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2026 cycle opened December 1, 2025 and closed January 26, 2026. Next cycle expected December 2026.
Resilience Grants is sponsored by Northeastern Organic Farming Association of Vermont (NOFA-VT). Distributes funds directly to Vermont farmers for projects that will improve longer-term resilience on farms, broadly framed around promoting organic practices to build an economically viable, ecologically sound, and socially just Vermont agricultural system. Focuses on the social, environmental, and economic impact of the project.
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Farmer Resilience Grants | NOFA Vermont Nourishing people, land, & justice through organic agriculture NOFA-VT has a pool of funds to distribute directly to farmers as grants to fund projects that will improve longer-term resilience on farms.
Our definition of ‘resilience’ is framed broadly around the mission of NOFA-VT: to promote organic practices to build an economically viable, ecologically sound, and socially just Vermont agricultural system that benefits all living things.
In this grant application, applicants will define how these funds will be used to improve the resilience on your farm, in your community, and/or for your broader community, with a focus on the social, environmental, and economic impact of the project. We encourage applicants to review the scoring rubric prior to submitting an application.
Applications are reviewed anonymously (names of farms and farmers removed before review) by a committee of Vermont farmers and farmworkers . Grants are awarded with no need for receipt submission or reporting on behalf of the recipient. We are still accepting multi-farm applications.
If you have a team of farms applying, you may request up to $5,000 per farm, with a maximum total request of $20,000. For example, if you have four farms applying together on a collaborative project, you may apply for up to $20,000. Please contact Avery MacLean, with any questions at [email protected] or (802) 419-0049.
Applications will be accepted December 1, 2025 to January 26, 2026. 2026 Resilience Grant Applications are now closed. The next application cycle will open in December, 2026.
Past Resilience Grant Projects Hawthorn Meadow Farmstead Liz Echevarria is growing food for her community on a small scale while staying energy neutral. https://www. nofavt.
org/services-resources/other-resources/blog/resilience-hawth… Chief Shirly Hook and Doug Bent are saving seeds, growing food for their community, and teaching the next generation about the importance of food sovereignty. https://www. nofavt.
org/services-resources/other-resources/blog/visit-abenaki-tr… The People's Farmstand is collecting local, organic, and culturally important produce from partnering farms and distributing it at free pop-up farmstands. https://www. nofavt.
org/services-resources/other-resources/blog/resilience-peopl… Who qualifies for this grant? Eligibility requirements: Farms located in Vermont and in business for a minimum of one year. Must be able to meet the timeline for project completion by December 31st, 2026.
Cannot have received a Vermont Family Farmer of the Month award two years prior to submitting application. Must hold an active NOFA-VT Membership at any level, including out $1/year Community Tier Previous Resilience Grant awardees are welcome to apply, but applicants who did not receive a resilience grant in 2024 or 2025 will receive additional points in the scoring rubric . What projects can this grant cover?
We are particularly interested in projects that: mitigate against the harmful effects of our changing climate repair harms that have been committed due to the historic and widespread systemic racism embedded in our food system are innovative and will encourage others to adopt new and more promising practices will lead to broader community resilience through enhanced food security, community-based solutions, and connectivity.
That said, we are leaving the definition of resilience intentionally broad so that applicants can share their ideas about resilience with us and to not limit our imagination, as we know resilience takes many forms and we do not want to inadvertently disallow exciting, out of the box ideas! What makes a "good" grant request?
While no specific project is inherently more likely to receive funding than others, some suggestions for writing a more broadly appealing grant proposal would be to: View the rubric while writing! Full rubric for application evaluation is available here: Resilience Grant Application Rubric. Clearly address how your project request relates to building Social, Economic, & Environmental resiliency.
Offer a project budget that is both reasonably accurate & cites material sources. Applicants have the option to upload a detailed budget to the application. When are applications open?
Meet the Farmer Resilience Grant Review Committee Amanda Andrews of Tamarack Hollow Farm grows 7 acres of organic vegetables for wholesale distribution in Plainfield, VT. She has been farming since 2007 and has experience raising livestock, poultry, and vegetables for local and regional farmers markets, CSA, and wholesale.
Her partner helps on the farm and they have two adorable children that enjoy building forts in the greenhouse and distracting the farm crew. Dani has been living and working at the intersections of agriculture and open ag technology for over a decade. After years of working on vegetable and dairy farms, often as a draft horse teamster, they and two collaborators purchased 222 acres in Corinth, VT and started Shepherd Moon Farm in 2022.
They are building a dairy flock and co-operative creamery business on land which will also host folks engaged in social justice work for organizing, retreat, and respite.
Dani has served on the board of the Draft Animal Power Network (DAP-Net), as a network facilitator for the open-source farm tool community, FarmHack, and as a trainer and convener with IfNotNow Pittsburgh, organizing American Jews against the occupation of Palestinian land. Dani is an employee owner of the farmer- and staff-owned Farm Generations Co-operative and helps farmers use the co-operative’s e-commerce software, GrownBy.
Dani also loves building and making things, cooking and feeding people, and eating cheese. Sasha Wol-soon Hom (she/her) Sasha Wol-soon Hom of Bottomless Well is a goat farmer, homeschooling mother of four, organizer, and fiction writer. Her and her family have been living off-grid in tents, tipis, and yurts for over a decade.
They recently relocated to a 600-acre land co-op where they raise meat goats for community organizations in an effort to provide culturally relevant food access to food-scarce and displaced families. In her free time, she sometimes sleeps . We are using the ideas brought forth in these Resilience Grants to advocate for innovative farm-based policy solutions at the state and national level.
We will also share the needs expressed in the applications with the broader funding community in an effort to draw more interest and funds into supporting farms as a key solution to building a more resilient food system for our collective future. For more information, assistance with the grant application, or to request translation services or a paper application, please contact Avery MacLean at (802) 419-0049 or by email .
Donate to the Resilience Fund To make your tax-deductible donation to support our work increasing resilience on farms and in local communities including Resilience Grants, please fill out our donate form and choose 'Resilience Fund' from the campaign drop-down, or mail a check made out to NOFA-VT with 'Resilience Fund' in the memo to PO Box 697, Richmond, VT 05477.
Statement of Intention on Social Justice Businesses & Organizations Farmers Market Conference Farmer Cohorts and Mentorships Organic Transition Mentorship (TOPP) Jack Lazor Memorial Soil Stewards Farmer Agroforestry Cohort Land Together Learning Network Business & Transfer Planning Services Marketing Technical Assistance Services Organic Dairy Technical Assistance Services Organic Practices Technical Assistance Services Veg & Berry Technical Assistance Vermont Family Farmer of the Month Increase Food Access for Low-Income Vermonters Choosing Organic for the Climate For Farmers Market Partners Crop Cash Resources for Program Organizers Vermont Farmers Market Association Technical Assistance and Resources Federal Policy Priorities Find Organic & Local Food
Scoring criteria used to review proposals for this grant.
Based on current listing details, eligibility includes: Farms located in Vermont and in business for a minimum of one year. Must hold an active NOFA-VT Membership. Applicants should confirm final requirements in the official notice before submission.
Current published award information indicates Up to $5,000 per farm, maximum $20,000 for multi-farm applications 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.
Yes — AI tools like Granted can help research funders, draft proposal sections, and check compliance. However, always review and customize AI-generated content to reflect your organization's unique strengths and the specific requirements of the solicitation.
Review timelines vary by funder. Federal agencies typically take 3-6 months from submission to award notification. Foundation grants may be faster, often 1-3 months. Check the program's timeline in the official solicitation for specific dates.
Many federal programs offer multi-year funding or allow competitive renewals. Check the official solicitation for continuation and renewal policies. Non-competing continuation applications are common for multi-year awards.
Past winners and funding trends for this program
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