Pamela Reed Phipps: Birmingham’s Champion for Girls in Foster Care
As Executive Director of Grace House Ministries, Pamela Reed Phipps helps offer a home, education, and around-the-clock care for Alabama girls in foster care. Meet this inspiring FACE of Birmingham!
Pamela Reed Phipps has dedicated her lifeβs work to being an advocate for girls. At first, sheβd thought sheβd do this by being a voice for the voiceless in the courtroom. But in 1993 she started volunteering as a mentor at Grace House Ministries, just one year after the Fairfield-based program was founded by Mama Lois Coleman. Grace House offers a home, education and around-the-clock care for Alabama girls in foster care. When the organization needed a new executive director, Pamelaβs experience in law and human resources, the time sheβd spent working at Girls, Inc., and her longtime dedication to Grace House made her the perfect candidate.Β
Sheβs been Executive Director of Grace House since 2010, and during this time Grace House has expanded to serve more girls, established a home school for residents, and started a Grace House Community Garden. Pamela has also shepherded the ministry through tough times including the death of Mama Lois in 2019 and the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020. We are honored to introduce this weekβs FACE of Birmingham, Pamela Reed Phipps.Β

What drew you to Grace House, and what has kept you dedicated to the mission all these years?
I was introduced to Grace House through one of my mentors and I just fell in love with it. I fell in love with Mama Lois and the vision, and I really developed a heart and passion for helping girls. Itβs a remarkable and beautiful story of how God did a full circle for me, taking me from being a mentor to being the executive director. And I count it a complete honor and privilege that I get to go to bat for these girls to help improve every aspect of their lives β whether itβs academic, spiritual, or their self-esteem. I couldnβt have mapped out this plan, and I think itβs far better than arguing a case in a courtroom.
Are there any lessons you learned from Mama Lois Coleman that have helped you in your role at Grace House?
One of the scriptures that she would tell me is, βFaithful is He who called you, and He will also bring it to pass,β and she would say, βYou have to thrust your cares into the Lord.β I would tend to be a worrier, trying to figure out everything, and in ministry, while it is a business, she taught me how to be centered on what God has called me to do.
Do what you know to do, and the rest will come.
I canβt tell you how many times we had financial goals or fundraising goals β especially during the pandemic β and I had no idea how we were going to meet those goals. But God would give us a thought, give us a plan, and thatβs all we would do, and the next thing we knew, the checks would start rolling in.
She taught me how to be centered in myself and how to identify people with a heart for the ministry. And she taught me to always put the girls first. By putting them first and letting them be the heartbeat of the ministry, all the things β the staff, the money, the property acquisition β will come, because people will be invested in the girls.
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How did the pandemic impact Grace House and the work that you do?
It was really hard on us because, unlike other nonprofits, there is no Plan B. We canβt go to a virtual way of raising girls. It was very difficult for us because we couldnβt accept any new girls. We had to quarantine to protect the girls that were here. That was heartbreaking.
And from a financial standpoint, we had to totally reimagine how we were going to do fundraising for the remainder of the year. Most of our fundraisers are in person; they involved one-on-one contact. Thankfully, I have a ton of donors that believe in what weβre doing, and they just invested in us, no questions asked. They stepped up, and I couldnβt be more grateful to those donors who are just so faithful to Grace House and our mission and our programs.

How do you hope to see Grace House expand over the next 10 years?
The vision is us acquiring 15 more homes and converting them into homes for girls, especially girls who are 16 to 19 years old. A lot of people want the young girls. Thatβs whoβs in the foster homes; thatβs whoβs getting adopted. My girls who are 16 to 19 are left homeless, left to drop out of high school, and left to fall back into that cycle. So, I want to be able to expand our program to serve 60 more girls to serve a total of 100 girls on our campus.
Thatβs such a big vision, but when you serve a big God, nothing is unimaginable or unattainable, because weβre not doing this by ourselves, and I can sense Mama Lois pushing me on saying, βYou can do this, girl. Just keep pushing forward.β
What do you like to do when youβre not working?
I love spending time with my family. Itβs funny that I have a heart for girls, but I have three boys. Even our dog Einstein is a boy! I go from one extreme to the other! I like journaling, and I do enjoy Pilates. That helps to center me and gives me the exercise that I need. I do enjoy shopping. One of my favorite places to shop is Anthropologie. I donβt cook, so we eat out or order in a lot. Our weekly picks are Salvatoreβs, Firebirds, Tazikiβs, Nikiβs, and Taco Mama.
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What was your last best meal at a Birmingham area restaurant?
French toast and fruit with powdered sugar at the Village Tavern.

Whatβs the best advice you have to give?
Your past is not your fault, but your future is your responsibility. Thatβs what I always tell the girls at Grace House. They come from such broken backgrounds, but I tell them by Godβs grace youβre here at Grace House now, so youβve been given an opportunity to turn that tide, to change things. Thereβs no more abandonment, no more neglect, no more abuse. Youβre a part of a family now, so your life begins anew.
Other than faith, family, and friends, name three things you canβt live without.
Massages, shoes, and coffee.
Thank you, Pamela!
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Javacia Harris Bowser
Javacia Harris Bowser is a Birmingham-based freelance writer and the founder of See Jane Write, an online community and coaching service for women who write. With over 20 years of journalism experience, Javacia has received awards from the National Federation of Press Women, Alabama Media Professionals, Alabama Press Association, and the Alabama State Council on the Arts. When sheβs not writing, sheβs usually practicing Pilates, getting her 10K steps a day, or watching crime shows. Follow Javacia on Instagram @seejavaciawrite.