Deadline: 17-Jul-20
The Center for Health, Environment and Justice (CHEJ) has a Small Grants Program for grassroots groups working on environmental health and justice issues.
Grassroots communities of color, low wealth, rural and urban groups are encouraged to apply. If you are part of a coalition, each group in the coalition may apply as well as the coalition itself. This grant program will support projects that help groups move toward their goals by building leadership, increasing capacity, or providing training and education.
A priority of CHEJ’s Small Grants Program is to help grassroots community groups to build their capacity. The program is designed to reach people from low wealth communities and communities of color who are impacted by environmental harms.
CHEJ prioritizes community-based organizations aiming to have local, state, and regional impact as the core of the health and environmental justice movement. CHEJ believes that no social change on behalf of the exploited comes without strong community-based organizations.
Funding Information
- The grant application is different for different sized organizations. Small organizations and all-volunteer groups with budgets under $50,000, FALL UNDER TIER 1 (Applications downloads on right). Grants are available in this tier range from $1,000 to $5,000.
- Organizations with budgets no greater than $250,000, FALL UNDER TIER 2. This tier of the program will provide support from $5,000 to $10,000.
- Larger organizations with budgets over $250,000, FALL UNDER TIER 3. This tier of the program will support projects with grants from $10,000 to $20,000.
If you are a grassroots group, but are not incorporated and do not have a bank account, you will need to find an organization that can accept the funds for your group. Consider such as a faith-based organization or another non-profit who will serve as your “fiscal sponsor.”
Eligible Activities
Grant activities can include:
- Board Development
- Membership outreach
- Fundraising efforts
- Meeting to develop organizing/strategic plans. Events that are part of that plan.
- Training leaders to go door-to-door
- Equipment for communications, example; the purchase of Zoom software.
- Educational activities directly connected to your strategic plan
- General events, done safely and honoring social distancing.
Projects they are not likely to fund:
- Film production
- Community gardens
- Individuals
- National organizations
- Legal assistance
- Market campaigns
- Natural environmental protections
- Food banks
- Organization outside of the United States
- National Campaigns, (except local/statewide group specific efforts may fit into a campaign)
- They no longer can fund environmental testing
- Groups with annual budget over one million dollars
- Legislative lobbying
CHEJ’s Small Grants program focuses on addressing environmental threats and associated public health harms.
For more information, visit http://chej.org/chej-small-grants-program/