Impact

Health, economic, and educational disparities disproportionately hurt communities of color and young people, which can both create and exacerbate mental health issues. Lincoln Families provides mental health services in schools and the community to help youth and families coping with trauma to succeed. We work to disrupt generational poverty at our Family Resource Centers, providing supports for families to build skills and achieve economic mobility. Our educational engagement and literacy programs close the opportunity gap for youth, open academic and career pathways, and build strong futures.

52 Schools Impacted

Schools

Teachers Trained

Students Impacted

Caregivers Supported

Families Served

Social political change is a vital component in the movement toward justice, equity, and healing for the youth and families we serve. It is our responsibility and priority at Lincoln Families to engage in all levels of advocacy to strengthen our work in schools and communities, to remove barriers to care, and to advance racial justice. This means listening to the needs of the community and transforming this information into action towards change.

Partnerships

Our commitment to disrupting cycles of poverty and trauma requires community collaboration and investment. As a result, we at Lincoln Families pursue collaborative partnerships with mission-aligned organizations to foster mutual strategic thinking and resource sharing assistance for greater collective impact in our service hubs of Oakland, Hayward, and East Contra Costa County. We also partner with a wide variety of companies and corporations that help to make our work possible.

Get Involved

We depend on our family of supporters to help make our transformational programming possible. Your investments help us provide real solutions to the unique issues Lincoln Families youth and families face every day.

Last year, Lincoln provided mental health services to more than 3,200 youth and families, with the following transformative outcomes:

100% of Lincoln Kinship families, remained stable and together;

92% of Lincoln youth demonstrated an improvement in school, behavioral/emotional, or life functioning; 

1,881 students in Alameda and Contra Costa counties were provided in-school, after-school, and summer supports to remove roadblocks to learning and strengthen educational engagement