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Workforce Development | Leadership | Community Impact

PROXIMITY ASAP
Always Serve A Purpose
Connecting people to opportunity, purpose, and economic mobility through workforce development, leadership, and community impact.

06/08/2026

Federal Grant Opportunity - Transitional Housing Assistance Program

PLEASE READ EVERYTHING!

Is your organization providing housing and supportive services to survivors of domestic violence, dating violence, sexual assault, or stalking?

The U.S. Department of Justice Office on Violence Against Women (OVW) has announced the FY 2026 Transitional Housing Assistance Grants for Victims of Domestic Violence, Dating Violence, Sexual Assault, and Stalking Program. This funding supports organizations working to provide safe housing and comprehensive support services that help survivors transition to long-term stability and permanent housing.

FUNDING INFORMATION
• $48.5 million available
• 80 anticipated awards
• Up to $600,000 per award
• 48-month project period
• Anticipated start date: October 1, 2026

AREAS OF FOCUS
Funding may support:
• Transitional housing programs
• Short-term rental assistance
• Utility payment assistance
• Security deposits and relocation costs
• Permanent housing placement support
• Employment counseling and job readiness services
• Occupational training
• Transportation assistance
• Childcare services
• Case management
• Survivor-centered support services

ELIGIBLE APPLICANTS
Eligible applicants include:
• State Governments
• Tribal Governments
• Local Governments
• Nonprofit Organizations

IMPORTANT REQUIREMENT
State and local government applicants must partner with a victim service requirement.

READ ALL GUIDELINES ON THE NOFO CAREFULLY!

APPLICATION DEADLINES
• Grants.gov Deadline: July 14, 2026 at 11:59 PM ET
• JustGrants Deadline: July 16, 2026 at 4:59 PM ET
Link to NOFO: https://www.justice.gov/ovw/media/1443986/dl?inline

DISCLAIMER: This opportunity is being shared for informational purposes only. I am not affiliated with, endorsed by, or representing the U.S. Department of Justice, the Office on Violence Against Women, or this funding opportunity. All eligibility, application, and programmatic questions should be directed to the agencies.

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05/17/2026

If you graduated in the 90s or earlier, you probably remember schools separating students by learning levels. Some students learned at grade level while others were placed in CDC classes (Comprehensive Development Classes) or resource classes because they needed additional academic, behavioral, emotional, or developmental support.

There were also Level 1, 2, and 3 classifications that often reflected how much support a student needed:
Level 1 = mild support,
Level 2 = moderate support,
Level 3 = more intensive assistance and supervision.

Then came the major push for inclusion in the early 2000s where everybody became integrated into the same environments more broadly. Now before people twist my words, I’m not saying inclusion is bad. I’m saying society stopped being honest about emotional intelligence, accountability, impulse control, psychological health, and behavioral dysfunction.

Sometimes we glorify “gangster” behavior without realizing we are really looking at untreated trauma, emotional instability, psychopathy, manipulation, impulsiveness, or people operating with very low emotional intelligence. And because society normalized blending everybody together without teaching people how to recognize unhealthy behavior patterns, many emotionally healthy people end up bonding, dating, reproducing, and building lives with deeply unstable individuals because they appear “normal enough” on the surface.

You find yourself pouring your heart out trying to communicate with someone who genuinely lacks the emotional capacity, empathy, comprehension skills, accountability, or psychological stability to process healthy communication. Then society labels everything “toxic” when in reality some people are dealing with serious dysfunction that goes far beyond ordinary relationship conflict.

Pay attention. Everybody is not wired the same emotionally, mentally, or psychologically.

10/26/2025

This Isn’t Charity — This Is Covenant
Our government is cutting food stamps again — knowing exactly who this will hurt most.
Our elderly. Our veterans. Our children. The working poor who already stretch every dollar like it’s a lifeline.
I wasn’t hungry growing up, but I remember the struggle.

I watched my family work twice as hard to barely get by. I watched adults skip meals so the kids could eat.
And I learned early that survival in our communities isn’t about luck — it’s about love, creativity, and collective care. So I’ll say this clearly:

We can’t keep waiting on systems that were never designed to save us. It’s time to feed ourselves — body, soul, and community. I’m calling on farmers, gardeners, food producers, and every neighbor who still believes in people over profit: This is the moment to stand up and cover one another. Because while they’re cutting funding, we’re planting seeds.

Here’s how we can move right now:
Adopt-a-Family: Choose one family to bless weekly with groceries, produce, or eggs.

Community Harvest Days: Host free pickup days for seniors, single parents, and unhoused neighbors.
Pantry Partnerships: Connect local gardens, farms, and markets with food banks and churches.

Seed & Soil Drives: Help families start their own gardens by donating soil, seeds, and starter kits.

Pay-What-You-Can Boxes: Offer sliding-scale or “give one, gift one” produce subscriptions.

Community Fridges: Sponsor or stock a fridge in your area with fresh food.

Volunteer & Barter Days: Trade time, skills, and goods — no one left behind.

Grant Writers & Organizers: Start securing funds for community gardens, pantries, and food security programs now.

This isn’t about charity — it’s about justice and responsibility. It’s about covenant — the commitment that says I won’t let my neighbor starve while I have something to share. The government might be cutting aid, but we’re cutting excuses. We are the ones we’ve been waiting for.

If you need help sourcing grants and your group or project is an eligible (501(c)(3), or partnered with one; community-based; addressing food security, gardens, etc)., comment here. I will send you a list of 10 specific grants with deadlines, amounts, eligibility that are currently open and relevant for Mississippi / Memphis / regional communities.

10/25/2025

Maybe it’s just me. Maybe it’s because my social feed has been intentionally curated — full of creators who are positive, spiritual, community-minded, and doing the work that matters. But I can’t help but wonder:
Where are the ones we’ve built our hope around?

We, Black and Brown people, pour millions of dollars into subscriptions, tickets, concerts, and platforms.
We support Tyler Perry films that remind us to persevere. We sing with Beyoncé about freedom and power. We look to Oprah as a voice of wisdom and Denzel as a model of integrity. We shout to gospel artists who lift our spirits when life tries to break us.

Yet when the communities that made them need them most — when food is scarce, when water is unsafe, when hope is low — where are they? Have they used their platforms to build community hubs, to fund gardens, to restore neighborhoods? Do they still see the faces that filled the theaters, downloaded the albums, and kept the lights on? This isn’t about counting pockets. It’s about counting accountability. Because one filmmaker, one athlete, one entertainer, one comedian — four people, with one million each — could feed cities, build centers, or fund freedom.
They wouldn’t even have to speak. Their giving would say enough.

“To whom much is given, much will be required.” — Luke 12:48

The world as we know it is changing fast.
And if we aren’t preparing — stockpiling, saving, planting, and building true community — we’re going to find out the hard way that not receiving benefits won’t be our biggest problem. So maybe this is the time to stop waiting on the already famous and start becoming the faithful. To use our small platforms, our few resources, our local reach to create what we once expected from them. Because the truth is — God is raising a new generation of builders.

Everyday people with eternal purpose.
People who don’t need applause to act,
or a million followers to feed a neighbor.
Maybe the question isn’t “Where are they?”
Maybe God is asking, “Where are you?”

09/23/2025

You don't need to do everything. You just need to do the one thing that moves the needle today.

You're either SOMEBODY who shows up for that one thing... or NOBODY who keeps saying “I'll start tomorrow!” Pick one task and Kill it because talk is cheap but money will buy you land.

09/16/2025

👟 One size don’t fit all.

What works in their hood don’t always work in ours.
That’s why Platform Over Popularity is built on listening first, then moving different.

Real voices. Real needs. Real solutions.
Not cookie-cutter. Not watered down. Not for clout.
For the people. By the people. Period. ✊🏾

09/15/2025

Now that I have your attention lil nasty’s… 😂😂😂

VOLUNTEERS are needed for the next event which will be happening on September 20, 2025 from 6pm to 10pm (or before). If you are interested please inbox Tori Grayer.

09/15/2025

Why Platform Over Popularity?

We chose the name Platform Over Popularity because popularity often decides which issues get the spotlight — and which ones are ignored. While the “popular” voice can shape our city both positively and negatively, it doesn’t always reflect the full truth of community needs.

Our mission is to build a platform where all voices matter — not just the loudest, the trendiest, or the most well-connected. By putting platform over popularity, we create space for the overlooked and underserved, connect people with real solutions, and ensure leaders remain accountable to every community member, not just the most visible ones.

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