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Search Through Grants for Community Centers in Massachusetts
Find the perfect Grants for Community Centers in Massachusetts on Instrumentl. 200+ Grants for Community Centers in Massachusetts in the United States
200+
Available grants
$43.8M
Total funding amount
$22.5K
Median grant amount
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Barr Foundation: Climate Grants
Barr Foundation
ReTreeUS School and Community Orchards Grant Program
United Charitable
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Town Fair Tire Foundation Grant
Town Fair Tire Foundation Inc
Annual Community Impact Grants program
Fallon Community Health Plan Inc
Amelia Peabody Foundation Grant
Amelia Peabody Foundation
Massachusetts Urban Agriculture Grant Program
Massachusetts Department of Agricultural Resources (MDAR)
Reading Frederick Douglass Together Grant
Massachusetts Foundation for the Humanities (Mass Humanities)
Smith Family Foundation: Small Capital Grants
Richard and Susan Smith Family Foundation
BCBSM Foundation: Catalyst Fund Grant
Blue Cross Blue Shield of Massachusetts Foundation
Community Enrichment Grant
Community Foundation of North Central Massachusetts
EmPower Massachusetts- Implementation Grants (MA)
The Massachusetts Clean Energy Center (MassCEC)
Felicia Rose Grant Program
Cummings Foundation Inc.
Public Art for Spatial Justice Grants
New England Foundation For The Arts
Community Health Grant (Nashoba Valley)
Community Foundation of North Central Massachusetts
Students and Young Adults Career Awareness and Training Grant
The Massachusetts Clean Energy Center (MassCEC)
Summary
Through this Request for Proposals (“RFP”), the Massachusetts Clean Energy Technology Center (“MassCEC”) is offering Students and Young Adults Equity Workforce Career Awareness and Training Grants. The Grants help provide direct funding and technical assistance support to organizations interested in career awareness and training programming focused on supporting students1 and young adults who are part of one or more of the following populations:
- Individuals from Environmental Justice (“EJ”) Neighborhoods or low-income communities;
- Members of federally recognized or state-acknowledged tribes;
- Members of underrepresented communities in the clean energy workforce; and
- Current or former workers from the fossil fuel industry (“Fossil Fuel Workers”).
Capital improvements Grant - Projects to Childcare Centers
Franklin Square House Foundation Inc
Adelaide Breed Bayrd Foundation Grants
Adelaide Breed Bayrd Foundation
Rebecca Pomroy Foundation Grant
Rebecca Pomroy Foundation
Civics Teaching and Learning Grants
Massachusetts Department of Elementary and Secondary Education
Massachusetts Department of Elementary and Secondary Education
The Massachusetts Department of Elementary and Secondary Education provides leadership, oversight, funding, support, and accountability for the Commonwealth's approximately 400 school districts that educate close to 1 million public school children each year. We also oversees programs that serve 20,000 adult learners each year.
Civics Teaching and Learning
The purpose of this competitive grant program is to support teaching and learning related to civics, as required by Chapter 296 of the Acts of 2018 and emphasized in the 2018 History and Social Science Framework.
This grant supports LEAs to develop and/or select curriculum materials, implement professional development, and design other enriching learning experiences intended to further students' civic knowledge, skills and dispositions. LEAs may propose to collaborate with vendors to support this work. Proposals may include interdisciplinary elements or other opportunities for civic learning beyond the history/social science classroom.
In addition, the grant supports implementation of grade 8 and high school civics projects, the hosting of local civics project showcases, participation in the Massachusetts Civics Project Showcases, and other enrichment activities focused on meaningful civic learning.
For details about the civics projects and other civics instructional information, please visit Civics.
This grant is structured as a two-year program. LEAs awarded funding in FY27 (Year 1) and contingent upon available funds and satisfactory progress awardees may apply only for continuation funding in FY28 (Year 2) to support the next phase of their projects. Continuation funding is not guaranteed. Contingent upon available funds, a new cohort of LEAs may be selected through the FY28 competitive RFP process. FY27 awardees will not be eligible to apply under the new FY28 competitive RFP.
Priorities
DESE seeks to fund civics teaching and learning initiatives that exemplify:
- Equity. Grant-funded projects should increase all students' access to high-quality civics education experiences and work to address historical inequities where they exist. In addition, projects should provide students with culturally and linguistically sustaining learning experiences that value and affirm their identities and linguistic resources, center student and community agency, and develop students' critical perspectives. Supports for multilingual learners should be developed in alignment with the 2020 WIDA English Language Development Framework.
- Sustainability. Grant-funded projects should take steps toward long-term enhancements to civics education, including, but not limited to, the development of supportive instructional leadership structures. Investments such as professional development for educators or acquisition of needed instructional materials can provide benefits long past the period of this grant, as opposed to "one-off" activities.
- Civic deeper learning. Grant-funded projects should help students master civic knowledge, skills and dispositions, appropriate to grade-level standards, through creative agency and opportunities to actively "do civics." Civic action should be student-led and meaningful to students as individuals, with relevance to their identities and lived experiences. Civic learning should be an integrated part of the larger curriculum, not isolated experiences, lessons, or units.
Yawkey Foundation: Program and Small Capital Grants - Conservation & Wildlife
Yawkey Foundation
Yawkey Foundation
The story of Tom and Jean Yawkey and their impact on the lives of children and families goes back over eight decades to the commitments they made to the people of Massachusetts, New England, and Georgetown County, South Carolina. The Yawkeys’ love for these communities, and their quiet sense of responsibility for those in need, is captured in the careful steps they took to ensure that their legacy would live on through the work of the Yawkey Foundation. The Yawkeys were perhaps best known for their longtime ownership of the Boston Red Sox. More quietly, but with just as much passion and commitment, Tom and Jean Yawkey were also engaged in an unwavering dedication to those most in need.
Today, the Yawkey Foundation remains as committed as ever to continuing to honor Tom and Jean Yawkey and their commitment to those in need. Having awarded more than $620 million to-date in charitable grants to organizations focused on Health Care, Education, Human Services, Youth and Amateur Athletics, Arts and Culture, and Conservation and Wildlife, the Yawkey Foundation is committed to preserving and sustaining the charitable values of the Yawkeys by investing in impactful nonprofits providing resources, opportunity, and dignity to the vulnerable and underserved.
Program and Small Capital Grants
Program and Small Capital Grants support high-impact, strategic, and responsive nonprofit organizations in delivering their core missions through discrete and timebound projects. Program & Small Capital Grants help address an immediate need that is critical to the organization’s work.
Program and Small Capital Grants may fund a discrete timebound program need, one small project, or a piece of equipment aligned with a nonprofit’s purpose. These grants are extremely competitive, and the Yawkey Foundation will receive many more compelling Initial Proposals than it will be able to fund. Initial Proposals should demonstrate an awareness of and alignment with the Yawkey Foundation’s mission and Areas of Giving. Additionally, the most competitive Initial Proposals will reflect a nonprofit’s strong leadership and proven impact in providing direct services and programs for unmet needs in underserved regions aligned with the Yawkey Foundation’s geographic priority areas, including Gateway Cities in Eastern Massachusetts.
Nonprofits may submit only one Initial Proposal to the Yawkey Foundation during a calendar year, irrespective of the Type of Grant. Organizations that have not been previously funded by the Foundation in recent years are encouraged to submit Initial Proposals for Program & Small Capital Grants to familiarize the Foundation with its work before submitting an Initial Proposal for Strategic Investment or Transformational Capital.
Areas of Giving: Human Services; Youth & Amateur Athletics; Education; Conservation & Wildlife; Arts & Culture; and Health Care.
Conservation & Wildlife
Tom and Jean Yawkey had a deep appreciation for nature and a passionate desire to protect our natural resources. The Yawkeys’ gift of more than 20,000 acres of shorefront land to the South Carolina Department of Natural Resources is their most enduring legacy in conservation.
In 1914, Tom Yawkey’s uncle purchased a small amount of land along the shoreline in Georgetown County, South Carolina. Tom inherited the land from his uncle and went on to purchase additional parcels until the area totaled over 20,000 acres. Upon his death in 1977, Tom bequeathed the land to the State of South Carolina.
Today, the Tom Yawkey Wildlife Center is considered one of the most outstanding grants to wildlife conservation efforts in North America; the world’s longest alligator study started there over 40 years ago and the area remains one of the premier nesting locations for endangered Loggerhead Sea Turtles and is home to hundreds of species of migratory birds. Over the years, the Yawkey Foundation has developed collaborative research partnerships with institutions such as Clemson University, the University of South Carolina, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute, Horry-Georgetown Technical College and many others using the Wildlife Center as a research laboratory for important wildlife conservation efforts.
Quest Diagnostics Foundation: Priority Community Programs
Quest Diagnostics Foundation Inc
EmPower Massachusetts- Innovation and Capacity-Building RFP
The Massachusetts Clean Energy Center (MassCEC)
Mindfulness and Contemplative Christianity Grants
Trust for the Meditation Process
Expand Massachusetts Stories- Open Track
Massachusetts Foundation for the Humanities (Mass Humanities)
Showing 27 of 200+ results.
Sign up to see the full listGrants for Community Centers in Massachusetts Highlights
Top Searched Grants for Community Centers in Massachusetts
Grant Insights : Grants for Community Centers in Massachusetts
Grant Availability
How common are grants in this category?
Common — grants in this category appear regularly across funding sources.
200+ Grants for Community Centers in Massachusetts grants for nonprofits in the United States, from private foundations to corporations seeking to fund grants for nonprofits.
80 Grants for Community Centers in Massachusetts over $25K in average grant size
64 Grants for Community Centers in Massachusetts over $50K in average grant size
53 Grants for Community Centers in Massachusetts supporting general operating expenses
200+ Grants for Community Centers in Massachusetts supporting programs / projects
200+ Grants on Instrumentl focused on Renewable/Sustainable Energy
1,000+ Grants on Instrumentl focused on Workforce Preparation & Job Readiness
Grant Deadline Distribution
Over the past year, when are grant deadlines typically due for grants for Community Centers in Massachusetts?
Most grants are due in the first quarter.
Typical Funding Amounts
What's the typical grant amount funded for Grants for Community Centers in Massachusetts?
Grants are most commonly $22,500.
Average Grant Size
What's the typical amount funded for Massachusetts?
Grants are most commonly $101,164.
Total Number of Grants
What's the total number of grants in Grants for Community Centers in Massachusetts year over year?
In 2024, funders in Massachusetts awarded a total of 44,980 grants.
2022 103,608
2023 102,118
2024 44,980
Top Grant Focus Areas
Among all the Grants for Community Centers in Massachusetts given out in Massachusetts, the most popular focus areas that receive funding are Education, Philanthropy, Voluntarism & Grantmaking Foundations, and Human Services.
1. Education
2. Philanthropy, Voluntarism & Grantmaking Foundations
3. Human Services
Funding Over Time
How is funding for Grants for Community Centers in Massachusetts changing over time?
Funding has increased by -61.90%.
2022 $14,522,602,699
2023
$11,906,472,240
-18.01%
2024
$4,536,858,892
-61.90%
Massachusetts Counties That Receive the Most Funding
How does grant funding vary by county?
Suffolk County, Middlesex County, and Norfolk County receive the most funding.
| County | Total Grant Funding in 2024 |
|---|---|
| Suffolk County | $2,583,720,955 |
| Middlesex County | $615,323,982 |
| Norfolk County | $176,406,206 |
| Essex County | $155,124,532 |
| Worcester County | $126,296,816 |