Category: News

Rising Star Breakfast: Building a Local Talent Pipeline

Leaders from the corporate, higher education, philanthropic and nonprofit communities gathered on October 31st to learn how collaborative public-private partnerships in Hartford and other cities are preparing local youth for higher ed and the workforce. 

The event featured Fio Partners consulting and managing partner, Anne Yurasek, who has worked with public/private coalitions in the state and has studied collaborative efforts. In Nashville, she noted, high school students attend a career fair with hands-on activities and pre-assessments designed to help them identify career aspirations. In Austin, partners train volunteer classroom coaches and mentors and provide financial aid workshops and text message campaigns to send students deadline reminders.  

Hartford, a city on the move with energy and optimism, has formed the ALL IN! Coalition for College and Career Readiness, said  Yurasek.  ALL IN! brings together leaders committed to breaking down silos to form cross-sector partnerships and work toward bold goals for Hartford Public School students and graduates, she said.  

The audience at Infinity Hall in Hartford laughed when she pointed out how risk-averse the Hartford region is. She encouraged leaders to adopt a learning mindset and be willing to risk failure with trusted partners.  

During a panel discussion, moderated by Erin Haberman, Senior Director, Community Relations, Travelers, and Second Vice President, Travelers Foundation, panelists shared Hartford success stories and needs.  

Panelist Dr. Duncan Harris, CEO of Capital Community College, said through a partnership with Food Share, hunger is no longer a barrier to students’ learning at Capital. Middle school and high school students are eager to learn what they need to do to complete college and have the skills necessary for in-demand jobs, said Hartford Schools Superintendent Dr. Leslie Torres-Rodriguez, another panelist.  

Employers, seeking to hire local people interested in building their careers in Connecticut, are open to helping close students’ knowledge gap about what jobs are in demand now and in the future, said panelist Dr. Martin Estey, Executive Director of the Hartford Consortium for Higher Education.  

After the meeting, attendees were asked to consider providing one-on-one tutoring or mentoring, take on a high school or college intern, and/or participate in an ALL IN! cross-sector action team. We thank those who have already volunteered! To learn more visit www.ALLINHartford.org and to volunteer, email ALL_IN_Coalition@achievehartford.org


The Facilities Clock Is Ticking

Public discussion – not to say outcry – has put the need to address Hartford’s under-enrolled and unsustainable schools on the front burner, but other, subtler challenges are simmering as well.  The District is currently applying for State funding that, at best, will help renovate and maintain a fraction of the facilities on a long-deferred list.

 

The Hartford Board of Education’s School Choice and Facilities Committee this week wrestled with the fact that its 40-project list for $2 million in State Alliance Grant funding is based on a sound rubric of priorities, but reflects only the tip of the iceberg, so to speak.

 

Executive Director of Facilities Claudio Bazzano Tuesday advised the committee that modifications to facilities plans over the past few years have had a fits-and-starts impact as the City and State budget spigots have been cut or shut.  A long-range plan for five-to-10 schools is being developed for presentation to the Board late this year, he said, noting that the Martin Luther King, Jr. school has been on the Capital Improvement Project list since 2015, but has been on hold under dire City fiscal conditions.  That’s the original Weaver HS Building.

 

Projects bump around according to the reimbursement rate and the City’s ability to fund them – and give a false impression of what the priorities actually are.

 

Here are other key points from Tuesday’s meeting:

 

  • Re-Gifting? The PCB-afflicted Clark School, now closed, is subject under the law to be relinquished to the City and discussions for that transfer are under way, District Chief Operating Officer José Colón-Rivas explained.  What might happen if the City declines to accept the gift?

 

  • Up the Street? Plans are under way to co-locate the Capital Community College Magnet Academy (CCCMA), which has some 60 students, over at Capital Prep, a few blocks up Main Street.  For next year, Grade 12 students will have the option of attending either Great Path Academy or Classical Magnet Academy.  Capital Prep has room for CCCMA students – and the Board will be asked to de-magnetize it for 2018-19.  The partnership with Capital Community College will continue, but may look different in the future.

 

  • The Board’s draft policy for school closure, consolidation, and relocation is being sharpened, Board Member Karen Taylor advised – and it will now also be augmented with separate guidance on the co-location of schools.  Updating policy will only be one of many steps toward building closure and school consolidations and relocations that will inevitably take us back to the world of Equity 2020. Will the second time be a charm?

 

 

The Bottom Line

 

There is a growing awareness in Hartford that, despite the convenience, having nearly 50 schools doesn’t make sense either qualitatively or quantitatively in today’s fiscal climate and in this geographically-small city.  Now we need equal awareness of the facts that many under-enrolled facilities also urgently need renovation and that critical partnerships and assets must be preserved and protected somehow.  While some building facilities are on life support (diverting necessary resources from children’s educations to temporarily fix buildings, defies logic).  The comprehensive facilities plan slated for November will be crucial to the District’s future.


Get in the Game with Brackets for Good

Who doesn’t love a little friendly competition?

Achieve Hartford! is excited to be participating in the Brackets For Good tournament. During this bracketed tournament for charities, 64 local nonprofit organizations will compete to make the most points — raise the most dollars. Every point counts! The overall winner (nonprofit with the most overall dollars raised) will receive a $10,000 prize.

It’s time for us to get some points on the board.  You can help us by shooting a jump shot here.

See the bracket match-ups and join Team Achieve Hartford!.

The tournament begins at 8 p.m. on February 24, and we only have a few days to make into the next round.

Donations made to Achieve Hartford! through the Brackets for Good tournament will support our mission of helping the community and Hartford Public Schools graduate more students who are prepared for college and career.

Achieve Hartford! is an independent nonprofit organization with the belief that strong schools lead to a strong city.  As Mayors, Boards of Education and Superintendents change over time, we are the consistent voice pushing for high-quality education in our city since 2008.

Get in the game and help Hartford kids succeed.

[clickToTweet tweet=”@BracketsForGood is on & @achievehartford is in it to win it.https://hartford.bfg.org/ #CompetitiveGiving” quote=”@BracketsForGood is on & @achievehartford is in it to win it.https://hartford.bfg.org/ #CompetitiveGiving”]

Brackets For Good

Brackets For good is the sport for nonprofits. Inspired by college basketball brackets, Brackets For Good is a charitable, online fundraising tournament where up to 64 hand-selected, local nonprofits with a 501(c)3 status in good standing compete for donations while earning increased awareness along the way. All participating nonprofits have a chance at winning $10,000 unrestricted grant courtesy of the tournament’s presenting sponsor. Watch this YouTube video to see how it works: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jskPh8hBh_8


Contact Us

Achieve Hartford!
1429 Park St., Unit 114
Hartford, CT 06106

 

(860) 244-3333

 

info@achievehartford.org

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