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 311–318 of 4393 results

  • Grant Recipient

    Partnership for College Completion

    Awarded: Awarded Amount: $100,000

    In 2018, the Partnership for College Completion (PCC) launched the Illinois Equity in Attainment (ILEA) Initiative to spur action on college and university campuses across the state to eliminate racial and socioeconomic degree completion disparities on their campuses by 2025. The PCC is building an expansive portfolio of tools and resources to support this diverse set of 28 institutions to achieve their goal. The PCC seeks support to deepen the work of the ILEA initiative through increased academy offerings, virtual convenings, and possibly in-person events.

  • Grant Recipient

    PRO Publica, Inc.

    Awarded: Awarded Amount: $150,000

    ProPublica respectfully requests a grant of $150,000 over two years to support accountability journalism that makes a meaningful difference for the people of Chicago and the region. Our award-winning team of Midwest journalists, based out of a newsroom in Chicago, are dedicated to exposing the systems that fuel injustice and inequality in the city and across our region, and to holding accountable those in power to enact meaningful change.

  • Grant Recipient

    HOUSING ACTION ILLINOIS

    Awarded: Awarded Amount: $100,000

    Housing Action Illinois seeks support for our co-leadership of the CRA Coalition, which works toward policies to increase the availability of credit and institutional investments in low- and moderate-income communities, particularly communities of color. The coalition will also work to hold banks accountable to community needs. Coalition partners focus on various needs and constituencies, including banking, lending, and the financial sector; small business; community development; financial wellness education; and racial equity. Housing Action’s knowledge and expertise relates to housing issues, such as residential mortgage lending, housing counseling, and the needs of homebuyers, homeowners, renters, and people experiencing homelessness.

  • Grant Recipient

    Heartland Alliance for Human Needs & Human Rights

    Awarded: Awarded Amount: $150,000

    We seek renewed support for our Research and Policy Division, which leads our policy work to close the racial wealth gap in Illinois, such as work on economic security, income supports, asset building, ending wealth stripping, consumer protections, and fines/fees reform. This has included retirement and Children’s Savings Account programs, EITC expansion, lending/debt reforms, and driver's license suspensions. Our priorities are developed in coalition and with an equity lens. We use data to understand racial disparities, and center and engage impacted people in our work. We seek support for leading the Illinois Asset Building Group and participating in leadership roles in the Illinois Cost-of-Living Refund Coalition and the Transit Table.

  • Grant Recipient

    YOUNG INVINCIBLES

    Awarded: Awarded Amount: $50,000

    In an effort to continue the momentum towards the implementation of the Mental Health Early Action on Campus Act (“Act”), NAMI Chicago & Young Invincibles propose to establish a Learning Collaborative (“Collaborative”) comprised of interested and engaged campuses to provide technical assistance in implementing the Act’s requirements. Our goal is to secure funding that supports building programs on campuses that can ultimately be sustained through state funding as originally intended in the Act.

  • Grant Recipient

    WINDOW TO THE WORLD COMMUNICATIONS INC

    Awarded: Awarded Amount: $150,000

    Window to the World Communications respectfully requests The Chicago Community Trust’s consideration of a one-time grant of $200,000 to support WTTW News and its expanded news platform. Financial support from The Trust will enable WTTW to sustain and advance our local affairs and journalism programming that includes the broadcasts of Chicago Tonight, the newly launched Chicago Tonight: Latino Voices and Chicago Tonight: Black Voices, digital segments of these programs and other stories on WTTW News, and community engagement activities surrounding our news content.

  • Grant Recipient

    Growing Home, Inc.

    Awarded: Awarded Amount: $140,000

    This project will increase the profitability and sustainability of Growing Home’s social enterprise by improving its business model and facilities through new marketing efforts as well as earning a Good Agricultural Practices certification.

  • Grant Recipient

    Goldin Institute

    Awarded: Awarded Amount: $35,000

    Founded in 2019 by the Goldin Institute, the Chicago Peace Fellows is a unique 9-month leadership program for Black and Brown grassroots leaders which uses collaborative inquiry, strategy and action to catalyze neighborhood-level initiatives to build safer, more peaceful communities on the South and West sides. Designed with past grantees of the Chicago Fund for Safe and Peaceful Communities and a wide range of civic leaders, the curriculum utilizes GATHER, an online learning hub built by the Goldin Institute to empower grassroots leaders. The GATHER course provides a series of social change concepts and tools for authentic community engagement. It is supplemented with in-person workshops and collaborative action projects.