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  • Good evening.

  • It is such a blessing to work at the Harlem Children's Zone,

  • an African-American-led organization that has pioneered the field

  • of comprehensive place-based services, from cradle to career.

  • And that word, "comprehensive," is so key to what we do.

  • You know, most interventions focus on one piece

  • of a complicated, giant puzzle.

  • But that's not enough to solve the puzzle.

  • You don't solve education without understanding the home context

  • or the home environment of our young scholar.

  • Or the broader context of health, nutrition or criminal justice.

  • The unit of change for us is not the individual child,

  • it's the entire neighborhood.

  • You have to do multiple things at the same time.

  • And we have 20 years of data to prove that this works.

  • We've had 7,000 graduates of our baby college,

  • we've eliminated the Black-white achievement gap in our schools.

  • We've reduced obesity rates in our health programs

  • and have close to 1,000 students enrolled in college.

  • We weave together a net of services so tightly,

  • so that no one will fall through the cracks.

  • And we've inspired global practitioners.

  • We've had over 500-plus communities across the US

  • and 70-plus countries

  • come and visit us to learn our model.

  • You see, the problems of the globe, and the problems of the world

  • are not neatly siloed into buckets.

  • So therefore the solutions must be comprehensive,

  • they must be holistic.

  • And now we're in the midst of a global pandemic.

  • COVID-19 has revealed to us what we always knew to be true.

  • The poorest among us pay the highest price with their lives and their livelihood.

  • And that's playing out every day in the African American community,

  • where we're 3.6 times more likely to die of COVID

  • than our white counterparts.

  • We're seeing those health disparities on the ground in New York City,

  • our nation's epicenter.

  • And to compound the impact of the health disparities,

  • there's significant economic devastation,

  • where one in four of our families in Harlem

  • report food insecurity,

  • and 57 percent report a loss of income or a loss of their job.

  • But to better understand the work of the Harlem Children's Zone,

  • I want to share a story with you,

  • about a second-grade scholar named Sean.

  • Sean is a beautiful Black boy

  • whose smile would light up any room that he's in.

  • And when quarantine began in March,

  • we noticed that Sean wasn't attending virtual school.

  • And after some investigation,

  • we've come to learn that Sean's mom was hospitalized due to COVID.

  • So he was at home with grandma and his baby sibling,

  • who was his only viable support system,

  • since Sean's father is incarcerated.

  • Grandma was struggling.

  • There wasn't much food in the household,

  • limited diapers,

  • and Sean didn't even have a computer.

  • When mom was released from the hospital,

  • their challenges deepened,

  • because they could no longer stay with grandma,

  • due to her preexisting health conditions.

  • So Sean, his baby sibling and his mom had to go to a shelter.

  • Sean's story is not atypical at the Harlem Children's Zone.

  • We know Sean and millions like him all across the country

  • deserve to have everything that this world has to offer,

  • without inequality robbing them of that opportunity.

  • All the result of racism

  • and historical and systemic underinvestment

  • are now compounded by COVID-19.

  • Our comprehensive model

  • uniquely positions the Harlem Children's Zone in the fight of COVID.

  • The success that we have on the ground in Harlem

  • makes it imperative,

  • and it is our responsibility to share what we know works

  • with the country.

  • We have developed a comprehensive COVID-19 relief and recovery response

  • for our community,

  • that was surfaced from our community,

  • focused on five primary areas of need,

  • and already servicing families like Sean's.

  • They are the following.

  • One, emergency relief funds.

  • We know that our families need cash in their hands right now.

  • Two, protecting our most vulnerable.

  • We know our families need access to essential goods and information.

  • So that is food, that's masks,

  • that's a curated resource list and public health campaigns.

  • Three, bridging the digital divide.

  • We believe that internet is a fundamental right.

  • So we need to ensure our families have connectivity,

  • and also all school-age children in a household

  • have the proper learning devices.

  • Four, zero learning loss.

  • We know that there's a generation of students at risk

  • of losing an entire year of their education.

  • We need to make sure that we are providing high-quality virtual programing,

  • in addition to having safe reentry planned for school reentry.

  • And five, mitigating the mental health crisis.

  • There's a generation at risk of having PTSD,

  • due to the massive amounts of toxic stress.

  • We need to ensure that our families have access to telehealth

  • and other virtual supports.

  • We have six amazing partners across six cities in the United States

  • that are adopting our model for their own context in their community.

  • They are Oakland, Minneapolis,

  • Chicago, Detroit, Newark and Atlanta.

  • In addition to those partners, we have three national partners,

  • who will be sharing our model and sharing our strategies

  • through their network,

  • in addition to amplifying our impact by policy advocacy.

  • We will have impact on three levels.

  • Individual impact on the ground in Harlem,

  • across a number of outcomes in education,

  • in health, in economics,

  • reaching 30,000 people.

  • There's community-level impact across six cities,

  • again through our amazing partners,

  • that will reach an additional 70,000 people.

  • And then national impact,

  • not only through policy advocacy,

  • but through capacity building at scale.

  • Our answer to COVID-19,

  • the despair and inequities plaguing our communities,

  • is targeting neighborhoods with comprehensive services.

  • We have certainly not lost hope.

  • And we invite you to join us on the front lines of this war.

  • Thank you.

Good evening.

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