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Over 1,250 volunteers signed up this year for Go All IN Day, an event organized by the United Way of Central Indiana.
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The Damien Center is one nonprofit that has already lost some public funding for programs that serve the LGBTQ community due to government cuts.
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Several Indianapolis-based organizations are providing help to people affected by Hurricane Helene.
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Who determines nonprofit status for companies in the state, particularly for apartment complexes? And how are these landlords held accountable? That’s a question our audience wanted to know.
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The same pressures bringing people to their doors are making it more difficult for food banks to operate.
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Lilly Endowment, Inc. will grant $34 million to organizations that focus on issues that range from re-entry to LGBTQ youth.
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A bill to make it easier for nonprofits to purchase distressed homes is in its final steps in the Indiana General Assembly.
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Following an investigation, the U.S. Department of Labor is requiring New Hope Services in Jeffersonville to pay back a total of $154,443 to 74 workers with disabilities.
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The Far Eastside of Indianapolis has faced years of social disadvantage as it struggles with poverty and violence. But a community leader hopes that will change with the opening of a new arts and cultural center. But there’s only one thing still preventing it from opening: the COVID-19 pandemic.
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The CDC reported the first case of HIV 40 years ago. Since then, health officials and advocates learned much more about the virus and how to prevent it. But Black women are being infected at unusually high rates. Outreach organizations are working to change that.