I Want to Open a Non Profit Faith Based Drug Rehab. How Do I Get Funding to Open It?

Question by Larry Yochim: I want to open a non profit faith based drug rehab. How do I get funding to open it?
Rehabilitation, housing, and spiritual guidance to be able to be productive citizens once again, my criteria will be a minimum of one year in house rehabilitation, also connected with county and state inmates who’s parole will be to complete this program or violate probation. many people are getting out of jail and having to return because no help is available in my county. My goal is to help break the addiction and reunite men with there loved ones and to society as clean and sober individuals.

Best answer:

Answer by Katherine W
Funding doesn’t magically appear. You’d have to raise money for it, and you may get some government funding. However, what you’re proposing has a lot of government regulations to go along with it. Generally, you have to have certified counselors, and also be certified for housing.

If you haven’t already worked for an organization doing this kind of work, that’s where I’d start. You’d get the experience and learn about the local regulations. Start with your local Rescue Mission or Salvation Army or Catholic Charities. Then go to your local housing authority and ask what it would take to get certified.

Finally, if you’ve done all that, I would create a business plan of how much your costs would be each month and each year, and what your sources of revenue would be. How much do government programs give you? How much can you raise from local foundations (go and interview them and ask, or research their local giving at www.guidestar.org, looking at their 990 forms)? Then, survey the local community and see how much donors would donate.

What you’re proposing is really, really hard. Start by working with other organizations first. It’s not an easy way to make money.

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Kick-Off Press Conference #1 – 12/10/2007 – Big Brothers Big Sisters of Will and Grundy Counties kicked off a million capital campaign on December 10, 2007, in a conference room so crowded it drove home the campaign’s appeal. “We know without question we need a new facility, said campaign co-chairman Jim Roolf, president of First Midwest Bank Joliet and a member of the Illinois Tollway Board of Directors. He said unprecedented growth in Will and Grundy counties demands a larger facility to serve the needs of the increasing number of at-risk boys and girls from single-parent families, some 500 of whom are now being helped. He said the goal can be “achieved pretty quickly, despite launching a campaign near the holidays, a difficult time of the year for many with expenses.” “If everyone in Will and Grundy counties gave , we would almost accomplish our goal,” noted Roolf. He introduced two boys, Nick Sayers of Morris, who has just been matched with a Big Brother, and Demetri Morris of Naperville, who has been on the ready-to-be-matched list waiting for a Big Brother for more than a year. “Nick and Demetri, you’re what it’s all about. You are our future, and our future starts today.” Co-chairman Paul Ganzert, an investment adviser, said Big Brothers Big Sisters started locally in 1972 and told about his experiences volunteering in the 1970s and 1980s as a Big Brother to two different boys. “Today, both are very good citizens,” he said proudly. Dana Agnich of Morris, Nick’s mom, said that since being matched with

 

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