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The community effort was the genesis of the Memphis Police Department's Crisis Intervention Team. The Memphis CIT program has achieved remarkable success, in large part because it has remained a true community partnership. Today, the so-called "Memphis Model" has been adopted by more than 2,700 communities in the U.S. including other countries.
Porter-Leath was founded in 1850 as an orphanage and has since grown to six program service areas. The agency retains the early nature of its mission by providing foster care and has also expanded to early childhood education. The agency remains in its 1852 location on the 9 acres (36,000 m 2) of land donated by Mrs. Sarah Leath. The original ...
Christ Community Health Services was founded in 1995 in Memphis, Tennessee by four doctors, Rick Donlon, David Pepperman, Karen Miller, and Steven Besh. [7] With a budget of around $46 million a year Christ Community Health Services employs a variety of health care workers ranging from dentists, doctors, pharmacists and behavioral health experts; total employment at Christ Community Health ...
In 1964, it was acquired by Presbyterian Services Inc. and converted into senior living residences. In April 2022, the Memphis Landmarks Commission approved a historic designation request for the ...
A Memphis Police Department officer drives past an American flag displayed between two Memphis Fire Department trucks outside of Hope Church prior to the start of the funeral for Joseph McKinney ...
23 Idlewild St., S. Memphis, TN 38104 Hope House is a nonprofit organization for children infected or affected by HIV/AIDS and their families in Memphis, Tennessee , USA. It was founded in 1994 by the Junior League of Memphis [ 1 ] and opened in 1995. [ 2 ]
Accelerate Memphis is the implementation tool of Memphis 3.0, and has issued $200 million in bonds to "facilitate catalytic community projects in neighborhoods experiencing historic disinvestment ...
The Tennessee Children's Home Society was chartered as a non-profit corporation in 1897. [2] In 1913, the Secretary of State granted the society a second charter. [2] The Society received community support from organizations that supported its mission of "the support, maintenance, care, and welfare of white children under seven years of age admitted to [its] custody."