“LA Más” Helps Bring NELA Community Together

“LA Más” Helps Bring NELA Community Together

Los Angeles, CA. LA Más consists of a small team that made a huge impact with the neighborhood of Northeast LA (NELA) through a food support program (seen above), partnerships with other organizations, and continuous communication with residents.

The non-profit is organized by a group of seven people who prioritize promoting projects that help to elevate working-class communities and people of color since its foundation in 2012.

Program Manager Alexandra Ramirez explained that “before COVID-19, we had two major programs” that the team primarily focused on. The Backyard Homes Project allowed homeowners to construct an Accessory Dwelling Unit (ADU) in exchange for providing affordable housing to a Section 8 voucher, and Storefronts, LA  which focused on “developing storefronts redesigned for small business owners.”

The ADU project and Storefronts, LA regularly had in-person meetings with multiple people, which could not continue as phase one of quarantine began in mid-March. “We were in the midst of doing about three or four designs,” said Ramirez, “so that had to stop.”

For the next two weeks, Ramirez and her team started checking in and getting advice from local non-profits about how to best serve the community during the shutdown. It was in these conversations that LA Más and its local partners started to note “this informal phone tree that was happening” between residents of NELA checking in with their neighbors about how they could help during the pandemic.

“And that’s when we started realizing that we could do more of those check-ins,” said Ramirez, “we didn’t know how much more we could do so we really needed to rely on our volunteers.” (seen below)

An Excel spreadsheet was created by the LA Más team and was made up of the contact information of about two thousand residents. They began contacting people on their spreadsheet in order to best understand their current needs.

“We knew that we couldn’t be the only ones making these calls and checking in with residents and that’s when we opened it up to our volunteers,” Ramirez said, “and we started training them to make calls and, yeah, we went on from there.”

After about a week of over 150 volunteers talking to residents, LA Más found that the highest needs were primarily with food and information on financial and social issues that arose during the pandemic.

Grocery sponsorship allows struggling families to be able to eat fresh food through deliveries made by LA Más volunteers. Photo credit: LA Más Outreach Lead Liliana Sánchez

In mid-April, the Northeast LA Community Response was announced on LA Más’s social media pages as an initiative to help community members gain immediate relief. Requests could range from deliveries of activity kits and face masks to information on unemployment filings and mortgage payments.

The program officially concluded in June, but LA Más was not going to simply stop helping the community.

“We kept seeing how food insecurity really was so present in our community, so we have been running offshoots of that program [NE LA Community Response] ever since,” Ramirez explained.

For the rest of the summer, LA Más operated a temporary food support program, where volunteers delivered donated and sponsored grocery bags for families in need on a weekly basis.

When discussing what Ramirez hopes for in the future when the coronavirus may not be as much of a centralized issue, she said, “We really need to address the systemic issues that are impacting working-class communities of color in our neighborhood.” She continues to explain immigrant families in particular “had a really hard time getting the support they needed.”

“Really, our goal is to continue to work in addressing those underlying issues, and figuring out how do we support our community and make these issues more visible,” Ramirez concluded.

LA Más is currently focused on reinventing its mission statement and posted a week ago that:

“For the rest of 2020, we are doing ‘fieldwork’ around the priorities that community members helped us identify: housing stability, economic development and food access, to name a few. We’ll be partnering with neighbors to identify what local solutions already exist and explore where new infrastructure could be helpful.”

If you have the means to donate to LA Más to continue giving to the community or are interested in becoming a volunteer, click here.

Photo credit for the first image: Russell Horning

From LA-Más:

LA-Más designs and builds initiatives that promote neighborhood resilience and elevate the agency of working class communities of color. We envision a Northeast Los Angeles where communities of color have equitable access to the power and resources needed to shape their futures.

“Life Group LA” Adapts to Continue Support of HIV/AIDS Community

“Life Group LA” Adapts to Continue Support of HIV/AIDS Community

Los Angeles, CA. The Life Group LA is a highly praised, group-oriented non-profit that gives immense support to those affected by HIV/AIDS through emotional support groups and weekend-long seminars. It has recently adjusted to providing weekly zoom sessions and webinars amidst the pandemic due to the extreme risk of volunteers and clients catching the COVID- 19 virus by attending physical group gatherings.

Life Group LA is a volunteer-driven organization that primarily focuses on its program, known as The POZ Life Weekend Seminar, where HIV-positive individuals and their loved ones can come together to learn more about living with HIV through educational workshops and emotional support groups. There is no cost for those who apply for the seminars or support groups as the organization relies purely on donations in order to cover costs.

Life Group LA’s latest seminar had been scheduled to take place in Las Vegas on March 28-29 of this year. However, since the pandemic hit the United States, the program had been postponed until group gatherings are considered safe by medical professionals.

Despite the fact that Life Group LA primarily works with groups of people in public spaces, executive director Sunnie Rose and the organization’s volunteers decided to continue its essential goals in giving the HIV community the emotional support and encouragement they need through webinars and monthly fundraising drawings.

The topics of the webinars are primarily focused on discussing the coronavirus and its effect on the HIV/AIDS community such as “Living with HIV in The COVID-19 Pandemic,” “Unmasked: COVID SCAMS What to Watch out For!” and “Intersection of Covid and HIV” (seen below).

Click here for more recorded webinars like the one seen above.

Life Group LA has more than fifty-one presenters that volunteer their time to help educate the HIV community on topics as mentioned above. Several of the volunteered presenters are medical professionals, college professors, and multimedia artists.

Sunnie Rose, the executive director of Life Group LA, described the organization as special because it “brings people out of isolation and out of fear” and “gives them the joy and the happiness that they so deserve in life.” Now, more than ever, Life Group LA is continuing to provide support for the HIV/AIDS community and beyond during the unprecedented times of the coronavirus pandemic in the United States.

From Life Group LA:

If you have the means to donate to Life Group LA in order to continue to provide free services for their clients and community, click here. 

Life Group LA is a powerful coalition of people focused on the spiritual, emotional and physical well-being of people living with HIV and those who support them through education, empowerment and emotional support. Our work is to assist people so that they may make informed choices and decisions regarding their healthcare and personal well-being.

WriteGirl Mentoring Programs Keeps Wheels Turning Online

WriteGirl Mentoring Programs Keeps Wheels Turning Online

Los Angeles, CA. The WriteGirl mentoring program has taken to zoom this summer and seen some unexpected benefits. Every year, the LA-based nonprofit matches over 500 girls with mentors; it also provides workshops and college guidance. WriteGirl has managed to keep its participation numbers high during the pandemic as girls who had transportation issues found it easier to be online. The organization boasts a thriving volunteer community with over 200 volunteers working as mentors, college counselors, and volunteers in the nonprofit’s program helping young women who are incarcerated. 

WriteGirl Poetry Workshop at Otis College during pre-covid days.

Ever since the shift to Zoom in March, WriteGirl has faced new challenges and introduced innovative tools and activities. Program coordinators lament the fact that not all of their students are staying connected. Keren Taylor, the executive director of WriteGirl, explains, “We don’t know the reason, is it the tech divide or family? Sometimes our young people don’t come forward to tell us what is going on because of stress or family conditions.” 

Taylor noted that volunteers are equipped with new online tools to engage students and to be more empathic. “We work with many students of color, who are struggling with the protests.” She explains that “the strangeness of our governmental response” has put a strain on students of color. “Add that to a mix and you really have a volatile situation for those girls, this is why we added self-care tools like exercise, going to bed early, and eating properly.”

A previous WriteGirl Songwriting Workshop

WriteGirl was launched in December 2001 to bring the skills and energy of professional women writers to teenage girls who do not otherwise have access to creative writing or mentoring programs.

WriteGirl is facing unforeseen expenses from tools such as Zoom and other needed software. On top of that, Taylor anticipates seeing the impact of COVID-19 on their fundraising programs over the next three to four months. “We expect it to be a very hard time,” said Taylor.  

Another looming challenge to WriteGirl is the changing nature of education. “People used to come away energized from our meetings being part of the culture, society, and nature,” Taylor said. “Looking ahead, we’re facing zoom fatigue because everything is online including friends and school.”  Taylor understands that her organization may not be the same but she believes it’s important to focus on their strengths, “our strength is in the depth of our training and the impact of our volunteers.” WriteGirl doesn’t plan to sit idle and is conducting surveys and initiating one on one calls with the participants to see how they’re being affected.

Taylor understands says the COVID-19 pandemic presents more challenges, but the nonprofit must continue giving young women something they can’t get anywhere else. “We might be in a pandemic right now but 10 years from now, those young people we’re training will be the ones saving us,” she added. 

From WriteGirl:

Within a community of women writers, WriteGirl promotes creativity and self-expression to empower girls. 

WriteGirl is a Los Angeles-based creative writing and mentoring organization that spotlights the power of a girl and her pen. At WriteGirl, we match girls with women writers who mentor them in creative writing. WriteGirl is a thriving community with 200 volunteer women writers serving more than 500 girls annually. Every year, we produce dozens of workshops, panel discussions, and special events to help girls get creative, get through high school, and get to college! In fact, since 2001, 100% of our graduating seniors have entered college, many on full or partial scholarships.

Through one-on-one mentoring and monthly creative writing workshops, girls are given techniques, insights, and hot topics for great writing in all genres from professional women writers. Workshops and mentoring sessions explore poetry, fiction, creative non-fiction, songwriting, journalism, screenwriting, playwriting, persuasive writing, journal writing, editing, and more. 

You can donate at this link: https://www.writegirl.org/donate

 

“Mayor’s Fund for LA” Angeleno Campaign Helps over 100 Thousands Residents

“Mayor’s Fund for LA” Angeleno Campaign Helps over 100 Thousands Residents

Los Angeles, CA. 105 thousand citizens of Los Angeles County have received help from the Mayor’s Fund for LA to do things like buy food and pay rent. FamilySource Centers also provided $1.2 million in grocery gift cards to nearly 10,000 Angelenos and all cards distributed in 3 days.

The Angeleno Campaign has helped counter major job losses as an emergency COVID-19 fundraising initiative launched with the collaboration of The Mayor’s Fund for Los Angeles, Accelerator for America, Mayor Eric Garcetti’s Office, and MasterCard City Possible to give immediate financial support for LA residents and families who have had unstable job security since early spring.

The non-profit Mayor’s Fund for LA started accepting applicants online for the relief during a three-day period starting on April 14th of this year.

LA Mayor Eric Garcetti reported that on the first day, shortly after the campaign was open to the public, more than 56,000 applicants had crashed the city’s application site. Garcetti would later announce that the total number increased to nearly 455,000 applications by the end of the three days (seen above).

Within the last four months of the fund being introduced to LA citizens, the Angeleno Program has raised more than $36 million through private donations made toward Mayor’s Fund for LA, which has helped nearly 105,000 LA residents. The money is distributed for an individual through a prepaid debit card if they signed up during the three-day application period.

The amount of money on the debit cards varied from $700 to $1,500 based on an applicant’s financial and economic situation.

The Angeleno Card Program indiscriminately assists the undocumented workers and unhoused residents of the city as it is designed to randomly select a validated applicant for the prepaid debit card.

“We are helping America’s cities fill critical gaps left by the federal response to the economic devastation caused by the pandemic,” said Garcetti in an Accelerator for America press release. “Immigrants and domestic workers are essential to our economy and our communities, and we will not get through this pandemic by leaving people behind.”

These posters are designed by Studio Number One for the LA Mask Print Project which was launched by Mayor Garcetti in early July to encourage the city’s citizens to wear masks.

Due to the program’s success in Los Angeles, Accelerator for America, alongside MasterCard City Possible, announced in late June that they would expand the program in ten different U.S. communities. The non-profit Accelerator, co-founded by the current LA mayor, announced in a press release that it was given a $750,000 grant by Open Society Foundation in support of the expansion of the Los Angeles program.

“I hope it inspires others who have those means or even two bucks,” said Mayor Garcetti during his April 16th briefing, “we need to get as many Angelenos covered in this crisis as we can.”

From Mayor’s Fund for Los Angeles:

The Mayor’s Fund for Los Angeles is a non-profit organization dedicated to improving life for all Angelenos. Uniquely positioned at the crossroads of local government, business, philanthropy, and the non-profit sector, the Fund facilitates the communication and collaboration vital to solving Los Angeles’ most complex challenges.

By leveraging the power of institutions and experts from across the city, the Fund helps create partnerships with the power to transform Los Angeles, making it a world leader in economic prosperity, efficiency, sustainability, and quality of life for all of its residents.

The Fund selects programs on the basis of their ability to engage public and private resources, demonstrate collaboration, seek innovative solutions, and yield measurable, transformational impact.

The Fund is supported by private donations and is overseen by an independent Board of Directors.

“Saban Community Clinic” Helping Those in Need Throughout Pandemic

“Saban Community Clinic” Helping Those in Need Throughout Pandemic

Los Angeles, CA. The Saban Community Clinic, with five sites located throughout Los Angeles, has worked hard in ensuring that its patients receive accessible healthcare during the global pandemic of COVID-19.

“We all need to unite and we all need to make sure that we’re there for each other mentally,” said Josue Portillo, Lead Front Desk Specialist from the Saban Beverly Health Center. Portillo discussed the difficulties that the staff has faced in keeping their doors open for vulnerable communities in Los Angeles, as well as the state of the regular services provided by the clinic.

The priority for Saban Community Clinic is to keep as much of their services open for those in need with as little risk as possible. Portillo talked about how they switched from “face-to-face contact” for regular appointments and results to “100% phone conversations” with patients when COVID-19 cases first began to emerge in California.

Saban Community Clinic today prioritizes all contact with patients to be over the phone. However, in the cases where blood work or any other type of screening is needed and approved by a patient’s doctor over the phone, Portillo and the Beverly Clinic’s staff will sanitize all areas patients may come in contact with before and after they come into the clinic.

Communication and Marketing Specialist Valeria De Luna commented on how important it is to keep “preventative services” open during the pandemic “regardless of how long this takes,” which includes screenings for STIs and pre-scheduled vaccinations for children. “That’s the biggest thing for us is making sure that we keep our community healthy from other things as well,” De Luna said, “and just making sure that those needs are addressed.”

The Free Shower Program is a regular service provided by the Saban Clinic to help individuals struggling with homelessness to receive access to a shower, a free toiletry kit, as well as other beneficial services provided by the clinic.

The program will continue to be open for these patients during the pandemic under strict limitations, which Portillo said was a bit difficult to enforce in comparison to their other services. “We are trying to provide the same services and keep our doors open for them because we know that they are very vulnerable in the community,” said Portillo.

“In the beginning,” Portillo said, “We worked hard for them to understand that we were limiting the amount of people in the building.” The Beverly Clinic currently only allows two unhouse patients participating in the program to come into the building at a time. They will be put into a room where they can charge their phone or organize their belongings for half an hour, fifteen minutes to take a shower in the facility, and then ten minutes to gather their belongings and leave the building so the staff can “sanitize the whole area before the next patient comes in.”

There are also tents outside of the entrances that provides shade and some care (seen in the picture above) while the unhouse patients wait their turn for the shower program.

De Luna commented on how their unhouse patients often do not have easy access to information on the Coronavirus or mobile devices to do a phone/video conference before going into one of the clinics in Los Angeles.

“There are all these different things that our patients have barriers to and so we really have to understand that our patients are coming from a really different perspective,” De Luna said, “we are really being that source for our community and providing them that outlet for them as well here.”

Portillo continues to help answer questions and concerns from individuals who have limited access to essential information on the pandemic and take care of patients who have to come into the clinic.

“All of our staff members’ encouragement for each other has really allowed us to push each other and support each other and make sure that these things can continue on a daily basis,” Portillo concluded.

If you would like to help Saban Community Clinic to continue providing these important services to the Los Angeles community during this difficult time, click here to donate to their emergency fund.

Click here for more videos about the clinic’s work during the pandemic.

From Saban Community Clinic:

The Saban Community Clinic was founded on the principle that healthcare is a right, not a privilege. Our clinics provide Whole Person Care to everyone regardless of income or immigration status. This includes medical, behavioral health and dental care.

For over 50 years, we have been redefining community health through a systemic approach that creates a lasting impact on individual lives and creates healthier communities. We have been awarded the National Committee for Quality Assurance (NCQA) Patient-Centered Medical Home (PCMH) Recognition Level 3, a model that puts the patient first.