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 5141–5148 of 4389 results

  • Grant Recipient

    Center for Neighborhood Technology

    Awarded: Awarded Amount: $100,000

    This proposal supports the involvement of six organizations, led by the Center for Neighborhood Technology (CNT), to participate in coalitions regarding transportation equity and mobility justice. These organizations - CNT, Active Transportation Alliance, Equiticity, Little Village Environmental Justice Organization, Palenque/Logan Square Neighborhood Association, and Metropolitan Planning Council make up the leadership of the Transportation Equity Network (TEN), a coalition formed in 2020 that now includes 55 community groups, civic organizations, equitable transportation advocates, academics, and other stakeholders. This grant will be used in large part to support the continued involvement and leadership of our organizations in this coalition and will also support our involvement in other related coalitions. In addition to its past activities, the coalition is bringing focus and intention in the coming year to methods of equitable governance, decision-making, and financial sustainability.

  • Grant Recipient

    Wellington United Church of Christ

    Awarded: Awarded Amount: $80,000

    The Sanctuary Working Group (SWG), a program of Wellington UCC, is applying for the Chicago Community Trust’s “Addressing Critical Needs for Housing Stability” grant to support our work housing migrants. The SWG uses the word “migrant” to encompass all statuses of people supported, including asylum seekers. We are a cooperative, grassroots network of representatives from 40 different non-profit organizations across the Chicago area who are uniquely positioned to respond to the diverse population of currently arriving migrants. Since March 2020, the SWG has offered support and accompaniment to nearly 600 asylum seekers, both families, and individuals, who come from Africa, Central-East Asia, Latin America, and the Caribbean. This grant, for general operating expenses, will enable the SWG to continue providing migrants with rent and utility support, including housing and case management that assists them in accessing public benefits related to living expenses, medical and dental care, employment and educational opportunities, and childcare needs.

  • Grant Recipient

    Greater Chatham Initiative Inc

    Awarded: Awarded Amount: $135,000

    Greater Chatham Initiative (“GCI”) has offered FoodLab Chicago to South Side food service entrepreneurs for five years from 2020 through 2024. GCI will partner with the EJ Consortium, Greater Auburn Gresham Development Corporation, Menu Engineers, Soul Delivered, and Sunshine Enterprises to bring FoodLab Chicago 6.0 to Chicago’s South Side’s rich and diverse Black restaurant ecosystem. This project includes training 25 food service entrepreneurs in menu engineering, cultural trail storytelling, and cost-effective catering delivery, working hand-in-hand with financial management and capital access training, to support the sustainability and growth of local food-based businesses.

  • Grant Recipient

    Northern Illinois University

    Awarded: Awarded Amount: $100,000

    STAMP is a collective impact partnership between Education Systems Center at Northern Illinois University (EdSystems), the Illinois Manufacturers’ Association Education Foundation, and regional collaboratives comprised of public school districts and their postsecondary and employer partners. STAMP’s goal is to prepare youth for in-demand, living wage careers in manufacturing, with a special focus on recruiting and retaining historically marginalized populations including Black, Latinx, and female youth. STAMP’s focus is on developing high-quality college and career pathways from secondary to postsecondary and careers, which include robust work-based learning and acquiring in-demand industry credentials. This proposal seeks funding to specifically support STAMP in Chicago, suburban Cook County, and Kane County. STAMP received funding for school years 2022¬–24 through the Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity’s Job Training and Economic Development program. A competitive grant renewal is currently pending with the state agency, which has shared that both the total number of grants awarded, and the award amounts will decrease. At minimum, support for this proposal will cover the funding gap; ideally, when braided with the agency funding, it will allow STAMP to serve more students in the Chicago metro region.

  • Grant Recipient

    Logan Square Neighborhood Association

    Awarded: Awarded Amount: $75,000

    Palenque LSNA respectfully requests program support to continue our work in the administration, research, and coalition building components of the Illinois Community Land Trust Task Force. This renewal comes at a crucial time as, due to administrative delays in the state, the Task Force began meeting later than expected and now our timeline has been extended with Task Force meetings concluding in December 2024 and a report to be published in Spring of 2025. Illinois Senate Bill 2037, passed in partnership with the Illinois Housing and Development Authority (IHDA) and the office of Governor JB Pritzker, established this Task Force. The bill presents a unique opportunity to further our collective efforts in promoting equitable wealth building and community shared ownership arriving as community land trusts (CLTs) gain momentum regionally as a tool for increasing homeownership in Black and Latinx communities. Entry level homeownership is increasingly inaccessible to families; good quality homes are too expensive in gentrifying neighborhoods and too rare in disinvested ones. However, CLTs reverse this trend by creating opportunities to build wealth while ensuring neighborhood stability in both gentrifying and disinvested communities. Through CLTs, neighborhoods retain land ownership and equitably compete with investors, leading to balanced, community-driven development and more opportunities for Latine and Black families to access generational wealth. The state of Illinois recognized this benefit. In January of 2023, it awarded the Here to Stay Community Land Trust $5 million in American Recovery Plan Act funds to accelerate land acquisition and development and to provide equitable subsidies for new homeowners. However, policy barriers inhibit the growth and success of CLTs. The State remains uninformed and unprepared to repair racial wealth gaps through homeownership in part because of their unfamiliarity with CLTs as a model for neighborhood stability and their lack of relationships with budding regional CLTs. This is beginning to change. The Task Force will continue to conduct research and lead community engagement, the findings of which will become a report published in partnership with IHDA. This report will set an agenda for strategic policy reforms to accelerate the success of CLTs, seeding future systemic reforms and additional funding to increase homeownership in Black and Latinx communities. We are still collecting data and discussing solutions, we do not expect a bill to be created yet therefore we do not intend to lobby for any legislation as we are still collecting data and discussing solutions. We believe that CLTs are essential to creating affordable housing options, preserving neighborhood stability, and empowering residents to build wealth and achieve economic security through shared ownership. With the Trust's support, we aim to leverage the Task Force to develop and implement policies in the future that expand access to community ownership of land and ensure long-term affordability for Chicago’s most vulnerable people.. Through our efforts to promote and support Community Land Trusts, we are directly addressing the racial wealth gap in Illinois. By creating affordable homeownership opportunities in Black and Latinx communities, CLTs help build wealth and ensure neighborhood stability. These efforts are crucial in reversing the trends of gentrification and disinvestment that disproportionately affect these communities. Our commitment to community engagement and education ensures that residents are empowered to take an active role in their neighborhoods, fostering a sense of ownership and economic security. By addressing the systemic barriers to CLT adoption and operation, we are working towards a more inclusive and equitable housing landscape in Illinois.

  • Grant Recipient

    Safer Foundation

    Awarded: Awarded Amount: $125,000

    Safer Foundation (Safer) proposes its Healing Economic And Racial Trauma through Homes (HEARTH) program to provide justice impacted Cook County residents with affordable housing units and rental subsidies. The overarching goal of the project is to provide a productive, supportive, and permanent pathway toward stabilization by providing subsidized, permanent supportive housing for at-risk or housing insecure individuals to address, reduce and/or eliminate associated barriers and cost burdens to housing. The program is further positioned to respond to socio-economic insecurity through an array of holistic, wraparound services that address and advance employment outcomes, access to social services, and physical, mental, and behavioral health while employing harm-reduction principals to address the long-term stability and well-being of at-risk individuals leading to living wage employment. This work is crucial in supporting the reentry efforts of those released from incarceration and addressing many issues of our highest poverty communities.

  • Grant Recipient

    Illinois Public Interest Research Group Education Fund

    Awarded: Awarded Amount: $50,000

    Illinois PIRG Education Fund is a recognized leader on utility accountability and insurance reform. Our successful coalition building and strategic, long-term approach have successfully shaped public narrative and policy outcomes. We led the charge in standing up to powerful utility companies, paving the way for a remarkable shift in utility regulation in Illinois last year - including a new focus on affordability. We launched a coalition to tackle unfair and excessive car insurance rates, taking on another industry that was considered too powerful to challenge in Illinois. In a relatively short period of time, our campaign has elevated the issue, built political will, and demonstrated that meaningful reforms are achievable. Utilities and insurance are both relatively universal - utilities provide essential services and insurance is required to drive, which many Chicagoans must do to access education, work and health care. But in both industries, common practices have disproportionate impacts on communities of color as observed through greater energy burdens, disproportionate utility disconnection rates, and objectively discriminatory car insurance rates. We have consistently demonstrated an ability to convene and lead coalition efforts that lead to tangible change. With the generous support of the Chicago Community Trust, we’ve made significant progress building power and advancing policy priorities over the past several years. The coming year presents exciting opportunities to build upon our progress: after eight years of campaigning, we are on the verge of implementing fundamental reforms to the Peoples Gas pipe replacement program, which has significantly contributed to crippling utility debt particularly in majority Black neighborhoods in Chicago. We are also at an inflection point in our car insurance campaign, transitioning from initial organizing and educating to campaigning to advance tangible policy reforms that will rein in excessive and discriminatory car insurance rates.

  • Grant Recipient

    Greenhouse Scholars

    Awarded: Awarded Amount: $100,000

    Greenhouse respectfully requests a grant of $200,000 from the Chicago Community Trust in support of our Whole Person College and Post-College Young Leaders Programs. This grant would allow Greenhouse to execute current programs with quality and expand our impact and services for Chicago-area young adults both during and for a decade following college. This work ensures the diverse constituents we serve are well-positioned to build generational wealth and to create opportunity, prosperity, and access to choices for others in their families and communities.