Tag: Greater Cincinnati

  • Federal funding cuts would significantly affect local nonprofits, survey shows

    Federal funding cuts would significantly affect local nonprofits, survey shows

    Cincinnati, OhioRecent executive orders and administrative memos have increased the focus on federal grants and contracts. A study exploring the impact such cuts would have on individuals and families in Greater Cincinnati found that most nonprofits receive at least 25% or more of their operating budgets from the federal government. Two-thirds of nonprofits indicated they’d face difficult choices regarding service reductions or closures within six months of federal funding disruption. One organization reported it would be forced to close immediately. 

    United Way partnered with local funders, including Greater Cincinnati Foundation and Interact for Health, to survey 109 organizations in our region during three weeks in February. The survey sought to identify the scope of services supported locally by federal funding and how organizations might manage a federal funding freeze.  

    Many organizations said they would pursue private and corporate foundation funding to bridge the gap if faced with these cuts. Federal funding accounts for more than $1 trillion in support for state and local programs. These programs provide services ranging from essential needs and housing to youth education and workforce development. Private philanthropy cannot make up the difference.  

    “Organizations like United Way provide grants to local nonprofits because we believe in the work they are doing to make a positive impact across our region,” said Moira Weir, President and CEO of United Way of Greater Cincinnati. “While our contributions can be crucial, federal funding often constitutes a significant portion, or even the bulk of, a nonprofit’s budget.”  

    Federal funding supports state and local operations by design. This policy approach ensures that federal resources provide meaningful support. Local organizations are equipped to respond effectively to communities’ evolving needs, making nonprofits vital for stability. 

    “Nonprofits aren’t just recipients of federal funding,” said Weir. “They play an important role in the community and help the federal government fulfill its obligations to citizens. 

    “Without this funding, many of our friends and neighbors could lose access to basic needs or support systems that can put them on a path to a better future.”  

    [pdf-embedder url=”https://lovelandmagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/04/UWGC_Federal-Funding-Impact-Assessment_1pgr.pdf”]
    About United Way of Greater Cincinnati 
    We empower everyone in our region to achieve economic well-being so our entire community can thrive – now and in the future. Founded in 1915, UWGC is one of the region’s largest nonprofit organizations. It is committed to working alongside policymakers, community partners and donors to promote educational success, financial empowerment and housing security. Learn more about UWGC’s work across nine counties in Ohio, Kentucky and Indiana at UWGC.org. #UnitedWeThrive
  • Cassie Brings the League for Animal Welfare to the Table of Discussions

    Cassie Brings the League for Animal Welfare to the Table of Discussions

    Cassie Mattia is the President and Publisher of Loveland Magazine

    by Cassie Mattia,

    Loveland, OhioThe oldest and one of the largest no-kill shelters in Cincinnati, Ohio graced me with their presence on my latest episodes of the Table of Discussions! The League for Animal Welfare, which was founded in 1949, provides much-needed care for over 1,800 unwanted, lost, and neglected cats and dogs.

    I sat down with Executive Director, Devon Smith, and Enrichment Coordinator, Ronni Valle to talk about the League for Animal Welfare’s sheltering services, and their clinic that includes a spay/neuter voucher program, vaccine clinics, veterinary assistance program, and much more! Did I mention we had special furry guest Zumi in the studio too? 

    So sit back with your fur babies and enjoy my latest Table of Discussions episode featuring Devon, Ronni, and Zumi from the League for Animal Welfare!

    Mission

    To reduce the number of homeless cats and dogs in Greater Cincinnati by providing a compassionate, no-kill animal shelter and programs that promote responsible pet care.

    Vision

    We will be recognized as Greater Cincinnati’s leading no-kill shelter and animal welfare champion.

    Core Values

    Compassion
    We believe that all cats and dogs are entitled to be free from suffering, abuse, and exploitation.

    Integrity
    We consistently act honestly, fairly, and in the best interests of the animals in our care.

    Education
    We proactively promote and facilitate responsible pet parenting, and are committed to raising public awareness about the humane treatment of all animals.

    Excellence
    We strive to always provide exceptional care for our animals and an exemplary shelter experience.

    Stewardship
    We use our resources wisely and maintain the public trust.

    The League is a proud Best Friends Network Partner!

    How to Donate

    As a nonprofit, the League for Animal Welfare relies on donations from our wonderful supporters in order to care for the cats and dogs that make their way to our shelter. Donating is easy and can be done a number of ways:

    Donate Online

    You can donate directly through our website here!

    Donate By Phone

    Call the shelter at (513) 735-2299 to make a donation over the phone.

    Donate By Mail

    Send your check or payment information to:

    League for Animal Welfare
    4193 Taylor Rd
    Batavia, OH 45103

    Donate with Stock

    Gifts of appreciated stock can offer real tax benefits to the giver in the right circumstances, so check with your tax adviser on whether this giving option makes sense for you. View stock transfer instructions here. We wish to ensure all gifts are properly received and acknowledged so please email us with the name of the stock, the number of shares and your name and address.

    Donate Through Your Employer

    Community Shares of Greater Cincinnati raises unrestricted funds for a network of 30 local nonprofits by hosting workplace campaigns where employees make tax-deductible charitable donations to the cause of their choice.

    Below is a list of current workplace partners. If you work for one of the listed organizations, you can choose to have a donation deducted directly from your payroll to support the League. If you company is not listed, learn more about the advantages of becoming a workplace partner.

    • Cincinnati Public Schools
    • Cincinnati State Community College
    • City of Cincinnati
    • Contemporary Arts Center
    • Hamilton County
    • Hamilton County Public Library
    • Hoxworth
    • Interact for Health
    • METRO
    • Miami University
    • Northern Kentucky University
    • University of Cincinnati
    • UC Foundation

    President and Publisher of Loveland Magazine, Cassie Mattia is a resident of Historic Downtown Loveland and the Public Relations Coordinator at Butler County Board of DD. Cassie was awarded the Little Miami River Chamber Alliance 2021 Young Business Professional of the Year.

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  • Strategies to End Homelessness receives $5M grant to help end homelessness in Hamilton County

    Strategies to End Homelessness receives $5M grant to help end homelessness in Hamilton County

    Hamilton County, Ohio – Strategies to End Homelessness, which leads a coordinated community effort to end homelessness in Greater Cincinnati, today announced that it has received a $5 million grant from the Bezos Day 1 Families Fund—the largest private gift in the organization’s history. Launched in 2018 by Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, the Day 1 Families Fund issues annual leadership awards to leading organizations on the frontlines that are employing compassionate, needle-moving work to help families move from unsheltered homelessness and shelters to permanent housing with the services they require to achieve stability.

    “Our analysis of homelessness data identifies solutions that are needed. Unfortunately, we only have enough capacity to help about a third of the families that are in need, and other funding sources do not support some of the services homeless families need the most,” said Kevin Finn, president and CEO of Strategies to End Homelessness. “We are grateful to the Bezos Day 1 Families Fund for this impactful grant, which will both expand capacity in existing data-driven programs and also support new services that data indicates are desperately needed.”

    This one-time grant will help Strategies to End Homelessness and its partners in their tireless work to support families as they reel from skyrocketing rent costs, limited services, and insufficient incomes. Strategies to End Homelessness plans to use the grant funds to prevent many children and families from ever experiencing the trauma of homelessness, to break the cycle of homelessness for others and to assist hundreds of at-risk families to progress toward self-sufficiency in safe, stable housing.

    Strategies to End Homelessness was selected as a Day 1 Families Fund grant recipient by a group of national advisors who are leading advocates and experts on homelessness and service provision. National advisors brought expertise on housing justice, advancing racial equity, and helping programs employ resources effectively to assist families out of homelessness.

    Over the past five years, the Day 1 Families Fund has provided 170 grants totaling more than $520 million to organizations around the country working to combat homelessness and help families gain housing support and stability.

    About The Bezos Day 1 Fund

    The Bezos Day 1 Fund made a $2 billion commitment to focus on making meaningful and lasting impacts in two areas: funding existing nonprofits that help families experiencing homelessness, and creating a network of new, nonprofit tier-one preschools in low-income communities. The Day 1 Families Fund issues annual leadership awards to organizations and civic groups doing compassionate, needle-moving work to provide shelter and hunger support to address the immediate needs of young families. The vision statement comes from the inspiring Mary’s Place in Seattle: no child sleeps outside. For more information, visit www.BezosDayOneFund.org/Day1FamiliesFund.

    About Strategies to End Homelessness

    Strategies to End Homelessness, a 501(c)(3), leads the coordinated community effort to end homelessness in Greater Cincinnati and envisions a community in which everyone has a stable home
    and the resources needed to maintain it. Through the coordination of the local homeless services system, administration of City, County, State, Federal and private funding to partner agencies, and the operation of programs, Strategies to End Homelessness prevents homelessness whenever possible, assists people out of homelessness, and offers solutions to homelessness through housing, serving approximately 11,000 people annually. For more information, go to https://www.strategiestoendhomelessness.org.

  • CPS to Return to Distance-Learning Model Beginning November 23 until after winter break

    CPS to Return to Distance-Learning Model Beginning November 23 until after winter break

    The Cincinnati Public Schools (CPS) Board of Education decided at a special public meeting last night to shift to a five-day per week distance-learning model for all students, effective Monday, November 23.

    Students will remain in distance-learning through winter break, returning to a blended model Monday, January 4, pending an improvement in community health data according to a press release issued by the District..

    The release said that the decision was made primarily due to rising COVID-19 cases throughout Greater Cincinnati, which has resulted in staffing challenges. “Like other essential organizations, the higher level of community spread has a direct impact on staff absenteeism. Teachers and staff must stay home when sick, when in quarantine as a result of a close contact, or as needed to take care of family members.”

    Superintendent Laura Mitchell recommended the district move classes back online as COVID-19 cases rise in Hamilton County and across Ohio. “My recommendation is that Nov. 20 would be the last day of in-person instruction for the remainder of this calendar year,” Mitchell said during a special CPS Board of Education meeting Tuesday.

    Mitchell said during the transition week Nov. 16-20, students would not have virtual learning at their own school and would access work through Schoology.

    What does this mean?

    School will look like it did at the beginning of the 2020–21 year with students learning from home. Students who signed up to participate in the distance learning from their current school option will remain in distance learning next week, accessing assignments through Schoology. They will return to the 5-day per week distance learning schedule with their classmates on Monday, November 23.

    Here are the CPS and City of Cincinnati Covid 19 Dashboards as reported on November 11.

    Right-Click on these images to open in a new tab to see a larger view.

  • One-of-a-kind Israeli experience for Loveland grads

    One-of-a-kind Israeli experience for Loveland grads

    Loveland, Ohio – “Living in Tel Aviv is a one of a kind experience,” says Loveland High School grad Nate Schweiger. Schweiger, along with Loveland alumnae Caryn Duvall, and Marissa Witt spent this past summer taking part in Onward Israel.

    The Onward Israel program, which is administered by JVS Career Services, places Jewish students in internships in Tel Aviv, and this year, 32 college students from across the Greater Cincinnati area took part in the program.

    Schweiger is currently a junior at Ohio University majoring in Communications Studies, and interned at Eloops as a B2B Sales Manager.  Eloops is an employee engagement platform to help companies connect their employees to one another and improve productivity. In Scheweiger’s first week of work, he created an app called TLV Express, which enabled Onward participants to find their way around the city. Another task of his was to re-write the company’s help center in grammatically correct English.

    Caryn Duvall is a senior at the University of Cincinnati and is majoring in Speech Pathology, and interned at The Language Kindergarten, where children with disabilities are able to develop their skills with an occupational therapist, physical therapist, and speech pathologist. Duvall shadowed individual therapy sessions and learned strategies and treatments for a number of disabilities. She is especially interested in the different practices between speech pathology professionals in Israel and the US.

    The Onward Israel program is made possible through a Cincy Journeys post-high school Israel travel grant funded by The Jewish Foundation of Cincinnati and administered by the Jewish Federation of Cincinnati. Through the Cincy Journeys program, Cincinnati Onward Israel interns are in the unique position of participating in this incredible experience for free.




  • Loveland grads: Ibby Boyle, Sophie Greenberg, and Maddi Wieler get on-the-job experience in Israel

    Loveland grads: Ibby Boyle, Sophie Greenberg, and Maddi Wieler get on-the-job experience in Israel

    Loveland graduates Isabel Boyle, Maddi Wieler, and Sophie Greenberg spent the summer in Tel Aviv, Israel completing professional internships in their fields.

    Three Loveland High School graduates spent this past summer as interns in Israel. They are part of a group of 22 college students from across the Greater Cincinnati area taking part in Onward Israel, a program that places Jewish students in internships in their chosen fields of study in Tel Aviv. 

    Isabel Boyle, better known as Ibby, is a rising senior at the University of Cincinnati, with a major in Marketing and Operations Management. She was an intern at the Cory Group this summer in Tel Aviv. The Cory Group helps people to launch and advertise their Kickstarter and Indiegogo campaigns. At her internship, she helped with content creation, script writing, press outreach, and more. Isabel said this basically mimics the creation of a new brand and is helping to teach her vital marketing skills. 

    Sophie Greenberg will begin her senior year studying Nutrition as well as Management and Leadership at Miami University this fall. She spent the spring semester studying abroad all over Asia and continued her world travels by interning in Tel Aviv this summer. Sophie worked at the Manna Center Program for Food Safety and Security as their marketing and research intern. Her main tasks at her internship included helping out with their summer institute, which is a program for international students that are learning about food safety and security. 

    Maddi Wieler will be a senior at The Ohio State University, where she studies Marketing and Pharmaceutical Sciences. Maddi spent the spring semester studying abroad in Europe. In Tel Aviv, Maddi was an intern for a company called TAU Innovations. Each year, TAU puts on the biggest conference in Israel with more than 6,000 people and 70 startups competing for a grand prize. Maddi’s jobs at TAU included assisting business development and marketing for the conference. 

    Onward Israel is made possible through a Cincy Journeys post-high school Israel travel grant funded by The Jewish Foundation of Cincinnati with additional funding from the Jewish Agency for Israel. Grants are administered by the Jewish Federation of Cincinnati. Programming is administered by JVS Career Services. Through the Cincy Journeys program, Cincinnati Onward Israel interns are in the unique position of participating in this experience for free.



  • #TigerCare: Hope Squad comes to Loveland Schools

    #TigerCare: Hope Squad comes to Loveland Schools

    By Eric Dool, Loveland Director of Student Services

    It is built into our district goals: Tiger Care. When considering all that Care could embody for our students, resilience – the capacity to recover quickly from difficulties; toughness, and self-efficacy – one’s belief in one’s ability to succeed in specific situations or accomplish a task, stand out as being of paramount importance in preparing our children for life’s challenges. Unfortunately, for some students, a lack of resilience and self-efficacy, combined with episodic and/or long-term mental-health needs, results in suicidal ideation. The reality is frightening, and has touched every single school throughout the nation. However, we are not without hope.

    Loveland is truly blessed with a wealth of caring staff and mental-health supports to meet the ongoing needs of our students. Yet, when considering the danger posed by suicidal thought, even those supports do not feel like enough.

    Loveland is truly blessed with a wealth of caring staff and mental-health supports to meet the ongoing needs of our students. Yet, when considering the danger posed by suicidal thought, even those supports do not feel like enough. We must do more. We will do more. To that end, over the next several months, Loveland will be embarking upon a partnership with Grant Us Hope (https://www.grantushope.org/) and Hope Squad (https://hopesquad.com/) to provide our students with the tools needed to join us on the front line in doing all that we can to identify and intervene with suicidal thought and behavior.

    Hope Squads – are trained to identify suicide warning signs in their peers, and to alert adults to those signs.

    Grant Us Hope, the official Hope Squad Founding Agency of Ohio, has partnered with Hope Squad’s founder, Dr. Greg Hudnall, to bring the model to the Greater Cincinnati region, and eventually the entire state. Building upon a researched-based model, student groups – or Hope Squads – are trained to identify suicide warning signs in their peers, and to alert adults to those signs. District staff are also trained in the model, and serve in the capacity of organizing and guiding as advisors. To be clear, Hope Squad members are empowered to seek help and save a life; Hope Squad members are not taught to act as counselors. This group of students will be educated on how to recognize signs of suicide contemplation, and how to properly and respectfully report this to an adult.

    This group of students will be educated on how to recognize signs of suicide contemplation, and how to properly and respectfully report this to an adult.

    In May, school counselors from Loveland Intermediate School, Loveland Middle School, and Loveland High School will receive training to equip them with the skills to serve as advisors. Staff training, parent meetings, and student selection and training will follow in the late fall of 2018. Hope Squad will then launch as an official Tiger Care program in January 2019.

    If you have any questions about Loveland’s participation in this program, I invite you to contact me directly.

    Eric Dool dooler@lovelandschools.org

    Director of Student Services
    Loveland City School District



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