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Equity Grants is sponsored by Center for Congregations. 90/10 matching grants designed to serve Indiana congregations impacted by systemic injustice or inequality. To qualify, a congregation must have an annual gross income under $100,000 and be either a congregation of color or a rural congregation.
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Equity Grants and Learning Opportunities - Center for Congregations Our team is here to help you get clarity around what is possible, which resources are available, and how you might best use them to meet your congregational goals. Aligning with the organization’s mission, the Center for Congregations’ grant program is designed to help Indiana congregations find and use the best resources to address their challenges and opportunities.
The grants program is one of the Center’s four primary services alongside resource consulting, education programs and the Congregational Resource Guide (CRG) . The Equity Grant program was designed to acknowledge that the Center’s Resource Grant guidelines occasionally do not serve those impacted by systemic injustice and inequity.
Grants are made possible by a grant to the Center for Congregations from the Lilly Endowment Inc. Congregations must gross less than $100,000 annually, and must also be a BIPOC or rural community. The majority of congregants should be from one or more of the following: Other racial or ethnic minority groups The Center for Congregations currently identifies the counties listed below as rural county throughout the state of Indiana.
If a congregation is in a county not listed here but considers itself in a rural location, please contact your regional Center for Congregations office to discuss. Congregations in these counties are potentially eligible for an Equity Grant.
Adams, Benton, Blackford, Carroll, Clinton, Crawford, Daviess, Decatur, Dubois, Fayette, Fountain, Franklin, Fulton, Gibson, Greene, Henry, Huntington, Jasper, Jay, Jefferson, Jennings, Knox, LaGrange, Lawrence, Marshall, Martin, Miami, Montgomery, Newton, Noble, Ohio, Orange, Parke, Perry, Pike, Pulaski, Putnam, Randolph, Ripley, Rush, Scott, Spencer, Starke, Steuben, Sullivan, Switzerland, Union, Wabash, Warren, Washington, White Frequently Asked Questions What is the purpose of an Equity Grant?
The purpose is to increase your congregation’s capacity to accomplish a new goal. A grant needs a specific, focused topic. Multiple unrelated issues cannot be bundled in a single grant.
The Center hopes that through an Equity Grant, your congregation will experience an outside resource that raises your ability to accomplish a goal, ultimately furthering your congregation’s mission and values. What do Equity Grants fund? How much can we receive from an Equity Grant?
Equity Grants are 90/10 matching grants to pay for the cost of outside resources of up to $25,000. You have one year to raise your portion and complete the project. Are we competing against others?
There are a limited number of Equity Grants available to Indiana congregations each year. How often can we apply for a grant? Due to the limited number of Equity Grants available, your congregation can apply for and receive approval for one Equity Grant.
Your congregation may apply for and receive approval for a Resource Grant each calendar year, but not simultaneous with an Equity Grant. To start an Equity Grant application process, you need to have completed all final reports for any previous grants. How long does a grant project last once funds are awarded?
Equity Grant funded activities need to be completed with a year of the date the grant is awarded. Of course, a project may take less than a year. When can I start work with the funded resource?
This is an important question. Do not start work or sign a contract with a potentially fundable resource until your grant has been approved. You will often need a proposal or contract form from a chosen resource to complete the grant, but do not sign the contract or proposal to start the work until grant approval.
Do “in-kind” contributions, such as materials or volunteer labor, count for our part of the match? No, your congregation’s 10% portion must be in dollars. How does the Equity Grant process work?
Contact the Center for Congregations and speak with a resource consultant to arrange an appointment. If, after the conversation, your idea appears to fit the Equity Grant criteria, you will continue to the next step of the process. The resource consultant will give you the grant application form and discuss it with you.
You will be asked to submit a draft of the application to your resource consultant. The resource consultant will review your draft and offer suggestions for strengthening the proposal. Steps 3 and 4 may be repeated a number of times.
We encourage you to stay in touch with your resource consultant throughout this process. She or he will be happy to work with you to ensure a strong application. When your resource consultant deems the application ready for submission, you will be asked to submit a final copy with signatures and all supporting documents.
Please note that the material must be received by the first day of the month in which you wish to have your grant application formally considered. Decisions on grants are made the third Tuesday of each month, except December. You will be informed of your grant status within two days of the grants committee meeting.
An official letter of agreement will be issued. When the Center receives fully signed copies of that letter, the grant funds will be released to your congregation in the form of a check. The Center provides its portion in one lump sum at the beginning of the project’s year timeline.
Your congregation has one year to raise your portion and complete the project. How long does the application process take? It depends on the nature of the grant.
The Center will not rush a grant application to meet deadline. Your congregation will need to follow each step of the process. However, the Grants Committee meets every month except December, which is meant to encourage flexibility for the congregation.
Are there items an Equity Grant doesn’t fund? Yes.
Grant funds cannot be used for: Private parochial schools run by the congregation Salaries or payments to congregational staff members or potential staff members Hosting conferences or events targeted to the general public versus congregation members Printing, copies of media, advertising, postage Operating funds and fund drives (the grants do cover consultant fees to help raise funds) Resources connected to programs, like education events, for which your congregation will charge or receive a profit Annually recurring projects or expenses, such as Vacation Bible School and Sunday school curriculum, repeated attendance at a particular conference, annual music license fees Professional development that exclusively benefits staff Current projects and/or projects previously paid for Other resources as determined by the Center Is my congregation allowed to choose the resources for our grant?
Yes. Your congregation is best positioned to decide what will fit your needs. However, the Center does want to be in a resource consulting relationship with your congregation.
After working with more than 4,600 congregations in Indiana, we have developed expertise in finding resources and making helpful recommendations. Nonetheless, it is ultimately your congregation’s decision which resources to use. It is important that the funded resource is not a staff member of your congregation.
Other boundaries by the Center may apply. For example, there may be occasions when the Center not only recommends, but requires your congregation to seek bids from multiple vendors. What follow-up grant reporting does the Center for Congregations require?
If your congregation receives an Equity Grant, you agree to send the Center of Congregations a quarterly report and a final report of your project within one year of the date the grant was awarded. The final report must include a complete financial report. All these reports are filed online.
Reporting forms will be made available. We do not routinely require that your provide receipts of grant eligible expenses. However, the Center may request verification for all or a portion of your grant’s eligible expenses.
Please note: Failure to submit an acceptable final report will jeopardize your congregation’s ability to be considered for future grants. How can my congregation verify proof of IRS tax-exempt status in order to receive an Equity Grant?
Your congregation’s tax-exempt status is verified by providing one of the following: A copy of the IRS letter designating your congregation’s 501(c)(3) status; A copy of your denomination’s IRS group 501(c)(3) designator with an accompanying copy of your denominational directory listing your congregation; Confirmation of Nonprofit Status form.
Depending on which verification you use, the Center may require additional supporting material. Please note: an Indiana Department of Revenue Sales Tax Exemption certificate does not meet the proof of tax-exempt status. Hear how churches across Indiana are innovating and growing with the help of our support.
Elise Erikson Barrett, Ph. D. PASTOR SONDRA GENTRY | BETHEL COMMUNITY CHURCH Transforming Lives, One Heart Tug at a Time: A Congregation’s Outreach from Seymour to Maui I appreciate the Center for providing churches with the opportunity to live out their specific DNA in the context of their communities.
We were able to adapt what we were learning to fit our congregation’s needs and it was a game changer. Northview Church | Indianapolis, IN
Based on current listing details, eligibility includes: Indiana congregations with annual gross revenue under $100,000 that are BIPOC or located in a designated rural county. Applicants should confirm final requirements in the official notice before submission.
Current published award information indicates Up to $25,000 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.
The Fund for Women & Girls Grant Program is sponsored by The Foundation for Enhancing Communities (TFEC). The Fund for Women & Girls, an initiative of TFEC, makes grants to local nonprofit organizations in specific South Central PA counties. The grants support projects that advance the lives of women and girls by providing opportunities to address basic needs, develop economic self-sufficiency, and strengthen health and safety needs.
VGF grants will be used to develop and/or support community-based entities to recruit, manage, and support volunteers. CNCS seeks to fund effective approaches that expand volunteering, strengthen the capacity of volunteer connector organizations to recruit and retain skill-based volunteers, and develop strategies to use volunteers effectively to solve problems. Specifically, the VGF grants will support efforts that expand the capacity of volunteer connector organizations to recruit, manage, support and retain individuals to serve in high quality volunteer assignments.Applicants that receive funding under this Notice may directly carry out the activities supported under the award, or may carry out the activities by making sub-grants to community-based entities, supporting volunteer generation at these entities.). Funding Opportunity Number: AC-05-25-21. Assistance Listing: 94.021. Funding Instrument: G. Category: O. Award Amount: $6.1M total program funding.