In 2022, Communities of Faith Organizing for Action (COFOA) celebrated its 15th anniversary developing grassroots community leaders and transforming life in the poorest neighborhoods and villages in El Salvador. COFOA has grown into a national movement, with 140 grassroots leadership teams in communities across 11 of the 14 departments in the country. As Salvadorans struggle to defend their democracy, COFOA is demonstrating the power of broad-based grassroots participation and showing that it is possible to hold public officials at all levels of government accountable to local communities.

COFOA is leading several large-scale national change campaigns. Through the RENACER (REBIRTH) campaign, families from 80 informal developments across the country are campaigning for national legislation and national policy change to resolve the titles of 350,000 Salvadoran families who’ve been defrauded of their land rights by unscrupulous developers. COFOA leaders are in direct negotiations with El Salvador’s National Housing Minister to break the logjam preventing people from receiving titles to their land, and the organization filed suit against on the largest land developers in the country to hold the company accountable to providing deeds to families who’ve paid off their loans, but have been left in limbo. The RENACER campaign is meant to transfer titles worth more than one billion dollars and to pave the way for public investment in subdivisions that have been left in limbo for years, without water, electricity, paved roads, green spaces, schools and health clinics.

In 2022, COFOA launched a second national campaign to press the Salvadoran Ministry of Municipal Works to invest tax dollars set aside for community development in hundreds of local projects, from new schools and health clinics to roads and water systems, to improve life in neglected communities across the country. Since COFOA leaders delivered petitions from 8,000 local residents with 700 priority community projects to the Ministry of Municipal Works in May 2022, local COFOA teams have secured government funding for development projects worth millions of dollars, a small down payment on a campaign to transform life in El Salvador and tackle the underlying root causes driving so many Salvadorans to migration.

COFOA continues to campaign for every Salvadoran to have access to clean water, and is working with the Salvadoran Catholic Church and other partners to prevent the re-introduction of metallic mining in El Salvador. And COFOA is working with faith-based organizations and religious leaders in El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, and the U.S. to help lead the regional Root Causes Initiative to press for policies change to improve the conditions that force people to leave their homes and communities and create safe and legal pathways for people to migrate.