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Horizon Foundation Recognizes Community Leaders at Awards Breakfast Grassroots Director, HC DrugFree and Alpha Phi Alpha To Be Honored
Thursday, June 14, 2007 Tweet
Grassroots Executive
Director Andrea Ingram, HC DrugFree, Alpha Phi
Alpha Fraternity and Columbia Foundation
president and CEO Barbara Lawson were honored
at The Horizon Foundation’s Annual Awards
Breakfast on June 14.
The awards
ceremony recognizes leadership, health
education, and work with young
people.
Lawson, who will be retiring this fall after 20
years at The Columbia Foundation, will receive
a special Community Appreciation Award. Under
her leadership, the community foundation’s
endowment has grown from about $1 million to
nearly $15 million. The foundation provides
funding for many of the county’s nonprofit
human services and arts agencies. In the 17 years she’s been
executive director of the Grassroots Crisis
Intervention Center, Andrea Ingram has been a
tireless advocate for the men, women and
children of Howard County who have nowhere to
turn when they desperately need help.
In
addition to running to county’s only homeless
shelter, Ingram helped to develop the Mobile
Crisis Team, which operates out of Grassroots,
and has worked on teen suicide prevention and
with the Coalition to Prevent Teen Pregnancy.
She also started the county’s Cold Weather
Shelter, a project of the faith-based community
to provide shelter to homeless people during
the winter when Grassroots’ shelter is
full.
But her service to the community
doesn’t stop there. She has served on the
board of the Association of Community Services
and the Local Board on Homelessness and is an
active member of the Community Emergency
Response Network (CERN).
Ingram will
receive the Richard G. McCauley Leadership
Award, named in honor of the foundation’s
first board chair.HC DrugFree’s mission
is to empower parents to raise healthy, alcohol
and drug-free teens by providing newsletters,
programs and Web resources on a variety of
issues related to parenting and substance
abuse. Under the leadership of executive
director Laura Smit, the organization also does
an annual Teen Job and Volunteer Fair which
attracted over 1,000 people this year.
Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity is one of
the oldest service organizations in Columbia.
For 10 years, the Howard County Chapter has
been running a nationally recognized program,
Alpha Achievers, which encourages the character
development and academic growth of African
American male high school students. Two hundred
young men are currently involved in the program
at four high schools. Alpha Phi Alpha’s
other "Pipeline Intervention" programs include
the Ellington-Adderley African-American
Community Jazz Ensemble; Alpha Excellence
Grants to encourage African American male
students to take Advanced Placement classes;
Project Alpha, which helps young men make
responsible decisions about sexuality; and an
extensive scholarship and recognition
program.
Barbara Lawson became
The Columbia Foundation’s first full-time
executive director in 1989. Over the years, she
has served as an architect of the county's
nonprofit infrastructure, mentored executives
of other nonprofits and fostered a community
that values philanthropy. Under her leadership,
the Foundation has provided seed money for new
programs, encouraged local organizations to
start their own endowment funds and provided
technical assistance that has strengthened the
infrastructure of the non-profit community in
Howard County.
The Horizon Foundation
started its awards program in 2004. With
approximately $90 million in assets, The
Foundation addresses health and wellness issues
through strategic grantmaking and partnerships
with private and public
institutions.