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FY2026 Runaway Homeless Youth Training, Technical Assistance, and Capacity Building Center (RHYTTAC) is sponsored by Administration for Children & Families - ACYF/FYSB (HHS). This cooperative agreement strengthens and builds the capacity of runaway and homeless youth and other youth-serving professionals and service providers across the nation by developing training products, providing targeted technical assistance to RHY award recipients and youth-serving organizations, and leading coordination activities among RHY award recipients.
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Search similar grants →According to the current listing, eligibility includes: Statewide and regional nonprofit organizations, or a combination of such entities. Faith-based and community organizations that meet the eligibility requirements are also eligible. Confirm the full requirements in the official notice before applying.
Applications for FY2026 Runaway Homeless Youth Training, Technical Assistance, and Capacity Building Center (RHYTTAC) are due August 3, 2026. Build your timeline backwards from this date to cover registrations, approvals, and final submission checks.
FY2026 Runaway Homeless Youth Training, Technical Assistance, and Capacity Building Center (RHYTTAC) is funded by Administration for Children & Families - ACYF/FYSB (HHS). Verify program details on the funder's official page before applying.
Start from the official opportunity page linked in this listing — it carries the sponsor's submission instructions.
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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.
On June 8, HHS and GSA launched Special Item Number 518210GM under the GSA Multiple Award Schedule — a continuous procurement pathway for federal agencies to buy grants management software, audit support, and subrecipient monitoring. The shift ends the Grants QSMO's marketplace-by-RFI model and quietly establishes the GSA Schedule as the default rail for federal grants software for the next decade.
Read articleNIH posted PAR-27-032 — Maximizing Investigators' Research Award for Early Stage Investigators — on May 12 as the first NOFO under the HHS SimplerNOFO initiative. Plain language, checklists, restructured sections, and explicit guidance replace the dense traditional NIH announcement. What the redesign means for grant writing strategy across HHS and which NOFOs are next in line.
Read articleOn May 8, 2026, ED and HHS announced the first competitions under a new Family Engagement and School Support Partnership — covering Promise Neighborhoods and Ready to Learn, with applications due August 6. HHS will manage grant funds and provide technical assistance under an Interagency Agreement, the largest structural change to Promise Neighborhoods since its 2010 launch. The priority shift to evidence-based literacy and high-impact tutoring is the visible piece. The administrative reorganization is what determines whether the program survives the next reauthorization.
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