Honor the Earth: Grants: Apply For A Grant

 
Honor the Earth Grant Application Procedure and Guidelines

Please read through the entirety of the Grantmaking Guidelines listed below, the table of contents links to specific sections.

Contents

Overview

Geographic Restriction

Non-Profit Status


Program Areas


Environmental & Energy Justice
Building Sustainable Communities
Youth
Opportunity Fund


Deadlines


Application Process

Reporting Requirements

Proposal Overview Checklist



OUR GRANTMAKING PROGRAM
Honor the Earth, in partnership with the Tides Foundation, awards grants solely to organizations that are led and managed by Native peoples. Priority is given to grassroots, community-based organizations and groups with a lack of access to federal and/or tribal funding resources. Honor the Earth does not make grants to individuals. Grants range from $1,000 to $5,000.


GEOGRAPHIC RESTRICTION

Honor the Earth only issues grants to Native organizations in the United States & Canada.


NONPROFIT STATUS

Honor the Earth awards grants only to organizations with 501(c)(3) status or an equivalent. You will be asked to provide proof of this nonprofit or tax-exempt status when applying for a grant. We acknowledge the challenges that smaller, native-based groups have in obtaining 501(c)(3) status. However, Honor the Earth adheres strictly to this requirement in order to facilitate transparency and accountability.


WHAT WE FUND

Honor the Earth issues grants in the following program areas: Environmental & Energy Justice; Building Sustainable Communities; and Youth. Please read the descriptions for each of the program areas below before applying.

ENVIRONMENTAL & ENERGY JUSTICE
Native lands are disproportionately targeted for resource extraction, energy development, and dumping of hazardous waste. Our communities suffer from the toxic effects of coal-fired power plants, uranium mining, oil drilling, and nuclear waste just to name a few. Oftentimes, it is our sacred sites that are under attack, or places providing critical habitat to endangered species, traditional and medicinal plants, and biological diversity. At the same time, Native lands hold vast amounts of renewable energy potential such as solar and wind that provide cleaner, healthier energy to the community.

Honor the Earth supports Native community-based groups and organizations engaged in community organizing in the following areas:

Environmental Justice – includes but is not limited to:

• Environmental protection & environmental health
• Conservation of natural resources
• Protection of sacred and historical sites
• Protection of endangered species and biological diversity

Energy – includes but is not limited to:

• Issues of fossil fuel, nuclear, and mega-hydro energy production, processing & emissions
• Nuclear waste storage and transportation
• Climate change and global warming
• Issues of unsustainable mineral and water extraction related to energy production and processing
• Energy policy advocacy
• Community-based initiatives using small-scale, clean renewable energy solutions

Community-based groups and organizations engaged in community organizing, tribal environmental protection, environmental health and energy policy advocacy, or popular education are encouraged to apply.

BUILDING SUSTAINABLE COMMUNITIES
With only four of over 500 Native languages in North America projected to be vital after the year 2050, our communities are in desperate need to preserve and restore that which makes us unique: the languages which frame our world view. We are also facing continued colonization through exploitation of our land, natural resources, and culture. Our future depends on reclaiming and restoring our traditional languages, lifeways and building healthy, sustainable communities.

Honor the Earth supports Native grassroots groups and organizations developing innovative Native community-based initiatives that build and maintain healthy and sustaining Native communities that integrate Indigenous traditional knowledge and language. With respect for the wisdom of our Elders and with regard for future generations, we support activities that assist in the preservation of Native lifeways, preserve Indigenous languages and traditional knowledge, foster youth development and participation, maintain traditional foods systems, protect environmental and natural resources, and activities that work toward the decolonization of our communities.

Focus areas could include, but are not limited to:

• Sustaining a community economy
• Addressing internalized oppression and de-colonization, community violence and suicide
• Fostering youth and elder exchanges
• Language and culture
• Integrating community economic development and environmental justice
• Developing models of Native-based dispute resolution and peacemaking
Native organizations who can demonstrate their commitment to work with their youth, elders and create a healthy balance with the role of their men and women are encouraged to apply.

YOUTH
Native youth are the center of the continuity of Native America, and are the leaders and elders of the future. They are also the descendants of our communities and, as a consequence, the collective experience of Native America. Honor the Earth recognizes the need for youth involvement in community organizing since they will bring new perspectives and new energy to a grassroots movement that has limited human resources available. We are committed to investing in youth and support initiatives that educate, empower, and build the capacity of youth in Indigenous communities. We seek to help develop the next generation of rural-and reservation-based Native American youth leaders who will become a major factor in safeguarding the health of our peoples and our environment through awareness, activism, advocacy and organizing.

Honor the Earth supports initiatives that promote youth development and leadership skills. Priority is given to youth-led projects.

OPPORTUNITY FUND GRANTS
*The Opportunity Fund is temporarily frozen due to low funds. This site will be updated when opportunity funding resumes*
In addition to the program areas listed above, Honor the Earth will occasionally review requests for unforeseen emergency funding. These requests, unlike program requests, are reviewed throughout the year, and therefore, applicants can apply at any time. However, these funds are awarded for emergency travel-related expenses and project emergency funding only. Opportunity Fund grant applicants must adhere to the application process listed below and submit all information required. In addition, applicants seeking Opportunity Funds must also answer the following:

• Describe your organization, detailing why you are in need of emergency funds
• Describe your unexpected need in detail
• By what date will you need funding?
• Have you sought funding from other sources? Please list them.

Please note: These grants will require at least a four week turnaround time for reviewing, selecting, and processing the request through the Tides Foundation. If your funding needs are less than four weeks away, please consider seeking alternate funding sources.


FUNDING CYCLE

Honor the Earth issues grants on the funding cycle listed below (all dates are postmarked by dates). Please note that if the deadline falls on a weekend, it will move to the first following business day. Please note: these deadlines may change. Please check back with us regularly to ensure you are receiving the most up-to-date information.

Spring
Proposals Due: January 15th
Your group will be notified by April 15 and will receive your grant by April 30.

Fall/Winter
Proposals Due: September 15th
Your group will be notified by the end of the calendar year and will receive your grant early the following year.


APPLICATION PROCESS
Initial Approach: full proposal with cover sheet and attachments

Proposal Format:
A. Cover Sheet
The cover sheet is used for board correspondence; please fill it out clearly and entirely.

For groups based in the United States (Microsoft Word format)
For groups based in Canada (Microsoft Word format)

B. Proposal
Proposals should be 3 to 5 pages in length only and include/answer the following:

Organizational Information/Background

• A brief history of your group: how long has your group existed, how many staff/volunteers are there, and who in your group focuses on fundraising efforts?
• Demonstrate how you are running your organization as a native controlled organization.
• Where is the program located?
• How does your work tie into Honor the Earth’s program area(s)?

Community Collaborations

• Who are the other groups you work with? Describe your efforts to work in your communit(ies). Who do you work with in the non-Native community?

Program Description/Project Need

• A brief description of your current and future work. Please state your goals and describe your strategies to reach them. What is your long term vision?
• A brief description of the opportunity, challenge or need your community faces and/or the issue you are working to address.
• How was that focus determined? Who was involved in the decision-making process?
• What is your overall goal regarding the situation described above? What activities will you carry out to achieve that goal? Who will carry them out?
• What is the timeframe for this project?
• How will your proposed activities benefit the community in which they will occur? What impact will this project have?

Evaluation

• Please describe your criteria for success. What do you want to happen as a result of your activities?
• How will you measure these changes?
• Who will be involved in evaluating this work (staff, board, constituents, community, consultants)?
• What will you do with your evaluation results?
• Who are your other sources of funding? What is your long-term funding strategy to sustain this effort?

C. Attachments

• An IRS letter determining 501(c)(3) status from your organization or fiscal sponsor. If you have a fiscal sponsor, you will need to have them send a letter stating they are in partnership with you
• A list of staff (paid and/or volunteer) and a list of your Board of Directors, Advisory Board or Community Council including tribal affiliation(s)
• A current year itemized annual budget expenses for your organization
• A list of pending and committed revenues for organization

If seeking funds for a specific project, please also include:

• An itemized budget expenses for specific project
• A list of pending and committed income for specific project

Please do not send CD, DVD, spiral bound documents, or materials other than what is requested in the cover sheet's check list. We will request more information if needed.

Submit via mail to:
Honor the Earth Grants Manager
2104 Stevens Ave South
Minneapolis, MN 55404

Faxed proposals are not accepted.
Please send proposal and attachments at the same time. Please send proposal via email and postal mail to: e-mail: Grantshonorearth@earthlink.net with “[Your Organization’s Name] Grant Application” as the subject line and to the postal address above. Please call (612) 879-7529 if you have any questions concerning your application.

ASSURANCES
If your proposal is accepted, when you receive your grant award letter you will be required to provide assurances that the grant will be used only for its intended purpose and that any unused funds will be returned to the Honor the Earth/Tides Foundation.


REPORTING REQUIREMENTS

Final reports should be submitted within one year of the date your grant was awarded. No new grant request will be considered until final reports from prior awards are received. Grantees must send in a mid-term report in order to be considered for a new grant. If a mid-term report is submitted, a final report is still required at the end of the grant term (one year from the date of the grant award). If you have questions regarding the status of a report, please call (612) 879-7529 or e-mail: Grantshonorearth@earthlink.net.

Your report package must include:

• Grant ID number
• Your complete progress report (see guidelines below; no longer than 2 pages)
• A financial summary of the budget versus actual revenues/expenses for the project
• News clippings or other relevant material (just the highlights, please)

Please consider and respond to each of the points below in your progress/final report.

Impact and Assessment

• Reiterate your original goals and objectives. What progress was made toward those goals? Your response should include both qualitative and quantitative impacts. In other words, how did you move your program? How do/did you build capacity?
• Who, if anyone, did you collaborate with on the project?
Challenges
• What challenges did you confront and how did your organization deal with them? Were there any modifications to your strategy in light of this/these challenges?
• Detail any staff or other institutional program changes made/to be made.
Evaluation and Lessons Learned
• Describe your evaluation process and lessons learned. What has been your staff capacity to handle reporting requirements/interviewing/assessments?
Funding and Finances

• How did you spend the grant from Tides/Honor the Earth?
• If applicable, note the percentage of these funds used for direct and grassroots lobbying.
• List other key funders who provided additional financial support over the grant period.

The Future

• What is your long-term plan?
• Besides money, how else can Honor the Earth support your work?

Please submit report via mail to:
Attn: Honor the Earth Grants Manager
2104 Stevens Ave South
Minneapolis, MN 55404

Faxed reports are not accepted.
Please send proposal and attachments at the same time. Please send proposal via email and postal mail to: e-mail: Grantshonorearth@earthlink.net with “[Your Organization’s Name] Grant Application” as the subject line and to the postal address above. Please call (612) 879-7529 if you have any questions concerning your application.

Proposal Overview
Honor the Earth includes this overview as a checklist to make sure you provide us with all the information we will need in order to consider your proposal:

  • Cover letter – please fill out accurately and completely
  • Proposal – 3 to 5 pages only in length detailing the points above
  • Attachments – IRS letter, list of staff/volunteers, list of Board members with tribal affiliations, your current year’s budget and a project budget, a list of pending/committed funding sources for the organization and/or project

Although Honor the Earth has the utmost respect for all Native communities and organizations that submit requests for funding, we are a small organization and cannot fund all of the worthy proposals we receive. We will notify you in writing and/or via phone within twelve weeks of our decision. (In the case of the Opportunity Fund requests, we will notify you within approximately four weeks following receipt of your request.) We ask that you not call about the status of your proposal. We will contact you if we need additional information. Upon receipt of your proposal, we make sure that all components are included and contact you if we need additional information. We look forward to hearing from you.


© 2008 Honor the Earth
info@honorearth.org