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 1411–1418 of 4630 results

  • Grant Recipient

    DEPAUL UNIVERSITY

    Awarded: Awarded Amount: $15,000

  • Grant Recipient

    Chicago Community Foundation

    Awarded: Awarded Amount: $3,062

  • Grant Recipient

    LINCOLN PARK COMMUNITY SERVICES

    Awarded: Awarded Amount: $25,000

    Lincoln Park Community Services respectfully submits this application for general operating support to support our expansion of Drop-in services for people experiencing street based homelessness at our Sedgwick location in Old Town based upon the need that has been identified since our move to our new location. Specifically, we are seeking to increase the operation of our drop-in center to five days a week and facilitate expanded services to individuals who are in need, even if we are unable to provide them with an interim housing (shelter) bed. LPCS seeks to transition from a drop-in model that serves clients one time or intermittently to a more comprehensive, outcomes-focused model offering regular, weekly case management and support to clients until they are placed into more stable housing. With our current model we are limited to one day a week for just three hours in a single location. Our expanded drop-in center model will offer showers, laundry, meals, hygiene supplies, access to clothing items, access to on-site primary care, access to computers and wi-fi, transportation support/bus passes, and intensive case management focused on linkage to services. We are seeking support to hire additional staff, purchase additional resources, such as hygiene supplies, food, and clothing, CTA passes, and provide case management services to street-based individuals. LPCS serves adult individuals aged 18 and over who are experiencing homelessness or who are at risk of homelessness and works with them to overcome their barriers to housing. LPCS serves individuals of all ethnic and racial backgrounds, sexual orientation, religious affiliation, gender identity, and educational attainment. Guests and clients come to LPCS from throughout Chicago. The LPCS drop-in center has a particular emphasis on people who are unsheltered and experiencing street-based homelessness.

  • Grant Recipient

    Chicago Southland Economic Development Corporation

    Awarded: Awarded Amount: $400,000

    Chicago Southland Economic Development Corporation (CSEDC) is applying for $400,000 We Rise Grant funding to complete the acquisition and construction of the 4343 Ascending House (https://4343ascendinghouse.org/), the Chicago Southland Business Incubator. The vision of the 4343 Ascending House is to increase the representation of minority and female small business founders related to Manufacturing and Transportation, Distribution and Logistics (TDL) by providing shared working space, high-speed internet, advanced start-up software, mentorship, and funding opportunities to increase access to networks and expertise that these entrepreneurs need to build their businesses. Located at 4343 Lincoln Hwy, Matteson, IL 60443, the incubator will serve 44 municipalities, over 200 businesses, and over 650,000 residents in the region of southern Cook County bordered by Chicago to the north, Will County to the south, and Indiana to the east. During the Covid crisis, the 4343 Ascending House has started a pilot proposed digital program, which aims to support business development and help existing business and prospective small enterprises transform into digital business to harness the power of e-commerce. Critical partners include Supply Chain Innovation Center and Business Incubator (SCICBI) of Governors State University, Ecommerce Management, and Village of Matteson.

  • Grant Recipient

    The Conservation Fund

    Awarded: Awarded Amount: $110,000

    This application seeks operational funding to launch the Working Farms Fund program in metro Chicago. The Working Farms Fund program is an innovative model to support a resilient regional food system by addressing farmland as a critical piece of supply chain infrastructure. Specifically designed to enable talented and diverse growers to scale production to meet institutional demand for good food, the Working Farms Fund protects critical at-risk farmland and offers a patient pathway to landownership as the basis for business resiliency and intergenerational wealth creation.

  • Grant Recipient

    Ageoptions Inc

    Awarded: Awarded Amount: $50,000

    Avisery by AgeOptions helps older adults and adults with disabilities access affordable healthcare and effectively utilize their health benefits by leveraging its 1,795-member network of health insurance counseling professionals to advocate for a responsive health benefits delivery system. With Chicago Community Trust funding, Avisery will expand its advocacy work so older adults and those with disabilities can access benefits that reduce health and wealth disparities. Avisery will use its network of professional benefits counselors, coalition partners, and relationships with insurance plans, and state and federal agencies to advocate for beneficiaries on an individual level and to address systemic barriers to access and affordability.

  • Grant Recipient

    Alliance to End Homelessness in Suburban Cook County

    Awarded: Awarded Amount: $125,000

    The Alliance leads a network of stakeholders dedicated to preventing and ending homelessness in suburban Cook County. We operate a housing system that provides a coordinated continuum of interventions for people experiencing housing instability. Interventions include preventing homelessness when possible, providing crisis housing when needed, and prioritizing permanent housing. Each of these housing interventions is informed by our systemwide approach that is rooted in cross-sector collaboration, data-driven decision making, and removing structural barriers to housing. The Alliance provides the infrastructure to advance systems and policy change to connect people experiencing homelessness with the housing and services that meet their needs.

  • Grant Recipient

    Shriver Center on Poverty Law

    Awarded: Awarded Amount: $150,000

    The Shriver Center on Poverty Law (Shriver Center) requests a renewal $150,000 general operating grant from the Chicago Community Trust to support its leadership and meaningful work across multiple coalitions, including the Transit Table, Cost of Living Refund Coalition, Housing Policy Roundtable, Illinois Domestic Workers Coalition, and Responsible Budget Coalition. We will leverage these networks throughout the grant period as they strive to promote economic and racial justice, strengthen families and communities, and advance policies and reforms that address the racial wealth gap. Our advocates generally serve as the primary legal and policy experts of these tables, increasing the strength and ultimate success of each coalition.