IN THIS MONTH'S FAMILY MATTERS ...
“Community outreach work is one of the most essential pieces of making sure that our communities are safe, healthy, and thriving. And the beautiful aspect of it, is that it's people who know and come from these communities who get to be their biggest servants and their best advocates.”
- Cook County State's Attorney Kim Foxx,
in a video message to the Metropolitan Peace Academy's Cohort Six graduates
Congratulations to the Metropolitan Peace Academy Cohort Six graduates!
These street outreach workers are superheroes, and they never take their capes off! Thank you to all our newest graduates for bringing your perspectives to the Metropolitan Peace Academy and learning together.
Our virtual celebration featured special awards and recognition, reflections from our graduates, as well as messages from Cook County State's Attorney Kim Foxx, Metropolitan Family Services CEO Ric Estrada, and Metropolitan Peace Initiatives Executive Director Vaughn Bryant.
Play is more than just fun:
Midway Children's Center is building a new playground, and you can help!
One of the biggest obstacles for our teachers at Midway Children’s Center is … furniture. Our outdoor playground is unusable, so in order to ensure our children have enough space for play, the teachers move our furniture aside to make enough space indoors.
Because play is a critical part of how children learn, we want to ensure a quality play space for the 72 children we serve through full-day, high-quality early learning on Chicago’s Southwest Side. The staff recently launched a grassroots community fundraising effort to help pay for a new playground.
Thank you to all the Santa For A Day Santas who helped make our youth's holiday dreams come true!
Metropolitan Calumet partnered with the Chicago Housing Authority on the "Santa For A Day" initiative, with our youth writing letters about their wishes.
Program Director Carrie Pullie shares one special story: "The founder of Santa for a Day, Rich Gentile, read one of our youth's letters and it really hit him. [She] wanted a bed so she wouldn't have to sleep on the floor anymore. So he bought a frame, mattress and sheets."