Past Grants

Past grants archive does not include small grants of $10,000 or less.

Vehicles for Change, Inc.

$390,000 / 2020 / Workforce Development

Since 1999, the Abell Foundation has supported Vehicles for Change (VFC) in making low-cost cars available to low-income job seekers in Baltimore City. In 2015, with funding from Abell, VFC launched an automotive technician repair program.  VFC hires men and women who have been recently released from prison or who have been granted work release (usually in small cohorts of seven to eight people).  All program applicants have successfully completed the 600-hour Automotive Service Excellence (ASE) Auto Maintenance and Light Repair training program while incarcerated.  At VFC, they receive three to five months of paid work experience, earning $9 an hour.  The on-the-job experience is designed to build the trainees’ resumes and overcome any reservations that employers have about hiring returning citizens.  All trainees must pass at least four ASE certification tests.   The program is working:  of the 150 trainees who enrolled since the beginning of the program, 13 are still in training, 131 wer placed into full-time employment and only six have not completed because they were on work release and had to return to prison.  All of the 131 graduates have been placed into employment, with an average starting hourly wage of $16 per hour.  Funding from Abell will support the training and job placement of 56 to 60 Baltimore residents.

Whitelock Community Farm, Fiscally Sponsored by Fusion Partnerships, Inc.

$30,000 / 2020 / Community Development

Whitelock Community Farm, over its 10 year history, has harvested over 40,000 pounds of organic produce.  Distribution sites include a Reservoir Hill farm stand, neighborhood mobile market sites, community supported agriculture (CSA) program, a city wide farmers market and local restaurants. This grant provided support for infrastructure upgrades will allow the Farm to maximize food production, minimize food waste, expand outreach to youth in the community, and increase sales. 

ACLU Foundation of Maryland, Inc.

$100,000 / 2019 / Criminal Justice and Addiction

On-going support for ACLU’s criminal justice program to include efforts around expanding parole opportunities for individuals sentenced to life sentences and encouraging meaningful family and community connections for incarcerated individuals.

Franciscan Center, Inc.

$100,000 / 2019 / Health and Human Services

The Franciscan Center has served the indigent, homeless and working poor of Battimore since 1968. Throughout the Center’s 51 years of service, it has expanded its programs in direct response to the needs of its community. Funding from the Abell Foundation will support on-going emergency services for families in crisis including food, clothing, eviction prevention, utility assistance, and emergency health services.  

Jane Addams Resource Corporation

$100,000 / 2019 / Workforce Development

The Jane Addams Resource Corporation (JARC) Baltimore trains unemployed and/or underemployed Baltimore City residents in welding and computer numerical control (CNC) at the Regional Skills Training Center on Park Heights Avenue in West Baltimore.  With funding from the Abell Foundation, students receive hands-on training and earn industry-recognized credentials in a work-like environment.  Beyond technical skills training, JARC Baltimore provides employment readiness and financial support services to trainees during and after training.  Graduates are placed into jobs earning an average starting wage of $19 per hour.  

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