Troubled Bronx Charity Continues to Receive Government Grants

New York lawmakers are giving more money to the Bronx Community Foundation, which has failed to spend it in the past.

Sam Mellins   ·   August 28, 2025
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| Photos: Venca24 / Wikimedia Commons; Billion Photos; natatravel, vasabii, theeradech sanin, jmccurley51 / Canva | Illustration: Leor Stylar

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A Bronx charity that failed to distribute hundreds of thousands of dollars that it raised for fire victims received $300,000 in new government grants this spring, records show.

We’ve been keeping a close eye on this particular organization, the Bronx Community Foundation. In January, we reported that it had failed to spend nearly $400,000 it received for the victims of the devastating Twin Parks apartment fire, which killed 17 Bronxites in 2022. For three years in a row, it spent more on consultants and overhead than on charitable giving.

We also reported that the organization was facing internal turmoil, with multiple board members resigning in the wake of the firing of the organization’s inaugural president and CEO.

Last fall, Empire State Development, a government agency that promotes economic growth, cancelled a grant to the Foundation. The cancellation letter cited the leadership turnover and the organization’s financial and ethical issues, which the agency said “cast doubt on whether the organization can appropriately satisfy the terms and conditions required.”

But none of these things have stopped New York lawmakers from giving the group more money.

The foundation has been awarded millions of dollars in city, state, and federal funding over the years. This year’s haul of government money consists of $245,000 from the New York City Council and $55,000 from the New York Assembly. Both bodies distribute millions of dollars every year in grants that are sponsored by individual lawmakers in response to requests from community groups.

One factor in the foundation’s fundraising success may have been hiring the influential lobbying firm London House, whose founder Jason Laidley has close ties to Bronx power brokers including Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie, Councilmember Kevin Riley, and Bronx Democratic Party leader Senator Jamaal Bailey.

The biggest contribution to the foundation was from Council Speaker Adrienne Adams, who directed $100,000 to the group.

It also received $90,000 from Councilmember Rafael Salamanca Jr., $25,000 from Riley, and $30,000 from Councilmember Althea Stevens, all of whom represent the Bronx.

The foundation also received a $55,000 grant from the New York State Assembly, which doesn’t publicly reveal which lawmakers sponsor grants — a practice good government groups say invites corruption.

City Council spokesperson Mara Davis said that the grants are “aimed at helping create more equitable access to digital resources for Bronx residents and all New Yorkers.” Davis noted that the grants are to reimburse the Foundation’s expenses, rather than being paid out in advance. She did not address questions about why the Council is continuing to offer grants despite the foundation’s challenges.

Spokespeople for Heastie, Riley, and Stevens did not respond to requests for comment, nor did the foundation.

Councilmember Rafael Salamanca Jr. said that the $90,000 grant to the foundation that he sponsored was for laptop giveaways to Bronx kids. (He did not respond to a follow-up question about how many laptops the grant provided.) Earlier this year, Salamanca and the foundation hosted an event where 350 members of an NYPD-sponsored youth group received free laptops.

Salamanca said that he wasn’t concerned about the foundation’s challenges because the group had gone through the city’s process to determine eligibility for grants.

“Whenever an elected official in the city wants to allocate funding to an organization, they get vetted,” Salamanca said, “And there was no issue.”

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Sam Mellins is senior reporter at New York Focus, which he has been a part of since launch day. His reporting has also appeared in The San Francisco Chronicle, The Intercept, THE CITY, and The Nation. Reach him on Signal: mellins.613
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