Past Grants

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

Vehicles for Change, Inc.

$125,000 / 2019 / 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 114 trainees who enrolled since the beginning of the program, only four have not completed because they were on work release and had to return to prison.  All of the 110 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 12 Baltimore residents.

ACLU Foundation of Maryland, Inc.

$100,000 / 2018 / Criminal Justice and Addiction

On going support for ACLU’s criminal justice project to include efforts around ending the misuse of solitary confinement, expanding parole opportunities for individuals sentenced to life sentences, and encouraging meaningful family and community connections for iincarcerated individuals.

Arts Education in Maryland Schools Alliance

$25,000 / 2018 / Education

Since its founding in 1992, Arts Education for Maryland Schools (AEMS) Alliance has worked to ensure that all of Maryland’s public schoolchildren have consistent and equitable access to high quality arts education.  In Baltimore City, arts education is largely uncoordinated, with unevenly distributed resources and nonexistent or incomplete data. This grant will support a three-county pilot of the Artlook Data Map, a searchable database that provides information about arts courses at each school, the percentage of students enrolled, and the community arts partners who work there.  Ultimately, Artlook will increase accountability and promote equitable opportunities for arts education in Maryland public schools.  

Baltimore Brew

$100,000 / 2018 / Community Development

Baltimore Brew provides in-depth reporting on public policy, government accountability and behind the scenes political coverage. Founded in 2009, the online publication has 60-70,000 unique readers each month.  The Brew holds a critical space in independent local media. This grant provided funds in support of staffing and related expenses.

Baltimore City Health Department

$111,293 / 2018 / Health and Human Services

To better target asthma treatment resources to the children who are most in need of support, the Baltimore City Health Department will create an asthma surveillance system that uses state health claims data to identify children who have had emergency room visits and/or hospitalizations due to asthma.  The Health Department will conduct outreach to these children and their families to offer supportive services to assist them in managing their asthma and reducing exposure to allergens.  The department will also use the asthma surveillance system to identify asthma “hot spots” in Baltimore where asthma prevention interventions can be delivered.  This grant provided funding to hire a half-time epidemiologist to design and manage the asthma surveillance system.  

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