Non-profit

Groundswell Fund

Website:

groundswellfund.org/

Location:

San Francisco, CA

Tax ID:

47-4003615

Tax-Exempt Status:

501(c)(3)

Budget (2021):

Revenue: $24,343,616
Expenses: $18,544,605
Assets: $42,239,063

Formation:

2003

Type:

Abortion Rights Advocacy Organization

CEO:

Yamani Yansá Hernandez

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The Groundswell Fund is a “pass through” grantmaking organization that funds advocacy and direct-services groups working on reproductive issues—especially those that advocate for increased access to abortion for minority groups—and transgender interests.

History and Background

The Groundswell Fund focuses on increasing access to low-cost or government-funded abortions, contraception, midwifery, and sex education, especially for minority groups, as well as opposing gender-based violence, restrictions on immigration, and the use of certain chemicals. The fund seeks to build the capacity of community groups that share its goals and to build voter engagement in support of increased access to abortion, contraception, and transgender rights. 1 It pursues an “intersectional” funding model and primarily makes grants to groups that link abortion access to other issues such as environmentalism, civil rights, criminal justice reform, expanded immigration, and LGBT interests. 2 As a matter of policy, all Groundswell program staff are minority women or minority transgender women. 3

Groundswell Fund receives contributions from foundations and private donors and makes grants, usually under $50,000, to build the capacity of organizations working in its program areas. Since its founding, Groundswell Fund has distributed more than $32 million, by its own description “mostly to groups led by women of color, low-income women, and transgender people.” 4 Groundswell claims more than 300 private donors and 30 foundation donors, but it does not identify its funders. 5 Among its known funders are the Tides Foundation,6 Open Society Foundations,7 David and Lucile Packard Foundation,8 Compton Foundation,9 Overbrook Foundation,10 and Tara Health Foundation. 11

Programs and Grantmaking Activities

Increasing access to abortion is the centerpiece of the Groundswell Fund’s giving. The group has been a regular supporter of Access Reproductive Care-Southeast, an Atlanta organization that refers women in several Southern states to abortion providers, pays for abortions for poor women, and advocates against state-level abortion restrictions. 12 Similarly, it supports Access Women’s Health Justice in Oakland, California, which provides financial aid and transportation, housing, and food aid to women seeking abortion, and distributes the “morning-after” pill. 13

In 2019, the Groundswell Fund started the Liberation Project, stating that “in the era of Trump, the two groups that bear the greatest burden of white supremacy and misogyny in the U.S.—women of color and transgender people of color—have a vital leadership role to play in the larger resistance movement.” The goal of the Liberation Fund is to identify effective community organizers who are minority and transgender women and support their organizations. 14 In 2019, the Liberation Fund gave about $900,000 to 11 grantees, including the TransLatin@ Coalition; the Transgender, Gender Variant, and Intersex Justice Project; the Marsha P. Johnson Institute, which aids “Black trans women and gender nonconforming femmes”; and Native Movement, an Alaska-based organization advocating for “regenerative” land use practices. 15

Groundswell also created a Rapid Response Fund to make quick, relatively small grants “to grassroots organizations led by women of color, trans people of color, and low-income women and trans people in critical, unexpected, fights to protect and advance reproductive and social justice.” In 2018, the Rapid Response Fund awarded about $500,000 to 30 organizations, including $25,000 to the National Latina Institute for Reproductive Health to defend immigrant activists who are detained; $15,000 to the Black LBGTQIA Migrant Project, which “stand[s] at the intersection of criminal justice, immigration reform, and trans liberation”; and $10,000 to West Virginia Free to lobby against a proposed state constitutional amendment to prohibit Medicaid funding of abortions (the amendment passed). 16

Groundswell is part of the Rights, Faith, and Democracy Collaborative, a grantmaking fund that opposes allowing conscientious objectors to same-sex marriages to refrain from participating in same-sex wedding ceremonies. 17 The group filed an amicus brief with the Supreme Court in Masterpiece Cake Shop v. Colorado Civil Rights Commission, arguing that the Court should rule in favor of a state anti-discrimination commission’s finding that refusal to decorate a cake for a same-sex wedding because of the baker’s religious convictions was illegal discrimination. 18

Groundswell frequently makes small grants to support non-traditional birthing and midwifery practices. For example, it has supported Breath of My Heart Birthplace, a New Mexico midwifery practice that “serve[s] a diverse range of family configurations including lesbian, bisexual, queer, transgender, heterosexual and single-parent families.” 19 It awarded $25,000 to Ancient Song Doula Services in New York to lobby the state government to modify Medicaid rules to eliminate “complicated licensure requirements that will favor white-led doula organizations over grassroots doulas of color.” 20

In 2019, Groundswell funded survey and demographic research into the political attitudes and activism of minority women. The research found that minority women were a particularly energized demographic group after the 2016 Presidential election and that drafting minority women candidates would increase minority women turnout for all Democratic candidates. 21

People

Founder

Vanessa Daniel is the founder of Groundswell Fund and the previous executive director. Daniel has expressed extremist sentiments, decrying the United States’ supposed “rotten foundation of greed, slavery and genocide” while also claiming:

“…the hubris of white supremacist conquest and imperialism and its insatiable thirst for total dominance over nature, over people of color, over anyone who is not white, Christian, cisgender, male, and rich. It has been a termite-like force that throughout history has eviscerated all in its path: the buffalo, the ozone, the opportunity and dreams of people of color, along with the humanity of those white people who have allowed it to grind on unimpeded.” 22

Daniel has criticized non-profit organizations that adopt the organizing techniques of minority-led groups as putting “raisins in the potato salad,” arguing that “Aside from being ineffective in moving the needle on social change generally, this funding approach only reinforces white supremacy.” 23 Prior to founding the Groundswell Fund, Daniel was a program officer in environmental justice at the Tides Foundation and an organizer with the Service Employees International Union. 24

CEO

Yamani Yansá Hernandez is the Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of Groundwell Fund since August 2023 and was previously the interim executive director of the group from December 2022 through August 2023. 25 She previously served as a Partner with social justice coaching nonprofit Management Center from February 2022 to January 2023, the executive director for the National Network of Abortion Funds from 2015 to 2022, the executive director of the Illinois Caucus for Adolescent Health from 2011 to 2015, and worked in several positions for the Chicago School Board from 2006 through 2010. 26 27

Board Chair

Kimberly Inez McGuire is the chairwoman of the Groundswell Fund as of January 2024. McGuire also serves as the executive director of pro-abortion organization Unite for Reproductive & Gender Equity (URGE) and sits on the board for Sexuality Information and Education Council of the United States (SIECUS). 28 She previously served as the senior program director for women’s health firm ConwayStrategic from 2015-2018, the Director of Public Affairs for then-named National Latina Institute for Reproductive Health (now called the National Latina Institute for Reproductive Justice) from 2012-2015, and a Senior Associate in Programs and Policy for the Reproductive Health Technologies Project from 2009-2011. “Kimberly Inez McGuire.” LinkedIn, Accessed January 12, 2024. https://www.linkedin.com/in/kimberlyinezmcguire[/note]

Rocio Cordoba is the former chairman of the Groundswell Fund’s board. Cordoba serves as the executive director of Funders for Reproductive Equity, a group of philanthropies that work to increase access to abortion. Prior to this, Cordoba was a program officer with the Gender, Sexuality and Reproductive Justice Program at the Ford Foundation, where she managed the Youth Sexuality, Reproductive Health and Rights and Sexuality Research Initiatives. 29

References

  1. “What Is Reproductive Justice?” Groundswell Fund. Accessed January 12, 2020. https://groundswellfund.org/what-is-reproductive-justice/
  2. Wallace, Nicole. “Open Your Tent for Supporters Wide, Says Leader of Progressive Group.” Chronicle of Philanthropy. December 5, 2017. Accessed January 12, 2020. https://www.philanthropy.com/article/Open-Your-Tent-for-Supporters/241852
  3. “Meet Our Team.” Groundswell Fund. Accessed January 11, 2020. https://groundswellfund.org/meetourteam/
  4. Wallace, Nicole. “Open Your Tent for Supporters Wide, Says Leader of Progressive Group.” Chronicle of Philanthropy. December 5, 2017. Accessed January 12, 2020. https://www.philanthropy.com/article/Open-Your-Tent-for-Supporters/241852
  5. “Donate.” Groundswell Fund. Accessed January 7, 2020. https://groundswellfund.org/
  6. Tides Foundation, Return of a Private Foundation (Form 990PF), 2015, Part XV, Line 3;
  7. Slattery, Elisa. “How Reproductive Justice Serves as a Model for Progressive Organizing.” June 23, 2017. Accessed January 12, 2020. https://www.opensocietyfoundations.org/voices/how-reproductive-justice-serves-model-progressive-organizing
  8. “Groundswell Fund.” David and Lucile Packard Foundation. Accessed January 12, 2020. https://www.packard.org/grants-and-investments/grants-database/groundswell-fund-2/
  9. “Grantee News.” Compton Foundation. Accessed January 12, 2020. https://www.comptonfoundation.org/groundswell-fund-2012-celebrating-reproductive-justice/
  10. “Gender Rights 2019.” Overbrook Foundation. Accessed January 12, 2020. https://www.overbrook.org/gender-rights-2019
  11. “Groundswell Fund.” Tara Health Foundation. Accessed January 11, 2020. https://tarahealthfoundation.org/groundswell-fund/
  12. “About ARC.” Access Reproductive Care—Southeast. Accessed January 7, 2019. https://www.arc-southeast.org/about-arc
  13. “Types of Assistance.” Access Women’s Health Justice. Accessed January 7, 2020. https://abortionfunds.org/fund/access-womens-health-justice/
  14. “Liberation Fund.” Groundswell Fund. Accessed January 11, 2020. https://groundswellfund.org/liberation-fund/
  15. 2019 Liberation Fund Docket. Groundswell Fund. Accessed January 11, 2020. https://groundswellfund.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/11/GSF_LiberationFundDocket_Web.pdf
  16. 2018 Rapid Response Fund Docket. Groundswell Fund. Accessed January 11, 2020. https://groundswellfund.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/2018-RRF-Final-Docket.pdf
  17. “Rights, Faith, and Democracy Collaboration.” Accessed January 12, 2020. https://www.proteusfund.org/rfdc/
  18. Lambda Legal. “Lambda Legal to High Court: Religious License to Discriminate Harms LGBT People from Cradle to Grave.” Lambda Legal. October 30, 2017. Accessed February 01, 2018. https://www.lambdalegal.org/blog/co_20171030_masterpiece-cakeshop-amicus-filing.
  19. “Fertility and Preconception Care.” Breath of My Heart Birthplace. Accessed January 7, 2020. https://breathofmyheart.org/fertility-preconception-care/
  20. 2018 Rapid Response Fund Docket. Groundswell Fund. Accessed January 11, 2020. https://groundswellfund.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/2018-RRF-Final-Docket.pdf
  21. Chiu, Bonnie. “The Spike in Political Mobilization of Women of Color In the U.S. Will Define 2020.” Forbes. September 18, 2019. Accessed January 7, 2019. https://www.forbes.com/sites/bonniechiu/2019/09/18/the-spike-in-political-mobilization-of-women-of-color-in-the-us-will-define-2020/#38472449367f
  22. Daniel, Vanessa. “America Is Burning.” Medium. September 13, 2017. Accessed January 12, 2020. https://medium.com/groundswellfund/americaisburning-4f154e201a3a
  23. Daniel, Vanessa. “The gentrification of movements: 4 ways funders can stop putting raisins in the potato salad.” Responsive Philanthropy. September 24, 2018. https://www.ncrp.org/publication/responsive-philanthropy-september-2018/the-gentrification-of-movements-4-ways-funders-can-stop-putting-raisins-in-the-potato-salad
  24. “Vanessa Daniel.” Groundswell Fund. Accessed January 12, 2020. https://groundswellfund.org/vanessa-daniel/
  25. “Yamani Yansá Hernandez.” LinkedIn, Accessed January 12, 2024. https://www.linkedin.com/in/yamaniyansa
  26. “Yamani Yansá Hernandez.” LinkedIn, Accessed January 12, 2024. https://www.linkedin.com/in/yamaniyansa
  27. “Yamani Yansá Hernandez.” Groundswell Fund, Accessed January 12, 2024. https://groundswellfund.org/team/yamani-yansa-hernandez/
  28. “Kimberly Inez McGuire.” Groundswell Fund, Accessed January 12, 2024. https://groundswellfund.org/team/kimberly-inez-mcguire/
  29. “Funders for Reproductive Equity Announces Rocio Córdoba as Next Executive Director.” Funders for Reproductive Equity. November 18, 2019. Accessed January 7, 2020. https://www.wearefre.org/funders-for-reproductive-equity-announces-rocio-cordoba-as-next-executive-director

Directors, Employees & Supporters

  1. Esperanza Tervalon-Garrett
    Former Chief Strategy Officer
  2. Ross Morales Rocketto
    Former Senior Fellow (2010)

Donation Recipients

  1. ACT for Women and Girls (Non-profit)
  2. Allied Media Projects (Non-profit)
  3. Alternate ROOTS (Non-profit)
  4. Americans for Indian Opportunity (Non-profit)
  5. Black Women for Wellness (Non-profit)
  6. Borealis Philanthropy (Non-profit)
  7. Center for Popular Democracy (CPD) (Non-profit)
  8. Colorado Organization for Latina Opportunity and Reproductive Rights (COLOR) (Non-profit)
  9. Coming Clean Inc (Non-profit)
  10. Common Counsel Foundation (Non-profit)
  11. Correctional Association of New York (Non-profit)
  12. Desis Rising Up and Moving (Non-profit)
  13. Forward Together (Non-profit)
  14. Fractured Atlas Productions (Non-profit)
  15. Highlander Research and Education Center (Non-profit)
  16. International Indian Treaty Council (Non-profit)
  17. Khmer Girls in Action (Non-profit)
  18. Miami Workers Center (Non-profit)
  19. Movement Strategy Center (Non-profit)
  20. Ms. Foundation for Women (Non-profit)
  21. Mujeres Unidas y Activas (MUA) (Non-profit)
  22. National Asian Pacific American Women’s Forum (NAPAWF) (Non-profit)
  23. National Korean American Service and Education Consortium (NAKASEC) (Non-profit)
  24. National Latina Institute for Reproductive Health (Non-profit)
  25. National Network of Abortion Funds (Non-profit)
  26. National Women’s Health Network (Non-profit)
  27. NEO Philanthropy (Non-profit)
  28. New Florida Majority (Non-profit)
  29. New Florida Majority Education Fund (Non-profit)
  30. New York Women’s Foundation (Non-profit)
  31. United for Respect (Labor Union)
  32. Peace Development Fund (Non-profit)
  33. Poder in Action (Non-profit)
  34. Positive Women’s Network USA (Other Group)
  35. Project South (Non-profit)
  36. Proteus Fund (Non-profit)
  37. Restaurant Opportunities Centers United (ROC) (Non-profit)
  38. SisterSong (Non-profit)
  39. Social and Environmental Entrepreneurs (Non-profit)
  40. Social Justice Fund Northwest (Non-profit)
  41. Southern Vision Alliance (Non-profit)
  42. Southerners on New Ground (Non-profit)
  43. Texas Organizing Project Education Fund (Non-profit)
  44. The Black Collective, Inc (Non-profit)
  45. The Praxis Project (Non-profit)
  46. Third Wave Fund (Non-profit)
  47. Transgender Law Center (Non-profit)
  48. WESPAC Foundation (Non-profit)
  49. Western States Center (Non-profit)
  50. Women’s Foundation of California (Non-profit)
  51. Women’s Voices for the Earth (Non-profit)
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Nonprofit Information

  • Accounting Period: December - November
  • Tax Exemption Received: July 1, 2015

  • Available Filings

    Period Form Type Total revenue Total functional expenses Total assets (EOY) Total liabilities (EOY) Unrelated business income? Total contributions Program service revenue Investment income Comp. of current officers, directors, etc. Form 990
    2021 Dec Form 990 $24,343,616 $18,544,605 $42,239,063 $2,419,076 N $24,214,574 $65,775 $43,267 $868,525
    2020 Dec Form 990 $29,691,752 $16,400,164 $37,022,960 $2,993,785 N $29,625,647 $0 $55,587 $402,239
    2019 Dec Form 990 $21,014,931 $12,218,883 $24,368,947 $3,635,595 N $20,954,037 $0 $56,939 $383,835 PDF
    2018 Dec Form 990 $8,543,661 $12,398,826 $15,079,715 $3,055,286 Y $8,463,336 $0 $77,067 $369,480 PDF
    2017 Dec Form 990 $13,445,776 $10,054,631 $18,898,096 $2,992,142 Y $13,432,463 $0 $10,724 $337,776 PDF
    2016 Dec Form 990 $6,903,769 $7,547,102 $13,758,777 $1,337,463 N $6,885,361 $0 $18,408 $289,481 PDF
    2015 Dec Form 990 $14,626,503 $1,677,217 $13,314,943 $365,657 N $14,626,503 $0 $0 $0 PDF

    Groundswell Fund

    548 Market Street #49734
    San Francisco, CA 94104