Lurie budget cuts to hit San Francisco nonprofit grants


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Impact of Budget Cuts on San Francisco Nonprofits

San Francisco's budget cuts are significantly impacting numerous nonprofits, particularly those focused on supporting vulnerable populations. One example highlighted is the impending closure of the Workers Rights Community Collaborative, a program run by the Chinese Progressive Association.

Case Study: Ermei Wu

The article features Ermei Wu, a monolingual Cantonese-speaking immigrant who benefited greatly from the Workers Rights Community Collaborative. This program helped her understand and claim her rights as a worker, leading to fairer wages in her subsequent jobs.

Financial Impact

The Office of Labor and Standards Enforcement scaled back the workers' rights program by roughly half its budget last year and plans to eliminate the remaining funding this year, resulting in the program's complete closure.

Broader Implications

This situation is not isolated; the overall funding pool for San Francisco's numerous charitable organizations is set to decrease, raising concerns about the capacity of these organizations to continue their vital work.

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When she first came to San Francisco roughly a decade ago, Ermei Wu landed a job in a Chinatown restaurant to support her three kids. Like many monolingual immigrants, she didn’t have anyone explaining wage laws to her in the language she speaks, Cantonese. 

She never knew to challenge her boss for what she later discovered was wage theft, until she joined the Chinese Progressive Association’s program, the Workers Rights Community Collaborative. 

“I knew I had rights as a worker, that I had paid sick leave, that there was minimum wage, that there was overtime,” Wu said through a translator. She pays it forward: “I tell all the people around me about what rights they have as a worker.”

In her next restaurant job, Wu was paid what she was owed. Last year, however, the Office of Labor and Standards Enforcement scaled back the workers’ rights program by nearly $400,000, roughly half its budget. This year, the program is set to lose the other half and shutter entirely.

It’s not the only one. The pot of money funding San Francisco’s legion of do-good organizations is about to shrink.

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