GRANT
TARGETS STRONG FAMILIES
$13 MILLION TO AID THREE COMMUNITIES
JANICE ROMBECK, Mercury News
Neighborhoods in three Santa Clara County communities
will get $13 million to strengthen families so their
children will be more successful in school.
The five-year commitment from the John S. and James
L. Knight Foundation, announced at a news conference
Wednesday at San Jose’s Seven Trees Library, will
bring $4.95 million to the San Jose Franklin-McKinley
Education Foundation and three other non-pro€t groups.
Efforts in the neighborhood near Gilroy’s Glen
View Elementary School and the Mayfair area of East
San Jose will begin in the next few months.
The grant will give hundreds of working Latino and Vietnamese
families living on the edge better access to health
care, €nancial planning and child care programs. Part
of the grant also will fund programs that provide better
access to art for minorities.
The Franklin-McKinley foundation, which works with neighborhoods
near that district’s schools, will lead the effort
in the Solari-Seven Trees area, serving as a “hub”
to coordinate services of the Health Trust, Catholic
Charities, Lenders for Community Development and other
city and non-pro€t agencies.
“The grant targets preschool-age children in an
area bounded by Lewis, Monterey and Senter roads, a
diverse area with 1,300 families with children in that
age group,” said Muhammed Chaudhry, executive
director of the Franklin-McKinley foundation.
“Strong early childhood programs help strengthen
families and create a strong foundation for success
later in life,” Chaudhry said.
The Health Trust, with a grant of $1.5 million, will
provide dental health care to children through a Tooth
Mobile that visits neighborhoods, and a cooperative
of 70 dentists offering free services.
A Silicon Valley Children’s Oral Health Needs
study estimates that half of the children entering kindergarten
start with tooth decay, and 23 percent start with serious
mouth pain, said Gary Allen, president and CEO of the
Health Trust.
Lenders for Community Development and Catholic Charities
will get $900,000 to help low-income families save money
to send their kids to college. Working with Catholic
Charities, Lenders for Community Development will help
struggling families set up monthly savings plans and
will put in $2 for each $1 the family saves, Executive
Director John Weaver said.
The foundation will continue to work with the city to
provide early childhood education at its Smart Start
centers and get more child care workers trained and
licensed.
The Franklin-McKinley Education Foundation works with
schools to coordinate some of the many social service
programs available. “It takes some of the burden
off the schools, so teachers can do their jobs,”
Chaudhry said.
“We feel to support education, you need to do
all the other things,” he said.
Established in 1950, the John S. and James L. Knight
Foundation makes national grants in journalism, education
and arts and culture. Its fourth program, community
initiatives, is concentrated in 26 communities where
the Knight brothers published newspapers, including
the San Jose Mercury News, but the foundation is wholly
separate from and independent of those newspapers.
San Jose Mercury News (CA)
January 22, 2004
Page: 3B
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