COVID-19 Rapid Response Fund marks the last round of phase one grants

The final round of phase one grants was announced Friday, July 17 by the Greater Cleveland COVID-19 Rapid Response Fund coalition. The Fund’s 80-plus funding partners are conducting a listening campaign to get feedback from the community, and to prepare for a second phase of grants in the future.

$900,000 was awarded to 13 organizations in this last round. Since the Fund’s creation in March, partners have granted more than $8.6 million to 160 nonprofit groups and organizations. The latest recipients are:

<span class="content-image-text">St. Paschal Baylon Roman Catholic Parish</span>St. Paschal Baylon Roman Catholic ParishFood & Shelter

Cuyahoga Metropolitan Housing Authority (CMHA): $75,000 to hire additional resident employees to help clean and sanitize buildings across CMHA’s 60 housing developments, which serve 55,000 low-income residents across Cuyahoga County.

Lutheran Metropolitan Ministry: $90,000 to provide staffing and technology that will allow the organization to conduct its workforce development and other programming remotely and to build capacity to continue safely serving vulnerable populations in Greater Cleveland during the pandemic.

St. Paschal Baylon Roman Catholic Parish: $20,000 to purchase additional food, masks, hygiene products and other supplies for the unsheltered homeless population of Downtown Cleveland and surrounding areas.

United Church Homes/South Haven Woods: $10,000 to purchase cleaning supplies and enhanced nutrition for low-income residents, who are older adults or people of all ages with disabilities.

West Park Baptist Church: $32,000 to provide additional staffing, PPE, and cleaning supplies for increased food distribution in the West Park/Bellaire Puritas community.

Zion Hill Baptist Church: $30,000 to purchase food and personal care products for families struggling due to COVID-19, and to also provide for staffing and transportation for Mt. Pleasant community distribution.

PPE/COVID Testing

Olivet Housing & Community Development Corp.: $40,000 to expand its COVID-19 testing services as a community-wide free testing site and to purchase and distribute PPE supplies to those in the Fairfax neighborhood who do not have access to, or cannot afford to purchase, items such as masks, hand sanitizer, gloves and thermometers.

United Black Fund of Greater Cleveland: $100,000 to partner with The Khnemu Foundation to unify more than 50 faith-based partners through the FACTS CLE (Faith and Community Together Serving CLE) network, which will purchase, store, assemble and distribute more than 25,000 PPE kits for vulnerable residents in the city of Cleveland and inner ring suburbs.

Children & Youth

Starting Point: $200,000 to create a rapid relief fund that will provide mini-grants to early care and education programs throughout Cuyahoga County to respond to their needs, including PPE, staffing and pandemic-related materials, as these programs reopen and are challenged to navigate COVID-19.

The Diaper Bank of Greater Cleveland: $33,000 to continue to safely address the growing need for diapers, wipes, infant supplies and supportive services for children and families disproportionally impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic.

<span class="content-image-text">Northeast Ohio Adoption Services</span>Northeast Ohio Adoption ServicesNortheast Ohio Adoption Services: $20,000 to support programs reducing the heightened and potentially life-threatening risks of foster care youth/young adults.

Connectivity

East Cleveland Public Library: $50,000 to modify the physical facility and provide PPE to be COVID-19 compliant and to purchase additional hot spots and digital equipment to be used by patrons and older adults in senior facilities near the library.

Small Community Grants

Neighborhood Connections: $200,000 to provide grants ($500-$5,000) to small nonprofit organizations, faith-based congregations, and grassroots and neighborhood civic groups throughout Cuyahoga, Lake and Geauga counties for a broad range of essential human needs such as healthy food and safe shelter. Since receiving its first round of funding on April 10, Neighborhood Connections has awarded 134 grants totaling more than $450,000.

With the community still facing unprecedented challenges, the Fund’s 80-plus funding partners are conducting a #CLEResponds listening campaign to get insight and feedback from the community at large. To better understand COVID-19’s continued impact and to identify Cleveland’s most pressing needs, the community can help by answering two questions:

• What is the most pressing need you and/or your community is currently facing?

• What is the #1 thing Greater Cleveland’s leaders must focus on to help our region recover from COVID-19 and come back stronger?

Residents of Greater Cleveland can respond to the questions using this link.

Donations of any amount are still being accepted and are tax deductible.