Community Grants - 2006

IHC Community Grant Application & Humanities Resource Workshop in Macomb

Event Details

When
04/09/2010
10:00am - 2:00pm
Where
WIUM - Tri-States Public Radio
900 W Adams St (533 University Services Bldg)
Macomb, IL
United States
See map: Google Maps
County: 
McDonough
Fee: 
Free. Open to the public.
Where
WIUM - Tri-States Public Radio
900 W Adams St (533 University Services Bldg)
Macomb, IL
See map: Google Maps
County: 
McDonough
Fee: 
Free. Open to the public.
  • Are you interested in applying for an IHC Community Grant?
  • Are you looking for tips on publicizing your programs or fundraising ideas?
  • Do you want to create community conversations in your town or neighborhood?

Representatives from Illinois nonprofit organizations are invited to join us for this special grant application and resource day. During the workshop, you'll learn about the many ways in which the Illinois Humanities Council provides support for nonprofits, while making important connections and creating potential collaborations with other local organizations.

Schedule of events:

  • 10:00 AM - Overview of IHC Community Grant Guidelines and Application Procedures with IHC Program Officer Ryan Lewis
  • 11:00 AM - Facilitated roundtable exchanges on fundraising, communications, and other nonprofit issues with special guests
  • 12:30 PM - Lunch and demonstration of other IHC resources, including the DIY Café Society Toolkit

Read our Community Grant guidelines. The next grant application deadlines are April 15, 2010 and July 15, 2010.

This event is free and open to the public. Registration for this event is required and must be made by April 2, 2010. You can register online, by email, or by phone at 312.422.5580.

When registering, please provide your name, the name of the organization you will be representing, and the organization's address and phone number.

For more information, please call 312.422.5580.

ILLINOIS HUMANITIES COUNCIL NAMES DEKALB PUBLIC LIBRARY AS RECIPIENT OF 2007 LAWRENCE W. TOWNER AWARD

02/16/2007

Launched "Heroes at Your Library" teen reading discussion group

CHICAGO - The DeKalb Public Library has been named the winner of the 2007 Lawrence W. Towner Award for their project "Heroes At Your Local Library." Steven Torres-Roman, a librarian at the DPL, is the project director.

"Heroes at Your Library" is a year-long reading and discussion group for teens. Not a typical reading series, "Heroes" will feature an important graphic novel each month, as well as promote discussion. The novels will consider the theme of the meaning of heroes in society and culture. A library staff person with an expertise in graphic novels will facilitate the reading and discussion.

The Towner Award was created in 1985 by the Illinois Humanities Council Board of Directors in memory of a past chairman, Lawrence W. Towner. It was instituted to encourage "risk-taking in the development and execution of a public humanities project." It is more appropriate to recognize such qualities at the beginning of the project when the risk was undertaken, rather than after its completion.

Got Quarters? Putting public services in private hands

Event Details

When
12/10/2008
7:00pm - 8:00pm
Where
Hallowed Grounds
5706 S University Ave Reynolds Club, 2nd Floor
Chicago, IL, 60637-1514
United States
See map: Google Maps
County: 
Cook
Fee: 
Free. Open to the public.
Where
Hallowed Grounds
5706 S University Ave Reynolds Club, 2nd Floor
Chicago, IL, 60637-1514
See map: Google Maps
County: 
Cook
Fee: 
Free. Open to the public.
Parking a car in Chicago is going to get even more expensive with Mayor Daley's plan to privatize the city's 36,000 parking meters. Under the plan, meter rates would increase to $1 an hour. By 2013, drivers will pay $6.50 an hour to park at downtown meters.

When the City Council Finance Committee met last week to debate the plan, aldermen complained about everything from soaring rates to end of parking-meter holidays, "to allowing the private operator to write parking tickets as frequently as every two hours at two-hour meters," the Chicago Tribune reported. Ald. Danny Solis (25th) said: "I could see people having to carry big bags of quarters - big bags of money - to deal with" these rate hikes.

Under the plan, Chicago pockets $1.2 billion to allow the partnership of Morgan Stanley Infrastructure Partners and LAZ Parking to lease and manage the city's meter operations for 75 years. By leasing the meters, Chicago sought to fill a $150 million budget hole. The city's Chief Financial Officer Paul Volpe, said there were two choices:"cutting $150 million in expenses or raising $150 million worth of taxes."

For more information, call 312.422.5580.

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