RESOURCE FOR MEMBERS ONLY
View materials from "Funders Together to End Homelessness – Baltimore Meeting - September 2022".
FIND MORE BY:
RESOURCE FOR MEMBERS ONLY
View materials from "Funders Together to End Homelessness – Baltimore Meeting - September 2022".
FIND MORE BY:
RESOURCE FOR MEMBERS ONLY
View Materials from Workforce and Financial Stability Legislative Debrief
FIND MORE BY:
RESOURCE FOR MEMBERS ONLY
View Materials from Health Funders Legislative Debrief
FIND MORE BY:
RESOURCE FOR MEMBERS ONLY
View materials from "17th Weekly Funder and Partner Coordination Briefing".
RESOURCE FOR MEMBERS ONLY
View materials from "Maryland Community Foundations Association Quarterly Meeting – January 2021".
RESOURCE FOR MEMBERS ONLY
View materials from Implications of the Climate Solutions Now Act for Philanthropy.
FIND MORE BY:
RESOURCE FOR MEMBERS ONLY
View program resources from Green Funders Peer Learning Exchange with the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation.
FIND MORE BY:
By the end of 2017, Baltimore suffered 343 homicides, a new record for killings per capita. This continues a troubling trajectory; overall violent crime between 2012 to 2017 is up 9.8 percent. Most categories of violent crime either increased or stayed about the same, with the biggest percentage growths in homicides, shootings and robberies. Join expert researchers to learn about violence as a health crisis and research-based best practices around reducing violence. We’ll also discuss how these practices are (or could be) implemented in Baltimore.
On January 31st, participants uttered these phrases in frustration and despair during United Way of Central Maryland’s Walk a Mile Experience (WAM), a poverty simulation, which the Maryland Philanthropy Network (Maryland Philanthropy Network) co-hosted with the Baltimore Women’s Giving Circle and the Jewish Women’s Giving Foundation, a project of The ASSOCIATED.
Every four years, the world watches the Olympics to see the best athletes excel in their chosen sport and compete for medals for being at the top of their field.
The Kirwan Commission on Innovation and Excellence in Education has become a key talking point in the 2018 election campaign, and on Thursday it picks up its work where it left off in January for the legislative session.
In The Black Butterfly: The Harmful Politics of Race and Space in America, Lawrence T. Brown reveals that ongoing historical trauma caused by a combination of policies, practices, systems, and budgets is at the root of uprisings and crises in hyper-segregated cities around the country. Putting Baltimore under a microscope, Brown looks closely at the causes of segregation, many of which exist in current legislation and regulatory policy despite the common belief that overtly racist policies are a thing of the past. Join your colleagues for a peer discussion about the role of our sector in this call to action to promote racial equity, end redlining, and reverse the damaging health- and wealth-related effects of segregation.
Maryland’s public health policy cuts across all sectors: housing, transportation, education, public works, planning, and community development, and renewed investment in public health is critical to ensure the strength and vitality of all of these sectors. Please join Maryland Philanthropy Network and our distinguished experts for a discussion on how we can collaborate and support a coordinated, equity-focused advocacy agenda to create change in the funding appropriations for public health infrastructure at the state and local levels.
Join Maryland Philanthropy Network for a conversation at the nexus of education and health. Together, we will explore how schools are responding to children in mental health crisis, how those students are being supported, what this looks like in practice, and ways the philanthropic community can be supportive.
Last year my colleague Adam Donaldson convinced me to join as a fun way to deepen relationships between a few foundations. Join what? Well, believe it or not, join an Maryland Philanthropy Network Fantasy Football league.
Baltimore City Public Schools are back in session Aug. 29. Across the city, students are getting ready for a new year at their neighborhood school, a charter school, a specialized high school or a transformation school.
For many of us, summer vacation is synonymous with summer camp or afternoons spent poolside. However, the summer months should also be a time for children to build upon the academic skills they have gained during the school year.
The 2012-2013 school year will bring with it the new environmental literacy requirements passed by the legislature in June 2011.
Frustratingly, foreclosure remains a persistent problem for residents of Central Maryland, especially Baltimore City.