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21 Jun
2024

Bank of America Charitable Foundation

  Grant Amount: Not Specified

Information

The Bank of America Charitable Foundation will issue two requests for proposals (RFPs) on the priority focus area of Economic Mobility.
FIRST RFP: applications accepted 1/22/2024 – 2/16/2024
Economic mobility focused on needs of individuals and families
Health
Too many communities across the United States do not have equal access to what is needed to live healthier lives. Within under-resourced communities, generations of lack of access to care and health resources have contributed to poorer health outcomes. The focus is on programs and organizations who are working to address the economic and social conditions that influence family stability and an individual’s health, including access to quality community- based health services, crisis-prevention tied to family stabilization programs, and other poverty related issues.
Examples:
  • Prevention and Access to healthcare – Services that improve health outcomes with an emphasis on community-based healthcare, mental health counseling, substance use disorder treatment, and rehabilitation.; services that address access to quality health care, including early detection and disease prevention; capacity building and training for local community-based health centers and clinics
  • Food Access and Nutrition – food-based health care partnerships; programs addressing fresh and nutritious food access; programs that address dietary nutritional needs and education for persons with underlying health conditions (diabetes, cancer, heart-health)
  • Family stabilization – access to crisis prevention programs and wrap services including help with immediate and safe shelter, free or subsidized benefits like internet access, utilities, childcare, transportation, financial assistance and recovery.
  • Services for the homeless – programs that prevent or end homelessness, such as emergency shelter, rapid-rehousing, rental and utility assistance and permanent supportive housing.
Jobs
Employment is a key driver of economic mobility. The focus is on building pathways to employment by supporting a range of workforce development and educational opportunities that will help vulnerable individuals and families stabilize and advance.
Examples:
  • Youth workforce development and employment – Nonprofit programs helping young people (14-24 years old) transition from education to meaningful employment (i.e. high school completion programs, skills-training for hard and soft skills, early work experience, first-time employment, internship and/or apprenticeships especially for disconnected youth.
  • Skills training for adults through alternate routes – Nonprofit organizations providing adults with job preparedness, training, skill building, career counseling, placement, job retention, and entrepreneurship opportunities
  • Removing Barriers to employment – Nonprofit organizations addressing obstacles that hinder individuals from securing and maintaining long-term employment (i.e. organizations serving individuals with disabilities, persons impacted by the justice system, recent immigrants/refugees/asylees, and foster care youth).
  • Academic Institutions and student support – Post-secondary institutions (vocational/technical college, community college, four-year university or other trade school) and nonprofit partners providing support services that are ensuring students, particularly diverse students, matriculate and achieve post-graduation success
SECOND RFP – applications accepted: 5/27/2024 – 6/21/2024
Economic mobility focused on the needs of the community
Affordable Housing
The current health and humanitarian crisis has underscored the importance of safe, decent housing for an individual’s overall well-being, including health, educational success and future employment opportunities. Support is available for the work of organizations working to preserve, and increase access to a mix of affordable housing options.
Examples:
  • Housing development for vulnerable populations through the construction or preservation of affordable single, multi-family, transitional and supportive housing
  • Minority homeownership programs
  • Pathways to stable housing or homeownership through financial stability efforts such as homebuyer education, budgeting, savings, and credit counseling including eviction and foreclosure prevention.
  • Sustainable development efforts creating healthy living environments through energy efficiency upgrades, retrofits, solar and other green building efforts.
Neighborhood Revitalization
Vibrant communities are places where individuals can thrive and succeed and have the opportunity to live and work with safe, decent housing, transportation to jobs, strong business corridors and thriving arts and culture districts. Support is available for local and regional revitalization efforts, taking a holistic approach to building inclusive communities, creating economic opportunity and livable neighborhoods.
Examples:
  • Revitalization, preservation, and stabilization initiatives that engage community stakeholders in building livable communities.
  • Transit-oriented development efforts that connect individuals to jobs, services, schools, and economic opportunity.
  • Community arts and cultural institutions that provide economic opportunity and contribute to the vitality and livability of communities.
  • Assist economic development efforts that help promote healthy commercial corridors (Mainstreet)
  • Resiliency of communities supporting short- and long-term plans to prepare, withstand and recover from extreme weather events and the long-term impacts of climate change.
  • Environmental efforts through the preservation, creation or restoration of open space, parks and community gardens.
  • Supporting organizations/initiatives that bring energy efficiency and renewable energy advances to diverse communities.
Small Business Resiliency
Small Businesses help drive economic mobility and generational wealth and play an important role in the overall health of our nation’s economy. In response to the challenges small business owners face, they’re supporting nonprofits assisting under-resourced entrepreneurs, including women and minority business owners, as they address their short-term needs and help them grow and scale.
Examples:
  • Technical assistance: Support to organizations delivering training to help entrepreneurs start, grow or expand their business.
  • Access to capital: Funding nonprofits that connect entrepreneurs with access to essential growth capital.
  • Supporting incubators and accelerators that provide mentors, resources, and networks entrepreneurs need to launch, fund and grow their businesses
  • Build operational capacity of CDFIs delivering essential growth capital to entrepreneurs

Eligibility

Must be tax-exempt under section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, not classified as a private foundation and not operating through a fiscal agent or sponsor

Must be based and serve communities in these markets

https://about.bankofamerica.com/en/making-an-impact/eligible-states-local-markets

Category

  • Education / Job Training
  • Health and Wellness
  • Other / Miscellaneous
  • Youth / Children and Families