
Robin Hood’s job programs have helped thousands of people get jobs, despite such barriers to employment as histories of substance abuse, incarceration, and homelessness. We also support organizations that create economic security for low-income individuals by providing loans and grants, financial literacy and free banking services, and assistance in starting a business. Robin Hood also helps poor working-families gain access to public benefits and tax credits through our Earned Income Tax Credit (E.I.T.C.) and Single Stop Initiatives. Single Stop provides free confidential benefits and financial counseling in poor neighborhoods, while E.I.T.C. educates poor working New Yorkers about the money they're owed and helps them file for the credits at no cost.

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1199 SEIU Homecare Industry Bill Michelson Education Fund
Trains low-income women to become certified nursing assistants, patient care associates and licensed practical nurses.
Accion New York
Makes small loans and provides technical assistance to immigrant or minority-owned small businesses; provides financial counseling at Single Stop sites throughout the city.
Argus Community
Trains people on public assistance, formerly homeless, former addicts and ex-offenders to become substance-abuse counselors.
Ariva
Promotes economic development in low-income communities by providing financial counseling programs, free tax preparation services, and access to financial products and services.
BedStuy Restoration Corporation
Provides supportive housing, community development and social services to youth and families in Bedford-Stuyvesant and runs a full-service Single Stop site. It is the oldest community development corporation in the United States.
Bronx Defenders
Provides comprehensive legal and social services to poor families caught in the criminal-justice and child-welfare systems in the Bronx each year, including a full-service Single Stop site.
Bronx Educational Opportunity Center
Trains 120 low-income Bronx residents for employment as emergency medical technicians.
BronxWorks
Operates a job-training program, a program to promote college attendance by disconnected youth and an early-childhood center; provides immigration services; and runs two Single Stop sites.
Brooklyn Educational Opportunity Center
Trains low-income Brooklyn residents to work in computer networking and information technology.
Center for Employment Opportunities
Helps 2,000 newly-released ex-offenders and parolees each year to find work.
Center For Family Life In Sunset Park
Provides after-school programs, employment assistance, family counseling and emergency food, and runs a full-service Single Stop site.
Center for Urban Community Services
Provides homeless individuals and residents of permanent and transitional shelters, some run by partner organizations like Common Ground, with mental health and social services.
The Child Center of New York
Offers mental health and related services (including a parent-education program to reduce child abuse) to 10,000 children and parents and runs Single Stop programs at two sites.
Children's Health Fund
Provides healthcare and Single Stop services to homeless children and families with mobile units and at its South Bronx clinic.
College of Staten Island/Office of Continuing Education
Trains low-income individuals for careers as certified nurse assistants.
Common Ground
Houses the homeless, offers innovative homeless-prevention services and a Brownsville homelessness prevention project which also houses a full-service Single Stop site.
The Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art
Retrains low-income immigrant engineers so they can use their skills in the United States.
Credit Where Credit is Due
Provides financial-literacy training and financial services to residents of Washington Heights and provides one-on-one financial counseling at Single Stop sites throughout the city.
The Doe Fund
Provides housing and transitional work for homeless men who have histories of addiction and incarceration.
East River Development Alliance
Teaches economic literacy and prepares, without charge, tax filings for the residents of public housing facilities in western Queens.
The Edith and Carl Marks Jewish Community House of Bensonhurst
Teaches recent immigrants English, and places them in new jobs.
Fifth Avenue Committee
Runs housing, employment and economic development programs in South Brooklyn; operates four occupationally specific training programs for the unemployed and underemployed and a full-service Single Stop site that includes tax assistance.
The Financial Clinic
Helps poor New Yorkers achieve financial stability by providing free tax preparation, legal support and financial counseling.
Fortune Society
Offers job training, housing, education and other services to ex-offenders.
Good Shepherd Services
Runs foster-care programs, adolescent residences for youth aging out of subsidized foster care, supervised independent living residences and two Single Stop sites, one in the Bronx and one in Brooklyn.
Grameen America
Provides micro-loans, savings programs, financial education, and credit establishment to financially empower low-income entrepreneurs.
Grand Street Settlement
Provides residents of the Lower East Side with comprehensive social programs and services including a full-service Single Stop site, a Carrera after-school program to reduce teen-pregnancy and an early-childhood center.
Greenhope Services For Women, Inc.
Helps formerly incarcerated women in East Harlem rebuild their lives.
Groundwork, Inc.
Reaches over 500 students and families living in public housing by running after-school and summer programs in East New York and offering complete Single Stop services to the community.
Harlem Children's Zone
Runs educational, social-service and health programs in Harlem, including three full-service Single Stop sites.
Henry Street Settlement
Offers transitional housing, mental-health services, day-care, senior programming, youth activities, job-training programs and a full-service Single Stop site.
Highbridge Community Life Center
Trains women on public assistance, most of whom are mothers, for jobs at health-care facilities.
The HOPE Program
Trains homeless men and women and substance abusers for work.
Kingsbridge Heights Community Center
Trains low-income residents in northwest Bronx to gain licenses and launch home-based childcare businesses.
Legal Aid Society
Provides free legal counseling and assistance at Single Stop sites throughout the city and specialized legal immigration services and training to Robin Hood grantees.
Legal Services NYC
Provides free legal counseling and assistance at Single Stop sites throughout the city and legal services and training to Robin Hood grantees.
LIFT
Uses an innovative, low-cost model that relies on college student volunteers to work one-on-one with low-income individuals to help them solve housing, employment and public-benefits problems.
Mayor's Fund to Advance New York City - Conditional Cash Transfers (CCT)
Makes cash rewards to families who meet pre-set benchmarks for academic achievement, such as passing scores on Regents exams by high school students, for preventive health practices, like parents taking children for annual physical and dental checkups, and for parental employment.
Metropolitan Council on Jewish Poverty
Provides a wide spectrum of social services for low-income Jewish New Yorkers, including affordable housing, job training programs, crisis-intervention counseling, food pantries and home care for the elderly, and runs a full-service Single Stop site.
Minkwon
Provides legal, social and immigration-related services to the low-income Chinese and Korean residents of Flushing Queens.
Neighborhood Economic Development Advocacy Project
Provides direct service and advocacy programs designed to promote financial justice in New York City’s low-income communities.
New York City College of Technology
Trains participants to maintain facilities focusing on environmentally friendly (green) techniques.
New York City District Council of Carpenters Labor Technical College (Building Works program)
Trains low-skilled individuals for jobs in “green collar” construction, providing a 17-week program that leads to certification, pre-apprenticeship jobs and union membership.
New York City Financial Network Action Consortium
Oversees two free tax-preparation sites as part of Robin Hood’s E.I.T.C. tax-refund initiative.
New York Legal Assistance Group
Provides free legal and benefits counseling at seven hospital-based clinics.
Nontraditional Employment for Women
Trains women for high-paying jobs and union membership in the construction trades and other skilled blue-collar occupations in utilities and transportation industries.
Northern Manhattan Improvement Corporation
Provides free legal, housing and social services as well as assistance with job placement to low-income families in Washington Heights.
Opportunities For A Better Tomorrow
Trains workers in Brooklyn to take jobs as entry-level office workers and as pharmacy clerks and technicians.
Outreach Project
Trains students with limited education, ex-offenders and former substance abusers to be substance-abuse counselors, and provides alcohol and drug-addiction treatment.
Per Scholas
Combines classroom training and internships in its own computer-recycling business to prepare low-income participants for careers as computer technicians.
PHI
Trains women in Manhattan, the South Bronx and Brooklyn for jobs as health aides and as home-care attendants.
Project Hospitality
Provides food, clothing and social services for needy residents, including immigrants, of Staten Island; runs a full-service Single Stop site specializing in food stamp and health insurance enrollments.
Project Renewal
Provides housing, social services and employment to homeless and formerly homeless New Yorkers with histories of substance abuse and mental illness.
Providence House
Provides housing and case-managed services—including access to government benefits, family counseling, job-training and employment referrals to female parolees.
Public Health Solutions
Provides Single Stop services, especially help signing families up for food stamps and state-subsidized health insurance, at two Women Infant and Children (WIC) centers in Queens and Brooklyn.
The Resource Training Center
Trains low-income individuals, most of whom are former addicts or ex-offenders, as alcohol and drug addiction counselors.
Restaurant Opportunity Center of New York
Trains and certifies low-income individuals, including immigrants, to work in relatively high-end restaurants, as waiters, chefs, hosts and hostesses, managers and support staff in the kitchens.
SCO Family of Services
Helps families in crisis, running two parenting-education programs (Nurse Family Partnership and Parent-Child Home Program) and a Single Stop site.
Seedco
Serves disadvantaged job seekers and low-wage workers and their families, as well as offering assistance to small businesses; operates the city’s highest volume Single Stop site at its Upper Manhattan Workforce1 Career Center.
Self Help Community Service, Inc.
Trains low-income, Spanish-speaking women, including many immigrants, as home health aides.
Single Stop USA
Provides a wide range of family support services and free one-on-one legal, financial, benefits, and tax counseling to poor families nationwide.
Southwest Brooklyn Industrial Development Corp
Helps small manufacturers in Southwest Brooklyn hire local, unemployed, low-income residents.
St. John's Bread And Life
Operates a food pantry and the largest soup kitchen in Brooklyn, feeding 1,000 people per day, and a mobile unit; runs two full-service Single Stop operations, including a new Coney Island initiative bringing Single Stop services to remote food pantries in the region.
St. Nick’s Alliance
Trains low-income adults, including many ex-offenders, as environmental remediation technicians to handle hazardous materials.
Sustainable South Bronx
Trains and certifies low-income individuals, half of whom have histories of criminal involvement, for jobs in weatherization, retrofitting and environmentally friendly roof installation.
Urban Justice Center
Provides free, confidential legal and benefits assistance to families at soup kitchens, food pantries, and drop-in assistance centers.
Way to Work
Helps high-school dropouts and other young adults between ages of 18 and 21 start work careers.
Women In Need
Houses 800 homeless families per night at seven transitional shelters and runs the city’s only Single Stop site within a shelter.
Women's Center for Education and Career Advancement
Created and updates the computer program which Single Stop sites use to assess household eligibility for government benefits; teaches business management to low-income female entrepreneurs.
Women's Housing And Economic Development Corp.
Provides permanent housing, employment assistance, Head Start, childcare training, and other services to families in the South Bronx and runs a full-service Single Stop site.
Year Up
Offers a 12-month training program in technology for economically disadvantaged young adults geared toward employment in entry-level information-technology positions and enrollment in college.
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