The California Environmental Grassroots Fund supports small and emerging local groups across California that are building climate resilience and advancing environmental justice.
Donor Name: Rose Foundation for Communities and the Environment
State: California
County: All Counties
Type of Grant: Grant
Deadline: 02/01/2024
Size of the Grant: $1000 to $10,000
Grant Duration: 1 Year
Details:
The Grassroots Fund supports small grassroots groups across California that are tackling tough environmental problems including toxic pollution, urban sprawl, sustainable agriculture, climate change, environmental degradation of rivers and wild places, as well as, communities and health. The objectives are :
- Strengthen and diversify the capacity of the grassroots base of California’s environmental movement.
- Provide grantees with training opportunities, as well as scholarship funds, to develop skills in budgeting, communications, strategic planning, computer software, working with volunteers and more.
- Enable communities that often fall through the cracks of traditional funding processes to gain crucial recognition and support.
- Offer fiscal sponsorship to allow groups that lack 501(c)3 status to receive grant funds.
The fund prioritizes groups that serve & represent historically marginalized or impacted communities, especially BIPOC, frontline, and low-income communities; as well as organizations whose work is not just having a meaningful impact in their own communities, but who are thinking strategically about how their work fits into the larger landscape of environmental challenges they face today.
Priorities
- Movement–building
- Preference is given to groups building broad community support and engaging in effective public outreach.
- Impacted and Underserved Communities
- The fund prioritizes groups that serve and represent historically marginalized or impacted communities, especially BIPOC, frontline, immigrant, and low-income communities.
- Community-Oriented with a Big Picture Vision
- Priority is given to organizations grounded in the communities they serve and addressing important local problems, but who are also thinking strategically about how their work fits into the larger landscape of environmental challenges they face today.
- Climate Resilience and Environmental Justice
- Its priority issues of time, and they are deeply interconnected. The same extractive systems that have caused the climate crisis have heaped disproportionate harms on marginalized communities. Sustainable solutions must come from the communities that have born the most harm. On a practical level, these priority areas encompass a wide scope of work, from fighting to protect the forests and natural biodiversity, planning for sustainable and equitable management of the water resources, reimagining the food and transportation systems, and addressing the disproportionate effects of pollution and climate impacts on poor, BIPOC, and immigrant communities.
Funding Information
The maximum grant size is $7,500.
Eligibility Criteria
To be eligible for a grassroots grant, the applicant must meet the following criteria:
- Geographic Scope
- Project impact must be within the state of California.
- Organization Size
- Annual income or expenses of $150,000 or less
- Issues Supported
- Include, but are not limited to environmental health and justice, climate advocacy and resilience, land management and urban sprawl, habitat and wilderness protection, water resources, sustainable agriculture, and pollution and toxics.
- Strategies Supported
- Include, but are not limited to community-based advocacy, litigation, restoration, community organizing, grassroots campaigns, and environmental education.
- Tax Status
- Applicants may be a nonprofit, be fiscally sponsored by another nonprofit, or ask for fiscal sponsorship from the fund.
- Frequency of Applying:
- Organizations whose proposals are rejected may re-apply after six months. Organizations that are funded may re-apply after one year if their evaluation form has been submitted and accepted.
- Duration of Support
- Grants are for a one year period. In order to make space for emerging new organizations, after three years of funding, groups need to wait two years before reapplying.
For more information, visit Rose Foundation.