Home Virginia Wildlife Grant Program now accepting applications
News

Virginia Wildlife Grant Program now accepting applications

Contributors

dgifDo you manage a program that creates curiosity, discovery, and adventure in the outdoors? The Virginia Wildlife Grant Program may be able to help. Applications are now being accepted for programs that connect kids to the outdoors.

This year, $65,000, a $10,000 increase from 2017, will be awarded to qualifying programs for hunting, fishing, boating, shooting sports, trapping, and wildlife viewing activities.

The Virginia Wildlife Grant Program provides a funding source to non-profits, schools and government organizations with a focus on connecting youth to the outdoors. The program is a partnership effort between the Virginia Department of Game and Inland Fisheries (DGIF) and The Wildlife Foundation of Virginia (WFV) and is funded through the sales of merchandise at ShopDGIF.com., private contributions and fundraising events.

The application period ends August 31, 2018.

For the 3rd year in a row, Ron Kody, President of Richmond Ford, has made a substantial contribution that has sparked interest from other private individuals who recognize the powerful impact this grant program has on kids. A special thank you to Steve and Heidi Crandall from Nelson County who are dedicated to creating the next generation outdoor enthusiasts, and retired DGIF employee, Marika Byrd, for their very generous contributions to get kids outdoors.

“Ron, Steve and Marika have not only had an immeasurable impact on the reach of this grant program, they have also paved the way for other committed sportsmen and women to direct their own charitable giving to a cause that will have a lasting effect on the outdoor landscape in Virginia. Our goal is to continue to grow this grant program so that maybe one day, we will have enough funds to award to every very worthy request we receive,” said Jenny West, Executive Director of The Wildlife Foundation of Virginia.

Bob Duncan, DGIF Executive Director, adds “Getting kids outdoors will continue to be part of the future direction of DGIF to recruit new anglers, hunters, wildlife viewers, and other outdoor enthusiasts. The grant focus also supports a significant national initiative to build engagement in the outdoors called R3 – recruitment, retention, and reactivation.”

Last year, 144 applications were submitted and 27 projects were selected. The estimated number of youth impacted by these programs is about 9,500. Eleven programs focused on high-risk youth which included visually impaired and urban kids.

Support AFP

Contributors

Contributors

Have a guest column, letter to the editor, story idea or a news tip? Email editor Chris Graham at [email protected]. Subscribe to AFP podcasts on Apple PodcastsSpotifyPandora and YouTube.

Latest News

donald trump
Politics

Easier to die, harder to vote: The rigged architecture of the Warfare State

virginia tax
Virginia

State income tax filing deadline is Friday: Officials pushing you to file electronically

The filing and payment deadline for Virginia state income taxes is Friday, and Tax Commissioner Kristin Collins is saying it’s best at this stage to file electronically, if you can.

tony elliott gator bowl
Football

UVA Football: Finally, we have the details on Tony Elliott’s extension

UVA Football coach Tony Elliott got himself a million-dollar-a-year raise after his team’s 11-win season in 2025, with a total compensation package at $5.4 million a year, with $100,000 raises over each of the next five years of the deal.

uva football chandler morris
Football

UVA Football: Morris, Taylor among 10 ‘Hoos signing NFL rookie deals

football money
Football

UVA Football: Details on fresh extensions for Kitchings, Rudzinski, Gaither

rob tracinski podcast
Politics, Virginia

Podcast: Rob Tracinski discusses his Sixth District congressional campaign

ryan odom uva basketball
Basketball

UVA Basketball: Odom lands first transfer commitment for 2026 class