GRANTEES
Our partners span the ecosystem of movement builders advancing gender, economic, and racial justice through innovative approaches and community-led solutions
Anchor Organizations
As of 2023, our anchor organizations steward the majority of our remaining grantmaking dollars and resources, to continue advancing Tara Health’s mission long after our close.
Center for Inclusive Business
"BSR's Inclusive Business practice provides principled and pragmatic leadership for business to protect progress on gender and racial equity and build toward the future we all need."
— Jen Stark, Director
Orchid Capital Collective
"We can't fund the reimagination of our care system with just grants. This is our opportunity to take a clear look, absorb and acknowledge the intersection of reproductive and economic justice, rethink how capital flows and returns through integrated tools, and move beyond short-term fixes toward community ownership"
— Tenesha Duncan, Founder & CEO
Oasis Institute
"Centuries of 'divide and conquer' strategies have driven wedges between racial and economic groups that could otherwise work together to challenge the destructive system of racial capitalism. It's a system that harms everyone; to counter it, we need infrastructure for movements, solidarity and belonging."
— Iris Kuo, Executive Director
Rhia Ventures
"Women's health has been historically underfunded, and investment is rarely directed to address the root causes of disparities along lines of race, sexual identity, income, and other social determinants of health. In a health care system that, left unchecked, will only perpetuate and worsen these disparities, we must make equity fundamental to innovation if we're intent on improving outcomes and expanding into new markets."
— Erika Seth Davies, CEO
Current Grantees
We continue to honor our existing multi-year grant commitments to these organizations, whose work remains central to advancing gender, economic, and racial justice.
Knights and Orchids Society
“Glimpses of this future are already here. We see it when a client walks into our clinic and receives care without judgment or cost. We see it in our staff—Black trans folks who are thriving in roles that would have once excluded them. We see it in the joy of our community events, in the safety of our housing initiatives, and in the collective power we build through every policy we influence and every life we touch. These are not just signs of hope—they are living proof that our vision is not a dream, but a reality already taking root.”
Partners in Abortion Care
“Every philanthropic partnership we form is a step toward a world where all patients can access the care that they deserve. We understand that true prosperity comes when we build systems that elevate everyone, ensuring access to care and support—regardless of background or circumstance.”
— Diane Horvath MD, MPH & Morgan Nuzzo, CNM
Springboard to Opportunities
“We are not just funding futures; we are shifting narratives. Through our "Front & Center" series with Ms. Magazine, Black women are telling their own stories, unfiltered and unapologetically, in their own words.”
Abortion Care Network
“Abortion Care Network fosters a sustainable and accessible abortion care ecosystem by supporting independent abortion providers, who deliver the majority of abortion care in the United States. This ensures essential community-based healthcare access, a vital step for our collective thriving.”
— Nikki Madsen and Erin Grant, Co-Executive Directors, Abortion Care Network
Rockefeller Philanthropy Advisors
“At the CARE Fund, we have witnessed the transformative impact of resourcing caregivers, domestic workers, Black and Indigenous women, and immigrants to collaborate across issues. Policies change. Narratives shift. Advocates are able to move beyond reactive strategies toward long-term, generational change—including the reimagining of care systems themselves. These care systems, long rendered invisible and undervalued, are beginning to be recognized as essential infrastructure and the foundation of a just and inclusive economy.”
— Anna Shireen Wadia, Executive Director