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Tourist Development Council Arts, Culture & Heritage (ACH) Grant Program is sponsored by St. Johns Cultural Council (Florida). This funding program aims to increase the positive economic impacts of local tourism by encouraging exemplary arts, culture, and heritage programming and supporting enhanced advertising and promotion of these quality tourism opportunities in St.
Johns County, Florida. Funded programming must demonstrate artistic excellence and merit and attract visitors to stay in the county.
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Search similar grants →According to the current listing, eligibility includes: Cultural nonprofit 501(c)(3) organizations or American Alliance of Museums (AAM)-accredited museums, registered and in good standing with the State of Florida and IRS, that have successfully delivered an event or series of events in Orange County within the last five years, drawing significant tourist interest and enhancing the region's cultural appeal. Events must take place in Orange County and be accessible and promoted to the general public. Confirm the full requirements in the official notice before applying.
The published deadline was May 31, 2026, which has passed. Check the official notice for any future application windows before investing time in a proposal.
Tourist Development Council Arts, Culture & Heritage (ACH) Grant Program is funded by St. Johns Cultural Council (Florida). Verify program details on the funder's official page before applying.
This opportunity targets applicants in Florida. If your organization operates elsewhere, check the official notice for location requirements.
Start from the official opportunity page linked in this listing — it carries the sponsor's submission instructions.
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Jerome Early-Career Project Grants is a grant from Forecast Public Art, funded by the Jerome Foundation, that funds the creation of new public art projects by early-career artists based in Minnesota. Two grants of $8,000 each are awarded annually to support temporary or permanent public artworks anywhere in Minnesota. Projects may be supported by public or nonprofit agencies but private commissions are not eligible, and a secured project site is required at the time of application. The program places special emphasis on supporting BIPOC and Native artists, LGBTQIA+ artists, women artists, immigrant artists, rural artists, and artists with disabilities. Eligible applicants are Minnesota-based individual artists with 2–10 years of generative experience. The application deadline was October 15, 2025.
The Local Cultural Council Program is a grant from the Massachusetts Cultural Council distributing $1,000 to $10,000 through a statewide network of 329 Local Cultural Councils (LCCs) representing every city and town in the Commonwealth. Each LCC awards funds based on local community cultural needs as assessed by council members. Eligible applicants include artists, nonprofits, schools, and organizations pursuing arts, humanities, and science projects. Applications are submitted directly to local councils and are typically due by October 16. Grants from most LCCs are reimbursement-based. Massachusetts Cultural Council funds the LCCs centrally, which then regrant to community projects.
A new Partnership for Public Service report documents 118,000 science-related federal departures between September 2024 and February 2026 — Forest Service and NSF down a third, SAMHSA down 42 percent. Project grant obligations from science agencies dropped 24 percent from 2024 to 2025. On June 3, Johns Hopkins announced a $60M annual Research Resilience Fund. Here is what the data and the institutional response mean for grant applicants.
Read articleHopkins expanded its Pivot and Bridge program from $12.5M to $60M annually, raised the per-award cap to $250K, and dropped the divisional match requirement. Maryland chipped in $8.5M. The structure tells you where private bridge-funding is heading.
Read articleJohns Hopkins announced on June 3 that its Pivot and Bridge Program — funded at $12.5 million annually since April 2025 — has been replaced by a Research Resilience Fund capitalized at $60 million per year for two years. Per-award caps rise to $250,000, divisional matching disappears, and the program now covers salary as well as project expenses. The expansion follows a 43% year-over-year drop in Hopkins's federal research awards and a $500 million decline in the value of its multiyear federal research portfolio. The structural shift it represents — universities financing the work the federal government has stopped financing — has implications for principal investigators at every research-intensive institution.
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