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Search Through Cycling Grants in Alaska in the U.S.
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Semnani Family Foundation Grants
Semnani Family Foundation
Tony Robbins Foundation Grant
Anthony Robbins Foundation (The Tony Robbins Foundation)
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National Housing Innovation Grant (Housing Affordability Breakthrough Challenge)
Enterprise Community Partners Inc
Enterprise Community Partners
Enterprise Community Partners is a national nonprofit that exists to make a good home possible for the millions of families without one. Home is where life happens, where plans are made, and futures begin. It is the foundation for dignity, health, education, wealth, and community. Yet rents keep going up, paychecks don’t keep pace, and good homes in strong neighborhoods are increasingly out of reach.
The system doesn’t work. It must be changed, and it must be changed by us.
Enterprise has the breadth, scale, and expertise to do it. We support community development organizations on the ground. We aggregate and invest billions to improve housing and strengthen communities across the U.S. We advance housing policy at every level of government. We build and manage communities ourselves. Everything we do is informed by the residents we serve.
Together with our partners, we focus on the greatest need — the massive shortage of affordable rental homes — to achieve three goals:
- Increase the supply of affordable homes
- Advance racial equity after decades of systematic racism in housing
- Support residents and strengthen communities to be resilient to the unpredictable, and make upward mobility possible
Since 1982, we have invested $92.0 billion and created 1.1 million homes across all 50 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, and the U.S. Virgin Islands. We do all this to make home and community places of pride, power, and belonging.
National Housing Innovation Grant Competition
Home is foundational. It’s where we plant roots, raise and care for our families, and build community bonds. Yet in every corner of the country, millions of people of all ages and backgrounds need a home they can afford.
Wells Fargo is meeting this moment with a powerful grant opportunity. Together with Enterprise, Wells Fargo has launched the third iteration of the Housing Affordability Breakthrough Challenge. The 2026 cycle of the housing innovation competition will identify and propel proven, ready-to-scale solutions that transform current practices and increase housing choice and access.
Eligible applicants will compete for five individual grants of $2 million to advance their innovation and drive meaningful, systems-level change in the housing and adjacent industries. Winners will gain access to mentorship and coaching from industry leaders and experts and join a powerful network of Breakthrough Challenge innovators.
Focus Areas
This third cycle of the Housing Affordability Breakthrough Challenge aims to meet the nation’s affordable housing challenges across all types of communities: Native, rural, suburban, tribal, and urban.
Proposals must encompass one or more of three focus areas:
- Design and Construction
- Finance
- Service Delivery and Programs
Applicants will be asked to show how their proof of concept or pilot program has achieved clear outcomes and success, and provide a clear pathway to expanding the innovation’s reach and impact
Round 1: Criteria and Scoring
Your innovation must meet the criteria below to advance to the official scoring stage.
Type of Community
Innovations can serve all types of communities:
- Rural
- Urban
- Suburban
- Tribal
Location
Priority scoring will be given to applications from entities that are based in – or whose innovations are designed for – one or more of these 28 states, plus D.C.:
- Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Florida, Georgia, Idaho, Illinois, Iowa, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Montana, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, North Dakota, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Virginia, Washington, Washington D.C.
Affordability
Innovations must serve residents at these income levels:
- Rental: 80% AMI or below
- Homeownership: 120% AMI or below
- Workforce housing: 120% AMI or below
Cowles Charitable Trust Grant
Cowles Charitable Trust
Jessica Stevens Community Foundation: Healthy Communities Grant
The Alaska Community Foundation
Economic and Community Vitality Proposals
The Avista Foundation
McMillen Foundation Grants Program
The Robert B Mcmillen Foundation
Foster Foundation Grant
Foster Foundation
RF: Collection Management Fund Grant
Rasmuson Foundation
Alaska Arts Reporting Initiative Grant
The Alaska Community Foundation
Pride Foundation Community Grants Program
Pride Foundation
Cordova Community Foundation Competitive Grant
The Alaska Community Foundation
Alaska Clean Water Actions (ACWA) Grants
Alaska Department of Environmental Conservation
Dudley T. Dougherty Foundation Grant
Dudley T Dougherty Foundation Inc
Community Services Block Grant (CSBG)
Alaska Department of Commerce, Community, and Economic Development
Community Development Block Grants - Alaska
Alaska Department of Commerce, Community, and Economic Development
Dr. Scholl Foundation Grants
Dr Scholl Foundation
Health and Human Service Proposals
The Avista Foundation
Recordings at Risk Grant
Council on Library and Information Resources (CLIR)
Rural Health Transformation Program (RHTP)
The Alaska Community Foundation
Alaska Community Foundation
The Alaska Community Foundation connects people who care to the causes that make a difference and matter most to them. We encourage and nurture philanthropy through building and managing permanent endowments, convening stakeholders, working with partners to strengthen Alaskan communities, and providing donors with flexible giving options that are strategic to their philanthropic objectives. ACF also manages the Pick.Click.Give. program.
Mission: Inspiring the spirit of giving and connecting people, organizations, and causes to strengthen Alaska’s communities now and forever.
The Alaska Community Foundation runs competitive grant cycles throughout the year that are open to eligible local nonprofits and other organizations serving the public good.
Rural Health Transformation Program (RHTP)
The Rural Health Transformation Program (RHTP) is a five-year initiative focused on strengthening rural communities by improving healthcare access, quality, and outcomes by transforming the healthcare delivery ecosystem. Through innovative system-wide change, the RHTP invests in the rural healthcare delivery ecosystem for future generation.
Alaska’s RHTP will advance statewide health system transformation by funding projects that expand access to care, improve health outcomes, strengthen workforce capacity, modernize technology, and advance financially sustainable health care payment models.
Funding will support community-based and system-level projects aimed at improving access, workforce capacity, and care delivery statewide. The program is intentionally structured to promote fair access, a range of approaches, and geographic balance, ensuring that organizations across Alaska, regardless of size, location, or prior funding experience, can participate meaningfully.
The program is administered at the federal level by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) and led at the state level by the Alaska Department of Health. The Department of Health serves as the lead for program design, policy direction, funding decisions, and overall stewardship of the initiative.
To move resources to grantees and partners quickly and effectively, the Alaska Community Foundation (ACF) is managing the grant process, facilitating grant review, and providing technical assistance to RHTP grantees.
Program Priorities
RHTP funding supports projects aligned with Alaska’s six RHTP initiatives. A detailed description of the initiatives and potential uses of funds can be found on Alaska’s Department of Health RHTP webpage.
- Healthy Beginnings: strengthens maternal and child health as a foundation for healthy families.
- Health Care Access: expands and sustains essential primary, behavioral, oral, specialty, emergency, home and community-based and post-acute care health services across Alaska’s rural communities.
- Healthy Communities: invests in enhancing access to preventive and primary care services that enable early chronic disease management, expanding the use of consumer-facing digital tools and population health clinical infrastructure, and promoting healthy lifestyles with culturally appropriate community education.
- Pay for Value: Fiscal Sustainability: incentivizes a shift from traditional volume-based reimbursement models to build the long-term financial stability of rural providers through voluntary innovative care and payment models that increase care coordination, lower costs and improve health outcomes.
- Strengthen Workforce: builds a resilient rural health care workforce through pipeline, recruitment, training and retention strategies, alongside wraparound housing and child care supports to help providers remain in rural communities.
- Spark Technology and Innovation: harnesses data and technology to expand the use of consumer wearables and digital devices, enhance telehealth, foster appropriate use of AI, strengthen cybersecurity, facilitate data sharing and system interoperability, and test new delivery modalities using emerging technologies.
RHTP Grant Opportunities
Recognizing the interconnected nature of these priorities, Alaska’s RHTP includes four funding pathways:
- Readiness Grants – early-stage support to address foundational capacity gaps, including planning, feasibility, partnership development, and community engagement.
- Planning Grants - investments to support structured planning and design for clearly defined health system interventions.
- Implementation Grants – will fund projects that are fully prepared to execute and deliver high-impact work with demonstrated feasibility.
- Future Targeted Innovation Grants - which will enable the Department of Health to advance fully developed, high-impact projects. Funding opportunities through this pathway are expected to occur at a later date.
Native Food Security Grant
First Nations Development Institute
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Grant Insights : Grant Funding Trends in Alaska
Average Grant Size
What's the typical amount funded for Alaska?
Grants are most commonly $80,111.
Total Number of Grants
What's the total number of grants in Cycling Grants in Alaska year over year?
In 2024, funders in Alaska awarded a total of 2,983 grants.
2022 6,793
2023 7,135
2024 2,983
Top Grant Focus Areas
Among all the Cycling Grants in Alaska given out in Alaska, the most popular focus areas that receive funding are Education, Human Services, and Community Improvement & Capacity Building.
1. Education
2. Human Services
3. Community Improvement & Capacity Building
Funding Over Time
How is funding for Cycling Grants in Alaska changing over time?
Funding has increased by -45.52%.
2022 $443,767,296
2023
$438,318,510
-1.23%
2024
$238,796,085
-45.52%
Alaska Counties That Receive the Most Funding
How does grant funding vary by county?
Anchorage Municipality, Kenai Peninsula Borough, and Fairbanks North Star Borough receive the most funding.
| County | Total Grant Funding in 2024 |
|---|---|
| Anchorage Municipality | $93,502,608 |
| Kenai Peninsula Borough | $61,174,776 |
| Fairbanks North Star Borough | $51,333,238 |
| Matanuska Susitna Borough | $49,984,065 |
| Nome Census Area | $21,711,777 |