After the Storm. St. Croix Foundation for Community Development: Rebuilding Communities and Nurturing Resiliency

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After the Storm St. Croix Foundation for Community Development: Rebuilding Communities and Nurturing Resiliency 1

A message from our Board of Directors In the fall of 2017, the US Virgin Islands, Puerto Rico, and the Florida Keys were devastated by an unprecedented series of natural disasters. The catastrophic force of two back-to-back Category 5 Super-Storms in ten days not only raises awareness of the implications of a potential new normal in weather patterns, but more directly on the sustainability of America s isolated, underserved Caribbean Communities. With the impact of Hurricane Irma on St. Thomas and St. John and Hurricane Maria on Puerto Rico taking center stage, the devastation wrought by Maria s Cat 5 winds on St. Croix, the poorest island in the US Caribbean, has been largely overlooked! With the majority of St. Croix still without electricity, 7 of 13 public schools condemned, and the island s only community hospital scheduled to be decommissioned in weeks, building philanthropic capacity to support a community in crisis is an imperative. As is often the case in the aftermath of natural disasters, Hurricanes Irma and Maria exacerbated existing social and economic disparities. The nonprofit sector which strives to meet the needs of those most disenfranchised in our community is needed now more than ever, however nonprofit organizations are operating under the constraints of weakened capacity due to the storms. For over 27 years, St. Croix Foundation for Community Development (a place-based 501(c)3), has served as an operating foundation catalyzing strategic philanthropic investments within the U.S. Virgin Islands. By advancing a model of holistic community development as the pathway to economic prosperity, self-sufficiency and sustainability, the Foundation is best positioned to support a targeted hurricane relief, recovery, and restoration strategy for St. Croix and the Territory. Established in 1990 in the wake of Hurricane Hugo, (a Category 4 hurricane that decimated the island of St. Croix in 1989), St. Croix Foundation has been a conduit of over $37 million private and public sector dollars invested into the U.S. Virgin Islands. As a community-centric nonprofit serving disproportionately poor, under-served American residents, St. Croix Foundation is leading our community through recovery, grounded by our commitment to social equity and resiliency. We fundamentally believe that despite the dire circumstances created by the storm, our Territory has been afforded an opportunity to build a national model of self-sufficient and sustainable community (re)development. Through our Caribbean Assistance and Relief Effort (CARE) Fund, St. Croix Foundation is seeking to cultivate national philanthropic partnerships to support our comprehensive hurricane recovery and resiliency strategy. Today, we are leaning on our global philanthropic community to support us as we support our island. Warm regards, Willard John, Chairman Deanna James, Executive Director

Our Community Our Rationale Hurricane Maria s destructive path Our Mission St. Croix Foundation s mission is to encourage greater philanthropic activity, to marshal resources, and to act as a catalyst to benefit the people of St. Croix and the Virgin Islands. Our Vision The St. Croix Foundation will encourage greater philanthropic activity through increasing the public s awareness of current and emerging needs in our community. This will be accomplished by periodically assessing our community s philanthropic needs and by focusing and prioritizing the use of the Foundation s resources to best meet those needs. The Foundation will publish reports on its activities to be distributed throughout the public, private, and nonprofit sectors. The St. Croix Foundation will marshal resources by providing an accessible vehicle for donors of all abilities to use and by presenting the Foundation, both locally and nationally, as a worthwhile recipient of monetary, in-kind, and volunteer support. The Board of Directors will provide stewardship of the highest caliber to the resources entrusted to its governance and actively seek an endowment to benefit the people of St. Croix. Professional staff will be employed to support the Board s efforts and to provide quality, cost-effective service to interested donors and their advisors. The St. Croix Foundation will act as a catalyst through exerting and promoting leadership and advocating for positive change. The Board will strengthen our community s capacity to act through providing exemplary grants to local nonprofit organizations. The Foundation will conduct all of its activities to the highest ethical standards and seek to maximize our community s scarce resources.

The CARE Fund St. Croix Foundation s Strategy for Community Restoration Immediate, Intermediate and Long-Term Programming Within days of Hurricanes Irma and Maria, St. Croix Foundation for Community Development (SCF) launched the CARE Fund to provide direct support to front-line relief efforts on St. Croix and throughout the US Virgin Islands. Through the CARE Fund, St. Croix Foundation seeks to raise $5,000,000 to do what we do best: support holistic community development while building equity and resilience. Funds raised will support immediate and long-term work in the following areas: IMMEDIATE 1. Coordination and Direct Support of Front-line Relief Efforts: The Foundation is facilitating a coordinated pipeline for the local distribution of relief aid thus ensuring that neighborhoods hardest hit and least accessible are served. We are also providing direct support for shipping, storage and on-the-ground distribution costs. As a result we have developed a comprehensive civiccentric network that can be leveraged for preparedness and response to future natural disasters. 2. Data Collection for Strategic Recovery: The Foundation is collecting critical data from residents through our Needs Assessment Survey, which connects individuals who have critical needs with organizations that assist in providing vital services and supplies. Data collected will also serve to inform the community-wide dialogue about next steps in the recovery process and identify strategies to more effectively respond to future natural disasters. INTERMEDIATE 3. Grantmaking and Direct Support for Local Nonprofit Organizations: The Foundation will be awarding strategic grants to organizations that offer programs and direct services targeting the most vulnerable and underserved affected populations. Through our Nonprofit Needs Assessment Survey, SCF identified organizations whose operations were impacted by the storm and needed immediate relief. The data collected enables the Foundation to steward philanthropic resources to help nonprofits resume providing these critical services. SCF is now also currently providing shared work space for displaced civic organizations, including the Boys and Girls Club of the VI, the Domestic Violence and Sexual Assault Council (DVSAC), the VI Department of Education s Data Assessment Team, and AARP. 4. Operational Capacity Building + Disaster Recovery Staff: Operating today in a community with significantly fewer philanthropic resources, St. Croix Foundation is also marshalling resources through our CARE Fund to support our operating costs as we build capacity for our Organization in order to ensure that the Foundation has the operational bandwidth to meet our community s expanded needs. LONG TERM 5. Architectural Audits: The Foundation is convening a team consisting of local licensed architects, engineers, contractors and building professionals to conduct a comprehensive audit of the structures that performed well during the storm and those that did not to provide residents with guidelines for rebuilding through a community education campaign. Final results of the study will also inform sound and sustainable building codes which will be presented to policymakers for possible amendments to existing building codes for the Territory and for other neighboring islands in the region with less stringent building standards. 6. Sustainable Rebuilding: Hurricane Maria s path disproportionately impacted neighborhoods with high rates of poverty. Several unique characteristics of St. Croix include a high rate of home ownership, even among low to moderate income families, and a very low rate of home insurance. After all public assistance for recovery has been exhausted, there will still be a substantial unmet need. The Foundation will develop a grant program to assist residents in the most critically impacted communities to help homeowners rebuild safely and sustainably. 7. Resiliency and Preparedness Planning (food security, public safety, communications): The Foundation is working with private and public sector partners to develop and institute comprehensive resiliency strategies for St. Croix and the Territory with program components that can be activated during times of emergency and disaster. One focal point of this work will be building sustainability and resiliency for farmers in addition to emergency preparedness strategies surrounding public safety, public health and communications. With support from philanthropic partners, St. Croix Foundation is driving a comprehensive hurricane recovery and resiliency strategy. As we bear the heavy burden of supporting our community through the challenging road ahead of us, our overarching goal is simple: to support impacted communities on St. Croix and in the Territory equitably and responsibly for now and for good. Visit us at www.stxfoundation.org today.

A Snapshot of St. Croix: The Case for Equity A compelling case for equitable distribution of financial resources across the USVI has never been effectively made for the island of St. Croix until now. The following summary demonstrates the economic and social disparities across the three islands: USVI DATA ST. CROIX ST. THOMAS ST. JOHN ECONOMIC BASE Predominantly manufacturing-based No longer includes oil production To a minimal extent, includes traditional agriculture and tourism 48K population Holds the capital (Charlotte Amalie) The base of tourism Center of commerce, trade, finance, and government for the Territory 51K population 2/3 national park Top eco-tourism location Boasts luxurious homes and villas, and hotels for highend vacationers 4.5K population CHILD POVERTY 41% live in poverty 29% live in poverty 24 % live in poverty LAND MASS 84 Square Miles 32 Square Miles 20 Square Miles UNEMPLOYMENT 18% 14.8% Data Not Available MEDIAN INCOME $39,207 $45,861 $54,068 Despite the inequities that have framed the Territory s economic story, the Foundation has supported St. Croix throughout cataclysmic disasters, from the devastation of Hurricane Hugo at the Foundation s inception, to the shuttering of the Territory s largest private employer, HOVENSA oil refinery, in 2012. This major closure resulted in $92M in lost sales, a reduction of more than 2,400 jobs, and the evaporation of St. Croix s the middle class. Additionally, for over 12 years, St. Croix Foundation has accelerated the argument for education reform in an environment where 82% of VI students are not reading at grade level and where the homicide rate is double that of Chicago, IL.

A Unique Philanthropic Format: Doing it Differently St. Croix Foundation is, unequivocally, not a conventional community foundation! Recognizing that problems as complex as our community s cannot be solved by traditional philanthropy, we have chosen to function as a hybrid, (operating) foundation, catalyzing change, advocating for accountable and equitable governance while also filling persistent funding gaps. Commonly regarded as America s Paradise and relished for its sun, sand and sea, the US Caribbean represents some of the most underserved and underrepresented American communities under the flag. With a population of 106,000 nonvoting American citizens, the USVI is one of five unincorporated colonies of the United States. Despite having the highest representation in the military, the Territory has been largely ignored by some federal programs and most national philanthropies- even those that have identified disadvantaged, underrepresented and underserved populations as a priority. WE DON T WORK IN SILOS. Working in partnership with federal, local, and grassroots agencies that are gathering resources, the Foundation serves to leverage and connect these resources and partners to ensure a holistic recovery approach that creates safety nets for the most vulnerable in our population. Using nationally recognized models that are tailored to our unique community s needs, we ensure effective best practices are implemented for all of our community development and hurricane recovery efforts. St. Croix Foundation s 4 Pillars of Place-based Community-centric Philanthropy SCF serves as an operating foundation, and it uniquely engages donor interests to catalyze systemic social change. Priority Areas include: Public Health, Education Reform &Community revitalization Strategic Grantmaking & Impact Investments Nonprofit Sustainability & Fiscal Sponsorship SCF has served as the fiscal sponsor for over 220 grassroots projects and nonprofits. Our commitment is to building a healthy and vibrant civic sector & by supporting high impact nonprofits. Social Justice & Equity Public Policy & Advocacy By assessing needs and prioritizing resources to best meet those needs, SCF is committed to social, economic and philanthropic equity as a pathway to social change. SCF strengthens the inextricable link between communities and government systems through our public policy and advocacy work. Although grantmaking represents only 20% of our operating format, St. Croix Foundation serves as a strategic grantmaker, limiting our Fund portfolio to ensure focused, high impact investments. Today, the bulk of our programmatic portfolio is framed around direct services and advocacy. This is a progressive, active approach to philanthropy, committed more to holistic community development than to endowment building, which we believe its a more appropriate fit for our isolated developing Community.

A Meaningful Partnership Thank you so much for considering a gift to St. Croix Foundation for Community Development s CARE (Caribbean Assistance and Relief Effort) Fund. Today, in the aftermath of Hurricanes Irma and Maria, St. Croix Foundation acknowledges the difficulties facing St. Croix and the surrounding U.S. territories as well as all affected islands in the Caribbean. Through our CARE Fund, the Foundation is directing resources to support a comprehensive effort around both immediate needs and strategic longterm recovery. Having established www.usvigives.org as a platform for donors to give, St. Croix Foundation recognizes that in the aftermath of Hurricanes Irma and Maria, our communities will require substantial resources for the long arduous path to recovery. We have developed a cohesive and strategic plan that will ensure the highest degree of focus and accountability for ourselves and our community partners. While we know our islands and the families that live here in the Caribbean are resilient, with support from philanthropic partners, St. Croix Foundation will ensure immediate and long-term relief from the catastrophic losses that so many have endured in just a few short weeks. We look forward to a collaborative recovery over the coming weeks as we make significant and measurable impact, together. Our mission is to encourage greater philanthropic activity, to marshal resources, and to act as a catalyst to benefit the people of the Virgin Islands.