Nashville Area Chamber of Commerce, a Partner of the Tennessee Alliance for Economic Mobility (TAEM), Celebrates $25M Award to the New Collaborative to Improve Families’ Economic Mobility and Wellbeing in Middle Tennessee

 Alliance Will Innovate Across Seven Counties to Defeat Poverty Using TANF Funds

The Tennessee Department of Human Services (TDHS) has selected the Martha O’Bryan Center and the Tennessee Alliance for Economic Mobility (TAEM), a public-private partnership comprised of 32 organizations, to receive a $25,000,000 Tennessee Opportunity Pilot Initiative Implementation Grant to reimagine how the state supports families in moving out of poverty and into opportunity. Seven applicants from across Tennessee were selected by TDHS and the Families First Community Advisory Board to demonstrate a new vision for the Tennessee Safety Net that could be scaled statewide and ultimately become a model for the nation. The grants are funded by the federal Temporary Assistance for Needy Families program. Martha O’Bryan Center will serve as the backbone organization for TAEM, a partnership that includes community-based organizations, faith-based institutions, government agencies, political subdivisions, economic development organizations, and community and technical colleges in Davidson, Dickson, Maury, Montgomery, Rutherford, Wilson and Sumner counties. Partner Agency Name is a critical partner within the new collaborative.

One of TAEM’s approaches is designed to mitigate the effects of the “benefits cliff”–a broken piece of the public support system that leaves low-income families worse off financially when they increase their income and thus de-incentivizes caregivers from pursuing increased earnings, education, and opportunity. As families increase their income, they abruptly lose benefits, and the value of their increased income is less than the value of the lost benefit(s).

TAEM’s innovation to fix the benefits cliff is a transitional benefit which will be paid directly to food, childcare, housing, and health providers to increase families’ access to fresh food, childcare, housing, and health care when a family’s net resources decrease due to the benefits cliff. Addressing the benefits cliff is essential for families to their economic status and wellbeing.

Another key part of TAEM’s strategy is family-centered coaching, whereby participant families define goals for every member of the family and receive consistent support from their dedicated coach to achieve those goals. Families drive the goal setting and progress tracking processes and are surrounded by a tailored team of experts.

TAEM’s approach also includes financial counseling, wrap-around support navigation, and access to education and employment training that align with high-wage, high-demand career pathways in the Middle Tennessee labor market. TAEM’s pilot addresses three of TDHS’ universal outcomes, seeking to increase families’ economic status and stability, increase their family engagement (expanding their networks and connections to other families), and decrease their psychological distress (improved health and wellbeing).

Through TAEM, Partner Agency Name will provide (select one or adjust) family-centered coaching/wrap-around support navigation/employment and education services/access to employment and education pathways/financial counseling/food security/health services to families in x county(ies). “Quote.”

About Martha O’Bryan Center

Martha O’Bryan Center is an anti-poverty non-profit organization with longstanding history and deep community roots, grounded in tradition and strengthened by innovation. Founded in 1894 when Miss O’Bryan organized the Gleaners Society at First Presbyterian Church to support impoverished North Nashville residents, Martha O’Bryan Center has operated from the heart of Cayce Place – Nashville’s largest public housing community – since 1948. This is where we continue in service, partnering with families to open doors of hope and possibility, create a culture of attainment, and positively shape future generations. Martha O’Bryan Center serves over 15,000 people annually with its programs in early learning, parent empowerment, youth development, adult education, employment coaching, crisis counseling and public charter schools East End Prep and Explore! Community School.

About Nashville Area Chamber of Commerce and Partnership 2030

The Nashville Area Chamber of Commerce is Middle Tennessee’s largest business federation, representing more than 2,000 member companies. Belong, engage, lead, prosper embodies the Chamber’s focus on creating economic prosperity by facilitating community leadership. Established in 1990 as an economic development and community enhancement initiative of the Chamber, Partnership 2030 is a regional cooperative dedicated to making Middle Tennessee among the nation’s best places to live, work and do business. Partnership 2030 is supported by a diverse group of public and private companies as well as governmental agencies from the organization’s 10-county service area. The work of the Chamber is supported by its members, Partnership 2030 investors, and sponsors; the Chamber’s Pivotal Partners (a partnership at the highest level for all Chamber programs and events) are Bass, Berry & Sims, BlueCross BlueShield of Tennessee, Community Health Systems, Gresham Smith, and Regions. For more information, visit www.nashvillechamber.com.

About the Tennessee Alliance for Economic Mobility

The Tennessee Alliance for Economic Mobility (TAEM) is a public-private partnership compromised of 32 organizations that has developed an innovative approach to transform Tennessee’s safety net and ultimately improve low-income families’ economic mobility and wellbeing. The 32 partners include the following community-based organizations, faith-based institutions, government agencies, political subdivisions, economic development organizations, and community and technical colleges in seven Middle Tennessee counties (Davidson, Dickson, Maury, Montgomery, Rutherford, Sumner, and Wilson): A Step Ahead Foundation of Middle Tennessee, Inc., Big Brothers Big Sisters of Clarksville, Big Brothers Big Sisters of Middle Tennessee, Catholic Charities of Tennessee, Clarksville Housing Authority, Dickson County Help Center, EDSI Educational Data Systems, Inc., Forward Sumner, The Family Center, Greenhouse Ministries, Manna Café Ministries, Martha O’Bryan Center, Metro Action Commission, Metro Development and Housing Agency, Motlow State Community College, Nashville Area Chamber of Commerce, Nashville State Community College, Nashville State Community College – Clarksville Campus, Nashville State Community College – Dickson Campus, Nurture the Next, Second Harvest Food Bank of Middle Tennessee, Tennessee College of Applied Technology – Clarksville Campus, Tennessee College of Applied Technology – Dickson Campus, Tennessee College of Applied Technology – Hohenwald-Maury County Campus, Tennessee College of Applied Technology – Nashville Campus, Tennessee College of Applied Technology – Portland Campus, Tennessee College of Applied Technology – Hartsville-Wilson County Campus, Volunteer State Community College, United Way of Greater Nashville, The Well Outreach, Wilson Works, and Workforce Essentials, Inc.

About the Tennessee Department of Human Services

The Tennessee Department of Human Services (TDHS) views its programs and services as instruments for creating positive change in the lives of Tennesseans. Each of the Department’s customer-facing divisions administers supports that empower residents to reach their potential as self-sufficient contributors to Tennessee’s economy and communities. TDHS is committed to ensuring its investments in communities statewide are supported with the resources they need to successfully move families from crisis to and through career pathways. Through the Tennessee Opportunity Pilot Initiative, Tennessee will be able to demonstrate with measurable data those strategies that are most effective at reducing dependency and growing the capacity of our most vulnerable citizens.