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AddThis Feed Button About the Corporation > Our Programs >
 
Social Innovation Fund: Stories of Impact

 

Social Innovation Fund Home | 2012 Grant Competition | Grantees and Subgrantees
Stories of Impact | Transparency for Impact | Public Input on SIF National Evaluation Priorities
Opportunities to Participate in the Social Innovation Fund | News & Press Releases

As sub-granting competitions have come to a close, SIF investments have begun to flow into communities and sub-grantees across the country. Below are select stories of how these investments have begun to produce impact on the ground.


Social Innovation Fund Grant Recipient Wins Harvard Award for Innovative Programs
By Paul Carttar
The Center for Economic Opportunity (CEO), a New York City-based Social Innovation Fund (SIF) grant recipient, recently won Harvard University's noteworthy Kennedy School of Government Innovations in American Government Award for its powerful approach to fighting poverty in New York and across the country.

CEO is a social research and policy organization within the New York City government, created in 2006 by Mayor Michael Bloomberg to find new, effective anti-poverty strategies to help low-income New Yorkers. Harvard officials praised five of CEO's programs and expressed hope that other jurisdictions will replicate these financial literacy, education, and employment training initiatives to help the working poor climb up the economic ladder.

“Poverty is one of the great challenges of our time, and as someone who has spent a great deal of time working on the issues of poverty and social policy, I'm particularly pleased that CEO was selected as our Innovations in American Government Award winner,” said David Ellwood, dean of Harvard Kennedy School of Government in a release announcing the honor. “The award honors the Center's efforts to support the working poor at key transition points—starting school, entering the workforce, and having a family.”

CEO was one of the initial 11 intermediaries around the United States selected to receive grants from the Social Innovation Fund. The SIF has provided significant growth capital and support for CEO's efforts to demonstrate the effectiveness of its programs outside New York City. In July 2010, CEO received an annual $5.7 million grant from the SIF to establish programs in Cleveland, Ohio; Kansas City, Mo.; Memphis, Tenn.; Newark, N.J.; Tulsa, Okla.; San Antonio, Texas; and Youngstown, Ohio.

The programs based on CEO's pilots include the following:

  • SaveUSA is a matched savings initiative that offers low-income tax filers the opportunity to save a portion of their Earned Income Tax Credit and receive a 50 percent match if they continue to save for one year. During the program's first year, participants opened 1,600 accounts with nearly $1 million in savings in New York and three other cities.
  • Jobs-Plus addresses entrenched poverty among public housing residents by saturating targeted developments with job and career support, community building and rent incentives. During a previous national trial, residents' earnings showed sustained increases relative to a comparison group, even after the program ended.
  • Family Rewards offers very low-income families a broad range of financial incentives for activities designed to reduce current poverty while also working to reduce longer-term poverty. The pilot program reduced severe poverty by 13 percentage points, increased average savings by 62 percent and increases parents' full-time employment by 6 percentage points.
  • Project Rise offers education and paid internships to young adults who lack a high school diploma or GED and are out of school and out of work. Approximately half of the youth in the New York City pilot program remained employed or in education programs nine months after completing the internship.
  • WorkAdvance is a new workforce model that employs sector-focused and skills-building strategies to boost their earnings. A study of the New York pilot program found that participants were three times more likely to be placed in jobs, work more hours and earn higher wages than clients at traditional workforce centers.

The Social Innovation Fund is an initiative of the Corporation for National and Community Service (CNCS) that promotes public and private investments in effective nonprofit organizations to help them grow to serve more people in low-income communities.

To accomplish this goal, the SIF awards grants of $1 million to $5 million for up to five years to grantmaking intermediaries with track records of evidence-based decision-making. These intermediaries then match the federal contributions dollar-for-dollar and hold open competitions to identify and fund the most-effective nonprofits working in low-income communities, which match the grants dollar-for-dollar again.

Since 2010, the SIF has awarded $95 million to 16 intermediaries like CEO that have invested in more than 150 nonprofit organizations in 33 states and Washington, D.C. Each of those organizations is currently implementing innovative programs focused on solving critical community challenges. Thus far, these grants have yielded $250 million in commitments to raise additional funding from private donors to support these powerful solutions.

The 2012 Social Innovation Fund Grants Competition is now open, and we encourage all qualified grantmakers to consider applying. Applications are due by Tuesday, March 27, at 5 p.m. Eastern.

Keywords:  SIF   Social Innovation Fund   New York    
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Posted on 3/23/2012

   
Advancing Early Childhood Literacy by a Mile in Colorado
More than a quarter of Colorado's third-graders are not reading at grade level, a concerning statistic as early childhood literacy is one of the most important predictors of school success and high school graduation. Stakeholders across diverse sectors including federal, state, and local governments, educators, nonprofits, business leaders, and foundations have teamed up to improving childhood literacy as a top priority for the state.
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Posted on 3/6/2012

   
Social Innovation Fund: Expanding the Impact of Promising Programs
February 10, we announced the 2012 Social Innovation Fund Grants Competition and we encourage all qualified grantmakers to consider applying. Applications will be due by Tuesday, March 27, at 5:00 pm Eastern Time.
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Posted on 2/14/2012

   
Additional Social Innovation Fund Grants Awarded
Today, the National Fund for Workforce Solutions (NFWS) announced grants totaling $2.1 million to five communities as a means to support local, employer-led workforce partnerships. These grants represent the third round of funding supported by the federal Social Innovation Fund grant awarded to the National Fund and its implementation partner, Jobs for the Future.
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Posted on 10/6/2011

   
Nurses to the Rescue Via Virtual Clinics
Residents of Wolfe and Powell County in Kentucky have very limited access to primary care services, and long drives to access specialists who can meet their health needs. With its leveraged SIF funding from the Foundation for a Healthy Kentucky, St. Joseph Health System is addressing this issue by establishing two virtual primary care delivery clinics to provide primary care services in these rural areas.
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Posted on 8/3/2011

   
Closing the Care Gap: Addressing the "Last Mile" Problem
One of Cumberland Family Medical Center, Inc.'s satellite clinics is located in McCreary County, Kentucky. McCreary County is the 4th least healthy county in Kentucky, as ranked by the Kentucky Institute of Medicine, and is both a Medically Underserved and a Health Professional Shortage Area. As such, it embodies a “last mile” problem in access to health care services.
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Posted on 8/3/2011

   
Helping Kids With Special Needs Conquer A Fear of the Dentist
The Kentucky nonprofit, Home of the Innocents, provides dental services to children in state care, children with special health care needs, and other children and families served by the Home and its partner agencies.
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Posted on 8/3/2011

   
Teaching Financial Literacy at the Instituto del Progreso Latino
On Chicago's southwest side, the three predominantly Latino neighborhoods where Instituto del Progreso Latino works suffer from low incomes, low education levels, and rates of unemployment as high as 15%.
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Posted on 8/3/2011

   
A Model for Success: WorkAdvance and Per Scholas
Through the Social Innovation Fund, The Mayor's Fund to Advance New York City is also supporting the expansion of WorkAdvance. WorkAdvance seeks to boost the earnings of unemployed and low-wage working adults by helping them prepare for and enter quality jobs in targeted industries with opportunities for career growth.
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Posted on 8/3/2011

   
Saving for the Future with SaveUSA
The Mayor's Fund to Advance New York City has made SIF-leveraged investments to leading job training non-profits to expand and scale evidence-based innovations that are designed to break the cycle of poverty and build economic self-sufficiency in diverse communities across the country.
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Posted on 8/3/2011

   
Children's Institute, Inc.: Easing Rocky Roads to Successful Family Life
When Jerry* was nine, he was living with his alcoholic mother. All four of his siblings had already been removed from the home, but, somehow, Jerry was still there. Everything changed when, left home alone one summer day, the house caught fire and burned to the ground. As a result, Jerry was remitted to the child welfare system.
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Posted on 8/3/2011

   
The Gateway to College National Network, A Gateway to Sucess
Lawrence Caldwell quit school, ran away from an abusive home and was well on his way to becoming another faceless statistic of America's drop out crisis, until he enrolled in the Gateway to College program at Montgomery College in Maryland. He excelled academically and is now an undergraduate at The George Washington University.
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Posted on 8/3/2011

   
 
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