KENDRICK FOUNDATION ANNOUNCES 2024-25 COMPETITIVE GRANTEES

Awards Additional $618,545 to Address Critical Health Needs in Morgan County

The Kendrick Foundation is pleased to announce its 2024-25 competitive grantees. After a thorough application process, the foundation selected 12 non-profit organizations to receive funding aimed at addressing critical health issues, including mental health, substance use disorder, and physical activity and nutrition.

“Our funding priorities directly address the urgent mental health and substance use challenges highlighted in recent Surgeon General reports, while also aligning with the top health needs identified in our local community health needs assessment,” said Sara Dungan, J.D., Kendrick Foundation President. “By focusing on these critical areas, we’re responding to both national health priorities and local community needs, ensuring our initiatives make a meaningful and targeted impact on our community’s health.”

The following organizations received funding to support evidence-informed initiatives that address the health needs of Morgan County residents:

“We extend our heartfelt gratitude to all of our grantees for their dedication and commitment to improving health and wellbeing in Morgan County,” Dungan added. “Their efforts are vital in creating healthier, more resilient communities.”

The Surgeon General of the Public Health Service has focused the nation’s attention on important public health issues. Reports of the Surgeon General on the adverse health consequences of smoking triggered nationwide efforts to prevent tobacco use. Reports and other publications on nutrition, violence, and HIV/AIDS—to name but a few—have heightened America’s awareness of important public health issues and generated major public health initiatives. Surgeon General reports from 2001 to present can be found at https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK45031/.

“The Kendrick Foundation’s focus on mental health and substance use disorder aligns closely with recent Surgeon General priorities,” said Keylee Wright, M.A., Kendrick Foundation Executive Director. “Our initiatives, particularly in school-based mental health, echo the recommendations in the 2021 Surgeon General’s Advisory on Protecting Youth Mental Health. By increasing the number of our grantees by 50 percent this year, we’re answering the Surgeon General’s call for expanded community-based mental health support and facilitating more opportunities for connection, community, parental support, and healthy behaviors.”