Four local organizations — AE Cares/Maydm, Black Girl Magic, Ex-Incarcerated People Organizing (EXPO), and MMSD Madison West High School — have been selected to receive the Tamara D. Grigsby Office of Civil Rights 2025 Partners in Equity (PIE) Racial Equity and Social Justice (RESJ) Grants, Dane County has announced.
“Every person in Dane County deserves the chance to thrive, and that means confronting and undoing the systems that have held too many of our neighbors back. These Partners in Equity grants invest directly in community-led solutions that lift up young people, support families, and advance justice. I’m grateful to each of these organizations for their leadership and for helping build a stronger, more inclusive Dane County,” Dane County Executive Melissa Agard said in a press release.
Grants are intended to address systemic racial inequities in one of the following areas as they relate to criminal justice: health (including pandemic health-related responses), education, employment, and criminal justice.
The 2025 PIE-RESJ grant recipients include (bios courtesy of Dane County):
AE CARES/MAYDM – $20,000
AE Cares, in collaboration with Maydm, aims to address racial disparities in Dane County’s criminal justice system by expanding access to STEM education and wellness support for youth of color. By centering justice-impacted youth and embedding equity into every layer of programming, AE Cares and Maydm aim to disrupt intergenerational cycles of incarceration and exclusion, creating pathways to healing, learning, and opportunity. This program will serve young people in grades 6–12, with intentional outreach to children of incarcerated parents. The program will offer quarterly STEM training cohorts, wellness events that integrate physical activity and mental health support, career advisory sessions, mentorship, and family engagement.
BLACK GIRL MAGIC (BGM) – $8,215
The Black Girl Magic Legacy program supports Black girls at Madison East High School to thrive academically, socially, and emotionally during this critical stage of development. The program provides mentorship, leadership development, and civic engagement opportunities for approximately 60 Black girls in grades nine through twelve. Weekly group sessions create a safe space to explore identity, build academic skills, and prioritize wellness. One-on-one mentorship helps students set goals, monitor progress, and prepare for postsecondary success. Students also participate in leadership and community projects to strengthen their voice and impact.
EX-INCARCERATED PEOPLE ORGANIZING (EXPO) – $15,000
Ex-Incarcerated People Organizing (EXPO) is a peer-led grassroots organization committed to dismantling barriers faced by individuals returning from incarceration. By centering justice-impacted voices and partnering with community, county, and academic partners, EXPO works to reduce recidivism, increase access to services, and improve reentry outcomes. The program offers weekly peer support meetings and individualized sessions for Black, Hispanic, and Indigenous adults returning to their communities, with connections to essential wraparound services such as housing, employment, and health care assistance.
MMSD WEST HIGH SCHOOL – $7,500
Madison Metropolitan School District (MMSD) and West High School will host the Equity Symposium in 2026, serving more than 2,200 students and 200 staff. The symposium expands on equity priorities identified by students and will include workshops on art and social justice, environmental justice, racism/antiracism, disability inclusion, equity in education, equity and the law, civic engagement, gender, sexuality, health equity, mental health equity, housing and food justice, identity, restorative justice, and workshops en español for Spanish-speaking multilingual learners.








