Powering Equity through The Cooperage Project
Delivering safe, reliable electricity is just one of the ways we take part in the communities we serve. Through the PPL Foundation’s Powering Equity grants, we support nonprofit organizations advancing diversity, equity and inclusion, and protecting underrepresented residents.
The Cooperage Project in Honesdale recently received a Powering Equity grant from the PPL Foundation. The Cooperage Project is a not-for-profit that serves its surrounding community through youth, food, and arts and culture programming. The organization is using this funding to support its LGBTQ+ programming offered throughout the month of June and into the fall. The Cooperage Project began hosting Pride events in 2022.
“In Wayne County, there weren’t any visible Pride community events at the time,” said Arrah Fisher, executive director of The Cooperage Project. “The first event we hosted was a smashing success, so when PPL announced its new Powering Equity grant category in 2023, we thought it would be great to apply to fund some of this Pride-related programming.”
Funding from the round of 2024 grants will go toward three different Pride events hosted throughout the month of June, and it will also be used to build off a Cooperage Project event that was funded by 2023’s round of Powering Equity grants, called Community Conversations beyond the LGTBQ+ Culture War.
“We had a panel discussion with community members from several different backgrounds – a school counselor and a local reverend to name a couple,” Fisher said. “We had over 150 people show up to be a part of this conversation and listen. It was incredible.”
Fisher says the hope is not only to educate the broader community, but to provide a safe space.
“When we held our last Pride karaoke event, we had over 100 people show up, and nearly half of them were teenagers,” Fisher said. “They feel safe, affirmed and supported at The Cooperage Project. For us, we like to know that what we’re doing is mattering.”
Fisher also says having an initiative like Powering Equity grants is important to building a deeper sense of understanding.
“As an organization, we don’t see as many opportunities for funding equity-based programming,” she said. “The PPL Foundation supports us in a lot of different ways, and it has made a tremendous impact on our programs and on the people in our community.”