Bringing inventive thinking to war on poverty, Sisters of Charity Foundation funds fellowship

November 15, 2017

By JULIE MINDA

Fresh, creative thinking has produced a dizzying array of products and services for the modern world. So, why can't such inventiveness be used to solve today's intractable social concerns?

That is a concept behind a fellowship program from the Sisters of Charity Foundation of Cleveland and the Cleveland Leadership Center. "Innovation Mission: Fighting Poverty With Big Ideas" will invest $250,000 of foundation funds into the work of five people chosen by a committee following a competitive application process.

The fellows will develop and implement solutions to problems faced by people living in poverty. The fellowship program will serve as a type of incubator so that the fellows can evolve their ideas, create a business plan, pitch the plan to potential funders and begin to implement it — all during an 18-month period.

The foundation announced the five fellows Oct. 26. They are:

  • Dabney Conwell, vice president, Benjamin Rose Institute on Aging, and executive director of the Rose Centers for Aging Well. She will work to create and implement a program that will provide low-income elderly people being discharged home from the hospital with a prescription for a hot meal to be delivered to their home daily. By improving nutrition, the program aims to reduce avoidable hospital readmissions, shorten hospital stays for those who require further hospitalizations, and keep elders independent and living in their homes.
  • Julie Cortes, a senior attorney with the Legal Aid Society of Cleveland, will work to create a one-stop center to support low-income entrepreneurs in developing their business ideas.
  • Bill Leamon, a college and career coach with Notre Dame College, will develop a program to provide a mentor to all Cleveland Metropolitan School District graduates attending college.
  • Hazel Remesch, supervising attorney of the housing practice for the Legal Aid Society of Cleveland, will look into creating a legal clinic at housing court to give people at risk of eviction access to representation and counsel.
  • Penny Smith, executive director of academic services, Northeast Ohio Medical University, will develop a program that uses public policy and technology to help ex-offenders and military veterans who are noncustodial parents to better support their children. The program would provide apprenticeships and job training.
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Sisters of Charity Foundation of Cleveland staff meet with business, community and civic leaders in the summer to introduce a fellowship program intended to encourage innovation in anti-poverty initiatives. The foundation selected its inaugural set of fellows Oct. 26.

In selecting the five fellows, the foundation chose those with a good understanding of poverty in Cleveland. A review committee selected the fellows based on the viability of ideas, potential impact and feasibility as well as the applicants' qualifications to put the plan into action.

Something New
Dennis Beatrice, a longtime independent consultant for the Sisters of Charity Foundation and a senior advisor at the nonprofit research center SRI International, is an advisor for the Innovation Mission. He said the foundation wants to encourage "a new way of thinking about social welfare programs."

Beatrice said innovation is the lifeblood of the private sector, but the social service sector has lagged the private sector in using innovation to improve how things are done. He said the organizations behind the Innovation Mission "want to raise the visibility and the role of innovation to get at this persistent problem" of poverty.

Susanna Krey is president of the Sisters of Charity Foundation of Cleveland, which is part of Cleveland-based Sisters of Charity Health System. The foundation makes grants and engages in advocacy to improve the lives of people in need, with a focus on impoverished families, women and children. Krey said the foundation is teaming with the Cleveland Leadership Center on the Innovation Mission. That center's website said it develops and trains civic leaders and is a "a catalyst for civic engagement."

Incubation
The fellows will keep their current jobs and will commit at least 12 weeks of their time to the fellowship over the 18-month span of the program. Each fellow's employer can apply to receive up to $15,000 to compensate for the person's time.

Poverty a significant concern for Cleveland

The Sisters of Charity Foundation of Cleveland has made it a priority to address poverty, which is a long-standing and pronounced issue in that Midwestern city.

Data from the U.S. Census Bureau indicates that as of July 2016, more than 36 percent of the population of Cleveland, a city of 385,000-plus people, were in families with incomes below the federal poverty level. And, according to Kids Count Data Center, a project of the Annie E. Casey Foundation, 51 percent of Cleveland's children under the age of 18 are in families whose incomes are below the poverty level.

The foundation will provide each fellow with up to $15,000 in funding to support idea research and development. This could include traveling to other cities to observe programming, hiring a consultant, holding focus groups or a wide variety of other approaches, said Margaret Eigsti, a foundation program officer. Fellows will be strongly encouraged to involve Cleveland community members in their research to ensure their programs would be welcomed by, and useful to, the people they're trying to help.

Beatrice will provide one-on-one coaching and conduct professional development workshops for fellows. He said the incubation period is critical to the implementation and success of innovative programs. "We'll be engaging with participants, sharpening their ideas. The evolution of the idea is key."

Staying power
The fellows are eligible to receive $20,000 each from the foundation after 12 months to implement their project.

However, said Krey, a goal is for the fellows to develop their ideas to be sustainable outside of the Sisters of Charity Foundation's support. Twelve months into their fellowship, they will pitch their ideas to prospective funders — this could be other foundations or investors.

Krey is hopeful that the fellowship will enable people with great ideas to have the time and capacity to build them out. "We are eager to see the possibilities. New approaches are needed to tackle the diverse challenges around poverty," she said.

 

 

Copyright © 2017 by the Catholic Health Association of the United States
For reprint permission, contact Betty Crosby or call (314) 253-3490.

Copyright © 2017 by the Catholic Health Association of the United States

For reprint permission, contact Betty Crosby or call (314) 253-3490.