Awards funding to Tug Hill Tomorrow Land Trust OSWEGO, N.Y. — The Richard S. Shineman Foundation announced that 12 not-for-profit organizations earned grant awards totaling $248,000 at its November board meeting. It was the last of three 2021 grant rounds in this “unprecedented year of the continued coronavirus pandemic,” the foundation said in a Nov. […]
Get Instant Access to This Article
Become a Central New York Business Journal subscriber and get immediate access to all of our subscriber-only content and much more.
- Critical Central New York business news and analysis updated daily.
- Immediate access to all subscriber-only content on our website.
- Get a year's worth of the Print Edition of The Central New York Business Journal.
- Special Feature Publications such as the Book of Lists and Revitalize Greater Binghamton, Mohawk Valley, and Syracuse Magazines
Click here to purchase a paywall bypass link for this article.
Awards funding to Tug Hill Tomorrow Land Trust
OSWEGO, N.Y. — The Richard S. Shineman Foundation announced that 12 not-for-profit organizations earned grant awards totaling $248,000 at its November board meeting.
It was the last of three 2021 grant rounds in this “unprecedented year of the continued coronavirus pandemic,” the foundation said in a Nov. 22 news release. The funded projects represent a diverse cross-section of community organizations in health and human services, education, civic benefit, and conservation.
The Shineman Foundation’s largest grant award, $52,500, went to Victory Transformation, to fund the completion of preliminary renovations for its Men’s Shelter/Center at 24 E. Oneida St. in Oswego. Another commitment of $50,000 was made to the Desens House at 264 W. Second St. in Oswego to create a resource center that will serve as a comprehensive community link between women in recovery and the resources the community provides, the foundation stated.
Other health and human services awards went to ARISE Child and Family Services to purchase a storage container for the ramps in its ramp program; David’s Refuge for provision of respite/caregiver support to Oswego County parents and guardians of children with special needs; and Fulton’s Blessings in a Backpack for its weekend backpack program for 250 K-6 children in the Fulton City School District.
The Shineman Foundation awarded five education grants to organizations expanding their outreach within Oswego County. It provided to funding to the Museum of Science and Technology for its digital theatre/planetarium upgrade and its “Oswego County Discovery Sessions” science program, which will bring a virtual or in-person 45-minute classroom-based science demonstration to all 78 sixth-grade classes in 16 school buildings in Oswego County; the Oswego Bookmobile to provide the remaining funds needed to purchase a new bookmobile for use in the summer of 2022; and to Fulton City Schools for the expansion of a community-involved endeavor allowing for families to participate in sap collection and the creation of a finished maple-syrup product. Foundation grants also went to the Boy Scout Longhouse Council to enable it to update its outdated technology and serve more youths across the county; and the St. Lawrence Valley Educational TV Council for the creation of seven Oswego County segments on WPBS Weekly shows.
The Shineman Foundation says its mission is to be a catalyst for change and to enhance the quality of life in Oswego County. The foundation says it engages in charitable activities to stimulate economic vitality, encourage strong social bonds that strengthen the community, and to build the capacity of its not-for-profit partners.