Skip to content

Features

Seattle’s Most Influential People 2019: Social Justice Fund Interim Program Director, Karen Toering

Toering's black-led Giving Project has raised more than $370,000 from 240 donors to boost black-led organizations

By Niki Stojnic November 5, 2019

Karen_ToeringCROP

This article originally appeared in the November 2019 issue of Seattle magazine.

This article appears in print in the November 2019 issue, as part of the Most Influential People of the Year feature. Click here to subscribe.

As interim program director of the Social Justice Fund, Karen Toering has directed her many talents—as a grassroots organizer, cultural worker, and nonprofit arts and social justice consultant—into the black-led Giving Project. The project, the first of its kind in Seattle, is intended to boost black-led organizations that are working to build power and quality of life for black communities in the Pacific Northwest, and to redefine philanthropy for those with fewer funds to contribute. Toering’s team attended workshops and training sessions, discussed issues of race, class and philanthropy, and studied the mechanics of fundraising and grantmaking. By March, it had raised more than $370,000 from 240 donors and awarded two-year grants of about $21,000 to 14 black-led organizations.

Follow Us

Most Influential: Jen Barnes

Most Influential: Jen Barnes

Owner, Rough & Tumble

Lots of people tried to dissuade Jen Barnes from opening Rough & Tumble, among the first women-themed sports bars in the United States. She didn’t listen. “Quite a few tried to talk me out of this because at the time it was crazy,” says Barnes, a fourth-generation Seattleite and a huge sports fan who spent…

Most Influential: Rico Quirindongo

Most Influential: Rico Quirindongo

Director at Office of Planning and Community Development, City of Seattle

Rico Quirindongo received an email from then-Seattle Mayor Jenny Durkan in August of 2020 in the throes of the pandemic with the subject line, “I want to talk to you about the future of the city.” “I thought it was spam,” Quirindongo recalls with a chuckle. “Then I realized this is actually her email and…

Most Influential: Amy Tipton

Most Influential: Amy Tipton

Gallery owner, advocate

Amy Tipton is nothing if not resourceful. In 2013, shortly after opening her now-shuttered Belltown boutique Sassafras, she decided to resurrect the neighborhood’s monthly art walk, which had fizzled after Roq La Rue Gallery moved south to Pioneer Square. “I found an old map of the locations that used to participate, then reached out to…

Most Influential: Bob Davidson

Most Influential: Bob Davidson

CEO, Seattle Aquarium

When Bob Davidson visited the Seattle Aquarium 22 years ago as newly appointed CEO, he brought his three college and high school-age sons along to tour the facility. Little had changed or been invested in the city-run Aquarium over the past decades, and it showed. Aging exhibits and informational signs did little to inspire or…