Grant Directories
Lincoln Community Foundation - High Sheriffs’ Fund (Lincolnshire) The Lincolnshire Community Foundation exists to benefit disadvantaged people and communities by making grants to support relevant charitable, voluntary and community organisations. Through the High Sheriffs’ Fund the foundation provides grants of up to £5,000 to assist projects that promote a safer society and help reduce crime in Lincolnshire. Funds can be used for young people (diversionary activities, projects that raise aspirations or reduce isolation); intergenerational activities (reduce fear of crime, promote community cohesion); activities for older people that tackle isolation and loneliness (resident groups, clubs societies). |
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Trusthouse Charitable Foundation - Major Grants (UK) The Trusthouse Charitable Foundation is a grant making foundation that give grants to small and medium sized local organisations in the UK with a demonstrable track record of success working to address local issues in communities of extreme urban deprivation and deprived rural districts. Through the Major grants programme the foundation provides funding of between £10,000 and £100,000 for core costs, salaries, running and project costs to organisations that have a focus on Family Support, this may further include: Early intervention; Families coping with addiction; Prisoners' families |
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Trusthouse Charitable Foundation - Small Grant (UK) The Trusthouse Charitable Foundation is a grant making foundation that give grants to small and medium sized local organisations in the UK with a demonstrable track record of success working to address local issues in communities of extreme urban deprivation and deprived rural districts. Through the small grants programme the foundation provides funding of between £2,000 and £10,000 to charitable organisations with an income of less than £250,000 for projects that focus on Community Support. Examples of the kind of projects that can be funded include: CommunityServices; CommunityCentres; Alternative Education; Training, mentoring, employment and volunteering opportunities; Youth; Counselling; Family Support Services; Substance Misuse. |
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Nottinghamshire Community Foundation - Danielle Beccan Memorial Fund (Nottinghamshire) Nottinghamshire Community Foundation exists to benefit disadvantaged communities by making grants to support relevant charitable or voluntary organisations, which make a difference to their local communities. Through the Danielle Beccan Memorial Fund the foundation provides grants of up to £5,000 to support charitable groups in Nottingham working with children and young people around the prevention of violence. |
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Nottinghamshire Community Foundation - JF Mortimer Fund (Nottinghamshire) Nottinghamshire Community Foundation exists to benefit disadvantaged communities by making grants to support relevant charitable or voluntary organisations, which make a difference to their local communities. Through the JF Mortimer Fund the foundation provides grants to support people in Nottingham City and County by making grants to community and voluntary groups who work to improve their communities. Grants are available for projects covering exclusively or mainly one of the following themes: Children & Young People; Stronger and Safer Communities; Greener and Cleaner Communities; Healthier Communities; Older and Vulnerable People. |
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Nottinghamshire Community Foundation - Ashfield Community Fund (Ashfield) Nottinghamshire Community Foundation exists to benefit disadvantaged communities by making grants to support relevant charitable or voluntary organisations, which make a difference to their local communities. Through the Ashfield Community Fund the foundation provides grants of between £500 and £1,000 to groups who deliver under any of the following themes and Council priorities: Health and Happiness; Homes and Housing; Economic Growth and Place; Cleaner and Greener; Safer and Stronger. |
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Foundation Derbyshire - The Derbyshire High Sheriff Fund (Derbyshire) Foundation Derbyshire exists to benefit disadvantaged communities by making grants to support relevant charitable or voluntary organisations, which make a difference to their local communities. Through the Derbyshire High Sheriff Fund the foundation provides grants of up to £2,500 to improve the quality of life for Derbyshire residents by supporting activities that help to build safer, stronger communities. |
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Leicestershire and Rutland Community Foundation - St Matthews Big Local (Leicestershire and Rutland) The Wiltshire Community Foundation exists to benefit disadvantaged communities by making grants to support relevant charitable or voluntary organisations, which make a difference to their local communities. Through the St Matthews Big Local programme the foundation provides grants for both individuals and organisations for projects that contribute to the St Matthews Big Local vision, which is: A cleaner and greener neighbourhood; Increased feelings of safety and security for local residents; The celebration of diversity, talent and creativity; Increased community cohesion on the estate. |
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Loughborough University Donations Fund (Charnwood) Each year Loughborough University sets aside £15,000 for its Community Donations Fund to provide financial support to community groups and organisations to support the social, educational, cultural and physical well- being of people living in Charnwood. In addition the Fund makes grants of up to £1,000 to community groups and organisations across postcodes surrounding the Olympic Park. |
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The Allen Lane Foundation - People Affected by Violence or Abuse (UK) The Allen Lane Foundation is a grant-making trust with a focus is on funding unpopular causes. The overall aims of the Foundation are to make a lasting difference to people’s lives; reduce isolation, stigma and discrimination; and to encourage or enable unpopular groups to share in the life of the whole community The Foundation supports projects aimed at education and the prevention of abuse, and the provision of practical alternatives to violence and conflict resolution. |
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The Allen Lane Foundation - Offenders and Ex-offenders (UK) The Allen Lane Foundation is a grant-making trust with a focus is on funding unpopular causes. The overall aims of the Foundation are to make a lasting difference to people’s lives; reduce isolation, stigma and discrimination; and to encourage or enable unpopular groups to share in the life of the whole community. The Foundation supports the work of groups and organisations that work with people in prison, ex-offenders, and those at risk of offending. The Foundation is especially keen to support the rehabilitation of people, and work that helps reduce the likelihood of re-offending behaviour. |
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Places of Worship: Security Funding Scheme (England and Wales) This scheme will provide protective security measures to places of worship that have been subject to, or are vulnerable to a hate crime attack. To be eligible, applicants will need to demonstrate that any crimes committed at their place of worship (or one not necessarily of the same faith within a 2 mile radius) was motivated by hostility or prejudice based on religion or belief. Grants can cover security equipment but not the cost of recruiting security personnel and may include: CCTV; perimeter fencing; access control gates; window locks; intruder alarm; external lighting; and security doors and the appropriate labour cost to install the security equipment. |
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Tampon Tax Fund (UK) The UK Government's Tampon Tax Fund distributes the VAT collected on women's sanitary products as grants to charitable organisations within the UK. A total of £15 million is available for projects that address violence against women or work with disadvantaged women and girls. Priority will be given to projects that provide services that are not currently widely available. Proposals from organisations that work to improve the lives of disadvantaged women and girls more generally are welcomed. All applicants must demonstrate how user involvement is built into their work and that users (or potential users) of a service or project are involved in an appropriate way at all stages. |
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Police & Crime Commissioner for Nottinghamshire - Make Notts Safe Fund (Nottinghamshire) Through the Police & Crime Commissioner for Nottinghamshire's Make Notts Safe Fund, grants are available under the following three themes: Community Chest - this will provide seed-corn and other funding for third sector organisations to enable local delivery against the PCC’s priorities; Thematic Grants - will fund third sector organisations with multi-year funding through thematic funding rounds which are closely linked to the Make Notts Safe Plan’s strategic priorities; Innovation Fund - will support organisations to research, develop or pilot and evaluate a new initiative. |
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Police & Crime Commissioner for Leicestershire - The PCC Grant The Police & Crime Commissioner for Leicestershire's grant scheme (The PCC Grant) aims to support local voluntary, community and social enterprise sector organisations to develop and run projects that support the achievement of specific commissioning intentions and related outcomes in identified hotspot locations across the county. Eligible projects form interventions that pro-actively reduce anti-social behaviour in eight specific locations and, across the county, those that increase the reporting of domestic abuse, serious sexual assault and hate crime. |
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Police & Crime Commissioner for Humberside - Crime Reduction Fund The Police & Crime Commissioner for Humberside's Crime Reduction Fund aims to cut crime and make local communities safer by supporting projects and activities identified by local people and promoted by community and voluntary organisations. Community groups, charities, youth projects and organisations with an interest in crime reduction and public safety can bid for grants from the scheme. Examples include grants for CCTV equipment, security gates for alleyways to reduce burglaries and anti-social behaviour, and projects to divert young people at risk of committing crime into more positive activities. The PCC is particularly keen to support small grassroots groups. |
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Police & Crime Commissioner for Derbyshire The Police & Crime Commissioner for Derbyshire has established three grant streams to which public and third sector organisations and community groups can apply, these are: Community Action Grants for community projects that assist in reducing crime and anti-social behaviour, protect victims and vulnerable people, and support witnesses: NICE grants for capital projects: Commissioners grants for the provision of specialist services. The overall aim is to enable organisations to work at a local level with the PCC towards the priorities set out in the Police and Crime Plan. |
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Office of the Police & Crime Commissioner for Staffordshire (Staffordshire and Stoke on Trent) The Police & Crime Commissioner for Staffordshire's Achieving Safer, Fairer, United Communities strategy is about how different organisations and the public go about making a real and sustained difference to reducing crime and anti-social behaviour and improving local communities. Through establishing grant funding mechanisms, the PCC aims to encourage public agencies, the voluntary sector, businesses and communities to work together to improve community safety, reduce crime and disorder and increase public confidence. PCC grant streams offer funding of £100 to £10,000 to achieve local solutions from small, targetted community safety and reassurance activities to larger projects delivered by agency partnerships. |
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Saint Sarkis Charity Trust Grant (UK) The Saint Sarkis Charity Trust is a grant making organisation which funds the following organisations: The Armenian Church of Saint Sarkis in London; The Gulbenkian Library at the Armenian Patriarchate in Jerusalem; registered charities concerned with the Armenian community in the UK and/or overseas. Although the Trust continues to provide funding for a small number of innovative projects which help to support prisoners in the UK and so reduce the rates of re-offending, it no longer accepts unsolicited applications for this priority. The funding amount is discretionary and applications may be submitted at any time. |
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Indigo Trust Grant (UK) The Indigo Trust is a grant making foundation that funds technology-driven projects to bring about social change, largely in African countries. The Trust focuses mainly on innovation, transparency and citizen empowerment. The Trust will also consider innovative projects, which utilise Information Technologies to support development outcomes in any sector including the health, education, human rights and agricultural spheres. The Indigo Trust makes grants to African projects or programmes, or to organisations which operate at least partly in African countries. |
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YAPP Charitable Trust (England and Wales) The Trust makes revenue grants to small registered charities whose work focuses on one of the Trust’s priority groups. These are; elderly people, children and young people aged 5 - 25, people with physical impairments; learning difficulties or mental health challenges,; social welfare - people trying to overcome life-limiting problems of a social, rather than medical, origin (such as addiction, relationship difficulties, abuse, offending); and education and learning (with a particular interest in people who are educationally disadvantaged, whether adults or children). Grants are given for running costs for up to three years. Grants are normally for a maximum of £3,000 per year. |
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Weaver's Company Benevolent Fund Grant (UK) The aim of the Weaver's Company Benevolent Fund is to support projects working with disadvantaged young people (aged 5 to 30 years) to ensure that they are given every possible chance to meet their full potential and to participate fully in society. The Fund also aims to help young people at risk of criminal involvement to stay out of trouble and assist in the rehabilitation of offenders, particularly young offenders both in prison and after release. Grants are usually no more than £15,000 per annum, and to make sure grants of this size have an impact, we will not fund large organisations. To be eligible for funding, local organisations such as those working in a village, estate or small town should normally have an income of less than £100,000. Those working across the UK should normally have an income of not more than £250,000. Applications are considered at meetings in February, June and November. |
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Westhill Endowment Grant (UK) Westhill support projects with strong underlying Christian Values that transform peoples lives, foster empathy between communities and build bridges between people of diverse backgrounds and cultures. Grants have been made to a very wide range of successful projects in local communities in churches and cathedrals, hospitals and hospices; and in higher and a wide range of further educational institutions both in the UK and overseas. Most grants range between £500 and £20,000. Larger sums for projects running over two years are considered but matching funding is sometimes advised. Applications can be submitted at any time and these are assessed on a quarterly basis. |
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Derbyshire Community Foundation (Derbyshire) Derbyshire Community Foundation is one of 48 community foundations across the UK. It's aim is to provide funding that will directly address the needs of Derbyshire's most vulnerable people and communities. Support generally falls under the broad heading of social welfare and applications must demonstrate a strong case for support, clear aims and objectives, wherever possible the organisation or project is user led and the grant will make a real difference to people within their community. Grants available for core and revenue costs, new or continuing projects, one-off initiatives and capital costs and transport. |
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Community Foundations (UK) Community Foundations support community and voluntary sector activity through grants to local groups and organisations. There are 48 Community Foundations of different sizes within the UK. Although all Community Foundations operate according to common criteria, they vary in terms of size and nature of grants available. Some Community Foundations will fund both organisations and individuals whilst other foundations will only fund organisations. Each community foundation covers a specific geographic area and will not normally be able to support work outside its area. |