Aspen Institute Re-Invests in Innovative Community Collaboratives to Engage “Opportunity Youth”

July 23, 2014

Contact: Monique Miles
Aspen Forum for Community Solutions Deputy Director
The Aspen Institute
202-736-2296
monique.miles@aspeninstitute.org

Aspen Institute Re-Invests in Innovative Community Collaboratives to Engage “Opportunity Youth”
Second Year of Grants Awarded As Positive Results Come In

Washington, DC, July 24, 2014 – Today, the Opportunity Youth Incentive Fund (OYIF) announced its second round of grants, with plans to provide new awards to 19 communities across the United States. The Opportunity Youth Incentive Fund is managed by the Aspen Institute’s Forum for Community Solutions and is dedicated to reconnecting “Opportunity Youth” to education and employment. Opportunity Youth is a term used to describe the 6.7 million young people – between the ages of 16 to 24 in the United States – who are neither enrolled in school nor participating in the labor market.

All 19 OYIF community grantees received one year planning grants last year along with 2 communities that received multi-year awards. Collectively, these 21 community grantees will continue to focus their efforts on the successful reconnection of Opportunity Youth through community collaborations that remove barriers, connect the various systems that touch their lives, and begin to scale effective pathways to jobs and long-term, family-sustaining success. The Aspen Forum for Community Solutions plans to provide up to $13 million in grants to the 21 OYIF sites and learning partners over the five-year course of the Fund.

During the past year, OYIF grantees have demonstrated early success by bringing together the K-12 systems; community colleges and other postsecondary providers; municipal and state governments; national and local philanthropy and nonprofits; and private sector leaders in their communities, to design education and employment reconnection strategies for young people who have extraordinary barriers to success.

 “The results of the collective impact approach should encourage all sectors to evaluate their strategies beyond stand-alone efforts, as our experience has shown that working together with a common agenda, shared metrics, and strong coordination and communication across systems, can aggregate the impact of community actors,” said Melody C. Barnes, former director of the White House Domestic Policy Council and chair of the Aspen Forum for Community Solutions.  

From southern Maine to California OYIF grantee partners are deepening collaborative partnerships to maximize the impact of local systems and revenue streams to scale up real pathways to good paying jobs for the young people who most need them.

“One system alone cannot address the great challenges facing young people with some of the worst odds in life, such as youth who have been involved with the child welfare or juvenile justice systems,” said Patrick McCarthy, president and CEO of the Annie E. Casey Foundation. “The collective impact approach holds great promise, aligning multiple systems to better support these young people’s needs and interests and give them a real shot at succeeding in school and in life. We look forward to the evidence and lessons that will emerge from these community efforts in the coming years.”

Grantees also work with local employers to ensure opportunity youth receive the training necessary to gain employment. To support these efforts, JPMorgan Chase has partnered with the Aspen Forum for Community Solutions and others to encourage targeted training programs.

“Employers are looking for people with the right skill sets to help their businesses thrive in today’s economy,” said Dalila Wilson-Scott, President of the JPMorgan Chase Foundation. “The skills-based training strategy that JPMorgan Chase, AFCS and OYIF have developed is a playbook for connecting young people to employment opportunities, and it can be replicated by partners around the country.”

The Aspen Forum for Community Solutions will continue to engage with all OYIF grantees to gather data and facilitate the sharing of best practices, developing a roadmap of research, tools, and resources for other collective impact approaches.

“Every funder wants to invest in system changes that will have a meaningful impact on organizations, institutions, employers and families. The Aspen Forum for Community Solutions is a leader in the field, and the OYIF grantees are making tremendous progress through the collective impact model. We’re proud to continue our support for this effective approach and look forward to seeing even more results,” said Hilary Pennington, Vice President, Ford Foundation.

OYIF Community Grantee Partners:
The communities selected to partner with the Aspen Forum Opportunity Youth Incentive Fund for the second round of funding include:

Atlanta, GA | United Way of Greater Atlanta | Atlanta Opportunity Youth Collaborative

Austin, TX | Workforce Solutions Capital Area | Austin Opportunity Youth Collaborative

Baltimore, MD | Ingoma Foundation & Johns Hopkins Centers for Adolescent Health and the Prevention of Youth Violence | Baltimore City Opportunity Youth Collaborative

Boston, MA | Boston Private Industry Council & Boston Opportunity Agenda | Boston Opportunity Youth Collaborative

Chicago, IL | Mayor’s Office | Thrive Chicago

Del Norte County, CA | Wild Rivers Community Foundation | Del Norte County and the Adjacent Tribal Lands Opportunity Youth Initiative

Denver, CO I Rose Community Foundation | Denver Opportunity Youth Investment Initiative

Detroit, MI | Detroit Employment Solutions Corporation & Excellent Schools Detroit | Detroit Pathways to Opportunity Initiative

Greenville, MS | Rural LISC | GO YOUTH

Hartford, CT | Capital Workforce Partners | Hartford Opportunity Youth Collaborative

Hopi Reservation, AZ | The Hopi Foundation | Hopi Opportunity Youth Initiative

Los Angeles, CA | Alliance for Children’s Rights | LA Compact Opportunity Youth Collaborative

Maine, Southern Rural | Muskie School of Public Service, University of Southern Maine | Southern Maine Youth Transition Network

New Orleans, LA | Partnership for Youth Development & Cowen Institute for Public Education Initiatives, Tulane University | Employment and Mobility Pathways Linked for Opportunity Youth (EMPLOY)

New York, NY | JobsFirstNYC | Bronx Opportunity Network

Oakland, CA | Urban Strategies Council | Oakland-Alameda County Opportunity Youth Initiative

Philadelphia, PA | Philadelphia Youth Network | Project U-Turn (Continuing implementation funding from implementation grants made in 2013)

San Diego, CA | Youth Development Office, San Diego Workforce Partnership | Youth Opportunity Pathways Initiative (PATHWAYS)

San Jose / Santa Clara County, CA | Kids in Common, Planned Parenthood Mar Monte | Santa Clara County Opportunity Youth Partnership

South King County, WA | Community Center for Education Results | The Road Map Project (Continuing implementation funding from implementation grants made in 2013)

Tucson, AZ | United Way of Tucson and Southern Arizona | Youth on the Rise

Support for the Aspen Forum and Opportunity Youth Incentive Fund is made possible by contributions from the Annie E. Casey Foundation; Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation; Bank of America Foundation; Bloomberg Philanthropies; California Endowment; Carnegie Corporation; Casey Family Programs; Conrad N. Hilton Foundation; Ford Foundation; Greater Texas Foundation; Helios Education Foundation; Hewlett Foundation; James Irvine Foundation; John S. & James L. Knight Foundation; John T. Gorman Foundation; Joyce Foundation; JPB Foundation; JPMorgan Chase Foundation; Lumina Foundation; Marguerite Casey Foundation; Nancy & Miles Rubin; Nellie Mae Education Foundation; Rockefeller Foundation; and the W.K. Kellogg Foundation. All of the foundations that support the OYIF serve on the Leadership Council for the Fund. These funders help to shape the learning agenda, evaluation and other aspects of the OYIF.

The Aspen Institute’s Forum for Community Solutions and Opportunity Youth Incentive Fund builds on the work and recommendations of the White House Council for Community Solutions. The Forum is chaired by Melody C. Barnes, former director of the White House Domestic Policy Council, and run by Executive Director Steve Patrick. For more information, visit: AspenCommunitySolutions.org

The Aspen Institute is an educational and policy studies organization based in Washington, DC. Its mission is to foster leadership based on enduring values and to provide a nonpartisan venue for dealing with critical issues. The Institute is based in Washington, DC; Aspen, Colorado; and on the Wye River on Maryland’s Eastern Shore. It also has offices in New York City and an international network of partners. For more information, visit www.aspeninstitute.org.

###

View Comments
0