Chicago Sun-Times

A new sweet beginning for North Lawndale nonprofit

Gets funding for new home to help train, employ more ex-cons

- BY MAUDLYNE IHEJIRIKA, STAFF REPORTER mihejirika@suntimes.com | @maudlynei

When Brenda Palms-Barber moved here from Denver to become executive director of the North Lawndale Employment Network, she could not have foreseen the 20-year journey leading to a new, 20,000-square-foot headquarte­rs bringing its programs under one roof.

On Thursday, Palms-Barber, now president and CEO, along with city and philanthro­pic officials will celebrate that journey, and NLEN’s acquisitio­n of the shuttered Liberty Bank & Trust at 1111 S. Homan Ave., with the help of a $2.5 million city grant, $1 million from JPMorgan Chase and other funding sources.

“It really is a very monumental milestone,” Palms-Barber said Wednesday of the new home for NLEN’s myriad job-training and rehabilita­tion programs.

Internatio­nally known for its most innovative program, “Sweet Beginnings,” which trains exoffender­s in bee-keeping and production and sales of honey products, the nonprofit’s new headquarte­rs will double — to 5,000 — the number of West Side residents served.

“It’s critically important that we take a moment to thank and express our deep appreciati­on for those investors who essentiall­y believed in our vision, understood the importance of this building and the importance of investing in our third decade of service,” Palms-Barber said.

Founded by the Steans Family Foundation, the organizati­on provides workforce training for a target population facing the employment barrier of criminal records, offering skills for in-demand jobs in transporta­tion, distributi­on and logistics, informatio­n technology, retail and hospitalit­y, and manufactur­ing.

With more than $5 million in public and private funding, NLEN will invest in renovation of the former home of what had been the last black-owned bank on the West Side, as well as in staffing and equipment.

The new workforce-developmen­t campus, to include a cafe and event space, is expected to contribute significan­tly to the transforma­tion of the beleaguere­d West Side community — with an unemployme­nt rate of over 23 percent — when it opens in spring 2020.

Of the residents served, 83% are single, and 75% of them male; men ages 19-25 make up 33% of those served; and women ages 3640, 20%. A third lack a high school diploma or GED, and 70% have a criminal record.

“We’ve worked with Brenda and her team at NLEN for many years, and we’ve really tried to help them with some of their programs that are making a difference,” said Charlie Corrigan, head of Chicago philanthro­py at JPMorgan Chase, which in 2017 made a commitment to provide $40 million in funding over three years, targeting the city’s South and West sides.

“NLEN’s vision was not just about buying a building, but about increasing their impact,” Corrigan said. “We saw the opportunit­y to make an investment that would hopefully leverage or catalyze more investment­s to come, which was something we wanted to be a part of.”

 ?? MAUDLYNE IHEJIRIKA/SUN-TIMES ?? Brenda Palms-Barber, founder and CEO of the North Lawndale Employment Network, and Joe Wilson, director of workforce programs and clinical services.
MAUDLYNE IHEJIRIKA/SUN-TIMES Brenda Palms-Barber, founder and CEO of the North Lawndale Employment Network, and Joe Wilson, director of workforce programs and clinical services.

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