Carolina Foundation for Jewish Seniors awards grants to nonprofits in the Carolinas that provide life enriching programs for Jewish seniors.
Donor Name: Carolina Foundation for Jewish Seniors
State: North Carolina, South Carolina
County: All Counties
Type of Grant: Grant
Deadline: 03/13/2024
Size of the Grant: $10,000 to $100,000
Grant Duration: 1 Year
Details:
CFJS is dedicated to enriching the lives of Jewish seniors residing in North and South Carolina communities through programs/projects sharing Jewish values and ideals.
CFJS aims to help support programs/projects and services that advance the Foundation’s objectives.
These include:
- Long term community impact
- Collaboration with other local organizations
- Participant involvement in social services (volunteer or financial)
- Applicant organization showing their financial commitment to the program
- Specific qualitative and quantitative outcomes such as numbers served and measurable impact on lives
- Uniqueness (non-duplicative of other area programs or services)
- Competent grant management and program oversight
The following are program/project examples that CFJS seeks to help with financial support.
- Case Management with a licensed professional or case worker
- Community building, education and furtherance of Jewish values and ideals
- Congregational Nurse
- Dementia or memory impairment
- Combatting Isolation
- Food Distribution
- Group Day Care and Respite programs
- Transportation.
Funding Information
- Grants are generally funded up to $50,000 per program/project, especially for 1st time grants.
- The grant cycle is July 1 to June 30.
Eligibility Criteria
CFJS welcomes grant requests from nonprofit organizations that:
- Are classified as a 501(C)(3) charitable organization as determined by IRS regulations, unless you are affiliated with another tax-exempt organization such as local government, school or synagogue.
- Organizations that serve Jewish older adults in North and South Carolina
- Grant awards are based on the merit of the program, its potential impact, how well it meets the priorities and focus area of CFJS, availability of funds and quality of the application.
- Awards for ongoing operational support of an organization are very limited and discouraged. Preference is given to organizations that use grant funds for direct services to Jewish seniors rather than maintaining program operations.
- Preference is also given to organizations using matching funds or partial funding from their organization, an outside organization or foundation, i.e., leverages its resources.
- Preference will be given to those organizations that comply with grant guidelines, reporting requirements and achieve positive outcomes.
- If your organization is applying for the first time, the Letter of Intent form must be completed first with permission given to complete the grant application.
For more information, visit CFJS.