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Refugee Technical Assistance Program is sponsored by Administration for Children and Families - Office of Refugee Resettlement (ORR). This program awards a cooperative agreement for a national one-stop source or hub for refugee technical assistance. It provides coordinated, innovative TA and training to ORR-funded state refugee programs, refugee service providers, and ethnic and community-based organizations serving refugees.
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Or search similar grants →According to the current listing, eligibility includes: Public and private nonprofit agencies. Faith-based and community organizations are eligible. Applications from individuals and foreign entities are not eligible. Confirm the full requirements in the official notice before applying.
Refugee Technical Assistance Program is funded by Administration for Children and Families - Office of Refugee Resettlement (ORR). 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.
Past winners and funding trends for this program
The Support for Trauma-Affected Refugees (STAR) Program is an Office of Refugee Resettlement (ORR) grant that funds organizations providing mental health and trauma-informed services to refugees experiencing trauma-related challenges. STAR grant recipients deliver culturally competent services to refugee populations who have experienced persecution, violence, or other traumatic events prior to and during resettlement. Current grant recipients include organizations such as Alliance for African Assistance, Church World Service, and Catholic Charities chapters across multiple states. Eligible applicants are public and private nonprofit organizations serving refugee populations with trauma-informed care. The grant period runs through September 29, 2028.
Refugee Individual Development Accounts (IDA) is sponsored by Administration for Children and Families - Office of Refugee Resettlement (ORR). This program invites eligible entities to submit competitive grant applications for projects to establish and manage Individual Development Accounts (IDAs) for low-income refugee participants. Grantee organizations may use ORR funds to provide matches for savings in IDAs of up to $2,000 per individual refugee and $4,000 per refugee household.
OJJDP FY24 National Mentoring Programs is sponsored by U.S. Department of Justice, Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention (OJJDP). This program aims to support national mentoring organizations to enhance and expand mentoring services for children and youth who are at risk or high risk for juvenile delinquency, victimization, and juvenile justice system involvement.
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.
William 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 articlePMHCA (HRSA-26-058) makes $9.79 million available for up to 22 awards of up to $445,000 to build tele-consultation networks that help pediatric primary care providers manage children's behavioral health. The catch buried in the eligibility section: applicants must NOT already hold a PMHCA award — which effectively reserves the new-state lane for the eight unfunded states and territories, plus tribes everywhere. Here's how to read it and what wins.
Read articleThe William Penn Foundation's May 2026 docket distributed $57.2M across 128 grants, with 41 percent flowing to Children and Families. The breakdown reveals which Philadelphia nonprofit categories are gaining institutional traction and which are being asked to make harder cases.
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