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Grant opportunity: Alabama Humanities Recovery Grants

Alabama Humanities Alliance to award up to $800,000 in grants to help cultural organizations bounce back from the pandemic.

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — Beginning July 1, the Alabama Humanities Alliance (AHA) will accept applications for $800,000 in special grant funding to help humanities organizations recover financially from the COVID-19 pandemic. AHA will award funding through individual grants of up to $20,000.

The application process will run from July 1–30. Applications should be submitted through AHA’s online grant management system.

Visit AHA’s Grants site to learn more about guidelines, eligibility, and to apply. “AHA’s recovery grants will help humanities-focused organizations thrive beyond the pandemic,” says Chuck Holmes, AHA’s executive director. “Robust cultural organizations make Alabama a richer, smarter, and more vibrant place to live and learn.

These grants will sustain the humanities in our communities and contribute to the state’s economic recovery in the months ahead.” Alabama Humanities Recovery Grants are funded by the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) through the federal American Rescue Plan Act of 2021.

Grant eligibility Alabama Humanities Recovery Grants are available to Alabama-based nonprofit organizations with a demonstrated commitment to providing public humanities programming, including museums, libraries and archives, historic sites, and more.

To receive an Alabama Humanities Recovery Grant, an organization must:
• Provide public humanities programming as a significant part of its mission and work. • Be a registered nonprofit organization.
• Be physically located in Alabama and serve Alabama residents as its primary audience. Detailed grant application guidelines are available at alabamahumanities.org/grants. Grant requests may include funding for a variety of needs, such as:
• Staff salaries and fringe benefits for personnel involved in humanities programming and administration. • Administrative, operational, and marketing expenses.
• Strategic planning, professional development, equity assessments, and capacitybuilding efforts.
• Professional fees.
• Programming, publication, and dissemination expenses.
• Technical assistance, consultation, or training provided by experts that will directly enhance humanities programming capabilities.
• Collaborative activities that promote partnership, networking, and leveraging the resources of multiple public humanities providers, resulting in enhanced programming capacity.

Coming to the rescue, again In 2020, AHA administered and distributed $500,000 in CARES Act grants to 79 agencies across Alabama, which provided relief to retain staff and pay bills during the height of the pandemic.

“Our CARES grants were often the first, and sometimes only, relief funding that humanities organizations received,” AHA Grants Director Graydon Rust said at the time. “Imagine your community with the public library shuttered, or public programming slashed at your local museum,” Holmes says. “Or beloved historical sites like the Jesse Owens Memorial Park or the Helen Keller Birthplace closed. Last year’s CARES Act funding helped those kinds of groups ride out the economic impact of the pandemic. Now, we want to help these treasured institutions start thriving again, as invaluable resources for their communities and for all Alabamians.”

Apply today To apply for an Alabama Humanities Recovery Grant, visit AHA’s Grants site.

About Alabama Humanities The Alabama Humanities Alliance is the state affiliate of the National Endowment for the Humanities. Its mission is to foster learning, understanding, and appreciation of Alabama’s people, communities, and cultures. Learn more at alabamahumanities.org.

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