Deadline: 17-Apr-2024
The Ontario Trillium Foundation (OTF) is pleased to announce the Youth Innovations Test Grant.
Through this grant stream, Youth Opportunities Fund (YOF) invests in projects led by youth or youth-adult partnerships to improve the social and economic well-being of youth. YOF’s work is founded in the belief that young leaders have the tools and skills to come together based on shared experiences to address the needs of youth. Young leaders are driven to find solutions that can have lasting impact and design projects that reflect how culture and traditions can enhance learning and life-long skills development to improve well-being.
A Youth Innovations Test grant is designed to help groups:
- Try out a new idea that has the potential to make a positive impact on the lives of young people
- Research, learn and understand more about a specific topic or issue
- Bring youth together to discuss an issue and explore new approaches collectively
YOF prioritizes grassroots groups that are looking to address the experiences of Indigenous (First Nation, Metis or Inuit) and/ or Black youth who continue to face systemic barriers and oppression.
In addition to prioritizing Black and Indigenous grassroots groups and youth, YOF prioritizes investing in projects that positively impact youth with the following intersecting lived experiences or identities:
- Youth in conflict or at risk of being in conflict with the law
- Youth in care or leaving care
- Youth at-risk of dropping out or have dropped out
- Youth living with disabilities and/or special needs between the ages of 12 to 29
- Two-spirit, lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer and/or questioning, intersex, asexual (2SLGBTQIA+) youth
Funding Information
- Maximum $100,000
Duration
- Minimum 1 year, Maximum 3 years
Eligibility Criteria
- Eligible groups
- A grassroots group that is not registered as a charity or as an incorporated not-for-profit.
- The work of a youth-led grassroots group or youth-adult partnership is community-led and community-inspired. Grassroots group means that core group members share identities and lived experiences with the young people who will benefit.
- If you are a grassroots group from a First Nation, you are eligible to apply. Your group cannot have more than 50% of its members as part of the band office or band council.
- An organization incorporated as a not-for-profit corporation without share capital in a Canadian jurisdiction.
- This includes a Chartered Community Council, operating under the Métis Nation of Ontario, or Inuit communities that are registered as not-for-profit corporations without share capital in Canada.
- The organization is required to have independently managed revenues of $50,000 or less in either of the last two years.
- Board members and day-to-day management must also meet youth-led group and youth adult-partnership definitions.
- Note
- Groups can only apply for one Youth Opportunities Fund grant at a time.
- If your group has an active Youth Opportunities Fund grant, you can only apply for funding if you are in the last year of your active grant.
- A grassroots group that is not registered as a charity or as an incorporated not-for-profit.
- Group Requirements
- Groups need to meet the following requirements to be eligible for funding.
- Reflect communities served
- Core group members (including board members, where applicable) reflect the identities and experiences of the youth they are working with and for.
- The proposed project will benefit young people between 12-25, and/or 12-29 for youth living with special needs and/or disabilities, mental health needs and/or addictions.
- YOF prioritizes projects led by and for Indigenous (First Nation, Métis, Inuit) and Black youth.
- Core group
- The group has at least three core group members.
- More than 50% of core group members need to be at arm’s length relationship to each other. An ‘arm’s length’ relationship means board members and group members are not married or related to each other, do not work as business partners or are otherwise in a relationship where interests may be compromised.
- Youth must make up more than 50% of the core group.
- The group is based in Ontario and the work will benefit youth in Ontario.
- The group exists independently of a larger organization (other not-for-profit), charitable organization or municipality, university, school, religious institution and/or hospital.
- The group agrees to work with an Organizational Mentor and has autonomy to choose their Organizational Mentor, design the project, identify group members, and plan for the future.
- Leadership structure
- There are three types of eligible leadership structures:
- A youth-led group
- Has all individuals aged 29 or under at the governance and/ decision-making level
- Has youth, 12 to 29 years old, managing the project (from planning to implementation and evaluation)
- A youth-adult partnership
- This is a group that has young people as its primary audience and where youth and adults share power. This looks like:
- Shared responsibility for decision-making about the project and the group
- Shared responsibility for planning and delivery of activities and the budget
- Shared responsibility for planning for the future of the project and the group
- This is a group that has young people as its primary audience and where youth and adults share power. This looks like:
- An adult-initiated youth partnership
- This group has adults, 30 years of age and over, who have brought youth together to build out an idea and have a significant role in decision-making about the project and group. Over time, adults will:
- Have a reduced role in the partnership and will ensure the leadership of youth to drive the work.
- Create space for youth to take on more responsibility in planning, delivering of activities and establishing plans for the future of the project and group.
- Note: This type of leadership is only applicable in Test grants.
- Note: Adult groups with all or most members up to the age of 35 can apply if they are looking to advance the following YOF Priority Outcome: Supporting youth in and/or leaving care and/or involved in the justice system to navigate and access resources for wellbeing.
- This group has adults, 30 years of age and over, who have brought youth together to build out an idea and have a significant role in decision-making about the project and group. Over time, adults will:
- A youth-led group
- There are three types of eligible leadership structures:
- Reflect communities served
- Groups need to meet the following requirements to be eligible for funding.
Ineligible
- The following are not eligible to apply:
- Registered charities
- Religious entities established for the observation of religious beliefs, including, but not limited to, churches, temples, mosques and synagogues.
- Municipalities
- Groups composed of all team members ages 30 years or older (all-adult teams).
- Groups or projects that are part of an existing organization (not-for-profit or for-profit organizations)
- Groups specifically designed to serve young people through committees or clubs of institutions, including municipalities, universities, schools, and hospitals
- For-profit organizations and businesses
- Individuals
For more information, visit OTF.