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OSI-Baltimore Selects 12 New Community Fellows, Awards $720,000 in Grants to Social Entrepreneurs Who will Lead Innovative Strategies to Build a Stronger City
16th Annual Class of Fellows Will Serve as Catalysts for Change
BALTIMORE—OSI-Baltimore today announced its 16th annual class of Community Fellows and dedicated $720,000 to support this diverse group of social entrepreneurs who will lead creative and inspiring approaches for improving the community.
OSI-Baltimore’s Community Fellows program, which began in 1998, has had an enormous impact on the city. The newest class of 12 fellows will join a network of 136 other engaged leaders, most of whom continue to bring fresh energy and ideas to effect social change in Baltimore.
Each of this year’s fellows will receive $60,000 to work full-time for 18 months, implementing creative strategies to assist and revitalize underserved communities in Baltimore. The group of fellows will work in schools and courts, in recreation centers and low-income housing units. Many of them will work directly with people on the streets of Baltimore.
OSI-Baltimore has designated two of the awardees as Black Male Achievement (BMA) Fellows, who will strive to reach some of the city’s most underserved populations—black men and boys. Matthew Hanna and Ulysses Cofield will receive additional recognition from the Open Society Foundations’ Campaign for Black Male Achievement, a strategy to address the exclusion of black men and boys from economic, social, educational and political life in the United States. The BMA Fellowship is dedicated to improving the life outcomes of black men and boys and is the first fellowship program of its kind.
“It is thrilling to announce this new group of effective and passionate social activists, all of whom have the vision to create new opportunities for people throughout Baltimore,” said Pamela King, OSI-Baltimore Director of Community Fellowships. “The city is fortunate to have so many inspiring leaders willing to forge new approaches to some of our most challenging issues. Each year we marvel at the variety of innovative approaches and solutions for our city. These fellows bring hope, new methodologies, resources and advocacy skills to residents, mobilizing them to take action to meet their own needs and to revitalize Baltimore communities.”
The Class of 2013 includes 12 people with extremely diverse backgrounds and a wide range of proposed projects.
A veteran health educator will work with young men living with HIV and usher them through manhood training to prepare them to be responsible men able to manage their infections. A paralegal who spent time in the foster care system growing up will work with teenage girls to help them make the transition from the juvenile justice system into foster care homes. A health worker will help free girls and women from sex trafficking by working with them to rebuild their emotional well-being, develop skills and move into safe, sustainable lives.
Denene Yates, who is working to help city prostitutes, will also use her fellowship to try to change the way society stigmatizes and “makes lepers” out of women who are or have been involved in sex trafficking.
“So many people have this idea, a glamorization of what being a prostitute—what being exploited—looks like. The idea is that it is choice-driven,” Yates says. “But people just get sucked into this. And then they’re just stuck. No one wakes up and wants to be a prostitute.”
Another fellow, Bernice Bishop will use the 18 months of her fellowship to expand a successful food-and-necessities pantry she began some years ago into an education and training center that helps women in need develop essential life skills.
The Women Empowering Women Education and Outreach Center will add such programs as financial and budget management, credit repair, GED preparation, parenting and family restoration, and small business planning to complement services Bishop currently provides women.
“People always say that they want to teach people things so they won’t need assistance from others. But if I’m hungry and my child needs Pampers and we don’t have toothpaste, then it’s going to be hard to get my full attention,” says Bishop, who grew up poor—and sometimes hungry. “You have to holistically help people.
And just in time for Veterans Day, fellow Bill Tiefenwerth will launch his project, Veterans in Partnership (VIP), which will pair veterans who have had a difficult time finding meaningful employment with middle school students at James McHenry Elementary/Middle School in West Baltimore. The program, which will include physical education and enrichment programming as well as STEM (science, technology, engineering and math) components, will also provide mentoring and job counseling to the veterans.
Fellows Matt Hanna and Ulysses “Coach U” Cofield will each work to reach young black males—Hanna through lacrosse and Cofield through basketball—and help them rise out of challenging circumstances and succeed.
Fellow Lanaea Featherstone will use technology and mentoring to engage Latino immigrant parents and caregivers in an effort to help them find and keep better jobs.
And fellow Megan Leschak will work to reduce recidivism by forcing those who work in the criminal justice system to recognize the real connection between trauma and criminal behavior.
In one project, students will use graphic design and architecture, among other tools, to develop socially conscious community projects. Other projects will touch on such issues as the rights of the city’s disabled community and those of renters in low- and moderate-income housing who have fallen on hard times.
Since its launch 15 years ago, the Baltimore Community Fellowships program has received support from OSI-Baltimore and several other foundations and individuals, including The Clayton Baker Trust, The Lois and Irving Blum Foundation Inc., the Cohen Opportunity Fund, The Marion I. & Henry J. Knott Foundation, the John Meyerhoff and Lenel Srochi Meyerhoff Fund, the Moser Family Philanthropic Fund, The Osprey Foundation, the PNC Foundation, the Alison and Arnold Richman Fund, The Henry and Ruth Blaustein Rosenberg Foundation, Barbara K. and M. Sigmund Shapiro, Samuel I. Rosenberg Fund, The William G. Baker, Jr. Memorial Fund and numerous individual donors.
A seven-person committee selected the 12 fellows after extensive evaluation, including peer reviews, site visits and interviews.