COVID impact grants from We Rise Together puts $7.4M towards uplifting community plans

July 2024 · 6 minute read
CHICAGO (WLS) — A financial coalition focusing on Chicago’s equitable recovery awarded $7.4 million worth of grants Thursday to real estate development projects that were already underway when the pandemic hit.

We Rise Together: For An Equitable and Just Recovery is a coalition of private, public, and philanthropic funders focused on communities that historically have been disinvested, including neighborhoods on the South and West Sides.

On Thursday, 10 projects in eight communities received grants to propel their plans forward, despite the COVID-19 setback.

In South Lawndale, Latinos Progresando has been planning for years to transform a vacant, old city library building into a community center. But when the pandemic hit, the group’s focus shifted immediately.

“We had to stop, because at that time we had to make sure the families in our community had what they needed to survive,” said Luis Gutierrez, the founder and CEO of Latinos Progresando.

On Thursday, We Rise Chicago announced it awarded the neighborhood organization a $1 million dollar grant to transform the library into the Latinos Progresando Community Center.

Gutierrez expects the project to be completed by the end of 2022. When finished, he said students will be able to receive mental health services, along with after-school programs run by Lincoln Park Zoo.

“What recovery looks like is investing directly in the neighborhoods in the city of Chicago that have been historically disinvested in, and have been hit hardest by COVID,” Gutierrez said. “

“I’m ecstatic, excited. I still can’t believe it. It’s such a blessing,” he added. “I can’t tell you how much this means to me, to Latinos Progresando, to the entire community. It is transforming this entire project.”

Gloria Castillo of We Rise Together said urgency is important. She said all the projects selected are expected to be operational in 12 months, and she expects it will help the surroundings blocks and neighborhoods.

“We have to make sure that communities that have suffered the most are not left behind,” Castillo said. “That’s really the critical part of our work. It really strengthens the entire region.”

In Greater Grand Crossing, a vacant grocery store will now become ChiFresh Kitchen – a retail, catering, and food service business.

ChiFresh Kitchen received an $850,000 grant, Castillo said.

The black-owned cooperative currently operates in a kitchen they have outgrown, and the owners, all five formerly incarcerated, now have visions for the future.

“We’re just trying to make it out here, and just do great things in the community, and we’re very excited about that,” said Renee Taylor, co-owner of ChiFresh Kitchen.

ChiFresh Kitchen owners expect to be fully operational early next year. The owners hope to lift others up as well, including those who have spent time in prison.

“I want to be able to hire more incarcerated women so they can have the same dreams, goal and opportunities we were given,” said Sarah Stadtfeld, Co-Owner, ChiFresh Kitchen.

After all, the group takes pride in their cooking.

“Everyone says our meals are super delicious,” Stadtfeld said. “You should try them.”

We Rise Together released the following about each project:

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