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Finalists Named in 2010 YouthBridge SEIC
Seven SEIC Finalists Selected to Compete for $150,000 in Funding
St. Louis, Missouri , January 28, 2010
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Finalists named in
2010 YouthBridge SEIC competition
Judges of the 2010 YouthBridge Social Entrepreneurship and
Innovation Competition narrowed the field to seven teams on Jan. 28 after
semi-finalists presented their 90-second ‘elevator pitches’ to an open forum at
the Olin Business School. The seven finalists
have until April 8 to hone their business plans and prepare presentations for
the last round of judging. Grants
totaling $150,000 will be announced at an awards ceremony April 15.
The seven finalists are:
City Greens Produce
City
Greens Produce aims to provide access to fresh, local and affordable produce,
promote healthy living in the community, provide a space for neighbors to
interact and support local Missouri farmers as part of the extended community.
Crafts By Youth--Economic
Empowerment for Youth
Washington
University students partnered with a Ugandan NGO called UDHA in the summer of 2009 to find a way to
economically empower disadvantaged rural youth, primarily young women (ages
16-24). Crafts By Youth is the nonprofit started to sell the environmentally
friendly recycled paper bead jewelry produced through the income-generating
program.
The Dahlia Partnership
The
Dahlia Partnership is dedicated to systemic change through education and
advocacy. Utilizing a curriculum, The REAL Skinny, Dahlia will train education
professionals how to recognize early signs of eating disorders and provide
intervention when necessary.
One Percent
Foundation
OPF empowers young adults to become lifelong
philanthropists by facilitating engaged, systematic, collective and
values-driven giving and participation. OPF Partners pledge to donate at least
one percent of their income to philanthropy each year. The Foundation supports
organizations in the five broad categories of Education, the Environment,
Health, International Aid, and Poverty.
Project GiveChange
Social
action platform that facilitates online giving and promotes contributions by
reducing opportunity costs, providing incentives, and targeted marketing.
St. Louis Dancing Classrooms
St.
Louis Dancing Classrooms(SLDC) is a SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT program aimed at
empowering youth, teaching respectful interaction, and promoting teamwork in
St. Louis Metropolitan schools. Using the New York-based program (portrayed in
Mad Hot Ballroom—currently serves 1,000 schools per year) as a model, SLDC is a
10-week in-school residency targeting 5th grade classrooms. The Pilot was
launched in south St. Louis in Jan 2009. By leveraging existing relationships
with area school systems, arts organizations, and dance communities SLDC
expects to serve 27 schools and 5,000 students in 3 years.
Twice Blessed Thrift and
Gift
Our
Lady's Inn, a non-profit organization that serves homeless pregnant women and
their children opened a resale shop to develop a sustainable revenue stream
from excess in-kind donations. The store serves as an employee training program
for clients, where they gain valuable work experience, an employer reference,
and earn store credits towards purchases. Store opened in May, 2009 in a small
storefront donated by a benefactor. It has made a small profit but needs to
expand or open another store to meet self-sustaining goals.
Initiated in 2005 as the Social Entrepreneurship &
Innovation Competition by the Skandalaris Center, a name change was announced
last fall to reflect the on-going commitment of the YouthBridge Community
Foundation to the program.
Rex Reed, Executive Director of Agency Services for
YouthBridge congratulated the finalists in this year’s competition, "We are pleased and excited to see how the SEIC has grown and developed over the years and the impact it's making in St. Louis. Fostering creative solutions to the area's societal problems is what we're about, and the YouthBridge SEIC is the cornerstone of that work."
The foundation, which has been a Washington University
partner in the SEIC since its inception, renewed its support last year with an
initial three-year commitment of funding and training for non-profit,
community-based ventures, totaling nearly half a million dollars.
The YouthBridge SEIC
competition is unique in St. Louis and, in terms of monetary awards, is the
largest competition of its kind in the U.S.
Additional sponsors include the Incarnate Word Foundation, the Lutheran
Foundation of St Louis, and the Daughters of Charity Foundation of St Louis.
For more information:
Skandalaris Center, Washington University in St. Louis: http://www.sc.wustl.edu/
YouthBridge Community Foundation: http://www.youthbridge.org
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