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Auto Club Group Foundation Grants
The Auto Club Group Foundation
Capacity-Building Mini-Grant Opportunity
Colorado Springs Health Foundation
Carbon Offset Projects Grant
Colorado Carbon Fund
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CSHF Grants - Capacity-Building Opportunity
Colorado Springs Health Foundation
DanPaul Foundation Grants
The Dan Paul Foundation
Global Impact Cash Grants
Cisco Systems Foundation
Hearst Foundation: Social Service Grant
William Randolph Hearst Foundation
Honda’s Community Event Sponsorship
American Honda Motor Co., Inc.
Roche Corporate Donations and Philanthropy (CDP)
La Roche, Inc.
Skill Advance Colorado Job Training Grant
Colorado Office of Economic Development & International Trade
About Us
Next50 is a private, national foundation based in Denver, Colorado. Since 2016, Next50 has been working toward creating a world that values aging.
The mission of Next50 shall be to promote independence and dignity for the aging population, to include the needs of low and moderate income persons encompassing individuals with physical, cognitive and/or behavioral disabilities, by encouraging and supporting innovative, affordable and coordinated services and initiatives.
Ways we Support Affordable Aging
At Next50, we believe in maximizing our impact by deploying our capital across a range of diverse investment tools and strategies – a polycapital approach.
Next50’s philanthropic approach blends responsive and proactive strategies to drive meaningful, lasting change across our priority areas. By actively engaging with the communities we serve, we gain critical insights that allow us to bridge gaps, anticipate challenges, and amplify impact.
Through polycapital, we leverage a full spectrum of financial and non-financial tools – including grants, investments, policy, advocacy, and community engagement – because creating a world that values aging requires a multifaceted and adaptive strategy.
Sudden and Urgent Need (SUN)
Providing small, Colorado-based organizations serving marginalized older adults with one-time funding to address sudden and urgent needs.
SUN funding is available for efforts such as:
- An organization providing mobile technology training for low-income older adults in a rural area has an unexpected issue that has arisen with their mobile training vehicle and needs a replacement part to be able to continue providing services.
- A small organization providing a financial boot-straps course for low-income older adults has a water leak in their building and must shut down classes until the leak is fixed.
- A small organization serving older adults in rural Colorado receives unexpected notice that its lease will not be renewed, requiring sudden legal and moving expenses to secure new space and maintain operations without disruption.
Sudden & Urgent need
The organization must demonstrate that their need is unbudgeted, unforeseen, time-sensitive, and significantly interferes with their ability to serve older adults and/or their caregivers or provides an immediate opportunity to enhance services. The request must be for an expense that is a one-time need and is not a part of the organization’s general operating or ongoing expenses.
Improving economic well-being for older adults
Applicants must demonstrate how the work of their organization contributes to the economic well-being of the older adults they serve.
Alignment with priority areas
Applicants should be able to briefly describe how their work with older adults aligns with one or more of Next50’s priority areas – Ending Ageism, Advancing Digital Equity, and Supporting Aging in Place
Population served
Requesting organizations must demonstrate a current focus on serving marginalized populations aged 50+ and/or their caregivers. Marginalized refers to the systematic social, economic, and political exclusion or disadvantage faced by individuals or groups, particularly those with intersectional identities. Please refer to our list of priority populations. Applicants who demonstrate a strong understanding of the intersectional identities of the older adults they serve and actively work to dismantle systemic barriers to access will be prioritized.
Impact
Applicants must explain the potential to have an immediate impact on the organization’s ability to serve older adults.
Need For Funds
Applicants must clearly describe their organization’s financial need for requested funds. We will consider both an organization’s need for funding and its financial sustainability. If you have significant cash reserves or a budget surplus, please explain why the requested funds are needed. Similarly, if you have low cash reserves or a budget deficit, please share how the requested funds will help improve financial sustainability and/or how you plan to improve your financial position.
Responsive Grants: Nurture Healthy Minds - Adult Recovery Grants
The Colorado Health Foundation
Funding Overview
Our responsive grants program is designed for you to propose your best ideas to achieve impact within one or more of our focus areas. The program is intended to respond to an urgent community need; address emerging opportunities; test innovative approaches or breakthrough ideas; or implement proven programs. At each funding deadline (Feb. 15, June 15, Oct. 15), we will identify specific objectives for our responsive grants program, which may change from deadline to deadline. Grant funding is highly competitive across all objectives open for the responsive grants program in a funding cycle. Organizations that apply for funding in the responsive grants program for this funding cycle will have to compete across the following objectives: Adult Recovery Supports, Caregiver Resources, Food Program Efficiency, Food Program Participation and Housing Financial Assistance.
Adult Recovery
Focus Area: Advance Health and Well-Being
The Colorado Health Foundation believes recovery is possible for those experiencing mental health and substance use issues.
We envision a Colorado where adults on their recovery journeys can access culturally responsive and linguistically appropriate recovery services close to their homes.
Why It Matters
The Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) defines recovery as “a process of change through which individuals improve their health and wellness, live a self-directed life, and strive to reach their full potential.”
Additional services beyond clinical treatments and traditional substance use interventions are useful for beginning and maintaining the process of recovery. Nonclinical, evidence-based supports and tools, including peer-support groups, employment services and more, help bring recovery closer. These services are most effective when they align with a person’s background, culture and values.
Mental and behavioral health conditions affect Coloradans across socioeconomic levels and ethnicities. However, barriers to accessing recovery-related services persist for certain groups of Coloradans. Obstacles include a shortage of available services, especially those tailored to Coloradans of color, concerns about affordability, and stigma associated with mental health services.
Community Investment Fund- Climax Area- Colorado & Henderson- Colorado
Freeport-Mcmoran Copper & Gold Foundation
Youth and Adult Grant Programs
Adolph Coors Foundation
Colorado Organizational Resiliency (COR) Grant
Next50 Foundation
Advanced Industries Proof of Concept Grant
Colorado Office of Economic Development & International Trade
GFF Capital Grants
Gates Family Foundation
Melvin & Elaine Wolf Foundation Grant
Melvin & Elaine Wolf Foundation, Inc.
TJX Foundation Grants
The Tjx Foundation Inc
Programmatic Support- Education Pillar Award
American Honda Motor Co., Inc.
Programmatic Support - Environment Pillar Award
American Honda Motor Co., Inc.
Programmatic Support- Mobility Pillar Award
Honda USA Foundation
Advanced Industries Collaborative Infrastructure Grant
Colorado Office of Economic Development & International Trade
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Sign up to see the full listTechnology Grants in Colorado Highlights
Top Searched Technology Grants in Colorado
Grant Insights : Grant Funding Trends in Colorado
Average Grant Size
What's the typical amount funded for Colorado?
Grants are most commonly $93,435.
Total Number of Grants
What's the total number of grants in Technology Grants in Colorado year over year?
In 2024, funders in Colorado awarded a total of 25,497 grants.
2022 58,261
2023 56,542
2024 25,497
Top Grant Focus Areas
Among all the Technology Grants in Colorado given out in Colorado, 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 Technology Grants in Colorado changing over time?
Funding has increased by -53.64%.
2022 $5,306,649,967
2023
$5,130,283,753
-3.32%
2024
$2,378,257,140
-53.64%
Colorado Counties That Receive the Most Funding
How does grant funding vary by county?
Denver County, El Paso County, and Jefferson County receive the most funding.
| County | Total Grant Funding in 2024 |
|---|---|
| Denver County | $722,055,676 |
| El Paso County | $692,459,950 |
| Jefferson County | $346,494,820 |
| Boulder County | $317,496,019 |
| Larimer County | $315,001,998 |