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Looking for Food Safety Grants in Pennsylvania? Find the perfect grant for your nonprofit on Instrumentl
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Up to US $25,000
Up to US $100,000
More than US $100,000
Smart recommendations based on your profile — in minutes.
Unspecified amount
More than US $50,000
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More than US $1,000
US $1,000 - US $10,000
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Up to US $1,000
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US $10,000 - US $75,000
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About Us
For more than 100 years, Duquesne Light Company has provided safe and reliable electric service to communities in southwestern Pennsylvania. Today, our core values of safety, integrity, dependability, equity and community enable us to serve more than 600,000 customers in two counties, including the city of Pittsburgh. We are committed to safely powering our customers’ lives while playing a leading role in our region’s clean energy transition. Our vision is to create a larger-than-light, clean energy future for all by delivering exceptional results today and boldly harnessing opportunities for tomorrow. In doing so, we can ensure a cleaner, healthier and more equitable community for generations to come.
Charitable Giving at Duquesne Light
Our Charitable Giving Grants Program is designed to help communities most affected by the rising cost of living—especially those burdened by high energy expenses. By prioritizing funding for nonprofit organizations helping individuals and families meet their basic needs and access high quality workforce development opportunities, we aim to reduce financial strain and promote long-term economic stability for residents across our service area.
Funding Priorities
By funding Basic Needs, we support access to essentials like food, housing, childcare, and transportation, along with wraparound services and crisis interventions—helping families achieve stability and reduce financial strain.
Through Workforce Development, we invest in training and career pathways that lead to family-sustaining wages and long-term job security, empowering individuals to overcome economic challenges and build a more resilient future.
Grantmaking
Traditional Grants
Duquesne Light’s Traditional Grants program provides funding to nonprofit organizations with annual operating budgets over $500,000 that are working to improve the quality of life for residents within our service territory. Grants support programs aligned with one of two focus areas: Basic Needs and Workforce Development.
US $5,000 - US $250,000
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Up to US $10,000
US $1,000 - US $20,000
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About PA IOLTA
The core mission of the Pennsylvania Interest on Lawyers’ Trust Accounts (IOLTA) Board is to support the provision of civil legal services to the Commonwealth’s poor and disadvantaged. The IOLTA Board is a not-for-profit organization operating under the jurisdiction of the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania.
How Does the IOLTA Program Work?
The IOLTA program is simple. Clients and others frequently transfer moneys to attorneys to hold. When the amount is large or if the funds will be held for an extended period of time, attorneys invest them for the benefit of the client. But when the funds are small or expected to be held for a short time, they cannot practically be invested to benefit the client. Pennsylvania Rule of Professional Conduct 1.15 requires attorneys to deposit nominal and short-term fiduciary funds in interest-bearing IOLTA accounts. The attorneys’ banks transfer the interest earned on IOLTA accounts to the Pennsylvania IOLTA Board.
How is the Money Used?
Upon approval of the Supreme Court of PA, the Board makes grants annually to non-profit organizations, law school clinical programs, and administration of justice projects that provide civil legal services free of charge to the poor and disadvantaged.
Grants
The Pennsylvania IOLTA Board carries out its mission to financially support the delivery of civil legal aid to low-income and disadvantaged Pennsylvanians through the careful administration of various revenue sources, both court-directed and legislatively-directed. Upon approval of the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, the IOLTA Board makes grants annually to qualified legal aid organizations across the state, Pennsylvania’s nine law school clinical and externship programs, and administration of justice projects, all of which provide legal assistance to low-income individuals and families facing a civil legal crisis where basic human needs, such as shelter, food, medicine and safety, are at stake.
Specialized Legal Services Grant Program
These discretionary grants – often referred to as “zone grants” – support the delivery of specialized legal services to targeted groups of people such as the disabled, non-English speaking communities, and victims of domestic violence. Funding is allocated to geographic zones based on the proportion of people living in poverty throughout the state. Applicants compete with one another in the zone where the proposed services would be delivered. Learn more about the geographic boundaries of our funding zones by viewing the IOLTA Funding Zone Map.
US $10,000 - US $50,003
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About PA IOLTA
The core mission of the Pennsylvania Interest on Lawyers’ Trust Accounts (IOLTA) Board is to support the provision of civil legal services to the Commonwealth’s poor and disadvantaged. The IOLTA Board is a not-for-profit organization operating under the jurisdiction of the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania.
How Does the IOLTA Program Work?
The IOLTA program is simple. Clients and others frequently transfer moneys to attorneys to hold. When the amount is large or if the funds will be held for an extended period of time, attorneys invest them for the benefit of the client. But when the funds are small or expected to be held for a short time, they cannot practically be invested to benefit the client. Pennsylvania Rule of Professional Conduct 1.15 requires attorneys to deposit nominal and short-term fiduciary funds in interest-bearing IOLTA accounts. The attorneys’ banks transfer the interest earned on IOLTA accounts to the Pennsylvania IOLTA Board.
How is the Money Used?
Upon approval of the Supreme Court of PA, the Board makes grants annually to non-profit organizations, law school clinical programs, and administration of justice projects that provide civil legal services free of charge to the poor and disadvantaged.
Grants
The Pennsylvania IOLTA Board carries out its mission to financially support the delivery of civil legal aid to low-income and disadvantaged Pennsylvanians through the careful administration of various revenue sources, both court-directed and legislatively-directed. Upon approval of the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, the IOLTA Board makes grants annually to qualified legal aid organizations across the state, Pennsylvania’s nine law school clinical and externship programs, and administration of justice projects, all of which provide legal assistance to low-income individuals and families facing a civil legal crisis where basic human needs, such as shelter, food, medicine and safety, are at stake.
Law School Clinical and Internship Programs
The grants are conditioned on five requirements:
US $5,000 - US $25,000
Unspecified amount
Showing 27 of 30+ results.
Sign up to see the full listWhat's the typical amount funded for Pennsylvania?
Grants are most commonly $97,283.
What's the total number of grants in Food Safety Grants in Pennsylvania year over year?
In 2024, funders in Pennsylvania awarded a total of 54,538 grants.
Among all the Food Safety Grants in Pennsylvania given out in Pennsylvania, the most popular focus areas that receive funding are Philanthropy, Voluntarism & Grantmaking Foundations, Education, and Human Services.
1. Philanthropy, Voluntarism & Grantmaking Foundations
2. Education
3. Human Services
How is funding for Food Safety Grants in Pennsylvania changing over time?
Funding has increased by -46.38%.
How does grant funding vary by county?
Philadelphia County, Montgomery County, and Allegheny County receive the most funding.
| County | Total Grant Funding in 2024 |
|---|---|
| Philadelphia County | $1,037,757,864 |
| Montgomery County | $783,094,056 |
| Allegheny County | $757,275,094 |
| Lancaster County | $274,214,562 |
| Dauphin County | $226,196,305 |