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    3. Seattle Parks Foundation
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    Seattle Parks Foundation

    ActiveRecreation & Sports
    SEATTLE, WAWebsite2063329900

    About Seattle Parks Foundation

    We partner with community to champion thriving and equitable parks and public spaces.

    Focus Areas

    Parks and public spacesCommunity-led projectsFiscal sponsorshipTree equity / urban forestryClimate resilienceEnvironmental justiceCivic engagement and community building

    Who They Fund

    Indigenous peoples / Native communitiesnonprofit sponsees and sponsoring organizationsorganizational staff and leaders receiving trauma-informed coachingparticipants in shared learning/action teams

    Funding Style

    About Seattle Parks Foundation

    A defining part of Seattle Parks Foundation’s recent grantmaking is support for organizational transition, including a $410,098 distribution of funds tied to Possibility Labs’ offboarding to a new sponsoring organization. The foundation also made a $210,000 distribution of funds to the King County Play Equity Coalition as part of an offboarding process, showing that it funds both large-scale fiscal transitions and smaller project support. Alongside those structural grants, the foundation continues to back community-centered work in parks, public spaces, tree equity, climate resilience, and civic engagement. Recent recipients include United Indians of All Tribes Foundation for Indigenous Peoples’ Day, Center for Healing & Justice Through Sports for trauma-informed coaching, and Braided Seeds for shared learning action team participation. The pattern suggests a funder that combines sponsorship transition support with place-based community work, especially where parks, equity, and public space intersect. Its stated partnership model centers community and thriving, equitable parks and public spaces, and the grant record reflects that mix of infrastructure support and targeted program funding.

    What Seattle Parks Foundation Funds

    Seattle Parks Foundation supports a mix of park-related, equity-focused, and capacity-building work. In Indigenous cultural recognition and celebration, it gave $5,750 to United Indians of All Tribes Foundation for Indigenous Peoples’ Day. In workforce and leadership support, it awarded $5,500 to Center for Healing & Justice Through Sports for trauma-informed coaching. It also funded peer-learning activity with $5,375 to Braided Seeds for shared learning action team participation. The foundation’s active Tree Equity Network Granting Program adds another clear thread: tree equity, urban forestry stewardship, neighborhood-based climate resilience, community stewardship, and environmental justice. Across these grants, the work leans toward community-led projects and organizational support rather than a narrow single-program model.

    How Seattle Parks Foundation Gives

    Typical grant size is tightly clustered at the low end for most awards, with a p25 of $5,500, median of $5,750, and p75 of $210,000. That spread reflects a mix of small program grants and much larger distribution-of-funds transactions. The recent record shows repeated support in 2025, but to different recipients and for different purposes, which points more to ongoing transactional and project-based giving than repeated multiyear grants to the same organization. Seattle Parks Foundation is a regular funder, not a DAF, and it does not fund individuals. Unsolicited applications are not part of the Tree Equity Network Granting Program.

    Financial Snapshot

    Annual Giving

    $637K

    Total Assets

    $12.5M

    Total Revenue

    $6.3M

    Total Expenses

    $7.8M

    Typical Grant Size

    Most grants fall between $6K and $210K, with a median of $6K.

    25th Percentile

    $6K

    Median

    $6K

    75th Percentile

    $210K

    Geographic Reach

    Regional3 states funded

    About 60% of grants go to recipients in IL.

    Funding intensity
    Low
    High
    Headquarters

    Leadership

    REBECCA BEAR

    Accepts unsolicited proposals

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    Privacy PolicyTerms of ServiceSystem Status
    EIN: 91-1998597
    1 filings on record
    See If You're a Fit — FreeFree account · instant fit score · similar funders
    transition/offboarding support
    capacity building/technical assistance
    project-specific/event support
    learning network/peer convening funding

    Topics

    Indigenous cultural recognition and celebration (Indigenous Peoples' Day)trauma-informed coaching and workforce developmentshared learning / action team participationorganizational sponsorship transition and fund distribution processes

    Where Seattle Parks Foundation Makes Grants

    Grants are concentrated in Washington, with 60% going to recipients in the foundation’s HQ state. Seattle appears frequently, including the King County Play Equity Coalition and United Indians of All Tribes Foundation, while Tukwila is also represented through Braided Seeds. Outside Washington, recent grants reach San Francisco, California, and Oak Park, Illinois. By recipient count, Illinois is the top state, even though most grant dollars and most recipients are in Washington.

    Frequently Asked Questions About Seattle Parks Foundation

    What kinds of work does Seattle Parks Foundation fund?

    The foundation funds parks and public spaces, community-led projects, fiscal sponsorship, tree equity and urban forestry, climate resilience, environmental justice, and civic engagement and community building. Recent grants also show support for Indigenous Peoples’ Day, trauma-informed coaching, and shared learning action team participation.

    Does Seattle Parks Foundation accept unsolicited applications?

    Not through its Tree Equity Network Granting Program. That program is listed as not accepting unsolicited requests.

    What is the typical grant size?

    Its recent grant distribution is mixed, with p25 at $5,500, median at $5,750, and p75 at $210,000. That indicates many smaller awards alongside some much larger distribution-of-funds grants.

    Where does Seattle Parks Foundation give most often?

    Most grants go to recipients in Washington, with 60% of grants given in the HQ state. Seattle appears often in the recent record, and Tukwila also appears among recipients.

    What kinds of support does the foundation provide to organizations?

    Recent grants show distribution of funds tied to offboarding to a new sponsoring organization, offboarding sponsee support, and shared learning or action team participation. The pattern also includes project support such as Indigenous Peoples’ Day and trauma-informed coaching.

    Latest 990 Filing

    2025

    Source: IRS Form 990-PF, fiscal year 2025.

    Recent Grants

    Most recent grants reported to the IRS.

    RecipientLocationAmountYearPurpose
    POSSIBILITY LABSSAN FRANCISCO, CA$410,0982025DISTRIBUTION OF FUNDS, OFFBOARDING SPONSEE TO NEW SPONSORING ORGANIZATION
    KING COUNTY PLAY EQUITY COALITIONSEATTLE, WA$210,0002025DISTRIBUTION OF FUNDS, OFFBOARDING SPONSEE
    UNITED INDIANS OF AL TRIBES FOUNDATIONSEATTLE, WA$5,7502025TO SUPPORT INDIGENOUS PEOPLES' DAY
    CENTER FOR HEALING & JUSTICE THROUGH SPORTSOAK PARK, IL$5,5002025FOR TRAUMA INFORMED COACHING
    BRAIDED SEEDSTUKWILA, WA$5,3752025FOR SHARED LEARNING ACTION TEAM PARTICIPATION

    POSSIBILITY LABS

    $410,098
    SAN FRANCISCO, CA2025

    DISTRIBUTION OF FUNDS, OFFBOARDING SPONSEE TO NEW SPONSORING ORGANIZATION

    KING COUNTY PLAY EQUITY COALITION

    $210,000
    SEATTLE, WA2025

    DISTRIBUTION OF FUNDS, OFFBOARDING SPONSEE

    UNITED INDIANS OF AL TRIBES FOUNDATION

    $5,750
    SEATTLE, WA2025

    TO SUPPORT INDIGENOUS PEOPLES' DAY

    CENTER FOR HEALING & JUSTICE THROUGH SPORTS

    $5,500
    OAK PARK, IL2025

    FOR TRAUMA INFORMED COACHING

    BRAIDED SEEDS

    $5,375
    TUKWILA, WA2025

    FOR SHARED LEARNING ACTION TEAM PARTICIPATION