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Grant Funding Resources

Accessible Grants for Vermont Communities

Explore a curated collection of grants available to Vermont communities. Each listing helps local officials and organizations find the right funding to support planning, development, and resilience initiatives.

Obtaining Grants for Sustainable and Strategic Community Development Across Vermont

Obtaining grants is one important way to fund planning and implementation projects. Each grant, generally, has goals and minimum requirements and may take the form of technical assistance from a specialist or provide direct funding for a community to use on a specific project. They may be financed by private foundations or government entities. Some require matching funds while others do not.

Understanding the eligibility criteria, timelines, and intended outcomes of each program helps communities target the most suitable opportunities. By exploring available options, local leaders can better align funding sources with their community’s long-term vision and priorities.

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Clyde River, East Charleston, VT

  • Community Support Grants

    The Municipal Planning Grant Program

    A state-funded program designed to support Vermont towns in their municipal planning efforts. The program funds technical assistance for town planning, implementation of plans and ordinances, encouragement of citizen participation and education, and innovative planning projects.

     

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  • Community Support Grants

    VT Community Development Program Grants

    Grants to municipalities that provide financial and technical assistance to identify and address local needs and priorities in the areas of housing, economic development, public facilities, and public services for persons of lower income, funded through the Federal Community Development Block Grants program.

     

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  • Community Support Grants

    USDA Rural Development's Community Programs

    Provides Community Program loans, grants, and loan guarantees for projects to develop essential community facilities for public use in rural areas. This may include hospitals, fire protection, public safety, libraries, schools, day care centers as well as many other community-based initiatives.

     

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  • Community Support Grants

    Partnership for Sustainable Communities

    Funding and technical assistance for municipalities is sometimes available through the partnership of three Federal Agencies: EPA (environment), HUD (housing and urban development) and DOT (transportation).

     

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  • Community Support Grants

    Brownfields Reuse Initiative

    Several programs designed to provide brownfield developers with tools to help deliver projects in a safe, timely and cost effective manner through: limitation of environmental liability; technical assistance; and financial assistance.

     

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  • Community Support Grants

    Trees for Local Communities Cost-Share Grant Program

    The Vermont Urban and Community Forestry Program’s TLC Grants provide funds to communities for the purpose of developing and implementing local urban and community forestry programs.

     

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  • Water-Related Grants

    ​Vermont Water Quality Grants (DEC)

    Funds are available for water-related projects that protect or restore fish and wildlife habitats; protect or restore river corridors and shorelines; control aquatic nuisance species; enhance recreational use and enjoyment; identify and protect historic and cultural resources; educate people about watershed resources; or monitor fish and wildlife populations and/or water quality.

     

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  • Water-Related Grants

    Lake Champlain Basin Program Grants

    Annual grants for local watershed projects related to the implementation of the Opportunities for Action management plan for the Lake Champlain Basin. Who is Eligible: non-profit organizations, local municipalities, private or public schools. Projects must be in the Lake Champlain watershed.

     

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  • Water-Related Grants

    Connecticut River Joint Commissions Partnership Program Grants

    In support of innovative, community-generated projects that address economic and conservation challenges in ways that are compatible with the Connecticut River valley’s historic, scenic, and natural resources.

     

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  • Historic Preservation Grants

    Barn Grants

    The Vermont Division for Historic Preservation has had a 50/50 matching grants program to assist owners of historic agricultural buildings (barns, corn cribs, sheds, grist mills, etc.) since 1991. These can be in private ownership.

     

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  • Historic Preservation Grants

    Historic Preservation Grants

    Historic buildings are important to Vermont communities and organizations. Since 1987 the Vermont Division for Historic Preservation has had a 50/50 matching grants program to assist municipalities and non-profit organizations in restoring important historic buildings across the state.

     

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  • Historic Preservation Grants

    Certified Local Government (CLG) Grants

    CLG matching grants can be used to fund a wide variety of local preservation projects.

     

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  • Recreation & Conservation Grants

    ​Land & Water Conservation Fund

    Matching funds to create parks and open spaces, protect wilderness and forests, and provide outdoor recreation opportunities – Federal funds administered by the Vermont Department of Forests, Parks and Recreation.

     

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  • Recreation & Conservation Grants

    Vermont Recreation Trails Grants

    The Recreation Trails Program provides communities and non-profit organizations with the opportunity to create and maintain trails and greenways in Vermont. Trails and greenways contribute to the vision of an interconnected network that provides access to outdoor recreational opportunities within 15 minutes of every person’s home.

     

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  • Recreation & Conservation Grants

    Vermont Youth Conservation Corps

    The Vermont Youth Conservation Corps (VYCC) is a non-profit service, conservation, and education organization that accomplishes their mission by forming small teams of young people who work with excellent adult leaders to complete conservation projects. They improve local resources, and construct and improve trails and wild life enhancements.

     

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Foundations

Connecting the Communities

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Vermont Community Foundation

Supports communities statewide by connecting donors to local needs and providing grants that strengthen Vermont’s nonprofit sector.

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Vermont Community Foundation

Supports communities statewide by connecting donors to local needs and providing grants that strengthen Vermont’s nonprofit sector.

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Candid.org

Supports communities statewide by connecting donors to local needs and providing grants that strengthen Vermont’s nonprofit sector.

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FAQ

Planning and Zoning Questions, Answered!

    In its most basic form, planning is the art of understanding how things are in our communities today, how we’d like things to be tomorrow, and then figuring out how to get there. It involves recognizing the gifts that we share here in Vermont and celebrating the ability we have in our communities to create our own destinies. It is the planner’s – or planning commission’s – responsibility to gather and guide public perceptions and translate them into visions for the community’s future. Specifically, they determine how to manage growth and seek solutions to encourage appropriate development while protecting the environment.

    Planning allows community members to come together to make decisions about the town or city’s priorities for the future. It creates an environment where residents become part of a larger whole and have the right and responsibility to decide how the entire community should develop itself. A single project can have a big impact – for the better, or for the worse – on an entire town.
    Planning lays out the community’s priorities, helps to guide development (in the form of housing, commercial, recreation, transportation, etc.), and helps town officials and potential developers to know exactly where everyone stands on a particular type of project and how to best implement it.

    The short answer: everybody. The Plan should not only a document for the planning commission and the town offices. The ultimate goal is to create a plan that speaks for the entire community. The more people who feel that the plan represents them, the more effective a document it will be.
    A good first step is to identify key organizations within your community and contact a representative. Groups could include a lake association, a historical society, a snowmobiler’s association, etc.

    Regional Planning Commissions (RPCs) in Vermont are set up to work towards two primary goals: assisting individual communities with their planning efforts and leading a comprehensive approach to development issues on a regional scale.
    Regional Planning Commissions often create agreements with individual communities to assist in the creation or update of town plans, or development regulations such as zoning, or special projects. In many cases, especially in communities without professional planning staff, they also provide technical assistance to dedicated volunteer planning commissions as they strive to plan for the future.
    At the regional level, boards of commissioners – representing all member communities – guide decisions affecting multiple communities. Subjects of regional interest include transportation, water quality, housing, economic development, and emergency management, among others.

    Town and regional plans are meant to be guides to the future. They are the result of public discussion and deliberation about how a community should develop itself.
    In Vermont, town plans are required, by statute, to include eleven sections. Town Plans should include a current description of the community, an analysis of what facilities and services will be needed in the future, and statement of what the community wants for its future. Perhaps most importantly, a plan should include a set of priorities for what can or should be done to achieve the future the community seeks.

    No. Regulations are a popular, and often effective, way of implementing a plan, but they are by no means the only way. Non-regulatory tools, as they are often called, may include setting town priorities for spending funds on improvements, seeking grants to assist in economic development or the design or creation of facilities (be they infrastructure or bike paths), raising awareness of important issues and assistance to residents (for example, affordable housing), promoting desired types of development, setting up annual community events, or preparing local information brochures.
    Of course, a plan can also lay the foundation for adopting regulations, including subdivision regulations, flood hazard regulations, wireless telecommunications facilities ordinances, or zoning, among others.

    Essentially, the Plan is a guide, while zoning or subdivision regulations present requirements that those wishing to build or add to a development must follow. The Plan is the town’s broad vision for the future and is focused on identifying major problems or opportunities and laying out the foundations for dealing with them. Regulations implement the plan by setting specific standards for development that others must follow.
    A town plan might suggest, in the future land use section of its Plan, that one part of the community is especially well suited to low density residential development. It would not specify lot sizes, setbacks, or permitted uses, though it may provide suggestions. A regulation would fill in the details, establishing the types of appropriate development and the form that it should take, be it through minimum lot sizes, types of permitted uses, or incentives for development that matches the town’s character.

    First, it should be mentioned that a given bylaw may very well contain elements of both zoning and subdivision regulation.
    That being said, subdivision regulations generally deal with how a larger piece of land is cut into smaller pieces and how any infrastructure, such as roads or stormwater management, are integrated into the new landscape. Subdivision regulations generally provide a set of locally determined standards for the creation of new lots, including design and access.

    Zoning regulations, by contrast, are applied to parcels that are to be used or built upon. They may include lists of what uses are appropriate for certain districts within the community, lot size minimums or maximums, setbacks requirements, provisions for changing uses, or incentives for innovative developments that promote goals outlined in the town plan.

    In regards of Land Use Regulations and the Development Review questions, please note – for the time being, please refer to the Chapter 117 FAQs that were created in response to the statutory revisions of 2004.

Planning Resources Icon

Planning Resources

Planning resources help communities make informed decisions about growth, development, and land use. These tools and guides support municipalities in creating effective plans, shaping policies, and promoting sustainable, well-managed communities. Explore available planning resources to strengthen your community’s vision and long-term goals.

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Community Planning Toolbox

The Community Planning Toolbox introduces users to the issues, techniques and resources for planning for Vermont's downtowns and villages, as well as the natural resources that surround them. It features case studies and sample tools that demonstrate how other communities have addressed similar challenges to those facing your community.

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