FPWA
Eunice H. serves as the Chief Development Officer at FPWA since February 2025, following a successful tenure as Senior Director of Philanthropy and Director of Philanthropy at CancerCare from January 2017 to February 2025. Eunice's expertise spans various roles in nonprofit organizations, including the Director at Student Sponsor Partners, where strategic contributions supported low-income high school students, and Business Development at The Salvation Army, focusing on partnerships and fundraising. Previous roles include Director of Research at The Business of Giving and consulting on corporate sponsorship and individual giving for The Global Cocoa Project. Academic credentials include a Bachelor of Arts in Psychology from Columbia University, a Master of Public Administration from New York University, and a BA in Psychology from Barnard College, along with a Certification in Coaching from JRNI. Notable achievements include significant increases in annual and planned giving, successful fundraising events, and collaboration with senior leadership to drive organizational mission and brand awareness.
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FPWA
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FPWA is a leading anti-poverty policy and advocacy organization dedicated to strengthening human services organizations and faith institutions and advancing economic opportunity and justice for New Yorkers with low incomes. Since 1922, FPWA has driven groundbreaking policy reforms to better serve those in need. We work to dismantle the systemic barriers that impede economic security and well-being and strengthen the capacity of human services agencies and faith organizations so New Yorkers with lower incomes can thrive and live with dignity. FPWA’s work is focused around three central tenets: ensuring New Yorkers with lower income have the necessary income and potential for building assets that enable them to thrive, not merely get by; ensuring an equitable, just, and appropriately resourced human services sector that is responsive to the needs of New Yorkers; and dismantling the unjust structures and systems that inhibit New Yorkers’ rights to live with dignity and equitable access to power and opportunity.