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October 15, 2009 Social Innovation Fund Guidelines Expected by End of the YearThe Corporation for National and Community Service plans to issue final guidelines by the end of the year for groups that plan to apply for grants from the new Social Innovation Fund, with the first awards likely to take place in late spring or summer, corporation officials said today. Congress has not yet adopted a budget for the 2010 fiscal year, which began October 1. However, while waiting for the official allocation, the corporation “can and expects to move forward” with the guidelines, or “notice of funding opportunity,” said Marta Urquilla, senior adviser for social innovation. President Obama proposed $50-million for the fund, which will provide grants to help nonprofit groups expand promising programs to tackle pressing national social problems. The Senate Appropriations Committee approved that amount, but the House voted to cut it to $35-million. The full Senate has not yet acted. The corporation, the federal agency that will manage the Social Innovation Fund — which it now calls “the Sif” — held the conference call to explain how the money will be allocated and to answer questions from the field. Ms. Urquilla and Bob Grimm, the director of research and policy development, spent much of the time explaining the goals and procedures outlined by the Edward M. Kennedy Serve America Act, which authorized the money. But they also gave some hints about how the corporation will carry out the law:
Under the Serve America Act, the corporation will award five-year grants of $1-million to $10-million to the intermediary grant makers (which can include partnerships between grant makers or with certain state or local government entities). They will provide grants of at least $100,000 a year for three to five years to the nonprofit groups, following consultations with “a diverse cross section of community representatives.” Those groups must provide data on the “measurable outcomes” their work has had. Note: An earlier version of this story incorrectly said the maximum grant to intermediary grant makers was $5-million. ![]() CommentsCommenting is closed for this article.
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— Sandy Oestreich Oct 25, 10:36 PM #