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Project Summaries: 2007 Communities Empowering Youth Grantees

America on Track

600 West Santa Ana Boulevard
Suite 710
Santa Ana, CA 92701
714-531-7144

Award Amount, Year 1: $250,000
Award Year: 2007

Collaboration Description:
America on Track and its partner organizations have a wealth of experience addressing gang activity, youth violence, and child abuse and neglect. America on Track and its three partner organizations, two community-based and one faith-based, are all located in Santa Ana, California. Organizations in the collaborative have nine to one hundred years of experience working in the community, and have worked together since 1999 on numerous projects through the local Weed & Seed coalition. All partners meet monthly to brainstorm, collaborate, and review progress on goals and objectives.

Partners:
The Cambodian Family, Santa Ana Education Foundation, and Trinity Cristo Rey Lutheran Church.

Lead Organization Description:
Founded in 1995, America on Track works to provide a support system for disadvantaged families and protect their children from drug abuse, gang involvement, and educational failure. In addition, the organization provides training and technical assistance to other local faith-based and community organizations.

Project Description:
At the beginning of each project year, the On Track Communities Empowering Youth project uses the McKinsey Capacity Assessment Grid to identify organizational strengths and deficiencies as the foundation for training and technical assistance. America on Track offers individualized quarterly training sessions to partner organizations in each identified area of need. In addition, it offers numerous workshops, to be attended by two representatives from each organization. Training and technical assistance for the three partners is led by staff and directors of America on Track. America on Track also provides $108,200 per year as financial assistance to its three partners.

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Asociación de Organizaciones Comunitarias para el Desarrollo de Viviendas de Puerto Rico

Plaza de Mercado de Caguas
P.O. Box 31238
2nd Floor, Suite 16
San Juan, PR 00929
787-744-1325

Award Amount, Year 1: $250,000
Award Year: 2007

Collaboration Description:
Asociación de Organizaciones Comunitarias para el Desarollo de Viviendas de Puerto Rico (the Association) has been in operation for five years, and its two partner organizations have nearly fifteen years of experience working with the local community. Together, they collaborate on coordination and implementation of the Positive Youth Program, which will focus on decreasing gang activity, youth violence, and child abuse and neglect in the Cantera Peninsula community. The three partners, all involved in the local Weed & Seed program, hope to strengthen their ability to address the many social issues in their community both as a collaborative and as individual organizations.

Partners:
Apoyo Empresarial and Consejo Vecinal.

Lead Organization Description:
The Association was created in 2002 by area leaders as a result of funding from the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). Since its inception, the Association has provided technical assistance to local nonprofits addressing youth development, and has recruited twenty-eight member organizations.

Project Description:
During the second year of the project, the Association will deliver a total of 126 hours of direct training and approximately 1,112 hours of TA between both partner organizations. These trainings will focus on the four critical areas of community development, which will give both partners the tools necessary to increase community participation with services provided for positive youth development. The Association makes 25 percent of total CEY funding available to its partners as financial assistance for organizational improvements.

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Center for Success and Independence

3722 Pinemont Drive
Houston, TX 77018
713-426-4545

Award Amount, Year 1: $249,978
Award Year: 2007

Collaboration Description:
Building on a shared history of working together in their community, the Gate of Light partners’ goal is to strengthen the community’s capacity to sustain large, complex collaborations. The project will develop database infrastructure to serve the needs of each organization and the collaborative as a whole, create a community-wide advisory board that provides feedback, and establish links with government and business.

Partners:
Bering Memorial United Methodist Church and Light House Village.

Lead Organization Description:
Founded in 2000, the Center for Success and Independence (TCSI) offers prevention, screening and assessment, treatment, case management, evaluation, and training to adolescents in Houston, Texas. It also serves as a lead organization in multiple interagency collaborations.

Project Description:
Through the Gate of Light Capacity Building Project, TCSI offers training in advanced nonprofit leadership and financial systems management. TCSI will also upgrade its internal information systems to build its own capacity. To launch the project, collaborative members completed community and organizational assessments and are using TCSI’s Prevention Toolbox software to develop strategic plans for capacity building. Partners receive training from TCSI, a management consultant, and an IT consultant in multiple critical capacity areas. The Gate of Light Capacity Building Project provides partners with technical assistance and financial assistance suited to their individual needs.

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Cincinnati Beulah Missionary Baptist Church

1834 Section Road
Cincinnati, OH 45237
513-531-7283

Award Amount, Year 1: $249,012
Award Year: 2007

Collaboration Description:
Beulah Missionary Baptist Church and its two partnering faith-based organizations increase collaboration, coordination, community participation, and the leveraging of resources to more effectively address the issues of youth violence and neglect.

Partners:
Council of Christian Communions and World Outreach Christian Center.

Lead Organization Description:
Beulah Missionary Baptist Church (BMBC) has been a presence in its community for nearly 100 years. BMBC has become a provider of numerous social service programs for youth, couples, families, and ex-offenders. Additionally, BMBC provides training and technical assistance (TA) to FBCOs throughout Cincinnati, Ohio.

Project Description:
Lead organization BMBC trains staff and volunteers in best practices for working with youth violence, detecting and reporting abuse, teamwork, and resource management. The collaborative partnership holds quarterly meetings to keep other churches, businesses, civic organizations and families informed about the services available to them. Partner organizations use assessments to determine goals and objectives for capacity building. BMBC also provides more than $62,500 in financial assistance to its partners.

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Clemson University

Office of Sponsored Programs
Box 345702, 300 Brackett Hall
Clemson, SC 29634
864-656-2424

Award Amount, Year 1: $249,918
Award Year: 2007

Collaboration Description:
The Faith in Youth Collaboration is made up of Clemson University’s Youth Learning Institute and five well-established youth-serving organizations in two South Carolina counties. The oldest partner organization was founded in 1886, and the newest in 1999. All five organizations have previous involvement with the Youth Learning Institute.

Partners:
Carey Hill Development Corporation, Christ Central Ministries, Redd’s Branch Baptist Church, Second Baptist Church, and The Imani Group.

Lead Organization Description:
Located in Clemson University’s Institute on Family and Neighborhood Life, the South Carolina Center for Grassroots and nonprofit Leadership is dedicated to building the capacity of the state’s most-in-need nonprofits. The Center was formed in 1998 by a collaborative of major foundations, universities, nonprofits, faith-based networks, and state agencies, and has served as a CCF intermediary since 2002.

Project Description:
The Youth Learning Institute (YLI) is building its capacity as a training center for organizations that work with at-risk youth by strengthening its leadership and staff development, community engagement, volunteer management, and evaluation procedures. YLI builds partner capacity by providing a series of three-day residential training retreats. Partners also receive technical assistance through residential retreats individually tailored to meet predetermined capacity building needs; YLI also makes its fifty-person staff available to partners for consultation on specific needs. YLI gives each of the five partner organizations $20,000 per year as direct financial assistance.

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Communities in Schools of KCK/Wyandotte County

4601 State Avenue
Suite 38
Kansas City, KS 66102
913-627-4381

Award Amount, Year 1: $249,062
Award Year: 2007

Collaboration Description:
Communities in Schools of KCK/Wyandotte County (CIS of KCK/WC) and its collaborative partners provide programming in several Kansas City public schools through CIS’s Adopt-a-School program, which engages local churches to adopt neighborhood public schools and provide them with a variety of services and resources. Through the CEY grant, the six partner churches undergo extensive training to build and strengthen their capacity to offer programming.

Partners:
Evangelistic Center, Grace Lutheran Church, Living Stone Family Worship Center, Mt. Olive Missionary Baptist Church, Salem Missionary Baptist Church, and Victory Hills Church of the Nazarene.

Lead Organization Description:
CIS of KCK/WC is a community-based organization that removes barriers to education through the integration of community resources. Since its founding in 1998, CIS of KCK/WC has partnered with area agencies, schools, and faith-based and community organizations to distribute resources to youth and families who need them most.

Project Description:
CIS of KCK/WC and its partners receive training through the University’s Community Capacity Building Training Institute, a series of workshops and classes which begins with a study of community engagement and ends with completion of the collaborative’s community needs assessment. Staff of the Training Institute will lead training and technical assistance efforts in year two. By year three, CIS of KCK/WC will have sufficient capacity to facilitate the majority of capacity building assistance to its partners. CIS of KCK/WC provides its partners with financial assistance totaling at least 25 percent of its total award based on the level of need identified in their organizational assessments.

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Community Action Agency

1214 Greenwood Avenue
Jackson, MI 49203
517-784-4800

Award Amount, Year 1: $249,635
Award Year: 2007

Collaboration Description:
This collaborative is composed of organizations that have worked together in the Partnership Park neighborhood of Jackson, Michigan, since 2001. Together, they formed the Partnership Park Downtown Neighborhood Association (PPDNA). PPDNA conducts a community assessment, creates an action plan that follows the assessment’s findings, builds a communications task force, and replicates the assessment process in other neighborhoods. The group also continues to be involved in the local Weed & Seed initiative.

Partners:
Catholic Charities of Jackson, Partnership Park Downtown Neighborhood Association (PPDNA), and St. John’s United Church of Christ.

Lead Organization Description:
The Community Action Agency (CAA) has worked to address the needs of low-income residents of three Michigan counties for more than forty years. Currently, CAA operates approximately sixty direct service programs and provides training and technical assistance to faith-based and community organizations throughout Michigan.

Project Description:
CAA provides training and TA to its partner organizations, with particular emphasis on PPDNA. Among other services, PPDNA provides leadership training to community residents and runs an after school program for community youth. PPDNA receives $62,500 in financial assistance from CAA annually.

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Community Council of Greater Dallas

1349 Empire Central
Suite 400
Dallas, TX 75247
214-871-5065

Award Amount, Year 1: $250,000
Award Year: 2007

Collaboration Description:
The Community Council of Greater Dallas works with three established partner organizations—two community-based and one faith-based—in CCGD’s Dallas Community Youth Development Program, which has operated since 1996.

Partners:
Good Street Baptist Church, Teens at Work, and Vision Regeneration.

Lead Organization Description:
The Community Council of Greater Dallas (CCGD), founded in 1940, is dedicated to bringing people together to address issues that affect the well-being of children and young people in its community. CCGD researches and disseminates information on the needs of children and youth and coordinates the efforts of community leaders and professionals to develop community-based action plans to address those needs.

Project Description:
Throughout the project, CCGD will build its capacity and that of its partners. During the summer of year 2, CCGD partners will implement a “Train the Parent” workshop to teach parenting skills to the parents of its program partipants. Each year, partner agencies receive training from CCGD through quarterly seminars and individualized technical assistance (TA) sessions. CCGD divides $62,500 in financial assistance among its partners, based on level of need.

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Corporación de Apoyo a Programas Educativos y Comunitarios

PMB 106 P.O. Box 4956
Caguas, PR 00726
787-745-3710

Award Amount, Year 1: $250,000
Award Year: 2007

Collaboration Description:
The Community Alliance for Empowering Youth is a long-standing collaborative of five community organizations and one faith-based organization. An advisory board whose members represent each partner organization plays a major role in the project’s implementation, its periodic evaluation, and planning for the future.

Partners:
EcoRecursos Comunitarios (Community EcoResources), Asociacion Nuevo Milenio (New Millennium Association), Asociacion de Residentes de Brisas del Mar (Brisas del Mar Residents’ Council), Comunidad Organizada de San Salvador (Organized Community of San Salvador), and Casa Laura Vicuna.

Lead Organization Description:
Corporación de Apoyo a Programas Educativos y Comunitarios
(CAPEDCOM) was founded in Puerto Rico in 1994 with the goal of using education as a tool to help disadvantaged people improve their lives. It has a long history of providing capacity building services and creating sustained relationships among faith-based and community organizations.

Project Description:
CAPEDCOM provides $62,500 each year in financial assistance to partners based on each organization’s needs assessment and operating budget. CAPEDCOM offers partners four training sessions each month—one for each critical capacity building area—and provides direct, individualized technical assistance to each organization the following week. A consultant assists organizations using a learn-by-doing approach in which organizations receive training and technical assistance simultaneously to achieve optimal results.

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Dallas Leadership Foundation

717 North Harwood Avenue
Suite 840
Dallas, TX 75201
214-777-5520

Award Amount, Year 1: $250,000
Award Year: 2007

Collaboration Description:
Each of the faith-based and community groups involved in the Dallas Leadership Foundation’s (DLF) collaborative has worked with DLF on past projects, some for as many as twelve years. Through this collaborative, partners address the issues of gang activity and youth violence through a coordinated, city-wide effort—a method that has proved effective in other DLF initiatives. The DLF partnership also participates in the West Dallas Weed & Seed group.

Partners:
The Bridge Enterprises, Cornerstone Ministries, Dallas Urban Young Life, East Dallas Community Organization, Hamilton Park United Methodist Church Youth Ministry, Light Economic & Development, Mothers Against Teen Violence, Project Still I Rise, RMC Ministries, Tamar Circle Program, Rehoboth Missionary Baptist Church, Simple Faith International, St. Mark AME Zion Church, and Voice of Hope.

Lead Organization Description:
DLF brings people together to rebuild underserved communities and works with disadvantaged youth to address issues of youth violence and gang activity. DLF provides affordable housing and mobilizes churches, the business community, and other stakeholders to participate in community-strengthening projects. DLF also provides capacity building services to grassroots organizations in the surrounding area.

Project Description:
DLF conducts baseline and follow-up assessments to collect information on each partner’s needs and track progress and outcomes. In addition to quarterly training offered by DLF and the Faith & Philanthropy Institute, DLF-facilitated peer-learning sessions allow interaction among partners on capacity building topics. DLF provides each partner two hours a month of one-on-one technical assistance to develop and implement a customized capacity building plan. Finally, DLF provides $62,500 in financial assistance to partners.

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Duluth Area Family YMCA

302 West 1st Street
Duluth, MN 55802
218-722-4745

Award Amount, Year 1: $249,982
Award Year: 2007

Collaboration Description:
The Duluth Area Family YMCA leads a collaborative of youth-serving organizations with established programs and community connections in four high-risk neighborhoods of Duluth, Minnesota. The Prevention Partners collaborative is a network of faith-based and community organizations of various sizes and provides an array of prevention services.

Partners:
Boys and Girls Club of Duluth, Copeland Community Center, East Hillside Patch, Grant Community School Collaborative, Life House, Men as Peacemakers, Neighborhood Youth Services, Valley Youth Center, and YWCA of Duluth.

Lead Organization Description:
Duluth Area Family YMCA has provided youth programming for 125 years and volunteer services to 120 agencies in the Duluth/Superior area for sixty-nine years. It facilitates Mentor Duluth and the Duluth Youth Agency Coalition–a six-agency mentoring collaboration. In 2004, the YMCA developed an AmeriCorps Program that supports fifty-four organizations in northeast Minnesota through the collaboration of regional agencies, including Fond du Lac Tribal and Community College, Bois Forte Indian Reservation, and the Arrowhead Interfaith Council of Churches.

Project Description:
The YMCA and contracted service providers administer on-going individualized technical assistance to members of the collaborative. YMCA program staff, consultants, and mentors work one-on-one with each organization; they also offer a minimum of two workshops in each critical capacity area for organization leaders, staff, and board members. Over thirty months, all collaborative members will each receive at least forty hours of training. During year two of the project, each member will also receive twenty-five hours of individualized technical assistance. Financial resources provide time for organization staff to attend trainings and make possible the purchase of new equipment. The YMCA’s annual financial assistance to partners totals at least $62,500.

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Fresh Ministries, Inc.

1131 North Laura Street
Jacksonville, FL 32206
904-355-0000

Award Amount, Year 1: $250,000
Award Year: 2007

Collaboration Description:
In addition to its own staff and resources, Fresh Ministries makes use of Beaver Street Enterprise Center, the Nonprofit Center of Northeast Florida, and Volunteer Jacksonville to provide comprehensive capacity building services to its partners and the Urban Core collaborative.

Partners:
Beaver Street Enterprise Center, East Jacksonville Resource Center, Family Nurturing Center, Household of Faith, Jacksonville Hospitality Institute, Nonprofit Center of Northeast Florida, Police Athletic League, Providence Christian Fellowship, Sanctuary on 8th Street, and Volunteer Jacksonville.

Lead Organization Description:
Founded in 1994, Fresh Ministries is an interfaith, community-based nonprofit association working to address poverty and its impact on families and communities in urban Jacksonville, Florida, through equal access to education, economic opportunities, and necessary support systems. Fresh Ministries also has extensive experience in providing training, technical assistance, and funding to faith-based and community organizations.

Project Description:
The Urban Core project provides four quarterly, three-hour workshops to area nonprofits. In addition, Fresh Ministries assigns a staff project advisor to each partner to assist in completion of a baseline organizational assessment and capacity building plan. The advisor helps identify appropriate service providers to work with the partner on identified needs. Fresh Ministries provides funds totaling at least $62,500 per year to partner organizations.

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Future Foundation

1892 Washington Avenue
East Point, GA 30344
404-766-0510

Award Amount, Year 1: $250,000
Award Year: 2007

Collaboration Description:
Future Foundation and its project partners are among the most stable and well-established organizations serving East Point, Georgia, with nearly eighty years of collective experience in youth services. The three partners have worked together for the past three years within a larger established coalition of faith-based and community organizations in the Atlanta area.

Future Foundation and its partners completed intensive needs assessments to identify capacity needs. The results of these assessments guide their capacity building plans.

Partners:
Andrew and Walter Young Family YMCA and East Point Community Action Team.

Lead Organization Description:
Established in 2001, Future Foundation runs six youth development programs that support the academic, social, and physical development of young people in metropolitan Atlanta. Future Foundation operates a state-licensed comprehensive youth development and learning center that works to fulfill the organization’s mission to improve the lives of youth by empowering them to achieve success.

Project Description:
Project partners attend group training workshops, presentations, professional development seminars, and staff retreats with support provided by training and technical assistance experts identified through the Georgia Center for Nonprofits. Future Foundation provides at least $62,500 in direct financial assistance to its partners.

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Heritage Community Services, Inc.

2810 Ashley Phosphate Road, B-7
North Charleston, SC 29418
843-863-0508

Award Amount, Year 1: $199,937
Award Year: 2007

Collaboration Description:
The three organizations in this collaborative, all experienced service providers in metropolitan Charleston, South Carolina, have worked together for five years. This project allows them to better understand the issues facing their community’s youth and develop strategies to adapt programs that accommodate the needs of its growing Hispanic population.

Partners:
Charleston Area Community Development Corporation and Midland Park Community Ministries.

Lead Organization Description:
Heritage Community Services, Inc. (HCS) provides training and counseling in healthy relationships, marriages, and families. Established in 1995, HCS also offers training and technical assistance to South Carolina’s faith-based and community organizations.

Project Description:
HCS provides ongoing organizational assessment tools to its partners throughout the grant period. Heritage staff provide training and technical assistance with input from local and state experts in various social service areas. In addition to training workshops, direct and individualized technical assistance, and monthly partner coordination meetings, Heritage provides each partner with $25,000 in financial assistance each year of the grant.

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Human Services Associates, Inc.

1703 West Colonial Drive
Orlando, FL 32804
407-422-0880

Award Amount, Year 1: $250,000
Award Year: 2007

Collaboration Description:
Human Services Associates, Inc. (HSA) and its four faith-based and community partners have an average six-year history of working together. HSA currently maintains a contractual agreement with each of its partners. The collaborative participates in a minimum of five youth initiative meetings per month in the Orlando, Florida area.

Partners:
Center for Non-violence Learning, Community Counseling Center of Central Florida, Firm Foundation, and Life and Work Solutions.

Lead Organization Description:
Founded in 1993, HSA offers assessment, intervention, prevention, education, and treatment services to at-risk youth and families in sixteen central Florida counties.

Project Description:
HSA is building its capacity in information technology infrastructure, with the ultimate goal of becoming paperless. HSA conducts assessments with each partner and works with them to create individual capacity building plans. A team of four high-level HSA staff—experts in fiscal management, human resources, quality management, and community outreach—spends an average of thirty hours per month providing training and technical assistance to partners. Based on initial needs assessments, each partner receives a portion of $62,500 in financial assistance for further capacity building efforts.

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International Rescue Committee

122 East 42nd Street
14th Floor
New York, NY 10168
212-551-3000

Award Amount, Year 1: $249,999
Award Year: 2007

Collaboration Description:
The Park Hill Network collaborative is comprised of three community-based organizations: International Rescue Committee, African Refuge, and the Century Dance Complex. All three groups are dedicated to serving refugee and immigrant youth in New York City. In the second and third year of the project, the three organizations in the original Network will welcome a fourth partner.

Partners:
African Refuge and the Century Dance Complex.

Lead Organization Description:
The International Rescue Committee (IRC) is a nonsectarian voluntary organization that has provided relief, protection, and resettlement services to refugees, victims of oppression, and victims of conflict since 1933. IRC offers a variety of services to foster the academic and social development of refugee and immigrant youth in Staten Island.

Project Description:
IRC holds monthly training workshops to support each partner organization with its individual organizational capacity building requirements. IRC coordinates quarterly two-day training workshops focused on capacity building topics, advancing from the foundational level to more sophisticated areas of development. IRC also offers customized technical assistance to partners through two site visits each year, written recommendations, and one-on-one meetings with staff members. In years two and three, IRC will offer its partners a total of $70,000 annually.

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Murtis H. Taylor Multi-Service Center

13422 Kinsman Road
Cleveland, OH 44120
216-283-4400

Award Amount, Year 1: $250,000
Award Year: 2007

Collaboration Description:
Murtis H. Taylor Multi-Service Center and its four partner organizations have a six-year history of collaborating to address issues facing youth in Cleveland’s Mt. Pleasant neighborhood. For the past two years, partner organizations have participated in the Mt. Pleasant Weed & Seed coalition.

Partners:
Discovery Center, Peace in the Hood, Teen Point of View, and Thea Bowman Center.

Lead Organization Description:
Murtis H. Taylor Multi-Service Center (Center) has nearly sixty years of experience providing social support services and behavioral healthcare. Center programs address parenting, conflict resolution, anger management, violence prevention, and substance abuse prevention and intervention. Since 1997, the Center has run the Building and Unifying Services Collaborative (BUCS), an initiative that focuses on strengthening the internal capacity of small and medium nonprofits in Cleveland.

Project Description:
The Murtis H. Taylor Multi-Service Center coordinates training and technical assistance provided by Center staff and consultants for all partners. During year 2, the project’s capacity building director, working with local educational institutions, will engage stakeholders, residents, and workers in a comprehensive and inclusive strategic planning process with the goal of developing a collaborative-level five-year strategic plan. The Center makes 25 percent of its total grant funds available to its four project partners for use in further capacity building activities.


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National Indian Justice Center

5250 Aero Drive
Santa Rosa, CA 95403
707-579-5507

Award Amount, Year 1: $249,788
Award Year: 2007

Collaboration Description:
The Activating Native Youth Assets Project is a collaborative comprised of twenty-two Pomo tribes. Partners provide community services to at-risk Native American youth in Sonoma, Lake and Mendocino counties in California. The project uses group and individual learning approaches and strategic use of financial assistance to build capacity to ensure sustainable, high-quality social services.

Partners: California Indian Museum and Cultural Center, and Sonoma County Indian Health Project.

Lead Organization Description:
The National Indian Justice Center (NIJC) is a nonprofit organization with twenty-four years of experience providing capacity building training and technical assistance to tribal communities nationwide.

Project Description:
NIJC assesses the needs of its target service populations. Organizational assessments allow for creation of action plans for the project. Three-day conferences with capacity building workshops in all four capacity building areas and quarterly networking lunches create and foster strategic community alliances. NIJC utilizes a project Web page to share resources and promote continuing education. Financial assistance equal to 25 percent of the total grant award is distributed among partners to support individual capacity building efforts.

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Nebraska Children and Families Foundation

215 Centennial Mall South
Suite 200
Lincoln, NE 68508
402-476-8251

Award Amount, Year 1: $250,000
Award Year: 2007

Collaboration Description:
Having worked with all partners in south Omaha projects addressing numerous issues facing children and families, Nebraska Children and Families Foundation leads its five partners in its capacity building initiative South Omaha Community Learning Collaborative (SOCLC). Using collaborative training, workshops, and financial awards, SOCLC members hope to establish and sustain an interdependent system of care for children in south Omaha, Nebraska.

Partners:
Camp Fire USA Midlands Council, Lutheran Family Services, Neighborhood Center for Greater Omaha, Nothing But Net Foundation, and South Omaha Weed & Seed.

Lead Organization Description:
Nebraska Children and Families Foundation (NCFF) was established in 1997 to leverage public and private resources and promote positive outcomes for vulnerable children and families statewide. Partner organizations provide services in a distressed community defined by three neighborhood association borders and the South Omaha Weed & Seed target area.

Project Description:
NCFF staff and consultants provide partners 250 hours of technical assistance and fifty-two hours of collaboration training and peer exchange through quarterly group learning circles and workshops. NCFF distributes financial awards totaling 25 percent of the Federal award, or $62,500, each year to augment capacity building services.

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New England Network for Child, Youth and Family Services, Inc.

156 College Street
Suite 301
Burlington, VT 05401
802-658-9182

Award Amount, Year 1: $249,949
Award Year: 2007

Collaboration Description:
The Windham Capacity Project for Youth brings together established youth service providers, newer faith-based youth programs, and training organizations to share challenges and knowledge, while providing expert input to support skill-building. The New England Network for Child, Youth and Family Services, Inc.(NEN) and each of its three partners have worked together on shared community initiatives for twenty years, and each partner brings specialized programming experience in the prevention of youth violence, child abuse, and neglect.

Partners:
Youth Services Inc., Boys and Girls Club of Brattleboro, and the Ecumenical Council.

Lead Organization Description:
NEN is a private, nonprofit organization that works to support and advance child and youth services throughout New England. For twenty-three years, NEN has organized and implemented local training and technical assistance programs that focus on building the capacity of faith-based and community organizations working with traumatized children and youth; families at risk for child abuse and neglect; and youth at risk for violence, substance abuse, and other high-risk behaviors.

Project Description:
Staff from NEN and the United Way provide each partner with approximately forty hours of professional training and eighty hours a year of customized, on-site technical assistance. In year two, NEN will pilot its Pro Youth Work Toolkit with its Windham Capacity Project for Youth partner organizations to provide skills building around helping young people achieve their developmental assets. NEN distributes $62,000 each year in financial assistance.

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Oasis Counseling International

333 Norfolk Avenue
Suite 201
Norfolk, NE 68701
402-379-2030

Award Amount, Year 1: $249,168
Award Year: 2007

Collaboration Description:
The Collaboration Capacity Building to Empower Youth project serves the area of Norfolk, Nebraska. Oasis Counseling International has worked with two of its three partners to empower the youth of Norfolk since the 1980s and has collaborated with the third partner for three years. Together, the four organizations have more than 150 years of experience strengthening young people’s health.

Partners:
Norfolk Family YMCA, Norfolk Family Medicine, and Northeast Nebraska Child Advocacy Center (NENCAC).

Lead Organization Description:
Oasis Counseling International offers holistic bilingual behavioral health treatment in the Nebraska cities of Norfolk, O'Neil, and Ainsworth.

Project Description:
Oasis Counseling International (Oasis) and its partner organizations participate in capacity building activities to meet the needs revealed in the community assessment and organizational assessments completed in year one. In addition to providing all partners with group training seminars and individualized technical assistance, Oasis will distribute $157,000 as financial assistance to partners in the second grant year.

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Prim n Proper, Inc./Choosing to Excel

416 Sturgis Road
Conway, AR 72034
501-269-4166

Award Amount, Year 1: $250,000
Award Year: 2007

Collaboration Description:
Choosing to Excel (CTE) leads a collaboration of four youth-serving organizations that work with and address the needs of at-risk youth in the city of Conway, located in Faulkner County, Arkansas. The collaborative brings together the faith-based community, the juvenile justice system, and local community organizations.

Partners:
Conway Alternative School, Faulkner County Juvenile Court, Pleasant Branch Baptist Church, and Excel Upward.

Lead Organization Description:
CTE, operated by Prim n Proper, Inc., is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit healthy choice and prevention organization. Since 1994, CTE has provided services that strengthen families and reduce the number of youth involved in criminal activity by providing a variety of programs and services for at-risk youth.

Project Description:
Prim n Proper, Inc./Choosing to Excel enhances both its own and its partners’ ability to empower community youth and reduce youth violence, gang activity, and child abuse and neglect by providing quarterly one and two day group training and workshops, monthly customized technical assistance consultations, and individualized technical assistance as needed to each member of the collaborative. A steering committee of community members assists with a community assessment, which guides strategic plans for each member of the collaborative. The steering committee also develops and reviews criteria for distributing financial assistance. Financial assistance totals $62,500 and amounts to each partner are based on their specific needs.

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Reach Out West End

1126 West Foothill Boulevard
Suite 185
Upland, CA 91786
909-982-8641

Award Amount, Year 1: $250,000
Award Year: 2007

Collaboration Description:
Reach Out West End’s partner organizations include faith-based and community organizations with a history of working together in the Pomona Weed & Seed Partnership and the Safe Schools/Healthy Students Partnership. The ExecNet CEY (E-CEY) collaborative led by Reach Out West End uses best practices and peer-based learning to increase the capacity of partner organizations to serve at-risk youth.

Partners:
Bilingual Family, Boys and Girls Club of Pomona Valley (BGCPV), Camp Fire USA San Antonio Council, Samaritan Counseling Center, Inland Valley Counsel of Churches-Hope Partners, Foothill Family Shelter, and Pacific Lifeline.

Lead Organization Description:
Founded in 1969, Reach Out West End offers a variety of programs that provide positive alternatives for at-risk youth. Its services target western San Bernardino and eastern Los Angeles counties in California.

Project Description:
All partner agencies of the E-CEY collaborative plan and implement quarterly trainings based on their work plans. Each partner has a technical assistance (TA) coach who provides monthly on-site skill building. TA coaches are in regular contact with their assigned organizations to ensure that their personalized TA plans are sensitive to the importance of cultural competency and meet identified capacity building needs. Each partner organization works with its TA coach to finalize a specific budget based on need prior to receiving financial assistance ranging from $15,000 to $19,000.

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South Brooklyn Youth Consortium

2811 Mermaid Avenue
Brooklyn, NY 11224
718-266-7052

Award Amount, Year 1: $249,970
Award Year: 2007

Collaboration Description:
South Brooklyn Youth Consortium’s Compassion Consortium: Empowering New York City's Youth (CCY) project brings together five faith-based and community organizations. South Brooklyn and its partners have existing relationships working to address the needs of young people.

Partners:
Amethyst Women’s Project (Amethyst), Gone But Not Forgotten, Children’s Choice Family Services (CCFS), United Community Organization, and Books Before Ball.

Lead Organization Description:
Since its official incorporation in 1996, the South Brooklyn Youth Consortium (SBYC) has provided training and technical assistance to more than sixty staff members of youth-serving organizations throughout the greater New York City area. SBYC seeks to increase the capacity of youth and community development programs to provide quality services, set high standards in youth and community development and service delivery, increase the visibility of youth and community development work, and advocate for increased resources.

Project Description:
SBYC uses its Peer Network Model to coordinate training and technical assitance to build both its own capacity and that of its partners. The six members (including the lead organization) of the consortium receive financial assistance to improve their capacity in accordance with assessed needs. All members of the network participate in twelve workshops, four six-week seminars led by outside experts, and forty-eight days of technical assistance. SBYC also provides financial assistance of approximately $18,000 to each of its partners.

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St. Vincent Mercy Medical Center

2213 Cherry Street
Ste. ACC #307
Toledo, OH 43608
419-251-2122

Award Amount, Year 1: $230,505
Award Year: 2007

Collaboration Description:
St. Vincent Mary Medical Center and its partner organizations have worked together for three years on multiple community issues including healthy marriages, youth development, and academic support services. The goal of their collaborative is to improve and expand program services to youth and the community. Additionally, this project participates in the community Weed & Seed network by sharing and providing information, resources, and data for two of its programs.

Partners:
Mentoring, Education & Leadership, New Beginnings Development Corporation, and The Mark-et Place.

Lead Organization Description:
Established in 1855, St. Vincent Mary Medical Center’s (SVMMC) mission is to improve the health and well-being of the Toledo, Ohio, community with special attention to the poor and under-served. Its youth development programs address teen pregnancy and mental health services. SVMMC also provides training and technical assistance to smaller faith-based and community organizations through collaborative groups and partnerships.

Project Description:
SVMMC and its partners share responsibility for training based on level of expertise. Staff from the lead agency provide training on youth violence prevention curricula; outside experts and partners provide training on other topics. Trainers also provide direct and individualized technical assistance to partners. Financial assistance provided is 38 percent of the total project budget.

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Temple University

Center for Social Policy and Community Development
1601 N. Broad Street, Room 100
Philadelphia, PA 19122
215-204-8691

Award Amount, Year 1: $250,000
Award Year: 2007

Collaboration Description:
This collaborative of five nonprofit organizations has a history of working together to address issues facing at-risk youth in north Philadelphia. Three of the partner organizations worked with the Center for Social Policy and Community Development (CSPCD) on a previous capacity building grant. The collaborative works to create a community of practice, develop and implement best practices in program services, and increase organizational capacity as well as community awareness of youth violence and child abuse and neglect.

Partners:
Helping Energize and Rebuild Ourselves, Ludlow Youth Community Center, The Place of Refuge, and Women's Institute for Family Health.

Lead Organization Description:
Temple University’s CSPCD has served the northern Philadelphia community since 1969. CSPCD bridges social concerns of the community and the academic and service goals of the university to build the community’s capacity to meet social, economic, and educational challenges.

Project Description:
CSPCD augments monthly training with fifty hours of individual technical assistance for each partner organization. During the first year of the project, training and technical assistance will focus on developing logic models and financial management systems. Partners will also have access to outside consultants for additional training. Financial assistance totaling $62,500 will be used for staff development, organizing community forums, and assisting partners with implementation of individual work plans.

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Twin Cities Christian Foundation fka Kingdom Oil Christian Foundation

701 Fourth Avenue South
Suite 750
Minneapolis, MN 55415
612-288-2299

Award Amount, Year 1: $250,000
Award Year: 2007

Collaboration Description:
In addition to Twin Cities Christian Foundation’s (TCCF) formal and informal instruction, training opportunities, and resource development, partners in the CEY-Minneapolis project benefit from collaboration with Weed & Seed Central Minneapolis, which shares information and work with the collaborative to reach and serve Minneapolis area high-risk youth.

Partners:
African American Adoption Agency, Church of New Life, Girls in Action, MAD DADS, Mothers of Crime Victims, New Salem Missionary Baptist Church, Oasis of Love, Parenting with Purpose, The Street Coalition, Track Minnesota Elite, Urban Hope's Star Club, Urban Youth Conservation, and Youth Enterprise.

Lead Organization Description:
TCCF was established in 1997 to address the needs of disadvantaged youth in Minneapolis. Its mission is to encourage and facilitate the release of resources and administer community partnerships, with the goal of bringing divergent sectors of the community together to assist people in need.

Project Description:
TCCF staff and contractors provide extensive training, as well as an additional twenty-five hours of technical assistance annually to each member of the collaborative. Each year, TCCF distributes 33 percent or more of its total award to its partners based on their capacity building plans and the level of need identified in their organizational assessments.

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UMOS, Inc.

P.O. Box 04129
Milwaukee, WI 53204
414-389-6600

Award Amount, Year 1: $250,000
Award Year: 2007

Collaboration Description:
The Milwaukee Youth Collaborative Partnership is a unique partnership of six neighborhood social service agencies with a total of over 100 years of experience serving a changing multi-cultural, low-income community. An advisory committee oversees the implementation of partner activities and objectives.

Partners:
Pathfinders, La Causa Child Welfare Program, Youth Independence Project, Kosciuszko Community Learning Center, United Community Center, and Latina Resource Center.

Lead Organization Description:
UMOS, Inc. is a comprehensive, multi-state social service agency headquartered in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. UMOS, Inc. has more than twenty years of experience providing capacity building training and technical assistance to faith-based and community organizations.

Project Description:
In the second year of the grant, UMOS staff, under the direction of the Milwaukee Youth Collaborative Partnership, will plan and implement a year long training and technical assistance plan scheduled based on partners’ needs. The partnership will provide community capacity building training to increase the capacity building knowledge base and skills of at least 200 faith-based and community organization staff, board members, and volunteers. Each partner will also receive financial assistance, which will total $200,000.

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Voices For Children, Inc.

2305 Canyon Boulevard #101
Boulder, CO 80302
303-440-7059

Award Amount, Year 1: $122,700
Award Year: 2007

Collaboration Description:
The organizations involved in this collaborative range in age from three to twenty years. The members of the partnership bring greater community awareness of the plight of abused teens and children of high-conflict divorce.

Partners:
Boulder County Partners Mentoring Program, Boulder Institute for Psychotherapy and Research, and St. Vrain Family Center.

Lead Organization Description:
Since 1985, Voices for Children (VFC) has worked to increase community awareness of child and teen abuse by training volunteers as court-appointed special advocates (CASAs), who provide direct services to abused and neglected children in Boulder County, Colorado.

Project Description:
VFC contracts with the M. Caplan Company to help each partner set specific goals and to provide workshops, executive coaching, and individualized technical assistance to its partner organizations. The working collaboration increases the ability of the partners to coordinate services, especially for those clients who receive services from more than one of the partners. VFC distributes at least 25 percent of its grant award to its partners.

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Winston-Salem State University

Center for Community Safety
601 Martin Luther King, Jr. Drive
Winston-Salem, NC 27110
336-750-2200

Award Amount, Year 1: $250,000
Award Year: 2007

Collaboration Description:
Winston-Salem State University and its three faith-based partners work collaboratively to increase staff skills and abilities, increase the number of FBCOs working together in the community, improve program outcomes for youth, increase resources, and document best practices in youth and community services.

Partners:
Green Street United Methodist Church, New Birth of Christ Church Community Development Enterprise, and United Metropolitan Baptist Church.

Lead Organization Description:
Winston-Salem State University (WSSU) is a historically black public university whose primary mission is to offer high-quality educational programs at the baccalaureate and masters levels for a diverse student population. As a public service and research center, the Center for Community Safety (CCS) of WSSU works to build the capacity of the community to address a broad range of issues affecting the qualifty of life for citizens of Winston-Salem and Forsyth County, North Carolina.

Project Description:
WSSU provides training and technical assistance using a three-level approach. Level one focuses on individual capacity building needs of each partner. Level two training and technical assistance focuses on collaborative community mapping and program evaluation projects. Level three training focuses on engaging other organizations in the community. WSSU also provides a total of $62,500 in financial assistance to its partners for implementation of individual and collaborative work plans.

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World Vision, Inc.

US Programs
34834 Weyerhauser Way South
Federal Way, WA 98001
202-572-6384

Award Amount, Year 1: $250,000
Award Year: 2007

Collaboration Description:
The Seattle Tutoring Coalition (STC), a partnership formed in 1993 between World Vision Seattle and five other organizations, helps provide for students’ unmet intellectual, social, and emotional needs. STC’s project seeks to address youth violence and gang involvement in Seattle’s Rainier Valley area.

Partners:
Broadview Emergency Shelter and Transitional Housing Program, Catholic Community Services, Invest in Youth, Neighborhood House, and Treehouse.

Lead Organization Description:
Founded in 1950, World Vision is a worldwide Christian relief and development organization with a focus on helping communities build sustainable partnerships that have lasting benefits in the lives of children and families. World Vision's program in Seattle has worked toward reducing youth violence and gang involvement since 1995.

Project Description:
Local and national World Vision staff members provide training to members of the collaborative. Each of the five partner organizations has a technical assistance consultant who will provide them with at least thirty-one hours of training and forty-five hours of individualized technical assistance during the second year of the project. In addition, 30 percent of the Federal award is provided as financial assistance to partners for individual capacity building projects.

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