- Browse Grants /
- Michigan /
- Operating Grants for Nonprofits in Michigan
Search Through Operating Grants for Nonprofits in Michigan in the U.S.
Operating Grants for Nonprofits in Michigan
100+
Available grants
$31M
Total funding amount
$26.5K
Median grant amount
-
Get new Operating for Nonprofits in Michigan grants weekly
-
Environmental Justice Thriving Communities Grantmaking Program: Tier 1
The Minneapolis Foundation
The Minneapolis Foundation
The Minneapolis Foundation drives collective action to realize strong, vibrant communities. We cultivate generosity by taking action on the greatest civic, social, and economic needs—partnering with nonprofits, facilitating grantmaking, driving research and advocacy, and providing services to donors seeking to make a difference in their communities.
Great Lakes Environmental Justice Thriving Communities Grantmaking Program
In partnership with the Midwest Environmental Justice Network, NDN Collective, and RE-AMP Network, the Minneapolis Foundation will award environmental justice grants to organizations working in and for underserved communities throughout the Great Lakes region.
Grants will be awarded to community-based nonprofits and other eligible organizations in the following three tiers:
- Tier 1: Assessment and Engagement
- Tier 2: Community Education and Planning
- Tier 3: Project Development and Implementation
We aim to distribute 30% of grant funding to federally recognized tribes and Native American organizations, 25% to rural communities, and 45% to urban communities. The partnership anticipates making 206 grants: 83 in Year 1, 85 in Year 2, and 38 in Year 3.
You may submit an application for multiple tiers at the same time, in any order.
Program Goal
The Great Lakes TCGM Partnership will distribute $40 million to organizations working in and for underserved communities throughout the Great Lakes region. The partnership was selected by the EPA as one of 11 grantmakers around the nation in its new Environmental Justice Thriving Communities Grantmaking program.
The program’s goal is to lift up community-led innovation and strengthen community-based groups by breaking down barriers to federal funding. All grants will be given to environmental and public health efforts in underserved communities as defined by the EPA.
Issue Areas
Grants will support projects that focus on issues including, but not limited to:
- Environmental health
- Air, soil, and water quality
- Healthy homes
- Access to healthy food
- Stormwater and green infrastructure
- Emergency preparedness
- Disaster resilience
- Environmental job training
Tier 1: Assessment and Engagement
Tier 1 awards are one-year grants of up to $150,000 for assessment and engagement efforts that increase understanding of the breadth, depth, or impact of local environmental or public health issues. These grants are limited to capacity-constrained and entry-level applicants, as determined by the information you submit in the intake form. These grants will be paid on a milestone basis: 50% up front and 50% at the midway point, upon completion of agreed-upon milestones.
Eligible activities include, but are not limited to:
- GIS mapping
- Air quality sensor purchasing and siting
- Air, water, or soil sampling, testing, and monitoring
- Research, surveys, and studies
- Power mapping, public engagement, and public education to improve collective understanding of community challenges, needs, and opportunities.
Through a noncompetitive process, we will also award grants of up to $75,000 to capacity constrained communities and community-based organizations under Tier One.
You need not develop a new project to receive a grant. These one-time grants are well suited to support existing work that is currently not funded by another source or to complement other projects for which you already have funding. We also welcome proposals for high-priority new projects.
Environmental Justice Thriving Communities Grantmaking Program: Tier 2
The Minneapolis Foundation
The Minneapolis Foundation
The Minneapolis Foundation drives collective action to realize strong, vibrant communities. We cultivate generosity by taking action on the greatest civic, social, and economic needs—partnering with nonprofits, facilitating grantmaking, driving research and advocacy, and providing services to donors seeking to make a difference in their communities.
Great Lakes Environmental Justice Thriving Communities Grantmaking Program
In partnership with the Midwest Environmental Justice Network, NDN Collective, and RE-AMP Network, the Minneapolis Foundation will award environmental justice grants to organizations working in and for underserved communities throughout the Great Lakes region.
Grants will be awarded to community-based nonprofits and other eligible organizations in the following three tiers:
- Tier 1: Assessment and Engagement
- Tier 2: Community Education and Planning
- Tier 3: Project Development and Implementation
We aim to distribute 30% of grant funding to federally recognized tribes and Native American organizations, 25% to rural communities, and 45% to urban communities. The partnership anticipates making 206 grants: 83 in Year 1, 85 in Year 2, and 38 in Year 3.
You may submit an application for multiple tiers at the same time, in any order.
Program Goal
The Great Lakes TCGM Partnership will distribute grants to organizations working in and for underserved communities throughout the Great Lakes region. The partnership was selected by the EPA as one of 11 grantmakers around the nation in its new Environmental Justice Thriving Communities Grantmaking program.
The program’s goal is to lift up community-led innovation and strengthen community-based groups by breaking down barriers to federal funding. All grants will be given to environmental and public health efforts in underserved communities as defined by the EPA.
Issue Areas
Grants will support projects that focus on issues including, but not limited to:
- Environmental health
- Air, soil, and water quality
- Healthy homes
- Access to healthy food
- Stormwater and green infrastructure
- Emergency preparedness
- Disaster resilience
- Environmental job training
Tier 2: Community Education and Planning
Tier 2 awards are one- to two-year grants of up to $250,000 for community-focused efforts that design, inform, and highlight solutions to local environmental or public health priorities. Up to 50% of the grant can be used for relevant property acquisition. Grants will be paid on a reimbursement basis, with a small number of grantees eligible for one advance payment of up to 10% of the total grant.
Eligible activities include, but are not limited to:
- Developing project plans
- Developing communications and outreach plans
- Conducting workshops and trainings
- Developing curricula, toolkits, or guidelines; developing social media content
- Producing videos or printed materials
- Hosting events and gatherings
- Building or strengthening partnerships and collaboration
- Creating local advisory committees
- Engaging in public review or comment periods
- Developing or updating disaster resilience plans, emergency preparedness plans, or other community planning and visioning efforts
You need not develop a new project to receive a grant. These one-time grants are well suited to support existing work that is currently not funded by another source or to complement other projects for which you already have funding. We also welcome proposals for high-priority new projects.
Environmental Justice Thriving Communities Grantmaking Program: Tier 3
The Minneapolis Foundation
The Minneapolis Foundation
The Minneapolis Foundation drives collective action to realize strong, vibrant communities. We cultivate generosity by taking action on the greatest civic, social, and economic needs—partnering with nonprofits, facilitating grantmaking, driving research and advocacy, and providing services to donors seeking to make a difference in their communities.
Great Lakes Environmental Justice Thriving Communities Grantmaking Program
In partnership with the Midwest Environmental Justice Network, NDN Collective, and RE-AMP Network, the Minneapolis Foundation will award environmental justice grants to organizations working in and for underserved communities throughout the Great Lakes region.
Grants will be awarded to community-based nonprofits and other eligible organizations in the following three tiers:
- Tier 1: Assessment and Engagement
- Tier 2: Community Education and Planning
- Tier 3: Project Development and Implementation
We aim to distribute 30% of grant funding to federally recognized tribes and Native American organizations, 25% to rural communities, and 45% to urban communities. The partnership anticipates making 206 grants: 83 in Year 1, 85 in Year 2, and 38 in Year 3.
You may submit an application for multiple tiers at the same time, in any order.
Program Goal
The Great Lakes TCGM Partnership will distribute grants to organizations working in and for underserved communities throughout the Great Lakes region. The partnership was selected by the EPA as one of 11 grantmakers around the nation in its new Environmental Justice Thriving Communities Grantmaking program.
The program’s goal is to lift up community-led innovation and strengthen community-based groups by breaking down barriers to federal funding. All grants will be given to environmental and public health efforts in underserved communities as defined by the EPA.
Issue Areas
Grants will support projects that focus on issues including, but not limited to:
- Environmental health
- Air, soil, and water quality
- Healthy homes
- Access to healthy food
- Stormwater and green infrastructure
- Emergency preparedness
- Disaster resilience
- Environmental job training
Tier 3: Project Development and Implementation
Tier 3 awards are one- to two-year grants of up to $350,000 to pilot or implement project plans. Projects may have educational and outreach components, but must focus on developing tangible community assets or providing environmental or public health benefits to one or more disadvantaged communities. Up to 50% of the grant can be used for relevant property acquisition or purchase. Grants will be paid on a reimbursement basis, with a small number of grantees eligible for one advance payment of up to 10% of the total grant.
Eligible activities include, but are not limited to:
- Strengthening cumulative impact, public health, or environmental protections
- Increasing access to healthy food
- Reducing the use of pesticides or toxic substances
- Cleaning up contaminated sites
- Conducting healthy home assessments
- Increasing energy or water efficiency in homes or buildings
- Launching community energy or water efficiency programs
- Installing water filters; developing community gardens
- Creating community resilience hubs
- Installing green infrastructure projects
- Creating internships or implementing workforce development programs
You need not develop a new project to receive a grant. These one-time grants are well suited to support existing work that is currently not funded by another source or to complement other projects for which you already have funding. We also welcome proposals for high-priority new projects.
Erb Foundation: Arts and Culture
Fred A And Barbara M Erb Family Foundation
Fred and Barbara Erb Family Foundation
The Fred and Barbara Erb Family Foundation continues the legacy of two lifelong Southeast Michigan residents who were deeply committed to their community. Since 2008, the Foundation has awarded over $180 million to initiatives Fred and Barbara cared about most—supporting the environment, arts and culture, jazz education, sustainable business, and Alzheimer’s research.
In 2022, the Foundation made the strategic decision to spend down all assets by 2034, enabling bold investments in projects that address pressing needs and drive lasting change. It remains dedicated to working closely with its partners, fostering collaboration and continuing its commitment to improving the health of communities.
Our Mission, Vision, and Values
The Fred and Barbara Erb Family Foundation envisions a flourishing, healthy, and resilient Great Lakes ecosystem and a culturally vibrant, sustainable Southeast Michigan. Toward this end, we strengthen the cultural and environmental organizations that share our vision to make this a reality for generations to come.
Grant Program Area: Arts and Culture
Strengthen Detroit's jazz culture and mentorship traditions by:
- Investing in professional development and opportunities for artists, teachers, teaching artists, and nonprofit staff.
- Providing young musicians pursuing jazz with program participation, lessons, and additional supports.
- Developing future audiences through music instruction and activities that promote an appreciation for jazz.
Strengthen the resiliency and development of arts and culture organizations, leaders, and the sector in Wayne, Oakland, and Macomb counties by:
- Supporting financial stability through earned income generation, reserve development, and best practices for financial management.
- Improving operations through workforce retention, leadership and staff development, system improvements, capacity building, and operationalizing equity.
- Promoting artistic and operational innovation and collaboration, advocacy, audience development, and equitable practices.
Public Welfare Foundation Grant
Public Welfare Foundation
Investing in nonprofits that are advancing a new, transformative system of justice with the core values of racial equity, economic well-being, and fundamental fairness for all.
Grants Overview
Public Welfare Foundation awards grants to nonprofits that honor the Foundation’s core values of racial equity, economic well-being, and fundamental fairness for all. The Foundation looks for strategic points where its funds can make a significant difference and improve lives through policy and system reform that results in transformative change.
Our Work
Public Welfare Foundation aims to catalyze a transformative approach to justice that is community-led, restorative, and racially just.
- Adult Criminal Justice
- Youth Justice
- Legacy Initiatives
- Jurisdictions
Working in Communities, With Communities
Public Welfare Foundation believes that the best ideas bubble up from communities so we work to engage deeply in and with the communities we fund.
We work with communities to drive transformation from multiple angles including policy advocacy, organizing, leadership development, and demonstration projects. Public Welfare Foundation is committed to funding innovative solutions and investing in the leadership of those most proximate to the issues facing this nation.
Focusing our efforts on criminal justice and youth justice reforms allows us to achieve greater impact in the overhaul of the systems that were created to marginalize and contain our nation’s most vulnerable populations.
Grants Process
The Public Welfare Foundation has a two-step application process that includes both a Letter of Inquiry (LOI) and a full proposal. We invite full proposals after reviewing letters of inquiry. We only consider full proposals we have invited that fit within the program guidelines and available resources.
Current focus areas include:
- Organizations and projects with a focus on structural and systemic changes in the U.S. criminal justice system.
- The Foundation does not typically fund direct service work (ex. individual support services, case management).
- However, the Foundation will consider initiatives that aim to further a demonstration project to make the case for non-carceral alternatives and transformative approaches to justice reform.
- Organizations, projects, or special initiatives with a focus on reducing harm and violence using community-centered interventions.
- Reframing the narrative and fostering greater transparency and urgency around the U.S. criminal justice system through storytelling, journalism and other targeted efforts.
Grant Types: How We Fund the Work
General Support Grants
- General support grants are for day-to-day operating costs or to further the work of your organization. These grants are not earmarked for a particular program or project.
Program or Project Support Grants
- Program or project support grants support a specific program or activity of the organization. These are restricted grants and must be used for that program or project.
Special Opportunities Grants
- The Special Opportunities Program supports projects reflecting the Foundation’s mission and underlying values. These are one-time only grants that are especially timely and compelling. At times, this kind of grant serves as a laboratory for new ideas.
Valero Energy Foundation
Valero, its employees and the Valero Energy Foundation are committed to improving the quality of life in communities where we work and live, fulfilling a mission that was set from the beginning. We set the standard for corporate citizenship and promotes prosperity in our communities.
The Valero Energy Foundation -- a public charity and Valero's philanthropic arm -- funds nonprofit agencies that serve predominantly disadvantaged children and families. In 2019, the Foundation contributed appoximately $40 million in assistance in the communities where Valero has major operations.
Four Pillars of Support
Our funding focuses on our four pillars of giving in communities where we have major operations.
- Basic Needs: Valero gives assistance to agencies that provide basic needs of life, including shelter, food and clothing necessary for the development of a strong and safe community.
- Health Care: We invest in the development of strategic community health resources and facilities that will support the needs of all members of our nearby communities, with major gifts going to children’s hospitals, university medical centers and service providers that offer specialized health care services and programs.
- Education: Valero is a strong advocate of education as it creates a necessary foundation for all children to thrive and for adults to lead productive lives.
- Civic: We support civic and environmental initiatives directly related to the success of the communities where we live and work.
Baltimore Life Community Grants Program
Baltimore Life Foundation
For more than 20 years, The Baltimore Life Companies have viewed community involvement as our responsibility, not only through financial support of local organizations, but through our employees’ commitment to volunteerism. To further demonstrate our belief in good corporate citizenship, Baltimore Life has established a community grants program to help nonprofit organizations enhance the quality of life in communities—Delaware, Maryland, Michigan, New Jersey, Ohio, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Virginia, Washington, D.C., West Virginia, and the surrounding communities—where our employees live and work.
Grants of up to $500 will be awarded to multiple organizations. Our grants program is a continuation of Baltimore Life’s long-standing tradition of giving back to our communities.
Gerstacker Foundation Grant
Rollin M. Gerstacker Foundation
The Rollin M. Gerstacker Foundation was founded by Mrs. Eda U. Gerstacker in 1957, in memory of her husband. Its primary purpose is to carry on, indefinitely, financial aid to charities of all types supported by Mr. and Mrs. R.M. Gerstacker during their lifetimes. These charities are concentrated in the states of Michigan and Ohio.
More specifically, most charities are in Midland, Michigan, and Midland County, but also in greater Michigan. In Ohio, most grants are given to groups in Cleveland – the hometown of Rollin and Eda Gerstacker. Grants are also made to communities where major Dow operations are located.
Foundation Giving
The major share of Gerstacker Foundation giving in it’s 56-year history has gone to:
- Homes for the elderly
- Health care and research
- Research institutions
- Colleges and universities
- Youth work
- General community support
Granting Areas
Midland’s Downtown & Riverfront
To avoid the trend of downtown decline, the Gerstacker Foundation has taken a leading role in the renaissance of Midland’s downtown and riverfront. It and other contributors have realized a vision to transform downtown Midland into a vibrant hub of business and recreational activity. Attractions include the Tridge, Gerstacker Sprayground, Pere Marquette Rail-Trail, Riverside Place senior housing, Farmer’s Market, skate park, conference center and hotel, canoe livery and Currie Golf Course – all enjoyed by thousands of residents and visitors every year.
Affordable Housing
For most people, growing old means less income and mobility, which is why many move into senior citizen housing – if it’s available. Thanks in part to Eda Gerstacker’s determination, Midland County has outstanding, affordable housing for the elderly – including The King’s Daughters Home, Washington Woods, Riverside Place and Pere Marquette Senior Estates in Coleman. Senior housing remains a cornerstone of Gerstacker Foundation giving and has led to the support of related activities, such as the Affordable Housing Alliance, Habitat for Humanity and Midland Area Homes.
Family Services
Today’s families face a growing number of social and economic challenges that can’t be resolved through government funding alone. To help address those challenges, the Gerstacker Foundation contributes heavily to organizations that unite families, prevent violence, address disabilities, stop substance and physical abuse, and promote educational opportunities. Examples include the Foundation’s support of three Midland-area community and family centers: the David Reece Memorial Fund, the Ten-Sixteen Treatment Centers and the Council on Domestic Violence and Sexual Assault.
Local Schools
Inspiring and maintaining a love for education is no easy feat. It’s made easier, however, with contributions from the Gerstacker Foundation, which has a long history of supporting K-12 education in Midland and other communities. Foundation funding enables the school system and teachers to initiate projects that would not otherwise be possible. These range from unique teaching activities and a new auditorium, to science additions, stadium upgrades and school renovations.
Higher Education
Eda Gerstacker, a teacher by profession, firmly believed in the value of a quality college education. In this spirit, the Gerstacker Foundation has supported more than 30 public and private colleges and predominantly African American colleges. Most college grantees are in Michigan and range from Albion, Alma and Northwood University to Michigan State University and the University of Michigan. Ohio colleges include Hiram and Wooster.
Faith-Based Initiatives
Although the Gerstacker Foundation is not affiliated with any single religious group, it applauds activities that benefit our communities and give our youth self-confidence and respect for others. It therefore supports several faithbased organizations that have similar goals, including the Salvation Army, SpringHill Camps, University of Michigan Hillel, Young Life, St. Brigid Catholic Church and the Bethany Presbyterian Church in Cleveland – an inner-city mission church that Eda Gerstacker attended.
Youth Activities
The work of the Gerstacker Foundation has always been focused on children, preparing them for lives of useful service. This has been done by funding activities that inspire leadership, and that also help troubled youth find the way. Examples include the Midland Soccer Complex, the Michigan 4-H Foundation, the Starr Commonwealth for Boys, Eagle Village,Big Brothers Big Sisters in the Heart of Michigan, and The ROCK Youth Center.
Health Care and Advanced Research
Two areas of major support from the Gerstacker Foundation are health care and advanced, non-profit research. The Foundation believes immediate care for physically and mentally impaired people is just as important as innovative research for future cures and treatments. More than 30 diverse health care organizations benefit from Gerstacker funding. These range from its largest grantee, MidMichigan Health, to the Association for Children’s Mental Health, Neighborhood Clinic, Arthritis Foundation, National Parkinson Foundation and Alzheimer’s Association.
Environment and Conservation
The Gerstacker Foundation is a strong believer in progress, but not at the expense of the environment. For this reason, the Foundation supports more than a dozen programs that educate the public and preserve the environment for centuries to come. Programs range from the Chippewa Nature Center and The Nature Conservancy to a unique Wildlife Recovery program, the Saginaw Bay Watershed Initiative, Little Forks Conservancy, Ducks Unlimited and American Farmland Trust.
Arts & Culture
To encourage creativity and provide enriching experiences, the Gerstacker Foundation supports a number of cultural endeavors in Midland and other communities. These include the Midland Center for the Arts, Matrix:Midland, Tridge Summer Concerts, Interlochen Center for the Arts, Brazosport Fine Arts Council (in Texas), The Dairy Center for the Arts (Boulder), Chinese Cultural Ongoing Program (Midland) and Michigan Jazz Trail Festival.
Public Service
The men and woman in public service work hard to enhance their communities, sometimes putting their own lives at risk. To support public service and fill the gaps in limited budgets, the Gerstacker Foundation offers funding to many worthy groups and programs, including the Michigan State Police, Midland County firefighters, Midland County Law Enforcement Center, Midland County D.A.R.E. group and the Bay Area Narcotics Enforcement Team.
Public Policy Intiatives
To preserve our democratic freedoms and way of life, the Gerstacker Foundation supports a variety of nonpartisan think tanks and other groups at the national and state levels. These organizations objectively evaluate public policy issues, and share their findings with decision makers and the public to help people make informed decisions. Grantees range from the American Enterprise Institute and the Mackinac Center for Public Policy to Economics America of Michigan, Chemical Heritage Foundation and the Heritage Foundation.
Americana Foundation: Agriculture and Natural Resources Grants
Americana Foundation
Americana Foundation Grant
The Americana Foundation was established by Adolph and Ginger Meyer to support, through philanthropy, their varied personal interests. A Detroit area industrialist, Adolph Meyer believed in the American ideals of hard work and self-reliance and held a deep respect for early American farmers, craftsmen, and artists. Ginger Meyer was an avid gardener, award-winning floral arranger, and an active contributor of time and funds to a variety of charitable causes.
This dedication to education and agriculture includes preservation of their 160-acre historic farmstead in southeast Michigan, Tollgate Farm, which provides unique hands-on learning on a working farm in an urban setting.
The Foundation provides its support mainly through financial grants. Some limited technical assistance in the form of consulting services to the board, staff and volunteers of recipient organizations is available. The technical assistance is provided to assist the recipient group in organizational management and strategic planning.
Our Mission
The Americana Foundation supports the sustainable development of agriculture and community food systems, the protection of natural resources, and an inclusive narrative of early American art and history.
Program Focus: Agriculture and Natural Resources
Adolph and Ginger Meyer believed that farmers were the backbone of America and that farming and the production of food “always will be a required function if any of us are to survive." The Meyers had a lifelong interest in honoring America’s agrarian traditions and were committed to ensuring that people in Michigan maintain a close connection with the land, and with farmers and other producers of our food.
Over the years, Americana has supported projects and programs designed to create rural and urban landscapes in Michigan where the community is connected to the food system, land, and nature; where agricultural producers are prosperous and focused on sustainability, and where agriculture and natural resources support public health, diverse business opportunities and livable communities for all.
Geographic Focus: Geographic Focus: Nonprofit organizations doing work that impacts Michigan are eligible to apply.
Our Current Focus
Our current priority in the Agriculture and Food Systems program area is to support projects and programs that work to transform food systems in Michigan so that they focus on growers, processors, and distributors and provide healthy and culturally appropriate food through ecologically sound and sustainable methods. The goal is for all Michiganders - rural and urban - to be connected to a sustainable local food economy. The program area seeks to benefit those who traditionally have lacked power over and resources to access healthy locally or regionally produced food.
Example Projects
- Connecting Michigan farms and food businesses with new markets, consumers, and communities.
- Empowering Michigan communities to shape the food systems that provide their food.
- Creating opportunities for small-scale and marginalized Michigan farmers and food businesses.
- Supporting systems designed to increase access to healthy, culturally appropriate, locally grown food for Michigan communities.
- Increasing the resilience of the food system in Michigan to the impacts of climate change.
Amway Impact Grants
At Amway, we use the best of our business and the passion of our people to impact communities around the world. Amway is committed to providing community grants in support of non-profit organizations and the programs that focus on Health + Wellbeing and Empowerment. The Amway grant program is currently available to organizations in Kent County, Michigan.
Grant Focus Areas
Funding focus areas:
- Increase access to fresh, healthy foods
- Provide supplemental nutritional resources to families and children facing food insecurity
- Support optimal health for kids and their families through healthy eating education and training opportunities.
- Community Infrastructure and Programming support designed to encourage healthy and active lifestyles.
- Promote practices that strengthen mental wellbeing and foster a resilient, healthy mindset
Target audiences:
- Children
- Families and single parent households with school-aged children
- Rural and urban communities
- Traditionally underserved populations
Funding focus areas:
- Workforce & Entrepreneurship skill education
- Livelihood Education: Training and Development of life skills that support individuals to thrive (ex. financial literacy or basic management skills such as teamwork, problem-solving, etc.)
- Youth mentorship
- Youth leadership development
- Support addressing the individual and contextual barriers that hinder economic empowerment of marginalized and underserved populations
Target audiences:
- Women and girls
- Youth
- Traditionally underserved populations
Corporate Giving Program: Requests under $1000
Franklin P. and Arthur W. Perdue Foundation
Perdue Farms is a fourth-generation, family owned U.S. food and agricultural company. We were founded on trust—a value that carries through everything we do. Through our two operating divisions, Perdue Foods and Perdue AgriBusiness, we’re making steps every day toward our goal of becoming the most trusted name in food and agricultural products. Our path forward is about getting better, not just bigger.
We're Committed to Being Careful Stewards. Stewardship is one of our company's core values. Our stewardship platform, "We believe in responsible food and agriculture®," challenges us to continually improve. Learn more about the progress we've made in the areas of food, environment, animal care, people, community and our partners.
What we support
We believe in putting our resources where there is a direct benefit to a broad-based spectrum of the community.
- We strive to strengthen our communities by focusing our efforts on agriculture and the environment, education, fighting hunger and poverty, health and social services, and public safety
- We also support organizations that celebrate the heritages and cultures of our communities
Our Responsibility
- Food Producing: Quality Food
- Environment: Protecting the Environment
- Animal Care: Providing for the Welfare of Animals
- People: Caring About Others
The Sisters of St. Francis (Sylvania) Foundation Donor Advised Fund
Toledo Community Foundation
Greater Toledo Community Foundation, is a public charitable organization created by citizens of our community to enrich the quality of life for individuals and families in our service area. The Foundation serves northwest Ohio and southeast Michigan with a particular emphasis on the greater Toledo area. The mission of The Sisters of St. Francis of Sylvania, Ohio is to live the Gospel in joyful servanthood among the people and as messengers of peace to commit themselves to works that reverence human dignity, embrace the poor and marginalized and respect the gift of all creation. Greater Toledo Community Foundation and the Sisters of St. Francis Foundation have partnered to support programming through the Sisters of St. Francis Foundation Donor Advised Fund (“Sisters of St. Francis Fund”).
Focus Areas
Consistent with their mission statement, grants from the Sisters of St. Francis Fund support a variety of organizations and programs which are working in one or more of the following areas:
- aiding in the fight against human trafficking and/or offering support to its victims;
- offering support to immigrants and refugees; and
- Advancing social justice and equal access to opportunity through other programs and strategies;
- Supporting efforts that advance, Laudato Si’, Pope Francis’ call to care for planet earth, our common home, by addressing climate change, pollution, or promoting sustainable lifestyles, offering ecological education and spirituality or community engagement and participatory actions.
-
Human Trafficking –
- funding will be awarded to support survivor-informed activities including, but not limited to, comprehensive service delivery; economic opportunity and asset-building programs; physical and mental health supports; education initiatives and/or other kinds of anti-trafficking efforts that reach for systemic solutions and promote the respect and dignity of all.
-
Immigrants & Refugees
- funding will be awarded in a variety of areas including, but not limited to, citizenship and naturalization efforts; economic opportunity and asset-building programs; physical and mental health supports; diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives; civic participation activities; education and workforce development initiatives; workers’ rights and civil legal aid activities and/or other kinds of efforts that promote the well-being of immigrants and refugees.
-
Social Justice & Equal Opportunity
- funding will be awarded in a variety of areas including, but not limited to, activities that promote equal access to housing, employment, education and health care; equitable and sustainable neighborhood development; civil and/or environmental justice work; and/or other approaches that promise to uplift the ability of marginalized or underserved communities to define their own futures and access opportunity.
-
Laudato Si’—
- funding will be awarded in areas that address Pope Francis’ call to care for our common home.
- These include the following areas
- Cry of the Earth (climate change, pollution, forests, wetlands, species);
- Sustainable Lifestyles (personal and community purchasing and lifestyle choices); Ecological Education (how nature functions and is connected, promotion of sustainability);
- Ecological Spirituality (spiritual connection between humans and God’s creation) and
- Community Engagement and Participatory Action (collaborative engagement between and among agencies with the Sisters of St. Francis).
Cultural Sustainability: Equity-Based Operating Grants
Arts Midwest is now accepting applications for Cultural Sustainability: Equity-Based Operating Grants, a pilot program that offers grants of up to $67,000 to small arts and culture organizations that are rooted in communities of color.
What is it?
Cultural Sustainability: Equity-Based Operating Grants is a general operating grant pilot program that offers grants of up to $67,000.
About Cultural Sustainability: Equity-Based Operating Grants
Cultural Sustainability: Equity-Based Operating Grants is a pilot program offered by the six U.S. Regional Arts Organizations (USRAOs) in partnership with The Wallace Foundation. It will give general operating support grants to arts and cultural organizations rooted in communities of color with annual operating expenses up to $500,000.
In total, Arts Midwest will be awarding 18 general operating grants across our nine-state region.
- 9 Organizations (one per state) with operating expenses between $0-$249,999 will receive a $55,000 general operating grant.
- 9 Organizations (one per state) with operating expenses between $250,000-$499,999 will receive a $67,000 general operating grant.
Over the 15-month pilot program, Arts Midwest will offer five virtual workshops on topics focusing on long-term visioning and sustainability planning. Grantees will also be invited to join virtual peer networking sessions and quarterly check-ins with Arts Midwest staff.
Arts Midwest believes that equity means ensuring that everyone has access to the resources and opportunities they need to thrive.
CultureSource: Digital Access for the Arts Funding
CultureSource
Mission
Our mission is to advance the work of organizations that cultivate creative and cultural expression in Southeast Michigan.
Digital Access for the Arts Funding
DAAP recognizes the need for arts and cultural organizations to embrace the futures of their work online, in-person, and all of the spaces between. This funding opportunity as a part of the initiative will make sixteen (16) grants of $5,000 to CultureSource member organizations to make informed investments in technology that enhance their work and sustain their digital, online, and hybrid futures.Applications can support an organization’s investment in equipment that enhance their programmatic work, software that helps with internal processes, or even work with a consultant or implementation specialist to help boost the organization’s capacity to grow their digital, in-person, and hybrid arts and culture work.
Wisconsin Public Service Foundation: Local Community Grant Program
Wisconsin Public Service Foundation
Wisconsin Public Service (WPS) supports initiatives for community and neighborhood development, health and human services, arts and culture, education and environment. The company matches its employees’ charitable giving to those initiatives and also conducts an annual workplace giving campaign for the United Way. Financial support is provided to the activities of nonprofit, tax-exempt organizations in communities served by WPS. Most of the charitable support is through the WPS Foundation, funded by stockholders of WEC Energy Group.
Contributions are made in the following categories:
- Arts & Culture: Arts and culture add to the richness of life in our communities. We support projects that promote diversity and make the arts accessible to all people. This includes theater, dance, music and museums.
- Community & Neighborhood Development: Communities become stronger when neighbors work together. We support nonprofit organizations dedicated to community improvement.
- Education: Lifelong learning helps ensure a strong future for our communities and their economies. We contribute to programs that complement our company's educational programs and philosophies, including opportunities for minorities and women. We support partnerships between businesses and educational institutions, career planning and youth mentorship.
- Environment: As a company, we protect and encourage the wise use of natural resources. We also support others' efforts for the betterment of fish and wildlife, water and air quality, forests, energy efficiency, renewable energy and recycling.
- Human Services & Health: The physical and emotional well-being of everyone in our communities is a measure of the health of the communities. We support programs that serve limited-income, senior and handicapped individuals, and those emphasizing wellness.
History
WPS Foundation was incorporated in 1964, funded with paper company stocks and bonds repurchased by WPS in the late 1920s. The transfer of the certificates, accomplished over a four-year period, gave the foundation a financial base of $2 million. The resulting tax credits increased the value of WPS stock by $.20 per share, and gave the company a consistent means of contributing to charitable, educational and scientific organizations. Over the past 30 years, the foundation's stocks and bonds were redeemed, and the money has been used to buy mutual funds.
The foundation is a strong supporter of capital projects, the United Way and start-up programs in communities served by the four energy companies in Wisconsin, Minnesota and Michigan.
Each region the energy companies serve has a Contributions Committee of local employees from a cross-section of departments. Donation requests for a region are sent to the region's Contributions Committee, which reviews the requests based on the needs and issues in the community.
Nissan Foundation Grants
Nissan Foundation
About
"Enriching people's lives" is the global vision of Nissan and all its operating companies across the world. Nissan supports this vision by improving the quality of life in the communities where it operates.
Two impactful programs for our communities:
- Nissan Foundation
- Since 1992, the Nissan Foundation has awarded millions of dollars to 150+ organizations promoting respect and understanding of America's rich cultural heritage.
-
Nissan Neighbors
- Nissan Neighbors provides charitable giving and employee volunteer support for initiatives in education, environmental sustainability, and humanitarian services.
Nissan Foundation
Nissan formed the Nissan Foundation in 1992 in response to the civil unrest that occurred near its then U.S. sales operations following the Rodney King trial verdict. Since its founding, the Nissan Foundation has annually awarded hundreds of thousands of dollars to nonprofit organizations that support the Foundation’s mission.
The primary mission of the Nissan foundation is to award grants to nonprofit organizations whose programs explore and celebrate cultural diversity and heritage.
General Grantmaking Guidelines
The Community Foundation is a public charity organized as a collection of permanent endowments. The income from these endowed funds is awarded through a grant application process to provide charitable funding to nonprofits classified by the IRS as 501(c)(3) organizations and other eligible entities (such as municipalities, schools and faith-based organizations), for projects that predominantly benefit residents of Clinton, Eaton and Ingham Counties, Michigan.
Capacity-Building Grants
Capacity Building grants help an organization increase its sustainability and effectiveness by strengthening its internal systems. Capacity Building strengthens an organization so it can grow its impact and accomplish its mission. The Foundation does this by partnering with our Capacity Building grantees and other experts in organizational management. Capacity grant amounts vary.
Examples of Capacity Building issues include:
- Board Development
- Fundraising Planning
- Governance Models, Executive Leadership Development
- Long-range Planning, Succession Planning
- Staff Training and Development
- Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Training
Capital Region Community Foundation
The Capital Region Community Foundation provides charitable funding to 501(c)3 nonprofit organizations and other eligible entities, for projects and programs that predominantly benefit residents of Clinton, Eaton, and Ingham Counties, Michigan.
What We Believe
In our grantmaking, we work with partners whose programming, leadership, staffing, and volunteers reflect the diversity of the people they serve. Like the Community Foundation, our partners should authentically work to maximize access to services and achieve equitable practices for all people regardless of ethnicity, race, age, gender, sexual orientation, identity/expression, national origin, veteran status, marital status, income status and or philosophy/religion.
Grant Categories
The Community Foundation has four types of grants – Youth, Mini, Capacity Building, and Impact. The Foundation accepts applications from all eligible entities. However, we strongly encourage requests from small and mid-size nonprofits who are making a difference in underserved and/or diverse communities. You may apply in more than one grant category per year, but just one application per category, please!
Mini-Grants
Up to $5,000. Mini-Grants are perfect for smaller organizations that seek programming or project support. These opportunities are provided to donor-advised fundholders for consideration.
Old National Bank Foundation Grants
Old National Bank
Old National Bank Foundation
The Old National Bank Foundation makes contributions to nonprofit organizations to fund widespread community impact programs and/or projects. The Foundation is part of Old National's overall charitable giving initiative, which enables us to support programs that improve quality of life in areas of Indiana, Illinois, Kentucky, Tennessee, Michigan, Minnesota, Iowa and Wisconsin. We believe in supporting where our clients, team members and shareholders live and work.
Funding Priorities
Our funding targets innovative programs that enhance the quality of life within our communities in support of the following four strategic initiatives: Affordable Housing, Workforce Development, Economic Development, and Financial Empowerment. We prioritize programs that serve underrepresented communities and low- to moderate-income people.
Examples of funding priorities with measurable outcome focus areas include:
Affordable Housing
- Increase Homeownership Opportunities: We seek initiatives that enable individuals and families to purchase homes through accessible financing, down payment assistance, and homeowner education.
- Support Critical Home Repairs and Revitalization: We fund programs that ensure safe, habitable housing by assisting with essential repairs for homes
- Promote Multi-Family Housing Developments: We prioritize programs that develop or sustain affordable rental units
Economic Development
- Small Business Development and Growth: We aim to support programs that help small businesses scale, access resources, and build sustainable growth plans.
- Capacity Building for Technical Support: We encourage projects that enhance the capability of organizations offering technical support to small businesses and nonprofits.
- Entrepreneurship and Business Coaching: We support programs that offer entrepreneurship education, business coaching, and professional development for new or aspiring business owners.
Financial Education
- Old National Bank’s Real-Life Finance e-learning curriculum provides robust financial education training for community partners
Workforce Development
- Access to Apprenticeship and Work-Based Learning: We support workforce readiness through initiatives offering hands-on training, particularly in trades and high-demand fields.
- Job Creation, Employment Entry, and Retention: We support projects that connect individuals to stable employment and increasing levels of income. This can include higher education with dual credentialing, leadership and professional development
Financial Empowerment
- Financial Wellness: We fund long-term initiatives that reduce barriers to banking and credit access, especially for underbanked groups. This can include culturally relevant and multilingual outreach, foreclosure prevention, and credit counseling with the goal of financial independence
- Community Lending Access: We support organizations that provide access to affordable microloans, emergency loans, and community cooperative lending as safe and sustainable alternatives to predatory loans
The Chelsea Community Foundation - General Grants
Community Foundation for Southeast Michigan
Chelsea Community Foundation
The Chelsea Community Foundation is a permanent community endowment with assets in excess of $2.5 million thanks to strong local support and prudent financial management. The Chelsea Community Foundation is guided by Chelsea’s civic leaders who care deeply about the community. To-date, more than $1.6 million has been awarded to local nonprofits to address emerging community needs and opportunities.
The Civic Foundation of Chelsea was formed in 1981 to coordinate the efforts of various individuals and entities in serving the needs of the community. Another organization, The Foundation for Community Care, was established by the Chelsea Community Hospital to provide financial assistance for patients in need of health care services and lacking insurance or the ability to pay, and for other philanthropic needs not typically part of a hospital’s operating budget.
In 1994, the two Foundations merged into the Chelsea Foundation, and in 1995 it became an affiliate fund of the Community Foundation for Southeast Michigan. This affiliation offered access to the larger Community Foundation’s resources while permitting the flexibility to make sure Chelsea’s needs would be met from the proceeds of a well-managed permanent endowment with community-minded donors and advisors.
About the Fund
The Chelsea Community Foundation, an affiliate fund of the Community Foundation for Southeast Michigan, is a permanent community endowment that was established in 1995 to enhance the quality of life in Chelsea, as defined by the geographic boundaries of the Chelsea School District. The Chelsea Community Foundation is directed by a group of civic leaders who live or work in Chelsea and care deeply about the community. The fund continues to grow as a result of the generous contributions of many individuals and businesses.
General Grants
The Chelsea Community Foundation, awards grants of varying sizes that strengthen Chelsea and benefit its residents. General grant awards typically range from $5,000 to $25,000.
The grantmaking priorities for the Chelsea Community Foundation are aligned with the Community Foundation for Southeast Michigan’s Grantmaking Guidelines in terms of general content and materials to submit for a grant application. Wherever there is a contradiction, the General Grantmaking Guidelines document takes precedence.
Bayer Fund: Health & Wellness Grant Program
Bayer Fund
Awareness. Education. Prevention. These are three key tenets of Bayer Fund’s investments in health and wellness. With a focus on cancer and cardiovascular disease, we provide resources to organizations dedicated to educating and/or providing services to patients, caregivers and at-risk populations.
Health & Wellness Grants
Programs that Bayer Fund will support include those that focus on patients and their families needing assistance with issues to managing cardiovascular disease and cancer. This includes education, disease awareness, and supportive services for these diseases. In areas related to cardiovascular disease, priority (though not exclusivity) will be given to charitable organizations that focus on programs and support for the African American community due to the high incidence rate of disease in this population.
Giving in this category will focus on support services such as education, disease awareness, and general access to care (e.g., housing for families traveling for cancer or heart care).
All funding requests and budgets must be for program activities and expenses that start after funding decisions are made. All programs must be completed within one year of the start date, except in limited situations where longer term programs have been agreed upon. Grant award amounts vary, depending on the size of the community, the type of programming, and the reach of the organization.
Please see FAQs for additional guidelines.
Community Impact Program Grant
Jackson Community Foundation
The Jackson Community Foundation's Grant Committee prioritizes funding for programs, services, and systems change initiatives that provide opportunities for learning, action, and advocacy aimed at advancing diversity, equity, and inclusion in Jackson County. This grant is funded by the Community Needs Endowment Fund.
PROGRAM GRANT
Limit requests to $20,000 for programs benefitting the residents of Jackson County, Michigan. Nonprofit 501(c)3 organizations, school districts, governmental entities (for programs, goods or services that are not funded through taxpayer dollars), and churches (for nonreligious purposes) are eligible to apply.
For General Operating Support, please see here.
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.
MIHEF Behavioral Health RFP
Michigan Health Endowment Fund
About
The Michigan Health Endowment Fund is a philanthropic foundation that works to improve the health and wellness of Michigan residents while reducing healthcare costs.
The Health Fund supports organizations across Michigan, from grassroots groups addressing local health challenges to large agencies working in every county. From the urban streetscapes of downtown Detroit all the way to the rural corners of the Upper Peninsula, our partners are doing innovative, evidence-based work to improve the health and wellness of Michigan residents.
Behavioral Health RFP
The Health Fund’s Behavioral Health Initiative aims to improve access to high-quality mental health and substance use disorder (SUD) care for Michigan residents with an emphasis on children and older adults. As the initiative works to improve access to care, we endeavor to bridge health equity gaps, advance integrated care, increase cost-effectiveness, and strengthen the behavioral health workforce.
Funding
You may apply for a one- or two-year grant. The Behavioral Health Initiative anticipates making grants ranging from $50,000 to $500,000. We welcome proposals toward the smaller end of that range.
Priorities
The Behavioral Health Initiative is interested in funding new projects that address:
- Implementation of innovative care delivery models
- Multi-sector responses aimed at developing and strengthening collaboration to support efficient entry to care
- Use of innovative technology to improve access to care and/or quality of care
- Implementation of team-based approaches to care, including integration at the point of care, sharing health information among providers, and increased provider consultation
- Projects that focus on behavioral health improvements for foster and adopted children
Ally Charitable Foundation Grants
Ally Charitable Foundation
At Ally, our purpose is to advance economic mobility and reduce inequities through innovative philanthropy and programing that inspires social change, with a focus on:
- Affordable Housing
- To impact affordable housing, we make grants to nonprofit organizations that focus on expanding access to quality affordable housing and enabling pathways toward permanent housing solutions.
- Financial Education
- To impact financial education, we make grants to nonprofit organizations that focus on providing underserved communities with the tools and resources that address key financial concepts to help end disparities and advance economic mobility.
- Workforce Development
- To impact workforce development, we make grants to nonprofit organizations that focus on providing individuals with access to college and career pathways that will help advance economic mobility in underserved communities.
Our philanthropic giving strategy is aligned to these focus areas to increase impact through purposeful collaboration and community engagement.
Andersons Fund Supporting Organization
Toledo Community Foundation
Andersons Fund Supporting Organization
The Andersons Fund Supporting Organization (the Fund) has been created to enrich the quality of life for individuals and families in our region. The Fund serves northwest Ohio and southeast Michigan with a particular emphasis on the greater Toledo area. Grants support organizations with programs in the areas of education, social services, physical & mental health, neighborhood & urban affairs, natural resources and the arts.
General Grantmaking Guidelines
The Community Foundation is a public charity organized as a collection of permanent endowments. The income from these endowed funds is awarded through a grant application process to provide charitable funding to nonprofits classified by the IRS as 501(c)(3) organizations and other eligible entities (such as municipalities, schools and faith-based organizations), for projects that predominantly benefit residents of Clinton, Eaton and Ingham Counties, Michigan.
Impact Grants
Impact Grants are meant to increase the long-term impact of an organization or program, increase the organization’s ability to reach under-served populations, or enable two or more nonprofits to work collaboratively to create transformative and sustainable community change.
: We will consider leadership gifts at the beginning of capital campaigns to help leverage other giving. Please contact us for more information.
Impact Projects must meet at least one of the following Impact Criteria:
- Significantly increase the long-term impact of an organization or program, not provide for ongoing operations (routine expenses such as ongoing programming, occupancy, administration, etc.) For example, Impact Grants will not purchase food for a pantry; however, we might purchase equipment that help a pantry stock healthier options to impact the health of their clients.
- Significantly increase an organization’s ability to reach under-served populations, rather than simply serve more people. For example, Impact Grants are not designed to increase the number of people utilizing an existing program, but rather to help expand a successful program to have greater impact to a new, high-need population.
- Enable two or more nonprofits to work collaboratively to create transformative and sustainable community change. We welcome applications where two or more organizations are collaborating to implement a solution to a critical community issue.
Showing 27 of 100+ results.
Sign up to see the full listTop Searched Operating Grants for Nonprofits in Michigan
Grant Insights : Operating Grants for Nonprofits in Michigan
Grant Availability
How common are grants in this category?
Common — grants in this category appear regularly across funding sources.
100+ Operating grants for nonprofits in Michigan grants for nonprofits in the United States, from private foundations to corporations seeking to fund grants for nonprofits.
52 Operating grants for nonprofits in Michigan over $25K in average grant size
43 Operating grants for nonprofits in Michigan over $50K in average grant size
28 Operating grants for nonprofits in Michigan supporting general operating expenses
100+ Operating grants for nonprofits in Michigan supporting programs / projects
1,000+ Grants on Instrumentl focused on Community Development & Revitalization
2,000+ Grants on Instrumentl focused on Art & Culture
Grant Deadline Distribution
Over the past year, when are grant deadlines typically due for Operating grants for Nonprofits in Michigan?
Most grants are due in the first quarter.
Typical Funding Amounts
What's the typical grant amount funded for Operating Grants for Nonprofits in Michigan?
Grants are most commonly $26,500.
Average Grant Size
What's the typical amount funded for Michigan?
Grants are most commonly $92,653.
Total Number of Grants
What's the total number of grants in Operating Grants for Nonprofits in Michigan year over year?
In 2023, funders in Michigan awarded a total of 60,659 grants.
2022 59,390
2023 60,659
Top Grant Focus Areas
Among all the Operating Grants for Nonprofits in Michigan given out in Michigan, 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 Operating Grants for Nonprofits in Michigan changing over time?
Funding has increased by 2.08%.
2022 $5,494,510,387
2023
$5,608,918,451
2.08%
Michigan Counties That Receive the Most Funding
How does grant funding vary by county?
Wayne County, Kent County, and Oakland County receive the most funding.
County | Total Grant Funding in 2023 |
---|---|
Wayne County | $1,099,951,265 |
Kent County | $680,505,723 |
Oakland County | $668,110,971 |
Washtenaw County | $583,416,333 |
Calhoun County | $465,305,490 |