KYIV. UkraineGate .12. November .2022 | War News .
The MHP-Hromada Charitable Foundation holds free webinars on strategizing, developing a food security plan and project management within the framework of the “Gardens for Victory” grant program. This was reported in the press service of the Foundation .
Details
The training program started at the end of October, however, even now everyone can join it in a closed Facebook group.
Citation
“Every additional opportunity that can support Ukrainians is extremely important today. The Gardens for Victory grant competition is one such opportunity where the community can receive additional resources to strengthen its food security in the face of war. Through this competition, the community can become even more self-reliant, as well as acquire important competencies in project management and project writing, which will be extremely valuable and relevant during the reconstruction of Ukraine,” said Tetiana Volochay, Director of the MHP-Hromada Foundation.
About the contest
The contest “Gardens for Victory” is implemented in Sumy, Kyiv, Vinnytsia, Khmelnytsky, Ivano-Frankivsk, Kharkiv, Poltava, Lviv, Cherkasy and Dnipropetrovsk regions.
Local governments can apply for grants independently or in cooperation with other communities, communal institutions, small and medium-sized farmers, cooperatives, associations and associations of agricultural producers. Winners will be able to get up to 250 thousand rubles. uah for the implementation of their projects. Applications are accepted until November 30.
The competition is implemented in partnership with the Ministry of Agrarian Policy and Food of Ukraine in order to increase the food security of communities, develop cultivation, processing, storage of grown agricultural products and increase employment.
Help
MHP-Hromada is a Ukrainian charitable foundation that started its activities in 2015. Its main mission is the integrated development of communities. The geography of activity includes 12 regions of Ukraine: more than 700 towns and villages.
Since the beginning of Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine, the Foundation has been systematically supporting people in the regions of hostilities, Ukrainian defenders and rescuers, communities, hospitals and maternity hospitals, charitable institutions that care for orphans and the elderly, as well as people who were left without a home and livelihood due to the war.
Source: Ukrgate