Here are notable new grant awards compiled by the Chronicle:
Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Malaria
$165 million over three years to Ukraine’s Ministry of Health to bolster its response to the tuberculosis and HIV/AIDS epidemics in the country, which have been exacerbated during its war with Russia.
Lynde and Harry Bradley Foundation
$15.7 million to organizations in Wisconsin, primarily in Milwaukee.
Among the largest grants was $800,000 to Neu-Life Community Resource Center, an organization that offers after-school and career-development programs for youths in Milwaukee, to back its capital campaign and general operations.
Pivotal Ventures
$14 million to the School-Based Health Alliance to expand its health-care services in schools, particularly those that serve families with the lowest incomes.
James M. Cox Foundation
$10 million over four years to Emory University for the Charlie and Harriet Shaffer Cognitive Empowerment Program, housed within the Goizueta Institute at Emory Brain Health. The program helps people with mild cognitive impairment and their caregivers.
Mayo Clinic
$10 million to Rochester Public Schools for the Minnesota school district’s strategic plan.
Golden Globe Foundation
$5 million divided among 96 organizations, including groups that serve marginalized communities, film schools, journalism and press-freedom projects, and film-restoration programs.
The foundation was created last year following the sale of the film and television awards from the Hollywood Foreign Press Association to Eldridge Globes LLC.
Mays Family Foundation
$5 million to the San Antonio Zoo for its capital campaign to build new animal habitats and enhance amenities for visitors.
Lowry Mays, the co-founder of Clear Channel Communications, served on the zoo’s board from 1995 until his death in 2022.
Charles Stewart Mott Foundation
$3.5 million to Communities First to purchase and renovate two historic but dilapidated buildings in Flint, Mich., and turn them into office and commercial space for the charity’s use.
The Mott Foundation is a financial supporter of the Chronicle.
Arthur M. Blank Family Foundation
$3 million to Morris Brown College to develop a remote-learning option for its certificate program in hospitality that can reach students outside of the metropolitan Atlanta area.
Marcus Foundation
$3 million to the Baylor College of Medicine’s Eberlin Lab for Medical Mass Spectrometry to continue to develop technology that uses molecular analysis to guide resection in breast-cancer surgery.
Public Wise
$1.8 million to 32 voting-rights organizations for their work with Black, Latino, Asian American and Pacific Islander, and LGBTQIA+ communities, particularly those in battleground states like Arizona, Georgia, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin.
Texas Children’s Hospital
$1.5 million commitment to the Houston Parks Board to build a children’s play area in MacGregor Park.
New Grant Opportunity
The dating app Hinge is accepting applications for grants through One More Hour, a $1 million grant-making fund to support organizations that facilitate in-person connections among young people. Grants worth up to $25,000 each will be awarded to nonprofit social groups and organizations that serve people from Generation Z in Atlanta, Los Angeles, and New York. Applications are due January 30.
Chronicle of Philanthropy subscribers also have full access to GrantStation’s searchable database of grant opportunities. For more information, visit our grants page.