Recently Awarded Grants

Grants Summary


Special grant opportunities for border county businesses and child care businesses

Visit our Special Grants page for details and to apply for any current time-limited opportunities.


More than one-third of quarterly grants invested in sustaining or expanding child care

From July through September 2023, the Northland Foundation awarded 35 quarterly grants totaling $603,500. More than one-third of all grant funds last quarter – more than $200,000 – were directed toward helping sustain and expand licensed child care in the region.

The Northland Foundation has prioritized early care and education for more than 20 years with training and education, partnership development, funding, advocacy, and rallying around the topic. During the past year alone, Northland has, in collaboration with government partners, invested nearly $800,000 to assist with stabilization and expansion of existing child care and start-up of new child care businesses. Northland has also administered millions of dollars in Minnesota Early Learning Scholarships to help families in the region pay for high-quality care and led programming to support “informal providers” who regularly care for the children of family members, friends, and neighbors.

Need, however, continues to outpace efforts to increase child care access. According to the 2023 Child Care Needs Summary report newly released by First Children’s Finance, the current child care shortfall in northeast Minnesota is 4,223 slots – a loss of 500 slots since June 2022 when the shortfall was reported at just over 3,700.

Tony Sertich, Northland Foundation President, has been closely involved with the child care issue at the local, regional, and state levels.

“The State of Minnesota took strong positive steps this year to help stabilize child care, and we can’t take our foot off the gas now. Northland will keep doing what we can alongside public and private partners,” said Sertich.

“That said, from all our work on child care, it is clear that a quick-and-easy fix does not exist especially in relation to infants and toddlers,” continued Sertich. “There is no silver bullet. It will take broad community engagement, the courage to try new and different approaches, and significant public investment to reach long-term solutions that work for families, early care and education providers, and employers.”

Find details of all July-September quarterly grants here.

LAND ACKNOWLEDGEMENT

From traditional, ancestral & contemporary lands of Ojibwe, Dakota, Northern Cheyenne & other Native people. See a more detailed acknowledgement of this land and its history.

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