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SPJ Foundation Grants | Society of Professional Journalists Committees and Communities Foundation Board of Directors $(document). mouseup(function(e){ var container = $("#mobilemenu"); // If the target of the click isn't the container if(! container.
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target). length === 0){ SPJ26 Convention: Registration and call for program proposals open SPJ26 heads to Columbus, Ohio, Oct. 1-4, at the Hilton Columbus Downtown.
Visit spj26. org to learn more, register, and submit your conference session proposal. SPJ Foundation > Grants > Foundation Grants Applications due: Deadline passed Proposal Guidelines • General Funding Policy • Submit your proposal The SPJ Foundation is now accepting grant proposals for projects that strengthen journalism and protect the public’s right to know.
This cycle, priority will be given to initiatives that advocate for journalists and journalism , defend press freedom, promote media literacy and help build public trust in credible news. Find out how to submit your grant proposal here. Get all your SPJ Foundation grants questions answered during this free Q&A webinar on June 10 at Noon ET.
Register in advance here. Additionally, you can watch a replay of last year’s virtual session with SPJ Foundation Grants Committee Chair Jane Kirtley. Protect and defend press freedom and the First Amendment.
Equip journalists with tools to advocate for themselves and the profession. Promote media literacy and increase public trust in journalism. Develop innovative approaches to protect access to credible information.
Please stay tuned for information about our next grant cycle in 2026. June 1, 2026: Grant cycle opens June 10, 2026, Noon ET: Free Q&A webinar [ registration link ] August 13, 2026, 11:59 p. m.
ET: Application deadline Late October 2026: Applicants receive funding decision via email November 2026: Awardees return signed agreements and initial funds are disbursed if applicable. Quick Tips for Applicants Keep your project tightly aligned with SPJ’s mission and current priorities. Spell out exactly how your work will advocate for journalists and protect credible reporting.
Show realistic goals, a clear budget and measurable results. Think big — but stay feasible. Previously-awarded Foundation Grants The following grants have been approved by the Foundation in recent years.
Partnership for Public Service (Washington, D. C.) Navigating the Federal Government Training and tools to help journalists report on federal operations and policies through accessible data and expert insight.
SPJ Greater Oregon Pro Chapter Sustainable Small-Chapter Advocacy Toolkit A marketing and crowdfunding model to support advocacy work by small chapters, designed for replication nationwide. SPJ Los Angeles Pro Chapter Press Freedom: Coming Together, Fighting Back A daylong press freedom workshop and accompanying playbook outlining actionable steps for journalists and chapters nationwide.
National Press Club Journalism Institute (Washington, D. C.) A media literacy program and toolkit helping the public safely and effectively engage with journalists and strengthen trust in news.
A media literacy campaign offering training for journalists, students and community groups on press freedom and ethical reporting. SPJ New England Pro Chapter National FOIA Contest for Students A national competition challenging students to use public records laws, documenting their successes and barriers.
Cathy Kuhlmeier Foundation (Missouri) Freedom Fighters Assemble A podcast series sharing firsthand stories from students fighting for free press and expression rights in schools. SPJ St. Louis Pro Chapter Student Journalist Boot Camp A one-day, hands-on training event for college journalists covering interviewing, ethics, records and reporting skills.
The College Media Association and the Student Press Law Center’s Louis E. Ingelhart First Amendment Program is named to honor Ingelhart, a journalism professor who dedicated much of his life to studying, writing and teaching the First Amendment. He was a tireless champion for scholastic journalism, nationwide.
This award is given annually to professional journalists, institutions or advisers who have made extraordinary, long-term contributions in support of the First Amendment. The Indigenous Journalists Association Indigenous Media Initiative (formerly the Red Press Initiative) educates on the value of an Indigenous free press to the well-being of Indigenous people, communities and nations.
The initiative also teaches contextual reporting about Indigenous people and issues necessary to overcome the biases and stereotypes portrayed in the media. Wildfire Media’s Spark Training Program helps individuals, teams and journalists raise funds for documentary and civic advocacy projects through education and mentoring.
The program is online and offers interactive classes with downloaded learning materials that explore proposal writing, fundraising strategies and successful pitch approaches, in addition to one-on-one mentoring with award-winning journalists and funding experts. The program also offers free or partial scholarships through its scholarship fund to Spark Cohorts based on funding availability.
The 2024 SPJ Region 1 Northeast Summer High School Journalism Institute at Emerson College in Boston is a program for students that offers workshops, touring the campus and telling stories related to their landscape and environment that will be edited and critiqued by peers. At the end of the experience, students will have published links to their work.
The faculty and volunteer trainers are SPJ leaders from across the northeast who have been planning and coordinating the event for the last year. NFOIC’s “Freedom of Information Bootcamp for Journalists of Color” provides training in acquiring and analyzing government documents and data.
In addition to general skills in accessing government information, the program will partner each mentee with an expert mentor in his or her respective state, in most cases the leader of a coalition who can assist the journalist long-term in accessing government. The Bay City News Foundation is presenting a quarterly training series on “Unlocking Public Records in California.
” The four workshops, hosted with the First Amendment Coalition , will focus on everything journalists need to know about using California’s main open-records law, the California Public Records Act, to land scoops and strengthen their reporting. The presentation will be given by First Amendment Coalition Executive Director David Snyder, an open-government lawyer and former reporter for The Washington Post.
The one-hour sessions will feature real-world scenarios and teachable lessons from recent cases, with opportunities for participant questions. ALMA’s Annual High School Journalism and Multi-Media Workshop presents a free, hands-on multimedia journalism program for minority and underserved high school journalism students from throughout Arizona, New Mexico, the Navajo Nation and Hopi Tribe.
The daylong workshop, held at the Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication at Arizona State University, includes opportunities to meet and interview newsmakers such as Arizona state legislators, U.S. Congress members and professionals from the fields of law, banking, journalism, sports and the non-profit sector.
National Freedom of Information Coalition ($6,100) NFOIC’s Freedom of Information Bootcamp for Journalists of Color trains participants to acquire and analyze government documents and data.
Native American Journalists Association ($10,000) The SPJ Region 1 Northeast High School Journalism Institute at Roger Williams University in Bristol, Rhode Island, offered students training in field reporting through lectures and hands-on reporting experience.
SPJ Future Leaders Academy ($25,750) SPJ’s annual convention with the College Media Association and Associated Collegiate Press as partners offered training via more than 50 professional development programs geared to the organization’s mission and the needs of today’s journalists. Pacific Northwest non-profit Wildfire Media received funding for its Spark Training Program.
The intensive educational course teaches grant writing and fundraising skills to journalists and documentary professionals, enabling them to pursue funding for their investigative reporting pieces. The program will be anchored in online, interactive classes complemented by one-on-one project mentoring with award-winning journalists and fundraising experts.
A grant to the New England First Amendment Coalition funded a collaboration with the Society of Professional Journalists. The joint venture produced tutorials explaining the Freedom of Information Act along with state public records and open meeting laws. The tutorials have informed a broad audience of both journalists and the general public.
Funding provided to Feet in 2 Worlds supported its Telling Immigrant Stories in Espanol and in English workshop. The grant addressed the scarcity of training resources for early and mid-career, bilingual journalists. The program introduced them to audio reporting and production for podcast, broadcast, and digital news sites.
It also provided tools and resources for reporting on immigration, labor, COVID-19, education, and other issues of particular interest to Latinx audiences. Participants practiced pitching stories to a panel of veteran editors and producers. Funds intensive course teaching grant writing and fundraising skills to Pacific Northwest journalists and documentary professionals focused on investigative reporting.
New England First Amendment Coalition ($2,500) Supports the coalition’s collaboration with the Society of Professional Journalists to produce tutorials explaining the Freedom of Information Act, along with state public records and open meeting laws. Feet in 2 Worlds ($3,000) Backs the Telling Immigrant Stories in Español and in English workshop.
Journalists learn audio reporting and production for podcast, broadcast and digital news sites, and pitch stories to editors and producers. National Lesbian & Gay Journalists Association ($5,000) WETA (PBS Newshour) ($2,500) New England First Amendment Coalition ($1,500) James W.
Foley Legacy Foundation ($5,000) National Press Photographers Association ($33,200) SPJ National Conference Education ($19,691) Provides support for educational programming at the 2018 SPJ National Conference.
New England First Amendment Coalition ($2,500) Provides support for The First Amendment and the Free Press: An ongoing public conversation about the value of journalism in our communities and why the Fourth Estate must be protected. National Lesbian and Gay Journalists Association ($2,500) Freedom Forum Institute ($1,000) Provides support for Power Shift Project. Provides support for “Paper Money” program.
Native American Journalists Association ($2,500) Provides support to further update and expand a code of ethics guide for how to conduct news coverage of the Native American community. SPJ National Conference Education ($43,000) Provides support for educational programming at the 2018 SPJ National Conference.
Asian American Journalists Association ($2,199) Provides support for JCamp 2017, a journalism training program for high school students. Investigative Reporters & Editors ($2,199) Provides support to create new regional Watchdog Workshop. Native American Journalists Association ($2,199) Provides support to update and expand a code of ethics guide for how to conduct news coverage of the Native American community.
National Freedom of Information Coalition ($2,199) Provides support for the NFOIC Summit. National Press Photographers Association ($2,119) Provides support for training of law enforcement/first responders on rights to photograph. SPJ National Conference Education, $35,000 Provides support for educational programming at the 2017 SPJ National Conference.
SPJ Loan-A-Drone Program, $1,000 The SPJ Florida chapter will send a drone journalist/pilot and a high-tech drone for hands-on training. Participants will learn the laws as well as best flight practices. The SPJ Florida chapter is offering help and money to groups who want to host a program about the way journalists cover the Muslim community .
During this program journalists and Muslim leaders will teach each other how they approach these topics — and maybe both groups will learn something new.
National Press Photographers Association (NPPA), $5,000 Provides support for the Right to Photograph & Record in Public program which presents training to law enforcement officers, first responders, citizens and journalists to foster a better understanding of their rights and responsibilities and ultimately gain greater respect for the roles that everyone plays as pertains to newsgathering and law enforcement.
National Press Photographers Association (NPPA), $2,500 Colorado Freedom of Information Coalition (CFOIC), $2,000 Provides support for the organization’s blog and news feed. New England First Amendment Coalition (NEFAC), $2,500 Provides support for the New England First Amendment Institute. National Freedom of Information Coalition (NFOIC), $2,500 Provides support for the NFOIC Summit.
Asian American Journalists Association (AAJA), $3,500 Provides support for JCamp 2017, a journalism training program for high school students. Native American Journalists Association (NAJA), $5,000 Provides support for the development of a code of ethics guide for how to conduct news coverage of the Native American community.
SPJ National Conference Education, $28,000 Provides support for educational programming at the 2016 SPJ National Conference. SPJ Loan-A-Drone Program, $1,500 The SPJ South Florida chapter will send a drone journalist/pilot and a high-tech drone to SPJ chapters, and other groups of journalists, for hands-on training and even the execution of actual assignments. Participants will learn the laws as well as best flight practices.
National Association of Press Photographers, $7,000 The Right to Photograph & Record in Public program will present training to law enforcement officers, first responders, citizens and journalists in order to foster a better understanding of their rights and responsibilities and ultimately gain greater respect for the roles that everyone plays as pertains to newsgathering and law enforcement.
Student Press Law Center, $3,000 The New Voices Grassroots Campaign is an initiative to build on the successful enactment of the New Voices of North Dakota press-freedom statute passed in 2015 by building and supporting copycat grassroots organizations across the country. Support from SPLC speakers and expert witnesses has been crucial in legislative movements to protect the rights of college and high-school journalists.
The program will send reinforcements into many more states to capitalize on the momentum built in North Dakota. SPJ National Conference Education, $85,000 Provides support for educational programming at the 2015 SPJ National Conference. SPJ Diversity Committee, $8,820 Creation of a Reggie Stuart Fellowship program that will offer an opportunity for two minority SPJ members to receive management training.
SPJ Region 7 Fellowships, $8,500 Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press, $3,600 Provides support for the production of “Law Enforcement’s Evolving Surveillance Arsenal-A Legal and Policy Guide for Journalists. ” Provides support for the organization’s hotline and workshops. Colorado Freedom of Information Coalition, $2,500 Provides support for the organization’s blog and news feed.
SPJ Training Place, $191,585 Support for training programs such as: On Demand training videos, Journalism Training Programs, JournCamps, Spring Conferences and webinars. SPJ National Convention 2014 Education, $85,000 Support for educational programming at the 2014 SPJ National Convention. SPJ Mark of Excellence Program Support, $27,201 Provides staff support for the Mark of Excellence Awards program.
SPJ Diversity Leadership Program, $8,510 Provides fellowships for members to attend the 2014 SPJ National Convention. Zombie Stories Program, $2,000 Supports a hands-on student project, run by SPJ Regional Director Michael Koretzky, that teaches interviewing skills in a fun way (with zombies). Student Press Law Center, $6,000 Provides support for the Tinker Tour West program.
Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press, $5,000 Provides support for the Open Courts Compendium, 2nd edition. New England First Amendment Coalition, $5,000 Provides support for the New England First Amendment Institute. Colorado Freedom of Information Coalition, $5,000 Support for the organization’s blog and news feed.
Center for Integration & Improvement of Journalism, $3,500 Support for the development of a comprehensive diversity style guide. SPJ Training Place, $187,722 Includes support for training programs such as: On Demand training videos, Journalism Training Programs, JournCamps, Spring Conferences, webinars. 2013 SPJ National Convention Education, $85,000 Supporting educational programming at the 2013 SPJ National Convention.
SPJ Mark of Excellence Program Support, $27,201 Providing staff support for the MOE Awards program. SPJ Chapter Programming Grants, $7,660 Providing grants to chapters for spring conferences and local professional development events. SPJ Diversity Leadership Program, $7,570 Providing diversity fellowships for members to attend SPJ’s 2013 National Convention.
SPJ Madison Chapter, $2,000 Providing financial assistance for a weekend event honoring Chester C. Wells. SPJ Unethical Press Program, $350 Supporting a hands-on student project to learn what a newspaper would look like if the SPJ Code of Ethics never existed.
SPJ Will Work for Food Program, $3,000 Supporting a hands-on student project running a homeless shelter’s newspaper. National Freedom of Information Coalition, $7,500 Supporting the NFOIC National Conference. Student Press Law Center, $6,500 Providing support to update the publication “Covering Campus Crime.
” Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press, $1,000 Providing support to transfer popular legal guides into mobile formats. SPJ Training Place, $186,342 Includes support for training programs such as: On Demand training videos, Journalism Training Programs, JournCamps, Spring Conferences, webinars. 2012 SPJ National Convention Education, $85,475 Supporting educational programming at the 2012 SPJ National Convention.
SPJ Mark of Excellence Program Support, $27,201 Providing staff support for the MOE Awards program. SPJ Chapter Programming Grants, $5,523 Providing grants to chapters for spring conferences and local professional development events. SPJ Communications Committee, $3,000 Creating PSAs to highlight the important work of journalists.
SPJ Charlotte Chapter, $3,200 Providing training to journalists on covering the Democratic National Convention in Charlotte. National Freedom of Information Coalition, $10,000 Supporting the NFOIC National Conference. Student Press Law Center, $6,925 Supporting the development of a guide to social networking laws.
SPJ Training Place, $198,754 2011 National Convention Education, $79,426 Supporting educational programming at the 2011 SPJ National Convention SPJ Mark of Excellence Program Support, $27,201 Providing staff support for the MOE Awards SPJ Chapter Programming Grants, $9,619 Providing grants to chapters for spring conferences and local professional development events SPJ Diversity Committee Fellows Program, $8,300 Providing diversity fellowships for members to attend SPJ’s 2012 National Convention National Freedom of Information Coalition, $10,000 Supporting the NFOIC National Conference Student Press Law Center, $7,800 Supporting the development of a legal orientation kit for new college editors Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press, $13,900 Supporting the production of a publication to aid journalists in crafting federal Freedom of Information Act appeals SPJ Training Programs, $63,140 SPJ Reporters Institute, $56,050 Supporting professional development for print and broadcast journalists.
2010 National Convention Education, $53,128 Supporting educational programming at the 2010 SPJ National Convention. Mark of Excellence Program Support $27,680 Providing staff support for the MOE Awards. Ethics Hold ‘Em Cards, $2,500 Supporting Ethics Hold ‘Em Tournaments emphasizing our Code of Ethics.
National Freedom of Information Coalition, $5,000 Supporting the NFOIC 2010 National Conference. SPJ National Journalism Conference Education, $53,128 To support the educational components of the 2009 SPJ Convention & National Journalism Conference.
SPJ Reporters Institute, $56,050 SPJ MOE Staff Support, $27,680 This grant supports the Mark of Excellence Awards programming, designed to stimulate, promote and recognize outstanding achievement in student journalism. SPJ Training Programs, $63,140 Ethics Hold ‘Em Cards $2,500 A grant to support SPJ’s Code of Ethics with specially made playing cards for an Ethics Hold ‘Em tournaments held at Conventions and local chapter events.
National Freedom of Information Coalition 2009 Convention, $5,000 The Foundation supports NFOIC’s national conference with a grant to target individuals in states with no existing FOI coalition presence by offering travel stipends to attend the conference. SPJ National Journalism Conference Education, $37,500 To help support the educational components of the 2008 SPJ Convention & National Journalism Conference.
SPJ MOE Staff Support, $15,000 This grant supports the Mark of Excellence Awards programming, designed to stimulate, promote and recognize outstanding achievement in student journalism. SPJ Media Credibility Project, $24,000 In place of SPJ’s traditional Ethics Week grants, money will be distributed only to chapters engaging in a town hall-style program.
This will help SPJ reach its organizational goal with one collective message ethics and media credibility and engages people on all levels — national, regional, local and even incorporates the local media and, most importantly, the public.
SPJ professional development coordinator position, $50,000 To support the various training programs SPJ provide, in an effort to remove the burden from volunteers and to deliver a consistent message to all our chapters, this grant provides for a staff person to SPJ training programs, $75,000 SPJ Journalists Toolbox, $20,000 to purchase an extensive web data base containing information and sources on a vast number of topics for use by journalists.
http://www. journaliststoolbox.
org/ SPJ Reporters Institute $63,000 University of Georgia Foundation: $3,000 per year for three years to support the annual surveys of journalism National Freedom of Information Coalition: $5,000 to support the 2009 NFOIC National Conference Student Press Law Center: $10,000 to support the production of “Covering Campus Crime,” a handbook published by the Student Press Law Center Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press: $10,000 to support production of “How to Use the Federal Freedom of Information Act,” a guidebook published by the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press Ethics in Journalism Week, $22,720.
SPJ will continue the annual Ethics in Journalism Week in 2008, with programming events throughout the country. SPJ Ethnic/Community Media Training, $17,550. SPJ will provide local training on open meetings and public records laws for journalists working for ethnic and community media outlets.
SPJ Citizens Journalism Academy, $23,200. This program will improve and protect journalism by instructing an emerging breed of “citizen journalists” on the tenets of responsible news-gathering and distribution.
This will be accomplished by promoting to the general public SPJ’s core missions, including ethics and the freedom of information; and by promoting greater awareness of legislative, legal and social issues affecting journalism, the First Amendment and the free flow of public information. First Amendment Free Food Festival, South Florida SPJ Pro Chapter, $2,000.
This grant will fund one or more events to teach college students about the First Amendment by offering them a free lunch in exchange for their signature on a waiver, which grants program coordinators the right to deny students their First Amendment Rights. The American Journalist Survey, through Indiana University, $10,000.
This follow-up study examines the characteristics, working conditions, attitudes and values of newsmen and newswomen. Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press, $15,000. The RCFP will complete a unique national study of the status of state open meetings and open records laws in the post 9/11 world.
SPJ Training Programs, $75,000. SPJ 2007 National Convention Education, $48,150. This grant will help support the 2007 SPJ Convention & National Journalism Conference.
SPJ 2008 Spring Conferences, $6,000. This grant provides funding for a speaker (or speakers) at each of SPJ’s 12 regional conferences on a topic related to one of SPJ’s core missions of ethics, FOI, diversity and education. National Freedom of Information Coalition 2008 Annual Conference, $7,500.
The Foundation will support NFOIC’s national conference in 2008 in Northern Virginia. Specifically, the grant will target individuals in states with no existing FOI coalition presence by offering travel stipends to attend the conference. Ethics AdviceLine for Journalists, the Chicago Headline Club SPJ Chapter and Loyola University Chicago, $10,000.
This grant provides support for promoting and expanding the Ethics AdviceLine, a free service that provides guidance on ethics to professional journalists, some of whom are on deadline. SPJ Diversity Outreach Project, $14,430. This grant continues the Society’s Diversity Fellows program, introducing individuals of diverse backgrounds to mentorship and leadership opportunities within SPJ.
SPJ Mark of Excellence Awards Program Staff, $13,000. This grant supports the Mark of Excellence Awards programming, designed to stimulate, promote and recognize outstanding achievement in student journalism. SPJ Training on the Go, $27,000.
SPJ Narrative Writing Seminars, $31,440. Led by Pulitzer-prize winner Tom Hallman, these programs teach reporters narrative writing concepts and techniques. SPJ Reporters Institute, $35,000.
SPJ Webcasting Project, $7,060. SPJ will make audio recordings of national and local professional development programs available to members through the Web. SPJ Mark of Excellence Awards Program Staff Support, $12,480.
This grant supports the Mark of Excellence Awards programming, designed to stimulate, promote and recognize outstanding achievement in student journalism. SPJ Regional Conference Programming, $6,000. This grant provides funding for a speaker (or speakers) at each of SPJ’s 12 regional conferences on a topic related to one of SPJ’s core missions of ethics, FOI diversity, and education.
SPJ National Convention Education, $41,700. This grant will help support the 2006 SPJ Convention & National Journalism Conference. Ethics in Journalism Week, $22,720.
SPJ will continue the annual Ethics in Journalism Week in 2007, with programming events throughout the country. National Freedom of Information Coalition National Conference, $5,000. The Foundation continues its longtime support of NFOIC’s annual conference.
Specifically, this grant will allow NFOIC to target individuals in stats with no existing FOI coalition presence and provide them with financial assistance to participate in the conference. Chicago Headline Club/Loyola University Ethics Adviceline, $5,000. The grant helps fund the Ethics Adviceline, a service that provides support for journalists facing an ethical dilemma.
SPJ/SDX Hurricane Relief Grants, up to $25,000. The Foundation will make available up to $25,000 from the Pulliam General Fund to help students replace journalism textbooks that were lost due to the Gulf Coast disaster. National Freedom of Information Coalition, $5,000.
The grant (to be paid 8/06) will fund the 2006 NFOIC national conference. Society of Professional Journalists, $182,524.
Funds going toward the Society of Professional Journalists will support educational programming at the national convention in Las Vegas, October 16-18, 2005, the Mark of Excellence awards for journalism students, educational programming for ethics week in journalism, educational support for SPJ regional conferences, funding to update its “Prison Access Project” that examines laws and policies regarding journalists’ access to prisons, a new series of narrative writing workshops led by Pulitzer Prize-winning writer Tom Hallman and production of a DVD highlighting the Society’s prestigious Sigma Delta Chi awards.
Western Kentucky University, $3,000. This grant will support the publication of a textbook to be titled “Contemporary First Amendment Cases. ” It is anticipated that the book will serve as a primary textbook for high school and university courses.
University of Georgia, $3,000 per year for three years. This grant will support the “Annual Surveys of Journalism and Mass Communication. ” The survey provides key data on enrollments in journalism and mass communication programs, professional salaries and attitudes of journalism graduates.
This grant supports the 2006 National Freedom of Information Coalition conference to be held in Indianapolis. National Freedom of Information Coalition, $10,000. This grant supports the 2005 conference in Santa Fe, New Mexico.
Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press, $15,000. This grant is for publication of the fifth edition of “Tapping Officials’ Secrets. ” The compendium was last updated in 2001 and the new version will reflect amendments to access laws.
The publication is targeted for use by the news media as well as the public. SPJ, $17,060 over two years. This grant will fund the development of the Society’s Diversity Fellows program.
National Conference of Editorial Writers Foundation, $100,000 over five years ($20,000 per year). The grant will support and help to permanently endow the NCEW Foundation’s Minority Writers Seminar. The seminar is intended to address the recruitment and retention of minority writers and editors, to help the newspaper industry become more reflective of the communities it serves.
These grants will support SPJ’s national convention, ethics hotline, Mark of Excellence Awards program, Ethics in Journalism Week, SPJ regional conferences and diversity outreach. Investigative Reporters and Editors, $30,000. For continuation of the Better Watchdog Workshop series.
Chicago Headline Club/Loyola University, $23,243. For continuation of the Ethics Adviceline for Journalists. A joint venture of the Chicago Headline Club and the Loyola University Chicago Center for Ethics and Social Justice, Ethics AdviceLine provides advice from ethicists trained in journalism ethics First Amendment Foundation of Florida, $20,000.
National Press Foundation, $21,640. For a manual titled “Covering Your State Capitol” National Conference of Editorial Writers Foundation, $5,000. For the Minority Writers Seminar held at Vanderbilt University Strengthening the Pillars of Free Press: Support the SPJ Foundation.
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Based on current listing details, eligibility includes: Organizations and individuals aligned with SPJ’s mission. Applicants should confirm final requirements in the official notice before submission.
Current published award information indicates Varies Always verify allowable costs, matching requirements, and funding caps directly in the sponsor documentation.
The current target date is August 15, 2026. Build your timeline backwards from this date to cover registrations, approvals, attachments, and final submission checks.
Federal grant success rates typically range from 10-30%, varying by agency and program. Build a strong proposal with clear objectives, measurable outcomes, and a well-justified budget to improve your chances.
Requirements vary by sponsor, but typically include a project narrative, budget justification, organizational capability statement, and key personnel CVs. Check the official notice for the complete list of required attachments.
Yes — AI tools like Granted can help research funders, draft proposal sections, and check compliance. However, always review and customize AI-generated content to reflect your organization's unique strengths and the specific requirements of the solicitation.
Review timelines vary by funder. Federal agencies typically take 3-6 months from submission to award notification. Foundation grants may be faster, often 1-3 months. Check the program's timeline in the official solicitation for specific dates.
Many federal programs offer multi-year funding or allow competitive renewals. Check the official solicitation for continuation and renewal policies. Non-competing continuation applications are common for multi-year awards.
Past winners and funding trends for this program