Grantee Directory
Our grantees are our community partners; as New York City’s most effective poverty-fighting nonprofits, they have boots on the ground to create scalable solutions, strengthen communities, and make a lasting impact.
300+
Grantee community partner organizations across NYC's five boroughs
$118
M
Invested in NYC's most innovative poverty-fighting solutions in 2023
2
M+
New Yorkers living in poverty
2/8
Grants Directory
(427)This directory represents all active grants to our current community partner grantee organizations as of 2024; some organizations will appear more than once in the instances where we have two or more active projects with the same organization.
This directory represents all active grants to our current community partner grantee organizations as of 2024; some organizations will appear more than once in the instances where we have two or more active projects with the same organization.
CUNY ACE
To expand the Accelerate, Complete, Engage (ACE) program at City College of New York, aiming to significantly increase the graduation rate of transfer students.
Grant amount: $656,000
CUNY Internship to Employment
To enroll recent alumni with low-income backgrounds into paid internship opportunities that lead to full-time employment.
Grant amount: $300,000
CUNY Office of Careers and Industry Partnerships
To implement a pilot of the Career Success Campus Model at six campuses, with the aim of increasing the number of low-income graduates consistently employed in a mobility-wage job within one year of graduation.
Grant amount: $2,000,000
CUNY Office of Careers and Industry Partnerships
To support scaling and implementing Degree-Career Maps across its undergraduate campuses with the goal of increasing rates of employment, starting salaries and improved job retention for alumni.
Grant amount: $700,000
Cypress Hills Local Development Corporation
To help at-risk youth to enroll and stay in college or get and keep a job.
Grant amount: $600,000
Cypress Hills Local Development Corporation
To provide one-time general operating support to supplement the agency’s programs and operations.
Grant amount: $50,000
Docs for Tots
To support Building Relationships in Infant and Toddler Early Education (BRITE), an enhanced mental health consultation that increases infant and toddler socioemotional outcomes and the quality of family child-care settings.
Grant amount: $450,000
Docs for Tots
To train and prepare a workforce of assistant providers serving infants and toddlers in family group child care settings.
Grant amount: $576,000
DREAM
To provide year-round high-quality education programming and youth development services to children in East Harlem and the Bronx at charter schools and an academically focused after-school program.
Grant amount: $1,300,000
Drive Change
To provide sectoral job training and placement in food service and hospitality to justice involved youth.
Grant amount: $500,000
Duke University
To analyze the impact of monthly unconditional cash gifts to mothers with young children on key economic and policy relevant domains: food hardship, financial well-being, and household spending on necessities and child-specific goods.
Grant amount: $250,000
Eagle Academy Foundation
To help low-income young men of color earn high school diplomas and obtain college degrees and workforce opportunities.
Grant amount: $200,000
East Side House Settlement
To provide unemployed, out-of-school youth in the Mott Haven section of the South Bronx with the support to complete their high school equivalency, access middle-skills career opportunities and be placed in a job or enroll in college.
Grant amount: $510,000
ECEOTM, Inc.
To support developing tools for navigating regulations, enhancing child care quality, and advocating for the early childhood sector.
Grant amount: $200,000
Edith and Carl Marks Jewish Community House of Bensonhurst
To support young adult refugees who fled the war in Ukraine with critical resettlement services and to provide of these young adults with a pathway to employment.
Grant amount: $300,000
Edith and Carl Marks Jewish Community House of Bensonhurst
To provide job training and placement services to low-income adults.
Grant amount: $250,000
Educators for Excellence
To provide general operating support to ensure teachers have a leading voice in policies affecting their students and profession, and to continue advocacy for transforming teachers' unions to be more diverse, transparent, and student-centered.
Grant amount: $450,000
EL Education
To create and codify a digital and personalized version of an open-source English language arts curriculum and position the curriculum for scale.
Grant amount: $800,000
Envision Freedom Fund
To capitalize and launch the New York Immigrant Freedom Fund; a fund that would pay immigration bond to release eligible clients from immigration detention.
Grant amount: $600,000
Envision Freedom Fund
To capitalize and launch the New York Immigrant Freedom Fund; a fund that would pay immigration bond to release eligible clients from immigration detention.
Grant amount: $500,000
Exalt Youth
To prevent justice-involved youth from returning to the juvenile or adult criminal justice system.
Grant amount: $200,000
ExpandED Schools
To support an independent organization that will partner with New York City Public Schools to build the city’s collective capacity to scale high-impact tutoring.
Grant amount: $2,000,000
Families and Workers Fund
To train and connect low-income New Yorkers to high-quality jobs that are created as a result of federal and state infrastructure funding, in coordination with local and national funders.
Grant amount: $500,000
FamilyCook Community Table
To provide general operating support to support the parents and caregivers of 0-3-year-olds in New York City.
Grant amount: $750,000
FDNY Foundation
To train low-income young adults for jobs as emergency medical technicians, with a focus on placement into coveted positions at the Fire Department of the City of New York.
Grant amount: $175,000
Feeding Westchester
To support advocacy activities related to defending the federal Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program and other federally funded food assistance programs.
Grant amount: $40,000
Fifth Avenue Committee
To support the development of affordable and supportive housing.
Grant amount: $800,000