San Antonio City Council OKs $6.3M in COVID-19 funds for social services

Published: Fri, 03/10/23

San Antonio City Council OKs $6.3M in COVID-19 funds for social services


San Antonio agencies and organizations focused on helping older adults, youth and individuals with mental health challenges are invited to propose how they would spend some of the $6.31 million in federal COVID-19 money that the city plans to spend to improve services in these areas.
(Courtesy Kampus Production/Pexels)

Community Impact
By Edmond Ortiz
Updated 

San Antonio City Council voted March 9 to approve $6.31 million in federal COVID-19 relief money to help boost local organizations that provide mental health care, youth and senior citizen services.

The money comes from the city’s allocation in American Rescue Plan Act funding, city staff said.

Mayor Ron Nirenberg said ARPA money has helped numerous communities to stabilize their finances and experience levels of social service recovery in the three years since the pandemic fully emerged.

But city officials said public and private agencies and organizations concentrated on social services are still struggling to help meet the needs of people who have been adversely affected by the pandemic, be it through job, food or housing insecurity or mental health or substance use challenges.

“The worst of the health impacts may be over, but don’t let anybody convince you that the long tail of COVID still remains,” Nirenberg said.

 
According to local officials, the city set aside $4.63 million for mental health care programs, $647,916 for youth-focused programs, $500,00 for senior citizen programs, and $500,000 for other nonprofit social services that mainly affect area youths and older adults.

City officials said the money for mental health care will help select organizations and agencies aiding youth aging out of foster care and at-risk youngsters with access to such services as housing and employment.

The $4.63 million allocation also includes funds for groups helping to respond to family violence service calls as well as organizations and agencies assisting people coping with substance use.

The remaining ARPA monies approved by the council March 9 are designed to help youth and older adults who were directly affected—financially or otherwise—by the pandemic.

Local officials said the next step involves the city releasing a request for proposals March 13 to local eligible agencies and organizations. Responses are due April 27, and the city will evaluate and score respondents May 5-10.

Officials said the council will award specific amounts of the ARPA funds to select agencies and organizations June 1.

By Edmond Ortiz - Edmond joined Community Impact as a reporter in August 2021, helping to launch new editions in the San Antonio market. Edmond covers various beats in the North San Antonio coverage area. He previously was the main reporter for Local Community News, covering several areas in and around San Antonio, first as a freelancer and then staff member. Prior to that, Edmond was a community news reporter for Prime Time Newspapers and the San Antonio Express-News, including editing two community weeklies. He's a San Antonio native, and studied mass communications at San Antonio College and Texas State University.
 


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