U.S. Bank Foundation Distributes $15 Million in Opportunity Fund Grants
The U.S. Bank Foundation distributed $15 million in grants from the Opportunity Fund to support low- to moderate-income communities, focusing on wealth-building opportunities for rural, Native American, and communities of color. Lead for America received funding to bridge the digital divide in rural areas through the American Connection Corps program. The grants also support small businesses, affordable housing, homeownership, and economic development initiatives.
The U.S. Bank Foundation distributed $15 million in grants to support low- to moderate-income communities.
Lead for America received funding to bridge the digital divide in rural areas through the American Connection Corps program.
The grants support small businesses, affordable housing, homeownership, and economic development initiatives.
- None.
Fund supports nonprofits like Lead for America, which aims to boost digital connectivity in rural and disconnected areas
NORTHAMPTON, MA / ACCESSWIRE / May 9, 2024 / U.S. Bank
Opportunity Fund grant recipient Lead for America works to help rural communities bridge the digital divide through its American Connection Corps (pictured here at its orientation in Wichita, Kansas).
Originally published on U.S. Bank company blog
The U.S. Bank Foundation recently distributed
In the first round of funding, the grants include more than
"By working with nonprofits that have deep roots in local communities, the U.S. Bank Foundation Opportunity Fund supports stable housing options, helps new businesses flourish and communities thrive," said Reba Dominski, chief social responsibility officer at U.S. Bank and president of the U.S. Bank Foundation.
Lead for America (LFA), with a goal to help increase civic leadership capacity and access to digital technology in rural and digitally disconnected communities, is an example of the kind of support the Opportunity Fund strives to provide, recognizing that connected and skilled communities can better leverage opportunities for growth and innovation. The grant will support LFA's flagship program, the American Connection Corps (ACC), which recruits and trains civic-minded individuals to spend a year in their hometown communities addressing connectivity-related challenges.
Corps members are embedded within local nonprofits or government agencies in more than 70 communities across 27 states and work hand in hand with each community to help provide the capacity and resources to meet local needs.
"The digital divide is multidimensional and nuanced. It's about more than just gaining access to broadband -it's also about how you're able to translate connectivity into real prosperity for your community," said ACC Executive Director Taylor Stuckert. "This requires new leadership in a number of sectors - economic development, health, education, agriculture, natural resources, and more - to be both civically capable and digitally fluent, and ACC brings that possibility to life."
"By working with nonprofits that have deep roots in local communities, the U.S. Bank Foundation Opportunity Fund supports stable housing options, helps new businesses flourish and communities thrive."
- Reba Dominski, chief social responsibility officer at U.S. Bank and president of the U.S. Bank Foundation
ACC members' work has ranged from supporting grants to secure funds to build the community's broadband infrastructure, to getting households enrolled in the Affordable Connectivity Program, to offering digital literacy programs, to helping local businesses become more digitally inclusive. In the past year, ACC members have helped communities advance agricultural tourism and improve agricultural practices through technology, implemented a digital storytelling program that connects rural residents with their neighbors, and coordinated outreach activities that promote data-driven tree conservation, among other activities.
The Opportunity Fund grant allows ACC to maintain and support their corps members, who often are recent college graduates, retirees and students taking a gap year between high school and college. ACC heavily invests in living allowances, benefits and training - beyond the resources it receives from AmeriCorps, with which ACC is affiliated - to successfully recruit and retain a cohort that's committed to serving the communities that members call home.
"There are a number of barriers to growing national service, and the help of partners like the U.S. Bank Foundation is absolutely critical to helping us break those barriers down," said Eric Kotin, LFA's director of strategic initiatives. "Our ability to build a pipeline of homegrown, locally rooted leadership that is representative of the communities we serve is directly correlated to the support of partners like the foundation."
The U.S. Bank Foundation Opportunity Fund is a five-year,
*The Opportunity Fund represents a financial commitment of the U.S. Bank Foundation; it is not a traditional equity fund, nor does it represent a form of ownership.
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View the original press release on accesswire.com