Legal: Offit, Kurman, Yumkas & Denick, P.A. 8 Park Center Court, Suite 200 Owings Mills, Maryland 21117 Phone: 443-738-1500 Fax: 443-738-1535 Website: www.OFFITLAW.com
CPA: Stout, Causey & Horning, P.A. 11311 McCormick Road, suite 400 Hunt Valley, Maryland 210 Phone: 410-403-1500 Fax: 410-403-1570 Website: www.SCandH.com
A school based non-profit that provides incentives to students for their academic achievement and to provide support to their caregivers and teachers.
2300 N. Charles Street, Second Floor Baltimore, MD 21218 Phone: 410-889-7400 Fax: 410-889-0944 Website: info@communityconferencing.org
Helps neighborhoods, schools, government agencies, faith communities, and families uncover their natural wisdom for responding to destructive behavior in constructive ways, and to build connections that serve the well-being of all.
2700 N. Charles Street, Suite 200 Baltimore, MD 21218 Phone: 410-662-5500 Fax: 410-662-5517
The Family League of Baltimore City is the Local Management Board. Its role is to focus attention and resources on improving the wellbeing of children and families by engaging communities and encouraging public and private partnerships. FLBC maintains an online resource directory of Baltimore service providers.
Main administrative office: 4623 Falls Road Baltimore, MD 21209-4914 Phone: 410-336-1980
A nonprofit, nosectarian agency providing services to vulnerable families and individuals through 23 programs in Central Maryland. We find permanent homes for HIV+ infants; mentor at-risk adolescents; help troubled youths turn their lives around; train teen parents to earn a GED and get a job; help substance abusers stabilize their families with shelter and emergency aid, and support victims of domestic violence and sexual abuse.
New Light Leadership Coalition 28 Alleghany Avenue, Suite 503 Baltimore, MD 21204 Phone: 410-494-1588 Phone 2: 1-866-NLLC-INC (665-3462) Fax: 410-494-1517 Email: info@nllc.org Website: www.nllc.org
CItywide Resource Guide for Youth. Provides a listing of youth organizaiton and programs in the city of Baltimore.
1601 Guilford Avenue, 2 South Baltimore, MD 21202 Phone: 410-889-4700 Fax: 410-889-47010
A note for profit orgranizaitons that serves as a catalyst for justice and peace through school and youth projects including: Building relationships and understanding to create a safe, respectful, accepting, and peaceful environment to enhance academic achievement; educating staff and students on issues of multicultural understanding and diversity; and building leadership among students to sustaing and carry forward the goals of a peaceful and accepting enviornment which honors diversity.
Kathryn Liss HIPP Network Coordinator 4806 York Road Baltimore, MD 21212 Phone: 443-904-3002 Fax: 410-323-9272 Email: hipp@afsc.org
Teachers conflict resoultuion skills, builds community, and empowers youth to lead both as faciliatators of the program and as a social change activists. Used in schools, after-school programs, detention facilities and church youth groups.
1517 S. Ritchie Highway, Suite 102 Arnold, MD 21012 Phone: 410-974-4901 Fax: 410-757-9530 Email: vholt@marfy.org
Member organization provide services to children and yoth who need special care, treatment, education, and training. Maryland Blueprints Committee designed this manual to be a helpful, easy-to-follow guide for community planning groups. It contains information about effective prevention programs that have been shown by research to reduce/prevent substance use/abuse, crime, delinquency, and/or antisocial behavior. The guidelines are provided to help planning groups select prevention programs based on their individual goals and objectives.
P.O. Box 83846 Gaithersburg, Maryland 20883-3846 Phone: 301-527-8222 Fax: 301-670-1407 Website: info@mlw.org
MLW offers three week-long residential programs each summer, as well as community outreach programs during the school year. These programs are designed to allow students to learn about and build upon a wide range of leadership skills, and come away with the knowleged and confidence to apply these skills in their schools and communities. Three summer programs are available: Middle School Experience in Leadership (MSEL), Senior High Workshop ( SHW), and Advanced Leadership Seminar (ALS).
517 North Charles Street, Suite 200 Blatimore, MD 21201 Phone: 1-800-741-2687 Phone 2: 410-685-3816 (local) Fax: 410-752-5016 Email: info@marylandmentors.org
MMP works to increase the number of Maryland youth in quality mentoring relationships with caring adults for the purpose of enhancing academic and career options, raising self-esteem and empowering youth toward self-sufficiency.
Yo! Administration: Ernest Dorsey, director 101 W. 24th Street Baltimore, MD 21218 Phone: 410-396-6722 Email: edorsey@oedworks.com
Yo! Westside: Kerry Owings, manager 1510 W. Layfayette Avenue Baltimore, MD 21217 Phone: 410-545-6950 Email: kowings@oedworks.com
Yo! Eastside: Ms. Louis Mitchell, manager 1212 N. Wolfe Street Baltimore, MD 21213 Phone: 410-732-2661 Email: lmitchell@mail.hebcac.org
Yo Baltimore's mission is to increase employment and raise high school completion rates, as well as improve the long-term economic well-being of youth living in Baltimore's Empowerment Zone communities.
28 Alleghany Avenue, Suite 503 Baltimore, MD 21204 Phone: 410-494-1588 Phone 2: 1-866-NLLC-INC (665-3462) Fax: 410-494-1517 Email: info@nllc.org Website: www.nllc.org
NLLC is a youth-governed organization that provides leadership training and an annual leadership conference for youth ages 16-25, and aids in the development of partnerships among youth organziaitons to create systematic change. Empowers youth though a holistic, peer-centered approach to leadership development.
S2W, Inc. 1201 Noyes Drive Silver Spring, MD 20910 Phone: 410-562-1008 Websie: info@s2w.org
Educate, empower and enable young women drivers to ensure their safety.
P.O. Box 1538 Salisbury, MD 21802 Phone: 410-667-4586
A school-based, one-on-one mentoring program that provides community volunteer mentors for public school children, grades one through twelve, who are at risk of educational failure due to academics, socialization, or emotional factors. Mentors meet with students during the school day, in school, for one hours a week for the school year. Students show improvement in GPAs, attendence and behaviors. Back to Top |