Past grants archive does not include small grants of $10,000 or less.
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.
When wage earners in low-income families experience an increase in income, they often lose eligibility for certain benefits, resulting in a decrease in the gross resources available for the family; this is known as the “benefits cliff.” This grant supports research by the United Way and the Schaefer Center for Public Policy on the impact of the benefits cliff on Maryland working families.
Opened in October 2012, the YES Center is the only drop-in center for unaccompanied homeless youth and young adults in Baltimore. The center serves youth ages 14 to 25, providing counseling, peer support, connections to resources, and a safe place for the youth to meet their basic needs for food, clothing, laundry facilities, and access to phones and computers, among other things. Services provided by YES staff members and partner agencies include employment readiness, job training, and job placement support; assistance accessing housing; case management; assistance in accessing public benefits; health care, including behavioral health; tutoring; and legal services. This grant supports the salaries of a case manager and peer intern who assist clients in addressing their needs.
The Y of Central Maryland, founded in 1853, provides services to children and adults of all demographic and economic backgrounds in Baltimore City and surrounding counties. The Y has partnered with St. Agnes Hospital to renovate and expand the site of the former Cardinal Gibbons High School in the Morrell Park/Violetville area of southwest Baltimore into their third full-service Family Center in the city. This project will culminate with the enrollment of 6,500 new Y members, the creation of 200 full-time and part-time jobs, and programming for at least 250 youth from the surrounding area.
Up2Us Sports was founded in 2010 as a national non-profit with the goal to use the power of sport to fight childhood obesity, end academic failure, and reduce youth violence by empowering youth with the skills they need to make good choices and to be physically active. In 2018, Up2Us opened a chapter in Baltimore to provide 200-trained coaches over the next five years – 40 per year – to community organizations throughout the city, with a focus on South and West Baltimore, for at least a one-year period. This grant helped to partially subsidize the expenses incurred by community programs with limited resources.
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