Baltimore City officials and The Rockefeller Foundation on Thursday announced a program aimed at addressing economic and public health issues spurred by the coronavirus

The Baltimore Health Corps will recruit, train and employ more than 300 Baltimoreans left jobless during the crisis. Health Corps members will be deployed to support contact tracing, public health education outreach, care coordination and social support in the city's most vulnerable neighborhoods.

“The Baltimore Health Corps is first-of-its-kind because it will target hiring individuals who have recently lost their jobs due to the pandemic and live in communities hardest hit by COVID-19 as community health workers, including those without previous healthcare experience,” Mayor Bernard C. "Jack" Young said in a statement.

Young said all Health Corps members will be paid a living wage and receive a stipend for health insurance.

The $12.4 million program is backed in part by a $2 million grant from The Rockefeller Foundation. The foundation is working with the city to recruit other partners. The city has committed $4.5 million in federal coronavirus relief to the program. The city has marshaled more than $2.3 million in funding from other philanthropies and agencies.