225 N Michigan Ave, Ste 1200
Chicago, IL 60601
(800) 227-2345
The Chicago Bar Foundation brings Chicago’s legal community together to improve access to justice for people in need and make the legal system more fair and efficient for everyone. The CBF accomplishes this by increasing access to free and affordable legal assistance for people in need, and making the courts and legal system more user-friendly and accessible for people without lawyers. Through grants, advocacy, pro bono and partnerships, the CBF takes a system-wide approach to improving access to justice and focuses on objectives that are best achieved by the legal community working together. More specifically, the CBF works to: • Strengthen our community’s pro bono and legal aid organizations • Enable dedicated lawyers to pursue careers in legal aid • Maximize opportunities for pro bono lawyers to effectively supplement the work of their legal aid counterparts • Make the courts and legal system more user-friendly and accessible for those in need As the charitable arm of The Chicago Bar Association, the CBF’s work is made possible by the generous contributions of thousands of dedicated lawyers and legal professionals, more than 200 law firms and corporations, and many other committed partners. Thanks to that strong support, the CBF awarded over $4.6 million in grants in 2013 and continues to play a lead role in a number of innovative access to justice initiatives. To learn more about the CBF, visit http://chicagobarfoundation.org/
In Illinois, 1 in 10 babies is born too soon. The March of Dimes works to end premature birth and other problems that threaten our babies. We help moms have full-term pregnancies and healthy babies. If something goes wrong, we offer information and comfort to families. We research the reasons why babies are born too soon or very sick and work on preventions. Follow us on instagram: instagram.com/marchofdimesIL
We provide educational programs and support for individuals living with kidney disease and their families, continuing education programs for healthcare professionals, and advocacy to advance initiatives that directly affect the care and treatment of kidney disease. Additionally, the National Kidney Foundation, its affiliates and divisions are leaders in the funding of medical research in the area of kidney diseases. Over one third of the medical research funded in the United States for kidney disease is funded by the NKF, its affiliates and divisions.
By actively engaging the PF community, the Pulmonary Fibrosis Foundation has developed essential programs available to those living and working with pulmonary fibrosis. The Pulmonary Fibrosis Foundation is focused on our mission to mobilize people and resources to provide access to high quality care and leads research for a cure so people with pulmonary fibrosis will live longer, healthier lives. Our signature programs include: PFF Care Center Network PFF Patient Registry PFF Patient Communication Center PFF Ambassador Program An international network of support groups and online communities The PFF Summit Comprehensive disease education materials Our expert Medical Advisory Board and the biennial PFF Summit allow us to maintain an ongoing dialogue with physicians, researchers, industry representatives, and the patient community. This creates a collaborative environment that will help us achieve many of our goals. Our peer-reviewed research program supports projects that improve understanding of pulmonary fibrosis and will lead to successful therapies. We have developed significant relationships with industry partners and upheld our position as the honest broker to inform those affected by pulmonary fibrosis of important scientific breakthroughs.
CMBWN Programs & Activities Providing Education and Raising Public Awareness: The Centralized Training Institute (CTI) offers essential, coordinated training for domestic violence advocates and allied professionals. CTI staff and expert trainers work toward increasing the knowledge and skills of participants to enable them to better serve families experiencing domestic violence. CTI provides three types of trainings: 1.) Domestic Violence 40-Hr Training (basic training for new domestic violence workers); 2.) Advanced & Specialized Training (improves the knowledge of experienced domestic violence workers on vital and relevant issues); and 3.) Allied Professional Training (customized domestic violence training for staff of organizations that frequently encounter domestic violence survivors, their children, and perpetrators). CTI has educated thousands of domestic violence workers and allied professionals, over 1,190 last fiscal year alone. Connecting Members of the Community to Direct Service Providers The City of Chicago / State of Illinois Domestic Violence Help Line is a confidential, multi-lingual link to community-based domestic violence services. It operates 24-hours a day, 365 days a year, is toll-free, and is TTY available for speech- and hearing-impaired callers. Last fiscal year, the Help Line answered over 24,000 calls from survivors, friends, and family members seeking information and referrals. The Network provides staff and training for the Help Line under a professional services contract with the City of Chicago. Leading Public Policy & Advocacy Efforts The Network serves as forum for information exchange within the Cook County domestic violence services community. Our committee and membership meetings are the foundation of collaboration and networking for member programs and are central to keeping The Network informed on what is happening in the field of domestic violence, both locally and nationally. In this way, we are uniquely positioned to stay abreast of, and respond to, survivor needs and trends developing in service delivery. One of The Network's advocacy goals is for survivors of domestic violence to have the opportunity to access, and be knowledgeable about, the options that are available to them. The Network also hopes to educate not only the general public, but those encountering victims in various institutions, in order to ensure that people seeking help are received with compassion and dedication.
Metropolitan Family Services has more than 900 full- and part-time professional staff dedicated to providing quality services to families throughout Chicago, DuPage County, Evanston/ Skokie and the southwest suburbs. Metropolitan serves more than 68,000 families and individuals as diverse as the communities in which they live, with 81% being part of the working poor or lower-middle class.
The Worlds First Service Club Founded by Paul Harris February 23, 1905
The Associate Board of Ambassadors (ABOA) is a young professionals group who has raised over $1 million in the fight against cancer since its inception in 2006. Skyline Soiree is the primary fundraiser of the Associate Board and one of the premier events of its kind in Chicago. The group is also charged with furthering the fundraising efforts of the Discovery Ball through procurement of silent auction items and volunteer recruitment. Perhaps most importantly, ABOA members have the opportunity to network with others who are interested in making a difference in their community and significantly impacting the Society’s lifesaving mission. E-mail us for more information at: [email protected]
The Niagara Foundation was founded in 2004 by a group of Turkish-American businessmen and educators in order to realize the vision of their spiritual leader, Fethullah Gulen, himself a Turkish Muslim scholar and poet, as well as an educational and humanitarian activist. Today the Niagara Foundation is active in nine Midwestern states with 22 branches. The founders of the Niagara Foundation envisioned an institution that could bring together people from all walks of life in order to celebrate diversity in a shared society. They named the organization after Niagara Falls, where two great lakes become more magnificent together than they could be separately. The Niagara Foundation employs the Niagara Falls as a metaphor to underline the importance of the cooperation and understanding among diverse groups of people. We may be separated by ethnicity, religion, race and color, but we all experience both happiness and sorrow, as we are all human beings. As a part of the diverse, global Hizmet or “Gulen” movement, the Niagara Foundation’s mission is to foster civic conversations and sustained relationships between people of different cultures and faiths. The Niagara Foundation organizes forums, dinners, conferences, lectures, community service, and intercultural trips to fulfill its core values of hospitality, enrichment, and leadership. What was, in 2004, a very small organization dedicated solely to the pursuit of educational enrichment, has flourished under the dedicated staff, from CEO and President down to the volunteers of the Niagara Foundation. In 2012, The Niagara Foundation in Chicago created three distinct centers that exemplify all the ways in which the organization reaches out to unique communities. The Center for Public and Global Affairs reaches out to public officials, as well as civic and business leaders active in the community. The Center for Cultural Exchange and Interfaith Collaboration hosts interfaith gatherings and intercultural trips to Turkey. The Center for Academic Affairs works in collaboration with universities to involve the academic community in the conversations Niagara facilitates. The three centers combine to make up the whole of the Niagara Foundation, which has grown into an organization known for its hospitality, educational enrichment, and recognition of its network of local and global leaders.
Thrive Chicago has brought together 600 individuals representing nearly 200 child and youth serving organizations to accomplish the shared objective of supporting Chicago youth from “cradle-to-career.” As a collective impact initiative, Thrive engages a diverse group of leaders from the nonprofit, business, government, education and philanthropy sectors working toward one common agenda: to prepare all Chicago youth for a vibrant future.
A cancer diagnosis is accompanied by a whole range of emotions. Fear, sadness and powerlessness are just a few. During this scary time, support isn’t enough; those fighting MPNs need action steps to help them regain some semblance of control. And that’s where we come in. Our education & advocacy improve patient lives today, while our ground-breaking research offers hope for a better tomorrow. All working hand in hand with you to change your prognosis. Follow us: @MPN_RF
The Forum conducts analysis to inform, influence and lead. Its goals are to improve education outcomes, advocate for affordable housing, promote just immigration policies, and engage diverse sectors of the community, with an understanding that advancing Latinos advances a shared future.
The DetermiNation program represents the hard work, strength, and commitment needed to compete in an endurance race and those are the same qualities the American Cancer Society calls on in the race to save lives from cancer.
This page is about sharing success stories, ideas, and events as people of faith inspire one another to take better care of our common home.
We focus our efforts on ending homelessness by addressing root causes, including the lack of affordable housing, the lack of living-wage jobs, the lack of health care, discrimination and violence. CCH believes that homelessness is a solvable problem and has had many victories over the years. We will continue to fight until every person has a place to call home. Chicago Coalition for the Homeless is the only organization in Chicago to run regular outreach to homeless families, unaccompanied youth, ex-offenders, prostitution survivors, and single adults. We offer this at emergency shelters, transitional housing, SRO and street programs – 30 across the city each month, reaching more than 3,500 people a year. We are the only non-profit in Illinois dedicated to crafting public policies that curb – and one day, can end – the homelessness that hurts low- and middle-income families. CCH pursues initiatives to preserve a shelter safety net, to secure more affordable housing and rents, boost access to transitional job programs and support services, and create re-entry options and alternatives to incarceration. We train and empower homeless people to advocate on these issues. Ours is the only law office in Illinois dedicated solely to serving homeless people, with focus on children and teens turned away by public schools or denied school services. The Law Project represented 263 clients in the city and suburbs in the fiscal year that ended in June 2009. Also unique in Illinois, a youth attorney works full-time with homeless teens. Most clients are unaccompanied youth living on their own, without family to care for them. The mobile legal clinic runs street and school outreach, with weekly hours at Teen Living Programs, Center on Halsted, Broadway Youth Center, and a drop-in youth group. To preserve its independent voice, CCH does not take government funding. Instead, when we advocate for public funds, it’s to create more housing, better services for those who are homeless or at-risk, and help support providers who serve the homeless. CCH effectively pairs community organizing with advocacy. Just one example: homeless moms helped our housing campaign convince the state to create homeless prevention grants, one-time grants to help families avoid foreclosure or eviction. CCH advocates yearly for funds, and doubled state funding by 2007. In nine years, 79,000 Illinois families were helped ($800 on average in 2008); 86 percent remain housed 18 months later.
The Catholic Conference of Illinois serves the bishops in the six dioceses of the state: Belleville, Chicago, Joliet, Peoria, Rockford and Springfield-in-Illinois. Because of the nature of Facebook, the Catholic Conference of Illinois cannot regulate and does not necessarily endorse the content of individual wall postings, friends’ pages, advertisements, etc. We reserve the right to remove or de-link objectionable content if and when we become aware of it.
MLA is a non-profit, educational organization of health sciences information professionals. Founded in 1898, MLA provides lifelong educational opportunities, supports a knowledge base of health information research and works with a global network of partners to promote the importance of quality information for improved healthcare.