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Community Possible Grant Program: Play, Work, & Home Grants
US Bancorp Foundation
DanPaul Foundation Grants
The Dan Paul Foundation
Environmental Justice Thriving Communities Grantmaking Program: Tier 1
The Minneapolis Foundation
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Global Impact Cash Grants
Cisco Systems Foundation
LabCorp Charitable Foundation Grants
Labcorp Charitable Foundation
Semnani Family Foundation Grants
Semnani Family Foundation
Wells Fargo Community Giving
Wells Fargo Foundation
Robinson Foundation Grant
Robinson Foundation
Schreiber Foods Foundation Grant
Schreiber Foods Foundation Inc.
Community Opportunity Fund: Resilience Grant Focus
Boreal Waters Community Foundation
About Us
The Duluth Superior Area Community Foundation was established in 1983 by visionary community leaders. We are a collection of hundreds of endowed funds established by individuals, families, private foundations, and businesses to enhance the quality of life in our region. Since our inception, we have distributed more than $40 million in grants and scholarships and currently administer over 360 different funds, each with its own charitable purpose. The Duluth Superior Area Community Foundation promotes private giving for the public good.
Community Opportunity Fund
The Community Opportunity Fund is at the heart of our work at Boreal Waters Community Foundation. It’s how we connect generosity with possibility to support bold ideas, local leadership, and long-term solutions across northeastern Minnesota and northwestern Wisconsin.
Each year, this fund helps nonprofits tackle critical challenges, strengthen communities, and ensure that everyone in our region can thrive.
A Grant Program Rooted in Community and Collective Generosity
As our region’s permanent civic endowment, the Community Opportunity Fund helps nonprofits and community groups respond to challenges, create solutions, and build a better future. In 2023, we restructured the fund to offer larger, more flexible grants—supporting not just programs, but long-term vision and systems change.
We focus on these interconnected areas:
Community Opportunity Fund: Resilience Grant Focus
Projects must enhance the ability of organizations, families, or communities to anticipate, adapt to, and recover from challenges, creating sustainable, long-term solutions that reduce risk and promote resilience.
Examples include:
- Leveraging partnerships and resources to implement scalable, lasting solutions that strengthen community resilience.
- Expanding access to knowledge, training, and tools that improve economic, social, or environmental stability for individuals and families.
- Developing community-driven solutions that address housing stability, food security, workforce resilience, or climate adaptation.
- Applying innovative or proven strategies that increase a community’s ability to prepare for and respond to systemic challenges (e.g., disaster preparedness, economic shifts, public health crises).
Community Opportunity Fund: Belonging Grant Focus
Community Opportunity Fund: Opportunity Grant Focus
What We Fund
We support a wide range of community-driven, equity-centered work. Funding can be used for:
- Program or Project Support: To launch, expand, or sustain work in Opportunity, Resilience, or Belonging
- General Operating Support: To build strength and stability
- Capacity Building: To grow organizational effectiveness or leadership
- Community-Led Solutions: Especially those involving lived experience and cross-sector collaboration
- Systems Change and Upstream Impact: Projects that address root causes—not just symptoms
Fred C. & Katherine B. Andersen Foundation Grant
Fred C And Katherine B Andersen Foundation
J. J. Keller Foundation: Large Grants
J. J. Keller Foundation, Inc.
Menasha Corporation Foundation Grant
Menasha Corporation Foundation
Best Life Community Awards
ALTRA FOUNDATION INC
Andersen Corporate Foundation Grants
Andersen Corporate Foundation
Douglas County Disaster and Welfare Fund
Boreal Waters Community Foundation
J.W. Couch Foundation Grant
Jesse W Couch Charitable Foundation
Samuel F. Atkins and Barbara H. Atkins Memorial Fund Grant
Boreal Waters Community Foundation
Red Cliff/Miskwaabikaang Fund Grant
Boreal Waters Community Foundation
Dudley T. Dougherty Foundation Grant
Dudley T Dougherty Foundation Inc
Georgia-Pacific Foundation Grant
Georgia-Pacific Foundation
Tele-Behavioral Health Grant (WI)
Wisconsin Department of Health Services
Wisdom Family Foundation Grant Program
Wisdom Family Foundation
Biodiversity Fund- Large & Multi-Year Grants
Boreal Waters Community Foundation
Mission
The Biodiversity Fund supports efforts to maintain and strengthen biodiversity in the Duluth-Superior region through preservation and restoration of habitat, help for particular species and ecosystems, planning for changing conditions, research and education. The purpose is to consider now the value to future generations of the species and ecosystem diversity that will remain when/if human population stabilizes.
Biodiversity Fund
The Biodiversity Fund supports projects that preserve and restore habitats, assist vulnerable species and ecosystems, plan for environmental change, and promote research and education in the Duluth-Superior region.
The fund aims to protect the region's biodiversity through conservation, preservation, and restoration of natural resources for the benefit of future generations.
Biodiversity Fund- Large & Multi-Year Grants
The Fund may also support larger initiatives of up to $50,000 per year for up to three years, for projects that require sustained investment to achieve meaningful, long-term impact.
Multi-year requests should demonstrate:
- A clear long-term vision with defined milestones that allow progress to be assessed prior to subsequent years of funding each year
- How the work will scale, adapt, or deepen impact over time
- Strong partnerships, stewardship plans, or systems-level outcomes
- A plan for sustainability beyond the grant period
What We Mean by Biodiversity
Biodiversity is the variety of life on Earth, encompassing the diversity of genes, species, and ecosystems and the complex relationships that sustain them. Biodiversity underpins ecosystem stability, climate resilience, and human well-being by providing essential services such as clean air and water, natural food systems, nature-derived medicines, and climate adaptation and regulation.
This grant recognizes that healthy natural ecosystems and sustainable native plant and animal communities are deeply interconnected — environmental degradation often exacerbates social inequities and instability of communities of habitats and ecosystems. Community-led solutions strengthen ecological outcomes.
Biodiversity Fund Priorities
Funded projects should demonstrate strength in several of the following areas. Not every project must address all principles, but competitive proposals will show clear alignment across multiple dimensions.
- Upstream & Preventative Focus
- Projects address root causes rather than symptoms.
- Prioritize prevention, restoration, and long-term solutions
- Reduce risk and vulnerability for people, species, and ecosystems
- Anticipate environmental and social change rather than reacting after harm occurs
- Collaboration & Community Voice
- Projects are grounded in authentic partnership.
- Build cross-sector collaboration (e.g., nonprofits, Tribal Nations, schools, governments, researchers, community groups)
- Center the expertise and leadership of people with lived experience, including Indigenous knowledge and local ecological expertise
- Share power in design, decision-making, and implementation
- Equity-Centered Impact
- Projects advance equity for both people and place.
- Prioritize historically marginalized communities and/or vulnerable species and ecosystems
- Focus resources, decision-making power, or stewardship closer to impacted communities
- Recognize how environmental harm and social inequity intersect
- Systems, Policy & Practice Change
- Projects have transferability and relevance beyond a single site or program.
- Improve institutional practices, policies, land-use decisions, or resource flows
- Strengthen community-level systems related to housing, food security, climate adaptation, education, or conservation
- Demonstrate potential for replication, scaling, or broader adoption
- Sustainability & Capacity Building
- Projects plan for impact that lasts beyond the grant period.
- Strengthen organizational, community, or ecosystem capacity
- Build skills, infrastructure, stewardship, or long-term management plans
- Promote ongoing care, monitoring, or adaptive management of natural systems
- Evidence of Change & Learning
- Projects contribute to shared learning and understanding.
- Use data, research, community knowledge, or storytelling to demonstrate impact
- Measure ecological, social, or systems-level outcomes
- Share lessons learned to inform future equity-, resilience-, and biodiversity-focused work
Biodiversity Fund- Small Grants
Boreal Waters Community Foundation
Transformation Grant- Resilience Focus
Boreal Waters Community Foundation
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Sign up to see the full listFood Grants for Nonprofits in Wisconsin Highlights
Top Searched Food Grants for Nonprofits in Wisconsin
Grant Insights : Grant Funding Trends in Wisconsin
Average Grant Size
What's the typical amount funded for Wisconsin?
Grants are most commonly $86,127.
Total Number of Grants
What's the total number of grants in Food Grants for Nonprofits in Wisconsin year over year?
In 2024, funders in Wisconsin awarded a total of 23,742 grants.
2022 45,256
2023 45,044
2024 23,742
Top Grant Focus Areas
Among all the Food Grants for Nonprofits in Wisconsin given out in Wisconsin, 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 Food Grants for Nonprofits in Wisconsin changing over time?
Funding has increased by -51.03%.
2022 $3,758,149,480
2023
$4,172,752,976
11.03%
2024
$2,043,540,643
-51.03%
Wisconsin Counties That Receive the Most Funding
How does grant funding vary by county?
Milwaukee County, Dane County, and Brown County receive the most funding.
| County | Total Grant Funding in 2024 |
|---|---|
| Milwaukee County | $682,570,856 |
| Dane County | $466,029,602 |
| Brown County | $106,804,944 |
| Waukesha County | $72,062,878 |
| La Crosse County | $56,045,918 |