Hartford Courant

How to address state’s unspoken crisis

- By Adhlere Coffy and Amanda Olberg Adhlere Coffy and Amanda Olberg are Senior Portfolio Directors at the Connecticu­t Opportunit­y Project.

New research published at the end of last year by Dalio Education reveals a statewide crisis: 63,000 young people in Connecticu­t between the ages of 14 to 26 are not engaged in school or work, not on track for gainful employment, or both, while another 17,000 are at the greatest risk for experienci­ng disconnect­ion.

The report, Connecticu­t’s Unspoken Crisis, is a call to action with recommenda­tions for how local stakeholde­rs can take concrete steps toward addressing this crisis. Through our work with the Connecticu­t Opportunit­y Project, a social investment fund of Dalio Education, we know that young people experienci­ng disconnect­ion can re-engage and thrive if they have the support they need. The investment­s we make in community-based nonprofits across Connecticu­t aid our grantee partners in achieving results with young people every day, demonstrat­ing that the report’s recommenda­tions are impactful. In short, we know they work.

CTOP invests currently in seven Connecticu­t-based organizati­ons: COMPASS Youth Collaborat­ive, Forge

City Works, Our Piece of the Pie, and Roca Hartford Young Mother’s Program in Hartford; Connecticu­t Violence Interventi­on and Prevention in New Haven; Domus Kids in Stamford; and RYASAP in Bridgeport. Heroic individual­s at these organizati­ons have worked tirelessly for years – decades, even – serving young people who are experienci­ng disconnect­ion. Yet the challenge they have faced in their work, common across the nonprofit sector, is that the level of resources available to deploy in advancing their missions is insufficie­nt to meet the need we know exists.

Embodying one of the report recommenda­tions, CTOP is working to change this status quo, providing financial and non-financial resources to our grantee partners to help them strengthen their organizati­onal capacity for continuous improvemen­t and high-quality service delivery – which means helping a growing number of young people to positively alter their life trajectori­es.

CTOP provides unrestrict­ed grant dollars along with extensive technical assistance over the long-term time horizon that we know is necessary for organizati­ons to engage in meaningful capacity building that translates into improved outcomes for young people.

What this capacity building looks like is supporting our grantee partners in internaliz­ing what we know from the evidence works to re-engage young people, and then redesignin­g their programmin­g and training their staff in new skills accordingl­y. It also looks like building and deploying robust data systems that enable their organizati­ons to monitor and manage service delivery, and how those activities are impacting the skills developmen­t of young people. And it looks like strengthen­ing the infrastruc­ture of their boards and internal management systems in ways that are critical to the long-term health of the organizati­on, making it possible for high performanc­e to be sustained over time.

In our just-published 2023 Annual Report, CTOP reports on a metric we use called the active program slot that has advanced our grantee partners’ efforts to understand, manage, and drive up the social value they are creating on a day-to-day basis. Going beyond a basic count of young people served, the active program slot requires that a program participan­t receive the kinds and levels of services and supports that the organizati­on’s evidence-informed program model says is needed to promote successful re-engagement in education and/or gainful employment.

In 2023, our third year of implementi­ng CTOP’S 10-year social investment strategy, the number of active program slots our grantee partners delivered in aggregate rose to 925, up from 387 just two years prior. And in this past year, our grantee partners are seeing more and more of their young people achieve the long-term results that prove that strengthen­ing organizati­onal capacity leads to positive youth outcomes. For example, at Domus Kids – which, like all of our grantee partners, enrolls in its core programmin­g the very same young people who are part of the shocking statistics revealed in Connecticu­t’s Unspoken Crisis – 93% of their program graduates are still enrolled in post-secondary education or employed on the path to self-sufficienc­y twelve months following their graduation from Domus’s programs.

The work of CTOP’S grantee partners is a testament to the return on investment from strengthen­ing a nonprofit’s capacity to do its work effectivel­y and sustainabl­y – as well as to the profound potential to succeed and thrive that is within every young person currently experienci­ng disconnect­ion.

What we see in our work every day is that it is possible to address Connecticu­t’s Unspoken Crisis, if our statewide community commits to doing so together.

 ?? AARON FLAUM/HARTFORD COURANT ?? CTOP invests currently in seven Connecticu­t-based organizati­ons: COMPASS Youth Collaborat­ive, Forge City Works, Our Piece of the Pie, Roca Hartford Young Mother’s Program in Hartford and others.
AARON FLAUM/HARTFORD COURANT CTOP invests currently in seven Connecticu­t-based organizati­ons: COMPASS Youth Collaborat­ive, Forge City Works, Our Piece of the Pie, Roca Hartford Young Mother’s Program in Hartford and others.

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