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First Responders Grant Round is sponsored by Hero Fund America Fund, a field-of-interest fund of the Community Foundation of Herkimer and Oneida Counties. This grant round provides funding to EMS, Fire, and Law Enforcement Agencies for education, training, lifesaving equipment, and mental health needs. Paid law enforcement agencies with 25 or fewer employees are eligible to apply.
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Search similar grants →According to the current listing, eligibility includes: Paid law enforcement agencies with 25 or less employees from across the United States. Also eligible: Volunteer fire departments and volunteer emergency medical service (EMS) agencies. Confirm the full requirements in the official notice before applying.
The current listing shows up to $1,500. Verify award ceilings, matching requirements, and allowable costs in the official notice.
Applications for First Responders Grant Round are due June 30, 2026. Build your timeline backwards from this date to cover registrations, approvals, and final submission checks.
First Responders Grant Round is funded by Hero Fund America Fund, a field-of-interest fund of the Community Foundation of Herkimer and Oneida Counties. Verify program details on the funder's official page before applying.
Yes — this listing is flagged as national in scope, so applicants across the U.S. may apply, subject to the sponsor's other eligibility criteria.
Applications go through the funder's official portal — the Apply Now link on this page goes there directly.
Past winners and funding trends for this program
The Homeless Youth Program is a grant from the Illinois Department of Human Services that funds services for homeless and at-risk youth across Illinois. Administered through the Office of Community and Positive Youth Development, it supports nonprofit organizations delivering shelter, outreach, and support services to young people experiencing homelessness or housing instability. Eligible applicants are Illinois-based nonprofits with demonstrated capacity to serve youth. Awards range from $100,000 to $800,000 per year under CSFA number 444-80-0711. This is a FY 2026 funding opportunity with an application deadline of May 21, 2025.
Community Investment Tax Credit Program (CITC) is a grant from the Maryland Department of Housing and Community Development that provides state tax credit allocations to 501(c)(3) nonprofits, enabling them to attract private donations from individuals and businesses. Donors contributing $500 or more to approved projects receive tax credits equal to 50% of their contribution. The program has leveraged nearly $27 million in charitable contributions to approximately 700 projects statewide. Eligible project areas include education, housing, job training, arts and culture, economic development, and services for at-risk populations. Projects must be located in or serve residents of Maryland's Priority Funding Areas. The application period is typically held annually.
The Families First Community Grant Program is a competitive grant initiative from the Tennessee Department of Human Services (TDHS) offering approximately $27 million in funding to support nonprofit organizations serving low-income Tennessee families. Grants fund programs across four priority areas: education, health, economic stability, and family well-being, aligned with TANF goals of promoting self-sufficiency. Eligible applicants are 501(c)(3) nonprofits based in Tennessee that provide direct services to economically disadvantaged families. The 2025 application cycle closed July 10, 2025. This program reflects Tennessee's broader commitment to strengthening communities through strategic investment in local organizations that address the root causes of poverty.
The Rural Economic Development Loan and Grant Program's fourth-quarter FY26 deadline lands on June 30, 2026 — the last shot at REDLG capital this fiscal year. With $50 million in zero-interest loans and $10 million in grants available annually, REDLG is structurally unlike any other USDA Rural Development instrument: rural electric and telecommunications utilities apply on behalf of an ultimate rural business recipient, and the utility passes the federal funding through at zero or near-zero cost. Here is what eligible projects look like, why the intermediary structure quietly favors a specific applicant profile, and what to do before the next cycle opens in FY27.
Read articleA novel provision in the May 29 OMB rewrite of 2 CFR Part 200 requires recipients of federal financial assistance to apply viewpoint-neutral terms to event services on any property they control — regardless of whether the event is federally funded. The provision lands hardest on the 3,069 county governments, the research universities that hold dispersed campus venues, and the community-based nonprofits that own meeting space. Comment deadline July 13, effective October 1. The defensive posture before then is the same regardless of how the final rule narrows scope.
Read articleHumanity AI's first $18M in pooled grants — $500K to 12 organizations plus $3M to Data & Society — signals where the ten-foundation coalition's $500M will land over five years. Here's the strategy behind the picks and the open-call window.
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