Skip to main content

UASU Student Group Granting Program

To support the great work of student groups, your UASU runs the Student Group Granting program. Your UASU contributes $100,000 annually for both Events and Operations applications.

Event Grant

This grant funds events either hosted or attended by members of student groups, which provide positive, practical experiences which will enhance the student involvement experience, and contribute to student group goals. 

Please note that to be eligible for funding, your events will still have to receive approval, otherwise the Students’ Union reserves the right to deny/rescind funding. Events that have not been approved can still be considered for funding. If you have questions or concerns please contact the program at clubs@uasu.ca.

Operations Grant

This grant supports a student group’s general operations. Costs affiliated with specific events are not eligible for this grant and should be requested through an Event Grant application. This grant is recommended to student groups in their start-up period (typically the first two years of operations), and for groups who are experiencing extenuating circumstances which have begun to cause problems with financial health and security of the club.

Applications Open   Event Date has to fall within:

May 01 - 31

May 31st

September 1 - December 31 (Fall Semester events)

Sept 01 - 30

September 30th

January 01 - April 30 (Winter Semester events)

Jan 01 - 30

January 31st

May 01 - August 31 (Spring/Summer Semester events)

How to Apply for Grants

The University of Alberta Students’ Union administers the Student Group Granting program. Since funds are provided by the Students' Union,UASU, only UASU-level groups are eligible for Event and Operations grants.

The first step is to login to your student account on hellorubric.com.

  1. ReadClick the Application"Login" thoroughly on Rubric to make sure you know what you're eligible for, what limits there are,drop-down and getselect everythingStudent inPortal.
  2. order. Still confused? We have budget templates, sample applications (coming soon!), and a handbook to help you
  3. Login with your application!UAlberta email and password.
  4. Great!Click Now,the goicon in the upper right-hand corner.
  5. From the options, click on the name of your student group under "Switch Accounts".
    1. You will now be viewing your club page as a club executive.

Once you're accessing Rubric from your club page, follow these steps to thesubmit Cluban Grantsapplication:

Program's
    Rubric
  1. Click pageon and"Forms" fill outin the appropriatetop navigation bar.
  2. Under "Grant Forms" click the application form completelyyou'd - well in advance of the granting deadline. Referlike to Stepcomplete 1 (or email us) if you don't know which category you should apply under.
    1. Event Grant: This grant is intended to offer financial support to groups that are primarily planning and hosting an event OR for a group sending members as ambassadors to an event or conference.
    2. Operations Grant: The Operations Grant is intended to offer funds to support or acquire items which will contribute to general and ongoing group operations and not for a one-time or recurring eventevent..
  3. Read the Application thoroughly on Rubric to make sure you know what you're eligible for, what limits there are, and get everything in order. Still confused? We have budget templates, sample applications (coming soon!), and a handbook to help you with your application.
  4. Revise your application as necessary, and submit the form via Rubric under the UASU Club Grants Page.Rubric. We can't accept late applications, and we don't make exceptions - so be punctual!

Student Group Grant Application Resources

Student Group Granting Rubrics

Event Grant Rubric:

The purpose of the Event Grant is to provide funding to events either hosted or attended by members student groups, which provide positive, practical experiences which will enhance the student involvement experience, and contribute to student group goals. The Student Group Granting Program will prioritize those grant applications which best meet the standards and expectations of the rubric below. 

Rubric Categories:
Group Growth and Participant Learning:

  • When describing the purpose of the event, whether the group is planning/hosting the event or attending a conference or competition, the grant application must identify specific skills or experiences that the participating students will gain, and how they will relate to the ongoing visibility and success of the student group

Details of Application

  • Event details and relevant and specific. The application does not leave out major details (such as an event’s purpose, date, or venue) and the specific items or services that will be covered by the grant funds, if the application is successful, are identified in the application.

Fiscal Responsibility

  • Documentation is provided on the fiscal management of the group, and they demonstrate that the group has plans beyond the current year. The application also demonstrates the considerations the executive has taken to ensure the financial health of the student group, and provides details on how this event contributes to the overall financial stability of the student group. Responsible financial practices must also be present, with adequate explanations for prior year ending in deficit.

Impact

  • The event is impactful to both the success of the student group and to the campus community. Descriptions of assessment plans to measure the success of the event are paramount.

Relevance to Student Group

  • The event is intentionally planned and actively contributes to the student group’s stated mission, as identified in the group’s constitution*.
    *Constitution must be reviewed by Student Group Services as per Student Group Recognition policies and procedure.
Weight Criteria 4 - Excellent 3 - Good 2 - Fair 1 - Poor
25% Group Growth and Participant Learning Participant Learning: 
See 3. Three or more robust learning outcomes are described. 
Group Growth:
See 3. The application also provides specifics on how the event contributes to the growth and visibility of the student group in both short and long terms.
Participant Learning: 
Specific skills or understanding that participants will gain are identified; activities at the event will directly contribute to specific learning outcomes. Purpose of event has particular, positive impact(s) on the student group (internally), and the University of Alberta Community (externally).
Group Growth:
The application describes how the event outcomes contribute to the growth of the student group.
Participant Learning: 
Specific skills or understanding that participants will gain are identified; activities at the event will directly contribute to specific learning outcomes. Purpose of event has unspecified impact(s) on the student group (internally), and/or the University of Alberta Community (externally).
Group Growth: 
The application implies or is unspecific in the description of how the event outcomes contribute to the growth of the student group.
Participant Learning: 
The purpose of the event is undefined, and no learning outcomes have been specified. 
Group Growth:
It is unclear in the application how this event will positively represent the student group to encourage growth. 
20% Details of Application Clarity: 
See criteria for score 3. 
Specificity: 
Items and services to be covered by the grant funding are specified; their relevance to the goals of the event have been described clearly. 
Clarity: 
Application details are clear, informative, and include all major details (eg. dates, locations, sources of funding), and additional context provided. 
Specificity: 
Items and services to be covered by the grant funding are specified.
Clarity: 
The application is readable, though disjointed. Some questions may have been answered in sentence fragments, and is difficult to understand.  
Specificity:
Items and services to be covered by the grant are described generally.
Clarity: 
Application details are lacking, vague and general. Little planning has been done, and no steps have been taken. Information is missing or incomplete.
Specificity:
No specific items or services are mentioned.
35% Fiscal Responsibility Budgets:
See criteria for score 3. All budgets are highly detailed, and demonstrate evidence that the group has taken all measures to reduce costs.
Financial Planning: 
See criteria for score 3. Based on the books, the event contributes to the financial sustainability of the group.  Groups show history of proper financial management, or provide adequate  explanations for deficit with plan to improve financial health.
Budgets:
Required budgets are included on the application, and include details that are clear and agree with the purposes of the student group and the event. 
Financial Planning: 
The budget suggests that the group is financially sound; that is, the event costs are reasonable, and/or justified, with evidence that it will ensure the future financial health of the group.
Budgets:
Required budgets are included on the application. Budgets are unclear in places and/or describe some “miscellaneous” costs that are undefined. 
Financial Planning: 
The budget suggests that the event will not run a deficit, but may be leaving the group somewhat financially unstable for the future
Budgets:
Requested budgets are not present, or if they are present, leave out significant details. 
Financial Planning: 
The budget suggests that the event will run a large deficit, or will otherwise leave the group in poor financial health.
10% Impact Student Group Impact: 
See criteria for score 3.
Campus Impact:
The group clearly demonstrates how the event will impact and improve the broader campus community.
Assessment Plans:
Assessment method(s) are described in detail, including why the specific method(s) were chosen and how the data collected will be used to plan for future events. 
Student Group Impact: 
The group clearly demonstrates how the event will impact the members of the student group.
Campus Impact:
The group discusses how the event will impact and improve the broader campus community.
Assessment Plans:
Assessment method(s) are explained in the application, with justification for the selected method(s). 
Student Group Impact:
The group mildly explains the impact which the event will have on its members.
Campus Impact:
See criteria for score 1.
Assessment Plans:
Some planning for assessing the impact and success of the event are indicated in the application, but justification for the selected method(s) are unclear.
Student Group Impact: 
The group does not illustrate how the event will impact the members of the student group.
Campus Impact:
The group does not illustrate how the event will impact the broader campus community.
Assessment Plans:
Little or no planning for assessing the impact and success of the event are indicated in the application.
10% Relevance to Student Group See description for 3 scale. The application also demonstrates the applicant’s understanding of the long-term context and impact of the event on the group’s goals.  Application clearly defines the relationship between outcomes of the event and the goals of the student group, as identified in their Constitution*. Unclear what tie the event has to the outcomes or goals of the student group, but the event could potentially bring positive attention to the group. No indication has been made by the applicant of how the event relates to the overarching goals of the student group’s Constitution.

Operations Grant Rubric:

The purpose of the Operations Grant is to support a student group’s general operations. Costs affiliated with specific events are not eligible for this grant and should be requested through an Event Grant application. This grant is recommended to student groups in their start-up period (typically the first two years of operations), and for groups who are experiencing extenuating circumstances which have begun to cause problems with financial health and security of the club.  The Student Group Granting Program will prioritize those grant applications which best meet the standards and expectations of the rubric below.

Rubric Categories:

Group Growth

  • Student Groups should always be looking forward, planning for their future. In this category the Granting Program will prioritize applicants who have clearly outlined the short-term impact -- that is, within 1-2 years -- of the grant would be on their club operations, as well as the long-term vision for the club’s operations, to aspire to self-sustainability.

Strategic Planning

  • When setting goals, it is important for a club to set their sights on foreseeable challenges and needs of the student group that are likely to come with the attainment of short- and long-term goals. The Granting Program will prioritize applicants who can identify strategies and best practices that will allow their student group to flourish, if their application is successful.

Fiscal Responsibility

  • Documentation is provided on the fiscal management of the group, and they demonstrate that the group has plans beyond the current year. The application also demonstrates the considerations the executive has taken to ensure the financial health of the student group.

Details of Application

  • Details provided in the application are relevant and specific. The application does not leave out major details and the specific items or services that will be covered by the grant funds, if the application is successful, are identified in the application.
Weight Criteria 4- Excellent 3 - Good 2 - Fair 1 - Poor
25% Group Growth Short Term Impact:
Specific and significant impact on the group’s operations and success for the year are intentionally planned in relation to how they will feed into the long term vision. 
Long Term Vision: 
Goals and plans outlined in the application indicate that the group will likely not need to apply for Operational funding in the future.
Short Term Impact:
Specific and significant impact on the group’s operations and success for the year are outlined; the connection between this impact and the long term vision is articulated.  
Long Term Vision:  
The application gives specific and realistic goals for the group over the course of five years.
Short Term Impact:
The application identifies potentially significant, positive impact on the group’s operations for the current year. 
Long Term Vision: 
The application implies some goals beyond the current year, but the goals are unrealistic or vague.
Short Term Impact:
The application identifies unclear impacts of the grant on the group’s operations for the current year.
Long Term Vision: 
The application demonstrates little to no long-term planning or goals for the group.
30% Strategic Planning Challenges & Needs:
See criteria for score 3.
Strategies & Best Practices:
The application provides robust descriptions of strategies or practices that will help the group effectively manage challenges into the future, and internal accountability plans to ensure goals are always relevant as the group grows.
Challenges & Needs:
The application identifies realistic challenges and needs that could arise from the group’s realization of goals and vision.
Strategies & Best Practices:
The application provides relevant strategies or practices that will help the group effectively manage challenges into the future.
Challenges & Needs:
The application identifies challenges or needs which are too broad and general, and fails to explain the connections to the goals and vision of the group. 
Strategies & Best Practices:
The application provides examples of strategies or practices but the effect(s) on the challenges are unclear.
Challenges & Needs:
The application does not identify realistic challenges or needs, or those identified are not connected to the group’s short and long term vision. 
Strategies & Best Practices:
The application does not identify strategies that will contribute to attaining the goals or vision of the group. 
30% Fiscal Responsibility Budgets:
See criteria for score 3. 
Financial Planning: 
See criteria for score 3. Budget is very detailed, and demonstrates  that group has taken all measures to reduce costs. Plans for the year contribute to the financial sustainability of the group.
Budgets:
Required budgets are included on the application, and include details that are clear and agree with the purposes of the student group. 
Financial Planning: 
The budget suggests that the group is financially sound; that is, the listed expenses are reasonable, and/or justified, with evidence that the future financial health of the group is feasible.
Budgets:
Required budgets are included on the application. Budgets are unclear in places and/or describe some “miscellaneous” costs that are undefined. 
Financial Planning: 
The budget suggests that the group will not run a deficit, but some practices or financial choices may be leaving the group somewhat financially unstable for the future.
Budgets:
Requested budgets are not present, or if they are present, leave out significant details. 
Financial Planning: 
The budget suggests that the event will run a large deficit, or will otherwise leave the group in poor financial health. 
15% Details of Application Clarity: 
See criteria for score 3. 
Specificity: 
Items and services to be covered by the grant funding are specified; their relevance to the goals of the group have been described clearly.
Clarity: 
Application details are clear, informative, and include all major details and additional context provided. 
Specificity: 
Items and services to be covered by the grant funding are specified.
Clarity: 
The application is readable, though disjointed. Some questions may have been answered in sentence fragments, and is difficult to understand.  
Specificity:
Items and services to be covered by the grant are described generally.
Clarity: 
Application details are lacking, vague and general. Some questions may have been answered in sentence fragments, and is difficult to understand.  
Specificity:
No specific items or services are mentioned.

Student Group Granting Handbook

Student Group Grant Program (SGGP) Overview

The University of Alberta Students’ Union aspires to create an exceptional and life-changing university experience for students through extra-curricular offerings that integrate learning, discovery, and citizenship to develop the intellect and imagination, educate leaders, and enhance a global perspective. To receive funding, an organization must demonstrate a benefit not only to their own group, but also to the campus community. The groups should benefit both in the short term and also in the long term by becoming more self-sufficient.

Funding Sources

The University of Alberta Students’ Union contributes $100,000 annually for both Events and Operations applications. Only SU-recognized student groups are eligible for this funding.

Student Group Granting Adjudication Committee

Applications are reviewed and scored by the Student Group Granting Adjudication Committee. The Granting Administrators of the Granting Committee ensure that all applications are eligible and provide policy and procedural guidelines for the committee.

The Granting Committee consists of:

  • At least four current executive members of student groups recognized by the Students' Union
  • Two non-voting members of Governance Staff

For more information regarding the Granting committee and its make up, please see the Finance Committee's Standing Orders.

Applying for a Student Group Grant

The following items guide the Student Group Granting Committee’s process and purpose. Groups must ensure that their application is consistent with all applicable guidelines and requirements.

Grant applications should demonstrate that the activities or operations of the student group contribute to the growth and vitality of the campus community, and that group members or participants will gain meaningful experiences from the proposed opportunity.

To assist the Program in funding as many student groups as possible in a year, there is a cumulative cap of $2000 that a recognized student group can receive in the Program’s fiscal year. This limit is cumulative between both the Event and Operations grants in the Program.

A group may only request a grant for up to the total of its remaining granting limit (eg. If a group has already received a $1200 grant, they are only eligible to apply for an $800 grant, not another full $2000 grant). Event Grants will also have a maximum eligible amount of ½ the total event cost to the student group, OR the remaining annual limit for that group, whichever comes first. Requests which surpass these limits will be reduced in the adjudication process, or may be disqualified altogether. You can contact clubs@su.ualberta.ca to confirm your group's eligible amount.

The Student Group Granting Program will not issue two grants for the same event. If multiple student groups are hosting a collaborative activity together, the groups may apply jointly for that event, by expressing this intention on the application form. The granting limit for the event will be the greatest of the annual limits of the groups, not the sum.

Student Group Granting Program Types (SU-only groups eligible)

Event Grant:
The purpose of the Event Grant is to provide funding to events either hosted or attended by members of student groups, which provide positive, practical experiences which will enhance the student involvement experience, and contribute to student group goals. The Event Grant will provide no more than 50% of the total event expenses, up to the remaining annual limit of the student group.
Before attending or hosting the event, the student group will need to complete event risk management approval by submitting an application through Rubric.

Eligibility
To be eligible for any funding from the Student Group Granting Program, a student group:

  • Must be fully registered and approved as an SU student group.
  • Must have a community bank account under the student group’s name with at least two signing authorities.
  • Must demonstrate fiscal responsibility and no outstanding financial obligations to the Students’ Union.
  • Must submit all materials by the application deadline.

The event must occur in the time period specified (see below). The group must submit the event through the Event Risk Management Approval process and receive approval; events that are not approved through this process will have their funds rescinded and/or denied.

For an Event hosted by the student group:
Must be used for any expenses related to events or activities hosted by  student groups, including running a conference or competition.

For an Event student group members are attending as ambassadors:
Must be used for any expenses relating to sending ambassadors to competitions, tournaments, business case studies, academic conferences, or professional development opportunities.

Operations Grant:
The purpose of the Operations Grant is to support a student group’s general operations. Costs affiliated with specific events are not eligible for this grant and should be requested through an Event Grant application. This grant is recommended to student groups in their start-up period (typically the first two years of operations), and for groups who are experiencing extenuating circumstances which have begun to cause problems with financial health and security of the club.
The maximum funding received by a student group is $500 every 2 program fiscal years. The grant cannot be used to reimburse items that have been acquired or paid for, in part or in full, by the student group prior to the application process.

Eligibility
To be eligible for any funding from the Student Group Granting Program, a student group:

  • Must be fully registered and approved as an SU student group.
  • Must have a community bank account under the student group’s name with at least two signing authorities.
  • Must demonstrate fiscal responsibility and no outstanding financial issues.
  • Must submit all materials by the application deadline.
  • Must direct funds towards basic group needs including, but not limited to:
    • Office supplies
    • General Advertising Materials (i.e. not for a particular event)
    • Printing costs
    • Promotional items
    • Office amd locker rentals
    • Web domain costs and site development
    • T-shirts for long-term use (Multiple years, not given away or dated for a particular event)
    • Banking fees

Must not have received $500 in Operations Grant Funding in the past two years.

Ineligible Items and Costs

Part of the grant application will ask what the group plans to spend their grant on, if successful. The following items are ineligible for funding from the Granting Program. If they appear on the request list, the Committee may reduce the ask amount by the amount of money that would be allocated to that request. If the full request list is comprised of items of this nature, the application may be disqualified altogether.
To be clear, an Event Grant could have these costs included in the Event Budget, but under no circumstances can funding from the Student Group Granting Program or Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion Grant be used to purchase or subsidize them.

List of Ineligible Items and Costs:

Tips & Tricks: Preparing Your Application

Remember: all the details that the Granting Committee will have to make a decision on your grant request are in the application you submit. This means they will not have as much context as you do around the goals and vision of the organization. Think about how you would explain the purpose of your grant request to someone who knows little to nothing about your student group!

  • Avoid using acronyms or short-hand terminology that is specific to your student group or field of expertise, or, if you do shorten any terms, provide full definitions for them early on in the application as possible.
  • Discuss and clarify your goals and intentions for the costs in detail, to help the Committee understand your group’s vision, purpose, and the use of the proposed costs. Demonstrate how the event or materials will help in carrying out your group’s mandate!
  • You will have a much better chance if your activity is something that engages or is accessible to all of campus and not just your group and group members.
    Note: This does not necessarily mean that internal events are ineligible! Be sure to explain how supporting an event with more internal impact could feed into long-term, external impacts on the campus community.
  •  In the application, you have the option of uploading supporting documents to accompany your application. This can include timelines, outlines, event proposals, layouts, posters, marketing plans, itineraries… in that section, the world is your oyster!
  •  We always recommend that groups have a contingency plan and other sources of funding as grants are never a guarantee—and it’s also rare that groups will get their full requested amount.
  • If you’ve done a first run-through of your budgets and can see that you have a surplus or deficit, we suggest that you clarify in your application why your budget stands the way it does. There are risks associated with funding a student group that plans to be thousands of dollars in debt by the end of the year, and questions of “does the group need this money?” will arise if a group is applying for grants with a significant (10% or more) budget surplus. Your budgets should reflect your actual planning, and a significant imbalance can be cause for concern and negatively impact an application score.

Application Deadlines, Process, and Scoring

There are three application periods every year, each landing on the last day of the specified month in the current fiscal year (May 1 - April 30). Applications must be submitted online through the UASU Club Grants Program Rubric Page, and are due by 11:59 PM on the deadline date. Late submissions will be disqualified from the session.

Application Opens Application Deadline Events must fall within
May 1st May 31st September 1st - December 31st
September 1st September 30th January 1st - April 30th
January 1st January 31st May 1st - August 31st

Process Flowchart

  1. Grant applications will be submitted online via UASU Club Grants Program Rubric page.
  2. On the day following the application deadline, Governance Staff will audit and disqualify any ineligible applications.
  3. Staff will divide all eligible applications amongst members of the committee for scoring before the adjudication committee meeting. Each application is scored initially by at least two members of the Committee. The average of these two scores will be brought to the full Committee Adjudication Meeting for ratification.
    If the first two scores have a difference of 0.5 or more, a third Committee member will score, and their score will be added to determine the final average score, which is then brought to be ratified at the Adjudication Meeting.
  4. The Committee Adjudication Meeting will take place to review, discuss, and finalize application scores.
    During the meeting, initial scorers provide a brief summary of each application to the rest of the Committee, and explanation of the recommended scores. The voting members then decide whether to ratify the recommended score, or score the applications in-meeting (in the case of particularly contentious or vastly variant scores). If the decision is to score an application in-meeting, all remaining voting committee members will score the application, followed by discussion and a final vote.
  5. Student Group Services will notify each applicant of the results by Approving or Denying submissions on Rubric. All groups are welcome to contact SGS for additional details on their results. Cheques will not be immediately available at this time.
    1. Student Group Services will contact successful groups when cheques become available. Cheques can be picked up from 0-81, Student Life Central, Lower Level SUB.
      Student groups must pick up their cheques within fifteen business days of being notified, unless the groups make alternative arrangements with Student Group Services, as per the Finance Committee Standing Orders.
  6.  All groups that receive a grant must complete a Grant Report by the specified deadline (two weeks following the event for all event grants, and one year after receival for all operations grants). The report template and instructions will be provided. Keep all receipts for any grant-related purchases —you must submit them with your Grant Report.
Grading and Allocations

Event Grants and Operations Grants each have a corresponding scoring rubric; they can be found at the end of this handbook in the appendix. Each rubric has a scale of 1.0 - 4.0 points. The minimum score required to receive funding is 2.7/4.0. The amount of money that will be disbursed to each applicant will be pro-rated according to how well the application scores; to receive the full ask amount, the score must be a 3.8/4.0.
When funds are being allocated, the highest-scoring applications are allotted their merited dollar amount first, in descending order to the lowest-scoring application. Some application rounds will have more applications than others, so in the event of a high-volume application round, some applications may not receive funding, even if they score a 2.5/4.0.
Any grant application request that is for $200 or less will be considered on a pass/fail basis, and will receive either their full request if they receive a passing score, or no funding if they do not receive a passing score.

Common Disqualifications
  • Late Applications - Any late submissions will automatically be disqualified. Online submissions are time-stamped, so there are no exceptions. Applications in hard copy are never considered.
  • Incomplete Applications – make sure that all the questions in the applications are answered and that you have attached the necessary budgets. Many applications are automatically disqualified due to incompletion when:
    • a group forgets to submit one of the required budgets: If your event budget is the same as your operating budget because your group only holds the one event, please be sure to note this in the application. If your group is missing an operating budget for the previous year, please be sure to provide a reason.
    • a group does not submit an adequate budget: Budgets are considered insufficient when all income, all expenses, or net surplus/loss are missing. Please note that a running total or bank statement are NOT budgets. If you need help creating a budget for your group, please contact SGS or visit the Resources & Downloads on our website.
  • Ineligible Items & Activities - It’s important to specify which item(s) the Grant funding will cover or subsidize, if your group receives a grant. If costs listed for the grant request are ineligible, the ask amount for your grant may be reduced to cover only the eligible item costs, or your application may be disqualified altogether if all the included items are ineligible.
  •  Grant request is too little - The granting minimum is $100.00. Submissions under $100.00 will be automatically disqualified.
Appealing an Adjudication Decision

Student Groups can appeal a granting decision only in the following cases:

  • An undeclared or unaddressed conflict of interest; or
  • Evidence of bias on the part of one or more reviewers; or
  • Factual error(s) made by one or more reviewers that could have altered the outcome of review substantially; or
  • Failure by a Governance staff member to provide required information to the review committee.

If the student group would like to file for an appeal, they must do so within one working week of the result notification sent to the group via Rubric. Details on how to submit an appeal will be provided in the notification message.
In the event that a valid appeal request is received, the Committee will meet again to discuss the nature of the appeal within one working week. Follow up with the appealing student group will be made by the Committee immediately following the Appeal meeting.
Any appeals that are filed will be processed by the Student Group Granting Program Adjudication Committee. All decisions made by the Committee regarding appeals are final.

Reporting

So You Got a Grant: Now What?

Applicants who are successful and receive funds from the Student Group Granting Program are required to submit a Grant Report, which includes a Report Form, receipts, a finalized Event budget (for Event Grants), and a written report.
Grant reports are submitted online through Rubric. Just log into Rubric and search up the Student Group Granting Program, scroll down to “Forms” and click on the appropriate report type. Follow through the prompting questions and it will lead you to the final page where you can upload the receipts and final budget.

Report Deadlines

Event Grants: Due 2 weeks following the end date of the Event.
Operations Grants: Due 1 year from the deadline of the application round used to apply for the grant.

Failure to Submit Reports

Any late, missing or incomplete grant reports will affect a group's eligibility to receive funding from the Program. If no report or receipts are provided, the Committee may require the group to return the funds received.
To reinstate eligibility for the Student Group Granting Program, the student group must:

  • Submit the outstanding Grant Report, including all its component parts, to Student Group Services; OR
  • Submit an Auxiliary Report, outlining acceptable reasoning for the incomplete Grant Report, to the Granting Committee, via Student Group Services.

If a student group submits an Auxiliary Report, and the report is not considered valid or complete, the student group can be barred from accessing the Granting Program for up to and no longer than four (4) calendar years from the original Grant Report due date.

Report Contents

Grant Reports must include:

  • All receipts for costs covered or subsidized by the Grant funding received
  • A written summary of the impact that the funding had on the student group/on the student group event
  • A final actual budget for the Event or Operations of the student group (up to the report submission date)
  •  Report on the amount of unused funds (if applicable)

Funds are to be spent as outlined in your granting application. Any deviation must be cleared with Student Group Services prior to spending on a cost that was not in the approved proposal in the application. Any money that is unspent, lacking receipts or inappropriately allocated may be required to be returned.
In the event that a group returns Grant funds for any reason, the cumulative eligibility total does not reset; that is, a group is eligible to receive up to the annual limit for Event and Operation grants, regardless of use or non-use of the funding received.

Other items that are optional to include in the Grant Report are:

  • Photos/media
  • Testimonials and feedback from participants in an Event or student group operations
Granting Program Annual Report

The Student Group Granting Program is accountable to the Finance Committee of Students’ Council for all Event and Operations funding. Governance Staff will prepare an annual report which summarizes the granting program for the year, including the number of individual grants provided to student groups, the number of applications received, and more!

Information provided in the Grant Reports filled out by student groups will be included in the Annual Report, which will be shared with stakeholders in the programs. If a student group who has received a grant and submitted a report has concerns about the use of information contained in their reports, they should contact Governance Staff to resolve the issue.

Appendix A: Event Grant Application Questions

The Basics

Student Group Name (no acronyms)
Note that this is the name to which cheques will be issued. Ensure that this is the name as it appears on your student group’s bank account and all other official documentation. The Students’ Union may charge a processing fee to reissue cheques.

Name of Event:
Must appear the same on the event risk management approval application. If the name changes after this is submitted, please inform Student Group Services at clubs@su.ualberta.ca.

Date of Event:
If a range/multi-day event, please specify start AND end dates.

Location(s):

Name of Executive (Primary Contact):
This is the person that we will contact with details on the results of your application.

UAlberta Email Address:

Name of Alternate Executive Member (Alternate Contact):
Student Group Services may contact this person to confirm details about the grant application.

UAlberta Email Address:

Request Amount:
Maximum request can be up to 50% of the event cost OR up to the group’s remaining annual limit, whichever comes first.

All events must be submitted to the Event Risk Management Coordinator for review. Events that are not duly processed will not be eligible for funding through this program.

Have you submitted your event for approval by the SERM Coordinator? (Yes or No, select one)

If "no", why not?