Cleveland Nonprofits Left Hanging as $2 Million Crime-Fighting Cash Sits in Limbo

Neighborhood groups across Cleveland say the checks they were promised for violence-prevention and restorative-justice work still have not arrived, months after the Community Police Commission signed off on awards. The holdup, they say, is already scrambling summer programming and staffing plans at small nonprofits that were counting on the money.

As reported by FOX 8 I-Team, the commission approved roughly $2 million for neighborhood organizations, but had not released the funds. Executive Director Shalenah “Shelly” Williams attributed the delay to government red tape and told reporters payments would begin in six to eight weeks. The commission’s own contact page lists Shalenah “Shelly” Williams as executive director, confirming her role on the agency website, according to the Cleveland Community Police Commission.

Council Vote Could Finally Unlock the Money

The Cleveland City Council agenda lists an emergency ordinance that would authorize the Community Police Commission or the city’s finance director to enter into the grant agreements and make related transfers. The documents are filed as 658-2026, along with a related transfer ordinance, 659-2026. Those items were placed on the May 18 agenda, and the meeting record states that the council planned to reconvene on Monday, June 1, when the transfer and contracts could be taken up, according to the Cleveland City Council.

Commission Says the Grants Are Ready to Go

The commission’s own press materials state that it selected dozens of local nonprofits and hired the United Black Fund to manage the awards. A commission news release also noted that the body planned to begin distributing its 2024 grants by the end of June and that the cycle would deliver more than $1 million to local programs, according to the Cleveland Community Police Commission.

Why Community Groups Are Skeptical

Story continues

TRENDING NOW

LATEST LOCAL NEWS