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›› nonprofit management grants are mini-grants used to attend conferences or workshops, host trainings, or meet other management needs:


Lynchburg Community Development Corpo- ration received $944 for three staff members to attend the 2010 South Carolina Community Economic Development Conference.


Richland County First Steps received $1,000 to attend the 2009 Harlem Children’s Zone Conference.


S.C. UpLift Community Outreach received $1,000 to hold a full day board-training session.


South Carolina Association of Nonprofit Organizations received $2,500 to provide seven scholarships to nonprofit representa- tives to attend the 2010 Annual Nonprofit Conference.


Tiger Totes Family Literacy received $890 for a staff member to attend The S.C. Alliance of Black School Educators Conference and The S.C. International Reading Association Conference.


CCAP In 2009, Central Carolina Commu- nity Foundation was awarded funding from the National AIDS Fund to create the Central Carolina AIDS Partnership (CCAP), the first National AIDS Fund Partner in South Carolina. Nine community organi- zations received funding from the first round of CCAP grants, totaling $160,000 for HIV/AIDS prevention education programs. These grants are made possible by the support of the National AIDS Fund, the Elton John AIDS Foundation and our local partners.


DIVA International Inc. received $30,000 for the SIHLE program. This peer-led, social skills training intervention aims to reduce HIV sexual risk behavior among sexually active, African American teenage females.


22 | Central Carolina Community Foundation 2010 Annual Report


Harriet Hancock Center Foundation received $10,000 for the YEAH program. This locally developed program trains and empowers young peer leaders in the community, ages 18 to 25, to take control and responsibility for their sexual health.


HopeHealth Inc. received $15,000 for VOICES. This video based intervention is designed to increase condom use among African American and Latino men and women, ages 18 to 30, to help reduce the risk of HIV infection.


LRADAC received $20,000 for the Double Jeopardy Prevention program. This interven- tion implements the video based VOICES program and is specifically for recovering substance abusers.


Midlands Community Development Corpo- ration received $15,000 for the Total Recovery Network. This will expand current HIV/AIDS prevention and outreach programs for youth in the greater Columbia, Eastover, Hopkins and Gadsden areas of Richland County through implementation of the Focus on Youth curriculum.


Palmetto AIDS Life Support Services received $20,000 for project WISE. This intervention recruits and trains a core group of HIV+ women who use their experience and training to provide outreach, education, and training as well as encourage testing among women at high risk of acquiring HIV.


South Carolina Hispanic Outreach received $20,000 for the ContraSIDA program. This intervention delivers culturally and linguisti- cally appropriate HIV/AIDS prevention educa- tion, information and testing to the Hispanic/ Latino community.


South Carolina HIV/AIDS Council received $20,000 for the SIHLE program. This peer- led, social skills training intervention aims to reduce HIV sexual risk behavior among sexually active, African American teenage females.


YWCA of the Upper Lowlands Inc. received $10,000 for the Sumter YWCA Gatekeepers. These peer-led groups were created in two housing communities in Sumter to equip and empower women of color to be voices for HIV/ AIDS prevention in their community.


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