District Grants

District Designated Fund (DDF) dollars put to work — funding local Rotary service through District 5330’s Community Block Grants.

District Grants Chair

Questions about qualifying or applying for a Community Block Grant? Reach out to the District Grants Chair.

Jennifer Loretta
District Grants Chair

Jennifer Loretta

Rotary Club of Palm Desert
Contact
GRANTS & FOUNDATION

Funding good in our communities

District 5330 channels Rotary Foundation District Designated Funds (DDF) into local service. In our district, District Grants are awarded as Community Block Grants — small-scale, short-term club service projects that are usually more flexible than Global Grants. Clubs apply through the District (not directly to Rotary International), entirely online through DACdb. For larger international humanitarian, vocational-training, and scholarship projects, see Global Grants.

COMMUNITY BLOCK GRANTS

How Community Block Grants work

Community Block Grants help District 5330 clubs put Rotary Foundation dollars to work on local service projects. The entire process — application, reporting, and balance tracking — happens online in DACdb.

To qualify

  • Your club must have no open grant from a prior year (close last year’s grant first).
  • A current MOU on file with the District (see Resources below).
  • Your club must commit at least $100 in the grant application to receive funds.

To apply

  • Apply through the DACdb Grants Module (District tab → Grant Request).
  • The District reviews and submits club applications to The Rotary Foundation.
  • Projects must be completed and reported before payment is finalized.
  • See Key Dates below for the full schedule.
REQUIRED BEFORE YOU APPLY

Get your club qualified

To take part in any Rotary Foundation grant, your club must be qualified for the current Rotary year. Qualification is renewed annually and must be completed before a grant is submitted.

1. Attend the Grant Management Seminar

At least one club representative must attend a District Grant Management Seminar each year. It’s held annually — watch the District Calendar for the date.

District Calendar →

2. Sign the club MOU

Your club president and president-elect sign the annual Club Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) and return it to the District Grants Chair.

Club MOU (PDF) (opens in a new tab)

3. Steward & report

Use grant funds only as approved, keep records, and submit final reports by the deadline.

Grant Management Training (opens in a new tab)
Take Grant Management Training (opens in a new tab)

Free online course through Rotary.org — required before your club can apply.

KEY DATES

Key dates

Applications openMay 31 (in DACdb)
Club submission deadlineAugust 31
District submits to TRFSeptember 15
Projects completed & reportedby June 30
Grant Management SeminarHeld annually — see the District Calendar
STEP BY STEP

Watch: how to fill out your application

A short walkthrough of completing a Community Block Grant request in the DACdb Grants Module.

IDEAS

What clubs spend the money on

A few examples of eligible Community Block Grant projects:

  • Support for a food bank
  • Educational programs or school repairs
  • Wheelchair ramps for low-income families
  • Senior or veterans’ center repairs
  • Dictionaries or books for local schools
  • Holiday meals for families in need
  • PRYDE or RYLA support
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