The
Certified Financial Planner Board of Standards is accepting
applications for its grant programs through March 1, 2007, the board
announced.
The 2007 Financial
Planning Grants program seeks to provide funding to "innovative and
sustainable projects that reach people and encourage them to benefit
from financial planning," according to the board.
The CFP Board
started the grant program last year, when it provided $875,500 in
funding to 20 projects that are "reaching people with the benefits of
financial planning," according to the board.
Grant recipients
last year included non-profit groups, educators and CFP professionals,
involved in projects ranging from the development of new ways of using
technology to provide financial planning to creating partnerships that
provide financial planning information and assistance through
libraries, high schools, colleges and community-based organizations.
Requirements for
2007 funding applications and an online application form are available
at www.cfp.net/teamup/grants.asp.
Some examples of projects and their funding last year:
Brett Danko,
CFP, received $80,640 to develop a program of financial counseling,
education and planning services for women served by non-profit domestic
violence agencies in New Jersey. The project is expected to take three
years.
Bronx Community
College in New York City received $74,938 to develop a financial
planning overview to integrate into mandatory college freshman
orientation courses and to coordinate programs with the school's Career
Center counselors, Business Club and Alumni Association to enhance the
visibility of financial planning information on campus and the nearby
community.
The Indian
Valley Housing Corporation, a non-profit organization assisting
low-income, homeless and at-risk households in Southeastern
Pennsylvania with housing needs, received $79,285 to develop a three-year
pilot program of financial education and one-on-one planning services
for their clients.
The
Massachusetts Council on Compulsive Gambling received $30,000 to
develop an outreach project to provide financial education support to
loved ones of people with gambling problems and to provide preventative
education to adults in their twenties. The materials developed for the
project will be available to organizations across the country.
Applications for
2007 funding may be for new projects or proposals to enhance programs
that already exist, according to the board.
"The requested grant money must fund something distinct that furthers CFP Board's mission," the board states.