Loading organization details...
Loading organization details...
Source: IRS e-Filed Form 990 (from the IRS e-File system), Tax Year 2024
Total Revenue
▼$647.4K
Total Contributions
$642.9K
Total Expenses
▼$403.8K
Total Assets
$1.1M
Total Liabilities
▼$453.5K
Net Assets
$636.7K
Officer Compensation
→$36.1K
Other Salaries
$28.3K
Investment Income
$4,467
Fundraising
▼N/A
Source: USAspending.gov · Searched by organization name
VA/DoD Awards
$161.4M
VA/DoD Award Count
3
Funding from the Department of Veterans Affairs and/or Department of Defense.
Total Federal Funding (partial)
$8.7B
Awards Found
200+
Additional awards may exist. View all on USAspending.gov →
| Awarding Agency | Description | Amount | Fiscal Year | Period |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Department of Health and Human Services | STATE INNOVATION WAIVER UNDER SECTION 1332 OF THE AFFORDABLE CARE ACT | $1.3B | FY2019 | Jan 2019 – Dec 2028 |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | PURPOSE: COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT BLOCK GRANT DISASTER RECOVERY (CDBG-DR) AND COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT BLOCK GRANT MITIGATION (CDBG-MIT) GRANT FUNDS ARE APPROPRIATED BY CONGRESS AND ALLOCATED BY THE DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT (HUD) AS AUTHORIZED UNDER TITLE I OF THE HOUSING AND COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT ACT OF 1974, AS AMENDED. THE MAIN PURPOSE OF CDBG-DR FUNDS IS TO REBUILD DISASTER-IMPACTED AREAS AND PROVIDE CRUCIAL SEED MONEY TO START THE LONG-TERM RECOVERY PROCESS. THESE FLEXIBLE GRANTS HELP CITIES, COUNTIES, INDIAN TRIBES, AND STATES RECOVER FROM PRESIDENTIALLY DECLARED DISASTERS, ESPECIALLY IN LOW-INCOME AREAS, SUBJECT TO AVAILABILITY OF SUPPLEMENTAL APPROPRIATIONS. SINCE CDBG-DR ASSISTANCE MAY FUND A BROAD RANGE OF RECOVERY ACTIVITIES, HUD CAN HELP COMMUNITIES AND NEIGHBORHOODS THAT OTHERWISE MIGHT NOT RECOVER DUE TO LIMITED RESOURCES.; ACTIVITIES TO BE PERFORMED: STATE AND LOCAL GOVERNMENTS RECEIVE CDBG-DR AND CDBG-MIT FUNDS FROM HUD TO ASSIST COMMUNITIES RECOVERING FROM A PRESIDENTIALLY DECLARED DISASTER. HUD ALLOCATES FUNDS BASED ON THE UNMET RECOVERY NEEDS OF EACH COMMUNITY. HUD ISSUES AN ALLOCATION ANNOUNCEMENT NOTICE IN THE FEDERAL REGISTER WHICH WILL INCLUDE THE LIST OF GRANTEES, ALLOCATIONS, AND ANY WAIVERS AND ALTERNATIVE REQUIREMENTS. GRANTEES MAY USE THE FUNDS FOR DISASTER RELATED LONG-TERM RECOVERY, RESTORATION OF INFRASTRUCTURE, HOUSING, ECONOMIC REVITALIZATION, AND MITIGATION ACTIVITIES. ALL CDBG-DR AND CDBG-MIT ACTIVITIES MUST CLEARLY ADDRESS A DIRECT OR INDIRECT IMPACT OF THE DISASTER IN A PRESIDENTIALLY DECLARED AREA FOR THE COVERED DISASTER. EACH GRANTEE MUST DEVELOP AN ACTION PLAN THAT OUTLINES HOW THE GRANTEE PLANS TO ALLOCATE FUNDING TO A COMBINATION OF RECOVERY PROGRAMS. EACH GRANTEE MUST MAKE THE DRAFT ACTION PLAN AVAILABLE FOR PUBLIC COMMENT AND FEEDBACK PRIOR TO SUBMITTING THE PLAN TO HUD FOR REVIEW. ONCE APPROVED, THE ACTION PLAN SERVES AS THE BLUEPRINT FOR THE GRANTEE’S CDBG-DR PROGRAM. THE ACTION PLAN PROCESS IS OUTLINED IN THE APPLICABLE ALLOCATION ANNOUNCEMENT NOTICE.; EXPECTED OUTCOMES: CDBG-DR FUNDS ARE EXPECTED TO RESULT IN LONG-TERM DISASTER RECOVERY FOR COMMUNITIES IMPACTED BY PRESIDENTIALLY DECLARED DISASTERS.; INTENDED BENEFICIARIES: CDBG-DR FUNDS ARE INTENDED PRIMARILY FOR LOW- AND MODERATE-INCOME HOUSEHOLDS PER STATUTORY REQUIREMENTS. CDBG-DR IS THE ONLY FEDERAL DISASTER RESOURCE THAT PRIORITIZES LOW- AND MODERATE-INCOME HOUSEHOLDS. LOW- AND MODERATE-INCOME MEANS A FAMILY OR HOUSEHOLD WITH AN ANNUAL INCOME LESS THAN THE SECTION 8 LOW INCOME LIMIT, WHICH IS GENERALLY 80 PERCENT OF THE AREA MEDIAN INCOME. MOST ALLOCATIONS OF CDBG-DR AND CDBG-MIT FUNDS REQUIRE GRANTEES USE 70 PERCENT OF THE GRANT FUNDS TO BENEFIT LOW- AND MODERATE-INCOME PERSONS, HOWEVER GRANTEES MUST REVIEW THE APPLICABLE FEDERAL REGISTER NOTICE GOVERNING THE FUNDS TO CONFIRM THE REQUIREMENTS OF EACH GRANT. OVERALL, CDBG-DR FUNDS SHOULD BE USED TO ASSIST INDIVIDUALS, COMMUNITIES, AND/OR BUSINESSES SITUATED IN THE MOST IMPACTED AND DISTRESSED AREAS AFFECTED BY A PRESIDENTIALLY DECLARED DISASTER.; SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES: THE SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES ARE UNKNOWN AT THE TIME OF AWARD. | $585.7M | FY2025 | Aug 2025 – Aug 2031 |
| Department of the Interior | FY2025 FSM TRUST FUND PAYMENT FEDERATED STATES OF MICRONESIATRUST FUND FOR THE PEOPLE OF THE FEDERATED STATES OF MICRONESIA IN THE AMOUNT OF $250000000PERIOD OF AVAILABILITY 10012024 TO 09302025 | $250M | FY2025 | Oct 2024 – Sep 2025 |
| Department of the Interior | FY2024 COFA3 FSM TRUST FUND PAYMENT2TO PROVIDE THE USG CONTRIBUTION FUNDING TO THE TRUST FUNDOF THE PEOPLE OF THE FEDERATED STATES OF MICRONESIA | $232.7M | FY2024 | May 2024 – Jun 2024 |
| Department of Energy | BRIMSTONE COMMERCIAL, LLC (BRIMSTONE) WILL CONSTRUCT AND OPERATE A NEW PLANT TO COMMERCIALIZE A DEEPLY DECARBONIZED PROCESS FOR MAKING ORDINARY PORTLAND CEMENT (OPC) AND CO-PRODUCTS, INCLUDING SUPPLEMENTARY CEMENTITIOUS MATERIALS (SCM) AND SMELTER-GRADE ALUMINA (SGA). BRIMSTONE WILL DEVELOP A TRANSFORMATIVE TECHNOLOGY THAT APPLIES A CHEMICAL-BASED PROCESS FOR MAKING CEMENT THAT ELIMINATES PROCESS CARBON DIOXIDE (CO2) EMISSIONS ASSOCIATED WITH LIMESTONE PROCESSING. THE PROCESS ALSO INCLUDES THE PRODUCTION OF SCM FROM SILICEOUS RESIDUES TO REDUCE EMISSIONS ASSOCIATED WITH CONCRETE PRODUCTION AND HAS THE ABILITY TO INCORPORATE DIRECT AIR CAPTURE OF ATMOSPHERIC CO2 FROM MAGNESIUM-BEARING WASTE RESIDUE. THIS PROJECT WILL PRODUCE OPC AND SCMS FROM CARBON-FREE CALCIUM SILICATE ROCK USING A CLOSED ACID BENEFICIATION CYCLE. THE NEW PLANT’S SUCCESS, BY DEMONSTRATING A PATHWAY FOR ACHIEVING POSITIVE UNIT ECONOMICS FOR BRIMSTONE’S DECARBONIZED CEMENT PRODUCTION PROCESS, WILL DE-RISK THE BUSINESS MODEL AND SUPPORT NET-ZERO GOALS WHILE INCREASING SUPPLY RESILIENCY IN THE CEMENT AND ALUMINUM INDUSTRIES. THIS PROJECT PLANS TO PROVIDE TANGIBLE BENEFITS TO THE COMMUNITY BY CREATING UP TO 100 FAMILY-SUSTAINING OPERATIONS JOBS WITH COMPREHENSIVE BENEFITS, ENGAGING WITH LABOR UNIONS AND SUPPORTING THE USE OF NEGOTIATED AGREEMENTS FOR THE CONSTRUCTION AND OPERATION OF THE FACILITY. THIS PROJECT WILL ESTABLISH EARLY TWO-WAY ENGAGEMENT WITH COMMUNITY MEMBERS THROUGH A COMMUNITY ADVISORY COUNCIL, DEVELOP A LOCAL WORKFORCE DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM, AND ENSURE EQUITABLE ACCESS TO BENEFITS THROUGH PARTNERSHIPS WITH MINORITY SERVING INSTITUTIONS AND BUSINESSES MAJORITY-OWNED OR CONTROLLED BY UNDERREPRESENTED PERSONS OR GROUPS OF UNDERREPRESENTED PERSONS. | $189M | FY2025 | Jan 2025 – Sep 2033 |
| Department of Energy | BIPARTISAN INFRASTRUCTURE LAW (BIL): LIFSI: ELECTROLYTE SALT PRODUCTION FACILITY THE OBJECTIVE IS TO BUILD A 10KT COMMERCIAL SCALE FACILITY FOR THE DOMESTIC PRODUCTION OF LIFSI (LITHIUM (BIS) FLUOROSULFONYL IMIDE – LIN (SO2F)2) TO SUPPLY THE DOMESTIC PRODUCTION OF LIBS. THE NEW STATE-OF-THE-ART FACILITY IS EXPECTED TO BE CO-LOCATED AT THE EXISTING HONEYWELL PROPERTY IN GEISMAR, LOUISIANA. THE NEW LITHIUM SALT PLANT IS EXPECTED TO BE THE FIRST DOMESTIC PRODUCTION FACILITY FOR LIFSI. | $123.8M | FY2025 | Jan 2025 – Dec 2029 |
| Department of Education | THE PROJECT REQUESTS 50% OF THE HIGHER EDUCATION EMERGENCY RELIEF FUND FOR INSTITUTIONAL SUPPORT FROM THE DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION ASDIRECTED BY THE 2020 CARES ACT. | $118.4M | FY2020 | May 2020 – Jun 2024 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | HEAD START AND EARLY HEAD START | $103.4M | FY2017 | Jul 2017 – Feb 2023 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | HEAD START AND EARLY HEAD START | $103.3M | FY2023 | Mar 2023 – Feb 2028 |
| Department of Commerce | RECOVERY ACT - PENNSYLVANIA RESEARCH AND EDUCATION NETWORK (PENNREN) | $99.7M | FY2010 | Feb 2010 – Jun 2013 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | HEAD START AND EARLY HEAD START | $90M | FY2019 | Jul 2019 – Jun 2025 |
| Department of Education | THE PROJECT REQUESTS 50% OF THE DIRECT-TO-STUDENT ALLOCATION FROM THE DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION AS DIRECTED BY THE 2020 CARES ACT. | $86.3M | FY2020 | Apr 2020 – May 2022 |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | INDIAN HSG BLOCK GR | $74.6M | FY2012 | Oct 2011 – Sep 2034 |
| VA/DoDDepartment of Defense | 'MEDICAL TROPICAL RESEARCH LABORATORY PROGRAM' | $74.5M | FY2012 | Apr 2012 – Mar 2024 |
| Corporation for National and Community Service | AMERICORPS*STATE | $57.5M | FY2006 | Jul 2006 – Aug 2013 |
| Department of Transportation | APPLICATION PURPOSE: THE PURPOSE OF THIS AWARD IS TO PROVIDE PVTA WITH FUNDING FOR A PROGRAM OF CAPITAL PROJECTS THAT WILL MAINTAIN VEHICLES AND BUILDINGS IN A STATE OF GOOD REPAIR PROVIDE ESSENTIAL SERVICES AND ENHANCE REGIONAL TRANSIT PLANNING EFFORTS.; ACTIVITIES PERFORMED: ACTIVITIES TO BE PERFORMED INCLUDE:- THE ELECTRIFICATION AND EXPANSION OF PVTAS SPRINGFIELD OPERATIONS AND MAINTENANCE FACILITY LOCATED AT 655 COTTAGE STREET.- THE BUS BAY EXPANSION OF PVTAS UMASS AMHERST FACILITY LOCATED AT 185 HOLDSWORTH WAY AMHERST MA.- FENCING INSTALLATION AT PVTAS NORTHAMPTON FACILITY LOCATED AT 54 INDUSTRIAL DRIVE.; EXPECTED OUTCOMES: THESE ACTIVITIES WILL ALLOW PVTA TO CONTINUE TO SUPPORT THE COMMUNITY BY MAINTAINING A SAFE RELIABLE AND EFFICIENT PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION SYSTEM IN THE PIONEER VALLEY. ASSETS WILL BE MAINTAINED IN A STATE OF GOOD REPAIR AND UPGRADED IN ACCORDANCE WITH PVTAS TRANSIT ASSET MANAGEMENT PLAN.; INTENDED BENEFICIARIES: THE RESIDENTS OF THE PIONEER VALLEY TRANSIT AUTHORITYS SERVICE AREA AND LOCAL AREA COMMUTERS AND EMPLOYEES AS WELL AS HIGHER EDUCATION STUDENTS.; SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES: NONE | $55.5M | FY2024 | Sep 2024 – Sep 2028 |
| Department of Agriculture | DIRECT BB TREASURY RATE GRANT - (FY09-10) STIMULUS | $55.5M | FY2010 | Aug 2010 – Aug 2012 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | HIV EMERGENCY RELIEF PROJECT GRANTS | $55.2M | FY1991 | Apr 1991 – Feb 2019 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | HEALTH CENTER CLUSTER | $53.8M | FY2002 | Mar 2002 – Feb 2030 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | HEAD START AND EARLY HEAD START | $53.5M | FY2014 | Jan 2014 – Jun 2019 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | CONSORTIA FOR INNOVATIVE AIDS RESEARCH IN NONHUMAN PRIMATES | $52.9M | FY2016 | May 2016 – Apr 2022 |
| Department of Agriculture | DIRECT BB TREASURY RATE GRANT - (FY09-10) STIMULUS | $49.9M | FY2010 | Aug 2010 – Aug 2012 |
| Department of Commerce | PURPOSE: THE PURPOSE OF THE PROJECT IS TO ENHANCE ENMR TELEPHONE COOPERATIVE'S EXISTING NETWORK'S INFRASTRUCTURE BY CREATING ALTERNATE PATHS AND INCREASING RESILIENCY AND BANDWIDTH WITH UPGRADES AND NEW FIBER ROUTES. IT INCLUDES THE CONSTRUCTION OF FIVE NEW FIBER SEGMENTS, ONE OF WHICH COMPLETES A FIBER RING LINKING KERMIT, TEXAS TO JAL, NEW MEXICO IN THE SOUTHERN EDGE OF THE MIDDLE MILE NETWORK. THE OTHER FOUR NEW FIBER SEGMENTS WILL CREATE ALTERNATIVE DIVERSE PATHS CONNECTING SANTA FE AND ALBUQUERQUE, NEW MEXICO. THE APPLICANT'S EXISTING WHOLESALE CUSTOMERS WILL IMMEDIATELY BENEFIT FROM THE EXPANDED CAPACITY AND INCREASED RELIABILITY. THE APPLICANT'S OBJECTIVES FOR THE PROPOSED PROJECT INCLUDE ASSURANCE THAT LAST MILE PROVIDERS HAVE ACCESS TO AFFORDABLE MIDDLE MILE TRANSPORT TO THE INTERNET. ACTIVITIES TO BE PERFORMED: PROJECT WILL USE FIBER TO BUILD NEW AND RESILIENT MIDDLE MILE NETWORK THROUGH UNSERVED COMMUNITIES WITH A COMMITMENT TO OPEN ACCESS AND CARRIER NEUTRAL NON-DISCRIMINATORY INTERCONNECT. THE PERIOD OF PERFORMANCE IS EXPECTED TO BE 3 YEARS. EXPECTED OUTCOMES: THE APPLICANT HAS THE FOLLOWING GOALS AND DELIVERABLES FOR THIS PROJECT: 1. CONSTRUCTION OF FIVE NEW FIBER SEGMENTS TO IMPROVE REDUNDANCY AND DECREASE LATENCY AND UPGRADES TO TRANSPORT ELECTRONICS THROUGHOUT EASTERN NEW MEXICO AND WEST TEXAS. 2. UTILIZATION OF THE EXISTING CENTRAL OFFICE (CO) AND HUT ASSETS TO INSTALL AND OPERATE NEWLY PROPOSED TRANSPORT ELECTRONICS OBVIATING THE NEED TO CONSTRUCT NEW COS AND HUTS, FURTHER MITIGATING CONSTRUCTION COSTS. 3. INCREASE BANDWIDTH FOR THE ENTIRE NETWORK FROM UP TO 800 GBPS TO UP TO 16 TBPS ALLOWING LAST MILE PROVIDERS TO INCREASE UPLOAD SPEEDS FOR END-USERS, STRENGTHEN THE NETWORK AGAINST SINGLE POINTS OF FAILURE, AND PROVIDE REDUNDANCY. INTENDED BENEFICIARIES: THE AREAS THAT WILL BENEFIT FROM THIS PROJECT INCLUDE 29 NEW MEXICO AND 20 TEXAS COUNTIES, SERVING A SOCIO-ECONOMICALLY DIVERSE POPULATION OF 3.4 MILLION RESIDENTS AND 63 COMMUNITY ANCHOR INSTITUTIONS. THE SERVICE REGION INCLUDES BOTH URBAN AND RURAL SEGMENTS WITH POPULATION DENSITIES RANGING FROM 0.1 PER SQUARE MILE (LOVING COUNTY, TX) AND 0.3 (HARDING COUNTY, NM) TO 582.5 (BERNALILLO COUNTY, NM) AND 854.4 (EL PASO COUNTY, TX). THE PROJECT AREAS WILL BENEFIT IN THE FOLLOWING WAYS: 1. ATTRACTING ADDITIONAL LAST-MILE PROVIDERS TO THE UNSERVED AND UNDERSERVED END-USER LOCATIONS ALONG THE ROUTE. 2. EXTENDS BROADBAND INFRASTRUCTURE TO AREAS WITHOUT ACCESS TO LAST-MILE HIGH-SPEED TERRESTRIAL BROADBAND PROVIDERS. NEW MEXICO HAS THE HIGHEST PERCENTAGE OF RESIDENTS IN THE SOUTHWEST WITHOUT ADEQUATE BROADBAND INTERNET SERVICE WITH 22% OF NEW MEXICO RESIDENTS NOT HAVING ACCESS TO ADEQUATE BROADBAND INFRASTRUCTURE. IN AT LEAST FIVE OUT OF 33 NEW MEXICO COUNTIES, MORE THAN 40% OF HOUSEHOLDS DO NOT HAVE INTERNET ACCESS AT ALL. 3. INCREASING COMPETITION IN FIBER-TO-THE-PREMISE (FTTP) END USER MARKER BY REDUCING COSTS TO LAST-MILE PROVIDERS. 4. IMPROVING REDUNDANCY BETWEEN ALBUQUERQUE AND SANTA FE. 5. INTRODUCING NEW HIGH-CAPACITY DWDM NODES TO THE LESS POPULATED TOWNS OF RATON AND MAXWELL, NEW MEXICO6. EXTENDING ACCESS TO AREAS WITHOUT CURRENT ACCESS TO LAST-MILE HIGH-SPEED TERRESTRIAL BROADBAND PROVIDERS. 7. INCREASING BROADBAND UPLOAD AND DOWNLOAD SPEEDS FOR END-USERS, ALLOWING MORE ISP PROVIDERS TO PARTICIPATE IN THE MARKET AT A LOWER COSTS FROM INCREASED CAPACITY. SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES: THE APPLICANT WILL SUBAWARD FUNDS TO BACA VALLEY TELEPHONE COMPANY, INC. AND DELCOM, INC. FOR THE CONSTRUCTION OF NETWORK INFRASTRUCTURE IN THEIR RESPECTIVE SERVICE AREAS. | $49.9M | FY2023 | Jul 2023 – Jun 2028 |
| VA/DoDDepartment of Defense | PRODUCTION SCALING OF CRITICAL CHEMICALS | $49.6M | FY2024 | Dec 2023 – Dec 2027 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | PA-22 FYPD & PA-25 EARLY HEAD START | $49.4M | — | — – Dec 2013 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | HEALTH CENTER CLUSTER | $49.3M | FY2002 | Jun 2002 – May 2027 |
| Department of Agriculture | DIRECT BB TREASURY RATE GRANT - (FY09-10) STIMULUS | $48.9M | FY2010 | May 2010 – May 2012 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | HEALTH CENTER CLUSTER | $48.8M | FY2003 | Mar 2003 – Feb 2019 |
| Department of Education | GAINING EARLY AWARENESS AND READINESS FOR UNDERGRADUATE PROGRAMS (GEAR UP PARTNERSHIP) | $47M | FY2011 | Sep 2011 – Sep 2019 |
| Department of Education | COLLEGE NOW - CAREER CONNECTED! | $45.4M | FY2019 | Oct 2018 – Sep 2025 |
| Department of Commerce | TRANSFORMING NE OHIO: FROM RUST BELT TO TECH POWERHOUSE - AN OHIO MIDDLE MILE CONSORTIUM PROJECT | $44.8M | FY2010 | Jul 2010 – Sep 2013 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | NOVEL HETEROLOGOUS ADENOVIRUS PRIME-BOOST HIV-1 VACCINE | $44M | FY2008 | Aug 2008 – Jul 2013 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | HEAD START AND EARLY HEAD START | $43.9M | FY2020 | Jul 2020 – Jun 2025 |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | STATE ADM SMALL CITY | $43.7M | FY2011 | Jul 2011 – — |
| Department of Health and Human Services | HEALTH CENTER CLUSTER | $42.6M | FY2002 | Apr 2002 – Mar 2019 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | HEAD START PROGRAM | $42.6M | FY1999 | Jul 1999 – Jun 2025 |
| Department of Energy | PROPOSING A PROJECT TO OPTIMIZE OUR RURAL, TRI-STATE SERVICE AREA'S ACCESS TO AN ABUNDANCE OF REGIONAL RENEWABLE ENERGY. WE RECOGNIZE THE UNIQUE CHALLENGES FACED BY THESE COMMUNITIES, OFTEN CHARACTERIZED BY SPARSE POPULATIONS AND LIMITED ACCESS TO EXISTING INFRASTRUCTURE. | $42.3M | FY2025 | Jan 2025 – Dec 2029 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | HEALTH CENTER CLUSTER | $40.3M | FY2005 | Dec 2004 – Mar 2030 |
| Department of Education | TEACHER INCENTIVE FUND | $40.1M | FY2017 | Oct 2016 – Sep 2022 |
| Department of Transportation | IMPROVE EXISTING AIRPORT | $39M | FY2014 | Sep 2014 – Sep 2017 |
| Department of Agriculture | DIRECT BB TREASURY RATE GRANT - (FY09-10) STIMULUS | $38.5M | FY2010 | May 2010 – May 2012 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | HEALTH CENTER CLUSTER | $38.4M | FY2002 | Dec 2001 – Mar 2020 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | DF/HCC RENAL CANCER SPORE | $38.4M | FY2003 | Sep 2003 – Aug 2026 |
| Department of Agriculture | DIRECT BB TREASURY RATE GRANT - (FY09-10) STIMULUS | $38.3M | FY2010 | Apr 2010 – Apr 2012 |
| Corporation for National and Community Service | THIS AWARD FUNDS THE APPROVED 2022?23 AMERICORPS FORMULA PROGRAMS, AS LISTED ON THE APPROVED PROGRAM AND FUNDING SUMMARY CHARTS. NO MEMBER MAY ENROLL PRIOR TO THE APPROVED START DATE OF THE MEMBER ENROLLMENT PERIOD. YOUR 2022?23 REGULATORY MATCH IS 35%, AND YOUR BUDGETARY MATCH IS 38%. PLANNING GRANTS MAY ONLY OPERATE FOR ONE YEAR. BOYS AND GIRLS CLUB OF PHARR: FUND CURRENT ACTIVITIES. TO DO THIS, WE WILL EXPAND SERVICE BY INCREASING THE NUMBER OF SLOTS BY 38. COLLEGIATE EDU-NATION: FUND CURRENT ACTIVITIES. TO DO THIS, WE WILL EXPAND SERVICE BY INCREASING THE NUMBER OF SLOTS BY 14. CREATIVE ACTION: FUND CURRENT ACTIVITIES. TO DO THIS, WE WILL EXPAND SERVICE BY INCREASING THE NUMBER OF SLOTS BY 12. FORT BEND FAMILY HEALTH CENTER, INC.: FUND CURRENT ACTIVITIES. TO DO THIS, WE WILL EXPAND SERVICE BY INCREASING THE NUMBER OF SLOTS BY 20. GIRL SCOUTS OF SOUTH TEXAS: FUND CURRENT ACTIVITIES. TO DO THIS, WE WILL EXPAND SERVICE BY INCREASING THE NUMBER OF SLOTS BY 20. HEALTH 360, INC.: FUND CURRENT ACTIVITIES. TO DO THIS, WE WILL EXPAND SERVICE BY INCREASING THE NUMBER OF SLOTS BY 0. HOMEWARD BOUND, INC.: FUND CURRENT ACTIVITIES. TO DO THIS, WE WILL EXPAND SERVICE BY INCREASING THE NUMBER OF SLOTS BY 0. TEXAS ASSOCIATION OF REGIONAL COUNCILS: FUND CURRENT ACTIVITIES. TO DO THIS, WE WILL EXPAND SERVICE BY INCREASING THE NUMBER OF SLOTS BY 0. TEXAS SOUTHMOST COLLEGE DISTRICT: FUND CURRENT ACTIVITIES. TO DO THIS, WE WILL EXPAND SERVICE BY INCREASING THE NUMBER OF SLOTS BY 0. | $37.7M | FY2022 | Aug 2022 – Aug 2025 |
| VA/DoDDepartment of Defense | DEFENSE PRODUCTION ACT (DPA)TITLE III PROGRAM, ACCELERATED FEASIBILITY STUDY PROGRAM TO DEVELOP A COMPLETE U.S.-BASED GRAPHITE ANODE/ADVANCED MATERIAL | $37.3M | FY2023 | Jul 2023 – Aug 2025 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | HEALTH CENTER CLUSTER | $37.3M | FY2002 | Dec 2001 – Mar 2027 |
| Department of Energy | HIGH VOLUME MANUFACTURING OF LIPF6 - A CRITICAL LITHIUM-ION BATTERY MATERIAL | $37.3M | FY2010 | Apr 2010 – Sep 2013 |
| Agency for International Development | NEW COOPERATIVE AGREEMENT FOR UGANDA | $36.7M | FY2018 | Oct 2017 – Sep 2024 |
| Department of Transportation | PVTA FFY 2020 CARES ACT OPERATING GRANT | $36.6M | FY2020 | May 2020 – Dec 2027 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | HEAD START AND EARLY HEAD START | $36.4M | FY2015 | Jul 2015 – Jun 2020 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | HEALTH CENTER CLUSTER | $36.3M | FY2002 | Feb 2002 – Jan 2020 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | HEALTH CENTER CLUSTER | $35.8M | FY2002 | Apr 2002 – Mar 2030 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | HIV EMERGENCY RELIEF PROJECT GRANTS | $35.6M | FY1991 | Apr 1991 – Feb 2028 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | HEAD START AND EARLY HEAD START | $35.2M | FY2019 | Oct 2018 – Dec 2024 |
| Department of Agriculture | RECONNECT 100% GRANT INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENTS AND JOBS ACT | $35M | FY2023 | Mar 2023 – Mar 2025 |
| Department of Agriculture | RECONNECT 100% GRANT INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENTS AND JOBS ACT | $35M | FY2023 | May 2023 – May 2025 |
| Department of Agriculture | RECONNECT 100% GRANT INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENTS AND JOBS ACT | $35M | FY2023 | May 2023 – May 2025 |
| Department of Agriculture | RECONNECT 100% GRANT INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENTS AND JOBS ACT | $34.9M | FY2023 | Jun 2023 – Jun 2025 |
| Department of Agriculture | RECONNECT 100% GRANT INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENTS AND JOBS ACT | $34.9M | FY2024 | Jun 2024 – Jun 2026 |
| Department of Agriculture | PILOT BROADBAND 100% GRANT- RBS REDG SUB ACCOUNT SEC. 762- GRANT | $34.9M | FY2024 | Jun 2024 – Jun 2026 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | HEALTH CENTER CLUSTER | $34.6M | FY2002 | Feb 2002 – Jan 2027 |
| Department of Agriculture | RECONNECT 100% GRANT INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENTS AND JOBS ACT | $34.5M | FY2022 | Sep 2022 – Sep 2024 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | CHEMOPROPHYLAXIS FOR HIV PREVENTION IN MEN | $34.4M | FY2005 | Aug 2005 – Jan 2012 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | HEALTH CENTER CLUSTER | $33.6M | FY2004 | Dec 2003 – Jan 2028 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | HEALTH CENTER CLUSTER | $33.3M | FY2002 | Jun 2002 – May 2020 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | HEAD START AND EARLY HEAD START | $33.2M | FY2024 | Oct 2023 – Dec 2028 |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | INDIAN HSG BLOCK GR | $32.4M | FY2012 | Oct 2011 – Sep 2035 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | HEAD START & EARLY HEAD START | $31.7M | FY2013 | Jul 2013 – Sep 2018 |
| Department of Education | COLLEGE READY, CAREER SET! | $31.7M | FY2019 | Oct 2018 – Sep 2025 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | HEALTH CENTER CLUSTER | $31.6M | FY2002 | Jun 2002 – May 2020 |
| Department of Agriculture | PILOT BROADBAND 100% GRANT- RBS REDG SUB ACCOUNT SEC. 762- GRANT | $31M | FY2024 | Jun 2024 – Jun 2026 |
| Department of Agriculture | DIRECT BB TREASURY RATE GRANT - (FY09-10) STIMULUS | $30.8M | FY2010 | Aug 2010 – Aug 2012 |
| Department of Education | THE INDYEAST PROMISE NEIGHBORHOOD INITIATIVE WILL CREATE A PIPELINE OF SERVICES TO IMPROVE THE EDUCATIONAL OUTCOMES OF CHILDREN LIVING AND ATTENDING SCHOOL IN THE TARGETED GEOGRAPHY. | $30M | FY2022 | Jan 2022 – Dec 2026 |
| Department of the Interior | 2009-COFA-FSM-EDUCATION-FY09 | $29.9M | FY2009 | Oct 2008 – Sep 2013 |
| Department of Agriculture | PILOT BROADBAND GRANT | $29.3M | FY2022 | Jul 2022 – Jul 2024 |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | INDIAN HOUSING BLOCK GRANTS | $29M | FY2013 | Jul 2013 – Sep 2034 |
| Department of Commerce | EAST TEXAS MEDICAL AND EDUCATIONAL FIBER OPTIC NETWORK | $28.8M | FY2010 | Aug 2010 – Sep 2013 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | CONSORTIUM FOR AIDS VACCINE RESEARCH IN NONHUMAN PRIMATES | $28.6M | FY2011 | Jul 2011 – Jun 2017 |
| Department of Commerce | AMERICAN RECOVERY AND REINVESTMENT ACT - SBA - 21ST CENTURY INFORMATION AND SUPPORT ECOSYSTEM: MAKE IT EASY WHERE YOU ARE | $28.5M | FY2010 | Apr 2010 – Mar 2013 |
| Department of the Interior | CSG-FSM-2008-EDU - EDUCATION SECTOR GRANT | $28.4M | FY2007 | Sep 2007 – Sep 2012 |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | STATE ADM SMALL CITY | $28.3M | FY2012 | Jul 2012 – — |
| Department of the Interior | 2010-COFA-FSM-EDUCATION-FY10 -EDUCATION SECTOR GRANT | $28.2M | FY2010 | Oct 2009 – Sep 2010 |
| Department of Energy | TAS::89 0328::TAS RECOVERY NEW AWARD NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REGULATORY UTILITY COMMISSIONERS, EASTERN INTERCONNECTION B. THE OBJECTIVE OF THIS PROJ | $28M | FY2010 | Jun 2010 – Jun 2015 |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | STATE ADM SMALL CITY | $27.8M | FY2013 | Aug 2013 – — |
| Department of Health and Human Services | HEALTH CENTER CLUSTER | $27.7M | FY2007 | Jul 2007 – Apr 2027 |
| Department of the Interior | FY2026-COFA-FSM-RECON FY23-18 | $27.7M | FY2026 | May 2026 – Sep 2026 |
| Corporation for National and Community Service | THIS AWARD FUNDS THE APPROVED 2025?26 AMERICORPS FORMULA PROGRAM(S), AS LISTED ON THE APPROVED PROGRAM AND FUNDING SUMMARY CHARTS. NO MEMBER MAY ENROLL PRIOR TO THE APPROVED START DATE OF THE MEMBER ENROLLMENT PERIOD. YOUR 2025?26 BUDGETARY MATCH IS 27.22%. | $27.6M | FY2025 | Aug 2025 – Aug 2028 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | HOPE - HIV OBSTRUCTION BY PROGRAMMED EPIGENETICS - PROJECT SUMMARY/ABSTACT AFTER 40 YEARS, A CURE FOR PEOPLE LIVING WITH HIV (PLWH) REMAINS BOTH ELUSIVE AND ONE OF NIAID/NIH’S HIGHEST PRIORITIES. REBOUND-COMPETENT LATENT RESERVOIR CELLS PERSIST DESPITE ANTIRETROVIRAL THERAPY AND REKINDLE INFECTION DUE TO THE LACK OF EFFICIENT PROVIRAL SILENCING. THE UNDERLYING HYPOTHESIS OF THE HIV OBSTRUCTION BY PROGRAMMED EPIGENETICS (HOPE) COLLABORATORY APPLICATION IS A NOVEL “BLOCK-LOCK-EXCISE” APPROACH—THAT ENTAILS THE LONG-TERM DURABLE SILENCING OF VIRAL EXPRESSION TOWARDS PERMANENT EXCISION OF THE LATENT PROVIRUS—WILL LEAD TO THE PERMANENT CONTROL OF THE VIRUS IN THE ABSENCE OF THERAPY. A GRADED TRANSFORMATION OF REMNANT HIV IN PLWH IS PROPOSED FROM LATENT INTO SILENT TO PERMANENTLY DEFECTIVE PROVIRUSES, THUS EMULATING AND ACCELERATING THE NATURAL PATH THAT HUMAN ENDOGENOUS RETROVIRUSES HAVE TAKEN IN THE HUMAN GENOME OVER MILLIONS OF YEARS. THIS HYPOTHESIS WAS FORMULATED ON THE BASIS OF 30+ YEARS OF DEDICATED RESEARCH BY HOPE INVESTIGATORS INTO THE UNDERLYING MECHANISMS OF HIV LATENCY, LACK OF SUCCESS TO DATE WITH LATENCY-REVERSING STRATEGIES, RECENT RESULTS WITH TAT INHIBITOR DIDEHYDRO-CORTISTATIN A (DCA) AND ELITE CONTROLLERS SHOWING THAT A SUCCESSFUL ‘FUNCTIONAL’ HIV CURE COULD ARISE IF THERE IS A DEEP SILENCING OF RESERVOIR VIRUS, AND THE AVAILABILITY OF ADVANCED GENOME- ENGINEERING TECHNOLOGIES (BREC1 RECOMBINASE, PEPTIDE NUCLEIC ACIDS, CRISPR-BASE EDITORS) FOR DIRECT DELIVERY OF THE FINAL COUP DE GRACE: EXCISION OF REMNANT VIRUS FOR PERMANENT CURE. THE CENTRAL HYPOTHESIS WILL BE TESTED IN THREE RESEARCH FOCUSES (RFS) AND FIVE CENTRAL OBJECTIVES SHARED BETWEEN THE THREE RFS. SPECIFIC AIM (RF) 1: DEFINE MECHANISTICALLY THE DURABLE TRANSCRIPTIONAL SILENCING OF HIV ACROSS ALL T- AND MYELOID CELL SUBSETS BY COMBINATORIAL TARGETING OF KEY HOST AND VIRAL FACTORS. SPECIFIC AIM (RF) 2: DEVELOP AND CHARACTERIZE NEXT- GENERATION HIV SILENCING APPROACHES IN THE CONTROL OF HIV REBOUND. SPECIFIC AIM (RF) 3: DISABLE THE SILENCED HIV-1 PROVIRUS BY TARGETED GENOME ENGINEERING. OBJECTIVE 1: DETERMINE THE EPIGENETIC ARCHITECTURE OF THE INTEGRATED PROVIRUS AT DIFFERENT INTEGRATION SITES THAT PREVENTS PERMANENT SILENCING OF LATENT HIV. OBJECTIVE 2: DEFINE, AT THE MOLECULAR LEVEL, CELL TYPES AND EPIGENETIC CELL STATES THAT FAVOR VIRAL REBOUND. OBJECTIVE 3: IDENTIFY MOLECULAR FUNCTIONS OF TAT AND HOST FACTORS THAT PREVENT PERMANENT SILENCING. OBJECTIVE 4: LEARN FROM HERV SILENCING AND MUTATIONAL DECAY IN THE HUMAN GENOME. OBJECTIVE 5: RESPOND TO COMMUNITY EXPECTATIONS AROUND ‘FUNCTIONAL’ AND ‘CLASSICAL’ CURE APPROACHES. THE HOPE COLLABORATORY PARTNERED WITH THE SAN FRANCISCO AIDS FOUNDATION TO BUILD A STRONG ART-BASED COMMUNITY EDUCATION PROGRAM AND WITH THREE PRIMARY INDUSTRY LEADERS, AMGEN, SANGAMO AND CONSTELLATION, WHO WILL PROVIDE INTELLECTUAL AND MATERIALISTIC SUPPORT. WE ALSO ENGAGED WITH FOUR CLINICAL COHORTS OF PLWH FOR CLINICAL SAMPLE ANALYSIS IN THE US, BRAZIL AND AFRICA. COLLECTIVELY, THE INNOVATIVE SCIENCE, RENOWNED MEMBERS, COLLABORATIVE ORGANIZATIONAL STRUCTURE AND MILESTONE- DRIVEN RESEARCH PLAN OF THE HOPE COLLABORATORY REPRESENTS A NEW AND SUBSTANTIVE DEPARTURE FROM THE STATUS QUO AND PROMISES A FUNDAMENTAL NEW APPROACH TO HIV CURE STRATEGIES. | $27.3M | FY2021 | Aug 2021 – Apr 2027 |
| Department of the Interior | 2009-COFA-FSM-INFRASTRUCTUE-WENO ROAD PHASE 1 | $27.2M | FY2009 | Apr 2009 – Sep 2014 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | HEAD START AND EARLY HEAD START | $27.1M | FY2020 | Jul 2020 – Jul 2025 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | HEALTH CENTER CLUSTER | $27M | FY2002 | Jun 2002 – May 2027 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | HEAD START FULL YEAR/PART DAY | $26.8M | FY2001 | Feb 2001 – Jun 2013 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | HEAD START/HANDICAPPED SERVICES - FULL YEAR/PART DAY | $26.3M | FY2001 | Nov 2000 – Oct 2014 |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | STATE ADM SMALL CITY | $26.1M | FY2014 | Aug 2014 – — |
| Department of the Interior | TRIBALLY CONTROLLED COLLEGE ASSISTANCE | $25.5M | FY2019 | Jul 2019 – Jun 2024 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | HEALTH CENTER CLUSTER | $25.5M | FY2005 | Dec 2004 – Mar 2019 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | HEALTH CENTER CLUSTER | $25.3M | FY2002 | Jul 2002 – Feb 2020 |
| Department of Agriculture | DIRECT BB TREASURY RATE GRANT - (FY09-10) STIMULUS | $25.3M | FY2010 | Sep 2010 – Sep 2012 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | MECHANISMS OF STATE SWITCHING IN SLEEP AND SLEEP APNEA | $25.1M | FY2010 | Mar 2010 – May 2021 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | HEALTH CENTER CLUSTER | $25M | FY2002 | Apr 2002 – Mar 2030 |
| Department of Agriculture | RECONNECT 100% GRANT INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENTS AND JOBS ACT | $25M | FY2023 | Aug 2023 – Aug 2025 |
| Department of Agriculture | RECONNECT 100% GRANT INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENTS AND JOBS ACT | $25M | FY2023 | Aug 2023 – Aug 2025 |
| Department of Agriculture | RECONNECT 100% GRANT INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENTS AND JOBS ACT | $25M | FY2023 | Aug 2023 – Aug 2025 |
| Department of Agriculture | RECONNECT 100% GRANT INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENTS AND JOBS ACT | $25M | FY2023 | Aug 2023 – Aug 2025 |
| Department of Agriculture | MEAT AND POULTRY PROCESSING EXPANSION PROGRAM GRANTS - ARP | $25M | FY2023 | Mar 2023 – Mar 2025 |
| Department of Agriculture | PILOT BROADBAND GRANT | $25M | FY2022 | Sep 2022 – Sep 2024 |
| Department of Agriculture | RECONNECT 100% GRANT INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENTS AND JOBS ACT | $25M | FY2023 | Feb 2023 – Feb 2025 |
| Department of Agriculture | PILOT BROADBAND 100% GRANT- RBS REDG SUB ACCOUNT SEC. 762- GRANT | $25M | FY2022 | Jun 2022 – Jun 2024 |
| Department of Agriculture | RECONNECT 100% GRANT INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENTS AND JOBS ACT | $25M | FY2023 | Jun 2023 – Jun 2025 |
| Department of Agriculture | RECONNECT 100% GRANT INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENTS AND JOBS ACT | $25M | FY2023 | Mar 2023 – Mar 2025 |
| Department of Agriculture | RECONNECT 100% GRANT INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENTS AND JOBS ACT | $25M | FY2022 | Sep 2022 – Sep 2024 |
| Department of Agriculture | RECONNECT 100% GRANT INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENTS AND JOBS ACT | $24.9M | FY2023 | Jul 2023 – Jul 2025 |
| Department of Agriculture | PILOT BROADBAND LOAN GRANT COMBO - GRANT | $24.9M | FY2022 | Aug 2022 – Aug 2024 |
| Department of Agriculture | RECONNECT 100% GRANT INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENTS AND JOBS ACT | $24.8M | FY2022 | Sep 2022 – Sep 2024 |
| Department of Agriculture | RECONNECT 100% GRANT INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENTS AND JOBS ACT | $24.8M | FY2022 | Sep 2022 – Sep 2024 |
| Department of Agriculture | DIRECT BB TREASURY RATE GRANT - (FY09-10) STIMULUS | $24.7M | FY2010 | Apr 2010 – Apr 2012 |
| Department of Agriculture | PILOT BROADBAND GRANT | $24.7M | FY2022 | Jun 2022 – Jun 2024 |
| Department of Agriculture | RECONNECT 100% GRANT INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENTS AND JOBS ACT | $24.6M | FY2023 | Jul 2023 – Jul 2025 |
| Department of Education | RHODE ISLAND GEAR UP | $24.5M | FY2017 | Sep 2017 – Sep 2024 |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT BLOCK GRANTS/STATE'S PROGRAM AND NON-ENTITLEMENT GRANTS IN HAWAII | $24.4M | — | — – — |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | STATE ADM SMALL CITY | $24.3M | FY2015 | Jul 2015 – — |
| Department of Agriculture | SEC. 779 BB RECONNECT CORONAVIRUS AID, RELIEF AND ECON SECURITY (CARES) - GRANTS | $24.3M | FY2020 | Jul 2020 – Jul 2022 |
| Department of Agriculture | RECONNECT 100% GRANT INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENTS AND JOBS ACT | $24.3M | FY2023 | Jul 2023 – Jul 2025 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | HEAD START AND EARLY HEAD START | $24.2M | FY2019 | Apr 2019 – Sep 2024 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | HEALTH CENTER CLUSTER | $24.1M | FY2002 | Jan 2002 – Dec 2026 |
| Department of Agriculture | PILOT BROADBAND GRANT | $24M | FY2022 | Sep 2022 – Sep 2024 |
| Department of Agriculture | RECONNECT 100% GRANT INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENTS AND JOBS ACT | $23.8M | FY2023 | Feb 2023 – Feb 2025 |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT BLOCK GRANTS/STATE'S PROGRAM AND NON-ENTITLEMENT GRANTS IN HAWAII | $23.6M | — | — – — |
| Department of Health and Human Services | HEAD START AND EARLY HEAD START | $23.6M | FY2015 | Nov 2014 – Jun 2020 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | DECODING THE MULTIFACTORIAL ETIOLOGY OF NEURAL NETWORK DYSFUNCTION IN ALZHEIMER'S DISEASE - SUPPLEMENT – SUMMARY TAU CONTRIBUTES TO ALZHEIMER’S DISEASE (AD) AND MANY OTHER BRAIN DISEASES. HOWEVER, IT IS UNCERTAIN HOW TAU CAUSES NEURONAL DYSFUNCTION AND DEGENERATION, IN PART BECAUSE EXPERIMENTAL MODELS ARE NOT OPTIMIZED TO COMPARE THE RELATIVE PATHOGENICITY OF DIFFERENT TAU SPECIES IN DISEASE-RELEVANT CONTEXTS. MUTATIONS IN MAPT, THE GENE ENCODING TAU, CAUSE FRONTOTEMPORAL LOBAR DEGENERATION (FTLD) INSTEAD OF AD. IN CONTRAST, THE RARE A152T VARIANT OF TAU INCREASES RISK FOR BOTH TYPES OF DISEASES. THESE ASSOCIATIONS MERIT FURTHER EXPLORATION, ESPECIALLY AS MODELS EXPRESSING FTLD-MUTANT TAU ARE WIDELY USED TO STUDY TAU IN AD AND TO DEVELOP NOVEL AD TREATMENTS. CLINICAL AD ONSET IS PRECEDED BY ABNORMAL ACCUMULATIONS OF AMYLOID-B (AB) PEPTIDES IN BRAIN, AND MANY AD PATIENTS HAVE AT LEAST ONE APOLIPOPROTEIN (APO) E4 ALLELE, THE MOST IMPORTANT GENETIC RISK FACTOR FOR AD. THEREFORE, PROJECT 3 WILL GENERATE NEW MOUSE MODELS COMBINING HUMAN AB AND APOE4 EXPRESSION WITH NEAR-PHYSIOLOGICAL LEVELS OF HUMAN TAU THAT IS WILDTYPE, AS IN MOST AD PATIENTS, OR CARRIES THE A152T SUBSTITUTION, WHICH INCREASES AD RISK. COMPREHENSIVE FUNCTIONAL, PATHOLOGICAL, AND TRANSCRIPTOMIC ANALYSES OF THE NEW MODELS, TO BE CARRIED OUT IN COLLABORATION WITH PROJECTS 1, 2, AND 4 AND CORE B, SHOULD YIELD NEW INSIGHTS INTO DIFFERENTIAL EFFECTS OF THESE TAU SPECIES AND THEIR ROLES IN THE PATHOGENESIS OF DEMENTIA. PROJECT 3 WILL ALSO INVESTIGATE WHETHER TAU SPECIES THAT INCREASE AD RISK OR CAUSE FTLD DIFFER IN THEIR EFFECTS ON THE INTEGRITY AND FUNCTIONS OF NEURONS AND NEURAL NETWORKS. UNTIL WE KNOW WHICH FORMS OF TAU ARE MOST PATHOGENIC IN DIFFERENT CONDITIONS, THE MOST PRAGMATIC THERAPEUTIC APPROACH TO TAU IN OUR VIEW IS PARTIAL REDUCTION OF OVERALL TAU LEVELS, WHICH IS WELL TOLERATED AND HAS BENEFITS IN MORE CONVENTIONAL MODELS. WE WILL THEREFORE USE TAU-TARGETING ANTISENSE OLIGONUCLEOTIDES TO REDUCE HUMAN TAU LEVELS IN MODELS CO-EXPRESSING HUMAN AB AND APOE4. SINGLE-NUCLEUS/SINGLE-CELL TRANSCRIPTOMIC ANALYSES WILL BE USED TO IDENTIFY CELL-TYPE-SPECIFIC GENE EXPRESSION CHANGES AS WELL AS NOVEL MOLECULAR AND CELLULAR MECHANISMS THAT MAY MEDIATE PATHOGENIC EFFECTS OF TAU OR BENEFICIAL EFFECTS OF TAU REDUCTION. THESE ANALYSES WILL HELP PROJECTS 1 AND 2 DISTINGUISH BETWEEN PATHOGENIC MECHANISMS OF APOE4 AND AB THAT DO OR DO NOT DEPEND ON TAU. THEY COULD ALSO IDENTIFY NOVEL MOLECULAR AND CELLULAR MECHANISMS THAT MEDIATE TAU SEQUENCE-SPECIFIC EFFECTS. THE REQUESTED SUPPLEMENT WILL ALLOW A POSTDOCTORAL SCHOLAR FROM A BACKGROUND THAT IS UNDERREPRESENTED IN THE HEALTH-RELATED SCIENCES TO CONTRIBUTE TO THE EXPERIMENTS PROPOSED IN PROJECT 3 AND, AT THE SAME TIME, TO BENEFIT FROM TRAINING WITHIN THE LARGER CONTEXT OF THIS AD-FOCUSED INTERDISCIPLINARY PROGRAM. | $23.4M | FY2021 | Aug 2021 – Jul 2026 |
| Department of Agriculture | PILOT BROADBAND 100% GRANT- RBS REDG SUB ACCOUNT SEC. 762- GRANT | $23.3M | FY2021 | Mar 2021 – Mar 2023 |
| Department of the Interior | DESIGN AND CONSTRUCTION OF THE WEST RIVER AND LYMAN JONES RURAL WATER SYSTEM | $23.3M | FY1994 | Mar 1994 – Sep 2008 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | I4C 2.0: IMMUNOTHERAPY FOR CURE - SUMMARY THE GOALS OF I4C 2.0 ARE TO ADVANCE OUR SCIENTIFIC UNDERSTANDING OF THE VIRAL RESERVOIR AND TO DEVELOP IMMUNOLOGIC STRATEGIES FOR HIV-1 REMISSION AND ERADICATION BY A HIGHLY COLLABORATIVE AND MULTIFACETED RESEARCH PROGRAM INVOLVING PARTNERSHIPS AMONG ACADEMIA, INDUSTRY, GOVERNMENT, AND THE COMMUNITY. OUR OVERALL HYPOTHESIS IS THAT MULTIPLE IMMUNOLOGIC STRATEGIES WILL NEED TO BE EXPLORED AND COMBINED TO ACHIEVE LONG-TERM, ART- FREE VIROLOGIC CONTROL OR COMPLETE VIRUS ERADICATION, WITH THE GOAL OF SELECTING COMBINATION REGIMENS TO ADVANCE INTO CLINICAL DEVELOPMENT BY THE END OF THE PROPOSED PERIOD OF SUPPORT. WE PROPOSE THREE RESEARCH FOCI, A MANAGEMENT AND OPERATIONS SECTION, AND A COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT SECTION. FOCUS 1 (MECHANISTIC BASIS OF RESERVOIR TARGETING AND VIRAL PERSISTENCE) AIM 1. TO DEFINE A VIROLOGIC, IMMUNOLOGIC, AND TRANSCRIPTOMIC SIGNATURE OF VIRAL PERSISTENCE AND REBOUND AND TO DETERMINE HOW IMMUNOLOGIC STRATEGIES TARGET THE VIRAL RESERVOIR IN NHPS AND HUMANS AIM 2. TO DEFINE DRIVERS OF CLONAL EXPANSION AND PERSISTENCE OF THE REPLICATION-COMPETENT VIRAL RESERVOIR IN NHPS AND HUMANS TO ENHANCE RESERVOIR CONTROL AND ELIMINATION FOCUS 2 (NOVEL STRATEGIES FOR SUSTAINED VIRUS REMISSION) AIM 1. TO EVALUATE INNOVATIVE IMMUNE ENGINEERING STRATEGIES THAT PROVIDE LONG-TERM T CELL OR ENV-DIRECTED IMMUNE CONTROL, INCLUDING THERAPEUTIC VACCINES, CAR-T CELLS, AND ENGINEERED B CELLS AIM 2. TO COMBINE APPROACHES THAT AUGMENT HUMORAL AND CELLULAR IMMUNE RESPONSES TO ACHIEVE SUSTAINED IMMUNOSURVEILLANCE AND LONG-TERM ART-FREE VIROLOGIC CONTROL FOCUS 3 (NOVEL STRATEGIES FOR VIRUS ERADICATION) AIM 1. TO EVALUATE INNOVATIVE STRATEGIES FOR RAPID ELIMINATION OF THE MAJORITY OF THE VIRAL RESERVOIR, INCLUDING IMPROVED LRAS COMBINED WITH BNABS, ACTIVATED NK CELLS, AND CAR-T CELLS AIM 2. TO COMBINE THE MOST EFFECTIVE APPROACH TO RAPIDLY ELIMINATE THE MAJORITY OF THE VIRAL RESERVOIR WITH SUSTAINED IMMUNOSURVEILLANCE TO ELIMINATE THE RESIDUAL VIRAL RESERVOIR MANAGEMENT AND OPERATIONS (MO) SECTION COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT (CE) SECTION | $23.3M | FY2021 | Aug 2021 – Apr 2027 |
| Agency for International Development | ENERGY REGULATORY PARTNERSHIP PROGRAM (ERRP) | $23.1M | FY2016 | Jul 2016 – Aug 2025 |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT BLOCK GRANTS/STATE'S PROGRAM AND NON-ENTITLEMENT GRANTS IN HAWAII | $23.1M | FY2018 | Oct 2017 – — |
| Department of Agriculture | RECONNECT 100% GRANT INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENTS AND JOBS ACT | $23M | FY2024 | Jun 2024 – Jun 2026 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | HEAD START FULL YEAR - CENTER BASED | $22.5M | FY2007 | May 2007 – Jun 2014 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | HEALTH CENTER CLUSTER | $22.5M | FY2002 | Jan 2002 – Dec 2018 |
| Department of Commerce | THE BROADBAND INFRASTRUCTURE DEPLOYMENT PROJECT PROPOSES TO INSTALL MIDDLE MILE AND LAST MILE FIBER AND LAST MILE FIXED WIRELESS DIRECTLY CONNECTING 408 UNSERVED NATIVE AMERICAN HOUSEHOLDS WITH FIBER-TO-THE-HOME 100 MBPS/100 MBPS SERVICE. | $22.5M | FY2022 | Aug 2022 – Jul 2026 |
| Department of Agriculture | PILOT BROADBAND GRANT | $22.2M | FY2022 | Aug 2022 – Aug 2024 |
| Department of Education | PROMISE NEIGHBORHOODS IMPLEMENTATION GRANTS | $22M | FY2012 | Jan 2012 – Dec 2016 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | COMBINED IMMUNOLOGIC APPROACHES TO CURE HIV-1 | $21.9M | FY2016 | Jul 2016 – Jun 2022 |
| Department of Agriculture | PILOT BROADBAND 100% GRANT- RBS REDG SUB ACCOUNT SEC. 762- GRANT | $21.7M | FY2020 | Aug 2020 – Aug 2022 |
| Department of Agriculture | RECONNECT TREAS RATE 50-50 LOAN-GRANT INFRASTRUCTURE INVEST AND JOBS ACT GRANT | $21.7M | FY2023 | Mar 2023 – Mar 2025 |
| Corporation for National and Community Service | N/A | $21.6M | FY2019 | Aug 2019 – Sep 2023 |
| Department of Agriculture | PILOT BROADBAND 100% GRANT- RBS REDG SUB ACCOUNT SEC. 762- GRANT | $21.5M | FY2021 | Sep 2021 – Sep 2023 |
| Department of Agriculture | PILOT BROADBAND 100% GRANT- RBS REDG SUB ACCOUNT SEC. 762- GRANT | $21.5M | FY2020 | Aug 2020 – Aug 2022 |
| Department of the Interior | 2009-COFA-FSM-HEALTH-FY09 | $21.5M | FY2009 | Oct 2008 – Sep 2013 |
| Department of Agriculture | PILOT BROADBAND GRANT | $21.4M | FY2024 | Jun 2024 – Jun 2026 |
| Department of the Interior | 2010-COFA-FSM-HEALTH-FY10 -- HEALTH SECTOR GRANT | $21M | FY2010 | Oct 2009 – Sep 2010 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | HEALTH CENTER CLUSTER | $20.8M | FY2004 | Dec 2003 – Jan 2021 |
| Department of Agriculture | PILOT BROADBAND GRANT | $20.8M | FY2020 | Nov 2019 – Nov 2021 |
| Department of State | SPECIAL COURT FOR SIERRA LEONE - AMENDMENT 001. THIS IS A COST AMENDMENT TO ADD FUNDS. | $20.8M | FY2009 | Aug 2009 – Mar 2010 |
| Department of Energy | TAS::89 0331::TAS RECOVERY RECOVERY ACT - PILOT SCALE BIOREFINERY: SUSTAINABLE TRANSPORT FUELS FROM BIOMASS AND ALGAL RESIDUE VIA INTEGRATED PYROL | $20.8M | FY2010 | Dec 2009 – Jun 2015 |
| Environmental Protection Agency | DESCRIPTION:THIS AGREEMENT PROVIDES FUNDING UNDER THE INFLATION REDUCTION ACT (IRA) TO THE NONPROFIT ORGANIZATION DAY ONE, WHO ARE BASED IN THE SAN GABRIEL VALLEY. SPECIFICALLY, THE PROJECT WILL DEVELOP AND IMPLEMENT GREEN INFRASTRUCTURE, CLEAN WATER INFRASTRUCTURE, TRANSPORTATION OPTIONS FOR PREVENTING AIR POLLUTION, ENERGY EFFICIENT AND HEALTHY HOUSING AND BUILDINGS, AND POLLUTION MANAGEMENT AND REDUCTION STRATEGIES. THIS ASSISTANCE AGREEMENT PROVIDES FEDERAL FUNDING IN THE AMOUNT OF $20,452,614. ACTIVITIES:THE ACTIVITIES INCLUDE PLANTING TREES IN PARKWAYS AND PUBLIC PLACES, PLANTING GREENER SCHOOLYARDS WITH COMPOSTING, RAIN GARDENS, AND NATIVE PLANTS, PROMOTING ELECTRIC FAMILY AND CARGO BIKE USE AND BICYCLE REPAIR STATIONS, INSTALLING SOLAR PANELS AND INDUCTION STOVES IN HOMES, INSTALLING WATER REFILL STATIONS, AND BUILDING RAIN GARDENS AND A MULTI-BENEFIT STORMWATER CAPTURE SYSTEM. SUBRECIPIENT:ACTIVESGV WILL CO-LEAD COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT PLAN IMPLEMENTATION, COORDINATE E-FAMILY BIKE ACTIVITIES, INSTALL RESIDENTIAL RAIN GARDENS, AND CREATE BIKE REPAIR STATIONS AT PUBLIC SCHOOLS. THE COUNCIL FOR WATERSHED HEALTH WILL CONSTRUCT A NATURE-BASED, MULTI-BENEFIT GREENWAY PROJECT INCLUDING STORMWATER CAPTURE, NATIVE PLANTS, AND PEDESTRIAN/BIKEWAYS. TREEPEOPLE WILL CONDUCT THE TREE PLANTING PROGRAM TO PLANT 2,500 TREES. SUSTAINABLE CLAREMONT WILL IMPLEMENT SCHOOLYARD GREENING (ON-SITE COMPOSTING, RAIN GARDENS, TREE PLANTING) FOR AT LEAST 10 PUBLIC SCHOOLS. GRID ALTERNATIVES WILL IMPLEMENT RESIDENTIAL SOLAR PV AND BATTERY STORAGE AND COOL ROOFS.OUTCOMES:THE ANTICIPATED DELIVERABLES INCLUDE 1,000 TREES PLANTED IN PUBLIC AREAS, 1,500 DISTRIBUTED FRUIT TREES, 10 GREENER PUBLIC SCHOOL YARDS WITH NATIVE PLANTS, COMPOSTING, AND RAIN GARDENS, 300 ELECTRIC FAMILY/CARGO BIKES, 30 BIKE REPAIR STATIONS, 30 HOME SOLAR ENERGY SETUPS, 22 COOL ROOFS TO REDUCE AIR TEMPERATURE, 60 INDUCTION STOVES, 60 CLEAN WATER REFILL STATIONS, 60 RAIN GARDENS, AND A MULTI-BENEFIT STORMWATER CAPTURE SYSTEM FOR THE GREEN STREETS MERCED AVENUE GREENWAY, AND 12 DETAILED QUARTERLY REPORTS THAT WILL DOCUMENT BOTH QUANTITATIVE AND QUALITATIVE MEASURES OF EACH CLIMATE ACTION STRATEGY AND PROJECT. THE EXPECTED OUTCOMES INCLUDE CLIMATE AND PUBLIC HEALTH ENHANCEMENT, EXTREME HEAT MITIGATION, REDUCED GREENHOUSE GAS EMISSIONS, CLEANER OUTDOOR AND INDOOR AIR, REDUCED POLLUTION EXPOSURE TO STUDENTS AND LOW-INCOME RESIDENTS, CLEANER WATER, REDUCED WATER USAGE, REDUCED FLOOD RISK, REDUCED LANDFILL WASTE AND HABITAT POLLUTION, POLLINATOR PROTECTION, MORE ACCESSIBLE STREETS IN URBAN AREAS, AND INCREASED KNOWLEDGE OF CLIMATE RESILIENCE IN THE COMMUNITY. THE INTENDED BENEFICIARIES ARE DISADVANTAGED COMMUNITIES. | $20.5M | FY2025 | Jan 2025 – May 2025 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | SIGNALING AND TRANSCRIPTIONAL NETWORKS IN CARDIAC PATTERNING | $20.4M | FY2008 | Sep 2008 – Jul 2018 |
| Department of Commerce | PURPOSE: THE MMG AWARD REQUESTED BY SCTC WILL ACCOMPLISH TWO VERY IMPORTANT OBJECTIVES OF THE PROGRAM. 1) IT WILL BRING MIDDLE-MILE INFRASTRUCTURE TO THE TRULY UNSERVED AND UNDERSERVED COMMUNITIES OF CENTRAL APPALACHIA AND ENABLE SCTC AND OTHERS TO BUILD LAST-MILE INFRASTRUCTURE TO PROVIDE AFFORDABLE SERVICE. 2) BECAUSE THE PROPOSED NETWORK ARCHITECTURE IS A RING TOPOLOGY, AND IS INTEGRATED INTO EXISTING SCTC NETWORK, IT WILL PROVIDE A SELF-PROTECTED RESILIENCY WITH MULTIPLE PATHS AND FEW SINGLE POINTS OF FAILURE.ACTIVITIES TO BE PERFORMED: BUILT OVER FOUR YEARS, THE PROPOSED ROUTE WILL BE 155 MILES OF NEW FIBER CABLE THAT SIGNIFICANTLY IMPROVES THE EXISTING SCTC NETWORK ARCHITECTURE BY CREATING 4 NEW RINGS, CLOSES SEVERAL UNPROTECTED LATERALS, OPENS DOZENS OF UNSERVED MARKETS, AND INTERCONNECTS (VIA A NETWORK-TO-NETWORK INTERFACE NNI) WITH EAST KENTUCKY NETWORKS (EKN).THE EXISTING SCTC NETWORK THAT WILL BE LEVERAGED IS FROM DUFFIELD, VA, TO LEBANON IN RUSSELL CO., VA TO GRUNDY, VA, IN BUCHANAN CO., THEN EAST TO DICKENSON CO. AND WISE CO, WHERE AN INTERCONNECT WITH EKN IN POUND, VIRGINIA, WILL BE ESTABLISHED. THE SCTC NETWORK THEN GOES SOUTH AND EAST TOWARD LEE CO, VA., TO THE SECOND INTERCONNECT WITH EKN NEAR CRANKS, KY. THIS WILL CREATE THE RING TOPOGRAPHY THAT WILL PROVIDE THE SELF-HEALING CAPABILITY. THE NETWORK THEN CONTINUES SOUTHEAST TO CLAIBORNE AND GRAINGER COUNTIES TN, THEN NORTHWEST THROUGH HANCOCK CO., AND FINALLY BACK TO THE SCTC CENTRAL OFFICE IN DUFFIELD VA.THE NEW NETWORK BUILDS PROPOSED FOR THE NTIA GRANT WILL BE 24 MILES FROM UNION CO, TN., THROUGH GRAINGER COUNTY TO CREATE A NEW RING ON THE EXTREME SOUTHEAST END OF THE SCTC NETWORK. THEN, 36 MILES OF NEW CONSTRUCTION FROM GRAINGER CO., TN., THROUGH HAWKINS CO., TN., WHERE SCTC WILL CLOSE ONE ADDITIONAL RING. CONTINUING NORTHWEST, SCTC WILL BUILD 33 MILES OF NEW CONSTRUCTION TO KINGSPORT, TN., WHERE ANOTHER INTERCONNECTION WILL BE MADE WITH EXISTING FIBER, THEN 25 MILES SOUTH TO JOHNSON CITY, TN., THEN 25 MILES NORTHEAST TO BRISTOL, TN., AND FINALLY 9 MILES OF NEW CONSTRUCTION WITH EXISTING SCTC FIBER IN WASHINGTON CO., VA. IN ADDITION TO THIS PLAN, 3 MILES OF NEW CONSTRUCTION WILL BE BUILT TO INTERCONNECT WITH EKN NEAR CRANKS, KY.EXPECTED OUTCOMES: THE PROJECT IS PROPOSED THROUGH AN AREA WHICH IS AT LEAST 27.51% UNSERVED AND WHERE 26% OF THE HOUSEHOLDS FALL BELOW 200% OF THE NATIONAL POVERTY LEVEL. THIS PROJECT WILL SERVE THE UNSERVED WITH AFFORDABLE INTERNET. INTENDED BENEFICIARIES: THE PROPOSED PROJECT AREA IS A 13-COUNTY AREA OF CENTRAL APPALACHIA. THE SPARSE POPULATION DENSITY, MOUNTAINOUS TERRAIN, AND HIGH COST OF CONSTRUCTING NETWORKS IN THE REGION MAKE IT UNLIKELY THAT THERE WILL BE A MARKET-BASED SOLUTION TO THE BROADBAND PROBLEM WITHOUT FEDERAL ASSISTANCE. THE AREA INCLUDES DICKENSON, LEE, RUSSELL, SCOTT, WASHINGTON, BUCHANAN, AND WISE COUNTIES IN FAR SOUTHWEST VIRGINIA AND GRAINGER, HAWKINS, SULLIVAN, WASHINGTON, UNION, AND HANCOCK COUNTIES IN EAST TENNESSEE. EXCEPT FOR WASHINGTON AND SULLIVAN COUNTIES IN TENNESSEE, THE AREA IS RURAL, LOW POPULATION DENSITY, AND HAS GREATER POVERTY THAN EITHER OF THE TENNESSEE OR VIRGINIA STATE AVERAGES, AND SUBSTANTIALLY BELOW THE NATIONAL AVERAGE. ACCORDING TO US CENSUS 2020 DATA AND USDA RURALITY VALUES, 71.58% OF THIS PROJECT AREA IS RURAL.SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES: THERE WILL BE NO SUBRECIPIENTS. | $20.4M | FY2023 | Sep 2023 – Mar 2028 |
| Department of Agriculture | DIRECT BB TREASURY RATE GRANT - (FY09-10) STIMULUS | $20.3M | FY2010 | Jul 2010 – Jul 2012 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | AMP-AD DATA COORDINATION CENTER | $20.3M | FY2018 | Sep 2018 – Apr 2029 |
| Department of Agriculture | PILOT BROADBAND 100% GRANT- RBS REDG SUB ACCOUNT SEC. 762- GRANT | $20.2M | FY2020 | Sep 2020 – Sep 2022 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | HEALTH CENTER CLUSTER | $20.2M | FY2003 | Mar 2003 – Feb 2027 |
| Agency for International Development | ENHANCING STABILITY AND TECHNICAL EXPERTISE IN EUROPEAN AND EURASIAN MARKETS (ESTEEM) | $20.1M | FY2016 | Aug 2016 – Sep 2026 |
| Department of Education | PATHWAYS TO THE FUTURE! | $20M | FY2022 | Oct 2021 – Sep 2026 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | AMERICAN RESCUE PLAN ACT FUNDING FOR HEALTH CENTERS | $19.9M | FY2021 | Apr 2021 – Mar 2023 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | HEALTH CENTER CLUSTER | $19.8M | FY2002 | Apr 2002 – Mar 2019 |
| Department of Transportation | FY21 CAPITAL PROJECTS PLANNING | $19.7M | FY2021 | May 2021 – Dec 2026 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | ANDROGEN RECEPTOR ACTION IN CASTRATION RESISTANT PROSTATE CANCER | $19.7M | FY2013 | May 2013 – Aug 2030 |
| Department of the Interior | PURE WATER MONTEREY GROUNDWATER REPLENISHMENT PROJECT | $19.6M | FY2016 | Apr 2016 – Sep 2022 |
| Corporation for National and Community Service | THIS AWARD FUNDS THE APPROVED 2023-2024 AMERICORPS STATE COMPETITIVE FIXED AMOUNT PROGRAMS, AS LISTED ON THE APPROVED PROGRAM FUNDING SUMMARY CHART. THIS AWARD IS A FIXED AMOUNT GRANT AT $23,000 PER MSY FOR AMERICAN YOUTHWORKS, CITY YEAR DALLAS, COMMUNITIES IN SCHOOLS OF NORTH TEXAS, NATIONAL COLLEGE ADVISING CORPS, AND THE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS AT AUSTIN. NO MEMBER MAY ENROLL PRIOR TO THE APPROVED START DATE OF THE MEMBER ENROLLMENT PERIOD. AMERICAN YOUTHWORKS: THIS AWARD INCLUDES ARP FUNDING INTENDED TO INCREASE THE LIVING ALLOWANCE. TO DO THIS, WE WILL AWARD $139,470 FOR LIVING ALLOWANCE INCREASES. CITY YEAR, INC. (DALLAS): THIS AWARD INCLUDES ARP FUNDING INTENDED TO INCREASE THE LIVING ALLOWANCE. TO DO THIS, WE WILL AWARD $806,232 FOR LIVING ALLOWANCE INCREASES. NATIONAL COLLEGE ADVISING CORPS: THIS AWARD INCLUDES ARP FUNDING INTENDED TO INCREASE THE LIVING ALLOWANCE. TO DO THIS, WE WILL AWARD $1,673,752 FOR LIVING ALLOWANCE INCREASES. UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS AT AUSTIN: THIS AWARD INCLUDES ARP FUNDING INTENDED TO INCREASE THE LIVING ALLOWANCE. TO DO THIS, WE WILL AWARD $992,735 FOR LIVING ALLOWANCE INCREASES. | $19.5M | FY2023 | Jul 2023 – Aug 2026 |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | NEIGHBORHOOD STABILIZATION PRG | $19.5M | FY2009 | Oct 2008 – Aug 2009 |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | NEIGHBORHOOD STABILIZATION PRG | $19.5M | FY2009 | Oct 2008 – — |
| Corporation for National and Community Service | GRANTS WILL BE AWARDED TO ORGANIZATIONS PROPOSING TO ENGAGE AMERICORPS MEMBERS TO STRENGTHEN COMMUNITIES. | $19.4M | FY2016 | Aug 2016 – Aug 2020 |
| Department of Agriculture | DIRECT BB TREASURY RATE GRANT - (FY09-10) STIMULUS | $19.4M | FY2010 | Aug 2010 – Aug 2012 |
| Department of the Interior | THE UNITED STATES FISH AND WILDLIFE SERVICE (USFWS) AND THE WELL DONE FOUNDATION (WDF) SEEK TO RESTORE AND CONSERVE HABITAT BY PLUGGING, ABANDONING, AND RECLAIMING 111 ORPHANED WELL SITES ON AT LEAST 5 NATIONAL WILDLIFE REFUGES IN A MANNER THAT ADHERES TO STATE AND FEDERAL REGULATORY REQUIREMENTS FOR OIL AND GAS OPERATIONS AND MEETS CONSERVATION NEEDS IDENTIFIED WITHIN THE COOPERATIVE AGREEMENT. THE USFWS AND WDF HAVE THE COMPATIBLE GOAL OF ENSURING THAT ORPHANED OIL AND GAS WELLS ON REFUGE LANDS ARE PROPERLY PLUGGED AND ABANDONED AND THAT ASSOCIATED DISTURBED AREAS ARE RECLAIMED. ORPHANED OIL AND GAS WELLS AND SITES LOCATED ON WILDLIFE REFUGES POSE SAFETY THREATS AND ENVIRONMENTAL RISKS. THREATS INCLUDE INCREASED HAZARDS TO NATURAL RESOURCES, RESOURCE DAMAGE FROM RELEASE OF PETROLEUM PRODUCTS DUE TO MISSING OR DETERIORATING PRESSURE CONTROL EQUIPMENT, CONTAMINATION OF SURFACE OR GROUNDWATER ABSENT PROPER WELL PLUGGING, PERSONAL INJURY AND PROPERTY DAMAGE FROM RELEASE OF PRESSURIZED AND HIGHLY FLAMMABLE WELL FLUIDS, MIGRATION OF CONTAMINATES FROM BURIED PITS, AND LOSS OF HABITAT FROM SAID CONTAMINATION AND SURFACE DISTURBANCES. THESE RISKS INCREASE WITH TIME, AS DOES THE COST OF ADDRESSING THEM. | $19.3M | FY2025 | Dec 2024 – Dec 2029 |
| Department of Agriculture | PILOT BROADBAND GRANT | $19.2M | FY2020 | Nov 2019 – Nov 2021 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | HEAD START/EARLY HEAD START | $19.1M | FY2025 | Jul 2025 – Jun 2026 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | HEALTH CENTER CLUSTER | $19.1M | FY2002 | Jun 2002 – May 2027 |
| Department of Commerce | RECOVERY ACT - BIT WIRELESS BROADBAND INITIATIVE | $19M | FY2010 | Apr 2010 – Jun 2015 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | HEAD START AND EARLY HEAD START | $19M | FY2024 | Apr 2024 – Mar 2029 |
| Department of Agriculture | PILOT BROADBAND GRANT | $18.9M | FY2020 | Nov 2019 – Nov 2021 |
| Department of Agriculture | RECONNECT 100% GRANT INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENTS AND JOBS ACT | $18.7M | FY2022 | Sep 2022 – Sep 2024 |
| Department of Commerce | AMERICAN RECOVERY AND REINVESTMENT ACT - SBA - CONNECT YOUR COMMUNITY | $18.7M | FY2010 | Feb 2010 – Jan 2013 |
| Corporation for National and Community Service | AMERICORPS*STATE | $18.7M | FY2006 | Aug 2006 – Sep 2009 |
| Department of Agriculture | PILOT BROADBAND GRANT | $18.7M | FY2020 | Dec 2019 – Dec 2021 |
| Department of Education | GAINING EARLY AWARENESS AND READINESS FOR UNDERGRADUATE PROGRAMS (GEAR UP STATE) | $18.6M | FY2011 | Sep 2011 – Sep 2017 |
| Department of Agriculture | PILOT BROADBAND GRANT | $18.5M | FY2022 | Jul 2022 – Jul 2024 |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | HOME INVESTMENT CPD | $18.4M | FY2010 | Jul 2010 – — |
| Department of Health and Human Services | HEALTH CENTER CLUSTER | $18.1M | FY2003 | Mar 2003 – Feb 2020 |
| Department of Agriculture | RECONNECT 100% GRANT INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENTS AND JOBS ACT | $18.1M | FY2023 | Jan 2023 – Jan 2025 |
| Department of Transportation | APPLICATION PURPOSE: TO UTILIZE CARES ACT FUND TO HELP RESPOND TO A RECOVER FROM THE COVID-19 PANDEMIC.; ACTIVITIES PERFORMED: OPERATING ASSISTANCE PREVENTATIVE MAINTENANCE SUPPORT EQUIPMENT AND SUPPLIES PROTECTIVE BARRIERS FOR SUPPORT STAFF RETROFITTING OF CLOTH SEATS TO PLASTIC BUS SEATS.; EXPECTED OUTCOMES: FUNDING WILL PERMIT SPACE COAST AREA TRANSIT TO MEET PREVENTATIVE MAINTENANCE STANDARDS CONTINUE TO PROVIDE OPERATIONS AND KEEP ROLLING STOCK IN A STATE OF GOOD REPAIR.; INTENDED BENEFICIARIES: SPACE COAST AREA TRANSIT AND THE RIDERS THAT RELY ON ITS SERVICE WILL BENEFIT FROM CONTINUED SERVICES PERMITTING WORKERS IN BREVARD COUNTY FL TO GET TO WORK AND OTHER DESTINATIONS.; SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES: NONE | $18M | FY2020 | Jun 2020 – Mar 2025 |
| Department of State | TO SUPPORT THE "INL/COLOMBIA NATIONAL POLICE SCHOLARSHIP PROGRAM" | $18M | FY2016 | Jan 2016 – Jan 2021 |
| Department of Agriculture | DIRECT BB TREASURY RATE GRANT - (FY09-10) STIMULUS | $17.9M | FY2010 | Aug 2010 – Aug 2012 |
| Department of Agriculture | PILOT BROADBAND LOAN GRANT COMBO - GRANT | $17.9M | FY2025 | Nov 2024 – Nov 2026 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | GENERATION OF A CELLULAR ATLAS OF ADIPOSE TISSUE IN MOUSE AND MAN | $17.8M | FY2018 | Apr 2018 – Mar 2028 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | NOVEL AD/MVA AND AD/PROTEIN HIV-1 VACCINES | $17.8M | FY2012 | Jun 2012 – May 2018 |
| Department of Transportation | APPLICATION PURPOSE: THE PURPOSE OF THIS AWARD IS TO PROVIDE PVTA WITH FUNDING FOR THE FY24 PROGRAM OF CAPITAL AND PLANNING PROJECTS THAT WILL MAINTAIN VEHICLES AND BUILDINGS IN A STATE OF GOOD REPAIR PROVIDE ESSENTIAL SERVICES AND ENHANCE REGIONAL TRANSIT PLANNING EFFORTS.; ACTIVITIES PERFORMED: ACTIVITIES TO BE PERFORMED: PROJECT #1:PREVENTIVE MAINTENANCENON-ROUTE ADA PARATRANSIT SERVICETRANSPORTATION PLANNINGPROJECT #2REPLACEMENT OF (4) 35 BUSESREPLACEMENT OF (12) 40 BUSESREPLACEMENT OF (1) 40 BUS 5339REPLACEMENT OF (1) 35 BUS 5339BUY REPLACEMENT 30FT BUS (2) TYPE D SHUTTLE BUSES ACQUIRE MINI-VAN FOR THE TOWN OF WARE WITH CONGESTION MITIGATION AND AIR QUALITY IMPROVEMENT (CMAQ) PROGRAM FUNDS TRANSFERRED FROM FHWAACQUIRE REPLACEMENT SUPERVISORY VEHICLES (2)ACQUIRE REPLACEMENT SUPPORT VEHICLES (1)PROJECT #3:INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY; EXPECTED OUTCOMES: THESE ACTIVITIES WILL ALLOW PVTA TO CONTINUE TO SUPPORT THE COMMUNITY BY MAINTAINING A SAFE RELIABLE AND EFFICIENT PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION SYSTEM IN THE PIONEER VALLEY. ASSETS WILL BE MAINTAINED IN A STATE OF GOOD REPAIR AND UPGRADED IN ACCORDANCE WITH PVTAS TRANSIT ASSET MANAGEMENT PLAN. ADDITIONALLY SUPPORT FOR PVTAS NON FIXED ROUTE ADA PARATRANSIT SERVICE WILL ENSURE PVTAS CONTINUED COMPLIANCE WITH ADA REQUIREMENTS TO PROVIDE ACCESSIBLE SERVICE TO ELIGIBLE CUSTOMERS.; INTENDED BENEFICIARIES: THE RESIDENTS OF THE PIONEER VALLEY TRANSIT AUTHORITYS SERVICE AREA AND LOCAL AREA COMMUTERS AND EMPLOYEES AS WELL AS HIGHER EDUCATION STUDENTS.; SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES: PIONEER VALLEY PLANNING COMMISSION (PVPC) WILL BE RECEIVING $200000 IN FEDERAL FUNDS AS A SUBRECIPIENT OF PVTA UNDER THIS AWARD TO PERFORM REGIONAL TRANSIT PLANNING ACTIVITIES. | $17.8M | FY2024 | Aug 2024 – Dec 2026 |
| Department of the Interior | CSG-FSM-2008-HEALTH - HEALTH SECTOR GRANT | $17.7M | FY2007 | Sep 2007 – Sep 2012 |
| Department of Transportation | APPLICATION PURPOSE: THE PURPOSE OF THIS AWARD IS TO PROVIDE PVTA WITH FUNDING FOR A PROGRAM OF CAPITAL AND PLANNING PROJECTS THAT WILL MAINTAIN VEHICLES AND FACILITIES IN A STATE OF GOOD REPAIR PROVIDE ESSENTIAL TRANSPORTATION SERVICES AND ENHANCE REGIONAL PLANNING EFFORTS.; ACTIVITIES PERFORMED: NORTHAMPTON BUS MAINTENANCE FACILITY DESIGN SERVICES SEALCOAT ASPHALT AND RESTRIPEHOLYOKE INTERMODAL CENTER BUS BAY CANOPY AND PAVEMENT UPGRADESUMASS TRANSIT FACILITY HYDRAULIC LIFT REPAIRSOLVER PAVILION SEALCOAT PARKING LOTS AND RESTRIPINGSPRINGFIELD OM FACILITY AT COTTAGE STREET ROOFTOP SOLAR ARRAY INTEGRATION BUS TIRE CAROUSELSPRINGFIELD PARATRANSIT OM FACILITY MANSORY REPAIRS TO BUILDINGS ENVELOPEADMINISTRATION BUILDING FLAT ROOF PROTECTION AND REPAIR TO CEILING AND WALLSENSURE ENVIRONMENTAL COMPLIANCEENSURE PVTA FACILITIES ARE IN A STATE OF GOOD REPAIRACQUIRE SHOP EQUIPMENTINFORMATION TECHNOLOGYREPLACEMENT OF (7) 40 BUSESREPLACEMENT OF (1) 40 BUS 5339REPLACEMENT OF (2) 40 BUS WITH 60 ARTICULATED BUSPREVENTIVE MAINTENANCENON-ROUTE ADA PARATRANSIT SERVICETRANSPORTATION PLANNINGTHE MATCH FOR THESE PROJECTS WILL BE PROVIDED BY STATE CONTRACT ASSISTANCE LOCAL ASSESSMENTS AND RTACAP FUNDS.; EXPECTED OUTCOMES: THESE ACTIVITIES WILL ALLOW PVTA TO CONTINUE TO SUPPORT THE COMMUNITY BY MAINTAINING A SAFE RELIABLE AND EFFICIENT PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION SYSTEM IN THE PIONEER VALLEY REGION OF WESTERN MASSACHUSETTS. ASSETS WILL BE MAINTAINED IN A STATE OF GOOD REPAIR AND UPGRADED IN ACCORDANCE WITH PVTAS TRANSIT ASSET MANAGEMENT PLAN. ADDITIONALLY SUPPORT FOR PVTAS NON FIXED ROUTE ADA PARATRANSIT SERVICE WILL ENSURE PVTAS CONTINUED COMPLIANCE WITH ADA REQUIREMENTS TO PROVIDE ACCESSIBLE SERVICE TO ELIGIBLE CUSTOMERS.; INTENDED BENEFICIARIES: ASSISTANCE IN PROVIDING PUBLIC TRANSIT SERVICE TO INDIVIDUALS THAT FOR WHATEVER REASONS DO NOT OWN A PERSONAL VEHICLES. THE BENEFICIARIES OF THIS PROGRAM ARE THE RESIDENTS OF THE PIONEER VALLEY TRANSIT AUTHORITYS SERVICE AREA AND LOCAL AREA COMMUTERS.; SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES: PIONEER VALLEY PLANNING COMMISSION (PVPC) WILL BE RECEIVING $208000 IN FEDERAL FUNDS AS A SUBRECIPIENT OF PVTA UNDER THIS AWARD TO PERFORM PLANNING ACTIVITIES. | $17.7M | FY2026 | May 2026 – Sep 2028 |
| Department of Agriculture | PILOT BROADBAND GRANT | $17.6M | FY2024 | Jun 2024 – Jun 2026 |
Department of Health and Human Services
$1.3B
STATE INNOVATION WAIVER UNDER SECTION 1332 OF THE AFFORDABLE CARE ACT
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$585.7M
PURPOSE: COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT BLOCK GRANT DISASTER RECOVERY (CDBG-DR) AND COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT BLOCK GRANT MITIGATION (CDBG-MIT) GRANT FUNDS ARE APPROPRIATED BY CONGRESS AND ALLOCATED BY THE DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT (HUD) AS AUTHORIZED UNDER TITLE I OF THE HOUSING AND COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT ACT OF 1974, AS AMENDED. THE MAIN PURPOSE OF CDBG-DR FUNDS IS TO REBUILD DISASTER-IMPACTED AREAS AND PROVIDE CRUCIAL SEED MONEY TO START THE LONG-TERM RECOVERY PROCESS. THESE FLEXIBLE GRANTS HELP CITIES, COUNTIES, INDIAN TRIBES, AND STATES RECOVER FROM PRESIDENTIALLY DECLARED DISASTERS, ESPECIALLY IN LOW-INCOME AREAS, SUBJECT TO AVAILABILITY OF SUPPLEMENTAL APPROPRIATIONS. SINCE CDBG-DR ASSISTANCE MAY FUND A BROAD RANGE OF RECOVERY ACTIVITIES, HUD CAN HELP COMMUNITIES AND NEIGHBORHOODS THAT OTHERWISE MIGHT NOT RECOVER DUE TO LIMITED RESOURCES.; ACTIVITIES TO BE PERFORMED: STATE AND LOCAL GOVERNMENTS RECEIVE CDBG-DR AND CDBG-MIT FUNDS FROM HUD TO ASSIST COMMUNITIES RECOVERING FROM A PRESIDENTIALLY DECLARED DISASTER. HUD ALLOCATES FUNDS BASED ON THE UNMET RECOVERY NEEDS OF EACH COMMUNITY. HUD ISSUES AN ALLOCATION ANNOUNCEMENT NOTICE IN THE FEDERAL REGISTER WHICH WILL INCLUDE THE LIST OF GRANTEES, ALLOCATIONS, AND ANY WAIVERS AND ALTERNATIVE REQUIREMENTS. GRANTEES MAY USE THE FUNDS FOR DISASTER RELATED LONG-TERM RECOVERY, RESTORATION OF INFRASTRUCTURE, HOUSING, ECONOMIC REVITALIZATION, AND MITIGATION ACTIVITIES. ALL CDBG-DR AND CDBG-MIT ACTIVITIES MUST CLEARLY ADDRESS A DIRECT OR INDIRECT IMPACT OF THE DISASTER IN A PRESIDENTIALLY DECLARED AREA FOR THE COVERED DISASTER. EACH GRANTEE MUST DEVELOP AN ACTION PLAN THAT OUTLINES HOW THE GRANTEE PLANS TO ALLOCATE FUNDING TO A COMBINATION OF RECOVERY PROGRAMS. EACH GRANTEE MUST MAKE THE DRAFT ACTION PLAN AVAILABLE FOR PUBLIC COMMENT AND FEEDBACK PRIOR TO SUBMITTING THE PLAN TO HUD FOR REVIEW. ONCE APPROVED, THE ACTION PLAN SERVES AS THE BLUEPRINT FOR THE GRANTEE’S CDBG-DR PROGRAM. THE ACTION PLAN PROCESS IS OUTLINED IN THE APPLICABLE ALLOCATION ANNOUNCEMENT NOTICE.; EXPECTED OUTCOMES: CDBG-DR FUNDS ARE EXPECTED TO RESULT IN LONG-TERM DISASTER RECOVERY FOR COMMUNITIES IMPACTED BY PRESIDENTIALLY DECLARED DISASTERS.; INTENDED BENEFICIARIES: CDBG-DR FUNDS ARE INTENDED PRIMARILY FOR LOW- AND MODERATE-INCOME HOUSEHOLDS PER STATUTORY REQUIREMENTS. CDBG-DR IS THE ONLY FEDERAL DISASTER RESOURCE THAT PRIORITIZES LOW- AND MODERATE-INCOME HOUSEHOLDS. LOW- AND MODERATE-INCOME MEANS A FAMILY OR HOUSEHOLD WITH AN ANNUAL INCOME LESS THAN THE SECTION 8 LOW INCOME LIMIT, WHICH IS GENERALLY 80 PERCENT OF THE AREA MEDIAN INCOME. MOST ALLOCATIONS OF CDBG-DR AND CDBG-MIT FUNDS REQUIRE GRANTEES USE 70 PERCENT OF THE GRANT FUNDS TO BENEFIT LOW- AND MODERATE-INCOME PERSONS, HOWEVER GRANTEES MUST REVIEW THE APPLICABLE FEDERAL REGISTER NOTICE GOVERNING THE FUNDS TO CONFIRM THE REQUIREMENTS OF EACH GRANT. OVERALL, CDBG-DR FUNDS SHOULD BE USED TO ASSIST INDIVIDUALS, COMMUNITIES, AND/OR BUSINESSES SITUATED IN THE MOST IMPACTED AND DISTRESSED AREAS AFFECTED BY A PRESIDENTIALLY DECLARED DISASTER.; SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES: THE SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES ARE UNKNOWN AT THE TIME OF AWARD.
Department of the Interior
$250M
FY2025 FSM TRUST FUND PAYMENT FEDERATED STATES OF MICRONESIATRUST FUND FOR THE PEOPLE OF THE FEDERATED STATES OF MICRONESIA IN THE AMOUNT OF $250000000PERIOD OF AVAILABILITY 10012024 TO 09302025
Department of the Interior
$232.7M
FY2024 COFA3 FSM TRUST FUND PAYMENT2TO PROVIDE THE USG CONTRIBUTION FUNDING TO THE TRUST FUNDOF THE PEOPLE OF THE FEDERATED STATES OF MICRONESIA
Department of Energy
$189M
BRIMSTONE COMMERCIAL, LLC (BRIMSTONE) WILL CONSTRUCT AND OPERATE A NEW PLANT TO COMMERCIALIZE A DEEPLY DECARBONIZED PROCESS FOR MAKING ORDINARY PORTLAND CEMENT (OPC) AND CO-PRODUCTS, INCLUDING SUPPLEMENTARY CEMENTITIOUS MATERIALS (SCM) AND SMELTER-GRADE ALUMINA (SGA). BRIMSTONE WILL DEVELOP A TRANSFORMATIVE TECHNOLOGY THAT APPLIES A CHEMICAL-BASED PROCESS FOR MAKING CEMENT THAT ELIMINATES PROCESS CARBON DIOXIDE (CO2) EMISSIONS ASSOCIATED WITH LIMESTONE PROCESSING. THE PROCESS ALSO INCLUDES THE PRODUCTION OF SCM FROM SILICEOUS RESIDUES TO REDUCE EMISSIONS ASSOCIATED WITH CONCRETE PRODUCTION AND HAS THE ABILITY TO INCORPORATE DIRECT AIR CAPTURE OF ATMOSPHERIC CO2 FROM MAGNESIUM-BEARING WASTE RESIDUE. THIS PROJECT WILL PRODUCE OPC AND SCMS FROM CARBON-FREE CALCIUM SILICATE ROCK USING A CLOSED ACID BENEFICIATION CYCLE. THE NEW PLANT’S SUCCESS, BY DEMONSTRATING A PATHWAY FOR ACHIEVING POSITIVE UNIT ECONOMICS FOR BRIMSTONE’S DECARBONIZED CEMENT PRODUCTION PROCESS, WILL DE-RISK THE BUSINESS MODEL AND SUPPORT NET-ZERO GOALS WHILE INCREASING SUPPLY RESILIENCY IN THE CEMENT AND ALUMINUM INDUSTRIES. THIS PROJECT PLANS TO PROVIDE TANGIBLE BENEFITS TO THE COMMUNITY BY CREATING UP TO 100 FAMILY-SUSTAINING OPERATIONS JOBS WITH COMPREHENSIVE BENEFITS, ENGAGING WITH LABOR UNIONS AND SUPPORTING THE USE OF NEGOTIATED AGREEMENTS FOR THE CONSTRUCTION AND OPERATION OF THE FACILITY. THIS PROJECT WILL ESTABLISH EARLY TWO-WAY ENGAGEMENT WITH COMMUNITY MEMBERS THROUGH A COMMUNITY ADVISORY COUNCIL, DEVELOP A LOCAL WORKFORCE DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM, AND ENSURE EQUITABLE ACCESS TO BENEFITS THROUGH PARTNERSHIPS WITH MINORITY SERVING INSTITUTIONS AND BUSINESSES MAJORITY-OWNED OR CONTROLLED BY UNDERREPRESENTED PERSONS OR GROUPS OF UNDERREPRESENTED PERSONS.
Department of Energy
$123.8M
BIPARTISAN INFRASTRUCTURE LAW (BIL): LIFSI: ELECTROLYTE SALT PRODUCTION FACILITY THE OBJECTIVE IS TO BUILD A 10KT COMMERCIAL SCALE FACILITY FOR THE DOMESTIC PRODUCTION OF LIFSI (LITHIUM (BIS) FLUOROSULFONYL IMIDE – LIN (SO2F)2) TO SUPPLY THE DOMESTIC PRODUCTION OF LIBS. THE NEW STATE-OF-THE-ART FACILITY IS EXPECTED TO BE CO-LOCATED AT THE EXISTING HONEYWELL PROPERTY IN GEISMAR, LOUISIANA. THE NEW LITHIUM SALT PLANT IS EXPECTED TO BE THE FIRST DOMESTIC PRODUCTION FACILITY FOR LIFSI.
Department of Education
$118.4M
THE PROJECT REQUESTS 50% OF THE HIGHER EDUCATION EMERGENCY RELIEF FUND FOR INSTITUTIONAL SUPPORT FROM THE DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION ASDIRECTED BY THE 2020 CARES ACT.
Department of Health and Human Services
$103.4M
HEAD START AND EARLY HEAD START
Department of Health and Human Services
$103.3M
HEAD START AND EARLY HEAD START
Department of Commerce
$99.7M
RECOVERY ACT - PENNSYLVANIA RESEARCH AND EDUCATION NETWORK (PENNREN)
Department of Health and Human Services
$90M
HEAD START AND EARLY HEAD START
Department of Education
$86.3M
THE PROJECT REQUESTS 50% OF THE DIRECT-TO-STUDENT ALLOCATION FROM THE DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION AS DIRECTED BY THE 2020 CARES ACT.
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$74.6M
INDIAN HSG BLOCK GR
Department of Defense
$74.5M
'MEDICAL TROPICAL RESEARCH LABORATORY PROGRAM'
Corporation for National and Community Service
$57.5M
AMERICORPS*STATE
Department of Transportation
$55.5M
APPLICATION PURPOSE: THE PURPOSE OF THIS AWARD IS TO PROVIDE PVTA WITH FUNDING FOR A PROGRAM OF CAPITAL PROJECTS THAT WILL MAINTAIN VEHICLES AND BUILDINGS IN A STATE OF GOOD REPAIR PROVIDE ESSENTIAL SERVICES AND ENHANCE REGIONAL TRANSIT PLANNING EFFORTS.; ACTIVITIES PERFORMED: ACTIVITIES TO BE PERFORMED INCLUDE:- THE ELECTRIFICATION AND EXPANSION OF PVTAS SPRINGFIELD OPERATIONS AND MAINTENANCE FACILITY LOCATED AT 655 COTTAGE STREET.- THE BUS BAY EXPANSION OF PVTAS UMASS AMHERST FACILITY LOCATED AT 185 HOLDSWORTH WAY AMHERST MA.- FENCING INSTALLATION AT PVTAS NORTHAMPTON FACILITY LOCATED AT 54 INDUSTRIAL DRIVE.; EXPECTED OUTCOMES: THESE ACTIVITIES WILL ALLOW PVTA TO CONTINUE TO SUPPORT THE COMMUNITY BY MAINTAINING A SAFE RELIABLE AND EFFICIENT PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION SYSTEM IN THE PIONEER VALLEY. ASSETS WILL BE MAINTAINED IN A STATE OF GOOD REPAIR AND UPGRADED IN ACCORDANCE WITH PVTAS TRANSIT ASSET MANAGEMENT PLAN.; INTENDED BENEFICIARIES: THE RESIDENTS OF THE PIONEER VALLEY TRANSIT AUTHORITYS SERVICE AREA AND LOCAL AREA COMMUTERS AND EMPLOYEES AS WELL AS HIGHER EDUCATION STUDENTS.; SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES: NONE
Department of Agriculture
$55.5M
DIRECT BB TREASURY RATE GRANT - (FY09-10) STIMULUS
Department of Health and Human Services
$55.2M
HIV EMERGENCY RELIEF PROJECT GRANTS
Department of Health and Human Services
$53.8M
HEALTH CENTER CLUSTER
Department of Health and Human Services
$53.5M
HEAD START AND EARLY HEAD START
Department of Health and Human Services
$52.9M
CONSORTIA FOR INNOVATIVE AIDS RESEARCH IN NONHUMAN PRIMATES
Department of Agriculture
$49.9M
DIRECT BB TREASURY RATE GRANT - (FY09-10) STIMULUS
Department of Commerce
$49.9M
PURPOSE: THE PURPOSE OF THE PROJECT IS TO ENHANCE ENMR TELEPHONE COOPERATIVE'S EXISTING NETWORK'S INFRASTRUCTURE BY CREATING ALTERNATE PATHS AND INCREASING RESILIENCY AND BANDWIDTH WITH UPGRADES AND NEW FIBER ROUTES. IT INCLUDES THE CONSTRUCTION OF FIVE NEW FIBER SEGMENTS, ONE OF WHICH COMPLETES A FIBER RING LINKING KERMIT, TEXAS TO JAL, NEW MEXICO IN THE SOUTHERN EDGE OF THE MIDDLE MILE NETWORK. THE OTHER FOUR NEW FIBER SEGMENTS WILL CREATE ALTERNATIVE DIVERSE PATHS CONNECTING SANTA FE AND ALBUQUERQUE, NEW MEXICO. THE APPLICANT'S EXISTING WHOLESALE CUSTOMERS WILL IMMEDIATELY BENEFIT FROM THE EXPANDED CAPACITY AND INCREASED RELIABILITY. THE APPLICANT'S OBJECTIVES FOR THE PROPOSED PROJECT INCLUDE ASSURANCE THAT LAST MILE PROVIDERS HAVE ACCESS TO AFFORDABLE MIDDLE MILE TRANSPORT TO THE INTERNET. ACTIVITIES TO BE PERFORMED: PROJECT WILL USE FIBER TO BUILD NEW AND RESILIENT MIDDLE MILE NETWORK THROUGH UNSERVED COMMUNITIES WITH A COMMITMENT TO OPEN ACCESS AND CARRIER NEUTRAL NON-DISCRIMINATORY INTERCONNECT. THE PERIOD OF PERFORMANCE IS EXPECTED TO BE 3 YEARS. EXPECTED OUTCOMES: THE APPLICANT HAS THE FOLLOWING GOALS AND DELIVERABLES FOR THIS PROJECT: 1. CONSTRUCTION OF FIVE NEW FIBER SEGMENTS TO IMPROVE REDUNDANCY AND DECREASE LATENCY AND UPGRADES TO TRANSPORT ELECTRONICS THROUGHOUT EASTERN NEW MEXICO AND WEST TEXAS. 2. UTILIZATION OF THE EXISTING CENTRAL OFFICE (CO) AND HUT ASSETS TO INSTALL AND OPERATE NEWLY PROPOSED TRANSPORT ELECTRONICS OBVIATING THE NEED TO CONSTRUCT NEW COS AND HUTS, FURTHER MITIGATING CONSTRUCTION COSTS. 3. INCREASE BANDWIDTH FOR THE ENTIRE NETWORK FROM UP TO 800 GBPS TO UP TO 16 TBPS ALLOWING LAST MILE PROVIDERS TO INCREASE UPLOAD SPEEDS FOR END-USERS, STRENGTHEN THE NETWORK AGAINST SINGLE POINTS OF FAILURE, AND PROVIDE REDUNDANCY. INTENDED BENEFICIARIES: THE AREAS THAT WILL BENEFIT FROM THIS PROJECT INCLUDE 29 NEW MEXICO AND 20 TEXAS COUNTIES, SERVING A SOCIO-ECONOMICALLY DIVERSE POPULATION OF 3.4 MILLION RESIDENTS AND 63 COMMUNITY ANCHOR INSTITUTIONS. THE SERVICE REGION INCLUDES BOTH URBAN AND RURAL SEGMENTS WITH POPULATION DENSITIES RANGING FROM 0.1 PER SQUARE MILE (LOVING COUNTY, TX) AND 0.3 (HARDING COUNTY, NM) TO 582.5 (BERNALILLO COUNTY, NM) AND 854.4 (EL PASO COUNTY, TX). THE PROJECT AREAS WILL BENEFIT IN THE FOLLOWING WAYS: 1. ATTRACTING ADDITIONAL LAST-MILE PROVIDERS TO THE UNSERVED AND UNDERSERVED END-USER LOCATIONS ALONG THE ROUTE. 2. EXTENDS BROADBAND INFRASTRUCTURE TO AREAS WITHOUT ACCESS TO LAST-MILE HIGH-SPEED TERRESTRIAL BROADBAND PROVIDERS. NEW MEXICO HAS THE HIGHEST PERCENTAGE OF RESIDENTS IN THE SOUTHWEST WITHOUT ADEQUATE BROADBAND INTERNET SERVICE WITH 22% OF NEW MEXICO RESIDENTS NOT HAVING ACCESS TO ADEQUATE BROADBAND INFRASTRUCTURE. IN AT LEAST FIVE OUT OF 33 NEW MEXICO COUNTIES, MORE THAN 40% OF HOUSEHOLDS DO NOT HAVE INTERNET ACCESS AT ALL. 3. INCREASING COMPETITION IN FIBER-TO-THE-PREMISE (FTTP) END USER MARKER BY REDUCING COSTS TO LAST-MILE PROVIDERS. 4. IMPROVING REDUNDANCY BETWEEN ALBUQUERQUE AND SANTA FE. 5. INTRODUCING NEW HIGH-CAPACITY DWDM NODES TO THE LESS POPULATED TOWNS OF RATON AND MAXWELL, NEW MEXICO6. EXTENDING ACCESS TO AREAS WITHOUT CURRENT ACCESS TO LAST-MILE HIGH-SPEED TERRESTRIAL BROADBAND PROVIDERS. 7. INCREASING BROADBAND UPLOAD AND DOWNLOAD SPEEDS FOR END-USERS, ALLOWING MORE ISP PROVIDERS TO PARTICIPATE IN THE MARKET AT A LOWER COSTS FROM INCREASED CAPACITY. SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES: THE APPLICANT WILL SUBAWARD FUNDS TO BACA VALLEY TELEPHONE COMPANY, INC. AND DELCOM, INC. FOR THE CONSTRUCTION OF NETWORK INFRASTRUCTURE IN THEIR RESPECTIVE SERVICE AREAS.
Department of Defense
$49.6M
PRODUCTION SCALING OF CRITICAL CHEMICALS
Department of Health and Human Services
$49.4M
PA-22 FYPD & PA-25 EARLY HEAD START
Department of Health and Human Services
$49.3M
HEALTH CENTER CLUSTER
Department of Agriculture
$48.9M
DIRECT BB TREASURY RATE GRANT - (FY09-10) STIMULUS
Department of Health and Human Services
$48.8M
HEALTH CENTER CLUSTER
Department of Education
$47M
GAINING EARLY AWARENESS AND READINESS FOR UNDERGRADUATE PROGRAMS (GEAR UP PARTNERSHIP)
Department of Education
$45.4M
COLLEGE NOW - CAREER CONNECTED!
Department of Commerce
$44.8M
TRANSFORMING NE OHIO: FROM RUST BELT TO TECH POWERHOUSE - AN OHIO MIDDLE MILE CONSORTIUM PROJECT
Department of Health and Human Services
$44M
NOVEL HETEROLOGOUS ADENOVIRUS PRIME-BOOST HIV-1 VACCINE
Department of Health and Human Services
$43.9M
HEAD START AND EARLY HEAD START
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$43.7M
STATE ADM SMALL CITY
Department of Health and Human Services
$42.6M
HEALTH CENTER CLUSTER
Department of Health and Human Services
$42.6M
HEAD START PROGRAM
Department of Energy
$42.3M
PROPOSING A PROJECT TO OPTIMIZE OUR RURAL, TRI-STATE SERVICE AREA'S ACCESS TO AN ABUNDANCE OF REGIONAL RENEWABLE ENERGY. WE RECOGNIZE THE UNIQUE CHALLENGES FACED BY THESE COMMUNITIES, OFTEN CHARACTERIZED BY SPARSE POPULATIONS AND LIMITED ACCESS TO EXISTING INFRASTRUCTURE.
Department of Health and Human Services
$40.3M
HEALTH CENTER CLUSTER
Department of Education
$40.1M
TEACHER INCENTIVE FUND
Department of Transportation
$39M
IMPROVE EXISTING AIRPORT
Department of Agriculture
$38.5M
DIRECT BB TREASURY RATE GRANT - (FY09-10) STIMULUS
Department of Health and Human Services
$38.4M
HEALTH CENTER CLUSTER
Department of Health and Human Services
$38.4M
DF/HCC RENAL CANCER SPORE
Department of Agriculture
$38.3M
DIRECT BB TREASURY RATE GRANT - (FY09-10) STIMULUS
Corporation for National and Community Service
$37.7M
THIS AWARD FUNDS THE APPROVED 2022?23 AMERICORPS FORMULA PROGRAMS, AS LISTED ON THE APPROVED PROGRAM AND FUNDING SUMMARY CHARTS. NO MEMBER MAY ENROLL PRIOR TO THE APPROVED START DATE OF THE MEMBER ENROLLMENT PERIOD. YOUR 2022?23 REGULATORY MATCH IS 35%, AND YOUR BUDGETARY MATCH IS 38%. PLANNING GRANTS MAY ONLY OPERATE FOR ONE YEAR. BOYS AND GIRLS CLUB OF PHARR: FUND CURRENT ACTIVITIES. TO DO THIS, WE WILL EXPAND SERVICE BY INCREASING THE NUMBER OF SLOTS BY 38. COLLEGIATE EDU-NATION: FUND CURRENT ACTIVITIES. TO DO THIS, WE WILL EXPAND SERVICE BY INCREASING THE NUMBER OF SLOTS BY 14. CREATIVE ACTION: FUND CURRENT ACTIVITIES. TO DO THIS, WE WILL EXPAND SERVICE BY INCREASING THE NUMBER OF SLOTS BY 12. FORT BEND FAMILY HEALTH CENTER, INC.: FUND CURRENT ACTIVITIES. TO DO THIS, WE WILL EXPAND SERVICE BY INCREASING THE NUMBER OF SLOTS BY 20. GIRL SCOUTS OF SOUTH TEXAS: FUND CURRENT ACTIVITIES. TO DO THIS, WE WILL EXPAND SERVICE BY INCREASING THE NUMBER OF SLOTS BY 20. HEALTH 360, INC.: FUND CURRENT ACTIVITIES. TO DO THIS, WE WILL EXPAND SERVICE BY INCREASING THE NUMBER OF SLOTS BY 0. HOMEWARD BOUND, INC.: FUND CURRENT ACTIVITIES. TO DO THIS, WE WILL EXPAND SERVICE BY INCREASING THE NUMBER OF SLOTS BY 0. TEXAS ASSOCIATION OF REGIONAL COUNCILS: FUND CURRENT ACTIVITIES. TO DO THIS, WE WILL EXPAND SERVICE BY INCREASING THE NUMBER OF SLOTS BY 0. TEXAS SOUTHMOST COLLEGE DISTRICT: FUND CURRENT ACTIVITIES. TO DO THIS, WE WILL EXPAND SERVICE BY INCREASING THE NUMBER OF SLOTS BY 0.
Department of Defense
$37.3M
DEFENSE PRODUCTION ACT (DPA)TITLE III PROGRAM, ACCELERATED FEASIBILITY STUDY PROGRAM TO DEVELOP A COMPLETE U.S.-BASED GRAPHITE ANODE/ADVANCED MATERIAL
Department of Health and Human Services
$37.3M
HEALTH CENTER CLUSTER
Department of Energy
$37.3M
HIGH VOLUME MANUFACTURING OF LIPF6 - A CRITICAL LITHIUM-ION BATTERY MATERIAL
Agency for International Development
$36.7M
NEW COOPERATIVE AGREEMENT FOR UGANDA
Department of Transportation
$36.6M
PVTA FFY 2020 CARES ACT OPERATING GRANT
Department of Health and Human Services
$36.4M
HEAD START AND EARLY HEAD START
Department of Health and Human Services
$36.3M
HEALTH CENTER CLUSTER
Department of Health and Human Services
$35.8M
HEALTH CENTER CLUSTER
Department of Health and Human Services
$35.6M
HIV EMERGENCY RELIEF PROJECT GRANTS
Department of Health and Human Services
$35.2M
HEAD START AND EARLY HEAD START
Department of Agriculture
$35M
RECONNECT 100% GRANT INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENTS AND JOBS ACT
Department of Agriculture
$35M
RECONNECT 100% GRANT INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENTS AND JOBS ACT
Department of Agriculture
$35M
RECONNECT 100% GRANT INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENTS AND JOBS ACT
Department of Agriculture
$34.9M
RECONNECT 100% GRANT INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENTS AND JOBS ACT
Department of Agriculture
$34.9M
RECONNECT 100% GRANT INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENTS AND JOBS ACT
Department of Agriculture
$34.9M
PILOT BROADBAND 100% GRANT- RBS REDG SUB ACCOUNT SEC. 762- GRANT
Department of Health and Human Services
$34.6M
HEALTH CENTER CLUSTER
Department of Agriculture
$34.5M
RECONNECT 100% GRANT INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENTS AND JOBS ACT
Department of Health and Human Services
$34.4M
CHEMOPROPHYLAXIS FOR HIV PREVENTION IN MEN
Department of Health and Human Services
$33.6M
HEALTH CENTER CLUSTER
Department of Health and Human Services
$33.3M
HEALTH CENTER CLUSTER
Department of Health and Human Services
$33.2M
HEAD START AND EARLY HEAD START
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$32.4M
INDIAN HSG BLOCK GR
Department of Health and Human Services
$31.7M
HEAD START & EARLY HEAD START
Department of Education
$31.7M
COLLEGE READY, CAREER SET!
Department of Health and Human Services
$31.6M
HEALTH CENTER CLUSTER
Department of Agriculture
$31M
PILOT BROADBAND 100% GRANT- RBS REDG SUB ACCOUNT SEC. 762- GRANT
Department of Agriculture
$30.8M
DIRECT BB TREASURY RATE GRANT - (FY09-10) STIMULUS
Department of Education
$30M
THE INDYEAST PROMISE NEIGHBORHOOD INITIATIVE WILL CREATE A PIPELINE OF SERVICES TO IMPROVE THE EDUCATIONAL OUTCOMES OF CHILDREN LIVING AND ATTENDING SCHOOL IN THE TARGETED GEOGRAPHY.
Department of the Interior
$29.9M
2009-COFA-FSM-EDUCATION-FY09
Department of Agriculture
$29.3M
PILOT BROADBAND GRANT
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$29M
INDIAN HOUSING BLOCK GRANTS
Department of Commerce
$28.8M
EAST TEXAS MEDICAL AND EDUCATIONAL FIBER OPTIC NETWORK
Department of Health and Human Services
$28.6M
CONSORTIUM FOR AIDS VACCINE RESEARCH IN NONHUMAN PRIMATES
Department of Commerce
$28.5M
AMERICAN RECOVERY AND REINVESTMENT ACT - SBA - 21ST CENTURY INFORMATION AND SUPPORT ECOSYSTEM: MAKE IT EASY WHERE YOU ARE
Department of the Interior
$28.4M
CSG-FSM-2008-EDU - EDUCATION SECTOR GRANT
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$28.3M
STATE ADM SMALL CITY
Department of the Interior
$28.2M
2010-COFA-FSM-EDUCATION-FY10 -EDUCATION SECTOR GRANT
Department of Energy
$28M
TAS::89 0328::TAS RECOVERY NEW AWARD NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REGULATORY UTILITY COMMISSIONERS, EASTERN INTERCONNECTION B. THE OBJECTIVE OF THIS PROJ
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$27.8M
STATE ADM SMALL CITY
Department of Health and Human Services
$27.7M
HEALTH CENTER CLUSTER
Department of the Interior
$27.7M
FY2026-COFA-FSM-RECON FY23-18
Corporation for National and Community Service
$27.6M
THIS AWARD FUNDS THE APPROVED 2025?26 AMERICORPS FORMULA PROGRAM(S), AS LISTED ON THE APPROVED PROGRAM AND FUNDING SUMMARY CHARTS. NO MEMBER MAY ENROLL PRIOR TO THE APPROVED START DATE OF THE MEMBER ENROLLMENT PERIOD. YOUR 2025?26 BUDGETARY MATCH IS 27.22%.
Department of Health and Human Services
$27.3M
HOPE - HIV OBSTRUCTION BY PROGRAMMED EPIGENETICS - PROJECT SUMMARY/ABSTACT AFTER 40 YEARS, A CURE FOR PEOPLE LIVING WITH HIV (PLWH) REMAINS BOTH ELUSIVE AND ONE OF NIAID/NIH’S HIGHEST PRIORITIES. REBOUND-COMPETENT LATENT RESERVOIR CELLS PERSIST DESPITE ANTIRETROVIRAL THERAPY AND REKINDLE INFECTION DUE TO THE LACK OF EFFICIENT PROVIRAL SILENCING. THE UNDERLYING HYPOTHESIS OF THE HIV OBSTRUCTION BY PROGRAMMED EPIGENETICS (HOPE) COLLABORATORY APPLICATION IS A NOVEL “BLOCK-LOCK-EXCISE” APPROACH—THAT ENTAILS THE LONG-TERM DURABLE SILENCING OF VIRAL EXPRESSION TOWARDS PERMANENT EXCISION OF THE LATENT PROVIRUS—WILL LEAD TO THE PERMANENT CONTROL OF THE VIRUS IN THE ABSENCE OF THERAPY. A GRADED TRANSFORMATION OF REMNANT HIV IN PLWH IS PROPOSED FROM LATENT INTO SILENT TO PERMANENTLY DEFECTIVE PROVIRUSES, THUS EMULATING AND ACCELERATING THE NATURAL PATH THAT HUMAN ENDOGENOUS RETROVIRUSES HAVE TAKEN IN THE HUMAN GENOME OVER MILLIONS OF YEARS. THIS HYPOTHESIS WAS FORMULATED ON THE BASIS OF 30+ YEARS OF DEDICATED RESEARCH BY HOPE INVESTIGATORS INTO THE UNDERLYING MECHANISMS OF HIV LATENCY, LACK OF SUCCESS TO DATE WITH LATENCY-REVERSING STRATEGIES, RECENT RESULTS WITH TAT INHIBITOR DIDEHYDRO-CORTISTATIN A (DCA) AND ELITE CONTROLLERS SHOWING THAT A SUCCESSFUL ‘FUNCTIONAL’ HIV CURE COULD ARISE IF THERE IS A DEEP SILENCING OF RESERVOIR VIRUS, AND THE AVAILABILITY OF ADVANCED GENOME- ENGINEERING TECHNOLOGIES (BREC1 RECOMBINASE, PEPTIDE NUCLEIC ACIDS, CRISPR-BASE EDITORS) FOR DIRECT DELIVERY OF THE FINAL COUP DE GRACE: EXCISION OF REMNANT VIRUS FOR PERMANENT CURE. THE CENTRAL HYPOTHESIS WILL BE TESTED IN THREE RESEARCH FOCUSES (RFS) AND FIVE CENTRAL OBJECTIVES SHARED BETWEEN THE THREE RFS. SPECIFIC AIM (RF) 1: DEFINE MECHANISTICALLY THE DURABLE TRANSCRIPTIONAL SILENCING OF HIV ACROSS ALL T- AND MYELOID CELL SUBSETS BY COMBINATORIAL TARGETING OF KEY HOST AND VIRAL FACTORS. SPECIFIC AIM (RF) 2: DEVELOP AND CHARACTERIZE NEXT- GENERATION HIV SILENCING APPROACHES IN THE CONTROL OF HIV REBOUND. SPECIFIC AIM (RF) 3: DISABLE THE SILENCED HIV-1 PROVIRUS BY TARGETED GENOME ENGINEERING. OBJECTIVE 1: DETERMINE THE EPIGENETIC ARCHITECTURE OF THE INTEGRATED PROVIRUS AT DIFFERENT INTEGRATION SITES THAT PREVENTS PERMANENT SILENCING OF LATENT HIV. OBJECTIVE 2: DEFINE, AT THE MOLECULAR LEVEL, CELL TYPES AND EPIGENETIC CELL STATES THAT FAVOR VIRAL REBOUND. OBJECTIVE 3: IDENTIFY MOLECULAR FUNCTIONS OF TAT AND HOST FACTORS THAT PREVENT PERMANENT SILENCING. OBJECTIVE 4: LEARN FROM HERV SILENCING AND MUTATIONAL DECAY IN THE HUMAN GENOME. OBJECTIVE 5: RESPOND TO COMMUNITY EXPECTATIONS AROUND ‘FUNCTIONAL’ AND ‘CLASSICAL’ CURE APPROACHES. THE HOPE COLLABORATORY PARTNERED WITH THE SAN FRANCISCO AIDS FOUNDATION TO BUILD A STRONG ART-BASED COMMUNITY EDUCATION PROGRAM AND WITH THREE PRIMARY INDUSTRY LEADERS, AMGEN, SANGAMO AND CONSTELLATION, WHO WILL PROVIDE INTELLECTUAL AND MATERIALISTIC SUPPORT. WE ALSO ENGAGED WITH FOUR CLINICAL COHORTS OF PLWH FOR CLINICAL SAMPLE ANALYSIS IN THE US, BRAZIL AND AFRICA. COLLECTIVELY, THE INNOVATIVE SCIENCE, RENOWNED MEMBERS, COLLABORATIVE ORGANIZATIONAL STRUCTURE AND MILESTONE- DRIVEN RESEARCH PLAN OF THE HOPE COLLABORATORY REPRESENTS A NEW AND SUBSTANTIVE DEPARTURE FROM THE STATUS QUO AND PROMISES A FUNDAMENTAL NEW APPROACH TO HIV CURE STRATEGIES.
Department of the Interior
$27.2M
2009-COFA-FSM-INFRASTRUCTUE-WENO ROAD PHASE 1
Department of Health and Human Services
$27.1M
HEAD START AND EARLY HEAD START
Department of Health and Human Services
$27M
HEALTH CENTER CLUSTER
Department of Health and Human Services
$26.8M
HEAD START FULL YEAR/PART DAY
Department of Health and Human Services
$26.3M
HEAD START/HANDICAPPED SERVICES - FULL YEAR/PART DAY
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$26.1M
STATE ADM SMALL CITY
Department of the Interior
$25.5M
TRIBALLY CONTROLLED COLLEGE ASSISTANCE
Department of Health and Human Services
$25.5M
HEALTH CENTER CLUSTER
Department of Health and Human Services
$25.3M
HEALTH CENTER CLUSTER
Department of Agriculture
$25.3M
DIRECT BB TREASURY RATE GRANT - (FY09-10) STIMULUS
Department of Health and Human Services
$25.1M
MECHANISMS OF STATE SWITCHING IN SLEEP AND SLEEP APNEA
Department of Health and Human Services
$25M
HEALTH CENTER CLUSTER
Department of Agriculture
$25M
RECONNECT 100% GRANT INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENTS AND JOBS ACT
Department of Agriculture
$25M
RECONNECT 100% GRANT INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENTS AND JOBS ACT
Department of Agriculture
$25M
RECONNECT 100% GRANT INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENTS AND JOBS ACT
Department of Agriculture
$25M
RECONNECT 100% GRANT INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENTS AND JOBS ACT
Department of Agriculture
$25M
MEAT AND POULTRY PROCESSING EXPANSION PROGRAM GRANTS - ARP
Department of Agriculture
$25M
PILOT BROADBAND GRANT
Department of Agriculture
$25M
RECONNECT 100% GRANT INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENTS AND JOBS ACT
Department of Agriculture
$25M
PILOT BROADBAND 100% GRANT- RBS REDG SUB ACCOUNT SEC. 762- GRANT
Department of Agriculture
$25M
RECONNECT 100% GRANT INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENTS AND JOBS ACT
Department of Agriculture
$25M
RECONNECT 100% GRANT INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENTS AND JOBS ACT
Department of Agriculture
$25M
RECONNECT 100% GRANT INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENTS AND JOBS ACT
Department of Agriculture
$24.9M
RECONNECT 100% GRANT INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENTS AND JOBS ACT
Department of Agriculture
$24.9M
PILOT BROADBAND LOAN GRANT COMBO - GRANT
Department of Agriculture
$24.8M
RECONNECT 100% GRANT INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENTS AND JOBS ACT
Department of Agriculture
$24.8M
RECONNECT 100% GRANT INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENTS AND JOBS ACT
Department of Agriculture
$24.7M
DIRECT BB TREASURY RATE GRANT - (FY09-10) STIMULUS
Department of Agriculture
$24.7M
PILOT BROADBAND GRANT
Department of Agriculture
$24.6M
RECONNECT 100% GRANT INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENTS AND JOBS ACT
Department of Education
$24.5M
RHODE ISLAND GEAR UP
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$24.4M
COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT BLOCK GRANTS/STATE'S PROGRAM AND NON-ENTITLEMENT GRANTS IN HAWAII
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$24.3M
STATE ADM SMALL CITY
Department of Agriculture
$24.3M
SEC. 779 BB RECONNECT CORONAVIRUS AID, RELIEF AND ECON SECURITY (CARES) - GRANTS
Department of Agriculture
$24.3M
RECONNECT 100% GRANT INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENTS AND JOBS ACT
Department of Health and Human Services
$24.2M
HEAD START AND EARLY HEAD START
Department of Health and Human Services
$24.1M
HEALTH CENTER CLUSTER
Department of Agriculture
$24M
PILOT BROADBAND GRANT
Department of Agriculture
$23.8M
RECONNECT 100% GRANT INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENTS AND JOBS ACT
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$23.6M
COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT BLOCK GRANTS/STATE'S PROGRAM AND NON-ENTITLEMENT GRANTS IN HAWAII
Department of Health and Human Services
$23.6M
HEAD START AND EARLY HEAD START
Department of Health and Human Services
$23.4M
DECODING THE MULTIFACTORIAL ETIOLOGY OF NEURAL NETWORK DYSFUNCTION IN ALZHEIMER'S DISEASE - SUPPLEMENT – SUMMARY TAU CONTRIBUTES TO ALZHEIMER’S DISEASE (AD) AND MANY OTHER BRAIN DISEASES. HOWEVER, IT IS UNCERTAIN HOW TAU CAUSES NEURONAL DYSFUNCTION AND DEGENERATION, IN PART BECAUSE EXPERIMENTAL MODELS ARE NOT OPTIMIZED TO COMPARE THE RELATIVE PATHOGENICITY OF DIFFERENT TAU SPECIES IN DISEASE-RELEVANT CONTEXTS. MUTATIONS IN MAPT, THE GENE ENCODING TAU, CAUSE FRONTOTEMPORAL LOBAR DEGENERATION (FTLD) INSTEAD OF AD. IN CONTRAST, THE RARE A152T VARIANT OF TAU INCREASES RISK FOR BOTH TYPES OF DISEASES. THESE ASSOCIATIONS MERIT FURTHER EXPLORATION, ESPECIALLY AS MODELS EXPRESSING FTLD-MUTANT TAU ARE WIDELY USED TO STUDY TAU IN AD AND TO DEVELOP NOVEL AD TREATMENTS. CLINICAL AD ONSET IS PRECEDED BY ABNORMAL ACCUMULATIONS OF AMYLOID-B (AB) PEPTIDES IN BRAIN, AND MANY AD PATIENTS HAVE AT LEAST ONE APOLIPOPROTEIN (APO) E4 ALLELE, THE MOST IMPORTANT GENETIC RISK FACTOR FOR AD. THEREFORE, PROJECT 3 WILL GENERATE NEW MOUSE MODELS COMBINING HUMAN AB AND APOE4 EXPRESSION WITH NEAR-PHYSIOLOGICAL LEVELS OF HUMAN TAU THAT IS WILDTYPE, AS IN MOST AD PATIENTS, OR CARRIES THE A152T SUBSTITUTION, WHICH INCREASES AD RISK. COMPREHENSIVE FUNCTIONAL, PATHOLOGICAL, AND TRANSCRIPTOMIC ANALYSES OF THE NEW MODELS, TO BE CARRIED OUT IN COLLABORATION WITH PROJECTS 1, 2, AND 4 AND CORE B, SHOULD YIELD NEW INSIGHTS INTO DIFFERENTIAL EFFECTS OF THESE TAU SPECIES AND THEIR ROLES IN THE PATHOGENESIS OF DEMENTIA. PROJECT 3 WILL ALSO INVESTIGATE WHETHER TAU SPECIES THAT INCREASE AD RISK OR CAUSE FTLD DIFFER IN THEIR EFFECTS ON THE INTEGRITY AND FUNCTIONS OF NEURONS AND NEURAL NETWORKS. UNTIL WE KNOW WHICH FORMS OF TAU ARE MOST PATHOGENIC IN DIFFERENT CONDITIONS, THE MOST PRAGMATIC THERAPEUTIC APPROACH TO TAU IN OUR VIEW IS PARTIAL REDUCTION OF OVERALL TAU LEVELS, WHICH IS WELL TOLERATED AND HAS BENEFITS IN MORE CONVENTIONAL MODELS. WE WILL THEREFORE USE TAU-TARGETING ANTISENSE OLIGONUCLEOTIDES TO REDUCE HUMAN TAU LEVELS IN MODELS CO-EXPRESSING HUMAN AB AND APOE4. SINGLE-NUCLEUS/SINGLE-CELL TRANSCRIPTOMIC ANALYSES WILL BE USED TO IDENTIFY CELL-TYPE-SPECIFIC GENE EXPRESSION CHANGES AS WELL AS NOVEL MOLECULAR AND CELLULAR MECHANISMS THAT MAY MEDIATE PATHOGENIC EFFECTS OF TAU OR BENEFICIAL EFFECTS OF TAU REDUCTION. THESE ANALYSES WILL HELP PROJECTS 1 AND 2 DISTINGUISH BETWEEN PATHOGENIC MECHANISMS OF APOE4 AND AB THAT DO OR DO NOT DEPEND ON TAU. THEY COULD ALSO IDENTIFY NOVEL MOLECULAR AND CELLULAR MECHANISMS THAT MEDIATE TAU SEQUENCE-SPECIFIC EFFECTS. THE REQUESTED SUPPLEMENT WILL ALLOW A POSTDOCTORAL SCHOLAR FROM A BACKGROUND THAT IS UNDERREPRESENTED IN THE HEALTH-RELATED SCIENCES TO CONTRIBUTE TO THE EXPERIMENTS PROPOSED IN PROJECT 3 AND, AT THE SAME TIME, TO BENEFIT FROM TRAINING WITHIN THE LARGER CONTEXT OF THIS AD-FOCUSED INTERDISCIPLINARY PROGRAM.
Department of Agriculture
$23.3M
PILOT BROADBAND 100% GRANT- RBS REDG SUB ACCOUNT SEC. 762- GRANT
Department of the Interior
$23.3M
DESIGN AND CONSTRUCTION OF THE WEST RIVER AND LYMAN JONES RURAL WATER SYSTEM
Department of Health and Human Services
$23.3M
I4C 2.0: IMMUNOTHERAPY FOR CURE - SUMMARY THE GOALS OF I4C 2.0 ARE TO ADVANCE OUR SCIENTIFIC UNDERSTANDING OF THE VIRAL RESERVOIR AND TO DEVELOP IMMUNOLOGIC STRATEGIES FOR HIV-1 REMISSION AND ERADICATION BY A HIGHLY COLLABORATIVE AND MULTIFACETED RESEARCH PROGRAM INVOLVING PARTNERSHIPS AMONG ACADEMIA, INDUSTRY, GOVERNMENT, AND THE COMMUNITY. OUR OVERALL HYPOTHESIS IS THAT MULTIPLE IMMUNOLOGIC STRATEGIES WILL NEED TO BE EXPLORED AND COMBINED TO ACHIEVE LONG-TERM, ART- FREE VIROLOGIC CONTROL OR COMPLETE VIRUS ERADICATION, WITH THE GOAL OF SELECTING COMBINATION REGIMENS TO ADVANCE INTO CLINICAL DEVELOPMENT BY THE END OF THE PROPOSED PERIOD OF SUPPORT. WE PROPOSE THREE RESEARCH FOCI, A MANAGEMENT AND OPERATIONS SECTION, AND A COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT SECTION. FOCUS 1 (MECHANISTIC BASIS OF RESERVOIR TARGETING AND VIRAL PERSISTENCE) AIM 1. TO DEFINE A VIROLOGIC, IMMUNOLOGIC, AND TRANSCRIPTOMIC SIGNATURE OF VIRAL PERSISTENCE AND REBOUND AND TO DETERMINE HOW IMMUNOLOGIC STRATEGIES TARGET THE VIRAL RESERVOIR IN NHPS AND HUMANS AIM 2. TO DEFINE DRIVERS OF CLONAL EXPANSION AND PERSISTENCE OF THE REPLICATION-COMPETENT VIRAL RESERVOIR IN NHPS AND HUMANS TO ENHANCE RESERVOIR CONTROL AND ELIMINATION FOCUS 2 (NOVEL STRATEGIES FOR SUSTAINED VIRUS REMISSION) AIM 1. TO EVALUATE INNOVATIVE IMMUNE ENGINEERING STRATEGIES THAT PROVIDE LONG-TERM T CELL OR ENV-DIRECTED IMMUNE CONTROL, INCLUDING THERAPEUTIC VACCINES, CAR-T CELLS, AND ENGINEERED B CELLS AIM 2. TO COMBINE APPROACHES THAT AUGMENT HUMORAL AND CELLULAR IMMUNE RESPONSES TO ACHIEVE SUSTAINED IMMUNOSURVEILLANCE AND LONG-TERM ART-FREE VIROLOGIC CONTROL FOCUS 3 (NOVEL STRATEGIES FOR VIRUS ERADICATION) AIM 1. TO EVALUATE INNOVATIVE STRATEGIES FOR RAPID ELIMINATION OF THE MAJORITY OF THE VIRAL RESERVOIR, INCLUDING IMPROVED LRAS COMBINED WITH BNABS, ACTIVATED NK CELLS, AND CAR-T CELLS AIM 2. TO COMBINE THE MOST EFFECTIVE APPROACH TO RAPIDLY ELIMINATE THE MAJORITY OF THE VIRAL RESERVOIR WITH SUSTAINED IMMUNOSURVEILLANCE TO ELIMINATE THE RESIDUAL VIRAL RESERVOIR MANAGEMENT AND OPERATIONS (MO) SECTION COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT (CE) SECTION
Agency for International Development
$23.1M
ENERGY REGULATORY PARTNERSHIP PROGRAM (ERRP)
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$23.1M
COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT BLOCK GRANTS/STATE'S PROGRAM AND NON-ENTITLEMENT GRANTS IN HAWAII
Department of Agriculture
$23M
RECONNECT 100% GRANT INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENTS AND JOBS ACT
Department of Health and Human Services
$22.5M
HEAD START FULL YEAR - CENTER BASED
Department of Health and Human Services
$22.5M
HEALTH CENTER CLUSTER
Department of Commerce
$22.5M
THE BROADBAND INFRASTRUCTURE DEPLOYMENT PROJECT PROPOSES TO INSTALL MIDDLE MILE AND LAST MILE FIBER AND LAST MILE FIXED WIRELESS DIRECTLY CONNECTING 408 UNSERVED NATIVE AMERICAN HOUSEHOLDS WITH FIBER-TO-THE-HOME 100 MBPS/100 MBPS SERVICE.
Department of Agriculture
$22.2M
PILOT BROADBAND GRANT
Department of Education
$22M
PROMISE NEIGHBORHOODS IMPLEMENTATION GRANTS
Department of Health and Human Services
$21.9M
COMBINED IMMUNOLOGIC APPROACHES TO CURE HIV-1
Department of Agriculture
$21.7M
PILOT BROADBAND 100% GRANT- RBS REDG SUB ACCOUNT SEC. 762- GRANT
Department of Agriculture
$21.7M
RECONNECT TREAS RATE 50-50 LOAN-GRANT INFRASTRUCTURE INVEST AND JOBS ACT GRANT
Corporation for National and Community Service
$21.6M
N/A
Department of Agriculture
$21.5M
PILOT BROADBAND 100% GRANT- RBS REDG SUB ACCOUNT SEC. 762- GRANT
Department of Agriculture
$21.5M
PILOT BROADBAND 100% GRANT- RBS REDG SUB ACCOUNT SEC. 762- GRANT
Department of the Interior
$21.5M
2009-COFA-FSM-HEALTH-FY09
Department of Agriculture
$21.4M
PILOT BROADBAND GRANT
Department of the Interior
$21M
2010-COFA-FSM-HEALTH-FY10 -- HEALTH SECTOR GRANT
Department of Health and Human Services
$20.8M
HEALTH CENTER CLUSTER
Department of Agriculture
$20.8M
PILOT BROADBAND GRANT
Department of State
$20.8M
SPECIAL COURT FOR SIERRA LEONE - AMENDMENT 001. THIS IS A COST AMENDMENT TO ADD FUNDS.
Department of Energy
$20.8M
TAS::89 0331::TAS RECOVERY RECOVERY ACT - PILOT SCALE BIOREFINERY: SUSTAINABLE TRANSPORT FUELS FROM BIOMASS AND ALGAL RESIDUE VIA INTEGRATED PYROL
Environmental Protection Agency
$20.5M
DESCRIPTION:THIS AGREEMENT PROVIDES FUNDING UNDER THE INFLATION REDUCTION ACT (IRA) TO THE NONPROFIT ORGANIZATION DAY ONE, WHO ARE BASED IN THE SAN GABRIEL VALLEY. SPECIFICALLY, THE PROJECT WILL DEVELOP AND IMPLEMENT GREEN INFRASTRUCTURE, CLEAN WATER INFRASTRUCTURE, TRANSPORTATION OPTIONS FOR PREVENTING AIR POLLUTION, ENERGY EFFICIENT AND HEALTHY HOUSING AND BUILDINGS, AND POLLUTION MANAGEMENT AND REDUCTION STRATEGIES. THIS ASSISTANCE AGREEMENT PROVIDES FEDERAL FUNDING IN THE AMOUNT OF $20,452,614. ACTIVITIES:THE ACTIVITIES INCLUDE PLANTING TREES IN PARKWAYS AND PUBLIC PLACES, PLANTING GREENER SCHOOLYARDS WITH COMPOSTING, RAIN GARDENS, AND NATIVE PLANTS, PROMOTING ELECTRIC FAMILY AND CARGO BIKE USE AND BICYCLE REPAIR STATIONS, INSTALLING SOLAR PANELS AND INDUCTION STOVES IN HOMES, INSTALLING WATER REFILL STATIONS, AND BUILDING RAIN GARDENS AND A MULTI-BENEFIT STORMWATER CAPTURE SYSTEM. SUBRECIPIENT:ACTIVESGV WILL CO-LEAD COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT PLAN IMPLEMENTATION, COORDINATE E-FAMILY BIKE ACTIVITIES, INSTALL RESIDENTIAL RAIN GARDENS, AND CREATE BIKE REPAIR STATIONS AT PUBLIC SCHOOLS. THE COUNCIL FOR WATERSHED HEALTH WILL CONSTRUCT A NATURE-BASED, MULTI-BENEFIT GREENWAY PROJECT INCLUDING STORMWATER CAPTURE, NATIVE PLANTS, AND PEDESTRIAN/BIKEWAYS. TREEPEOPLE WILL CONDUCT THE TREE PLANTING PROGRAM TO PLANT 2,500 TREES. SUSTAINABLE CLAREMONT WILL IMPLEMENT SCHOOLYARD GREENING (ON-SITE COMPOSTING, RAIN GARDENS, TREE PLANTING) FOR AT LEAST 10 PUBLIC SCHOOLS. GRID ALTERNATIVES WILL IMPLEMENT RESIDENTIAL SOLAR PV AND BATTERY STORAGE AND COOL ROOFS.OUTCOMES:THE ANTICIPATED DELIVERABLES INCLUDE 1,000 TREES PLANTED IN PUBLIC AREAS, 1,500 DISTRIBUTED FRUIT TREES, 10 GREENER PUBLIC SCHOOL YARDS WITH NATIVE PLANTS, COMPOSTING, AND RAIN GARDENS, 300 ELECTRIC FAMILY/CARGO BIKES, 30 BIKE REPAIR STATIONS, 30 HOME SOLAR ENERGY SETUPS, 22 COOL ROOFS TO REDUCE AIR TEMPERATURE, 60 INDUCTION STOVES, 60 CLEAN WATER REFILL STATIONS, 60 RAIN GARDENS, AND A MULTI-BENEFIT STORMWATER CAPTURE SYSTEM FOR THE GREEN STREETS MERCED AVENUE GREENWAY, AND 12 DETAILED QUARTERLY REPORTS THAT WILL DOCUMENT BOTH QUANTITATIVE AND QUALITATIVE MEASURES OF EACH CLIMATE ACTION STRATEGY AND PROJECT. THE EXPECTED OUTCOMES INCLUDE CLIMATE AND PUBLIC HEALTH ENHANCEMENT, EXTREME HEAT MITIGATION, REDUCED GREENHOUSE GAS EMISSIONS, CLEANER OUTDOOR AND INDOOR AIR, REDUCED POLLUTION EXPOSURE TO STUDENTS AND LOW-INCOME RESIDENTS, CLEANER WATER, REDUCED WATER USAGE, REDUCED FLOOD RISK, REDUCED LANDFILL WASTE AND HABITAT POLLUTION, POLLINATOR PROTECTION, MORE ACCESSIBLE STREETS IN URBAN AREAS, AND INCREASED KNOWLEDGE OF CLIMATE RESILIENCE IN THE COMMUNITY. THE INTENDED BENEFICIARIES ARE DISADVANTAGED COMMUNITIES.
Department of Health and Human Services
$20.4M
SIGNALING AND TRANSCRIPTIONAL NETWORKS IN CARDIAC PATTERNING
Department of Commerce
$20.4M
PURPOSE: THE MMG AWARD REQUESTED BY SCTC WILL ACCOMPLISH TWO VERY IMPORTANT OBJECTIVES OF THE PROGRAM. 1) IT WILL BRING MIDDLE-MILE INFRASTRUCTURE TO THE TRULY UNSERVED AND UNDERSERVED COMMUNITIES OF CENTRAL APPALACHIA AND ENABLE SCTC AND OTHERS TO BUILD LAST-MILE INFRASTRUCTURE TO PROVIDE AFFORDABLE SERVICE. 2) BECAUSE THE PROPOSED NETWORK ARCHITECTURE IS A RING TOPOLOGY, AND IS INTEGRATED INTO EXISTING SCTC NETWORK, IT WILL PROVIDE A SELF-PROTECTED RESILIENCY WITH MULTIPLE PATHS AND FEW SINGLE POINTS OF FAILURE.ACTIVITIES TO BE PERFORMED: BUILT OVER FOUR YEARS, THE PROPOSED ROUTE WILL BE 155 MILES OF NEW FIBER CABLE THAT SIGNIFICANTLY IMPROVES THE EXISTING SCTC NETWORK ARCHITECTURE BY CREATING 4 NEW RINGS, CLOSES SEVERAL UNPROTECTED LATERALS, OPENS DOZENS OF UNSERVED MARKETS, AND INTERCONNECTS (VIA A NETWORK-TO-NETWORK INTERFACE NNI) WITH EAST KENTUCKY NETWORKS (EKN).THE EXISTING SCTC NETWORK THAT WILL BE LEVERAGED IS FROM DUFFIELD, VA, TO LEBANON IN RUSSELL CO., VA TO GRUNDY, VA, IN BUCHANAN CO., THEN EAST TO DICKENSON CO. AND WISE CO, WHERE AN INTERCONNECT WITH EKN IN POUND, VIRGINIA, WILL BE ESTABLISHED. THE SCTC NETWORK THEN GOES SOUTH AND EAST TOWARD LEE CO, VA., TO THE SECOND INTERCONNECT WITH EKN NEAR CRANKS, KY. THIS WILL CREATE THE RING TOPOGRAPHY THAT WILL PROVIDE THE SELF-HEALING CAPABILITY. THE NETWORK THEN CONTINUES SOUTHEAST TO CLAIBORNE AND GRAINGER COUNTIES TN, THEN NORTHWEST THROUGH HANCOCK CO., AND FINALLY BACK TO THE SCTC CENTRAL OFFICE IN DUFFIELD VA.THE NEW NETWORK BUILDS PROPOSED FOR THE NTIA GRANT WILL BE 24 MILES FROM UNION CO, TN., THROUGH GRAINGER COUNTY TO CREATE A NEW RING ON THE EXTREME SOUTHEAST END OF THE SCTC NETWORK. THEN, 36 MILES OF NEW CONSTRUCTION FROM GRAINGER CO., TN., THROUGH HAWKINS CO., TN., WHERE SCTC WILL CLOSE ONE ADDITIONAL RING. CONTINUING NORTHWEST, SCTC WILL BUILD 33 MILES OF NEW CONSTRUCTION TO KINGSPORT, TN., WHERE ANOTHER INTERCONNECTION WILL BE MADE WITH EXISTING FIBER, THEN 25 MILES SOUTH TO JOHNSON CITY, TN., THEN 25 MILES NORTHEAST TO BRISTOL, TN., AND FINALLY 9 MILES OF NEW CONSTRUCTION WITH EXISTING SCTC FIBER IN WASHINGTON CO., VA. IN ADDITION TO THIS PLAN, 3 MILES OF NEW CONSTRUCTION WILL BE BUILT TO INTERCONNECT WITH EKN NEAR CRANKS, KY.EXPECTED OUTCOMES: THE PROJECT IS PROPOSED THROUGH AN AREA WHICH IS AT LEAST 27.51% UNSERVED AND WHERE 26% OF THE HOUSEHOLDS FALL BELOW 200% OF THE NATIONAL POVERTY LEVEL. THIS PROJECT WILL SERVE THE UNSERVED WITH AFFORDABLE INTERNET. INTENDED BENEFICIARIES: THE PROPOSED PROJECT AREA IS A 13-COUNTY AREA OF CENTRAL APPALACHIA. THE SPARSE POPULATION DENSITY, MOUNTAINOUS TERRAIN, AND HIGH COST OF CONSTRUCTING NETWORKS IN THE REGION MAKE IT UNLIKELY THAT THERE WILL BE A MARKET-BASED SOLUTION TO THE BROADBAND PROBLEM WITHOUT FEDERAL ASSISTANCE. THE AREA INCLUDES DICKENSON, LEE, RUSSELL, SCOTT, WASHINGTON, BUCHANAN, AND WISE COUNTIES IN FAR SOUTHWEST VIRGINIA AND GRAINGER, HAWKINS, SULLIVAN, WASHINGTON, UNION, AND HANCOCK COUNTIES IN EAST TENNESSEE. EXCEPT FOR WASHINGTON AND SULLIVAN COUNTIES IN TENNESSEE, THE AREA IS RURAL, LOW POPULATION DENSITY, AND HAS GREATER POVERTY THAN EITHER OF THE TENNESSEE OR VIRGINIA STATE AVERAGES, AND SUBSTANTIALLY BELOW THE NATIONAL AVERAGE. ACCORDING TO US CENSUS 2020 DATA AND USDA RURALITY VALUES, 71.58% OF THIS PROJECT AREA IS RURAL.SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES: THERE WILL BE NO SUBRECIPIENTS.
Department of Agriculture
$20.3M
DIRECT BB TREASURY RATE GRANT - (FY09-10) STIMULUS
Department of Health and Human Services
$20.3M
AMP-AD DATA COORDINATION CENTER
Department of Agriculture
$20.2M
PILOT BROADBAND 100% GRANT- RBS REDG SUB ACCOUNT SEC. 762- GRANT
Department of Health and Human Services
$20.2M
HEALTH CENTER CLUSTER
Agency for International Development
$20.1M
ENHANCING STABILITY AND TECHNICAL EXPERTISE IN EUROPEAN AND EURASIAN MARKETS (ESTEEM)
Department of Education
$20M
PATHWAYS TO THE FUTURE!
Department of Health and Human Services
$19.9M
AMERICAN RESCUE PLAN ACT FUNDING FOR HEALTH CENTERS
Department of Health and Human Services
$19.8M
HEALTH CENTER CLUSTER
Department of Transportation
$19.7M
FY21 CAPITAL PROJECTS PLANNING
Department of Health and Human Services
$19.7M
ANDROGEN RECEPTOR ACTION IN CASTRATION RESISTANT PROSTATE CANCER
Department of the Interior
$19.6M
PURE WATER MONTEREY GROUNDWATER REPLENISHMENT PROJECT
Corporation for National and Community Service
$19.5M
THIS AWARD FUNDS THE APPROVED 2023-2024 AMERICORPS STATE COMPETITIVE FIXED AMOUNT PROGRAMS, AS LISTED ON THE APPROVED PROGRAM FUNDING SUMMARY CHART. THIS AWARD IS A FIXED AMOUNT GRANT AT $23,000 PER MSY FOR AMERICAN YOUTHWORKS, CITY YEAR DALLAS, COMMUNITIES IN SCHOOLS OF NORTH TEXAS, NATIONAL COLLEGE ADVISING CORPS, AND THE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS AT AUSTIN. NO MEMBER MAY ENROLL PRIOR TO THE APPROVED START DATE OF THE MEMBER ENROLLMENT PERIOD. AMERICAN YOUTHWORKS: THIS AWARD INCLUDES ARP FUNDING INTENDED TO INCREASE THE LIVING ALLOWANCE. TO DO THIS, WE WILL AWARD $139,470 FOR LIVING ALLOWANCE INCREASES. CITY YEAR, INC. (DALLAS): THIS AWARD INCLUDES ARP FUNDING INTENDED TO INCREASE THE LIVING ALLOWANCE. TO DO THIS, WE WILL AWARD $806,232 FOR LIVING ALLOWANCE INCREASES. NATIONAL COLLEGE ADVISING CORPS: THIS AWARD INCLUDES ARP FUNDING INTENDED TO INCREASE THE LIVING ALLOWANCE. TO DO THIS, WE WILL AWARD $1,673,752 FOR LIVING ALLOWANCE INCREASES. UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS AT AUSTIN: THIS AWARD INCLUDES ARP FUNDING INTENDED TO INCREASE THE LIVING ALLOWANCE. TO DO THIS, WE WILL AWARD $992,735 FOR LIVING ALLOWANCE INCREASES.
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$19.5M
NEIGHBORHOOD STABILIZATION PRG
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$19.5M
NEIGHBORHOOD STABILIZATION PRG
Corporation for National and Community Service
$19.4M
GRANTS WILL BE AWARDED TO ORGANIZATIONS PROPOSING TO ENGAGE AMERICORPS MEMBERS TO STRENGTHEN COMMUNITIES.
Department of Agriculture
$19.4M
DIRECT BB TREASURY RATE GRANT - (FY09-10) STIMULUS
Department of the Interior
$19.3M
THE UNITED STATES FISH AND WILDLIFE SERVICE (USFWS) AND THE WELL DONE FOUNDATION (WDF) SEEK TO RESTORE AND CONSERVE HABITAT BY PLUGGING, ABANDONING, AND RECLAIMING 111 ORPHANED WELL SITES ON AT LEAST 5 NATIONAL WILDLIFE REFUGES IN A MANNER THAT ADHERES TO STATE AND FEDERAL REGULATORY REQUIREMENTS FOR OIL AND GAS OPERATIONS AND MEETS CONSERVATION NEEDS IDENTIFIED WITHIN THE COOPERATIVE AGREEMENT. THE USFWS AND WDF HAVE THE COMPATIBLE GOAL OF ENSURING THAT ORPHANED OIL AND GAS WELLS ON REFUGE LANDS ARE PROPERLY PLUGGED AND ABANDONED AND THAT ASSOCIATED DISTURBED AREAS ARE RECLAIMED. ORPHANED OIL AND GAS WELLS AND SITES LOCATED ON WILDLIFE REFUGES POSE SAFETY THREATS AND ENVIRONMENTAL RISKS. THREATS INCLUDE INCREASED HAZARDS TO NATURAL RESOURCES, RESOURCE DAMAGE FROM RELEASE OF PETROLEUM PRODUCTS DUE TO MISSING OR DETERIORATING PRESSURE CONTROL EQUIPMENT, CONTAMINATION OF SURFACE OR GROUNDWATER ABSENT PROPER WELL PLUGGING, PERSONAL INJURY AND PROPERTY DAMAGE FROM RELEASE OF PRESSURIZED AND HIGHLY FLAMMABLE WELL FLUIDS, MIGRATION OF CONTAMINATES FROM BURIED PITS, AND LOSS OF HABITAT FROM SAID CONTAMINATION AND SURFACE DISTURBANCES. THESE RISKS INCREASE WITH TIME, AS DOES THE COST OF ADDRESSING THEM.
Department of Agriculture
$19.2M
PILOT BROADBAND GRANT
Department of Health and Human Services
$19.1M
HEAD START/EARLY HEAD START
Department of Health and Human Services
$19.1M
HEALTH CENTER CLUSTER
Department of Commerce
$19M
RECOVERY ACT - BIT WIRELESS BROADBAND INITIATIVE
Department of Health and Human Services
$19M
HEAD START AND EARLY HEAD START
Department of Agriculture
$18.9M
PILOT BROADBAND GRANT
Department of Agriculture
$18.7M
RECONNECT 100% GRANT INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENTS AND JOBS ACT
Department of Commerce
$18.7M
AMERICAN RECOVERY AND REINVESTMENT ACT - SBA - CONNECT YOUR COMMUNITY
Corporation for National and Community Service
$18.7M
AMERICORPS*STATE
Department of Agriculture
$18.7M
PILOT BROADBAND GRANT
Department of Education
$18.6M
GAINING EARLY AWARENESS AND READINESS FOR UNDERGRADUATE PROGRAMS (GEAR UP STATE)
Department of Agriculture
$18.5M
PILOT BROADBAND GRANT
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$18.4M
HOME INVESTMENT CPD
Department of Health and Human Services
$18.1M
HEALTH CENTER CLUSTER
Department of Agriculture
$18.1M
RECONNECT 100% GRANT INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENTS AND JOBS ACT
Department of Transportation
$18M
APPLICATION PURPOSE: TO UTILIZE CARES ACT FUND TO HELP RESPOND TO A RECOVER FROM THE COVID-19 PANDEMIC.; ACTIVITIES PERFORMED: OPERATING ASSISTANCE PREVENTATIVE MAINTENANCE SUPPORT EQUIPMENT AND SUPPLIES PROTECTIVE BARRIERS FOR SUPPORT STAFF RETROFITTING OF CLOTH SEATS TO PLASTIC BUS SEATS.; EXPECTED OUTCOMES: FUNDING WILL PERMIT SPACE COAST AREA TRANSIT TO MEET PREVENTATIVE MAINTENANCE STANDARDS CONTINUE TO PROVIDE OPERATIONS AND KEEP ROLLING STOCK IN A STATE OF GOOD REPAIR.; INTENDED BENEFICIARIES: SPACE COAST AREA TRANSIT AND THE RIDERS THAT RELY ON ITS SERVICE WILL BENEFIT FROM CONTINUED SERVICES PERMITTING WORKERS IN BREVARD COUNTY FL TO GET TO WORK AND OTHER DESTINATIONS.; SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES: NONE
Department of State
$18M
TO SUPPORT THE "INL/COLOMBIA NATIONAL POLICE SCHOLARSHIP PROGRAM"
Department of Agriculture
$17.9M
DIRECT BB TREASURY RATE GRANT - (FY09-10) STIMULUS
Department of Agriculture
$17.9M
PILOT BROADBAND LOAN GRANT COMBO - GRANT
Department of Health and Human Services
$17.8M
GENERATION OF A CELLULAR ATLAS OF ADIPOSE TISSUE IN MOUSE AND MAN
Department of Health and Human Services
$17.8M
NOVEL AD/MVA AND AD/PROTEIN HIV-1 VACCINES
Department of Transportation
$17.8M
APPLICATION PURPOSE: THE PURPOSE OF THIS AWARD IS TO PROVIDE PVTA WITH FUNDING FOR THE FY24 PROGRAM OF CAPITAL AND PLANNING PROJECTS THAT WILL MAINTAIN VEHICLES AND BUILDINGS IN A STATE OF GOOD REPAIR PROVIDE ESSENTIAL SERVICES AND ENHANCE REGIONAL TRANSIT PLANNING EFFORTS.; ACTIVITIES PERFORMED: ACTIVITIES TO BE PERFORMED: PROJECT #1:PREVENTIVE MAINTENANCENON-ROUTE ADA PARATRANSIT SERVICETRANSPORTATION PLANNINGPROJECT #2REPLACEMENT OF (4) 35 BUSESREPLACEMENT OF (12) 40 BUSESREPLACEMENT OF (1) 40 BUS 5339REPLACEMENT OF (1) 35 BUS 5339BUY REPLACEMENT 30FT BUS (2) TYPE D SHUTTLE BUSES ACQUIRE MINI-VAN FOR THE TOWN OF WARE WITH CONGESTION MITIGATION AND AIR QUALITY IMPROVEMENT (CMAQ) PROGRAM FUNDS TRANSFERRED FROM FHWAACQUIRE REPLACEMENT SUPERVISORY VEHICLES (2)ACQUIRE REPLACEMENT SUPPORT VEHICLES (1)PROJECT #3:INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY; EXPECTED OUTCOMES: THESE ACTIVITIES WILL ALLOW PVTA TO CONTINUE TO SUPPORT THE COMMUNITY BY MAINTAINING A SAFE RELIABLE AND EFFICIENT PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION SYSTEM IN THE PIONEER VALLEY. ASSETS WILL BE MAINTAINED IN A STATE OF GOOD REPAIR AND UPGRADED IN ACCORDANCE WITH PVTAS TRANSIT ASSET MANAGEMENT PLAN. ADDITIONALLY SUPPORT FOR PVTAS NON FIXED ROUTE ADA PARATRANSIT SERVICE WILL ENSURE PVTAS CONTINUED COMPLIANCE WITH ADA REQUIREMENTS TO PROVIDE ACCESSIBLE SERVICE TO ELIGIBLE CUSTOMERS.; INTENDED BENEFICIARIES: THE RESIDENTS OF THE PIONEER VALLEY TRANSIT AUTHORITYS SERVICE AREA AND LOCAL AREA COMMUTERS AND EMPLOYEES AS WELL AS HIGHER EDUCATION STUDENTS.; SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES: PIONEER VALLEY PLANNING COMMISSION (PVPC) WILL BE RECEIVING $200000 IN FEDERAL FUNDS AS A SUBRECIPIENT OF PVTA UNDER THIS AWARD TO PERFORM REGIONAL TRANSIT PLANNING ACTIVITIES.
Department of the Interior
$17.7M
CSG-FSM-2008-HEALTH - HEALTH SECTOR GRANT
Department of Transportation
$17.7M
APPLICATION PURPOSE: THE PURPOSE OF THIS AWARD IS TO PROVIDE PVTA WITH FUNDING FOR A PROGRAM OF CAPITAL AND PLANNING PROJECTS THAT WILL MAINTAIN VEHICLES AND FACILITIES IN A STATE OF GOOD REPAIR PROVIDE ESSENTIAL TRANSPORTATION SERVICES AND ENHANCE REGIONAL PLANNING EFFORTS.; ACTIVITIES PERFORMED: NORTHAMPTON BUS MAINTENANCE FACILITY DESIGN SERVICES SEALCOAT ASPHALT AND RESTRIPEHOLYOKE INTERMODAL CENTER BUS BAY CANOPY AND PAVEMENT UPGRADESUMASS TRANSIT FACILITY HYDRAULIC LIFT REPAIRSOLVER PAVILION SEALCOAT PARKING LOTS AND RESTRIPINGSPRINGFIELD OM FACILITY AT COTTAGE STREET ROOFTOP SOLAR ARRAY INTEGRATION BUS TIRE CAROUSELSPRINGFIELD PARATRANSIT OM FACILITY MANSORY REPAIRS TO BUILDINGS ENVELOPEADMINISTRATION BUILDING FLAT ROOF PROTECTION AND REPAIR TO CEILING AND WALLSENSURE ENVIRONMENTAL COMPLIANCEENSURE PVTA FACILITIES ARE IN A STATE OF GOOD REPAIRACQUIRE SHOP EQUIPMENTINFORMATION TECHNOLOGYREPLACEMENT OF (7) 40 BUSESREPLACEMENT OF (1) 40 BUS 5339REPLACEMENT OF (2) 40 BUS WITH 60 ARTICULATED BUSPREVENTIVE MAINTENANCENON-ROUTE ADA PARATRANSIT SERVICETRANSPORTATION PLANNINGTHE MATCH FOR THESE PROJECTS WILL BE PROVIDED BY STATE CONTRACT ASSISTANCE LOCAL ASSESSMENTS AND RTACAP FUNDS.; EXPECTED OUTCOMES: THESE ACTIVITIES WILL ALLOW PVTA TO CONTINUE TO SUPPORT THE COMMUNITY BY MAINTAINING A SAFE RELIABLE AND EFFICIENT PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION SYSTEM IN THE PIONEER VALLEY REGION OF WESTERN MASSACHUSETTS. ASSETS WILL BE MAINTAINED IN A STATE OF GOOD REPAIR AND UPGRADED IN ACCORDANCE WITH PVTAS TRANSIT ASSET MANAGEMENT PLAN. ADDITIONALLY SUPPORT FOR PVTAS NON FIXED ROUTE ADA PARATRANSIT SERVICE WILL ENSURE PVTAS CONTINUED COMPLIANCE WITH ADA REQUIREMENTS TO PROVIDE ACCESSIBLE SERVICE TO ELIGIBLE CUSTOMERS.; INTENDED BENEFICIARIES: ASSISTANCE IN PROVIDING PUBLIC TRANSIT SERVICE TO INDIVIDUALS THAT FOR WHATEVER REASONS DO NOT OWN A PERSONAL VEHICLES. THE BENEFICIARIES OF THIS PROGRAM ARE THE RESIDENTS OF THE PIONEER VALLEY TRANSIT AUTHORITYS SERVICE AREA AND LOCAL AREA COMMUTERS.; SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES: PIONEER VALLEY PLANNING COMMISSION (PVPC) WILL BE RECEIVING $208000 IN FEDERAL FUNDS AS A SUBRECIPIENT OF PVTA UNDER THIS AWARD TO PERFORM PLANNING ACTIVITIES.
Department of Agriculture
$17.6M
PILOT BROADBAND GRANT
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.
Tax Year 2024 · Source: IRS e-Filed Form 990
| Name | Title | Hrs/Wk | Compensation | Related Orgs | Other | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Aaron Reddin | Executive Director | 60 | $36.1K | $0 | $0 | $36.1K |
| Anthony Valley | Secretary | 2 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 |
| Lindsay Carter | Treasurer | 2 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 |
| Mark Deal | President | 2 | $0 |
Source: IRS Publication 78, Auto-Revocation List & e-Postcard Data
Tax-deductible contributions: Yes
Deductibility code: PC
990-N (e-Postcard) Filing History
This organization files simplified Form 990-N (annual gross receipts ≤ $50,000).
Sources: IRS e-Filed Form 990 (XML) & ProPublica Nonprofit Explorer
Scroll →
| Year | Revenue | Contributions | Expenses | Assets | Net Assets |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2024IRS e-File | $647.4K | $642.9K | $403.8K | $1.1M | $636.7K |
| 2023 | $283K | $274K | $313.7K | $808.1K | $392.8K |
| 2022 | $339.5K | $339K | $260.9K | $587.4K | $423.5K |
| 2021 | $320.1K | $317.6K |
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 e-Filed Form 990 (Tax Year 2024)
Leadership & compensation: IRS e-Filed Form 990, Part VII (Tax Year 2024)
Federal grants: USAspending.gov (live)
Organization info: IRS Business Master File
Tax-deductibility: IRS Publication 78
| $0 |
| $0 |
| $0 |
| Angela Carson | Vice President | 2 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 |
| Tricia Williams | Associate Director | 2 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 |
Aaron Reddin
Executive Director
$36.1K
Hrs/Wk
60
Compensation
$36.1K
Related Orgs
$0
Other
$0
Anthony Valley
Secretary
$0
Hrs/Wk
2
Compensation
$0
Related Orgs
$0
Other
$0
Lindsay Carter
Treasurer
$0
Hrs/Wk
2
Compensation
$0
Related Orgs
$0
Other
$0
Mark Deal
President
$0
Hrs/Wk
2
Compensation
$0
Related Orgs
$0
Other
$0
Angela Carson
Vice President
$0
Hrs/Wk
2
Compensation
$0
Related Orgs
$0
Other
$0
Tricia Williams
Associate Director
$0
Hrs/Wk
2
Compensation
$0
Related Orgs
$0
Other
$0
| Name | Title | Hrs/Wk | Compensation | Related Orgs | Other | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amanda Parker | Board Member | 2 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 |
| Brian Thompson | Board Member | 2 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 |
| Dave Hoffpauir | Board Member | 2 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 |
| Maureen Skinner | Board Member | 2 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 |
Amanda Parker
Board Member
$0
Hrs/Wk
2
Compensation
$0
Related Orgs
$0
Other
$0
Brian Thompson
Board Member
$0
Hrs/Wk
2
Compensation
$0
Related Orgs
$0
Other
$0
Dave Hoffpauir
Board Member
$0
Hrs/Wk
2
Compensation
$0
Related Orgs
$0
Other
$0
Maureen Skinner
Board Member
$0
Hrs/Wk
2
Compensation
$0
Related Orgs
$0
Other
$0
| $245.4K |
| $537.6K |
| $354K |
| 2020 | $275.5K | $269.5K | $197.7K | $526K | $323K |
| 2019 | $212.2K | $202K | $223.6K | $467K | $245.2K |
| 2018 | $221.6K | $208.5K | $191.7K | $290.8K | $256.6K |
| 2017 | $174.2K | — | $161.5K | $324.6K | — |
| 2016 | $370.4K | $363.7K | $454.3K | $298.1K | $136.6K |
| 2015 | $395.4K | $395.4K | $289.8K | $301.1K | $220.5K |
| 2014 | $198.4K | — | $136.2K | $198.7K | — |
| 2021 | 990 | Data |
| 2020 | 990 | Data |
| 2019 | 990 | Data |
| 2018 | 990 | Data |
| 2017 | 990-EZ | Data |
| 2016 | 990 | Data |
| 2015 | 990 | Data |
| 2014 | 990-EZ | Data |