Championing the humanities across a state as diverse as Maryland requires many contributors and much collaboration. That’s where our Marilyn Hatza Memorial SHINE Grant Program comes in: Strengthening the Humanities Investment in Nonprofits for Equity.
Maryland Humanities’ grants program funds general operating support to nonprofits conducting work in the humanities throughout Maryland. We have been actively adjusting our grant practices over the past few years with a focus on equity and accessibility. With the Marilyn Hatza Memorial SHINE Grant Program, Maryland Humanities takes the next step in our grantmaking evolution and aims to lower barriers and provide funding in a more equitable way to organizations statewide. Thank you to the State of Maryland via the Maryland Historical Trust for providing the Hatza SHINE seed money and helping to invest in a healthier humanities landscape statewide.
Hatza SHINE Grants are $10,000 general operating support grants for Maryland nonprofits conducting humanities programming.
The FY25 application is now closed.
- Goals of the Marilyn Hatza Memorial SHINE Grant Program
- Continue and expand general operating support funding, awarding $900,000 in grants.
- Focus on small and mid‐size humanities, cultural, and educational nonprofits that may not have staff capacity or resources to be competitive in fundraising.
- Ensure a broad geographic reach, similar to what we were able to realize from our COVID‐relief grants, which funded organizations in all 23 of Maryland’s counties, plus Baltimore City.
- Continue to refine lessons learned on how to evaluate applicants and distribute funds equitably, while ensuring accountability and responsible fiscal stewardship.
- Convene annual cohorts of grantees in new networks of engagement and common purpose to amplify the state’s investment, strengthening both the organizations and communities.
- Dates, Deadlines, and Informational Events
- June 10, 2024 – FY25 application and rubric made available on website
- June 24, 2024 – application opens
- July 17, 2024 – virtual info session
- July 29, 2024 – virtual open office hours
- August 13, 2024 – virtual Q&A session
- August 14, 2024 – draft review deadline
- August 27, 2024 – virtual Q&A session
- August 29, 2024 – virtual open office hours
- September 1, 2024 – application closes
- Mid-November, 2024 – awardees notified
- Grant Guidelines
Please review the grant guidelines before applying for a grant. Questions can be directed to Camilla Sandoval, Program Coordinator, Grants at csandoval@mdhumanities (dot) org.
- Application and How to Apply
The FY25 Hatza SHINE Grant application is available for preview.
Preview Application Here
All applications for Hatza SHINE grants must be completed through our grant portal.
Access grant portal (APPLY HERE)
- Returning applicants:
- Please login with your organization’s existing email and password. If you do not know your organization’s login details, please contact Camilla Sandoval (csandoval@mdhumanities.org).
- New applicants:
- Please create a new account. After you create an account you will be able to access the grant application by logging in.
- Returning applicants:
- Application Support, Resources, and Tips
Draft Review
Application drafts can be submitted for review by Emily Ross, Program Officer, Grants. To submit an application for draft review, please email a copy of your application to eross@mdhumanities (dot) org with your organization name and “draft review” in the subject line. Please allow 2-3 business days for your draft review to be returned. The deadline to submit applications for draft review is August 14, 2024.
What will a draft review cover?
- Completeness – is your application filled out completely, answer every question fully, and include the correct budget and/or supplementary attachments?
- Eligibility – is your organization eligible for a Hatza SHINE grant?
- Compliance – does your application adhere to the Hatza SHINE grant guidelines?
What will a draft review not cover?
- Evaluation – opinions on how the application would be scored or feedback on the quality of narrative answers cannot be provided during a draft review.
- Funding recommendation – a draft review cannot determine whether your organization will or will not receive a Hatza SHINE grant.
- Extensive editing or rewriting
Exemplary Sample Answers
A collection of high-scoring answers from a variety of organizations’ previous applications is available to view. Organizations have been de-identified and identifying information redacted.
Watch the Informational Session
A recording of the informational session held on July 17 is available to view.
Scoring Rubric
The scoring rubric is used by grant reviewers to evaluate applications. The rubric provides insight to applicants about the criteria used to evaluate their organization’s application.
SHINE FY25 First Evaluation Preview
SHINE FY25 Second Evaluation Preview
DEAI Toolkit
The purpose of this toolkit is to provide organizations applying to a SHINE grant with a starting point to reflect on their organization’s culture, strategies, and values related to Diversity, Equity, Access, and Inclusion (DEAI). The toolkit is not exhaustive in every consideration and portions may not be applicable to certain organizations. Maryland Humanities recognizes that successful DEAI work requires financial resources many organizations do not have access to. This toolkit is not a checklist of completed requirements to receive a SHINE grant but rather a set of considerations to assist organizations when writing in their grant application about their organization’s approaches to and plans for DEAI work.
Schedule a Meeting with a Staff Member
If you have questions about applying for a grant or eligibility guidelines, Camilla Sandoval, Grants Coordinator, is available for 15-30 minute virtual meetings.
Email csandoval@mdhumanities (dot) org to schedule.
Please note staff are unable to meet with applicants after August 28, 2024 (4 days before the application deadline). Grants staff are available to answer questions by email until 5pm on August 30, 2024.
Attend a Q&A session or Open Office Hours
What are open office hours?
Drop by any time into our virtual office on Zoom to speak with grants staff. The grants department’s door is open to anyone to stop by and get answers about Hatza SHINE grants, get clarity about the process of applying, or ask general grants-related inquiries.
What is a Q&A session?
Applying for a Hatza SHINE grant? Have unanswered questions about the process you’d like answered face-to-face with grants staff? Join a virtual Q&A session and get answers. We will also review some of the most frequently asked questions about applying for a Hatza SHINE grant.
Upcoming Sessions:
- Open Office Hours – July 29, 10am-2pm – Register Here
- Q&A Session – August 13, 1pm – Register Here
- Q&A Session – August 27, 11am – Register Here
- Open Office Hours – August 29, 10am-2pm – Register Here
Oral Application Interview
Grant applications can be completed by oral interview for accessibility reasons. Possible (but not all) accessibility reasons could include: lack of internet access, barriers to using a computer, and communication preferences.
Oral applications use the same application (SHINE FY25 Application Preview) as written applicants. It is completed through spoken word and transcribed.
The deadline to schedule an oral application interview is August 16th, 2024.
Oral Interview Application Process:
- Schedule an interview time with Program Officer, Grants Emily Ross. Call (410) 618-5017 or email eross@mdhumanities (dot) org to schedule.
- Applicants should review the application in advance. Applicants will be asked the questions directly from the application during their interview.
- Interview is held by phone or in person at Maryland Humanities offices in Baltimore, MD. Applicants choose.
- Grants staff transcribe the interview into an application.
- A copy of the transcribed application will be mailed, faxed, or emailed to the applicant to make changes or approve.
- Grants staff submit the application.
- Frequently Asked Questions
Who is eligible to apply for the Marilyn Hatza Memorial SHINE Grant Program?
To be eligible for a Hatza SHINE grant, an organization must: be designated as a nonprofit; offer humanities-based programming as a significant part of its work; be physically located and registered as a nonprofit in Maryland with Maryland residents as its primary constituents; and have a maximum total annual operating budget of $500,000 or less. Organizations whose mission or focus is the creation or performance of art are not eligible for this funding. You can find the grant program guidelines here: https://www.mdhumanities.org/wp-content/uploads/Hatza-SHINE-FY25-Guidelines-1.pdf
When is the application period?
The application will open on June 24, 2024 and will close on September 1, 2024 at 11:59PM. A copy of the application and the evaluation rubric will be available for preview on our website about two weeks prior to the opening date. You will be able to access the application in our grants system here.
What is considered humanities programming for the purposes of this grant program?
Organizations conducting activities in the humanities provide programs that do one or more of the following: explore and elevate our shared stories of the past, present, and future to connect people; preserve, share, and celebrate cultural identities, heritage, and traditions; promote storytelling and enriching communities through dialogue, discussion, and participation; and/or bring people together to encourage thoughtful and accessible programs that value equity, democracy, collaboration, and life-long learning.
We encourage applying organizations to view Maryland Humanities’ mission, vision, and values and to look for how their organization’s programming aligns.
Should my organization apply for Hatza SHINE funding?
We welcome all eligible applicants to apply. Please reach out to our Grants team If you’re still unsure whether your organization is eligible after reviewing the eligibility requirements. Additionally, you can view a copy of the application on our website prior to starting an application in our grants system. As this is a competitive grant program, we cannot guarantee every applicant will receive an award.
My organization received a Hatza SHINE award last year, can we apply again this year?
Yes, if your organization received a Hatza SHINE award last year and still meets the grant program’s eligibility requirements, your organization can apply again this year.
My organization has a fiscal sponsor, can we apply?
Yes, organizations with fiscal sponsors are welcome to apply. Each of the following additional documentation are required by email to eross@mdhumanities (dot) org before the application deadline: 1) Fiscal Sponsorship Agreement between the sponsor and sponsored organization that demonstrates a fiduciary pass-through arrangement; 2) 2023 annual budget of the sponsor organization; 3) Copy of 2023 990 form of the sponsor organization.
Is there a match requirement?
No match is required for this funding.
What are the allowable expenses with this funding?
Allowable costs include rent, utilities, supplies, salaries, programming costs, capacity building, and other day-to-day expenses of an organization. We discourage the use of this funding for new construction, renovations, and collections acquisition. If you have questions about a specific cost, please contact our Grants team.
What happens after my organization submits our application?
After the application period closes on September 1, our Grants team will conduct a preliminary review of all applications to confirm each applicant’s eligibility. All eligible applications will then be passed on to the second round of review. This round is conducted by our Grants Review team, who will score the narrative section of the applications. Each application will be scored by a randomly selected set of reviewers. Once the second round is complete, the Grants team and Grants Review team will convene to view final combined scores and determine the list of awarded applicants. We are aiming to notify applicants of their decision status by November 2024. Any delay in this process will be communicated to applicants.
How many applications did you receive last year and how many were awarded? How many will you award this year?
We received 130 eligible applications for FY24 and awarded 95 organizations. This year, for FY25 we will award 90 organizations.
My question is not here, how can I get more information?
You can reach Emily Ross, Program Officer, Grants, at eross@mdhumanities (dot) org, and Camilla Sandoval, Program Coordinator, Grants, at csandoval@mdhumanities (dot) org
Additionally, our Grants team will be hosting virtual informational events.