by: James Higa, Executive Director
Forbes magazine recently published their 2015 30 Under 30 Social Entrepreneurs list. It is a group of inspired young entrepreneurs who are leveraging their business savvy to solve the world's most pressing problems.
We were delighted to discover that of the 30 on the list, PVF has known, funded, and mentored three of the awardees. When Jonny Dorsey was an undergraduate, we funded his work on college campuses across the nation to raise funds to fight AIDS. He has since gone on to found Global Health Corps, and is now a White House Fellow in the Department of Education.
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PVF's Executive Director, James Higa (standing), meeting with the SIRUM team.
Photo by Craig Sherod
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We first met Kiah Williams as a Tom Ford Fellow in Philanthropy at the Haas Center for Public Service. This fellowship program, founded by PVF, took Kiah on the road to work at the Clinton Foundation and then to start SIRUM, which PVF funded with an early seed grant. SIRUM takes the billions of dollars of unused medicines that go to waste every year and applies technology to distribute this surplus to those in need. Kiah describes it as "like the match.com for unused drugs."
We tracked Fagan Harris' journey as a student activist leader, a program officer at College Track, the Chair of the National Outreach for The Dream is Now at Emerson Collective, a Rhodes Scholar at Oxford, and now an Echoing Green Fellow and the founder of Baltimore Corp. Baltimore Corp. is reinventing and revitalizing the city by recruiting young leaders to perform impactful roles in it's leading nonprofits, social enterprises, and government agencies.
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PVF's CEO, Bill Somerville, and Executive Director, James Higa.
Photo by Craig Sherod
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We are delighted to celebrate the success of these leaders and we also take pride in them as a validation of our core philosophy to Find 'Em and Fund 'Em. We want to be the first to find you and we want to be the first to fund you. We want to be there in those early days when no one wants to take a chance on you because it's too risky or you are too small or unproven. We are maverick grantmakers, unique in the field of philanthropy. Recent media coverage of PVF describes that our approach to grantmaking - in which we take more risks - brings about greater innovation and impact. A key part of our risk-taking approach is finding and investing in people instead of problems.
Fagan Harris explains it this way: "PVF created space for me to grow into the leader and person I am today. They exposed me to people and organizations changing our world for the better, and helped me to understand the qualities of authentic and effective leadership. Despite my young age, they never made me feel anything less than fully capable and empowered. PVF truly saw my potential before I understood it myself, and for that I am forever grateful."
This is why we do what we do at PVF. There is nothing more exciting than finding the emerging generation of leaders in our communities and giving them a chance to soar. The risk-taking dollar is the entrepreneurial dollar in philanthropy.
We Find 'Em and Fund 'Em.
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