The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

$640M donation will assist refugee, Latino residents

Billionair­e donates to two nonprofits after open call.

- By Lautaro Grinspan lautaro.grinspan@ajc.com The Atlanta JournalCon­stitution and Report for America are partnering to add more journalist­s to cover topics important to our community. Please help us fund this important work here.

Two Atlanta-area nonprofits that serve Hispanic and refugee residents received multimilli­on dollar donations from billionair­e philanthro­pist MacKenzie Scott. Last year, Ser Familia and Ethne Health were among more than 6,000 organiza- tions that responded to an open call for funding from Scott’s own nonprofit, Yield Giving. Ultimately, 361 appli- cants were selected and a total of $640 million was given away. Ser Familia and Ethne Health received $2 mil- lion each — the most generous award available.

Scott has donated bil- lions of dollars to charity since signing a pledge to give away the bulk of her wealth in 2019, the year she divorced Jeff Bezos. In 2022, she donated $436 million to Georgia-based Habitat for Humanity, then her largest publicly disclosed gift. But this was the first time that the philanthro­pist set up an open call to review and select deserving nonprofits.

In a statement, Scott said that the successful applicants were chosen “for their out- standing work advancing the voices and opportuni- ties of individual­s and fam- ilies of meager or modest means, and groups who have met with discrimina­tion and other systemic obstacles.”

Ser Familia is a Hispan- ic-serving nonprofit that provides social services to families across five offices in metro Atlanta.

Scott’s $2 million gift is the biggest single donation the organizati­on has received in its 23-year history, according to Belisa Urbina, Ser Famil- ia’s co-founder and CEO.

It’s “truly a game changer,” Urbina said.

Part of the money will be used to expand Ser Famil- ia’s mental health services, and will help fund an expan- sion in Kennesaw to increase the nonprofit’s footprint in Cobb County. According to Urbina, the magnitude of Scott’s donation reflects the need that exists in the At anta Hispanic communityf­or Ser Familia’s work.

Ethne Health has also been expanding.

In November, the nonprofit clinic located in the refugee hub of Clarkston opened a dental practice to address refugee communitie­s’ chronic challenges accessing oral health services.

Dr. Robert Contino, Ethne Health co-founder and CEO, said in a statement that receiving the Yield Giving Award came as a happy surprise.

“This gift means that we will be able to make longterm investment­s that will grow our service lines and expand our reach, and will therefore be able to help many more people in less time find hope and healing than we would have been able to otherwise,” he said.

Last year, Ethne staff used more than 40 languages to serve their patients, an indicator of the diversity of Clarkston’s refugee population.

 ?? ?? MacKenzie Scott gave millions to area nonprofits.
MacKenzie Scott gave millions to area nonprofits.

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