MCCF Awards $130,596 in the 2023 Spring Unrestricted Grant Cycle!
The Montgomery County Community Foundation gathered May 24th to award grant checks to ten grant recipients in the 2023 Spring unrestricted grant cycle. MCCF Chief Executive Officer, Kelly Taylor, welcomed everyone and thanked the nonprofit leaders for the work they do in our community. Fund owners in attendance were recognized and thanked, for without fund owners, the grants would not be possible.
For more information on each grant, and the funds that made these grants possible, please continue reading below.
Community Development:
Animal Welfare League, $4,423
AWL relies heavily on their dedicated volunteers. The funds will be used to enhance the volunteer program with new training materials and equipment. In addition, they will purchase the materials needed to install shades on the outside dog runs to provide greater comfort and respite from indoor confinement which will lead to better adjusted, and better behaved animals.
Crawfordsville Masonic Temple Foundation, $24,280
The CMTF board will engage a consultant to assist them in developing a 5-year Strategic Plan for their organization. After board members attended the MCCF Nonprofit Learning Series on Board Governance, they determined this to be the next logical step to take in their growth as a board.
Friends of Sugar Creek, $13,500
Friends of Sugar Creek strives to raise awareness, to protect, restore and promote appreciation of Sugar Creek. By replacing the aging fleet of canoes with ten new Old Town canoes, they’ll be able to continue their robust programming to achieve these goals.
Early Childhood Education:
Rainbows & Rhymes Preschool, $9,170
Supporting Strong and Confident Early Childhood Teachers is their professional development plan for the year. This grant will support those efforts by funding Creative Curriculum training, Jim Gill’s training, A Joyous Way to Learn through Active Music Play, along with his music workshop and interactive concert for families.
Health:
Crawfordsville Community School Corporation, $12,000
This will provide the schools with three new vision screeners which school nurses will use to provide state-mandated vision screenings. The new machines will provide more accurate results and more efficient screening time meaning less time spent out of the classroom.
North Montgomery School Corporation, $11,400
The funds will be used to address the health and welfare needs of students in a variety of ways. Assistance may be given students for medical, dental, optical and mental health needs. Various health education is provided, including substance abuse resilience for middle and high school students. Funds also help to ensure CPR and AED equipment and training is up to date.
South Montgomery School Corporation, $8,000
Funds will help to address the health and welfare needs of students in a variety of ways, such as medical, dental, vision, and mental health resources. With about 40% of the student population receiving some form of meal or textbook assistance, the schools strive to provide a bridge to access these and other services.
Human Services:
Abilities Services, Inc., $7,483
ASI will purchase furnishings and other items to create a sensory room. This is a designated area where individuals with sensory processing disorders, cognitive and learning disabilities, can retreat to, and to process and cope in an ever-changing world around them. ASI expects to see a decrease in behavioral incidents as well as shortened de-escalation time frame for those behaviors.
Habitat for Humanity, $35,000
Building affordable housing is the cornerstone of Habitat’s mission in the Crawfordsville area. Rising costs of building materials have hampered their progress on the current build. These funds will allow them to complete the current project on Binford Street so that an eager new homeowner can get moved in and they can move onto the next project.
Recovery Coalition, $5,340
Funds will be used to cover the cost of training two individuals as Peer Recovery Coaches and will pay three coaches for their work. Once the coaches are trained and in place, they will become a certified Recovery Community Organization. This will make them eligible for other funding sources for the Peer Recovery Coaches’ wages so that this service can continue.
These grants were made possible by the following MCCF Field of Interest Funds:
- Preston and Anne Bost Early Childhood Education Fund
- Luella Brake Trust Fund
- Maude Dockins Trust Fund
- Crawfordsville Housing Authority Fund
- Richard and Nancy Inskeep Fund
- A.F. Ramsey Trust Fund
- Amy C. Robinson Trust Fund
- Faye O. and Anna Winter Schenck Fund
- Libby Whitecotton Fund
- Women of Wisdom Fund, Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow; honoring Rev. Chris Hotopp-Zachary, Mary Vi Leaming RN and Meda Lorton
And from these MCCF Unrestricted Funds:
- Heather Barajas Fund
- Chase Fund
- Community Fund
- Dr. Fred and Elizabeth Daugherty Trust Fund
- Directors Fund
- Leland and Dolores Epperson & Family Fund
- Bob and Bill Fell Fund
- Larry and Susan Griffith Fund
- Michael D. and Sally A. Hinkle Fund
- Larry D. Servies and Wanda R. Hopkins Fund
- Max W. Johnson Fund to honor Mary Francis “Fran” Johnson
- Lincoln Legacy Fund
- Amy McFerran Fund
- Tom and Cynda Mellish Fund
- Phil and Judy Michal Fund
- Mike and Rhonda Mitchell Family Fund
- Montgomery County Physicians Fund
- Morris and Barbara Odle Family Fund
- Gloria and Marvin Oliver Fund
- Dale and Linda Petrie Fund
- Torey and Bethany Rauch Fund
- William and Amy Roth Fund
- Coach Rick and Deb Schavietello Fund
- Florence Schultz Trust Fund
- James G. and Susan Smith Fund
- John T. Taylor Charitable Fund
- Bobbye and Claude Thompson Fund
- John and Sandy Tidd Fund in memory of Ernest and Anna Tidd and Joan and John Spray
- Tom Warren Fund
- Leonard and Louise Winchell Fund
- Roland Brooks and Helen Johnson Wynne Fund