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File #: 2646-2019    Version: 1
Type: Ordinance Status: Passed
File created: 10/4/2019 In control: Neighborhoods Committee
On agenda: 10/28/2019 Final action: 10/31/2019
Title: To authorize an appropriation and expenditure within the Neighborhood Initiatives subfund in support of the My Brother’s Keeper Grants Program; and to authorize the Director of the Department of Neighborhoods to enter into grant agreements with various service providers; and to declare an emergency ($50,000.00)
Sponsors: Rob Dorans, Shannon G. Hardin
Attachments: 1. Legislative DAX Strings - Ord No 2646-2019
Explanation
This ordinance authorizes an appropriation of $50,000 to the Department of Neighborhoods within the Neighborhood Initiatives subfund and expenditures associated with the My Brother’s Keeper grants program.

In 2014 President Obama called on cities, non-profits, and the private sector to collaborate and close opportunity gaps for boys and young men of color (B&YMOC). Columbus was one of the first cities to answer this call. The city and partner organizations brought together more than 500 B&YMOC to ensure that Columbus’ My Brother’s Keeper (MBK) work was grounded in testimony from the target population. Numerous non-profit service providers, schools, and companies have created programs to serve vulnerable youth of color since the launch of the national MBK initiative. In 2015, Senator Sherrod Brown and former Chair of the National MBK initiative and Obama Cabinet Secretary Broderick Johnson hosted an event to highlight Columbus’ MBK initiative.

After the event, Secretary Johnson said that without hard data, the city would not be able to effectively serve B&YMOC in Columbus. Columbus City Council contracted with the Kirwan Institute for the Study of Race and Ethnicity to gather data on youth vulnerability, map community assets, and determine a strategic investment framework. The study was released in the December of 2017.

The purpose of the MBK grants is to financially support programs that have shown success in one of the four categories the Kirwan Institute identified as contributing to youth vulnerability: economics, safety, education, and health. Many non-profits, churches, and community leaders have led the charge in our neighborhoods for years. The MBK Grants Program will allow those organizations to grow their capacity and serve more B&YMOC in Columbus.

Round 1 grants engaged and expanded the MBK network in Columbus by supporting work focused on BYMOC. Round 2 grants will help project teams test ideas and learn what works. Grants may support ...

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