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Search Through Food Safety Grants in Florida
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Costco Wholesale Charitable Contributions
Costco Foundation
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DanPaul Foundation Grants
The Dan Paul Foundation
Global Impact Cash Grants
Cisco Systems Foundation
Health Foundation of South Florida Grants
Health Foundation of South Florida
Roche Corporate Donations and Philanthropy (CDP)
La Roche, Inc.
Semnani Family Foundation Grants
Semnani Family Foundation
The Bank of America Foundation Sponsorship Program
Bank Of America Charitable Foundation Inc
T. Mark Schmidt Off-Highway Vehicle Grant
Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services
Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services
The Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services supports and promotes Florida agriculture, protects the environment, safeguards consumers, and ensures the safety and wholesomeness of food. Our programs and activities are so varied and extensive, they touch the life of just about every Floridian.
T. Mark Schmidt Off-Highway Vehicle Grant Program
The purpose of the T. Mark Schmidt Off-Highway Vehicle Grant Program (hereinafter referred to as the OHV Grant Program) is to provide financial assistance to Applicants as further defined below, to provide or improve off-highway vehicle recreational areas or trails for public use on Public Lands. Through the Off-Highway Vehicle Tilting Program, the state of Florida has been allocated funds for implementing this program. The primary purpose of the OHV Grant Program is to provide and/or improve off-highway riding opportunities on Public Lands by establishing and/or maintaining existing or new riding areas; provide enforcement of applicable regulations to the System and off-highway vehicle activities; provide safety, training and rider education in the operation of off-highway vehicles and if funds are available, acquire lands to be included in the System and manage and rehabilitate such lands. Grant awards are recommended by the Off-Highway Vehicle Recreation Advisory Committee annually, with final approval by the Commissioner of Agriculture, and appropriated by the Florida Legislature.
Grant Categories
There are five grant categories:
Max and Victoria Dreyfus Foundation Grant
Max and Victoria Dreyfus Foundation
Corporate Giving Program: Requests under $1000
Franklin P. and Arthur W. Perdue Foundation
Cutler Bay Community Fund
Town of Cutler Bay
Corporate Giving Program: Requests over $1000
Franklin P. and Arthur W. Perdue Foundation
Penn National Gaming Foundation Grants
Penn National Gaming
J.W. Couch Foundation Grant
Jesse W Couch Charitable Foundation
Dudley T. Dougherty Foundation Grant
Dudley T Dougherty Foundation Inc
Georgia-Pacific Foundation Grant
Georgia-Pacific Foundation
TJX Foundation Grants
The Tjx Foundation Inc
Impact Polk Grants
GiveWell Community Foundation
Florida Specialty Crop Block Grant Program
Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services
Bergel Institute Fellowship - FE2: Building a Fully-Resourced Community
The Bergel Institute
The Bergel Institute
The Bergel Institute is dedicated to the advancement of human knowledge and the human condition.
The Institute focuses on six major areas:
- Economics
- Science
- Technology
- Consciousness
- Health
- Culture
The common theme in all of the Institute’s work is the pursuit of what is possible. It brings a commitment to critical thinking and the questioning of accepted norms and approaches to issues that lie at the foundation of what we think and how we live. In every discipline, assumptions are tested against evidence.
In addition to its research and programmatic endeavors, the Institute offers fellowships. Fellowships come with high expectations and are supported with structure and active mentorship.
Bergel Institute Fellowships
The Bergel Institute offers Fellowships to individuals of all ages who wish to spend a year in intensive study and project development in a subject area that aligns with the advancement of human knowledge and the human condition. Each year, the Institute will list specific fellowship topics within these areas. Applicants may pick one or propose a different topic, as long as it aligns with the Institute’s goals.
Fellowships run from June to May and are primarily virtual, with two paid Institute visits (to the home office in Florida) as the only in-person expectations during the Fellowship year. Fellows are expected to work approximately 20 hours per week and to bring a strong intrinsic motivation for the project. They will spend the year conducting intensive research and/or project development, supported by Institute staff, with monthly meetings and quarterly progress reports to help maintain momentum.
The Fellowship is also intended to function as an incubator, providing time, guidance, and structure for work that continues beyond the Fellowship year.
As noted above, Fellows travel to the Institute twice during the Fellowship year to present to leadership: once in August, at the end of Q1, and again in May, at the end of the Fellowship year. The May presentation focuses on what was accomplished during the year and the Fellow’s plans for next steps. Final work may take many forms, including detailed manuscripts, the launch of a business or organization; or a video series, documentary films, etc. Travel and lodging for both presentations are covered by the Institute.
Upon completion of the Fellowship year, all Fellows are required to serve as mentors for future Fellows, ensuring that accumulated knowledge and experiences are passed to their successors.
FE2: Building a Fully-Resourced Community
This Fellowship gives you the opportunity to identify one place in the United States and focus on ensuring it has the resources required for residents to gain economic stability and independence. The work is practical and coalition-driven. Rather than debating systems in the abstract, Fellows will begin immediately by recruiting and securing community partners, which may include healthy food manufacturers or grocery stores, health care providers, financial institutions, and local employers. Depending on the community, the Fellowship may also include the initial steps required to build a recreation center or implement apprenticeship programs in local businesses.
Fellows will use The Bergel Institute’s Poverty Action Guide as a foundation to identify the barriers keeping families in poverty and to design an implementation-ready plan. The work will focus on the conditions that most directly shape long-term stability, including employment, education, basic needs, transportation, child care, health, housing, savings, and safety. Fellows will work with leaders from each sector in the community, building partnerships among existing institutions and recruiting new providers where gaps exist.
By the end of the Fellowship, the Fellow will produce a pilot model and roadmap that can be adapted and replicated in other communities. Because this work requires coordination and follow-through, the Fellow will work closely with Bergel Institute staff throughout the Fellowship year.
TCFNF: Program Support Grants for Putnam County
The Community Foundation For Northeast Florida Inc
RESTORE Landowner Incentive Program
Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services
Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services
The Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services supports and promotes Florida agriculture, protects the environment, safeguards consumers, and ensures the safety and wholesomeness of food. Our programs and activities are so varied and extensive, they touch the life of just about every Floridian.
Enhancing Gulf Waters through Forested Watershed Restoration - RESTORE Landowner Incentive Program
Introduction
The USDA Forest Service is providing funding to restore water quality and quantity through the implementation of forest management activities. This project is seeking applications for projects focused on restoring pine ecosystems and forest hydrology within the Florida project area.
The program is intended to target lands that have forests, are forests, once had forests or are capable of growing forests. This includes areas that might have been converted to farm or pastureland, burned by forest fires, cut-over, harvested, natural or planted pine stands, pine / hardwood stands or damaged byhurricanes.
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Sign up to see the full listFood Safety Grants in Florida Highlights
Top Searched Food Safety Grants in Florida
Grant Insights : Grant Funding Trends in Florida
Average Grant Size
What's the typical amount funded for Florida?
Grants are most commonly $140,410.
Total Number of Grants
What's the total number of grants in Food Safety Grants in Florida year over year?
In 2024, funders in Florida awarded a total of 56,141 grants.
2022 107,491
2023 109,840
2024 56,141
Top Grant Focus Areas
Among all the Food Safety Grants in Florida given out in Florida, the most popular focus areas that receive funding are Philanthropy, Voluntarism & Grantmaking Foundations, Education, and Human Services.
1. Philanthropy, Voluntarism & Grantmaking Foundations
2. Education
3. Human Services
Funding Over Time
How is funding for Food Safety Grants in Florida changing over time?
Funding has increased by -46.82%.
2022 $14,150,322,449
2023
$14,761,745,220
4.32%
2024
$7,850,493,003
-46.82%
Florida Counties That Receive the Most Funding
How does grant funding vary by county?
Miami Dade County, Orange County, and Broward County receive the most funding.
| County | Total Grant Funding in 2024 |
|---|---|
| Miami Dade County | $2,519,130,065 |
| Orange County | $1,616,906,144 |
| Broward County | $1,539,789,187 |
| Alachua County | $1,392,877,227 |
| Palm Beach County | $1,089,111,487 |