Community Foundation for Palm Beach and Martin Counties
The Community Foundation for Palm Beach and Martin Counties is a public charity headquartered in West Palm Beach that serves as a philanthropic intermediary for donors, nonprofits, and communities across Palm Beach and Martin Counties in South Florida. The foundation manages charitable funds contributed by individuals, families, and corporations seeking to support causes ranging from education and health care to environmental conservation and social services. As one of the region's largest community foundations, it coordinates philanthropic efforts, provides fiscal sponsorship, and convenes stakeholders around critical issues affecting the two-county area. The organization operates through a combination of donor-advised funds, field of interest funds, scholarship funds, and discretionary grants, making it a central institution in South Florida's nonprofit sector. The foundation holds 501(c)(3) tax-exempt status and is registered as a charitable organization with the Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services.
History
The Community Foundation for Palm Beach and Martin Counties was established to create an organized vehicle for charitable giving in a region undergoing significant growth and demographic change. Its founding reflected a broader national movement in the late twentieth century toward community foundations that could aggregate charitable resources and deploy them across defined geographic areas — a model championed nationally by the Council on Foundations, which counts the organization among its members. By centralizing donor intent and philanthropic resources, the foundation positioned itself to address local needs more efficiently than individual donors acting alone.[1]
The foundation's asset base and grantmaking capacity grew steadily as it earned recognition among regional donors who valued its expertise in identifying community priorities and evaluating nonprofit effectiveness. A milestone in that growth came when the Frederick A. DeLuca Foundation — the philanthropic vehicle of the late Subway co-founder Fred DeLuca — awarded an $8.4 million grant to the Community Foundation for Palm Beach and Martin Counties, one of the largest single grants in the organization's history and a signal of its credibility among major institutional donors.[2] The organization developed specialized expertise in grant evaluation, nonprofit capacity building, and collaborative grantmaking around complex social issues. As the population of Palm Beach and Martin Counties expanded during the 1990s and 2000s, the foundation's reach grew correspondingly, with both longtime residents and newcomers seeking meaningful ways to invest in community betterment. The organization adopted data-driven grantmaking methodologies to measure the effectiveness of funds distributed to nonprofit organizations throughout the region.
Mission and Operations
The Community Foundation for Palm Beach and Martin Counties operates through a dual-track system designed to serve both donors and recipient organizations. On the donor side, the foundation accepts contributions to several types of charitable funds. Donor-advised funds allow contributors to make an irrevocable charitable contribution, receive an immediate tax benefit, and then recommend grants to qualified nonprofits over time. Field of interest funds are dedicated to specific cause areas — such as the environment or early childhood education — and are administered by the foundation using its own expertise in those areas. Scholarship funds support educational advancement for students meeting defined criteria. This structure gives donors flexibility in how their charitable contributions are invested and distributed, while the foundation's tax-exempt status and professional investment management benefit even smaller contributors who could not otherwise access institutional investment portfolios.
On the nonprofit and community side, the foundation serves as a significant source of grant funding for registered charitable organizations serving Palm Beach and Martin Counties. The foundation issues regular grant cycles, accepts letters of intent and full proposals, and evaluates nonprofit applications using criteria related to organizational capacity, community impact, measurable outcomes, and alignment with foundation priorities. Beyond direct grantmaking, the foundation provides nonprofit consulting, workshops on fund development and board governance, and peer learning networks for grantees. A Philanthropic Advisory Council — whose members include civic leaders and business professionals from across the region — provides guidance on strategic giving priorities and helps connect donors to community needs.[3] In 2025, the foundation welcomed Ryan Ederle among three new Philanthropic Advisory Council members, expanding the council's regional representation.[4]
Community Impact and Grantmaking
The Community Foundation for Palm Beach and Martin Counties distributes millions of dollars annually to nonprofits addressing educational gaps, health care disparities, environmental challenges, and social service needs throughout the region. Educational grantmaking has historically represented a significant share of annual distributions, with funding directed toward programs addressing early childhood development, K–12 school improvement, college access and completion, and workforce training. The foundation has consistently prioritized funding for schools and programs serving economically disadvantaged students, recognizing education as a pathway to economic mobility and long-term community stability. In the health care sector, it has supported organizations providing primary care access, mental health services, and chronic disease prevention, particularly in communities with limited access to those services.
Environmental grantmaking reflects the region's particular ecological vulnerabilities. Palm Beach and Martin Counties sit along a stretch of South Florida coastline dependent on the Biscayne and Surficial aquifer systems for drinking water, and both counties face documented risks from sea-level rise, coastal erosion, and water quality degradation in the Indian River Lagoon and Lake Okeechobee watershed. Foundation grantmaking in this area has supported coastal conservation, water quality improvement, and habitat restoration. That environmental focus has taken on added local significance as South Florida communities have confronted large-scale development pressures — including proposed industrial facilities with substantial water and energy demands — that raise questions about long-term resource sustainability in a region where many rural residents rely on private wells and aquifer-fed water supplies.
The foundation has also funded social service organizations addressing homelessness, food insecurity, and domestic violence. Its nonprofit grantees include organizations such as the Rose Trolley, a nonprofit providing transportation services to elderly and disabled residents in Palm Beach County, which has received foundation support and recognition through the foundation's nonprofit spotlight program.[5] The foundation regularly publishes community needs assessments and grantmaking trend reports, contributing to ongoing regional conversations about philanthropic priorities. In recent years, it has emphasized collaborative grantmaking models in which multiple funders coordinate around shared challenges, multiplying the impact of individual grants and encouraging strategic partnerships among nonprofits.
Leadership and Governance
The Community Foundation for Palm Beach and Martin Counties is governed by a board of directors composed of community leaders, business professionals, and philanthropic practitioners who set organizational strategy and oversee foundation operations. The board draws from multiple sectors — business, nonprofit leadership, education, and civic engagement — to ensure that its decision-making reflects diverse community perspectives. The chief executive, carrying the title of president and CEO, works with the board chair and standing committees to advance strategic initiatives and manage day-to-day operations. The CEO's role includes public representation of the foundation's mission; the organization's chief executive has been quoted in regional media describing the foundation's approach to community philanthropy and the challenges facing the South Florida nonprofit sector.[6]
Governance committees address grantmaking oversight, investment management, donor development, and community engagement. The foundation's Philanthropic Advisory Council supplements the board by bringing additional sector expertise and donor perspective to strategic conversations about funding priorities. The foundation maintains transparency through annual reports, publicly available grant guidelines, and regular communications with donors and nonprofit partners. It participates in national networks of community foundations, including those affiliated with the Council on Foundations, benchmarking its practices against peer institutions and incorporating innovations in philanthropic management. Professional ethical standards govern all interactions with donors, nonprofit applicants, and the broader community, consistent with the foundation's obligations as a steward of charitable assets held for public benefit.