This project builds on work that began in 2019, when Bailey Learning and Arts Collective, the UF Levin School of Law, and other community partners offered workshops with a public health intervention model in two traditional neighborhoods to inform residents about heirs property. Facilitated by longtime Pleasant Street resident Terri Bailey, the workshop included storytelling, printed information, and talks by UF faculty and heirs property lawyers, providing interested property owners with local legal aid service. This grant will expand the workshops to other neighborhoods and enable the inclusion of more cultural arts content.