Find your favorite nonprofit or choose one that inspires you from our database of over 2 million charitable organizations.
Displaying 505–516 of 37,463
Our mission is to make a significant contribution to the community by reducing the number of homeless men, women and children in Washington State. Vision House works to dramatically change the lives of homeless families by providing services that teach self-sufficiency, ultimately empowering our residents to avoid homelessness, poverty and abuse in the future.
First Choice Pregnancy Counseling Center is a ministry offering abstinence information, life-affirming alternatives to abortion and compassionate counseling, care, and support to those who face unplanned pregnancy.
Provide emergency food and clothing support to people who are in need.
Clackamas Service Center is an inclusive, trauma-informed "one-stop-shop" where community members experiencing hunger and poverty can meet their basic food, health, and hygiene needs, and connect with supportive services to help them take their next steps toward stability and self-sufficiency.
To provide temporary emergency assistance to people in the Portland area who are unable to meet their basic needs, including food, clothing, and referral services. Clients include unemployed, under employed, families/individuals with physical or mental problems.
Silverton Area Community Aid (SACA) is a non-profit social service organization whose mission is to improve lives by providing food, services and access to community resources. We provide emergency food, financial assistance and other services to people in need within the Silver Falls School District. Through our food pantry in 2020, we served an average of 209 households each month (about 640 people), providing them with a 3-5-day supply of food at each visit. We also provided over $107,000 in emergency financial aid to help residents of our community stay in their homes, pay utility bills, pay for prescriptions, receive dental care, and get to job interviews and other important appointments by providing bus passes and fuel vouchers. In 2021, the need is even greater.
The National Indian Child Welfare Association (NICWA) is dedicated to the well-being of American Indian and Alaska Native children and families. Our vision is that every Native child will have access to community-based, culturally appropriate services that help them grow up safe, healthy, and spiritually strong
CASA of Clackamas County's mission is to train and support community volunteers to provide a voice in court and advocate for the best interests of abused and neglected children (ages 0-18) in the foster care system who need safe and permanent homes. Our staff recruits, trains, and supports CASA volunteers who coordinate with workers in both the child welfare and judicial systems to make sure children’s needs are met while they are in care and that they get to permanency as quickly as possible.CASAs investigate children's situations, contacting parents, school personnel, relatives, foster parents, child welfare agency workers, and service providers. CASAs then make recommendations to the Court regarding best next steps for children's living arrangements and any supportive services.
We prevent child abuse by keeping children safe and families together. We empower families to break the generational cycle of abuse through parenting education, therapeutic classrooms, and home visits. We serve children from birth to five years of age with early childhood development programs that will prepare them for the rest of their lives.It is our mission to "keep children safe and families together."
Peninsula Family Service strengthens the community by providing children, families, and older adults the support and tools to realize their full potential and lead healthy, stable lives.We envision a community where opportunity, financial stability and wellness are secured for all.Each year, we assist 10,000 of our region's most vulnerable children, families, and older adults. We employ about 150 people working throughout a four-county radius; San Mateo, Santa Clara, Santa Cruz, and San Benito counties. We bring early learning to the zip codes that need it most, help families build a bridge over the safety net, and ensure that older adults live well.Our three primary programs are Early Learning, Employment, Financial Empowerment, and Older Adult Services.
The Sonoma County Family YMCA nurtures the healthy development of children and teens, strengthens families, invests in individual well-being and uplifts our entire community making it a healthier, safer, better place to live. With our expertise in health, fitness, education and aquatics we are proud to be the largest local provider of: before & after-school care, swim lessons, water safety classes and mobility programs for our aging population. The Y serves people of all faiths, races, abilities, ages and incomes. No one is turned away for inability to pay, ever. 100% of donations go directly to serving the people our programs support. Though each is independent, YMCAs collectively make up the largest nonprofit community service organization in America.
Community Services Agency provides a safety net for elderly, low-income, and homeless residents of Mountain View, Los Altos, and Los Altos Hills in California. We offer nutrition services, shopping assistance, and case management for seniors; food and emergency financial aid for low-income people; and comprehensive case management for homeless individuals and families. Our services are local, direct, and personal, and our staff and volunteers constantly seek to improve our clients' stability, self-reliance, and dignity. CSA's strong community partnerships offer local residents many different ways to give of their time, money, good, and services to benefit their disadvantaged neighbors.CSA was named 2018 Nonprofit of the Year for CA Assembly District 24.