Inasmuch Foundation

Inasmuch Foundation is a grant-making foundation based in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, United States. It provides financial contributions within the community and civic engagement, education, human services, and journalism fields. Grantmaking within community and civic engagement, education, and human services is specific to nonprofit organizations serving Oklahoma City. Grants within the journalism focus area are open to organizations nationwide. The organization administers an open request cycle each fall and spring, as well as an invitation-only grant cycle in the summer.

Edith Kinney Gaylord established Inasmuch Foundation and Ethics and Excellence in Journalism Foundation in 1982 as two separate entities, and in 2014, the corporate entities merged and the Ethics and Excellence in Journalism Foundation became a wholly owned subsidiary of Inasmuch Foundation. The transition was completed in 2020 with the launch of a new, consolidated brand and website.

In 2023, Inasmuch Foundation reached an inflection point with the distribution of more than $350 million in grants, an amount that surpasses founder Edith Kinney Gaylord’s original contributions to Inasmuch Foundation. That same year, Inasmuch released a 40th Anniversary Report with details on the past, present, and future of the organization.

As of 2023, Inasmuch Foundation provides an average of $25 million plus in grants per fiscal year. Additionally, the endowment has grown to a current value of more than $550 million.

Leadership
Inasmuch Foundation was founded in 1982 by Edith Kinney Gaylord.

Robert J. Ross has served as President of Inasmuch Foundation since 2005 and was elected Chairman in 2019. He originally joined the Inasmuch team in 2003 as Executive Director and Vice President of the Board.

Mission
Inasmuch Foundation champions community and civic engagement, education, human services, and journalism to improve the quality of life for Oklahomans.

Name
The foundation takes its name from the Gospel of Saint Matthew, "Inasmuch as ye have done it unto one of the least of these, my brethren, ye have done it unto me."

Grant recipients
Since its founding in 1982, Inasmuch Foundation has supported over 250 non-profit organizations. Grant recipients have included:
 * City Care
 * Homeless Alliance
 * Lyric Theater
 * Myriad Botanical Gardens
 * Oklahoma City Museum of Art
 * Oklahoma City National Memorial & Museum
 * Oklahoma Media Center
 * Oklahoma City Zoo & Botanical Garden (Oklahoma Zoological Society)
 * Positive Tomorrows
 * Regional Food Bank of Oklahoma
 * ReMerge of Oklahoma County
 * Sunbeam Family Services
 * United Way of Central Oklahoma
 * University of Oklahoma
 * Gaylord College of Journalism & Mass Communication
 * Upward Transitions

Notable contributions
Inasmuch Foundation promotes itself as a leader in public/private partnerships and collaborative problem-solving. Some of Inasmuch Foundation’s notable projects include…
 * The Ecosystem Engagement Fund, a multiphase study conducted by Oklahoma Media Center (OMC) and funded by Kirkpatrick Foundation in Oklahoma City. In the first two stages, OMC conducted scientific polling to identify how Oklahomans consume news and performed academic field research to gather input from rural news deserts and underserved communities. After gathering and analyzing this information, OMC performed newsroom training to interpret key research findings and construct a plan to put the study’s recommendations into practice. In the final phase, Inasmuch Foundation distributed $100,000 in grants to newsrooms who developed programs aimed at implementing what they learned and building trust among readers.
 * Key to Home, a large-scale public/private partnership involving over 40 member agencies working together to house and provide wrap around support to Oklahoma City’s chronically unsheltered population. In 2019, Oklahoma City Mayor David Holt convened a Homelessness Task Force co-chaired by Inasmuch Foundation Chairman and CEO, Bob Ross and Arnall Family Foundation President Sue Ann Arnall. Inasmuch Foundation, Arnall Family Foundation and the City of Oklahoma City provided resources to commission research on challenges and solutions as well as development of a comprehensive plan to address the problem, which ultimately resulted in the Key to Home program. Key to Home plans to house 500% of Oklahoma City’s unsheltered population within two years and is funded with a combination of federal grants, municipal allocations, and private support. Key to Home is modeled off a previously successful effort out of Houston, Texas that housed 25,000 of the city’s unsheltered population over ten years.
 * Oklahoma City Educare, which was introduced to Oklahoma City in 2007 thanks to a collaboration among Inasmuch Foundation, Sunbeam Family Services, Community Action Agency, and Oklahoma City Public Schools. Part of the national Educare Learning Network, Oklahoma City Educare serves 200 children and their families and takes a holistic approach to education by addressing mental and emotional health through family engagement. Oklahoma City Educare is one of several in the state and the first Educare location in the nation to be certified by Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design.
 * Inasmuch Foundation, along with more than 50 community partners, established ReMerge of Oklahoma County in 2011. The organization serves mothers of minor children who are facing non-violent felony charges in Oklahoma County. To date, ReMerge has graduated 193 women who parent a total of 474 minor children. ReMerge has saved the state of Oklahoma more than $47 million dollars by providing a pathway for mothers to be restored to our community rather than incarcerated and separated from their children.