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The Emergent Need Fund is a grant from the New Hampshire Children's Health Foundation that funds nonprofit organizations responding to unforeseen events threatening their ability to deliver essential services to young children and families in New Hampshire. Designed to provide rapid, one-time support during sudden disruptions—whether economic, environmental, or operational—the fund offers awards up to $50,000.
Eligible applicants are New Hampshire 501(c)(3) organizations, or those with a tax-exempt fiscal sponsor, serving families with children ages 0-5 at risk for poor health outcomes. The Foundation prioritizes organizations advancing economic security for young children. Funds are one-time awards only and are not designed for ongoing support.
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Apply for a Grant - New Hampshire Children's Health Foundation Children’s Health Dashboard Emergent Need Funding Available The New Hampshire Children’s Health Foundation (NHCHF) has created a 2026 Emergent Need Fund to help nonprofit organizations in New Hampshire respond to needs caused by unforeseen events.
These funds are designed to provide rapid support when unexpected circumstances threaten the ability to deliver essential services to children and families. We understand that sudden disruptions, whether economic, environmental, or operational, can compound existing challenges such as limited workforce capacity, budget constraints, and the strain of managing multiple priorities.
During these periods of instability, individuals and families across the state rely even more on nonprofits to meet critical community needs. This grant approach aims to help organizations remain resilient and responsive when it matters most. These funds are intended for one-time awards only and are not designed to provide ongoing support.
Emergent need funding is available for New Hampshire 501(c)(3) organizations, or organizations applying under a tax-exempt fiscal sponsor, that serve families with children, ages 0–5 who are at risk for poor health outcomes. Our primary focus is on organizations advancing economic security through related sectors to improve outcomes for young children and their families.
An organizational or operational response to address emergent needs that could cause harm if unaddressed. Examples include an unexpected increase in demand for services, funding loss, organizational restructuring, and costs related to providing legal services for immigrant and refugee families with young children.
Costs for vehicles, equipment, furniture, food, office supplies, construction Expenses already incurred Out-of-state projects that do not benefit New Hampshire Sectarian or religious programs Support for political activities, i.e. campaigns International travel expenses Organizations or projects that exclude or discriminate based on race, religion, age, gender, sexual orientation, physical or mental ability, national or ethnic origin What is the time expectation for using the funds?
Grant activities must take place within one year from when the grant is awarded to be eligible for funding. The application process begins on January 12, 2026. Applications are accepted on a rolling basis throughout the year or until funding for the year has been fully expended.
We encourage organizations to apply as soon as the need and a plan to address the need are identified. To apply, follow this link and follow the instructions. How much can you request?
Requests should not exceed $50,000. When should you expect a response? Requests $30,000 and under will receive a response within four weeks.
Requests over $30,000 will receive a response within six weeks. If you have any questions, please contact Alisa Druzba , Director of Research and Community Impact. 49 South Main Street, Suite 204 Committed to Children’s Health New Hampshire Children’s Health Foundation is organized and operates exclusively for charitable purposes.
Our mission is to improve the health and wellbeing of all New Hampshire children. More about New Hampshire Children's Health Foundation > © 2026 New Hampshire Children's Health Foundation Children’s Health Dashboard
Based on current listing details, eligibility includes: NH 501(c)(3) nonprofits or those with fiscal sponsor serving families with young children Applicants should confirm final requirements in the official notice before submission.
Current published award information indicates Requests up to $50,000 Always verify allowable costs, matching requirements, and funding caps directly in the sponsor documentation.
The current target date is rolling deadlines or periodic funding windows. Build your timeline backwards from this date to cover registrations, approvals, attachments, and final submission checks.
Federal grant success rates typically range from 10-30%, varying by agency and program. Build a strong proposal with clear objectives, measurable outcomes, and a well-justified budget to improve your chances.
Requirements vary by sponsor, but typically include a project narrative, budget justification, organizational capability statement, and key personnel CVs. Check the official notice for the complete list of required attachments.
Yes — AI tools like Granted can help research funders, draft proposal sections, and check compliance. However, always review and customize AI-generated content to reflect your organization's unique strengths and the specific requirements of the solicitation.
Review timelines vary by funder. Federal agencies typically take 3-6 months from submission to award notification. Foundation grants may be faster, often 1-3 months. Check the program's timeline in the official solicitation for specific dates.
Many federal programs offer multi-year funding or allow competitive renewals. Check the official solicitation for continuation and renewal policies. Non-competing continuation applications are common for multi-year awards.
Emergent Needs and Open Grants is a grant from The Schenectady Foundation that funds new and arising community challenges requiring creative, community-based responses in Schenectady County, New York. The Foundation allocates $270,000 to emergent needs grants as part of a broader $1.45 million 2026 grant program, alongside grants for healthy food access, neighborhood revitalization, arts, micro-grants, scholarships, and the Grassroots Fund. Applications must be submitted through the GrantInterface portal beginning with a Letter of Inquiry. The application deadline is June 5, 2026. Eligible applicants are nonprofit 501(c)(3) organizations primarily serving Schenectady County residents.
Consolidation of the research infrastructure landscape – individual support for evolution, long-term sustainability and emerging needs of pan-European research infrastructures is sponsored by European Commission — Horizon Europe. Expected Outcome: Project results are expected to contribute to several of the following expected outcomes: better structured and strengthened European research infrastructure landscape; new services available to a wider user community, including participants in other parts of Horizon Europe, allowing to better tackle scientific and societal challenges; increased capacity to address EU policy priorities and/or socio-economic challenges; reinforced global competitiveness of the European Research Area; reduction of environmental (including climate-related) impacts as well as optimisation of resource and energy consumption integrated through the full life cycle of research infrastructures; increased long-term sustainability of European research infrastructures. Scope: This topic targets the consolidation of the EU research infrastructures landscape through the support, together with the countries that are members of the research infrastructures, to the strengthening, long-term sustainability, reorientation or evolution of ESFRI Landmarks [1] or European Research Infrastructure Consortia (ERICs) [2] . The proposed action should justify the specific objectives and focus on activities that are critical for the sustainability and optimised use of the ESFRI Landmarks or ERICs, such as activities aiming at several of the following objectives: enlargement of the membership or broadening of the base of participating countries, notably widening countries and candidate countries; addressing critical aspects raised following an assessment or monitoring exercise, e.g. in the context of ESFRI activities; reinforcing international cooperation; revision of business/funding plan; development of managerial and technical skills for research infrastructure staff; structuring and strengthening of national/thematic nodes; extension of remote and/or virtual access; management of research data according to the FAIR principles; reorientation or evolution of the research infrastructure scope; development, update and or implementation of impact assessment of the research infrastructure. In case of reorientation or evolution of the research infrastructure scope, activities should fill gaps in the research infrastructures landscape [3] , enabling the research infrastructure to address new research or societal challenges and/or serve new user communities, increasing and improving service capacity and/or integrating new resources/facilities. Due attention should be given to related EU initiatives, strategies and priorities and, where relevant, to complementarity and relevance to activities in other parts of Horizon Europe, such as better addressing SRIAs of Horizon Europe partnerships. Proposals should explain concrete complementarities and any synergies with previous or current EU grants, notably under the research infrastructures part of the Horizon Europe work programme, e.g. INFRADEV and INFRATECH grants. Given the funding rate, proposals should ensure a minimum adequate backing by the beneficiaries, who should provide the remaining share for the activities covered by the Grant Agreement and foster the sustainability of the ESFRI Landmark or ERIC. Specific attention should be given, where relevant, to the greening of technologies and methodologies used by the research infrastructure, to the interaction with industry/SMEs, to the fostering of the innovation potential of the infrastructures, and to their integration into local, regional and global innovation ecosystems. [1] See list of ESFRI Landmarks in the ESFRI RIs PORTFOLIO https://ri-portfolio.esfri.eu/ [2] See ERIC Landscape – Active European Research Infrastructure Consortia (ERICs) https://research-and-innovation.ec.europa.eu/strategy/strategy-research-and-innovation/our-digital-future/european-research-infrastructures/eric/eric-landscape_en [3] Although the action aims at individual support to a pan-European research infrastructure, applicants should consider the ESFRI Landscape Analysis and liaise Programme areas: Horizon Europe (HORIZON), Excellent Science, Research infrastructures Keywords: ESFRI