Community Foundation of Utah Awards Inaugural Social Enterprise Grants
04/29/2012 | 1768 views | 0 0 comments | 10 10 recommendations | email to a friend | print

The Community Foundation of Utah is honoring the innovative work of 20 purpose-driven Utah organizations with a share of the foundation’s inaugural $10,000 Social Enterprise Grant.



Individual grants range in amounts from $500 to $1000 and support Utah organizations working to strengthen their communities, support families and children or protect the state’s wildlife and environmental resources through specific programs or projects.



Social enterprises create a sustainable, positive, impact on people and communities. Many focus on the creation of jobs for people served by the nonprofit, while others tap the expertise of an agency to create profit centers. All help nonprofit organizations reduce their dependence on annual donations.



“The
new economy means that Utah nonprofits have to find ways to reduce their dependence on donations. Social enterprises, which are mission-driven businesses run by a charity, are one approach,” Utah Community Foundation Executive Director Fraser Nelson said. “We hope these grants will help spur innovation and help nonprofits find new ways to meet the communities’ needs – and their own.”



The grant awards come from The Utah Fund, the foundation’s discretionary grants program and includes $5,000 in matching funds from GE Financial Services.



Grant applications from nearly 100 organizations were reviewed by a panel of local community and business leaders. Awards were give to programs demonstrating a strong commitment to looking at their work and revenue streams in a new way, exploring how new models of capitalization can help the agency become more self sustaining.



Southern-Utah based New Frontiers for Families will use its $1,000 grant to pay for a consultant’s work on a business plan, along with marketing and fundraising strategies that will help the organization better serve its clients.



With office in Tropic, New Frontiers works independently or in partnership with other agencies to help families in rural Utah access services for children living with disabilities, mental health challenges and other developmental issues. year New Frontiers provided more than 270 individual families with weekly services, ran an after school program for about 1,600 children and partnered with Utah State University on a program to help farmers and ranchers remain productive in agriculture when facing limitations like aging, injury, illness or other disabilities.



“We don’t have much of a budget at all ... so $1,000 was amazing,” said Johnson, who helped found New Frontiers about 15 years ago. “We haven’t spent any time on the infrastructure at all, we’ve just been doing the work. But we can’t do the work unless we go back and build that infrastructure.”



Other grant recipients include:

  • Canyon Creek Women's Crisis Center, Cedar City Bad Dog Arts, Salt Lake City
  • Boys & Girls Club South Valley, Murray
  • Cancer Wellness House, Salt Lake City
  • Grand Co School District - After-school Program, Moab
  • Hawkwatch International, Salt Lake City
  • International Rescue Committee Inc., Salt Lake City
  • Local First Utah and Utah Microenterprise Loan Fund, Salt Lake City Neighborhood Nonprofit Housing Corp, Logan
  • New Frontiers for Families and Allies with Families, Panguitch Odyssey House of Utah, Salt Lake City
  • Ogden Nature Center, Ogden
  • Rescue Mission of Salt Lake, Salt Lake City
  • The Road Home, Salt Lake City
  • Salt Lake Community Action Program – Head Start, Salt Lake City Utahns Against Hunger, Salt Lake City
  • Valley Services, Inc., Salt Lake City
  • Volunteers of America, Salt Lake City

 

Funds were also awarded to to the Utah Nonprofits Association to support applicants needing grant writing training and other technical assistance.

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Ten Things You Need to Know for Friday
by Bryan Schott
May 24, 2013 | 2627 views | 0 0 comments | 2 2 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Countdown: There are 166 days to the 2013 municipal elections, 249 days until the start of the 2014 Legislature, 525 days until the 2014 midterm elections and 962 days until the 2016 Iowa Caucuses. 

An analysis says expanding Medicaid coverage will save Utah more than $130 million and would give health insurance to 123,000 residents [Tribune].

A new report ranks Utah #1 for economic outlook next year [Utah Policy, Tribune].

House Majority Leader Brad Dee goes on a European vacation with three lobbyists, but Dee insists the trip was above board because everybody paid their own way and they didn’t discuss politics [Tribune].

Former Attorney General Mark Shurtleff is caught on tape offering to get $2 million for Utah Businessman Darl McBride if he would shut down a website critical of another Utah businessman. That money was to come from a third Utah businessman who was in trouble with the Attorney General’s office [Tribune].

Former Legislator and current blogger Holly Richardson says she’s had enough with the “culture of corruption” permeating the Attorney General’s office [Holly on the Hill].

Sen. Orrin Hatch wants to hear from Utahns who think they have been inappropriately targeted by the IRS as part of his investigation into misconduct by the agency [Tribune].

Kennecott lays off 100 workers because of the massive landslide at their Bingham Canyon Mine [Tribune, Deseret News].

The Boy Scouts vote to allow gay members in their ranks [Deseret News].

Former Utah Gov. Jon Huntsman launches a new political action committee to support Republicans who share his point of view [Tribune].

Gov. Gary Herbert says he is confident the state can work out a deal to avoid taxing the electricity used by the new National Security Agency data center at Camp Williams [Tribune].
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