
“It’s an honor for us to help support these nonprofit organizations as they bring life, health and vitality to their communities,” said Melody Birmingham-Byrd, Duke Energy state president for Indiana. “We are dedicated to supporting initiatives that enhance the regions where our customers live, work and play.”
Top grant recipients include:
- Food Finders Food Bank, Inc., in Howard County, $50,000 to provide additional food during the high-need holiday season
- Indiana Chamber of Commerce Foundation, Inc., $50,000 to advance workforce development goals
- Indiana Symphony Society, Inc., $30,000 to support Discovery Concerts, offered to third- through sixth-grade students
- Indiana Special Olympics, Inc., $20,000 to support the Olympic Town summer games for contestants with intellectual disabilities
- Indiana University Southeast, $17,500 to help build nonprofit capacity in Southern Indiana through a professional development conference and on-site consulting
- Heart of Rushville in Rushville, Ind., $16,500 to create a park in memory of Carol Jenkins-Davis, a young woman who lost her life due to a racially motivated crime
- Arts Council of Southern Indiana, $10,000 to help fund creation of Art on Wheels, a mobile van that will travel in Clark, Harrison and Floyd counties, delivering interactive art experiences to children under age 18
- YMCAs of the Wabash Valley, $15,000 to support a youth food delivery program, helping feed approximately 400 school-age children during the two-week winter holiday break
- Arts and Cultural Council, Decatur County, $12,000 for the Rebekah Park amphitheater, providing a permanent location for arts and cultural events
- Sculpture Trails Outdoor Museum, Greene County, $12,000 for a traveling foundry program to support STEAM (Science, Technology, Engineering, Arts and Math) programs



