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To apply for a Minigrant,
please download the following PDFs:
2009
Minigrant Application (100k)
2009
Minigrant Guidelines (140k)

Minigrant Program FAQs

What is the Minigrant
Program?
The
Minigrant program is a partnership financed by the State
of Michigan, through the Michigan Council for Arts and Cultural
Affairs (MCACA) and run by the Arts Council of Greater Grand
Rapids, in this region. The Minigrant program offers grants
of up to $4000 to non-profit groups for locally developed
high-quality arts projects, which are special opportunities
to address local arts needs and increase public access to
the arts. Minigrants support a broad range of artistic expression
from all cultures through projects which produce or present
the traditional or contemporary arts.
Who may apply?
Minigrants
are available to nonprofits through a competitive grant application
and peer review process administered three times a year. The
Arts Council of Greater Grand Rapids administers the Minigrant
program for seven counties in West Michigan: Ionia, Kent,
Lake, Mecosta, Montcalm, Newaygo and Osceola. If you have
an arts project in another county of Michigan, you may call
Michigan Council for Arts and Cultural Affairs to discover
what regional Minigrant regranting office you need to talk
to: 517-241-4011.
Service organizations, arts organizations, parks and recreation
organizations, professional associations, public and non-public
schools, labor unions, cities, townships and villages are
among the groups who may apply, but this list is not all inclusive.
Individuals, State of Michigan agencies, departments or commissions
with unmet obligations on a Michigan Council for Arts and
Cultural Affairs award, may not apply for a Minigrant.
Universities and colleges may apply, providing they:
- demonstrate significant and direct community benefit,
- document community support and shared project use, and
- include current letters of support from the community
Minigrants may not be used for activities within the instructional
or service responsibilities of colleges or universities, or
that primarily serve their faculty or students.
How much money may
I apply for?
You
may request up to $4000 on a matching funds basis. Matching
funds are donations of cash, goods, and services to the project.
You are encouraged to include cash in your matching funds.
The program is competitive and grants are typically less than
$4000. Not all applications are funded.
Requests for Minigrant Funds may not exceed one-half of your
project costs. For example: If you request $1500, your project
must cost $3000 or more. You must match your request with
$1500 or more of your own funds.
Your match could be:
- cash totaling $1500 or more or...
- in-kind funds (donated goods and services) totaling $1500
or more or...
- any combination of in-kind and cash totaling $1500 or
more.
When should I apply?
Minigrant
funding is offered in three rounds per year. The first round
deadline is in the first part of July and is for projects
beginning between October 1 through January 31. The second
round deadline is in the first part of October and is for
projects beginning between February 1 through May 31. The
third round deadline is in the first part of February and
is for projects beginning between July 1 and September 30.
Exact dates can be obtained by calling the Arts Council after
May 1, 616.459.2787. All Minigrant-funded projects must be
completed within the State's fiscal year, which ends September
30.
What kinds of projects
are funded?
Minigrants
may be used for arts and cultural activities including, but
not limited to, the following:
- exhibits, readings, performances, workshops, broadcasts
- artist residencies, consultancies, design activities (includes
computerized work)
- commissioning of art work, restoration of public works
of art
- festivals, pow wows, conferences, seminars
- video and film production and screening
- publication of limited edition, original works by an independent,
non-profit press
- art activities for students
You May NOT:
- receive more than one Minigrant for the same project
- receive a MCACA grant and a Minigrant for the same project
- use the same matching funds for more than one Minigrant
- use MCACA grant funding as matching funds for a Minigrant
- apply for a Minigrant and a Touring Arts Grant for the
same project
- Minigrant Dollars can NOT be used for:
- non-arts activities
- capital expenses (construction, renovation; purchase of
facilities or permanent equipment)
- activities conducted outside Michigan, or out-of-state
travel
- school teacher salaries, in-service, release time or school
administrative costs
- activities which produce academic credit, receive a grade,
or are part of the curriculum
- creation of textbooks or classroom materials, curriculum
development, scholarly or academic research
- K-12, college or university faculty or student exhibitions
or performances or payments to students
- projects that primarily serve an applicant's membership,
staff or board; exhibit or present their work
- consultants who are members of the applicant's staff or
board.
- indirect costs (percentage charged against a grant to
cover handling of grant funds)
- existing deficits, licensing fees, fines, penalties, interest
or litigation
- purchase awards, cash prizes, contributions or donations
- food or beverages for hospitality, entertainment or reception
functions
- exhibition of art work which is not original, for example,
facsimiles of original works
- historical reenactments
- fund-raising or allocations to endowment or other restricted
funds
- funds which the applicant would regrant or subgrant
- operating costs not directly associated with a project
or start up costs for a new organization
- rarely is the same organization considered for more than
1 Minigrant per year
How are applications
evaluated?
During
review panel meetings, applications are discussed, evaluated
and scored in light of the guidelines and review criteria.
Reviewers also consider application completeness and clarity.
Review panels are made up of volunteer arts, community and
business professionals with appropriate expertise. Review
panel membership constantly changes.
Reviewers look for projects that demonstrate artistic merit,
sound planning and management, and community service. Panel
funding recommendations are approved by our board of directors.
Geographic, minority, underserved and disciplinary distribution
are considered when determining awards.
What must I do if I
am awarded a grant?
If
you are awarded a grant, you must:
- confirm project plans and, if full funding is not awarded,
revise your project budget based on your recommended grant
- sign a contract detailing the use of Minigrant funds
- credit MCACA and the Arts Council of Greater Grand Rapids
in all publications and press releases
- complete a Minigrant Final Report and provide samples
of project materials
Other Information:
Grant
funds may arrive after your project's starting date. You should
be prepared to handle initial expenses.
If a project produces material which could be copyrighted,
the copyright must reside with the author. However, Michigan
Council for Arts and Cultural Affairs reserves the right to
use copyrighted work for Council purposes without obligation
to pay royalties to the owner.
A portion of your grant will be withheld pending our receipt
and approval of you Final Report.
If the applicant is not an arts organization and the project
makes a profit, the surplus up to the grant amount must be
refunded.
It is MCACA policy that decisions regarding Minigrants may
not be appealed.
If you would like more information about the Minigrant Program,
contact the Arts Council
of Greater Grand Rapids Program Officer.
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