To provide affordable housing and service coordination for persons with limited incomes in an inclusive environment that enhances their quality of life physically, mentally, and spiritually.
Modesto Affiliated Church Housing Corp’s latest reported grant was $7,288,574 to Ralston Tower Rhf Partners Lp in Long Beach for developing and managing a low-income housing community. That single award captures the foundation’s core role: financing affordable housing projects and the resident services that support them. The organization describes its purpose as providing affordable housing and service coordination for people with limited incomes in an inclusive environment that supports physical, mental, and spiritual quality of life. Its grantmaking is tied to Retirement Housing Foundation communities and related entities, with an emphasis on affordable housing, supportive services for older adults, housing for people with disabilities, and housing for low-income families. The foundation also supports community development, resident services, and social services coordination, which suggests a model that combines property development with ongoing operational support. The organization’s active programs show multiple ways it channels funds: general charitable support, affordable housing preservation and pre-development, resident benevolence, youth education scholarships, and resident engagement activities. Across those programs, the throughline is housing-centered support for RHF communities and the residents who live in them.
Affordable housing is the clearest thread in the foundation’s grantmaking. Through the Affordable Housing Fund, it supports the preservation, maintenance, pre-development, and creation of affordable housing communities nationwide, including pre-development funding for new senior affordable communities. Resident support is another major area. The Resident Benevolence Fund provides rental assistance and other benevolence programs to RHF residents of all ages, including examples such as Kicks 4 Kids back-to-school shoes support. The foundation also backs resident engagement. Project H.A.N.D.S. supplies crafting materials, tools, and supplies so residents can make items and donate them to other organizations. Youth education appears in the Youth Education Scholarships program, which is designed to support the education of RHF residents’ youth. Together, these programs show a funder focused on housing, resident stability, and community life within RHF communities.
$7.3M
$19.6M
$22M
$8.2M
Most grants fall between $7.3M and $7.3M, with a median of $7.3M.
25th Percentile
$7.3M
Median
$7.3M
75th Percentile
$7.3M
About 100% of grants go to recipients in CA.
STUART HARTMAN
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The single reported grant size in the data is $7,288,574, and the p25, median, and p75 are all the same amount, indicating one observed grant at that level. The foundation is operating through program-specific funds and RHF-related entities rather than a broad, open-ended grantmaking pattern. It makes program-related investments and its philanthropy is closely connected to housing development, operations, resident services, and long-term program sustainability. The active program pages also show both unsolicited and non-unsolicited channels, depending on the program.
Grantmaking is local, and all reported grants go to recipients in California. The top state by grant count is CA, with 100% of grants landing in the HQ state. The named recent recipient is in Long Beach, matching the foundation’s California-centered pattern. Some active programs are described as nationwide or across U.S. territories, but the grant data provided here shows only California recipients.
The foundation centers on affordable housing and service coordination for people with limited incomes. Its stated focus includes affordable assisted living, housing for older adults, housing for families, housing for people with disabilities, community development, resident services, and social services coordination.
The grant-size distribution is flat in the available data: p25, median, and p75 are all $7,288,574. That reflects the single reported grant amount on file.
Yes. Active programs include resident benevolence, youth education scholarships, and Project H.A.N.D.S., alongside affordable housing funds and general charitable support. Those programs point to a model that combines housing with resident stability and community engagement.
The grant data provided is entirely California-based: 100% of grants go to recipients in CA, and the top state by grant count is also CA. The recent recipient listed is in Long Beach.
Some active programs accept unsolicited requests, including the Affordable Housing Fund, RHF Charitable Foundation Sponsorship Opportunities, Youth Education Scholarships, Project H.A.N.D.S., and the Resident Benevolence Fund. The RHF Charitable Foundation general grantmaking page is marked as not accepting unsolicited requests.
2024
Source: IRS Form 990-PF, fiscal year 2024.
Most recent grants reported to the IRS.
| Recipient | Location | Amount | Year | Purpose |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| RALSTON TOWER RHF PARTNERS LP | LONG BEACH, CA | $7,288,574 | 2024 | TO DEVELOP & MANAGE A LOW INCOME HOUSING COMMUNITY |
RALSTON TOWER RHF PARTNERS LP
$7,288,574TO DEVELOP & MANAGE A LOW INCOME HOUSING COMMUNITY