Through the Pew Fund for Health and Human Services in Philadelphia, The Pew Charitable Trusts supports nonprofit organizations that promote the health and well-being of people facing complex challenges rooted in poverty. Pew Fund grants help local social services organizations expand their reach and impact in the Philadelphia region and implement promising solutions to emerging problems or gaps in service delivery.
The Pew Fund provides two types of grants:
Venture grants: Flexible funding that enables organizations to meet an emerging need or fill a critical service gap for a specific population while using data to increase a program’s sustainability and impact over the grant period. These grants support promising solutions that have the potential to create “ripple effects” on sector-wide practices, policies, or systems. The awards range from $100,000 to $300,000 over three years and are nonrenewable. To be considered for support in this category, an organization must have an operating budget of at least $400,000.
Growth grants: Flexible, multiyear investments that strengthen health and human services agencies’ capacity to provide more low-income individuals with research-informed services. These grants support the expansion of proven services and programs in the Philadelphia region. The grants range from $750,000 to $4 million over five years, with the possibility of renewal based on performance. To be considered for support in this category, an organization must have an operating budget of at least $2 million.
Through 2025 the Pew Fund will focus on supporting organizations that address the following issue areas:
Pew Fund staff members identify organizations on a rolling basis and invite them to participate in a rigorous review process. Decisions on funding requests are made on a quarterly basis, in March, June, September, and December. To be eligible for funding, an organization must:
For more information on our process, please visit the Pew Fund’s frequently asked questions page. After reading the FAQ, organizations that meet the specified criteria can inquire about funding by filling out our online form.
Grantees receiving either type of funding are eligible for additional training and technical assistance through Pew’sevaluation capacity building initiative, which helps strengthen grantee organizations’ ability to collect, analyze, and use data to understand and improve their programs.
Since 1991, the Pew Fund has played an important role in supporting the needs of Philadelphia-area residents facing challenges to their health and well-being—including those related to poverty, mental illness, and homelessness—by enhancing local nonprofits’ collective ability to develop and offer high-quality services.
Since its inception, the fund has invested $265 million in more than 350 local organizations—and in the past five years alone, Pew’s support has helped grantees assist 80,000 to 100,000 people annually. Moving forward, our goal is to have an even more meaningful impact in the region by helping nonprofits continue to expand their use of evidence-based services.
The Pew Fund began awarding venture and growth grants in June 2020. Following is a list of those grantees to date.
Venture grantees:The Attic Youth Center, Bethanna, Boys & Girls Clubs of Philadelphia, Center for Black Educator Development, Child Guidance Resource Center, Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia’s Violence Intervention Program, Drexel University’s Healing Hurt People program, Elevate 215, Health Federation of Philadelphia, Impact Services, New Kensington Community Development Corporation, Philabundance, Philadelphia Children’s Alliance, Philly Joy Bank, Prevention Point, Puentes de Salud, Sharing Excess, Springboard Collaborative, Teach Plus, Temple University Hospital’s Trauma Victim Support Advocates program, Thomas Jefferson University’s Center for Supportive Healthcare, Turning Points for Children’s LifeSet Program, University of Pennsylvania’s Pediatric Anxiety Treatment Center at Hall-Mercer, Valley Youth House, and Women Against Abuse.
Growth grantees:Benefits Data Trust, Center for Families and Relationships, Children’s Crisis Treatment Center, Compass Working Capital, Esperanza Health Center, Heights Philadelphia, MANNA, Maternal and Child Health Consortium, Maternity Care Coalition, Mazzoni Center, ParentChild+, Pathways to Housing PA, Project HOME, SeniorLAW Center, and University City District’s West Philadelphia Skills Initiative.
Before June 2020, the Pew Fund provided three-year grants to organizations serving specific populations. Press releases announcing our grants, as well as other content related to our grantees, can be found in the “Our Work” section below.