SLO awards $150,000 to nonprofits for DEI programs

December 14, 2023

By JOSH FRIEDMAN

The San Luis Obispo City Council last week awarded a combined total of $150,000 in Diversity, Equity and Inclusion (DEI) grants to eight local nonprofits for programs the city says will contribute to a sense of belonging for underserved and underrepresented communities in SLO.

City officials received 26 applications for the grants requesting a combined total of more than $500,000 in funding this year. In September, a subcommittee of the SLO Human Relations Commission reviewed the applications and narrowed the list of recommended organizations. Then in October, the commission approved the recommendations, sending them to the city council. 

On Dec. 5, the city council unanimously approved the “high-impact” DEI grants. The city will distribute the funds early next year, awarding:

  • $40,000 to the Diversity Coalition to increase training opportunities intended to create more diversity on the boards of directors for local nonprofits
  • About $40,000 to San Luis Obispo County UndocuSupport to create 14 multilingual “how to” videos with English captioning covering seven important topics for Spanish and Mixteco-speaking immigrants and community members
  • $20,000 to the GALA Pride & Diversity Center for the SLO Queer Cultural Revitalization Project, including funding for 11 events to increase networking opportunities and activities that highlight different aspects of queer culture
  • $16,800 to RACE Matters for four monthly therapy or clinician-led discussion groups to create health equity and wellbeing for diverse community members.
  • $10,000 to SLO Hillel to host engagement and learning opportunities by bringing a speaker under the organization’s Jews of Color Speaker Series
  • About $9,500 to SLO Museum of Art to cover two exhibits showcasing artists from historically underserved and excluded communities and free public programming for the entire community
  • $8,000 to Court Appointed Special Advocates (CASA) to increase support for Latino/Latinx/Hispanic and bilingual volunteers and to increase training opportunities for staff and the board of directors
  • $6,000 to the History Center of SLO County to increase exhibits and lecture accessibility to Spanish-speaking community members

“The San Luis Obispo community continues to embrace diversity, ensure equity and practice inclusion, and nonprofits are at the forefront of those efforts,” said Nestor Veloz-Passalacqua, the city’s diversity, equity, and inclusion manager. “In smaller communities like ours, the impact of every nonprofit and individual is more pronounced. This DEI work will help build bridges between different groups, ultimately fostering a sense of belonging, unity and shared identity in San Luis Obispo.”


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Feed the DEI lobby and the bike lobby while screwing San Luis Obispo’s downtown with parking rate hikes and its neighborhoods with ridiculous bike lanes, loss of neighborhood parking, and millions of $…


There has probably been at least a half million of our tax dollars spent by the city on DEI Grants already and what’s most interesting in that the survey monkey we were all asked to fill out to set budget priorities resulted in DEI coming in nearly dead last. Responders to the survey clearly didn’t want money spent on this but it appears no one at city hall listened. We clearly need new leadership in this city and I hope there will be candidates running in 2024 who will focus on prioritizing spending our tax dollars on things we NEED, not throwing away our hard-earned tax dollars at a progressive ideological agenda. Elections have consequences so we need someone to step forward to lead this city that stops this wasteful spending.


I nominate Mazin!


And voters need to be offered viable choices other than candidates vetted and trained by a lefty feminist DEI outfit in Oakland. All those elected in the last election were helped by Emerge, yet campaign finance statements don’t show that support: Shoresman, Stewart and Francis. Why isn’t this news looked into by our “news” (I mean restaurant review) paper?


Your organization donates to my political campaign and I vote to send public moneys to your organization.

You work for the County/City. I vote crazy salaries for you and your department. You and your department then promote and protect the interests of my political donors.

This a system of government patronage where neither “side” are acting a fiduciaries.


Seriously, we don’t agree on some things but with regard to wacky City priorities and fiscal issues we are in sinc. Please run!


I’m appalled by San Luis Obispo’s decision to waste $150,000 on these DEI programs. It’s nothing short of fiscal irresponsibility and a blatant disregard for real issues like infrastructure and public safety that desperately need funding. This is political correctness run amok, diverting precious resources to feel-good, abstract programs that do nothing to solve actual problems. It’s a slap in the face to hardworking taxpayers who expect their money to be used wisely, not for promoting divisive, identity-based agendas. Where’s the common sense in prioritizing these overpriced, unproven initiatives over the genuine needs of our community?


3000 per video for something there is no accountability for, sign me up! Sounds like I need to make myself president of my own non profit, oh wait I’m a white male, I’ll keep paying my 60% taxes for my “opportunity” to keep working my ass off till I’m 80.


Hundreds of things the city could use this money for instead of this nonsense.


Um – who is the “consultant” who will get $40,000 to train people to find minorities to serve on Boards? What a scam.


A total crock of you-know-what. The city would be wise to divert that money into reduced parking fees and save the downtown.


Absolutely


Oh Brother,

The Good old boys club just changed its name.

Now it’s called DEI.

Nothing like, Who You Know.

And with Taxpayers monies.

I refuse to spend my Money in SLO.