The NYC LCLAA Puerto Rico Relief Foundation focuses on post-Hurricane Maria disaster recovery by providing direct financial support to Puerto Rican homeowners for emergency roof repairs. Grants are made primarily to individual residents rather than organizations, indicating a grassroots, relief-oriented approach that targets immediate housing stabilization. The foundation’s giving is narrowly focused and consistent across recipients, emphasizing urgent infrastructure repairs rather than long-term reconstruction programs.
Concentrated, narrowly targeted relief: multiple mid-sized grants (roughly $18k–$27k) made to individual homeowners for the same purpose. The foundation funds many distinct individuals rather than repeat institutional grantees, indicating distributed micro-relief to address a specific post-disaster need.
NYC Lclaa Puerto Rico Relief Foundation centers its giving on emergency roof repairs for Puerto Rican homeowners still dealing with Hurricane Maria damage. The recent grants show a narrow, direct model: individual households in Puerto Rico receive cash support to restore damaged roofs and stabilize homes after the storm. Grants in 2023 and 2024 go to residents of places such as Sabana Hoyos and Arecibo, with each award tied to repair work rather than broader program funding. The foundation’s grantmaking is highly consistent in purpose and recipient type. It does not fund organizations in the recent grants list; instead, it directs assistance to named individuals for specific repair needs. That pattern makes the foundation distinct as a relief-oriented funder focused on residential recovery rather than long-term reconstruction or general community development. Its reported annual grants total $233,010, while the total asset base is $9,113. The scale of individual awards is clustered in the low-to-mid twenty-thousand-dollar range, reflecting a one-time capital repair approach aimed at urgent housing stabilization. Recent recipients include Lisandra Isomali Antorgiorgi and Alejandro Beltran, both funded for roof repair work in Puerto Rico.
The foundation’s clearest focus is residential roof restoration after Hurricane Maria. It awarded $26,746 to Lisandra Isomali Antorgiorgi in Sabana Hoyos for repair roof damage from Hurricane Maria, and $25,705 to Alejandro Beltran in Arecibo for repair roof damaged by Hurricane Maria. Those grants show a repeated emphasis on immediate housing repair for individual homeowners. A second pattern is direct emergency assistance for families in specific Puerto Rican communities. Carmen Gonzalez Rivera in Sabana Hoyos received $23,419 to repair a roof damaged by Hurricane Maria, while Miriam Rivera Concepcion in Arecibo received $24,122 for the same purpose. The foundation also supports smaller follow-on repairs within the same disaster-recovery frame. Nilsa Martell in Utuado received $4,724 to repair a roof damaged in Hurricane Maria, indicating that the funder’s work reaches beyond one municipality while staying tightly focused on storm-related housing recovery.
Grant size is tightly grouped: p25 is $20,284, median is $23,419, and p75 is $23,989. That clustering suggests a standardized repair-grant approach rather than widely varying award sizes. The recent grants list shows repeated giving in 2023 and 2024, with multiple recipients funded in both years. The foundation gives directly to individuals, not organizations, and the recent grants indicate a project-specific relief structure tied to one-time roof repair needs. Its annual grants total $233,010, against total assets of $9,113, which points to a grantmaking profile centered on distributed assistance rather than asset accumulation.
$233K
$9K
$1
$160
Most grants fall between $20K and $24K, with a median of $23K.
25th Percentile
$20K
Median
$23K
75th Percentile
$24K
About 0% of grants go to recipients in PR.
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Notable grantees: Lisandra Isomali Antorgiorgi, Alejandro Beltran, Miriam Rivera Concepcion, Santos Rosado Garcia, Yantaina Rios Rodriguez
All recent grants in the data go to U.S. recipients, and every listed recipient is in Puerto Rico. Award locations cluster most often in Arecibo and Sabana Hoyos, with smaller presence in Utuado. The foundation’s top state by grant count is PR, and none of the recent grants go to recipients in NJ, the headquarters state. The geographic pattern is regional and concentrated within Puerto Rico rather than spread across multiple states or countries.
It funds direct roof-repair assistance for Puerto Rican homeowners affected by Hurricane Maria. The recent grants are all tied to repairing roof damage from the storm, and the recipients are named individuals rather than organizations.
The recent grants go to individual homeowners in Puerto Rico, including residents of Sabana Hoyos, Arecibo, and Utuado. The grant descriptions tie each award to a specific roof-repair need after Hurricane Maria.
The grant-size distribution is tightly clustered around the low-to-mid $20,000s: p25 is $20,284, median is $23,419, and p75 is $23,989. Recent awards include both higher and lower amounts, but most fall near that range.
Its top state by grant count is Puerto Rico. In the recent grants list, every recipient is located in Puerto Rico, and the award locations include Arecibo, Sabana Hoyos, and Utuado.
The foundation does not fund individuals? No, it funds individuals: the recent grants list is made up of named people, each receiving support for roof repairs after Hurricane Maria.
2025
Source: IRS Form 990-PF, fiscal year 2025.
Most recent grants reported to the IRS.
| Recipient | Location | Amount | Year | Purpose |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| LISANDRA ISOMALI ANTORGIORGI | SABANA HOYOS, PR | $26,746 | 2024 | REPAIR ROOF DAMAGE FROM HURRICANE MARIA |
| ALEJANDRO BELTRAN | ARECIBO, PR | $25,705 | 2024 | REPAIR ROOF DAMAGED BY HURRICANE MARIA |
| MIRIAM RIVERA CONCEPCION | ARECIBO, PR | $24,122 | 2024 | REPAIR ROOF DAMAGE FROM HURRICANE MARIA |
| YANTAINA RIOS RODRIGUEZ | ARECIBO, PR | $23,446 | 2024 | REPAIR ROOF DAMAGED BY HURRICANE MARIA |
| JASIRYS TAIRYS REYES | SABANA HOYOS, PR | $20,046 | 2024 | REPAIR ROOF DAMAGED BY HURRICANE MARIA |
| EDNA HILDA REINA | ARECIBO, PR | $18,865 | 2024 | REPAIR ROOF DAMAGED BY HURRICANE MARIA |
| NILSA MARTELL | UTUADO, PR | $4,724 | 2024 | TO REPAIR ROOF DAMAGED IN HURRICANE MARIA |
| SANTOS ROSADO GARCIA | ARECIBO, PR | $23,856 | 2023 | TO REPAIR ROOF DAMAGED IN HURRICANE MARIA |
| CARMEN GONZALEZ RIVERA | SABANA HOYOS, PR | $23,419 | 2023 | REPAIR ROOF DAMAGED BY HURRICANE MARIA |
| MIGDA ALVARADO YURET | SABANA HOYOS, PR | $21,560 | 2023 | REPAIR ROOF DAMAGE FROM HURRICANE MARIA |
| SANTOS GONZALEZ CANDELARIA | SABANA HOYOS, PR | $20,521 | 2023 | REPAIR ROOF DAMAGE FROM HURRICANE MARIA |
LISANDRA ISOMALI ANTORGIORGI
$26,746REPAIR ROOF DAMAGE FROM HURRICANE MARIA
ALEJANDRO BELTRAN
$25,705REPAIR ROOF DAMAGED BY HURRICANE MARIA
MIRIAM RIVERA CONCEPCION
$24,122REPAIR ROOF DAMAGE FROM HURRICANE MARIA
YANTAINA RIOS RODRIGUEZ
$23,446REPAIR ROOF DAMAGED BY HURRICANE MARIA
JASIRYS TAIRYS REYES
$20,046REPAIR ROOF DAMAGED BY HURRICANE MARIA
EDNA HILDA REINA
$18,865REPAIR ROOF DAMAGED BY HURRICANE MARIA
NILSA MARTELL
$4,724TO REPAIR ROOF DAMAGED IN HURRICANE MARIA
SANTOS ROSADO GARCIA
$23,856TO REPAIR ROOF DAMAGED IN HURRICANE MARIA
CARMEN GONZALEZ RIVERA
$23,419REPAIR ROOF DAMAGED BY HURRICANE MARIA
MIGDA ALVARADO YURET
$21,560REPAIR ROOF DAMAGE FROM HURRICANE MARIA
SANTOS GONZALEZ CANDELARIA
$20,521REPAIR ROOF DAMAGE FROM HURRICANE MARIA