Database / Awards
Federal awards
Every contract and grant ingested from USAspending.gov. Use filters below to narrow by agency, dollar threshold, or date window.
Results
4,464 awards
Showing 4351–4400
| Action date | Recipient | Agency | Amount | Description | Sector |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2026-04-08 | MGC SERVICES A JOINT VENTURE 2 LLC | Department of Veterans Affairs | $34,321,462 | PHASE 2 EXPANSION OF THE GREAT LAKES NATIONAL CEMETERY | — |
| 2026-04-30 | THE GEO GROUP, INC. | Department of Homeland Security | $34,270,827 | DETENTION SERVICES DESERT VIEW (DV) ANNEX IN THE LOS ANGELES AREA OF RESPONSIBILITY | — |
| — | MISSISSIPPI DEPARTMENT OF EMPLOYMENT SECURITY | Department of Labor | $34,248,969 | AWARD PURPOSE THE PURPOSE OF THE WIOA YOUTH GRANTS IS TO PROVIDE RESOURCES FOR LOCAL WORKFORCE DEVELOPMENT AREAS TO DELIVER COMPREHENSIVE YOUTH SERVICES THAT FOCUS ON ASSISTING OUT-OF- SCHOOL YOUTH AND IN-SCHOOL YOUTH, WITH ONE OR MORE BARRIERS TO EMPLOYMENT, PREPARE FOR EMPLOYMENT AND POSTSECONDARY EDUCATION OPPORTUNITIES; ATTAIN EDUCATIONAL AND/OR SKILLS TRAINING CREDENTIALS; AND SECURE EMPLOYMENT WITH CAREER/PROMOTIONAL OPPORTUNITIES. ACTIVITIES PERFORMED WIOA SPECIFIES THAT STATES PROVIDE RESOURCES FOR LOCAL WORKFORCE DEVELOPMENT AREAS TO ADMINISTER YOUTH SERVICES. LOCAL WORKFORCE DEVELOPMENT AREAS DELIVER COMPREHENSIVE YOUTH SERVICES TO OUT-OF-SCHOOL YOUTH AND IN-SCHOOL YOUTH. TRAINING SERVICES INCLUDE: TUTORING; ALTERNATIVE SECONDARY SCHOOL SERVICES; PAID AND UNPAID WORK EXPERIENCES, WHICH INCLUDE: SUMMER AND YEAR ROUND EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES, PRE-APPRENTICESHIP PROGRAMS, INTERNSHIPS AND JOB SHADOWING, AND ON-THE-JOB TRAINING; OCCUPATIONAL SKILL TRAINING; EDUCATION OFFERED CONCURRENTLY WITH WORKFORCE PREPARATION AND TRAINING; LEADERSHIP DEVELOPMENT OPPORTUNITIES; SUPPORTIVE SERVICES; MENTORING; FOLLOW-UP SERVICES; COMPREHENSIVE GUIDANCE AND COUNSELING; FINANCIAL LITERACY EDUCATION; ENTREPRENEURIAL SKILLS TRAINING; SERVICES THAT PROVIDE LABOR MARKET AND EMPLOYMENT INFORMATION; AND POSTSECONDARY EDUCATION AND TRAINING PREPARATION ACTIVITIES. DELIVERABLES THE WIOA YOUTH PROGRAM OUTCOMES ARE TO PROVIDE ACTIVITIES THAT LEAD TO THE ATTAINMENT OF A SECONDARY SCHOOL DIPLOMA OR RECOGNIZED POST-SECONDARY CREDENTIAL AND/OR EMPLOYMENT. INTENDED BENEFICIARY YOUTH, BETWEEN THE AGES OF 14 AND 24, WITH ONE OR MORE OF THE FOLLOWING CHARACTERISTICS: LOW-INCOME; BASIC SKILLS DEFICIENT; ENGLISH LANGUAGE LEARNER; JUSTICE SYSTEM INVOLVEMENT; HOMELESS; RUNAWAY; IN FOSTER CARE; PREGNANT OR PARENTING; INDIVIDUAL WITH A DISABILITY; OR WHO REQUIRES ADDITIONAL ASSISTANCE TO COMPLETE AN EDUCATIONAL PROGRAM. SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES LOCAL WORKFORCE DEVELOPMENT AGENCIES DELIVER COMPREHENSIVE SERVICES TO OUT-OF-SCHOOL AND IN-SCHOOL YOUTH TO PREPARE THEM FOR POSTSECONDARY EDUCATION AND EMPLOYMENT. SOME OF THE TYPES OF SERVICE ACTIVITIES MAY INCLUDE BUT ARE NOT LIMITED TO: TUTORING; PAID AND UNPAID WORK EXPERIENCES, OCCUPATIONAL SKILL TRAINING, FOLLOW-UP SERVICES; AND COMPREHENSIVE GUIDANCE AND COUNSELING, AND SUPPORTIVE SERVICES. | — |
| 2026-03-18 | GENERAL DYNAMICS INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY, INC. | Department of Homeland Security | $34,230,699 | IGF::OT::IGF-OTHER BPA CALL #01, ENTERPRISE INFORMATION SYSTEMS INFRASTRUCTURE EISI) IMPLEMENTATION AND SUSTAINMENT; POP 16FEB16 -15AUG16. TECHNICAL ENTERPRISE SUPPORT SERVICES (TESS) BPA AP# HSCG79-14-006 APFS# P2014012788 BPA KO: CYNTHIA VALDES BPA COR: KEVIN SHEEHAN | — |
| — | RURAL HEALTH SERVICES CONSORTIUM, INC | Department of Health and Human Services | $34,211,519 | HEALTH CENTER CLUSTER | — |
| 2026-03-17 | PARAGON SYSTEMS INC | Department of Health and Human Services | $34,203,622 | STRATEGIC NATIONAL STOCKPILE PROTECTIVE GUARD SERVICES | — |
| — | TRANSPORTATION, MICHIGAN DEPARTMENT OF | Department of Transportation | $34,202,150 | PROJECT TITLE: MICHIGAN URBAN BRIDGES REVITALIZATION :::: PROJECT DESCRIPTION: COMPETITIVE GRANT PROJECT: SUPERSTRUCTURE BRIDGE REPLACEMENT AS PART OF THE PHASE 3 BRIDGE BUNDLING PROGRAM. SN 678 AT FRASER ST OVER THE KAWKAWLIN RIVER; SN 3936 AT E ELM ST OVER RED CEDAR RIVER; SN 8144 AT SASHABAW RD OVER CLINTON RIVER; SN 8941AT W SPRING LAKE RD OVER SMITH BAYOU; SN 10982 AT PLYMOUTH RD OVER FLEMMING CREEK; SN 12107 AT BECK RD OVER JOHNSON DRAIN; SN 12498 AT HARRISON ST OVER E BR ECORSE RIVER | — |
| — | UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY RESEARCH FOUNDATION, THE | Department of Health and Human Services | $34,183,375 | KENTUCKY CENTER FOR CLINICAL AND TRANSLATIONAL SCIENCE | — |
| 2026-04-21 | POTOMAC ELECTRIC POWER CO | Department of State | $34,172,632 | UESC ECP FOR HST PHASE II IGF::OT::IGF | — |
| 2026-03-03 | AT&T ENTERPRISES, LLC | Department of Veterans Affairs | $34,111,132 | NLEC-NG TASK ORDER 7 | — |
| 2026-05-07 | EDUCATION & TRAINING RESOURCES LLC | Department of Labor | $34,099,492 | OPERATION OF WILMINGTON JOB CORP CENTER, OUTREACH/ADMISSIONS, CAREER TRANSITION SERVICES | — |
| — | ASSOCIATED UNIVERSITIES INC | National Science Foundation | $34,093,912 | MANAGEMENT AND OPERATIONS OF THE GREEN BANK OBSERVATORY FY 2025 - FY 2026 -ASSOCIATED UNIVERSITIES, INC. (AUI) WILL MANAGE AND OPERATE THE GREEN BANK OBSERVATORY (GBO) FROM OCTOBER 1, 2024 TO SEPTEMBER 30, 2026. AS PART OF THIS PROJECT, AUI WILL INITIATE A CRITICALLY-NEEDED INFRASTRUCTURE REFURBISHMENT PLAN TO ENSURE THE LONG-TERM SAFETY AND SCIENTIFIC VITALITY OF GBO. FURTHERMORE, IT WILL REINTEGRATE GBO INTO THE NATIONAL RADIO ASTRONOMY OBSERVATORY (NRAO) TO REALIZE A COHERENT VISION OF SERVICE TO THE RADIO ASTRONOMY COMMUNITY, WITH A RENEWED EMPHASIS ON IMPROVING SCIENTIFIC CAPABILITY, USER SUPPORT, ARCHIVAL DATA ACCESS, AND SOFTWARE TOOLS. ASTRONOMY IS AN IMPORTANT ELEMENT IN MEETING NATIONAL GOALS RELATED TO DIVERSITY, SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY EDUCATION, AND INCREASED U.S. COMPETITIVENESS. GBO?S EXEMPLARY EDUCATION AND PUBLIC OUTREACH PROGRAMS IN WEST VIRGINIA WILL CREATE UNIQUE STEM LEARNING EXPERIENCES FOR K? 16 STUDENTS, EDUCATORS, PROFESSIONAL SCIENTISTS, AND THE PUBLIC. THE GREEN BANK SCIENCE CENTER ATTRACTS NEARLY 40,000 VISITORS EACH YEAR, AND ACTIVE TELESCOPES ON SITE PROVIDE INVALUABLE TRAINING OPPORTUNITIES FOR STUDENTS, AS WELL AS SCIENCE ENRICHMENT FOR A VERY WIDE DEMOGRAPHIC. DRIVEN BY THE PRIORITIES OF THE U.S. RESEARCH COMMUNITY AS ARTICULATED IN THE 2020 DECADAL SURVEY OF ASTRONOMY AND ASTROPHYSICS, GBO WILL ENABLE IMPORTANT DISCOVERIES ACROSS MANY FIELDS OF ASTRONOMY AND ASTROPHYSICS. THE MAJOR RESEARCH INSTRUMENT AT GBO IS THE 100-METER DIAMETER GREEN BANK TELESCOPE (GBT)---THE WORLD'S LARGEST FULLY STEERABLE SINGLE-DISH RADIO TELESCOPE. THE GBT'S LARGE SKY COVERAGE, VERY HIGH SENSITIVITY, AND EXTENSIVE SUITE OF INSTRUMENTS MAKE IT A POWERFUL AND VERSATILE TELESCOPE WHICH ENABLES ADVANCES IN VIRTUALLY ALL AREAS OF MODERN ASTROPHYSICS. SOME MAJOR STUDIES ENABLED BY THE GBT WILL INCLUDE: CHARACTERIZING THE LOW-FREQUENCY GRAVITATIONAL WAVE BACKGROUND; DETERMINING THE NATURE AND COMPLEX ENVIRONMENTS OF MYSTERIOUS FAST RADIO BURSTS; ESTABLISHING THE CHEMICAL INVENTORY OF MOLECULAR CLOUDS AND EVOLVED STARS TO ELUCIDATE THE GROWTH OF MOLECULAR COMPLEXITY IN SPACE; MEASURING THE DISTRIBUTION OF SUPERHEATED GAS IN THE INTERCLUSTER MEDIUM OF GALAXY CLUSTERS; AND SCANNING NEARBY STARS, THE GALACTIC PLANE, AND EXTERNAL GALAXIES FOR TECHNOSIGNATURES. THE GBT OFFERS EXCELLENT COMPLEMENTARITY AND SYNERGY WITH INTERFEROMETRIC ARRAYS, SUCH AS THE VERY LARGE ARRAY, THE VERY LONG BASELINE ARRAY, AND THE ATACAMA LARGE MILLIMETER/SUBMILLIMETER ARRAY. IT ALSO PLAYS A CRITICAL ROLE AS A HIGHLY SENSITIVE ELEMENT OF VERY LONG BASELINE INTERFEROMETRY. THIS AWARD REFLECTS NSF'S STATUTORY MISSION AND HAS BEEN DEEMED WORTHY OF SUPPORT THROUGH EVALUATION USING THE FOUNDATION'S INTELLECTUAL MERIT AND BROADER IMPACTS REVIEW CRITERIA.- SUBAWARDS ARE NOT PLANNED FOR THIS AWARD. | — |
| — | TEXAS DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION | Department of Transportation | $34,092,582 | PROJECT TITLE: ON US 67 AT LAKE RIDGE PARKWAY. CONSTRUCT INTERCHANGE; PHASE 1. :::: PROJECT DESCRIPTION: US 67 AT LAKE RIDGE PARKWAY; INTERCHANGE IMPROVEMENT. | — |
| 2026-03-30 | CLIENT FIRST TECHNOLOGIES, INC | Department of Veterans Affairs | $34,082,641 | HUD OIG BOSS RE-COMPETE | — |
| 2026-04-20 | ICON GOVERNMENT AND PUBLIC HEALTH SOLUTIONS, INC. | Department of Health and Human Services | $34,081,098 | CLINICAL TRIAL PLANNING AND EXECUTION (CTPE) | — |
| — | THE JOHNS HOPKINS UNIVERSITY | Department of Health and Human Services | $34,078,316 | JOHNS HOPKINS AIDS CLINICAL TRIALS UNIT | — |
| 2026-03-11 | APTIVE RESOURCES LLC | General Services Administration | $34,076,759 | OPM HRS RECRUITMENT AND BRANDING BPA AFCS CALL 04 | — |
| 2026-03-31 | ATT MOBILITY LLC | Department of Transportation | $34,071,758 | AT&T - CELLULAR DEVICES AND SERVICES FOR DOT | — |
| — | STATE OF NEW MEXICO | Department of Agriculture | $34,069,495 | WIC FOOD EXPENSE | — |
| 2026-04-29 | UNIVERSAL PROTECTION SERVICE, LIMITED PARTNERSHIP | Department of Homeland Security | $34,060,634 | PROTECTIVE SECURITY OFFICER (PSO) SERVICES IN WASHINGTON DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA | — |
| 2026-04-16 | JENNIE-O TURKEY STORE INC | Department of Agriculture | $34,026,370 | COMMODITIES FOR USG FOOD DONATIONS: 2000010260/4100030842/TURKEY BREAST CKD FRZ CTN 34-42 LBS,TURKEY BREAST DELI SLC FRZ PKG-20/2 LB | — |
| 2026-04-27 | DERIVATIVE LLC | Department of the Treasury | $34,022,027 | FINCEN IT SUPPORT SERVICES FITSS | — |
| — | COMMUNITY HEALTH OF CENTRAL WASHINGTON | Department of Health and Human Services | $34,016,097 | HEALTH CENTER CLUSTER | — |
| — | PRIMARY HEALTH SERVICES CENTER | Department of Health and Human Services | $33,988,808 | HEALTH CENTER CLUSTER | — |
| 2026-03-12 | ANDRITZ HYDRO CORP | Department of the Interior | $33,979,078 | GRAND COULEE JOHN W. KEYS III PUMP-GENERATING PLANT EXCITATION SYSTEM, GOVERNOR, AND PROTECTIVE RELAY REPLACEMENT AND CONTROLS MODERNIZATION, COLUMBIA BASIN PROJECT, WASHINGTON | — |
| — | HUMAN SERVICES, OKLAHOMA DEPT OF | Department of Agriculture | $33,966,484 | SNAP STATE ADMINISTRATIVE COSTS | — |
| 2026-04-29 | M.A. DEATLEY CONSTRUCTION, INC. | Department of Transportation | $33,964,645 | WY NPS YELL 14(1), LEWIS RIVER BRIDGE | — |
| — | TELAMON CORPORATION | Department of Health and Human Services | $33,944,753 | MIGRANT AND SEASONAL HEAD START AND EARLY HEAD START | — |
| — | MISSOURI DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH & SENIOR SERVICES | Department of Agriculture | $33,944,340 | WIC ADMIN EXPENSES | — |
| 2026-02-20 | EARTH RESOURCES TECHNOLOGY, LLC | Department of Commerce | $33,935,008 | COMPREHENSIVE LARGE ARRAY-DATA STEWARDSHIP SYSTEM (CLASS) SUSTAINMENT | — |
| 2026-05-08 | IT WORKS! INC. | Department of Transportation | $33,923,331 | EFAST PA 19-002-CS NAS DATA INTEGRATION SERVICES / SYSTEM OPERATIONS AND MAINTENANCE | — |
| 2026-05-08 | DELOITTE CONSULTING LLP | Department of Agriculture | $33,921,607 | FINANCIAL SERVICES IT SUSTAINMENT SUPPORT. | — |
| — | TENNESSEE DEPARTMENT OF HUMAN SERVICES | Department of Health and Human Services | $33,920,929 | SSBG-2024 | — |
| — | INDIANA FAMILY AND SOCIAL SERV | Department of Health and Human Services | $33,894,092 | GY2024 ORR REFUGEE CASH AND MEDICAL ASSISTANCE | — |
| — | STATE OF MICHIGAN | Department of Homeland Security | $33,871,406 | GRANT TO LOCAL GOVERNMENT FOR REPAIR OR REPLACEMENT OF DISASTER DAMAGED FACILITIES | — |
| 2026-05-11 | CGI FEDERAL INC. | Department of Transportation | $33,865,149 | ELEARNING MANAGEMENT SYSTEM (ELMS) | — |
| 2026-04-21 | JMA SOLUTIONS LLC | Department of Transportation | $33,860,376 | NEW TASK ORDER FOR OPERATIONAL SUPPORT AND ENGINEERING SERVICES | — |
| — | UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, SAN DIEGO | Department of Health and Human Services | $33,848,843 | UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, SAN DIEGO CLINICAL TRIAL UNIT | — |
| 2026-04-07 | ECS FEDERAL, LLC | Department of Justice | $33,846,811 | STOR 228 | — |
| 2026-03-11 | CI2 AVIATION, INC. | Department of Transportation | $33,845,465 | THE FCT CONTRACT ENCOMPASSES THE SCOPE OF ATC SERVICES AND ASSOCIATED SUPPORT SERVICES REQUIRED FOR THE DAY-TO-DAY OPERATION OF FCTS AS DEFINED IN THE STATEMENT OF WORK (SOW). | — |
| — | LOUISIANA STATE UNIVERSITY | National Science Foundation | $33,821,660 | NSF ENGINES: LOUISIANA ENERGY TRANSITION ENGINE -THIS NSF ENGINES AWARD TO THE LOUISIANA ENERGY TRANSITION ENGINE WILL ADVANCE OUR NATION?S CAPACITY FOR INNOVATION IN CLEAN ENERGY BY DRIVING RESEARCH AND COMMERCIALIZATION EFFORTS IN CARBON CAPTURE, HYDROGEN AS AN ALTERNATIVE FUEL, CARBON DIOXIDE AS A FEEDSTOCK, SUSTAINABLE WATER, SUSTAINABLE MANUFACTURING FOR CLEAN ENERGY, AND ECONOMIC AND POLICY RESEARCH TO PROMOTE PATHWAYS TO DECARBONIZATION IN THE STATE OF LOUISIANA. CLEAN ENERGY TECHNOLOGIES WILL SURPASS THE CURRENT STATE OF PRACTICE AND OUR CURRENT CAPABILITIES BECAUSE OF THE UNIQUE CAPACITY OF THIS NSF ENGINE TO LEVERAGE LOUISIANA?S UNIQUE GEOLOGY, ITS EXISTING OIL AND GAS PRODUCTION AS WELL AS DOWNSTREAM PETROCHEMICAL OPERATIONS, AND ITS STRONG RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT INFRASTRUCTURE. THIS WILL HAVE PROFOUND IMPACTS ON OUR NATIONAL ECONOMY AND SECURITY, AND IT WILL INCREASE THE NATION?S ABILITY TO COMPETE ON A GLOBAL STAGE AS THE WORLD RACES TO FIND MORE SUSTAINABLE ENERGY SOLUTIONS WHILE ALSO UNLOCKING REGIONAL ECONOMIC GROWTH AND CREATING OPPORTUNITIES FOR THE ENTIRE STATE. IN ADDITION TO THE SIGNIFICANT NATIONAL IMPACTS, THE NSF ENGINE HAS THE POTENTIAL TO CREATE NEW JOBS AND TRAINING OPPORTUNITIES IN THE CLEAN ENERGY SECTOR PARTICULARLY FOR HISTORICALLY UNDERSERVED AND/OR RURAL COMMUNITIES WITHIN THE REGION OF SERVICE. IF SUCCESSFUL, THE INNOVATION ECOSYSTEM DRIVEN BY THE NSF ENGINE WILL RESULT IN UNPRECEDENTED ADVANCES RANGING FROM CARBON DIOXIDE SEQUESTRATION AND CARBON DIOXIDE AS A FEEDSTOCK TO HYDROGEN AS AN ALTERNATIVE FUEL BY CREATING NEW TECHNOLOGIES AND TECHNOLOGY STARTUPS THAT SOLVE INDUSTRY NEEDS, BRINGING WITH IT NEW JOBS, OPPORTUNITIES, AND ECONOMIC PROSPERITY FOR THE STATE OF LOUISIANA. THE NSF ENGINE HAS A REGION OF SERVICE THAT SPANS THE ENTIRE STATE OF LOUISIANA. THE NSF ENGINE INCLUDES A LARGE ECOSYSTEM OF CORE PARTNERS WITH REPRESENTATION FROM THE ENERGY INDUSTRY, UNIVERSITIES (INCLUDING HISTORICALLY BLACK COLLEGES AND UNIVERSITIES, PUBLIC AND PRIVATE FOUR-YEAR INSTITUTIONS AND TWO-YEAR INSTITUTIONS), ECONOMIC AND WORKFORCE DEVELOPMENT ORGANIZATIONS, NON-PROFITS, AND INVESTMENT FIRMS THAT ARE ESSENTIAL TO THE NSF ENGINE?S SUCCESS. THIS DIVERSE COALITION OF PARTNERS WILL BE CENTRAL TO R&D, TRANSLATION, AND WORKFORCE DEVELOPMENT EFFORTS. THE NSF ENGINE WILL FOCUS ON SIX TOPIC AREAS RELATED TO DECARBONIZATION AND THE TRANSITION TO CLEAN ENERGY. THESE TOPIC AREAS ARE: (1) CARBON SEQUESTRATION; (2) HYDROGEN AS AN ALTERNATIVE FUEL; (3) USE OF CARBON DIOXIDE TO PRODUCE BIOFUELS OR BIOPRODUCTS; (4) SUSTAINABLE SOLUTIONS TO THE ENERGY INDUSTRY?S HIGH DEMAND FOR WATER; (5) SUSTAINABLE MANUFACTURING PRACTICES FOR THE CLEAN ENERGY INDUSTRY; AND (6) POLICY DEVELOPMENT TO PROMOTE DECARBONIZATION OF THE ENERGY SECTOR. THE NSF ENGINE WILL ASSEMBLE A CROSS-SECTOR COMMITTEE OF CORE PARTNERS WHO WILL WORK TOGETHER TO PRIORITIZE RESEARCH INITIATIVES THAT ARE RESPONSIVE TO THE ENERGY INDUSTRY?S NEEDS IN THE TRANSITION TO A SUSTAINABLE, LOW CARBON FUTURE. SPECIFIC RESEARCH PROJECTS WILL BE SUPPORTED THROUGH SEED FUNDING COMPETITIONS. THE RESEARCH AND TRANSLATION GOALS OF THE NSF ENGINE ARE TO: (1) LEVERAGE REGIONAL EXPERTISE TO SOLVE ENERGY AND HYDROCARBON TRANSITION-RELATED CHALLENGES ALIGNED WITH THE SIX IDENTIFIED TOPIC AREAS; (2) LAUNCH AND SUSTAIN AN ENERGY TRANSITION TECHNOLOGY INCUBATOR THAT PRIORITIZES HISTORICALLY UNDERSERVED COMMUNITIES TO GROW AND DEVELOP EARLY-STAGE TECHNOLOGY PROJECTS; AND (3) GENERATE AND ATTRACT MORE SUBSTANTIAL INVESTMENTS, TECHNOLOGIES, INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY ACTIVITY, STARTUPS, AND COMMERCIAL ACTIVITIES TO ACCELERATE ENERGY TRANSITION BY DEVELOPING AND GROWING RESEARCH, PARTNERSHIPS, WORKFORCE TRAINING, AND ENTREPRENEURIAL EFFORTS IN LOUISIANA. COLLECTIVELY, THESE GOALS WILL ENABLE LOUISIANA TO BECOME A GLOBAL LEADER IN CLEAN ENERGY TECHNOLOGY INNOVATIONS AND ACCELERATE REGIONAL ECONOMIC GROWTH?CREATING CAREER OPPORTUNITIES FOR THE ENTIRE COMMUNITY. THE COALITION OF PARTNERS BRING DEEP EXPERTISE ACROSS ALL CORE FUNCTIONS OF THE NSF ENGINE TO ENSURE THE NSF ENGINE GOALS ARE MET. THIS EXPERTISE INCLUDES CHEMICAL AND CLEAN ENERGY ENGINEERING; TECHNOLOGY COMMERCIALIZATION, ENTREPRENEURSHIP, AND SMALL BUSINESS MANAGEMENT; ESTABLISHMENT OF ACCESSIBLE CAREER PATHWAYS FOR LOUISIANA RESIDENTS; AND DEVELOPMENT OF SUSTAINABLE PARTNERSHIPS ACROSS HIGHER EDUCATION, INDUSTRY, COMMUNITY, AND GOVERNMENT. THE NSF ENGINE HAS ENGAGED STATE AND LOCAL CHAMBERS OF COMMERCE, ECONOMIC AND WORKFORCE DEVELOPMENT ORGANIZATIONS, INDUSTRY, AND LOUISIANA?S COMMUNITY AND TECHNICAL COLLEGE SYSTEM TO BUILD TRAINING AND MENTORSHIP OPPORTUNITIES ACROSS THE STATE. SPECIFIC ACTIVITIES INCLUDE TRAIN-THE-TRAINER PROGRAMS TO EDUCATE THE NEXT GENERATION OF STEM EDUCATORS, SUPPORTING K-12 EDUCATORS LINK ENERGY TRANSITION TOPICS TO FOUNDATIONAL STEM CLASSES, AND A GRANT PROGRAM THAT WILL SUPPORT NEW, EQUITABLE TRAINING OPPORTUNITIES THAT ADDRESS NEW AND EXISTING WORKFORCE GAPS IN THE CLEAN-ENERGY SECTOR. WORKFORCE DEVELOPMENT ACTIVITIES WILL PRIORITIZE RURAL AND HISTORICALLY UNDERSERVED COMMUNITIES WITHIN THE REGION OF SERVICE. THE NSF ENGINE HAS BROUGHT TOGETHER A STRONG COALITION OF PARTNERS AND IDENTIFIED STRONG ALIGNMENT WITH REGIONAL ASSETS AND PRIORITIES. THE NSF ENGINE HAS IDENTIFIED CRITICAL R&D TOPIC AREAS THAT MUST BE ADVANCED TO DRIVE CLEAN-ENERGY INNOVATIONS AND GET CLOSER TO A NET-ZERO CARBON FUTURE. IT WILL SUPPORT R&D AND TRANSLATIONAL ACTIVITIES TO CULTIVATE AN INNOVATION ECOSYSTEM OF TECH COMPANIES THAT SUPPORT THE NATION?S TRANSITION TO CLEAN ENERGY, WHILE ALSO DRIVING ECONOMIC GROWTH THROUGH JOB CREATION AND TRAINING OPPORTUNITIES IN THE CLEAN ENERGY SECTOR, PARTICULARLY FOR HISTORICALLY UNDERSERVED AND/OR RURAL COMMUNITIES, ACROSS THE STATE OF LOUISIANA. THIS AWARD REFLECTS NSF'S STATUTORY MISSION AND HAS BEEN DEEMED WORTHY OF SUPPORT THROUGH EVALUATION USING THE FOUNDATION'S INTELLECTUAL MERIT AND BROADER IMPACTS REVIEW CRITERIA.- SUBAWARDS ARE PLANNED FOR THIS AWARD. | — |
| — | ARIZONA DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMIC SECURITY | Department of Health and Human Services | $33,809,170 | LIHEAP-2026 - LOW INCOME HOME ENERGY ASSISTANCE | — |
| — | GENERAL DYNAMICS INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY, INC. | General Services Administration | $33,768,698 | HESC II TO AWARD | — |
| — | NATIONAL OPINION RESEARCH CENTER | Department of Health and Human Services | $33,729,002 | HEALTHCARE COST AND UTILIZATION PROJECT (HCUP) CLIN 0002 BASE AWARD | — |
| — | NATIONAL JEWISH HEALTH | Department of Health and Human Services | $33,715,767 | AIRWAY TRANSCRIPTOMIC RESPONSES TO COVID-19 ILLNESSES IN THE HUMAN EPIDEMIOLOGY AND RESPONSE TO SARS-COV-2 (HEROS) COHORT | — |
| — | ANTHONY L. JORDAN HEALTH CORPORATION | Department of Health and Human Services | $33,708,447 | HEALTH CENTER CLUSTER | — |
| — | CAHABA MEDICAL CARE FOUNDATION | Department of Health and Human Services | $33,707,582 | HEALTH CENTER CLUSTER | — |
| — | BLUE PACIFIC JV LLC | Department of Veterans Affairs | $33,670,029 | PROJECT 578-17-027: REPLACE EXISTING STEAM PIPE FROM VAULT 9 TO VAULT 7 STEAM TUNNEL AND REPLACE STEAM PIPE BETWEEN VAULT 9 AND PIT 5 AT THE HINES VA HOSPITAL. | — |
| — | MASSACHUSETTS DEPARTMENT OF ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION | Environmental Protection Agency | $33,668,727 | DESCRIPTION:THIS AGREEMENT PROVIDES FUNDING FOR THE OPERATION OF THE MASSACHUSETTS DEPARTMENT OF ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION'S CONTINUING ENVIRONMENTAL PROGRAMS WHILE GIVING IT GREATER FLEXIBILITY TO ADDRESS ITS HIGHEST ENVIRONMENTAL PRIORITIES, IMPROVE ENVIRONMENTAL PERFORMANCE, ACHIEVE SAVINGS AND STRENGTHEN THE PARTNERSHIP BETWEEN THE MASSACHUSETTS DEPARTMENT OF ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AND THE ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY. THIS AGREEMENT FUNDS THE STATE'S CONTINUING ENVIRONMENTAL PROGRAMS FOR AIR, WATER, AND WASTE/TOXICS THROUGHOUT THE STATE OF MASSACHUSETTS AND DIRECT RESOURCES AS APPROPRIATE TO ADDRESS ENVIRONMENTAL AND PUBLIC HEALTH CONCERNS. ACTIVITIES:THE ACTIVITIES TO BE PERFORMED UNDER THIS MULTI-MEDIA PERFORMANCE PARTNERSHIP GRANT INCLUDE THE COLLECTION AND ANALYSIS OF DATA AND OTHER INFORMATION RELATED TO AMBIENT AIR QUALITY AND WATER QUALITY CONDITIONS FOR A RANGE OF WATER BODIES IN THE COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS. ACTIVITIES UNDER THIS AGREEMENT ALSO ALLOW THE COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS TO ADMINISTER ITS AUTHORIZED WATER PROGRAMS INCLUDING THE NON-POINT SOURCE PROGRAM, THE UNDERGROUND INJECTION CONTROL PROGRAM, THE PUBLIC WATER SYSTEM SUPERVISIONS PROGRAM, AND THE WETLAND PROGRAM DEVELOPMENT GRANTS, IF SELECTED. IN ADDITION, THE FUNDING SUPPORTS THE CONTROL AND MITIGATION OF HAZARDOUS WASTE AND ALLOWS FOR THE ASSESSMENT, CLEANUP, AND REDEVELOPMENT OF BROWNFIELDS SITES AND OTHER CONTAMINATED SITES IN THE COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS. SUBRECIPIENT:MASSDEP (THE RECIPIENT) INDICATED THAT SUBAWARDS WOULD BE UTILIZED TO ASSIST IN FULFILLING THE DELIVERABLES UNDER 3 DISTINCT PROGRAMS: 1) THE 319 NONPOINT SOURCE PROGRAM, 2) THE CWA 106 WATER POLLUTION CONTROL PROGRAM, AND 3) THE WETLAND PROGRAM DEVELOPMENT GRANT PROGRAM. FOR THE 319 NONPOINT SOURCE PROGRAM, THE SUBAWARDS ARE FOR REQUIRED TECHNICAL SERVICES. THIS INCLUDES PROVIDING TECHNICAL STAFFING SUPPORT WITH EXPERTISE IN REVISING THE NPS MANAGEMENT PLAN; AND DEVELOPING, MAINTAINING, AND UPDATING MASSDEP'S CAPACITY-BUILDING TECHNICAL TOOLS. FOR THE CWA 106 (AND 106 MONITORING) PROGRAM, THE RECIPIENT WILL ENTER INTO SUBAWARDS (PROVIDE GRANTS TO) PUBLIC AND NON-PUBLIC ENTITIES TO ASSIST IN THE MONITORING, ASSESSMENT, AND MITIGATION OF POLLUTION IN WATERWAYS, THROUGHOUT THE COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS. THIS INCLUDES LAB AND PHARMACEUTICAL SERVICES. SOME OF THE FUNDING AVAILABLE UNDER THE WETLAND PROGRAM DEVELOPMENT GRANT PROGRAM WILL INCLUDE A SUBAWARD TO FULFILL THE PROJECT'S GOAL OF INTEGRATING NEWLY DEVELOPED TIDAL HYDRAULIC GEOMETRY REGRESSION EQUATIONS INTO THE USGS STREAMSTATS WEB APPLICATION FOR CLIMATE RESILIENCY. OUTCOMES:THIS WORK INCLUDES OUTPUTS (DELIVERABLES) AND OUTCOMES ASSOCIATED WITH MANAGING CONTINUING ENVIRONMENTAL PROGRAMS, WHICH INCLUDE ACTIVITIES TO PROTECT AND MAINTAIN AIR, WATER, AND LAND BY MONITORING, USING POLLUTION PREVENTION, ASSESSMENT, AND RELEVANT CLEANUP TECHNIQUES, PERMITTING, ENFORCEMENT, STANDARD SETTING, AND/OR INSPECTIONS FOR THE VARIOUS MULTI-MEDIA PROGRAMS. THE ACTIVITIES THAT ARE TO BE PERFORMED ARE CURRENTLY IDENTIFIED IN THE FY24-FY25 PRIORITIES AND COMMITMENTS LISTS, WHICH ARE IN SUPPORT OF THE CONTINUING ENVIRONMENTAL PROGRAMS FUNDED BY THIS PERFORMANCE PARTNERSHIP GRANT. THESE ACTIVITIES WILL PRODUCE MEASURABLE ENVIRONMENTAL PUBLIC HEALTH RESULTS TO BENEFIT THE CITIZENS OF MASSACHUSETTS, WHO ARE THE DIRECT BENEFICIARIES OF THESE CONTINUING ENVIRONMENTAL PROGRAMS. | — |
| — | YAKIMA NEIGHBORHOOD HEALTH SERVICES | Department of Health and Human Services | $33,664,201 | HEALTH CENTER CLUSTER | — |
Page 88 of 90