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 1061–1068 of 4389 results

  • Grant Recipient

    Greater Chicago Food Depository

    Awarded: Awarded Amount: $25,000

    In support of general operations.

  • Grant Recipient

    CHICAGO ARCHITECTURE BIENNIAL INC

    Awarded: Awarded Amount: $25,000

    In support of general operations of the mission and programs for The Available City.

  • Grant Recipient

    Become Inc

    Awarded: Awarded Amount: $150,000

    BECOME’s strategies and activities are centered on collaborating with communities to develop sustainable solutions, expanding community capacity to implement those solutions, and creating lasting movement toward a shared community vision. BECOME creates an environment for the community to transcend structural barriers and challenges. We co-create structures and practices to support the community in sustaining change and creating an environment for people to become their ACTUALIZED self by living in, out and through the grandest version of themselves. BECOME has developed Culturally Responsive Community Transformation (CRCT) as an innovative model for bringing residents together to identify their collective goals for social transformation within the boundaries of their neighborhood and collaboratively create pathways to turn their community insight into action. BECOME plans to expand our revolutionary community transformation in Auburn Gresham by piloting the development of our first Culturally Responsive Community Transformation Hub that serves to build community capacity and social transformation from the inside out with community-driven strategic planning, facilitation, and coalition building. Through this model, we concentrate all of our services in a neighborhood, working with community residents, facilitating and building their capacity to achieve their collective goals for transformation. We work with them for the long-term until their vision of a thriving community is realized.

  • Grant Recipient

    Access Living of Metropolitan Chicago

    Awarded: Awarded Amount: $20,800

    In support of general operations.

  • Grant Recipient

    The Social Network

    Awarded: Awarded Amount: $100,000

    The Social Network is a vibrant, innovative, and culturally rich spaces designed to inspire, engage, and develop opportunities for overlooked and underserved communities. We aspire to empower, build, and grow black communities through engagement, food, technology and social impact. The Social Network will be a pop-up restaurant and E-gaming Space. Following the lead of our parent company The Woodlawn; The Social Network will be a licensed pop-up kitchen which will give local chefs, culinary artist, caters and restaurateurs the opportunity promote and sell their food options to the general public. The Social Network's E-Gaming Space will provided high speed internet technology to community partners to enjoy and be entertained via gaming.

  • Grant Recipient

    CHICAGO NEIGHBORHOOD INITIATIVES INC

    Awarded: Awarded Amount: $100,000

    CNI and our team of community partners seek to equitably transform lives through development of housing, workforce, health and public safety infrastructure. Looking ahead, we intend to continue our strategy in Pullman and carry the results-backed progress CNI has spearheaded in Pullman into neighboring Roseland, applying targeted place-based investments in alignment with community goals. We have spent the last two years engaging with community stakeholders to understand their needs and goals. As a result of this ongoing engagement, we seek to address depopulation and corresponding challenges: declines in safety, reductions in property values, reduced access to retail and significant health disparities. We seek to build Black wealth through the creation of new assets and dispel the notion that improving lives means leaving a neighborhood. This request will specifically fund costs associated with planning and predevelopment activities related to the Roseland Rising initiative, which will drive investment to 4 specific districts within Roseland. Based on our experience as a community and economic development organization with a long-standing track record in Chicago, predevelopment funding is the most difficult to access but the most necessary in order to get a project off the ground. We appreciate your consideration of our proposal.

  • Grant Recipient

    Illinois Partners for Human Service

    Awarded: Awarded Amount: $12,500

    In support of general operations.

  • Grant Recipient

    Elevate Energy

    Awarded: Awarded Amount: $50,000

    Elevate seeks funding for the community-led multimedia project "Help This Garden Grow," a documentary podcast series uplifting the story of how a community at the edge of Chicago fought to breathe, took the fight around the world, and birthed the modern Environmental Justice movement. Produced by AirGo Radio, "Help This Garden Grow" (HTGG) explores the story of Hazel Johnson, a resident of the Altgeld Gardens community on the far South Side, who founded the People for Community Recovery (PCR) to address the toxic industrial pollution that was killing the families of her community. Over the course of the multigenerational multipart documentary, we will talk with Hazel Johnson’s daughter and the current Executive Director of PCR, Cheryl Johnson. We will also interview organizers, policymakers, historians, and community members about how PCR emerged, the legacy of Ms. Johnson's work, and how this Chicago community built the lineage of today's vibrant, impactful, and necessary environmental justice movement. Project partners include People for Community Recovery, a non-profit environmental organization founded by Hazel Johnson that for over 40 years has enhanced the quality of life of residents living in communities affected by pollution and educating communities on Environmental Justice; AirGo Radio, a media firm that documents and contributes to liberatory cultural and political movements; Elevate, a national organization that seeks to create a just and equitable world in which everyone has clean and affordable heat, power, and water; and the HTGG Creative Cabinet, a cohort of Chicago-based environmental justice leaders. The HTGG cohort will guide the narrative of the show, help identify additional voices to include in the conversation, and lead community discussions centering how Hazel Johnson and PCR have shaped the world-changing work of which the Cabinet members are at the forefront. This project is also designed to be a new model for equitable media collaboration, building a payment and production infrastructure that centers both Cheryl Johnson and our Creative Cabinet’s lived experience and engages them as co-creators of the story we are shaping together.