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Human Services Grants is sponsored by The New York Community Trust. The New York Community Trust provides grants to focus on early intervention and prevention to enable vulnerable children to grow up in stable families and succeed in school and life.
This includes supporting a continuum of early childhood programs from birth to kindergarten and strengthening services for families with children at risk of foster care placement and for young people already in care.
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Human Services - The New York Community Trust Learn more about how we fund human services. To see what else we fund, explore the Info for Nonprofits page. The Trust helped foster care agency Graham Windham support families with older foster children transitioning into adulthood.
To mitigate the effects of poverty, increase opportunity through effective services and public benefits, and reduce racial disparities. Focus on early intervention and prevention to enable vulnerable children to grow up in stable families and succeed in school and life by: Supporting a continuum of early childhood programs from birth to kindergarten.
Strengthening services for families with children at risk of foster care placement and for young people already in care. Reducing entry and re-entry into the homeless shelter system and increasing long-term housing stability. Increasing access to income supports and healthy, affordable food.
Expand proven and promising practices that help those in need lead productive lives by: Support research, policy, and programs that direct resources to alleviate hunger, homelessness, and poverty; and to move individuals to stability and independence. Advocating for wide-ranging, quality services that help low-income individuals and families succeed.
Build the capacity of government agencies and nonprofits serving low-income New Yorkers by: Supporting the coordination and integration of services across city agencies and service providers. Training and supporting public and nonprofit human services workers. Advancing efforts that improve the funding, contracting, and support of human services agencies.
Preference is given to projects that go beyond one agency or program to offer sector-wide, systemic, and multi-agency solutions. Whenever possible and appropriate human services grants are made in partnership with other Trust program areas. Read the background paper that informed this grantmaking strategy here.
Our program directors host regular information sessions for new applicants. Register today! to develop a food rescue training program for tenant leaders in public housing.
to protect homeless families’ right to shelter. This grant will also support advocacy for a statewide housing voucher program.
to litigate cases of housing discrimination on behalf of low-income New Yorkers Foster Care Excellence Fund for a collaborative fund to keep low-income families together and support best practices in the city’s child welfare system to study the effectiveness of a child maltreatment prevention program for mothers with post-traumatic stress disorder to ensure New Yorkers moving out of shelter and into permanent housing have the resources to remain housed to help families at risk of child welfare intervention campaign for free child care for a nutrition education program for Staten Island young people to increase access to healthy food sources for supportive housing residents in East New York Seafarers and International House to continue to provide lodging for seafarers in need, board ships to provide services, and for those with shore leave and U.S. visas, offer transportation to shopping and medical care Havens Relief Fund Society to provide emergency relief to newly arrived migrants Supportive Housing Network of New York, Inc. to encourage more efficient and effective government investment in supportive housing to organize a network of funders engaged with transforming the food systems in New York City benefit the poorest of the poor, including supporting recently arrived migrants Curious about what else we fund?
Are you seeking support for the following? Capital and building campaigns General operating support/routine operational expenses Unfortunately, we don’t make grants in these areas. Where will the activities you plan to request support for take place?
Only select National or International if your work falls outside of New York City, Long Island, or Westchester. Select all relevant impact areas to your nonprofit. Details on your impact areas
Based on current listing details, eligibility includes: Nonprofit organizations in metropolitan New York, serving New York City and Nassau, Suffolk, and Westchester counties, focusing on human services for vulnerable children and families. Priority for projects offering sector-wide, systemic, and multi-agency solutions. Applicants should confirm final requirements in the official notice before submission.
Current published award information indicates Typically $5,000 - $200,000 (average around $90,000) 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.
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