CONTACT:
Jake Goodman, Opportunity Fund Executive Director
jgoodman [at] theopportunityfund.org, 412-362-1300
PITTSBURGH, PA, November 7, 2025 — Opportunity Fund announces grantmaking support in the total amount of $968,000 to 71 partners as part of its second grant cycle in 2025. The foundation reviewed 176 requests for funding, requesting over $3.4 million.
“Our guiding values have always included social justice, racial justice, queer liberation, and valuing of the arts and artists,” said Jake Goodman, Opportunity Fund’s Executive Director. “While the current political moment features a federal government that employs intimidation tactics to scare people with resources away from directing them to specific populations and issues, we will not be deterred by political threats. As this cohort of grant partners exemplifies, we will move forward as we always have.
At a time when immigrants and refugees are being targeted and terrorized, the cycle’s largest grant ($150,000) joins other regional funders to pool support for the Collaborative for Immigrant Impact, a coalition of 18 organizations, to fuel a rapid, collective response to address the immediate impacts of policy changes on immigrant and refugee families in southwestern Pennsylvania.
Opportunity Fund allocated 45% of the cycle’s grant funds to arts organizations, continuing its long-time support of free expression and experimental creation. “We fund the arts for the same reasons that authoritarian leaders fear and suppress them: because we know their power,” said Goodman.
Opportunity Fund aspires to nurture reciprocal relationships with its partners that are built on trust. The majority of grants that Opportunity Fund awards provide unrestricted general operating support, which empower partners to use the grant funds as they best see fit to carry out their missions. This cycle, 75% of awarded funds offer general operating support. We continue to honor our commitment to offer transparency in our racial and demographic grantmaking data: 31% of this grant cycle’s funding went to Black-led organizations, 25% to Asian or Latino/a/e-led organizations or teams with multiracial leadership, and 44% to white-led.
A complete list of awarded grants can be found below.
Opportunity Fund continues to seek ways to streamline and innovate its grantmaking process and timeline. This cycle, the foundation made nearly half (45%) of the grant award decisions at the preliminary application stage of the process. In addition, for the first time members of the Opportunity Fund Board of Directors and community members worked together on grant panels to make final funding recommendations.
Since Opportunity Fund’s inception in 2015, the foundation has awarded 1,301 grants totaling nearly $19.5 million. Grant cycles take place two times per year. The deadline to submit an online Letter of Inquiry (LOI) to be considered for a grant for the next cycle is January 15, 2026. Opportunity Fund encourages organizations focused on the arts and/or social and economic justice to reach out or submit an online LOI by the deadline. Full information about applying for grants is available in the “For Applicants” area of this website.
Grant Partner List:
ABFE | A Philanthropic Partnership for Black Communities ($10,000) to support ABFE’s Racial Equity Advancement & Defense Initiative (READI), which equips funders and nonprofits to navigate legal and political threats to racial justice, strengthen coordination, and advance race-explicit strategies that uphold equity and opportunity for Black communities and communities of color. ABFE promotes effective and responsive philanthropy in Black communities.
Abolitionist Law Center (ALC) ($60,000 over three years) to provide flexible, multi-year, general operating funds to to support the organization’s challenges to harmful and unjust institutional policies and practices, including in Allegheny County’s courts and jail. ALC is a movement lawyering and organizing project that defends human rights and challenges incarceration and other state and structural violence.
ACTION-Housing ($20,000) to provide flexible, general operating funds as the organization modernizes its internal systems and organizational structure. Action-Housing empowers people to build more secure and self-sufficient lives through the provision of decent, affordable housing, essential support services, asset building programs, and educational and employment opportunities.
Aleph Institute ($7,500) to support the distribution of fresh, kosher food to help struggling families over the holiday seasons. The Aleph Institute is a Jewish humanitarian organization that offers a multitude of services to men and women confined in carceral systems and their families, focused on the premise “no one alone, no one forgotten.”
Alliance for Refugee Youth Support and Education (ARYSE) ($40,000 over two years) to provide flexible, multi-year, general operating support. ARYSE supports immigrant and refugee youth in accessing the resources they need to feel confident, engaged, and celebrated. Through advocacy and out-of-school-time programming that focuses on building skills and a sense of community, ARYSE affirms youths’ identities and works alongside them to achieve their vision for their futures.
Alumni Theater Company (ATC) ($30,000 over two years) to provide flexible, multi-year, general operating support during the company’s 17th and 18th seasons. ATC creates bold theatrical work that gives a fresh voice to the experience of young Black artists and highlights their rich contribution to our community at large.
Amnesty International USA (AIUSA) ($45,000 over three years) to provide flexible, multi-year support for AIUSA’s Crisis Campaign. Funding supports AIUSA in its crucial resistance to the Trump Administration’s impact on human rights in the United States and triggers rapid movement-wide advocacy and campaigning as threats arise. AIUSA works to protect people wherever justice, freedom, truth, and dignity are denied.
Artists Image Resource (AIR) ($12,500) to support the creation and exhibition of new print-related work with the 13 artists of the #notwhitecollective. AIR integrates the creation of fine art prints with learning programs that explore the role of the artist and the importance of creative expression.
Attack Theatre ($12,500) to provide flexible, general operating support during the company’s 30th Anniversary season. Attack Theatre explores artistic expression in its commitment to remain curious in the investigation of new ideas; to artistically collaborate through deliberate, interdisciplinary partnerships; and to connect with local and global communities to provide accessible, creative learning opportunities.
August Wilson House ($15,000) to provide flexible, general operating support. The August Wilson House promotes the literary and social legacy of August Wilson through the restoration of his boyhood home in Pittsburgh’s Hill District neighborhood. It fosters and promotes greater appreciation for and understanding of African-American literature, the performing arts and the literary and social legacy of August Wilson.
Balafon West African Dance Ensemble ($30,000 over two years) to provide flexible, multi-year, general operating support. Balafon creates enriching opportunities to experience the joy and spirit of traditional West African dance, uniquely celebrating the cultural contributions of women. Inspired by the belief that dance uplifts lives, Balafon is dedicated to passing on a vibrant legacy that upholds the core values of community, creativity, liberation, excellence and heritage.
Beltzhoover Consensus Group (BCG) ($15,000) to provide flexible, general operating support as the organization creates a Real Estate Project Manager position to assist its real estate efforts. BCG develops new construction and rehab for resale of mixed use quality housing, and provides other resources needed to sustain healthy prosperous lifestyles for residents of Pittsburgh’s Beltzhoover neighborhood.
Bhutanese Community Association of Pittsburgh (BCAP) ($15,000) to provide flexible, general operating support. BCAP ensures a high quality of life for all members of the Bhutanese community in Allegheny County and in the surrounding Westmoreland and Washington counties, and supports their integration into American society through culturally-informed services and activities.
Bike Pittsburgh ($10,000) to provide flexible, general operating support. The funds will bolster advocacy and mobility justice efforts focused on community organizing that elevates resident voice and power. BikePGH is transforming our streets to make biking and walking commonplace for all Pittsburghers in order to improve our quality of life and reduce the harmful effects of car dependence in our communities.
Black Action Network Committee (BANC) ($15,000) to support and expand Thinking Above the Line, a filmed conversation series and quarterly luncheons that convene Black artists, entrepreneurs, organizers, and residents in Beaver County to address racism, mental health, and economic justice‚ while providing paid, real-world media and project roles for BANC’s youth cohort.
The Braddock Inclusion Project ($12,000) to provide flexible, general operating support. for equitable access to nutritious fresh produce to communities in and around Braddock. The Braddock Inclusion Project addresses poverty, economic exclusion, systematic oppression & erasure-related issues impacting their residents.
Care for All ($10,000) to provide flexible, general operating support. As Wisconsin’s only nonprofit, independent abortion clinic, Care for All fills a critical gap in quality abortion care and other reproductive and sexual health services for people of all needs and backgrounds, regardless of ability to pay.
Casa San Jose ($60,000 over three years) to provide flexible, multi-year, general operating support. Casa San Jose advocates with and for the Latino community to provide assistance to stabilize families through social, emotional, and financial support.
Casa San Jose ($20,000) acting as fiscal sponsor, to support the work of Block Chronicles’ Pittsburgh – Latinx Artist Residency (P-LAR). P-LAR is a 6-month program that provides stipends, mentorship, and community engagement opportunities for two advanced-career Latinx artists in Allegheny County. Block Chronicles connects humanity through stories that educate, heal, and inspire.
Casa San Jose ($20,000), acting as fiscal sponsor, to support the work of Guerrero Glass and its glassblowing school. Guerrero Glass provides a safe space for BIPOC youth from marginalized communities to express themselves, regardless of gender identity or sexual orientation – empowering them to create meaningful art that inspires social change.
Center for Employment Opportunities (CEO) ($20,000) to provide flexible, general operating support for CEO Pittsburgh. CEO provides immediate, effective, and comprehensive employment services exclusively to people recently released from incarceration.
Center of Life ($40,000 over two years) to provide flexible, multi-year, general operating support as the organization undergoes a major capital campaign project to construct a permanent headquarters on Hazelwood Green, where it will be, at present, the only civic organization building permanent infrastructure. Center of Life provides families and youth with the life-skills, education, training, and resources necessary to be strong and to make their communities strong.
Chatham Baroque ($12,500) to provide flexible, general operating support during the 2025/2026 season. Chatham Baroque connects diverse audiences to the passion and depth of the music of the Middle Ages, Renaissance, Baroque, and Early Classical periods through performing and presenting vivid and compelling programs and educational experiences.
City of Asylum Pittsburgh ($20,000) to provide flexible, general operating support. Funding will support the organization’s artist sanctuary and annual catalogue of 120+ free literary, arts, and humanities programming that amplify global voices, foster cross-cultural understanding, and ensure equitable access to the arts. City of Asylum builds a just community by protecting and celebrating freedom of creative expression.
City of Bridges Community Land Trust ($20,000) to provide flexible, general operating support. Funding will enable the organization to expand and build strategies to redress the intersections of housing, economic and racial justice. City of Bridges CLT builds community ownership that preserves permanent affordability, empowers individuals, and ensures responsible growth and stewardship.
Contemporary Craft ($20,000) to support the organization’s expansion into its new Timmons Studios, as part of its Imagine More Campaign. This expansion doubles Contemporary Craft’s footprint and enables significant growth in educational and community programming. Contemporary Craft engages the public in creative experiences through contemporary craft.
Creative Citizen Studios ($15,000) to provide flexible, general operating support. Creative Citizen Studios provides artists with disabilities educational art classes and workshops, and provides participants with the ability to exhibit and sell their artwork to the public.
Disability Lead ($15,000) to support disabled leadership in Southwestern Pennsylvania. Disability Lead elevates and connects a network of leaders with disabilities who shift power, transform systems, and redefine leadership.
The Embodiment Institute (TEI) ($5,000) to provide flexible, general operating support. TEI supports Black-Led Movement Work by creating training and healing spaces for community movement leaders to learn about politicized healing and embodiment. TEI changes the conversation, practice and politics of healing through strategic training and interventions at interpersonal, organizational, cultural and environmental scales.
Focus On Renewal ($17,500) to provide flexible, general operating support. Funding will primarily support their Community Resource Center and the relaunch of programming at their Father Ryan Arts Center. Focus on Renewal supports the people in the Sto-Rox community through programs for all, aimed toward the development and sustainability of a healthy mind, body and spirit.
Fractured Atlas ($15,000), acting as fiscal sponsor, to support Julia Production to produce Shakespeare’s R&J, a cross-cultural reinterpretation of Joe Calarco’s adaptation of Romeo and Juliet at City Theatre Company in May 2026. Developed by a BIPOC- and immigrant-led collective of early-career artists, the production reclaims a canonical text through the lens of diverse lived experiences and centers voices too often excluded from classical theater.
Fractured Atlas ($5,000), acting as fiscal sponsor, to support the work of Pittsburgh Fringe Festival. Funds will provide scholarship opportunities to offset production and travel costs for local and traveling fringe artists, as well as support executive team members by providing a stipend rather than solely operating on a volunteer basis. The Pittsburgh Fringe Festival supports adventurous and exploratory performing artists by showcasing their artistic expression in an inclusive environment to equally adventurous audiences.
The Genesis Collective ($15,000) to provide flexible general operating support. The Genesis Collective supports artists and their work, increases the public’s access to art and creativity, and entrenches art in and around community development in Beaver County, Pennsylvania.
Guardians Of Sound & The Hip Hop Orchestra ($10,000) to provide flexible, general operating support. Funds will support the organization in providing ongoing, year-long music lessons and a summer music camp, serving primarily Black youth. Guardians of Sound and its Hip Hop Orchestra enrich life and lives through music.
HEALING BY DEZIGNS ($10,000) to provide support for the Holistic Fashion Therapy program. HEALING BY DEZIGNS empowers and transforms the lives of Black men and women who are grappling with remnants of trauma after abuse.
Hill Dance Academy Theatre (HDAT) ($30,000 over two years) to provide flexible, multi-year, general operating support. HDAT provides professional-level training in Black dance traditions, history, culture and aesthetics that engages and empowers students to pursue careers in Black dance.
Industrial Arts Workshop (IAW) ($10,000) to provide flexible, general operating support. IAW works to advance, inspire, and educate high school students through weld training and the creation of art.
JACK Quartet ($6,000) to support the audio and video recording of Pittsburgh-based composer Mathew Rosenblum’s work “Upon Vermilion Wheels” by JACK Quartet and pianist Conor Hanick. JACK Quartet champions new string quartet music and the transformative experiences that it creates.
JADA House International ($10,000) to provide flexible, general operating support. JADA House uplifts and empower generations of people by building strong programs that strengthen communities. JADA House supports families and creates spaces for healing, empowerment, and growth, particularly in Pittsburgh’s Hazelwood community, with an emphasis on addressing the unique needs of Black and Brown communities.
Jeremiah’s Place ($35,000 over two years) to provide flexible, multi-year, general operating support. The organization provides judgment-free, 24/7 emergency childcare services for children ages 0-6, provided at no cost to families and caregivers. Jeremiah’s Place protects children and strengthens families by providing a safe haven of respite, health, renewal, and support for children when their families are experiencing a critical need for childcare.
Kelly Strayhorn Theater ($7,500), acting as fiscal sponsor, to support Jesse Factor’s 2025-2026 season. The creative team of Jesse Factor is committed to presenting innovative performance work exploring queer narratives and cultural fusions.
Macedonia Family and Community Enrichment Center (FACE) ($15,000) to provide flexible, general operating support. Funding will enable Macedonia FACE to continue to provide its essential safety net services to elders and families experiencing hardship. FACE encourages the development of healthy families and is committed to living out its mission by addressing the disparities that impact African American families and other vulnerable populations in the community.
The Midwife Center ($35,000 over two years) to provide flexible, multi-year, general operating support. Funding will increase access to reproductive healthcare, especially for low-income, uninsured, and underinsured people in the Pittsburgh region. The Midwife Center promotes wellness by providing exceptional, client-centered primary gynecological, pregnancy and birthing care in southwestern Pennsylvania’s only independent birth center.
Mon Valley Initiative (MVI) ($15,000) to support their Workforce Development and Financial Coaching Program. MVI works to increase the income levels and economic independence of local residents by delivering effective career development services, income supports and financial coaching, targeted to the unemployed and under-employed in the Mon Valley region.
National Council of Jewish Women Pittsburgh (NCJW) ($10,000) to provide flexible, general operating support. NCJW Pittsburgh exists to drive enduring systems change in our community with regard to economic equity, inclusive democracy, and reproductive justice. Inspired by the Jewish value of Tikkun Olam (healing the world), NCJW Pittsburgh promotes increased equity through the empowerment of women.
Neighborhood Funders Group (NFG) ($15,000) to support the Amplify Fund, the grantmaking arm of the Neighborhood Funders Group. The Amplify Fund is a pooled, placed-based fund that channels resources to build power, equity in its priority places, including Western Pennsylvania. Neighborhood Funders Group organizes philanthropy so that Black, Indigenous, and people of color communities and low-income communities thrive.
New Sun Rising ($10,000), acting as fiscal sponsor, to support Glitterbox Theater. Glitterbox is a space where outsiders, dreamers, and artists can build community and create vibrant culture. Since 2017, Glitterbox Theater has provided a platform for amateur and DIY theater, with a focus on community accessibility. They host a wide variety of events including plays, concerts, dance parties, drag shows, burlesque, educational workshops, poetry readings, stand up, film screenings, and craft markets.
New Sun Rising ($45,000 over three years), acting as fiscal sponsor, to provide flexible, multi-year, general operating support for Pittonkatonk. Pittonkatonk is a free, outdoor, grassroots music festival held in Pittsburgh’s Schenley Park and is committed to providing a non-commercial, intergenerational space for celebration, learning, and activism, powered by solar and biodiesel energy, and deeply rooted in Pittsburgh’s immigrant, working-class, and creative communities. Pittonkatonk empowers people through music in diverse practices to engage the world around them and advance fair and just relations between people and society.
New Sun Rising ($10,000), acting as fiscal sponsor, to support the work of Tabitha’s Daughters as they continue pursuing health justice and food justice for African American women in Pittsburgh. Tabitha’s Daughters seeks empowerment, healing, and transformation of women’s lives (mind, body, & humanity) through the communal practice of sisterly fellowship, including the studying and sharing of life stories.
PEACOCK Consulting ($15,000) to provide flexible, general operating support to expand the SAIL Project, a community-driven initiative that fosters leadership and advocacy among Pennsylvania’s disabled community. Designed by and for individuals with disabilities, SAIL offers training and support to empower Pennsylvanians with disabilities as effective change agents.
Pennsylvania Community Health Worker Collaborative (PACHW) ($15,000) to provide flexible, general operating support. PACHW unites and empowers Pennsylvania’s community health workers through active collaboration, education, advocacy, and support. The collaborative champions the development of a strong professional identity through leadership in statewide advocacy and policy change to impact the communities they serve.
Prime Stage Theatre ($7,500) to provide flexible, general operating support for the company’s 29th season. Prime State entertains, inspires, and enriches audiences through professional theatre experiences by bringing classic and contemporary literature and history to life through the transformative process of live theatre.
Producer Hub ($15,000), acting as fiscal sponsor, to support the operations and Pittsburgh-based work of DNAWORKS, dedicated to dialogue, democracy, healing, and justice through the arts. DNAWORKS centers Global Majority and LGBTQQ2SPIAA+ voices and experiences to create more complex representations of identity, culture, class, and heritage through theatre, dance, film, writing, and art installation.
Proud Haven ($15,000) to support QMNTY QHEST, a peer-led, collaborative initiative that centers trans and nonbinary youth leadership through housing stability, arts-based healing, and skill-building for economic independence. Proud Haven provides safe shelter for LGBTQIA+ youth experiencing homelessness in Pittsburgh, and emotional support and resources to help LGBTQIA+ youth develop the skills needed to live independently.
Rainbow Serpent ($60,000 over three years) to provide flexible, multi-year, general operating support. Rainbow Serpent advances Black LGBTQ culture through multimedia art, emerging technologies, innovative healing protocols and traditional African cosmologies. Rainbow Serpent believes that the unique gifts of Black LGBTQ people can heal the world.
RealTime Arts ($30,000 over two years) to provide flexible, multi-year, general operating support. Funds will support RealTime Arts to develop bold, community-inspired, original theater works that tell real stories of real people, and to support the launch of a new business plan that will enhance the company’s financial independence, sustainability, and national reach. RealTime connects human beings through unique theatrical experiences.
Reimagine Reentry ($15,000) to provide flexible general operating support. Reimagine Reentry is a reentry program for men and women returning home from incarceration to Allegheny County. Reimagine Reentry walks alongside returning citizens to address the unique challenges of reentering the community through a strengths-based approach.
Resonance Works ($25,000 over two years) to provide multi-year, flexible, general operating support for the 2025/26 and 2026/27 seasons. Resonance Works is a multi-modal performing arts company in Pittsburgh that presents socially relevant performances of new and traditional classical music repertoire and to foster authentic artistic collaborations and community partnerships.
Riverlife ($10,000) to support the 2026 Shore Thing Performing Arts Series aboard its new Shore Thing mobile programming barge. Docked at Allegheny Landing at Pittsburgh’s North Shore, Shore Thing will host free, public performing arts programming. Riverlife creates, activates, and celebrates Pittsburgh’s riverfronts, connecting people through exceptional places and experiences.
Rivers of Steel Heritage Corporation ($10,000) to provide flexible, general operating support during the organization’s capital campaign to fully activate the Carrie Blast Furnaces National Historic Landmark as the focal point of industrial craft within the Rivers of Steel National Heritage Area. Rivers of Steel strengthens the economic and cultural fabric of western Pennsylvania by fostering dynamic initiatives and transformative experiences.
Shana Simmons Dance ($15,000) to provide flexible, general operating support that will allow the organization to expand its innovative approach to contemporary dance, blending different styles, and using dance as a medium for social and cultural exploration. Shana Simmons Dance seeks advancement of quality dance performance and increased engagement with audiences and the community through financially accessible interactive and immersive productions.
Silver Eye Center for Photography ($10,000) to provide flexible, general operating support. Silver Eye promotes the power of contemporary photography as a fine art medium by creating original exhibitions, unique educational programming, and a space for artists to learn, create, and connect through our digital lab and education center, The Lab @ Silver Eye.
Social Good Fund ($20,000 over two years), acting as fiscal sponsor, to provide flexible, multi-year, general operating support for the work of PeoplesHub. PeoplesHub is an online popular education school for activists based in the US. Led by and for disabled organizers and allies, PeoplesHub offers public and private trainings, communities of practice, and peer support that are grounded in solidarity economy and disability justice principles.
Squonk Opera ($45,000 over three years) to provide flexible, multi-year, general operating support. Funding will support the creation of “The Joy Machine,” an immersive outdoor spectacle, and the community-centered “Squonk in the Neighborhood” program of free STEAM workshops, art installations, and performances across Pittsburgh. Squonk inspires diverse audiences to explore their creativity and common humanity, to invigorate live performance and develop young and non-traditional audiences with music, multimedia spectacle, and humor, and to embrace the unique culture of our home in Western Pennsylvania and the world.
Team G.R.O.W. ($10,000) to provide flexible, general operating support. Team G.R.O.W. (Great Resources Of Wisdom) supports low-income families/homes owners in Pittsburgh’s Hill District/Uptown community to become educated on how to keep up on repairs to their homes, so they may maintain housing for their families.
Theatre Communications Group (TCG) ($10,000) to support fieldwide theatre knowledge-building, advocacy, and collective action. TCG’s fieldwide services advocate for and advance freedom of speech and expression for the theatre ecology. TCG strengthens, nurtures, and promotes the professional nonprofit theatre, including and beyond their membership of over 750 theatres and affiliates plus 10,000 individuals nationwide.
Three Rivers Young Peoples Orchestras (TRYPO) ($10,000) to support the 2025-26 season of the Youth Chamber Connection program, which provides chamber music education and performance opportunities for beginner, intermediate, and advanced music students in the Greater Pittsburgh metropolitan area. TRYPO creates a dynamic, inclusive community where young people are inspired to pursue a lifelong passion for music.
Touchstone Center for Crafts ($15,000) to provide flexible, general operating support. Touchstone Center for Crafts advances excellence in arts and craft by educating and encouraging individuals to develop technical skills, good design, and innovative artistic expression. Touchstone offers classes, exhibitions, lectures, demonstrations, and other creative, educational programming throughout the year for people of all ages and levels of expertise.
Trade Institute of Pittsburgh (TIP) ($20,000 over two years) to provide flexible, multi-year, general operating support during a time when the organization will launch a three-year strategic plan that will implement physical expansion and potential replication. TIP empowers men and women with significant barriers to employment through skill building and career opportunities.
World Affairs Council of Pittsburgh ($20,000 over two years) to provide flexible, multi-year, general operating support. The World Affairs Council of Pittsburgh supports learning about the world across generations so that we can build a more globally minded and globally connected Pittsburgh that is equitable and just for all.
YWCA Greater Pittsburgh ($10,000), acting as fiscal sponsor, to support the Black and White Reunion as it hosts the 28th annual Pittsburgh Racial Justice Summit (PRJS). Founded in 1996, the Black and White Reunion brings together organizations and individuals to dismantle the systems that uphold racism and to be in solidarity in the struggle for human equity. The yearly PRJS brings diverse communities together to develop alliances for justice and to eliminate human oppression.
DISCRETIONARY GRANTS
The Field ($5,000), acting as fiscal sponsor, to support Pete-Flo Enterprises’ Rooted and Rested, a liberatory rest and coaching residency that provides BIPOC arts and culture leaders, especially Black women, with time, space, and support to heal from burnout and restore their leadership power through rest, community care, and transformative coaching.
Nonprofit Partners ($150,000), acting as fiscal sponsor, to support the Collaborative for Immigrant Impact to fuel a rapid, collective response to address the immediate impacts of policy changes on immigrant and refugee families, preserving the region’s capacity to support them on the long journey of building a new life here. The Collaborative includes AJAPO, AIU, Arise, ARYSE, Ansar, BCAP, Casa San Jose, CIAC, Hello Neighbor, Holy Family Institute, JFCS, Justice at Work, Latino Community Center, Literacy Pittsburgh, Open Field, PHDC, PIRC, and SHIM.
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