NAFI Rhode Island Buoyed by More Than $150,000 in Recent Grants

September 28, 2021
NAFI RI (Rhode Island) recently received

NAFI Rhode Island has been buoyed by more than $150,000 in recent grants as part of nearly $212,000 in funding for the three-state NAFI cluster guided by NAFI Connecticut, Inc.

The grants include:

“Receiving these funds greatly enhanced our ability to sustain critical services and programs during the pandemic, often in new and innovative ways,” said Lynn Bishop, Executive Director of NAFI CT, New York and Rhode Island. “We were able to ease the stress of COVID, and empower our wonderful, dedicated staff to remain focused on the mission of compassionately serving the needs of families and individuals.”

$100,000 from the Rhode Island Foundation

NAFI explained in seeking the grant that its Enhanced Outpatient Services (EOS) serve approximately 200 economically disadvantaged families throughout Rhode Island and employ more than 50 staff members who provide in-home services to Medicaid-eligible families that have a child (age 3-18) with severe behavioral or emotional problems. 

“The program is time-limited and focuses on the development of management skills and natural supports to help families keep their children in the home and out of hospitals or other institutions,” the grant application said, noting that the program provides 10 to 20 hours of in-home therapeutic services weekly, and has a full-time researcher who assists the program in evaluating its effectiveness.

Employing master’s level staff that receive two hours of weekly clinical supervision, the model also enhances professional development.

In quantifying the impact of COVID-19 on the program, the grant application said, “The families served by EOS are economically disadvantaged and have limited resources to deal with the additional COVID-19 related stress created by having a behaviorally challenged youth home all day; maintaining stable employment;  assuring that the youth participate in distance learning; and making sure that there is sufficient food and shelter.”

Social distancing requirements impacted the support systems and removed EOS from the home; even if office visits were possible, most families lack the logistical and financial resources to attend appointments. “Covid-19 has made our current form of service delivery completely impossible,” the application said, explaining that all logistical and clinical processes had to be reinvented to work harmoniously with telehealth, requiring the EOS team to develop effective skills to utilize telehealth to continue the program mission of strengthening families.

Telehealth services will extend beyond COVID-19 in a targeted process to bring the mission into homes not previously accessible to the EOS.

$56,884 from The Champlin Foundation

The Rhode Island-based Champlin Foundation grant funded the purchase of generators for two of NAFI RI’s residential programs, the Main Street Program in Warren and the Oakland Beach Program in Warwick. (See the separate story on efforts to upgrade the Main Street property.)

Main St. group home NAFI Rhode Island grants
NAFI RI’s Main Street property

“Now, in case of a bad storm we don’t have move the residents to hotels,” said Cindy Martinez, Executive Finance Director for NAFI CT. “Having the ability to keep clients safe and in their homes during bad weather or power outages is a much better outcome for their well-being. ”

The Main Street Program is a 10-bed program for adolescent boys that uses the evidence-informed Lighthouse model in working to serve older adolescents that lack the potential to move to a foster home or family home. They receive living skills and support necessary to learn to live independently so that they do not become institutionalized while they wait to “age-out” of the system. This program is funded by the Department of Children Youth and Families (DCYF).

The Oakland Beach program is a 6-bed program for adolescent boys that employs the evidence-based Multidimensional Family (MDFT) Therapy model. It is just one of two in Rhode Island—the other is NAFI’s Ridge Street Program for adolescent girls—that specialize in working with teens with substance abuse and/or juvenile justice involvement, and is also funded by the DCYF. 

$30,900 via the Connecticut Department of Education

Touchstone School in Litchfield, CT, received $30,900 in federal Emergency Assistance for Non-Public Schools (EANS) funding from the Connecticut Department of Education for a series of technology upgrades.

Touchstone School grants
Touchstone School

Touchstone is a state-approved private special education school at the heart of a state-funded residential treatment program for young women involved in the juvenile justice and child welfare systems who are referred by the state Court Support Services Division (CSSD) or the Department of Children and Families (DCF). It also accepts a limited number of outside day students who are struggling in public school districts.

“Under the Coronavirus Response and Relief Supplemental Appropriations (CRRSA) Act, CSDE must prioritize EANS services or assistance to non-public schools that enroll low-income students and those most impacted by COVID-19,” the CSDE explained in a release announcing the application process for EANS aid.

The $30,900 grant funds:

“Having this new and upgraded technology is transformative,” said Katie Ryan, the new principal at Touchstone. “Our students are technologically savvy and appreciate how the right tools support and enhance the learning process—and this new equipment provides vital affirmation to our students that they matter, and that their learning process and growth are important and valued.”

$24,000 from a Donor Advised Fund

A check for $24,000 from the Fiduciary Charitable Foundation (also known as Fiduciary Trust Charitable) on behalf of a donor advised fund simply arrived in the mail.

The donor’s only requirement was that the funds be used to further NAFI’s tax-exempt mission. The funds are in NAFI’s Enrichment Fund, which supports clients across the CT/NY/RI cluster. NAFI CT also guides New York operations.

“It was definitely a surprise,” Martinez said of the check. “It’s a nice reminder to those planning charitable gifts of the positive impact a gift to a nonprofit like NAFI can have on the lives of youth and families facing challenges.”

About NAFI RI

NAFI has been operating residential, foster care and community based programs in Rhode Island since 1989, and in 2004, NAFI RI grew into a comprehensive network of nine programs, serving adolescents and adults with an overarching mission of creating diverse and innovative services for people.

NAFI RI includes juvenile justice, mental and behavioral health and family support programs. In 2016 NAFI RI joined forces with NAFI CT to create a multi-state, multi-service agency serving southern New England. To learn more, see the website at nafiri.org.