I just read the State of Chicago Youth 2026 report published by A Better Chicago.
Below is a paragraph from the introduction posted on Page 2 of the report. It shows that Chicago has nearly 800,000 young people under the age of 25. But, "Opportunity remains out of reach for far too many youth, especially those in Black and Latinx communities on the South and West Sides."
I urge you to visit this page and download the PDF, then read the full report.
Then, take a look at what I wrote last April following the release of the 2025 State of Chicago Youth report. Everything I wrote then applies now, except that due to ICE immigration raids in Chicago more young people are struggling to find their way through school. Supportive adults in schools and non-school programs are needed more than ever, but too few still exist.
I think A Better Chicago is doing great work. Since 2010 they have provided more than $50 million in unrestricted funding and management support to help nonprofits in their portfolio grow. Yet, that's not enough. Chicago (and many suburbs) need great tutor/mentor and learning programs in every high poverty neighborhood. That means someone needs to be raising funds to help youth programs that are NOT in A Better Chicago's portfolio grow!
In 2011 I obtained data from the Heartland Alliance to create a series of maps showing the number of kids age 6-17 who were living in each Chicago Community Area. I updated that in 2018. My goal was that planners in each community area would use this information to better understand how many youth-serving programs were needed, and what programs were already available to youth in their area.
My 2011 (yellow boxes) and 2018 (blue boxes) versions show the total number of youth age 6 to 17 in each community area, and the percent of those youth who were at or below the poverty level. Based on this planners could determine how many youth serving programs were needed in the area, just to serve a small percent of the kids living there.
I used the Chicago Tutor/Mentor Program Locator map as the base, then added the yellow and blue data boxes using Power Point. Then I published the report in this visual essay.
My 2011 (yellow boxes) and 2018 (blue boxes) versions show the total number of youth age 6 to 17 in each community area, and the percent of those youth who were at or below the poverty level. Based on this planners could determine how many youth serving programs were needed in the area, just to serve a small percent of the kids living there.
I used the Chicago Tutor/Mentor Program Locator map as the base, then added the yellow and blue data boxes using Power Point. Then I published the report in this visual essay.
Unfortunately the Tutor/Mentor Program Locator is no longer available. However, if I had updated data I could re-create this report using the map that I host on this page. Below is an example.
Using this data and my lists of Chicago youth-serving programs, anyone could lead year-round public awareness campaigns intended to educate potential donors, volunteers and business partners and turn them into proactive supporters of existing, or new, programs.
Using this data and my lists of Chicago youth-serving programs, anyone could lead year-round public awareness campaigns intended to educate potential donors, volunteers and business partners and turn them into proactive supporters of existing, or new, programs.
When we were creating the Cabrini Connections tutor/mentor program in late 1992 we realized that one more great youth-serving program could be life-changing for the few youth and volunteers who become involved, but would have little impact on the more than 200,000 youth living in high poverty areas of Chicago. So we created the Tutor/Mentor Connection in 1993, to help all programs, including our own, attract more consistent media and donor attention.
I led this two-part strategy until mid 2011 when the financial crisis that started in 2008 finally caused our board of directors to drop the Tutor/Mentor Connection and focus only on the kids program. I created the Tutor/Mentor Institute, LLC to keep the T/MC available in Chicago to try to help similar strategies grow in other cities.
However, I led this two-part strategy for almost 19 years! Imagine how much impact might be generated if A Better Chicago and other youth-serving programs adopted this same strategy for almost two decades!
The top graphic shows that attention and resources will grow if the same events and "call to action" are repeated quarterly from year-to-year. The bottom graphic shows how anyone can be the YOU who calls on their stakeholders to get informed, then get involved, supporting tutor/mentor programs in every high poverty area of Chicago.
What it takes:
As long as someone maintains a list of youth-serving programs and makes it available on a website, anyone can build a campaign that draws attention and support to these programs. That's what I have been doing. You can find my lists on this page.
As long as someone maintains a list of youth-serving programs and makes it available on a website, anyone can build a campaign that draws attention and support to these programs. That's what I have been doing. You can find my lists on this page.
Maybe in a few years one or more intermediaries will be able to create their own version of maps like the one below, which shows participation in the 1994-2015 Tutor/Mentor Leadership and Networking Conferences that I hosted in Chicago. See the dashboard on this page.
For most of the past 30 years I've focused strictly on programs that identified as some form of volunteer-based tutoring and/or mentoring based on this survey. The programs on my maps are programs that fit this description. However, I recognized in the late 2000s that I needed to be adding other types of youth-serving programs to my maps, but never was able to do that. However, I have included many of them on lists found on this page.
I'm now 79 and not in great health. Someone needs to step forward and take ownership of my archives and responsibility for building a new youth-program resource that draws volunteers and donors directly to existing programs.
Until that happens, I'd appreciate any help you can offer to keep my lists up-to-date and to share my posts with more people. That includes sharing them with people in other cities, where there also are concentrations of persistent poverty and too few youth-serving programs.
You can reach me on LinkedIn, Facebook, BlueSky, Mastodon, Twitter and Instagram. See links on this page.
And, if you'd like to help me cover expenses, visit this page and make a contribution.








No comments:
Post a Comment