1,000+ Opportunities
Find the right grant
Search federal, foundation, and corporate grants with AI — or browse by agency, topic, and state.
Public Benefit Innovation Fund is sponsored by Center for Civic Futures (supported by philanthropic partners like Ballmer Group, Gates Foundation, W. K. Kellogg Foundation, Renaissance Philanthropy, Families and Workers Fund).
The Public Benefit Innovation Fund awards grants to states and their partners, including nonprofits, to accelerate the development of artificial intelligence projects designed to improve public benefits programs.
Get alerted about grants like this
Save a search for “Center for Civic Futures (supported by philanthropic partners like Ballmer Group, Gates Foundation, W.K. Kellogg Foundation, Renaissance Philanthropy, Families and Workers Fund)” or related topics and get emailed when new opportunities appear.
Search similar grants →Extracted from the official opportunity page/RFP to help you evaluate fit faster.
Center for Civic Futures announces 8 projects to improve AI for public benefits access | StateScoop The nonprofit Center for Civic Futures on Tuesday announced it will award $8. 5 million to accelerate the development of artificial intelligence projects designed to improve public benefits programs over the next two years.
Following a call for ideas that yielded more than 400 responses , the group has named eight projects it will support.
These include a multi-state cohort to improve AI tools that can verify work requirements for SNAP and Medicaid benefits, a project with Maryland’s labor department and the Harvard Kennedy School to improve the state’s unemployment insurance system and an initiative in New Jersey to scale up numerous AI pilot projects so that they can be used across the state government.
Another project will aim to develop new infrastructure and evaluation tools that can be widely used across the public sector to identify the generative AI models most effective at answering questions related to public benefits.
The work is funded through the group’s Public Benefit Innovation Fund , which the center’s executive director, Cassandra Madison, said is designed to create a “safe space for experimentation” for states. The fund gets support from the group’s philanthropic partners, including the Ballmer Group, the Gates Foundation, the W. K.
Kellogg Foundation, Renaissance Philanthropy and the Families and Workers Fund. “We think of ourselves as a living lab for states that can really focus in on and explore what are the most promising applications of AI to improve benefits access,” Madison said.
The nonprofit plans next spring to lead an additional open call for projects to fund, but Madison said that in the first round, the group selected projects that seemed “shovel ready,” those that had already advanced beyond the proof-of-concept phase, had a network of partners to draw on and whose organizers possessed “a deep understanding of the problem space.
” “We’re at a moment where AI’s applications, and generative AI’s applications in particular, are experimental and there’s been lots of promising pilots across the country, but very few things have scaled,” she said. “There will be a whole set of learnings.
” The vast majority of state IT leaders have expressed interest, in surveys and elsewhere, in finding ways to use AI to improve how they deliver services, but they have limited capacity to do so.
Dave Cole, New Jersey’s chief innovation officer, said that in his state, AI “is never about replacing workers,” but admitted that, as in many other states, his state’s workforce hasn’t recovered to pre-pandemic levels — “We still need to do more with the teams that we have and make that work experience better.
” In New Jersey, grant funding will help the state scale up a host of AI projects that have been tested in isolated cases or by individual agencies. The state has launched an AI chatbot, which Cole said is used by 20% of the state’s workforce. But the state has also begun using AI for more specific purposes, like scanning and validating documents uploaded by benefits recipients, and writing memos.
Cole said such projects have so far proven valuable — “we can quickly catch errors that might have taken an agent 20 days or so to catch the error manually and review and get back to the applicant” — but that making such narrowly defined tools available across the entire state is a larger project that requires additional support.
“Inboxes are filled with pitches about AI tools that will solve problems,” Cole said. “For us, it’s been a core principle of our team and the way we work in New Jersey to be human-centered and to focus on the problems people are having now and then we find the tools and technologies that address those things.
” Cole said New Jersey plans to conduct between three and five pilot projects during the first year of the grant, and use the second year to scale up the most successful projects across the state government.
“This sort of national effort will allow us to have hopefully in a year a suite of tools that are specifically built to address some of the challenges that government has, with some of the unique constraints in government,” he said. “We’re very concerned with data security and privacy. We’re very concerned there is good training and guardrails on the tools we make available to public service workforce.
It takes extra time to do those things. ” The new grant funding follows a project announced by the Center for Civic Futures last month called the AI Readiness Project , a $500,000 effort hoped similarly to identify best practices and accelerate the use of AI in state governments.
In addition to seven projects led by states and their partners funded by this round of grants, the center is also funding an eighth project designed to create benchmarking tools that can be widely adopted across government.
That project will use Vals AI , a technology platform designed to benchmark AI tools used in the public sector, to develop measurements of how well AI models answer questions related to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program.
Madison said that through the group’s AI Readiness Project, it is also creating an evaluation and benchmarking group, designed to encourage states to think about model performance, identify successful frameworks and plan future experiments.
“That’s being developed in real time and so that’s going to be a big focus for us in 2026, and I’d say this initial project is the way we’re dipping our toes into the water, but it’s something that’s very important and something that states want to prioritize. ” Many states are testing AI on their own, but progress has come in fits and starts.
Brandon Ragle, the chief information officer of Illinois, a state not involved in this round of grant funding, said that measuring the performance of AI tools is very important to his office, particularly in light of the hype being pumped out by many technology companies. He said other state agencies will sometimes ask for AI to fix a given problem, but that his office sees that they only need “some simple automation.
” In September, Illinois made Microsoft’s AI-powered productivity tools available to all of its 56,000 employees. Ragle said it was “a good use case because the cost was effective for us,” but admitted that more work is required to understand whether more narrowly focused AI projects would be worthwhile in his state.
“Sometimes that’s hard to do in government, because we’re not producing widgets or producing products that we’re selling,” he said. “We’re providing services to residents, and so that measurement is different.
” Madison said that the Center for Civic Futures operates “deep” communities of practice, and that she hopes these grants and the center’s other efforts will propel a “flywheel of shared learnings,” in which states leading on AI can help the laggards catch up. But with AI’s rapid development, even the most innovative state and local governments are lagging behind industry, she pointed out.
“We’re never going to close the gap completely, but if we can narrow the gap a little bit that would be great,” she said. “If we can get government a little bit more in the driver’s seat of what’s happening next, that would be great. ” California CIO Christopher Given.
The Anthropic logo can be seen at an event organized by the AI company in San Francisco on May 6, 2026.
(Andrej Sokolow / Picture Alliance via Getty Images) Funding AI-powered building-code permitting A Home for Every Child Initiative eight months in: PIPs and predictive algorithms The AIDE initiative: How AI can help emergency managers better prepare for disasters The pole problem: A hidden challenge for BEAD deployment North Carolina appoints former GSA official to lead state's procurement transformation California launches pilot for 'Career Passport' digital workforce tool New Jersey launches digital public health hub ahead of 2026 FIFA World Cup Minnesota invests $90M in human services IT modernization amid looming SNAP, Medicaid changes Dallas deploys new digital kiosks as FIFA World Cup kicks off Dallas launches new resource page ahead of FIFA World Cup Houston launches AI pilot to improve curb management, make loading zones safer Louisville launch new app for public safety during the Kentucky Derby State and local governments ask Senate for $300M in cyber grant funding North Carolina partners with Tanium to strengthen state cybersecurity Massachusetts awards $1M across 20 local governments, schools in new cyber grants FTC orders Illuminate Education to bolster data security after breach impacting 10M students Iowa projects half-billion-dollar savings through cloud migration and IT consolidation New York's mayor unveils 'COGE' government efficiency office New Jersey announces new transit app, other tech upgrades as part of governor's 'Rapid Action Plan' 'Too-short' timeline for Medicaid colliding with strained state eligibility systems, report claims
According to the current listing, eligibility includes: States and their partners, which can include nonprofits, focused on improving public benefits programs through AI. Confirm the full requirements in the official notice before applying.
Public Benefit Innovation Fund is funded by Center for Civic Futures (supported by philanthropic partners like Ballmer Group, Gates Foundation, W.K. Kellogg Foundation, Renaissance Philanthropy, Families and Workers Fund). 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.
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.
Five of America's wealthiest philanthropists are spending $1 billion over 15 years on AI tools for frontline workers and low-income families. Here's what nonprofits and social enterprises need to know.
Read articleWilliam Penn's 128-grant, \$57.2M May 2026 distribution reveals a Philadelphia-focused funder doubling down on children, arts education, and civic infrastructure as federal support recedes.
Read articleThe Ford Foundation committed $60M in democracy grants within 100 days of new leadership. What it means for nonprofits working on civic engagement, voting rights, and election integrity.
Read article