3C Community Profile: Humboldt Park
Take a stroll down the Paseo Boricua corridor on Division Street and it’s easy to see why Humboldt Park is one of Chicago’s most vibrant…
Take a stroll down the Paseo Boricua corridor on Division Street and it’s easy to see why Humboldt Park is one of Chicago’s most vibrant…
For more than 100 years, The Chicago Community Trust has convened, supported, funded, and accelerated the work of community members and changemakers committed to strengthening the Chicago region. From building up our civic infrastructure to spearheading our response to the Great Recession, the Trust has brought our community together to face pressing challenges and seize our greatest opportunities. Today, that means confronting the racial and ethnic wealth gap.
Showing 1061–1068 of 4205 results
Grant Recipient
Leveraging the unique research methodology pioneered by the U.S. Financial Health Pulse, FHN will launch this “Chicago Financial Health Pulse” to understand how the financial lives of diverse communities in Chicago are changing over time. This project would be one pillar of the Trust’s broader strategy to close the racial wealth gap in Chicago over the next decade. By understanding how Chicago residents are spending, saving, borrowing, and planning, researchers could identify policy and industry solutions that would help close the racial wealth gap. Findings from the study could be used to galvanize conversations across an array of stakeholders committed to investing in solutions to close the racial wealth gap over the next ten years.
Grant Recipient
In support of Financial Health Network to design and implement a local version of the FHN national survey.
Grant Recipient
The WBDC is seeking a bridge grant to develop and refine an enhanced model for delivery of EMBA. The goal of EMBA is to advance a stronger and more connected small business field of practice among Chicago BSOs as it relates to contracting and procurement opportunities for their minority business clients. This ensures a greater number of minority business owners have the exposure acumen, resources and tools needed to consider and be successful with higher-margin opportunities in this marketplace. The WBDC will draw upon our recent successful experiences with the Hub and Spoke delivery model. For EMBA, it is anticipated the WBDC will serve as the Hub, the Chicago Minority Supplier Development Council (CMSDC) as a Subject Matter Expert and select hyper-local, community-based Business Service Organizations as the Spokes. The Bridge grant will enable the WBDC to customize and refine the model, ascertain interest, form deeper relationships with targeted BSOs, and enlist participation and involvement from Corporate Partners who engage with Advocacy organizations on an ongoing basis for Supplier Diversity activities.
Grant Recipient
The City Colleges of Chicago Foundation Student Technology Equity Program will empower students across the city with tech tools (laptops and connectivity), student supports, and capabilities to thrive in learning environments and workplaces that require a mastery of technology to be successful. The program will create more equitable access to technology and skill building to prepare Chicagoans to enroll, complete a college credential (certificate or degree), launch or advance their careers, and contribute to an inclusive Chicago economy.
Grant Recipient
By bringing together a dynamic and diverse collaborative of key community, hospitality industry, and philanthropic partners, the Bronzeville Culinary Incubator made significant progress in 2021 toward our goal of substantially increasing the number and vitality of Black-owned and -led culinary enterprises and using these enterprises as platforms for revitalizing Black Chicago. Informed by our year one learnings, our 2022 planning effort will address 4 key challenges regarding the development of talent, financial resources, spaces, and patrons that hamstring our ability to scale our effort. This work will clarify near-term opportunities to reduce the racial culinary gap, provide specific goals and a detailed plan to capture these opportunities, and deepen relationships with existing and new collaborators.
Grant Recipient
UChicago Office of Civic Engagement (OCE), the Polsky Center for Entrepreneurship and Innovation, and its current local financial partners including Chicago Community Loan Fund (CCLF) and Seaway, a Division of Self-Help Federal Credit Union, request a $25,000 planning grant from the Fund for Equitable Business Growth. These funds will enable the partnership, in early 2022, supported by learnings gained from the pilot implementation and robust evaluation of the Small Business Financial Fundamentals (SBFF), to re-examine the program’s partnership model, to make refinements to the program design including the core curriculum engaging UChicago Booth School of Business faculty and local banking partners, and to participate in co-learning opportunities between the funders and the BSO cohort. Over this period, the project team will also gather additional data and feedback from SBFF pilot participants and connect them to ongoing supports and resources to inform future enhancements to SBFF. The partnership will integrate shared learnings and prepare to advance a second program cycle of SBFF, which is responsive to the evolving needs of entrepreneurs of color. Through SBFF, UChicago and its local banking partners will continue to support local entrepreneurs to build financial management knowledge and skills, support recovery and resilience as firms rebound from the pandemic, and help prepare these businesses to ultimately apply for and absorb financial capital.
Grant Recipient
Grant Recipient