Grants for Veteran Nonprofit Organizations in New York
Grants for Veteran Nonprofit Organizations in New York
Looking for grants for veteran nonprofit organizations in New York?
Read more about each grant below or start your 14-day free trial to see all grants for veteran nonprofit organizations in New York recommended for your specific programs.
American Express Community Giving
American Express Foundation
Mission
It is our mission to support our customers, colleagues and communities by helping them achieve their aspirations and helping their communities thrive. This shapes our work as a responsible corporate citizen. We deliver high-impact funding and initiatives that support people, businesses and non-profit partners so that together, we can make a meaningful difference in the world.
Sponsoring Conference Participation in Support of Healthy Communities, Consumer Empowerment, and Veterans’ Health
New York State Health Foundation
About the Foundation
The New York State Health Foundation (NYSHealth) has a broad mission to improve the health of New York State residents, especially the most vulnerable. To achieve meaningful impact, the Foundation makes grants, informs health care policy and practice, and spreads effective programs that work to improve New York’s health system. Most of the Foundation’s grantmaking is focused on two priority areas: building healthy communities and empowering health care consumers. NYSHealth also maintains an area of focus on veterans’ health to help meet the needs of returning veterans and their families.
Sponsoring Conference Participation in Support of Healthy Communities, Consumer Empowerment, and Veterans’ Health
In a state as large as New York, a steady stream of smart, innovative work is coming from NYSHealth grantees and non-grantees alike that is relevant to NYSHealth’s priority areas of Building Healthy Communities and Empowering Health Care Consumers and its focus area on Veterans’ Health. These organizations should be elevating their work and informing key stakeholders at regional, statewide, and national conferences, meetings, and other convenings. Yet, because of a lack of time and resources, they often are unable to do so.
Through this Request for Proposals (RFP), NYSHealth will sponsor community-based organizations, health departments, and other low-resource organizations to attend and present at local, State, and national conferences related to building healthy communities, empowering health care consumers, and meeting the needs of returning veterans and their families. NYSHealth will support both organizations already engaged in this work and those new to these fields in New York State.
Upcoming conferences in 2019 that may be eligible for conference support:
Building Healthy Communities
- New York State Association for Rural Health Conference (September)
- Closing the Hunger Gap Conference (September)
- American Public Health Association Annual Meeting and Expo (November)
Empowering Health Care Consumers
- Planetree’s International Conference on Patient-Centered Care (October)
Veterans’ Health
- National Association of State Workforce Agencies Veterans Conference (August)
- America’s Warrior Partnership Symposium (September)
- Cohen Veterans Care Summit (October)
- Student Veterans of America Annual Conference (January 2020)
Weinberg Foundation Small Grants Program
The Harry and Jeanette Weinberg Foundation
How we give
The Weinberg Foundation fulfills its mission to help those in greatest need by providing grants within five focus areas. These focus areas serve different populations, as well as different geographic areas. However, the Community Services focus area is intended for large community organizations operating multiple programs that meet a range of needs. Most nonprofit grant requests should align with one of the four core focus areas: Housing, Health, Jobs, or Education.
The Small Grants Program (SGP)
The Weinberg Foundation recognizes that small, community-based organizations provide critical services to vulnerable individuals and families. Through the Small Grants Program (SGP), the Foundation supports smaller nonprofits with a streamlined grant application and review process. Grants awarded under the SGP must still align with the Foundation’s strategic priorities in the areas of Housing, Health, Jobs, and Education.
Funding requests through the Small Grants Program can be for operating, program, or capital grants. The maximum Small Grant amount is $50,000 per year over two years, or $100,000 total. Organizations are eligible to apply if they meet the Foundation’s eligibility criteria and maintain an annual organizational budget of $3 million or less.
Housing
Stable housing provides a foundation for individuals, children, and families to lead healthy and productive lives.
Without housing, people are unable to focus on education, employment, health care, and meeting other basic needs. The Foundation is dedicated to supporting organizations that provide safe and affordable housing.
The Foundation supports the creation of new housing units, as well as the renovation of existing housing, to provide and maintain affordable, quality, and supportive housing options. Projects should be integrated into the broader community and must incorporate supportive services. Priority is given to projects that add new units of housing into a community.
Affordable Housing Development and Renovation
Here are a few examples of appropriate projects:
- Affordable housing for older adults, including services that allow residents to age independently, within their communities, and with maximum quality of life.
- Permanent supportive housing serving people exiting homelessness. Project details must include the types of services offered, as well as a focus on financial management and job training and career development.
- Affordable housing that meets the needs of veterans, young adults with developmental disabilities, those escaping domestic violence, and other vulnerable populations.
Maintaining Stable Housing
The Foundation supports programs that allow people to remain housed within their communities by providing comprehensive services that meet a range of social, economic, and health needs.
Here are a few examples of appropriate projects:
- Aging in community programs that allow older adults to age independently and with maximum quality of life. Specifically, programs may include home modification and repair, which can also be used as a platform for delivery of a variety of services.
- Rapid Re-Housing programs for families, youth, veterans and others who have experienced homelessness. These programs include case management, limited financial assistance, and job services and career development.
- Independent living, including supportive services that allow young adults with disabilities to live in the least restrictive environment possible, within their community.
Health
Good health is a prerequisite for any other life pursuit.
Poor physical or mental health can prevent people from seeking education, employment, and other opportunities that would allow for economic mobility. The Foundation is dedicated to supporting organizations that help children, adults, and families lead healthy lives.
Health Care Access
The Foundation supports organizations that provide access to health care, as well as those that work to improve the health status of vulnerable patients.
Here are a few examples of appropriate projects:
- Capital projects that expand access to primary care. Grantees are typically Federally Qualified Health Centers, and other community health centers, that provide a single-access point for a range of services. Please note that the Foundation does not fund hospitals or free clinics.
- Oral and behavioral health programs that increase access to care through the construction of new facilities as well as operating support that leverages billing revenue.
- Health care transition programs that ensure young adults with developmental disabilities have access to qualified primary care providers as they move into adulthood.
Aging in Community
The Foundation supports projects that enable older adults to remain independent. Projects must incorporate a model that connects older adults and/or caregivers with a range of services that help them age independently, within their communities, and with maximum quality of life.
Here are a few examples of appropriate projects:
- PACE (Program for All-Inclusive Care for the Elderly) Centers or other capital projects that provide nursing home-eligible older adults with a single-access point for a range of services.
- Prevention models that address older adults’ social determinants of health, with the goal of preventing hospitalization, readmission, and institutionalization.
- Caregiver support programs that help with older adults’ daily personal care (bathing, dressing, walking, eating, etc.).
Veteran Mental Wellness
The Foundation supports programs that enhance the mental wellness of veterans who are reintegrating into civilian life.
Here are a few examples of appropriate projects:
- Retreat programs, including an intensive on-site experience with a minimum of one year of follow-up. Programs must use a proven curriculum.
- Post-traumatic mental health therapy that is evidence-based and proven to reduce symptoms.
- Coordinated resource networks that facilitate access to a range of supportive services. These networks have a single-access point that evaluates veterans and connects them with the most appropriate service providers.
Nutrition and Food Access
The Foundation supports organizations and programs that increase access to sufficient and nutritious food.
Here are a few examples of appropriate projects:
- Meal service programs that ensure homebound people living with severe, chronic illnesses have access to nutritious food.
- Food delivery models, including nonprofit grocery stores, which increase access to healthy foods in food deserts.
- Food bank expansions and other capital projects that increase warehouse space, add cold storage and handling, and make other modifications necessary to serve more people. Please note that the Foundation focuses on regional food banks and not on food pantries or feeding programs.
Trauma, Abuse, and Safety
The Foundation supports programs that promote child and family safety and that reduce the long-term traumatic effects of child abuse and neglect, sexual assault, intimate partner or family violence, elder abuse, and exposure to community violence.
Here are a few examples of appropriate projects:
- Domestic violence programs that provide safe shelter, counseling, legal assistance, and other support services.
- Shelters and multidisciplinary team projects, including comprehensive services, for older adults fleeing physical, mental, economic, and sexual abuse.
- Prevention and treatment programs that strive to reduce, and alleviate the effects of, child sexual and physical abuse, child trafficking, and child neglect.
Jobs
Employment provides the best opportunity for personal success and financial security.
Quality training programs that lead to employment enable individuals and families to achieve economic stability. The Foundation is dedicated to supporting organizations that help people secure and keep quality jobs with opportunities for advancement.
Job Training
The Foundation supports job-training programs that result in industry-recognized credentials, as well as job-placement and retention services. Employers must engage with the training organizations to verify program content and support placement and retention services. Organizations should track job retention and wages for at least two years.
Here are a few examples of appropriate projects:
- Sector-based training programs in the health care, manufacturing, construction, food service, information technology, biotechnology, manufacturing industries, and more.
- Life-skills and job-readiness training, including case management and referrals to technical-training programs or direct job placement.
- Capital costs for job-training centers, including construction or renovation projects or large equipment purchases, that result in an increased number of individuals served in a sector-based training program.
- Veterans programs that provide job-placement services for military members and their spouses.
Financial Literacy and Economic Stability
The Foundation supports programs that provide people with the financial tools necessary to achieve economic stability.
Here are a few examples of appropriate projects:
- Financial coaching programs to help participants decrease debt, increase savings, and set long-term financial goals.
- Free tax preparation for low-wage workers provided by IRS-trained and certified volunteers.
Youth Employment and Career Support
The Foundation supports programs that provide career exploration and work-based learning opportunities for youth.
Here are a few examples of appropriate projects:
- Hard and soft-skills training to help disconnected youth (neither in school nor working) reconnect with career-pathway opportunities.
- Paid internships that expose youth to a direct work experience.
- Summer jobs programs for youth citywide.
- Customized, community-based employment opportunities for young adults with disabilities who are transitioning from a school environment into the workplace.
Education
Education can help break the cycle of poverty.
Providing at-risk children and youth with academic opportunities helps prepare them for a stable and productive future. The Foundation is dedicated to supporting organizations that provide or supplement a high-quality education from kindergarten through high school.
STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math)
The Foundation supports in-school and out-of-school STEM programs, professional development to strengthen STEM instruction, and programs proven to improve math proficiency, in order to prepare youth for evolving workforce needs that require STEM literacy.
Here are a few examples of appropriate projects:
- STEM programs, either in or out-of-school, that engage students in project-based learning. Programs should be able to demonstrate the academic impact of this work.
- Intensive, evidence-based math interventions proven to increase students’ math scores. Please note that the Foundation will not fund curriculum only.
- Programs that teach educators how to use and incorporate project-based STEM learning into their classrooms.
- Construction of STEM spaces, including labs, makerspaces, and STEAM (Science, Technology, Engineering, Art, and Math) centers.
Out-of-School Time
The Foundation supports after-school, weekend, and summer programs for students, kindergarten through grade 12. Funded programs must have an academic component with demonstrated academic outcomes.
Here are a few examples of appropriate projects:
- After-school, weekend, or summer programs that work with students for a minimum of six weeks over the summer and one year during the school year and blend academic learning with enriching activities to increase academic achievement, school attendance, and positive social behavior.
- Summer programs that blend academic learning with enriching activities and provide nutritious meals, as well as opportunities for physical activity. See Summer Funding Collaborative for more information.
- Job opportunities that introduce teens to the workforce and teach soft skills necessary for work and life. Ideally these programs will have opportunities for advancement, continued involvement, or handoff to another employer.
College and Career Preparedness
The Foundation supports programs that assist students in developing a post-secondary plan and position them for success after graduation from high school.
Here are a few examples of appropriate projects:
- College access programs that help students and families navigate the college application and admissions processes, including SAT/ACT testing, financial aid, and scholarship access. Priority will be shown to programs that also help students persist through college to obtain a degree.
- Career technology education (CTE) programs that help students achieve an industry-recognized certification that will allow them to graduate from high school in a position to enter the workforce and eventually earn a family-sustaining wage.
Veteran Housing Grants
Home Depot Foundation
Background
The Home Depot Foundation works to improve the homes and lives of U.S. veterans, train skilled tradespeople to fill the labor gap and support communities impacted by natural disasters. Since 2011, the Foundation has invested more than $400M in veteran causes and improved more than 50,000 veteran homes and facilities. The Foundation has pledged to invest half of a billion dollars in veteran causes by 2025 and $50 million in training the next generation of skilled tradespeople through the Path to Pro program.
The Home Depot Foundation is deeply committed to serving veterans and works with nonprofit organizations across the country to give back to our nation’s heroes.
The Foundation's Veteran Housing Grants Program awards grants to nonprofit organizations for the new construction or rehabilitation of permanent supportive housing for veterans. Awards typically range from $100,000 to $500,000.
Rock Charitable Fund
Northern New York Community Foundation
Northern New York Community Foundation
Community Foundation grants are awarded to support programs and projects that are responsive to the evolving needs of the region in areas that include: human services, health and wellness, arts and culture, education, families and youth, conservation and environment, community development, recreation and more. Grant proposals are evaluated based on the quality of planning, leadership, support, funding available for disbursement, passion and vision clearly expressed in the application.
Rock Charitable Fund
Purpose: Support for the maintenance and preservation of churches and cemeteries and places of legitimate historical significance in the county; to help benefit or assist Veterans of the United States Military living in St. Lawrence County for medical or recreational needs.
Funding available: Up to $100,000
State Fund Grant- New York – Lower NYL Grants
The NRA Foundation
We Fund the Future of the Shooting Sports
The NRA Foundation provides financial support to eligible projects, programs and organizations through its grant program.
Each year, volunteer committees from across the country tirelessly raise charitable dollars and generous donors make gifts that are in turn awarded as grants in support of educational and public service programs relating to the shooting sports in our communities.
The General Focus of Foundation Grants is to:
- Promote, advance and encourage firearms, shooting sports and hunting safety
- Educate individuals with respect to firearms, firearms history, participation in the shooting sports, hunting safety, and marksmanship
- Conduct research in furtherance of improved firearms safety and marksmanship facilities and techniques
The NRA Foundation: New York – Lower NYL Grants
The NRA Foundation provides financial support to eligible projects, programs and organizations through its Grant Program. Each year, volunteer committees from across the country tirelessly raise charitable dollars and generous donors make gifts that are in turn awarded as grants in support of educational and public service programs relating to the shooting sports in our communities.
The NRA Foundation: New York – Upper NYU Grants
The NRA Foundation
The NRA Foundation: New York – Upper NYU Grants
The NRA Foundation provides financial support to eligible projects, programs and organizations through its Grant Program. Each year, volunteer committees from across the country tirelessly raise charitable dollars and generous donors make gifts that are in turn awarded as grants in support of educational and public service programs relating to the shooting sports in our communities.
NYSHF Special Projects Fund Grant
New York State Health Foundation
Special Projects Fund
The New York State Health Foundation (NYSHealth) has a broad mission to improve the health of all New Yorkers, especially the most vulnerable. NYSHealth’s efforts are concentrated on specific priority and focus areas, but to ensure flexibility and responsiveness to other important health issues, the Special Projects Fund supports projects that are outside of those areas. Projects pertaining to the following priority and focus areas will be INELIGIBLE for funding through the Special Projects Fund: Healthy Food, Healthy Lives; Empowering Health Care Consumers; or Veterans’ Health.
All projects supported through this Request for Proposals (RFP) must have an impact on New Yorkers either at a local, regional, or statewide level. Special Projects Fund awards should be considered one-time, nonrenewable funding opportunities.
Eligible projects should be coordinated interventions that are implemented over a specified period of time to achieve measurable results. Although projects that have impact within one organization or community are eligible, this RFP places emphasis on initiatives that have a large-scale regional or statewide impact on New York State’s health system
MGM Resorts Foundation Community Grant Fund
MGM Resorts Foundation
Community Grant Fund
Grant decisions will be made by our employee Community Grant Councils (CGC) based in each of the regions in which MGM Resorts International operates domestically. Each CGC meets and evaluates grant proposals from nonprofit agencies in its respective region to determine how the community grant funds will be allocated.
Funding Areas
The Program will give priority to funding for agencies/projects/programs that provide services in the following focus areas:
- Affordable Housing
- Economic Opportunity/ Workforce Development
- Education K-12
- Family Services
- Food Insecurity
- Health and Wellness
- Homelessness
- Services for Seniors
- Services for Veterans and Military Families
MGM Resorts Foundation grants are for a one-year period and do not automatically renew.
Like what you saw?
We have 10,000+ more grants for you.
Create your 14-day free account to find out which ones are good fits for your nonprofit.
Not ready yet? Browse more grants.