'I was in disbelief; a lot of different emotions came over me,' said Maddox, a
The funds will enable Maddox to finally relocate her organization from the cramped basement in the
The grant from health and fitness company
'I got tired of watching my young people get gunned down in these streets,' said Maddox, who still works midnight shifts as a police officer. 'I've been to so many different funerals of our young people who didn't have anywhere else safe to go and socialize with their friends or be a part of any kind of programming or opportunities to have a job or any type of a resource that would keep them busy and occupied so I've been really working at this for a long time.'
Six years ago, when Future Ties first connected with the University, Maddox says the organization only had a name and a mission.
'I didn't have a logo, I didn't have a strategic plan, I didn't have my board up, I didn't have anything,' Maddox said. 'So, just going through the Accelerator, they were like, 'Okay, this is what you need.' I wouldn't even exist if it wasn't for the Accelerator. They called me all the time, they kept me going when I felt like it was just a no-win situation. They kept pushing me.'
The Accelerator supported Future Ties in everything from strategic planning and board and curriculum development to getting the organization's website and social media up and running. Early on, much of the focus was on the most basic needs of a nonprofit: creating a budget, fundraising, and grant writing support. Over the years, that support helped Future Ties raise the funds needed to grow its annual budget from around
In 2018, the Accelerator gave Future Ties a
Maddox also seized opportunities to connect with University leaders, resources, and opportunities including the
'The Accelerator's mission is to guide organizations in building the organizational resilience, programmatic strength, and human capacity to advance positive change in their neighborhoods and it has been amazing to see Future Ties' transformative growth in all these areas,' Grant said. 'Jennifer and her team are now at a place where her vision for Future Ties can be realized, preventing more community violence and trauma by providing a safe space for young people to learn and grow and for their families to access the resources they need.'
Plans for the new center feature a kitchen for teaching about healthy eating and nutrition, a gym for young people to play sports without concerns of neighborhood violence and other threats, as well as mental health counseling and wellness classes to teach families how to cope with trauma and manage their stress, anxiety, and PTSD.
On
''You told us you were going to do this and I had to see it,'' Maddox recalls the young man telling her. 'Every time I tell that story it does something to me because that young man was there from the beginning and then he never got to see [the expanded center] come into play for him-but now he has a son, so his son can reap some of the benefits from the center, so I'm excited about that.
'I'm really just looking forward to seeing the faces of these kids when we open up and they walk through those doors like, 'This is our space? You told us you were going to do this and here it is.''
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