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Judson Center Wins $150K Flinn Foundation Grant

December 22, 2025

The Judson Center is launching a new infant mental health program in Oakland County with $150,000 in funding from the Ethel and James Flinn Foundation, distributed as $75,000 annually over two years. The "Our Early Years" pilot program will serve families involved with child welfare services and those experiencing poverty-related trauma, focusing on strengthening caregiver-child relationships for children from birth to age three. This initiative responds to concerning Michigan data showing that 68% of adults and 58% of youth have experienced adverse childhood experiences, with infants under one year representing 11% of child maltreatment victims in 2023.

Who is affected

  • Families with infants and very young children (birth to age 3) involved in the child welfare system in Oakland County
  • Families at risk due to poverty or trauma
  • Parents and caregivers working to repair relationships with their children
  • Children under age 1 (who made up 11% of child maltreatment victims in Michigan in 2023)
  • Judson Center as the implementing organization
  • Lenora Hardy-Foster, President and CEO of Judson Center (award recipient)

What action is being taken

  • Judson Center is launching the "Our Early Years" Infant Mental Health Program pilot in Oakland County
  • The Flinn Foundation is providing $75,000 in 2025 funding (part of a two-year, $150,000 grant)
  • The program is working to help parents and caregivers repair relationships with their children, strengthen emotional and developmental well-being, and improve family stability
  • The Flinn Foundation is awarding 60 grants totaling $3 million across southeast Michigan

Why it matters

  • This pilot program addresses a critical intervention point where early childhood adversity has lifelong health consequences. With 68% of Michigan adults reporting adverse childhood experiences and infants under one representing a disproportionate share of child maltreatment victims, early intervention during the birth-to-three period can prevent long-term harm by supporting caregiver-child relationships when they are most formative. The program targets families at the intersection of child welfare involvement and poverty-related trauma, offering support before gaps widen and when consistent, accessible, respectful care can make the greatest difference in a child's developmental trajectory.

What's next

  • No explicit next steps stated in the article

Read full article from source: Michigan Chronicle