"By investing significant resources into a diverse ecosystem of results-driven nonprofit, faith-based, and community organizations, we're reinforcing our decades-long focus on grassroots solutions and also amplifying how national service is creating local impact."
That's AmeriCorps CEO Michael D.
Smith's take on this year's $370 million in grants awarded to nonprofit and faith-based organizations across the country.
Of that amount, $192.6 million will go to approximately 35,000 AmeriCorps members working on more than 300 projects, including education, the environment, job training, addiction treatment, services for veterans, disaster preparedness, and recovery, and more, NBC News reports.
Nearly half of the grants ($177.4 million) will be given to governor-appointed state service commissions that partner with AmeriCorps to address priority needs in those states.
The rest of the grants, which run from Oct.
1 to Sept.
30, are typically awarded throughout the year, including funds for federally recognized American Indian and Alaska Native tribes or tribal organizations.
"While there is a rich diversity of program focus and locations served, what all of these grantees have in common is their relentless focus on evidence-based approaches, creating pathways from service to career and prioritizing member development and safety nets, such as higher living allowances and wraparound
A customized collection of grant news from foundations and the federal government from around the Web.
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