Community Foundation awards more than $1 million for hurricane recovery

Many grants to be used in support of mental health services

Image courtesy of the Community Foundation of Sarasota County

The Community Foundation of Sarasota County recently awarded $1,050,046 through its Suncoast Disaster Recovery Fund to 17 nonprofits “that support individuals who have faced hardship in the wake of Hurricanes Ian, Debby, Helene, and Milton,” the Foundation has announced.

The Suncoast Disaster Recovery Fund “was created in partnership with The Patterson Foundation in 2022 as Hurricane Ian made landfall,” the release continues. Since then, the fund has raised nearly $10 million for recovery efforts — with $2.2 million in gifts from The Patterson Foundation and a $500,000 matching gift from the Brian and Sheila Jellison Family Foundation, among other major gifts, the release notes.

“Last year’s hurricane season left our community reeling — destroying homes, shuttering workplaces, and leaving a lasting impact on people’s mental health,” said Kirsten Russell, the Community Foundation’s vice president of community impact. “This new series of grants will provide a boost to nonprofits that are on the front lines helping people in our region recover as the community gears up for another potentially devastating hurricane season,” Russell added in the release.

“Many of the grants will go toward providing mental health support services for hurricane survivors, while other money will be used for home repairs and other rebuilding assistance,” the release explains.

“In addition to the damage that Hurricanes Ian, Debby, Helene, and Milton wreaked on our community’s physical landscape,” the release points out, the storms “took a major toll on residents’ mental health.”

Yet other grants “will provide residents with disaster case management services through United Way of Charlotte County, United Policyholders, and Catholic Charities Diocese of Venice,” the release adds. Still others will be used “to help people repair their homes with the help of Habitat for Humanity, United Way of South Sarasota County, EPIC Community Center, Awaken Outreach Center, and Truly Valued,” the release continues.

Further, The Boys & Girls Clubs of Charlotte County, the New College Child Center, and Mote Marine Laboratory & Aquarium each received grants, as well, to either repair damaged infrastructure or maintain temporary spaces while repairs are underway.

The full list of grants is as follows: