Facebook Distributes $200,000 to East Palo Alto and Menlo Park Nonprofits, Mercury News
By Bonnie Eslinger
Facebook kicked off the new year by showering 42 nonprofits in Menlo Park and East Palo Alto with a total of $200,000 in grants, according to company officials.
The financial largess is part of a deal the social media company struck with the city of Menlo Park last year in exchange for permission to almost double the number of employees on its main campus at the intersection of Bayfront Expressway and Willow Road.
Although Facebook originally promised to create a $500,000 foundation, Susan Gonzales, the company's head of community engagement, said Monday that it kicked in an extra $100,000 for a total community donation of $600,000.
"We were pleased by the response," Gonzales said, adding that more than 100 community groups applied for the funding. "We decided in order to address a lot of the requests we'd add $100,000 to help celebrate the launch of the fund."
Menlo Park Council Member Kirstin Keith, who is on the Facebook Local Community Fund board and participated in the grant allocation discussions along with East Palo Alto Council Member Laura Martinez and several Facebook employees, said it was "fantastic" to be able to give out the money.
"These are really needy organizations who will helpfully change people's lives," Keith said.
The grants, which range from $2,500 to $5,000, will help support everything from youth programs to food distribution to small business aid to school clothes for homeless kids. Organizations Advertisement were notified about the grants last week, Gonzales said.
Felicia Matthews of A Better Way Foundation in East Palo Alto said the $5,000 grant will make a world of difference for the three-year-old nonprofit and the at-risk kids it serves. The organization hopes to use the money to create an after-school technology program, she said.
"This gives us an opportunity to see what we can do," Matthews said.
Last month, Facebook's 28-year-old founder Mark Zuckerberg announced he was donating $500 million in stock to the Silicon Valley Community Foundation to support health and education causes.
Keith said Menlo Park is fortunate to have Facebook. "I look around and I don't see other corporations doing this," she said. "It's pretty amazing."
The next round of funding will be distributed in June, according to Gonzales. Interested nonprofits are asked to email info@venturesfoundation.org for additional information about the Facebook Local Community Fund and the grant program.
Email Bonnie Eslinger at beslinger@dailynewsgroup.com; follow her at twitter.com/bonnieeslinger.
Facebook's new foundation gave a total of $200,000 to 42 nonprofits in Menlo Park and East Palo Alto:
- A Better Way
- Baby Basics
- Bayshore Christian Ministries
- Belle Haven Community Foundation
- Boys & Girls Clubs of the Peninsula
- College Spring
- Community Legal Services in East Palo Alto
- Community Overcoming Relationship Abuse
- East Palo Alto YMCA
- Ecumenical Hunger Program
- East Palo Alto Tennis & Tutoring
- East Palo Alto Kids Foundation
- Eternal Life Church
- Fit Kids Foundation
- Foundation for a College Education
- Free at Last
- Georges's A-Games
- Girls to Women
- HIP Housing
- Job Train
- KARA
- Kiwanis Club Foundation
- Latino Community Foundation
- Mouse Squad
- My New Red Shoes
- New Creation Home Ministries
- Nuestra Casa
- Peninsula Conflict Resolution Center
- Peninsula Family Service
- Peninsula Volunteers
- Rebuilding Together
- Renaissance Entrepreneurship Center
- Riekes Center for Human Enhancement
- Roadrunners
- Rosalie Rendu
- Rosener House Adult Day Care
- Saint Francis Conference of St Vincent de Paul
- Sojourn to the Past
- St. Francis/Khan Academy Youth Club
- Star Vista
- Teen Talk Sexuality Education
- Youth Community Service
Check out the article on MercuryNews.com.