
Thanks to overwhelming support from hundreds of thousands of people around the country and the world, the Robin Hood Relief Fund is helping those who lost loved ones, lost jobs, are in need of services including mental health, or may have fallen through the cracks of other relief efforts. A comprehensive overview of the fund’s work is available in our downloadable Year Three 9/11 Report.
The Relief Fund is distributing funds as expeditiously as possible consistent with meeting Robin Hood’s high standards of prudence, due diligence, and care. To learn more about Robin Hood Relief Fund-supported programs and the issues they address, explore the Relief Fund grant recipient portfolios below:

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Abraham House
Educates offenders, ex-offenders and their families, mostly Latino immigrants in part by running an after-school program.
Asociación Tepeyac
Provides after-school programs that focuses on academics and arts mostly for Latino children in Queens.
Bloomingdale Family Program
Provides a Head Start program that caters to students with learning disabilities or emotional problems.
Brooklyn Bureau of Community Service
Offering a diverse array of social services to the people of Brooklyn.
Chinese Staff and Workers Association
Providing comprehensive services to displaced workers in Chinatown
Church Avenue Merchants Block Association, Inc
Strengthening Brooklyn's disadvantaged citizens
Food Bank For New York City
Distributes 68 million pounds of food to approximately 1,200 emergency and community food programs.
HERE New York Assistance Fund
Providing cash assistance and health insurance to restaurant workers and their families
Japanese American Social Service, Inc.
Providing services to New York's September 11th-affected Japanese community
Latin American Workers Project, Inc.
Advancing the rights of the Latino community
Little Sisters Of The Assumption Family Health Service
Provides bilingual and early-childhood development programs to isolated Mexican families in East Harlem.
MARC After School Program
Enhancing academic skills of Bronx children
Mount Sinai - Irving J. Selikoff Center for Occupational and Environmental Medicine
Providing medical care for Ground Zero rescue and recovery workers
New York City Mission Society
Operates a Carrera after-school program in Harlem to reduce teenage pregnancy.
New York Taxi Workers Alliance
Representing and protecting the rights and interests of taxi and livery drivers
New York Unemployment Project
Providing benefits counseling and legal services to the unemployed
NJ Interfaith Partnership for Disaster Recovery
Providing assistance to New Jersey residents affected by September 11th
NYU/Bellevue Occupational & Environmental Medicine Clinic
Meeting the medical needs of immigrant day laborers
Pragati, Inc.
Assisting the South Asian community
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.
Safe Horizon
Preparing for crises, every day
South Brooklyn Legal Services
Providing legal representation to low income workers displaced by September 11th
St. Clare's WTC Outreach Program
Supporting victims' families in Staten Island
University Settlement Society of New York
Provides comprehensive early education, parenting services and developmental interventions for children under age five.
Urban Justice Center
Provides free, confidential legal and benefits assistance to families at soup kitchens, food pantries, and drop-in assistance centers.
Young Korean American Service and Education Center
Ensuring the rights of Korean Americans
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