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SBLF — Small Business Loan Fund is sponsored by Community Reinvestment Fund, Inc. (CRF) through partner lenders. This is a community development financial institution specifically focused on minority and women-owned businesses. While it has a strong focus on South Florida (Broward, Miami-Dade, and Palm Beach counties), statewide applications are accepted.
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Small Business Lender - Community Reinvestment Fund, USA Small Businesses Make Our Communities Thrive. CRF partners with others to expand access to capital and resources for under-resourced small businesses — helping them grow, create jobs, and strengthen the places they call home. Working together we can create a just economy that works for all small businesses and communities.
Collective Impact Programs that Increase Capital Access for Under-Resourced Small Businesses We co-create and implement program-based solutions with community partners and stakeholders. Together, we help solve the complex challenges of scaling capital access for small businesses. Jobs created or retained.
Funded in communities across the country. Years of inspiring change. Learn more about our programs Improving lives and strengthening communities We work to complement and amplify the scale and effectiveness of the small business ecosystem with our lending, technology and service solutions.
Increase and complement the flow of capital to under-resourced small businesses. Reach more small businesses and grow lending capacity through integrated technology solutions. Learn about CRF Technology Design and deliver impactful programs with tools and services that support access to capital for under-resourced small businesses.
“I thought the dream was dead. It would not have happened without CRF. ” St.
Paul & Minneapolis, MN Access transparent and affordable financing to help grow your business, hire employees, and thrive in the communities where you operate. Learn more about how we work with Small Businesses Banks & Financial Service Providers Access a national network of mission-driven partners to create more value for your small business customers across their journey.
Learn more about our work with Banks & Financial Service Providers CDFIs & Business Support Organizations Reach more customers, create more impact and meet the unique needs of the small business communities you serve. Learn more about our work with CDFIs & Business Support Organizations Efficiently deploy funds and serve the unique needs of small business owners in your community.
Learn more about our work with the Public Sector Philanthropists & Foundations Realize your impact goals and attract additional investment to support your cause. Learn more about our work with Philanthropists & Foundations $2 Billion in Loans Enrolled on CRF Exchange CRF is excited to announce that CRF Exchange recently surpassed $2 billion in loans enrolled.
CRF Exchange is our cloud-based platform that streamlines how lenders enroll Mayor Mamdani Launches $80M NYC Future Fund, Expanding Affordable Financing For Small Businesses NEW YORK – Today, Mayor Zohran Kwame Mamdani, Deputy Mayor for Economic Justice Julie Su and Department of Small Business Services Resources for Minnesota Small Businesses Many Minnesota small businesses are facing unexpected challenges right now due to reduced customer traffic, neighborhood and personal safety concerns, Collective Impact Programs
According to the current listing, eligibility includes: Minority and women-owned businesses in Florida. Strongest focus on Broward, Miami-Dade, and Palm Beach counties. Confirm the full requirements in the official notice before applying.
SBLF — Small Business Loan Fund is funded by Community Reinvestment Fund, Inc. (CRF) through partner lenders. Verify program details on the funder's official page before applying.
This opportunity targets applicants in Florida. If your organization operates elsewhere, check the official notice for location requirements.
Start from the official opportunity page linked in this listing — it carries the sponsor's submission instructions.
Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) / Small Business Technology Transfer (STTR) Programs (Phase I) is sponsored by U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) National Institute of Food and Agriculture (NIFA). The USDA SBIR/STTR programs focus on transforming scientific discovery into products and services with commercial potential and/or societal benefit in agriculturally-related areas. This can include app development for agricultural technology, rural development, and smart farming. Phase I aims to demonstrate technical feasibility.
Developer Grants is sponsored by Circle. Circle's Developer Grant initiative supports projects leveraging USDC to create practical solutions. While the 2025 applications are closed for reimagining, they will place greater emphasis on Arc-specific grants and evaluate projects based on alignment with Circle products, team strength, innovation, and impact on the USDC network in 2026.
The May 29 OMB rewrite of 2 CFR Part 200 quietly rebuilds the pass-through entity compliance architecture. Proposed §200.332 strengthens subrecipient risk assessment, monitoring documentation, and remediation triggers. A new requirement mandates that every subaward be reported to SAM.gov with the reported records confirmed in performance reports — converting subaward administration from a back-office accounting function into a public-record certification regime. For the universities, state agencies, and national nonprofits that pass through more than half of their federal awards as subawards, the operational implication is a new compliance operating model that needs to be standing up by the October 1 effective date.
Read articleThe 400-page rewrite of 2 CFR 200 published May 29 contains specific provisions — political pre-issuance review, peer-review demotion, fixed-amount award elimination — that have drawn most of the analytical attention. The deeper structural change is a philosophical pivot from a framework where federal agencies supported recipients to "correct course and accomplish intended grant objectives" to one organized around "penalties for noncompliance." The pivot reframes the recipient relationship from partner to defendant, and it requires grantee compliance departments to rebuild documentation, internal-controls, and audit-response infrastructure that most have allowed to atrophy over the past decade.
Read articleBuried in the May 29 OMB rewrite of 2 CFR Part 200 is the elimination of fixed-amount awards as a default grant instrument. Cost-reimbursement reverts to the standard. Here is what the change costs community-based nonprofits, pass-through subaward portfolios, SBIR Phase II direct-to-award structures, and the grant offices that have built workflows around milestone payments — and the comment-and-renegotiation strategy that has six weeks to land before July 13.
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