Support GLAAD: Foundations & Corporate Grants
GLAAD receives support in the form of grants from a variety of institutional funders, including foundations and corporations. The grants that GLAAD receives range in size from $1,000 to $1 million and take a variety of forms: from multi-year grants to one-time challenge grants, and from general operating support to funding of specific programmatic or geographically based initiatives.
GLAAD would like to recognize the following organizations that provide grant support for GLAAD's programs and initiatives.
Anonymous
Arcus Foundation AT&T Foundation
BW Bastian Foundation
Charitable Foundation/Agent Community Outreach of Prudential CA Realty
Chubb GLEN
Comcast
Davidson/Valentini Fund of Stonewall Community Foundation
E. Rhodes & Leona B. Carpenter Foundation
Evelyn & Walter Haas, Jr. Fund Funding Exchange - Heller Bernard
Gill Foundation
Hargrove Pierce Foundation
IBM
Johnson Family Foundation
Kevin J. Mossier Foundation
Klub Services Inc
Louis Russo & Joseph Dwyer Charitable Trust
Mel Heifetz Fund of the Dade Community Foundation
Microsoft
Morningstar Foundation
Morrison & Foerster Foundation
Phyllis M. Coors Foundation
Roll Giving
San Francisco Foundation
Southern California Edison
Stark Services
Ted Snowdon Foundation
Wallis Foundation
Wells Fargo Foundation
For more information, please contact:
Shikha Jain Cruz
Director of Foundation Relations
(323) 634-2034
JainCruz@glaad.org
Grantmakers: For additional information about GLAAD, please see our GuideStar listing.
Snapshot of Our Work

Sgt. Anthony Bustos. Photo courtesy Jeff Sheng
GLAAD Tells The Stories of LGBT Service Members
As Congress moved to repeal Don't Ask, Don't Tell, GLAAD worked to share the stories of several gay and lesbian service members suffering under the military's ban on gay and lesbian service members. GLAAD worked with service members like Sergeant Anthony Bustos to help share his story and tell everyday Americans what it means to have total equality in the Armed Forces. GLAAD brought Sergeant Bustos' story to the NY Daily News, the Wall Street Journal and USA Today, the most widely-circulated newspaper in the country, and helped him formulate powerful talking points that help people understand why repeal is so important. Read more about GLAAD's work on 'Don't Ask, Don't Tell'...




