Peabody Grants Described

• Peabody grants only support projects and programs that are carried out in Massachusetts.

• Most Peabody grants are made to organizations that serve disadvantaged, inner-city youth populations.

• Most often the organizations receiving grants will be located in the very neighborhoods that they would serve by their efforts.

• We particularly favor grants to organizations that employ on their staffs members of the populations that they serve.

• We particularly favor grants that help organizations to leverage additional funds.

• We particularly favor grants that significantly increase an organization's ability and capacity to deliver its services.

• Peabody grants are made for almost any project that serves to promote and enhance the grantee organization's mission: for existing and new programs, for capital acquisitions, for the renovation of existing buildings and facilities, for the repair, maintenance and purchase of equipment.

• When considering a grant application we look first and most of all at the leadership of the organization. Our experience has taught us over and over again that the people who lead and staff the organization are most instrumental in bringing about real and positive changes in the lives of inner-city families and communities.

• Peabody grants are made in a wide range of sizes, but always correspond to the requirements of the proposal, the size of the organization and its capacity to accomplish the grant purpose. Most grants exceed $10,000 and generally fall in the $20,000 to $80,000 range for programs or operations. A smaller number of grants, generally in the $50,000 to $200,000 range, are capital improvement grants or other grants which also take an organization to a new level of operations in respect to the quality or quantity of services provided.

• The kinds of grants that we like most to make are those that bring about real changes on the ground, changes in the neighborhoods where people live. Such grants may help an existing organization to increase its capacity for service where it is currently situated, but frequently such grants will help the organization to establish a new facility where no such facility exists, bringing services to a neighborhood for the first time. Examples of such new and renewed facilities supported by Peabody grants are neighborhood and community centers, youth centers, charter schools, branch Y's, neighborhood technology centers, computer club houses and computer classrooms. With our help the existing organization will attain a new and higher level of service to its clientele. In short, our grants help service organizations to build capacity and thereby extend the benefits of their work to greater numbers of people, to greater numbers of disadvantaged youth.

• Grants may be made for periods of one, two or three years. However, most Peabody grants are for one year only.