星期四, 10月 15, 2020

City of Boston Funding update

 

CITY of BOSTON

The Funding Update

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City of Boston, 11/16/2020
Boston Cultural Council grants are available to medium-sized organizations with budgets under $2 million. Grants support arts programming including music, film and video, folk and traditional art, visual art, theater, dance, humanities, literary arts, performance or time-based arts, social and civic practices, and multi-disciplinary arts. Max award: $5,000.


The Mayor's Office of Arts & Culture lists additional funding resources here.


City of Boston, Open
The Boston Resiliency Fund helps coordinate philanthropic efforts to provide essential services to Boston residents whose health and well-being are most immediately impacted by the coronavirus pandemic. Funding priorities: providing food to Boston's children, families, and seniors; providing technology to Boston Public Schools students for remote learning; and providing support to first responders, front-line workers, and healthcare workers so they can effectively do their jobs and promote public health.


City of Boston, 10/16/2020
Now seeking eligibility forms to be reviewed for Community Preservation Act applications. The scope of work must address affordable housing, open space, or the preservation of historic sites.

City of Boston, 10/28/2020
The Parks and Recreation Department requests proposals from an Urban Forest planning consultant to develop an equitable vision for the protection and expansion of the City's tree canopy goals.


Dining for Women, 10/24/2020
This giving circle invites Letters of Intent for projects that support women and girls living in extreme poverty in developing countries. Priorities: Education/Training; Health/Clean Water/Sanitation; Economic Empowerment; Healtjhy Environment; Food security/Regenerative Agriculture/Nutrition; Human Trafficking; Leadership Training/Advocacy. Grants will range from $25,000 to $35,000.

New this week: Beacon Hill Community Fund, 11/1/2020
Funding priorities: Arts and Education, Youth Sports and Recreation, Day Care Centers, Playgrounds, activities for Seniors and persons with Special Needs and Disabilities, Community Gardens and Spaces, Affordable Housing, Social Services, and other activities that serve the public interest. Grants range from $500 to $10,000. 

New this week: Collective Future Fund, 11/24/2020
Survivor Safety and Securing Democratic Futures grants channel resources to organizations led by people who identify as Black, Indigenous, women of color, queer, trans, nonbinary and gender non-conforming. Funding goals: to advance safety and support through direct relief and organizing support to frontline workers and survivors of gender-based and state violence during the multiple crises that have unfolded in 2020. Grants of $50,000 will be awarded for 12-month projects beginning December 2020. 

America Walks, 11/9/2020
Community Change grants support the growing network of advocates, organizations, and agencies using innovative, engaging, and inclusive programs and projects to create healthy, active, and engaged places to live, work, and play. Max project stipend: $1,500. 

New this week: National Endowment for the Humanities, 12/2/2020 to 1/6/2021 Media Projects grants support radio, podcast, television, and long-form documentary film projects that engage general audiences with humanities ideas. Grants range from $75,000 to $1M. 

New this week: Peace Development Fund, Open
The De Colores Rapid Response Fund is available for quick, short-term delivery to hot spots of opportunity for organizing in marginalized communities. Grants range from $500 to $1,000. 


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BOSTON COUNTS 2020
Take 5 minutes and fill out the Census -- today!
You can do it online or over the phone in 13 different languages.
Your response determines how Boston receives funding for housing, transportation, education, child care, food supplies, and healthcare.
Be Counted.
Be Protected.
Be Represented.


Respond NOW - today is the deadline!

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Confirm your City of Boston residency here, as part of the annual city census. This also protects your voting rights.

City of Boston, Open
The Reopen Boston Fund was established to help small businesses minimize risk and manage economic recovery. Eligible costs include Personal Protective Equipment, safety partitions for customers and employees, and managing outdoor space that’s approved for business use. The grants are for brick-and-mortar businesses, with fewer than 15 employees, where people work close to each other or to customers.

Boston Local Development Corporation, Open
The Standard BLDC Loan Fund is available for existing businesses, new
ventures, and businesses relocating to Boston. Loans range from $25,000 to $150,000. The Backstreets Boston Back-up Loan Program provides financing of up to $250,000 for Boston companies in the industrial and manufacturing sectors. Also, BLDC recently received a $693,000 CARES Act Recovery Assistance grant from the Economic Development Administration at the US Department of Commerce to capitalize and administer a Revolving Loan Fund to provide loans to coronavirus-impacted small businesses in Boston. For more information, contact Bill Nickerson or Gisella Soriano. 


New this week: MassDevelopment, 1/15/2021 
The Cultural Facilities Fund provides major improvement grants to nonprofit cultural organizations in Massachusetts. Funding categories: Feasibility, Technical Assistance and Capital. Grants range from $50,000 to $200,000 with a 1:1 required match.


The Mayor’s Office of Economic Development holds
Virtual Office Hours on Wednesdays from 11AM to 1PM.

Learn about becoming a City of Boston-certified Minority/Woman-Owned Business

New this week: Online News Association, 10/28/2020
The Challenge Fund for Innovation in Journalism Education supports experimental projects that encourage collaborative local news coverage and investigations, bridge the academic and professional communities, improve training for students, and generate meaningful lessons for digital news. Max award: $20,000.

New this week: Bezos Scholars Program, 1/11/2021
Seeking passionate and intellectually curious young people who are rising leaders in their schools and communities. Student applicants are required to identify and a trusted adult from their school to become their educator nominee. A formal recommendation is also required.

New this week: National Science Foundation, 1/15/2021 and Continuing
Law & Science grants support research that explores connections between human behavior and law, legal institutions, or legal processes; or the interactions of law and basic sciences, including biology, computer and information sciences, STEM education, engineering, geosciences, and math and physical sciences. Past awards have ranged from $25,000 to $1M.


US Department of Education, 11/4/2020
Center for Excellence grants encourage institutions of higher education to develop model programs to support veteran student success in postsecondary education by coordinating services to address the academic, financial, physical, and social needs of veteran students. Max award $450,000.


American Association of University Women, 11/1/2020 - 12/1/2020
American Fellowships support women scholars who are pursuing full-time study to complete dissertations, conducting postdoctoral research full time, or preparing research for publication for eight consecutive weeks.
Career Development grants provide funding to women who hold a bachelor’s degree and are preparing to advance or change careers or re-enter the workforce in education, health and medical sciences, or social sciences.
Community Action Grants support innovative programs that promote education and equity through projects focused on encouraging girls to select, before entering college, the physical sciences or engineering as a career.

Samsung, 12/13/2020
The Solve for Tomorrow contest is designed to boost interest and proficiency in STEM, and challenges public school teachers and students in grades 6-12 to show how STEM can be applied to help improve their communities. Awards include Samsung technology packages. The competition opens with first-round ideas.

JAMS Foundation/Association for Conflict Resolution, 1/11/2021
The Initiative for Students and Youth provides grants for conflict prevention and dispute resolution programs for K-12 students and for adults working with youth populations in ways that directly transfer conflict resolution education skills from adults to youth. Grants will range from $15,000 to $40,000 in Year One.

New this week: American Humane, 10/31/2020
Meacham Foundation Memorial Grants support nonprofits and public agencies for shelter expansion or improvement that increase or improve the quality of care given to animals. Max award: $4,000. Additional funding opportunities are listed on the website.


New this week: Kids Gardening, 12/18/2020
Youth Garden Grants support school and youth educational garden projects that enhance the quality of life for students and their communities. Grants range from $700 to $1,700.


Health Resources & Services Administration, 1/21/2021
Funding goal: to increase the supply of behavioral health professionals while also improving distribution of a quality behavioral health workforce and thereby increasing access to behavioral health services. A special focus is placed on the knowledge and understanding of children, adolescents, and transitional-aged youth at risk for behavioral health disorders. Max award: $480,000.

School-Based Healthcare Solutions Network, Open
Grants support under-resourced public and charter schools to implement and expand access to quality behavioral health and general pediatric services on school campuses. Community Grants (up to $100,000) require a 40% match. Principal Grants provide up to $5,000 per academic year to principals of K-12 schools in selected states, as well as a mental health professional to support student behavioral health services on campus. 

GrantStation offers a searchable database of COVID-19 funding.


New this week: Bank of America and Philanthropy Massachusetts, 11/18/2020
The Nonprofit Learning Institute is a series of technical assistance and capacity building sessions with the goal of fostering and empowering leaders in the Massachusetts nonprofit sector. Funding focus: supporting nonprofit leaders who are Black, Indigenous and People of Color. The applicant’s annual operating budget should be between $500,000 and $2M

New this week: Red Sox Foundation, Open
Funding focus: children, families, veterans, and communities in need. Funding priorities: health, educational, and recreational opportunities. Grants range from $1,000 to $5,000.


Lawrence Foundation, 10/31/2020
Funding priorities: environment, human services, Covid-19 and other causes. Awards range from $5,000-$10,000.

Max and Victoria Dreyfus Foundation, 11/10/2020
Grants support museums, cultural, and performing arts programs; schools, hospitals, educational and skills training programs, programs for youth, seniors, and persons with disabilities; environmental and wildlife protection activities; and other community-based organizations and their programs. Awards range from $1,000 to $20,000​

Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, 11/24/2020
The Foundation has issued a new call for proposals: Policies for Action: Public Policy Research to Advance Racial Equity and Racial Justice that will translate findings into actionable evidence about how, and how well, policies work to improve racial equity and racial justice. A total of $2M is available.

National Science Foundation, 1/29/2021
The Secure and Trustworthy Cyberspace program welcomes proposals that address cybersecurity and privacy, and draw on expertise in one or more of these areas: computing, communication and information sciences; engineering; education; mathematics; statistics; and social, behavioral, and economic sciences. Awards will range from $50,000 to $3M.

THE RESOURCE TABLE

CLICK HERE TO SUBSCRIBE TO THE FUNDING UPDATE


WEBINAR: How Nonprofits Can Use Crowdfunding to Raise More Money
11/10/2020 at 1pm Eastern

Courtesy of GoFundMe Charity


ONLINE LEARNING: Time Management for Grantwriters
Courtesy of GrantStation


Connecting Communities to Opportunity

Courtesy of Winn Companies
Use CONNECT to search for free and reduced cost services like food, healthcare, job opportunities, benefits enrollment, rent assistance and more.


Family Resources

Emergency Childcare
Good Neighbors
Coping Skills for Youth


Microsoft Digital Skills Center for Nonprofits - a collaboration with TechSoup Courses



Mel King Institute

Expand your knowledge on community development topics through virtual training courses.


XPRIZE Challenge Ideation Workshop
“CRAZY IDEAS WANTED”

In this session, the XPRIZE team will share the signature elements of competition design thinking. Pandemic Alliance Partners will break out into small groups to discuss COVID-19 solution gaps in key areas. The goal is to identify problems that could be solved through collaboration between Pandemic Alliance partners or through XPRIZE competitions.
Click here to contribute ideas that the world needs to focus on now.



Best Times to Post on Social Media
Courtesy of Nonprofit Tech for Good



5 Powerful Strategies for Your 2021 Annual Fundraising Plan
Courtesy of Mobile Cause and Constant Contact
10/27/2020 at 1PM Eastern


Visit the Intergovernmental Relations Resource Page for a wide variety of  fundraising tips, along with back issues of The Funding Update.

CITY OF BOSTON ANNOUNCES ELECTION DROPBOXES ARE NOW AVAILABLE

 

CITY OF BOSTON ANNOUNCES ELECTION DROPBOXES ARE NOW AVAILABLE 

Voters registered in Boston can use dropboxes around the city to return vote-by-mail applications by October 28 and completed ballots by November 3


BOSTON - Thursday, October 15, 2020 - The Boston Election Department today announced dropboxes are now available around the city for Boston residents to vote by mail in the November 3 State Election. Registered voters can submit their vote-by-mail applications by October 28 and completed ballots by November 3 in one of the 17 dropboxes, available 24 hours a day starting today through 8 p.m. on Election Day. Voters may also return their completed ballots at any early voting location during the scheduled voting hours. If residents choose to return their ballots by mail, they must be postmarked by November 3 and received by the Election Department by November 6 to be counted. As a reminder, the last day to register to vote in the November 3 State Election is October 24.  

The November 3 State Election includes the following races: Senator in Congress, Representative in Congress, Governor's Councillors, Senator in General Court, Representative in General Court, Register of Probate, and Office of the President of the United States. In addition to the races, there are two ballot questions: Law Proposed by Initiative Petition Motor Vehicle Mechanical Data & Law Proposed by Initiative Petition Ranked-Choice Voting, and two public policy questions in State Representative Districts 11, 15, 17 and 18. 

Massachusetts voters can apply for a vote-by-mail ballot online or by completing this form and returning it to the City of Boston's Election Department, via mail, email, fax or by dropping it off in person by appointment at Boston City Hall room 241. Appointments can be made by calling 617-635-8386. Voters can then track their ballot request through trackmyballotMA.com. As of October 13, the Boston Election Department has mailed 112,000 ballots to voters who requested one and will continue to mail ballots for all applications as they arrive, until the application deadline of October 28.

Dropboxes are available 24 hours, seven days a week at the following locations: 
  • Boston City Hall, 1 City Hall Square, Boston (City Hall Plaza entrance, third floor)
  • Boston City Hall, 1 City Hall Square, Boston (Congress Street entrance, first floor)
  • East Boston Branch of the Boston Public Library, 365 Bremen St, East Boston
  • Charlestown Branch of the Boston Public Library, 179 Main St, Charlestown
  • South Boston Branch of the Boston Public Library, 646 East Broadway, South Boston
  • Central Library of the Boston Public Library, 700 Boylston Street, Boston
  • Honan-Allston Branch of the Boston Public Library, 300 North Harvard St, Allston
  • Brighton Branch of the Boston Public Library, 40 Academy Hill Rd, Brighton
  • Roxbury Branch of the Boston Public Library, 149 Dudley Street, Roxbury
  • Fields Corner Branch of the Boston Public Library, 1520 Dorchester Ave, Dorchester
  • Jamaica Plain Branch of the Boston Public Library, 30 South Street, Jamaica Plain
  • Mattapan Branch of the Boston Public Library, 1350 Blue Hill Ave, Mattapan
  • West Roxbury Branch of the Boston Public Library, 1961 Centre St, West Roxbury
  • Hyde Park Branch of the Boston Public Library, 35 Harvard Ave, Hyde Park
  • Parker Hill Branch of the Boston Public Library, 1497 Tremont St, Roxbury
  • BCYF Menino, 125 Brookway Rd, Roslindale 
  • Grove Hall Branch of the Boston Public Library, 41 Geneva Ave, Dorchester
Additionally, dropboxes will be available at each early voting location during the scheduled voting hours. Voters registered in Boston can vote in-person during the early voting period from Saturday, October 17 through Friday, October 30, 2020at any of the early voting sites. No excuse is required to vote early. Hours and locations for early voting can be found here.
 
Due to COVID-19, health and safety protocols during the early voting period and on Election Day will be implemented at polling locations. All poll workers will receive face shields, face masks, gloves, disinfectant wipes, disinfectant spray and hand sanitizer. Cleaning will take place at each site every two to three hours. Voters waiting in line will be instructed to stand six feet away from others and wear a face covering. 
 
Election Day
 
Voters are reminded there are 20 precinct polling location changes this cycle that can be found here. Polling locations will be open from 7:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m. on Election Day on Tuesday, November 3, 2020. Individuals can find their polling location for Election Day here.
 
For more information on how to participate in this year's elections, please visit boston.gov/election

10/17-30提前投票 昆市居民可至昆士市府及北昆士高中

Early voting in person (Quincy) - 10/17 to 10/30

昆士市親自提前投票日期、時間及地點:


 

Baker-Polito Administration Announces $6.5 Million in New Manufacturing Emergency Response Team Grants

 Baker-Polito Administration Announces $6.5 Million in New Manufacturing Emergency Response Team Grants

Thirteen Projects Will Produce Masks, Hand Sanitizer, Gowns; Boost Testing

 

BOSTON – The Baker-Polito Administration has awarded over $6.5 Million to 13 Massachusetts organizations to develop new products to assist in the response to the COVID-19 public health emergency. The new grants from the Massachusetts Manufacturing Emergency Response Team (MERT) will expand the Commonwealth’s work to drive in-state manufacturing of critical products, an effort which has produced more than 11 million pieces of personal protective equipment and other critical pieces as of September.

 

The new grants, announced during national Manufacturing Month, bring the total MERT awards to $16.2 million, and have spurred the production of critical items including N95 masks, protective gowns, hand sanitizer, and ventilators. Since its inception, the MERT has mobilized, organized, and operationalized the critical work streams that allowed Massachusetts manufacturers to pivot their operations to produce needed materials in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. The new awards support infrastructure and workforce training efforts at each company, driving increased production from these ‘Made in Massachusetts’ manufacturers.

 

“The MERT program continues to identify and support successful ‘Made in Massachusetts’ manufacturers that produce Personal Protective Equipment for our front-line responders, business owners, and residents,” said Governor Charlie Baker. “This program and the sheer output from these manufacturers has been central to the Commonwealth’s fight against COVID-19.”

 

“Our administration is pleased to support these capital and workforce training requests to ensure Massachusetts’ manufacturing sector will continue to produce in the face of these tough economic times,” said Lt. Governor Karyn Polito. “As we emerge from this public health crisis, our hope is that these new product lines spur job creation and drive growth for these companies, while also establishing new supply chains for our in-state purchasers of PPE.”

 

“As the chair of the Advanced Manufacturing Collaborative, I couldn’t be prouder to support these grantees, and to remind people across the nation and world that we make things here in Massachusetts,” said Secretary of Housing and Economic Development Mike Kennealy. “Not only has this new home-grown production of PPE benefited those battling this virus on the frontlines, but it has also contributed to our ability to safely reopen the Commonwealth’s economy.”

 

"The Commonwealth has the most educated and best-trained workforce in the U.S.," said Secretary of Labor and Workforce Development Rosalin Acosta. "These grants will allow Massachusetts to tap into that unparalleled advanced manufacturing talent pool and help to provide the equipment that workers in industries across the Commonwealth are depending on." 

 

Launched in April 2020, the MERT grant program made its first set of awards in May 2020, when it provided $9.5 million to 15 Massachusetts organizations that are now producing masks, gowns, ventilators, swabs, and testing materials, as well as boosting the capacity to test these critical items. The MERT grants support the purchase of equipment, working capital, materials, and workforce development efforts with funding provided by a partnership that includes the Executive Office of Housing and Economic Development, Massachusetts Technology Collaborative (MassTech), Massachusetts Life Sciences Center, Commonwealth Corporation, and the Massachusetts Manufacturing Innovation Initiative (M2I2).

“The companies supported by the MERT have produced millions of pieces of PPE and set themselves apart nationally for the speed and efficiency with which they put these critical items into the hands of front line workers,” said Carolyn Kirk, Executive Director of MassTech. “We’ve seen similar trends with our first set of grantees, who’ve taken the state funding and made huge gains in a short amount of time. It’s been an honor to lead the MERT and to work with our partners to help these companies.”

 

“The Life Sciences Center is proud to be part of this continued effort to provide the necessary support to manufacturers located throughout the Commonwealth,” said Damon Cox, Interim President and CEO of the Massachusetts Life Sciences Center. “The MERT represents the Commonwealth’s collaborative DNA in action as academic, industry, and government stakeholders remain steadfast in their commitment to work together to leverage resources and expertise to respond to the COVID-19 pandemic.”

 

“Our grant programs are designed to provide workers with the skills they need for lifelong careers and today we are also providing a lifeline to our dedicated frontline workers,” said Commonwealth Corporation CEO and President Christine Abrams. “This grant program has been critical to the Commonwealth’s recovery from the impact of the coronavirus, while supporting the pivot of manufacturers impacted by the pandemic, bolstering the stabilization of the Massachusetts economy.”

 

“AFFOA is proud to be working with the MERT and facilitating the strategic investments being made into manufacturing across the Commonwealth,” said Sasha Stolyarov, Ph.D., Chief Executive Officer of Advanced Functional Fabrics of America (AFFOA). “Our domestic manufacturing ecosystem is more robust and resilient today thanks to the forward-thinking vision of the MERT and the innovative spirit of our manufacturers.”

 

Of the $16.1 million awarded through the MERT grant program:

 

  • $7.2 million to support the development of protective masks (45 percent of the total);

 

  • $3.2 million for COVID-19 testing (20 percent);

 

  • $3.2 million for gowns (20 percent);

 

  • $1.4 million for ventilators;

 

  • $630,000 for testing of PPE;

 

  • $341,000 for hand sanitizer; and

 

  • $257,000 for support of materials/supply chain.

 

The MERT is a coordinated effort comprised of members from academia, industry, and government to address the urgent need for PPE to support health care workers on the front lines of Massachusetts’ COVID-19 response. More than 900 companies from around the world submitted their interest to the MERT, including over 550 from Massachusetts.  Of those, over 50 companies have made it through the program, producing hundreds of thousands of pieces of PPE and other critical items each week, totaling more than 11 million since the start of the pandemic. Managed by MassTech, the quasi-public economic development agency that oversees advanced manufacturing programs for the Commonwealth, the MERT was devised as an emergency response to the COVID-19 pandemic and will continue to assist manufacturers in targeted ways as the demand for PPE continues.

 

The 13 grants announced today went to the following Massachusetts organizations:

 

Grantee

Location

Amount

Description

 Masks

The Fallon Company LLC, in partnership w/ Shawmut Manufacturing

Norwood

$2,772,688, with $44,000 for workforce training

Will use the funds to buy equipment for a locally-owned, vertically-integrated N95 mask plant in Massachusetts.

New Balance Athletics

Boston

$80,000 for workforce training

New Balance has pivoted from manufacturing athletic footwear to the production of masks, including at their factory in Lawrence. Their grant will fund workforce training to produce surgical masks.

Gowns

CareAline Products

 

Danvers; Fall River

$101,250, with $80,000 for workforce training

Headquartered in Danvers and with manufacturing in Fall River, CareAline is experienced in innovating and manufacturing medical safety garments that are purchased by hospitals for vascular access safety. Their contracted manufacturing facility will produce reusable Level 1 isolation gowns.

Precision Sportswear

 

Fall River

$32,755

Precision’s employees produce medical items for manufacturers including CareAline Products, AliMed, DM Medical Sommerfly, US Bedding, and American Players.

99 Degrees Custom

 

Lawrence

$80,000 for workforce training

A leading U.S. manufacturer of performance activewear apparel, 99 Degrees is pivoting to make PPE. The recipient of a previous MERT capital grant, the new funding will support workforce training.

Ventilators

Transcom Scopes Inc dba Instrument Technology Inc.

 

Westfield

$41,282.66

Transcom has over 50 years of experience making complex machined parts and has spent the last 20 years making small pieces for medical device OEM clients. The funding will help the company purchase additional tooling and fixtures to produce ventilator manifolds.

Testing of Products

Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept

of Chemical Engineering

 

Cambridge

$142,224

The Rutledge Lab at MIT has been providing filtration efficiency testing services through the MERT since the beginning of the pandemic. A selected subset of their results has been posted online by the Mass. Department of Public Health since mid-April, and have been endorsed by the National Personal Protective Technology Laboratory (NPPTL), the testing lab of NIOSH. 

Materials & Supply Chain

Avila Textiles, Inc.

 

Dighton

$85,775.25, with $14,000 for workforce training

Since 1995, Avila has produced quality narrow woven fabrics. Their equipment and trained personnel enable Avila to produce over 3,000 different webbing constructions, meeting specifications of the U.S. government and foreign customers.

Industrial Polymers and Chemicals, Inc.

Shrewsbury

$150,000, with $8,000 for workforce training

IPAC has been in business for over 60 years, supplying fiberglass reinforcement to the abrasives industry, body armor components for first responders, DIY repair kits, and now PPE to combat the COVID-19 pandemic. The funding is for a CNC cutting machine to produce isolation gowns, adding a second CNC machine to the facility.

COVID-19 Testing

International Light Technologies

 

Peabody

$16,138

ILT is producing a real time test intended for the presumptive qualitative detection of nucleic acid from the 2019-nCoC in upper and lower respiratory symptoms. Funding will help ILT support the construction of an additional manufacturing work station.

Web Industries, Inc. 

Marlborough

$2,563,102.55 with $80,000 workforce training

Web Industries currently manufactures medical devices and provides expertise in Lateral Flow Immunoassay as well as Rapid Diagnostic Test manufacturing. The funds will support the equipment, facility, and human resource requirements required to produce COVID-19 tests. 

Hand Sanitizer

Gloucester Bio (Tekkware Inc.)

Gloucester

$209,840, with $16,000 for workforce training

An FDA registered facility, Gloucester Bio manufactures and supplies yeast to ethanol distilleries. With their familiarity in handling and manufacturing ethanol, they are pivoting to the production of hand sanitizer. 

Heritage Hemp, LLC

Northampton

$63,352.17

Heritage Hemp manufactures consumer products that utilize ethanol, which has made an easy transition to hand sanitizer. The award will support the integration of advanced robotics to expand manufacturing capacity.

High Purity Natural Products LLC

Southbridge

$52,500.00

High Purity Natural Products is FDA registered to manufacture and fill hand sanitizer in a variety of container sizes in bulk. This grant will support filling equipment.