Triangulator

Our news blog

Archives | RSS

Wednesday, February 17, 2010

El Centro Hispano rolls out its Carrboro branch plans

Posted by on Wed, Feb 17, 2010 at 12:14 PM

Durham's El Centro Hispano plans to open its Orange County branch on April 1 in Carrboro Plaza, though they are yet to secure a lease, leaders said in both Spanish and English at the Seymour Center on Tuesday.

The group hopes to bring financial stability, consistent leadership and a successful service and funding model to Carrboro after El Centro Latino closed in November, leaving a hole in translation, job finding, after school and legal services for Spanish speakers.

"There are no guarantees. We are out on a limb," El Centro Hispano Board Chairwoman Susan Denman said. "It’s because we support what Carrboro and Chapel Hill have been doing, and we have faith in the foundation the board has laid."

More than 100 community members, some former volunteers or members of churches that supported El Centro Latino, attended the meeting during which El Centro Hispano outlined its plans for Orange County and pinned for support.

The group, which has been an independent nonprofit since 1997, will remained headquartered in Durham, but will hire at least five people to work in Carrboro. There they will seek to offer a resources office, legal and taxes clinic, tutoring, ESL classes and an HIV prevention program.

They're targeting April to coincide with the arrival of Latino Community Credit Union at the plaza along N.C. 54. The two groups have long worked side-by-side in Durham. They are negotiating to secure the 2,200-square-foot space next to the bank.

The event was held jointly with the board of El Centro Latino, which plans to pass on its membership and volunteer lists and ease the transition. Denman was quick to stress that although El Centro Hispano is launching the new branch with reserve funding, they will need money from local governments.

"Without local support, without local funding, we cannot indefinitely continue to pull funds out of a pot," she said. "There is no pot."

Tags: , , , , ,

Pin It

Comments (0)

Subscribe to this thread:

Add a comment

INDY Week publishes all kinds of comments, but we don't publish everything.

  • Comments that are not contributing to the conversation will be removed.
  • Comments that include ad hominem attacks will also be removed.
  • Please do not copy and paste the full text of a press release.

Permitted HTML:
  • To create paragraphs in your comment, type <p> at the start of a paragraph and </p> at the end of each paragraph.
  • To create bold text, type <b>bolded text</b> (please note the closing tag, </b>).
  • To create italicized text, type <i>italicized text</i> (please note the closing tag, </i>).
  • Proper web addresses will automatically become links.

Latest in Triangulator

Facebook Activity

Twitter Activity

Read indyweek's Tweets

Comments

Thanks for covering this! It's a shame that so many workers in North Carolina risk life and limb to bring …

by Jeremy Sprinkle on New AFL-CIO report evaluates worker health and safety (Triangulator)

Fracking in Pennsylvania, years ago, led to massive water table destruction (based on Halli's special sauce) and about $40,000 per …

by Honz on One N.C. county says "no" to fracking (Triangulator)

Most Read

© 2013 Indy Week • 302 E. Pettigrew St., Suite 300, Durham, NC 27701 • phone 919-286-1972 • fax 919-286-4274
RSS Feeds | Powered by Foundation