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FY2027 - Grandparents and Other Relatives Raising Children Program

Department On Aging

Funding Amount

Varies

Deadline

June 25, 2026

24 days left

Grant Type

state

Overview

FY2027 - Grandparents and Other Relatives Raising Children Program

The Illinois Department on Aging, through the Grandparents and Other Relatives Raising Children Program (GRG), provides assistance to relatives, regardless of their age or income, who are raising children. The term “grandparent or older individual who is a relative caregiver” means a grandparent or step grandparent of a child, or a relative of a child by blood, marriage or adoption.

A Grandfamily is a family unit in which a grandparent is the head of household and is actively parenting one or more grandchild(ren). It’s a form of kinship care, in which a relative of a child takes over the parenting responsibilities. Another name for these households is “skip-generation families,” and they are increasingly common.

One main reason for the increase in Grandfamilies is substance abuse and alcoholism have created a need for grandparents to step in and parent their grandchildren. The opioid crisis has created a number of young parents who are unfit to parent and the numbers continue to increase. There are a number of other drugs, as well as alcohol that have turned families upside down as children are neglected or abused by their addicted parents.

The GRG program establishes and funds:
• Legal services,
• Respite,
• Support groups,
• Counseling (includes training),
• Gap-filling funds, and
• Develops resources through a competitive grant process.

Area Agencies on Aging and non-profit organizations are eligible to apply.

Program personnel provides technical assistance to providers, refers relatives to services, and advocates on their behalf when they experience difficulty accessing services. Program personnel collaborate with state agencies including the Departments of Human Services, Children and Family Services, Health Care and Family Services and Public Health, Area Agencies on Aging, private social service agencies, legal assistance programs, law schools and clinics, extension services, educational advocacy groups, information and referral services, hospitals, clinics, churches, schools, police, and social work organizations.

Each year, contingent upon General Revenue funding, the Department has released a Request for Proposal (RFP) to the Aging Network and other non-profit organizations in child welfare, caregiving, legal services, respite, and social services systems. In FY 2024, a total of 17 grants were awarded, totaling $300,000. The number of relatives served: 932 were 55 or older; 440 were under the age of 55 and 1,878 children were assisted.

These funds assist relatives raising children regardless of their age or income. Funding provides diverse services such as respite, support groups, counseling (including training), legal, and gap-filling. This funding opportunity utilizes state funds through the State General Revenue Funds to provide assistance to grandparents/other relatives, regardless of their age or income, who are raising children.

Applicants of this funding opportunity must demonstrate how the funds will be used to enhance the GRG program in their area. Funds are to be used to assist grandparent(s)/other relatives in providing the following services: respite, support groups, counseling (including training), legal, and gap filling.

The Goal of GRG is to provide assistance to relatives who are seeking resources and referrals in their efforts to provide safe, stable and loving homes for children.

Details

  • Awarding Agency: Department On Aging
  • CSFA Number: 402-03-1475
  • CSFA Popular Name: GRG
  • Announcement Type: Initial Announcement
  • Award Type: Competitive
  • Total Funding Available: $300,000.00
  • Funding Sources: State
  • Capital Grant: No
  • Indirect Costs Allowed: Yes
  • Posted Date: 2026-05-26
  • Award Period: 2026-07-01 – 2027-06-30

Funding Source Description

This award uses state General Revenue Funds. The intent of this award is to provide assistance to relatives, regardless of their age or income, who are raising children. The program establishes and funds legal services, respite, support groups, counseling, education/training, and gap-filling funds and develops resources through a competitive grant process.

Area Agencies on Aging and non-profit organizations are eligible to apply. The Department anticipates 15 to 25 awards for this NOFO. Any entity in good standing (no adverse contract action within the last 24 months, GATA registration completed and approved, no stop pay) with the Illinois Department on Aging/State of Illinois may apply for this award. The Department anticipates providing awards to entities in PSAs 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, and 13.

Final award amount shall be up to the discretion of the Department. Work performed or grant related costs incurred prior to the period of performance shall not be payable by the Grandparents and Other Relatives Raising Children Program or the Department. The Notice of State Award (NOSA) will indicate the start of the period of performance when executed.

Funding Restrictions

PURCHASING OF GIFT CARDS OF ANY KIND IS NOT AN ALLOWABLE EXPENSE FOR THIS GRANT.

Indirect Cost Description

This grant shall not restrict indirect costs to the grant. The grantee shall either submit evidence of a federally negotiated rate, the rate as approved through the GATA Indirect Cost Rate System or accept the de minimis rate.

In order to charge indirect costs to a grant, the applicant organization must have an annually negotiated indirect cost rate agreement (NICRA). There are three types of NICRAs:

a) Federally Negotiated Rate. Organizations that receive direct federal funding, may have an indirect cost rate that was negotiated with the Federal Cognizant Agency. Illinois will accept the federally negotiated rate. The organization must provide a copy of the federally NICRA.

b) State Negotiated Rate. The organization must negotiate an indirect cost rate with the State of Illinois if they do not have a Federally Negotiated Rate. Or the organization may elect to use the de minimis rate. If an organization has not previously established in indirect cost rate, an indirect cost rate proposal must be submitted to the State of Illinois through the indirect cost rate system, CARS, no later than three months after the effective date of the award. If an organization previously established an indirect cost rate, the organization must annually submit a new indirect cost proposal through CARS within six months after the close of the grantee’s fiscal year. All grantees must complete an indirect cost rate negotiation or elect the de minimis rate in CARS to claim indirect costs. Indirect costs claimed without an established negotiated rate or a de minimis rate election in CARS may be subject to disallowance.

c) De minimis Rate. An organization that has never received a Federally Negotiated Rate may elect a de minimis rate of 10% of modified total direct cost (MTDC). Once established, the de minimis rate may be used indefinitely. The State of Illinois must verify the calculation of the MTDC annually in order to accept the de minimis rate.

The Department reserves the right to limit the amount and/or type of indirect costs that is allowed to be charged to this grant award. For example, the cost of independent research and development, including their proportionate share of indirect costs, are unallowable under this grant award.
Grantees have discretion not to claim payment for indirect costs. Grantees that elect not to claim indirect costs cannot be reimbursed for indirect costs. The organization must record an election of “No Indirect Costs” into CARS.

Restrictions on Indirect Costs

No

State Award Notices

A Notice of State Award (NOSA) shall be sent to each successful applicant using the GATA web-portal. A Uniform Grant Agreement shall be sent to the Grantee once the awarded entity has signed the NOSA. The NOSA shall include estimated project start date, programmatic and financial special conditions.

Administrative and National Policy Requirements

The NOSAs shall include all necessary information regarding terms, conditions, and additional requirements of the resulting grants.

Reporting

Grantees shall be required to submit financial and programmatic reports, minimally, for the following reporting periods: 4 reports: 1) July 1, 2026 - September 30, 2026, Report due October 31, 2026 2) October 1, 2026 – December 31, 2026, Report due January 31, 2027 3) January 1, 2027 – March 31, 2027, Report due April 30, 2027 4) April 1, 2027 – June 30, 2027, Report due July 31, 2027. Grant reports shall be submitted using the GATA Periodic Performance Report, the GATA Periodic Financial Report, and supplemental GRG reporting documents as instructed by the Department. Reports will be submitted via e-mail to the GRG Program Manager and aging.fiscal@illinois.gov must be copied.

How to Apply

Submission Timeline

  • Submission Opens: 2026-05-26
  • Submission Closes: 2026-06-25
  • Submission Timeline: One Time
  • Application Review Start / Pre-Qualification Deadline: 2025-06-25
  • Allow Multiple Applications: No

Question Submission

  • Questions Open: 2025-05-26
  • Questions Close: 2025-06-19
  • Questions Email: matthew.rousey2@illinois.gov

Apply on AmpliFund: https://il.amplifund.com/Public/Opportunities/Details/32595355-c8e5-4c60-8e3e-e91e0f54993b

Focus Areas & Funding Uses

Fields of Work

seniorsfoster-parentsfamily-services

Project Locations

IL

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