Introduction
OLGA
OLGA Guidelines
Legal Requirements
Programs
Arts Learning
Capacity Building
Individual Artist Grant
Programs and Services
Arts Innovation
Arts Access
Sustainability
International Partnerships
Other Programs
Guidelines Definitions
Application Deadlines
Panelist Nomination Form
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Sustainability Program
What the Program Supports
Examples of Eligible Activities
Who May Apply
Grant Range
Program Requirements
Additional Information
How to Apply
Support Materials
Audio-Visual Materials
Evaluation/Scoring Process
View a list of Application Questions for Sustainability.
OAC reserves the right to alter application narrative questions at any time. Please refer to the OnLine Grants Application system for the most up-to-date questions, as well as definitions, formatting details and character limits.
This section of "Guidelines" is available
as a PDF for you to download and print out if you prefer to read
it offline. You must also read Legal Requirements if you plan to
apply for OAC funding. A PDF of the complete version of the "Guidelines"
is available in the Introduction.
PDF of Sustainability
Program (48K)
PDF of Legal Requirements
(67K)
PDF of Regional
Map (88K) with county breakdown and staff contact information
Right Click the file and choose Save Target As: to
download the file.
Why the OAC Supports the Sustainability Program
The arts play an important role in the lives of every Ohio citizen.
All communities benefit from participating, experiencing, sharing
and learning through the arts. The Ohio Arts Council has consistently
taken a leadership role in developing creative ways to make the arts
available throughout the state. The OAC pioneered general operating
support for arts organizations beginning in 1978.
Funding from this program supports organizations that provide essential
arts programming to their community and are integral to its cultural
legacy. Through our direct financial support of ongoing programming
by arts, non-arts and cultural organizations, the OAC sustains the
vitality of Ohio economically, educationally and culturally.
The Sustainability program allows organizations to plan and conduct
ongoing arts programs?either a full year of activities or recurring
projects?in both traditional spaces (galleries, concert halls, theaters,
museums) and nontraditional venues (hospitals, shopping malls, retirement
centers, places of worship).
Deadline: February 1 (odd-numbered years only)
What the Program Supports
This funding program provides two-year grants to organizations for
annual arts programming or a recurring single project or activity.
Repeated events, such as a yearly festival, are eligible. The program
supports organizations that offer broad-based arts programming in
any discipline (multiarts, performing arts, literature, traditional
arts, visual arts) that is produced and presented by nonprofit arts
and cultural organizations, other nonprofit or government entities,
and colleges or universities that offer arts programming.
Ohio Artists on Tour Directory Requests - Fee Support Component
This funding is to support requests for the fees of artists in the
Ohio Artists on Tour Directory.
We encourage presenters
to select artists from the Directory, which provides performance
opportunities for the artists and an additional funding resource
for the presenter.
NOTE: Performing Arts Presenters
The process for applying for Fee Support has changed; please click here to learn more about how your organization can receive additional support to present artists from the OAC's Ohio Artists on Tour Directory.
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Examples of Eligible Activities
- A museum or gallery presents multiple exhibitions, educational
programming, publications, and community arts events throughout
the year.
- A performing arts center presents a series of dance, music
and theater performances, including residencies, from September
through May.
- A community arts organization presents its annual summer
weekend festival featuring arts and crafts, music, dance
and demonstrations by regional artists.
- A university media arts department offers a statewide
annual film and video festival for community and university
audiences.
- A series of literary journals featuring Ohio poets is
published.
- A municipal parks and recreation department offers art
classes and produces performances in theater and dance.
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Who May Apply
Applicants to the Sustainability program
must have received OAC funds at least twice in the past five
years. This previous support must have come from an OAC funding program
that evaluated and scored the application through a panel
process. First-time applicants to the OAC and organizations with
budgets of $25,000 or less should refer to the Arts Access Program.
| Applicants may be: |
- Nonprofit arts and cultural organizations
- Social service agencies
- Other nonprofit organizations that provide arts programming
- Educational organizations that demonstrate a commitment
to arts programming in a larger community setting
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Non-arts organizations such as colleges and universities, government
entities and social service organizations may apply to the Sustainability
program
only for their ongoing arts component or programming. Grants are based
on the arts program?s budget (see below), not the organization?s total
budget. Indirect
costs may be shown as in-kind
but not as part of the cash match. For additional information refer
to ?Applications from Colleges, Universities and Government Agencies.?
Organizations that seek funding in this category must demonstrate
their value and relevance to the community through quality arts programming
and services.
Grant Range
Grants in the Sustainability program
are determined by a formula that takes into account the panel score
(see below) and the organization?s budget (based on the most recently
completed fiscal year). Historically, grants to arts organizations
with budgets over $1.5 million have ranged between 1% and 4% of their
total operating budget; grants to arts organizations with budgets
under $1.5 million generally range from 4% to 10% of their total budget.
Grants to non-arts organizations range from 4% to 10% of their submitted
arts program budget. These percentages are given as examples only
and may vary according to the OAC?s allocation from the state legislature.
All Sustainability grants require at least a 1:1 cash match.
Sustainability (over $1.5 million) Additional Requirements
The following organizations, even if their budgets are over $1.5 million, are ineligible for funding in the Sustainability (over $1.5 million) category. They may be eligible to apply in other programs, including the Sustainability (under $1.5 million) category:
- Organizations whose primary thrust is education and/or the awarding of academic credit, such as colleges, universities and other degree-granting institutions. This includes departments, divisions, centers and other sub-entities of institutions of higher education.
- Organizations that receive operating funds from other state agencies.
- Organizations whose main purpose is not the presentation or production of the arts.
- Divisions or departments of larger governmental entities (e.g., divisions of parks and recreation)
- National service organizations.
Please read ?Legal Requirements and Ohio Arts Council Rules? and ?Grants
Process for Organizations? before applying to this program. Activities
for which funds are requested may begin no earlier than July 1 following
the application deadline. They must be completed by June 30 of the
following year. Organizations must apply for two-year funding.
Additional Information
Organizations awarded Sustainability grants are required to sign a
Grant Agreement with the OAC to provide specific services. Two Grant
Agreements are issued: one for activities that occur in the first
OAC fiscal year (July 1?June 30), a second agreement for activities
that occur in the second OAC fiscal year.
OAC grants are paid after grant activities are completed and after
a satisfactory Final Report has been submitted through OLGA. The OAC
must receive the Final Report within 30 days of completion of the
project or program or the grant may be canceled. Requests for extensions
are reviewed on a case-by-case basis and may be granted if a written
request is submitted before the due date of the Final Report. The
Final Report Form is linked to the application and Grant Agreement.
Grantees should refer to both documents as they prepare the final
report, or payment may be delayed. A Final Report must be submitted
at the end of each of the two years of funding. Grantees may request
one partial
payment during each of the two years of funding.
How to Apply
All applications to the OAC must be submitted via its online application
system, OLGA. No paper applications are accepted. See the section
entitled ?Grants Process for Organizations.?
Organizations applying for the Sustainability program
are requested to notify an OAC staff member of their intent to apply.
All applicants are strongly encouraged to submit a draft
application at least 30 days before the final deadline date.
The draft will be reviewed by OAC staff members and the applicant
will receive feedback on the completeness of the application. To submit
a draft, simply follow the instructions at the beginning of the application.
| Timeline |
| Draft
application deadline |
January 1 |
| Final application deadline |
February 1 |
| Panel meetings |
Early May for arts organizations with budgets greater than
$1.5 million; late April for all other Sustainability applicants |
| Grant award announcement |
Mid- to late July |
| Grant agreement mailed |
Mid-August (each year of the biennium) |
| Grant activity begins (no earlier than) |
July 1 |
| What the OAC Needs |
- Required financial documents (see below).
- A completed Sustainability application must be submitted
online by 5 p.m. on the February 1 deadline. At that time,
the system locks and no further changes can be made to the
application.
- One set of required support
materials (listed below) must be received in the OAC
office within seven calendar days of the deadline date.
In addition, a complete copy of the application must be
submitted. All documents, including the signature form with
an original signature, the support material checklist and
one copy of the application must be submitted along with
your support materials. If the support materials do not
reach the OAC within this timeframe, the application will
not be accepted. You will be notified via your online account
when materials are received.
- Include with your support materials an Assurances/ Signature/
Support Materials Checklist. This document will appear on
your computer immediately after your application is submitted.
It must be signed by your organization?s board president
or an authorized official.
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| Required Financial Documentation |
- Certified independent audit (required for organizations
with budgets over $1.5 million) OR
- Independent certified financial review OR
- Copy of organization?s last fiscal year IRS Form 990 (for
organizations with budgets under $1.5 million)
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| These financial documents are due by April
1 following the deadline. In addition, organizations with budgets
over $1.5 million must submit |
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Financial Form M
Independent audit letter
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| Both these items will be mailed to organizations
with budgets over $1.5 million after receipt of the application. |
| Failure to submit this financial documentation
by April 1 will result in a penalty deduction in a grant award
or the application being deemed ineligible. |
| Support Materials relate to the ?Evidence? criteria
listed under each review category (see ?Evaluation/Scoring Process?).
Please do not use plastic sleeves or binders to submit support
materials. Pocket folders are acceptable. Submit only one set
of the following support materials: |
- One-paragraph biographies of key artistic and administrative
staff and outside personnel mentioned in the application,
e.g. consultants, artists, curators, jurors.
- List of board members and their professional affiliations;
list of committee members.
- Up to two examples of educational materials (if applicable)
such as teacherpreparation packets, student study guides,
brochure of educational offerings, curricula.
- Letters of commitment from any organization mentioned
in the application as a partner, e.g. social service agency,
school district, local business, another arts organization.
- Up to three unsolicited letters of support from past participants;
letters may not be more than three years old.
- Sample evaluation tool.
- Maximum of five pieces, no more than two years old, from
the following list. During the draft
application process, discuss with OAC staff which materials
are best suited to support your application.
- annual report
- audience survey
- critical review
- exhibition catalogue
- invitation
- newsletter
- press clipping
- press release
- program
- season brochure
- For Literature applicants only: two different literary
publications.
- For Performing Arts presenters
only: a complete list of all artists to be presented, including
name, fee amount, date of presentation and venue. To receive
funding support for artists from the Ohio Artists on Tour
Directory, applicants who are recommended for funding in
Sustainability have until May 15 to submit a copy of the
contract signed by the presenter and the artist.
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Audio-Visual Materials
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Please note: all applicants submitting AV materials
in this program are now required to complete a cover sheet
describing the content of their AV submission. Please print
out the following PDF and include it with your support materials.
AV cover sheet (PDF
357k)
Because panelists
score applications in the area of Artistic/Educational/Cultural
Value, applicants are strongly encouraged to include audio-visual
materials that best document their programming. The following
guidelines are provided for preparing audio-visual
materials. You may send:
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- Up to, but not more than, 12, 35 mm slides, mounted in
plastic of past or upcoming programming or projects. See
Preparing Slides, below, for instructions on identifying
and labeling slides. Slides should be duplicates; do not
send originals.
Preparing Slides: Send only clear, well-lit slides
in plastic slide mounts. Do not send cardboard mounts, which
may bend and jam in the projector, damaging the slides.
Do not send glass slides. Slides that jam in the projector
will be removed and not shown. Do not put tape or labels
on slide mounts. Use permanent ink to label the slides directly
on the plastic mounts.
Label
each slide with the name of your organization (artist name
on slide image below), number, title of work, date the work
was completed, red dot to indicate lower left corner. Number
each slide clearly, e.g. 1, 2, 3, in the order they are
to be viewed.
- Up to 12 photographs (digital photographs on a disk are
also allowed). Label appropriately with information listed
under slides.
- Up to two videotapes, CD-ROMs or DVDs (different works).
Label each with the name of your organization and information
about the work. Cue all materials as appropriate and include
a separate sheet of screening notes that describe the sample
work in detail, and indicate all artists involved in the
work.
- Up to two CDs or audiocassettes (different works). Label
with name of work, ensemble, date recorded and repertoire.
Cue tapes or indicate appropriate tracks on a separate sheet
of listening notes.
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| NOTE: You are allowed up to 10 total minutes? running
time of any video, DVD, CDROM digital slides, audiocassettes
and CDs. Total time viewed is at the discretion of the panel
and may in some cases be less than 10 minutes. Keep this in
mind as you select and cue materials. Choose the best examples
for the application. Do not send poor-quality slides. |
Evaluation/Scoring Process
The Sustainability program panel discusses and evaluates each application
based on the following Review Criteria.
A vote is taken to determine whether the application advances to the
scoring round. An application that moves forward is awarded a maximum
of 100 points in the four criteria
categories, Artistic/Educational/Cultural Value; Community Participation
and Accessibility; Planning, Evaluation and Documentation; and Organizational
and Financial Management. Scores are averaged, then ranked from highest
to lowest. They are used in the formula to determine grant recommendations,
which are approved by the OAC Board.
The review process is competitive; not all applications are funded.
The Council may determine a cutoff point in the ranking; applicants
below a certain score are not funded.
Artistic/Educational/Cultural Value
The highest score for this category is 25 points
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- Proposed activities demonstrate artistic, cultural and/or
educational value for the community being served.
- Proposed activities advance the organization?s artistic
vision.
- Qualified persons, including board, staff, and community
members, are involved in the design and implementation of
proposed activities.
- If applicable, K?12 in-school educational programming
meets the
Ohio Arts Academic Content Standards.
- Organization has done long-range planning that addresses
economic, educational and cultural goals, with clearly defined
strategies for achieving those goals.
- Programming continues to evolve and demonstrate creativity.
- Artistic programming contributes to community culture.
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Evidence
Can support any of the above criteria
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- Grant application
- OAC Final Report (OAC staff will supply)
- Artists? biographies
- Audio visual materials
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Community Participation & Accessibility
The highest score for this category is 25 points
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- Applicant addresses the educational, economic and/or social
needs of the community.
- Applicant understands and is responsive to the diverse
interests and needs of the community.
- Applicant?s programming and facilities meet or exceed
federal ADA requirements.
- Applicant has taken appropriate steps to broaden, deepen and diversify
participation in its programs/activities.
- Applicant has identified and minimized barriers to cultural
participation, e.g. practical, experiential and perceptual.
- Applicant acts as an advocate for the public value of
the arts in the community.
- Applicant has forged public and private partnerships with
a variety of organizations.
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Evidence
Can support any of the above criteria
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- Grant application
- OAC Final Report (OAC staff will supply)
- Board and committees lists
- Publicity materials that detail range of admission prices,
operating hours or performance times and accessibility logos
- Educational materials
- Letters of commitment
- Letters of support
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Planning, Evaluation and Documentation
The highest score for this category is 25 points
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- Planning procedures are comprehensive and clearly described.
- Appropriate persons, including board, staff, artists and
community members, are involved in planning, documentation
and evaluation and have clearly defined roles.
- Evaluation strategies are appropriate for the participants
and the activity; results are used to guide current and
future planning and programming.
- An appropriate publicity/promotional plan is outlined.
- Organization engages in short- and long-range planning
that addresses economic, educational and cultural goals,
with clearly defined strategies and a budget for reaching
those goals.
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Evidence
Can support any of the above criteria
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- Grant application
- OAC Final Report (OAC staff will supply)
- Sample Evaluation tool
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Organizational and Financial Management
The highest score for this category is 25 points
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- Applicant demonstrates ability to complete the proposed
project or programming.
- Appropriate persons, including staff, board and committee
members, are involved and have clearly defines roles.
- Budget is accurate and realistic for the organization
or project and correlates to the applicant?s narrative.
- Broad base of financial support includes public and private
sources.
- Applicant demonstrates ability to develop and manage resources
appropriately.
- If there is a deficit, applicant has a plan to reduce
it and has outlined its effect on proposed activities.
- Organizational management structure indicates a track
record of consistency and stability.
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Evidence
Can support any of the above criteria
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- Grant application
- OAC Final Report (OAC staff will supply)
- Board and committee lists
- Administrative staff biographies
- Publicity materials
- Audit or financial review or IRS Form 990
- Grant application
- Letters of support
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This section of "Guidelines" is available as a PDF for you to download
and print out if you prefer to read it offline. You must also read
Legal Requirements if you plan to apply for OAC funding. A PDF of
the complete version of the "Guidelines" is available in the Introduction.
PDF of Sustainability
Program (48K)
PDF of Legal Requirements
(67K)
PDF of Regional
Map (88K) with county breakdown and staff contact information
Right Click the file and choose Save Target As: to
download the file.
 |
|