
The Friends of SDPB support the mission of South Dakota Public Broadcasting through advocacy, leadership, and fundraising responsive to the needs of SDPB and all South Dakotans.
The defining pattern for Friends of South Dakota Public Broadcasting is direct support for South Dakota Public Broadcasting itself. Three of the foundation’s largest recent grants went to South Dakota Public Broadcasting in Vermillion, all labeled for programming, including awards of $1,823,188 in 2023, $1,432,372 in 2024, and $1,350,000 in 2024. That repeated funding makes the relationship between the foundation and SDPB central to understanding its grantmaking. The foundation’s stated mission is to support SDPB through advocacy, leadership, and fundraising responsive to the needs of SDPB and all South Dakotans. Its work sits within public media, journalism, education, entertainment, community engagement, and local programming. Recent grants also show support beyond the main broadcaster, including funding for the South Dakota High School Activities Association in Pierre for programming. The pattern points to an implementation-focused grantmaker that uses restricted, project-based support to help deliver public media and related programming within South Dakota.
Public media is the clearest cause area in the foundation’s recent grants. South Dakota Public Broadcasting in Vermillion received $1,823,188 in 2023, plus $1,432,372 and $1,350,000 in 2024, all for programming. Education-related support also appears in the grant list. The South Dakota High School Activities Association in Pierre received $111,240 in 2023, $106,000 in 2024, and $101,625 in 2024, each designated for programming. Those grants align with the foundation’s listed focus areas: public media, journalism, education, entertainment, community engagement, and local programming. The recurring programming language suggests support for delivery and operations rather than broad unrestricted funding.
Typical grants are large: the 25th percentile is $107,310, the median is $730,620, and the 75th percentile is $1,411,779. The recent record shows repeated awards to the same recipients across 2023 and 2024, especially South Dakota Public Broadcasting and the South Dakota High School Activities Association, which points to ongoing support rather than one-off gifts. The foundation does not fund individuals and does not make program-related investments. Its philosophy tags indicate programmatic support, restricted/project funding, and implementation-focused giving.
$3M
$11.7M
$4.4M
$4.8M
Most grants fall between $107K and $1.4M, with a median of $731K.
25th Percentile
$107K
Median
$731K
75th Percentile
$1.4M
About 100% of grants go to recipients in SD.
Ryan Howlett
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Giving is entirely local and entirely within South Dakota: 100% of grants go to recipients in the foundation’s HQ state, and the top state by grant count is SD. The recent grants cluster in Vermillion and Pierre, with South Dakota Public Broadcasting in Vermillion receiving the largest awards and the South Dakota High School Activities Association in Pierre receiving multiple programming grants. No non-U.S. recipient countries appear in the recent distribution.
Its recent grants are centered on South Dakota Public Broadcasting in Vermillion, which received three of the largest awards in the data, all for programming. The foundation’s stated focus areas also include public media, journalism, education, entertainment, community engagement, and local programming.
The grant-size distribution is large: the 25th percentile is $107,310, the median is $730,620, and the 75th percentile is $1,411,779. Recent awards also include multi-hundred-thousand-dollar programming grants.
No. The geographic data shows 100% of grants go to recipients in South Dakota, and the top state by grant count is SD.
Yes. South Dakota Public Broadcasting appears multiple times across 2023 and 2024, and the South Dakota High School Activities Association also appears in multiple years, showing a recurring grant pattern rather than isolated awards.
The philosophy tags describe programmatic support, restricted or project funding, and implementation-focused giving. The recent grants are all labeled for programming, which matches that pattern.
2024
Source: IRS Form 990-PF, fiscal year 2024.
Most recent grants reported to the IRS.
| Recipient | Location | Amount | Year | Purpose |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| South Dakota Public Broadcasting | Vermillion, SD | $1,432,372 | 2024 | Programming |
| South Dakota Public Broadcasting | Vermillion, SD | $1,350,000 | 2024 | Programming |
| South Dakota High School Activities Association | Pierre, SD | $106,000 | 2024 | Programming |
| South Dakota High School Activities Association | Pierre, SD | $101,625 | 2024 | Programming |
| South Dakota Public Broadcasting | Vermillion, SD | $1,823,188 | 2023 | Programming |
| South Dakota High School Activities Association | Pierre, SD | $111,240 | 2023 | Programming |
South Dakota Public Broadcasting
$1,432,372Programming
South Dakota Public Broadcasting
$1,350,000Programming
South Dakota High School Activities Association
$106,000Programming
South Dakota High School Activities Association
$101,625Programming
South Dakota Public Broadcasting
$1,823,188Programming
South Dakota High School Activities Association
$111,240Programming