Just in time for Black History Month, Adullam Ministries along with City of College Park and other organizations, kick-off 10-month entrepreneurship program for College Park teens.
COLLEGE PARK, Ga. – As the perfect coda for Black History Month, the BirthRight by Legacy program launch party was held on February, 22nd. Implemented by Adullam Ministries, INC., this 10-month initiative is the first of its kind for the area and was designed to give youth a better understanding of who they are, how they are connected to their local community, and knowing their place in the world.
“This country was built upon black and brown people, and we find ourselves, not seeing ourselves in the light that we should,” said Adullam Ministries CEO, Jamelle Mckenzie.
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“The purpose of this program is to help to help our young people identify themselves, and one of the main things we want them to identify themselves as are assets.”
The 10-month program includes a 9-week paid summer internship in which each participant shadows a business or community leader. The Birthright program is divided into three 12-week segments that are crafted around identity building, leadership training, and civic engagement.
How It Works:
1. Student participants gather each Monday online (via ZOOM) and in-person for three 12-week sessions.
2. Participants get to meet and interact each week with famous celebrities and mentors who share their stories and insight.
3. Relevant topics and themes are established that center on student “Success and Fulfillment.”
4. Weekly “Challenge Topics” allow students to reflect and give input from their life experiences and former sessions.
5. Facilitators along with Celebrities, Mentors, and/or Subject Matter Expert guests facilitate lively discussions, Q&A, and interactive Coaching exercises.
6. Students breakout into Cohort Groups to have more intimate discussions about the topics and themes.
7. Cohort Groups are given and create short assignments reflecting on what they have learned, felt, and experienced.
“I think that most kids are just like their parents. We just know ‘Go to work, get a paycheck.” expressed Taylor.
“These days and times, these kids can do whatever they want to do. I think it’s a great opportunity right now for kids to do whatever they want to do and be whoever they want to be.”
The BirthRight by Legacyprogram begins its first session on March 1, 2021, and runs through May 17, 2021.
For more information about the BirthRight by Legacy youth program, visit their Facebook pageor visit their website.
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City officials, non-profits, and local charter school help to celebrate the memory of student with ‘Buddy Bench’, balloon memorial, and new mural.
EAST POINT, Ga. — On the evening of Friday, November 6th, 2020, 11-year-old Ty’Rell Simms was headed home from his grandmother’s house with a friend. Tragically, he never made it — but his story and his legacy do not end there.
Victim of a drive-by shooting that had absolutely nothing to do with him, Simms left behind a grieving family struggling to cope with their senseless loss and a community left without their classmate, teammate, and friend.
Known for his natural athleticism, generous spirit, warm smile, and overall good nature, Simms touched the lives of many in the Tri-Cities in his brief eleven years.
During the unpleasant undertaking of finding ways to commemorate Simm’s life, his fellow scholars at KIPP South Fulton Academy(KSFA) envisioned ways to commemorate his life.
The Beta Club at KIPP Academy, where Simms had just begun his fifth-grade school year under pandemic distance learning approached the faculty and staff about a ‘Buddy Bench.’
The ‘Buddy Bench project’ is a relatively new initiative where plastic bottle caps and recyclable plastic items are repurposed into a functional memorial or ‘buddy bench’ in someone’s memory.
“Our Beta Club scholars came to us wanting to find an outlet for celebration, for grief or just having a way to feel afterward,” recalls KSFA Literacy Coach, Kathryn McClinton.
“They came up with the ‘buddy bench’ idea so we could collect caps in his honor and create a bench where people could actually come and sit, and remember him while also forming bonds with other people.”
The goal of the daunting task of gathering 400-lb of plastics through donations, both local and abroad to create Simms’ memorial bench.
The cap collection process was spearheaded by a fellow athlete and community youth leader, CJ Matthews. While Matthews did not know Simms personally, he was so moved by the news of his passing, he felt compelled to contribute somehow.
Family-friend and local pastor, Ray Waters solemnly recounts to Vox Pop All, the morning he received the call with the heart-breaking news of Ty’rell’s passing.
“It’s five minutes before church, and I’m thinking about what I’m going to talk about, and I get a call, and it is from Conrad’s (Ty’Rell’s father), brother. Scooter told me that Ty’Rell had been shot the night before and had died,” laments the Village Church pastor to Vox Pop ATL.
“My whole life as a pastor, I’ve been called and told that something tragic that had happened — but nothing like that.”
Wholesome Wave Georgia and Food Well Alliance partner-up to expand SNAP benefits with ‘Georgia Plant 2 Plate’ program
EAST ATLANTA, Ga. — Although general concerns regarding the pandemic have seemed to greatly diminish, the needs of families still dealing with economic hardships and food insecurity have not.
The Georgia Plant 2 Plate program was launched shortly after the pandemic shutdowns in April 2020 to ensure that SNAP recipients had reliable food access by offering 50% off fresh, healthy, and locally grown food.
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For 2021, the Plant 2 Plate program has expanded SNAP benefits to include 50% off local fruit and vegetable plant seedlings or ’starts’ to families paying with their EBT cards.
Along with the purchase of fruit and vegetable starter plants, a free gardening kit including pots, soil, gloves, trowels, and plant care guides were provided to SNAP recipients.
Working in partnership with the Georgia Fresh For Less program at Wholesome Wave Georgia, Food Well Alliance hosted a Georgia Plant 2 Plate pop-up just in time for Earth Day on Thursday, April 22, 2021, at East Atlanta Village Farmers Market located at Stokeswood Avenue SE, Atlanta, GA 30316.
To date, Georgia Plant 2 Plate has hosted pop-up events at:
For more information about the 2021 Georgia Plant 2 Plate program, you can visit their website, and learn more about other programs involving the Food Well Alliance, click here.
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The College Park-based community outreach organization has partnered with four local schools in the Tri-Cities area to provide the students and faculty with PPE (Personal Protection Equipment).
This initiative has been taking place since the beginning of the 2021 school year according to Jamelle McKenzie, Executive Director for IGNITE College Park Resource Center.
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“We have adopted for schools in the Tri-Cities area, and one of the things we like to do is to provide these schools with the necessary PPE that they need,” Mckenzie tells Vox Pop ATL.
“So, today we actually visited College Park Elementary School and Woodland Middle School, and delivered approximately 5000 face-masks that can be used for students, their families, and the faculty.”
With the number of in-person teaching increasing this year, the need for PPE has definitely increased for the scholars and their teachers.
IGNITE Resource Centerdelivered 2,500 face masks to Woodland Middle School and 1,500 to College Park Elementary School.
“Something as simple as masks you would not think would make such a huge impact, but it definitely has here at Woodland Middle,” shares the Woodland Middle School principal.
When asked how did she feel about the face-mask donations and continued support from IGNITE Resource Center, College Park Elementary School principal, Dr. Maisha Otway had this to add:
“Some people think that everyone has masks and that’s not true. We have them until we don’t,” affirms Dr. Otway. “So, on delivery like this is, it’s phenomenal and these are just so awesome and colorful and cute. We love that, too.”
For more information about the IGNITE College Park Resource Center, visit their website.
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