About Community Foundation of the Ozarks Stock Trust
We help individuals and organizations accomplish their goals by facilitating charitable giving, scholarships and grantmaking. Connecting passion with purpose to support giving in our region since 1973.
Focus Areas
Arts and CultureChildren and YouthCommunity DevelopmentEnvironment and ConservationEducationHealth / MedicalScholarships
Funding Style
program-specific/project-based fundingrestricted support tied to specific initiativesimplementation-focused grants
Topics
unspecified program area (not detailed in text)
About Community Foundation of the Ozarks Stock Trust
A defining feature of the Community Foundation of the Ozarks Stock Trust is its mix of donor-directed and discretionary grantmaking tied to specific programs across the Ozarks. The trust’s recent grants are large, program-specific awards to Community Foundation of the Ozarks entities in Springfield, including a $1,490,941 grant in 2024 and a $1,017,531 grant in 2023. That pattern points to a funder that works through the broader community foundation structure rather than through open-ended operating support.
The trust’s public program list shows a broad community role: rural schools, outdoor access, regional resiliency, scholarships, arts, health-related support, and local affiliate grantmaking. It also supports individual-focused efforts such as orthodontic services for eligible young people and small assistance for amputees, alongside annual artist support. Across these activities, the trust appears to fund both institution-level initiatives and targeted services for residents in its service region.
Its recent record is concentrated in Missouri and anchored in Springfield, with all tracked grants going to U.S. recipients. The combination of very large program awards and smaller, place-based grants suggests a foundation that uses multiple channels to support local priorities.
What Community Foundation of the Ozarks Stock Trust Funds
In education, the trust backs rural schools and student aid. Its Rural Schools Partnership is built around supporting rural K–12 schools with grantmaking and resources, while the scholarship program opens calls for student applications and advertises more than $1.7 million in scholarships.
In outdoor recreation and conservation, the Everyone Outdoors program funds outdoor-access and outdoor-recreation projects across the CFO region; the site reports a recent cycle of $120,000 and a regionwide expansion. That places parks, trails, and access to nature within its active grantmaking.
Health-related support appears in two different forms. The Charles L. and Dorothy Weaver Memorial Orthodontic Grant provides three scholarships annually for full-treatment orthodontic services for ages 10–30 who meet financial-need criteria, and the L.E.A.H. grant offers up to $150 per year per person for medical or prosthetic-related supplies.
Community resilience is another clear focus. Coover Regional Resiliency Grants support rural communities and the nonprofits serving them, including 23 nonprofits across the region.
How Community Foundation of the Ozarks Stock Trust Gives
Financial Snapshot
Annual Giving
$166K
Total Assets
$1.4M
Total Revenue
$204K
Total Expenses
$208K
Typical Grant Size
Most grants fall between $592K and $1.3M, with a median of $1M.
25th Percentile
$592K
Median
$1M
75th Percentile
$1.3M
Geographic Reach
Local1 state funded
About 100% of grants go to recipients in MO.
Funding intensity
LowHigh
Headquarters
Deep Analysis
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Typical grant size is large: the 25th percentile is $591,931, the median is $1,017,531, and the 75th percentile is $1,254,236. The recent grant record shows repeated awards to the same Springfield-based recipient across multiple years, including 2023, 2024, and 2025, which signals recurring program support rather than one-off giving. The trust is classified as a mixed community foundation and operates through grant cycles and partner-administered programs. Several active programs accept unsolicited applications, including the grant portal cycles, rural schools support, outdoor-access funding, scholarships, and multiple smaller-assistance programs.
Where Community Foundation of the Ozarks Stock Trust Makes Grants
Giving is local and Missouri-centered: 100% of tracked grants went to recipients in MO, and the top state by grant count is Missouri. The recent grants list names Springfield, MO as the recipient city for the largest awards. Program activity also reaches rural parts of the Ozarks, including Southwest Missouri, the Springfield metro, and regional service areas tied to affiliate foundations. Some programs are explicitly regionwide across the CFO service region, while others are limited to specific local affiliate areas such as Cabool and Douglas County.
Frequently Asked Questions About Community Foundation of the Ozarks Stock Trust
What kinds of programs does the foundation support?
The active program list includes rural K–12 education, outdoor-access projects, regional resiliency grants for rural nonprofits, scholarships, arts support, health-related grants for orthodontic care and amputee assistance, and local affiliate grantmaking. It also funds family-focused work in the Springfield metro through a partnered RFP.
Does it support scholarships?
Yes. The foundation administers scholarship funds and opens calls for student scholarship applications each cycle. The site says more than $1.7 million in scholarships are open for application, and one named program offers annual orthodontic scholarships for three individuals ages 10–30.
Are there open grant opportunities?
Yes. The CFO Grants portal lists multiple discretionary and donor-directed grant cycles each fiscal year, and several active programs accept unsolicited applications, including Rural Schools Partnership, Everyone Outdoors, affiliate grantmaking, L.E.A.H., Ripley Butler Clay Fund for the Arts, and CFO Scholarships.
What geographic area do its grants cover?
The trust is local and all tracked grants went to Missouri recipients. Program coverage includes the CFO service region, the Springfield metro, Southwest Missouri, rural Ozarks communities, and specific affiliate service areas such as Cabool and Douglas County.
How large are its grants?
The distribution is high-value: the 25th percentile is $591,931, the median is $1,017,531, and the 75th percentile is $1,254,236. Recent grants also show repeated large awards above $1 million to Springfield-based Community Foundation of the Ozarks entities.
Latest 990 Filing
2025
Source: IRS Form 990-PF, fiscal year 2025.
Recent Grants
Most recent grants reported to the IRS.
Recipient
Location
Amount
Year
Purpose
COMMUNITY FOUNDATION OF THE OZARKS INC
SPRINGFIELD, MO
$166,331
2025
SPECIFIC PROGRAMS
COMMUNITY FOUNDATION OF THE OZARKS
SPRINGFIELD, MO
$1,490,941
2024
SPECIFIC PROGRAMS
COMMUNITY FOUNDATION OF THE OZARKS
SPRINGFIELD, MO
$1,017,531
2023
SPECIFIC PROGRAMS
COMMUNITY FOUNDATION OF THE OZARKS INC
$166,331
SPRINGFIELD, MO2025
SPECIFIC PROGRAMS
COMMUNITY FOUNDATION OF THE OZARKS
$1,490,941
SPRINGFIELD, MO2024
SPECIFIC PROGRAMS
COMMUNITY FOUNDATION OF THE OZARKS
$1,017,531
SPRINGFIELD, MO2023
SPECIFIC PROGRAMS
Open Grant Opportunities
Current and upcoming funding from Community Foundation of the Ozarks Stock Trust that your nonprofit may be able to apply for.
Open nowCloses in 3 days (Jun 30, 2026)Award: $10K – $35K
Impact 100 Ozark Grantmaking Program
community development
Who can apply: 501(c)3 public charities or other IRS approved entities (government entities, school districts and churches) serving the eastern Christian County area. Proposals should not include day-to-day operations, scholarships, or starting a new nonprofit agency.
Deadline: Due by June 30, 2026; finalist presentation at Annual Awards Celebration on September 10, 2026.
Who can apply: Public 501(c)3 organizations or other IRS approved entities (government entities, school districts and churches) serving the Monett area.
Cardsinals Fly Together Fund - Worship Wednesday Grants
faithcommunity engagement
Who can apply: Recognized houses of worship and faith-based organizations with 501(c)3 status may apply for a matching grant to assist in bringing a group to a Worship Wednesday home game during the 2026 season.
Who can apply: Supports schools and organizations providing opportunities for local youth to improve athletic skills, basic fundamentals, and character development in the Carthage area.
Outdoor recreationAccess to natureParks and trails
Who can apply: Nonprofits and community organizations proposing outdoor-access or recreation projects in the specified service area; cycle-specific criteria posted when open.
Deadline: Cycle deadlines published in the grant portal per round.
CFO Grants (General grant cycles via Grant Portal)
Community developmentEducationYouth services+4 more
Who can apply: Organizations within the CFO service region and affiliate service areas. Individual cycles have their own specific criteria; generally nonprofit 501(c)(3) organizations, schools, and some government entities are eligible.
Deadline: Grant cycles are announced beginning in July for the CFO fiscal year (July 1–June 30). Individual cycles have their own deadlines posted in the grant portal.
environment and conservationchildren and youthschools and education
Who can apply: Grants must support conservation education and be matched 1:1 by the grantee/receiving organization with additional cash dollars raised.
Deadlines and eligibility are summarized from public sources and may change — always confirm the details on the funder's official application page before applying.