – 5 pm Jamaican time or 1 pm – 6 pm EST. 
The workshops and seminars will be closed sessions, for Summit Registrants, on the ZOOM platform.  All attendees will receive a Certificate of Completion.
The series of free seminars and workshops are designed for Jamaican educators with an array of dynamic topics espousing new approaches for in-classroom environments.

Topics include:
Tricks and Tools of Online/ Remote Learning,
Organizational Inclusivity,
  Strategies for the Future Ready Educator
Agricultural Sustainability and Education
Teaching Critical Thinking in the Classroom
Robotics
Teaching Teachers to Teach STEM
Teaching Students with Learning Disabilities
Behavioral Health
Middle Management/ Senior Teacher Training 
Early Childhood Education

The summit offers opportunities to support the continuous development of lifelong learning for educators who will be open to implementing new technologies, collaborating to promote effective teaching/learning techniques, and also manage their learning.

The JDETF is part of the Jamaica Diaspora Taskforce Action Network (JDTAN) which is led by Chairman Leo Gilling.  In speaking of the Summit, Mr. Gilling expressed excitement. "It's wonderful that Dr. Dyce and his team can continue to provide this professional development resource for educators despite COVID-19; The summit was originally planned for California.  I'm also happy to see that to date, approximately 600 teachers have registered to take advantage of this virtual opportunity.” 

For additional information and to register visit www.jdtan.org.

For more information, contact:

Latoya Jones
PR & Communications Manager




Death of Latina Army Private Must Lead to Important Changes. July 2020

LULAC


LULAC

LULAC: Our Deepest Condolences To Vanessa Guillen’s Family

Nation’s Oldest and Largest Latino Civil Rights Organization Says Death of Latina Army Private Must Lead to Important Changes

Washington, DC - Domingo Garcia, National President of the League of United Latin American Citizens (LULAC) today issued the following confirmation of the death of Army Private Vanessa Guillen:
“This is a sad and painful time for Vanessa’s family and the community and we grieve with them in the loss of this beloved daughter, sister and brave soldier. On behalf of LULAC, I want to tell Gloria, Vanessa’s mother and Mayra, her sister, that we will not rest until a full investigation is conducted by the military and changes are made so that this never happens to another soldier. For now, we pause and stand with the Guillen family in their time of sorrow and we will be with them to lay Vanessa to rest.
In a few days, LULAC is meeting with the Secretary of the Army in Washington and we are demanding that a separate, independent agency outside of the military protocol be established to investigate reports of rapes, assaults and sexual harassment some of our soldiers are being subjected to and all too often, their claims are ignored. We also know, as we hear from soldiers impacted, that there is a credible fear of reporting due to retaliation and that the majority of cases are not reported. Further, we want women to head these investigations to ensure that the message is loud and clear to every female soldier: WE WILL HEAR YOU AND WE WILL TAKE ACTION.
Also, LULAC has its website www.LULAC.org/VanessaGuillen up and running so any soldier can feel free to contact us and submit their information which we will protect and send directly to the appropriate law enforcement authority. Finally, we are urging the public to support the Guillen family during this difficult time by donating directly on the Go Fund Me page setup by Mayra: click here .
# # #
About LULAC
The League of United Latin American Citizens (LULAC) is the nation’s largest and oldest civil rights volunteer-based organization that empowers Hispanic Americans and builds strong Latino communities. Headquartered in Washington, DC, with 1,000 councils around the United States and Puerto Rico, LULAC’s programs, services and advocacy address the most important issues for Latinos, meeting critical needs of today and the future. For more information, visit www.LULAC.org.

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