Title 42 › Chapter 129— NATIONAL AND COMMUNITY SERVICE › Subchapter I— NATIONAL AND COMMUNITY SERVICE STATE GRANT PROGRAM › Part III— Social Innovation Funds Pilot Program › § 12653k
Creates a competitive grant program called Social Innovation Funds to give money to grantmaking groups so they can help nonprofit community groups copy, grow, or test programs that work in low-income places. Eligible applicants are existing grantmaking institutions or partnerships that include one. Grants last 5 years and can be renewed for another 5 years. Awards must be between $1,000,000 and $10,000,000 per year. The program focuses on improving measurable results in eight areas, including education, child and youth development, reducing poverty or increasing economic opportunity, health, local environment and resource conservation, energy efficiency, civic engagement, and lowering crime. Applicants must use evidence to pick and expand proven programs or to test new ideas, protect against conflicts of interest, describe how they will pick community groups to get subgrants, and explain how they will track and evaluate results. Grant recipients may make competitive subgrants to community organizations in the chosen places or issue areas. Subgrants run 3 to 5 years, can be renewed, and must be at least $100,000 per year. Both grantees and subgrantees must provide matching cash funds of at least $1 for every $1 of federal money. If a State or local government is part of the applicant, that government must supply between 30% and 50% of the match. The program can cut the match by half for applicants serving areas that are very underserved by philanthropy. Up to 10% of the program money can be used to give grants directly to community organizations under the same rules. Up to 5% of the funding may be held back for research, evaluation, technical help, and a public clearinghouse of best practices, and the program must collect data, report results, and post a list of fund recipients. Defined terms: community organization — a nonprofit running community programs; covered entity — an eligible grantmaking institution or an eligible partnership; issue area — one of the eight topics listed above.
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The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
42 U.S.C. § 12653k
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60