News you can use

Humanities Montana distributes first Round of CARES Act funds

Press release

Humanities Montana has awarded more than $100,000 in Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act funds to support cultural institutions across the state.

In the weeks ahead, it will continue to distribute nearly $400,000 in grants to the state’s museums, historic sites and other humanities-focused nonprofits affected by the COVID-19 health crisis.

The first round of Humanities Montana CARES Act Grants of up to $5,000 were awarded to primarily small and rural organizations, including Wild Rose Center on the Northern Cheyenne reservation, the Carter County Museum in Ekalaka, and Sunburst Arts and Education in Eureka.

Applications will continue to be accepted and awarded on an ongoing basis through the summer or until all funds are expended. Applicants that did not receive funding in the first round of awards will be considered in future funding rounds.

“Montana’s humanities organizations — our libraries and museums and cultural councils — are at the heart of our communities. They help us explore who we are and how we can be better. We hope these funds will help as many groups as possible survive through these uncertain times. Now, more than ever, we need institutions that help us understand what has gone before and share new thinking about how to move forward,” Kim Anderson, Humanities Montana’s director of programs and grants, said.

The grants can be used to cover general operating costs including salaries, rent and utilities, as well as costs associated with providing online public programs. There are no matching funds requirements and the application is short and accessible. Application instructions and grant guidelines are available the Humanities Montana website.

The funds are part of the CARES Act passed by Congress in March. The $2 trillion aid package includes $75 million for the National Endowment for the Humanities, approximately $30 million of which will be sent to 56 state and territorial humanities councils to redistribute to humanities non-profit organizations in need.

The state humanities councils were chosen to distribute these funds because of their well-established relationships with museums, historical societies, libraries and cultural institutions that are the cornerstones of some of the most vulnerable and hardest to reach communities.

Humanities Montana is Montana’s state humanities council with a mission to serve communities through stories and conversation. It offers experiences that nurture imagination and ideas by speaking to Montanans’ diverse history, literature, and philosophy.

Established in 1972, it is one of 56 councils across the nation that the National Endowment for the Humanities created in order to better infuse the humanities directly and effectively into public life. Humanities Montana produces, funds, creates and supports humanities-based projects and programs, cultural experiences and conversations.

 

Reader Comments(0)