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. Today, that means confronting the racial and ethnic wealth gap.

Explore Our Discretionary Grants

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Showing 1801–1808 of 4447 results

  • Grant Recipient

    University of Illinois at Chicago

    Awarded: Awarded Amount: $300,000

  • Grant Recipient

    LIBERTY PRAIRIE FOUNDATION

    Awarded: Awarded Amount: $100,000

    Through the activities and resources of our Northeast Illinois FarmLink project, we will continue to connect and equip diverse farmers and landowners to achieve land access successes even as we work to enhance our strategies and approaches. By acting as a land access gateway for the region, we will also make it easier for other organizations seeking to help farmers with long-term land access to find those farmer candidates, thereby reducing fragmentation. In addition, we selectively address systemic factors that shape the context of land access by creative engagement with both private and public landowners and by supporting the emerging statewide land access program.

  • Grant Recipient

    The University of Chicago - Office of Civic Engagement

    Awarded: Awarded Amount: $120,000

    The UChicago Office of Civic Engagement (OCE) and the Polsky Center for Entrepreneurship and Innovation (Polsky) in partnership with local financial and banking partners, and a local economic development referral partner, will continue to serve South Side entrepreneurs of color to help them increase access to social, financial, and knowledge resources through the Small Business Financial Fundamentals Program (SBFF). The SBFF will provide dedicated support on the advancement of individualized business growth projects and comprehensive instruction, and leverage the robust academic resources of the University of Chicago Booth School of Business (Chicago Booth) - including MBA students - to deliver tailored training and education to South Side business owners. Through this program, participants will also have full member access to the robust and ongoing supports at the Polsky Exchange at the University of Chicago, yielding a strengthened network of local entrepreneurs with the knowledge and skills needed to most effectively utilize the services and resources offered by the Exchange.

  • Grant Recipient

    The Chicago Community Foundation/Elevated Chicago

    Awarded: Awarded Amount: $200,000

    Elevated Chicago is requesting $200,000 to support the ongoing implementation of the ETOD Policy Plan, developed in partnership with the City and 40+ organizations through the ETOD Working Group, and to increase public sector funding for ETOD, particularly in communities of color.

  • Grant Recipient

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology

    Awarded: Awarded Amount: $300,000

  • Grant Recipient

    FAITH IN PLACE

    Awarded: Awarded Amount: $125,000

    Faith in Place's "Faith Action for Sustainable Food and Communities" project builds on work to sustain and expand the Congregation-Supported Agriculture (CSA) program and pilot a Community Incubator Kitchen (CIK) at Greater St. John Bible Church in Chicago's Austin neighborhood. Proposed grant period activities include 1) continue to provide technical assistance, mentoring, and access to resources for the 6 existing CSA program farms; 2) outreach to explore adding more faith-based farms into the CSA program; 3) work to advance the CIK pilot, including overcoming municipal regulatory barriers; and 4) education and advocacy engagement with policymakers to reduce and rectify policies detrimental to CIK formation and CSA operations.

  • Grant Recipient

    CROSSROADS FUND

    Awarded: Awarded Amount: $200,000

    Crossroads Fund recently celebrated 40 years of existence as a public foundation that supports movements, organizes donors, provides fiscal sponsorship to grassroots organizations, partners with local philanthropy to host pooled funds and provides capacity building programs in collaboration with local and national foundations. In the last two years we have witnessed an increased demand in our work in the form of connecting grantees to funders, leading political education opportunities for both grantees and philanthropy, hosting pooled funds and providing fiscal sponsorship to grantee organizations and initiatives led by foundations. Our unique position of sitting at the intersection of grassroots organizing and philanthropy and being one of the few local public foundations enables us to serve in different and yet complimenting capacities. It provides us proximity to local organizing while having structures that allow for nimble collaboration in fundraising, grantmaking and playing a leading role in the provision of capacity building programs, enables us to collaborate deeply with philanthropy. However, our sustainability is predicated on our fundraising and it is in this spirit that we are honored to partner with Chicago Community Trust in our request for a multiyear grant that will maintain and increase our capacity.

  • Grant Recipient

    Youth Job Center Inc.

    Awarded: Awarded Amount: $110,454

    Youth Job Center (YJC) requests $110,454 to continue the Auto Maintenance and Repair Career Pathway Program that began in 2021 to serve residents of Southwest and South Chicago. In partnership with Olive Harvey College (OHC), YJC recruits and engages out-of-school young adults in a curriculum that combines basic employment skills development, personalized career advising, industry specific skills training, relevant credentialing, and supportive services. This in-depth training is paired with a job placement or an internship, allowing the participant to practice their newly developed skills in a real-world setting. YJC has engaged Olive Harvey College to provide auto specific skill training resulting in industry recognized certifications. We respectfully request $110,454 to support a second year of the same program ($75,000), as well as continued support for the participants in both of YJC’s Auto Repair & Maintenance Programs ($35,000). We anticipate approximately 12 completers of the program this year, and several have expressed interest in the next level of certification.