Protect the lands, waters, wildlife, and communities of the 22-million-acre Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem through conservation, advocacy, partnership, and community-based solutions.
Greater Yellowstone Coalition directed a single 2025 grant of $4,042,460 to the Bureau of Land Management for mineral rights on public lands, a clear signal that public-lands policy sits near the center of its work. Across the recent grant list, the coalition backs conservation and advocacy tied to the 22-million-acre Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem, with grants reaching federal agencies, local associations, and wildlife groups. The pattern includes repeated support for grizzly bear conflict resolution, bison restoration, elk occupancy agreements, Indigenous conservation, and range rider work. The grant record also shows practical partnerships with place-based groups. Centennial Valley Association received multiple awards for grizzly conflict resolution and support for range riders. Tom Miner Basin Association also appears several times for grizzly conflict resolution. Those repeat awards suggest the coalition uses grants to sustain on-the-ground work over time rather than only one-off projects. Its portfolio connects wildlife habitat, ranch-land stewardship, transportation impacts, and public lands oversight within the same regional conservation frame.
In wildlife conflict mitigation, Greater Yellowstone Coalition funded Idaho Fish & Wildlife twice for $15,000 in 2024 and 2025 for grizzly conflict resolution, and Jackson Hole Wildlife Foundation for the same purpose in 2024. It also supported Henrys Fork Wildlife Alliance in Ashton, Idaho, for wildlife advocacy. For land and water-related protection, the coalition gave $25,000 to Property & Environment for a bison restoration project and $14,967 to Legacy Philanthropy for an elk occupancy agreement. Public lands and policy show up in the $4,042,460 grant to the Bureau of Land Management for mineral rights on public lands and the $10,000 award to Trout Unlimited for FY 24 Mill Creek. Community and tribal work appears in grants to Wyoming Wilderness Association for an inter tribal gathering and Mountain Time Arts for Indigenous conservation.
Typical grant sizes cluster tightly around a small-to-mid grant format: p25 is $7,500, median is $10,000, and p75 is $15,000. The recent list also includes one very large 2025 award that sits far above that pattern. Several recipients appear in multiple years, including Idaho Fish & Wildlife, Centennial Valley Association, and Tom Miner Basin Association, which points to recurring support for some partners. The organization does not fund individuals and does not make program-related investments. The grant list indicates a regional, relationship-based grantmaker rather than a broad open-call funder.
$4.2M
$26.6M
$8.1M
$9M
Most grants fall between $8K and $15K, with a median of $10K.
25th Percentile
$8K
Median
$10K
75th Percentile
$15K
About 50% of grants go to recipients in VA.
SCOTT CHRISTENSEN
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Grants are entirely U.S.-based, and half of the grants go to recipients in Montana. The most common recipient state by count is Virginia, reflecting a mix of local and national partners. Named recipient cities in the list include Bozeman, Jackson, Ashton, Sheridan, Emigrant, Dillon, Arlington, and Washington, DC. Montana recipients appear repeatedly through Bozeman-based groups and other in-state partners, while Washington, DC and Arlington show that some grants support federal-policy and national conservation organizations.
The recent grants center on wildlife conservation and coexistence, especially grizzly bear conflict resolution, bison restoration, and elk occupancy. The list also includes public lands oversight, mineral rights on public lands, Indigenous conservation, campground food storage, and range rider support.
The grant-size distribution is concentrated around smaller awards: the 25th percentile is $7,500, the median is $10,000, and the 75th percentile is $15,000. The recent record also includes one much larger award to a federal land-management agency.
Yes. Several recipients appear more than once in the recent grant list, including Idaho Fish & Wildlife, Centennial Valley Association, and Tom Miner Basin Association. That pattern suggests ongoing support for some partners across multiple years.
Grants are regional and U.S.-based. Montana receives 50% of the grants, and the most frequent recipient state by count is Virginia. Recent recipients are located in cities including Bozeman, Jackson, Ashton, Sheridan, Emigrant, Dillon, Arlington, and Washington, DC.
2025
Source: IRS Form 990-PF, fiscal year 2025.
Most recent grants reported to the IRS.
| Recipient | Location | Amount | Year | Purpose |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| BUREAU OF LAND MANAGEMENT | WASHINGTON, DC | $4,042,460 | 2025 | MINERAL RIGHTS ON PUBLIC LANDS |
| USDA FOREST SERVICE | PORTLAND, OR | $119,582 | 2025 | CAMPGROUND FOOD STORAGE |
| IDAHO FISH & WILDLIFE | BOISE, ID | $15,000 | 2025 | GRIZZLY CONFLICT RESOLUTION |
| NATIONAL WILDLIFE FEDERATION | MISSOULA, MT | $15,000 | 2025 | BISON RESTORATION PROJECT |
| TROUT UNLIMITED | ARLINGTON, VA | $10,000 | 2025 | FY 24 MILL CREEK |
| CENTENNIAL VALLEY ASSOCIATION | DILLON, MT | $7,500 | 2025 | SUPPORT FOR RANGE RIDERS |
| TOM MINER BASIN ASSOC | EMIGRANT, MT | $7,500 | 2025 | GRIZZLY CONFLICT RESOLUTION |
| FOREST SERVICE | BOZEMAN, MT | $140,500 | 2024 | GRIZZLY BEAR HABITAT ROAD CLOSURES |
| WYOMING WILDERNESS ASSOC | SHERIDAN, WY | $21,500 | 2024 | INTER TRIBAL GATHERING |
| IDAHO FISH & WILDLIFE | BOISE, ID | $15,000 | 2024 | GRIZZLY CONFLICT RESOLUTION |
| HENRYS FORK WILDLIFE ALLIANC | ASHTON, ID | $10,000 | 2024 | GRIZZLY CONFLICT RESOLUTION |
| JACKSON HOLE WILDLIFE FOUND | JACKSON, WY | $10,000 | 2024 | GRIZZLY CONFLICT RESOLUTION |
| TOM MINER BASIN ASSOC | EMIGRANT, MT | $7,500 | 2024 | GRIZZLY CONFLICT RESOLUTION |
| CENTENNIAL VALLEY ASSOCIATION | DELL, MT | $7,500 | 2024 | GRIZZLY CONFLICT RESOLUTION |
| RUBY VALLEY CONSERVATION DIST | SHERIDAN, MT | $6,000 | 2024 | GRIZZLY CONFLICT RESOLUTION |
| FRIENDS OF THE BRIDGER-TETON | JACKSON, WY | $5,500 | 2024 | GRIZZLY CONFLICT RESOLUTION |
| PROPERTY & ENVIRONMENT | BOZEMAN, MT | $25,000 | 2023 | BISON RESTORATION PROJECT |
| LEGACY PHILANTHROPY | SANTA BARBARA, CA | $14,967 | 2023 | ELK OCCUPANCY AGREEMENT |
| CNTR FOR LARGE LANDSCAPE CONS | BOZEMAN, MT | $10,000 | 2023 | CLIMATE CHANGE IMPACTS |
| NTHN ROCKIES CONSERV CO-OP | WASHINGTON, DC | $10,000 | 2023 | CLIMATE CHANGE IMPACTS |
| MOUNTAIN TIME ARTS | BOZEMAN, MT | $10,000 | 2023 | INDIGENOUS CONSERVATION |
| TOM MINER BASIN ASSOC | EMIGRANT, MT | $7,500 | 2023 | GRIZZLY CONFLICT RESOLUTION |
| CENTENNIAL VALLEY ASSOCIATION | DELL, MT | $7,500 | 2023 | GRIZZLY CONFLICT RESOLUTION |
| HENRYS FORK WILDLIFE | ASHTON, ID | $6,250 | 2023 | SUPPORT FOR WILDLIFE ADVOCACY |
BUREAU OF LAND MANAGEMENT
$4,042,460MINERAL RIGHTS ON PUBLIC LANDS
USDA FOREST SERVICE
$119,582CAMPGROUND FOOD STORAGE
IDAHO FISH & WILDLIFE
$15,000GRIZZLY CONFLICT RESOLUTION
NATIONAL WILDLIFE FEDERATION
$15,000BISON RESTORATION PROJECT
TROUT UNLIMITED
$10,000FY 24 MILL CREEK
CENTENNIAL VALLEY ASSOCIATION
$7,500SUPPORT FOR RANGE RIDERS
TOM MINER BASIN ASSOC
$7,500GRIZZLY CONFLICT RESOLUTION
FOREST SERVICE
$140,500GRIZZLY BEAR HABITAT ROAD CLOSURES
WYOMING WILDERNESS ASSOC
$21,500INTER TRIBAL GATHERING
IDAHO FISH & WILDLIFE
$15,000GRIZZLY CONFLICT RESOLUTION
HENRYS FORK WILDLIFE ALLIANC
$10,000GRIZZLY CONFLICT RESOLUTION
JACKSON HOLE WILDLIFE FOUND
$10,000GRIZZLY CONFLICT RESOLUTION
TOM MINER BASIN ASSOC
$7,500GRIZZLY CONFLICT RESOLUTION
CENTENNIAL VALLEY ASSOCIATION
$7,500GRIZZLY CONFLICT RESOLUTION
RUBY VALLEY CONSERVATION DIST
$6,000GRIZZLY CONFLICT RESOLUTION
FRIENDS OF THE BRIDGER-TETON
$5,500GRIZZLY CONFLICT RESOLUTION
PROPERTY & ENVIRONMENT
$25,000BISON RESTORATION PROJECT
LEGACY PHILANTHROPY
$14,967ELK OCCUPANCY AGREEMENT
CNTR FOR LARGE LANDSCAPE CONS
$10,000CLIMATE CHANGE IMPACTS
NTHN ROCKIES CONSERV CO-OP
$10,000CLIMATE CHANGE IMPACTS
MOUNTAIN TIME ARTS
$10,000INDIGENOUS CONSERVATION
TOM MINER BASIN ASSOC
$7,500GRIZZLY CONFLICT RESOLUTION
CENTENNIAL VALLEY ASSOCIATION
$7,500GRIZZLY CONFLICT RESOLUTION
HENRYS FORK WILDLIFE
$6,250SUPPORT FOR WILDLIFE ADVOCACY