Grants

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Our Grantmaking Strategy

For more than 100 years, The Chicago Community Trust has convened, supported, funded, and accelerated the work of community members and changemakers committed to strengthening the Chicago region. From building up our civic infrastructure to spearheading our response to the Great Recession, the Trust has brought our community together to face pressing challenges and seize our greatest opportunities.

Explore Our Discretionary Grants

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Showing 5841–5848 of 4703 results

  • Grant Recipient

    Black Researchers Collective

    Awarded: Awarded Amount: $75,000

    We're building capacity of Chicago communities with community organizers and movement builders by advancing civic education, increasing research and data literacy, involving residents in state and local policy, and actively engaging folx in a participatory process to activate what they've learned for the benefit of their communities. This work primarily lives in our Community Education & Action Research pillar, and is fully executed in partnership with a number of our Community Anchor Organizations. For FY2025-26, we're working with the following communities and anchor organizations to actively contribute to the economic vitality of Chicago neighborhoods: (1) West Garfield Park: Garfield Park Community Council, (2) Grand Boulevard: Community Assets Builders Association, (3) South Shore: Real Men Charities, and (4) Washington Heights: Elevated Survivorship.

  • Grant Recipient

    Taskforce Prevention and Community Services

    Awarded: Awarded Amount: $50,000

    Task Force Prevention and Community Services (TaskForce) respectfully requests $50,000 in general operating support to sustain and expand our vital, life-affirming programs for LGBTQ+ youth of color in Chicago. Based in the heart of the Austin community—a neighborhood deeply affected by systemic disinvestment—TaskForce serves as one of the only safe, affirming hubs for over 3,500 LGBTQ+ youth, offering integrated services that address the intertwined challenges of HIV prevention, mental health, gender-based violence, and food insecurity. This application will outline: Our Mission and Values: A community-rooted commitment to the sexual health, wellbeing, and empowerment of LGBTQ+ youth of color through a trauma-informed, culturally responsive model of care. Organizational History and Urgency: Founded in 1990, TaskForce operates in one of Chicago’s most underserved areas. As demand for our services surges—up 40% from 2023—we face rising costs and urgent needs from youth navigating housing insecurity, violence, and limited access to affirming healthcare. Core Programs and Services Including: Health Services: Free, on-site HIV/STI testing, PrEP navigation, hormone therapy, and wraparound care. Mental Health and Violence Prevention: Referrals, expressive therapies, youth mental health training, and case management for survivors of gender-based violence. Essential Needs: A growing food pantry, gender-affirming clothing closet, legal aid, and warm meals. Community Engagement: The Vogue School, CPS outreach, and employment readiness programs rooted in cultural pride and identity. Impact and Reach: In 2024 alone, we provided 600+ HIV tests, distributed 2,400+ produce bags, served 1,100+ families through our food pantry, and engaged over 2,000 youth in our Vogue School—all at no cost to participants. Vision for 2025: With your support, we aim to reach 4,000 youth, deepen partnerships for on-site care, grow food access by 10%, and expand trauma-informed, gender-affirming programming citywide. Why Now: LGBTQ+ youth of color—especially Black and Latinx youth—face unprecedented barriers to basic healthcare, safety, and stability. Amid rising attacks on gender-affirming care and widening health disparities, TaskForce is often the only place many youth feel safe, seen, and supported. Without increased funding, our ability to meet this moment is at risk. We ask for your partnership to protect and expand access to services that save lives, affirm identities, and build brighter futures for LGBTQ+ youth of color in Chicago. Thank you for your thoughtful consideration.

  • Grant Recipient

    Illinois Environmental Council Education Fund

    Awarded: Awarded Amount: $80,000

    The Illinois Environmental Council Education Fund (IECEF) will continue to engage coalition partners and educate decision-makers in an effort to create a stronger, more resilient local food economy in Chicagoland and throughout Illinois.

  • Grant Recipient

    RESPOND NOW

    Awarded: Awarded Amount: $75,000

    Respond Now respectfully requests support from the Chicago Community Trust for our Food Pantry and SNAP Outreach programs—two essential initiatives that provide critical hunger relief across 22 south suburban Chicago communities we’ve proudly served for over 55 years. Our Food Pantry operates Monday through Friday and uses a client-choice model, empowering individuals and families to select the groceries that best meet their needs. Community members may visit up to twice per month and take home as many groceries as they can carry—typically two to three full-sized paper bags. In parallel, our SNAP Outreach program assists eligible individuals in navigating the complex enrollment process to access federal nutritional benefits. With the support of the Chicago Community Trust, we aim to strengthen and expand the reach of both programs to ensure that food insecurity is met with dignity, access, and practical support wherever the need exists. This work remains timely, as systemic disinvestment and structural racism continue to drive long-term socioeconomic challenges in the communities we serve. Indeed, this assistance would come at an urgent time, when cuts to Federal programs tied to food insecurity initiatives have become regular and aggressive. While those sources of funding are contracting despite growing hunger, Respond Now is expanding to fight it: in the final stages of our capital campaign to expand our pantry at 1439 Emerald Ave., construction is set to be completed in July of 2025. This will allow us to assist more than ever, and just in time: we are seeing nearly twice the pantry visits we were in 2022.

  • Grant Recipient

    Metropolitan Tenants Organization

    Awarded: Awarded Amount: $50,000

    The Metropolitan Tenants Organization (MTO) requests a $50,000 general operating grant. A 39-year old grassroots nonprofit in Chicago, MTO is a membership organization made up of tenants, tenant organizations, community members and groups who support the mission of MTO to educate, organize, and empower tenants to have a voice in the decisions that affect the affordability, availability, and sustainability of safe, decent, and accessible housing. MTO works on its mission through three primary programs: a Tenants Rights Hotline serving close to 9,000 people annually, many of whom are facing eviction and most of whom live in Chicago's predominantly African-American communities; an Affordable Housing Preservation Program, engaging and aiding renters to advocate for their rights as tenants; and a Healthy Homes Program that addresses home-based health hazards. MTO’s primary population is low income and minority. Our relationship with tenants and the community drive everything we do. Every interaction with a tenant is an opportunity to empower and build relationships that align with their needs, involve them in broader housing policies, and connect them to campaigns that promote systemic change. MTO is a key partner in citywide coalitions such as the Chicago Housing Initiative (CHI); Chicago Housing Justice League (CHJL), and; Proactive Addressing Substandard Housing (PASH). We offer regular training sessions for community-based groups such as Garfield Park Community Council, Pilsen Alliance, Night Ministry, Enlace, Access Living, Apna Ghar, and Lugenia Burns Hope Center which amplify our work and strengthen community voices to push for policy changes.

  • Grant Recipient

    Ecosystems of Care

    Awarded: Awarded Amount: $60,000

    Ecosystems of Care works to build stronger and more just systems of food, information, and resources, forge connections across neighbors, and generate community power. Our core project, Market Box, began as an emergency pandemic response in 2020, and takes a full-system approach to food insecurity. Our volunteer-led mutual aid project bulk-buys food from local farms and distributes it for free to Black, low-income neighbors across the South Side of Chicago. In five years, we have made over 24,000 deliveries. We seek to fill gaps left by existing food aid: because state benefits structures are often insufficient, we take a trust-based approach and do not require income verification. Because many in our network struggle with mobility, we deliver food directly. And because many existing pantries are best equipped to offer shelf-stable goods, we deliver fresh produce and protein. With every bag of food, we work toward three goals: to get fresh produce to our neighbors, to support small midwest farms, and to build a proven, replicable model of community-driven, locally sourced food-support.

  • Grant Recipient

    NeighborSpace

    Awarded: Awarded Amount: $225,000

    NeighborSpace seeks a three-year grant of $100,000 per year to support hiring an Urban Agriculture Coordinator: $75,000 will cover salary and fringe benefits for the position; $25,000 will support a portion of salaries for the Executive Director and Assistant Director, who will oversee and collaborate with the position. The Urban Agriculture Coordinator will serve a rapidly growing network of new and existing urban agriculture sites, supporting high-yield community gardens and neighborhood farms at all stages of land acquisition and remediation, design/build activities and business development, and ongoing stewardship.

  • Grant Recipient

    YWCA Metropolitan Chicago

    Awarded: Awarded Amount: $100,000

    YWCA Metropolitan Chicago provides comprehensive early child care and education services and programs designed to strengthen the sector and create a thriving ecosystem. Our work is delivered across Cook County, DuPage County, Lake County, Kane County, and parts of Kendall and Grundy counties.