
 
        
         
		Manhattan groups earn fortune in community grants 
 Photo courtesy of the New York Taxi Workers Alliance 
 BY BETH DEDMAN 
 The New York Community Trust is  
 awarding  $7  million  in  grants  to  
 47  non-profit  organizations  that  
 address issues including caring for cancer  
 patients,  fighting  gerrymandering  and  
 providing better access to nutritious food.  
 This round of grant approvals is the first  
 of five that the trust will award in 2020,  
 said Amy Wolf, assistant director for digital  
 media and marketing.  
 “Every year we give out $50 million in  
 competitive grants,” Wolf said.  
 The trust employs program officers to  
 vet  proposals  for  the  competitive  grant  
 programs, Wolf said. The officers review  
 proposals year-round regarding their field  
 of expertise.  
 The largest grant will provide $700,000  
 of financial aid to at least 2,200 cancer  
 patients  who  need  help  offsetting  the  
 cost  of  transportation,  child  care,  pain  
 medications,  insurance  premiums  and  
 co-payments. The program will help ensure  
 low-income people of color, immigrants  
 and working parents are able to afford the  
 care they need. 
 Another grant will help the LatinoJustic  
 PRLDEF fight gerrymandering in the  
 congressional, state and county legislative  
 districts.  This  non-profit  will  use  their  
 $525,000 grant to engage New York City  
 residents in the fight with a nonpartisan  
 redistricting commission. 
 The trust is also providing four grants  
 totaling $610,000 to increase access to  
 nutritious  food,  according  to  the  press  
 release. The Urban Food Policy Institute  
 at the CUNY School of Public Health and  
 Health Policy, Lenox Hill Neighborhood  
 House, United Community Centers and  
 the West Side Campaign Against Hunger  
 will use these grants to affect policy, create  
 programming, support farms, coordinate  
 food pantries and negotiate food prices, all  
 for the sake of helping New Yorkers have  
 easier access to healthy food. 
 The Transform Don’t Trash NYC Coalition  
 will use a $130,000 grant to shape rules  
 affecting the creation of a new zone system  
 to manage the removal of four million tons  
 of commercials waste produced annually as  
 well as advocate for reducing pollution and  
 bring attention to poor working conditions.  
 The trust will also help the New York  
 Taxi Workers Alliance help debt-burdened  
 drivers  with  an  $85,000  grant,  Urban  
 Youth Alliance International to adopt requirements  
 for a new Bronx prison facility  
 that will help replace jails on Rikers Island  
 with $80,000 and will also assist Hester  
 Street  Collaborative  to  help  non-profit  
 organizations  find and negotiate for affordable  
 work spaces with $150,000.  
 Among the 47 organizations, the trust  
 also provided grants to nonprofits covering  
 areas related to arts and culture, cancer  
 research and care, health, conservation and  
 environment, education, historic preservation, 
  homelessness, human justice, human  
 services,  job  development,  people  with  
 disabilities and technical assistance.  
 The New York Community Trust is a  
 grant-making foundation that is “dedicated  
 to improving the lives of residents of New  
 York City and its suburbs,” according to  
 their website. The Trust connects donors  
 to nonprofits to make a difference in the  
 lives of communities, particularly in New  
 York City, Westchester and Long Island. 
 More information about the New York  
 Community Trust can be found at nycommunitytrust. 
 org. 
 PHOTO BY ARI MINTZ 
 Group  Fitness  instructor  Miki  Henkin  leads  Silver  Sneakers  class  at  
 Center at the Lenox Hill Neighborhood House. 
 NYCHA app aims to improve communications with tenants 
 BY GRANT LANCASTER 
 New  York  City  Housing  Authority  
 officials launched an updated  
 version of their MyNYCHA app  
 Wednesday  that will  allow users  to  get  
 notifications about maintenance in their  
 building, pay  rent  and file maintenance  
 reports with ease. 
 The  updated  app  lets  users  opt  in  to  
 receive push or email notifications about  
 maintenance status and outages affecting  
 their buildings, according to a Wednesday  
 press release from NYCHA. 
 Residents can use the app to view and  
 pay their rent through the app. 
 Users can now create work tickets for  
 elevator maintenance in the app, as well  
 as letting them submit tickets for heating  
 problems  and  window  problems  at  the  
 same time. They can also view work orders  
 grouped by the type of repair. 
 “MyNYCHA is an invaluable tool for the  
 Authority,” said NYCHA Chair Gregory  
 Russ. “These upgrades expand functionality  
 and improve communications, customer  
 service, and quality of life for our  
 residents.” 
 Since the app launched in 2015, nearly  
 95,000 users have submitted more than  
 1.4 million maintenance requests through  
 the app,  according  to  the press  release.  
 NYCHA officials estimate that the app has  
 saved them $4.4 million. 
 About  564,000  New  Yorkers  used  
 NYCHA public housing or Section 8 programming  
 in 2019, according to a 2019  
 NYCHA fact sheet. 
 Schneps Media February 13, 2020     15