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BGE Charitable Contributions
Baltimore Gas and Electric Company
Powering our communities is just the beginning. BGE considers it our responsibility to improve the quality of life for people in the communities where we live, work, and serve.
BGE focuses our corporate giving in four areas - building Exelon's future workforce, energy empowerment in our communities, enrichment through local vitality, and equal access to arts and culture. We support and value diversity, equity & inclusion; we try to reflect the communities in which we operate. BGE is proud to support nonprofit organizations and students in our local communities.
BGE Directs Corporate Giving to Four Key Areas:
We fund programs that deliver measurable, sustainable improvements in the communities we serve. We invest in organizations that have proven track records in these areas:
Building Exelon's Future Workforce
Through our Building Exelon’s Future Workforce focus area, Exelon funds organizations, institutions, and programs that offer Science, Technology, Math, and Engineering (STEM) education and enrichment opportunities for students; scholarship and mentoring support to increase the number of students graduating with college degrees in STEM fields, STEM career and technical education, occupational skills training programs for older youth and adults, and assistance to remove barriers to employment. The following list includes a selection of strategies that Exelon and its operating companies support to build Exelon’s future workforce:
- Out-of-school education & enrichment programs such as summer or after school STEM programs and clubs,
- STEM career exposure opportunities for students such as career fairs and field site visits,
- Novel in-school STEM learning opportunities such as mobile labs and science outreach,
- K-12 STEM teacher training and professional development opportunities,
- STEM classroom resources and lab equipment,
- High school STEM trades career and technical education and training programs,
- Community college-based STEM trade education, training, and apprentice programs,
- Postsecondary scholarships for students majoring in STEM fields,
- STEM career mentoring and tutoring,
- STEM trade occupational skills training programs for adults and older youth, and
- Employment barrier removal assistance services.
Energy Empowerment in Our Communities
Through our Energy Empowerment in Our Communities focus area, Exelon funds organizations and programs that improve the quality of our environment; promote environmental education, conservation, and preservation; develop cleaner sources of energy; protect endangered species; and beautify neighborhoods. Examples of programs that Exelon and its operating companies support through Energy Empowerment grants include, but are not limited to, the following strategies:
- Alternative energy development, installation, and education,
- Vehicle electrification,
- Climate resilience or adaptation initiatives and education,
- Endangered species protection, wildlife conservation, promotion of biodiversity,
- Landscape and watershed conservation, restoration, and preservation,
- Neighborhood beautification and green space initiatives, and
- Environmental and energy efficiency education and outreach.
Enrichment Through Local Vitality
Through our Enrichment through Local Vitality focus area, Exelon funds a broad range of organizations and institutions that create local employment opportunities, support families, foster resilience, and strengthen communities. Examples of ways in which Exelon and its operating companies support Enrichment through Local Vitality include, but are not limited to, the following strategies:
Anchor institutions such as universities, colleges, hospitals, and other organizations that provide employment opportunities, economic benefits, and enrichment in communities,
- The establishment and promotion of business districts,
- Projects carried out through community development corporations,
- Community-based programs and nonprofit organizations,
- Emergency preparedness programs, resiliency hubs, and resources that promote public safety,
- Programs that increase local economic investment and employment opportunities, and
- Local Chambers of Commerce.
Equal Access to Arts and Culture
Exelon believes that our lives are enriched and our communities are strengthened through individual interactions and collective experiences with the arts. Through our Equal Access to Arts and Culture focus area, Exelon funds cultural institutions with broad public exposure and programs designed to make arts and culture more accessible to a wider and more diverse audience. Exelon and its operating companies support a broad range of programs that promote Equal Access to Arts and Culture, including, but not limited to, the following strategies:
- Arts education and enrichment for all ages carried out through schools, community programs, arts institutions, and other organizations,
- Community-based exhibition spaces such as galleries, theaters, performance spaces, and specialty museums,
- The acquisition and exhibition of culturally and locally relevant arts content, and
- The establishment and promotion of theater and arts districts.
Costco Wholesale Charitable Contributions
Costco Foundation
Charitable Contributions
Costco Wholesale’s primary charitable efforts specifically focus on programs supporting children, education, and health and human services in the communities where we do business. Throughout the year we receive a large number of requests from nonprofit organizations striving to make a positive impact, and we are thankful to be able to provide support to a variety of organizations and causes. While we would like to respond favorably to all requests, understandably, the needs are far greater than our allocated resources and we are unable to accommodate them all.
Warehouse Donations:
Warehouse donations are handled at the warehouse level - please consult your local warehouse for up-to-date information regarding their donations contacts and review process.
Grant Applications
If the request is under consideration, you may be contacted by staff for any additional information needed. Applications are reviewed within 4-6 weeks, and decisions are made based on several factors, including: type of program; identified community need not otherwise available; indication that evidenced based data will establish measurable results of intended outcomes; community collaboration; broad base of financial support; project budget and operating expenses.
Who We Are
The Creag Foundation is a private grant making foundation established in 2009 in Woodinville, Washington.
The founders of the Creag Foundation believe that meaningful change can only be achieved through hard work, creativity and passion. They also understand the practical mechanisms that allow charitable organizations to succeed and grow. As a group, Creag Foundation principals are dedicated to helping today’s most innovative programs improve the human condition in a wide variety of ways.
Our Focus
The broad purpose of the Foundation is to support the efforts of nonprofit organizations who are innovators in the field of human services. Our particular focus is on smaller organizations that are starting out or established organizations that are looking for funding to take their organization in a new direction.
What We Fund
/ What We Fund
The Creag Foundation is focused on innovation in the industry. We will consider proposals from 501(c)(3) organizations that are finding new ways to address societal issues facing the nonprofit community. Applicants must have held 501(c)(3) status for one year before submitting. If your organization has held 501(c)(3) status for over a year, and your believe that your organization has a new approach to an existing social problem or is addressing a previously unaddressed social issue, you are welcome to contact us and request that we consider your organization for a funding opportunity.
DanPaul Foundation Grants
The Dan Paul Foundation
Mission
The DanPaul Foundation will use its resources to help train teachers and parents in early childhood development, protect children from abuse and neglect, stimulate children's personal social responsibilities, and offer them opportunities for enrichment and growth.
The Foundation will also encourage children to be concerned and informed about the environment and the underprivileged, particularly with regard to clean air and water, and adequate housing and nutrition for all.
Beliefs
The DanPaul Foundation believes that children should have ample opportunities for enrichment in their lives, and thus strives to provide many different ways to enrich and expand children's minds through direct programs and monetary support to organizations doing similar work.
We have provided or currently provide grants related to the following program areas:
- Workshops, Conferences, + Seminars: We strive to offer educational workshops, conferences, and seminars for parents and teachers on topics related to early childhood development.
- Student Scholarships: We aim to help students attending post-secondary education institutions by providing need-based and academic scholarships.
- Scientific Endeavors: We desire to advance scientific endeavors which seek to improve the quality of life for everyone in the world.
- Clean Air + Water: We hope to pass on knowledge and practical life skills to youth regarding their personal responsibility to the environment, teaching them about issues surrounding clean air and water.
- Child Advocacy: We believe in protecting children from abuse and neglect and particularly love to support programs that provide education and assistance to children as well as organizations advocating or caring for vulnerable children.
- Homelessness: We want to encourage young people to take a personal interest in seeing that adequate housing and proper nutrition, especially for the underprivileged and homeless, are available.
- Poverty + Neglect: We seek to help those in poverty as well as educate youth about their responsibility to consider the underprivileged and take care of those most in need of life's basic essentials like adequate housing and proper nutrition.
- Refugee Enrichment: We wish to help refugee youth by supporting programs that provide them enrichment and help them transition to life in a new country.
The DanPaul Foundation provides grants to 501(c)3 tax-exempt non-profit organizations as defined by the IRS. The Foundation is interested in providing funding to programs that directly serve the health, education, development, and welfare of the world's youth.
Grants range from a few hundred dollars up to $15,000 per calendar year.
Good Neighbor Citizenship Company Grants
State Farm Companies Foundation
Community Grants
State Farm is committed to helping build safer, stronger and better-educated communities.
- We are committed to auto and home safety programs and activities that help people manage the risks of everyday life.
- We invest in education, economic empowerment and community development projects, programs and services that help people realize their dreams.
- We help maintain the vibrancy of our communities by assisting nonprofits that support community revitalization.
Good Neighbor Citizenship company grants focus on safety, community development and education.
Focus Areas
Safety Grants
We strive to keep our customers and communities safe. That's why our funding is directed toward:
- Auto safety — improving driver, passenger, vehicle or roadway safety
- Home safety — shielding homes from fires, crime or natural disasters
- Disaster preparedness and mitigation
- Disaster recovery
Community Development
We support nonprofits that invest and develop stronger neighborhoods. That's why our funding is directed toward:
- Affordable housing — home construction and repair
- Commercial/small business development
- Job training
- Neighborhood revitalization
- Financial literacy
- Sustainable housing and transportation
- Food insecurity
Education
Our education funding is directed toward initiatives that support the following programs:
- Higher education
- K-12 academic performance
- K-12 STEM
- Pathways for college and career success
Hearst Foundation: Culture Grant
William Randolph Hearst Foundation
Mission
The mission of the Hearst Foundations is to identify and fund outstanding nonprofits to ensure that people of all backgrounds in the United States can build healthy, productive and satisfying lives. Through its grantmaking, the Hearst Foundations support well-established nonprofit organizations that address significant issues within their major areas of focus—culture, education, health and social service—and that primarily serve large demographic and/or geographic constituencies. In each area of funding, the Foundations seek to identify those organizations achieving truly differentiated results relative to other organizations making similar efforts for similar populations. The Foundations also look for evidence of sustainability beyond their support.
Whether providing a scholarship to a deserving student, supporting a rural health clinic or bringing artists into schools so children can see firsthand the beauty of the arts, the Foundations’ focus is consistent: to help those in need, those underserved and those underrepresented in society. Since the Foundations were formed in the 1940s, the scale and capabilities of the grant making have changed, but the mission has not.
Culture Grant
The Hearst Foundations fund cultural institutions that offer meaningful programs in the arts and sciences, prioritizing those that enable engagement by young people and create a lasting and measurable impact. The Foundations also fund select programs nurturing and developing artistic talent. Supported organizations include arts schools, ballets, museums, operas, performing arts centers, symphonies and theaters.
Funding Priorities in Culture
In the recent past, 25% of total funding has been allocated to Culture. Organizations with budgets over $10 million have received 60% of the funding in Culture.
The Hearst Foundations are only able to fund approximately 25% of all grant requests, of which about 80% is directed to prior grantees and about 20% is targeted toward new grantees.
Types of Support
Program, capital and, on a limited basis, general and endowment support
LabCorp Charitable Foundation Grants
Labcorp Charitable Foundation
The Labcorp Charitable Foundation
We believe every person deserves equitable care and education.
In 2020 Labcorp established a private charitable 501(c)(3) foundation to advance our desire to bring quality healthcare access to all by supporting education and our local communities.
Common grant opportunities include:
- Supporting food pantries and meal programs
- Providing healthcare and patient services for underserved populations
- Encouraging STEM programming
- Advocating for healthy lifestyles through ongoing medical research and screening
Purpose
The Forest Legacy Program is a Federal program that works in partnership with States, supporting efforts to protect environmentally sensitive forest from conversion to non-forest uses.
Description
The program is designed to identify and protect environmentally important forests through the use of perpetual conservation easements purchased at market value between willing sellers and willing buyers.
- A conservation easement is a legal agreement between a landowner and an eligible organization that restricts future activities on the land to protect its conservation values.
- Up to 75% of the funding can be supplied by the Federal Government; at least 25% of funding will come from, State, Local, NGO funds or can be donated by the landowner.
Scope
The program is available only in areas identified as Forest Legacy Areas in Maryland’s Forest Legacy Program Assessment of Need. Forest Legacy Areas are geographically defined areas that were determined to have some of the highest economic and environmental values to benefit Maryland’s wildlife, wood products industry, water quality, and residents.
How Does Forest Legacy Work?
Only private forest within a Forest Legacy Area is eligible for the program. At least 75% of the area put under easement must be forested. The remaining 25% must be in a compatible land use such as agriculture.
Landowners who are willing to sell their development rights are encouraged to apply. All applications will be evaluated and ranked on an annual basis, and the highest ranked applications will be entered into the national ranking process for funding.
Projects are ranked on the basis of forest importance, threat of development, and strategic value to other protected lands or conservation initiatives. Funded projects will enter the negotiation and acquisition phase.
If negotiations produce acceptable easement terms, the easement will be purchased. If the project does not receive federal funding or negotiations do not produce acceptable terms, landowners may apply again in future years. The number of parcels accepted for acquisition will depend on the funding available and the estimated value of the parcels selected.
Michael & Susan Dell Foundation Grants
Michael & Susan Dell Foundation
Michael & Susan Dell Foundation Grants
The Michael & Susan Dell Foundation only accepts unsolicited proposals for specific areas within the education, family economic stability and childhood health sectors in select countries where we work, namely the United States, India and South Africa.
As a guideline, the foundation does not fund more than 25% of a project’s budget or more than 10% of an organization’s total annual operating expenses.
The Michael & Susan Dell Foundation has always recognized the power of providing grants to partner organizations that we knew were already working hard to improve the lives of urban children living in poverty. By aligning with organizations that are already making a difference, we continue to make an immediate impact on the lives of thousands of children.
Foundation priorities:
We fund social enterprises that directly serve or impact children or youth from urban low-income communities in the areas of education, health, and family economic stability (including livelihoods and financial inclusion). These social enterprises may be structured as for-profit or nonprofit entities.
Partnerships
We collaborate with a range of organizations focused on creating opportunities for children and families living in urban poverty, with a deep emphasis on measuring impact. Our funding advances projects already making an impact in education, health, and family economic stability. Through these enduring and long-standing partnerships, we create lasting change together.
PNC Foundation: Foundation Grant
PNC Foundation
PNC Foundation
Strengthening and enriching the lives of our neighbors in communities where we live and work.
Vision & Mission
For decades, we have provided resources to seed ideas, foster development initiatives and encourage leadership in nonprofit organizations where imagination and determination are at work enhancing people's lives everyday.
The PNC Foundation's priority is to form partnerships with community-based nonprofit organizations in order to enhance educational opportunities, with an emphasis on early childhood education, and to promote the growth of communities through economic development initiatives.
Foundation Grant
The PNC Foundation supports a variety of nonprofit organizations with a special emphasis on those that work to achieve sustainability and touch a diverse population, in particular, those that support early childhood education and/or economic development.
Education
The PNC Foundation supports educational programs for children and youth, particularly early childhood education initiatives that meet the criteria established through PNC Grow Up Great. Specifically, PNC Grow Up Great grants must:
- Support early education initiatives that benefit children from birth to age five; and
- Serve a majority of children (>50%) from low- to moderate-income families; and
- Adhere to all other standard PNC Foundation guidelines, as outlined on the PNC Foundation website, applicant eligibility quiz, as well as the Foundation policies and procedures; and
- Include one or a combination of the following:
- direct services/programs for children in their classroom or community;
- professional development/workforce development for early childhood educators;
- family and/or community engagement in children’s early learning
- Additional considerations:
- The grant focus should include math, science, reading, vocabulary development, the arts, financial education, or social/emotional development.
- The grant recipient, or collaborative partner, should have early childhood education as an area of focus. If the organization’s focus is beyond birth to age five, the specific grant must be earmarked for birth to age five.
- Incorporate opportunities for PNC volunteers in classroom or non-classroom-based activities.
Economic Development
Economic development organizations, including those which enhance the quality of life through neighborhood revitalization, cultural enrichment and human services are given support. Priority is given to community development initiatives that strategically promote the growth of low-and moderate-income communities and/or provide services to these communities.
- Affordable Housing
- The PNC Foundation understands the critical need for affordable housing for low-and moderate-income individuals.
- We are committed to providing support to nonprofit organizations that:
- give counseling and services to help these individuals maintain their housing stock;
- offer transitional housing units and programs; and/or
- offer credit counseling assistance to individuals, helping them to prepare for homeownership.
- Community Development
- Because small businesses are often critical components of community growth and help foster business development, the PNC Foundation provides support to nonprofit organizations that
- offer technical assistance to, or loan programs for, small businesses located in low-and moderate-income areas or
- support small businesses that employ low-and moderate-income individuals.
- Because small businesses are often critical components of community growth and help foster business development, the PNC Foundation provides support to nonprofit organizations that
- Community Services
- Support is given to social services organizations that benefit the health, education, quality of life or provide essential services for low-and moderate-income individuals and families.
- The PNC Foundation supports job training programs and organizations that provide essential services for their families.
- Arts & Culture
- Support is given for cultural enrichment programs benefitting the community.
- Revitalization & Stabilization of Low-and Moderate-Income Areas
- The PNC Foundation supports nonprofit organizations that serve low-and moderate-income neighborhoods by improving living and working conditions.
- Support is given to organizations that help stabilize communities, eliminate blight and attract and retain businesses and residents to the community.
Semnani Family Foundation Grants
Semnani Family Foundation
Mission
Driven by a philanthropic calling to support marginalized communities throughout the world, the Semnani Family Foundation partners with on-the-ground organizations and leverages its resources in a cost-effective and efficient manner that delivers the maximum benefit.
History
Guided by his grandmother Maliheh’s example and teachings, Khosrow Semnani and his wife Ghazaleh established the Semnani Family Foundation in 1993. The foundation’s first grant was issued through CARE International to an orphanage in Romania that cared for newborns affected by HIV. Over the last few decades, the foundation has continued to build upon its mission to empower the disaffected, partnering with a variety of organizations in different countries who can make the greatest impact.
In addition to its global influence, the Semnani Family Foundation established roots within the state of Utah with the founding of Maliheh Free Clinic in 2005 to provide free healthcare to thousands of uninsured people in the Salt Lake City area.
Where We Work
The Semnani Family Foundation focuses primarily on promoting health, education, and disaster relief for marginalized communities all around the world. Driven by a clear mission to adapt and serve at the global level, we have leveraged our resources to make a meaningful impact in the following countries so far:
- Afghanistan
- Bosnia
- Colombia
- England
- Ethiopia
- Ghana
- Guatemala
- India
- Iran
- Kenya
- Madagascar
- Mali
- Mexico
- Pakistan
- Philippines
- Romania
- Somalia
- South Africa
- Tanzania
- Tonga
- Uganda
- United States
- Yemen
At the heart of the Foundation lies a fervent commitment to human welfare, always prioritizing health and the needs of society’s most vulnerable.
The Sidney Stern Memorial Trust is devoted solely to the funding of charitable, scientific, medical and educational organizations.
The Board endeavors to support soundly-managed charitable organizations that give service with a broad scope, have a substantial effect on their target populations, and contribute materially to the general welfare. The Board does not discriminate on the basis of ethnicity, race, gender, sexual orientation or religion.
The Bank of America Foundation Sponsorship Program
Bank Of America Charitable Foundation Inc
- preserving neighborhoods;
- educating the workforce for 21st century jobs;
- addressing critical needs such as hunger and emergency shelter;
- arts and culture;
- the environment; and
- diversity and inclusion programs.
Grants are made at the Foundation’s discretion based on our current funding strategies focused on housing, jobs and hunger.
MD: Environmental Quality Incentives Program (EQIP)
USDA: Natural Resources Conservation Service of Maryland
The Environmental Quality Incentives Program (EQIP) provides financial and technical assistance to agricultural and forestry producers to address natural resource concerns and deliver environmental benefits.
How It Works
Through EQIP, NRCS provides agricultural producers and non-industrial forest managers with financial resources and one-on-one help to plan and implement improvements, or what NRCS calls conservation practices. Using these practices can lead to cleaner water and air, healthier soil and better wildlife habitat, all while improving agricultural operations. Through EQIP, you can voluntarily implement conservation practices, and NRCS co-invests in these practices with you.
Benefits
Some of these benefits include:
- Reduction of contamination from agricultural sources, such as animal feeding operations.
- Efficient utilization of nutrients, reducing input costs and reduction in nonpoint source pollution.
- Increased soil health to help mitigate against increasing weather volatility and improved drought resiliency.
National and State Priorities
The following national priorities, consistent with statutory resources concerns that include soil, water, wildlife, air quality, and related natural resource concerns, may be used in EQIP implementation:
- Reductions of nonpoint source pollution, such as nutrients, sediment, pesticides, or excess salinity in impaired watersheds consistent with total maximum daily loads (TMDL) where available; the reduction of surface and groundwater contamination; and the reduction of contamination from agricultural sources, such as animal feeding operations
- Conservation of ground and surface water resources
- Reduction of emissions, such as particulate matter, nitrogen oxides, volatile organic compounds, and ozone precursors and depleters that contribute to air quality impairment violations of National Ambient Air Quality Standards
- Reduction in soil erosion and sedimentation from unacceptable levels on agricultural land
- Promotion of at-risk species habitat conservation including development and improvement of wildlife habitat
- Energy conservation to help save fuel, improve efficiency of water use, maintain production, and protect soil and water resources by more efficiently using fertilizers and pesticides and
- Biological carbon storage and sequestration
In addition, Maryland has identified the following priorities:
- Air Quality Emissions
- Aquatic Habitat
- Concentrated Erosion
- Degraded Plant Condition
- Field Sediment, Nutrient and Pathogen Loss
- Inefficient Energy Use
- Livestock Production Limitation
- Pest Pressure
- Soil Quality Limitations
- Storage and Handling of Pollutants
- Terrestrial Habitat
- Wind and Water Erosion
Ameriprise Community Grants
Ameriprise Financial
Ameriprise Financial Grantmaking
At Ameriprise Financial, giving back is deeply rooted in our culture. We’ve initiated positive change in the communities where we live and work for more than 120 years. We believe our community involvement enables us to actively live our values. Through grant making, volunteerism and employee and financial advisor gift matching programs, we support a diverse group of over 6,000 nonprofits across the country.
Focus Areas
Awarding grant dollars to nonprofits is one way we strengthen our communities and help individuals on a path to financial independence. To ensure we're meeting the needs of our communities and making an even greater collective impact, we focus on three key giving areas when awarding grants.
Volunteer engagement is a priority across all focus areas:
The engagement of Ameriprise employees and financial advisors is a critical component of our philanthropy. Whether it’s serving on a nonprofit board, engaging friends, clients and community members in volunteering or providing skills-based support, our relationships with nonprofits go deep. For this reason, we give priority across all focus areas to applications where there is active volunteer engagement of Ameriprise advisors and employees.
Meeting Basic Needs
At Ameriprise Financial, we help clients achieve financial security and peace of mind. That’s satisfying, meaningful work. We also help the people in our neighborhoods who struggle to meet basic needs such as where their next meal comes from, where they’ll sleep tonight or how they’ll find a higher wage job. We’re here to help them through the three platforms of our Meeting Basic Needs focus area.
Consideration is given to applications addressing the following:
- Hunger
- Food banks, food shelves and food pantries, daily meal programs or meal services for the homebound
- Hunger-relief programs targeted to meet the special needs of children, ethnic populations or veterans
- Food programs run by nonprofits where hunger is not their sole focus, for example a youth meal program at the YWCA or a backpack program run by a Boys & Girls Club
- Shelter
- Emergency shelter, including youth homelessness
- Transitional housing, permanent supportive housing and efforts to end chronic homelessness
- Housing-first models (programs quickly providing housing and then addressing needed services)
- Achieving and maintaining home ownership, repair and maintenance efforts helping keep seniors, veterans and other populations in their homes
- Adult Self-Sufficiency: Programs serving adults age 21 and older that help address the following areas:
- Basic hard and soft skills that help adults achieve economic and family stability
- Basic financial and budgeting skills
- Increase employability and wages, including work readiness and job transitions
- Employment of disabled adults
Supporting Community Vitality
We believe communities should be strong, healthy and resilient. We want livable places for all, where neighbors look out for one another, cultural events are well-attended and people pull together in times of crisis and joy. We work to create economic vitality and cultural enrichment through the following areas of focus.
Consideration is given to applications addressing the following:
- Community Development
- Neighborhood revitalization
- Economic development
- Strengthening and supporting small businesses and nonprofits through technical expertise
- Cultural Enrichment
- Arts education
- Access for underserved populations
- Diverse artists and performances that spark topical community conversations
Volunteer Driven Causes: Ameriprise employees and financial advisors are outstanding volunteers who serve in teams and also as individuals bringing personal skill-sets to nonprofits. Volunteering is part of the culture at Ameriprise and we are proud to support communities through contributions of both service and financial resources.
Funding for Volunteer-Driven Causes is determined by current Ameriprise volunteerism. In general, funding is in proportion to the size of the Ameriprise volunteer team supporting a nonprofit. A team may include employees, financial advisors and/or staff or a combination of any Ameriprise volunteers.
Pooled Monitoring Initiative’s Restoration Research Award Program
Chesapeake Bay Trust
Pooled Monitoring Initiative’s Restoration Research Award Program
The Chesapeake Bay Trust, the Maryland Department of Natural Resources, the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation through the Environmental Protection Agency’s Chesapeake Bay Program Office, Anne Arundel County, Baltimore City, the Maryland Department of Transportation State Highway Administration, the Montgomery County Department of Environmental Protection, and other partners announce a Request for Proposals for its Restoration Research award program. The goal of this research program is to answer several key restoration questions that are a barrier to watershed restoration project implementation.
Funding partners hope that answering these questions will ultimately lead to increased confidence in proposed restoration project outcomes, clarification of the optimal site conditions in which to apply particular restoration techniques, information useful to regulatory agencies in project permitting, and information that will help guide monitoring programs. This program supports the Pooled Monitoring Initiative that is designed to connect key stormwater and stream restoration questions posed by the regulatory and practitioner communities with researchers. This program also supports research for pollutants of emerging concern, “trade-offs” and more. Each year the top research questions are added to this RFP and some years past research questions are cycled off while we await findings to inform the next question’s iteration. The Pooled Monitoring Initiative pools funding resources to answer your top research questions and deliver the results back to you for use.
Resilient and Connected Appalachians Grant Program
The Nature Conservancy
The Nature Conservancy
The Nature Conservancy is a global environmental nonprofit working to create a world where people and nature can thrive.
Our Mission
To conserve the lands and waters on which all life depends.
Connectivity, Climate, Communities Fund
To make the highest possible impact on the climate and biodiversity crises, The Nature Conservancy (TNC) is committed to advancing solutions and supporting partners throughout the Appalachians to connect and conserve vital wildlife habitat, build resilience to the impacts of climate change, and generate new job and recreation opportunities for communities.
Approximately one-third of the U.S. population lives in or within 100 miles of the Appalachians, including an estimated 36 million people that rely on the region for sources of drinking water. The landscape contains the world's largest remaining expanses of temperate broadleaf mixed forest and provides habitat to a wide diversity of plants of animals, many of which are listed as rare, threatened, or endangered. Conserving this landscape is critical for nature and for the people that live and work there.
However as climate change drives ecosystem instability, plants and animals are shifting their ranges northward, and people are having to find ways to adapt to complex and intertwined challenges. TNC and many others have been working to conserve vital Appalachian habitats for decades. Now we must ramp up our efforts and coordinate with partners across the Appalachians for maximum impact.
To succeed in these efforts, TNC’s Connectivity, Climate, Communities Fund offers two grant programs for conservation and community organizations, municipalities, Federally Recognized Tribal Nations, and local and state agencies in the Appalachians who are working to protect and conserve this region:
- The Resilient and Connected Appalachians Grant Program
- The New York Climate Resilience Grant Program
Resilient and Connected Appalachians Grant Program
The Resilient and Connected Appalachians Grant Program provides grants of up to $100,000 for fee and easement acquisition projects throughout the Appalachians.
Equitable Conservation and Community Benefits
Conservation organizations are increasingly acknowledging the importance of incorporating social equity in their missions, partnerships, and projects and evolving how they work to have better outcomes for people and nature.
TNC defines community benefits as the positive outcomes that directly result from or are included within conservation projects as experienced by local communities and people. This is particularly important for historically marginalized communities, communities with limited access to nature, communities experiencing heightened impacts of climate change due to systemic underinvestment and poor infrastructure, and Indigenous communities.
RCA program funding will support projects that demonstrate meaningful community engagement, work with those historically excluded from conservation, and lead to a fairer distribution of benefits for people and communities.
Some examples of community benefits include improved and greater access to nature, protection of drinking water sources, recreational and resource-based economic opportunities, flood mitigation, engagement in cross-cultural initiatives, or protection of lands that will meet community-defined conservation needs. We encourage projects with meaningful community benefits that are integrated with the land protection goals.
Project Evaluation
Projects will be evaluated according to their capacity to deliver land protection outcomes aligned with the program goals, including:
- Location:
- the project is located within TNC’s Appalachians Program boundary and is in or near a mapped focal area. Projects outside of focal areas will also be considered.
- Resilience:
- the percentage of the total project area that is part of the Resilient and Connected Network.
- Connectivity:
- adjacency to protected lands or other attributes that will lead to landscape connectivity over time (e.g., the project is a necessary acquisition for advancing a local or regional plan that aims to protect a critical conservation corridor).
- Collaboration:
- evidence of engagement with other organizations, community groups, or local governments (including, but not limited to, shared funding).
- Community:
- project elements that directly engage and or benefit people, especially vulnerable or marginalized communities.
- Timeline:
- the project will close within 12 months from the start of the grant agreement term.
- Feasibility:
- likelihood that the project will close and the costs seem reasonable.
Maryland Urban and Community Forestry Committee Grants Program
Maryland Department of Natural Resources
The Maryland Urban and Community Forestry Committee (MUCFC) Grants program helps community groups fund tree planting and education projects statewide to enhance Maryland’s urban forest. Community tree projects may be organized via schools, service organizations, homeowner organizations or other volunteer-based groups. The tree planting/educational projects must be located on public lands in parks, metropolitan areas, cities or towns.
Urban Forestry definition
According to the U.S. Census Bureau, an urban area is a place with a population of at least 2,500 people. This definition encompasses a wide range of communities, including most of the cities and towns in Maryland. Forestry refers to individual parks, yards and street trees, as well as forest fragments such as wooded parkland, unimproved lots and naturally regenerating areas.
Urban Forests are generally, though not exclusively, thought of as providing economical, ecological and social services like recreation, aesthetics, wildlife habitat, stormwater management, carbon storage and interception of airborne pollutants. This is in addition to the traditional view of forests as primarily providing goods like lumber, pulpwood or firewood.
Urban Forest definition
The ecosystem that consists of trees and other vegetation including shrubs, vines and groundcovers growing individually, in small groups or under forest conditions on public and private lands in our cities, their suburbs and towns. The urban forest not only provides shade for us and habitat for wildlife, it helps to clean our air and water. Streets, sidewalks, buildings, utilities, and most importantly, people are an integral part of the urban forest.
RFP- Northeastern Region Programmatic Field Liaisons and Community Liaisons
National Fish and Wildlife Foundation (NFWF)
RFP- Northeastern Region Programmatic Field Liaisons and Community Liaisons Grant
Overview
The National Fish and Wildlife Foundation (NFWF) seeks several qualified contractors to provide technical assistance under two distinct roles:
- Programmatic “field liaisons” to broadly support applicants and grantees for the Chesapeake Bay Stewardship Fund (CBSF) and Central Appalachia Habitat Stewardship Program (CAHSP), within NFWF’s Northeastern region. This support will help to advance CBSF and CAHSP goals to improve grantee and applicant experience and increase the quality and scale of qualified proposals to the program. The contractor will provide support for one year (with the option to renew for up to one additional year) and report to the Program Director for Chesapeake Bay and Central Appalachia, or to one of their direct reports.
- For CBSF, “community liaisons” embedded within specific geographic areas of interest to provide education, coordination, and networking among a variety of community-based organizations and other community stakeholders, NFWF, and its existing grantee and partner networks. This support will help ensure community-level interests and priorities are integrated into NFWF grant programs and portfolios, inform and advance capacity building models in support of locally led environmental and conservation programming, and improve the quality and impact of associated proposals and projects through NFWF’s CBSF programs and portfolios. Specific geographic areas of interest include, but are not limited to, communities within greater metropolitan areas of Baltimore, Maryland, Washington, D.C., and Richmond, Virginia.
Scope of Work
The purpose of the contemplated contract is to:
- Assist prospective applicants and current NFWF grantees and community partners in establishing, strengthening, and sustaining regional-scale partnerships and collaborative efforts to advance NFWF’s Chesapeake Bay Business Plan.
- Conduct outreach and offer assistance to potential grantees and community partners in targeted geographies to understand NFWF funding priorities, develop restoration project concepts, identify potential partnerships, and identify funding opportunities.
- Support successful project implementation through regular coordination and field-based site visits to troubleshoot potential challenges with project implementation; conduct pre-project monitoring assessments; obtain lessons learned or NFWF program feedback; collect photo documentation; provide guidance regarding projects’ long-term maintenance and stewardship plans; and to scope potential next phases of projects with grantees.
- Support NFWF staff in implementing grantee oversight activities to assist grantees who need additional guidance with reporting requirements or potential compliance issues and developing proposals to public and private funding partners for new projects and initiatives, consistent with NFWF’s Chesapeake Bay and Central Appalachia program goals.
- Ongoing engagement and participation in meetings and dialogues with EPA, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, the federal-state Chesapeake Bay Program partnership, the Chesapeake Conservation Partnership, and other coordinating bodies advancing Bay restoration and conservation.
- Participate in team meetings with NFWF team and other field and community liaisons, generally on a bi-weekly schedule.
- Provide accurate and detailed information about site visits, grantee contacts, outreach, etc. for NFWF funder reports.
- Facilitate peer-to-peer learning among grantees and community partners through field tours, site visits, workshops, and other venues.
- Facilitate collaborative initiatives around NFWF priorities in the designated regions.
Joseph Robert Foundation Grant
Joseph Robert Foundation
Mission
The Joseph Robert Foundation is a small Pennsylvania private foundation whose primary purposes are to provide financial support for the arts, animal welfare, and the environment. Our main geographic focus is the mid-Atlantic region of the U.S., but in special cases we may provide support to organizations located outside this area.
We are interested in awarding grants to non-profit organizations addressing significant issues of interest to our Board. We are especially interested in supporting smaller, local organizations that have fewer resources and more limited objectives, although we may also help fund regional or national organizations having specific program or project objectives. Both general operating and project/program support is available.
We welcome first-time grant seekers, support applications from prior grant recipients, and reach out to find eligible organizations that share our goals and interests.
What We Fund
Arts
We believe strongly in the power of the arts to transform both individuals and communities and are committed to reinforcing the importance of the arts as a vital component of our culture. In challenging political times such as these, the role of the arts is too often overlooked, or even denigrated. We want to play our part in asserting the value of the arts by encouraging artists to take risks, explore new possibilities, and reach out to both new and familiar audiences. By nurturing creativity and innovative thinking, we can help artists make an impact on the world around them.
While we are supportive of all forms of creative expression, the interests of the Foundation are primarily in the visual arts. We will also look favorably upon interdisciplinary projects/programs with a visual arts component, or an arts program/project that would further the goals of either of the other of the Foundation’s areas of interest.
Animal Welfare
The plight and circumstances of animals, whether domestic, farm or wild, are areas of deep concern to the Foundation. We are interested in rescuing, protecting, rehabilitating, and providing homes and sanctuaries for the non-human inhabitants of this planet. We are especially interested in helping organizations that identify and provide resources for animal populations in underserved communities. We are also interested in helping with programs that train and educate wildlife rehabilitators and other animal rescue workers.
Environment and Sustainable Resources Management
With ever increasing attacks on the environment and environmental protection, it is critically important to protect and preserve our natural resources, open lands, forests, oceans, waterways, watersheds, and green spaces. The Joseph Robert Foundation is primarily interested in supporting smaller, local organizations that can have a direct impact on their communities, whether through education or through sustainability projects. We may also be interested in contributing to larger organizations that provide essential services to protect and safeguard the environment from threats of all natures.
Grant Period
The normal grant period will be one year, starting from the date the award has been granted. When appropriate, grantees may reapply for Joseph Robert Foundation funding upon the submission of a final report at the end of the funding period.
Grant Amount
Most grant awards to organizations will be under $10,000. First-time grant awards will be limited to $5,000 or less, unless there are compelling circumstances. Determination of the grant amount will be made based on organizational and/or program/project budgets, scope of proposal, organizational qualifications, and overall application quality. Grants to individuals will be limited to $2,000 or less, with sources of matching and in-kind funds considered.
Grant Type
Organizations may apply for general operating (GO) and/or program/project funds, but larger organizations are limited to applying for program/project funding.
Individual applicants may only apply for project funds.
The Lawrence Foundation is a private family foundation focused on making grants to support environmental, human services and other causes.
The Lawrence Foundation was established in mid-2000. We make both program and operating grants and do not have any geographical restrictions on our grants. Nonprofit organizations that qualify for public charity status under section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code or other similar organizations are eligible for grants from The Lawrence Foundation.
Grant Amount and Types
Grants typically range between $5,000 - $10,000. In some limited cases we may make larger grants, but that is typically after we have gotten to know your organization over a period of time. We also generally don’t make multi-year grants, although we may fund the same organization on a year by year basis over a period of years.
General operating or program/project grant requests within our areas of interests are accepted. In general, regardless of whether a grant request is for general operating or program/project expenses, all of our grants will be issued as unrestricted grants.
Max and Victoria Dreyfus Foundation Grant
Max and Victoria Dreyfus Foundation
Max and Victoria Dreyfus Foundation Grant
The Foundation will consider requests to support museums, cultural and performing arts programs; schools and hospitals; educational, skills-training and other programs for youth, seniors, and persons with disabilities; environmental and wildlife protection activities; and other community-based organizations and programs.
Robinson Foundation Grant
Robinson Foundation
Calling to Serve
Since its inception in 2016, the Robinson Foundation has sought to demonstrate God’s love through sharing the gifts we have received. We understand the often unspoken hardships and struggles that people in and outside of our community face everyday. As such, our contributions are focused on relieving these hardships for the betterment of our world.
As a family-operated foundation, we pray that our small efforts will not only create immediate change in the lives of our neighbors, but will help set those lives on a course for success in the future. We are thankful for each and every day we have on this earth to use what God has granted us to make a difference.
Areas of Interest
- Animal Welfare
- Children & Families
- Disaster Relief
- Education
- Medical Assistance
- Nature & Wildlife Conservation
- Poverty Relief
- Religious & Spiritual Endeavors
- Veterans' Issues
Grant Considerations
We take many different aspects of applications into account when making grant issuing decisions, however these are some of the high-level questions we ask ourselves during the process:
- How does the organization serve their key audience goals?
- Is the organization fiscally responsible?
- Will a grant have a tangible, meaningful impact?
- Will we see direct results from this grant?
- Does the organization have other financial contributors?
Community Partnership Award
The Mutual of America Foundation Community Partnership Award recognizes outstanding nonprofit organizations in the United States that have shown exemplary leadership by facilitating partnerships with public, private or social sector leaders who are working together as equal partners, not as donors and recipients, to build a cohesive community that serves as a model for collaborating with others for the greater good.
Each year, the Mutual of America Foundation sponsors a national competition in which hundreds of organizations demonstrate the value of their partnership to the communities they serve, their ability to be replicated by others and their capacity to stimulate new approaches to addressing significant social issues.
Six organizations are selected by an independent committee to receive the Community Partnership Award.
- The Thomas J. Moran Award is given to the national award-winning program and includes $100,000 and a documentary video about the program.
- The Frances R. Hesselbein Award is given to a partnership that is addressing social challenges in more than one community, or which demonstrates the potential to be replicated in other communities. This recipient receives $75,000.
- Four other organizations are named Honorable Mention recipients for their programs, and each receives $50,000.
Since its inception in 1996, the Community Partnership Award has recognized 262 partnerships from cities and towns across America. Like so many of our clients working in the nonprofit community, Mutual of America is dedicated to having a direct, positive impact on society.
Gupta Family Foundation Grant
Gupta Family Foundation
Gupta Family Foundation is a private, nonprofit foundation headquartered in Herndon, Virginia, USA. Our mission is to support organizations that provide focused intervention in the lives of people who have been disadvantaged in some way to help them become self-reliant. We take a very broad view of “disadvantage” to include anything that holds a person back from realizing their potential, such as poverty, physical or mental disability, social alienation, etc. The foundation also supports relief agencies that serve people affected by emergencies such as natural disasters.
The foundation evaluates and awards annual and multi-year grants ranging from $5,000 to over $250,000 (USD). Our focus is on funding smaller organizations all around the world that are led by individuals with a deep personal commitment to their missions.
Our selection criteria include:
- Mission alignment
- The organization is run by the founder or, if not, by a successor who embodies the original inspiration, passion and commitment of the founder.
- At least 90% of grant monies reaches the intended beneficiaries.
- The organization is non-sectarian, i.e.,
- It does not, directly or indirectly, support or condone the proselytization of any religion,
- It is not supported by or affiliated to a religious organization.
Corporate Contributions
Community involvement and corporate citizenship are an example of Insperity’s mission in action. We are committed to helping the communities where we live and work because together, we know we can make great things happen.
Grants
Philanthropic grants are a strong part of our community outreach and aid institutions needing financial support to meet important service goals.
Event Sponsorship
Fundraising events are an important part of nonprofit support. Insperity provides event sponsorships to approved charities to assist them in meeting their financial and community goals.
Dudley T. Dougherty Foundation Grant
Dudley T Dougherty Foundation Inc
The Dudley T. Dougherty Foundation Vision
The Dudley T. Dougherty Foundation, "A Foundation for All", was established in 2002. It was begun in order to give a clear voice for those who wish to be a part of the many, worthy, forces for change in our world.
We are a foundation whose purpose is to look ahead towards the future, giving the past its due by remembering where we came from, and how much we can all accomplish together. We aim to make the critical difference on our planet by recognizing and having respect for our ever changing world. We respect all Life, the Environment, and all People, no matter who they are.
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Sign up to see the full listTop Searched Wildlife Grants in Maryland
Grant Insights : Grant Funding Trends in Maryland
Average Grant Size
What's the typical amount funded for Maryland?
Grants are most commonly $126,843.
Total Number of Grants
What's the total number of grants in Wildlife Grants in Maryland year over year?
In 2023, funders in Maryland awarded a total of 47,302 grants.
2022 46,680
2023 47,302
Top Grant Focus Areas
Among all the Wildlife Grants in Maryland given out in Maryland, 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 Wildlife Grants in Maryland changing over time?
Funding has increased by 50.98%.
2022 $3,960,728,306
2023
$5,979,795,969
50.98%
Maryland Counties That Receive the Most Funding
How does grant funding vary by county?
Montgomery County, Baltimore City, and Prince Georges County receive the most funding.
| County | Total Grant Funding in 2023 |
|---|---|
| Montgomery County | $3,561,602,202 |
| Baltimore City | $3,348,386,817 |
| Prince Georges County | $848,606,085 |
| Baltimore County | $515,380,138 |
| Anne Arundel County | $415,869,977 |