The NPF works in partnership with companies and organizations that wish to support the parks by delegating donations through one of foundation's programs and creating grants that honor the company's mission or values and benefit the parks and visitors. Additional donations that are not assigned to one of the programs help fund media and promotions, communication with partners, and park maintenance. The NPF has received support from partners such as: L.L. Bean, Union Pacific Railroad, Disney, and Subaru. In 2016, the NPF conducted a fundraising campaign titled "The Centennial Campaign for America’s National Parks," which raised more than $500 million in support of national parks and programs. In 2024, the
Lilly Endowment donated $100 million to the National Park Foundation to support more than 400 national park sites. Past and present NPF programs have included:
The African American Experience Fund Established in 2001, the African American Experience Fund (AAEF) helps preserve African American history and culture, and the stories of the individuals and the national park sites they care for under the AAEF. The fund works to reach a broader audience through public engagement with the parks. AAEF supports and highlights sites including the
Tuskegee Airmen National Historic Site and
Tuskegee Institute National Historic Site,
Martin Luther King, Jr. National Historic Site, and the
New Orleans Jazz National Historical Park. In total, more than 30 national parks and monuments are designated as African American Heritage Sites.
Best Idea Program The America's Best Ideas Program was launched by the National Park Foundation following the airing of the documentary by Ken Burns,
The National Parks: America’s Best Idea in 2009. The program aimed to provide underprivileged youth with opportunities to engage with National Parks through opportunities like internships. The program also created programs and activities in parks to educate visitors on park history and impact. Grants from the program included summer camps for children with developmental disorders, trips for Native American children to engage with their tribal history, and internships for homeless high school students. This program has since ended.
The Ticket to Ride Program The Ticket to Ride Program was created in 2011 by the National Park Foundation in order to provide students and youth with transportation to the national parks as a result of field trips being a financial burden for many schools and youth groups. In 2013, the NPF partnered with the Disney Worldwide Conservation Fund to provide grants through the Ticket to Ride Program.
Kennesaw Mountain National Battlefield Park was able to provide 400 students in Douglas Country, Georgia with transportation to the park where they participated in programs centered around
American Civil War history. In 2014, the NPF awarded
Biscayne National Park a grant through the Ticket to Ride Program that allowed for 1,500 students at Title I schools transportation to the park. Biscayne was able to use the funding to create educational programs that focused on the park's wildlife for the students to participate in. Overall, 65 parks were provided with transportation funding that same year. This program has ended.
The Latino Heritage Fund The Latino Heritage Fund, established in 2011, and known as the American Latino Heritage Fund until 2015, was started by the NPF to preserve Latino heritage and culture at national park sites and engage Latino communities. As of 2013, only 10% of park visitors were Latino. The Latino Heritage Fund works to increase attendance through educating and involving youth with sites and events that focus on Latino history. The NPF has also organized the funding and supported the National Park Service's establishment of more sites and monuments that celebrate individuals like
Cesar Chavez in an effort to highlight Latino history within America.
Open Outdoors for Kids The NPF's Open Outdoors for Kids program began in 2011 and aims to provide park access specifically to youth. With NPF workers based in different U.S. cities, Open Outdoors for Kids also works to increase community awareness of the importance of outdoor activity for kids. In the fall of 2017, the NPF provided the Northwest Youth Corps and Idaho Conservation Corps with a $290,000 grant so that members could have access to eight National Parks and fund further education on the parks' preservation and conservation. In March 2020, The National Park Foundation announced that it has engaged more than a million students in educational programs with national parks across the country since it established the program.
Service Corps Between 2018 and 2021, NPF provided more than $11 million to support more than 130 service corps crews. The crews provide on-the-job training and complete projects in national parks ranging from trail maintenance and habitat restoration to trash and litter removal. The effort helps address deferred maintenance in national parks. Additionally, NPF works with the Corps Network to increase crews that are inclusive of women, as well as LGBTQ and BIPOC people.
Women in Parks The Women In Parks program raises funds for national parks and park programs that highlight stories of women who made history. Projects include the production of online oral histories of the women of the Northern Arapaho tribe and their indigenous history at the Cache la Poudre River
National Heritage Area; an exhibit dedicated to the wife of Martin Luther King Jr., Coretta Scott King, at the Martin Luther King, Jr. National Historical Park; and preservation of the
National Woman's Party historic headquarters in Washington, D.C. To mark the 100th anniversary of the
19th Amendment, the NPF distributed $460,000 in grants to parks where significant events in women's history in the United States occurred. ==Related legislation==