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Mentoring program celebrates at time of transition
Mentoring program celebrates at time of transition

Yahoo

time4 days ago

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Mentoring program celebrates at time of transition

When the federal funding that supported it was yanked earlier this year, an after-school mentoring program at Meadville Area Middle School (MAMS) faced a daunting predicament. Surrounded by about 40 family members and community mentors at an end-of-the-year celebration Wednesday, the program's eight student leaders showed that they were up to the task and by the end of the event it was clear their efforts had paid off in a concrete way. 'We viewed the loss of the Department of Environmental Protection grant as an opportunity to assess how our instruction in budgeting, problem solving, communication skills, time management, teamwork, dependability and creativity in the use of our local resources has influenced our students,' MAMS social studies teacher and MLK Mentoring Program teacher Harrison Dixon told the crowd assembled in the school library. 'They have overcome challenges and made, in fact, quite a recovery.' Now in its 14th year, the mentoring program received a $50,000 grant last fall that was expected to fund the program through next year. Administered by the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection, the actual funds came from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's Environmental and Climate Justice Program, a program that was quickly targeted for cuts when the Trump administration came into office in January. Mentoring program officials learned in April that the funding had been frozen. With support from Crawford Central School District, Allegheny College and numerous other businesses, organizations and individuals, the program carried on this semester, allowing students to continue work on RecyclKings, the business they had conceived and developed during the two-hour sessions they attended four times each week. 'This year has given us the opportunity to grow in many ways and respond to challenges we once thought we couldn't survive — but we did!' eighth grader Jocelyn Hart, the company president, told the audience. Plans are in the works to shift control of the program from the Martin Luther King Jr. Scholarship Fund to Crawford Central School District. Details of that transition are still being determined, according to Ken Wolfarth, the district's curriculum director, but the program's three-week summer camp is set to kick off next Wednesday. Some students might not immediately see the appeal of a program that keeps them in school an extra two hours each day — or that gets them up early for a full day of activities in the summer — but for students like seventh grader Izzabella Lutton, the RecyclKings production manager, the opportunity was too good to resist. 'I like that it was a hands-on learning-based thing where you could work with people who were older or younger than you,' she said in an interview after the ceremony concluded. 'It something that brings people together. It inspires them to become more than what they already can be. Being in it for a whole year, it was definitely tough to stay at sometimes, but I pushed forward because I knew I could do it and I knew that whatever tried to stop me, I would push that aside.' The program received rave reviews from Izzabella's mother, Natalie Mullenax, as well. 'It really keeps them busy and learning as they're having a good time too,' she said. The program typically includes a diverse mix of skill development activities. The past semester included trips for swimming and skating at Meadville Area Recreation Complex; watershed science work in Mill Run; enough practice in American Sign Language to carry on basic conversations; mock job interviews at Acutec Precision Aerospace Inc.; and much more. One new focus was the RecyclKings business that saw students working to raise awareness and collect cans and other items. In his annual report, RecyclKings Treasurer Gavin Kerr, an eighth grader, reported that through a dumpster in the school parking lot, a 'Pod War' school spirit event in which groups of students competed to bring in the most cans for recycling, sales of T-shirts, donations and other activities, the business had generated more than $2,600 in revenue. The students donated $1,000 to the MAMS annual drive in recognition of the students who supported their efforts. After other expenses, nearly $850 remained for a profit-sharing program benefiting the eight students that formed the company. The precise amount each student received was calculated using a formula that factored in criteria such as attendance, respect, problem solving and teamwork. In the end, each of the eight students left the ceremony with sums ranging between $100 and $122. With the program's impending transition to Crawford Central, the ceremony also marked the departure of Armendia Dixon, a champion of education in Meadville and northwestern Pennsylvania for more than 50 years. As the last remaining students and their families left the library, Dixon reflected on the program she helped launch 14 years ago and that has now helped more than 550 students in their journey to high school and beyond. 'My goodness, I am so proud of the many graduates,' Dixon said. 'They are doing things and it is remarkable.'

'DOGE does it again': Federal cuts come for mentoring program
'DOGE does it again': Federal cuts come for mentoring program

Yahoo

time19-04-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

'DOGE does it again': Federal cuts come for mentoring program

A loss of federal funding won't dethrone the middle school environmentalists in a Meadville Area Middle School (MAMS) after-school program, according to leaders of the Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Mentoring Program. Armendia Dixon and Nancy Smith learned last week that a $50,000 federal grant expected to fund the program through next year had been frozen. 'DOGE has done it again,' said Smith, president of the Dr. Martin Luther King Scholarship Committee Inc., the nonprofit that oversees the MAMS mentoring program. Recent cuts to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's Environmental and Climate Justice Program included the $50,000 grant that was funding the mentoring program. DOGE refers to the Department of Government Efficiency, the Trump administration effort guided by billionaire Elon Musk, which has gutted billions in federal programs over the last few months. DOGE has in many cases become the public face for federal budget cuts, even those for which it is not directly responsible. In January, participants in the MAMS program unveiled RecyclKings, a student-led recycling business they began operating in partnership with various community organizations. The initiative was funded by a government-to-government grant from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's (EPA) Environmental and Climate Justice Program. Fresh off seeing students in the program present their work at the Creek Connections Student Research Symposium at Allegheny College earlier this month, Dixon was determined to see students continue their efforts through the spring despite the loss of funding. 'I'm not one to complain because this is an opportunity for us to problem solve,' Dixon said. 'I'm sure we're just not going to give up because our students have worked diligently on this grant where they saw the opportunity to form their own company.' 'Terminated by the EPA' A spokesman for the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection (DEP), which administered the grant funding from the EPA, confirmed the loss of the grant but offered little additional insight. 'The DEP can confirm that future funding through the Environmental Justice Government-to-Government program has been terminated by the EPA,' the spokesman said in an emailed statement. 'DEP is evaluating the impacts of the loss of this funding, as well as the impact on the currently allocated and obligated money and determining next steps.' The EPA did not respond to a request for comment Thursday. Environmental justice programs have been the target of multiple executive orders from President Donald Trump, including one that directed federal agencies to ''terminate, to the maximum extent allowed by law, all DEI, DEIA, and 'environmental justice' offices and positions.' DEI refers to diversity, equity and inclusion programs while DEIA adds the term 'accessibility.' In a New York Post op-ed published April 4, the same day MAMS students were presenting their work at Creek Connections, EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin labeled environmental justice programs as 'scams' and said he had canceled more than $22 billion in environmental justice and DEI grants and contracts. 'Instead of directly fixing actual environmental problems with our precious taxpayer dollars, the Biden Environmental Protection Agency lit them on fire to fund cronies and activist groups,' Zeldin wrote. 'Many American communities are suffering with serious unresolved environmental issues, but under the 'environmental justice' banner, the previous administration's EPA showered billions on ideological allies, instead of directing those resources into solving environmental problems and making meaningful change.' Pennsylvania's Office of Environmental Justice was created as part of the DEP via an executive order from Gov. Tom Wolf in 2021. The DEP defines environmental justice as 'the just treatment and meaningful involvement of all people, regardless of income, wealth, race, color, national origin, area of residence, Tribal affiliation, or disability, in agency decision-making and other activities that affect human health and the environment.' 'The Meadville way' Smith said that about $2,000 of the mentoring program's grant money had been spent before the grant was terminated. She was optimistic the terms of the grant would not require the program to pay back the money already spent. 'But there's no guarantee of that, either,' she added. 'It's a big disappointment.' Among the expenses covered by the grant so far were RecyclKings T-shirts for students in the program, rental and pickup fees for a dumpster and recycling containers at MAMS, radio advertising announcing the business launch and the catered event at the school in January where students announced their plans. Similar events aimed at students' families and community mentors were scheduled to take place later this semester, but the status of those events remained unclear. Smith said the program has other funding sources. Crawford Central School District pays transportation costs to take students home and a Rotary grant covers expenses for field trips and recurring outings to the Meadville Area Recreation Complex for skating and swimming opportunities. Smith and others who teach in the program volunteer their time. Crawford Central Superintendent Jenn Galdon said the district would 'seek to work with Allegheny College to fund the mentoring program for next year.' Allegheny has partnered with Dr. Martin Luther King Scholarship Fund Inc., the nonprofit that oversees the mentoring program, on a variety of efforts. Now in its 15th year, the mentoring program was making its first foray into student-led business development. At the January unveiling, eighth grader Jocelyn Hart, the RecyclKings president, said that launching the business would expose students to the basics of entrepreneurship and allow them to work with local experts on leadership and marketing skills, communication, workplace expectations, and the fundamentals of environmental studies. Dixon, who has led the program since its start in spring 2011, was upset about the loss of funding but was not willing to lose time to frustration. Looking ahead to an aluminum can recycling contest that would start this week as part of the middle school's 'pod wars,' she encouraged organizations and individuals interested in assisting the after school program to contact Crawford Central. She remained optimistic about the program's future, she added, saying that 'getting ticked off wouldn't solve the problem.' 'We will continue to meet,' Dixon said, a hint of defiance in her voice. 'I am sure we're going to find a way to keep the program going because that's the Meadville way.'

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