Category Archives: Animals

Zoo Miami Wildlife Conservation Fund

The Zoo Miami Wildlife Conservation Fund supports projects protecting wildlife and natural ecosystems around the world. Applications for up to $5,000 are due by June 1, 2024 at Midnight ET.

Grantees are required to handle all directly affected animals humanely and preferably have procedural Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee approval. 

Eligibility

This funding opportunity is open to individuals, governmental entities, and nonprofit organizations with appropriate qualifications for the proposed project.

Required Attachments

All applications must have:

  • Project description (2 pages or fewer)
  • Detailed budget
  • Timeline
  • Resume(s) of principal applicant(s)
  • Description of qualifications
  • Nonprofit letter, if applicable
  • Two letters of endorsement
  • Copies of required permits

Submission

Applications may be submitted electronically to Frank.Ridgley@miamidade.gov (preferred) or mailed to:

Zoo Miami Wildlife Conservation Fund 

Zoo Miami 

C/O Dr. Frank Ridgley

12400 SW 152nd Street 

Miami, FL 33177-1499 

KFC Foundation: Kentucky Fried Wishes

The KFC Foundation funds actionable, local level projects in the United States through the Kentucky Fried Wishes program.

Twenty-five grants of $10,000 are awarded each quarter in a different focus area. The next funding cycle will be May 1-31, 2024 for projects focused on Improving Health & Wellbeing.

Eligibility

This grant is open to organizations in the United States who:

  • Have a 501(c)3 nonprofit designation
  • Have maintained good standing with the IRS for 2 years
  • Work at the local level, either individually or as a chapter/affiliate of a larger organization

Allowable Expenses

Grant funds may be used to:

  • Hire professional services necessary to complete the project
  • Purchase equipment necessary to complete the project

Grant funds may not be used for:

  • Salaries
  • Scholarships
  • Ongoing or recurring programs
  • Event sponsorships

Focus Areas

Improving Health & Wellbeing

Image by Marzena P.

Applications for Improving Health & Wellbeing will be accepted May 1-31. Potential projects include:

  • Creating a mobile health clinic
  • Playground improvements
  • Domestic violence shelter upgrades
  • Accommodations for individuals with disabilities

Expanding Access to Food & Shelter

Applications for Expanding Access to Food & Shelter will be accepted July 1-31. Potential projects include:

  • Remodeling a food pantry
  • Creating a community garden
  • Beautifying a community space
  • Repairing and renovating buildings

Caring for the Environment, Animals, & More

Image by Jill Wellington

Applications for Caring for the Environment, Animals, & More will be accepted September 1-30. Potential projects include:

  • Creating a permanent wildlife conservation exhibit
  • Purchasing a new vehicle for mobile vet clinic
  • Park improvements
  • Other reasonable requests not covered under any other focus area

Empowering Through Education & Training

This focus area is currently closed and a new funding cycle hasn’t yet been announced. Potential projects include:

  • Establishing a community-wide CPR certification program
  • Creating an after school literacy program
  • Creating a job skills training program for adults with disabilities

Pollinator-Friendly Practices on Roadsides and Highway Rights-of-Way Program

The Pollinator-Friendly Practices on Roadsides and Highway Rights-of-Way Program supports projects to implement, improve, or develop a Pollinator-Friendly Practice Plan. The goal of the program is to turn the 3.9 million miles of roadside across the U.S. into pollinator habitat.

Applications for up to $150,000 are due by June 18, 2024 at 11:59 PM ET. The Federal Highway Administration is required to fund all satisfactory applications, which must conform to the Application Template.

Eligibility

This grant is open to:

  • State Departments of Transportation
  • Federal Land Management Agencies
  • Native American Tribes

Eligible Pollinator-Friendly Practices

Applicants may request funding for one or more of the following:

  • Pollinator-friendly mowing strategies
  • Planting or seeding
  • Removing nonnative grasses from planting and seeding mixes
  • Protecting existing habitat
  • Updating, improving, or further developing the Pollinator-Friendly Practices Plan
  • Implementing a Pollinator-Friendly Practices Plan or an integrated vegetation management plan
  • Obtaining expert training or assistance on pollinator-friendly practices
  • Design, construction, or maintenance to ensure habitat does not negatively impact road safety
  • Outreach to increase public support and/or coordinate with adjacent landowners

Applications Requirements

State Departments of Transportation and Federal Land Management Agencies must provide documentation of:

  • Coordination with applicable State agencies in the development of their Plan
  • Consultation with affected or interested Indigenous tribes in the development of their Plan

Review Criteria

All applications will be reviewed based on:

Merit Criteria

  • Overall Benefits to Pollinator Species and Habitats
  • Context and Connectivity  
  • Roadside Pollinator Project Design and Methods
  • Maintenance and Management  

Project Readiness Criteria

Image by Iupac
  • Environmental Review and Permitting Risk
  • Project Risks and Mitigation Strategies
  • Technical Assessment
  • Financial Completeness Assessment

Lush Charity Pot Grants

Lush awards grants funded through sales of their Charity Pot Hand and Body Lotion to grassroots organizations around the world. They support causes that are often overlooked and underfunded in the areas of Animal Protection, Environmental Justice, and Human Rights.

Applications are accepted on a continual basis for requests up to $15,000.

Eligibility

This grant is open to:

  • Registered and unregistered nonprofit organizations and NGOs
  • Indigenous groups
  • Community groups

Applicants must have an annual revenue of $500,000 or less.

Funding Limitations

Grant funds may not be used for:

  • Air travel
  • The cost of attending a training, meeting, or other event
  • Non-vegan or vegetarian food
  • Scholarships
  • Event sponsorships
  • Bail

NIFA Veterinary Services Grant Program

The Veterinary Services Grant Program from the USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture will support projects to develop and sustain food animal veterinary services and alleviate vet shortages in the United States.

Grants will be awarded in two categories – Education, Extension, and Training (EET) and Rural Practice Enhancement (RPE). Approximately 10 awards will be made in each category. EET applicants may request up to $250,000; RPE applicants may request up to $125,000. There is no matching requirement. All applications must be submitted through Grants.gov by March 21, 2024 at 5:00 PM ET.

Education, Extension and Training Grants

EET grants are intended for programs to assist veterinarians, vet technicians, and students gain the skills needed to alleviate the shortage of veterinary services in the United States and Insular Areas.

Eligibility

This grant is open to:

  • Colleges or schools of veterinary medicine accredited by the American Veterinary Medical Association
  • Departments of veterinary science or departments of comparative medicine accredited by the U.S. Department of Education
  • University research foundations or veterinary medical foundations
  • State, regional, or national organizations supporting food animal veterinary programs. 
  • Allied or professional food animal veterinary organizations recognized by the American Veterinary Medical Association
  • State agricultural experiment stations or Research Farms  
  • State, local, or tribal government agencies

Potential Activities

https://vet.purdue.edu/hospital/farm-animal/

Potential uses of grant funds may include:

  • Training in food safety, public health, or food animal medicine
  • Modifying veterinary courses, including updates for remote learning and faculty recruitment and retention
  • Training vet residents, interns, and externs
  • Continuing education, including remote learning opportunities
  • Outreach to 11th and 12th grade students on education and career opportunities in food animal medicine

Rural Practice Enhancement Grants

RPE grants will support private clinics in Veterinarian Shortage Situations expand their capacity to provide food/large animal veterinary services.

Eligibility

This grant is open to clinics in rural veterination shortage situtations as definded by the Veterinary Medicine Loan Repayment Program (VMLRP). Type II shortage situtations are rural. Type I and III situtations will need to consult the USDA’s Rural Community Development Initiative to determine eligibility.

Applicants may include:

  • For-profit or nonprofit vet clinics and hospitals
  • Clinics or hospital that employ a current VMLRP grantee

Potential Activities

https://vetmed.iastate.edu/vmc/large-animal/food-animal-camelid

Potential uses of grant funds may include:

  • Veterinary office equipment
  • Clinical equipment
  • Overhead expenses associated directly with providing services in the shortage area (up to 50% of total budget)
  • Establishing mobile vet facilities
  • Outreach to 11th and 12th grade students on education and career opportunities in food/large animal medicine and herd health management

Robert F. Schumann Foundation

The Robert F. Schumann Foundation supports projects in the United States focused on Arts, culture, and humanities, Education, the Environment, and Animals. The Foundation is administered through Wells Fargo Philanthropic Trust Services.

Applications are accepted year round, but must be submitted by February 28th to be considered at that year’s annual grant meeting.

Eligibility

This grant is open to 501(c)3 nonprofit organizations in the United States. Special consideration will be given to organizations in the Northeast, Mid-Atlantic and on the East Coast.

Focus Areas

The Schumann Foundation supports projects focused on:

  • Arts, culture, and humanities
  • Education
  • The Environment (especially open space habitats)
  • Animals (especially ornithology)

TiME Land Purchase Grant Program

This is My Earth (TiME) is an international environmental organization founded in 2016. Their Land Purchase Grant Program helps local groups acquire threatened land and protect its biodiversity.

Applications are accepted and reviewed on a rolling basis. If approved, projects will then be included in TiME’s annual crowdfunding campaign which begins on January 1st. Although no maximum amount is specified, the average request is $20,000 – $60,000.

Eligibility

Applicant

This grant is open to groups that:

  • Are nonprofit or non-governmental organizations with legal documentation
  • Are locally based or able to demonstrate a capacity to operate locally
    • Are capable of purchasing and protecting the land
  • Have a clear conservation objective
  • Have a plan for long-term management of the land

Land

To be eligible, land must:

  • Be for sale
  • Be located in an area with high biodiversity and conservation value
  • Be under threat

Crowdfunding Campaign

Applications that have been received and approved will be a part of the crowdfunding campaign starting the following January 1st. Both TiME and the applicant are responsible for recruiting donors to the project.

Each donor of at least $1 will have the right to vote on how funds raised should be distributed among the different projects. The campaign runs until sufficient funds have been raised or December 31st, whichever comes first.

Park Foundation

The Park Foundation is a family-run foundation established in 1966 by Roy H. Park. They are dedicated to creating a more just and sustainable society across the United States and in their hometown of Ithaca, NY.

The Foundation offers grants in 8 priority areas: Democracy, Civic Participation, Media, Environment, Animal Welfare, Sustainable Ithaca, Community Needs, and School Food and Nutrition. Eligibility varies by funding area.

Letters of interest are not required, but are highly recommended. After submitting your LOI, do not submit a full proposal until you hear from a Foundation staff member. LOI’s can be submitted at any time. Proposals are reviewed on a quarterly basis. Upcoming due dates are: September 22, 2023, and January 5, 2024.

Funding Priorities

Democracy

Eligibility

Grants under this category are open to nonprofit organizations across the United States.

Prioritized Activities

Image by John Mounsey
  • Expanding voting access
  • Advocating for reform at the local, state, and federal levels
  • Ending partisan gerrymandering
  • Eliminating dark money in elections
  • Holding government officials accountable
  • Overturning Citizen’s United
  • Supporting a field of diverse, young leaders
  • Promoting progressive agendas

Civic Participation

Eligibility

Grants under this category are open to nonprofit organizations across the United States.

Prioritized Activities

  • Working to stop voter suppression
  • State-based groups educating, motivating, and mobilizing voters
  • National and state groups protecting voters’ rights and election integrity

Media

Eligibility

Grants under this category are open to nonprofit organizations across the United States.

Prioritized Activities

  • Public broadcasting
  • Investigative journalism
  • Media policy

Environment

Eligibility

Grants under this category are open to nonprofit organizations working on a national level or in New York State.

Clean Water: Prioritized Activities

  • Investment in publicly owned and operated water utilities
  • Reduced bottled water consumption
  • Strong, enforced policies
  • Empowering people to defend their right to clean water

Energy

Grants under this category are open to state-level organizations in New York for:

  • Advocacy
  • Policy development
  • Organizing
  • Corporate responsibility

Animal Welfare

Eligibility

Grants under this category are open to nonprofit organizations across the United States working on projects of national significance.

Focus Areas

  • Indigenous wildlife management
  • Organizing, educating, and advocating on behalf of endangered species and ecosystems
  • National and regional efforts to preserve birds, pollinators, whales, and wolves

Sustainable Ithaca

Eligibility

Grants under this category are open to nonprofit organizations in Ithaca and Tompkins County, NY.

Program Priorities

  • Ecosystem conservation
  • Energy and climate change
  • Environmental education
  • Smart growth

Community Needs

Eligibility

Grants under this category are open to nonprofit organizations in Tompkins County, NY.

Program Priorities

  • Developing interventions in partnership with low income residents
  • Identifying barriers to success and implementing programs to overcome them
  • Tailoring programs using data about subpopulations to ensure needs are being met

School Food and Nutrition

Eligibility

Grants under this category are open to nonprofit organizations in Tompkins County, NY.

Goal

Image by Tricia Reynolds

Breaking the self-reinforcing cycle of poverty, hunger, poor health, negative social and academic impacts, and limited future opportunities.