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Youth Outreach Services

Youth Outreach Services promotes the strengths and abilities of youth and families by providing community-based services that empower and enrich each to face life’s challenges with confidence, competence and dignity.

Youth Outreach Services provides community re-entry services for those leaving incarceration.

Youth Guidance

At Youth Guidance, we believe that no matter what challenges a young person faces, they are more likely to succeed when they have many caring adults in their lives. Our highly trained staff works directly with schools, parents and families to meet kids where they are—physically within schools, socially and emotionally—and help them break cycles of violence, overcome life and academic obstacles, make positive choices, and remain on the right path towards life success. Youth Guidance serves more than 12,000 students in Chicago’s schools. More than 95% of our students are African-American and Hispanic/Latino. Most reside in low income communities.

Education initiatives include Project Prepare, which develops soft and hard skills for college and job readiness; extended day and enrichment after school programs; a community schools program; and a Parent and Family Engagement program.

YOUth Can Chicago

YOUth CAN Chicago’s mission is to intervene in the lives of low income youth in the community by enriching their academic, cultural and social development through academic assistance, computer technology, art, entrepreneurship and music programs. YOUth CAN strengthen the self-preservation skills of community youth by giving them the tools necessary for success.  “Discovering the potential in YOU!”

Students learn entrepreneurship by developing, creating, marketing and selling the products they create.

Members engage in one hour daily individualized tutoring and homework assistance. Individualized tutoring conducted by staff allows us to identify youth problem areas and strengthen performance in those subjects.

Yoga Gardens

Yoga Gardens NFP is a women founded not-for -profit organization which began in Chicago. Our goal is to aid and uplift communities in impoverished Chicago neighborhoods by teaching & practicing peace, and by making healthy and nutritious foods available. Through yoga, meditation, healthier food options, and beautifying the neighborhood, we relieve stress and disease in areas where these difficulties are most prevalent. We revitalize vacant lots in developing residential areas, which often accumulate garbage, attract criminal activity, and ultimately become a burden on the residents. Yoga Gardens transforms each lot into a thriving yoga & gardening community space.

Yoga Garden produces an array of organic and non gmo fruits and vegetables. Residents learn to grow their own food and are able to take home what the garden produces. Because our garden is located in a food desert, it provides fresh produce to residents who would normally have limited or no access to those types of foods.

Westside Health Authority

Westside Health Authority serves the Austin neighborhood and the greater Westside of Chicago. WHA’s mission is to use the capacity of local residents to improve the health and well-being of the community. For WHA, health is defined broadly to include the social and physical environment which contributes to the mental, physical and spiritual well-being of a person. It also includes relationships with family, friends and neighbors, and the ability to find stable employment. Though focused on serving the West Side, WHA serves communities throughout Chicago.

WHA advocates through the Austin/greater Westside communities.

United for Better Living

Located within the West Garfield Park community on Chicago’s west side, UBL has provided services to Westside residents for slightly over thirty years, including families, seniors and youth. United for Better Living seeks to be a leading organization that strengthens and empowers individuals and families living in West Garfield Park (WGP) and its surrounding communities with relevant human service programs.

Education programs include adult literacy and GED instruction, computer training for teens and adults, and the Safe Haven After School Program, which includes tutoring, mentoring, homework help, a computer lab, and other educational programs/activities.

UCAN Chicago

UCAN strives to build strong youth and families through compassionate healing, education and empowerment. UCAN operates under the cornerstones of a consistent presence, meaningful programming and unrivaled diversity. UCAN serves over 13,000 at-risk children, youth and families across Illinois through more than 30 programs that create a healing process for youth who have experienced trauma and provide a continuum of care.

UCAN advocates in many areas (see above). General fund donations go toward the Chicagoland area. Direct donation link: http://www.ucanchicago.org/donate/

Thresholds

Established in 1959, Thresholds provides healthcare, housing, and hope for thousands of persons with mental illnesses and substance use disorders in Illinois each year. Through care, employment, advocacy, and housing, Thresholds assists and inspires people with mental illnesses to reclaim their lives. Thresholds is one of the oldest and largest providers of recovery services for persons with mental illnesses and substance use disorders in Illinois. We reject the notion that anyone is a lost cause, utilizing evidence-based practices and a wide range of supports to treat the whole person, rather than just the disease. We offer 30 innovative programs at more than 100 locations throughout Chicago, the adjacent suburbs, and nine surrounding counties. Services include assertive outreach, case management, housing, employment, education, psychiatry, primary care, substance use treatment, and research. Last year, Thresholds served more than 15,000 adults and youth, with 75% of services delivered out in the community, representing more than 500,000 hours of care.

Donations support Threshold’s programs (see above). If you want all funds to go to Chicago, indicate that fact in the “How did you hear about us? Comments?” section of the donation page.

Teamwork Englewood

Teamwork Englewood’s mission is to unite the many organizations serving Englewood residents and work toward the common goal of building a thriving community through the Englewood Quality of Life Plan, which focuses on housing/public spaces, public safety/crime, health/wellness, education/youth, and jobs/economic development.

We are the Southside Community Re-entry Support Center for the city of Chicago. We aspire to create opportunities for those leaving incarceration to prevent recidivism, improve public safety and encourage productive and successful lives. In these efforts, Teamwork Englewood has partnered with Dakota, Berry’s Global, PECO’s Pallet and Ford to provide full time opportunities to returning citizens.

TARGET Area Development Corporation

TARGET is a regional grassroots social justice organization with offices in Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, and South Africa building power in communities to solve stubborn problems using Research, Organizing, Mobilization, and Education (ROME).

Donations support TARGET’s programs (see above).  When donating, choose “other” as your program/fund and indicate you’d like your donation to go to Chicago programs.

Southwest Organizing Project (SWOP)

The Southwest Organizing Project’s (SWOP) mission is to build a broad-based organization of Christian, Muslim and Jewish faith institutions, public and private schools and other institutions in Southwest Chicago, which will enable families to exercise common values, determine their own future and connect with each other to improve life in their neighborhoods. To this end, leaders of SWOP have dedicated themselves to building relationships across racial, ethnic, generational and faith differences and to bringing the common concerns of their institutions into the public life of the community as they develop the capacity to act collectively and “stand for the whole.”

Advocacy topics include health, immigration, leadership training, and education (as a co-convener of VOYCE, Voices of Youth in Education).

South Austin Neighborhood Association

The South Austin Neighborhood Association’s mission is to engage Chicago’s South Austin residents to join together and collectively preserve and improve the quality of life by addressing concerns and issues that are important to all. With community teamwork and cooperation of the proper authorities, we can achieve our goals of a safe, productive, and beautiful neighborhood. By establishing communication between neighbors, supporting block clubs, and encouraging local businesses to have good business practices, we can enhance a positive sense of pride in our community.

Donations support The South Austin Neighborhood Association’s programs (see above).

SocialWorks

SocialWorks aims to empower youth through the arts, education, and civic engagement while fostering leadership, accessibility, and positivity. Our initiatives, OpenMike, Warmest Winter, Kids of the Kingdom, and our New Chance: Arts & Literature Fund, were created to advocate for youth and the fulfillment of individual achievement and success in all its forms. We’re excited to continue to bring impact to the city of Chicago, and we hope you’ll support along the way.

The New Chance Arts & Literature Fund will ensure more students have access to arts enrichment education. The fund will bring arts programs and materials to Chicago Public Schools that have experienced a decrease in 5-year graduation rates, addressing their budgets, textbooks, and music programs. This will affect schools that are most in need and will take effect during the 2017-2018 school year.

Safer Foundation

Safer Foundation is one of the nation’s largest not-for-profit providers of services designed exclusively for people with criminal records. We focus on helping our clients secure and maintain jobs because we understand that employment offers the best chance at successful re-entry. Safer Foundation’s evidence-based programs are geared toward addressing barriers to employment and providing services that support our clients’ re-entry efforts. Safer has pioneered innovative programs designed specifically for youth and adults with criminal records based on their learning styles, current education levels and past education experiences. Safer also offers intensive case management and prevention education. That includes help recognizing abusive behavior; problem-solving assistance; supportive services; and other ancillary services.

http://www.saferfoundation.org/How-You-Can-Help

http://www.saferfoundation.org/How-You-Can-Help/Hire-a-Safer-Client

http://www.saferfoundation.org/How-You-Can-Help/Join-Our-Team

Donations support Safer Foundation’s programs (see above). To donate to Chicago, indicate on the donation form that you are donating on behalf of Help Heal Chicago.

Direct donation link: http://www.saferfoundation.org/How-You-Can-Help/Donate

Rebuilding Together Metro Chicago

In the spirit of volunteerism and community partnership, Rebuilding Together Metro Chicago improves the homes and neighborhoods of people in need so they may continue to live in warmth, safety and comfort. Programs focus on the west and southwest sides, but there are programs outside of those focus areas. Feel free to call the office with questions. Direct link to donation page: CLICK HERE.

Donations support Rebuilding Together Metro Chicago’s programs (see above).

R.A.G.E. (Resident Association of Greater Englewood)

R.A.G.E. members are homeowners, stakeholders, business owners, professionals, students, parents and grandparents fighting to transform and empower Greater Englewood. This resident-funded and resident-led association consists of members who reside in all 5 wards of the Greater Englewood area with a mission of mobilizing people and resources to force a change in the community by breaking down barriers in communication and promoting positivity through solution-based approaches. Areas of focus: economic development, education and youth development, civic engagement.

Donations support R.A.G.E.’s programs (see above).

Primo Center for Women and Children

For nearly 40 years, the mission of the Primo Center has been to empower families to become productive, responsible and independent members of their community. Holding true to the values of the Primo Center’s founder, the late Bishop Quintin Primo Jr., the agency’s goal is to create innovative programming for some of Chicago’s most vulnerable residents, homeless women and children. The Primo Center invests in resources that are key to addressing homelessness—housing, which includes 184 units of shelter and 90 units of permanent housing; trauma-informed wraparound mental health services; early childhood services; a violence prevention program for at-risk youth in schools and community centers; and integrated health care, which matches physical health with behavioral health care homes.

Donations support the Primo Center’s programs (see above).

Open Books

Open Books’ mission is to transform lives through reading, writing, and the GIVING power of used books.

Each year, Open Books and our corps of volunteers bring joyful experiences to 6,000 children through our literacy programs, which are designed to boost confidence, help students see themselves as readers and writers, and provide them with access to books.

Every writing program also provides students with an opportunity to become published authors. Through our book granting programs, we donate more than 150,000 books to children, families, and under-resourced communities across Chicagoland.

The generosity of donors like you help us engage more than 4,500 youth through our literacy programs and give way more than 135,000 books to children and families each year. Together, we can transform lives through reading, writing, and the giving power of used books. We are grateful for your support!

Direct donation link: https://openbooks.z2systems.com/np/clients/openbooks/donation.jsp

Off the Street Club

Off The Street Club is a place where kids living in West Garfield Park have a safe place to learn, laugh and play without worry.

Off the Street Club offers several after school programs and tutoring.

New Life Centers of Chicagoland

With centers in Little Village and Humboldt Park, New Life Centers of Chicagoland connect youth and young adults with Christ and Community through mentoring, education, and sports. Many children in the neighborhood encounter language barriers, gang pressure and a poor educational system. New Life Centers hopes to provide a safe place for them to learn and grow holistically, where confidence can be built, and where opportunity can be given.

The La Semilla After-School Program exists to serve these children, both academically and spiritually. The program includes homework help and tutoring, snack time, games, Bible lessons, gym and nutrition education, and more.

Mothers Opposed to Violence Everywhere (Move)

To create both community and in-home programs that will decrease the growing violence in the North Lawndale community, M.O.V.E. organizes woman of all ages, whose families are victimized by gun violence, and some who were victims of gun or domestic violence themselves. Mothers Opposed to Violence Everywhere is a grass root organization that works to stop violence, increase public safety, and ensure a quality education in all schools. To donate, contact Louvenia Hood at louveniahood@gmail.com.

Donations support M.O.V.E.’s programs (see above).

Mothers and Men Against Senseless Killings (MASK)

MASK’s history/mission: MASK was established in 2015 as a way to put eyes on the streets, interrupt violence and crime, and teach children to grow up as friends rather than enemies. A group of caring individuals in the community began to simply hang out on the block, cook food, and emanate love. Our presence was felt. People began to notice neighbors were watching out for each other, and it was contagious. Now this method of injecting good vibes in troubled areas is catching on in more communities. Our primary mission is to build stronger communities through a focus on violence prevention, food insecurity, and housing. Additionally, MASK partners to ensure that community members have access to necessary city services, opportunities for education & professional skills growth, and economic development. If you wish to donate money, please know we are a 501(c)3, EIN: 81-3209025, and donations are tax deductible. Your gift will be used directly in support of feeding our communities, summer programming, back to school drives, holiday events, and the Lot in Englewood, Chicago. MASK is currently working in the following Chicago neighborhoods: Englewood/Hyde Park/Lawndale.

Donations support MASK’s programs (see above).

Marwen

Marwen educates and inspires young people from under-resourced communities and schools through the visual arts. Marwen achieves its mission by providing free visual arts classes to Chicago youth in 6 – 12 grades. Marwen also provides free college and career counseling to high school students and their families who are interested in pursuing a career in the visual arts or wish to continue their education beyond high school.

Donations support Marwen’s programs (see above).

LeadersUp

We serve as a talent development intermediary working with employers, community based organizations, and leaders in Chicago, Los Angeles, and the San Francisco Bay Area to create talent pipelines that connect young adults to career pathways and meet business entry to middle-skill hiring needs. LeadersUp bridges the divide between the untapped potential of young people and the business challenge of finding and keeping the best talent.

Donations support LeadersUp initiatives (see above).

Direct donation link: www.leadersup.org/donate/

Lawndale Christian Legal Center

LCLC serves youth involved with the criminal justice system, age 24 and younger, in North Lawndale. We provide youth with a unique integration of legal and social services to empower them to develop self-reliance. We come alongside youth who have been accused of an act of delinquency in the Cook County Juvenile Justice Division or who have been accused of a crime in the Cook County Criminal Justice Division (adult court). We call our approach “holistic legal services”, and we offer legal representation, social services, mentoring, and advocacy to walk youth through – and away from – the criminal justice system. We serve youth throughout the full duration of their involvement with the criminal justice system. Our services begin while our youth have a case pending in juvenile or adult criminal court, but continue after the case is over during their period of supervision, probation, incarceration, or parole, or for six months if they are found not guilty. On average, we work with our youth for three years until they are completely free of the criminal justice system.

Donations support LCLC’s programs (see above).

KLEO Community Family Life Center

KLEO offers a dependable, caring environment and diverse positive outlets for adolescent’s and teens whose life have been impacted by poverty, teen pregnancy, gangs and other challenges. The program is designed to provide children with a warm, supportive environment where they have an opportunity to enjoy activities, make choices, develop responsibilities, build character and stimulate their curiosity.

KLEO offers after school programs for ages 6-12, which provide tutoring, arts and crafts, computer classes, and healthy eating education; after school programs for ages 13-18, which offer poetry, dance, acting, and music; and youth advisors/counselors, who work in schools to target the 10% of students that tend to lead disruptions.

Kenwood-Oakland Community Organization

KOCO’s organizing agenda is directly informed by its constituency, the low-income and working families within the North Kenwood, Oakland, and its adjacent communities. KOCO’s organizing approach engages residents in identifying the issues that they want to see addressed, and facilitating the planning, strategizing and training opportunities to aid residents in addressing issues. KOCO is a membership-driven organization. Through the sustained engagement of low-income and working families, KOCO develops multi-generational leaders who impact decision-making processes and public policies, improving the quality of life in local communities.

Advocacy areas include education, housing, violence prevention, youth development, and seniors.

Institute for Nonviolence Chicago

Through the teachings of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., Nonviolence Chicago infuses high doses of nonviolence through community members and role models to change the prevalence and status quo of violence. Using a collaborative community-based approach founded on the theories and practices of nonviolence and relationship building, Nonviolence Chicago works with the highest risk (“in-risk”) individuals and the communities in which they live. Through outreach, mediation, support, and nonviolence trainings, they engage strategies to interrupt and replace the cycle of violence.

Case Managers help individuals move beyond violence and access the support and services they need to stay safe. Nonviolence Chicago works with participants on an individual basis to help them set goals, identify their needs, and secure services that help them move forward, including coaching for positive behavior, mentoring, mental health counseling, job readiness training/placement, support in school, or referrals to intensive social services.

Hypertext Magazine & Studio

At Hypertext Magazine & Studio, we believe that creating art helps us understand our personal journeys and our world. As writers, teachers, and publishers, we also believe in sharing our time, energy, and skills with community members whose stories have been silenced for too long. So we decided to make it official: as of October 2017, we are now a 501c3 organization dedicated to teaching writing and storytelling techniques to communities directly impacted by violence, people who are rebuilding their lives after being incarcerated, recovering from substance use disorders, or any underserved community whose collective voice has been marginalized. The storytelling and writing skills we teach transfer to all kinds of writing – including business correspondence, letters, emails, resumes, etc.

Hypertext Magazine &Studio (HMS) has been kicking around Chicago for a couple of years but the pedagogy we use – Story Workshop® Approach of the Teaching of Writing – has been tried and tested for over 50 years.

Story Workshop’s alternative teaching approach celebrates the diverse voices of every community. This approach, developed by the late writer and professor John Schultz and housed for decades at Columbia College Chicago, closely resembles the writing process and emphasizes the principles of attention, seeing-in-the-mind, and oral telling to help writers discover what they want to tell and how to tell it. It’s a highly flexible approach that can be used to teach seasoned as well as novice writers, old and young.

And since everyone has a story to tell and their own unique language to tell it, Story Workshop® celebrates the writer’s experience as a human being – collecting and mining life experiences and encouraging writers to use vivid language – including dialect. The ideal workshop brings a diverse range of voices and content into the semi-circle, giving permission and challenging students to bring their wealth of experience into the writing.

Our home base is Chicago and we are focused on working with social service nonprofits to help improve their clients’ lives. And since all we need to teach a class is a room and willing would-be writers, we’re ready and willing to teach anywhere in Chicago.

Healthcare Alternative Systems

Healthcare Alternative Systems (HAS) provides a continuum of multicultural and bilingual (English/Spanish) behavioral care and social services that empower individuals, families and communities. Healthcare Alternative Systems (HAS) seeks to implement sustainable programs that benefit society by improving the well-being and recovery efforts of those individuals, families, and communities impacted by behavioral health problems.  If you would like to restrict your gift to Chicago programs, call the office to make arrangements.

Healthcare Alternative Systems (HAS) provides community re-entry services, including parole services.

Greater Chicago Food Depository

The Greater Chicago Food Depository is Chicago’s food bank. We provide food for hungry people while striving to end hunger in our community. We do this in partnership with 700 agencies and programs including pantries, soup kitchens, shelters and responses for children, older adults and veterans. This network distributes food where it is needed most throughout Cook County. Since 1979, the Food Depository has made a daily impact on hunger across Cook County. Last year, the Food Depository distributed nearly 72 million pounds of food, 37% of which was fresh produce. Every day we distribute the equivalent of 164,000 meals. Our impact adds up and we have been recognized as one of the leading charities in Chicago.

Donations support the Greater Chicago Food Depository’s programs (see above). Direct link to donation page:

Financial Support

Greater Auburn-Gresham Development Corporation

The Greater Auburn-Gresham Development Corporation (GAGDC) works to foster and promote revitalization of the low-to-moderate income communities that we serve using comprehensive community development strategies. Since 2001, the GAGDC has worked in all, or parts of, Ashburn, Auburn Gresham, Englewood, Greater Grand Crossing, Washington Heights, West Englewood, and West Chatham.

Areas of advocacy include community economic development, housing, and education.

Get IN Chicago

Get IN Chicago provides counsel to funder and community-based organizations working to reduce youth violence and address the underlying, systemic issues that lead to it. Get IN Chicago also studies and funds antiviolence initiatives focused on acutely high-risk youth, those who are at heightened risk for becoming victims or perpetrators of violence. Get IN Chicago is led by business leaders who have pledged support to identify the most promising practices to improve the lives and safety of Chicago’s youth. To do this, Get IN Chicago partners with community-based organizations, public agencies and corporate funders to inspire creative solutions and collaboration, involve multiple stakeholders, and invest in innovative and effective strategies.

Donations support Get IN Chicago’s programs (see above).

Garfield Park Community Council

The GPCC is a community-building organization of dedicated residents and allies working together to develop leaders and create opportunities and programs that build a vital Garfield Park community. The GPCC’s goals focus on renewing the community’s commercial corridors, spurring new housing investment, addressing public safety and wellness, and building connections between neighbors. Programs integrate resident leadership and advocacy to ensure that community members lead neighborhood planning and renewal efforts.

For the past four years, the GPCC has held an annual resident leadership and organizing training, attended by approximately 100 residents. Residents who attend the training go on to work on small collective action campaigns and take on additional volunteer roles in the community or within the organization. The GPCC employs two Resident Organizers, both of whom are long-time community residents. Through a combination of door-knocking, public meetings, and outreach, the GPCC strives to involve the residents most impacted by community developments.

Family Focus

The mission of Family Focus is to promote the well-being of children from birth by supporting and strengthening families in and with their communities. We help parents gain confidence and competence as the primary caregivers and educators of their children. We provide parents and their children with critical resources and learning opportunities to encourage healthy development in their communities. When donating, if you choose to restrict your donation to Chicago, you may select Englewood or Lawndale or Hermosa.

Education programs include the Early Childhood Initiative, providing home visits, parental support group; the Fatherhood Initiative, open to men trying to reconnect with their families; after school programs providing curriculum based programming to improve socio-emotional health during the critical hours of 3pm – 6pm after school; and the Welcoming New Citizens program, providing services to help immigrant families and DACA recipients.

Enlace

Enlace Chicago is dedicated to making a positive difference in the lives of Little Village residents by fostering a safe and healthy environment and by championing opportunities for educational advancement and economic development.

Education initiatives include working with eight public schools in Little Village to transform them into safe, accessible community centers and promoting successful transition to high school and post-secondary opportunities, in addition to providing family programming that promotes academic achievement, skill building, socio-emotional learning, and leadership development.

Cure Violence Chicago

Cure Violence stops the spread of violence by using the methods and strategies associated with disease control – detecting and interrupting conflicts, identifying and treating the highest risk individuals, and changing social norms – resulting reductions in violence of up to 70%.  Currently, in partnership with local community based organizations, Cure Violence operates in West Englewood, Grand Crossing, South Shore, Auburn Gresham, Roseland, North Lawndale, Humboldt Park, South Chicago, Rogers Park, Uptown, Little Village, Southwest, and Grand Blvd. as well as in four major trauma centers in Chicago – Advocate Christ Medical Center, Mount Sinai Medical Center, Stroger Hospital of Cook County, and Northwestern Memorial Hospital.  Cure Violence is an evidence-based approach to preventing violence with multiple independent studies demonstrating effectiveness, including several in Chicago. (Tax exempt status under the University of Illinois Foundation.)

Donations support Cure Violence Chicago’s programs (see above). Direct donation link:

Donate

 

Court Appointed Special Advocates (CASA) of Cook County

Court Appointed Special Advocates (CASA) of Cook County trains volunteers to advocate on behalf of children ages 0-21 involved in Cook County’s Child Protection Court and serve as their CASA child’s voice in court, helping ensure that child’s voice is heard. CASA Advocates are connected with one child/sibling group to help ensure that their CASA child’s social, emotional, developmental, and cognitive needs are met and that the child’s best interests remain at the forefront of their child protection team members’ priorities as the team makes decisions on the child’s behalf about their health and well-being, living situation, school environment, connections with family members, and long-term court goals.

CASA Advocates engage in training and are then matched with a child/sibling group. Once connected with their CASA child, CASA Advocates visit with the child at least once monthly, connect with the child’s family members, schools, and child protection team members and service providers, participate in child protection case and school meetings, complete court reporting and attend court with or on behalf of the child. CASA Advocates engage in ongoing supervision and training throughout their case to help support their engagement in objective, culturally considerate, trauma-informed, child-centered advocacy.

Communities United

As a grassroots social justice organization, Communities United builds power by developing local leadership and empowering communities to identify and address the root causes of inequity at the neighborhood, city, state and national levels. We believe that community members hold the solutions to the challenges they face. Through a community organizing approach, Communities United develops institutions and community residents as leaders, convenes broad-based coalitions, and unites people across age, race, ethnicity, income, sexual orientation, gender identity, abilities and religion to advance structural change that concretely improves peoples’ lives. Communities United engages community members who live, work, go to school or worship in the diverse immigrant communities of Albany Park, Belmont-Cragin, North Park, Irving Park, West Ridge, North Austin, and North Lawndale.

Advocacy areas include public education, violence, immigrant rights, housing, healthcare, and work conditions/wages.

City Year Chicago

Founded in 1994, City Year Chicago is an education-based nonprofit that provides full time tutoring and mentoring to students in in multiple Chicago Public Schools. City Year partners with high-need schools to help bridge the gap between what their students need and what schools are designed to provide.

Donations support City Year Chicago’s programs (see above).

Chicago Youth Centers

For hundreds of children and families, CYC is the place where possibility lives. CYC’s early childhood, after-school, and summer programs help children and teens grow socially and emotionally and build skills for the 21st century. By providing opportunities for enrichment and helping them form meaningful relationships, they grow to be caring, successful adults who build bright futures for themselves and their families. CYC serves children and families through six Centers located in Altgeld Gardens, Bridgeport, Bronzeville, Humboldt Park, North Lawndale, and South Shore.

Educational programs include the Early Childhood Program, the Out-of-School Time Program, Teen Leadership Development, and the Education Support Initiative, which provides outreach and support to K-12 students who are children in state care.

Direct link to donate: http://www.chicagoyouthcenters.org/donate

Chicago Urban League

The Chicago Urban League works for economic, educational and social progress for African Americans and promotes strong, sustainable communities through advocacy, collaboration and innovation. Advocacy focuses on policies and programs that ensure equal participation by African Americans in the economic and social mainstream.

Donations support the Chicago Urban League’s programs (see above).

Chicago Survivors

Chicago Survivors works with families who have suffered the homicide of a loved one, providing crisis intervention services/support and advocating for families’ rights. Their vision: that a network of concern and care reframe violence prevention to include the care of families who experience the homicide of a loved one in Chicago, and that a compassionate community of survivors flourish as a means of peer support and an avenue for constructive engagement in anti-violence measures throughout the city, across the nation and around the world.

Donations support Chicago Survivors’ programs (see above).

Chicago Coalition for the Homeless

We are the only non-profit in Illinois dedicated to advocating for public policies that curb and can ultimately end homelessness. Our organization leads strategic campaigns, community outreach, and public policy initiatives that target the lack of affordable housing in metropolitan Chicago and across Illinois. In addition, CCH presses for access to jobs, training, and public schools. Our community organizers, policy specialists, and public interest attorneys advocate with people hurt by homelessness, including mothers with children, students, unaccompanied youth, ex-offenders, prostitution survivors, and low-wage workers. To preserve our independent voice, CCH does not accept government funding. Instead, we advocate for funds to create housing and improve services and opportunities for people who are homeless or at-risk, and to support the programs that serve homeless families, youths and adults.

Donations support CCH’s programs (see above).

By the Hand

We nourish Chicago kids in the most under-resourced neighborhoods – mind, body, and soul – to someday become the agents of change in our city and beyond.

We believe that the solution to violence in Chicago is raising up a new generation of healthy, knowledgeable, and purpose-driven children within the very neighborhoods where the violence occurs. By The Hand literally takes kids by the hand, starting in kindergarten, and walks with them all the way through college. Our program gives kids a safe learning environment during the most dangerous time of day – the after-school hours – and cares for them holistically with tutoring, nutritious meals, eye and dental care, counseling, spiritual development, and enriching activities like basketball and art.

Join us in developing Chicago’s new generation of changemakers: bythehand.org/give or bythehand.org/volunteer

Donations support By the Hand’s programs (see above).

BUILD

Broader Urban Involvement & Leadership Development (BUILD)

BUILD’s mission is to engage at-risk youth in the schools and on the streets, so they can realize their educational and career potential and contribute to the stability, safety and well being of our communities. Since 1969, BUILD (Broader Urban Involvement & Leadership Development) has been a pioneer and innovator in youth development, now serving neighborhoods on Chicago’s West (Austin, Humboldt Park, Hermosa, West Town) and South (Fuller Park, Bronzeville) Sides. Through three primary program areas — Prevention, Intervention, and BUILDing Futures — BUILD partners with an array of stakeholders to offer a spectrum of services designed to build lives and futures. Whether by providing a school-based curriculum, youth leadership opportunities, positive out-of school activities or intensive, individualized mentoring, all of BUILD’s programs share the same objectives: to reduce negative behaviors, school expulsions and withdrawals, recidivism rates, and court and gang involvement; and to increase pro-social behaviors, school readiness and success, college access, and opportunities for happy, productive futures.

BUILD targets college access and career readiness via Education Outreach Specialists, a Career Development Program, and a Youth Leadership Program.

Brighton Park Neighborhood Council

BPNC’s mission is to create a safer community, improve the learning environment at public schools, preserve affordable housing, provide a voice for youth, protect immigrant rights, promote gender equality, and end all forms of violence. Other advocacy efforts include financial and economic justice, as well as health care.

Donations support BPNC’s advocacy goals (see above).

Bright Star Community Outreach

BSCO recognizes that violence impacts individuals and communities in a complex and dynamic way, affecting nearly all aspects of life, from physical and mental health to housing, propensity for substance abuse, educational attainment and employment. BSCO’s community development initiatives, particularly in the 3rd and 4th ward of Chicago’s south side, are aimed at facing our largest societal challenges: violence in our communities, poor economic opportunities, inadequate mental health services, homelessness, child safety, and drug abuse. These efforts are designed to strengthen local families and communities, as well as leverage key partnerships with organizations and businesses that share their passion for seeing renewal in Chicago.

Advocacy initiatives include their Youth Advocacy Council, increasing mental health awareness, and other community outreach programs.

Boxing Out Negativity

Boxing Out Negativity is a boxing/mentoring program that strives to make youth ready for the real world. They enroll youth ages 8 to 16. Enrollment is free, but students have to “pay” in completing their school required homework, obeying the coach, and general positivity. Coach Derek’s dream is to open a boxing/recreation gym where many more students could be served. It would provide a safe haven for youth in Chicago and build positivity in all aspects of life.

Donations support the North Lawndale Boxing League’s programs (see above).

BBF Family Services

The mission of BBF Family Services is to improve the quality of life for North Lawndale youth and their families by providing safe, stable, and nurturing experiences that enhance social, emotional, academic, and career development. BBF Family Services envisions a thriving, self-sustaining community where empowered children and families have access to all opportunities. In pursuit of this vision, we provide coordinated programs and services that combat poverty, low educational attainment, chronic disease, criminal activity, and trauma in all age groups. BBF Family Services offers six program and service areas: Community Engagement, Education, Employment Services, Family Services, Health & Wellness, and Youth Services.

BFF Family Services develops partnerships, collaborations, and programs with organizations that offer coordinated services, linking youth and families to opportunities.

Austin Coming Together (A.C.T.)

A.C.T.’s mission is to increase the collective impact of member organizations’ efforts to improve education and economic development outcomes for the Austin community. Their impact goals are Quality Early Learning, Living Wage Careers, Safe Neighborhoods, and Stable Housing Markets.

Austin Career Connect is an effort to create pathways to living wage careers for the under- and unemployed. ACT works with our member organizations to:

  1. Support under- and unemployed Austin residents enroll in high quality job readiness and training programs
  2. Build the capacity of our members to work with each other in order to improve client outcomes
  3. Advocate for better policies that create living wage jobs in Austin and for Austin residents

Alternatives, Inc.

Alternatives, Inc. supports and empowers Chicago youth to build safer and more vibrant communities through a combination of youth development programs and behavioral health services. Alternatives is a comprehensive, multi-cultural youth development organization that operates as a support system for more than 4,000 of Chicago’s young people and their families each year. Our mission is to facilitate personal development, strengthen family relationships, and enhance the community’s well-being. Alternatives’ programs and services use an asset-based model that focuses on enriching young people’s lives by building upon individual strengths within the context of their family and community. Alternatives serves youth between the ages of 10 and 24 and their families citywide through various Chicago public schools, our Uptown Youth Center, and our interim South Side office. We are currently coordinating with existing agencies to open a permanent South Side center. Our participants reflect the city’s rich diversity and they live in 70 different Chicago communities – 48% on the south and west sides of the City.

Extra-curricular programs include Urban Arts and Girl World, which employs field trips and community engagement to cultivate self-esteem and self-advocacy, teach the power of teamwork, and promote awareness of social justice issues, particularly those affecting girls and women.

Direct donation link: www.alternativesyouth.org/get-involved/donate/

Alliance of Local Service Organizations (ALSO)

ALSO’s many programs serve its mission to end violence in the homes and streets of communities nationwide. ALSO has a focus in community violence prevention within Chicago as well as specifically in the Humboldt Park, West Humboldt Park, Hermosa, and Logan Square areas.

A donation supports 1) in-risk youth outreach 2) in-risk youth mentorship 3) re-entry case management and 4) street violence intervention.

After School Matters

After School Matters is a nonprofit that provides Chicago high school teens with high quality, after-school and summer opportunities to explore and develop their talents while gaining critical skills for work, college and beyond. Since 1991, more than 200,000 teens have participated in our hands-on, project-based after-school and summer programs in the arts, communications and leadership, sports and STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and Math). Programs take place at locations throughout the city including Chicago public high schools, Chicago Park District and Chicago Public Library locations, community organizations, downtown at the Gallery 37 Center for the Arts and in Belmont Cragin at our new Michael and Karyn Lutz Center for After School Matters.

Donations support After School Matters’ programs (see above).