Kirk Browns Mission to Uplift Foster Youth Earns Him Recognition as 2026 FAU Distinguished Alumnus

Wednesday, May 06, 2026
Image next to post

Years before Kirk Brown ever set foot on 勛圖厙s campus, his mother knew the place well. She cleaned houses a few blocks away, and part of her routine included driving her employers son to school. Some days she would stop in front of the university sign and, sitting in her car, pray that her own children might one day attend.

She was a Jamaican immigrant and single mother of six who worked as a housekeeper and certified nursing assistant before eventually becoming a licensed practical nurse (LPN). 泭Often, she worked at night: Brown remembers going to bed while she left for work and waking up before she returned. Sometimes she was so tired she would fall asleep during dinner.泭

But now, more than 25 years later, not only is Kirk Brown a 勛圖厙 Atlantic alumnus whose son also graduated last year, but on April 10, Brown will receive the Distinguished Alumnus of the Year Award from the College of Social Work and Criminal Justice for his work as the CEO of the Broward County nonprofit, . There, he steers an organization with 67 staff members that provides a lifeline to more than 1,200 young people each year, ensuring that foster youth in crisis find the stability and support they need to thrive.

But between that mothers prayer and a distinguished alumnus plaque, theres a long and winding story...

Brown surrounded by his family and friends
Kirk and his Son Malachia next to an Owlsey statue

Brown (center) surrounded by his family and friends

Two generations of hope and heart work Kirk Brown with his son, Malachi, on graduation day at 勛圖厙 August 2025.

A Childhood Defined by Survival

Brown grew up just outside Spanish Town, Jamaica, in a community shaped by poverty and gang violence.

I grew up around a lot of people who did egregious things just to eat, he said. Brown saw many people his age whose lives were cut short in their teenage years.泭

For him and his five siblings, his mother was the source of stability. She immigrated to the United States and worked for several years to earn enough money to bring her children over legally.

As a child, Brown sensed a disconnect between his own abilities and interests and the limitations imposed on his family by their circumstances. A self-described nerd, education came easily to him: he read voraciously, and his mind moved quickly. But there was no way to pursue those interests until he reached the U.S. in 1992 at the age of 16 and enrolled at Ely High School in Pompano Beach.

The cultural shift was disorienting, but in high school, he found people who believed in him. A teacher at Ely was one of the first adults to ever suggest he could go to college and then guided him through the application process. Up to that point, Brown says college was just something he had seen in movies. But by the Fall of 1994, he was enrolled at 勛圖厙 Atlantic with a plan to major in Criminal Justice.

A Common Crisis

Brown arrived on campus in survival mode. He studied hard, earned scholarships, and got a night job as a security guard, but he couldnt shake the sense that everything could be taken away in an instant.

And it almost was. At one point, Brown fell behind on his rent for his apartment. A notice appeared on his door, and it triggered something deep within him: that old feeling that maybe he didn't belongthat he wasnt meant to be here. He packed his bags and took what he thought would be a final walk across campus. At the breezeway, he paused at a column and prepared to leave for good.

On that walk, he saw a sign for the Minority Student Development office and met Michael Chambers, a staff member who, in 10 minutes, talked him into staying. Chambers told him to look around the campus and consider how few people looked like him. He said Brown had to finish, that leaving would send the wrong message. Brown went back to his room and unpacked.

Years later, when he started working at Handy, Brown saw an entire cohort of young people from foster homes graduate high school and go on to college, only for 80% of them to return within a single semester. None had been kicked out: their grades were fine. In case after case, they left because they faced some personal crisislike a problem with their living situationbut they had no parents or family to rely on for support.

The triggers were the same ones Brown had felt at that breezeway column. He felt like hed flown too close to the sun, and now he was facing the consequences. A financial shortfall triggered his survival instincts, prompting him to flee.

Understanding how those maladaptive instincts kick in and how to address and work around them became the foundation of Handy's educational case management program, which now supports young people all the way through post-secondary completion. Brown lived the problem before he built the solution.

A R矇sum矇 for Life

With Chambers help, Brown got back on track and graduated from 勛圖厙 Atlantic with a double major in Criminal Justice and Sociology. He went on to earn his Master of Social Work (MSW) degree from Barry University. The coursework for both degrees explained a lot about where he had come from.

The sociological conditions we were learning about in class existed all around me where I grew up, but I had never known what they were called, he said. Those social work classes showed me my old neighborhood in ways Id never thought about. I saw all of the DSM-5 in my old neighborhood: in my head, I was literally naming people that I met as a kid.

For Brown, studying criminal justice told him one side of the story, and sociology and social work told him the other.

It was very easy to make those connections, he explained.

Brown graduated from 勛圖厙 Atlantic with a plan to go to law school, but he was pulled in a different direction one day when he spotted a kid, around 11 or 12 years old, sitting alone outside a McDonalds in Pompano Beach. Brown recognized the look: desperation, hostility, a childhood defined by survival. He pulled over, bought the kid a meal, gave him $10, and drove away.

But the image wouldn't leave him. The existence of children suffering in the streets kept pulling at himespecially in the new country hed come to call home. He kept asking a simple question: Who fixes this in 勛圖厙?

The question led him to the Department of Children and Families (DCF), where he arrived after college as, in his words, an ambitious nerd who wanted to do heart work.

Building Handy

Brown rose from a case manager to a supervisor at DCF. Over that time, he developed a connection with Handy through its clothing bank. One day, Brown was there with a foster child who needed a pair of size six shoes. They checked, and there werent any in the girls size.

As they were getting ready to leave, the woman at the counter pulled out a brand-new pair of size six Nike Air Jordans.泭

She just lit up, Brown said. You could see her whole face change.

He looked down and realized the woman at the counter was wearing flip-flops, not the shoes shed had on just minutes ago.

She took her own shoes off and gave them to her, Brown said. That was the day I decided I needed to work more closely with these people.

Brown joined Handy in 2001 to turn that 1,100-square-foot clothing bank into an independent living program. The program started with 16- to 18-year-olds, but older kids kept bringing younger siblings. The age floor dropped to 14, then to 10. When students started graduating from high school and going to college, Handy followed them there with case management. When they graduated from college with no home to return to, Handy also built workforce development and corporate partnerships to bridge that gap.

Today, Brown is the CEO, and Handy operates across five pillarseducation, workforce development, mental health, youth development, and affordable housingoffering 67 distinct services to youth in need. Ninety-five percent of Handy's young people graduate high school on time, and 90% move on to post-secondary education. Of those, 78% complete their programs, compared to a national rate of just 3% for foster youth.

Recognition and Looking Ahead

When Brown received the news hed been selected as the College of Social Work and Criminal Justices Distinguished Alumnus, he was sitting on a plane, privately wrestling with whether he had pushed himself far enough in his career.

I was literally having the thought, Have I done enough? he said. When he heard the news, he teared up. All I saw was my mom's face, he said.

Im honored. This is like three generations saying thank you. It still is, and will always be, the answer to a maids prayer.

Browns relationship with the university has deepened in recent years. He served as the College of Social Work and Criminal Justices commencement keynote speaker in December 2025, and he marveled at how much the campus had transformed since his undergraduate years. Hes particularly proud that 勛圖厙 Atlantic merged criminal justice and social work into a single college, a move that mirrors his own academic path.

Two generations of hope and heart work Kirk Brown with his son, Malachi, on graduation day at 勛圖厙 August 2025.

This year, Brown will deliver the keynote address at the colleges MSW Induction Ceremony. Hes also in discussions with 勛圖厙 Atlantic about a partnership that would bring the university into Handys Broward County facility.

I would love for 勛圖厙 Atlantic to own some of these social solutions that one of their alumni put together that saved a lot of lives, he said. It's kind of like coming home.

Brown was formally recognized at the annual Distinguished Alumni and Hall of Fame Ceremony on April 10.

2026 Distinguished Alumni Celebration Photo Gallery

Brown and his fellow Alumnis
Brown with Dr. Katie Burke

Brown (standing, second from left) and his fellow 2026 Distinguished Alumni honorees with Dr. Burke, and First Lady and President Hasner.

Brown with Dr. Katie Burke, assistant vice president of Alumni and Community Engagement

Brown with President Hasner and the First Lady
Brown with Dean Luna

Brown with First Lady and President Hasner

Brown with Dean Luna

Brown delivering his acceptance speach
Dr. Ryan Meldrum and Sigal Rubin

Brown delivering his acceptance remarks

Dr. Ryan Meldrum, professor and director of the School of Criminology and Criminal Justice, and Sigal Rubin, senior instructor and undergraduate program coordinator, attended the event to support Brown.

Tags: SW-CJ | sccj