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Funding for projects aligned with the foundation's core strategic areas: Public Education Redesign and Enhancement, Nearshore Marine Resource Conservation, Climate Resiliency, and Strengthening Windward Oʻahu Communities. Applicants must begin with an Online Inquiry Form, and first-time applicants are required to call the foundation to discuss their project before submitting.
Supports youth-focused programs in Windward Oʻahu. Grant amounts are typically determined based on youth volunteer hours and community involvement.
A participatory grantmaking fund that supports community-led projects intended to build resilience and strengthen connections between people and place in the Koʻolau region. It prioritizes projects related to food security, health and wellbeing, and community-based education.
Harold K L Castle Foundation is a private corporation based in KAILUA, HI. The foundation received its IRS ruling in 1964. It holds total assets of $171.3M. Annual income is reported at $37.3M. Total assets have grown from $108.9M in 2011 to $171.3M in 2024. The foundation is governed by 15 officers and trustees. Tax records are available from 2020 to 2024. Grantmaking is concentrated in Hawaii. According to available records, Harold K L Castle Foundation has made 483 grants totaling $38.1M, with a median grant of $50K. The foundation has distributed between $7.2M and $15.9M annually from 2020 to 2023. Grantmaking activity was highest in 2022 with $15.9M distributed across 160 grants. Individual grants have ranged from $150 to $700K, with an average award of $81K. The foundation has supported 181 unique organizations. The foundation primarily supports organizations in Hawaii, California, District of Columbia, which account for 96% of all grants. Grantmaking reaches organizations across 9 states. Contributions to this foundation are tax-deductible.
The Harold K.L. Castle Foundation operates as Hawaii's largest private foundation — approximately $173 million in assets managed from Kailua on Windward O'ahu — and its giving philosophy is unmistakably strategic. Leadership consistently frames grants as "investments" in initiatives with demonstrated leverage, measurable impact, and potential to influence important public issues in Hawaii. This is not a foundation that writes checks to good causes; it is looking for catalytic bets where its capital unlocks significantly more value from other funders.
The typical engagement progression begins with an Online Inquiry Form at castlefoundation.org — but before submitting, all prospective applicants are expected to call Beth Murph (808-554-5164) for a pre-application conversation. This step is informal but effectively functions as a triage gate: staff use the call to assess fit, calibrate expectations, and advise on framing. Skipping this call is widely regarded as a mistake. After submitting the inquiry, staff review within one month and either invite a full proposal submission, request more information, or decline. Invited organizations then submit through the FLUXX portal ahead of quarterly board deadlines (2026: February 10, May 12, August 4, November 10). First-time applicants should plan for a 3–4 month cycle from initial inquiry to board decision.
The foundation's grantmaking is deeply relationship-oriented. Its two largest grantees — the University of Hawaii Foundation ($8.1 million across 60 grants) and Hawaii Community Foundation ($5.7 million across 26 grants) — reflect partnerships built over decades. Organizations with no prior relationship should approach their first inquiry as an introduction, not a transaction: demonstrate organizational credibility, show familiarity with the foundation's current strategic priorities, and explicitly connect your work to the four program areas (Education, Marine, Climate, Windward Communities).
Critical eligibility rules: only 501(c)(3) nonprofits and public schools qualify; individuals and businesses are ineligible; Hawaii residency or service is required; and each organization is limited to one active grant at a time. The foundation overhead rate is 1% on grants under $500,000 and 2% on larger amounts — a signal that lean administrative cost ratios matter here.
Harold K.L. Castle Foundation's giving has been consistent and well-managed over the past decade. IRS filings show total giving clustered between $10.4 million and $11.2 million annually from FY2019 through FY2023: FY2023 total giving was $10.9M (grants paid $7.3M), FY2022 was $11.2M ($8.0M paid), FY2021 was $10.7M ($7.3M paid), FY2020 was $10.9M ($7.2M paid), and FY2019 was $10.4M ($7.6M paid). The 2025 Impact Report documents $9.2M in total grants awarded for that year, reflecting a slight moderation. Assets have held steady at $169–177 million across the same period, with FY2023 at $173.5M and FY2024 at $171.3M — a conservatively managed endowment designed to sustain giving across generations.
The 2025 program allocation breaks down as follows: Strengthening Windward O'ahu Communities dominated at $5,225,420 (57% of total), Public Education came in at $1,784,650 (19%), Marine Conservation at $905,878 (10%), Climate Resiliency at $665,000 (7%), and Other Hawaii Investments at $633,500 (7%).
Grant size analysis from the DB (100-grant sample): median grant is $45,000, average is $73,462, with a range of $250 to $529,240. However, top-tier grantees receive far more: University of Hawaii Foundation averages $135,000 per grant across its 60 awards, while Hawaii Community Foundation averages $219,000 per award. Programmatic grants to direct-service organizations in Windward O'ahu typically range from $50,000 to $200,000 per year. Community-level grants through the Ko'olau Pilina Fund are capped at $3,000–$15,000.
Geographically, 88% of grants by count go to Hawaii-based organizations (425 of 483). The remaining 12% flows primarily to California (29 grants — national education/conservation intermediaries with Hawaii programs), Washington DC (12 — policy and advocacy organizations), and Virginia (7). Out-of-state grants almost exclusively represent national organizations with demonstrated Hawaii-specific programming, not general interest applicants.
The following table compares Harold K.L. Castle Foundation to four comparable Hawaii and regional private foundations based on publicly available financial data and program profiles:
| Foundation | Assets | Annual Giving | Primary Focus | Application |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Harold K.L. Castle Foundation | ~$173M | ~$10.9M | Education, Marine, Climate, Windward O'ahu | Inquiry required (rolling) |
| Hawaii Community Foundation | ~$400M+ | ~$30M+ | Broad Hawaii community needs | Open competitive |
| Atherton Family Foundation | ~$45M | ~$3–4M | Education, social services, Hawaii | Invited/LOI |
| Samuel N. & Mary Castle Foundation | ~$90M | ~$5M | Education, social services, Hawaii | Open (letters of inquiry) |
| Cooke Foundation Ltd | ~$38M | ~$2–3M | Hawaii arts, education, humanities | Open letters of inquiry |
Harold K.L. Castle Foundation stands out for its tightly focused geographic concentration (Windward O'ahu as a distinctive sub-regional priority), its unusual co-leadership model adopted in 2025, and its willingness to make large multi-year commitments to a small set of deeply trusted grantee partners. Unlike Hawaii Community Foundation's broad competitive grantmaking, Castle operates more like a strategic partner to a defined portfolio — meaning the bar for first-time grantees is higher but multi-year relationships are common once established. Compared to Atherton and Cooke (smaller, more arts/humanities-adjacent), Castle is the natural lead funder for education, marine, and climate work in Hawaii.
The defining event of 2025 was a major leadership transition. Terry George, who served as President and CEO for 22 years, retired effective July 1, 2025. In his place, the board appointed a co-leadership model: Alex Harris (formerly VP of Programs, compensation ~$233K) became President with responsibility for all grantmaking and strategy; Eric Co (formerly VP of Resiliency, compensation ~$214K) became CEO managing operations, communications, and special projects. This is the most significant leadership change in two decades and represents a structural experiment in shared institutional leadership. Ann Matsukado was promoted to Treasurer and Maria Quidez to Program Officer. In June 2025, Dr. Amber Waialea Datta joined as Marine Program Officer, a hire that signals renewed investment in the nearshore conservation portfolio after a period of relative quiet.
Programmatically, the foundation formally closed its Skilled Trades Initiative in January 2026 following a final convening in late 2025 — seven grants over two years, now concluded. The Hawaii Renewable Learning Fund (a zero-interest loan program for students pursuing renewable energy careers, managed by Social Finance Inc.) launched in June 2025. In April 2025, the foundation issued an RFP for a Hawaii Youth Apprenticeship Network design sprint targeting 16–24 year olds. The 2025 Impact Report was released March 4, 2026. In October 2025, the foundation publicly acknowledged concerns about federal funding cuts affecting Native Hawaiian-serving nonprofits.
Time your inquiry carefully. With four quarterly board deadlines in 2026 (February 10, May 12, August 4, November 10), submit your Online Inquiry at least 10–12 weeks before the deadline you are targeting to allow staff review, a possible invitation, and full proposal submission time. The May 12 deadline is widely considered the most competitive given the post-fiscal year rush of new requests.
Call Beth Murph first. Phone 808-554-5164 and describe your project concept in 2–3 sentences. Staff will tell you directly whether it fits current priorities. This call also helps you understand which program bucket your work falls into — critical given that Windward O'ahu Communities (57% of 2025 giving) and Education (19%) are dramatically more active than Marine (10%) or Climate (7%).
Lead with leverage. Castle's most consistent stated preference is for grants that catalyze other funding. In your inquiry and proposal, name specific co-funders already committed, matching grants you are pursuing, or how a Castle award unlocks state or federal dollars. Proposals without a leverage story are at a structural disadvantage.
Use the foundation's language. The foundation frames its work around "investments," "durability," "community-led," "aina-based," and "systems change." Grantee titles in the database frequently use phrases like "core organizational support," "backbone organization," and "building durability." Proposals that mirror this framing signal alignment.
Introduce yourself to the new leadership team. Alex Harris and Eric Co took the helm July 1, 2025. Neither is new to the foundation, but they are establishing their own programmatic identity. First-time applicants who attend public events, engage on the foundation's social channels, or request a brief informational conversation with program staff will be better positioned than cold applicants.
Avoid common disqualifiers. Do not request general operating support as your primary ask (rarely funded). Do not propose capital construction without a prior staff conversation. Do not apply if you have an existing open grant — the one-active-grant rule is strictly enforced. Do not apply if your work is outside Hawaii or lacks a clear nexus to one of the four program areas.
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Smallest Grant
$250
Median Grant
$45K
Average Grant
$73K
Largest Grant
$529K
Based on 100 grants from the most recent 990-PF filing.
No program descriptions are available for this foundation. Many private foundations report program activities in their annual 990-PF filings — check the Tax Filings section below for the most recent filing.
Harold K.L. Castle Foundation's giving has been consistent and well-managed over the past decade. IRS filings show total giving clustered between $10.4 million and $11.2 million annually from FY2019 through FY2023: FY2023 total giving was $10.9M (grants paid $7.3M), FY2022 was $11.2M ($8.0M paid), FY2021 was $10.7M ($7.3M paid), FY2020 was $10.9M ($7.2M paid), and FY2019 was $10.4M ($7.6M paid). The 2025 Impact Report documents $9.2M in total grants awarded for that year, reflecting a slight mod.
Harold K L Castle Foundation has distributed a total of $38.1M across 483 grants. The median grant size is $50K, with an average of $81K. Individual grants have ranged from $150 to $700K.
The Harold K.L. Castle Foundation operates as Hawaii's largest private foundation — approximately $173 million in assets managed from Kailua on Windward O'ahu — and its giving philosophy is unmistakably strategic. Leadership consistently frames grants as "investments" in initiatives with demonstrated leverage, measurable impact, and potential to influence important public issues in Hawaii. This is not a foundation that writes checks to good causes; it is looking for catalytic bets where its capi.
Harold K L Castle Foundation is headquartered in KAILUA, HI. While based in HI, the foundation distributes grants to organizations across 9 states.
| Name | Title | Compensation | Benefits | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Terrence R George | PRESIDENT/CEO | $391K | $69K | $460K |
| Alexander Harris | VICE PRESIDENT OF PROGRAMS | $231K | $38K | $269K |
| Dennis Eric Co | VICE PRESIDENT OF RESILIENCY | $214K | $53K | $266K |
| Carlton Kc Au | VICE PRESIDENT OF FINANCE | $114K | $17K | $131K |
| Ann S Matsukado | TREASURER | $98K | $34K | $132K |
| Susan L Sumida | SECRETARY | $57K | $9K | $67K |
| Henry M D'Olier | DIRECTOR/CHAIRMAN | $0 | $0 | N/A |
| James H Mcintosh | DIRECTOR | $0 | $0 | N/A |
| Corbett Ak Kalama | DIRECTOR | $0 | $0 | N/A |
| Dr Kittredge A Baldwin | DIRECTOR | $0 | $0 | N/A |
| Dr Claire L Asam | DIRECTOR | $0 | $0 | N/A |
| T Aulani Wilhelm | DIRECTOR | $0 | $0 | N/A |
| Jennifer G Sabas | DIRECTOR | $0 | $0 | N/A |
| Eric K Yeaman | DIRECTOR | $0 | $0 | N/A |
| Dee Jay A Mailer | DIRECTOR | $0 | $0 | N/A |
Total Giving
N/A
Total Assets
$171.3M
Fair Market Value
N/A
Net Worth
$171M
Grants Paid
N/A
Contributions
N/A
Net Investment Income
N/A
Distribution Amount
N/A
Total Grants
483
Total Giving
$38.1M
Average Grant
$81K
Median Grant
$50K
Unique Recipients
181
Most Common Grant
$25K
of 2023 grantees were first-time recipients
| Recipient | Location | Amount | Year |
|---|---|---|---|
| University Of VirginiaPROVIDE THE GOOD JOBS HAWAII PROJECT TEAM WITH A LEARNING AND EVALUATION PARTNER THAT CAN OFFER ACTIONABLE INSIGHTS AND ONGOING ANALYSIS OF HOW THE INITIATIVE IS HELPING TO PREPARE AND PLACE LOCAL RESIDENTS INTO HIGH-DEMAND, WELL-PAYING JOBS [5863; PC] | Charlottesville, VA | $112K | 2023 |
| Associated Builders & Contractors Inc"BUILDING HAWAII TOGETHER" SKILLED TRADES PROJECT TO INCREASE PARTICIPATION IN CARPENTRY, PLUMBING, ELECTRICAL, PAINTING AND ROOFING [5984; PC] | Honolulu, HI | $60K | 2023 |
| University Of Hawaii FoundationSOAR HIGHER - SUPPORT FOR WINDWARD OAHU SCHOOLS TO PARTICIPATE AS A GEAR UP 6-16 MODEL [5173; PC] | Honolulu, HI | $529K | 2023 |
| Hawaii Community Foundation (Hcf)SUPPORT FOR A SECOND ROUND OF CONTRIBUTIONS TO THE HOLOMUA POOLED FUND WHOSE GOAL IS TO IMPROVE MARINE RESOURCES MANAGEMENT IN HAWAI'I THROUGH A SUITE OF EFFORTS BUILT ON FOUR PILLARS: PLACE-BASED PLANNING, PONO PRACTICES, MONITORING, AND PROTECTION & RESTORATION [5905; PC] | Honolulu, HI | $500K | 2023 |
| The Nature Conservancy Of HawaiiADVANCING COMMUNITY-BASED MARINE MANAGEMENT TO REACH 30X30 GOALS [5660; PC] | Honolulu, HI | $280K | 2023 |
| HookuaainaTO PROCEED WITH A FIFTH AHUPUA'A SYSTEMS APPRENTICESHIP COHORT IN PARTNERSHIP WITH WINDWARD COMMUNITY COLLEGE, WHICH WILL ALSO INCLUDE EXPANSION TO THREE OTHER WINDWARD O'AHU 'AINA-BASED EDUCATION SITES [5912; PC] | Kailua, HI | $200K | 2023 |
| Historic Hawaii FoundationSUPPORT TO STABILIZE WALLS OF HISTORIC BUILDINGS THAT BURNED IN LAHAINA, IN PARTNERSHIP WITH THE LAHAINA RESTORATION FOUNDATION, AND SUPPORT FOR PLANNING, ARCHITECTURAL, ENGINEERING, AND PERMITTING FOR REHABILITATION AND RESTORATION OF HISTORIC SITES IN LAHAINA [6090; PC] | Honolulu, HI | $175K | 2023 |
| Polynesian Voyaging SocietyCHALLENGE GRANT TO STRENGTHEN THE POLYNESIAN VOYAGING SOCIETY'S CAPACITY TO LEAD A MOVEMENT OF SUSTAINABILITY BASED ON REVIVED INDIGENOUS WISDOM AND TO SUPPORT THE MOANANUIAKEA VOYAGE THROUGHOUT THE PACIFIC [5535; PC] | Honolulu, HI | $160K | 2023 |
| Social Finance IncPROPOSAL TO SERVE AS HAWAI'I RENEWABLE LEARNING FUND MANAGER [6086; PC] | Boston, MA | $150K | 2023 |
| 50canCORE ORGANIZATIONAL SUPPORT FOR HAWAIIKIDSCAN, AN EDUCATION ADVOCACY ORGANIZATION COMMITTED TO ENSURE THAT HAWAII HAS AN EXCELLENT AND EQUITABLE EDUCATION SYSTEM [5898; PC] | Washington, DC | $150K | 2023 |
| Castle Medical CenterSTARTUP SUPPORT TO ESTABLISH A COMMUNITY-BASED WORKFORCE DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM TO HELP KO'OLAUPOKO AND KO'OLAULOA RESIDENTS DEVELOP THE EMPLOYABILITY AND TECHNICAL SKILLS NECESSARY TO SECURE HIGHER-WAGE JOBS [5843; PC] | Kailua, HI | $140K | 2023 |
| Lanakila PacificLANAKILA PACIFIC CAREER PATH PROGRAM, A NEW FORM OF WORK-BASED LEARNING SUPPORT FOR YOUNG PEOPLE WITH MILD TO MODERATE AUTISM [5677; PC] | Honolulu, HI | $133K | 2023 |
| Pilina Education AllianceSUPPORT OF PATHWAY TO PURPOSE, A CAREER-BASED HIGH SCHOOL PROGRAM THAT PROVIDES GUIDANCE, MENTORSHIP AND WORK-BASED LEARNING OPPORTUNITIES FOR STUDENTS. [5658; NC] | Honolulu, HI | $125K | 2023 |
| Kualoa-Heeia Ecumenical Youth Project (Key)TO ESTABLISH A COMMUNITY-BASED WORKFORCE DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM TO HELP KO'OLAUPOKO AND KO'OLAULOA RESIDENTS DEVELOP THE EMPLOYABILITY AND TECHNICAL SKILLS AND TRAINING NECESSARY TO SECURE HIGHER-WAGE JOBS [5848; PC] | Kaneohe, HI | $115K | 2023 |
| Purple MaiaTO SUPPORT THE LAUNCH OF WINDWARD COMMUNITY COLLEGE'S HALAU HEKILI, AN ALTERNATE LEARNING SPACE FOR HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS ATTENDING KAILUA HIGH THAT CONNECTS HIGH SCHOOL, COLLEGE AND COMMUNITY LEARNING EXPERIENCES [5787; PC] | Honolulu, HI | $111K | 2023 |
| Maui United WayUNSOLICITED FLEXIBLE GRANT TO MAUI UNITED WAY TO BUILD THEIR CAPACITY TO HELP PROVIDE RELIEF TO THOSE DIRECTLY IMPACTED BY THE WILDFIRES ON MAUI, TO SUPPORT COMMUNITY ORGANIZATIONS PROVIDING THAT RELIEF, AND TO HELP IN THE RECOVERY AND REBUILDING PHASES [5951; PC] | Wailuku, HI | $100K | 2023 |
| Kuaaina Ulu Auamo (Kua)TO SUPPORT AND STRENGTHEN THIS CRITICALLY IMPORTANT BACKBONE ORGANIZATION AND ITS THREE COMMUNITY-DRIVEN NETWORKS FOR OCEAN MANAGEMENT IN HAWAII. [5598; PC] | Kaneohe, HI | $100K | 2023 |
| The Trust For Public LandTO HELP TRUST FOR PUBLIC LAND (TPL) AND ITS PARTNER, THE HAWAI'I LAND TRUST (HILT) CONTINUE THEIR EFFORTS TO SECURE PRIORITY LANDS IN WINDWARD O'AHU FOR COMMUNITY USE AND BENEFIT [5851; PC] | Honolulu, HI | $100K | 2023 |
| City And County Of Honolulu Office Of Climate Change Sustainability And ResTO HELP THE HONOLULU CITY & COUNTY OPTIMIZE ITS CLIMATE ADAPTATION WORK ALIGNED WITH THE FOUNDATION'S NEW CLIMATE STRATEGY [5860; GOV] | Honolulu, HI | $100K | 2023 |
| Conservation International FoundationPU'ULAU PROJECT: A TWO-YEAR EFFORT TO COMBINE ADDITIONAL KNOWLEDGE BASES FROM FISHERS AND COMMUNITY WITH WESTER-SCIENCE BASED MONITORING DATA TO IMPROVE PARTICIPATION AND DECISION MAKING FOR THE HOLOMUA INITIATIVE. [5588; PC] | Honolulu, HI | $95K | 2023 |
| Leadership Instituue Hawaii Department Of EducationLAYING THE FOUNDATION FOR MIDDLE LEVEL EDUCATION MAGIC: STRENGTHENING PUBLIC MIDDLE SCHOOLS IN HAWAII [5920; PC] | Aiea, HI | $80K | 2023 |
| College Summit Inc Dba PeerforwardPEERS LEADING PEERS THROUGH HIGHER EDUCATION [5516; PC] | Washington, DC | $80K | 2023 |
| Paepae O HeeiaSTRENGTHENING THE KO'OLAU 'AINA ALOHA NETWORK THROUGH SHARED VISION AND EFFORTS [5517; PC] | Kaneohe, HI | $75K | 2023 |
| Koolau FoundationCATALYST FUNDING TO DEVELOP THE HAIKU VALLEY CULTURAL PRESERVE [5907; PC] | Kaneohe, HI | $75K | 2023 |
| Connected The National Center For College And CareerPROVIDE SUPPORT TO CONNECTED: THE NATIONAL CENTER FOR COLLEGE AND CAREERS TO DESIGN, TEST AND LAUNCH THE FIRST PHASE OF A COMMUNITY OF PRACTICE FOR SMALL HIGH SCHOOLS IN RURAL AND REMOTE REGIONS OF HAWAII [5927; PC] | Berkeley, CA | $75K | 2023 |
| Resources Legacy FundSTRENGTHENING HOLOMUA: MARINE 30X30 [5521; PC] | Sacramento, CA | $75K | 2023 |
| Elemental ExceleratorCOMMUNITY-DRIVEN CLIMATE TECHNOLOGY DEPLOYMENT IN HAWAII: MORE CLOSELY CONNECTING EMERGING CLIMATE-RESILIENCE TECHNOLOGIES INCUBATED BY ELEMENTAL EXCELERATOR WITH THE ON-THE-GROUND NEEDS OF LOCAL COMMUNITY GROUPS AND ENVIRONMENTAL NONPROFITS [5650; PC] | Honolulu, HI | $70K | 2023 |
| Makaha Cultural Learning CenterTO EXPAND PV INSTALLATION TRAINING THROUGH STRIVE (SUSTAINABILITY THROUGH RENEWABLE IMPACT-DRIVEN VOCATIONAL EDUCATION) [5968; PC] | Waianae, HI | $60K | 2023 |
| Hawaii Electricians Training FundINTERIM CREDENTIAL PRE-APPRENTICESHIP PROGRAM & RECRUITMENT EXPANSION [6065; NC] | Honolulu, HI | $60K | 2023 |
| Pbl WorksSCALING HIGH QUALITY PBL IN HAWAII - EXPANDING AND DEEPENING LEADERSHIP TRAINING IN COHORTS 4 AND 5 [5294; PC] | Novato, CA | $57K | 2023 |
| Residential Youth Services & EmpowermentTO SUPPORT THEIR DROP-IN SHELTER AND SERVICES FOR YOUTH AGES 14-24 [5637; PC] | Kailua, HI | $55K | 2023 |
| Kulia Education FoundationSUPPORT FOR THE MARKETING FOR AND HIRING OF KEY STAFF FOR THE NEWLY AUTHORIZED KULIA ACADEMY PUBLIC CHARTER SCHOOL IN KALIHI FOCUSING ON IT SKILLS AND PROJECT-BASED LEARNING [5602; NC] | Honolulu, HI | $50K | 2023 |
| Hawaii People'S FundUNSOLICITED FLEXIBLE GRANT TO HAWAII PEOPLE'S FUND TO BUILD THEIR CAPACITY TO HELP PROVIDE RELIEF TO THOSE DIRECTLY IMPACTED BY THE WILDFIRES ON MAUI AND TO AMPLIFY THEIR VOICE IN DECISION MAKING THROUGH THE "MAUI ALOHA: THE PEOPLE'S RESPONSE" INITIATIVE [5947; PC] | Honolulu, HI | $50K | 2023 |
| Hawaii Executive CollaborateSUPPORT FOR THE REDISCOVERING HAWAI'I'S SOUL INITIATIVE TO CREATE SPACES WHERE LEADERS FROM ALL SECTORS COULD HAVE CANDID, DIFFICULT DISCUSSIONS TO WORK TOGETHER TO TAKE ACTION THAT WILL CREATE A BETTER FUTURE FOR HAWAI'I [5914; PC] | Honolulu, HI | $50K | 2023 |
| Hui O Waa KauluaUNSOLICITED FLEXIBLE GRANT TO HUI O WA'A KAULUA TO BUILD CAPACITY TO HELP PROVIDE RELIEF TO THOSE DIRECTLY IMPACTED BY THE WILDFIRES ON MAUI AND ALSO TO HELP REPLACE HUI O WA'A KAULUA'S CANOES LOST IN THE WILDFIRES [5950; PC] | Kahului, HI | $50K | 2023 |
| Center For Disaster Philanthropy IncUNSOLICITED GRANT TO CENTER FOR DISASTER PHILANTHROPY TO SUPPORT THE HAWAII WILDFIRES RECOVERY FUND [5946; PC] | Washington, DC | $50K | 2023 |
| Malama Honua Public Charter School FoundationSUPPORT FOR MALAMA HONUA PUBLIC CHARTER SCHOOL FOUNDATION TO COMPLETE PRE-CONSTRUCTION PREPARATIONS ON ITS 11-ACRE SITE IN WAIMANALO FOR A NEW LEARNING CAMPUS. [5925; PC] | Waimanalo, HI | $50K | 2023 |
| Teach For America (Tfa)SUPPORT TO SUSTAIN TEACH FOR AMERICA-HAWAI'I'S WORK TO CLOSE THE ACHIEVEMENT GAP [4585; PC] | Honolulu, HI | $50K | 2023 |