Loading organization details...
Loading organization details...
Source: IRS Form 990 via ProPublica Nonprofit Explorer
Total Revenue
▼$122.9K
Total Contributions
$0
Total Expenses
▼$110.6K
Total Assets
$3.5M
Total Liabilities
▼$143.8K
Net Assets
$3.4M
Officer Compensation
→$0
Other Salaries
$0
Investment Income
▼$13.8K
Fundraising
▼$0
Source: USAspending.gov · Searched by organization name
VA/DoD Awards
$2.8B
VA/DoD Award Count
50
Funding from the Department of Veterans Affairs and/or Department of Defense.
Total Federal Funding (partial)
$28.4B
Awards Found
200+
Additional awards may exist. View all on USAspending.gov →
| Awarding Agency | Description | Amount | Fiscal Year | Period |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT BLOCK GRANTS/STATE'S PROGRAM AND NON-ENTITLEMENT GRANTS IN HAWAII | $5B | — | — – — |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT BLOCK GRANTS/STATE'S PROGRAM AND NON-ENTITLEMENT GRANTS IN HAWAII | $4.3B | FY2021 | Jan 2021 – Jan 2033 |
| Department of Energy | THE DIII-D NATIONAL FUSION PROGRAM AND ADVANCED FUSION TECHNOLOGY RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT | $1.2B | FY2004 | Nov 2003 – Jul 2026 |
| Department of Homeland Security | GRANT TO LOCAL GOVERNMENT FOR REPAIR OR REPLACEMENT OF DISASTER DAMAGED FACILITIES | $823.2M | FY2020 | Apr 2020 – Sep 2026 |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT BLOCK GRANTS | $652.2M | FY2019 | Aug 2019 – Aug 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. | $555.7M | FY2025 | Sep 2025 – Sep 2031 |
| Department of Homeland Security | GRANT TO LOCAL GOVERNMENT FOR REPAIR OR REPLACEMENT OF DISASTER DAMAGED FACILITIES | $524.5M | FY2020 | Apr 2020 – Sep 2026 |
| Department of Energy | INFLATION REDUCTION ACT (IRA) ELECTRIC VEHICLE (EV) CONVERSION THE RECIPIENT WILL CONVERT AN EXISTING VEHICLE ASSEMBLY FACILITY LOCATED IN THE UNITED STATES TO ELECTRIC VEHICLE (EV) PRODUCTION. THE CONVERSION WILL ENABLE EXPANSION OF DOMESTIC EV PRODUCTION, COMPONENTS, AND MATERIALS. | $500M | FY2025 | Jan 2025 – May 2026 |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | GULF HURRICANE RECOVERY | $428.7M | — | — – Jan 2018 |
| Department of Homeland Security | PROVIDE REIMBURSEMENT TO STATE, LOCAL, TRIBAL, AND TERRITORIAL GOVERNMENT ENTITIES AND CERTAIN PRIVATE NON-PROFIT ORGANIZATIONS FOR EMERGENCY PROTECTIVE MEASURES TAKEN DURING THE PANDEMIC. EMERGENCY PROTECTIVE MEASURES NECESSARY TO SAVE LIVES AND PROTECT PUBLIC HEALTH AND SAFETY. MANAGEMENT, CONTROL, AND REDUCTION OF IMMEDIATE THREATS TO PUBLIC HEALTH AND SAFETY. EMERGENCY MEDICAL CARE. MEDICAL SHELTERING. ADMINISTRATION AND DISTRIBUTION OF VACCINES. COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT AND INFORMATION DISSEMINATION. | $380M | — | — – Sep 2026 |
| Department of Energy | THE DIII-D FUSION RESEARCH PROGRAM AND ADVANCED FUSION TECHNOLOGY RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT | $352.8M | FY2004 | Jan 2004 – Oct 2013 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | SCSS-2024 | $325.9M | FY2024 | Oct 2023 – Sep 2024 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | SCSS-2025 - CHILD SUPPORT SERVICES - STATES | $319.5M | FY2025 | Oct 2024 – Sep 2025 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | CSE-2023 | $294.6M | FY2023 | Oct 2022 – Sep 2023 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | FY 2018 STATE CHILD SUPPORT | $289.1M | FY2018 | Oct 2017 – Dec 2021 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | CSE-2022 | $284.4M | FY2022 | Oct 2021 – Sep 2022 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | FY 2017 STATE CHILD SUPPORT | $282.1M | FY2017 | Oct 2016 – Dec 2021 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | 2010 OCSE | $277.3M | FY2010 | Oct 2009 – Sep 2010 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | FY 2019 STATE CHILD SUPPORT | $269.5M | FY2019 | Oct 2018 – Sep 2019 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | SCSS-2026 - CHILD SUPPORT SERVICES - STATES | $266.6M | FY2026 | Oct 2025 – Sep 2026 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | CSE-2021 | $259.2M | FY2021 | Oct 2020 – Sep 2021 |
| Department of Homeland Security | GRANT TO LOCAL GOVERNMENT FOR REPAIR OR REPLACEMENT OF DISASTER DAMAGED FACILITIES | $242.8M | FY2017 | Nov 2016 – Sep 2026 |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT BLOCK GRANTS/STATE'S PROGRAM AND NON-ENTITLEMENT GRANTS IN HAWAII | $238.9M | — | — – — |
| Department of Health and Human Services | FY 2016 STATE CHILD SUPPORT | $235.4M | FY2016 | Oct 2015 – Dec 2019 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | FY 2015 STATE CHILD SUPPORT | $231.1M | FY2015 | Oct 2014 – Dec 2019 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | FY 2020 CHILD SUPPORT STATE | $229.1M | FY2020 | Oct 2019 – Sep 2020 |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT BLOCK GRANTS/STATE'S PROGRAM AND NON-ENTITLEMENT GRANTS IN HAWAII | $227.5M | FY2021 | Mar 2021 – Mar 2030 |
| Department of Homeland Security | GRANT TO LOCAL GOVERNMENT FOR REPAIR OR REPLACEMENT OF DISASTER DAMAGED FACILITIES | $216.4M | FY2014 | Apr 2014 – Sep 2020 |
| VA/DoDDepartment of Defense | COOPERATIVE AGREEMENT FOR ROBOTICS COLLABORATIVE TECHNOLOGY ALLIANCE (RCTA) | $213.6M | FY2010 | Apr 2010 – Mar 2022 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | 2007 OCSE | $212.2M | FY2007 | Oct 2006 – Sep 2007 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | 2009 OCSE | $207.4M | FY2009 | Oct 2008 – Dec 2019 |
| Department of Energy | GENERATING DEEP SAVINGS AND STRONG RESILIENCE FOR VULNERABLE HOUSEHOLDS IN PUERTO RICO WITH HIGHLY COST-EFFECTIVE SOLAR + STORAGE. THE OBJECTIVE OF THE PROJECT FOR TOPIC AREA 1 IS TO EFFICIENTLY UTILIZE FUNDING FROM THE DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY GRID DEPLOYMENT OFFICE PUERTO RICO ENERGY RESILIENCE FUND TO RAPIDLY DEPLOY ROOFTOP SOLAR PV AND BATTERY STORAGE SYSTEMS TO THE HOMES OF ELIGIBLE RESIDENTS (BENEFICIARIES) TO INCREASE THEIR ENERGY RESILIENCE AND DECREASE THEIR ENERGY BURDEN, GROW THE CLEAN ENERGY WORKFORCE IN PUERTO RICO, AND PROVIDE EDUCATION AND TRAINING FOR BOTH RESIDENTS AND WORKERS. TOPIC AREA 1 REQUIRES NO LESS THAN 5% COST SHARE FOR EACH PHASE OF WORK. | $200M | FY2024 | Dec 2023 – Dec 2028 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | 2011 OCSE | $193.1M | FY2011 | Oct 2010 – Sep 2011 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | 2012 OCSE | $186.9M | FY2012 | Oct 2011 – Sep 2012 |
| VA/DoDDepartment of Veterans Affairs | VHA CBO PURCHASED CARE | $183.3M | — | — – Sep 2026 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | 2008 OCSE | $183.1M | FY2008 | Oct 2007 – Sep 2008 |
| VA/DoDDepartment of Veterans Affairs | VHA CBO PURCHASED CARE | $166.1M | — | — – Sep 2026 |
| VA/DoDDepartment of Veterans Affairs | VHA CBO PURCHASED CARE | $140.1M | — | — – Sep 2026 |
| VA/DoDDepartment of Veterans Affairs | VHA CBO PURCHASED CARE | $134.5M | — | — – Sep 2026 |
| VA/DoDDepartment of Veterans Affairs | VHA CBO PURCHASED CARE | $131.8M | — | — – Sep 2026 |
| Department of Energy | GE-HITACHI ECONOMIC SIMPLIFIED BOILING WATER REACTOR (ESBWR) NEW NUCLEAR PLANT LICENSING, CONTINUATION TO BUDGET PERIOD 4 (INTERIM SCOPE) AND $3.5M O | $130.6M | FY2007 | Jul 2007 – Jun 2012 |
| Department of Homeland Security | GRANT TO LOCAL GOVERNMENT FOR REPAIR OR REPLACEMENT OF DISASTER DAMAGED FACILITIES | $122.2M | FY2016 | Oct 2015 – Sep 2026 |
| Department of Justice | OVC FY 18 VICTIM ASSISTANCE FORMULA | $117.3M | FY2018 | Oct 2017 – Sep 2021 |
| VA/DoDDepartment of Veterans Affairs | VHA CBO PURCHASED CARE | $115M | — | — – Sep 2026 |
| Department of Energy | TAS::89 0331::TAS RECOVERY ACT EERE NEW AWARD - GM LI-ION BATTERY PACK MANUFACURING | $105.7M | FY2009 | Sep 2009 – Jun 2015 |
| Department of Energy | TAS::89 0331::TAS RECOVERY ACT EERE NEW AWARD - U.S. ELECTRIC DRIVE MANUFACTURING CENTER - GLOBAL REAR WHEEL DREIVE ELECTRIC | $103.4M | FY2010 | Apr 2010 – Apr 2015 |
| Department of Agriculture | RUS IRA NEW ERA LOAN GRANT COMBO - LOAN 2% - GRANT | $100.5M | FY2025 | Nov 2024 – Nov 2026 |
| Department of Homeland Security | GRANT TO LOCAL GOVERNMENT FOR REPAIR OR REPLACEMENT OF DISASTER DAMAGED FACILITIES | $99.2M | FY2019 | Nov 2018 – Sep 2026 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | HEAD START AND EARLY HEAD START | $90M | FY2019 | Jul 2019 – Jun 2025 |
| VA/DoDDepartment of Veterans Affairs | NHC | $87M | — | — – Sep 2026 |
| VA/DoDDepartment of Veterans Affairs | VHA CBO PURCHASED CARE | $86.4M | — | — – Sep 2026 |
| Department of Justice | OVC FY 19 VICTIM ASSISTANCE FORMULA | $79.2M | FY2019 | Oct 2018 – Sep 2022 |
| Department of Agriculture | RUS IRA NEW ERA GRANT | $79M | FY2025 | Jan 2025 – Jan 2027 |
| Department of Justice | OVC FY 16 VOCA VICTIM ASSISTANCE FORMULA | $78.7M | FY2016 | Oct 2015 – Sep 2019 |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT BLOCK GRANTS/ENTITLEMENT GRANTS | $74.6M | — | — – — |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | GULF HURRICANE RECOVERY | $74.5M | FY2006 | Apr 2006 – Apr 2017 |
| VA/DoDDepartment of Defense | IN ARMY NATIONAL GUARD FACILITIES PROGRAM - 1001 - FY21 INITIAL STARTUP | $71.6M | FY2022 | Oct 2021 – Jun 2026 |
| Department of Energy | ADVANCED IGCC/HYDROGEN GAS TURBINE DEVELOPMENT | $70.3M | FY2005 | Sep 2005 – Jun 2014 |
| Department of Justice | OVC FY 15 VOCA VICTIM ASSISTANCE FORMULA | $69.9M | FY2015 | Oct 2014 – Sep 2018 |
| Department of Energy | THIS NUCLEAR INDUSTRY SAFETY SYSTEM DIGITAL UPGRADE PROJECT ADDRESSES THE NEED TO ACHIEVE PROGRESS IN MODERNIZING CURRENT PLANTS TO ENSURE THEIR LONG-TERM ECONOMIC VIABILITY THROUGH SUCCESSFUL DEMONSTRATION OF A MAJOR SAFETY INSTRUMENTATION AND CONTROL (I&C) SYSTEM UPGRADE. THIS PROJECT WILL DESIGN AND PROCURE A SAFETY I&C SYSTEM UPGRADE, INTEGRATING ALL REQUIRED DESIGN BASIS FUNCTIONS WITH NEW LABOR-REDUCTION FEATURES THAT SUBSTANTIALLY REDUCE OPERATING AND MAINTENANCE COSTS; DEVELOP A LICENSING STRATEGY AND DEMONSTRATE USE OF THE NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION’S (NRC) NEWLY REVISED DIGITAL I&C INTERIM STAFF GUIDANCE #06 (ISG-06), REVISION 2 FOR SAFETY I&C SYSTEMS; AND INSTALL AND COMMISSION THE SAFETY I&C SYSTEM IN AN OPERATING NUCLEAR PLANT. | $66.4M | FY2022 | Oct 2021 – Jul 2027 |
| VA/DoDDepartment of Defense | IN ARMY NATIONAL GUARD FACILITIES PROGRAM - 1001 - FY23 INITIAL STARTUP | $65.2M | FY2023 | Oct 2022 – Jul 2026 |
| Department of Justice | OVC FY 17 VOCA VICTIM ASSISTANCE FORMULA | $65.1M | FY2017 | Oct 2016 – Sep 2020 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | CCC FOR NHLBI PREVENTION AND EARLY TREATMENT OF ACUTE LUNG INJURY PETAL NETWORK | $64.2M | FY2014 | Jun 2014 – Oct 2023 |
| Department of Homeland Security | GRANT TO LOCAL GOVERNMENT FOR REPAIR OR REPLACEMENT OF DISASTER DAMAGED FACILITIES | $63.3M | FY2019 | Sep 2019 – Sep 2026 |
| VA/DoDDepartment of Defense | ADVANCED AFFORDABLE TURBINE ENGINE PROGRAM | $62.8M | FY2007 | Sep 2007 – Dec 2015 |
| Department of Homeland Security | GRANT TO LOCAL GOVERNMENT FOR REPAIR OR REPLACEMENT OF DISASTER DAMAGED FACILITIES | $62.7M | FY2017 | Aug 2017 – Sep 2026 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | DISCOVERY: DETERMINANTS OF INCIDENT STROKE COGNITIVE OUTCOMES AND VASCULAR EFFECTS ON RECOVERY | $62.6M | FY2019 | Sep 2019 – Aug 2026 |
| VA/DoDDepartment of Defense | IN ARMY NATIONAL GUARD FACILITIES PROGRAM - 1001 FY25 INITIAL AWARD | $60.6M | FY2025 | Oct 2024 – Sep 2025 |
| Department of Justice | OVC FY 20 VOCA VICTIM ASSISTANCE FORMULA | $58.3M | FY2020 | Oct 2019 – Sep 2023 |
| VA/DoDDepartment of Defense | IN ARMY NATIONAL GUARD FACILITIES PROGRAM - 1001 FY24 INITIAL AWARD | $58.1M | FY2024 | Oct 2023 – Dec 2026 |
| Department of Energy | ADVANCED IGCC/HYDROGEN GAS TURBINE DEVELOPMENT | $58M | FY2006 | Oct 2005 – Apr 2015 |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT BLOCK GRANTS/STATE'S PROGRAM AND NON-ENTITLEMENT GRANTS IN HAWAII | $57.8M | — | — – — |
| VA/DoDDepartment of Defense | IN ARMY NATIONAL GUARD FACILITIES PROGRAM 1001. FY20, APP01, BASE, INITIAL. | $57.1M | FY2020 | Oct 2019 – Apr 2025 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | FY 2013 STATE CHILD SUPPORT | $56.4M | FY2013 | Oct 2012 – Sep 2013 |
| VA/DoDDepartment of Defense | KANSAS ARMY NATIONAL GUARD - FACILITIES APPENDIX | $53.7M | FY2011 | Oct 2010 – Sep 2025 |
| 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 | REPRIEVE - CCC - LEAD APPLICATION | $52M | FY2014 | Aug 2014 – Apr 2023 |
| VA/DoDDepartment of Defense | IN ARMY NATIONAL GUARD FACILITIES PROGRAM 1001.FY21, APP01, BASE MOD 0. | $52M | FY2021 | Oct 2020 – Sep 2025 |
| VA/DoDDepartment of Defense | INCREMENTAL FUNDINF FOR FY04 APP | $51.9M | FY2004 | Dec 2003 – Jan 2011 |
| VA/DoDDepartment of Defense | ARNG 1001 INITIAL FACILITIES PROGRAM | $51.5M | FY2010 | Oct 2009 – Sep 2010 |
| Department of Justice | OVC FY 18 VOCA VICTIM ASSISTANCE FORMULA | $50.6M | FY2018 | Oct 2017 – Sep 2022 |
| Department of Energy | BIPARTISAN INFRASTRUCTURE LAW (BIL) - ACCELERATING AND DEPLOYING GRID EDGE COMPUTING TO SUPPORT THE RECIPIENT’S GOAL OF SOURCING 25 PERCENT OF ITS PEAK LOAD FROM ITS DISTRIBUTION SYSTEM AND REDUCING GREENHOUSE GAS EMISSIONS BY 80 PERCENT BY 2030, THE RECIPIENT WILL INSTALL A SCALABLE, DISTRIBUTED ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE (AI) PLATFORM TO ACCELERATE GRID EDGE COMPUTING CAPABILITIES AND ENHANCE DISTRIBUTED ENERGY RESOURCE (DER) INTEGRATION. THE RECIPIENT WILL DEPLOY APPROXIMATELY 90,000 GRID EDGE COMPUTING (GEC) DEVICES, ACROSS APPROXIMATELY 10 PERCENT OF ITS CUSTOMER BASE, AS THE FIRST STEP TOWARDS DEPLOYING ADVANCED GRID EDGE COMPUTING THROUGHOUT ITS TERRITORY. THIS DEPLOYMENT WILL ALLOW THE RECIPIENT TO TARGET KEY LOCATIONS WITHIN ITS SERVICE TERRITORY TO DEMONSTRATE THE VALUE OF EDGE COMPUTING PRIOR TO A FULL SYSTEM DEPLOYMENT. THE PROJECT WILL FOCUS APPROXIMATELY 40 PERCENT OF THE GECS IN DISADVANTAGED COMMUNITIES (DACS) TO SUPPORT GREATER RESILIENCY AND CLEAN ENERGY PARITY WITHIN DACS. | $50M | FY2025 | Oct 2024 – Oct 2025 |
| Department of Justice | THIS APPLICANT WILL PROVIDE FUNDS FROM THE CRIME VICTIMS FUND TO ENHANCE CRIME VICTIM SERVICES IN THE STATE. VICTIMS OF CRIME ACT (VOCA) ASSISTANCE FUNDS TYPICALLY ARE TYPICALLY COMPETITIVELY AWARDED BY THE STATE TO LOCAL COMMUNITY-BASED ORGANIZATIONS THAT PROVIDE DIRECT SERVICES TO CRIME VICTIMS. NC/NCF. | $49.9M | FY2022 | Oct 2021 – Sep 2025 |
| Department of Energy | BIPARTISAN INFRASTRUCTURE LAW (BIL) ACCELERATING BUILDING THERMAL ELECTRIFICATION WHILE MANAGING SYSTEM IMPACTS THIS PROJECT SEEKS TO INSTALL COMBINED BATTERY AND HEAT PUMP SYSTEMS, WITH ADDITIONAL SMART THERMOSTATS INSTALLED WHERE APPROPRIATE, IN OCCUPIED HOMES. | $49.8M | FY2025 | Oct 2024 – Oct 2025 |
| Department of Energy | BIPARTISAN INFRASTRUCTURE LAW (BIL) - ACCELERATING CLEAN ENERGY RESILIENCY FOR THE GRID AND CALIFORNIA WATER UTILITIES THE GOAL OF THIS PROJECT IS TO BRING CLEAN ENERGY RESILIENCY TO THE CRITICAL INFRASTRUCTURE OF WATER UTILITIES AND PROVIDE GRID OPERATORS A HIGHLY FLEXIBLE, COORDINATED, AND PREDICTABLE SOLUTION FOR LOAD REDUCTION DURING GRID STRESS. THIS PROJECT WILL DEMONSTRATE THIS INNOVATIVE INVESTMENT WHICH WILL BE IMMEDIATELY REPLICABLE TO ADDRESS THE SAME GRID CHALLENGES EXISTING ACROSS THE ENTIRE COUNTRY. THIS PROJECT WILL DELIVER AN INNOVATIVE, SCALABLE, AND CLEAN RESILIENCY SOLUTION THAT PROVIDES LOAD FLEXIBILITY FOR ELECTRIC GRID OPERATORS, IMPROVED RELIABILITY FOR CRITICAL INFRASTRUCTURE, AND ECONOMIC AND HEALTH BENEFITS FOR LOCAL COMMUNITIES. THE OBJECTIVES OF THIS PROJECT INCLUDE DEMONSTRATING INCREASED RESILIENCY SOLUTIONS FOR CALIFORNIA WATER UTILITIES TO ACCELERATE THE CLEAN ENERGY TRANSITION FROM THE INDUSTRY STANDARD OF DIESEL GENERATORS TO INNOVATIVE MICROGRID PROJECTS CONSISTING OF A COMBINATION OF BATTERY ENERGY STORAGE SYSTEMS (BESS) AND DISTRIBUTED ENERGY RESOURCES; CREATING VIRTUAL POWER PLANTS (VPP) THAT PROVIDE AN ORCHESTRATED RESPONSE TO DELIVER FIRM CAPACITY DURING GRID EMERGENCIES, OFTEN TRIGGERED BY WILDFIRE RISK AND HIGH WINDS; DEMONSTRATING HOW BESS AND DISTRIBUTED ENERGY RESOURCE MANAGEMENT SYSTEM (DERMS) SOLUTIONS COMPLEMENT EXISTING ENERGY RESOURCES TO GENERATE COST SAVINGS FOR LOCAL COMMUNITIES WHILE PROVIDING CLEAN RESILIENCY; DEMONSTRATING HOW BESS DEPLOYMENTS REDUCE EMISSIONS THAT IMPACT LOCAL AIR QUALITY AND CARBON EMISSIONS; EVALUATING DISPATCH ALGORITHMS WHICH ARE MORE EQUITY-FOCUSED THAN THE CURRENT “ECONOMIC ONLY” OPTIMIZATION ENGINES BY ASSESSING ADDITIONAL VARIABLES OF CLIMATE AND HEALTH IMPACTS; REDUCING RISK AND ACCELERATING THE TRANSITION TO CLEAN BACKUP POWER SOLUTIONS AT ALL CRITICAL FACILITIES; AND ADDRESSING THE INEQUALITIES OF THE EXISTING ENERGY SYSTEM THROUGH COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT, WORKFORCE DEVELOPMENT, DIVERSITY FOCUSED SOURCING STRATEGIES AND THE DIRECT INVESTMENT OF CLEAN ENERGY PROJECTS IN DISADVANTAGED COMMUNITIES. | $49.4M | FY2025 | Jan 2025 – Dec 2029 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | PA-22 FYPD & PA-25 EARLY HEAD START | $49.4M | — | — – Dec 2013 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | POINT OF CARE TECHNOLOGY RESEARCH CENTER IN PRIMARY CARE | $49.2M | FY2012 | Jul 2012 – May 2025 |
| Department of Justice | THIS APPLICANT WILL PROVIDE FUNDS FROM THE CRIME VICTIMS FUND TO ENHANCE CRIME VICTIM SERVICES IN THE STATE. VICTIMS OF CRIME ACT (VOCA) ASSISTANCE FUNDS TYPICALLY ARE TYPICALLY COMPETITIVELY AWARDED BY THE STATE TO LOCAL COMMUNITY-BASED ORGANIZATIONS THAT PROVIDE DIRECT SERVICES TO CRIME VICTIMS. NC/NCF. | $46.7M | FY2023 | Oct 2022 – Sep 2026 |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT BLOCK GRANTS/STATE'S PROGRAM AND NON-ENTITLEMENT GRANTS IN HAWAII | $46.4M | FY2021 | Mar 2021 – Mar 2030 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | MEDICAID FRAUD CONTROL UNIT | $46.1M | FY2018 | Oct 2017 – Sep 2018 |
| VA/DoDDepartment of Defense | IN ARMY NATIONAL GUARD FACILITIES PROGRAM - 1001 FY26 INITIAL AWARD | $45.4M | FY2026 | Oct 2025 – Sep 2026 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | MEDICAID FRAUD CONTROL UNIT - TO INVESTIGATE AND PROSECUTE MEDICAID PROVIDER FRAUD AS WELL AS PATIENT ABUSE OR NEGLECT IN HEALTH FACILITIES AND BOARD AND CARE FACILITIES AND OF MEDICAID BENEFICIARIES IN NON-INSTITUTIONAL OR OTHER SETTINGS. | $45.1M | FY2025 | Oct 2024 – Sep 2025 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | MEDICAID FRAUD CONTROL UNIT - TO INVESTIGATE AND PROSECUTE MEDICAID PROVIDER FRAUD AS WELL AS PATIENT ABUSE OR NEGLECT IN HEALTH FACILITIES AND BOARD AND CARE FACILITIES AND OF MEDICAID BENEFICIARIES IN NON-INSTITUTIONAL OR OTHER SETTINGS. | $44.9M | FY2022 | Oct 2021 – Sep 2022 |
| VA/DoDDepartment of Defense | 1001 ARNG FACILITIES PROGRAM | $44.3M | FY2005 | Oct 2004 – Sep 2011 |
| VA/DoDDepartment of Defense | DPA TITLE III SILICON CARBIDE FIBER PRODUCTION ** FAADC MIGRATION NOTE - ACTION TYPE:"1" TO "A", ASSISTANCE TYPE:"5" TO "05", RECORD TYPE:"2", BUSINESS FUNDS INDICATOR:"NON", INDIVIDUAL RECIPIENT INDICATOR:"NO", RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT FUNDS INDICATOR:"YES", COMPETED OPPORTUNITY:"1" TO "C", NUMBER OF PROPOSALS OR APPLICATIONS:"1", AWARDING SUB-TIER AGENCY CODE "5700" DERIVED FROM AWARDING OFFICE CODE "FA8650", FUNDING SUB-TIER AGENCY CODE "5700" DERIVED FROM FUNDING OFFICE CODE "F4FBCN", PPOP COUNTRY CODE:"USA", SMALL BUSINESS INDICATOR:"O", SAM EXCEPTION:"X" ** | $44M | FY2015 | Aug 2015 – Jan 2027 |
| Department of Justice | UNDER THIS PROGRAM, THE STATES PROVIDE SUBGRANTS TO LOCAL COMMUNITY-BASED ORGANIZATIONS AND PUBLIC AGENCIES THAT PROVIDE SERVICES DIRECTLY TO CRIME VICTIMS, SUCH AS CRISIS COUNSELING, TELEPHONE AND ONSITE INFORMATION AND REFERRALS, CRIMINAL JUSTICE SUPPORT AND ADVOCACY, SHELTER, THERAPY, AND ADDITIONAL ASSISTANCE. NC/NCF. | $43.4M | FY2025 | Oct 2024 – Sep 2028 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | MECHANISMS OF IMMUNE FAILURE IN CHRONIC INFECTION: HEPATITIS C AS A KEY PARADIGM | $43.4M | FY2010 | Sep 2010 – May 2029 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | MEDICAID FRAUD CONTROL UNIT - TO INVESTIGATE AND PROSECUTE MEDICAID PROVIDER FRAUD AS WELL AS PATIENT ABUSE OR NEGLECT IN HEALTH FACILITIES AND BOARD AND CARE FACILITIES AND OF MEDICAID BENEFICIARIES IN NON-INSTITUTIONAL OR OTHER SETTINGS. | $42.5M | FY2024 | Oct 2023 – Sep 2024 |
| VA/DoDDepartment of Defense | FUTURE AFFORDABLE TURBINE ENGINE | $42.4M | FY2011 | Sep 2011 – Jun 2019 |
| Department of Homeland Security | GRANT TO LOCAL GOVERNMENT FOR REPAIR OR REPLACEMENT OF DISASTER DAMAGED FACILITIES | $42.3M | FY2020 | Nov 2019 – Sep 2026 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | MEDICAID FRAUD CONTROL UNIT - TO INVESTIGATE AND PROSECUTE MEDICAID PROVIDER FRAUD AS WELL AS PATIENT ABUSE OR NEGLECT IN HEALTH FACILITIES AND BOARD AND CARE FACILITIES AND OF MEDICAID BENEFICIARIES IN NON-INSTITUTIONAL OR OTHER SETTINGS. | $42M | FY2023 | Oct 2022 – Sep 2023 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | MEDICAID FRAUD CONTROL UNIT | $41.9M | FY2017 | Oct 2016 – Sep 2017 |
| Corporation for National and Community Service | AMERICORPS*STATE | $41.5M | FY2006 | Sep 2006 – Sep 2009 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | CLINICAL COORDINATING CENTER NETWORK OF EXCELLENCE IN NEUROSCIENCE CLINICAL TRIAL | $41M | FY2011 | Sep 2011 – Aug 2028 |
| Department of Homeland Security | GRANT TO LOCAL GOVERNMENT FOR REPAIR OR REPLACEMENT OF DISASTER DAMAGED FACILITIES | $40.7M | FY2016 | Dec 2015 – Sep 2017 |
| Department of Agriculture | DIRECT BB TREASURY RATE GRANT - (FY09-10) STIMULUS | $40.7M | FY2010 | May 2010 – May 2012 |
| VA/DoDDepartment of Defense | IN ARMY NATIONAL GUARD FACILITIES PROGRAM 1001 | $40.6M | FY2018 | Oct 2017 – Jun 2023 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | IMPACT OF AMYLOID ON THE AGING BRAIN | $40.5M | FY2010 | Jul 2010 – Dec 2026 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | MEDICAID FRAUD CONTROL UNIT | $40M | FY2016 | Oct 2015 – Sep 2016 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | MEDICAID FRAUD CONTROL UNIT | $39.8M | FY2014 | Oct 2013 – Sep 2014 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | MEDICAID FRAUD CONTROL UNIT - TO INVESTIGATE AND PROSECUTE MEDICAID PROVIDER FRAUD AS WELL AS PATIENT ABUSE OR NEGLECT IN HEALTH FACILITIES AND BOARD AND CARE FACILITIES AND OF MEDICAID BENEFICIARIES IN NON-INSTITUTIONAL OR OTHER SETTINGS. | $39.8M | FY2026 | Oct 2025 – Sep 2026 |
| Department of Justice | THIS PROJECT WILL SUPPORT VOCA VICTIM COMPENSATION PROGRAMS ACROSS THE NATION THAT PROVIDE CRUCIAL FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE TO HUNDREDS OF THOUSANDS OF CRIME VICTIMS EACH YEAR. | $39.6M | FY2025 | Oct 2024 – Sep 2028 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | AUTISM INTERVENTION RESEARCH NETWORKS | $39.2M | FY2008 | Sep 2008 – Aug 2020 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | MEDICAID FRAUD CONTROL UNIT | $39.2M | FY2015 | Oct 2014 – Sep 2015 |
| Department of Energy | TAS::89 0328::TAS RECOVERY THIS PROJECT INCLUDES INSTALLATION OF POWER LINE CARRIER COMMUNICATIONS EQUIPMENT WITHIN 150 MEMBER SUBSTATIONS FOR COL | $39.2M | FY2010 | May 2010 – May 2015 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | MEDICAID FRAUD CONTROL UNIT | $38.9M | FY2019 | Oct 2018 – Sep 2019 |
| VA/DoDDepartment of Defense | 1001 ARNG O&M | $38.4M | FY2011 | Oct 2010 – Sep 2011 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | MEDICAID FRAUD CONTROL UNIT | $38.2M | FY2021 | Oct 2020 – Sep 2021 |
| Department of Justice | THE GRANT AWARD PROVIDES FUNDS FROM THE CRIME VICTIMS FUND TO ENHANCE STATE VICTIM COMPENSATION PAYMENTS TO ELIGIBLE CRIME VICTIMS. VICTIMS OF CRIME ACT (VOCA) COMPENSATION FUNDS PROVIDE FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE TO FEDERAL AND STATE VICTIMS OF CRIME. NC/NCF | $37.9M | FY2024 | Oct 2023 – Sep 2027 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | CLINICAL TRIAL OF CEFTRIAXONE IN ALS | $37.9M | FY2004 | Sep 2004 – Jun 2014 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | MEDICAID FRAUD CONTROL UNIT | $37.6M | FY2020 | Oct 2019 – Sep 2020 |
| Department of Homeland Security | BUILDING RESILIENT INFRASTRUCTURE AND COMMUNITIES | $37.3M | FY2022 | Feb 2022 – Feb 2025 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | HARVARD-WIDE PROGRAM ON ANTIBIOTIC RESISTANCE | $37.2M | FY2009 | Sep 2009 – Jan 2027 |
| VA/DoDDepartment of Defense | APPENDIX 1 FACILITIES OPERATIONS AND MAINTENANCE | $36.4M | FY2011 | Oct 2010 – Sep 2014 |
| Department of Energy | CONTROLLED HYDROGEN FLEET AND INFRASTRUCTURE DEMONSTRATION AND VALIDATION PROJECT | $36.3M | FY2004 | Sep 2004 – Dec 2011 |
| Department of Justice | OVC FY 21 VOCA VICTIM ASSISTANCE FORMULA | $36.1M | FY2021 | Oct 2020 – Sep 2024 |
| Department of Homeland Security | GRANT TO LOCAL GOVERNMENT FOR REPAIR OR REPLACEMENT OF DISASTER DAMAGED FACILITIES | $36M | FY2017 | Jan 2017 – Sep 2022 |
| VA/DoDDepartment of Defense | INARNG FACILITIES PROGRAM | $36M | FY2017 | Oct 2016 – Dec 2021 |
| VA/DoDDepartment of Defense | IN ARMY NATIONAL GUARD FACILITIES PROGRAM 1001 | $35.3M | FY2019 | Oct 2018 – Sep 2024 |
| Department of Energy | IN THE 2012 CONSOLIDATED APPROPRIATIONS ACT, CONGRESS APPROPRIATED FUNDS TO DOE FOR THE RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT OF ADVANCED ATF IN RESPONSE TO THE INCIDENT THAT OCCURRED AT THE FUKUSHIMA DAIICHI NUCLEAR POWER PLANT IN JAPAN FOLLOWING THE MARCH 2011 EARTHQUAKE AND TSUNAMI. THE FUKUSHIMA DAIICHI INCIDENT, ALONG WITH PROGRESS IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF ADVANCED MATERIALS, PROVIDED THE IMPETUS TO IMPROVE NUCLEAR FUEL PERFORMANCE AND SAFETY, THEREBY MITIGATING THE EFFECTS OF A SEVERE ACCIDENT. TO SUPPORT THE RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT OF ADVANCED ATF, NE, UNDER 2012 GUIDANCE, INITIATED AN INDUSTRY-ORIENTED PROGRAM TO ACCELERATE IMPROVEMENTS TO LWR FUEL PERFORMANCE AND SAFETY. THE RESULT OF THE ATF DEVELOPMENT ACTIVITIES, IF SUCCESSFUL, WILL BE ONE OR MORE COMMERCIAL PRODUCTS THAT ARE UTILIZED IN EXISTING AND FUTURE NUCLEAR POWER PLANTS. WHILE THE END USER OF THE NEW TECHNOLOGY WILL BE THE NUCLEAR INDUSTRY, THE GOVERNMENT HAS A MAJOR ROLE IN FACILITATING THE INITIAL RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, AND DEPLOYMENT (RD&D) TO SUPPORT THE EFFORT, BECAUSE THE EFFORT IS PRIMARILY FOCUSED ON THE CONTINUED USE OF CLEAN ENERGY TECHNOLOGY WITH ENHANCED SAFETY THAT IS IN THE PUBLIC'S INTEREST. | $35.2M | FY2023 | Dec 2022 – Dec 2027 |
| Department of Justice | OVC FY 19 VOCA VICTIM ASSISTANCE FORMULA | $34.7M | FY2019 | Oct 2018 – Sep 2022 |
| Department of Justice | OVC FY 11 VOCA VICTIM COMPENSATION FORMULA | $34.2M | FY2011 | Oct 2010 – Sep 2014 |
| Department of Homeland Security | GRANT TO LOCAL GOVERNMENT FOR REPAIR OR REPLACEMENT OF DISASTER DAMAGED FACILITIES | $33.2M | FY2018 | Jan 2018 – Sep 2026 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | INTERMEDIATE-SIZE EXPANDED ACCESS TRIAL OF AUTOLOGOUS HYBRID TREG/TH2 CELL THERAPY (RAPA-501) OF AMYOTROPHIC LATERAL SCLEROSIS - ALS IS A LETHAL NEURODEGENERATIVE DISEASE ACCELERATED BY NEUROINFLAMMATION. CURRENT FDA-APPROVED THERAPIES HAVE MODEST BENEFITS AND DO NOT ADDRESS INFLAMMATION. TO ADDRESS THIS, RAPA THERAPEUTICS, LLC (RAPA) HAS DEVELOPED AN AUTOLOGOUS T CELL THERAPY (RAPA-501) THAT REDUCES INFLAMMATION, WITH THE GOAL OF REDUCING ALS MORBIDITY AND MORTALITY. RAPA-501 ARE MANUFACTURED EX VIVO TO ATTAIN DUAL TREG/TH2 ANTI- INFLAMMATORY ACTIVITY AND A T-STEM PHENOTYPE THAT PERMITS T CELL THERAPY WITHOUT CONDITIONING CHEMOTHERAPY. IN AN ONGOING CLINICAL TRIAL OF RAPA-501 IN PEOPLE WITH ALS (PWALS) (NCT04220190), RAPA-501 CELLS WERE FOUND TO BE SAFE (NO PRODUCT-RELATED ADVERSE EVENTS), BIOLOGICALLY ACTIVE (DIVERSE ANTI-INFLAMMATORY EFFECTS IN PWALS), AND SHOWED EARLY TRENDS TOWARD STABILIZING PULMONARY FUNCTION DECLINE. A PHASE 2/3 EXPANSION COHORT WAS ADDED TO THE TRIAL TO ASSESS WHETHER RAPA-501 IS EFFICACIOUS IN STANDARD-RISK PWALS. WE WILL EXTEND RAPA-501 THERAPY TO PWALS NOT ELIGIBLE FOR THIS ONGOING PHASE 2/3 TRIAL OR OTHER ALS TRIALS, WHICH NEARLY UNIVERSALLY REQUIRE THAT PARTICIPANTS HAVE A SLOW VITAL CAPACITY (SVC) VALUE OF =50% OF PREDICTED NORMAL. THE PROPOSED EAP WILL ENROLL PWALS WHO HAVE SVC VALUES <50%. THIS POPULATION OF PWALS IS CONSIDERED “HIGH RISK” (~50% CHANCE OF RESPIRATORY FAILURE OR DEATH WITHIN 180 DAYS) AND THUS PARTICULARLY SUITABLE FOR EXPERIMENTAL IMMUNE THERAPIES SUCH AS RAPA-501. IN ADDITION, THE RAPA-501-EAP WILL NOT EXCLUDE PWALS WHO HAVE A PROLONGED TIME FROM ALS-RELATED SYMPTOMS OR LOW ALSFRS-R SCORES. PARTICIPANTS WILL RECEIVE FOUR RAPA-501 IV INFUSIONS (EVERY 42-DAYS AT ESTABLISHED SAFE DOSE, 80 X 106 CELLS/INFUSION). THIS RAPA-501-EAP WILL FURTHER EVALUATE THE SAFETY OF THIS THERAPY, EXPAND AN UNDERSTANDING OF THE RAPA-501 THERAPEUTIC MECHANISM OF ACTION, AND EVALUATE SIGNALS OF EFFICACY IN THIS REAL-WORLD POPULATION OF PWALS USING STANDARD METHODS AND ORIGENT DATA SCIENCES MACHINE LEARNING ALS PREDICTION ALGORITHMS. THE RAPA-501 EAP WILL BE LED BY INVESTIGATORS AT MASS GENERAL HOSPITAL (MGH; DRS. BERRY, BABU, AND PAGANONI) AND SPONSORED BY RAPA, WHICH IS RESPONSIBLE FOR RAPA-501 MANUFACTURING AND FDA REGULATORY FILINGS UNDER EXISTING IND 019480 (DR. FOWLER, SPONSOR). CLINICAL TRIAL SITE INVESTIGATORS HAVE EXPERIENCE WITH RAPA-501 THERAPY (MGH; HACKENSACK UNIVERSITY MEDICAL CENTER; AND MAYO CLINIC ARIZONA) OR OTHER CELLS THERAPIES. SITES ARE GEOGRAPHICALLY DIVERSE AND LIKELY TO ACCRUE A SIGNIFICANT NUMBER OF UNDERSERVED PWALS (U OF IOWA; U OF IDAHO; PROVIDENCE HOSPITAL, PORTLAND, OREGON; UC-IRVINE; COLUMBIA, NYC). IN ADDITION, SEVERAL RESEARCH COLLABORATIONS WILL EMANATE FROM THE INTENSIVE STUDY OF THE CLINICALLY-ANNOTATED, VALUABLE RESEARCH SAMPLES OBTAINED FROM THE RAPA-501 EAP. | $33M | FY2023 | Sep 2023 – Aug 2026 |
| Department of Homeland Security | GRANT TO LOCAL GOVERNMENT FOR REPAIR OR REPLACEMENT OF DISASTER DAMAGED FACILITIES | $32.5M | FY2014 | May 2014 – — |
| Department of Justice | OVC FY08 VOCA VICTIM COMPENSATION FORMULA | $31.8M | FY2008 | Oct 2007 – Sep 2011 |
| Department of Justice | THE GRANT AWARD PROVIDES FUNDS FROM THE CRIME VICTIMS FUND TO ENHANCE STATE VICTIM COMPENSATION PAYMENTS TO ELIGIBLE CRIME VICTIMS. VICTIMS OF CRIME ACT (VOCA) COMPENSATION FUNDS PROVIDE FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE TO FEDERAL AND STATE VICTIMS OF CRIME. NC/NCF | $31.8M | FY2023 | Oct 2022 – Sep 2026 |
| VA/DoDDepartment of Defense | INARNG FACILITIES PROGRAMS COOPERATIVE AGREEMENTS | $31.7M | FY2014 | Oct 2013 – Sep 2014 |
| Department of Justice | THE GRANT AWARD PROVIDES FUNDS FROM THE CRIME VICTIMS FUND TO ENHANCE STATE VICTIM COMPENSATION PAYMENTS TO ELIGIBLE CRIME VICTIMS. VICTIMS OF CRIME ACT (VOCA) COMPENSATION FUNDS PROVIDE FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE TO FEDERAL AND STATE VICTIMS OF CRIME. NC/NCF | $31.4M | FY2022 | Oct 2021 – Sep 2025 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | HEALTH CENTER CLUSTER | $31.4M | FY2002 | Jan 2002 – Dec 2018 |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | STATE ADM SMALL CITY | $31.3M | FY2009 | Oct 2008 – Aug 2009 |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | DISASTER ASSISTANCE | $31.3M | FY2012 | Aug 2012 – — |
| Department of Justice | OVC FY 12 VOCA VICTIM COMPENSATION FORMULA | $30.9M | FY2012 | Oct 2011 – Sep 2015 |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | STATE ADM SMALL CITY | $30.9M | FY2008 | Jul 2008 – Jul 2008 |
| Department of Energy | TAS::89 0331::TAS RECOVERY ACT - TRANSPORTATION ELECTRIFICATION AWARD TO GENERAL MOTORS COMPANY. | $30.5M | FY2010 | Mar 2010 – Apr 2014 |
| Department of Energy | THE PURPOSE OF THIS AWARD IS TO CONTINUE GE'S WORK ON THE ACCIDENT TOLERANT FUEL PROGRAM. IT CONTINUES THE WORK PERFORMED UNDER GE AWARD NO. DE-NE0008821. GE IS COST SHARING 20% AND FFRDC'S INL, ORNL AND LANL ARE PARTICIPATING. | $30.5M | FY2019 | Oct 2018 – Jan 2022 |
| Department of Energy | THEORY AND SIMULATION OF FUSION PLASMAS | $30.4M | FY1995 | Feb 1995 – Mar 2026 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | HEALTH CENTER CLUSTER | $30.4M | FY2001 | Jan 2001 – Dec 2026 |
| Department of Energy | HIGH SPEED FUEL CELL STACK MANUFACTURING THE PROJECT OBJECTIVE IS TO DESIGN, BUILD, AND DEPLOY A MANUFACTURING SYSTEM TO PRODUCE 20,000 NEXT GENERATION FUEL STACKS/YEAR. THE MANUFACTURING LINE WILL CONSIST OF ANODE AND CATHODE ELECTRODE PROCESSING, UNITIZED ELECTRODE ASSEMBLY (UEA), STACKING, COMPRESSION, AND BUTTON UP OF THE FUEL CELL STACK. | $30M | FY2025 | Oct 2024 – Dec 2025 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | HORMONAL CONTROL OF CALCIUM METABOLISM | $29.9M | FY1997 | Aug 1997 – Jun 2025 |
| Department of Justice | OVC FY09 VOCA VICTIM COMPENSATION FORMULA GRANT | $29.8M | FY2009 | Oct 2008 – Sep 2012 |
| VA/DoDDepartment of Defense | OPEN CA | $29.2M | FY2025 | Oct 2024 – May 2027 |
| VA/DoDDepartment of Defense | THE CENTER FOR INTEGRATION OF MEDICINE AND INNOVATIVE TECHNOLOGY (CIMIT) | $28.9M | FY2009 | Apr 2009 – Sep 2016 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | HEALTH CENTER CLUSTER | $28.7M | FY2002 | Apr 2002 – Mar 2030 |
| VA/DoDDepartment of Defense | KS - ARMY NATIONAL GUARD FACILITIES PROGRAM - 1001 INITIAL MOD ADMINISTRATIVELY OPENING UP APPENDIX 1001 FOR FY23. | $28.6M | FY2023 | Oct 2022 – Jun 2026 |
| VA/DoDDepartment of Defense | MCCA-FORT LEAVENWORTH READINESS CENTER | $28.1M | FY2018 | Oct 2017 – Jun 2023 |
| VA/DoDDepartment of Defense | INARNG FACILITIES PROGRAMS | $28M | FY2016 | Oct 2015 – Sep 2016 |
| VA/DoDDepartment of Defense | FUEL CELL ACTIVITIES DEMO FOR NEXT GENERATION NON-TACTICAL FUELL CELL PROPOULSION VEHICLE | $27.9M | FY2006 | Sep 2006 – Nov 2021 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | AN INTERMEDIATE-SIZE EXPANDED ACCESS PROTOCOL FOR AMYOTROPHIC LATERAL SCLEROSIS WITH PRIDOPIDINE - THE SIGMA 1 RECEPTOR (S1R) HAS EMERGED AS AN ATTRACTIVE THERAPEUTIC TARGET IN ALS. MUTATIONS IN THE S1R ARE CAUSATIVE OF ALS AND THE DEGREE OF LOSS OF FUNCTION IN S1R PROTEIN DETERMINES AGE OF ONSET. S1R KNOCK-DOWN EXACERBATES PHENOTYPES IN ALS MOUSE MODELS, AND S1R ACTIVATION IMPACTS PATHWAYS THAT ARE KNOWN TO BE IMPLICATED IN ALS, I.E., NUCLEOCYTOPLASMIC TRANSPORT, PROTEIN QUALITY CONTROL, ENDOPLASMIC RETICULUM (ER) STRESS, MITOCHONDRIAL FUNCTION, AND AUTOPHAGY. RILUZOLE, EDARAVONE, AND PB-TURSO, THE CURRENT STANDARD-OF-CARE MEDICATIONS FOR ALS IN THE US, OFFER ONLY MODEST CLINICAL BENEFIT AND ARE NOT KNOWN TO ACT THROUGH THE S1R. NUEDEXTA, A NON-SELECTIVE S1R AGONIST, IS APPROVED FOR THE TREATMENT OF PSEUDOBULBAR AFFECT AND HAS BEEN SHOWN TO IMPROVE BULBAR FUNCTION IN A SUBSET OF PEOPLE LIVING WITH ALS. PRIDOPIDINE (PRILENIA THERAPEUTICS) IS A POTENT AND HIGHLY SELECTIVE SMALL MOLECULE S1R AGONIST. THE S1R SHOWS HIGH EXPRESSION THROUGHOUT THE BRAIN, PARTICULARLY IN BRAINSTEM MOTOR NUCLEI. IN THE G93A SOD1 ALS MOUSE MODEL, PRIDOPIDINE MODIFIED DISEASE PROGRESSION. THE SAFETY AND EFFICACY OF PRIDOPIDINE ARE CURRENTLY BEING TESTED INTHE HEALEY ALS PLATFORM TRIAL. THE TRIAL DESIGN INCLUDES AN EFFICACY RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED TRIAL (RCT) FOLLOWED BY AN OPEN LABEL EXTENSION (OLE). THE RCT PORTION OF THE PRIDOPIDINE REGIMEN ENROLLED 162 ALS PARTICIPANTS. WHILE IT DID NOT REACH THE PRIMARY ENDPOINT, IT SHOWED TRENDS TOWARD BENEFICIAL EFFECTS OF PRIDOPIDINE ON SEVERAL OUTCOME MEASURES, WITH THE GREATEST IDENTIFIABLE EFFECT ON FUNCTIONAL SCORES, QUANTITATIVE MOTOR SPEECH, AND NEUROFILAMENT LIGHT LEVELS IN EARLY AND FASTER PROGRESSING PARTICIPANTS. THE OLE IS ONGOING. A SECOND EFFICACY TRIAL TARGETING A SELECTED POPULATION OF PEOPLE WITH ALS IS BEING PLANNED. UNFORTUNATELY, A LARGE SEGMENT OF THE REAL-WORLD ALS POPULATION WON’T BE ELIGIBLE TO ENROLL IN THIS SECOND EFFICACY STUDY DUE TO THE RESTRICTIVE ELIGIBILITY CRITERIA. THE CURRENT PROPOSAL IS AN EXPANDED ACCESS PROTOCOL (EAP) OF PRIDOPIDINE IN 200 INDIVIDUALS WITH ALS WHO ARE INELIGIBLE FOR CLINICAL TRIALS. PARTICIPANTS WOULD RECEIVE PRIDOPIDINE FOR UP TO 24 MONTHS, WHILE THE OLE AND THE PLANNED SECOND EFFICACY TRIAL ARE ONGOING. THIS STUDY WILL PROVIDE REAL- WORLD DATA BY EVALUATING THE EFFECTS OF THE DRUG IN A POPULATION THAT IS BROADER THAN THE ONE INCLUDED IN THE EFFICACY TRIALS AND BY COLLECTING SAFETY, CLINICAL, AND BIOLOGICAL OUTCOMES OVER LONGER TERM EXPOSURE. | $27.9M | FY2023 | Sep 2023 – Aug 2027 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | CENTER FOR INNOVATIVE NEUROTECH ADVANCEMENT - CINTA - PROJECT ABSTRACT - OVERALL WE PROPOSE TO CREATE THE CENTER FOR INNOVATIVE NEUROTECH ADVANCEMENT (CINTA), A NEW CENTER FOR RAPID TRANSFORMATION OF EMERGING TECHNOLOGIES INTO COMMERCIALLY VIABLE, CLINICALLY FOCUSED SOLUTIONS FOR DISORDERS OF THE NERVOUS SYSTEM. THE PD/PIS, DRS. STEVEN SCHACHTER AND PAOLO BONATO, TOGETHER HAVE MANY DECADES OF EXPERIENCE CREATING AND MANAGING COMPLEX MULTI-INSTITUTIONS, MULTI-DISCIPLINARY, NATIONAL TRANSLATIONAL RESEARCH ORGANIZATIONS, AND EXPERTISE IN NEUROTECHNOLOGY-RELATED RESEARCH, AND WILL LEVERAGE THEIR EXPERIENCE TO FURTHER INNOVATE, ADAPT, AND DEPLOY THE WELL-DEVELOPED, PROVEN APPROACH TO NEEDS-DRIVEN HEALTHCARE TECHNOLOGY INNOVATION PIONEERED, DEVELOPED, AND VALIDATED FOR 23 YEARS BY THE CONSORTIA FOR IMPROVING MEDICINE WITH INNOVATION & TECHNOLOGY (CIMIT). LED FOR THE PAST 23 YEARS BY DR. SCHACHTER AND COLLEAGUES, CIMIT HAS A PROVEN TRACK RECORD OF SUCCESS AS A NATIONAL CENTER FOR HEALTHCARE INNOVATION AND A UNIQUE MODEL TO IDENTIFY UNMET MEDICAL NEEDS; FIND, FUND, AND FACILITATE TECHNOLOGY-BASED PROJECTS TO SOLVE THOSE NEEDS; AND RAPIDLY MOVE THESE INNOVATIONS FROM CONCEPT TO MANUFACTURING TO COMMERCIALIZATION TO THE END-USER. COMBINING THEIR DECADES-LONG EXPERTISE AND INTEREST IN NEUROLOGICAL DISORDERS AND REHABILITATION, THE PD/PIS WILL OVERSEE THE ADVANCEMENT OF PROJECTS UNDER CINTA’S FIVE CORES: ADMINISTRATIVE CORE, OUTREACH CORE, EVALUATION CORE, INNOVATOR SUBPROJECTS CORE, AND RESOURCE SUBAWARDS CORE. PAUL TESSIER, PROGRAM DIRECTOR FOR THE ADMINISTRATIVE CORE, WILL HAVE OVERALL RESPONSIBILITY FOR INTEGRATING THE ACTIVITIES OF THE DIFFERENT CORES TO ACCOMPLISH THE OVERALL GOALS OF THE PROPOSED CENTER UNDER THE GUIDANCE OF THE CENTER PD/PIS. THE ADMINISTRATIVE CORE WILL ENSURE ONGOING INPUT FROM NIH PROGRAM DIRECTORS AND SCIENCE OFFICERS, AS WELL AS INPUT FROM THE STEERING COMMITTEE MEMBERS WHO ARE INTEGRAL IN PROVIDING GUIDANCE TO THE PROGRAM TO HELP DIVERSIFY THE TYPES OF PROJECTS AS WELL AS INCREASE REPRESENTATION OF PROPOSERS OF VARYING BACKGROUNDS. KEY CENTER ACTIVITIES TO ACCOMPLISH THE OVERALL GOALS INCLUDE ESTABLISHED NEEDS ASSESSMENT AND PROJECT SOLICITATION PROCESSES, AND CIMIT’S VIRTUAL COLLABORATION PLATFORM, COLAB, TO HELP CINTA INVESTIGATORS AND FACILITATORS TRACK IMPORTANT DELIVERABLES IN FOUR AREAS CRITICAL TO COMMERCIAL SUCCESS. COLAB WILL ALSO BE USED AS A PLATFORM FOR SHARED CINTA RESOURCES, SUCH AS A CINTA WEBSITE WITH ACCESS TO RESOURCES AVAILABLE TO KEY STAKEHOLDERS. FINALLY, CINTA WILL DRAW UPON THE WELL-ESTABLISHED NATIONAL AND INTERNATIONAL COLLABORATION NETWORKS OF CIMIT AND SPAULDING TO ACHIEVE CINTA’S GOALS AND ENHANCE EXTERNALLY FUNDED COLLABORATIONS. | $27.6M | FY2022 | Sep 2022 – Jun 2027 |
| Department of Justice | OVC FY 19 VOCA VICTIM COMPENSATION FORMULA | $27.6M | FY2019 | Oct 2018 – Sep 2022 |
| Department of Justice | OVC FY 18 VOCA VICTIM COMPENSATION FORMULA | $27.5M | FY2018 | Oct 2017 – Sep 2021 |
| VA/DoDDepartment of Defense | APX 1 O&M | $27.3M | FY2009 | Oct 2008 – Sep 2015 |
| Department of Agriculture | RUS IRA NEW ERA LOAN GRANT COMBO - LOAN 0% - GRANT | $27.1M | FY2025 | Nov 2024 – Nov 2026 |
| VA/DoDDepartment of Defense | INARNG FACILITY PROGRAMS | $27.1M | FY2015 | Oct 2014 – Sep 2015 |
| Department of Justice | FISCAL YEAR 2010 VOCA CRIME VICTIM COMPENSATION GRANT PROGRAM | $27M | FY2010 | Oct 2009 – Sep 2013 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | MASSACHUSETTS ALZHEIMER'S DISEASE RESEARCH CENTER | $26.9M | FY2019 | Apr 2019 – Mar 2029 |
| Department of Energy | BIPARTISAN INFRASTRUCTURE LAW (BIL): BUILDING THE SMART GRID OF THE FUTURE THROUGH THE COOPERATIVE ENERGY ECOSYSTEM THE GOAL OF THE PROJECT IS TO HELP ELECTRIC COOPERATIVES REMAIN ECONOMICALLY AND OPERATIONALLY HEALTHY IN THE FORESEEABLE FUTURE. IT AIMS TO INCREASE THE EFFICIENCY, CAPACITY, FLEXIBILITY, RELIABILITY, AND RESILIENCE OF THE RECIPIENT’S BULK POWER GRID, WHICH SERVES FOUR STATES AND 42 DISTRIBUTION MEMBER COOPERATIVES. | $26.8M | FY2025 | Oct 2024 – Oct 2025 |
| Department of Justice | THIS APPLICANT WILL PROVIDE FUNDS FROM THE CRIME VICTIMS FUND TO ENHANCE CRIME VICTIM SERVICES IN THE STATE. VICTIMS OF CRIME ACT (VOCA) ASSISTANCE FUNDS TYPICALLY ARE TYPICALLY COMPETITIVELY AWARDED BY THE STATE TO LOCAL COMMUNITY-BASED ORGANIZATIONS THAT PROVIDE DIRECT SERVICES TO CRIME VICTIMS. NC/NCF. | $26.7M | FY2024 | Oct 2023 – Sep 2027 |
| VA/DoDDepartment of Defense | ARNG - WICHITA, KS READINESS CENTER - PN 20000063 - CONSTRUCTION | $26.6M | FY2012 | Oct 2011 – Sep 2012 |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT BLOCK GRANTS/STATE'S PROGRAM AND NON-ENTITLEMENT GRANTS IN HAWAII | $26.5M | FY2021 | Mar 2021 – Mar 2030 |
| 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. | $26.4M | FY2026 | Dec 2025 – Dec 2031 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | GENETICALLY-ENGINEERED PIG ORGAN TRANSPLANTATION INTO NONHUMAN PRIMATES | $26.3M | FY2010 | Aug 2010 – Sep 2025 |
| VA/DoDDepartment of Defense | KS - ARMY NATIONAL GUARD FACILITIES PROGRAM - 1001 INITIAL MOD ADMINISTRATIVELY OPENING UP APPENDIX 1001 FOR FY24. | $26.3M | FY2024 | Oct 2023 – Dec 2026 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | MASSACHUSETTS ALZHEIMER'S DISEASE RESEARCH CENTER | $26.2M | FY1997 | Apr 1997 – Mar 2019 |
| Department of State | THE PURPOSE OF THIS GRANT IS PROMOTE AND PROTECT HUMAN RIGHTS THROUGHOUT THE WESTERN HEMISPHERE REGION. | $26.2M | FY2022 | Dec 2021 – Dec 2027 |
| Department of Justice | OVC FY2020 VOCA VICTIM ASSISTANCE FORMULA | $26M | FY2020 | Oct 2019 – Sep 2025 |
| VA/DoDDepartment of Defense | NH-MILCON-PN330022. LITTLETON. P21000 IS NECESSARY TO OPEN FEDERAL FUNDS IN THE FY21 MCCA. | $26M | FY2022 | Oct 2021 – Sep 2031 |
| VA/DoDDepartment of Defense | ARNG FACILITIES PROGRAMS-1001 | $26M | FY2010 | Oct 2009 – Sep 2012 |
| VA/DoDDepartment of Defense | INARNG FACILITIES PROGRAM | $25.9M | FY2013 | Oct 2012 – Sep 2013 |
| Department of Justice | VICTIMS OF CRIME ACT FUNDS FOR SOUTH CAROLINA | $25.8M | FY2016 | Oct 2015 – Sep 2019 |
| VA/DoDDepartment of Defense | MOD 0 | $25.7M | FY2023 | Oct 2022 – Aug 2025 |
| VA/DoDDepartment of Defense | IN ARMY NATIONAL GUARD MILITARY CONSTRUCTION READINESS CENTER PN: 320157. W912L9 21 2 2001, BASE MOD. ATLANTA, IN. | $25.7M | FY2021 | Oct 2020 – Sep 2026 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | CSE-2023 | $25.6M | FY2023 | Oct 2022 – Sep 2023 |
| VA/DoDDepartment of Defense | FY20 APX 1 INITIAL MODIFICATION. | $25.5M | FY2020 | Oct 2019 – Sep 2020 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | SCSS-2026 - CHILD SUPPORT SERVICES - STATES | $25.2M | FY2026 | Oct 2025 – Sep 2026 |
| VA/DoDDepartment of Defense | KS - ARMY NATIONAL GUARD FACILITIES PROGRAM - 1001 INITIAL MOD ADMINISTRATIVELY OPENING UP APPENDIX 1001 FOR FY25. | $25.1M | FY2025 | Oct 2024 – Jan 2027 |
| VA/DoDDepartment of Defense | SC - ARNG FACILITIES PROGRAM - 1001. FY23 MOD ZERO. | $25M | FY2023 | Oct 2022 – Sep 2024 |
| Department of Justice | OVC FY 16 VOCA VICTIM COMPENSATION FORMULA | $25M | FY2016 | Oct 2015 – Sep 2019 |
| VA/DoDDepartment of Defense | SC-MCCA 450353 ARMY AVIATION SUPPORT FACILITY GREENVILLE, SC | $25M | FY2010 | Oct 2009 – Sep 2010 |
| Department of Commerce | THIS EDA INVESTMENT SUPPORTS THE BIOFABRICATION CLUSTER, LED BY THE CITY OF MANCHESTER, WITH CREATING A BIOFABRICATION CLUSTER BY ESTABLISHING SOUTHERN NEW HAMPSHIRE AS THE GLOBAL EPICENTER FOR THE PRODUCTION AND DISTRIBUTION OF REGENERATIVE TISSUES AND ORGANS. COALITION PROJECTS INCLUDE DEVELOPING A FACILITY SUITABLE FOR SCALED PRODUCTION OF CELLS, TISSUES, AND ORGANS, CREATING A BUSINESS ACCELERATOR, ESTABLISHING A CLUSTER WORK-AND-LEARN PROGRAM, AND BUILDING PILOT STATIONS FOR A LOGISTICS NETWORK TO BE USED FOR FUTURE ORGAN DISTRIBUTION. ONCE IMPLEMENTED, THE INVESTMENT WILL HELP DEVELOP AND STRENGTHEN REGIONAL INDUSTRY CLUSTERS - ALL WHILE EMBRACING ECONOMIC EQUITY, CREATING GOOD-PAYING JOBS, AND ENHANCING U.S. COMPETITIVENESS GLOBALLY. | $24.9M | — | — – — |
| Department of Health and Human Services | CSE-2022 | $24.9M | FY2022 | Oct 2021 – Sep 2022 |
| VA/DoDDepartment of Defense | 0 | $24.6M | FY2022 | Oct 2021 – Aug 2025 |
| Department of Energy | REACTOR-BASED MOLYBDENUM-99 PRODUCTION SYSTEM (PHASE 1) | $24.5M | FY2015 | Sep 2015 – Apr 2018 |
| Department of Transportation | TIGER GRANT 1 | $24.5M | FY2010 | Jul 2010 – Feb 2012 |
| Department of Justice | MASSACHUSETTS CRIME VICTIM COMPENSATION GRANT FOR NEW ENGLAND COMPOUNDING CENTER VICTIMS | $24.5M | FY2016 | Oct 2015 – Sep 2019 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | INFLAMMATION AND THE HOST RESPONSES TO INJURY | $24.4M | FY2000 | Sep 2000 – Aug 2011 |
| VA/DoDDepartment of Veterans Affairs | NEW CONSTRUCTION: 120 BED FACILITY | $24.2M | — | — – — |
| Department of Energy | RARE EARTH ELEMENT (REE) SEPARATION AND PROCESSING DEMONSTRATION PROJECT | $24.2M | FY2022 | Oct 2021 – Sep 2025 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | CENTER FOR THE STUDY OF INFLAMMATORY BOWEL DISEASE | $23.9M | FY1997 | Jan 1997 – Mar 2027 |
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$5B
COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT BLOCK GRANTS/STATE'S PROGRAM AND NON-ENTITLEMENT GRANTS IN HAWAII
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$4.3B
COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT BLOCK GRANTS/STATE'S PROGRAM AND NON-ENTITLEMENT GRANTS IN HAWAII
Department of Energy
$1.2B
THE DIII-D NATIONAL FUSION PROGRAM AND ADVANCED FUSION TECHNOLOGY RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT
Department of Homeland Security
$823.2M
GRANT TO LOCAL GOVERNMENT FOR REPAIR OR REPLACEMENT OF DISASTER DAMAGED FACILITIES
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$652.2M
COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT BLOCK GRANTS
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$555.7M
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 Homeland Security
$524.5M
GRANT TO LOCAL GOVERNMENT FOR REPAIR OR REPLACEMENT OF DISASTER DAMAGED FACILITIES
Department of Energy
$500M
INFLATION REDUCTION ACT (IRA) ELECTRIC VEHICLE (EV) CONVERSION THE RECIPIENT WILL CONVERT AN EXISTING VEHICLE ASSEMBLY FACILITY LOCATED IN THE UNITED STATES TO ELECTRIC VEHICLE (EV) PRODUCTION. THE CONVERSION WILL ENABLE EXPANSION OF DOMESTIC EV PRODUCTION, COMPONENTS, AND MATERIALS.
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$428.7M
GULF HURRICANE RECOVERY
Department of Homeland Security
$380M
PROVIDE REIMBURSEMENT TO STATE, LOCAL, TRIBAL, AND TERRITORIAL GOVERNMENT ENTITIES AND CERTAIN PRIVATE NON-PROFIT ORGANIZATIONS FOR EMERGENCY PROTECTIVE MEASURES TAKEN DURING THE PANDEMIC. EMERGENCY PROTECTIVE MEASURES NECESSARY TO SAVE LIVES AND PROTECT PUBLIC HEALTH AND SAFETY. MANAGEMENT, CONTROL, AND REDUCTION OF IMMEDIATE THREATS TO PUBLIC HEALTH AND SAFETY. EMERGENCY MEDICAL CARE. MEDICAL SHELTERING. ADMINISTRATION AND DISTRIBUTION OF VACCINES. COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT AND INFORMATION DISSEMINATION.
Department of Energy
$352.8M
THE DIII-D FUSION RESEARCH PROGRAM AND ADVANCED FUSION TECHNOLOGY RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT
Department of Health and Human Services
$325.9M
SCSS-2024
Department of Health and Human Services
$319.5M
SCSS-2025 - CHILD SUPPORT SERVICES - STATES
Department of Health and Human Services
$294.6M
CSE-2023
Department of Health and Human Services
$289.1M
FY 2018 STATE CHILD SUPPORT
Department of Health and Human Services
$284.4M
CSE-2022
Department of Health and Human Services
$282.1M
FY 2017 STATE CHILD SUPPORT
Department of Health and Human Services
$277.3M
2010 OCSE
Department of Health and Human Services
$269.5M
FY 2019 STATE CHILD SUPPORT
Department of Health and Human Services
$266.6M
SCSS-2026 - CHILD SUPPORT SERVICES - STATES
Department of Health and Human Services
$259.2M
CSE-2021
Department of Homeland Security
$242.8M
GRANT TO LOCAL GOVERNMENT FOR REPAIR OR REPLACEMENT OF DISASTER DAMAGED FACILITIES
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$238.9M
COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT BLOCK GRANTS/STATE'S PROGRAM AND NON-ENTITLEMENT GRANTS IN HAWAII
Department of Health and Human Services
$235.4M
FY 2016 STATE CHILD SUPPORT
Department of Health and Human Services
$231.1M
FY 2015 STATE CHILD SUPPORT
Department of Health and Human Services
$229.1M
FY 2020 CHILD SUPPORT STATE
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$227.5M
COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT BLOCK GRANTS/STATE'S PROGRAM AND NON-ENTITLEMENT GRANTS IN HAWAII
Department of Homeland Security
$216.4M
GRANT TO LOCAL GOVERNMENT FOR REPAIR OR REPLACEMENT OF DISASTER DAMAGED FACILITIES
Department of Defense
$213.6M
COOPERATIVE AGREEMENT FOR ROBOTICS COLLABORATIVE TECHNOLOGY ALLIANCE (RCTA)
Department of Health and Human Services
$212.2M
2007 OCSE
Department of Health and Human Services
$207.4M
2009 OCSE
Department of Energy
$200M
GENERATING DEEP SAVINGS AND STRONG RESILIENCE FOR VULNERABLE HOUSEHOLDS IN PUERTO RICO WITH HIGHLY COST-EFFECTIVE SOLAR + STORAGE. THE OBJECTIVE OF THE PROJECT FOR TOPIC AREA 1 IS TO EFFICIENTLY UTILIZE FUNDING FROM THE DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY GRID DEPLOYMENT OFFICE PUERTO RICO ENERGY RESILIENCE FUND TO RAPIDLY DEPLOY ROOFTOP SOLAR PV AND BATTERY STORAGE SYSTEMS TO THE HOMES OF ELIGIBLE RESIDENTS (BENEFICIARIES) TO INCREASE THEIR ENERGY RESILIENCE AND DECREASE THEIR ENERGY BURDEN, GROW THE CLEAN ENERGY WORKFORCE IN PUERTO RICO, AND PROVIDE EDUCATION AND TRAINING FOR BOTH RESIDENTS AND WORKERS. TOPIC AREA 1 REQUIRES NO LESS THAN 5% COST SHARE FOR EACH PHASE OF WORK.
Department of Health and Human Services
$193.1M
2011 OCSE
Department of Health and Human Services
$186.9M
2012 OCSE
Department of Veterans Affairs
$183.3M
VHA CBO PURCHASED CARE
Department of Health and Human Services
$183.1M
2008 OCSE
Department of Veterans Affairs
$166.1M
VHA CBO PURCHASED CARE
Department of Veterans Affairs
$140.1M
VHA CBO PURCHASED CARE
Department of Veterans Affairs
$134.5M
VHA CBO PURCHASED CARE
Department of Veterans Affairs
$131.8M
VHA CBO PURCHASED CARE
Department of Energy
$130.6M
GE-HITACHI ECONOMIC SIMPLIFIED BOILING WATER REACTOR (ESBWR) NEW NUCLEAR PLANT LICENSING, CONTINUATION TO BUDGET PERIOD 4 (INTERIM SCOPE) AND $3.5M O
Department of Homeland Security
$122.2M
GRANT TO LOCAL GOVERNMENT FOR REPAIR OR REPLACEMENT OF DISASTER DAMAGED FACILITIES
Department of Justice
$117.3M
OVC FY 18 VICTIM ASSISTANCE FORMULA
Department of Veterans Affairs
$115M
VHA CBO PURCHASED CARE
Department of Energy
$105.7M
TAS::89 0331::TAS RECOVERY ACT EERE NEW AWARD - GM LI-ION BATTERY PACK MANUFACURING
Department of Energy
$103.4M
TAS::89 0331::TAS RECOVERY ACT EERE NEW AWARD - U.S. ELECTRIC DRIVE MANUFACTURING CENTER - GLOBAL REAR WHEEL DREIVE ELECTRIC
Department of Agriculture
$100.5M
RUS IRA NEW ERA LOAN GRANT COMBO - LOAN 2% - GRANT
Department of Homeland Security
$99.2M
GRANT TO LOCAL GOVERNMENT FOR REPAIR OR REPLACEMENT OF DISASTER DAMAGED FACILITIES
Department of Health and Human Services
$90M
HEAD START AND EARLY HEAD START
Department of Veterans Affairs
$87M
NHC
Department of Veterans Affairs
$86.4M
VHA CBO PURCHASED CARE
Department of Justice
$79.2M
OVC FY 19 VICTIM ASSISTANCE FORMULA
Department of Agriculture
$79M
RUS IRA NEW ERA GRANT
Department of Justice
$78.7M
OVC FY 16 VOCA VICTIM ASSISTANCE FORMULA
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$74.6M
COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT BLOCK GRANTS/ENTITLEMENT GRANTS
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$74.5M
GULF HURRICANE RECOVERY
Department of Defense
$71.6M
IN ARMY NATIONAL GUARD FACILITIES PROGRAM - 1001 - FY21 INITIAL STARTUP
Department of Energy
$70.3M
ADVANCED IGCC/HYDROGEN GAS TURBINE DEVELOPMENT
Department of Justice
$69.9M
OVC FY 15 VOCA VICTIM ASSISTANCE FORMULA
Department of Energy
$66.4M
THIS NUCLEAR INDUSTRY SAFETY SYSTEM DIGITAL UPGRADE PROJECT ADDRESSES THE NEED TO ACHIEVE PROGRESS IN MODERNIZING CURRENT PLANTS TO ENSURE THEIR LONG-TERM ECONOMIC VIABILITY THROUGH SUCCESSFUL DEMONSTRATION OF A MAJOR SAFETY INSTRUMENTATION AND CONTROL (I&C) SYSTEM UPGRADE. THIS PROJECT WILL DESIGN AND PROCURE A SAFETY I&C SYSTEM UPGRADE, INTEGRATING ALL REQUIRED DESIGN BASIS FUNCTIONS WITH NEW LABOR-REDUCTION FEATURES THAT SUBSTANTIALLY REDUCE OPERATING AND MAINTENANCE COSTS; DEVELOP A LICENSING STRATEGY AND DEMONSTRATE USE OF THE NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION’S (NRC) NEWLY REVISED DIGITAL I&C INTERIM STAFF GUIDANCE #06 (ISG-06), REVISION 2 FOR SAFETY I&C SYSTEMS; AND INSTALL AND COMMISSION THE SAFETY I&C SYSTEM IN AN OPERATING NUCLEAR PLANT.
Department of Defense
$65.2M
IN ARMY NATIONAL GUARD FACILITIES PROGRAM - 1001 - FY23 INITIAL STARTUP
Department of Justice
$65.1M
OVC FY 17 VOCA VICTIM ASSISTANCE FORMULA
Department of Health and Human Services
$64.2M
CCC FOR NHLBI PREVENTION AND EARLY TREATMENT OF ACUTE LUNG INJURY PETAL NETWORK
Department of Homeland Security
$63.3M
GRANT TO LOCAL GOVERNMENT FOR REPAIR OR REPLACEMENT OF DISASTER DAMAGED FACILITIES
Department of Defense
$62.8M
ADVANCED AFFORDABLE TURBINE ENGINE PROGRAM
Department of Homeland Security
$62.7M
GRANT TO LOCAL GOVERNMENT FOR REPAIR OR REPLACEMENT OF DISASTER DAMAGED FACILITIES
Department of Health and Human Services
$62.6M
DISCOVERY: DETERMINANTS OF INCIDENT STROKE COGNITIVE OUTCOMES AND VASCULAR EFFECTS ON RECOVERY
Department of Defense
$60.6M
IN ARMY NATIONAL GUARD FACILITIES PROGRAM - 1001 FY25 INITIAL AWARD
Department of Justice
$58.3M
OVC FY 20 VOCA VICTIM ASSISTANCE FORMULA
Department of Defense
$58.1M
IN ARMY NATIONAL GUARD FACILITIES PROGRAM - 1001 FY24 INITIAL AWARD
Department of Energy
$58M
ADVANCED IGCC/HYDROGEN GAS TURBINE DEVELOPMENT
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$57.8M
COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT BLOCK GRANTS/STATE'S PROGRAM AND NON-ENTITLEMENT GRANTS IN HAWAII
Department of Defense
$57.1M
IN ARMY NATIONAL GUARD FACILITIES PROGRAM 1001. FY20, APP01, BASE, INITIAL.
Department of Health and Human Services
$56.4M
FY 2013 STATE CHILD SUPPORT
Department of Defense
$53.7M
KANSAS ARMY NATIONAL GUARD - FACILITIES APPENDIX
Department of Health and Human Services
$53.5M
HEAD START AND EARLY HEAD START
Department of Health and Human Services
$52M
REPRIEVE - CCC - LEAD APPLICATION
Department of Defense
$52M
IN ARMY NATIONAL GUARD FACILITIES PROGRAM 1001.FY21, APP01, BASE MOD 0.
Department of Defense
$51.9M
INCREMENTAL FUNDINF FOR FY04 APP
Department of Defense
$51.5M
ARNG 1001 INITIAL FACILITIES PROGRAM
Department of Justice
$50.6M
OVC FY 18 VOCA VICTIM ASSISTANCE FORMULA
Department of Energy
$50M
BIPARTISAN INFRASTRUCTURE LAW (BIL) - ACCELERATING AND DEPLOYING GRID EDGE COMPUTING TO SUPPORT THE RECIPIENT’S GOAL OF SOURCING 25 PERCENT OF ITS PEAK LOAD FROM ITS DISTRIBUTION SYSTEM AND REDUCING GREENHOUSE GAS EMISSIONS BY 80 PERCENT BY 2030, THE RECIPIENT WILL INSTALL A SCALABLE, DISTRIBUTED ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE (AI) PLATFORM TO ACCELERATE GRID EDGE COMPUTING CAPABILITIES AND ENHANCE DISTRIBUTED ENERGY RESOURCE (DER) INTEGRATION. THE RECIPIENT WILL DEPLOY APPROXIMATELY 90,000 GRID EDGE COMPUTING (GEC) DEVICES, ACROSS APPROXIMATELY 10 PERCENT OF ITS CUSTOMER BASE, AS THE FIRST STEP TOWARDS DEPLOYING ADVANCED GRID EDGE COMPUTING THROUGHOUT ITS TERRITORY. THIS DEPLOYMENT WILL ALLOW THE RECIPIENT TO TARGET KEY LOCATIONS WITHIN ITS SERVICE TERRITORY TO DEMONSTRATE THE VALUE OF EDGE COMPUTING PRIOR TO A FULL SYSTEM DEPLOYMENT. THE PROJECT WILL FOCUS APPROXIMATELY 40 PERCENT OF THE GECS IN DISADVANTAGED COMMUNITIES (DACS) TO SUPPORT GREATER RESILIENCY AND CLEAN ENERGY PARITY WITHIN DACS.
Department of Justice
$49.9M
THIS APPLICANT WILL PROVIDE FUNDS FROM THE CRIME VICTIMS FUND TO ENHANCE CRIME VICTIM SERVICES IN THE STATE. VICTIMS OF CRIME ACT (VOCA) ASSISTANCE FUNDS TYPICALLY ARE TYPICALLY COMPETITIVELY AWARDED BY THE STATE TO LOCAL COMMUNITY-BASED ORGANIZATIONS THAT PROVIDE DIRECT SERVICES TO CRIME VICTIMS. NC/NCF.
Department of Energy
$49.8M
BIPARTISAN INFRASTRUCTURE LAW (BIL) ACCELERATING BUILDING THERMAL ELECTRIFICATION WHILE MANAGING SYSTEM IMPACTS THIS PROJECT SEEKS TO INSTALL COMBINED BATTERY AND HEAT PUMP SYSTEMS, WITH ADDITIONAL SMART THERMOSTATS INSTALLED WHERE APPROPRIATE, IN OCCUPIED HOMES.
Department of Energy
$49.4M
BIPARTISAN INFRASTRUCTURE LAW (BIL) - ACCELERATING CLEAN ENERGY RESILIENCY FOR THE GRID AND CALIFORNIA WATER UTILITIES THE GOAL OF THIS PROJECT IS TO BRING CLEAN ENERGY RESILIENCY TO THE CRITICAL INFRASTRUCTURE OF WATER UTILITIES AND PROVIDE GRID OPERATORS A HIGHLY FLEXIBLE, COORDINATED, AND PREDICTABLE SOLUTION FOR LOAD REDUCTION DURING GRID STRESS. THIS PROJECT WILL DEMONSTRATE THIS INNOVATIVE INVESTMENT WHICH WILL BE IMMEDIATELY REPLICABLE TO ADDRESS THE SAME GRID CHALLENGES EXISTING ACROSS THE ENTIRE COUNTRY. THIS PROJECT WILL DELIVER AN INNOVATIVE, SCALABLE, AND CLEAN RESILIENCY SOLUTION THAT PROVIDES LOAD FLEXIBILITY FOR ELECTRIC GRID OPERATORS, IMPROVED RELIABILITY FOR CRITICAL INFRASTRUCTURE, AND ECONOMIC AND HEALTH BENEFITS FOR LOCAL COMMUNITIES. THE OBJECTIVES OF THIS PROJECT INCLUDE DEMONSTRATING INCREASED RESILIENCY SOLUTIONS FOR CALIFORNIA WATER UTILITIES TO ACCELERATE THE CLEAN ENERGY TRANSITION FROM THE INDUSTRY STANDARD OF DIESEL GENERATORS TO INNOVATIVE MICROGRID PROJECTS CONSISTING OF A COMBINATION OF BATTERY ENERGY STORAGE SYSTEMS (BESS) AND DISTRIBUTED ENERGY RESOURCES; CREATING VIRTUAL POWER PLANTS (VPP) THAT PROVIDE AN ORCHESTRATED RESPONSE TO DELIVER FIRM CAPACITY DURING GRID EMERGENCIES, OFTEN TRIGGERED BY WILDFIRE RISK AND HIGH WINDS; DEMONSTRATING HOW BESS AND DISTRIBUTED ENERGY RESOURCE MANAGEMENT SYSTEM (DERMS) SOLUTIONS COMPLEMENT EXISTING ENERGY RESOURCES TO GENERATE COST SAVINGS FOR LOCAL COMMUNITIES WHILE PROVIDING CLEAN RESILIENCY; DEMONSTRATING HOW BESS DEPLOYMENTS REDUCE EMISSIONS THAT IMPACT LOCAL AIR QUALITY AND CARBON EMISSIONS; EVALUATING DISPATCH ALGORITHMS WHICH ARE MORE EQUITY-FOCUSED THAN THE CURRENT “ECONOMIC ONLY” OPTIMIZATION ENGINES BY ASSESSING ADDITIONAL VARIABLES OF CLIMATE AND HEALTH IMPACTS; REDUCING RISK AND ACCELERATING THE TRANSITION TO CLEAN BACKUP POWER SOLUTIONS AT ALL CRITICAL FACILITIES; AND ADDRESSING THE INEQUALITIES OF THE EXISTING ENERGY SYSTEM THROUGH COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT, WORKFORCE DEVELOPMENT, DIVERSITY FOCUSED SOURCING STRATEGIES AND THE DIRECT INVESTMENT OF CLEAN ENERGY PROJECTS IN DISADVANTAGED COMMUNITIES.
Department of Health and Human Services
$49.4M
PA-22 FYPD & PA-25 EARLY HEAD START
Department of Health and Human Services
$49.2M
POINT OF CARE TECHNOLOGY RESEARCH CENTER IN PRIMARY CARE
Department of Justice
$46.7M
THIS APPLICANT WILL PROVIDE FUNDS FROM THE CRIME VICTIMS FUND TO ENHANCE CRIME VICTIM SERVICES IN THE STATE. VICTIMS OF CRIME ACT (VOCA) ASSISTANCE FUNDS TYPICALLY ARE TYPICALLY COMPETITIVELY AWARDED BY THE STATE TO LOCAL COMMUNITY-BASED ORGANIZATIONS THAT PROVIDE DIRECT SERVICES TO CRIME VICTIMS. NC/NCF.
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$46.4M
COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT BLOCK GRANTS/STATE'S PROGRAM AND NON-ENTITLEMENT GRANTS IN HAWAII
Department of Health and Human Services
$46.1M
MEDICAID FRAUD CONTROL UNIT
Department of Defense
$45.4M
IN ARMY NATIONAL GUARD FACILITIES PROGRAM - 1001 FY26 INITIAL AWARD
Department of Health and Human Services
$45.1M
MEDICAID FRAUD CONTROL UNIT - TO INVESTIGATE AND PROSECUTE MEDICAID PROVIDER FRAUD AS WELL AS PATIENT ABUSE OR NEGLECT IN HEALTH FACILITIES AND BOARD AND CARE FACILITIES AND OF MEDICAID BENEFICIARIES IN NON-INSTITUTIONAL OR OTHER SETTINGS.
Department of Health and Human Services
$44.9M
MEDICAID FRAUD CONTROL UNIT - TO INVESTIGATE AND PROSECUTE MEDICAID PROVIDER FRAUD AS WELL AS PATIENT ABUSE OR NEGLECT IN HEALTH FACILITIES AND BOARD AND CARE FACILITIES AND OF MEDICAID BENEFICIARIES IN NON-INSTITUTIONAL OR OTHER SETTINGS.
Department of Defense
$44.3M
1001 ARNG FACILITIES PROGRAM
Department of Defense
$44M
DPA TITLE III SILICON CARBIDE FIBER PRODUCTION ** FAADC MIGRATION NOTE - ACTION TYPE:"1" TO "A", ASSISTANCE TYPE:"5" TO "05", RECORD TYPE:"2", BUSINESS FUNDS INDICATOR:"NON", INDIVIDUAL RECIPIENT INDICATOR:"NO", RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT FUNDS INDICATOR:"YES", COMPETED OPPORTUNITY:"1" TO "C", NUMBER OF PROPOSALS OR APPLICATIONS:"1", AWARDING SUB-TIER AGENCY CODE "5700" DERIVED FROM AWARDING OFFICE CODE "FA8650", FUNDING SUB-TIER AGENCY CODE "5700" DERIVED FROM FUNDING OFFICE CODE "F4FBCN", PPOP COUNTRY CODE:"USA", SMALL BUSINESS INDICATOR:"O", SAM EXCEPTION:"X" **
Department of Justice
$43.4M
UNDER THIS PROGRAM, THE STATES PROVIDE SUBGRANTS TO LOCAL COMMUNITY-BASED ORGANIZATIONS AND PUBLIC AGENCIES THAT PROVIDE SERVICES DIRECTLY TO CRIME VICTIMS, SUCH AS CRISIS COUNSELING, TELEPHONE AND ONSITE INFORMATION AND REFERRALS, CRIMINAL JUSTICE SUPPORT AND ADVOCACY, SHELTER, THERAPY, AND ADDITIONAL ASSISTANCE. NC/NCF.
Department of Health and Human Services
$43.4M
MECHANISMS OF IMMUNE FAILURE IN CHRONIC INFECTION: HEPATITIS C AS A KEY PARADIGM
Department of Health and Human Services
$42.5M
MEDICAID FRAUD CONTROL UNIT - TO INVESTIGATE AND PROSECUTE MEDICAID PROVIDER FRAUD AS WELL AS PATIENT ABUSE OR NEGLECT IN HEALTH FACILITIES AND BOARD AND CARE FACILITIES AND OF MEDICAID BENEFICIARIES IN NON-INSTITUTIONAL OR OTHER SETTINGS.
Department of Defense
$42.4M
FUTURE AFFORDABLE TURBINE ENGINE
Department of Homeland Security
$42.3M
GRANT TO LOCAL GOVERNMENT FOR REPAIR OR REPLACEMENT OF DISASTER DAMAGED FACILITIES
Department of Health and Human Services
$42M
MEDICAID FRAUD CONTROL UNIT - TO INVESTIGATE AND PROSECUTE MEDICAID PROVIDER FRAUD AS WELL AS PATIENT ABUSE OR NEGLECT IN HEALTH FACILITIES AND BOARD AND CARE FACILITIES AND OF MEDICAID BENEFICIARIES IN NON-INSTITUTIONAL OR OTHER SETTINGS.
Department of Health and Human Services
$41.9M
MEDICAID FRAUD CONTROL UNIT
Corporation for National and Community Service
$41.5M
AMERICORPS*STATE
Department of Health and Human Services
$41M
CLINICAL COORDINATING CENTER NETWORK OF EXCELLENCE IN NEUROSCIENCE CLINICAL TRIAL
Department of Homeland Security
$40.7M
GRANT TO LOCAL GOVERNMENT FOR REPAIR OR REPLACEMENT OF DISASTER DAMAGED FACILITIES
Department of Agriculture
$40.7M
DIRECT BB TREASURY RATE GRANT - (FY09-10) STIMULUS
Department of Defense
$40.6M
IN ARMY NATIONAL GUARD FACILITIES PROGRAM 1001
Department of Health and Human Services
$40.5M
IMPACT OF AMYLOID ON THE AGING BRAIN
Department of Health and Human Services
$40M
MEDICAID FRAUD CONTROL UNIT
Department of Health and Human Services
$39.8M
MEDICAID FRAUD CONTROL UNIT
Department of Health and Human Services
$39.8M
MEDICAID FRAUD CONTROL UNIT - TO INVESTIGATE AND PROSECUTE MEDICAID PROVIDER FRAUD AS WELL AS PATIENT ABUSE OR NEGLECT IN HEALTH FACILITIES AND BOARD AND CARE FACILITIES AND OF MEDICAID BENEFICIARIES IN NON-INSTITUTIONAL OR OTHER SETTINGS.
Department of Justice
$39.6M
THIS PROJECT WILL SUPPORT VOCA VICTIM COMPENSATION PROGRAMS ACROSS THE NATION THAT PROVIDE CRUCIAL FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE TO HUNDREDS OF THOUSANDS OF CRIME VICTIMS EACH YEAR.
Department of Health and Human Services
$39.2M
AUTISM INTERVENTION RESEARCH NETWORKS
Department of Health and Human Services
$39.2M
MEDICAID FRAUD CONTROL UNIT
Department of Energy
$39.2M
TAS::89 0328::TAS RECOVERY THIS PROJECT INCLUDES INSTALLATION OF POWER LINE CARRIER COMMUNICATIONS EQUIPMENT WITHIN 150 MEMBER SUBSTATIONS FOR COL
Department of Health and Human Services
$38.9M
MEDICAID FRAUD CONTROL UNIT
Department of Defense
$38.4M
1001 ARNG O&M
Department of Health and Human Services
$38.2M
MEDICAID FRAUD CONTROL UNIT
Department of Justice
$37.9M
THE GRANT AWARD PROVIDES FUNDS FROM THE CRIME VICTIMS FUND TO ENHANCE STATE VICTIM COMPENSATION PAYMENTS TO ELIGIBLE CRIME VICTIMS. VICTIMS OF CRIME ACT (VOCA) COMPENSATION FUNDS PROVIDE FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE TO FEDERAL AND STATE VICTIMS OF CRIME. NC/NCF
Department of Health and Human Services
$37.9M
CLINICAL TRIAL OF CEFTRIAXONE IN ALS
Department of Health and Human Services
$37.6M
MEDICAID FRAUD CONTROL UNIT
Department of Homeland Security
$37.3M
BUILDING RESILIENT INFRASTRUCTURE AND COMMUNITIES
Department of Health and Human Services
$37.2M
HARVARD-WIDE PROGRAM ON ANTIBIOTIC RESISTANCE
Department of Defense
$36.4M
APPENDIX 1 FACILITIES OPERATIONS AND MAINTENANCE
Department of Energy
$36.3M
CONTROLLED HYDROGEN FLEET AND INFRASTRUCTURE DEMONSTRATION AND VALIDATION PROJECT
Department of Justice
$36.1M
OVC FY 21 VOCA VICTIM ASSISTANCE FORMULA
Department of Homeland Security
$36M
GRANT TO LOCAL GOVERNMENT FOR REPAIR OR REPLACEMENT OF DISASTER DAMAGED FACILITIES
Department of Defense
$36M
INARNG FACILITIES PROGRAM
Department of Defense
$35.3M
IN ARMY NATIONAL GUARD FACILITIES PROGRAM 1001
Department of Energy
$35.2M
IN THE 2012 CONSOLIDATED APPROPRIATIONS ACT, CONGRESS APPROPRIATED FUNDS TO DOE FOR THE RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT OF ADVANCED ATF IN RESPONSE TO THE INCIDENT THAT OCCURRED AT THE FUKUSHIMA DAIICHI NUCLEAR POWER PLANT IN JAPAN FOLLOWING THE MARCH 2011 EARTHQUAKE AND TSUNAMI. THE FUKUSHIMA DAIICHI INCIDENT, ALONG WITH PROGRESS IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF ADVANCED MATERIALS, PROVIDED THE IMPETUS TO IMPROVE NUCLEAR FUEL PERFORMANCE AND SAFETY, THEREBY MITIGATING THE EFFECTS OF A SEVERE ACCIDENT. TO SUPPORT THE RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT OF ADVANCED ATF, NE, UNDER 2012 GUIDANCE, INITIATED AN INDUSTRY-ORIENTED PROGRAM TO ACCELERATE IMPROVEMENTS TO LWR FUEL PERFORMANCE AND SAFETY. THE RESULT OF THE ATF DEVELOPMENT ACTIVITIES, IF SUCCESSFUL, WILL BE ONE OR MORE COMMERCIAL PRODUCTS THAT ARE UTILIZED IN EXISTING AND FUTURE NUCLEAR POWER PLANTS. WHILE THE END USER OF THE NEW TECHNOLOGY WILL BE THE NUCLEAR INDUSTRY, THE GOVERNMENT HAS A MAJOR ROLE IN FACILITATING THE INITIAL RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, AND DEPLOYMENT (RD&D) TO SUPPORT THE EFFORT, BECAUSE THE EFFORT IS PRIMARILY FOCUSED ON THE CONTINUED USE OF CLEAN ENERGY TECHNOLOGY WITH ENHANCED SAFETY THAT IS IN THE PUBLIC'S INTEREST.
Department of Justice
$34.7M
OVC FY 19 VOCA VICTIM ASSISTANCE FORMULA
Department of Justice
$34.2M
OVC FY 11 VOCA VICTIM COMPENSATION FORMULA
Department of Homeland Security
$33.2M
GRANT TO LOCAL GOVERNMENT FOR REPAIR OR REPLACEMENT OF DISASTER DAMAGED FACILITIES
Department of Health and Human Services
$33M
INTERMEDIATE-SIZE EXPANDED ACCESS TRIAL OF AUTOLOGOUS HYBRID TREG/TH2 CELL THERAPY (RAPA-501) OF AMYOTROPHIC LATERAL SCLEROSIS - ALS IS A LETHAL NEURODEGENERATIVE DISEASE ACCELERATED BY NEUROINFLAMMATION. CURRENT FDA-APPROVED THERAPIES HAVE MODEST BENEFITS AND DO NOT ADDRESS INFLAMMATION. TO ADDRESS THIS, RAPA THERAPEUTICS, LLC (RAPA) HAS DEVELOPED AN AUTOLOGOUS T CELL THERAPY (RAPA-501) THAT REDUCES INFLAMMATION, WITH THE GOAL OF REDUCING ALS MORBIDITY AND MORTALITY. RAPA-501 ARE MANUFACTURED EX VIVO TO ATTAIN DUAL TREG/TH2 ANTI- INFLAMMATORY ACTIVITY AND A T-STEM PHENOTYPE THAT PERMITS T CELL THERAPY WITHOUT CONDITIONING CHEMOTHERAPY. IN AN ONGOING CLINICAL TRIAL OF RAPA-501 IN PEOPLE WITH ALS (PWALS) (NCT04220190), RAPA-501 CELLS WERE FOUND TO BE SAFE (NO PRODUCT-RELATED ADVERSE EVENTS), BIOLOGICALLY ACTIVE (DIVERSE ANTI-INFLAMMATORY EFFECTS IN PWALS), AND SHOWED EARLY TRENDS TOWARD STABILIZING PULMONARY FUNCTION DECLINE. A PHASE 2/3 EXPANSION COHORT WAS ADDED TO THE TRIAL TO ASSESS WHETHER RAPA-501 IS EFFICACIOUS IN STANDARD-RISK PWALS. WE WILL EXTEND RAPA-501 THERAPY TO PWALS NOT ELIGIBLE FOR THIS ONGOING PHASE 2/3 TRIAL OR OTHER ALS TRIALS, WHICH NEARLY UNIVERSALLY REQUIRE THAT PARTICIPANTS HAVE A SLOW VITAL CAPACITY (SVC) VALUE OF =50% OF PREDICTED NORMAL. THE PROPOSED EAP WILL ENROLL PWALS WHO HAVE SVC VALUES <50%. THIS POPULATION OF PWALS IS CONSIDERED “HIGH RISK” (~50% CHANCE OF RESPIRATORY FAILURE OR DEATH WITHIN 180 DAYS) AND THUS PARTICULARLY SUITABLE FOR EXPERIMENTAL IMMUNE THERAPIES SUCH AS RAPA-501. IN ADDITION, THE RAPA-501-EAP WILL NOT EXCLUDE PWALS WHO HAVE A PROLONGED TIME FROM ALS-RELATED SYMPTOMS OR LOW ALSFRS-R SCORES. PARTICIPANTS WILL RECEIVE FOUR RAPA-501 IV INFUSIONS (EVERY 42-DAYS AT ESTABLISHED SAFE DOSE, 80 X 106 CELLS/INFUSION). THIS RAPA-501-EAP WILL FURTHER EVALUATE THE SAFETY OF THIS THERAPY, EXPAND AN UNDERSTANDING OF THE RAPA-501 THERAPEUTIC MECHANISM OF ACTION, AND EVALUATE SIGNALS OF EFFICACY IN THIS REAL-WORLD POPULATION OF PWALS USING STANDARD METHODS AND ORIGENT DATA SCIENCES MACHINE LEARNING ALS PREDICTION ALGORITHMS. THE RAPA-501 EAP WILL BE LED BY INVESTIGATORS AT MASS GENERAL HOSPITAL (MGH; DRS. BERRY, BABU, AND PAGANONI) AND SPONSORED BY RAPA, WHICH IS RESPONSIBLE FOR RAPA-501 MANUFACTURING AND FDA REGULATORY FILINGS UNDER EXISTING IND 019480 (DR. FOWLER, SPONSOR). CLINICAL TRIAL SITE INVESTIGATORS HAVE EXPERIENCE WITH RAPA-501 THERAPY (MGH; HACKENSACK UNIVERSITY MEDICAL CENTER; AND MAYO CLINIC ARIZONA) OR OTHER CELLS THERAPIES. SITES ARE GEOGRAPHICALLY DIVERSE AND LIKELY TO ACCRUE A SIGNIFICANT NUMBER OF UNDERSERVED PWALS (U OF IOWA; U OF IDAHO; PROVIDENCE HOSPITAL, PORTLAND, OREGON; UC-IRVINE; COLUMBIA, NYC). IN ADDITION, SEVERAL RESEARCH COLLABORATIONS WILL EMANATE FROM THE INTENSIVE STUDY OF THE CLINICALLY-ANNOTATED, VALUABLE RESEARCH SAMPLES OBTAINED FROM THE RAPA-501 EAP.
Department of Homeland Security
$32.5M
GRANT TO LOCAL GOVERNMENT FOR REPAIR OR REPLACEMENT OF DISASTER DAMAGED FACILITIES
Department of Justice
$31.8M
OVC FY08 VOCA VICTIM COMPENSATION FORMULA
Department of Justice
$31.8M
THE GRANT AWARD PROVIDES FUNDS FROM THE CRIME VICTIMS FUND TO ENHANCE STATE VICTIM COMPENSATION PAYMENTS TO ELIGIBLE CRIME VICTIMS. VICTIMS OF CRIME ACT (VOCA) COMPENSATION FUNDS PROVIDE FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE TO FEDERAL AND STATE VICTIMS OF CRIME. NC/NCF
Department of Defense
$31.7M
INARNG FACILITIES PROGRAMS COOPERATIVE AGREEMENTS
Department of Justice
$31.4M
THE GRANT AWARD PROVIDES FUNDS FROM THE CRIME VICTIMS FUND TO ENHANCE STATE VICTIM COMPENSATION PAYMENTS TO ELIGIBLE CRIME VICTIMS. VICTIMS OF CRIME ACT (VOCA) COMPENSATION FUNDS PROVIDE FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE TO FEDERAL AND STATE VICTIMS OF CRIME. NC/NCF
Department of Health and Human Services
$31.4M
HEALTH CENTER CLUSTER
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$31.3M
STATE ADM SMALL CITY
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$31.3M
DISASTER ASSISTANCE
Department of Justice
$30.9M
OVC FY 12 VOCA VICTIM COMPENSATION FORMULA
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$30.9M
STATE ADM SMALL CITY
Department of Energy
$30.5M
TAS::89 0331::TAS RECOVERY ACT - TRANSPORTATION ELECTRIFICATION AWARD TO GENERAL MOTORS COMPANY.
Department of Energy
$30.5M
THE PURPOSE OF THIS AWARD IS TO CONTINUE GE'S WORK ON THE ACCIDENT TOLERANT FUEL PROGRAM. IT CONTINUES THE WORK PERFORMED UNDER GE AWARD NO. DE-NE0008821. GE IS COST SHARING 20% AND FFRDC'S INL, ORNL AND LANL ARE PARTICIPATING.
Department of Energy
$30.4M
THEORY AND SIMULATION OF FUSION PLASMAS
Department of Health and Human Services
$30.4M
HEALTH CENTER CLUSTER
Department of Energy
$30M
HIGH SPEED FUEL CELL STACK MANUFACTURING THE PROJECT OBJECTIVE IS TO DESIGN, BUILD, AND DEPLOY A MANUFACTURING SYSTEM TO PRODUCE 20,000 NEXT GENERATION FUEL STACKS/YEAR. THE MANUFACTURING LINE WILL CONSIST OF ANODE AND CATHODE ELECTRODE PROCESSING, UNITIZED ELECTRODE ASSEMBLY (UEA), STACKING, COMPRESSION, AND BUTTON UP OF THE FUEL CELL STACK.
Department of Health and Human Services
$29.9M
HORMONAL CONTROL OF CALCIUM METABOLISM
Department of Justice
$29.8M
OVC FY09 VOCA VICTIM COMPENSATION FORMULA GRANT
Department of Defense
$29.2M
OPEN CA
Department of Defense
$28.9M
THE CENTER FOR INTEGRATION OF MEDICINE AND INNOVATIVE TECHNOLOGY (CIMIT)
Department of Health and Human Services
$28.7M
HEALTH CENTER CLUSTER
Department of Defense
$28.6M
KS - ARMY NATIONAL GUARD FACILITIES PROGRAM - 1001 INITIAL MOD ADMINISTRATIVELY OPENING UP APPENDIX 1001 FOR FY23.
Department of Defense
$28.1M
MCCA-FORT LEAVENWORTH READINESS CENTER
Department of Defense
$28M
INARNG FACILITIES PROGRAMS
Department of Defense
$27.9M
FUEL CELL ACTIVITIES DEMO FOR NEXT GENERATION NON-TACTICAL FUELL CELL PROPOULSION VEHICLE
Department of Health and Human Services
$27.9M
AN INTERMEDIATE-SIZE EXPANDED ACCESS PROTOCOL FOR AMYOTROPHIC LATERAL SCLEROSIS WITH PRIDOPIDINE - THE SIGMA 1 RECEPTOR (S1R) HAS EMERGED AS AN ATTRACTIVE THERAPEUTIC TARGET IN ALS. MUTATIONS IN THE S1R ARE CAUSATIVE OF ALS AND THE DEGREE OF LOSS OF FUNCTION IN S1R PROTEIN DETERMINES AGE OF ONSET. S1R KNOCK-DOWN EXACERBATES PHENOTYPES IN ALS MOUSE MODELS, AND S1R ACTIVATION IMPACTS PATHWAYS THAT ARE KNOWN TO BE IMPLICATED IN ALS, I.E., NUCLEOCYTOPLASMIC TRANSPORT, PROTEIN QUALITY CONTROL, ENDOPLASMIC RETICULUM (ER) STRESS, MITOCHONDRIAL FUNCTION, AND AUTOPHAGY. RILUZOLE, EDARAVONE, AND PB-TURSO, THE CURRENT STANDARD-OF-CARE MEDICATIONS FOR ALS IN THE US, OFFER ONLY MODEST CLINICAL BENEFIT AND ARE NOT KNOWN TO ACT THROUGH THE S1R. NUEDEXTA, A NON-SELECTIVE S1R AGONIST, IS APPROVED FOR THE TREATMENT OF PSEUDOBULBAR AFFECT AND HAS BEEN SHOWN TO IMPROVE BULBAR FUNCTION IN A SUBSET OF PEOPLE LIVING WITH ALS. PRIDOPIDINE (PRILENIA THERAPEUTICS) IS A POTENT AND HIGHLY SELECTIVE SMALL MOLECULE S1R AGONIST. THE S1R SHOWS HIGH EXPRESSION THROUGHOUT THE BRAIN, PARTICULARLY IN BRAINSTEM MOTOR NUCLEI. IN THE G93A SOD1 ALS MOUSE MODEL, PRIDOPIDINE MODIFIED DISEASE PROGRESSION. THE SAFETY AND EFFICACY OF PRIDOPIDINE ARE CURRENTLY BEING TESTED INTHE HEALEY ALS PLATFORM TRIAL. THE TRIAL DESIGN INCLUDES AN EFFICACY RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED TRIAL (RCT) FOLLOWED BY AN OPEN LABEL EXTENSION (OLE). THE RCT PORTION OF THE PRIDOPIDINE REGIMEN ENROLLED 162 ALS PARTICIPANTS. WHILE IT DID NOT REACH THE PRIMARY ENDPOINT, IT SHOWED TRENDS TOWARD BENEFICIAL EFFECTS OF PRIDOPIDINE ON SEVERAL OUTCOME MEASURES, WITH THE GREATEST IDENTIFIABLE EFFECT ON FUNCTIONAL SCORES, QUANTITATIVE MOTOR SPEECH, AND NEUROFILAMENT LIGHT LEVELS IN EARLY AND FASTER PROGRESSING PARTICIPANTS. THE OLE IS ONGOING. A SECOND EFFICACY TRIAL TARGETING A SELECTED POPULATION OF PEOPLE WITH ALS IS BEING PLANNED. UNFORTUNATELY, A LARGE SEGMENT OF THE REAL-WORLD ALS POPULATION WON’T BE ELIGIBLE TO ENROLL IN THIS SECOND EFFICACY STUDY DUE TO THE RESTRICTIVE ELIGIBILITY CRITERIA. THE CURRENT PROPOSAL IS AN EXPANDED ACCESS PROTOCOL (EAP) OF PRIDOPIDINE IN 200 INDIVIDUALS WITH ALS WHO ARE INELIGIBLE FOR CLINICAL TRIALS. PARTICIPANTS WOULD RECEIVE PRIDOPIDINE FOR UP TO 24 MONTHS, WHILE THE OLE AND THE PLANNED SECOND EFFICACY TRIAL ARE ONGOING. THIS STUDY WILL PROVIDE REAL- WORLD DATA BY EVALUATING THE EFFECTS OF THE DRUG IN A POPULATION THAT IS BROADER THAN THE ONE INCLUDED IN THE EFFICACY TRIALS AND BY COLLECTING SAFETY, CLINICAL, AND BIOLOGICAL OUTCOMES OVER LONGER TERM EXPOSURE.
Department of Health and Human Services
$27.6M
CENTER FOR INNOVATIVE NEUROTECH ADVANCEMENT - CINTA - PROJECT ABSTRACT - OVERALL WE PROPOSE TO CREATE THE CENTER FOR INNOVATIVE NEUROTECH ADVANCEMENT (CINTA), A NEW CENTER FOR RAPID TRANSFORMATION OF EMERGING TECHNOLOGIES INTO COMMERCIALLY VIABLE, CLINICALLY FOCUSED SOLUTIONS FOR DISORDERS OF THE NERVOUS SYSTEM. THE PD/PIS, DRS. STEVEN SCHACHTER AND PAOLO BONATO, TOGETHER HAVE MANY DECADES OF EXPERIENCE CREATING AND MANAGING COMPLEX MULTI-INSTITUTIONS, MULTI-DISCIPLINARY, NATIONAL TRANSLATIONAL RESEARCH ORGANIZATIONS, AND EXPERTISE IN NEUROTECHNOLOGY-RELATED RESEARCH, AND WILL LEVERAGE THEIR EXPERIENCE TO FURTHER INNOVATE, ADAPT, AND DEPLOY THE WELL-DEVELOPED, PROVEN APPROACH TO NEEDS-DRIVEN HEALTHCARE TECHNOLOGY INNOVATION PIONEERED, DEVELOPED, AND VALIDATED FOR 23 YEARS BY THE CONSORTIA FOR IMPROVING MEDICINE WITH INNOVATION & TECHNOLOGY (CIMIT). LED FOR THE PAST 23 YEARS BY DR. SCHACHTER AND COLLEAGUES, CIMIT HAS A PROVEN TRACK RECORD OF SUCCESS AS A NATIONAL CENTER FOR HEALTHCARE INNOVATION AND A UNIQUE MODEL TO IDENTIFY UNMET MEDICAL NEEDS; FIND, FUND, AND FACILITATE TECHNOLOGY-BASED PROJECTS TO SOLVE THOSE NEEDS; AND RAPIDLY MOVE THESE INNOVATIONS FROM CONCEPT TO MANUFACTURING TO COMMERCIALIZATION TO THE END-USER. COMBINING THEIR DECADES-LONG EXPERTISE AND INTEREST IN NEUROLOGICAL DISORDERS AND REHABILITATION, THE PD/PIS WILL OVERSEE THE ADVANCEMENT OF PROJECTS UNDER CINTA’S FIVE CORES: ADMINISTRATIVE CORE, OUTREACH CORE, EVALUATION CORE, INNOVATOR SUBPROJECTS CORE, AND RESOURCE SUBAWARDS CORE. PAUL TESSIER, PROGRAM DIRECTOR FOR THE ADMINISTRATIVE CORE, WILL HAVE OVERALL RESPONSIBILITY FOR INTEGRATING THE ACTIVITIES OF THE DIFFERENT CORES TO ACCOMPLISH THE OVERALL GOALS OF THE PROPOSED CENTER UNDER THE GUIDANCE OF THE CENTER PD/PIS. THE ADMINISTRATIVE CORE WILL ENSURE ONGOING INPUT FROM NIH PROGRAM DIRECTORS AND SCIENCE OFFICERS, AS WELL AS INPUT FROM THE STEERING COMMITTEE MEMBERS WHO ARE INTEGRAL IN PROVIDING GUIDANCE TO THE PROGRAM TO HELP DIVERSIFY THE TYPES OF PROJECTS AS WELL AS INCREASE REPRESENTATION OF PROPOSERS OF VARYING BACKGROUNDS. KEY CENTER ACTIVITIES TO ACCOMPLISH THE OVERALL GOALS INCLUDE ESTABLISHED NEEDS ASSESSMENT AND PROJECT SOLICITATION PROCESSES, AND CIMIT’S VIRTUAL COLLABORATION PLATFORM, COLAB, TO HELP CINTA INVESTIGATORS AND FACILITATORS TRACK IMPORTANT DELIVERABLES IN FOUR AREAS CRITICAL TO COMMERCIAL SUCCESS. COLAB WILL ALSO BE USED AS A PLATFORM FOR SHARED CINTA RESOURCES, SUCH AS A CINTA WEBSITE WITH ACCESS TO RESOURCES AVAILABLE TO KEY STAKEHOLDERS. FINALLY, CINTA WILL DRAW UPON THE WELL-ESTABLISHED NATIONAL AND INTERNATIONAL COLLABORATION NETWORKS OF CIMIT AND SPAULDING TO ACHIEVE CINTA’S GOALS AND ENHANCE EXTERNALLY FUNDED COLLABORATIONS.
Department of Justice
$27.6M
OVC FY 19 VOCA VICTIM COMPENSATION FORMULA
Department of Justice
$27.5M
OVC FY 18 VOCA VICTIM COMPENSATION FORMULA
Department of Defense
$27.3M
APX 1 O&M
Department of Agriculture
$27.1M
RUS IRA NEW ERA LOAN GRANT COMBO - LOAN 0% - GRANT
Department of Defense
$27.1M
INARNG FACILITY PROGRAMS
Department of Justice
$27M
FISCAL YEAR 2010 VOCA CRIME VICTIM COMPENSATION GRANT PROGRAM
Department of Health and Human Services
$26.9M
MASSACHUSETTS ALZHEIMER'S DISEASE RESEARCH CENTER
Department of Energy
$26.8M
BIPARTISAN INFRASTRUCTURE LAW (BIL): BUILDING THE SMART GRID OF THE FUTURE THROUGH THE COOPERATIVE ENERGY ECOSYSTEM THE GOAL OF THE PROJECT IS TO HELP ELECTRIC COOPERATIVES REMAIN ECONOMICALLY AND OPERATIONALLY HEALTHY IN THE FORESEEABLE FUTURE. IT AIMS TO INCREASE THE EFFICIENCY, CAPACITY, FLEXIBILITY, RELIABILITY, AND RESILIENCE OF THE RECIPIENT’S BULK POWER GRID, WHICH SERVES FOUR STATES AND 42 DISTRIBUTION MEMBER COOPERATIVES.
Department of Justice
$26.7M
THIS APPLICANT WILL PROVIDE FUNDS FROM THE CRIME VICTIMS FUND TO ENHANCE CRIME VICTIM SERVICES IN THE STATE. VICTIMS OF CRIME ACT (VOCA) ASSISTANCE FUNDS TYPICALLY ARE TYPICALLY COMPETITIVELY AWARDED BY THE STATE TO LOCAL COMMUNITY-BASED ORGANIZATIONS THAT PROVIDE DIRECT SERVICES TO CRIME VICTIMS. NC/NCF.
Department of Defense
$26.6M
ARNG - WICHITA, KS READINESS CENTER - PN 20000063 - CONSTRUCTION
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$26.5M
COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT BLOCK GRANTS/STATE'S PROGRAM AND NON-ENTITLEMENT GRANTS IN HAWAII
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$26.4M
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 Health and Human Services
$26.3M
GENETICALLY-ENGINEERED PIG ORGAN TRANSPLANTATION INTO NONHUMAN PRIMATES
Department of Defense
$26.3M
KS - ARMY NATIONAL GUARD FACILITIES PROGRAM - 1001 INITIAL MOD ADMINISTRATIVELY OPENING UP APPENDIX 1001 FOR FY24.
Department of Health and Human Services
$26.2M
MASSACHUSETTS ALZHEIMER'S DISEASE RESEARCH CENTER
Department of State
$26.2M
THE PURPOSE OF THIS GRANT IS PROMOTE AND PROTECT HUMAN RIGHTS THROUGHOUT THE WESTERN HEMISPHERE REGION.
Department of Justice
$26M
OVC FY2020 VOCA VICTIM ASSISTANCE FORMULA
Department of Defense
$26M
NH-MILCON-PN330022. LITTLETON. P21000 IS NECESSARY TO OPEN FEDERAL FUNDS IN THE FY21 MCCA.
Department of Defense
$26M
ARNG FACILITIES PROGRAMS-1001
Department of Defense
$25.9M
INARNG FACILITIES PROGRAM
Department of Justice
$25.8M
VICTIMS OF CRIME ACT FUNDS FOR SOUTH CAROLINA
Department of Defense
$25.7M
MOD 0
Department of Defense
$25.7M
IN ARMY NATIONAL GUARD MILITARY CONSTRUCTION READINESS CENTER PN: 320157. W912L9 21 2 2001, BASE MOD. ATLANTA, IN.
Department of Health and Human Services
$25.6M
CSE-2023
Department of Defense
$25.5M
FY20 APX 1 INITIAL MODIFICATION.
Department of Health and Human Services
$25.2M
SCSS-2026 - CHILD SUPPORT SERVICES - STATES
Department of Defense
$25.1M
KS - ARMY NATIONAL GUARD FACILITIES PROGRAM - 1001 INITIAL MOD ADMINISTRATIVELY OPENING UP APPENDIX 1001 FOR FY25.
Department of Defense
$25M
SC - ARNG FACILITIES PROGRAM - 1001. FY23 MOD ZERO.
Department of Justice
$25M
OVC FY 16 VOCA VICTIM COMPENSATION FORMULA
Department of Defense
$25M
SC-MCCA 450353 ARMY AVIATION SUPPORT FACILITY GREENVILLE, SC
Department of Commerce
$24.9M
THIS EDA INVESTMENT SUPPORTS THE BIOFABRICATION CLUSTER, LED BY THE CITY OF MANCHESTER, WITH CREATING A BIOFABRICATION CLUSTER BY ESTABLISHING SOUTHERN NEW HAMPSHIRE AS THE GLOBAL EPICENTER FOR THE PRODUCTION AND DISTRIBUTION OF REGENERATIVE TISSUES AND ORGANS. COALITION PROJECTS INCLUDE DEVELOPING A FACILITY SUITABLE FOR SCALED PRODUCTION OF CELLS, TISSUES, AND ORGANS, CREATING A BUSINESS ACCELERATOR, ESTABLISHING A CLUSTER WORK-AND-LEARN PROGRAM, AND BUILDING PILOT STATIONS FOR A LOGISTICS NETWORK TO BE USED FOR FUTURE ORGAN DISTRIBUTION. ONCE IMPLEMENTED, THE INVESTMENT WILL HELP DEVELOP AND STRENGTHEN REGIONAL INDUSTRY CLUSTERS - ALL WHILE EMBRACING ECONOMIC EQUITY, CREATING GOOD-PAYING JOBS, AND ENHANCING U.S. COMPETITIVENESS GLOBALLY.
Department of Health and Human Services
$24.9M
CSE-2022
Department of Defense
$24.6M
0
Department of Energy
$24.5M
REACTOR-BASED MOLYBDENUM-99 PRODUCTION SYSTEM (PHASE 1)
Department of Transportation
$24.5M
TIGER GRANT 1
Department of Justice
$24.5M
MASSACHUSETTS CRIME VICTIM COMPENSATION GRANT FOR NEW ENGLAND COMPOUNDING CENTER VICTIMS
Department of Health and Human Services
$24.4M
INFLAMMATION AND THE HOST RESPONSES TO INJURY
Department of Veterans Affairs
$24.2M
NEW CONSTRUCTION: 120 BED FACILITY
Department of Energy
$24.2M
RARE EARTH ELEMENT (REE) SEPARATION AND PROCESSING DEMONSTRATION PROJECT
Department of Health and Human Services
$23.9M
CENTER FOR THE STUDY OF INFLAMMATORY BOWEL DISEASE
Source: Federal Audit Clearinghouse (fac.gov)
No federal single audit records found for this organization.
Single audits are required for entities expending $750,000+ in federal awards annually.
Source: IRS e-Filed Form 990
No officer or director compensation data available for this organization.
This data is sourced from IRS Form 990, Part VII. It may not be available if the organization files Form 990-N (e-Postcard) or has not yet been enriched.
Source: IRS Publication 78, Auto-Revocation List & e-Postcard Data
Tax-deductible contributions: Not confirmed
No additional tax-exempt status records found in ReconForce's database.
Sources: IRS e-Filed Form 990 (XML) & ProPublica Nonprofit Explorer
Scroll →
| Year | Revenue | Contributions | Expenses | Assets | Net Assets |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2023 | $122.9K | $0 | $110.6K | $3.5M | $3.4M |
| 2022 | $104.4K | $0 | $112K | $3.5M | $3.4M |
| 2021 | $1.8M | $1.7M | $109.8K | $3.4M | $3.4M |
| 2020 | $114.1K | $0 | $114.8K | $1.7M | $1.7M |
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 | |
| 2022 | 990 | Data |
Financial data: IRS Form 990 via ProPublica Nonprofit Explorer (Tax Year 2023)
Federal grants: USAspending.gov (live)
Organization info: IRS Business Master File · ProPublica Nonprofit Explorer
| 2019 | $113.9K | $0 | $145.4K | $1.7M | $1.7M |
| 2018 | $112.5K | $0 | $179.1K | $1.7M | $1.7M |
| 2017 | $110.6K | $0 | $148.3K | $1.8M | $1.8M |
| 2016 | $230.7K | $120K | $168.5K | $1.8M | $1.8M |
| 2015 | $111.4K | $0 | $176.4K | $1.8M | $1.8M |
| 2014 | $124.6K | $0 | $163.7K | $1.8M | $1.8M |
| 2013 | $113.1K | $0 | $140.6K | $1.9M | $1.9M |
| 2012 | $198.9K | $0 | $145.3K | $1.9M | $1.9M |
| 2011 | $112.1K | $0 | $139.2K | $1.8M | $1.8M |
| 2021 | 990 | Data |
| 2020 | 990 | Data | PDF not yet published by IRS |
| 2019 | 990 | Data |
| 2018 | 990 | Data |
| 2017 | 990 | Data |
| 2016 | 990 | Data |
| 2015 | 990 | Data |
| 2014 | 990 | Data |
| 2013 | 990 | Data |
| 2012 | 990 | Data |
| 2011 | 990 | Data |
| 2010 | 990 | — |
| 2009 | 990 | — |
| 2008 | 990 | — |
| 2007 | 990 | — |
| 2006 | 990 | — |
| 2005 | 990 | — |