1,000+ Opportunities
Find the right grant
Search federal, foundation, and corporate grants with AI — or browse by agency, topic, and state.
This listing may be outdated. Verify details at the official source before applying.
Find similar grantsChild and Family Wellbeing Fund is sponsored by State of New York. Resources community-driven initiatives that strengthen families and promote family preservation, reunification, and healing.
Get alerted about grants like this
Save a search for “State of New York” or related topics and get emailed when new opportunities appear.
Search similar grants →Extracted from the official opportunity page/RFP to help you evaluate fit faster.
Investing in a Child and Family Wellbeing Fund Is the Right Course for New York — Center for New York City Affairs Children, Youth, & Families Investing in a Child and Family Wellbeing Fund Is the Right Course for New York For the past three and a half years, I have worked with the Fostering Youth Success Alliance to help young people with foster care experience access the resources they need to attend college. This work is essential.
It helps young adults who have been separated from their families pursue their academic dreams. But it has also raised a critical question: What if we invested in families earlier – before separation happens? How could we strengthen communities and provide the right support to families in crisis, so they never reach the point of child welfare involvement?
One key solution is to expand funding for small, community-based organizations that families know and trust – organizations that provide resources before families reach a breaking point. These groups are uniquely positioned to offer culturally responsive and accessible support, complementing the work of larger human service organizations.
In the next few days, as they finalize the State budget for the 12 months starting April 1st, New York’s leaders can take an important step forward. The State Assembly’s budget proposal includes the “CHILD Program. ” It would establish a $50 million Child and Family Wellbeing Fund .
It would be available to grassroots organizations that help families stay together by offering vital services like parenting support, economic assistance, and access to health care. Research has shown that proactive investments like these reduce the unnecessary contact with child protective services (CPS) that is often the first step toward foster care placement.
To make this happen, the State budget must include both the funding for the CHILD Program and legislation ( Hevesi A63A / Brisport S6431 ) that would ensures neighborhoods communities have a voice in how these resources are distributed. This proposal would empower leaders and families to help direct investments based on their neighborhood’s unique needs, strengthening the broader network of support services available.
For the past two years, I have worked with a coalition of child welfare-impacted leaders, policy experts, and advocates to develop this proposed fund. We’ve seen first-hand how life-changing it is when families have access to programs they trust – programs that prevent unnecessary and traumatic involvement with the child welfare system.
Decades of disinvestment –driven by policies like redlining – have left some communities without the support systems they need. The connection is clear: neighborhoods with the highest CPS involvement, such as Brownsville in Brooklyn, Mount Eden in the Bronx, Lovejoy in Buffalo, and Westside in Syracuse, often have the fewest resources available to help families before crises arise.
Yet the small, local organizations that these families trust often struggle to access government funding. The Child and Family Wellbeing Fund will change that. It shifts the focus from what communities lack to what they have: strengths, aspirations, and trusted networks of support.
It prioritizes community leadership and decision-making, ensuring that those most affected have a say in how resources are allocated. Through a State advisory board and local grant-making processes, the Fund would invest in community-led solutions.
Neighborhood-based asset mapping would help identify resources and gaps, while participatory decision-making – including input from impacted families and youth – would guide funding priorities. This approach is different from the usual way State funding is distributed, which often relies on top-down decision making without community input. That system is not working for families.
New York currently spends hundreds of millions of dollars each year investigating families and operating the child welfare system. In 2023 alone, New York City spent more than $350 million on investigations and $700 million on foster care placements. New York should prioritize investments that keep families together.
This year’s State budget presents an opportunity to take bold action. By funding the Child and Family Wellbeing Fund, we can direct resources toward strengthening families and communities, ensuring that children can grow up in stable, supportive environments. Now is the time for our leaders in Albany to make this critical investment.
Deidra Nesbeth is the director of the Fostering Youth Success Alliance (FYSA) housed at Children’s Aid, a multi-service organization for children and families in New York. Photo by: Upendmovement. org Bruce Cory April 2, 2025 jan2025-onwards
According to the current listing, eligibility includes: Community-based organizations in New York State. Confirm the full requirements in the official notice before applying.
Child and Family Wellbeing Fund is funded by State of New York. Verify program details on the funder's official page before applying.
This opportunity targets applicants in New York. If your organization operates elsewhere, check the official notice for location requirements.
Start from the official opportunity page linked in this listing — it carries the sponsor's submission instructions.
New York Providing Local Access to Essential Sustenance (NY PLATES) capital grant program is sponsored by New York State (administered by Dormitory Authority of the State of New York in partnership with the New York State Department of Health's Division of Nutrition). This capital grant program supports food banks, emergency food programs, and municipalities providing food relief services in New York.
NY PLATES capital grant program is sponsored by New York State (administered by Dormitory Authority of the State of New York (DASNY)). The NY PLATES capital grant program provides funding to food banks and emergency food assistance organizations in New York State to build modern facilities, purchase equipment (like refrigeration units and food transport vehicles), and improve infrastructure to better serve fami…
The SCI Youth Grant Pitch Contest is a competitive program from Social Capital Inc. that funds youth-led community improvement projects in Greater Boston. Teams of high school students in grades 9 through 12 residing in Essex, Middlesex, Norfolk, or Suffolk counties develop project ideas through coaching from local professionals, then pitch their proposals to a live panel of judges. Winning teams receive $1,000 to $2,000 in grant funding to execute their community-strengthening visions. The program builds career skills including public speaking, project management, and team collaboration, while cultivating cross-socioeconomic connections among peers and mentors throughout the region.
The System Innovations Grant (Youth Opportunities Fund) is a multi-year funding opportunity from the Ontario Trillium Foundation that supports collaborative projects working to understand and strengthen systems so they function better for young people. Grants of up to $1,250,000 over five years fund collaboratives of two or more Ontario-based nonprofits aiming to create lasting systemic change that expands opportunities for youth ages 12 to 29, with a particular emphasis on Indigenous, Black, and other racialized youth facing systemic barriers. Eligible applicants are not-for-profit organizations incorporated for at least five years in Ontario with a mandate to serve youth, forming a formal collaborative. Indigenous- and Black-led organizations and collaboratives are prioritized. Applications were due March 11, 2026—check the Ontario Trillium Foundation website for upcoming intake cycles.
Improving Veteran Mental Health Grant Program is a grant from The Cigna Group Foundation that funds nonprofits providing housing stability and wraparound support services to improve the mental health of military veterans. The Foundation committed $9 million over three years addressing housing instability and its mental health impacts, as an estimated 40,000 veterans go without shelter nightly and 1.5 million are at risk of homelessness. Funded programs include mortgage and rental assistance, employment re-entry training, and housing development for veterans. Eligible nonprofits must leverage evidence-informed programs and align with at least one goal: increasing permanent housing, improving housing affordability, or enhancing wraparound services for veterans transitioning from shelters.
NYSERDA's $50M expansion of clean energy workforce funding runs through November 2027 and September 2030. The two tracks have radically different competition levels, cost shares, and award sizes — and the wrong choice will kill an otherwise strong application.
Read articleThree jurisdictions passed laws letting nonprofits get up to 25-50% of grant awards upfront instead of waiting months for reimbursement. The national implications.
Read article