Loading organization details...
Loading organization details...
Source: IRS Form 990 via ProPublica Nonprofit Explorer
Total Revenue
▼$757K
Total Contributions
$709.1K
Total Expenses
▼$1.5M
Total Assets
$2.9M
Total Liabilities
▼$39.1K
Net Assets
$2.9M
Officer Compensation
→$176.8K
Other Salaries
$188.1K
Investment Income
▼$0
Fundraising
▼$0
Source: USAspending.gov · Searched by organization name
VA/DoD Awards
$50.1M
VA/DoD Award Count
5
Funding from the Department of Veterans Affairs and/or Department of Defense.
Total Federal Funding (partial)
$198.4M
Awards Found
200+
Additional awards may exist. View all on USAspending.gov →
| Awarding Agency | Description | Amount | Fiscal Year | Period |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| VA/DoDDepartment of Defense | COVID-19 DPA3 US-BASED PRODUCTION OF N95 RESPIRATORS AND MELTBLOWN FILTER MATERIAL TO FULFILL DOD PANDEMIC DEMAND | $29.3M | FY2020 | Apr 2020 – Apr 2023 |
| VA/DoDDepartment of Defense | COVID-19 DPA3 DEFENSE PRODUCTION ACT (DPA) TITLE III INCREASED MACHINING CAPABILITY | $19.5M | FY2020 | Jun 2020 – Mar 2025 |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | PURPOSE: THE GREEN AND RESILIENT RETROFIT PROGRAM (GRRP) WAS ESTABLISHED BY SECTION 30002 OF THE INFLATION REDUCTION ACT OF 2022, (PUBLIC LAW 117-169) (THE “IRA”), TITLED “IMPROVING ENERGY EFFICIENCY OR WATER EFFICIENCY OR CLIMATE RESILIENCE OF AFFORDABLE HOUSING.” GRRP OFFERS LOANS AND GRANTS FOR HUD-ASSISTED MULTIFAMILY PROPERTIES TO IMPROVE ENERGY OR WATER EFFICIENCY, ENHANCE INDOOR AIR QUALITY OR SUSTAINABILITY, IMPLEMENT THE USE OF ZERO-EMISSION ELECTRICITY GENERATION, LOW-EMISSION BUILDING MATERIALS OR PROCESSES, ENERGY STORAGE, OR BUILDING ELECTRIFICATION STRATEGIES, OR ADDRESS CLIMATE RESILIENCE. ANNOUNCED GRRP AWARDS CAN BE FOUND AT WITHIN THE HYPERLINKED AWARDS ANNOUNCEMENT FOR EACH COHORT AT HTTPS://WWW.HUD.GOV/GRRP (E.G. WAVE 1 UNDER ELEMENTS AWARD ANNOUNCEMENT).; ACTIVITIES TO BE PERFORMED: GRRP FUNDS ARE USED TO FINANCE REHABILITATION PROJECTS THAT IMPROVE ENERGY OR WATER EFFICIENCY; ENHANCE INDOOR AIR QUALITY OR SUSTAINABILITY; IMPLEMENT THE USE OF ZERO-EMISSION ELECTRICITY GENERATION, LOW-EMISSION BUILDING MATERIALS OR PROCESSES, ENERGY STORAGE, OR BUILDING ELECTRIFICATION STRATEGIES; OR IMPROVE THE CLIMATE RESILIENCE OF ELIGIBLE HUD-ASSISTED MULTIFAMILY PROPERTIES. THESE AFFORDABLE HOUSING REHABILITATION PROJECTS MAY ENTAIL MOUNTING A ROOFTOP SOLAR SYSTEM TO GENERATE RENEWAL ENERGY, CONVERTING FROM GAS-POWERED HVAC SYSTEMS TO ELECTRIC HEAT PUMPS TO REDUCE CARBON EMISSIONS, AND/OR INSTALLING WIND- AND IMPACT-RESISTANT WINDOWS AND DOORS TO MAKE THEM RESILIENT TO SEVERE CLIMATE CONDITIONS –AMONG MANY OTHER ELIGIBLE MEASURES AND PROPERTY IMPROVEMENTS AIMED AT IMPROVING UTILITY EFFICIENCY, CLIMATE RESILIENCE, AND REDUCING CARBON EMISSIONS. THE PROGRAM SEEKS TO AMPLIFY RECENT TECHNOLOGICAL ADVANCEMENTS IN ENERGY AND WATER EFFICIENCY AND TO BRING A NEW FOCUS ON PREPARING FOR CLIMATE HAZARDS BY REDUCING RESIDENTS’ AND PROPERTIES’ EXPOSURE TO HAZARDS AND BY PROTECTING LIFE, LIVABILITY, AND PROPERTY WHEN DISASTER STRIKES. ALL GRRP INVESTMENTS WILL BE MADE IN AFFORDABLE HOUSING COMMUNITIES SERVING LOW-INCOME FAMILIES AND WILL REQUIRE AT LEAST FIVE YEARS OF EXTENDED AFFORDABILITY, AND A MINIMUM OF 15 YEARS OF AFFORDABILITY. HUD OFFERS GRRP FUNDING THROUGH THREE AWARD COHORTS DESIGNED TO MEET THE NEEDS OF PROPERTIES IN DIFFERENT SITUATIONS: ELEMENTS, LEADING EDGE, AND COMPREHENSIVE. APPROXIMATELY $140,000,000 WAS MADE AVAILABLE TO THE ELEMENTS COHORT, WHICH PROVIDES MODEST FUNDING TO OWNERS TO ADD PROVEN AND MEANINGFUL GREEN AND RESILIENT MEASURES TO THE CONSTRUCTION SCOPES OF IN-PROGRESS RECAPITALIZATION TRANSACTIONS. APPROXIMATELY $400,000,000 WAS MADE AVAILABLE TO THE LEADING EDGE COHORT, WHICH PROVIDES FUNDING FOR RETROFIT ACTIVITIES TO ACHIEVE AMBITIOUS OUTCOMES, INCLUDING GREEN BUILDING CERTIFICATION, NET ZERO, RENEWABLE ENERGY GENERATION, USE OF BUILDING MATERIALS WITH LOWER EMBODIED CARBON, AND CLIMATE RESILIENCE INVESTMENTS. APPROXIMATELY $1,470,000,000 WAS MADE AVAILABLE TO THE COMPREHENSIVE COHORT, WHICH PROVIDES FUNDING TO INITIATE RECAPITALIZATION INVESTMENTS DESIGNED FROM INCEPTION AROUND BOTH PROVEN AND INNOVATIVE GREEN AND RESILIENT MEASURES FOR PROPERTIES WITH A HIGH NEED FOR INVESTMENTS. UNDER ALL THREE AWARD COHORTS, OWNERS RECEIVE FUNDING IN THE FORM OF GRANTS OR LOANS. THROUGH 2024, GRRP WILL HAVE AWARDED ROUGHLY 250 PROPERTIES PRESERVING APPROXIMATELY 30,000 HOMES, THE MAJORITY OF WHICH ARE AFFORDABLE TO VERY LOW-INCOME HOUSEHOLDS, SENIORS, AND PERSONS WITH DISABILITIES.; EXPECTED OUTCOMES: THE PROGRAM WILL INCREASE ENERGY AND WATER EFFICIENCY, CREATE RENEWABLE ENERGY GENERATION, AND MAKE RESILIENCE IMPROVEMENTS TO PROTECT RESIDENTS AND AFFORDABLE HOUSING FROM NATURAL HAZARDS. TO MEASURE THIS, THE GRRP INVESTMENTS IMPLEMENTED ARE EXPECTED TO REDUCE GREENHOUSE GAS EMISSIONS BY 50% CUMULATIVELY ACROSS THESE PROPERTIES AND TO REDUCE MODELED ENERGY CONSUMPTION BY AT LEAST 25% AT EACH OF THESE PROPERTIES. SUCCESS OF THE GRRP GOALS WILL BE MEASURED USING EPA PORTFOLIO MANAGER’S UTILITY BENCHMARKING SYSTEM. INDIVIDUAL AWARDS WILL ENCOURAGE THE DEEPEST ENERGY SAVINGS AND EMISSIONS REDUCTIONS POSSIBLE BY FUNDING THE MOST IMPACTFUL IMPROVEMENTS IDENTIFIED THROUGH COMPREHENSIVE ASSESSMENTS OF THE BUILDINGS OR THROUGH ACHIEVING A TOP LEVEL, HIGH PERFORMANCE GREEN BUILDING CERTIFICATION. FURTHER, GRRP-FUNDED PROPERTY IMPROVEMENTS WILL ENHANCE RESIDENTS’ QUALITY OF LIFE AND PROVIDE HEALTHIER AND SAFER LIVING ENVIRONMENTS BY IMPROVING INDOOR AIR QUALITY, MAINTAINING COMFORTABLE LIVING TEMPERATURES, AND PREPARING BUILDINGS TO KEEP RESIDENTS SAFE THROUGH EXTREME WEATHER EVENTS AND NATURAL DISASTERS. RESILIENCE IMPROVEMENTS WILL BE CAPTURED BY A RESILIENCE ASSESSMENT THAT WILL BE REQUIRED FOR ALL GRRP PARTICIPANTS. RESILIENCE ASSESSMENT DATA MAY BE REPORTED FROM TIME TO TIME, BUT THERE ARE NO SPECIFIC PROGRAM GOALS FOR RESILIENCE. ; INTENDED BENEFICIARIES: THE PROGRAM AIMS TO BENEFIT RESIDENTS AND OWNERS OF HUD-ASSISTED MULTIFAMILY PROPERTIES AND THE COMMUNITIES AT-LARGE THEY RESIDE IN. THIS INCLUDES PROPERTIES ASSISTED BY SECTION 8 PROJECT-BASED RENTAL ASSISTANCE, SECTION 202 SUPPORTIVE HOUSING FOR LOW-INCOME ELDERLY, SECTION 811 SUPPORTIVE HOUSING FOR LOW-INCOME PERSONS WITH DISABILITIES PROGRAMS, AND SECTION 236 INTEREST REDUCTION PAYMENTS (IRP).; SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES: THE RECIPIENT DOES NOT INTEND TO SUBAWARD FUNDS. | $8.5M | FY2024 | Sep 2024 – Sep 2028 |
| Department of the Interior | AS-CIP-2017-2 | $7.2M | FY2018 | Jan 2018 – Sep 2026 |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | PURPOSE: THE GREEN AND RESILIENT RETROFIT PROGRAM (GRRP) WAS ESTABLISHED BY SECTION 30002 OF THE INFLATION REDUCTION ACT OF 2022, (PUBLIC LAW 117-169) (THE “IRA”), TITLED “IMPROVING ENERGY EFFICIENCY OR WATER EFFICIENCY OR CLIMATE RESILIENCE OF AFFORDABLE HOUSING.” GRRP OFFERS LOANS AND GRANTS FOR HUD-ASSISTED MULTIFAMILY PROPERTIES TO IMPROVE ENERGY OR WATER EFFICIENCY, ENHANCE INDOOR AIR QUALITY OR SUSTAINABILITY, IMPLEMENT THE USE OF ZERO-EMISSION ELECTRICITY GENERATION, LOW-EMISSION BUILDING MATERIALS OR PROCESSES, ENERGY STORAGE, OR BUILDING ELECTRIFICATION STRATEGIES, OR ADDRESS CLIMATE RESILIENCE. ANNOUNCED GRRP AWARDS CAN BE FOUND AT WITHIN THE HYPERLINKED AWARDS ANNOUNCEMENT FOR EACH COHORT AT HTTPS://WWW.HUD.GOV/GRRP (E.G. WAVE 1 UNDER ELEMENTS AWARD ANNOUNCEMENT).; ACTIVITIES TO BE PERFORMED: GRRP FUNDS ARE USED TO FINANCE REHABILITATION PROJECTS THAT IMPROVE ENERGY OR WATER EFFICIENCY; ENHANCE INDOOR AIR QUALITY OR SUSTAINABILITY; IMPLEMENT THE USE OF ZERO-EMISSION ELECTRICITY GENERATION, LOW-EMISSION BUILDING MATERIALS OR PROCESSES, ENERGY STORAGE, OR BUILDING ELECTRIFICATION STRATEGIES; OR IMPROVE THE CLIMATE RESILIENCE OF ELIGIBLE HUD-ASSISTED MULTIFAMILY PROPERTIES. THESE AFFORDABLE HOUSING REHABILITATION PROJECTS MAY ENTAIL MOUNTING A ROOFTOP SOLAR SYSTEM TO GENERATE RENEWAL ENERGY, CONVERTING FROM GAS-POWERED HVAC SYSTEMS TO ELECTRIC HEAT PUMPS TO REDUCE CARBON EMISSIONS, AND/OR INSTALLING WIND- AND IMPACT-RESISTANT WINDOWS AND DOORS TO MAKE THEM RESILIENT TO SEVERE CLIMATE CONDITIONS –AMONG MANY OTHER ELIGIBLE MEASURES AND PROPERTY IMPROVEMENTS AIMED AT IMPROVING UTILITY EFFICIENCY, CLIMATE RESILIENCE, AND REDUCING CARBON EMISSIONS. THE PROGRAM SEEKS TO AMPLIFY RECENT TECHNOLOGICAL ADVANCEMENTS IN ENERGY AND WATER EFFICIENCY AND TO BRING A NEW FOCUS ON PREPARING FOR CLIMATE HAZARDS BY REDUCING RESIDENTS’ AND PROPERTIES’ EXPOSURE TO HAZARDS AND BY PROTECTING LIFE, LIVABILITY, AND PROPERTY WHEN DISASTER STRIKES. ALL GRRP INVESTMENTS WILL BE MADE IN AFFORDABLE HOUSING COMMUNITIES SERVING LOW-INCOME FAMILIES AND WILL REQUIRE AT LEAST FIVE YEARS OF EXTENDED AFFORDABILITY, AND A MINIMUM OF 15 YEARS OF AFFORDABILITY. HUD OFFERS GRRP FUNDING THROUGH THREE AWARD COHORTS DESIGNED TO MEET THE NEEDS OF PROPERTIES IN DIFFERENT SITUATIONS: ELEMENTS, LEADING EDGE, AND COMPREHENSIVE. APPROXIMATELY $140,000,000 WAS MADE AVAILABLE TO THE ELEMENTS COHORT, WHICH PROVIDES MODEST FUNDING TO OWNERS TO ADD PROVEN AND MEANINGFUL GREEN AND RESILIENT MEASURES TO THE CONSTRUCTION SCOPES OF IN-PROGRESS RECAPITALIZATION TRANSACTIONS. APPROXIMATELY $400,000,000 WAS MADE AVAILABLE TO THE LEADING EDGE COHORT, WHICH PROVIDES FUNDING FOR RETROFIT ACTIVITIES TO ACHIEVE AMBITIOUS OUTCOMES, INCLUDING GREEN BUILDING CERTIFICATION, NET ZERO, RENEWABLE ENERGY GENERATION, USE OF BUILDING MATERIALS WITH LOWER EMBODIED CARBON, AND CLIMATE RESILIENCE INVESTMENTS. APPROXIMATELY $1,470,000,000 WAS MADE AVAILABLE TO THE COMPREHENSIVE COHORT, WHICH PROVIDES FUNDING TO INITIATE RECAPITALIZATION INVESTMENTS DESIGNED FROM INCEPTION AROUND BOTH PROVEN AND INNOVATIVE GREEN AND RESILIENT MEASURES FOR PROPERTIES WITH A HIGH NEED FOR INVESTMENTS. UNDER ALL THREE AWARD COHORTS, OWNERS RECEIVE FUNDING IN THE FORM OF GRANTS OR LOANS. THROUGH 2024, GRRP WILL HAVE AWARDED ROUGHLY 250 PROPERTIES PRESERVING APPROXIMATELY 30,000 HOMES, THE MAJORITY OF WHICH ARE AFFORDABLE TO VERY LOW-INCOME HOUSEHOLDS, SENIORS, AND PERSONS WITH DISABILITIES.; EXPECTED OUTCOMES: THE PROGRAM WILL INCREASE ENERGY AND WATER EFFICIENCY, CREATE RENEWABLE ENERGY GENERATION, AND MAKE RESILIENCE IMPROVEMENTS TO PROTECT RESIDENTS AND AFFORDABLE HOUSING FROM NATURAL HAZARDS. TO MEASURE THIS, THE GRRP INVESTMENTS IMPLEMENTED ARE EXPECTED TO REDUCE GREENHOUSE GAS EMISSIONS BY 50% CUMULATIVELY ACROSS THESE PROPERTIES AND TO REDUCE MODELED ENERGY CONSUMPTION BY AT LEAST 25% AT EACH OF THESE PROPERTIES. SUCCESS OF THE GRRP GOALS WILL BE MEASURED USING EPA PORTFOLIO MANAGER’S UTILITY BENCHMARKING SYSTEM. INDIVIDUAL AWARDS WILL ENCOURAGE THE DEEPEST ENERGY SAVINGS AND EMISSIONS REDUCTIONS POSSIBLE BY FUNDING THE MOST IMPACTFUL IMPROVEMENTS IDENTIFIED THROUGH COMPREHENSIVE ASSESSMENTS OF THE BUILDINGS OR THROUGH ACHIEVING A TOP LEVEL, HIGH PERFORMANCE GREEN BUILDING CERTIFICATION. FURTHER, GRRP-FUNDED PROPERTY IMPROVEMENTS WILL ENHANCE RESIDENTS’ QUALITY OF LIFE AND PROVIDE HEALTHIER AND SAFER LIVING ENVIRONMENTS BY IMPROVING INDOOR AIR QUALITY, MAINTAINING COMFORTABLE LIVING TEMPERATURES, AND PREPARING BUILDINGS TO KEEP RESIDENTS SAFE THROUGH EXTREME WEATHER EVENTS AND NATURAL DISASTERS. RESILIENCE IMPROVEMENTS WILL BE CAPTURED BY A RESILIENCE ASSESSMENT THAT WILL BE REQUIRED FOR ALL GRRP PARTICIPANTS. RESILIENCE ASSESSMENT DATA MAY BE REPORTED FROM TIME TO TIME, BUT THERE ARE NO SPECIFIC PROGRAM GOALS FOR RESILIENCE. ; INTENDED BENEFICIARIES: THE PROGRAM AIMS TO BENEFIT RESIDENTS AND OWNERS OF HUD-ASSISTED MULTIFAMILY PROPERTIES AND THE COMMUNITIES AT-LARGE THEY RESIDE IN. THIS INCLUDES PROPERTIES ASSISTED BY SECTION 8 PROJECT-BASED RENTAL ASSISTANCE, SECTION 202 SUPPORTIVE HOUSING FOR LOW-INCOME ELDERLY, SECTION 811 SUPPORTIVE HOUSING FOR LOW-INCOME PERSONS WITH DISABILITIES PROGRAMS, AND SECTION 236 INTEREST REDUCTION PAYMENTS (IRP).; SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES: THE RECIPIENT DOES NOT INTEND TO SUBAWARD FUNDS. | $4.8M | FY2024 | Sep 2024 – Sep 2028 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | BACKYARD BRAINS: BRINGING NEUROPHYSIOLOGY INTO SECONDARY SCHOOLS | $4.6M | FY2011 | Apr 2011 – Apr 2022 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | INTRODUCING NEUROSCIENCE AND NEUROCOMPUTATION CONCEPTS TO HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS USING BRAIN-BASED NEUROROBOTS - PROJECT SUMMARY UNDERSTANDING THE BRAIN IS A PROFOUND AND FASCINATING CHALLENGE, CAPTIVATING THE SCIENTIFIC COMMUNITY AND THE PUBLIC ALIKE. THE LACK OF EFFECTIVE TREATMENT FOR MOST BRAIN DISORDERS MAKES TRAINING THE NEXT GENERATION OF NEUROSCIENTISTS, ENGINEERS AND PHYSICIANS A KEY CONCERN. HOWEVER, MUCH NEUROSCIENCE IS PERCEIVED TO BE TOO DIFFICULT TO BE TAUGHT IN SCHOOL. TO MAKE NEUROSCIENCE ACCESSIBLE AND ENGAGING TO STUDENTS AND TEACHERS, BACKYARD BRAINS IS DEVELOPING SPIKERBOTS: FUN AND AFFORDABLE ROBOTS THAT LOOK LIKE BRAINS AND ARE CONTROLLED BY COMPUTER SIMULATIONS OF BIOLOGICAL BRAINS. THE SPIKERBOTS AND ASSOCIATED SOFTWARE AND CURRICULUM REQUIRE NO BACKGROUND IN NEUROSCIENCE OR PROGRAMMING, AND ALLOW STUDENTS TO INVESTIGATE MEANINGFUL QUESTIONS ABOUT MIND, BRAIN AND BEHAVIOR BY DESIGNING ARTIFICIAL BRAINS THAT MAKE THE ROBOTS’ BEHAVIOR LIFE-LIKE, SENSORY-GUIDED AND GOAL-DIRECTED. THESE BRAIN DESIGN EXERCISES ENGAGE STUDENTS IN ACTIVE, PROJECT-BASED LEARNING, WHICH HAS BEEN SHOWN TO IMPROVE STEM OUTCOMES, ESPECIALLY AMONG DISADVANTAGED STUDENTS. IN PHASE I, WE SHOWED THAT SPIKERBOTS WITH CAMERA-EYES, MICROPHONE-EARS, SPEAKERS, 2-WHEEL DRIVE AND WIFI, CONTROLLED BY SPIKING NEURAL NETWORKS SIMULATED ON LAPTOPS, ENABLED 295 HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS PARTICIPATING IN A 1-WEEK WORKSHOP TO LEARN NEUROSCIENCE CONCEPTS, SOLVE BRAIN DESIGN CHALLENGES, AND DEVELOP SELF-CONFIDENCE IN NEUROSCIENCE. IN PHASE II, WE WILL (1) DEVELOP PRODUCTION-READY SPIKERBOT HARDWARE THAT REDUCES COSTS AND IMPROVES DURABILITY, (2) DESIGN A CLOUD-BASED APPLICATION FOR CROSS-PLATFORM FUNCTIONALITY ON LOW-COST LAPTOPS, AND (3) DEVELOP A CURRICULUM AND SET OF TEACHER ONBOARDING MATERIALS, INCLUDING RECURRING TEACHER WORKSHOPS, HELD AT 3 SCIENCE MUSEUMS, ON EMPLOYING INQUIRY-BASED LEARNING TO TEACH EFFECTIVELY USING THE SPIKERBOT. EDUCATION RESEARCHERS AT PURDUE UNIVERSITY WILL CONTINUE TO CONDUCT EVALUATION OF STUDENTS’ AND TEACHERS’ EXPERIENCES AND LEARNING GAINS. WE INTEND TO SELL OUR NEUROROBOTS DIRECTLY TO CUSTOMERS, AND THROUGH OUR EDUCATION CHANNEL PARTNERS AT A PRICE OF $150 PER ROBOT. WHILE THE SPIKERBOT IS DESIGNED FOR SECONDARY EDUCATION, PRIMARY AND HIGHER EDUCATION SECTORS AS WELL AS INDIVIDUALS AND FAMILIES CAN ALSO BENEFIT FROM THE TECHNOLOGY. OUR LONG-TERM AIM IS TO ENCOURAGE EDUCATION POLICY MAKERS TO ADOPT MORE NEUROSCIENCE SCIENCE STANDARDS BY DEMONSTRATING AN EFFECTIVE NEUROSCIENCE CURRICULUM ORGANIZED AROUND BIOLOGICAL AND COMPUTATIONAL CONCEPTS THAT EMBRACE THE PHILOSOPHY OF THE NEXT GENERATION SCIENCE STANDARDS. BY COMBINING NEUROSCIENCE, A MULTIDISCIPLINARY FIELD THAT SPANS BIOLOGY, MEDICINE, PSYCHOLOGY, MATHEMATICS, AND ENGINEERING, WITH ROBOTICS AND ACTIVE, PROJECT-BASED LEARNING, OUR SPIKERBOT AND CURRICULUM WILL IMPROVE STEM-EDUCATION AND INSPIRE THE NEXT GENERATION OF SCIENTISTS, ENGINEERS AND PHYSICIANS. | $2.9M | FY2018 | Sep 2018 – Aug 2025 |
| Department of State | BUILDING BRIDGES OF EMOTIONAL AND PHYSICAL HEALING- AN INTEGRATED AND UNIFIED APPROACH TO PHYSICAL REHABILITATION, MHPSS, AND INCLUSION IN TURKIYE | $2.6M | FY2024 | Sep 2024 – Feb 2025 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | HEAD START | $2.5M | FY2001 | Dec 2000 – Nov 2014 |
| Department of Commerce | GREEN MFG. CENTER | $2.5M | FY2010 | Jun 2010 – Dec 2011 |
| Department of State | TO PROVIDE THE SPECIALIZED HEALTH CARE SERVICES TO THE MOST VULNERABLE POPULATIONS IN ANKARA, HATAY AND ISTANBUL WHILE STRENGTHENING THEIR RESILIENCE AND CONTRIBUTING TO THEIR WELLBEING THROUGH INTEGRATED REHABILITATION | $2.2M | FY2023 | Sep 2023 – Sep 2024 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | HEAD START | $2.2M | FY2020 | Dec 2019 – Nov 2024 |
| Department of Commerce | BUILDING 77 REHAB | $2M | FY2015 | Sep 2015 – Mar 2017 |
| Department of Agriculture | WASTE DISPOSAL GRANTS - REGULAR | $2M | FY2022 | Jan 2022 – Jan 2022 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | HEAD START | $1.9M | FY2015 | Dec 2014 – Nov 2019 |
| Department of State | PROVIDING SPECIALIZED HEALTH CARE SERVICES TO VULNERABLE POPULATIONS IN TURKEY WHILE STRENGTHENING THEIR RESILIENCE AND CONTRIBUTING TO THEIR WELLBEING THROUGH INTEGRATED REHABILITATION, COMMUNITY AND MENTAL HEALTH AND PSYCHOSOCIAL SUPPORT SERVICES | $1.9M | FY2022 | Sep 2022 – Sep 2023 |
| Department of Agriculture | DOMESTIC WATER GRANTS - REGULAR | $1.6M | FY2011 | Mar 2011 – Mar 2011 |
| Department of Transportation | PANEL LINE | $1.6M | FY2010 | Apr 2010 – Apr 2011 |
| Department of Education | IMPACT AID PROGRAM, TITLE VII, SECTION 7003 | $1.6M | — | — – Sep 2028 |
| Department of Education | IMPACT AID PROGRAM, TITLE VII, SECTION 7003 | $1.5M | — | — – Sep 2025 |
| Department of Commerce | SHIPYARD EQUIPMENT | $1.5M | — | — – — |
| Department of the Interior | AMERICAN SAMOA SHIPYARD SERVICES AUTHORITY (ASSSA), FISCAL YEAR 2024 CAPITAL IMPROVEMENT PROJECT (CIP) GRANT FOR THE ASSSA TUGBOAT. TOTAL PROJECT AWARD IS $1,500,000. | $1.5M | FY2024 | Jul 2024 – Jun 2029 |
| Department of the Interior | FISCAL YEAR 2022 CAPITAL IMPROVEMENT PROJECT (CIP) PROGRAM, AMERICAN SAMOA SHIPYARD SERVICES ADMINISTRATION, WINCH HOUSE REPAIRS AND RENOVATIONS. THIS AWARD PROVIDES $1,500,000 IN FEDERAL FUNDING TO THE ASSSA. | $1.5M | FY2022 | Mar 2022 – Sep 2027 |
| Agency for International Development | TO SUPPORT EARTHQUAKE AFFECTED POPULATIONS WITH PROTECTION INTERVENTIONS IN TURKIYE | $1.5M | FY2023 | Apr 2023 – Mar 2024 |
| Department of Education | IMPACT AID PROGRAM, TITLE VII, SECTION 7003 | $1.5M | — | — – Sep 2026 |
| Department of Transportation | WIDEN AND LENGTHEN DRYDOCK | $1.4M | FY2010 | Apr 2010 – Oct 2011 |
| Department of Education | UNKNOWN TITLE | $1.4M | — | — – Sep 2024 |
| Department of Education | IMPACT AID PROGRAM, TITLE VII, SECTION 7003 | $1.4M | — | — – Sep 2029 |
| Department of Education | IMPACT AID PROGRAM, TITLE VII, SECTION 7003 | $1.2M | — | — – Sep 2030 |
| Department of Transportation | TO SUPPORT THE PURCHASE OF BLASTING & PAINTING EQUIPMENT UPGRADES, PAINT FILTER BANK ASSEMBLIES AND RELATED HARDWARE AND CONTROLS, HEATED AIR MAKE-UP UNIT, DUST COLLECTOR ASSEMBLIES, BLAST POT ASSEMBLIES, C/O-MONITOR WITH CALIBRATION KIT, EXHAUST PLENUMS, AND 300 CU. FT. FREE STANDING ABRASIVE STORAGE HOPPER | $1.2M | FY2023 | Jul 2023 – Jul 2025 |
| Department of Transportation | TWO 20-TON TOWER CRANES | $1.2M | FY2012 | Mar 2012 – Mar 2014 |
| Department of Transportation | WHEELABRATOR BLAST AND PAINT PLATE PRESERVATION SYSTEM | $1.1M | FY2021 | Apr 2021 – Apr 2023 |
| Department of Transportation | 2500 TON EXTENSION TO DRY-DOCK #6 | $1.1M | FY2012 | Mar 2012 – Mar 2014 |
| Department of Transportation | MARINE TRAVEL LIFT | $1.1M | FY2013 | Jul 2013 – Jul 2015 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | CONGRESSIONALLY DIRECTED SPENDING FOR CONSTRUCTION PROJECTS - MARTHA’S VINEYARD HOSPITAL, LOCATED AT ONE HOSPITAL ROAD IN OAK BLUFFS, MA IN THE COUNTY OF DUKES COUNTY IS SEEKING FUNDING TO UPGRADE AND INSTALL PERMANENTLY AFFIXED EQUIPMENT IN RADIOLOGY AND THE OPERATING ROOM. MARTHA'S VINEYARD HOSPITAL IS A CRITICAL ACCESS HOSPITAL LICENSED WITH 25-BED CAPACITY, AND THE ONLY HOSPITAL LOCATED ON THE ISLAND OF MARTHA'S VINEYARD, ACCESSIBLE ONLY BY FERRY, AIRPLANE OR HELICOPTER. PRIOR TO THE PANDEMIC, THE HOSPITAL TRANSPORTED THE MAJORITY OF HIGHER ACUITY PATIENTS TO OFF-ISLAND HOSPITALS. THE SURGE OF MEDICAL NEEDS IN OFF-ISLAND COMMUNITIES DURING THE PANDEMIC, AND CONTINUING, HAS REVEALED THE NEED TO INCREASE ACCESS TO SPECIALTY AND OTHER DIAGNOSTIC SERVICES LOCALLY. OVERWHELMING CAPACITY CONSTRAINTS AND EMERGENCY DEPARTMENT OVERCROWDING PERSIST. THE REQUESTED EQUIPMENT IS NECESSARY TO PROVIDE THE HIGHEST QUALITY CARE TO THE MORE THAN 20,000 RESIDENTS AND 100,000 SEASONAL VISITORS. THE EQUIPMENT REQUEST SUPPORTS TWO AREAS OF NEED: A FIBER-OPTIC SURGICAL SYSTEM USED BY SURGEONS TO NAVIGATE LIGHTING AND IMAGING DURING PROCEDURES AND A FLUOROSCOPY UNIT THAT WILL ENABLE THE HOSPITAL TO HAVE TWO FULLY OPERATIONAL DIGITAL IMAGING ROOMS. BOTH EQUIPMENT PURCHASES AND INSTALLATIONS SUPPORT A LARGER EFFORT TO EXPAND HEALTH CARE ACCESS ON THE ISLAND. | $1.1M | FY2024 | Sep 2024 – Sep 2027 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | HEAD START AND EARLY HEAD START | $1M | FY2025 | Dec 2024 – Nov 2029 |
| Department of State | TO PROVIDE LIFE-IMPROVING HEALTH CARE TO THE MOST VULNERABLE POPULATIONS IN ANKARA AND ISTANBUL WHILE STRENGTHENING THEIR RESILIENCE AND CONTRIBUTING TO THEIR WELLBEING THROUGH INTEGRATED REHABILITATION, COMMUNITY HEALTH AND MENTAL HEALTH AND PSYCHOSOCIA | $1M | FY2021 | Sep 2021 – Sep 2022 |
| Department of Education | UNKNOWN TITLE | $1M | — | — – Sep 2023 |
| Department of Transportation | TO SUPPORT THE PURCHASE OF A 120X80 FLOATING DRYDOCK | $1M | FY2025 | Aug 2025 – Aug 2027 |
| Department of Agriculture | ARP ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT GRANT FOR RURAL HEALTH CARE FACILITIES | $1M | FY2022 | Jul 2022 – Jul 2024 |
| Department of Transportation | TO SUPPORT THE PURCHASE OF A 120X64 FOOT FLOATING DRYDOCK | $1M | FY2025 | Oct 2024 – Oct 2026 |
| Department of Education | IMPACT AID PROGRAM, TITLE VII, SECTION 7003 | $991.9K | FY2026 | Oct 2025 – Sep 2031 |
| Department of Transportation | DISTRIBUTIVE SYSTEM UPGRADES, 15-TON BRIDGE CRANE | $958.7K | FY2021 | Apr 2021 – Apr 2023 |
| Department of Transportation | NEW FLOATING DRY DOCK (100FT X 85FT X 23.5FT) | $945.8K | FY2013 | Jul 2013 – Jul 2015 |
| Department of Transportation | 150-TON MARINE TRAVELIFT | $939.3K | FY2023 | Jul 2023 – Jul 2025 |
| Department of Education | FUND FOR THE IMPROVEMENT OF EDUCATION - ELEMENTARY AND SECONDARY SCHOOL COUNSELING DEMONSTRATION PROGRAM | $930.6K | FY2006 | Jul 2006 – Jun 2010 |
| Department of Transportation | TOWER CRANE HYDROBLAST UNITS OVERHEAD SHOP CRANES | $922.4K | FY2010 | Apr 2010 – Apr 2011 |
| Department of Education | IMPACT AID PROGRAM, TITLE VII, SECTION 7003 | $913.7K | — | — – Sep 2027 |
| Department of Agriculture | REAP RENEWABLE ENERGY SYSTEM (RES) GRANT UNRESTRICTED AMOUNT | $871.8K | FY2025 | Nov 2024 – Nov 2026 |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | PURPOSE: ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT INITIATIVE, COMMUNITY PROJECT FUNDING/CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTED SPENDING AWARDS ARE AUTHORIZED UNDER THE CONSOLIDATED APPROPRIATIONS ACT, 2022 PUBLIC LAW 117-328 AND THE EXPLANATORY STATEMENT FOR DIVISION L OF THAT ACT. PROJECTS SELECTED FOR COMMUNITY PROJECT FUNDING/CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTED SPENDING ARE LISTED IN THE JOINT EXPLANATORY STATEMENT (JES) THAT ACCOMPANIES A SPECIFIC FISCAL YEAR’S APPROPRIATIONS ACT OR CONGRESSIONAL RECORD. THE JES LISTS PROJECT, RECIPIENT, STATE, AMOUNT AND CONGRESSIONAL SPONSOR.; ACTIVITIES TO BE PERFORMED: ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT INITIATIVE, COMMUNITY PROJECT FUNDING/CONGRESSIONALLY DIRECTED SPENDING AWARD PROJECTS INCLUDE A WIDE VARIETY OF ACTIVITIES THAT RESULT IN ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT OR COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT OUTCOMES. HUD WILL NOT KNOW THE FULL SCOPE OF THE PROJECT UNTIL THE RECIPIENT SUBMITS THE REQUIRED PROJECT NARRATIVE AND CONFIRMS ALIGNMENT WITH THE LANGUAGE AS PROVIDED IN THE CONGRESSIONAL RECORD. TO FIND THE DETAILS OF THE GRANT AWARD AS WRITTEN WITHIN THE CONGRESSIONAL RECORD USE THE FOLLOWING LINK AND PATH SELECTIONS TO GET TO THE DESCRIPTION OF THE ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT INITIATIVE, COMMUNITY PROJECT FUNDING GRANTS HTTPS://WWW.HUD.GOV/PROGRAM_OFFICES/COMM_PLANNING/EDI-GRANTS, SELECT THE FISCAL YEAR OF INTEREST, SCROLL DOWN TO PROGRAM LAWS AND REGULATIONS, UNDER FISCAL YEAR 20XX CONSOLIDATED APPROPRIATIONS ACT, 20XX: CONGRESSIONAL RECORD (JOINT EXPLANATORY STATEMENT).; EXPECTED OUTCOMES: COMPLETION OF THE PROJECT AS DESCRIBED IN THE JOINT EXPLANATORY STATEMENT (JES) PROJECT DESCRIPTION AND SUBSEQUENT APPROVED PROJECT NARRATIVE.; INTENDED BENEFICIARIES: THE PROJECT BENEFICIARIES ARE THE INDIVIDUALS AND/OR ORGANIZATIONS THAT ARE AWARDED GRANT FUNDS OR SERVED BY THE ENTITIES THAT ARE AWARDED GRANT FUNDS AS IDENTIFIED IN THE JES RECIPIENT OR PROJECT DESCRIPTION SECTIONS.; SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES: THE SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES ARE UNKNOWN AT THE TIME OF AWARD. | $850K | FY2024 | Aug 2024 – Aug 2032 |
| Department of Agriculture | 306C WWD RUS COLONIAS - DOMESTIC WATER | $837.6K | FY2014 | May 2014 – May 2014 |
| Department of Transportation | TO FOSTER EFFICIENCY COMPETITIVE OPERATIONS AND QUALITY SHIP CONSTRUCTION REPAIR AND RECONFIGURATION IN SMALL SHIPYARDS ACROSS THE UNITED STATES IN ADDITION TO FOSTERING EMPLOYEE SKILLS AND ENHANCED PRODUCTIVITY RELATED TO SHIPBUILDING SHIP REPAIR AND ASSOCIATED INDUSTRIES THIS GRANT IS FOR THE PURCHASE AND INSTALLATION OF A LINK BELT 130-TON TELESCOPIC BOOM ROUGH TERRAIN CRANE DELIVERABLES ARE A LINK BELT 130-TON TELESCOPIC BOOM ROUGH TERRAIN CRANE WHICH WILL INCREASE EFFICIENCY IN WITHIN THE SHIPYARD INTENDED BENEFICIARY IS FRASER SHIPYARDS LLC THERE ARE NO SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES | $817.1K | FY2025 | Aug 2025 – Aug 2027 |
| Department of Transportation | TO FOSTER EFFICIENCY COMPETITIVE OPERATIONS AND QUALITY SHIP CONSTRUCTION REPAIR AND RECONFIGURATION IN SMALL SHIPYARDS ACROSS THE UNITED STATES IN ADDITION TO FOSTERING EMPLOYEE SKILLS AND ENHANCED PRODUCTIVITY RELATED TO SHIPBUILDING SHIP REPAIR AND ASSOCIATED INDUSTRIES THIS GRANT IS FOR CONTINUATION OF THE SHIPYARD APPRENTICE PROGRAM DELIVERABLES ARE SHIPYARD APPRENTICE PROGRAM CONTIUNATION WHICH WILL INCREASE EFFICIENCY IN WITHIN THE SHIPYARD BY TRAINING SHIPYARD WORKERS IN VARIOUS ASPECTS OF SHIPYARD WORK INTENDED BENEFICIARY IS?PHILLY SHIPYARD INC THERE ARE NO SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES | $800K | FY2024 | Aug 2024 – Aug 2026 |
| Department of Transportation | WELDING MACHINES | $800K | FY2020 | Apr 2020 – Apr 2022 |
| Department of Transportation | UPGRADES TO MARINE RAILWAY | $796.1K | FY2023 | Sep 2023 – Sep 2025 |
| Department of Transportation | OVERHEAD MATERIAL HANDLING AND STEEL BRAKE PROCESSING IMPROVEMENT | $793.2K | FY2020 | Apr 2020 – Apr 2022 |
| Department of Transportation | ELECTRICAL UPGRADES (2 SKID MOUNTED PORTABLE SUB-STATION, 2 6-CIRCUIT DISTRIBUTION SKIDS, 2 4-CIRCUIT DISTRIBUTION SKIDS, 6 400A DISTRIBUTION SKIDS, CAMLOCKS) | $781.3K | FY2019 | Jun 2019 – Jun 2021 |
| Department of Transportation | COMPUTER NUMERICALLY CONTROLLED (CNC) LATHE | $779.2K | FY2013 | Jul 2013 – Jul 2015 |
| Department of Transportation | PURCHASE OF A LASER CNC CUTTING MACHINE AND A CNC PIPE BENDING MACHINE | $757.2K | FY2017 | Sep 2017 – Sep 2019 |
| Department of Transportation | MARINE TRAVELIFT | $745K | FY2016 | Apr 2016 – Apr 2018 |
| Department of Transportation | PURCHASE OF SPRAY PAINT SANDBLAST BOOTH, HYDRAULIC PRESS WITH TOOLING, UNIVERSAL VALVE TESTER PACKAGE WITH CONSOLE AND TOOLING, AND 3 BASE PLATE MOUNTED JIBS | $731.2K | FY2018 | Jul 2018 – Jul 2020 |
| Department of Transportation | APPRENTICE TRAINING PROGRAM | $720K | FY2021 | Apr 2021 – Apr 2023 |
| Department of Transportation | PURCHASE OF AIR COMPRESSOR SYSTEMS AND FIRE SUPPRESSION PUMPS | $718.4K | FY2023 | Jul 2023 – Jul 2025 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | INTRODUCING NEUROSCIENCE AND NEUROCOMPUTATION CONCEPTS TO HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS USING BRAIN-BASED NEUROROBOTS | $696.9K | FY2018 | Sep 2018 – Aug 2021 |
| Department of Transportation | SHIPYARD ELECTRICAL UPGRADES | $686.5K | FY2013 | Jul 2013 – Jul 2015 |
| Department of Transportation | CUTTING MACHINE, WELDING UPGRADES, ROUGH TERRAIN CRANE, TELEHANDLER | $667.3K | FY2012 | Mar 2012 – Mar 2014 |
| Department of Education | IMPACT AID PROGRAM, TITLE VII, SECTION 7003 | $665.5K | — | — – Sep 2029 |
| Department of Transportation | INSTALL A STIFFENER WELDING GANTRY ALONG WITH RAILS FOR GANTRY TRAVEL | $664.3K | FY2011 | Aug 2011 – Aug 2013 |
| Department of Education | IMPACT AID PROGRAM, TITLE VII, SECTION 7003 | $660.1K | — | — – Sep 2030 |
| Department of Transportation | TRAINING PROGRAM SAND BLAST PAINT AND BOOTHS SAND BLAST GRIT RECOVERY SYSTEMS MAN LIFTS 15 TON CRANE | $643.1K | FY2010 | Apr 2010 – Apr 2011 |
| Department of Transportation | MESSER SYSTEM | $640.2K | FY2020 | Apr 2020 – Apr 2022 |
| Department of Education | IMPACT AID PROGRAM TITLE VIII SECTION 8003 AND SECTION 8007(A) | $634.9K | FY2007 | Oct 2006 – Sep 2012 |
| Department of Education | IMPACT AID PROGRAM TITLE VIII SECTION 8003 | $621.4K | FY2008 | Oct 2007 – Sep 2013 |
| Department of Education | IMPACT AID PROGRAM, TITLE VII, SECTION 7003 | $619.8K | — | — – Sep 2028 |
| Department of Education | IMPACT AID PROGRAM TITLE VIII SECTION 8003 | $619.8K | FY2008 | Oct 2007 – Sep 2013 |
| Department of Transportation | AUTOMATIC TIG MEMBRANE WELDING AND TRI-PLEX MEMBRANE BONDING SYSTEMS FOR LNG VESSEL CONSTRUCTION | $604.5K | FY2016 | Apr 2016 – Apr 2018 |
| Department of Transportation | PURCHASE OF 150 TON TRAVELLIFT FOR IMPROVED OPERATIONS AND REGIONAL BENEFIT | $604.1K | FY2019 | Jun 2019 – Jun 2021 |
| Department of Education | IMPACT AID PROGRAM TITLE VIII SECTION 8003 AND SECTION 8007(A) | $602.7K | FY2007 | Oct 2006 – Sep 2012 |
| Department of Education | IMPACT AID PROGRAM, TITLE VIII, SECTION 8003 | $591.2K | FY2015 | Oct 2014 – Sep 2020 |
| Department of Education | IMPACT AID PROGRAM, TITLE VIII, SECTION 8003 | $587.9K | FY2016 | Oct 2015 – Sep 2021 |
| Department of Agriculture | 306C WWD RUS COLONIAS - COMBINATION WATER & WASTE DISPOSAL | $580.7K | FY2010 | Aug 2010 – Aug 2010 |
| Department of Education | IMPACT AID PROGRAM, TITLE VII, SECTION 7003 | $575.7K | FY2026 | Oct 2025 – Sep 2031 |
| Department of Transportation | UPGRADE COMPONENTS ON 150-TON PORTAL CRANE | $571.9K | FY2020 | Apr 2020 – Apr 2022 |
| Department of Education | IMPACT AID PROGRAM TITLE VIII SECTION 8003 | $570.5K | FY2009 | Oct 2008 – Sep 2014 |
| Department of Education | IMPACT AID PROGRAM TITLE VIII SECTION 8003 | $568K | FY2010 | Oct 2009 – Sep 2015 |
| Department of Transportation | REPLACEMENT OF DIESEL-POWERED FIRE PUMPS WITH ELECTRIC POWERED ONES TO SUPPORT PIER SIDE AND DRYDOCKED VESSELS | $566.6K | FY2022 | Jul 2022 – Jul 2024 |
| Department of Education | IMPACT AID PROGRAM, TITLE VIII, SECTION 8003 | $527.7K | FY2012 | Oct 2011 – Sep 2017 |
| Department of Education | IMPACT AID PROGRAM, TITLE VII, SECTION 7003 | $522.9K | FY2017 | Oct 2016 – Sep 2022 |
| Department of Transportation | PURCHASE OF CNC PLASMA CUTTING SYSTEM AND LATHE/MILLING MACHINE | $521.8K | FY2018 | Jul 2018 – Jul 2020 |
| Department of Education | IMPACT AID PROGRAM, TITLE VIII, SECTION 8003 | $519.8K | FY2014 | Oct 2013 – Sep 2019 |
| Department of Education | IMPACT AID PROGRAM TITLE VIII SECTION 8003 | $516K | FY2011 | Oct 2010 – Sep 2016 |
| Department of Transportation | PURCHASE OF 2 SELF-PROPELLED MODULAR TRANSPORTERS (SPMT) AND HIGH CAPACITY FORKLIFT | $500.7K | FY2018 | Jul 2018 – Jul 2020 |
| Department of the Interior | THIS GRANT WILL PRESERVE THE MARTHA S VINEYARD CAMP MEETING MVCMA TABERNACLE BY REPLACEMENT OF ITS ROOF THE PROPERTY IS AN IMPORTANT EXAMPLE OF THE RELIGIOUS CAMP MEETING MOVEMENTS OF THE EARLY NINETEENTH CENTURY IT PLAYED A KEY ROLE IN THE DESIGN OF PERMANENT RELIGIOUS CAMP MEETINGS AND RESORTS THE APPLICANT WILL PROVIDE 500,000 IN MATCHING FUNDS | $500K | FY2023 | Oct 2022 – Sep 2025 |
| VA/DoDDepartment of Defense | MILITARY-CONNECTED LOCAL EDUCATIONAL AGENCIES FOR ACADEMIC AND SUPPORT PROGRAMS (MCASP) | $500K | FY2023 | Sep 2023 – May 2028 |
| VA/DoDDepartment of Defense | LEDYARD PUBLIC SCHOOLS (LPS) HAS IDENTIFIED THE NEED FOR IMPROVED PRACTICES IN MATHEMATICS, INCLUDING A GREATER EMPHASIS ON MATHEMATICAL THINKING TO INCREASE MATHEMATICAL FLUENCY AND REASONING AMONG LPS MILITARY-CONNECTED STUDENTS. TO ACCOMPLISH THIS GOAL, LPS WILL REVISE EXISTING CURRICULUM, ADOPT NEW MATHEMATICS K-8 PROGRAM(S), ADD ACCELERATED MATH OPPORTUNITIES, HIRE MATH INTERVENTIONISTS AT THE ELEMENTARY LEVEL TO COACH TEACHERS AND WORK DIRECTLY WITH STUDENTS NEEDING TIERED INSTRUCTION, AND DETERMINE HOW TO USE EXISTING STAFF AT THE MIDDLE SCHOOL LEVEL TO PROVIDE TARGETED MATH INTERVENTION. WE WILL PROVIDE ONGOING PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT FOCUSED ON MATHEMATICS FOR OUR TEACHING STAFF AS WELL AS COACHING TRAINING FOR THE INTERVENTIONISTS WITH A FOCUS ON USING DATA TO SHAPE INSTRUCTION. THESE STEPS WILL ALLOW STUDENTS TO BUILD STRONG MATHEMATICAL SKILLS SO THAT MORE STUDENTS WILL BE SUCCESSFUL IN HIGHER-LEVEL COURSES AT BOTH THE MIDDLE AND HIGH SCHOOL LEVELS AND AS A RESULT BE BETTER PREPARED TO ATTEND COLLEGE OR ENTER THE WORKFORCE. | $500K | FY2021 | Sep 2021 – May 2026 |
| National Endowment for the Humanities | MARTHA'S VINEYARD MUSEUM EDUCATION ENDOWMENT CHALLENGE | $500K | FY2014 | Dec 2013 – Jul 2019 |
| Department of Justice | WISE ADVISORS MENTORING PROGRAM | $500K | FY2021 | Oct 2020 – Sep 2023 |
| Department of Homeland Security | PORT SECURITY GRANT PROGRAM | $489K | FY2024 | Sep 2024 – Aug 2027 |
| Environmental Protection Agency | THIS GRANT WILL FUND THE REPAIR AND REPLACEMENT OF THE WASTEWATER COLLECTION SYSTEM IN YARDLEY, PA. | $477K | FY2006 | Jun 2006 – Sep 2009 |
| Department of Education | IMPACT AID PROGRAM TITLE VIII SECTION 8003 | $473.4K | FY2010 | Oct 2009 – Sep 2015 |
| Department of Transportation | FOR A CLIMATE CONTROLLED DOWN DRAFT PAINT BOOTH AND STEEL FABRICATION EQUIPMENT | $467K | FY2017 | Sep 2017 – Sep 2019 |
| Department of Commerce | PSDC - TRAINING PROGRAM | $465.6K | FY2009 | Sep 2009 – Mar 2011 |
| Department of Transportation | WASTEWATER TREATMENT AND RECYCLING SYSTEM | $459.2K | FY2013 | Jul 2013 – Jul 2015 |
| Department of Energy | TAS::89 0328::TAS RECOVERY ACT. OBLIGATE FY 10 ARRA FUNDING IN THE AMOUNT OF $787,250.00 | $452.8K | FY2010 | Mar 2010 – Mar 2015 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | BACKYARD BRAINS: BRINGING NEUROPHYSIOLOGY INTO SECONDARY SCHOOLS | $446.3K | FY2011 | Apr 2011 – Mar 2013 |
| Department of Transportation | WIDEN MARINE RAIL TO 41 FEET, CONVERT NO 3 LIFT DOCK TO ELECTRIC DRIVE, PAINT AND BLAST BOOTH REPLACEMENT | $445.8K | FY2021 | Apr 2021 – Apr 2026 |
| Department of Transportation | TWO MEGABLASTER SYSTEMS, TWO AIR COMPRESSORS | $438.7K | FY2021 | Apr 2021 – Apr 2023 |
| Department of Transportation | TWO BIG TOP PORTABLE SHELTERS | $432.4K | FY2021 | Apr 2021 – Apr 2023 |
| Department of Transportation | FLOW UHP SYSTEM | $422.3K | FY2013 | Jul 2013 – Jul 2015 |
| Department of Transportation | TO FOSTER EFFICIENCY COMPETITIVE OPERATIONS AND QUALITY SHIP CONSTRUCTION REPAIR AND RECONFIGURATION IN SMALL SHIPYARDS ACROSS THE UNITED STATES IN ADDITION TO FOSTERING EMPLOYEE SKILLS AND ENHANCED PRODUCTIVITY RELATED TO SHIPBUILDING SHIP REPAIR AND ASSOCIATED INDUSTRIES THIS GRANT IS FOR THE PURCHASE AND INSTALLATION A CNC PLASMA CUTTING SYSTEM DELIVERABLES ARE A CNC PLASMA CUTTING SYSTEM WHICH WILL INCREASE EFFICIENCY IN WITHIN THE SHIPYARD INTENDED BENEFICIARY IS CONRAD ORANGE SHIPYARD INC THERE ARE NO SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES | $418.2K | FY2025 | Aug 2025 – Aug 2027 |
| Department of Labor | EARMARK | $414.9K | FY2009 | Jun 2009 – May 2011 |
| Department of Education | CAROL M. WHITE PHYSICAL EDUCATION PROGRAM | $403.4K | FY2009 | Jun 2009 – May 2010 |
| Department of Transportation | PURCHASE OF A LINK-BELT 110-TON ROUGH TERRAIN CRANE | $387.5K | FY2017 | Sep 2017 – Sep 2019 |
| Department of Education | UNKNOWN TITLE | $386.7K | — | — – Sep 2023 |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | PURPOSE: THE PUBLIC HOUSING CAPITAL FUND PROGRAM (CFP) WAS CREATED BY AN AMENDMENT TO THE 1937 ACT BY THE QUALITY HOUSING AND WORK RESPONSIBILITY ACT (QHWRA) IN 1998 (ADDING SECTION 9(D) TO THE 1937 ACT MERGING PREVIOUS MODERNIZATION AND DEVELOPMENT PROGRAMS). THE CFP PROVIDES FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE IN THE FORM OF GRANTS TO APPROXIMATELY 2,770 PUBLIC HOUSING AGENCIES (PHAS), SERVING NEARLY ONE MILLION UNITS, IN ALL 50 STATES AND TERRITORIES, TO CARRY OUT CAPITAL AND MANAGEMENT ACTIVITIES INCLUDING THOSE LISTED IN SECTION 9(D)(1) OF THE UNITED STATES HOUSING ACT OF 1937 (1937 ACT). THE MAIN PURPOSE OF THE CFP FORMULA GRANT IS TO FUND PUBLIC HOUSING MODERNIZATION, DEVELOPMENT, MANAGEMENT IMPROVEMENTS, AND THE OTHER ELIGIBLE ACTIVITIES DESCRIBED IN 24 CFR PART 905. ADDITIONAL INFORMATION ON THE PUBLIC HOUSING CAPITAL FUND IS LOCATED ON THE OFFICE OF CAPITAL IMPROVEMENTS WEBSITE: OFFICE OF CAPITAL IMPROVEMENTS | HUD.GOV / U.S. DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT (HUD) ADDITIONAL INFORMATION ON PUBLIC HOUSING FUNDING CAN BE FOUND BY ACCESSING THE WEBSITE BELOW AND REVIEWING THE PUBLIC HOUSING DASHBOARD LINKED UNDER THE “DATA DASHBOARD AND ANALYTICS”. PUBLIC HOUSING | HUD.GOV / U.S. DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT (HUD); ACTIVITIES TO BE PERFORMED: THE PHAS RECEIVE FEDERAL FUNDS FROM THE U.S. DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT (HUD) TO ADMINISTER THE PUBLIC HOUSING FUND. PUBLIC HOUSING CAPITAL FUNDS MAY ONLY BE USED FOR ACTIVITIES THAT ARE DESCRIBED AS ELIGIBLE ACTIVITIES IN 24 CFR 905.200 AND ARE EITHER SPECIFIED IN AN APPROVED 5-YEAR ACTION PLAN OR APPROVED BY HUD FOR EMERGENCY WORK OR WORK NEEDED BECAUSE OF A NON-PRESIDENTIALLY DECLARED NATURAL DISASTER. PUBLIC HOUSING DEVELOPMENT, MODERNIZATION, AND FINANCING ARE THE MAJOR ACTIVITIES TO BE PERFORMED. DEVELOPMENT IS ACTIVITIES AND RELATED COSTS THAT ADD TO (OR SIGNIFICANTLY RECONFIGURE) PUBLIC HOUSING UNITS IN A PHA’S INVENTORY, INCLUDING CONSTRUCTION AND ACQUISITION OF ADDITIONAL PUBLIC HOUSING UNITS, WITH OR WITHOUT REHABILITATION, AND ANY-AND-ALL UNDERTAKINGS NECESSARY FOR PLANNING, DESIGN, FINANCING, LAND ACQUISITION, DEMOLITION, CONSTRUCTION, OR EQUIPMENT OF PUBLIC HOUSING UNITS, AND RELATED BUILDINGS, FACILITIES, AND/OR APPURTENANCES (I.E., NON-DWELLING FACILITIES/SPACES). DEVELOPMENT ALSO INCLUDES ANY MIXED-FINANCE MODERNIZATION, ALL RELEVANT MODERNIZATION USES (OTHER THAN MANAGEMENT IMPROVEMENTS), FINANCING USES, AND DEVELOPMENT OF NON-DWELLING SPACE WHERE SUCH SPACE IS NEEDED TO ADMINISTER, AND IS OF DIRECT BENEFIT TO A PUBLIC HOUSING PROJECT (I.E. HOUSING DEVELOPED, ACQUIRED, OR ASSISTED BY A PHA UNDER THE 1937 ACT, AND THE IMPROVEMENT OF ANY SUCH HOUSING), INCLUDING THE RESIDENTS. FINANCING DEBT AND FINANCING COSTS (E.G., ORIGINATION FEES, INTEREST) INCURRED BY A PHA FOR DEVELOPMENT OR MODERNIZATION OF PUBLIC HOUSING PROJECTS, INCLUDING MIXED-FINANCE DEVELOPMENT, THE CAPITAL FUND FINANCING PROGRAM (CFFP), AND ANY OTHER USE AUTHORIZED UNDER SECTION 30 OF THE 1937 ACT. MODERNIZATION INCLUDES ALL ELIGIBLE ACTIVITIES EXCEPT FOR DEVELOPMENT AND FINANCING. PHYSICAL WORK IS A MAJOR ACTIVITY AND IS WORK THAT IS DONE ON THE PHYSICAL STRUCTURES, SITE, AND GROUNDS OF A PUBLIC HOUSING PROPERTY OR STRUCTURE. MAJOR PHYSICAL ACTIVITIES INCLUDE DEMOLITION, RECONFIGURATION, EMERGENCY ACTIVITIES, ENERGY EFFICIENCY, NON-ROUTINE MAINTENANCE, PLANNED CODE COMPLIANCE, AND VACANCY REDUCTION. THE MEASURABLE OUTCOME OF THIS GRANT IS THAT HUD WILL BE ABLE TO TRACK THE AMOUNT OF DOLLARS SPENT ON IMPROVEMENTS TO THE STRUCTURES, UNITS, COMMON AREAS, UTILITIES, AND OTHER ELIGIBLE ACTIVITIES. ; EXPECTED OUTCOMES: THE EXPECTED OUTCOMES FOR PUBLIC HOUSING CAPITAL FUNDS OF APPROXIMATELY $3.2 BILLION WILL BE PUT INTO THE DEVELOPMENT, MODERNIZATION, AND FINANCING OF NEARLY 1 MILLION PUBLIC HOUSING UNITS ACROSS ALL 50 STATES AND TERRITORIES. THE PUBLIC HOUSING UNITS ARE UPDATED TO BE DECENT, SAFE, SANITARY AND TO COMPLY WITH FEDERAL HOUSING STANDARDS. PHAS CAN ALSO USE A PORTION OF THE CAPITAL FUNDING FOR MANAGEMENT IMPROVEMENTS OR OPERATING ACTIVITIES INCLUDING SAFETY AND SECURITY COSTS.; INTENDED BENEFICIARIES: THE INTENDED BENEFICIARIES FOR PUBLIC HOUSING CAPITAL FUNDS ARE THE LOW-INCOME PUBLIC HOUSING RESIDENTS.; SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES: THE RECIPIENT DOES NOT INTEND TO SUBAWARD FUNDS. | $381K | FY2026 | Apr 2026 – Mar 2030 |
| Department of Education | UNKNOWN TITLE | $375.7K | — | — – Sep 2025 |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | PURPOSE: THE PUBLIC HOUSING CAPITAL FUND PROGRAM (CFP) WAS CREATED BY AN AMENDMENT TO THE 1937 ACT BY THE QUALITY HOUSING AND WORK RESPONSIBILITY ACT (QHWRA) IN 1998 (ADDING SECTION 9(D) TO THE 1937 ACT MERGING PREVIOUS MODERNIZATION AND DEVELOPMENT PROGRAMS). THE CFP PROVIDES FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE IN THE FORM OF GRANTS TO APPROXIMATELY 2,770 PUBLIC HOUSING AGENCIES (PHAS), SERVING NEARLY ONE MILLION UNITS, IN ALL 50 STATES AND TERRITORIES, TO CARRY OUT CAPITAL AND MANAGEMENT ACTIVITIES INCLUDING THOSE LISTED IN SECTION 9(D)(1) OF THE UNITED STATES HOUSING ACT OF 1937 (1937 ACT). THE MAIN PURPOSE OF THE CFP FORMULA GRANT IS TO FUND PUBLIC HOUSING MODERNIZATION, DEVELOPMENT, MANAGEMENT IMPROVEMENTS, AND THE OTHER ELIGIBLE ACTIVITIES DESCRIBED IN 24 CFR PART 905. ADDITIONAL INFORMATION ON THE PUBLIC HOUSING CAPITAL FUND IS LOCATED ON THE OFFICE OF CAPITAL IMPROVEMENTS WEBSITE: OFFICE OF CAPITAL IMPROVEMENTS | HUD.GOV / U.S. DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT (HUD) ADDITIONAL INFORMATION ON PUBLIC HOUSING FUNDING CAN BE FOUND BY ACCESSING THE WEBSITE BELOW AND REVIEWING THE PUBLIC HOUSING DASHBOARD LINKED UNDER THE “DATA DASHBOARD AND ANALYTICS”. PUBLIC HOUSING | HUD.GOV / U.S. DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT (HUD); ACTIVITIES TO BE PERFORMED: THE PHAS RECEIVE FEDERAL FUNDS FROM THE U.S. DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT (HUD) TO ADMINISTER THE PUBLIC HOUSING FUND. PUBLIC HOUSING CAPITAL FUNDS MAY ONLY BE USED FOR ACTIVITIES THAT ARE DESCRIBED AS ELIGIBLE ACTIVITIES IN 24 CFR 905.200 AND ARE EITHER SPECIFIED IN AN APPROVED 5-YEAR ACTION PLAN OR APPROVED BY HUD FOR EMERGENCY WORK OR WORK NEEDED BECAUSE OF A NON-PRESIDENTIALLY DECLARED NATURAL DISASTER. PUBLIC HOUSING DEVELOPMENT, MODERNIZATION, AND FINANCING ARE THE MAJOR ACTIVITIES TO BE PERFORMED. DEVELOPMENT IS ACTIVITIES AND RELATED COSTS THAT ADD TO (OR SIGNIFICANTLY RECONFIGURE) PUBLIC HOUSING UNITS IN A PHA’S INVENTORY, INCLUDING CONSTRUCTION AND ACQUISITION OF ADDITIONAL PUBLIC HOUSING UNITS, WITH OR WITHOUT REHABILITATION, AND ANY-AND-ALL UNDERTAKINGS NECESSARY FOR PLANNING, DESIGN, FINANCING, LAND ACQUISITION, DEMOLITION, CONSTRUCTION, OR EQUIPMENT OF PUBLIC HOUSING UNITS, AND RELATED BUILDINGS, FACILITIES, AND/OR APPURTENANCES (I.E., NON-DWELLING FACILITIES/SPACES). DEVELOPMENT ALSO INCLUDES ANY MIXED-FINANCE MODERNIZATION, ALL RELEVANT MODERNIZATION USES (OTHER THAN MANAGEMENT IMPROVEMENTS), FINANCING USES, AND DEVELOPMENT OF NON-DWELLING SPACE WHERE SUCH SPACE IS NEEDED TO ADMINISTER, AND IS OF DIRECT BENEFIT TO A PUBLIC HOUSING PROJECT (I.E. HOUSING DEVELOPED, ACQUIRED, OR ASSISTED BY A PHA UNDER THE 1937 ACT, AND THE IMPROVEMENT OF ANY SUCH HOUSING), INCLUDING THE RESIDENTS. FINANCING DEBT AND FINANCING COSTS (E.G., ORIGINATION FEES, INTEREST) INCURRED BY A PHA FOR DEVELOPMENT OR MODERNIZATION OF PUBLIC HOUSING PROJECTS, INCLUDING MIXED-FINANCE DEVELOPMENT, THE CAPITAL FUND FINANCING PROGRAM (CFFP), AND ANY OTHER USE AUTHORIZED UNDER SECTION 30 OF THE 1937 ACT. MODERNIZATION INCLUDES ALL ELIGIBLE ACTIVITIES EXCEPT FOR DEVELOPMENT AND FINANCING. PHYSICAL WORK IS A MAJOR ACTIVITY AND IS WORK THAT IS DONE ON THE PHYSICAL STRUCTURES, SITE, AND GROUNDS OF A PUBLIC HOUSING PROPERTY OR STRUCTURE. MAJOR PHYSICAL ACTIVITIES INCLUDE DEMOLITION, RECONFIGURATION, EMERGENCY ACTIVITIES, ENERGY EFFICIENCY, NON-ROUTINE MAINTENANCE, PLANNED CODE COMPLIANCE, AND VACANCY REDUCTION. THE MEASURABLE OUTCOME OF THIS GRANT IS THAT HUD WILL BE ABLE TO TRACK THE AMOUNT OF DOLLARS SPENT ON IMPROVEMENTS TO THE STRUCTURES, UNITS, COMMON AREAS, UTILITIES, AND OTHER ELIGIBLE ACTIVITIES. ; EXPECTED OUTCOMES: THE EXPECTED OUTCOMES FOR PUBLIC HOUSING CAPITAL FUNDS OF APPROXIMATELY $3.2 BILLION WILL BE PUT INTO THE DEVELOPMENT, MODERNIZATION, AND FINANCING OF NEARLY 1 MILLION PUBLIC HOUSING UNITS ACROSS ALL 50 STATES AND TERRITORIES. THE PUBLIC HOUSING UNITS ARE UPDATED TO BE DECENT, SAFE, SANITARY AND TO COMPLY WITH FEDERAL HOUSING STANDARDS. PHAS CAN ALSO USE A PORTION OF THE CAPITAL FUNDING FOR MANAGEMENT IMPROVEMENTS OR OPERATING ACTIVITIES INCLUDING SAFETY AND SECURITY COSTS.; INTENDED BENEFICIARIES: THE INTENDED BENEFICIARIES FOR PUBLIC HOUSING CAPITAL FUNDS ARE THE LOW-INCOME PUBLIC HOUSING RESIDENTS.; SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES: THE RECIPIENT DOES NOT INTEND TO SUBAWARD FUNDS. | $371.4K | FY2025 | May 2025 – May 2029 |
| Department of Education | IMPACT AID PROGRAM, TITLE VII, SECTION 7003 | $371.2K | — | — – Sep 2026 |
| Department of Transportation | 2010 ASSISTANCE TO SMALL SHIPYARDS | $360.9K | FY2010 | Apr 2010 – Apr 2011 |
| VA/DoDDepartment of Defense | WITH THE NAVYS STRATEGIC REALIGNMENT AIMED AT BETTER SUPPORTING NAVAL OPERATIONS IN THE PACIFIC, THE HAWAII SHIP REPAIR SECTOR IS PROJECTING A CONTINUED INCREASE IN WORKLOAD THROUGH 2031. TO BETTER SUPPORT THE NAVYS INCREASING WORKLOAD, PACIFIC SHIPYARDS INTERNATIONAL RESPECTFULLY SUBMITS PROPOSALS FOR THREE PROJECTS, EACH AIMING TO REVITALIZE THEIR SHIPYARD WELDING INFRASTRUCTURE WHICH CONTINUES TO SUPPORT NAVY SHIP REPAIR. THE PROJECTS INCLUDE A NEW CNC PLASMA CUTTING MACHINE, A STANDALONE GANTRY CRANE, AND A LARGE STEEL WORKING PLATFORM. | $360.5K | FY2025 | Aug 2025 – Jan 2026 |
| Department of the Interior | FY 2021 ENERGIZING INSULAR COMMUNITIES GRANT PROGRAM | $360K | FY2021 | Sep 2021 – Mar 2025 |
| Department of Agriculture | DOMESTIC WATER GRANTS - REGULAR | $359.4K | FY2017 | Jul 2017 – Jul 2021 |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | PURPOSE: THE PUBLIC HOUSING CAPITAL FUND PROGRAM (CFP) WAS CREATED BY AN AMENDMENT TO THE 1937 ACT BY THE QUALITY HOUSING AND WORK RESPONSIBILITY ACT (QHWRA) IN 1998 (ADDING SECTION 9(D) TO THE 1937 ACT MERGING PREVIOUS MODERNIZATION AND DEVELOPMENT PROGRAMS). THE CFP PROVIDES FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE IN THE FORM OF GRANTS TO APPROXIMATELY 2,770 PUBLIC HOUSING AGENCIES (PHAS), SERVING NEARLY ONE MILLION UNITS, IN ALL 50 STATES AND TERRITORIES, TO CARRY OUT CAPITAL AND MANAGEMENT ACTIVITIES INCLUDING THOSE LISTED IN SECTION 9(D)(1) OF THE UNITED STATES HOUSING ACT OF 1937 (1937 ACT). THE MAIN PURPOSE OF THE CFP FORMULA GRANT IS TO FUND PUBLIC HOUSING MODERNIZATION, DEVELOPMENT, MANAGEMENT IMPROVEMENTS, AND THE OTHER ELIGIBLE ACTIVITIES DESCRIBED IN 24 CFR PART 905. ADDITIONAL INFORMATION ON THE PUBLIC HOUSING CAPITAL FUND IS LOCATED ON THE OFFICE OF CAPITAL IMPROVEMENTS WEBSITE: OFFICE OF CAPITAL IMPROVEMENTS | HUD.GOV / U.S. DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT (HUD) ADDITIONAL INFORMATION ON PUBLIC HOUSING FUNDING CAN BE FOUND BY ACCESSING THE WEBSITE BELOW AND REVIEWING THE PUBLIC HOUSING DASHBOARD LINKED UNDER THE “DATA DASHBOARD AND ANALYTICS”. PUBLIC HOUSING | HUD.GOV / U.S. DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT (HUD); ACTIVITIES TO BE PERFORMED: THE PHAS RECEIVE FEDERAL FUNDS FROM THE U.S. DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT (HUD) TO ADMINISTER THE PUBLIC HOUSING FUND. PUBLIC HOUSING CAPITAL FUNDS MAY ONLY BE USED FOR ACTIVITIES THAT ARE DESCRIBED AS ELIGIBLE ACTIVITIES IN 24 CFR 905.200 AND ARE EITHER SPECIFIED IN AN APPROVED 5-YEAR ACTION PLAN OR APPROVED BY HUD FOR EMERGENCY WORK OR WORK NEEDED BECAUSE OF A NON-PRESIDENTIALLY DECLARED NATURAL DISASTER. PUBLIC HOUSING DEVELOPMENT, MODERNIZATION, AND FINANCING ARE THE MAJOR ACTIVITIES TO BE PERFORMED. DEVELOPMENT IS ACTIVITIES AND RELATED COSTS THAT ADD TO (OR SIGNIFICANTLY RECONFIGURE) PUBLIC HOUSING UNITS IN A PHA’S INVENTORY, INCLUDING CONSTRUCTION AND ACQUISITION OF ADDITIONAL PUBLIC HOUSING UNITS, WITH OR WITHOUT REHABILITATION, AND ANY-AND-ALL UNDERTAKINGS NECESSARY FOR PLANNING, DESIGN, FINANCING, LAND ACQUISITION, DEMOLITION, CONSTRUCTION, OR EQUIPMENT OF PUBLIC HOUSING UNITS, AND RELATED BUILDINGS, FACILITIES, AND/OR APPURTENANCES (I.E., NON-DWELLING FACILITIES/SPACES). DEVELOPMENT ALSO INCLUDES ANY MIXED-FINANCE MODERNIZATION, ALL RELEVANT MODERNIZATION USES (OTHER THAN MANAGEMENT IMPROVEMENTS), FINANCING USES, AND DEVELOPMENT OF NON-DWELLING SPACE WHERE SUCH SPACE IS NEEDED TO ADMINISTER, AND IS OF DIRECT BENEFIT TO A PUBLIC HOUSING PROJECT (I.E. HOUSING DEVELOPED, ACQUIRED, OR ASSISTED BY A PHA UNDER THE 1937 ACT, AND THE IMPROVEMENT OF ANY SUCH HOUSING), INCLUDING THE RESIDENTS. FINANCING DEBT AND FINANCING COSTS (E.G., ORIGINATION FEES, INTEREST) INCURRED BY A PHA FOR DEVELOPMENT OR MODERNIZATION OF PUBLIC HOUSING PROJECTS, INCLUDING MIXED-FINANCE DEVELOPMENT, THE CAPITAL FUND FINANCING PROGRAM (CFFP), AND ANY OTHER USE AUTHORIZED UNDER SECTION 30 OF THE 1937 ACT. MODERNIZATION INCLUDES ALL ELIGIBLE ACTIVITIES EXCEPT FOR DEVELOPMENT AND FINANCING. PHYSICAL WORK IS A MAJOR ACTIVITY AND IS WORK THAT IS DONE ON THE PHYSICAL STRUCTURES, SITE, AND GROUNDS OF A PUBLIC HOUSING PROPERTY OR STRUCTURE. MAJOR PHYSICAL ACTIVITIES INCLUDE DEMOLITION, RECONFIGURATION, EMERGENCY ACTIVITIES, ENERGY EFFICIENCY, NON-ROUTINE MAINTENANCE, PLANNED CODE COMPLIANCE, AND VACANCY REDUCTION. THE MEASURABLE OUTCOME OF THIS GRANT IS THAT HUD WILL BE ABLE TO TRACK THE AMOUNT OF DOLLARS SPENT ON IMPROVEMENTS TO THE STRUCTURES, UNITS, COMMON AREAS, UTILITIES, AND OTHER ELIGIBLE ACTIVITIES. ; EXPECTED OUTCOMES: THE EXPECTED OUTCOMES FOR PUBLIC HOUSING CAPITAL FUNDS OF APPROXIMATELY $3.2 BILLION WILL BE PUT INTO THE DEVELOPMENT, MODERNIZATION, AND FINANCING OF NEARLY 1 MILLION PUBLIC HOUSING UNITS ACROSS ALL 50 STATES AND TERRITORIES. THE PUBLIC HOUSING UNITS ARE UPDATED TO BE DECENT, SAFE, SANITARY AND TO COMPLY WITH FEDERAL HOUSING STANDARDS. PHAS CAN ALSO USE A PORTION OF THE CAPITAL FUNDING FOR MANAGEMENT IMPROVEMENTS OR OPERATING ACTIVITIES INCLUDING SAFETY AND SECURITY COSTS.; INTENDED BENEFICIARIES: THE INTENDED BENEFICIARIES FOR PUBLIC HOUSING CAPITAL FUNDS ARE THE LOW-INCOME PUBLIC HOUSING RESIDENTS.; SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES: THE RECIPIENT DOES NOT INTEND TO SUBAWARD FUNDS. | $353.8K | FY2024 | May 2024 – May 2028 |
| National Endowment for the Humanities | BROOKLYN NAVY YARD: PAST PRESENT AND FUTURE | $350K | FY2010 | Sep 2010 – Feb 2012 |
| Department of Transportation | MODERNIZATION AND UPGRADES TO A WELDING SYSTEM | $346.5K | FY2017 | Sep 2017 – Sep 2019 |
| Department of Education | UNKNOWN TITLE | $336.2K | — | — – Sep 2024 |
| Department of Education | IMPACT AID PROGRAM TITLE VIII SECTION 8003 | $332K | FY2009 | Oct 2008 – Sep 2014 |
| Department of Education | IMPACT AID PROGRAM, TITLE VIII, SECTION 8003 | $331.1K | FY2013 | Oct 2012 – Sep 2018 |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | PUBLIC HOUSING CAPITAL FUND | $329.6K | FY2023 | Feb 2023 – Feb 2027 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | A BIOLOGICALLY-INSPIRED, INTERACTIVE DIGITAL DEVICE TO INTRODUCE K12 STUDENTS TO COMPUTATIONAL NEUROSCIENCE - PROJECT SUMMARY UNDERSTANDING THE BRAIN IS A PROFOUND AND FASCINATING CHALLENGE, CAPTIVATING THE SCIENTIFIC COMMUNITY AND THE PUBLIC ALIKE. THE LACK OF EFFECTIVE TREATMENT FOR MOST BRAIN DISORDERS MAKES THE TRAINING OF THE NEXT GENERATION OF NEUROSCIENTISTS, ENGINEERS, AND PHYSICIANS A KEY CONCERN. HOWEVER, MUCH OF NEUROSCIENCE IS PERCEIVED TO BE TOO DIFFICULT TO BE TAUGHT IN SCHOOL. HAVING ALREADY INTRODUCED STUDENT-FRIENDLY, NIH-FUNDED ELECTROPHYSIOLOGICAL TOOLS FOR PROJECT-BASED LEARNING INTO K12 EDUCATION, BACKYARD BRAINS IS NOW AIMING TO BROADEN THE IMPACT BY DEVELOPING “COMPUTATIONAL SPIKERBOX”, A COUNTERPART TO OUR ELECTROPHYSIOLOGICAL SPIKERBOX. THIS EMBEDDED DIGITAL DEVICE WITH ADJUSTABLE PARAMETERS WILL SOUND VIA A SPEAKER, SEE VIA A MOBILE DEVICE DISPLAY, AND REACT VIA SENSORS. BY MODULATING ION CHANNELS AND CHANGING IONIC CONDUCTANCES IN THIS MODEL, STUDENTS WILL GAIN INSIGHT INTO HOW NEURONS ARE AFFECTED BY ANALGESICS AND VARIOUS VENOMS. HIGH SCHOOL TEACHERS AND STUDENTS EVALUATED OUR PROTOTYPE DEVICES IN A WORKSHOP AND STATED THAT IT DID HELP THEM TO DEVELOP INTUITION ABOUT BIOLOGICAL NEURONS THROUGH THE COMPUTATIONAL MODEL. IN PHASE I, WE WILL REFINE AND RUGGEDIZE OUR COMPUTATIONAL SPIKERBOX FOR THE CLASSROOM AND BUILD OUT THE PARTNERING APPLICATION. THE PROPOSED DEVICE WILL ALLOW FOR EXPERIMENTS THAT HAD PREVIOUSLY BEEN IMPOSSIBLE IN THE CLASSROOM, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO OBSERVING SUBTHRESHOLD NEURON ACTIVITY OR PRE- AND POST-SYNAPTIC VOLTAGES. TO ALLEVIATE THE LEARNING PROCESS AND MAKE IT FUN AND INTUITIVE, THE APP WILL HAVE AN INTUITIVE DRAG-AND-DROP INTERFACE TO CONSTRUCT MODELING OF NEURON BEHAVIOR VIA CLOSING OR OPENING OF ION CHANNELS WITHIN THE STIMULUS PARAMETERS, MAPPING THE VOLTAGE VALUES TO THE IONIC CURRENTS, VISUALIZING THEIR RESULT OF ION CHANNEL MODULATION AND PREDICT OUTCOMES IN A DISEASED NEURON BASED ON THE CORRECT SEQUENCE OF CONSTRUCTING THE NEURONAL ACTIVITY. OUR AIMS TO ENHANCE THE HARDWARE AND SOFTWARE WILL BE ACCOMPANIED BY DEVELOPING AN INNOVATIVE NGSS-ALIGNED LESSON PLAN BASED ON THE COMPUTATIONAL SPIKERBOX IN A NEUROSCIENCE CLASSROOM IN DETROIT, MI. THE IMPLEMENTATION OF THIS LESSON PLAN WILL BE ASSESSED BY ROCKMAN ET AL COOPERATIVE, WHO WILL EVALUATE STUDENT CONTENT KNOWLEDGE, ATTITUDES AND INTEREST IN SCIENCE, AND SELF-EFFICACY AS A SCIENTIST. OUR OVERALL PHASE I GOAL IS TO EMPOWER STUDENTS TO UNDERSTAND THE FUNDAMENTALS OF THE BIOLOGICAL PROPERTIES OF NEURONS, ALL WITHIN THE NGSS FRAMEWORK. IN PHASE II, WE PLAN TO EXPAND THE CURRICULUM AND THE CAPABILITIES OF OUR COMPUTATIONAL SPIKERBOX, EXTENDING THE FOCUS FROM A SINGLE NEURON BEHAVIOR TO CONNECTIONS BETWEEN A SMALL NUMBER OF NEURONS AND HOW IT RELATES TO HIGHER-LEVEL COMPUTATIONAL MODELING OF THE BRAIN. OUR LONG-TERM AIM IS FOR K12 STUDENTS TO DEVELOP A PRACTICAL UNDERSTANDING OF KEY NEURAL NETWORK CONCEPTS AND ENGAGE IN COMPUTATIONAL THINKING (CT), A WAY OF SOLVING PROBLEMS, DESIGNING SYSTEMS, AND UNDERSTANDING THE WORLD BY BREAKING COMPLEX PROBLEMS DOWN INTO SMALLER COMPONENTS. | $324.6K | FY2023 | Jun 2023 – May 2024 |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | MULTIFAMILY HOUSING SERVICE COORDINATORS | $322.5K | FY2017 | Jun 2017 – Dec 2025 |
| Department of Education | IMPACT AID PROGRAM, TITLE VIII, SECTION 8003 | $319.2K | FY2017 | Oct 2016 – Sep 2022 |
| Department of Transportation | AUTOMATED PIPE SPOOL WELDING EQUIPMENT | $312.8K | FY2021 | Apr 2021 – Apr 2023 |
| Department of Transportation | WATER-JET SURFACE PREPARATION EQUIPMENT | $309.9K | FY2023 | Jul 2023 – Jul 2025 |
| Department of Agriculture | REAP RENEWABLE ENERGY SYSTEM (RES) GRANT UNRESTRICTED AMOUNT | $308.3K | FY2024 | Sep 2024 – Sep 2026 |
| Department of Education | IMPACT AID PROGRAM, TITLE VIII, SECTION 8003 | $306.3K | FY2016 | Oct 2015 – Sep 2021 |
| Department of Education | IMPACT AID PROGRAM, TITLE VII, SECTION 7003 | $306K | — | — – Sep 2027 |
| Department of Homeland Security | PORT SECURITY GRANT PROGRAM | $302.5K | — | — – — |
| Department of Agriculture | DISC VALUE-ADDED AG PMDG-BEG & SOC DISADV FARMERS & RANCHERS | $300K | FY2012 | Mar 2012 – Mar 2014 |
| Department of Agriculture | VALUE- ADDED AGRICULTURAL PRODUCT MARKET DEVELOPMENT GRANTS | $300K | FY2013 | Jun 2013 – Jun 2013 |
| Department of Agriculture | **AWARDS ISSUED PRIOR TO JANUARY 20, 2025, WERE FUNDED UNDER PREVIOUS ADMINISTRATIONS AND MAY NOT REFLECT THE PRIORITIES AND POLICIES OF THE CURRENT ADMINISTRATION.** EDIBLE SCHOOLYARD NYC SEEKS TO EXPAND ACCESS TO FOOD AND GARDEN EDUCATION FOR STUDENTS IN NEW YORK CITY THROUGH DIRECT SERVICE TEACHING, ADVOCACY, AND PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT. OUR PROJECT, URBAN GARDENER, ACTIVIST, CHEF: SHAPING THE NEXT GENERATION OF FOOD JUSTICE ADVOCATES IN NEW YORK CITY, WILL PILOT A UNIQUE AND DEEP PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM FOR NYC EDUCATORS WITH THE PURPOSE OF INCREASING THEIR CAPACITY TO (1) BUILD THEIR OWN KNOWLEDGE AND SKILLS RELATED TO URBAN GARDENING AND COOKING EDUCATION, (2) DEVELOP A SCOPE AND SEQUENCE AND FOOD EDUCATION CURRICULUM TO IMPLEMENT WITH THEIR STUDENTS, AND (3) LAUNCH THEIR OWN EDIBLE EDUCATION PROGRAMS AT THEIR SCHOOLS.OUR PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT PILOT WILL BE DEVELOPED AND DESIGNED TO SPECIFICALLY RESPOND TO THE NEEDS AND OPPORTUNITIES OF NEW YORK CITY PUBLIC SCHOOL STUDENTS AND EDUCATORS. THE CONTENT OF THIS PILOT WILL DRAW UPON THE DIVERSE FOOD TRADITIONS OF NEW YORK CITY, AS WELL AS THE ROBUST CULTURE OF URBAN AGRICULTURE IN NYC. THIS COMPREHENSIVE PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT EXPERIENCE WILL TRAIN ELEMENTARY AND MIDDLE SCHOOL EDUCATORS, OVER THE COURSE OF ONE SCHOOL YEAR, TO IMPLEMENT EDIBLE EDUCATION PROGRAMMING THAT: (1) IS CULTURALLY-RESPONSIVE AND USES A SOCIAL JUSTICE LENS TO ENGAGE STUDENTS IN GROWING AND COOKING THE UNIQUE FOODS OF NEW YORK CITY, AND (2) SUPPORTS STUDENTS TO DISCOVER THE IMPORTANT ROLE THEY PLAY IN MAKING A GREEN AND MORE JUST URBAN FOOD SYSTEM IN NYC.TOGETHER, OUR PILOT WILL LEAD TO THE CREATION AND MAINTENANCE OF MORE EDIBLE EDUCATION PROGRAMS ACROSS NEW YORK CITY, ESPECIALLY IN UNDER-RESOURCED SCHOOL COMMUNITIES OF COLOR THAT ARE DISPROPORTIONATELY AFFECTED BY FOOD, HEALTH, AND EDUCATION SYSTEM INEQUITIES. | $300K | FY2023 | Jun 2023 – Jul 2025 |
| Department of Agriculture | VALUE- ADDED AGRICULTURAL PRODUCT MARKET DEVELOPMENT GRANTS | $300K | FY2012 | Mar 2012 – Mar 2012 |
| Department of Agriculture | VALUE- ADDED AGRICULTURAL PRODUCT MARKET DEVELOPMENT GRANTS | $300K | FY2012 | Mar 2012 – Mar 2012 |
| Department of Education | IMPACT AID PROGRAM, TITLE VIII, SECTION 8003 | $299.2K | FY2014 | Oct 2013 – Sep 2019 |
| Department of Agriculture | DLT GRANTS - SUBSTANCE USE DISORDER - MEDICAL | $293.9K | FY2025 | Feb 2025 – Feb 2027 |
| Department of Education | IMPACT AID PROGRAM, TITLE VIII, SECTION 8003 | $281.5K | FY2015 | Oct 2014 – Sep 2020 |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | NEIGHBORHOOD INITIAT | $274.4K | FY2010 | Feb 2010 – — |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | PUBLIC HOUSING CAPITAL FUND | $269.1K | FY2013 | Sep 2013 – — |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | PUBLIC AND INDIAN HOUSING | $266.8K | FY2024 | Jan 2024 – Dec 2030 |
| Department of Education | IMPACT AID PROGRAM, TITLE VIII, SECTION 8003 | $263.2K | FY2013 | Oct 2012 – Sep 2018 |
| Department of Agriculture | VALUE- ADDED AGRICULTURAL PRODUCT MARKET DEVELOPMENT GRANTS | $263K | FY2008 | Sep 2008 – Sep 2008 |
| Department of Agriculture | VALUE- ADDED AGRICULTURAL PRODUCT MARKET DEVELOPMENT GRANTS | $256.6K | FY2012 | Apr 2012 – Sep 2015 |
| National Science Foundation | SBIR PHASE I: DEVELOPMENT OF AI AND SOFTWARE PLATFORM FOR COST-EFFECTIVE SOIL CARBON MEASUREMENT AND ASSESSMENT -THE BROADER IMPACT/ COMMERCIAL POTENTIAL OF THIS SMALL BUSINESS INNOVATION RESEARCH (SBIR) PHASE I PROJECT IS TO ENABLE ACCURATE SOIL HEALTH MEASUREMENTS. THE PROPOSED PROJECT WILL DEVELOP NEW MACHINE LEARNING (ML) MODELS FOR ACCURATE SOIL CARBON PREDICTIONS. THE SYSTEM WILL GENERATE A STATISTICALLY- AND AGRONOMICALLY-SIGNIFICANT SOIL CARBON SAMPLING DESIGN CUSTOMIZABLE FOR LANDOWNER PREFERENCES AND THE PARCEL?S CHARACTERISTICS. THE ENVISIONED SYSTEM WILL INTEGRATE A HANDHELD MEASUREMENT PROBE AND A CLOUD-BASED DATA ANALYSIS AND MANAGEMENT PLATFORM FOR AUTOMATED, SCALABLE, COST-EFFECTIVE, AND AUTHORITATIVE SOIL CARBON SAMPLING. THE PROPOSED PROJECT WILL DEVELOP A NOVEL MACHINE LEARNING (ML) MODEL FOR THE IN-SITU PREDICTION AND ANALYSIS OF SOIL CARBON AND DEVELOPMENT OF AUTOMATED SAMPLING PLANS. THE PROPOSED SYSTEM INTEGRATES A SOIL STRATIFICATION AND SAMPLING PLAN DESIGN ALGORITHM; SOFTWARE INTEGRATED WITH A HANDHELD PROBE; AND AN INTEGRATED CLOUD-BASED ANALYSIS AND DATA MANAGEMENT PLATFORM. THE RESEARCH WILL ADDRESS TECHNICAL CHALLENGES INCLUDING: (1) DETECTING COMPLEX COVARIATES; (2) ALIGNING STRATIFICATION WITH SOIL CARBON VERIFICATION PROTOCOLS; (3) DEVELOPING NOVEL DIGITAL PEDOLOGY TECHNIQUES; AND (4) DEVELOPING MACHINE LEARNING TOOLS ABLE TO ITERATE MEASUREMENT PLANS IN NEAR REAL-TIME. THE SYSTEM'S OUTPUTS WILL ENABLE PARALLEL REGIONAL MODELS AND ADAPTIVE SAMPLING PLANS. THIS AWARD REFLECTS NSF'S STATUTORY MISSION AND HAS BEEN DEEMED WORTHY OF SUPPORT THROUGH EVALUATION USING THE FOUNDATION'S INTELLECTUAL MERIT AND BROADER IMPACTS REVIEW CRITERIA. | $255.9K | FY2022 | Apr 2022 – Dec 2022 |
| Department of Transportation | PURCHASE OF TRANSPORTER AND A FORKLIFT | $255.1K | FY2019 | Jun 2019 – Jun 2021 |
| Department of State | THE PROJECT AIMS TO SPREAD THE NOTIONS OF PEACE-BUILDING, PEACEFUL COEXISTENCE, TOLERANCE BY FORMING QUALIFIED WOMEN TO INCREASE SOCIAL AWARENESS. | $252.5K | FY2019 | Sep 2019 – Jun 2021 |
| Department of Agriculture | LAMP VALUE ADDED PRODUCER GRANT--MANDATORY | $250K | FY2025 | Sep 2025 – Sep 2027 |
| Department of Agriculture | LAMP VALUE ADDED PRODUCER GRANT--MANDATORY | $250K | FY2025 | Sep 2025 – Sep 2027 |
| Department of Agriculture | LAMP VALUE ADDED PRODUCER GRANT--MANDATORY | $250K | FY2025 | Sep 2025 – Sep 2027 |
| Department of Agriculture | VALUE- ADDED AGRICULTURAL PRODUCT MARKET DEVELOPMENT GRANTS | $250K | FY2024 | May 2024 – May 2024 |
| Department of Agriculture | VALUE- ADDED AGRICULTURAL PRODUCT MARKET DEVELOPMENT GRANTS | $250K | FY2023 | Sep 2023 – Sep 2023 |
| Department of Agriculture | VALUE- ADDED AGRICULTURAL PRODUCT MARKET DEVELOPMENT GRANTS | $250K | FY2023 | Sep 2023 – Sep 2023 |
| Department of Agriculture | VALUE- ADDED AGRICULTURAL PRODUCT MARKET DEVELOPMENT GRANTS | $250K | FY2022 | Sep 2022 – Sep 2022 |
| Department of Agriculture | VALUE- ADDED AGRICULTURAL PRODUCT MARKET DEVELOPMENT GRANTS | $250K | FY2022 | Sep 2022 – Sep 2022 |
| Department of Agriculture | VALUE- ADDED AGRICULTURAL PRODUCT MARKET DEVELOPMENT GRANTS | $250K | FY2022 | Sep 2022 – Sep 2022 |
| Department of Agriculture | VALUE- ADDED AGRICULTURAL PRODUCT MARKET DEVELOPMENT GRANTS | $250K | FY2021 | Sep 2021 – Sep 2021 |
| Department of Agriculture | VALUE- ADDED AGRICULTURAL PRODUCT MARKET DEVELOPMENT GRANTS | $250K | FY2020 | Sep 2020 – Sep 2020 |
| Department of Agriculture | VALUE- ADDED AGRICULTURAL PRODUCT MARKET DEVELOPMENT GRANTS | $250K | FY2020 | Sep 2020 – Sep 2020 |
| Department of Agriculture | VALUE- ADDED AGRICULTURAL PRODUCT MARKET DEVELOPMENT GRANTS | $250K | FY2020 | Aug 2020 – Aug 2020 |
| Department of Agriculture | VALUE- ADDED AGRICULTURAL PRODUCT MARKET DEVELOPMENT GRANTS | $250K | FY2020 | Aug 2020 – Aug 2020 |
| Department of Agriculture | VALUE- ADDED AGRICULTURAL PRODUCT MARKET DEVELOPMENT GRANTS | $250K | FY2020 | Aug 2020 – Aug 2020 |
| Department of Agriculture | VALUE- ADDED AGRICULTURAL PRODUCT MARKET DEVELOPMENT GRANTS | $250K | FY2018 | Jul 2018 – Jul 2018 |
| Department of Agriculture | VALUE- ADDED AGRICULTURAL PRODUCT MARKET DEVELOPMENT GRANTS | $250K | FY2018 | Jun 2018 – Jun 2018 |
| Department of Agriculture | VALUE- ADDED AGRICULTURAL PRODUCT MARKET DEVELOPMENT GRANTS | $250K | FY2017 | Jun 2017 – Jun 2017 |
| Department of Agriculture | LAMP VALUE-ADDED PRODUCER GRANTS - COVID | $250K | FY2025 | Aug 2025 – Aug 2027 |
| Department of Agriculture | BI GRANTS - RCDG DISCRETIONARY VALUE-ADDED AGRICULTURAL PROD MKT DVLP | $250K | FY2025 | Aug 2025 – Aug 2027 |
| Department of Agriculture | LAMP VALUE ADDED PRODUCER GRANT--MANDATORY | $250K | FY2024 | Sep 2024 – Sep 2026 |
| Department of Agriculture | LAMP VALUE ADDED PRODUCER GRANT--MANDATORY | $250K | FY2024 | Sep 2024 – Sep 2026 |
| Department of Agriculture | LAMP VALUE ADDED PRODUCER GRANT--MANDATORY | $250K | FY2023 | Sep 2023 – Sep 2025 |
| Department of Agriculture | LAMP VALUE ADDED PRODUCER GRANT--MANDATORY | $250K | FY2023 | Sep 2023 – Sep 2025 |
| Department of Agriculture | LAMP VALUE ADDED PRODUCER GRANT--MANDATORY | $250K | FY2023 | Sep 2023 – Sep 2025 |
| Department of Agriculture | LAMP VALUE ADDED PRODUCER GRANT--MANDATORY | $250K | FY2023 | Sep 2023 – Sep 2025 |
| Department of Agriculture | LAMP VALUE ADDED PRODUCER GRANT--MANDATORY | $250K | FY2023 | Sep 2023 – Sep 2025 |
| Department of Agriculture | LAMP VALUE ADDED PRODUCER GRANT--MANDATORY | $250K | FY2022 | Sep 2022 – Sep 2024 |
| Department of Agriculture | LAMP VALUE ADDED PRODUCER GRANT--MANDATORY | $250K | FY2022 | Sep 2022 – Sep 2024 |
| Department of Agriculture | LAMP VALUE ADDED PRODUCER GRANT--MANDATORY | $250K | FY2021 | Sep 2021 – Sep 2023 |
| Department of Agriculture | DISC VALUE-ADDED AG PMDG-BEG & SOC DISADV FARMERS & RANCHERS | $250K | FY2021 | Sep 2021 – Sep 2023 |
| Department of Agriculture | LAMP VALUE ADDED PRODUCER GRANT--MANDATORY | $250K | FY2021 | Sep 2021 – Sep 2023 |
| Department of Agriculture | LAMP VALUE ADDED PRODUCER GRANT--MANDATORY | $250K | FY2021 | Sep 2021 – Sep 2023 |
| Department of Agriculture | LAMP VALUE-ADDED PRODUCER GRANTS - COVID | $250K | FY2021 | Sep 2021 – Sep 2023 |
| Department of Agriculture | LAMP VALUE-ADDED PRODUCER GRANTS - COVID | $250K | FY2021 | Sep 2021 – Sep 2023 |
| Department of Agriculture | LAMP VALUE ADDED PRODUCER GRANT--MANDATORY | $250K | FY2020 | Sep 2020 – Sep 2022 |
| Department of Agriculture | LAMP VALUE ADDED PRODUCER GRANT--MANDATORY | $250K | FY2020 | Sep 2020 – Sep 2022 |
| Department of Agriculture | LAMP VALUE ADDED PRODUCER GRANT--MANDATORY | $250K | FY2020 | Sep 2020 – Sep 2022 |
| Department of Agriculture | LAMP VALUE ADDED PRODUCER GRANT--MANDATORY | $250K | FY2020 | Sep 2020 – Sep 2022 |
| Department of Agriculture | LAMP VALUE ADDED PRODUCER GRANT--MANDATORY | $250K | FY2020 | Aug 2020 – Aug 2022 |
| Department of Agriculture | SEC. 9007 REAP-RENEW ENERGY SYS GRANTS (MAN) | $250K | FY2020 | Apr 2020 – Apr 2022 |
| Department of Agriculture | DISC VALUE-ADDED AG PMDG-MID TIER CHAINS | $250K | FY2018 | Jun 2018 – Jun 2020 |
| Department of Agriculture | VALUE- ADDED AGRICULTURAL PRODUCT MARKET DEVELOPMENT GRANTS | $250K | FY2016 | Sep 2016 – Sep 2016 |
| Department of Agriculture | RCDG - VALUE-ADDED PRODUCT MARKET DEVELOPMENT GRANTS | $250K | FY2016 | Sep 2016 – Sep 2016 |
| Department of Agriculture | RCDG - VALUE-ADDED PRODUCT MARKET DEVELOPMENT GRANTS | $250K | FY2016 | Sep 2016 – Sep 2016 |
Department of Defense
$29.3M
COVID-19 DPA3 US-BASED PRODUCTION OF N95 RESPIRATORS AND MELTBLOWN FILTER MATERIAL TO FULFILL DOD PANDEMIC DEMAND
Department of Defense
$19.5M
COVID-19 DPA3 DEFENSE PRODUCTION ACT (DPA) TITLE III INCREASED MACHINING CAPABILITY
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$8.5M
PURPOSE: THE GREEN AND RESILIENT RETROFIT PROGRAM (GRRP) WAS ESTABLISHED BY SECTION 30002 OF THE INFLATION REDUCTION ACT OF 2022, (PUBLIC LAW 117-169) (THE “IRA”), TITLED “IMPROVING ENERGY EFFICIENCY OR WATER EFFICIENCY OR CLIMATE RESILIENCE OF AFFORDABLE HOUSING.” GRRP OFFERS LOANS AND GRANTS FOR HUD-ASSISTED MULTIFAMILY PROPERTIES TO IMPROVE ENERGY OR WATER EFFICIENCY, ENHANCE INDOOR AIR QUALITY OR SUSTAINABILITY, IMPLEMENT THE USE OF ZERO-EMISSION ELECTRICITY GENERATION, LOW-EMISSION BUILDING MATERIALS OR PROCESSES, ENERGY STORAGE, OR BUILDING ELECTRIFICATION STRATEGIES, OR ADDRESS CLIMATE RESILIENCE. ANNOUNCED GRRP AWARDS CAN BE FOUND AT WITHIN THE HYPERLINKED AWARDS ANNOUNCEMENT FOR EACH COHORT AT HTTPS://WWW.HUD.GOV/GRRP (E.G. WAVE 1 UNDER ELEMENTS AWARD ANNOUNCEMENT).; ACTIVITIES TO BE PERFORMED: GRRP FUNDS ARE USED TO FINANCE REHABILITATION PROJECTS THAT IMPROVE ENERGY OR WATER EFFICIENCY; ENHANCE INDOOR AIR QUALITY OR SUSTAINABILITY; IMPLEMENT THE USE OF ZERO-EMISSION ELECTRICITY GENERATION, LOW-EMISSION BUILDING MATERIALS OR PROCESSES, ENERGY STORAGE, OR BUILDING ELECTRIFICATION STRATEGIES; OR IMPROVE THE CLIMATE RESILIENCE OF ELIGIBLE HUD-ASSISTED MULTIFAMILY PROPERTIES. THESE AFFORDABLE HOUSING REHABILITATION PROJECTS MAY ENTAIL MOUNTING A ROOFTOP SOLAR SYSTEM TO GENERATE RENEWAL ENERGY, CONVERTING FROM GAS-POWERED HVAC SYSTEMS TO ELECTRIC HEAT PUMPS TO REDUCE CARBON EMISSIONS, AND/OR INSTALLING WIND- AND IMPACT-RESISTANT WINDOWS AND DOORS TO MAKE THEM RESILIENT TO SEVERE CLIMATE CONDITIONS –AMONG MANY OTHER ELIGIBLE MEASURES AND PROPERTY IMPROVEMENTS AIMED AT IMPROVING UTILITY EFFICIENCY, CLIMATE RESILIENCE, AND REDUCING CARBON EMISSIONS. THE PROGRAM SEEKS TO AMPLIFY RECENT TECHNOLOGICAL ADVANCEMENTS IN ENERGY AND WATER EFFICIENCY AND TO BRING A NEW FOCUS ON PREPARING FOR CLIMATE HAZARDS BY REDUCING RESIDENTS’ AND PROPERTIES’ EXPOSURE TO HAZARDS AND BY PROTECTING LIFE, LIVABILITY, AND PROPERTY WHEN DISASTER STRIKES. ALL GRRP INVESTMENTS WILL BE MADE IN AFFORDABLE HOUSING COMMUNITIES SERVING LOW-INCOME FAMILIES AND WILL REQUIRE AT LEAST FIVE YEARS OF EXTENDED AFFORDABILITY, AND A MINIMUM OF 15 YEARS OF AFFORDABILITY. HUD OFFERS GRRP FUNDING THROUGH THREE AWARD COHORTS DESIGNED TO MEET THE NEEDS OF PROPERTIES IN DIFFERENT SITUATIONS: ELEMENTS, LEADING EDGE, AND COMPREHENSIVE. APPROXIMATELY $140,000,000 WAS MADE AVAILABLE TO THE ELEMENTS COHORT, WHICH PROVIDES MODEST FUNDING TO OWNERS TO ADD PROVEN AND MEANINGFUL GREEN AND RESILIENT MEASURES TO THE CONSTRUCTION SCOPES OF IN-PROGRESS RECAPITALIZATION TRANSACTIONS. APPROXIMATELY $400,000,000 WAS MADE AVAILABLE TO THE LEADING EDGE COHORT, WHICH PROVIDES FUNDING FOR RETROFIT ACTIVITIES TO ACHIEVE AMBITIOUS OUTCOMES, INCLUDING GREEN BUILDING CERTIFICATION, NET ZERO, RENEWABLE ENERGY GENERATION, USE OF BUILDING MATERIALS WITH LOWER EMBODIED CARBON, AND CLIMATE RESILIENCE INVESTMENTS. APPROXIMATELY $1,470,000,000 WAS MADE AVAILABLE TO THE COMPREHENSIVE COHORT, WHICH PROVIDES FUNDING TO INITIATE RECAPITALIZATION INVESTMENTS DESIGNED FROM INCEPTION AROUND BOTH PROVEN AND INNOVATIVE GREEN AND RESILIENT MEASURES FOR PROPERTIES WITH A HIGH NEED FOR INVESTMENTS. UNDER ALL THREE AWARD COHORTS, OWNERS RECEIVE FUNDING IN THE FORM OF GRANTS OR LOANS. THROUGH 2024, GRRP WILL HAVE AWARDED ROUGHLY 250 PROPERTIES PRESERVING APPROXIMATELY 30,000 HOMES, THE MAJORITY OF WHICH ARE AFFORDABLE TO VERY LOW-INCOME HOUSEHOLDS, SENIORS, AND PERSONS WITH DISABILITIES.; EXPECTED OUTCOMES: THE PROGRAM WILL INCREASE ENERGY AND WATER EFFICIENCY, CREATE RENEWABLE ENERGY GENERATION, AND MAKE RESILIENCE IMPROVEMENTS TO PROTECT RESIDENTS AND AFFORDABLE HOUSING FROM NATURAL HAZARDS. TO MEASURE THIS, THE GRRP INVESTMENTS IMPLEMENTED ARE EXPECTED TO REDUCE GREENHOUSE GAS EMISSIONS BY 50% CUMULATIVELY ACROSS THESE PROPERTIES AND TO REDUCE MODELED ENERGY CONSUMPTION BY AT LEAST 25% AT EACH OF THESE PROPERTIES. SUCCESS OF THE GRRP GOALS WILL BE MEASURED USING EPA PORTFOLIO MANAGER’S UTILITY BENCHMARKING SYSTEM. INDIVIDUAL AWARDS WILL ENCOURAGE THE DEEPEST ENERGY SAVINGS AND EMISSIONS REDUCTIONS POSSIBLE BY FUNDING THE MOST IMPACTFUL IMPROVEMENTS IDENTIFIED THROUGH COMPREHENSIVE ASSESSMENTS OF THE BUILDINGS OR THROUGH ACHIEVING A TOP LEVEL, HIGH PERFORMANCE GREEN BUILDING CERTIFICATION. FURTHER, GRRP-FUNDED PROPERTY IMPROVEMENTS WILL ENHANCE RESIDENTS’ QUALITY OF LIFE AND PROVIDE HEALTHIER AND SAFER LIVING ENVIRONMENTS BY IMPROVING INDOOR AIR QUALITY, MAINTAINING COMFORTABLE LIVING TEMPERATURES, AND PREPARING BUILDINGS TO KEEP RESIDENTS SAFE THROUGH EXTREME WEATHER EVENTS AND NATURAL DISASTERS. RESILIENCE IMPROVEMENTS WILL BE CAPTURED BY A RESILIENCE ASSESSMENT THAT WILL BE REQUIRED FOR ALL GRRP PARTICIPANTS. RESILIENCE ASSESSMENT DATA MAY BE REPORTED FROM TIME TO TIME, BUT THERE ARE NO SPECIFIC PROGRAM GOALS FOR RESILIENCE. ; INTENDED BENEFICIARIES: THE PROGRAM AIMS TO BENEFIT RESIDENTS AND OWNERS OF HUD-ASSISTED MULTIFAMILY PROPERTIES AND THE COMMUNITIES AT-LARGE THEY RESIDE IN. THIS INCLUDES PROPERTIES ASSISTED BY SECTION 8 PROJECT-BASED RENTAL ASSISTANCE, SECTION 202 SUPPORTIVE HOUSING FOR LOW-INCOME ELDERLY, SECTION 811 SUPPORTIVE HOUSING FOR LOW-INCOME PERSONS WITH DISABILITIES PROGRAMS, AND SECTION 236 INTEREST REDUCTION PAYMENTS (IRP).; SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES: THE RECIPIENT DOES NOT INTEND TO SUBAWARD FUNDS.
Department of the Interior
$7.2M
AS-CIP-2017-2
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$4.8M
PURPOSE: THE GREEN AND RESILIENT RETROFIT PROGRAM (GRRP) WAS ESTABLISHED BY SECTION 30002 OF THE INFLATION REDUCTION ACT OF 2022, (PUBLIC LAW 117-169) (THE “IRA”), TITLED “IMPROVING ENERGY EFFICIENCY OR WATER EFFICIENCY OR CLIMATE RESILIENCE OF AFFORDABLE HOUSING.” GRRP OFFERS LOANS AND GRANTS FOR HUD-ASSISTED MULTIFAMILY PROPERTIES TO IMPROVE ENERGY OR WATER EFFICIENCY, ENHANCE INDOOR AIR QUALITY OR SUSTAINABILITY, IMPLEMENT THE USE OF ZERO-EMISSION ELECTRICITY GENERATION, LOW-EMISSION BUILDING MATERIALS OR PROCESSES, ENERGY STORAGE, OR BUILDING ELECTRIFICATION STRATEGIES, OR ADDRESS CLIMATE RESILIENCE. ANNOUNCED GRRP AWARDS CAN BE FOUND AT WITHIN THE HYPERLINKED AWARDS ANNOUNCEMENT FOR EACH COHORT AT HTTPS://WWW.HUD.GOV/GRRP (E.G. WAVE 1 UNDER ELEMENTS AWARD ANNOUNCEMENT).; ACTIVITIES TO BE PERFORMED: GRRP FUNDS ARE USED TO FINANCE REHABILITATION PROJECTS THAT IMPROVE ENERGY OR WATER EFFICIENCY; ENHANCE INDOOR AIR QUALITY OR SUSTAINABILITY; IMPLEMENT THE USE OF ZERO-EMISSION ELECTRICITY GENERATION, LOW-EMISSION BUILDING MATERIALS OR PROCESSES, ENERGY STORAGE, OR BUILDING ELECTRIFICATION STRATEGIES; OR IMPROVE THE CLIMATE RESILIENCE OF ELIGIBLE HUD-ASSISTED MULTIFAMILY PROPERTIES. THESE AFFORDABLE HOUSING REHABILITATION PROJECTS MAY ENTAIL MOUNTING A ROOFTOP SOLAR SYSTEM TO GENERATE RENEWAL ENERGY, CONVERTING FROM GAS-POWERED HVAC SYSTEMS TO ELECTRIC HEAT PUMPS TO REDUCE CARBON EMISSIONS, AND/OR INSTALLING WIND- AND IMPACT-RESISTANT WINDOWS AND DOORS TO MAKE THEM RESILIENT TO SEVERE CLIMATE CONDITIONS –AMONG MANY OTHER ELIGIBLE MEASURES AND PROPERTY IMPROVEMENTS AIMED AT IMPROVING UTILITY EFFICIENCY, CLIMATE RESILIENCE, AND REDUCING CARBON EMISSIONS. THE PROGRAM SEEKS TO AMPLIFY RECENT TECHNOLOGICAL ADVANCEMENTS IN ENERGY AND WATER EFFICIENCY AND TO BRING A NEW FOCUS ON PREPARING FOR CLIMATE HAZARDS BY REDUCING RESIDENTS’ AND PROPERTIES’ EXPOSURE TO HAZARDS AND BY PROTECTING LIFE, LIVABILITY, AND PROPERTY WHEN DISASTER STRIKES. ALL GRRP INVESTMENTS WILL BE MADE IN AFFORDABLE HOUSING COMMUNITIES SERVING LOW-INCOME FAMILIES AND WILL REQUIRE AT LEAST FIVE YEARS OF EXTENDED AFFORDABILITY, AND A MINIMUM OF 15 YEARS OF AFFORDABILITY. HUD OFFERS GRRP FUNDING THROUGH THREE AWARD COHORTS DESIGNED TO MEET THE NEEDS OF PROPERTIES IN DIFFERENT SITUATIONS: ELEMENTS, LEADING EDGE, AND COMPREHENSIVE. APPROXIMATELY $140,000,000 WAS MADE AVAILABLE TO THE ELEMENTS COHORT, WHICH PROVIDES MODEST FUNDING TO OWNERS TO ADD PROVEN AND MEANINGFUL GREEN AND RESILIENT MEASURES TO THE CONSTRUCTION SCOPES OF IN-PROGRESS RECAPITALIZATION TRANSACTIONS. APPROXIMATELY $400,000,000 WAS MADE AVAILABLE TO THE LEADING EDGE COHORT, WHICH PROVIDES FUNDING FOR RETROFIT ACTIVITIES TO ACHIEVE AMBITIOUS OUTCOMES, INCLUDING GREEN BUILDING CERTIFICATION, NET ZERO, RENEWABLE ENERGY GENERATION, USE OF BUILDING MATERIALS WITH LOWER EMBODIED CARBON, AND CLIMATE RESILIENCE INVESTMENTS. APPROXIMATELY $1,470,000,000 WAS MADE AVAILABLE TO THE COMPREHENSIVE COHORT, WHICH PROVIDES FUNDING TO INITIATE RECAPITALIZATION INVESTMENTS DESIGNED FROM INCEPTION AROUND BOTH PROVEN AND INNOVATIVE GREEN AND RESILIENT MEASURES FOR PROPERTIES WITH A HIGH NEED FOR INVESTMENTS. UNDER ALL THREE AWARD COHORTS, OWNERS RECEIVE FUNDING IN THE FORM OF GRANTS OR LOANS. THROUGH 2024, GRRP WILL HAVE AWARDED ROUGHLY 250 PROPERTIES PRESERVING APPROXIMATELY 30,000 HOMES, THE MAJORITY OF WHICH ARE AFFORDABLE TO VERY LOW-INCOME HOUSEHOLDS, SENIORS, AND PERSONS WITH DISABILITIES.; EXPECTED OUTCOMES: THE PROGRAM WILL INCREASE ENERGY AND WATER EFFICIENCY, CREATE RENEWABLE ENERGY GENERATION, AND MAKE RESILIENCE IMPROVEMENTS TO PROTECT RESIDENTS AND AFFORDABLE HOUSING FROM NATURAL HAZARDS. TO MEASURE THIS, THE GRRP INVESTMENTS IMPLEMENTED ARE EXPECTED TO REDUCE GREENHOUSE GAS EMISSIONS BY 50% CUMULATIVELY ACROSS THESE PROPERTIES AND TO REDUCE MODELED ENERGY CONSUMPTION BY AT LEAST 25% AT EACH OF THESE PROPERTIES. SUCCESS OF THE GRRP GOALS WILL BE MEASURED USING EPA PORTFOLIO MANAGER’S UTILITY BENCHMARKING SYSTEM. INDIVIDUAL AWARDS WILL ENCOURAGE THE DEEPEST ENERGY SAVINGS AND EMISSIONS REDUCTIONS POSSIBLE BY FUNDING THE MOST IMPACTFUL IMPROVEMENTS IDENTIFIED THROUGH COMPREHENSIVE ASSESSMENTS OF THE BUILDINGS OR THROUGH ACHIEVING A TOP LEVEL, HIGH PERFORMANCE GREEN BUILDING CERTIFICATION. FURTHER, GRRP-FUNDED PROPERTY IMPROVEMENTS WILL ENHANCE RESIDENTS’ QUALITY OF LIFE AND PROVIDE HEALTHIER AND SAFER LIVING ENVIRONMENTS BY IMPROVING INDOOR AIR QUALITY, MAINTAINING COMFORTABLE LIVING TEMPERATURES, AND PREPARING BUILDINGS TO KEEP RESIDENTS SAFE THROUGH EXTREME WEATHER EVENTS AND NATURAL DISASTERS. RESILIENCE IMPROVEMENTS WILL BE CAPTURED BY A RESILIENCE ASSESSMENT THAT WILL BE REQUIRED FOR ALL GRRP PARTICIPANTS. RESILIENCE ASSESSMENT DATA MAY BE REPORTED FROM TIME TO TIME, BUT THERE ARE NO SPECIFIC PROGRAM GOALS FOR RESILIENCE. ; INTENDED BENEFICIARIES: THE PROGRAM AIMS TO BENEFIT RESIDENTS AND OWNERS OF HUD-ASSISTED MULTIFAMILY PROPERTIES AND THE COMMUNITIES AT-LARGE THEY RESIDE IN. THIS INCLUDES PROPERTIES ASSISTED BY SECTION 8 PROJECT-BASED RENTAL ASSISTANCE, SECTION 202 SUPPORTIVE HOUSING FOR LOW-INCOME ELDERLY, SECTION 811 SUPPORTIVE HOUSING FOR LOW-INCOME PERSONS WITH DISABILITIES PROGRAMS, AND SECTION 236 INTEREST REDUCTION PAYMENTS (IRP).; SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES: THE RECIPIENT DOES NOT INTEND TO SUBAWARD FUNDS.
Department of Health and Human Services
$4.6M
BACKYARD BRAINS: BRINGING NEUROPHYSIOLOGY INTO SECONDARY SCHOOLS
Department of Health and Human Services
$2.9M
INTRODUCING NEUROSCIENCE AND NEUROCOMPUTATION CONCEPTS TO HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS USING BRAIN-BASED NEUROROBOTS - PROJECT SUMMARY UNDERSTANDING THE BRAIN IS A PROFOUND AND FASCINATING CHALLENGE, CAPTIVATING THE SCIENTIFIC COMMUNITY AND THE PUBLIC ALIKE. THE LACK OF EFFECTIVE TREATMENT FOR MOST BRAIN DISORDERS MAKES TRAINING THE NEXT GENERATION OF NEUROSCIENTISTS, ENGINEERS AND PHYSICIANS A KEY CONCERN. HOWEVER, MUCH NEUROSCIENCE IS PERCEIVED TO BE TOO DIFFICULT TO BE TAUGHT IN SCHOOL. TO MAKE NEUROSCIENCE ACCESSIBLE AND ENGAGING TO STUDENTS AND TEACHERS, BACKYARD BRAINS IS DEVELOPING SPIKERBOTS: FUN AND AFFORDABLE ROBOTS THAT LOOK LIKE BRAINS AND ARE CONTROLLED BY COMPUTER SIMULATIONS OF BIOLOGICAL BRAINS. THE SPIKERBOTS AND ASSOCIATED SOFTWARE AND CURRICULUM REQUIRE NO BACKGROUND IN NEUROSCIENCE OR PROGRAMMING, AND ALLOW STUDENTS TO INVESTIGATE MEANINGFUL QUESTIONS ABOUT MIND, BRAIN AND BEHAVIOR BY DESIGNING ARTIFICIAL BRAINS THAT MAKE THE ROBOTS’ BEHAVIOR LIFE-LIKE, SENSORY-GUIDED AND GOAL-DIRECTED. THESE BRAIN DESIGN EXERCISES ENGAGE STUDENTS IN ACTIVE, PROJECT-BASED LEARNING, WHICH HAS BEEN SHOWN TO IMPROVE STEM OUTCOMES, ESPECIALLY AMONG DISADVANTAGED STUDENTS. IN PHASE I, WE SHOWED THAT SPIKERBOTS WITH CAMERA-EYES, MICROPHONE-EARS, SPEAKERS, 2-WHEEL DRIVE AND WIFI, CONTROLLED BY SPIKING NEURAL NETWORKS SIMULATED ON LAPTOPS, ENABLED 295 HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS PARTICIPATING IN A 1-WEEK WORKSHOP TO LEARN NEUROSCIENCE CONCEPTS, SOLVE BRAIN DESIGN CHALLENGES, AND DEVELOP SELF-CONFIDENCE IN NEUROSCIENCE. IN PHASE II, WE WILL (1) DEVELOP PRODUCTION-READY SPIKERBOT HARDWARE THAT REDUCES COSTS AND IMPROVES DURABILITY, (2) DESIGN A CLOUD-BASED APPLICATION FOR CROSS-PLATFORM FUNCTIONALITY ON LOW-COST LAPTOPS, AND (3) DEVELOP A CURRICULUM AND SET OF TEACHER ONBOARDING MATERIALS, INCLUDING RECURRING TEACHER WORKSHOPS, HELD AT 3 SCIENCE MUSEUMS, ON EMPLOYING INQUIRY-BASED LEARNING TO TEACH EFFECTIVELY USING THE SPIKERBOT. EDUCATION RESEARCHERS AT PURDUE UNIVERSITY WILL CONTINUE TO CONDUCT EVALUATION OF STUDENTS’ AND TEACHERS’ EXPERIENCES AND LEARNING GAINS. WE INTEND TO SELL OUR NEUROROBOTS DIRECTLY TO CUSTOMERS, AND THROUGH OUR EDUCATION CHANNEL PARTNERS AT A PRICE OF $150 PER ROBOT. WHILE THE SPIKERBOT IS DESIGNED FOR SECONDARY EDUCATION, PRIMARY AND HIGHER EDUCATION SECTORS AS WELL AS INDIVIDUALS AND FAMILIES CAN ALSO BENEFIT FROM THE TECHNOLOGY. OUR LONG-TERM AIM IS TO ENCOURAGE EDUCATION POLICY MAKERS TO ADOPT MORE NEUROSCIENCE SCIENCE STANDARDS BY DEMONSTRATING AN EFFECTIVE NEUROSCIENCE CURRICULUM ORGANIZED AROUND BIOLOGICAL AND COMPUTATIONAL CONCEPTS THAT EMBRACE THE PHILOSOPHY OF THE NEXT GENERATION SCIENCE STANDARDS. BY COMBINING NEUROSCIENCE, A MULTIDISCIPLINARY FIELD THAT SPANS BIOLOGY, MEDICINE, PSYCHOLOGY, MATHEMATICS, AND ENGINEERING, WITH ROBOTICS AND ACTIVE, PROJECT-BASED LEARNING, OUR SPIKERBOT AND CURRICULUM WILL IMPROVE STEM-EDUCATION AND INSPIRE THE NEXT GENERATION OF SCIENTISTS, ENGINEERS AND PHYSICIANS.
Department of State
$2.6M
BUILDING BRIDGES OF EMOTIONAL AND PHYSICAL HEALING- AN INTEGRATED AND UNIFIED APPROACH TO PHYSICAL REHABILITATION, MHPSS, AND INCLUSION IN TURKIYE
Department of Health and Human Services
$2.5M
HEAD START
Department of Commerce
$2.5M
GREEN MFG. CENTER
Department of State
$2.2M
TO PROVIDE THE SPECIALIZED HEALTH CARE SERVICES TO THE MOST VULNERABLE POPULATIONS IN ANKARA, HATAY AND ISTANBUL WHILE STRENGTHENING THEIR RESILIENCE AND CONTRIBUTING TO THEIR WELLBEING THROUGH INTEGRATED REHABILITATION
Department of Health and Human Services
$2.2M
HEAD START
Department of Commerce
$2M
BUILDING 77 REHAB
Department of Agriculture
$2M
WASTE DISPOSAL GRANTS - REGULAR
Department of Health and Human Services
$1.9M
HEAD START
Department of State
$1.9M
PROVIDING SPECIALIZED HEALTH CARE SERVICES TO VULNERABLE POPULATIONS IN TURKEY WHILE STRENGTHENING THEIR RESILIENCE AND CONTRIBUTING TO THEIR WELLBEING THROUGH INTEGRATED REHABILITATION, COMMUNITY AND MENTAL HEALTH AND PSYCHOSOCIAL SUPPORT SERVICES
Department of Agriculture
$1.6M
DOMESTIC WATER GRANTS - REGULAR
Department of Transportation
$1.6M
PANEL LINE
Department of Education
$1.6M
IMPACT AID PROGRAM, TITLE VII, SECTION 7003
Department of Education
$1.5M
IMPACT AID PROGRAM, TITLE VII, SECTION 7003
Department of Commerce
$1.5M
SHIPYARD EQUIPMENT
Department of the Interior
$1.5M
AMERICAN SAMOA SHIPYARD SERVICES AUTHORITY (ASSSA), FISCAL YEAR 2024 CAPITAL IMPROVEMENT PROJECT (CIP) GRANT FOR THE ASSSA TUGBOAT. TOTAL PROJECT AWARD IS $1,500,000.
Department of the Interior
$1.5M
FISCAL YEAR 2022 CAPITAL IMPROVEMENT PROJECT (CIP) PROGRAM, AMERICAN SAMOA SHIPYARD SERVICES ADMINISTRATION, WINCH HOUSE REPAIRS AND RENOVATIONS. THIS AWARD PROVIDES $1,500,000 IN FEDERAL FUNDING TO THE ASSSA.
Agency for International Development
$1.5M
TO SUPPORT EARTHQUAKE AFFECTED POPULATIONS WITH PROTECTION INTERVENTIONS IN TURKIYE
Department of Education
$1.5M
IMPACT AID PROGRAM, TITLE VII, SECTION 7003
Department of Transportation
$1.4M
WIDEN AND LENGTHEN DRYDOCK
Department of Education
$1.4M
UNKNOWN TITLE
Department of Education
$1.4M
IMPACT AID PROGRAM, TITLE VII, SECTION 7003
Department of Education
$1.2M
IMPACT AID PROGRAM, TITLE VII, SECTION 7003
Department of Transportation
$1.2M
TO SUPPORT THE PURCHASE OF BLASTING & PAINTING EQUIPMENT UPGRADES, PAINT FILTER BANK ASSEMBLIES AND RELATED HARDWARE AND CONTROLS, HEATED AIR MAKE-UP UNIT, DUST COLLECTOR ASSEMBLIES, BLAST POT ASSEMBLIES, C/O-MONITOR WITH CALIBRATION KIT, EXHAUST PLENUMS, AND 300 CU. FT. FREE STANDING ABRASIVE STORAGE HOPPER
Department of Transportation
$1.2M
TWO 20-TON TOWER CRANES
Department of Transportation
$1.1M
WHEELABRATOR BLAST AND PAINT PLATE PRESERVATION SYSTEM
Department of Transportation
$1.1M
2500 TON EXTENSION TO DRY-DOCK #6
Department of Transportation
$1.1M
MARINE TRAVEL LIFT
Department of Health and Human Services
$1.1M
CONGRESSIONALLY DIRECTED SPENDING FOR CONSTRUCTION PROJECTS - MARTHA’S VINEYARD HOSPITAL, LOCATED AT ONE HOSPITAL ROAD IN OAK BLUFFS, MA IN THE COUNTY OF DUKES COUNTY IS SEEKING FUNDING TO UPGRADE AND INSTALL PERMANENTLY AFFIXED EQUIPMENT IN RADIOLOGY AND THE OPERATING ROOM. MARTHA'S VINEYARD HOSPITAL IS A CRITICAL ACCESS HOSPITAL LICENSED WITH 25-BED CAPACITY, AND THE ONLY HOSPITAL LOCATED ON THE ISLAND OF MARTHA'S VINEYARD, ACCESSIBLE ONLY BY FERRY, AIRPLANE OR HELICOPTER. PRIOR TO THE PANDEMIC, THE HOSPITAL TRANSPORTED THE MAJORITY OF HIGHER ACUITY PATIENTS TO OFF-ISLAND HOSPITALS. THE SURGE OF MEDICAL NEEDS IN OFF-ISLAND COMMUNITIES DURING THE PANDEMIC, AND CONTINUING, HAS REVEALED THE NEED TO INCREASE ACCESS TO SPECIALTY AND OTHER DIAGNOSTIC SERVICES LOCALLY. OVERWHELMING CAPACITY CONSTRAINTS AND EMERGENCY DEPARTMENT OVERCROWDING PERSIST. THE REQUESTED EQUIPMENT IS NECESSARY TO PROVIDE THE HIGHEST QUALITY CARE TO THE MORE THAN 20,000 RESIDENTS AND 100,000 SEASONAL VISITORS. THE EQUIPMENT REQUEST SUPPORTS TWO AREAS OF NEED: A FIBER-OPTIC SURGICAL SYSTEM USED BY SURGEONS TO NAVIGATE LIGHTING AND IMAGING DURING PROCEDURES AND A FLUOROSCOPY UNIT THAT WILL ENABLE THE HOSPITAL TO HAVE TWO FULLY OPERATIONAL DIGITAL IMAGING ROOMS. BOTH EQUIPMENT PURCHASES AND INSTALLATIONS SUPPORT A LARGER EFFORT TO EXPAND HEALTH CARE ACCESS ON THE ISLAND.
Department of Health and Human Services
$1M
HEAD START AND EARLY HEAD START
Department of State
$1M
TO PROVIDE LIFE-IMPROVING HEALTH CARE TO THE MOST VULNERABLE POPULATIONS IN ANKARA AND ISTANBUL WHILE STRENGTHENING THEIR RESILIENCE AND CONTRIBUTING TO THEIR WELLBEING THROUGH INTEGRATED REHABILITATION, COMMUNITY HEALTH AND MENTAL HEALTH AND PSYCHOSOCIA
Department of Education
$1M
UNKNOWN TITLE
Department of Transportation
$1M
TO SUPPORT THE PURCHASE OF A 120X80 FLOATING DRYDOCK
Department of Agriculture
$1M
ARP ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT GRANT FOR RURAL HEALTH CARE FACILITIES
Department of Transportation
$1M
TO SUPPORT THE PURCHASE OF A 120X64 FOOT FLOATING DRYDOCK
Department of Education
$991.9K
IMPACT AID PROGRAM, TITLE VII, SECTION 7003
Department of Transportation
$958.7K
DISTRIBUTIVE SYSTEM UPGRADES, 15-TON BRIDGE CRANE
Department of Transportation
$945.8K
NEW FLOATING DRY DOCK (100FT X 85FT X 23.5FT)
Department of Transportation
$939.3K
150-TON MARINE TRAVELIFT
Department of Education
$930.6K
FUND FOR THE IMPROVEMENT OF EDUCATION - ELEMENTARY AND SECONDARY SCHOOL COUNSELING DEMONSTRATION PROGRAM
Department of Transportation
$922.4K
TOWER CRANE HYDROBLAST UNITS OVERHEAD SHOP CRANES
Department of Education
$913.7K
IMPACT AID PROGRAM, TITLE VII, SECTION 7003
Department of Agriculture
$871.8K
REAP RENEWABLE ENERGY SYSTEM (RES) GRANT UNRESTRICTED AMOUNT
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$850K
PURPOSE: ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT INITIATIVE, COMMUNITY PROJECT FUNDING/CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTED SPENDING AWARDS ARE AUTHORIZED UNDER THE CONSOLIDATED APPROPRIATIONS ACT, 2022 PUBLIC LAW 117-328 AND THE EXPLANATORY STATEMENT FOR DIVISION L OF THAT ACT. PROJECTS SELECTED FOR COMMUNITY PROJECT FUNDING/CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTED SPENDING ARE LISTED IN THE JOINT EXPLANATORY STATEMENT (JES) THAT ACCOMPANIES A SPECIFIC FISCAL YEAR’S APPROPRIATIONS ACT OR CONGRESSIONAL RECORD. THE JES LISTS PROJECT, RECIPIENT, STATE, AMOUNT AND CONGRESSIONAL SPONSOR.; ACTIVITIES TO BE PERFORMED: ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT INITIATIVE, COMMUNITY PROJECT FUNDING/CONGRESSIONALLY DIRECTED SPENDING AWARD PROJECTS INCLUDE A WIDE VARIETY OF ACTIVITIES THAT RESULT IN ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT OR COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT OUTCOMES. HUD WILL NOT KNOW THE FULL SCOPE OF THE PROJECT UNTIL THE RECIPIENT SUBMITS THE REQUIRED PROJECT NARRATIVE AND CONFIRMS ALIGNMENT WITH THE LANGUAGE AS PROVIDED IN THE CONGRESSIONAL RECORD. TO FIND THE DETAILS OF THE GRANT AWARD AS WRITTEN WITHIN THE CONGRESSIONAL RECORD USE THE FOLLOWING LINK AND PATH SELECTIONS TO GET TO THE DESCRIPTION OF THE ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT INITIATIVE, COMMUNITY PROJECT FUNDING GRANTS HTTPS://WWW.HUD.GOV/PROGRAM_OFFICES/COMM_PLANNING/EDI-GRANTS, SELECT THE FISCAL YEAR OF INTEREST, SCROLL DOWN TO PROGRAM LAWS AND REGULATIONS, UNDER FISCAL YEAR 20XX CONSOLIDATED APPROPRIATIONS ACT, 20XX: CONGRESSIONAL RECORD (JOINT EXPLANATORY STATEMENT).; EXPECTED OUTCOMES: COMPLETION OF THE PROJECT AS DESCRIBED IN THE JOINT EXPLANATORY STATEMENT (JES) PROJECT DESCRIPTION AND SUBSEQUENT APPROVED PROJECT NARRATIVE.; INTENDED BENEFICIARIES: THE PROJECT BENEFICIARIES ARE THE INDIVIDUALS AND/OR ORGANIZATIONS THAT ARE AWARDED GRANT FUNDS OR SERVED BY THE ENTITIES THAT ARE AWARDED GRANT FUNDS AS IDENTIFIED IN THE JES RECIPIENT OR PROJECT DESCRIPTION SECTIONS.; SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES: THE SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES ARE UNKNOWN AT THE TIME OF AWARD.
Department of Agriculture
$837.6K
306C WWD RUS COLONIAS - DOMESTIC WATER
Department of Transportation
$817.1K
TO FOSTER EFFICIENCY COMPETITIVE OPERATIONS AND QUALITY SHIP CONSTRUCTION REPAIR AND RECONFIGURATION IN SMALL SHIPYARDS ACROSS THE UNITED STATES IN ADDITION TO FOSTERING EMPLOYEE SKILLS AND ENHANCED PRODUCTIVITY RELATED TO SHIPBUILDING SHIP REPAIR AND ASSOCIATED INDUSTRIES THIS GRANT IS FOR THE PURCHASE AND INSTALLATION OF A LINK BELT 130-TON TELESCOPIC BOOM ROUGH TERRAIN CRANE DELIVERABLES ARE A LINK BELT 130-TON TELESCOPIC BOOM ROUGH TERRAIN CRANE WHICH WILL INCREASE EFFICIENCY IN WITHIN THE SHIPYARD INTENDED BENEFICIARY IS FRASER SHIPYARDS LLC THERE ARE NO SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES
Department of Transportation
$800K
TO FOSTER EFFICIENCY COMPETITIVE OPERATIONS AND QUALITY SHIP CONSTRUCTION REPAIR AND RECONFIGURATION IN SMALL SHIPYARDS ACROSS THE UNITED STATES IN ADDITION TO FOSTERING EMPLOYEE SKILLS AND ENHANCED PRODUCTIVITY RELATED TO SHIPBUILDING SHIP REPAIR AND ASSOCIATED INDUSTRIES THIS GRANT IS FOR CONTINUATION OF THE SHIPYARD APPRENTICE PROGRAM DELIVERABLES ARE SHIPYARD APPRENTICE PROGRAM CONTIUNATION WHICH WILL INCREASE EFFICIENCY IN WITHIN THE SHIPYARD BY TRAINING SHIPYARD WORKERS IN VARIOUS ASPECTS OF SHIPYARD WORK INTENDED BENEFICIARY IS?PHILLY SHIPYARD INC THERE ARE NO SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES
Department of Transportation
$800K
WELDING MACHINES
Department of Transportation
$796.1K
UPGRADES TO MARINE RAILWAY
Department of Transportation
$793.2K
OVERHEAD MATERIAL HANDLING AND STEEL BRAKE PROCESSING IMPROVEMENT
Department of Transportation
$781.3K
ELECTRICAL UPGRADES (2 SKID MOUNTED PORTABLE SUB-STATION, 2 6-CIRCUIT DISTRIBUTION SKIDS, 2 4-CIRCUIT DISTRIBUTION SKIDS, 6 400A DISTRIBUTION SKIDS, CAMLOCKS)
Department of Transportation
$779.2K
COMPUTER NUMERICALLY CONTROLLED (CNC) LATHE
Department of Transportation
$757.2K
PURCHASE OF A LASER CNC CUTTING MACHINE AND A CNC PIPE BENDING MACHINE
Department of Transportation
$745K
MARINE TRAVELIFT
Department of Transportation
$731.2K
PURCHASE OF SPRAY PAINT SANDBLAST BOOTH, HYDRAULIC PRESS WITH TOOLING, UNIVERSAL VALVE TESTER PACKAGE WITH CONSOLE AND TOOLING, AND 3 BASE PLATE MOUNTED JIBS
Department of Transportation
$720K
APPRENTICE TRAINING PROGRAM
Department of Transportation
$718.4K
PURCHASE OF AIR COMPRESSOR SYSTEMS AND FIRE SUPPRESSION PUMPS
Department of Health and Human Services
$696.9K
INTRODUCING NEUROSCIENCE AND NEUROCOMPUTATION CONCEPTS TO HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS USING BRAIN-BASED NEUROROBOTS
Department of Transportation
$686.5K
SHIPYARD ELECTRICAL UPGRADES
Department of Transportation
$667.3K
CUTTING MACHINE, WELDING UPGRADES, ROUGH TERRAIN CRANE, TELEHANDLER
Department of Education
$665.5K
IMPACT AID PROGRAM, TITLE VII, SECTION 7003
Department of Transportation
$664.3K
INSTALL A STIFFENER WELDING GANTRY ALONG WITH RAILS FOR GANTRY TRAVEL
Department of Education
$660.1K
IMPACT AID PROGRAM, TITLE VII, SECTION 7003
Department of Transportation
$643.1K
TRAINING PROGRAM SAND BLAST PAINT AND BOOTHS SAND BLAST GRIT RECOVERY SYSTEMS MAN LIFTS 15 TON CRANE
Department of Transportation
$640.2K
MESSER SYSTEM
Department of Education
$634.9K
IMPACT AID PROGRAM TITLE VIII SECTION 8003 AND SECTION 8007(A)
Department of Education
$621.4K
IMPACT AID PROGRAM TITLE VIII SECTION 8003
Department of Education
$619.8K
IMPACT AID PROGRAM, TITLE VII, SECTION 7003
Department of Education
$619.8K
IMPACT AID PROGRAM TITLE VIII SECTION 8003
Department of Transportation
$604.5K
AUTOMATIC TIG MEMBRANE WELDING AND TRI-PLEX MEMBRANE BONDING SYSTEMS FOR LNG VESSEL CONSTRUCTION
Department of Transportation
$604.1K
PURCHASE OF 150 TON TRAVELLIFT FOR IMPROVED OPERATIONS AND REGIONAL BENEFIT
Department of Education
$602.7K
IMPACT AID PROGRAM TITLE VIII SECTION 8003 AND SECTION 8007(A)
Department of Education
$591.2K
IMPACT AID PROGRAM, TITLE VIII, SECTION 8003
Department of Education
$587.9K
IMPACT AID PROGRAM, TITLE VIII, SECTION 8003
Department of Agriculture
$580.7K
306C WWD RUS COLONIAS - COMBINATION WATER & WASTE DISPOSAL
Department of Education
$575.7K
IMPACT AID PROGRAM, TITLE VII, SECTION 7003
Department of Transportation
$571.9K
UPGRADE COMPONENTS ON 150-TON PORTAL CRANE
Department of Education
$570.5K
IMPACT AID PROGRAM TITLE VIII SECTION 8003
Department of Education
$568K
IMPACT AID PROGRAM TITLE VIII SECTION 8003
Department of Transportation
$566.6K
REPLACEMENT OF DIESEL-POWERED FIRE PUMPS WITH ELECTRIC POWERED ONES TO SUPPORT PIER SIDE AND DRYDOCKED VESSELS
Department of Education
$527.7K
IMPACT AID PROGRAM, TITLE VIII, SECTION 8003
Department of Education
$522.9K
IMPACT AID PROGRAM, TITLE VII, SECTION 7003
Department of Transportation
$521.8K
PURCHASE OF CNC PLASMA CUTTING SYSTEM AND LATHE/MILLING MACHINE
Department of Education
$519.8K
IMPACT AID PROGRAM, TITLE VIII, SECTION 8003
Department of Education
$516K
IMPACT AID PROGRAM TITLE VIII SECTION 8003
Department of Transportation
$500.7K
PURCHASE OF 2 SELF-PROPELLED MODULAR TRANSPORTERS (SPMT) AND HIGH CAPACITY FORKLIFT
Department of the Interior
$500K
THIS GRANT WILL PRESERVE THE MARTHA S VINEYARD CAMP MEETING MVCMA TABERNACLE BY REPLACEMENT OF ITS ROOF THE PROPERTY IS AN IMPORTANT EXAMPLE OF THE RELIGIOUS CAMP MEETING MOVEMENTS OF THE EARLY NINETEENTH CENTURY IT PLAYED A KEY ROLE IN THE DESIGN OF PERMANENT RELIGIOUS CAMP MEETINGS AND RESORTS THE APPLICANT WILL PROVIDE 500,000 IN MATCHING FUNDS
Department of Defense
$500K
MILITARY-CONNECTED LOCAL EDUCATIONAL AGENCIES FOR ACADEMIC AND SUPPORT PROGRAMS (MCASP)
Department of Defense
$500K
LEDYARD PUBLIC SCHOOLS (LPS) HAS IDENTIFIED THE NEED FOR IMPROVED PRACTICES IN MATHEMATICS, INCLUDING A GREATER EMPHASIS ON MATHEMATICAL THINKING TO INCREASE MATHEMATICAL FLUENCY AND REASONING AMONG LPS MILITARY-CONNECTED STUDENTS. TO ACCOMPLISH THIS GOAL, LPS WILL REVISE EXISTING CURRICULUM, ADOPT NEW MATHEMATICS K-8 PROGRAM(S), ADD ACCELERATED MATH OPPORTUNITIES, HIRE MATH INTERVENTIONISTS AT THE ELEMENTARY LEVEL TO COACH TEACHERS AND WORK DIRECTLY WITH STUDENTS NEEDING TIERED INSTRUCTION, AND DETERMINE HOW TO USE EXISTING STAFF AT THE MIDDLE SCHOOL LEVEL TO PROVIDE TARGETED MATH INTERVENTION. WE WILL PROVIDE ONGOING PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT FOCUSED ON MATHEMATICS FOR OUR TEACHING STAFF AS WELL AS COACHING TRAINING FOR THE INTERVENTIONISTS WITH A FOCUS ON USING DATA TO SHAPE INSTRUCTION. THESE STEPS WILL ALLOW STUDENTS TO BUILD STRONG MATHEMATICAL SKILLS SO THAT MORE STUDENTS WILL BE SUCCESSFUL IN HIGHER-LEVEL COURSES AT BOTH THE MIDDLE AND HIGH SCHOOL LEVELS AND AS A RESULT BE BETTER PREPARED TO ATTEND COLLEGE OR ENTER THE WORKFORCE.
National Endowment for the Humanities
$500K
MARTHA'S VINEYARD MUSEUM EDUCATION ENDOWMENT CHALLENGE
Department of Justice
$500K
WISE ADVISORS MENTORING PROGRAM
Department of Homeland Security
$489K
PORT SECURITY GRANT PROGRAM
Environmental Protection Agency
$477K
THIS GRANT WILL FUND THE REPAIR AND REPLACEMENT OF THE WASTEWATER COLLECTION SYSTEM IN YARDLEY, PA.
Department of Education
$473.4K
IMPACT AID PROGRAM TITLE VIII SECTION 8003
Department of Transportation
$467K
FOR A CLIMATE CONTROLLED DOWN DRAFT PAINT BOOTH AND STEEL FABRICATION EQUIPMENT
Department of Commerce
$465.6K
PSDC - TRAINING PROGRAM
Department of Transportation
$459.2K
WASTEWATER TREATMENT AND RECYCLING SYSTEM
Department of Energy
$452.8K
TAS::89 0328::TAS RECOVERY ACT. OBLIGATE FY 10 ARRA FUNDING IN THE AMOUNT OF $787,250.00
Department of Health and Human Services
$446.3K
BACKYARD BRAINS: BRINGING NEUROPHYSIOLOGY INTO SECONDARY SCHOOLS
Department of Transportation
$445.8K
WIDEN MARINE RAIL TO 41 FEET, CONVERT NO 3 LIFT DOCK TO ELECTRIC DRIVE, PAINT AND BLAST BOOTH REPLACEMENT
Department of Transportation
$438.7K
TWO MEGABLASTER SYSTEMS, TWO AIR COMPRESSORS
Department of Transportation
$432.4K
TWO BIG TOP PORTABLE SHELTERS
Department of Transportation
$422.3K
FLOW UHP SYSTEM
Department of Transportation
$418.2K
TO FOSTER EFFICIENCY COMPETITIVE OPERATIONS AND QUALITY SHIP CONSTRUCTION REPAIR AND RECONFIGURATION IN SMALL SHIPYARDS ACROSS THE UNITED STATES IN ADDITION TO FOSTERING EMPLOYEE SKILLS AND ENHANCED PRODUCTIVITY RELATED TO SHIPBUILDING SHIP REPAIR AND ASSOCIATED INDUSTRIES THIS GRANT IS FOR THE PURCHASE AND INSTALLATION A CNC PLASMA CUTTING SYSTEM DELIVERABLES ARE A CNC PLASMA CUTTING SYSTEM WHICH WILL INCREASE EFFICIENCY IN WITHIN THE SHIPYARD INTENDED BENEFICIARY IS CONRAD ORANGE SHIPYARD INC THERE ARE NO SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES
Department of Labor
$414.9K
EARMARK
Department of Education
$403.4K
CAROL M. WHITE PHYSICAL EDUCATION PROGRAM
Department of Transportation
$387.5K
PURCHASE OF A LINK-BELT 110-TON ROUGH TERRAIN CRANE
Department of Education
$386.7K
UNKNOWN TITLE
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$381K
PURPOSE: THE PUBLIC HOUSING CAPITAL FUND PROGRAM (CFP) WAS CREATED BY AN AMENDMENT TO THE 1937 ACT BY THE QUALITY HOUSING AND WORK RESPONSIBILITY ACT (QHWRA) IN 1998 (ADDING SECTION 9(D) TO THE 1937 ACT MERGING PREVIOUS MODERNIZATION AND DEVELOPMENT PROGRAMS). THE CFP PROVIDES FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE IN THE FORM OF GRANTS TO APPROXIMATELY 2,770 PUBLIC HOUSING AGENCIES (PHAS), SERVING NEARLY ONE MILLION UNITS, IN ALL 50 STATES AND TERRITORIES, TO CARRY OUT CAPITAL AND MANAGEMENT ACTIVITIES INCLUDING THOSE LISTED IN SECTION 9(D)(1) OF THE UNITED STATES HOUSING ACT OF 1937 (1937 ACT). THE MAIN PURPOSE OF THE CFP FORMULA GRANT IS TO FUND PUBLIC HOUSING MODERNIZATION, DEVELOPMENT, MANAGEMENT IMPROVEMENTS, AND THE OTHER ELIGIBLE ACTIVITIES DESCRIBED IN 24 CFR PART 905. ADDITIONAL INFORMATION ON THE PUBLIC HOUSING CAPITAL FUND IS LOCATED ON THE OFFICE OF CAPITAL IMPROVEMENTS WEBSITE: OFFICE OF CAPITAL IMPROVEMENTS | HUD.GOV / U.S. DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT (HUD) ADDITIONAL INFORMATION ON PUBLIC HOUSING FUNDING CAN BE FOUND BY ACCESSING THE WEBSITE BELOW AND REVIEWING THE PUBLIC HOUSING DASHBOARD LINKED UNDER THE “DATA DASHBOARD AND ANALYTICS”. PUBLIC HOUSING | HUD.GOV / U.S. DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT (HUD); ACTIVITIES TO BE PERFORMED: THE PHAS RECEIVE FEDERAL FUNDS FROM THE U.S. DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT (HUD) TO ADMINISTER THE PUBLIC HOUSING FUND. PUBLIC HOUSING CAPITAL FUNDS MAY ONLY BE USED FOR ACTIVITIES THAT ARE DESCRIBED AS ELIGIBLE ACTIVITIES IN 24 CFR 905.200 AND ARE EITHER SPECIFIED IN AN APPROVED 5-YEAR ACTION PLAN OR APPROVED BY HUD FOR EMERGENCY WORK OR WORK NEEDED BECAUSE OF A NON-PRESIDENTIALLY DECLARED NATURAL DISASTER. PUBLIC HOUSING DEVELOPMENT, MODERNIZATION, AND FINANCING ARE THE MAJOR ACTIVITIES TO BE PERFORMED. DEVELOPMENT IS ACTIVITIES AND RELATED COSTS THAT ADD TO (OR SIGNIFICANTLY RECONFIGURE) PUBLIC HOUSING UNITS IN A PHA’S INVENTORY, INCLUDING CONSTRUCTION AND ACQUISITION OF ADDITIONAL PUBLIC HOUSING UNITS, WITH OR WITHOUT REHABILITATION, AND ANY-AND-ALL UNDERTAKINGS NECESSARY FOR PLANNING, DESIGN, FINANCING, LAND ACQUISITION, DEMOLITION, CONSTRUCTION, OR EQUIPMENT OF PUBLIC HOUSING UNITS, AND RELATED BUILDINGS, FACILITIES, AND/OR APPURTENANCES (I.E., NON-DWELLING FACILITIES/SPACES). DEVELOPMENT ALSO INCLUDES ANY MIXED-FINANCE MODERNIZATION, ALL RELEVANT MODERNIZATION USES (OTHER THAN MANAGEMENT IMPROVEMENTS), FINANCING USES, AND DEVELOPMENT OF NON-DWELLING SPACE WHERE SUCH SPACE IS NEEDED TO ADMINISTER, AND IS OF DIRECT BENEFIT TO A PUBLIC HOUSING PROJECT (I.E. HOUSING DEVELOPED, ACQUIRED, OR ASSISTED BY A PHA UNDER THE 1937 ACT, AND THE IMPROVEMENT OF ANY SUCH HOUSING), INCLUDING THE RESIDENTS. FINANCING DEBT AND FINANCING COSTS (E.G., ORIGINATION FEES, INTEREST) INCURRED BY A PHA FOR DEVELOPMENT OR MODERNIZATION OF PUBLIC HOUSING PROJECTS, INCLUDING MIXED-FINANCE DEVELOPMENT, THE CAPITAL FUND FINANCING PROGRAM (CFFP), AND ANY OTHER USE AUTHORIZED UNDER SECTION 30 OF THE 1937 ACT. MODERNIZATION INCLUDES ALL ELIGIBLE ACTIVITIES EXCEPT FOR DEVELOPMENT AND FINANCING. PHYSICAL WORK IS A MAJOR ACTIVITY AND IS WORK THAT IS DONE ON THE PHYSICAL STRUCTURES, SITE, AND GROUNDS OF A PUBLIC HOUSING PROPERTY OR STRUCTURE. MAJOR PHYSICAL ACTIVITIES INCLUDE DEMOLITION, RECONFIGURATION, EMERGENCY ACTIVITIES, ENERGY EFFICIENCY, NON-ROUTINE MAINTENANCE, PLANNED CODE COMPLIANCE, AND VACANCY REDUCTION. THE MEASURABLE OUTCOME OF THIS GRANT IS THAT HUD WILL BE ABLE TO TRACK THE AMOUNT OF DOLLARS SPENT ON IMPROVEMENTS TO THE STRUCTURES, UNITS, COMMON AREAS, UTILITIES, AND OTHER ELIGIBLE ACTIVITIES. ; EXPECTED OUTCOMES: THE EXPECTED OUTCOMES FOR PUBLIC HOUSING CAPITAL FUNDS OF APPROXIMATELY $3.2 BILLION WILL BE PUT INTO THE DEVELOPMENT, MODERNIZATION, AND FINANCING OF NEARLY 1 MILLION PUBLIC HOUSING UNITS ACROSS ALL 50 STATES AND TERRITORIES. THE PUBLIC HOUSING UNITS ARE UPDATED TO BE DECENT, SAFE, SANITARY AND TO COMPLY WITH FEDERAL HOUSING STANDARDS. PHAS CAN ALSO USE A PORTION OF THE CAPITAL FUNDING FOR MANAGEMENT IMPROVEMENTS OR OPERATING ACTIVITIES INCLUDING SAFETY AND SECURITY COSTS.; INTENDED BENEFICIARIES: THE INTENDED BENEFICIARIES FOR PUBLIC HOUSING CAPITAL FUNDS ARE THE LOW-INCOME PUBLIC HOUSING RESIDENTS.; SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES: THE RECIPIENT DOES NOT INTEND TO SUBAWARD FUNDS.
Department of Education
$375.7K
UNKNOWN TITLE
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$371.4K
PURPOSE: THE PUBLIC HOUSING CAPITAL FUND PROGRAM (CFP) WAS CREATED BY AN AMENDMENT TO THE 1937 ACT BY THE QUALITY HOUSING AND WORK RESPONSIBILITY ACT (QHWRA) IN 1998 (ADDING SECTION 9(D) TO THE 1937 ACT MERGING PREVIOUS MODERNIZATION AND DEVELOPMENT PROGRAMS). THE CFP PROVIDES FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE IN THE FORM OF GRANTS TO APPROXIMATELY 2,770 PUBLIC HOUSING AGENCIES (PHAS), SERVING NEARLY ONE MILLION UNITS, IN ALL 50 STATES AND TERRITORIES, TO CARRY OUT CAPITAL AND MANAGEMENT ACTIVITIES INCLUDING THOSE LISTED IN SECTION 9(D)(1) OF THE UNITED STATES HOUSING ACT OF 1937 (1937 ACT). THE MAIN PURPOSE OF THE CFP FORMULA GRANT IS TO FUND PUBLIC HOUSING MODERNIZATION, DEVELOPMENT, MANAGEMENT IMPROVEMENTS, AND THE OTHER ELIGIBLE ACTIVITIES DESCRIBED IN 24 CFR PART 905. ADDITIONAL INFORMATION ON THE PUBLIC HOUSING CAPITAL FUND IS LOCATED ON THE OFFICE OF CAPITAL IMPROVEMENTS WEBSITE: OFFICE OF CAPITAL IMPROVEMENTS | HUD.GOV / U.S. DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT (HUD) ADDITIONAL INFORMATION ON PUBLIC HOUSING FUNDING CAN BE FOUND BY ACCESSING THE WEBSITE BELOW AND REVIEWING THE PUBLIC HOUSING DASHBOARD LINKED UNDER THE “DATA DASHBOARD AND ANALYTICS”. PUBLIC HOUSING | HUD.GOV / U.S. DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT (HUD); ACTIVITIES TO BE PERFORMED: THE PHAS RECEIVE FEDERAL FUNDS FROM THE U.S. DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT (HUD) TO ADMINISTER THE PUBLIC HOUSING FUND. PUBLIC HOUSING CAPITAL FUNDS MAY ONLY BE USED FOR ACTIVITIES THAT ARE DESCRIBED AS ELIGIBLE ACTIVITIES IN 24 CFR 905.200 AND ARE EITHER SPECIFIED IN AN APPROVED 5-YEAR ACTION PLAN OR APPROVED BY HUD FOR EMERGENCY WORK OR WORK NEEDED BECAUSE OF A NON-PRESIDENTIALLY DECLARED NATURAL DISASTER. PUBLIC HOUSING DEVELOPMENT, MODERNIZATION, AND FINANCING ARE THE MAJOR ACTIVITIES TO BE PERFORMED. DEVELOPMENT IS ACTIVITIES AND RELATED COSTS THAT ADD TO (OR SIGNIFICANTLY RECONFIGURE) PUBLIC HOUSING UNITS IN A PHA’S INVENTORY, INCLUDING CONSTRUCTION AND ACQUISITION OF ADDITIONAL PUBLIC HOUSING UNITS, WITH OR WITHOUT REHABILITATION, AND ANY-AND-ALL UNDERTAKINGS NECESSARY FOR PLANNING, DESIGN, FINANCING, LAND ACQUISITION, DEMOLITION, CONSTRUCTION, OR EQUIPMENT OF PUBLIC HOUSING UNITS, AND RELATED BUILDINGS, FACILITIES, AND/OR APPURTENANCES (I.E., NON-DWELLING FACILITIES/SPACES). DEVELOPMENT ALSO INCLUDES ANY MIXED-FINANCE MODERNIZATION, ALL RELEVANT MODERNIZATION USES (OTHER THAN MANAGEMENT IMPROVEMENTS), FINANCING USES, AND DEVELOPMENT OF NON-DWELLING SPACE WHERE SUCH SPACE IS NEEDED TO ADMINISTER, AND IS OF DIRECT BENEFIT TO A PUBLIC HOUSING PROJECT (I.E. HOUSING DEVELOPED, ACQUIRED, OR ASSISTED BY A PHA UNDER THE 1937 ACT, AND THE IMPROVEMENT OF ANY SUCH HOUSING), INCLUDING THE RESIDENTS. FINANCING DEBT AND FINANCING COSTS (E.G., ORIGINATION FEES, INTEREST) INCURRED BY A PHA FOR DEVELOPMENT OR MODERNIZATION OF PUBLIC HOUSING PROJECTS, INCLUDING MIXED-FINANCE DEVELOPMENT, THE CAPITAL FUND FINANCING PROGRAM (CFFP), AND ANY OTHER USE AUTHORIZED UNDER SECTION 30 OF THE 1937 ACT. MODERNIZATION INCLUDES ALL ELIGIBLE ACTIVITIES EXCEPT FOR DEVELOPMENT AND FINANCING. PHYSICAL WORK IS A MAJOR ACTIVITY AND IS WORK THAT IS DONE ON THE PHYSICAL STRUCTURES, SITE, AND GROUNDS OF A PUBLIC HOUSING PROPERTY OR STRUCTURE. MAJOR PHYSICAL ACTIVITIES INCLUDE DEMOLITION, RECONFIGURATION, EMERGENCY ACTIVITIES, ENERGY EFFICIENCY, NON-ROUTINE MAINTENANCE, PLANNED CODE COMPLIANCE, AND VACANCY REDUCTION. THE MEASURABLE OUTCOME OF THIS GRANT IS THAT HUD WILL BE ABLE TO TRACK THE AMOUNT OF DOLLARS SPENT ON IMPROVEMENTS TO THE STRUCTURES, UNITS, COMMON AREAS, UTILITIES, AND OTHER ELIGIBLE ACTIVITIES. ; EXPECTED OUTCOMES: THE EXPECTED OUTCOMES FOR PUBLIC HOUSING CAPITAL FUNDS OF APPROXIMATELY $3.2 BILLION WILL BE PUT INTO THE DEVELOPMENT, MODERNIZATION, AND FINANCING OF NEARLY 1 MILLION PUBLIC HOUSING UNITS ACROSS ALL 50 STATES AND TERRITORIES. THE PUBLIC HOUSING UNITS ARE UPDATED TO BE DECENT, SAFE, SANITARY AND TO COMPLY WITH FEDERAL HOUSING STANDARDS. PHAS CAN ALSO USE A PORTION OF THE CAPITAL FUNDING FOR MANAGEMENT IMPROVEMENTS OR OPERATING ACTIVITIES INCLUDING SAFETY AND SECURITY COSTS.; INTENDED BENEFICIARIES: THE INTENDED BENEFICIARIES FOR PUBLIC HOUSING CAPITAL FUNDS ARE THE LOW-INCOME PUBLIC HOUSING RESIDENTS.; SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES: THE RECIPIENT DOES NOT INTEND TO SUBAWARD FUNDS.
Department of Education
$371.2K
IMPACT AID PROGRAM, TITLE VII, SECTION 7003
Department of Transportation
$360.9K
2010 ASSISTANCE TO SMALL SHIPYARDS
Department of Defense
$360.5K
WITH THE NAVYS STRATEGIC REALIGNMENT AIMED AT BETTER SUPPORTING NAVAL OPERATIONS IN THE PACIFIC, THE HAWAII SHIP REPAIR SECTOR IS PROJECTING A CONTINUED INCREASE IN WORKLOAD THROUGH 2031. TO BETTER SUPPORT THE NAVYS INCREASING WORKLOAD, PACIFIC SHIPYARDS INTERNATIONAL RESPECTFULLY SUBMITS PROPOSALS FOR THREE PROJECTS, EACH AIMING TO REVITALIZE THEIR SHIPYARD WELDING INFRASTRUCTURE WHICH CONTINUES TO SUPPORT NAVY SHIP REPAIR. THE PROJECTS INCLUDE A NEW CNC PLASMA CUTTING MACHINE, A STANDALONE GANTRY CRANE, AND A LARGE STEEL WORKING PLATFORM.
Department of the Interior
$360K
FY 2021 ENERGIZING INSULAR COMMUNITIES GRANT PROGRAM
Department of Agriculture
$359.4K
DOMESTIC WATER GRANTS - REGULAR
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$353.8K
PURPOSE: THE PUBLIC HOUSING CAPITAL FUND PROGRAM (CFP) WAS CREATED BY AN AMENDMENT TO THE 1937 ACT BY THE QUALITY HOUSING AND WORK RESPONSIBILITY ACT (QHWRA) IN 1998 (ADDING SECTION 9(D) TO THE 1937 ACT MERGING PREVIOUS MODERNIZATION AND DEVELOPMENT PROGRAMS). THE CFP PROVIDES FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE IN THE FORM OF GRANTS TO APPROXIMATELY 2,770 PUBLIC HOUSING AGENCIES (PHAS), SERVING NEARLY ONE MILLION UNITS, IN ALL 50 STATES AND TERRITORIES, TO CARRY OUT CAPITAL AND MANAGEMENT ACTIVITIES INCLUDING THOSE LISTED IN SECTION 9(D)(1) OF THE UNITED STATES HOUSING ACT OF 1937 (1937 ACT). THE MAIN PURPOSE OF THE CFP FORMULA GRANT IS TO FUND PUBLIC HOUSING MODERNIZATION, DEVELOPMENT, MANAGEMENT IMPROVEMENTS, AND THE OTHER ELIGIBLE ACTIVITIES DESCRIBED IN 24 CFR PART 905. ADDITIONAL INFORMATION ON THE PUBLIC HOUSING CAPITAL FUND IS LOCATED ON THE OFFICE OF CAPITAL IMPROVEMENTS WEBSITE: OFFICE OF CAPITAL IMPROVEMENTS | HUD.GOV / U.S. DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT (HUD) ADDITIONAL INFORMATION ON PUBLIC HOUSING FUNDING CAN BE FOUND BY ACCESSING THE WEBSITE BELOW AND REVIEWING THE PUBLIC HOUSING DASHBOARD LINKED UNDER THE “DATA DASHBOARD AND ANALYTICS”. PUBLIC HOUSING | HUD.GOV / U.S. DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT (HUD); ACTIVITIES TO BE PERFORMED: THE PHAS RECEIVE FEDERAL FUNDS FROM THE U.S. DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT (HUD) TO ADMINISTER THE PUBLIC HOUSING FUND. PUBLIC HOUSING CAPITAL FUNDS MAY ONLY BE USED FOR ACTIVITIES THAT ARE DESCRIBED AS ELIGIBLE ACTIVITIES IN 24 CFR 905.200 AND ARE EITHER SPECIFIED IN AN APPROVED 5-YEAR ACTION PLAN OR APPROVED BY HUD FOR EMERGENCY WORK OR WORK NEEDED BECAUSE OF A NON-PRESIDENTIALLY DECLARED NATURAL DISASTER. PUBLIC HOUSING DEVELOPMENT, MODERNIZATION, AND FINANCING ARE THE MAJOR ACTIVITIES TO BE PERFORMED. DEVELOPMENT IS ACTIVITIES AND RELATED COSTS THAT ADD TO (OR SIGNIFICANTLY RECONFIGURE) PUBLIC HOUSING UNITS IN A PHA’S INVENTORY, INCLUDING CONSTRUCTION AND ACQUISITION OF ADDITIONAL PUBLIC HOUSING UNITS, WITH OR WITHOUT REHABILITATION, AND ANY-AND-ALL UNDERTAKINGS NECESSARY FOR PLANNING, DESIGN, FINANCING, LAND ACQUISITION, DEMOLITION, CONSTRUCTION, OR EQUIPMENT OF PUBLIC HOUSING UNITS, AND RELATED BUILDINGS, FACILITIES, AND/OR APPURTENANCES (I.E., NON-DWELLING FACILITIES/SPACES). DEVELOPMENT ALSO INCLUDES ANY MIXED-FINANCE MODERNIZATION, ALL RELEVANT MODERNIZATION USES (OTHER THAN MANAGEMENT IMPROVEMENTS), FINANCING USES, AND DEVELOPMENT OF NON-DWELLING SPACE WHERE SUCH SPACE IS NEEDED TO ADMINISTER, AND IS OF DIRECT BENEFIT TO A PUBLIC HOUSING PROJECT (I.E. HOUSING DEVELOPED, ACQUIRED, OR ASSISTED BY A PHA UNDER THE 1937 ACT, AND THE IMPROVEMENT OF ANY SUCH HOUSING), INCLUDING THE RESIDENTS. FINANCING DEBT AND FINANCING COSTS (E.G., ORIGINATION FEES, INTEREST) INCURRED BY A PHA FOR DEVELOPMENT OR MODERNIZATION OF PUBLIC HOUSING PROJECTS, INCLUDING MIXED-FINANCE DEVELOPMENT, THE CAPITAL FUND FINANCING PROGRAM (CFFP), AND ANY OTHER USE AUTHORIZED UNDER SECTION 30 OF THE 1937 ACT. MODERNIZATION INCLUDES ALL ELIGIBLE ACTIVITIES EXCEPT FOR DEVELOPMENT AND FINANCING. PHYSICAL WORK IS A MAJOR ACTIVITY AND IS WORK THAT IS DONE ON THE PHYSICAL STRUCTURES, SITE, AND GROUNDS OF A PUBLIC HOUSING PROPERTY OR STRUCTURE. MAJOR PHYSICAL ACTIVITIES INCLUDE DEMOLITION, RECONFIGURATION, EMERGENCY ACTIVITIES, ENERGY EFFICIENCY, NON-ROUTINE MAINTENANCE, PLANNED CODE COMPLIANCE, AND VACANCY REDUCTION. THE MEASURABLE OUTCOME OF THIS GRANT IS THAT HUD WILL BE ABLE TO TRACK THE AMOUNT OF DOLLARS SPENT ON IMPROVEMENTS TO THE STRUCTURES, UNITS, COMMON AREAS, UTILITIES, AND OTHER ELIGIBLE ACTIVITIES. ; EXPECTED OUTCOMES: THE EXPECTED OUTCOMES FOR PUBLIC HOUSING CAPITAL FUNDS OF APPROXIMATELY $3.2 BILLION WILL BE PUT INTO THE DEVELOPMENT, MODERNIZATION, AND FINANCING OF NEARLY 1 MILLION PUBLIC HOUSING UNITS ACROSS ALL 50 STATES AND TERRITORIES. THE PUBLIC HOUSING UNITS ARE UPDATED TO BE DECENT, SAFE, SANITARY AND TO COMPLY WITH FEDERAL HOUSING STANDARDS. PHAS CAN ALSO USE A PORTION OF THE CAPITAL FUNDING FOR MANAGEMENT IMPROVEMENTS OR OPERATING ACTIVITIES INCLUDING SAFETY AND SECURITY COSTS.; INTENDED BENEFICIARIES: THE INTENDED BENEFICIARIES FOR PUBLIC HOUSING CAPITAL FUNDS ARE THE LOW-INCOME PUBLIC HOUSING RESIDENTS.; SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES: THE RECIPIENT DOES NOT INTEND TO SUBAWARD FUNDS.
National Endowment for the Humanities
$350K
BROOKLYN NAVY YARD: PAST PRESENT AND FUTURE
Department of Transportation
$346.5K
MODERNIZATION AND UPGRADES TO A WELDING SYSTEM
Department of Education
$336.2K
UNKNOWN TITLE
Department of Education
$332K
IMPACT AID PROGRAM TITLE VIII SECTION 8003
Department of Education
$331.1K
IMPACT AID PROGRAM, TITLE VIII, SECTION 8003
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$329.6K
PUBLIC HOUSING CAPITAL FUND
Department of Health and Human Services
$324.6K
A BIOLOGICALLY-INSPIRED, INTERACTIVE DIGITAL DEVICE TO INTRODUCE K12 STUDENTS TO COMPUTATIONAL NEUROSCIENCE - PROJECT SUMMARY UNDERSTANDING THE BRAIN IS A PROFOUND AND FASCINATING CHALLENGE, CAPTIVATING THE SCIENTIFIC COMMUNITY AND THE PUBLIC ALIKE. THE LACK OF EFFECTIVE TREATMENT FOR MOST BRAIN DISORDERS MAKES THE TRAINING OF THE NEXT GENERATION OF NEUROSCIENTISTS, ENGINEERS, AND PHYSICIANS A KEY CONCERN. HOWEVER, MUCH OF NEUROSCIENCE IS PERCEIVED TO BE TOO DIFFICULT TO BE TAUGHT IN SCHOOL. HAVING ALREADY INTRODUCED STUDENT-FRIENDLY, NIH-FUNDED ELECTROPHYSIOLOGICAL TOOLS FOR PROJECT-BASED LEARNING INTO K12 EDUCATION, BACKYARD BRAINS IS NOW AIMING TO BROADEN THE IMPACT BY DEVELOPING “COMPUTATIONAL SPIKERBOX”, A COUNTERPART TO OUR ELECTROPHYSIOLOGICAL SPIKERBOX. THIS EMBEDDED DIGITAL DEVICE WITH ADJUSTABLE PARAMETERS WILL SOUND VIA A SPEAKER, SEE VIA A MOBILE DEVICE DISPLAY, AND REACT VIA SENSORS. BY MODULATING ION CHANNELS AND CHANGING IONIC CONDUCTANCES IN THIS MODEL, STUDENTS WILL GAIN INSIGHT INTO HOW NEURONS ARE AFFECTED BY ANALGESICS AND VARIOUS VENOMS. HIGH SCHOOL TEACHERS AND STUDENTS EVALUATED OUR PROTOTYPE DEVICES IN A WORKSHOP AND STATED THAT IT DID HELP THEM TO DEVELOP INTUITION ABOUT BIOLOGICAL NEURONS THROUGH THE COMPUTATIONAL MODEL. IN PHASE I, WE WILL REFINE AND RUGGEDIZE OUR COMPUTATIONAL SPIKERBOX FOR THE CLASSROOM AND BUILD OUT THE PARTNERING APPLICATION. THE PROPOSED DEVICE WILL ALLOW FOR EXPERIMENTS THAT HAD PREVIOUSLY BEEN IMPOSSIBLE IN THE CLASSROOM, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO OBSERVING SUBTHRESHOLD NEURON ACTIVITY OR PRE- AND POST-SYNAPTIC VOLTAGES. TO ALLEVIATE THE LEARNING PROCESS AND MAKE IT FUN AND INTUITIVE, THE APP WILL HAVE AN INTUITIVE DRAG-AND-DROP INTERFACE TO CONSTRUCT MODELING OF NEURON BEHAVIOR VIA CLOSING OR OPENING OF ION CHANNELS WITHIN THE STIMULUS PARAMETERS, MAPPING THE VOLTAGE VALUES TO THE IONIC CURRENTS, VISUALIZING THEIR RESULT OF ION CHANNEL MODULATION AND PREDICT OUTCOMES IN A DISEASED NEURON BASED ON THE CORRECT SEQUENCE OF CONSTRUCTING THE NEURONAL ACTIVITY. OUR AIMS TO ENHANCE THE HARDWARE AND SOFTWARE WILL BE ACCOMPANIED BY DEVELOPING AN INNOVATIVE NGSS-ALIGNED LESSON PLAN BASED ON THE COMPUTATIONAL SPIKERBOX IN A NEUROSCIENCE CLASSROOM IN DETROIT, MI. THE IMPLEMENTATION OF THIS LESSON PLAN WILL BE ASSESSED BY ROCKMAN ET AL COOPERATIVE, WHO WILL EVALUATE STUDENT CONTENT KNOWLEDGE, ATTITUDES AND INTEREST IN SCIENCE, AND SELF-EFFICACY AS A SCIENTIST. OUR OVERALL PHASE I GOAL IS TO EMPOWER STUDENTS TO UNDERSTAND THE FUNDAMENTALS OF THE BIOLOGICAL PROPERTIES OF NEURONS, ALL WITHIN THE NGSS FRAMEWORK. IN PHASE II, WE PLAN TO EXPAND THE CURRICULUM AND THE CAPABILITIES OF OUR COMPUTATIONAL SPIKERBOX, EXTENDING THE FOCUS FROM A SINGLE NEURON BEHAVIOR TO CONNECTIONS BETWEEN A SMALL NUMBER OF NEURONS AND HOW IT RELATES TO HIGHER-LEVEL COMPUTATIONAL MODELING OF THE BRAIN. OUR LONG-TERM AIM IS FOR K12 STUDENTS TO DEVELOP A PRACTICAL UNDERSTANDING OF KEY NEURAL NETWORK CONCEPTS AND ENGAGE IN COMPUTATIONAL THINKING (CT), A WAY OF SOLVING PROBLEMS, DESIGNING SYSTEMS, AND UNDERSTANDING THE WORLD BY BREAKING COMPLEX PROBLEMS DOWN INTO SMALLER COMPONENTS.
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$322.5K
MULTIFAMILY HOUSING SERVICE COORDINATORS
Department of Education
$319.2K
IMPACT AID PROGRAM, TITLE VIII, SECTION 8003
Department of Transportation
$312.8K
AUTOMATED PIPE SPOOL WELDING EQUIPMENT
Department of Transportation
$309.9K
WATER-JET SURFACE PREPARATION EQUIPMENT
Department of Agriculture
$308.3K
REAP RENEWABLE ENERGY SYSTEM (RES) GRANT UNRESTRICTED AMOUNT
Department of Education
$306.3K
IMPACT AID PROGRAM, TITLE VIII, SECTION 8003
Department of Education
$306K
IMPACT AID PROGRAM, TITLE VII, SECTION 7003
Department of Homeland Security
$302.5K
PORT SECURITY GRANT PROGRAM
Department of Agriculture
$300K
DISC VALUE-ADDED AG PMDG-BEG & SOC DISADV FARMERS & RANCHERS
Department of Agriculture
$300K
VALUE- ADDED AGRICULTURAL PRODUCT MARKET DEVELOPMENT GRANTS
Department of Agriculture
$300K
**AWARDS ISSUED PRIOR TO JANUARY 20, 2025, WERE FUNDED UNDER PREVIOUS ADMINISTRATIONS AND MAY NOT REFLECT THE PRIORITIES AND POLICIES OF THE CURRENT ADMINISTRATION.** EDIBLE SCHOOLYARD NYC SEEKS TO EXPAND ACCESS TO FOOD AND GARDEN EDUCATION FOR STUDENTS IN NEW YORK CITY THROUGH DIRECT SERVICE TEACHING, ADVOCACY, AND PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT. OUR PROJECT, URBAN GARDENER, ACTIVIST, CHEF: SHAPING THE NEXT GENERATION OF FOOD JUSTICE ADVOCATES IN NEW YORK CITY, WILL PILOT A UNIQUE AND DEEP PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM FOR NYC EDUCATORS WITH THE PURPOSE OF INCREASING THEIR CAPACITY TO (1) BUILD THEIR OWN KNOWLEDGE AND SKILLS RELATED TO URBAN GARDENING AND COOKING EDUCATION, (2) DEVELOP A SCOPE AND SEQUENCE AND FOOD EDUCATION CURRICULUM TO IMPLEMENT WITH THEIR STUDENTS, AND (3) LAUNCH THEIR OWN EDIBLE EDUCATION PROGRAMS AT THEIR SCHOOLS.OUR PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT PILOT WILL BE DEVELOPED AND DESIGNED TO SPECIFICALLY RESPOND TO THE NEEDS AND OPPORTUNITIES OF NEW YORK CITY PUBLIC SCHOOL STUDENTS AND EDUCATORS. THE CONTENT OF THIS PILOT WILL DRAW UPON THE DIVERSE FOOD TRADITIONS OF NEW YORK CITY, AS WELL AS THE ROBUST CULTURE OF URBAN AGRICULTURE IN NYC. THIS COMPREHENSIVE PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT EXPERIENCE WILL TRAIN ELEMENTARY AND MIDDLE SCHOOL EDUCATORS, OVER THE COURSE OF ONE SCHOOL YEAR, TO IMPLEMENT EDIBLE EDUCATION PROGRAMMING THAT: (1) IS CULTURALLY-RESPONSIVE AND USES A SOCIAL JUSTICE LENS TO ENGAGE STUDENTS IN GROWING AND COOKING THE UNIQUE FOODS OF NEW YORK CITY, AND (2) SUPPORTS STUDENTS TO DISCOVER THE IMPORTANT ROLE THEY PLAY IN MAKING A GREEN AND MORE JUST URBAN FOOD SYSTEM IN NYC.TOGETHER, OUR PILOT WILL LEAD TO THE CREATION AND MAINTENANCE OF MORE EDIBLE EDUCATION PROGRAMS ACROSS NEW YORK CITY, ESPECIALLY IN UNDER-RESOURCED SCHOOL COMMUNITIES OF COLOR THAT ARE DISPROPORTIONATELY AFFECTED BY FOOD, HEALTH, AND EDUCATION SYSTEM INEQUITIES.
Department of Agriculture
$300K
VALUE- ADDED AGRICULTURAL PRODUCT MARKET DEVELOPMENT GRANTS
Department of Agriculture
$300K
VALUE- ADDED AGRICULTURAL PRODUCT MARKET DEVELOPMENT GRANTS
Department of Education
$299.2K
IMPACT AID PROGRAM, TITLE VIII, SECTION 8003
Department of Agriculture
$293.9K
DLT GRANTS - SUBSTANCE USE DISORDER - MEDICAL
Department of Education
$281.5K
IMPACT AID PROGRAM, TITLE VIII, SECTION 8003
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$274.4K
NEIGHBORHOOD INITIAT
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$269.1K
PUBLIC HOUSING CAPITAL FUND
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$266.8K
PUBLIC AND INDIAN HOUSING
Department of Education
$263.2K
IMPACT AID PROGRAM, TITLE VIII, SECTION 8003
Department of Agriculture
$263K
VALUE- ADDED AGRICULTURAL PRODUCT MARKET DEVELOPMENT GRANTS
Department of Agriculture
$256.6K
VALUE- ADDED AGRICULTURAL PRODUCT MARKET DEVELOPMENT GRANTS
National Science Foundation
$255.9K
SBIR PHASE I: DEVELOPMENT OF AI AND SOFTWARE PLATFORM FOR COST-EFFECTIVE SOIL CARBON MEASUREMENT AND ASSESSMENT -THE BROADER IMPACT/ COMMERCIAL POTENTIAL OF THIS SMALL BUSINESS INNOVATION RESEARCH (SBIR) PHASE I PROJECT IS TO ENABLE ACCURATE SOIL HEALTH MEASUREMENTS. THE PROPOSED PROJECT WILL DEVELOP NEW MACHINE LEARNING (ML) MODELS FOR ACCURATE SOIL CARBON PREDICTIONS. THE SYSTEM WILL GENERATE A STATISTICALLY- AND AGRONOMICALLY-SIGNIFICANT SOIL CARBON SAMPLING DESIGN CUSTOMIZABLE FOR LANDOWNER PREFERENCES AND THE PARCEL?S CHARACTERISTICS. THE ENVISIONED SYSTEM WILL INTEGRATE A HANDHELD MEASUREMENT PROBE AND A CLOUD-BASED DATA ANALYSIS AND MANAGEMENT PLATFORM FOR AUTOMATED, SCALABLE, COST-EFFECTIVE, AND AUTHORITATIVE SOIL CARBON SAMPLING. THE PROPOSED PROJECT WILL DEVELOP A NOVEL MACHINE LEARNING (ML) MODEL FOR THE IN-SITU PREDICTION AND ANALYSIS OF SOIL CARBON AND DEVELOPMENT OF AUTOMATED SAMPLING PLANS. THE PROPOSED SYSTEM INTEGRATES A SOIL STRATIFICATION AND SAMPLING PLAN DESIGN ALGORITHM; SOFTWARE INTEGRATED WITH A HANDHELD PROBE; AND AN INTEGRATED CLOUD-BASED ANALYSIS AND DATA MANAGEMENT PLATFORM. THE RESEARCH WILL ADDRESS TECHNICAL CHALLENGES INCLUDING: (1) DETECTING COMPLEX COVARIATES; (2) ALIGNING STRATIFICATION WITH SOIL CARBON VERIFICATION PROTOCOLS; (3) DEVELOPING NOVEL DIGITAL PEDOLOGY TECHNIQUES; AND (4) DEVELOPING MACHINE LEARNING TOOLS ABLE TO ITERATE MEASUREMENT PLANS IN NEAR REAL-TIME. THE SYSTEM'S OUTPUTS WILL ENABLE PARALLEL REGIONAL MODELS AND ADAPTIVE SAMPLING PLANS. THIS AWARD REFLECTS NSF'S STATUTORY MISSION AND HAS BEEN DEEMED WORTHY OF SUPPORT THROUGH EVALUATION USING THE FOUNDATION'S INTELLECTUAL MERIT AND BROADER IMPACTS REVIEW CRITERIA.
Department of Transportation
$255.1K
PURCHASE OF TRANSPORTER AND A FORKLIFT
Department of State
$252.5K
THE PROJECT AIMS TO SPREAD THE NOTIONS OF PEACE-BUILDING, PEACEFUL COEXISTENCE, TOLERANCE BY FORMING QUALIFIED WOMEN TO INCREASE SOCIAL AWARENESS.
Department of Agriculture
$250K
LAMP VALUE ADDED PRODUCER GRANT--MANDATORY
Department of Agriculture
$250K
LAMP VALUE ADDED PRODUCER GRANT--MANDATORY
Department of Agriculture
$250K
LAMP VALUE ADDED PRODUCER GRANT--MANDATORY
Department of Agriculture
$250K
VALUE- ADDED AGRICULTURAL PRODUCT MARKET DEVELOPMENT GRANTS
Department of Agriculture
$250K
VALUE- ADDED AGRICULTURAL PRODUCT MARKET DEVELOPMENT GRANTS
Department of Agriculture
$250K
VALUE- ADDED AGRICULTURAL PRODUCT MARKET DEVELOPMENT GRANTS
Department of Agriculture
$250K
VALUE- ADDED AGRICULTURAL PRODUCT MARKET DEVELOPMENT GRANTS
Department of Agriculture
$250K
VALUE- ADDED AGRICULTURAL PRODUCT MARKET DEVELOPMENT GRANTS
Department of Agriculture
$250K
VALUE- ADDED AGRICULTURAL PRODUCT MARKET DEVELOPMENT GRANTS
Department of Agriculture
$250K
VALUE- ADDED AGRICULTURAL PRODUCT MARKET DEVELOPMENT GRANTS
Department of Agriculture
$250K
VALUE- ADDED AGRICULTURAL PRODUCT MARKET DEVELOPMENT GRANTS
Department of Agriculture
$250K
VALUE- ADDED AGRICULTURAL PRODUCT MARKET DEVELOPMENT GRANTS
Department of Agriculture
$250K
VALUE- ADDED AGRICULTURAL PRODUCT MARKET DEVELOPMENT GRANTS
Department of Agriculture
$250K
VALUE- ADDED AGRICULTURAL PRODUCT MARKET DEVELOPMENT GRANTS
Department of Agriculture
$250K
VALUE- ADDED AGRICULTURAL PRODUCT MARKET DEVELOPMENT GRANTS
Department of Agriculture
$250K
VALUE- ADDED AGRICULTURAL PRODUCT MARKET DEVELOPMENT GRANTS
Department of Agriculture
$250K
VALUE- ADDED AGRICULTURAL PRODUCT MARKET DEVELOPMENT GRANTS
Department of Agriculture
$250K
VALUE- ADDED AGRICULTURAL PRODUCT MARKET DEVELOPMENT GRANTS
Department of Agriculture
$250K
LAMP VALUE-ADDED PRODUCER GRANTS - COVID
Department of Agriculture
$250K
BI GRANTS - RCDG DISCRETIONARY VALUE-ADDED AGRICULTURAL PROD MKT DVLP
Department of Agriculture
$250K
LAMP VALUE ADDED PRODUCER GRANT--MANDATORY
Department of Agriculture
$250K
LAMP VALUE ADDED PRODUCER GRANT--MANDATORY
Department of Agriculture
$250K
LAMP VALUE ADDED PRODUCER GRANT--MANDATORY
Department of Agriculture
$250K
LAMP VALUE ADDED PRODUCER GRANT--MANDATORY
Department of Agriculture
$250K
LAMP VALUE ADDED PRODUCER GRANT--MANDATORY
Department of Agriculture
$250K
LAMP VALUE ADDED PRODUCER GRANT--MANDATORY
Department of Agriculture
$250K
LAMP VALUE ADDED PRODUCER GRANT--MANDATORY
Department of Agriculture
$250K
LAMP VALUE ADDED PRODUCER GRANT--MANDATORY
Department of Agriculture
$250K
LAMP VALUE ADDED PRODUCER GRANT--MANDATORY
Department of Agriculture
$250K
LAMP VALUE ADDED PRODUCER GRANT--MANDATORY
Department of Agriculture
$250K
DISC VALUE-ADDED AG PMDG-BEG & SOC DISADV FARMERS & RANCHERS
Department of Agriculture
$250K
LAMP VALUE ADDED PRODUCER GRANT--MANDATORY
Department of Agriculture
$250K
LAMP VALUE ADDED PRODUCER GRANT--MANDATORY
Department of Agriculture
$250K
LAMP VALUE-ADDED PRODUCER GRANTS - COVID
Department of Agriculture
$250K
LAMP VALUE-ADDED PRODUCER GRANTS - COVID
Department of Agriculture
$250K
LAMP VALUE ADDED PRODUCER GRANT--MANDATORY
Department of Agriculture
$250K
LAMP VALUE ADDED PRODUCER GRANT--MANDATORY
Department of Agriculture
$250K
LAMP VALUE ADDED PRODUCER GRANT--MANDATORY
Department of Agriculture
$250K
LAMP VALUE ADDED PRODUCER GRANT--MANDATORY
Department of Agriculture
$250K
LAMP VALUE ADDED PRODUCER GRANT--MANDATORY
Department of Agriculture
$250K
SEC. 9007 REAP-RENEW ENERGY SYS GRANTS (MAN)
Department of Agriculture
$250K
DISC VALUE-ADDED AG PMDG-MID TIER CHAINS
Department of Agriculture
$250K
VALUE- ADDED AGRICULTURAL PRODUCT MARKET DEVELOPMENT GRANTS
Department of Agriculture
$250K
RCDG - VALUE-ADDED PRODUCT MARKET DEVELOPMENT GRANTS
Department of Agriculture
$250K
RCDG - VALUE-ADDED PRODUCT MARKET DEVELOPMENT GRANTS
Source: Federal Audit Clearinghouse (fac.gov)
No federal single audit records found for this organization.
Single audits are required for entities expending $750,000+ in federal awards annually.
Source: IRS e-Filed Form 990
No officer or director compensation data available for this organization.
This data is sourced from IRS Form 990, Part VII. It may not be available if the organization files Form 990-N (e-Postcard) or has not yet been enriched.
Source: IRS Publication 78, Auto-Revocation List & e-Postcard Data
Tax-deductible contributions: Yes
Deductibility code: PC
Sources: IRS e-Filed Form 990 (XML) & ProPublica Nonprofit Explorer
Scroll →
| Year | Revenue | Contributions | Expenses | Assets | Net Assets |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2023 | $757K | $709.1K | $1.5M | $2.9M | $2.9M |
| 2022 | $1.8M | $1.8M | $1.4M | $3.7M | $3.6M |
| 2021 | $1.1M | $1.1M | $954.4K | $3.4M | $3.2M |
| 2020 | $1.2M | $1.1M | $1M | $2.8M | $2.5M |
Sources: ProPublica Nonprofit Explorer & IRS e-File Index
| Tax Year | Form Type | Source | Documents |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2024 | 990 | IRS e-File | PDF not yet published by IRSView Filing → |
| 2023 | 990 | DataIRS e-File | PDF not yet published by IRSView Filing → |
| 2022 | 990 | DataIRS e-File |
Financial data: IRS Form 990 via ProPublica Nonprofit Explorer (Tax Year 2023)
Federal grants: USAspending.gov (live)
Organization info: IRS Business Master File · ProPublica Nonprofit Explorer
Tax-deductibility: IRS Publication 78
| 2019 | $2M | $1.9M | $1.9M | $2.6M | $2.4M |
| 2018 | $1.8M | $1.7M | $1.5M | $2.6M | $2.3M |
| 2017 | $1.1M | $1M | $1.3M | $2.2M | $2M |
| 2016 | $1.3M | $1.2M | $1.1M | $2.4M | $2.2M |
| 2015 | $822.4K | $767.2K | $810.7K | $2.2M | $2M |
| 2014 | $705.3K | $642.7K | $703.2K | $2.2M | $2M |
| 2013 | $666.5K | $617.3K | $629.2K | $2.2M | $2M |
| 2012 | $532.7K | $488.2K | $472.7K | $2.2M | $2M |
| 2011 | $326.3K | $292.8K | $317.1K | $2.1M | $1.9M |
| 2021 | 990 | Data |
| 2020 | 990 | Data | PDF not yet published by IRS |
| 2019 | 990 | Data |
| 2018 | 990 | Data |
| 2017 | 990 | Data |
| 2016 | 990 | Data |
| 2015 | 990 | Data |
| 2014 | 990 | Data |
| 2013 | 990 | Data |
| 2012 | 990 | Data |
| 2011 | 990 | Data |
| 2010 | 990 | — |
| 2009 | 990 | — |
| 2008 | 990 | — |
| 2007 | 990 | — |
| 2006 | 990 | — |
| 2005 | 990 | — |
| 2004 | 990 | — |
| 2003 | 990 | — |
| 2002 | 990 | — |
| 2001 | 990 | — |