Funding: Archives 2014 & Earlier

Grants Awarded for November 2003

Charles Stewart Mott Foundation
503 S. Saginaw St., Suite 1200
Flint, MI 48502
(810) 238-5651
www.mott.org

• National Council on Alcoholism and Addictions, Flint, Mich., $27,300 for a new information technology system.
• Foundation for Democratic Youth, Budapest, Hungary, $33,000 to create a national advisory council to encourage youth activism.
• Highlander Research and Education Center, New Market, Tenn., $300,000 to support leadership development, training and community networking in Southern states.
• National Youth Employment Coalition, Washington, $375,000 to continue policy work and programming with local practitioners.
• Afterschool Alliance, Washington, $1 million for general support.
• Foundation for Civil Society, Moscow, Russia, $150,000 to support Russian nongovernmental programs seeking to improve government policies.
• Women’s Funding Network, San Francisco, $30,000 for general support to encourage women and girls to participate in communities and societies.
• Nelson Mandela Children’s Fund, Johannesburg, South Africa, $16,524 to compensate for a shortfall caused by changes in exchange rates.
• Intercultural Institution of Timisoara, Romania, $50,000 to improve ethnic relations.
• WETA, Arlington, Va., $43,191 for educational outreach materials for the PBS special, “The Journey Home.”
• Zapovedniks Center, Moscow, $60,000 to support training seminars, “microgrants” and technical assistance for nongovernmental organizations.
• National Center for Community Education, Flint, Mich., $2 million to support after-school providers.
• Public/Private Ventures, Philadelphia, $814,245 to support the Fathers at Work initiative and for technical assistance.
• Center for the Support of Democratic Youth Initiatives, Perm, Russia, $100,000 to expand programs that engage youth in community service
• Mott Community College, Flint, Mich., $146,920 to help prevent dropouts between middle and high school.
• Nova Skola, Prague, Czech Republic, $60,000 to support community education by establishing a community education network.
• Coalition of Community Foundations for Youth, Basehor, Kan., $60,000 to support the Youth Transition Funders Group.
• Exploratory and Special Projects, New York, $100,000 to provide educational outreach support for a video series on the life and legacy of Ralph Bunche, to be used in high school social studies and college-level courses.
• Arkansas Public Policy Panel, Little Rock, $200,000 to improve education equity across racial and ethnic lines.
• Public Policy and Education Fund of New York, Albany, $300,000 for general support.
• Temple University, Philadelphia, $25,000 to provide partial support for the Center for Public Policy to coordinate a third Organizing for Educational Excellence Training Institute.
• National Conference of State Legislatures, Denver, $200,000 for research on after-school development and to be a partner in the Afterschool Technical Assistance Collaborative.
• Center for Public Policy Priorities, Austin, Texas, $22,000 to help fund a series of four workshops to inform policy officials and service providers to support work force development services.

The Skillman Foundation

600 Renaissance Center, Suite 1700
Detroit, MI 48243
(313) 393-1185
www.skillman.org

• Neighborhood Funders Group, Washington, $2,000 for general support.
• Grantmakers for Children, Youth and Families, Washington, $5,000 for general support.
• The Foundation Center, New York, $10,000 for general support.
• Regents of the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, $25,000 to support the evaluation of the managed-care pilot in the Wayne County foster care system.
• Michigan’s Thanksgiving Parade Foundation, Detroit, $110,000 to support the 2003 parade’s float and balloon design contest for elementary school children.
• Abayomi Community Development Corp., Detroit, $75,000 to support children’s after-school program activities.
• Benjamin E. Mays Male Academy Association, Detroit, $75,000 to support after-school program activities in the Gratiot, Van Dyke and Mack areas.
• The Safe Center, Detroit, $75,000 to support after-school program activities.
• Vanguard Community Development, Detroit, $75,000 to support after-school programs.
• L.I.F.T. Women’s Resource Center, Detroit, $75,000 to support after-school programs.
• Cathedral Community Services, Detroit, $75,000 to support after-school programs.
• St. Paul Community Development Corp., Detroit, $75,000 to support after-school programs.
• The Yes Foundation, Bingham Farms, Mich., $114,000 to foster positive child-parent relationships through literacy-based interventions.
• Third Judicial Circuit Court of Michigan, Detroit, $80,000 to continue the Court-Appointed Special Advocates Volunteer Program.

Staples Foundation for Learning

500 Staples Drive, 4 West
Framingham, MA 01702
(508) 253-5000
www.staplesfoundation.org

• Atlanta Symphony Orchestra, $10,000 for the Talent Development Program.
• Boys & Girls Club of Washington County, Hagerstown, Md., $22,500 for a teen center.
• Buckeye Community Hope Foundation, Gahanna, Ohio, $15,000 to develop a computer-learning center for the YouthBuild program in Columbus.
• School, Home and Office Products Association, Dayton, Ohio, $15,000 for the Kids in Need Resource Center in Washington.
• Boston Excels, Boston, $10,000 for the Otis Elementary School Even Start Program.
• Junior Achievement of Lorain County, Elyria, Ohio, $10,000 to provide business and economics curricula for students in the seventh and eighth grades.
• Leadership, Education, and Athletics in Partnership, New Haven, Conn., $10,000 for child- and youth-development programs.
• See Forever Foundation, Washington, $10,000 for a job-training program for at-risk teenagers.
• Fielding Graduate Institute, Santa Barbara, Calif., $10,000 for a collaborative educational leadership program.
• Los Angeles Educational Partnership, Los Angeles, $10,000 for the Career Academics Program at inner-city high schools.
• New Avenues for Youths, Portland, Ore., $10,000 for the Community Alternative Education Center.
• Framingham Partners in Education, Framingham, Mass., $10,000 for an after-school program for elementary school students that focuses on math and science.
• New York Restoration Project, New York, $10,000 for the Recreational and Environmental Educational Program.
• Reading Is Fundamental, Washington, $10,000 to provide lending-library grants to Family of Readers program sites.
• Save the Children, Westport, Conn., $10,000 for an after-school mentoring and educational program that involves AmeriCorps volunteers.
• Treehouse, Seattle, $10,000 for a tutoring program.
• Enterprise for High School Students, San Francisco, $10,000 for a job referral program for teenagers.
• Boys & Girls Clubs of America, Atlanta, $2.5 million for general support.

The Women’s Foundation

340 Pine St., Suite 302
San Francisco, CA 94104
(415) 837-1113
www.twfusa.org

• Adolescent Health Working Group, San Francisco, $20,000 to help educate young women who can teach their peers about emergency contraception, sexual health services and related issues.
• Asian and Pacific Islanders for Reproductive Health, Oakland, Calif., $15,000 for general support.
• Centro Mujeres A.C., La Paz, Calif., $14,500 to implement workshops for youth on sexual and reproductive health, rights and services.
• Clinica de La Raza, Oakland, Calif., $22,500 to support individual and peer health education at Fremont High School, Oakland Technical High School and San Lorenzo School health centers.
• Girls After School Academy, San Francisco, $5,000 to expand the Responsibility for Emotional Secure Perceptions of Equal Choices Training curriculum in area middle schools and support groups.
• Planned Parenthood of San Diego and Riverside Counties, $17,500 to produce a youth-led radio program with Radio Bilingue and a community program of the Universidad Autonoma de Baja California.
• Planned Parenthood Shasta-Diablo, Concord, Calif., $17,500 to support the Client Advocacy Program and to empower young women and teens.
• Women and Youth Supporting Each Other, Los Angeles, $12,500 for general support.
• Women’s Community Clinic, San Francisco, $20,000 to supply the Street Outreach Project with funds for health and wellness supplies, training and salaries.
• Youth Gender Project, Berkeley, Calif., $5,000 to research and produce safe-sex materials for transgender and transsexual youth with a focus on HIV prevention.

The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation

P.O. Box 2316
Princeton, NJ 08543
(609) 627-5937
www.rwjf.org.

• Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development, Alexandria, Va., $290,463 to study the feasibility of a health report card in improving the health and well-being of school-age children.
• Middlesex County Recreation Council (John E. Toolan Kiddie Keep Well Camp), Edison, N.J., $364,400 for a camping program for health-impaired children.
• New Brunswick Tomorrow, New Brunswick, N.J., $450,000 for a citywide program to strengthen human services and resources.
The following were awarded grants under the foundation’s Covering Kids and Families program:
• Georgetown University Institute for Health Care Research and Policy, Washington, $28,232.
• Southern Institute on Children and Families, Columbia, S.C., $4,000.
• Bridgeport Child Advocacy Coalition, Conn., $199,992.
• Fresno County Economic Opportunities Commission, Fresno, Calif., $125,000.
• Our Children First Coalition, Texarkana, Ark., $125,000.
• Philadelphia Citizens for Children and Youth, $125,000.
• Children’s Defense Fund, Bellaire, Texas, $125,000.
• Buncombe County Department of Social Services, Asheville, N.C., $124,805.
• United Way of Central West Virginia, Charleston, $125,000.
• Baltimore Health Care Access, $124,930.
• City of Minneapolis Department of Health and Family Support, $115,957.
• Outside In, Portland, Ore., $119,628.
• Placement Resources, Pittsburgh, $124,970.
• Radford University Foundation, Radford, Va., $125,000.
• Penquis Community Action Program, Bangor, Maine, $149,483.
• CHOICE Regional Health Network, Olympia, Wash., $124,853.
• Kootenai Hospital District, Coeur d’Alene, Idaho, $121,369.
• Migrant Health Promotion, Progreso, Texas, $124,386.
• County of Olmsted Community Services, Rochester, Minn., $124,992.
• Youth Development, Los Lunas, N.M., $124,400.
• Hudson Perinatal Consortium, Jersey City, N.J., $125,000.
• Center for Healthcare Strategies Supporting Organization, Princeton, N.J., $847,237.

The following were awarded grants under the foundation’s Reclaiming Futures: Communities Helping Teens Overcome Drugs, Alcohol & Crime program:

• New Hampshire District Court, Concord, $1 million.
• Portland State University Graduate School of Social Work, Ore., $388,198.

Federal Grants

Selected grants announced near the end of the fiscal year, Sept. 30

Corporation for National and Community Service

1201 New York Ave. NW
Washington, DC 20525
(202) 606-5000
www.cns.gov

The following grants were awarded to help individuals and communities rise out of poverty:

• College Summit, Washington, $161,877.
• Non-Violence Project USA, Miami, $204,550.
• Communities in Schools of Florida, Tallahassee, $384,715.
• Center for Community Development-Delta State University, Cleveland, Miss., $433,553.
• Youth Venture, Arlington, Va., $233,145.
• Step by Step, Harts, W.Va., $281,788.

Department of Education
400 Maryland Avenue SW
Washington, DC 20202
(800) 872-5327
www.ed.gov

The following grants were awarded for public charter schools in Arizona (unless otherwise indicated):

• Intelli-school, Phoenix, $147,188.
• Arizona School for the Arts, Phoenix, $150,000.
• Valley Academy, Phoenix, $150,000.
• SC Jensen-Corporation/Intelli-School, Phoenix, $120,700.
• Toltecalli Academy, Tucson, $142,603.
• Venture Academy, Scottsdale, $149,325.
• Chandler Academy of Arts and Technology, $149,978.
• Arizona Community Development Corp., Tucson, $150,000.
• North Start Charter Middle School, Sun City, $150,000.
• New School for the Arts Middle School, Tempe, $150,000.
• Technical Vocational High School, Tucson, $150,000.
• J’Anne Ellsworth, Lake Montezuma, $150,000.
• Kathleen E. Pace, Sierra Vista, $150,000.
• Basis School, Tucson, $151,251.
• Academic and Personal Excellence High School, Tucson, $197,380.
• Patriot Academy, Gilbert, $199,913.
• Lifelong Learning Academy, Tucson, $255,000.
• Montgomery Institute, Meridian, Miss., $78,592.

The following grants were awarded for Safe and Drug-Free Schools mentoring programs:

• Success Through Adults Reaching Students, Wells, Minn., $39,739.
• Middle Way House, Bloomington, Ind., $47,755.
• Cayuga/Seneca Community Action Agency, Auburn, N.Y., $53,541.
• Churchill Community, Fallow, Nev., $55,440.
• Communities in Schools, Dallas, Texas, $59,937.
• Public Education Foundation of Marion, Ocala, Fla., $66,494.
• Crete Public Schools, Crete, Neb., $72,681.
• Dickinson County, Kinship Spirit Lake, Iowa, $77,536.
• Fledglings, Stone Mountain, Ga., $77,897.
• Centre County Youth Service Bureau, State College, Pa., $79,694.
• Newaygo County Community Services, Fremont, Mich., $82,788.
• Big Brothers Big Sisters of Vermillion County, Danville, Ill., $83,927.
• AFC Mentoring, Boston, $87,093.
• Boys & Girls Club of Santa Clara, Santa Paula, Calif., $91,770.
• Institute for New Americans, Minneapolis, $92,101.
• Reentry Inc., Raleigh, N.C., $92,644.
• Denver Public Schools, Denver, $93,035.
• Sinai Community Institute, Chicago, $94,037.
• Big Brothers Big Sisters of South Central Kentucky, Bowling Green, $95,481.
• Big Brothers Big Sisters of Sangamon County, Springfield, Ill., $95,720.
• Urban League of Broward County, Fort Lauderdale, Fla., $96,054.
• Students in Business, Fremont, Calif., $96,987.
• Volunteers for Youth, Carrboro, N.C., $97,099.
• Rhode Islanders Sponsoring Education, Providence, $97,976.
• Centers for Youth and Families, Little Rock, Ark., $98,111.
• Western Wellness Foundation, Dickinson, N.D., $98,426.
• Big Brothers Big Sisters of the Black Hills, Rapid City, S.D., $98,738.
• Urban Youth Alliance International, New York, $100,223.
• YWCA of Greater Pittsburgh, $103,826.
• Alliance for Lifelong Learning, Brattleboro, Vt., $103,906.
• Chamblee-Doraville Ministry Center, Doraville, Ga., $105,717.
• Linking Communities for Educational Services, Washington, $107,462.
• Connect, Washington, Pa., $109,733.
• Madison Metropolitan School District, Madison, Wis., $111,492.
• Commonbond Communities – Advantage Services, St. Paul, Minn., $122,967.
• Big Brothers Big Sisters of the Tri-State, Huntington, W.Va., $113,816.
• West Iowa Community Mental Health Center, Denison, $115,121.
• University of Illinois, Champaign, $117,247.
• Big Brothers Big Sisters of Nevada County, Grass Valley, Calif., $118,966.
• Couleecap, La Crosse, Wis., $119,320.
• Prevention Council of Central Ohio, Columbus, $121, 241.
• Big Brothers Big Sisters of Arlington, Texas, $123,072.
• Jefferson County Board of Education and CIS of Jefferson County, Monticello, Fla., $123,503.
• Berkeley Youth, Berkeley, Calif., $124,477.
• I Have A Dream Foundation, Houston, $124,525.
• Big Brothers Big Sisters/Middlesex, Framingham, Mass., $127,629.
• French Creek Christian Center, Franklin, Pa., $132,901.
• Prevent Child Abuse, Bozeman, Mont., $135,201.
• Catholic Charities & Community Services, Denver, $135,453.
• Tulsa County Independent Schools, Okla., $138,368.
• Big Brothers Big Sisters of Southwest Idaho, Boise, $138,858.
• Big Brothers Big Sisters of Ulster County, Kingston, N.Y., $139,833.
• Independence Community School District, Iowa, $140,025.
• Human Services, Orlando, Fla., $140,205.
• Community Solutions, Hartford, Conn., $121,573.
• Colorado Christian Home, Denver, $142,044.
• Anderson School, S.C., $142,117.
• YMCA of Greater Winston-Salem, N.C., $142,531.
• Lincoln Center Boys & Girls Club, Brigham City, Utah, $143,942.
• Boat Peoples S.O.S., Falls Church, Va., $145,097.
• Hispanic Office of Planning and Evaluation, Boston, $145,524.
• SUNY Research, Amherst, N.Y., $147,106.
• Yavapai Big Brothers Big Sisters, Prescott, Ariz., $147,357.
• San Diego Youth & Community Services, Calif., $150,944.
• The Glide Foundation, San Francisco, $151,822.
• Downeast Health Services, Ellsworth, Maine, $152,456.
• Boys & Girls Clubs of Augusta, Ga., $152,782.
• Georgia Community Services Program, Morrow, $152,844.
• Blackfoot School, Blackfoot, Idaho, $152,909.
• Citizen Schools, Boston, $153,657.
• Youth Opportunities Unlimited, Cleveland, $154,605.
• Communities in Schools of Sangamon County, Springfield, Ill., $155,863.
• Lamar Community, Lamar, Mo., $158,826.
• Youth Opportunities, Marks, Miss., $159,095.
• Columbus County Services Management, Whiteville, N.C., $161,500.
• Family Learning, Silver Spring, Md., $162,973.
• Bolder Options, Minneapolis, $164,506.
• Family Connections El Dorado, Placerville, Calif., $166,466.
• Home Start, San Diego, $170,709.
• Children’s Village, Dobbs Ferry, N.Y., $170,923.
• Pinellas County Schools, Largo, Fla., $171,136.
• Oakland Asian Students Educational Services, Calif., $173,398.
• Ho’oulu Lahui, Pahoa, Hawaii, $175,633.
• Greater Washington Urban League, Washington, $175,763.
• Concerned Black Men of Philadelphia, $179,565.
• Big Brothers Big Sisters of Mendocino County, Fort Bragg, Calif., $180,664.
• College Bound, Washington, $180,873.
• Atwood Community, Madison, Wis., $181,337.
• Families of Incarcerated Individuals, Memphis, Tenn., $182,544.
• Redwood Community Action Agency, Eureka, Calif., $182,799.
• Youth and Shelter, Ames, Iowa, $183,034.
• Sojourners Case, McArthur, Ohio, $183,262.
• Medford School District, Medford, Ore., $184,068.
• Mt. Ararat Community Activity Center, Pittsburgh, $184,315.
• Mental Health Association in North Dakota, Bismarck, $184,315.
• Community Empowerment Organization, Jersey City, N.J., $184,606.
• YMCA of San Francisco Urban Services, San Francisco, $184,606.
• Tuscaloosa County Board of Education, Ala., $184,844.
• Family and Children’s Association, Mineola, N.Y., $185,009.
• Forth Worth Independent School, Texas, $185,808.
• San Dieguito for Drug Free Youth, Del Mar, Calif., $186,037.
• Los Angeles Unified School District, Gardena, Calif., $187,377.
• KS Big Brothers Big Sisters, Wichita, Kan., $188,362.
• Little Haiti Housing Association, Miami, $188,389.
• Phoenix Programs of New York, N.Y., $188,615.
• Fresno Unified School, Calif., $189,930.
• Comprehensive Youth Services of Fresno County, Calif., $189,986.
• Big Brothers Big Sisters of Greater Miami Mentoring Resource, Fla., $192,076.
• Strategic Learning, Seattle, $192,578.
• Greene County School District, Greensboro, Ga., $193,621.
• Norwalk-Lamirada Unified School District, Norwalk, Calif., $194,016.
• Big Brothers Big Sisters of Greater Fairbanks, Alaska, $194,016.
• Big Brothers Big Sisters of Southeast Wyoming, Laramie, $194,016.
• Families Under Urban and Social Attack, Houston, $194,016.
• Big Brothers Big Sisters of Eastern Missouri, St. Louis, $194,016.
• Cincinnati Youth, Cincinnati, $196,198.
• Big Brothers Big Sisters/Greater Nashua, N.H., $197,013.
• Professional Counseling Resources, Wilmington, Del., $213,418.
• San Juan County, Farmington, N.M., $488,627.

The following grants were awarded under Even Start for migrant education programs:

• Somerton School District 11, Ariz., $76,389.
• Modoc County Office of Education, Alturas, Calif., $156,280.
• South Sioux City School District, Neb., $195,768.
• Pittsburgh Pre-School and Community Council, Calif., $206,771.
• Maine Department of Education, Augusta, $235,215.
• Many Hands, Bay Point, Calif., $235,714.
• School District No. 1, Multnomah County, Portland, Ore., $245,903.
• Ben Archer Health Center, Hatch, N.M., $250,000.
• San Joaquin County Office of Education, Stockton, Calif., $250,932.
• Tehama County Department of Education, Red Bluff, Calif., $254,692.
• El Centro, Kansas City, Kan., $255,514.
• Ser-Jobs for Progress South West Texas, Laredo, $266,301.
• McAllen Independent School District, Texas, $282,176.
• Lincoln Intermediate Unit No. 12, New Oxford, Pa., $285,000.
• University of North Carolina at Greensboro, Office of Research Services, $289,680.
• Colorado Department of Education, Denver, $293,155.
• Illinois Migrant Council, Chicago, $297,866.
• Illinois Migrant Council, Chicago, $299,900.
• Big Bend Community College, Moses Lake, Wash., $300,000.
• Crane School District 13, Yuma, Ariz., $300,000.
• Emporia USD 253, Emporia, Kan., $309,578.
• Ohio Valley Educational Cooperative, Shelbyville, Ky., $312,362.
• Hawaii Department of Education, Honolulu, $318,815.
• Northeast Kingdom Learning Services, Newport, Vt., $323,102.
• Arizona Department of Education, Phoenix, $371,120.
• Columbia Basin College, Pasco, Wash., $598,802.
• Southeast Kansas Education Service Center-Greenbush, Girard, $779,246.
The following grants have been awarded through cooperative agreements:
• Pacific Resources for Education and Learning, Honolulu, $1,078,747 for Star Schools.
• Jason Foundation for Education/Transitions Through Telecommunications, Needham Heights, Mass., $999,972 for Star Schools.
• Center for Civic Education, Calabasas, Calif., $16,889,500 for Civic Education/We the People.
• Elsie Whitlow Public Charter School, Washington, $905,685 for 21st Century Learning Centers programs.
• Pacific Resource for Education & Learning, Honolulu, $1.5 million for vocational education.
• Center for State Scholars, Austin, $2.4 million for vocational education research.

The following grants were awarded for educational research and improvement:

• Plymouth Community Renewal Centers, Louisville, Ky., $14,903.
• Trinity Family Life Center, Louisville, Ky., $29,805.
• YMCA Safe Place Services, Louisville, Ky., $39,740.
• Robbie Valentine Stars Club, Jeffersonville, Ind., $39,740.
• Hebrew Academy for Special Children, Brooklyn, N.Y., $49,675.
• Joel II Restoration Outreach, Erie, Pa., $49,675.
• Freedoms Foundation at Valley Forge, Pa., $49,675.
• Smart Discovery Center, Bethlehem, Pa., $49,675.
• Hippy USA, New York, $49,675.
• Association of Community Ministries, Louisville, Ky., $49,675.
• Friends of the McGroarty Cultural Arts Center, Tujunga, Calif., $64,578.
• Boys and Girls Club of Chester, Pa., $74,513.
• Girl Scouts-Pacific Peaks Council, Tumwater, Wash., $99,350.
• Audubon Nature Institute, New Orleans, $99,350.
• Venango Technology Center, Oil City, Pa., $99,350.
• Overtown Youth Center, Miami, $99,350.
• Felician Sisters of Pennsylvania, Corapolis, $124,188.
• Jefferson County-Dubois Area Vocational Technical School, Reynoldsville, Pa., $149,025.
• Camp Fire USA First Texas Council, Fort Worth, $149,025.
• Berea Children’s Home, Ohio, $160,947.
• Cayuga County Safe Schools, Auburn, N.Y., $173,863.
• Community Foundation of Greater Birmingham, Ala., $198,700.
• Artspace Projects, Minneapolis, $198,700.
• International Foundation for Music Research, Carlsbad, Calif., $223,538.
• Cleveland Botanical Garden, $248,375.
• Society of St. Vincent de Paul, Detroit, $248,375.
• Center for Rural Development, Somerset, Ky., $248,375.
• Holy Redeemer Health System, Abington, Pa., $248,375.
• Pittsburgh Digital Greenhouse, $248,375.
• YMCA of Philadelphia & Vicinity, $248,375.
• National Maritime Heritage Foundation, Washington, $273,213.
• Bronx Cluster of Settlement Houses, N.Y., $298,050.
• Pittsburgh Technology Council, $298,050.
• Urban League of Metropolitan Denver, $347,725.
• Hands on Science Outreach, Silver Spring, Md., $397,400.
• Pacific Islands Center for Educational Development, Pago Pago, American Samoa, $397,400.
• First Book, Washington, $402,368.
• Labor and Industry for Education, Hewlett, N.Y., $447,075.
• Guadalupe Center, Kansas City, Mo., $496,749.
• Chabot Space & Science Center, Oakland, Calif., $496,750.
• Cleveland Museum of Art, $496,750.
• Parents Inc., Anchorage, Alaska, $496,750.
• New Mexico Inc., Albuquerque, $496,750.
• Make the Road by Walking, Brooklyn, N.Y., $496,750.
• Space Education Initiatives, Green Bay, Wis., $496,750.
• Reuben Lindh Family Services, Minneapolis, $596,100.
• Parents Inc., Anchorage, Alaska, $993,500.
• Jackson State University, Jackson, Miss., $750,000.
• University of California, Los Angeles, $924,202.
• National Academy of Sciences/National Research Council, Washington, $1.2 million.
• Kipp Foundation, San Francisco, $1,462,422.
• Milken Family Foundation, Santa Monica, Calif., $1.8 million.

The following grants were awarded for TRIO Projects:

• Philadelphia Education Fund, Pa., $164,318.
• Metropolitan Development Council, Tacoma, Wash., $171,502.
• Pact, Inc., San Francisco, $199,888.
• Council for Opportunity in Education, Washington, $200,000.
• Aspira of New York, $200,000.
• Japanese Community Youth Council, San Francisco, $200,000.
The following grants were awarded for 21st Century Community Learning Centers:
• Porcupine Year Round School, Porcupine, S.D., $109,213.
• Roosevelt Children’s Academy Charter School, Roosevelt, N.Y., $150,000.

Department of Health and Human Services

200 Independence Ave. S.W.
Washington, DC 20201
(202) 619-0257
www.hhs.gov

The following grants were awarded for improving child welfare outcomes through systems of care:

• Contra Costa County Employment and Health, Martinez, Calif., $498,893.
• Jefferson County, Golden, Colo., $497,898.
• Kansas Department of Social and Rehabilitation Services, Topeka, $444,446.
• Clark County Family Services, Las Vegas, $500,000.
• New York City Administration for Children and Family Services, $498,834.
• North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services, Raleigh, $500,000.
• Native American Training Institute, Bismarck, N.D., $500,000.
• State of Oregon, Salem, $500,000.
• Pennsylvania Department of Public Welfare, Harrisburg, $100,000.

The following grants were awarded for family-to-family health care information and education centers:

• Stone Soup Group, Anchorage, Alaska, $149,991.
• Cerebral Palsy of Colorado, Denver, $150,000.
• The Indiana Parent Information Network, Indianapolis, $150,000.
• The Parents’ Place of Maryland, Hanover, $150,000.
• Parents, Let’s Unite for Kids, Billings, Mont., $150,000.
• Family TIES of Nevada, Sparks, $150,000.
• Statewide Parent Advocacy Network of New Jersey, Newark, $150,000.
• South Dakota Parent Connection, Sioux Falls, $150,000.
• Family Voices of Wisconsin, Madison, $142,972.

The following grants were awarded for improving the capacity of faith- and community-based organizations to serve people in need:

• United Way of Tucson & Southern Arizona, Tucson, $686,982.
• National Center for Neighborhood Enterprise, Washington, $498,403.
• We Care America, Washington, $712,020.
• Kentucky River Foothills Development Council, Richmond, $511,298.
• Louisiana Association of Nonprofit Organizations, Baton Rouge, $401,022.
• Greater Minneapolis Council of Churches, $532,00.
• Citizens Committee for New York City, $312,348.
• Foundation for Community Empowerment, Dallas, $578,892.
• Northwest Leadership Foundation, Tacoma, Wash., $740,438.
• Holy Redeemer Institutional Church of God in Christ, Milwaukee, $626,598.
• Big Brothers Big Sisters of Southeast Alaska, Juneau, $49,907.
• Montgomery S.T.E.P. Foundation, Ala., $50,000.
• St. Clair Children’s Advocacy Center, Pell City, Ala., $50,000.
• Lee County Family Resource Center, Marianna, Ark., $48,185.
• Rural Human Services, Crescent City, Calif., $49,430.
• Contra Costa Opportunity West, Richmond, Calif., $50,000.
• Center for Family Health, Jackson, Mich., $50,000.
• Lao Family Community of Minnesota, St. Paul, $50,000.
• Big Brothers Big Sisters of Montana, Helena, $50,000.
• West Islip Youth Enrichment Services, N.Y., $50,000.
• Care Alliance, Cleveland, $50,000.
• Thunderbird Challenge, Pryor, Okla., $50,000.
• Boys and Girls Aid Society of Oregon, Portland, $49,716.
• The Philadelphia Youth Network, $50,000.
• The Source: A Boys and Girls Club, Sisseton, S.D., $50,000.
• The Dream Program, Winooski, Vt., $47,195.
• Multifaith Works, Seattle, $50,000.

The following grants were awarded for supporting mentoring programs for children of prisoners:

• Alabama Attorney General’s Office, Montgomery, $461,568.
• Center for Youth and Families, Little Rock, Ark., $525,000.
• MatchPoint of Arizona, Phoenix, $75,000.
• Pima Prevention Partnership, Tucson, Ariz., $195,000.
• Centerforce, San Rafael, Calif., $70,000.
• Governor’s Office of Criminal Justice Planning, Sacramento, Calif., $270,000.
• Northern Valley Catholic Social Services, Redding, Calif., $120,000.
• Path of Life Ministries, Riverside, Calif., $480,000.
• San Diego Youth and Community Services, Calif., $150,000.
• Denver County Area Youth Services, Colo.,$100,000.
• Governor’s Partnership to Protect Connecticut’s Workforce, Hartford, Conn., $225,000.
• Nutmeg Big Brothers Big Sisters, Hartford, Conn., $270,000.
• Big Brothers Big Sisters of DE, Wilmington, Del., $82,500.
• Hawaii Youth Services Network, Honolulu, $165,000.
• Franklin Williamson Human Services, West Frankfort, Ill., $75,000.
• Indiana Behavioral Health Choices, Indianapolis, $172,500.
• YMCA of Greater Louisville, Ky., $52,500.
• Community Service Center, New Orleans, $62,500.
• Breaking the Chains Foundation, Hyattsville, Md., $120,000.
• Center for the Children, LaPlata, Md., $47,044.
• US Dream Academy, Columbia, Md., $420,000.
• Volunteers of America Northern New England, Brunswick, Maine, $120,000.
• Alternatives for Girls, Detroit, $100,000.
• Volunteers in Prevention, Probation, and Prisons, Detroit, $240,000.
• Search Institute, Minneapolis, $150,000.
• Big Brothers Big Sisters of Eastern Missouri, St. Louis, $193,500.
• Missoula County, Mont., $60,000.
• Montana Human Resources Development Council Directors, Bozeman, $112,500.
• Big Brothers Big Sisters of Greater Charlotte, N.C., $238,500.
• Chatham County Together!, Pittsboro, N.C., $30,000.
• Girl Scouts of Rolling Hills Council, North Branch, N.J., $60,000.
• San Juan County Partnership, Farmington, N.M., $200,000.
• Center for Community Alternatives, Syracuse, N.Y., $150,000.
• Edwin Gould Services for Children and Families, New York, $75,000.
• The Osbourne Association, Long Island, N.Y., $75,000.
• Big Brothers Big Sisters Association of Central Ohio, Columbus, $256,932.
• Little Dixie Community Action Agency, Hugo, Okla., $60,000.
• Big Brothers Big Sisters of Metropolitan Portland, Ore., $105,000.
• Committee Partners for Youth, Eugene, Ore., $75,000.
• Deschutes County, Bend, Ore., $62,500.
• Big Brothers Big Sisters of Southeastern Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, $450,000.
• Big Brothers/Big Sisters of Bucks County, Jamison, Pa., $82,000.
• Pittsburgh Leadership Foundation, $180,000.
• The Salvation Army, Philadelphia, $95,000.
• Big Brothers Big Sisters, Alamo Area, San Antonio, Texas, $487,500.
• City of Longview, Texas, $175,000.
• Montgomery County Youth Services, Conroe, Texas, $75,000.
• South Plains Community Action Association, Levelland, Texas, $90,000.
• Center for Multicultural Human Services, Falls Church, Va., $100,000.
• Girl Scouts-Totem Council, Seattle, $67,500.
• Volunteers of America Western Washington, Everett, Wash., $165,000.
• Big Brothers Big Sisters of Metropolitan Milwaukee, $400,000.

Department of Justice

Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention
810 Seventh St. NW
Washington, DC 20531
(202) 307-5911
www.ojjdp.ncjrs.org

The following grants were awarded through the Drug-Free Communities Support Program:

• Sitka Community Schools, Sitka, Alaska, $75,086.
• Save the Youth, Bessemer, Ala., $100,000.
• Marshall County Court Referral Services, Guntersville, Ala., $68,063.
• Pass Peers Are Staying Straight, Prattville, Ala., $100,000.
• Harbor House, Fort Smith, Ark., $99,951.
• Huntsville School District, Ark., $99,919.
• Community Resource Agency, Pine Bluff, Ark., 99,991.
• Southeastern Arizona Behavioral Health Services, Benson, Ariz., $99,973.
• Against Abuse, Casa Grande, Ariz., $99,413.
• Chicanos Por La Cause, Phoenix, $100,000.
• Luz Social Services, Tucson, Ariz., $100,000.
• Pima Prevention Partnership, Tucson, Ariz., $100,000.
• Anderson Valley Unified School District, Boonville, Calif., $100,000.
• Castro Valley United School District, Castro Valley, Calif., $100,000.
• San Dieguito for Drug Free Youth, Del Mar, Calif., $99,323.
• Comprehensive Youth Services, Fresno, Calif., $100,000.
• Gridley Unified School District, Gridley, Calif., $100,000.
• National Council on Alcoholism and Drug Dependence, Lake Forest, Calif., $88,887.
• North Monterey County Unified School District, Moss Landing, Calif., $100,000.
• YMCA of San Diego County, $99,999.
• SLO County Behavioral Health Services, San Luis Obispo County

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