AlaskaNews
My Feed

Content discovery

Topics

Issues and interests

Locations

News by place

Organizations

Agencies, boards, and groups

Elections

Elections and time-bounded civic events

Calendar

Upcoming meetings and civic events

Source material

People

People quoted on the platform

Transcripts

Search every public meeting (subscribers)

Video Clips

Quoted moments on video

Photos

Community gallery

Podcasts

Articles read aloud

How It WorksLog inSign up
AlaskaNewsAlaska News

Local news, from the source.

Public meetings deserve coverage.
Every claim links to the original source.

Browse

  • My Feed
  • Topics
  • Locations
  • Organizations
  • Elections
  • People
  • TranscriptsSubscribers
  • Podcasts
  • Calendar
  • Photos
  • Video Clips

Get involved

  • Subscribe
  • Submit a Tip
  • Join a Community
  • Become a Journalist
  • Compute Volunteers
  • About
  • Contact

Resources

  • RSS
  • How It Works
  • API
  • Privacy
  • Terms

© 2026 Communities News LLC. All rights reserved.

Part of the Communities News platform

Anchorage Park Foundation opens $300,000 challenge grant program

Cover image for article: Anchorage Park Foundation opens $300,000 challenge grant program

Frame from "Community and Economic Development Committee Meeting" · Source

Anchorage Park Foundation opens $300,000 challenge grant program

by Alaska News·Feb 10, 2026(4mo ago)
2 min readAnchorageAI
Share

The Anchorage Park Foundation opened its annual challenge grant program Thursday, offering up to $300,000 in matching funds for community-driven park and trail projects across the municipality.

The program matches community investment dollar-for-dollar with support from the Rasmuson Foundation. Communities can contribute cash, in-kind donations, or volunteer hours calculated at a national rate. The foundation increased award amounts this year and extended project completion timelines to two years.

Beth Nordlund, executive director of the Anchorage Park Foundation, told the Community and Economic Development Committee that the program has historically generated significant community investment beyond the initial match.

"The community investment over the years, we have all the numbers, but often people overmatch it 3 to 1," Nordlund said. "So this $300,000 investment in people's hopes and dreams for neighborhood parks and trails is just a really good opportunity to get community engagement."

The challenge grants accept applications for trail and public land projects. This year the foundation expanded eligibility to include projects on land adjacent to public property, not just municipal parks and trails.

Nordlund described the program as more than infrastructure improvement. She said the grants have transformed neighborhood dynamics by giving residents a shared purpose.

"I have seen it multiple times transform a group of neighbors who do not know one another are working towards the same thing," Nordlund said. "I have had multiple neighborhoods basically tell me that they were a divided community, and now they have something to work on together."

A committee member who has worked on a challenge grant echoed that assessment. "I have also worked on a challenge grant and yeah, I definitely can say it brings people together and it gives them something to, a goal to achieve together," the member said.

The foundation works closely with the Parks and Recreation Department to evaluate which projects are feasible and fundable. For applicants without nonprofit status, the foundation can serve as a fiscal sponsor, managing funds and paying bills directly.

A grantee kickoff is scheduled for May 15. The foundation has not yet announced the location, as Town Square Park will be unavailable due to construction.

Nordlund encouraged residents to contact the foundation before applying. She said professional guidance helps applicants shape stronger proposals and increases their chances of receiving funding.

Applications are open now. Information is available at the Anchorage Park Foundation website or by contacting [email protected].

Sources

Based on: View Transcript

This article cites 74 chunks.

GovernmentAnchorageMunicipality of Anchorage

AI-assisted, reviewed by editors. Spot an error?

Reviewed by News Bot

Stay informed. Support what matters.

Free, permanent access to local news you can verify. Subscribe to support Alaska News and go ad-free.

SubscribeHow it works →Sign up free

Community photos

Have a photo that captures this story? Share it — the community votes on covers.

+ Sign up to add a photo

Comments

Sign in to leave a comment.

No comments yet. Be the first to share your thoughts.