Resources

Access to behavioral health services is critical for lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer (LGBTQ) individuals in the United States. Although our country has made great strides to protect the rights of LGBTQ people in the past few decades, many LGBTQ individuals continue to experience the negative impact of societal bigotry and discrimination.

Unfortunately, the discrimination and stigma faced by LGBTQ people places them at a higher risk for behavioral health conditions, including mental health conditions and substance use Disorders (SUDs), than non-LGBTQ people. Yet too often, seeking health care services, including treatment for their behavioral health conditions, puts LGBTQ people at risk of experiencing discrimination or stigma, which can exacerbate their behavioral health conditions

The link below provides valuable resources to support our LGTBQ community at CSU.

On June 5, 1988, a small group of gay and lesbian Catholics celebrated their first mass as a newly organized ministry of the Archdiocese of Chicago, especially created to reach out to Chicago's LGBT community. The new ministry was named the Archdiocesan Gay and Lesbian Outreach of Chicago, and its acronym - AGLO - was no coincidence. For over 25 years, AGLOChicago has labored to reflect the light of Christ's love, offering its dazzling promise to people long forced to live in shadows, not wholly unlike the first Christians.

Center On Halsted: is the Midwest's most comprehensive community center dedicated to advancing community and securing the health and well-being of the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender and Queer (LGBTQ) people of Chicagoland. More than 1,000 community members visit the Center every day, located in the heart of Chicago's Lakeview Neighborhood. More Info >>

Howard Brown Health: exists to eliminate the disparities in healthcare experienced by lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people through research, education and the provision of services that promote health and wellness. It is now one of the nation's largest lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer (LGBTQ) organizations serving more than 40,000 adults and youth in its diverse health and social service delivery system focused around seven major programmatic divisions: primary medical care, behavioral health, research, HIV/STI prevention, youth services, elder services, and community initiatives.

Howard Brown serves men, women, trans and gender non-conforming folks, infants, youth, and children through a multi-site operation based in Chicago. This includes a main health and research center in the Uptown neighborhood, Howard Brown Health Sheridan, Howard Brown Health Halsted in Lakeview, Howard Brown Health Clark in Rogers Park, Howard Brown Health 63rd Street in Englewood, Howard Brown Health 55th Street in Hyde Park, Howard Brown Health at Thresholds South in Back of the Yards, Howard Brown Health at La Casa Norte in Humboldt Park, the Broadway Youth Center, and three Brown Elephant resale shops in Chicago (Lakeview and Andersonville neighborhoods) and Oak Park. More Info  >>

Broadway Youth Center: is a program of Howard Brown Health Center and [its] community partners, offering comprehensive services to youth, ages 12-24 including a safe space for young people experiencing homelessness. The mission of BYC is to make life healthier and happier for young people (12-24) who are transgender, queer, lesbian, bisexual, gay, and especially young people who do not have stable housing. BYC sees anyone, regardless of ability to pay. BYC provides basic needs assistance, resource advocacy, mental wellness supports, and education/vocational services. We consider ourselves a one-stop shop and try to meet as many needs as possible for the people that we serve.

Through its basic needs program, the BYC offers homeless youth a safe place to access basic needs, such as food, hygiene supplies, clothing, laundry, and showers. In addition to drop-in services, youth are also able to access a full range of free services and programs ranging from HIV/STI testing and treatment, acute health care services, GED classes, case management, counseling services and social and support groups. We are serving people from three locations. Please call 773.299.7600. More Info >>

Brave Space Alliance: is the first Black-led, trans-led LGBTQ+ Center located on the South Side of Chicago, dedicated to creating and providing affirming, culturally competent, for-us by-us resources, programming, and services for LGBTQ+ individuals on the South and West sides of the city. We strive to empower, embolden, and educate each other through mutual aid, knowledge-sharing, and the creation of community-sourced resources as we build toward the liberation of all oppressed peoples. More Info >>

Chicago House: Chicago House empowers persons living with or vulnerable to HIV/AIDS to lead healthy and dignified lives through housing and compassionate, client-centered support services. Annually, we serve more than 2,000 individuals in Chicago across four mission-critical pillars of housing, health, employment support, and the TransLife Care program. In January 2020. Chicago House provides permanent, community-based housing, supportive services, and prevention outreach to individuals and families struggling with HIV and AIDS. Many come to [Chicago House] with the added burdens of poverty, homelessness, substance abuse, and mental illness, as well as the need for job skills and training. Chicago House's innovative programs are designed to meet the unique needs of these individuals and families including many in the lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) community as well as minority communities who struggle with health and income disparities. More Info >>

Lambda Legal Illinois: Founded in 1973, Lambda Legal is the oldest and largest national legal organization whose mission is to achieve full recognition of the civil rights of lesbians, gay men, bisexuals, transgender people and everyone living with HIV through impact litigation, education and public policy work. As a 501(c)3 nonprofit organization, we do not charge our clients for legal representation or advocacy, and we receive no government funding.

We select cases that will have the greatest impact in protecting and advancing the rights of LGBT people and those with HIV. Education: We lead high-impact public education campaigns to help people exercise the rights they have and to build public support for equality. Public Policy: We advocate for public policy at the local, state and federal levels to improve the lives of LGBT people, people affected by HIV, and their families and allies. More Info >>

LGBT Chamber of Commerce of Illinois:Founded in 1973, Lambda Legal is the oldest and largest national legal organization whose mission is to achieve full recognition of the civil rights of lesbians, gay men, bisexuals, transgender people and everyone living with HIV through impact litigation, education and public policy work. As a 501(c)3 nonprofit organization, we do not charge our clients for legal representation or advocacy, and we receive no government funding.

We select cases that will have the greatest impact in protecting and advancing the rights of LGBT people and those with HIV. Education: We lead high-impact public education campaigns to help people exercise the rights they have and to build public support for equality. Public Policy: We advocate for public policy at the local, state and federal levels to improve the lives of LGBT people, people affected by HIV, and their families and allies. More Info >>

The Night Ministry-The Crib: The Night Ministry's overnight youth shelter, The Crib, first opened in January 2011 as a 4-month pilot program funded by the City of Chicago...The Crib has grown substantially in its first two seasons, but continues to be an emergency overnight space for young people ages 18-24 to get a hot meal, sleep, do yoga, dance, rest, and be safe. The space is welcoming to people of all genders and sexual orientations and is recognized for its LGBTQ-competent services. The Crib is open seven nights a week from 9 p.m. until 9 a.m. and can accommodate 20 youth. The Crib is an important addition to Chicago's efforts to care for youth who are on the streets, because there are only about 230 other shelter beds for youth in Chicago, while an estimated 2,000 young people experience homelessness every night. There are at least two staff members awake and on duty at all times. Staff also provide the youth with links to daytime supportive services. The Night Ministry compassionately provides housing, health care, outreach, spiritual care, and social services to adults and youth who struggle with homelessness, poverty, and loneliness. We accept individuals as they are and offer support as they seek to improve their lives. More Info >>

Project Fierce: Project Fierce Chicago seeks to create affirming transitional housing for LGTBQIA+ youth in Chicago that is responsive to the needs of young people. By mobilizing our communities, we provide pathways to independence. We envision a future where all youth have access to safe and affirming housing and the support and opportunities to achieve their goals. We believe in the power of collective action and community accountability. When youth thrive, communities thrive. More Info >>

Transformative Justice Law Project of Illinois: As a client-centered organization, we focus on meeting the needs of our clients as a priority over broad policy or reform work. We build long-term relationships and investments in our clients and meet them where they are at with flexibility in our structure and priorities. Throughout our work, we center our values on care-based principles that work to dismantle the oppressive structures of the state. These values can be summed up into three different commitments that guide every aspect of our work: prison abolition, gender self-determination, and transformative justice.More Info >>

Prison Abolition: is a movement to create lasting alternatives to punishment-based institutions such as prisons, jails, juvenile, immigrant, and military detention centers to actualize community safety. Instead of consenting to this false and fear-based need for prisons, we as abolitionists invest our energy in community empowerment, community-led education, radical activism, transformative justice, and liberation as necessary alternatives to the prison system and as methods to make prisons obsolete.

Gender Self-Determination: We prioritize the needs of transgender people because we believe that transphobia is inherent in almost all legal and social services available in the Chicago area and throughout Illinois, especially the criminal legal system itself. Gender self-determination necessarily includes access to and control over healthcare, holistic mental and emotional support, fashion and self-expression, gender-affirming housing, education, bathrooms, and social services, freedom from violence, harassment, and incarceration, and all the tools we need to be fabulous, empowered and safe in how we live in our genders.

Transformative Justice: Through community-based movements, transformative justice seeks to resist state- run responses to violence (such as the police state and systems of punishment, detention, and incarceration) and instead promotes support, compassion, dialogue and community building. In this way, reliance on violent and oppressive State level systems is transformed and replaced with community empowerment.

Provider Name Services Provided Address Phone
Child Care Centers (60619)
Sweet p daycare 6 weeks - 12 years old 725 E 92nd St. 331-725-7946
daycare 2-6 years old 1121 E 93rd St. 708-613-7210
Hayes home daycare incopacitated 707 E 93rd St. 773-723-0628
Little blessing and beyond daycare 6 weeks-5 years old 451 E 91st St. n/a
Leaps of learning center 2-6 years old 9011 S Cottage Grove Ave. 773-891-4910
Little ones learning home daycare 2-6years old 9524 S Burnside Ave. 773-457-6514
Britneys busy bodies daycare 6 weeks-6 years old 9301 S King drive 773-291-0078
Baby academy 6 weeks-12 years old 8607 S Cottage Grove Ave. 773-994-4400
Chicago preschool academy 2-6 years old 532 E 87th St. 773-488-4495
Nik naks daycare 6 weeks-12 years 9017 S. Dearborn Ave. 773-444-8011
4 ever young daycare 6 weeks-12 years old 441 E 79th St 773-966-6872
Tinker bell academy 6 weeks-12 years old 8236 S Cottage Grove Ave. 773-633-2682
New age prepartory academy 6 weeks-12 years old 8940 S Cottage Grove Ave. 773-783-2431
Leighs place daycare center 2-6 years old 8110 S Cottage Grove Ave. 800-903-0636
Giant leaps learning center 2-6 years old 8855 S State St. 773-994-2080
Provider Name Services Provided Address Phone
Child Care Centers(60643)
Little Genius Community daycare center 2-12 years old 1000 W 103rd St. 773-629-8003
Serendipty Childcare Center 6 weeks-12 years old 1300 W 99th St. 773-238-5900
New beginnings family daycare 6 weeks-6 years old 10906 S Morgan St. 312-978-0025
Licensed Childcare Jaylens Playroom 6 weeks-12 years old 9633 S Beverly Blvd. 872-731-3180
Gift 4 Kids Daycare 6 weeks-5 years old 1305 W 111th St. 773-941-5599
Best Start Daycare 6 weeks-12 years old 1352 W 99th St. 773-233-9420
West Beverly kinder care 6 weeks-12 years old 10126 S Western Ave. 872-355-9051
Leaning Place 6 weeks-6 years old 1500 W 119th St 773-995-5434
Inspiration Academy 7-13 years old 10630 S Western Ave. 773-238-4900
Learn Together Grow Together 2-6 years old 1126 W 99th St. 773-568-4769
Flo's Group home daycare 2-6 years old 10132 S May St. 773-220-9993
Rush home daycare 2-4 years old 10419 S Peoria St. 708-336-9680
Jolly Trolley Academy 6 weeks-6 years old 9522 24 S Vincennes Ave. n/a
Just for kids 2-6 years old 11024 S Bell Ave. 773-779-9070
Madeline Loving Touch 6 weeks-12 years old 1169 W 106th St. 312-285-0514
Nicos Playhouse 5-12 years old 1855 W 95th St. 773-238-0117
Chidren Center 6 weeks-12 years old 12803 S Halsted St. 773-264-5171
Sweetland Home Daycare 2-6 years old 1005 Vermont Ave. 773-264-2852
Provider Name Services Provided Address Phone
Child Care Centers(60621)
Little Angles Family daycare 2-6 years old 6702 S Emerald Ave. 773-488-8777
Children Learn & Play Daycare 2-12 years old 6512 S Halsted Ave. 773-966-7162
Beteur 1 Childcare 2-5 years old 7045 S Halsted St. 773-962-9960
King's Kiddie Kingdom 6 weeks-6 years old 815 E 74th St. 773-488-6010
Kennedy King College Child Development Center 2-5 years old 710 W 65th St 773-602-5481
Lloyd's Lollipop Land Daycare 6 weeks-12 years old 7016 S Emerald Ave. 773-874-8536
Kids Are US Learning Center 6 weeks-7 years old 7453 S Vincennes Ave. 773-846-5437
Happy Rainbow Hearts Childcare 6 weeks-12 years old 656 W 60th St. 773-855-8688
Building Blocks Learning Academy 6 weeks-12 years old 1120 W 69th St. 773-488-2222
Creative House of Learning License DAY CARE 2-6 years old 5525 S Lasalle St. 312-330-0546
Grace Daycare Home 3 months-12 years old 7245 S May St. 888-332-9364
Kiddies Daycare 2-6 years old 6038 S Throop St. 855-202-9885
The Next Generation Daycare Center 6 weeks-12 years old 21 E 59th St. 773-947-9920
Daycare Co 1-3 years old 1121 E 93rd St. 718-603-7120

College is an exciting time of independence, exploring opportunities, meeting new friends, and trying new things.  Some of these experiences may include making decisions about alcohol and drugs.  Upon entering college, some students have never tried alcohol or drugs.  Other students may have experimented or used often prior to college.

Use of alcohol and drugs affects most college students, even if you have decided not to use personally, and it is important to have the information and support necessary to navigate this aspect of college life.

If alcohol or drugs becomes a problem, please use the resources available to you. http://www.rehab.com/illinois

 

College Consenssus

Guide To Overcoming Substance Abuse In College

Introduction: Emergency Assistance is intended to assist students who face unexpected costs that impede their ability to continue and succeed academically and personally while enrolled at Chicago State University. If you are experiencing difficulty paying for time-sensitive expenses, including housing/rent, food, transportation, utilities, medical care, childcare, books, school fees, or other basic necessities, please fill out the following form, and include a brief summary of your circumstances. Currently enrolled students may be eligible for some form of assistance. Student Basic Need Emergency Request >>

Together All

The Counseling Center supports the University's vision "to embrace, engage, educate, enlighten, and empower" the students of Chicago State University. To advance the University's mission, the primary focus of Chicago State University's Counseling Center is to provide comprehensive behavioral health services to our students. As a result, we are pleased to announce a new partnership with Togetherall, which was made possible through the Early Action Mental Health Act and the Illinois Board of Higher Education.