Hyde Park Citizen 12-25-2019

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Citizen 40th Anniversary of the Illinois Human Rights Act Celebrated — Page 3 Week of Dec. 25, 2019

| Vol. 31 | No. 5 | www.citizennewspapergroup.com

HYDE PARK

The University of Chicago in Hyde Park created a new financial assistance program in 2018 as a way to diversify its student population that provides free tuition, fees and housing to low-income students with household incomes $60,000 per year or less. Photo credit: Courtesy of the University of Chicago

LOW-INCOME STUDENTS CAN NOW ATTEND THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO FOR FREE NEWS ??| CITIZEN

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Six community-based advance inhousehold $10 million A relatively new program at the University of Chicago allows low-income students to receiveteams free tuition if their income is $125,000 per year or less. And more financial assistance is available to students with household incomes $60,000 per year or less. Chicago Prize grant competition Penny Pritzker, Bryan Traubert and Kevin Poorman. College and Career Academy (ACCA), South and West Side teams have beenaidDevelopment Those students receive free housing and fees plus tuition as part ofSixselected their financial by the school. AndAustin for students who are_________________________ the first Corporation, Green Era, Urban redeveloping a vacant school into a business as finalists for the Chicago Prize, Growers Collective, New Pisgah Community a $10 million grant of the Pritzker Service Organization incubator and building 60 units of affordable housing South and West Sides Traubert Foundation will invest years in a in their families to attend college, they receive a $20,000 scholarship overthatfour andEquity a and guaranteed paid internship for “Chicago’s their first Economic Opportunity via A on vacant and scattered City-owned lots. Team are home to some of our city’s collaborative initiative that uses physical Little Village Community Hub Community: members: Westside Health Authority, Austin development to spur economic activity, South Lawndale most effective and creative Coming Together, By the Hand Club, United Way summer. Free housing is a big deal because the university requiresstrengthen all students to live on campus their first two years. civic infrastructure, and PAGE 2nonprofits, Project overview: Redevelopment ofduring a vacant of Metropolitan Chicago, LISC Chicago, IFF, Lamar improve the safety, well-being, and social service agencies and community two-story fire station into a commercial

BUSINESS Stedman Graham to Receive 2020 Horatio Alger Award PAGE 4

ENTERTAINMENT IN MEMORIAM: Big Bird and Oscar the Grouch: Remembering Carroll Spinney

economic mobility of residents in their neighborhoods. The announcement of Finalists was made during a celebratory event at The Hatchery, 135 N. Kedzie Ave., on December 11, 2019. Selected from a pool of over 80 applicants, the Finalists are comprised of community-based and citywide organizations working together on projects that involve building new or redeveloping existing community assets to address the needs of residents and advance a shared vision for their neighborhood. Each Finalist team will receive a $100,000 grant to support its ongoing project planning. One of these Finalists will be chosen as the single $10 million Chicago Prize recipient next spring. “The finalists for the Chicago Prize represent the shared leadership, creativity, and commitment needed to revitalize our South and West Side neighborhoods and transform the economic life of our city,” said Mayor Lori E. Lightfoot. “By driving investment in our historically underserved communities, we will uplift our families and local businesses, create growth that is both inclusive and sustainable, and unlock the huge, untapped potential that exists across Chicago. Our greatest success comes when all of us are succeeding, and I look forward to continuing to work with the Chicago Prize finalists and the Pritzker Traubert Foundation as we move forward towards our shared vision together.” “It’s clear that the Chicago Prize’s call to folks living on the South or West Sides to dream big and plan thoughtfully was more than met,” said Bryan Traubert, cofounder and trustee of the Pritzker Traubert Foundation before an audience of over 200 people at the Finalists’ announcement. “This project hopes to demonstrate that encouraging collaboration and providing financial resources could help unleash the change that these neighborhoods have long sought. Congratulations to all of the Finalist teams.” Traubert was joined by co-founder and trustee Penny Pritzker at The Hatchery to

NEWS

kitchen for food entrepreneurs, community meeting space and center for food purchasing from the LVEJO Urban Farm. Team members: Delta Institute and Little Village Environmental Justice Organization (LVEJO) Go Green on Racine: An Englewood Rising Project

Johnson Collaborative, Purpose Built Communities, Applegate Thorne-Thomsen Working Together to Reinvigorate South Chicago Community: South Chicago Project overview: Revitalizing East 91st and 92nd Streets, from the lakefront to Commercial Avenue, through nine

development organizations, providing tangible solutions to challenges linked to decades of disinvestment in these communities,” said Helene Gayle. ______________________________

Six communitybased teams advance in 10 million Chicago Prize grant competition PAGE 7

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Team members: Inner City Muslim Action Network (IMAN), Teamwork Englewood, Resident Association of Greater Engloewood (R.A.G.E.), and E.G. Woode

Communities: West Englewood and Englewood Project overview: Transformation of the 63rd & Racine intersection by refurbishing a two-story building into a food co-op, building a mixed-use development on three lots and repurposing a vacant school into a local recycling enterprise. Team members: Inner City Muslim Action Network (IMAN), Teamwork Englewood, Resident Association of Greater Englewood (R.A.G.E.), and E.G. Woode

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projects (six repurposed facilities, three new public spaces) that collectively provide affordable housing, six

advertising@citizennewspapergroup.com thechicagocitizen@thechicagocitiz www.facebook.com/durrell.garth.9 www.citizennewspapergroup.com multi-family units, a grocery store, community .

performing arts facility, indoor soccer arena, outdoor play space, gym, and business incubator and workforce development café, along with streetscape improvements. Team members: Claretian Associates Interfaith Housing Development Corporation, Special Service Area #5, Our Lady of Guadalupe Parish/School,

“The Chicago Prize finalists represent the type of community-led collaborative initiatives that have the power to bring transformative change and chart a new course of inclusive economic growth in our region. In addition to the $100,000 planning grant that is being awarded to each of the six Finalists, 14 other teams whose applications were highly ranked by the reviewers will receive a $10,000 award to


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Hyde Park Citizen 12-25-2019 by CITIZEN NEWSPAPERS - Issuu