Allentown

APPLICATIONS SOUGHT FOR MINI-GRANTS



The City of Allentown is seeking applications from community organizations for ten mini-grants totaling $7,500. The funds are to be used to beautify city blocks.

This third round of funding comes from the $25,000 Cities of Service Impact Volunteering Fund grant awarded to the city last year. Allentown was one of 23 cities receiving funding from more than 60 applicants. A total of 18 neighborhood organizations received mini-grants in two separate application periods last year.

The city’s goal is to utilize its base of volunteers and equip them with staff support and mini-grant dollars as they resolve identified neighborhood issues and replace the blight with beautification projects to be completed by May.

The “Love Our City” initiative engages individuals where they live, work and worship and provides a sense of ownership by having community organizations and residents take control of neighborhood issues. With its focus on Mayor Ed Pawlowski’s goal to sustain the city’s commitment to safe, clean and vibrant neighborhoods, it complements the city’s existing SERVE Allentown service plan.

The program also expands on the mayor’s Quality of Life initiative, which he created in 2006 to address neighborhood and community quality of life challenges. The mayor’s office has continuously focused on engaging new groups in Allentown to emphasize social responsibility.

“The grant initiative sustains neighborhood attractiveness, safety, and resident quality of life,” Pawlowski said. “It engages community group and neighborhood volunteers in low risk, high impact neighborhood improvement projects. The city is coordinating this initiative to revitalize and clean up neighborhoods one block at a time using volunteers who complete applications outlining their own projects.”

Applications for “Love our City” projects will be accepted through March 15, 2015. Projects will be implemented and completed from April 15 – May 31, 2015, and with data collection by June 15, 2015. Applications are available on the city website at http://www.allentownpa.gov/Government/Mayors-Office/Create-the-Good.

Dozens of cities across the nation have adopted the Cities of Service model since its introduction in 2009. It focuses on impact volunteering – volunteer strategies that target community needs, use best practices, and set clear, measurable outcomes to gauge progress.

Grantee cities were selected based on the quality of initiative proposals, scale and potential for impact, and caliber of implementation plans, among other criteria. Cities of Service Impact Volunteering Fund initiatives address issues in the Cities of Service priority areas of education and youth, health, neighborhood revitalization, preparedness and safety, sustainability, and veterans. The program is funded by Bloomberg Philanthropies.

About Cities of Service

Founded in September 2009 in New York City by New York Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg and 16 other mayors from across the nation, Cities of Service is a bipartisan coalition of over 180 mayors committed to addressing critical city needs through impact volunteering. American cities face serious challenges and many mayors want to take advantage of every resource available to them – including the time and energy of public-spirited residents – to address those challenges. But in cities across America today, citizen service is often an underutilized strategy by municipal governments. By leveraging citizen service strategies, Cities of Service helps mayors address local needs and make government more effective. To find out more about Cities of Service, visit our website at www.citiesofservice.org or follow us on Twitter @CitiesOfService.

 

Press Release Provided By:

Mike Moore

Communications Manager

Office of the Mayor

610 437-7653 office

610 437-8730 fax

Mike.Moore@allentownpa.gov