About Peninsula Community Foundation
The Peninsula Community Foundation’s recent giving is anchored by a mix of local community development, child-focused services, and emergency response. Its largest listed grant, $41,720 to Smithville Community Coalition in Cornelius, supported community development, while another sizable award of $40,000 went to Food Connections Inc in Asheville for Helene disaster relief. The pattern points to a foundation that funds practical, place-based work across the Lake Norman and North Mecklenburg area, with children, families, seniors, and people facing immediate hardship appearing repeatedly in its grant programs and recent awards.
Several grants show how the foundation works through specific local organizations. Ada Jenkins Center in Davidson received multiple awards for child reading programs, including a $32,000 grant in 2023 and $30,000 in 2025. In Huntersville, Caterpillar Ministries received $30,000 for child education, and Angels and Sparrows received $20,000 for community health. The grant list also includes support for transportation help, health clinics, housing-related services, and disaster recovery, indicating a broad direct-service approach rather than a single-program strategy.
What Peninsula Community Foundation Funds
Education and literacy are a recurring theme. Ada Jenkins Center received $32,000 in 2023 and $30,000 in 2025 for child reading programs, and Davidson Cornelius Child Dev Ctr received $18,000 for childcare. The foundation also supported school-age learning through Cornelius Development Corp with a $15,000 childcare grant.
Health and basic needs appear alongside education. Lake Norman Comm Health Clinic received $25,000 for community health, while Cook Community Clinic received $25,000 in 2024 and $20,000 in 2025 for community service and community health. Bags of Hope received $25,000 for child nutrition in 2025 and $15,000 in 2024 for the same purpose.
The foundation also backs crisis-oriented service delivery. Food Connections Inc received $40,000 for Helene disaster relief, and Hope House Foundation received $20,000 in 2024 and $15,000 in 2025 for community service.
How Peninsula Community Foundation Gives
Typical awards sit in a fairly tight range: the 25th percentile is $10,000, the median is $15,000, and the 75th percentile is $20,000. The recent grant list shows repeated support to some recipients across multiple years, including Ada Jenkins Center, Neighborhood Care, Bags of Hope, Caterpillar Ministries, Cook Community Clinic, Hope House Foundation, and Smithville Community Coalition. That suggests ongoing relationships rather than one-time awards. The Peninsula Community Foundation is classified as a mixed community foundation, and its programs include both competitive and board-directed grantmaking. Some programs accept unsolicited requests, while others, such as scholarship support and the transportation fund, do not.