The Sunlight Foundation Blog
 
  • Our Mini-Grantees Rock!

    POSTED BY
    Ellen Miller

    Today, Sunlight is announcing new Mini-Grants as part of its commitment to support original ideas, tools, Web sites, and bloggers that further our mission of using the Internet to foster a more open government.

    These new projects (scroll down for our Mini-Grantees) demonstrate the creativity of citizens in using the Internet to give the public the power to learn more about their elected representatives and to engage as communities in monitoring, conversing and connecting over the work of Congress. Each of the work of these new Sunlight grantees creates greater transparency for our elected officials. Their work will strengthen citizen participation in the democratic process.

    Check out the work of Geocoder.us that provides free address look-up information based on the U.S. Census, so that users can enter any address or intersection and learn the longitude and latitude coordinates for that location, or the work of Knowledge As Power which will develop a legislator email management and constituent relations communications system to increase transparency between legislators and their constituents. Speechology.org will host a Web site that will archive video of key political speeches-including debates, State of the Union addresses, convention speeches congressional testimony and campaign advertisements-and facilitate online public critical analysis. And three additional grants — Pacific Northwest Topic Hotlist, Richmond Sunlight and the Utah News Aggregator — have developed innovative ways to create more transparency for their legislators closer to home.

    We are very excited to be supporting all of these groups.

    Sunlight accepts applications for its Mini-Grants on an ongoing basis.

    0 Comments

    Posted: February 14th, 2008 Tags: , ,
  • Grants for citizen muckrakers

    POSTED BY
    Ellen Miller

    We’re announcing the availability of “mini-grants” of $1,000 to $5,000 to fund original ideas, tools, Web sites, and blogs that create a better, more dynamic relationship between members of Congress and the citizens they represent. See here for the full press release.

    We encourage grant applications from local or regional nonprofit organizations and Web sites, from offshoots of national groups, from individuals and from informal groups of citizens.

    Maybe you have a project or blog that can’t reach its maximum audience because you need a server upgrade, or you’re a political blogger who needs expensive polling data. Perhaps you’re creating a wiki to get the public involved in designing idea policy. If so, and your project’s goal is to help make Congress more open and transparent, then don’t delay and submit your proposal on our site.

    We’ll be looking for creative projects that fit our mission and have a likelihood of success and replication by others. As a rule, Sunlight does not award grants for salaries or general overhead expenses, but does for technology upgrades. Grants are available to augment existing projects or to jumpstart new ones.

    Applications are due January 1, 2008. We’re always impressed by the practical innovations proposed by our grant seekers, and can’t wait to see your new ideas to make a more open and transparent Congress.

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    Posted: October 16th, 2007 Tags: ,
  • Announcing Six New Grants

    POSTED BY
    Ellen Miller

    We’re announcing today a combination of large and mini-grants to promote openness and citizen involvement in the work of Congress. See here for the full press release.

    Each of these grants is exciting in its own way: two of the larger grants are cutting edge projects in the world of citizen journalism - one to Jay Rosen’s NewAssignment.Net and the other to Dan Gillmor’s Center for Citizen Media.

    I feel like Jay’s project is on the cusp of making some very big waves. As I said to him, if this works (and I think it will), the Washington game will never be the same again. The oh-so-cozy relationship between lawmakers and the old media will be replaced by something that is much more powerful - fearless citizens. I am certain that the establishment media will be challenged - and that’s a very good thing - by this experiment’s anticipated successes and perhaps they will recall that their mission to "afflict the comfortable." And one further thought: what Rosen is trying to do with NewAssignment.Net is something that media reform activists should start paying attention to since it can offer a way around the mainstream media’s failure.

    Dan Gillmor’s work that we are supporting is a beta test of how future congressional elections might be covered by a combination of citizen and professional journalists. His Center for Citizen Media will oversee the creation of a website that hopes to glean everything that can possibly be reported on a Congressional election, with an emphasis on drawing on the talents and ideas of local citizen reporters. Imagine citizens taking video cameras to fundraising events, or house meetings, or conversations with senior citizens and then posting them all on a single website. Imagine combining that with first-person reports, links to articles, data bases on campaign financing, video archives of past statements, etc. etc. It’s going to be a rush to get this going in one district this fall (it will happen in CA-11) but Dan has marshaled students in a class he’s teaching and some other terrific talent too that will pump it up fast.

    Equally exciting - though in a different arena — is the work of the Institute on Money in State Politics. We gave them a small grant a few months ago to begin the development and implementation of their initial Web Service Application Program Interfaces (APIs) and we are so impressed with their initial work that this grant is being made to allow them to continue apace. This grant will also allow them to conduct extensive outreach to be able to test their APIs in the real world this year, and it will mean that they are able to develop several custom APIs for journalists and/or academics. IMSP is really leading the way for all the data crunching groups in enthusiastically endorsing this Web 2.0 way of distributing information.

    And finally, we are announcing our final three grants under our mini-grant program. Zephyr came up with the notion of creating a pool of $20,000 and offering grants, not to exceed $5,000, to innovative programs that are focused on transparency for members of Congress. And it was a terrific idea because it surfaced people and projects well beyond what we knew was happening out there. We couldn’t be happier with the results of our request for proposals. All of submissions we received were certainly worthy projects and the total of six that were selected for funding show the power and creativity of what people are doing to inform citizens about Congress using technology and the Internet. I suspect we will decide to do more of these mini-grant programs in the future.

    0 Comments

    Posted: September 7th, 2006 Tags: , ,
  • Announcing Mini-Grants

    POSTED BY
    Ellen Miller

    The Sunlight Network, our affiliated advocacy group, is announcing today  a series of "mini-grants," in the $1,000 to $5,000 range, for local or regional nonprofit organizations and non-affiliated groups that have innovative approaches to strengthening the relationship between Members of Congress and the citizens they represent. (Note that the website for the Sunlight Network is not yet live.)

    We are particularly encouraging applications from existing small nonprofits, local or regional chapters of national organizations and groups of individuals. Grants are available to augment existing projects or to jumpstart new ones. Grants will be made available on a rolling basis starting July 15. Sunlight believes that open, honest, sincere representation is possible, and that engaged citizens can make it happen. These are grants designed to stimulate your action!

    We’ll make our decisions based on projects’ creativity, their likelihood of success, and the degree to which they match Sunlight’s goals. We strongly favor efforts that are themselves open and democratic in their internal structure. We are very excited to see what you come up with.

    Send a one-page summary of your proposed project, a budget (including the amount requested from Sunlight) and contact information to Zephyr Teachout, National Director, Sunlight Network, zteachout at sunlightfoundation dot com.

    We don’t want to prejudge what might come in the door, but here are a couple of some hypothetical examples which might jump-start your thinking:  

    An Austin, TX website that aggregates news and commentary on local issues and blogs about it might seek a grant to expand their work to cover their Congressional delegation. The money they request is for travel, a video camera, Lexis-Nexis access.

     A group of students in Miami want to investigate the placement of a controversial landfill so they ask for a grant to pay for research that seeks to show that business interests which may have supported local politicians may have distorted decision-making regarding placement of the landfill. Their grant funds the investigative report and its broadcasting on the web.

    Citizen Porkbusters in Kansas wants a grant to create an online video to educate other citizens about the powerful moneyed interests behind the promotion of ethanol. They plan to place the video on YouTube.

    We can’t wait to hear your ideas. Send them to Nisha Thompson at nthompson at sunlightfoundation dot com.

    0 Comments

    Posted: July 11th, 2006 Tags: ,

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