Proposals must be received by Monday, February 4, 2013
The focus of the second round of the Brooklyn Recovery Fund’s grant program is to support physical improvements to homes and buildings located in Brooklyn’s coastal communities.
Funding will support the following recovery and rebuilding activities:
- Mold removal and remediation;
- Electrical, heating and systems repairs and replacement; and
- Structural repairs to 1-4 family homes, nonprofit facilities, or buildings used by small businesses.
Priority will be given to proposals from community development and non-profit housing corporations and other qualified organizations with deep knowledge of and experience with mold removal, mold remediation, and housing and building repair/maintenance. We require partnerships between applicants and local service providers and organizations from each impacted community. Together the partnership should demonstrate an ability to provide an up to date community needs assessment about the status of building repair and a plan of action to help individuals, businesses, and institutions move from “rescue” to recovery and rebuilding. In Red Hook and Coney Island, we will require that all grantees work in partnership with the collaboratives that have been funded through BRF’s first round of recovery grants and will provide you with the information necessary to connect to these organizations.
All funding requests are due no later than Monday, February 4, 2013. We will make every effort to have all funding decisions made by Monday, February 11, 2013.
Target Neighborhoods
Brooklyn coastal communities that experienced severe storm damage: Red Hook, the Coney Island peninsula, Sheepshead Bay, Canarsie, and Gerritsen Beach.
Grant Amounts
A limited number of grants are available, up to $200,000 per impacted community (Red Hook, the Coney Island peninsula, Sheepshead Bay, Canarsie, and Gerritsen Beach).
Eligibility
- Community development and non-profit housing corporations and other qualified organizations who have established or can demonstrate an ability to establish close working relationships with local nonprofits serving communities or residents impacted by Super Storm Sandy.
Application Guidelines
- Provide brief mission statement and history of your organization.
- What qualifications do you possess to address mold removal, mold remediation, and building repair/maintenance? How will you partner and coordinate with organizations physically located in the impacted community? If you already have an established relationship, who is your/are your partner(s) and what type of partnership currently exists?
- What nonprofits, government entities, and/or community groups have you been working with to address recovery and rebuilding needs?
- If you received prior funding from the BRF, how does this request complement your previous request?
- How will you define and measure the success of this project?
- Be sure that your application includes full contact information (address, telephone, email) for this request’s point person; also include the community where this work will take place.
- Only ONE grantee per impacted community will be selected.
- Please limit your request to no more than 3 pages; not including attachments.
- Required Documents:
- Organization budget
- Project budget
- Most recent IRS 990 Form
- Most recent Financial Audit (note: if your organization uses a fiscal sponsor, please provide its audit and 990)
- Board of Directors
Submit via email or fax requested narrative and attachments by Monday, February 4, 2013 to:
- Toya Willifordm Program Director
- Brooklyn Community Foundation
- 45 Main Street, #409
- Brooklyn, NY 11201
- twilliford@bcfny.org
- Fax: 718-722-5757
Any questions please contact Toya Williford at 718.722.5352 or twilliford@bcfny.org.
http://www.brooklyncommunityfoundation.org/brooklyn-recovery-fund/apply-funding
















RT @OccupySandy: Community Grant Rebuilding Program – Deadline: Mon, February 4, 2013 http://t.co/ioXdzZ1b #SandyUpdates #OccupySandy
RT @OccupySandy: Community Grant Rebuilding Program – Deadline: Mon, February 4, 2013 http://t.co/ioXdzZ1b #SandyUpdates #OccupySandy
While I’m entirely in favor of helping people who have been so horribly affected by the storm, with great haste and lots of compassion and consideration for all they have been through and all that losing a home, neighborhood even a whole town means, I have to say, in all honesty I’m having trouble with the idea of ‘rebuilding’ and restoring the homes and buildings that were flooded. Just as I’d question it anywhere in this day and age of the global climate change, I question the wisdom of doing that w/ the money rather than using it to help people relocate to a better location not on the water’s edge. I feel we need to declare the water’s edge ‘public property’ and maintain it as a park-like area for all to share and stop trying to act like it isn’t going to flood again. I’m thinking of a project along the lines of that outlined in the documentary “A Convenient Truth: Urban Solutions from Curitiba, Brazil”
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1018804/
I hope that doesn’t sound heartless. I just worry we won’t have the funds if (when?) this should happen again. Does anyone else feel that way?
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RT @OccupySandy: Community Grant Rebuilding Program – Deadline: Mon, February 4, 2013 http://t.co/ioXdzZ1b #SandyUpdates #OccupySandy
RT @OccupySandy: Community Grant Rebuilding Program – Deadline: Mon, February 4, 2013 http://t.co/ioXdzZ1b #SandyUpdates #OccupySandy
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Mary C. Gagnon I agree with you. You speak with common sense. If I lived down there, I’d probably feel differently. I feel that these communities need to have basic necessities right now (I’m sure you are aware of this). My heartfelt concern is their immediate welfare. I don’t think any of the shoreline of this country should be rebuilt at the expense of taxpayers. People have got to realize that this is going to continue to happen…it’s not a one time devastation. Relocating is a horribly painful experience, but better to do it once than over and over.
@ Freddi and Mary – Relocate where exactly? Properties miles & miles from the beach also had damage. There are tornadoes, hurricanes, etc etc all over the country, possible disasters in so many areas. Relocate to “safe” neighborhood? My neighborhood used to be safe too – until it wasn’t. Not to mention the housing shortage Sandy has caused in our area, not to mention rampant price gouging on the rentals you CAN find. Home is home. I live in Midland Beach and we have not seen the likes of flooding like this in more years than the neighborhood old timers can even remember. Yes, build smarter. Yes, build better. Yes, learn from the past. But YES…rebuild!
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RT @OccupySandy: Community Grant Rebuilding Program – Deadline: Mon, February 4, 2013 http://t.co/ioXdzZ1b #SandyUpdates #OccupySandy
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