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Michigan Urban Conservation & Community Grants is sponsored by The Conservation Fund (with significant support from the Charles Stewart Mott Foundation). This program supports community-led projects that transform vacant, degraded, or underutilized urban land into new, expanded, or improved publicly accessible greenspaces in specific cities across southeast Michigan.
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2025 Michigan Urban Conservation & Community Grants - The Conservation Fund 2025 Michigan Urban Conservation & Community Grants Our Programs Urban Conservation 2025 Michigan Urban Conservation & Community Grants Do you have a vision to turn a vacant lot into a vibrant community space? Do you want to make your neighborhood greener, healthier, and more connected? If you’re working in southeast Michigan, this opportunity might be for you!
Grant Recipients Announced The Conservation Fund is proud to announce 19 community-based organizations selected for the 2025 Michigan Urban Conservation & Community Grants. With significant support from the Charles Stewart Mott Foundation, The Conservation Fund is pleased to announce the 2025 Michigan Urban Conservation and Community Grant Program.
Selected organizations may receive grant awards of up to $20,000 plus technical assistance and coaching designed to help advance urban conservation projects. The grant program aims to support community-led projects with the potential to transform vacant, degraded, or underutilized urban land into new, expanded, or improved publicly accessible greenspaces in the following cities across southeast Michigan: Detroit, Flint, Saginaw, St.
Clair Shores, Royal Oak, Pontiac, Dearborn Heights, and Warren . Proposed projects should address the following priority elements: Site Control: Projects should include an identified project site and a plan to secure some form of durable site control: conservation land acquisition, permanent site control, conservation easement, or similar long-term rights for public benefit.
For example, the project could involve securing rights to vacant properties to establish a new community garden, engaging in an active redevelopment project that includes a permanent greenspace element, gaining a long-term commitment from local government or private landowners for green space set-asides, or acquiring title to land to expand a neighborhood park or trail.
This component does not need to be the primary focus of the project, but a successful project should address dedicated land conservation. Note: The applicant organization does not need to assume site control directly, provided that the proposed conservation action is assured for the longer term. Partnerships with local land trusts and other entities are highly encouraged.
Community Engagement : Projects should include a community outreach and engagement plan. Projects are expected to collaborate with diverse community partners and provide opportunities for public engagement through community planning meetings, and educational or volunteer-focused events. Furthermore, projects should help empower residents to tackle real-world environmental and socioeconomic challenges in their community.
For example, the project might engage the neighborhood in creating a community garden to increase access to fresh, affordable, and healthy produce. What Grantees Will Receive Up to $20,000 in grant funding will be awarded to selected individual grantee organizations, together with hands-on coaching and training designed to strengthen the project team and build long-term capacity.
Grantees will be part of a supportive network with access to the following: Grantee participation in virtual kick-off meeting and launch survey Participation in the 2025 Urban Conservation & Community Peer Exchange in Michigan A series of educational webinars focused on land acquisition and long-term site control Personalized coaching and technical help through one-on-one meeting with TCF Staff Scholarships to mParks conference or other regional conference and training opportunities Additional support as identified by grantees Application Process and Timeline All applications must be submitted through our online system.
A link to the online application can be found at the bottom of this announcement. If you have any questions or problems, please contact us at ilyon@conservationfund. org .
Application Opens: June 1, 2025 Information Webinars and Open Office Hours: Throughout June June 26, 3- 4 PM ET | Click here to register Application Closes : July 18, 2025 Grants awarded : August 2025 2025 Urban Conservation Peer Exchange: September 17-19, 2025 (required for all grantees) Grant Period: August 2025 – July 2026 Interim Report Due: January 2026 Final Report Due: August 2026 Register for June 26 information webinar Eligible grantees are community-serving entities serving Detroit, Flint, Saginaw, St.
Clair Shores, Royal Oak, Pontiac, Dearborn Heights, and Warren . Open to non-profit 501(c)(3) organizations, state or federal government agencies, federally recognized tribes and local governments, and educational institutions. Community groups that are not eligible are encouraged to partner with an eligible group.
If you have a great project but your group is not eligible, please reach out to us if we can help match you with an eligible partner. Private for-profit firms and individuals are not eligible to apply. The project site’s current ownership can take any form (public, private, individual, institutional, for example), however there must be a plan to secure long-term site control.
Grant funding may not be used to support political advocacy, fundraising, lobbying, litigation, terrorist activities, or Foreign Corrupt Practices Act violations. All proposals will be screened for relevance, accuracy, completeness, and compliance with TCF funding policies. Proposals will then be evaluated based on the extent to which their projects meet the following criteria: Addresses both priority elements listed above.
Engages local community members, leaders, community-based organizations, and/or other relevant stakeholders to develop and implement the proposed project. Includes a definition of success and a plan to monitor and/or evaluate project success. The Conservation Fund anticipates making up to 16 grants across the eight target cities: Detroit, Flint, Saginaw, St.
Clair Shores, Royal Oak, Pontiac, Dearborn Heights, and Warren. Each applicant can request up to $20,000 to cover planning, pre-development, and implementation costs associated with their proposed project. Matching Contributions are not required but encouraged.
Matching Contributions may consist of cash, contributed goods and services, and volunteer hours. Ready to apply or want to learn more? Please reach out to Kelsey Pramik at kpramik@conservationfund.
org with any questions. Urban Conservation and Community Program Manager kpramik@conservationfund.... Protect the Lands That Sustain Us
According to the current listing, eligibility includes: Community-serving entities, including nonprofit 501(c)(3) organizations, state or federal government agencies, federally recognized tribes and local governments, and educational institutions in Detroit, Flint, Saginaw, …. Confirm the full requirements in the official notice before applying.
The current listing shows up to $20,000. Verify award ceilings, matching requirements, and allowable costs in the official notice.
Michigan Urban Conservation & Community Grants is funded by The Conservation Fund (with significant support from the Charles Stewart Mott Foundation). Verify program details on the funder's official page before applying.
This opportunity targets applicants in Michigan. If your organization operates elsewhere, check the official notice for location requirements.
Applications go through the funder's official portal — the Apply Now link on this page goes there directly.
Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) Program Phase I is sponsored by U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). The EPA SBIR Phase I Solicitation invites small businesses to submit proposals for projects addressing critical environmental challenges. Awards are for six months to demonstrate proof of concept. Key focus areas include Clean and Safe Water, Air Quality and Climate, Homeland Security, Circular Economy/Sustainable Materials, and Safer Chemicals.
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The EPA Gulf of America Division announced up to $50 million on May 5 for 20-30 Farmer-to-Farmer demonstration grants of $1.5M-$2.5M each across EPA Regions 3-8. Applications close June 19, 2026. The geographic scope spans from Pennsylvania to Texas — eighteen states drained by the Mississippi-Atchafalaya system — and the funding model rebuilds the federal conservation playbook around farmer-led demonstrations rather than top-down agency design.
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