Database / Awards
Federal awards
Every contract and grant ingested from USAspending.gov. Pick an agency to narrow the list; toggle Highest / Lowest to sort. Click any row to open the full award profile.
Sort by
Results
4,653 awards
Showing 1501–1550
| Action date | Recipient | Agency | Amount | Description | Sector |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2026-04-07 | FREQUENTIS USA, INC | Department of Transportation | $147,341,540 | VOICE SWITCH REPLACEMETN SYSTEM (VSRS) AWARD | transportation |
| 2026-04-06 | HUMAN SERVICES, NEW JERSEY DEPARTMENT OF | Department of Health and Human Services | $147,250,806 | STRENGTHEN RURAL COMMUNITIES ACROSS NEW JERSEY BY IMPROVING THEIR HEALTH THROUGH TRANSFORMATION OF THE HEALTHCARE DELIVERY ECOSYSTEM. - NEW JERSEY IS HOME TO OVER 1 MILLION RURAL RESIDENTS, WHO LIVE IN ELEVEN OF OUR TWENTY-ONE COUNTIES: ATLANTIC, BURLINGTON, CAPE MAY, CUMBERLAND, HUNTERDON, MERCER, MONMOUTH, OCEAN, SALEM, SUSSEX, AND WARREN. OUR RURAL NEW JERSEYANS LIVE IN 40 FEDERALLY-DESIGNED “RURAL CENSUS TRACTS” AND IN 7 STATE-DESIGNATED “RURAL” COUNTIES. RURAL NEW JERSEYANS ARE MORE LIKELY TO LIVE IN AREAS FACING A HEALTHCARE WORKFORCE SHORTAGE, EXPERIENCE MORE SUD-RELATED HEALTH IMPACTS, AND ARE LESS LIKELY TO MAKE IT TO AN ANNUAL PEDIATRIC WELL-VISIT APPOINTMENT. THE DIVISION OF MEDICAL ASSISTANCE AND HEALTH SERVICE (DMAHS) IS THE STATE’S MEDICAID AGENCY AND IS APPLYING ON BEHALF OF NEW JERSEY TO RECEIVE $1 BILLION IN FEDERAL FUNDING THROUGH THE RURAL HEALTH TRANSFORMATION PROGRAM. IF AWARDED, THIS FUNDING WOULD STRENGTHEN OUR STATE’S ABILITY TO DIRECT RESOURCES AND FOCUS TOWARDS TRANSFORMING THE HEALTHCARE OF RURAL NEW JERSEYANS OVER THE NEXT FIVE YEARS. DMAHS HAS BEEN WORKING CLOSELY WITH NJ’S STATE OFFICE OF RURAL HEALTH AND OTHER STAKEHOLDERS FOR THIS APPLICATION—AND WILL CONTINUE TO DO SO TO ACHIEVE OUR GOALS OF BUILDING OUR RURAL-SERVING HEALTHCARE WORKFORCE, AND ADAPTING CARE DELIVERY TO BE RESPONSIVE TO RURAL RESIDENTS’ WISHES AND NEEDS. WE PROPOSE DIRECTING FUNDING IN FIVE INITIATIVES AREAS: 1. RHT1 SUPPORTS RECRUITMENT, TRAINING, AND RETENTION OF CLINICAL AND NON-CLINICAL PROVIDERS 2. RHT2 PROVIDES FUNDING FOR ESSENTIAL PROVIDERS OF BEHAVIORAL HEALTH (CCBHCS), PRIMARY CARE (FQHCS), AND EMERGENCY MEDICAL SERVICES (HOSPITALS) 3. RHT3 ENCOURAGES REGIONAL PARTNERSHIPS TO STRENGTHEN CARE DELIVERY OUTSIDE OF BRICK-AND-MORTAR OFFICES—INCLUDING TELEHEALTH, REMOTE PATIENT MONITORING, AND MOBILE CARE 4. RHT4 FUNDS COMMUNITY-LEVEL EFFORTS TO PROMOTE PREVENTIVE HEALTH 5. RHT5 INVESTS IN AN ARRAY OF EVIDENCE-BASED INTERVENTIONS AND DATA INTEGRATION EFFORTS TO IMPROVE CHRONIC DISEASE TREATMENT WE WILL TAKE A HYBRID FUNDING APPROACH, WHERE WE BLEND DIRECTED FUNDING WITH COMPETITIVE FUNDING. THIS ALLOWS US TO JUMPSTART RHT-FUNDED ACTIVITIES IMMEDIATELY WHEN FUNDED WHILE STILL PRESERVING OUR ABILITY TO FUND THE BEST IDEAS THAT CAN ARISE FROM A COMPETITIVE APPLICATION PROCESS. TO SUPPORT THE SUCCESS OF NJ RHT, WE HAVE SOUGHT OUT PARTNERSHIPS WITH INNOVATION LEADERS (LIKE SCITECH SCITY, A PUBLIC-PRIVATE COLLABORATION TO SUPPORT DIGITAL HEALTH ADOPTION), HOSPITALS (UNIVERSITY HOSPITAL, WHICH LEADS STATEWIDE EMERGENCY RESPONSE), AND ACADEMIC PARTNERS (MONTCLAIR UNIVERSITY, A STATE LEADER IN REFLECTIVE SUPERVISION) TO HELP WITH KEY ACTIVITIES. DMAHS WILL ALSO RELY ON OUR STRONG PARTNERSHIP WITH PUBLIC HEALTH PARTNERS AT THE DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH TO LEVERAGE RHT FUNDING TO ADAPT OUR HEALTHCARE ECOSYSTEM TO BETTER MEET THE NEEDS OF RURAL NEW JERSEYANS AND HELP THEM THRIVE. | health |
| 2026-04-06 | OHIO DEPARTMENT OF JOB & FAMILY SERVICES | Department of Health and Human Services | $147,236,054 | SCSS-2026 - CHILD SUPPORT SERVICES - STATES | social-services |
| 2026-04-30 | MANAGEMENT & TRAINING CORPORATION | Department of Labor | $147,082,637 | ::IGF::OT::IGF CLEARFIELD JCC | justice |
| 2026-05-11 | ALBERT B. SABIN VACCINE INSTITUTE, INC. (THE) | Department of Health and Human Services | $147,062,009 | THIS CONTRACT IS TO ADVANCE THE DEVELOPMENT OF MONOVALENT VACCINES FOR PREVENTION OF MARBURG VIRUS (MARV) AND SUDAN EBOLAVIRUS (SUDV) DISEASE. | biotech |
| 2026-04-29 | ACCENTURE FEDERAL SERVICES LLC | Department of the Treasury | $146,715,471 | INTEGRATED ENTERPRISE CONTRACT (IEP) THE IEP PROVIDES FULLY INTEGRATED CORE SERVICES, IT INFRASTRUCTURE, OPERATIONS, SECURITY, APPLICATION INTEGRATION & SUPPORT, PROGRAM MANAGEMENT SERVICES, SUPPORTS MULTIPLE WORKLOADS, REFERRED TO AS PORTALS. | finance |
| 2026-04-20 | ILLINOIS DEPARTMENT OF EMPLOYMENT SECURITY | Department of Labor | $146,707,586 | PURPOSE: THE PURPOSE OF THIS GRANT IS TO ADMINISTER THE STATE?S UNEMPLOYMENT INSURANCE PROGRAM ACTIVITIES. ACTIVITIES TO BE PERFORMED: FUNDING PROVIDED TO THE STATE IS FOR COSTS INCURRED FOR THE OPERATION OF THEIR UNEMPLOYMENT INSURANCE PROGRAM. THIS INCLUDES THE STATE?S UNEMPLOYMENT INSURANCE ADMINISTRATIVE WORKLOAD AND THEIR ABILITY TO PROCESS CLAIMS. THIS ALSO INCLUDES THE OPERATION OF THE STATE?S CLAIMANT SYSTEMS AS WELL AS STAFFING LEVELS AND OVERHEAD COSTS. EXPECTED OUTCOMES: THE STATE IS ABLE TO MAINTAIN OR IMPROVE LEVELS OF PERFORMANCE REGARDING THE TIMELINESS AND QUALITY OF PROCESSING UNEMPLOYMENT INSURANCE CLAIMS, AS WELL AS EFFECTIVELY HANDLING IMPROPER PAYMENTS. THE STATE?S ABILITY TO IDENTIFY FRAUDULENT CLAIMS AND REDUCE IMPROPER PAYMENT RATES IS MAINTAINED OR IMPROVED. INTENDED BENEFICIARIES: UNEMPLOYMENT COMPENSATION CLAIMANTS. SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES: THE RECIPIENT DOES NOT INTEND TO SUBAWARD FUNDS. | labor |
| 2026-04-06 | FLORIDA DEPARTMENT OF CHILDREN AND FAMILIES | Department of Health and Human Services | $146,680,886 | ADPTASST-2026 - ADOPTION ASSISTANCE | social-services |
| 2026-04-20 | UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA AT CHAPEL HILL | Department of Health and Human Services | $146,492,149 | CANCER CENTER CORE SUPPORT GRANT | biotech |
| 2026-05-04 | UTAH STATE BOARD OF EDUCATION | Department of Agriculture | $146,341,433 | CNP CN BLOCK PROG | agriculture |
| 2026-04-17 | ILLINOIS DEPARTMENT OF HUMAN SERVICE | Department of Agriculture | $146,205,715 | WIC FOOD EXPENSE | social-services |
| 2026-04-06 | NEVADA DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH & HUMAN SERVICES | Department of Health and Human Services | $146,180,077 | MEDICAID ENTITLEMENT FOR 41 - FY 2026 - T19 | health |
| 2026-05-05 | SOCIAL SERVICES SOUTH CAROLINA DEPARTMENT | Department of Health and Human Services | $145,924,336 | CCDD-2026 - CHILD CARE AND DEVELOPMENT BLOCK GRANT DISCRETIONARY | social-services |
| 2026-05-05 | SACRAMENTO EMPLOYMENT TRAINING AGENCY | Department of Health and Human Services | $144,994,154 | HEAD START AND EARLY HEAD START | social-services |
| 2026-05-18 | KBC ENERGY SOLUTIONS LLC | Department of Energy | $144,827,656 | MISSION EXECUTION SUPPORT SERVICES | energy |
| 2026-03-31 | ILLINOIS DEPARTMENT OF HUMAN SERVICE | Department of Education | $144,540,133 | STATE VOCATIONAL REHABILITATION SERVICES (VR) | social-services |
| 2026-02-18 | TEXAS DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION | Department of Transportation | $144,376,313 | PROJECT TITLE: FY 2026 STATE PLANNING AND RESEARCH WORK PROGRAM :::: PROJECT DESCRIPTION: FY 2026 STATE PLANNING AND RESEARCH WORK PROGRAM | transportation |
| 2026-04-17 | NORTH CAROLINA DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH & HUMAN SERVICES | Department of Agriculture | $144,307,696 | WIC FOOD EXPENSE | social-services |
| 2026-03-03 | MASSACHUSETTS BAY TRANSPORTATION AUTHORITY | Department of Transportation | $144,279,591 | NORTH STATION SIGNAL IMPROVEMENTS RED LINE INFRASTRUCTURE IMPROVEMENTS AND BUS AND FERRY VEHICLE OVERHAULS | transportation |
| 2026-04-02 | ILLINOIS DEPARTMENT OF HUMAN SERVICE | Department of Agriculture | $144,243,379 | WIC FOOD EXPENSE | social-services |
| 2026-04-03 | HENSEL PHELPS CONSTRUCTION CO | Department of Health and Human Services | $144,045,451 | ADDITIONAL FUNDS TO REQ #7011484 - C107641 POOLESVILLE A&B CONVERSION DESIGN-BUILD CONTRACT, BLDG 102, JOSE MOREL LOPEZ [24-005745] | health |
| 2026-04-20 | NATIONAL NETWORK OF PUBLIC HEALTH INSTITUTES INC | Department of Health and Human Services | $143,653,845 | NATIONAL CENTER FOR WORKFORCE, INFRASTRUCTURE AND DATA SYSTEMS - THE COVID-19 PANDEMIC HAS LAID BARE LONG-STANDING INEQUITIES AMONG POPULATIONS, WEAKNESSES WITHIN AN ANTIQUATED PUBLIC HEALTH INFRASTRUCTURE AND LIMITED PROGRESS IN SUPPORTING AND ENHANCING A CAPABLE PUBLIC HEALTH WORKFORCE REFLECTING DIVERSITY OF THOSE THEY SERVE (I.E., RACE, ETHNICITY, GENDER AND SEXUAL IDENTITY, CULTURAL BACKGROUND AND SPOKEN/WRITTEN LANGUAGES). PUBLIC HEALTH INFRASTRUCTURE MUST BE TRANSFORMED BY EQUIPPING STATE, TRIBAL, LOCAL AND TERRITORIAL PUBLIC HEALTH AGENCIES TO STRATEGICALLY ADDRESS COMPLEX, INTERRELATED SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC SYSTEMS WHICH LEAD TO DISPROPORTIONALLY POOR HEALTH OUTCOMES FOR MARGINALIZED POPULATIONS; TO ENHANCE CROSS-SECTOR COLLABORATION; AND TO AND MODERNIZE DATA SYSTEMS. THE NATIONAL NETWORK OF PUBLIC HEALTH INSTITUTES (NNPHI) WILL LAUNCH THE NATIONAL CENTER FOR WORKFORCE, INFRASTRUCTURE AND DATA SYSTEMS, WHICH WILL PROVIDE CAPACITY BUILDING ASSISTANCE FOR THE 111 HEALTH AGENCIES AWARDED UNDER COMPONENT A OF CDC-RFA-OE22-2203-STRENGTHENING U.S. PUBLIC HEALTH INFRASTRUCTURE, WORKFORCE, AND DATA SYSTEMS. THE NATIONAL CENTER WILL ASSIST HEALTH DEPARTMENTS IN IMPLEMENTING KEY COMPONENT A STRATEGIES (E.G., RECRUITING, ONBOARDING, TRAINING AND RETAINING STAFF; ENHANCING FOUNDATIONAL CAPABILITIES; AND MODERNIZING DATA INFRASTRUCTURE) BY PROVIDING TRAINING AND TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE; EVALUATING THE OVERALL INITIATIVE; SUPPORTING DATA MODERNIZATION; AND COORDINATING AND COMMUNICATING ACROSS ALL COMPONENT A & COMPONENT B RECIPIENTS. NNPHI AND ITS PUBLIC HEALTH INSTITUTES HAVE DOCUMENTED ASSOCIATIONS WITH MANY STLT AGENCIES. THE NATIONAL CENTER ENGAGES PUBLIC HEALTH INSTITUTES AS INNOVATION HUBS AND NATIONAL PARTNER ORGANIZATIONS REPRESENTING THE LARGEST WORKFORCE SEGMENTS. OVER THE 5-YEAR INITIATIVE, IT WILL ACCELERATE PREVENTION, PREPAREDNESS, AND RESPONSE TO EMERGING THREATS; IMPROVE OTHER PUBLIC HEALTH OUTCOMES; AND INCREASE ACHIEVEMENT OF COMPONENT A GRANT OUTCOMES AND STRENGTHEN A RECIPIENTS’ CAPACITY. IN COLLABORATION WITH THE PUBLIC HEALTH TRAINING CENTER NETWORK AND AN EXPERT REVIEW WORKGROUP REPRESENTATIVE OF THE BROAD PUBLIC HEALTH WORKFORCE, NNPHI IS IN THE FINAL STAGES OF DEVELOPING A PUBLIC HEALTH RACIAL JUSTICE COMPETENCY MODEL (RJCM). THE RJCM GROUNDS PRACTITIONERS IN A SHARED UNDERSTANDING OF HOW RACISM SHOWS UP IN PUBLIC HEALTH PRACTICE. PUBLIC HEALTH PRACTITIONERS CAN USE THIS MODEL TO ENSURE TRAININGS, JOB DESCRIPTIONS, PERFORMANCE APPRAISALS, AND OTHER POLICIES/ PRACTICES ARE EQUITY-CENTERED; AND TO INCREASE THE COMPETENCY OF THE PUBLIC HEALTH WORKFORCE TO ADDRESS HEALTH DISPARITIES AND REDUCE THE RACIAL HEALTH EQUITY GAP. THE NATIONAL CENTER WILL GROUND ALL ITS WORK IN THE RJCM. | health |
| 2026-05-07 | YULISTA SOLUTIONS, LLC | National Aeronautics and Space Administration | $143,551,691 | THE PURPOSE OF CHARLES IS TO PROVIDE SUPPORT FOR AIRCRAFT AT JSC, BASED AT ELLINGTON FIELD IN HOUSTON, AND AT EL PASO, TEXAS | aerospace |
| 2026-03-09 | WASHINGTON METROPOLITAN AREA TRANSIT AUTHORITY | Department of Transportation | $143,499,868 | APPLICATION PURPOSE: THE PURPOSE OF THIS AWARD IS TO COMPLETE PHASE 4 OF METRO PLATFORM REHABILITATION PROGRAM AND LIFECYCLE REHABILITATION OR REPLACEMENT OF ELEVATORS ESCALATORS AND AUTOMATIC TRAIN CONTROL SYSTEMS AND IMPLEMENT RADIO/CELLULAR IMPROVEMENTS UPGRADES OF SUPPORT FACILITY FIRE SYSTEM REHABILITATION AND OF TUNNEL WATER LEAK MITIGATION.; ACTIVITIES PERFORMED: ACTIVITIES INCLUDE NECESSARY SAFETY REPAIRS AND REHABILITATION OF METRO STATION PLATFORMS AT FIVE STATIONS LOCATED ON THE WMATA ORANGE LINE IN NE WASHINGTON DC AND PRINCE GEORGES COUNTY MARYLAND; CONDUCT WATER MITIGATION WORK ALONG TWO-SEGMENTS OF THE RED LINE; AND SYSTEMWIDE IMPROVEMENTS TO REHABILITATE REPAIR UPGRADE OR REPLACE SYSTEM ESCALATORS AND ELEVATORS METROS RADIO SYSTEM AND ATC ROOM SAFETY CRITICAL EQUIPMENT.; EXPECTED OUTCOMES: CONTINUE TO PROVIDE CLEAN SAFE AND RELIABLE TRANSPORTATION AND ENSURE WMATA TRANSIT SYSTEMS ARE IN A STATE OF GOOD REPAIR.; INTENDED BENEFICIARIES: WMATAS BENEFICIARIES ARE WMATA EMPLOYEES AND WMATA CUSTOMERS WHO COMMUTE WITHIN OR CONNECT TO PUBLIC TRANSIT WITHIN THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA VIRGINIA AND MARYLAND REGION.; SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES: THERE ARE NO SUBRECIPIENTS ASSOCIATED WITH THIS AWARD. | transportation |
| 2026-05-05 | HEALTH SERVICES KENTUCKY CABINET FOR | Department of Health and Human Services | $143,189,092 | CCDD-2026 - CHILD CARE AND DEVELOPMENT BLOCK GRANT DISCRETIONARY | social-services |
| 2026-04-06 | TENNESSEE DEPARTMENT OF HUMAN SERVICES | Department of Health and Human Services | $143,114,391 | 2026 TANF | social-services |
| 2026-04-01 | LOCKHEED MARTIN CORPORATION | National Aeronautics and Space Administration | $143,095,852 | TAS::80 0114::TAS THE ATOMOSPHERIC IMAGE ASSEMBLY | aerospace |
| 2026-04-20 | STATE OF OHIO | Department of Veterans Affairs | $143,089,858 | VHA CBO PURCHASED CARE | veterans |
| 2026-03-31 | GREAT HILL SOLUTIONS, LLC | Department of State | $143,045,871 | CARE CONTACT CENTER | diplomacy |
| 2026-04-28 | NAVARRO RESEARCH AND ENGINEERING, INC. | Department of Energy | $143,030,765 | ENVIRONMENTAL OPERATIONS TASK ORDER FOR NEVADA | energy |
| 2026-04-13 | DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION CONNECTICUT | Department of Transportation | $142,800,000 | THE PROJECT INCLUDES PRELIMINARY ENGINEERING, NATIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY ACT (NEPA) REVIEW, AND FINAL DESIGN FOR PHASE 2 AND PHASE 3, AND CONSTRUCTION OF PHASE 1, PHASE 2, AND PHASE 3 (REFERRED TO INDIVIDUALLY AS A PHASE OR COLLECTIVELY AS PHASES ). FOR PHASE 1, THE RECIPIENT WILL COMPLETE ENVIRONMENTAL DOCUMENTATION AND PRELIMINARY ENGINEERING FOR FRA REVIEW AND APPROVAL AND FINAL DESIGN FOR FRA ACCEPTANCE WITH FUNDING OUTSIDE OF THIS GRANT. THE RECIPIENT WILL PREPARE ENVIRONMENTAL DOCUMENTATION, PRELIMINARY ENGINEERING, AND FINAL DESIGN FOR PHASES 2 AND 3, AND COMPLETE CONSTRUCTION OF ALL THREE PHASES, WITH FUNDS ADMINISTERED THROUGH THIS AGREEMENT.CONSTRUCTION INCLUDES THE REPLACEMENT OF SEVEN AGING SUBSTATIONS AND ASSOCIATED POWER EQUIPMENT THAT HAVE REACHED THE END OF THEIR USEFUL LIVES. THESE SUBSTATIONS AND THEIR COMPONENTS, ORIGINALLY CONSTRUCTED IN 1970S AND PARTIALLY UPGRADED IN THE 1980S, ARE THE FREQUENT CAUSE OF INFRASTRUCTURE FAILURES AND SERVICE DISRUPTIONS. REPLACEMENT OF THESE ANTIQUATED POWER INFRASTRUCTURE ASSETS IS ESSENTIAL TO MAINTAINING A STATE-OF-GOOD-REPAIR AND ENSURING RELIABLE TRAIN SERVICE FOR THE NEW HAVEN LINES 23 MILLION ANNUAL PASSENGERS. | transportation |
| 2026-05-05 | PA DEPARTMENT OF HUMAN SERVICES | Department of Health and Human Services | $142,788,941 | ADPTASST-2026 - ADOPTION ASSISTANCE | social-services |
| 2026-04-20 | DEPARTMENT OF LABOR & INDUSTRY PA | Department of Labor | $142,763,103 | AWARD PURPOSE THE PURPOSE OF THIS GRANT IS TO ADMINISTER THE STATE'S UNEMPLOYMENT INSURANCE PROGRAM ACTIVITIES. ACTIVITIES PERFORMED FUNDING PROVIDED TO THE STATE IS FOR COSTS INCURRED FOR THE OPERATION OF THEIR UNEMPLOYMENT INSURANCE PROGRAM. THIS INCLUDES THE STATE'S UNEMPLOYMENT INSURANCE ADMINISTRATIVE WORKLOAD AND THEIR ABILITY TO PROCESS CLAIMS. THIS ALSO INCLUDES THE OPERATION OF THE STATE'S CLAIMANT SYSTEMS AS WELL AS STAFFING LEVELS AND OVERHEAD COSTS. DELIVERABLES THE STATE IS ABLE TO MAINTAIN OR IMPROVE LEVELS OF PERFORMANCE REGARDING THE TIMELINESS AND QUALITY OF PROCESSING UNEMPLOYMENT INSURANCE CLAIMS, AS WELL AS EFFECTIVELY HANDLE IMPROPER PAYMENTS. THE STATE'S ABILITY TO IDENTIFY FRAUDULENT CLAIMS AND REDUCE IMPROPER PAYMENT RATES IS MAINTAINED OR IMPROVED. INTENDED BENEFICIARY UNEMPLOYED CLAIMANTS. SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES THE RECIPIENT DOES NOT INTEND TO SUBAWARD FUNDS. | labor |
| 2026-05-05 | SALT LAKE COMMUNITY ACTION PROGRAM | Department of Health and Human Services | $142,475,874 | HEAD START AND EARLY HEAD START | social-services |
| 2026-04-06 | OREGON DEPARTMENT OF HUMAN SERVICES | Department of Health and Human Services | $142,354,628 | FOSTER-2026 - FOSTER CARE | social-services |
| 2026-05-05 | HEALTH & HUMAN SVC COMMN TX | Department of Health and Human Services | $142,193,129 | SSBG-2024 | social-services |
| 2026-05-05 | SOUTH DAKOTA DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH | Department of Health and Human Services | $141,784,858 | CK19-1904 EPIDEMIOLOGY AND LABORATORY CAPACITY FOR PREVENTION AND CONTROL OF EMERGING INFECTIOUS DISEASES (ELC) | health |
| 2026-02-18 | OREGON STATE UNIVERSITY | Department of Energy | $141,695,691 | WAVE ENERGY TEST FACILITY | energy |
| 2026-03-06 | LEIDOS BIOMEDICAL RESEARCH INC | Department of Health and Human Services | $141,656,003 | ADVANCE UNIVERSAL INFLUENZA VACCINE - FLU MOSAIC VERSION 2 (FLUMOSV2) | biotech |
| 2026-04-27 | HOMELAND SECURITY & EMERGENCY | Department of Homeland Security | $141,609,186 | GRANT TO LOCAL GOVERNMENT FOR REPAIR OR REPLACEMENT OF DISASTER DAMAGED FACILITIES | housing |
| 2026-02-18 | LEIDOS, INC. | General Services Administration | $141,380,932 | TO8 OY1 STANDING ARMY | defense |
| 2026-04-17 | CONNECTICUT DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION | Department of Agriculture | $141,269,736 | CNP CN BLOCK PROGRAMS TOTAL CONSOLIDATED | agriculture |
| 2026-04-06 | OREGON DEPARTMENT OF HUMAN SERVICES | Department of Health and Human Services | $141,169,059 | 2026 TANF | social-services |
| 2026-04-17 | EXECUTIVE OFFICE OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF KENTUCKY | Department of Transportation | $141,033,600 | PROJECT TITLE: LAUREL-WHITLEY COUNTIES | I-75 WIDENING :::: PROJECT DESCRIPTION: WIDENING I-75 FROM MP 20.0 IN WHITLEY COUNTY TO MP 28.85, US-25E NORTH OF CORBIN. | transportation |
| 2026-04-30 | CGI FEDERAL INC. | General Services Administration | $140,976,062 | CDM DEFEND GROUP C BRIDGE TASK ORDER | intelligence |
| 2026-05-05 | VIRGIN ISLANDS DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH | Department of Health and Human Services | $140,973,280 | MEDICAID ENTITLEMENT FOR 57 - FY 2026 - T19 | health |
| 2026-03-05 | FLORIDA DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH | Department of Health and Human Services | $140,904,070 | PUBLIC HEALTH EMERGENCY PREPAREDNESS COOPERATIVE AGREEMENT | health |
| 2026-05-13 | ALCYON TECHNICAL SERVICES (ATS) JV, LLC | National Aeronautics and Space Administration | $140,896,781 | IGF::OT::IGF - TECHNICAL INFORMATION, ADMINISTRATIVE, AND LOGISTICS SERVICES (TIALS 2) TO SUPPORT THE INSTITUTIONAL NEEDS OF NASA'S GLENN RESEARCH CENTER. LOGISTICS TASK. | aerospace |
| 2026-05-05 | FLORIDA STATE UNIVERSITY | National Science Foundation | $140,880,752 | NATIONAL HIGH MAGNETIC FIELD LABORATORY RENEWAL 2023-2027 -HIGH MAGNETIC FIELDS ARE A POWERFUL TOOL FOR SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH, AND HAVE WIDE SPREAD TECHNOLOGICAL APPLICATIONS. THE MOST POPULAR APPLICATIONS INCLUDE MAGNETIC RESONANCE IMAGING FOR MEDICAL DIAGNOSIS, HIGH-SPEED MAGNETIC LEVITATION TRAINS, AND POWER GENERATION. SCIENTISTS USE HIGH MAGNETIC FIELDS TO EXPLORE NEW PHYSICAL PHENOMENA, DEVELOP MATERIALS FOR FUTURE GENERATION COMPUTERS, OVERCOME ENERGY CHALLENGES, AND INCREASE OUR UNDERSTANDING OF THE HUMAN BRAIN AND LIFE IN GENERAL. THIS AWARD TO FLORIDA STATE UNIVERSITY SUPPORTS THE OPERATION OF THE NATIONAL HIGH MAGNETIC FIELD LABORATORY (NHMFL) IN 2023-2027. HOME TO MANY WORLD-RECORD MAGNET SYSTEMS, THE NHMFL IS LOCATED AT THREE SITES: FLORIDA STATE UNIVERSITY, THE UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA AND THE LOS ALAMOS NATIONAL LABORATORY. MORE THAN ONE THOUSAND SIX HUNDRED SCIENTISTS FROM ACADEMIA, GOVERNMENT LABORATORIES, AND INDUSTRY AROUND THE WORLD COME TO THE NHMFL SITES EACH YEAR, AND USE THE POWERFUL MAGNETS AND STATE-OF-THE-ART INSTRUMENTS FOR RESEARCH IN MATERIALS SCIENCE, CONDENSED MATTER PHYSICS, CHEMISTRY, BIOLOGY, AS WELL AS MAGNET TECHNOLOGY. THE RESULTS OF THIS RESEARCH ARE PUBLISHED IN MORE THAN FOUR HUNDRED PAPERS EACH YEAR, AND LEAD TO THE CREATION OF START-UP COMPANIES. THE MAGNET SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY DIVISION AND THE ADVANCED SUPERCONDUCTIVITY CENTER AT NHMFL MEET THE LABORATORY?S MISSION TO DEVELOP NEW MATERIALS AND TO BUILD NEW MAGNET SYSTEMS TO ADVANCE THE FRONTIERS OF HIGH MAGNETIC FIELD SCIENCE. THE MISSION OF NHMFL ALSO INCLUDES THE EDUCATION AND TRAINING OF THE NEXT GENERATION OF SCIENTISTS AS WELL AS TO INCREASE THE SCIENTIFIC AWARENESS OF THE BROADER SCIENTIFIC COMMUNITY. A LARGE NUMBER OF SCIENTISTS, INCLUDING 500 UNDERGRADUATE AND GRADUATE STUDENTS, 200 POSTDOCTORAL SCHOLARS, AND 250 EARLY-CAREER SCIENTISTS, USE THE NHMFL AS THEIR TRAINING GROUND. THE NHMFL REACHES TENS OF THOUSANDS OF K-12 STUDENTS, TEACHERS, AND THE PUBLIC THROUGH CLASSROOM LESSONS, SUMMER AND WINTER CAMPS, INTERNSHIPS, TOURS, AND WEB-BASED INTERACTIVE TUTORIALS AND ACTIVITIES. AN OPEN HOUSE EVENT ORGANIZED BY THE SCIENTIFIC AND TECHNICAL STAFF AT THE NHMFL BRINGS MORE THAN 10,000 MEMBERS OF THE GENERAL PUBLIC TO PERFORM HANDS-ON EXPERIMENTS EACH YEAR. THE NHMFL INCLUDES SEVEN USER FACILITIES: STEADY STATE OR DC FIELD, ELECTRON MAGNETIC RESONANCE, NUCLEAR MAGNETIC RESONANCE, AND ION CYCLOTRON RESONANCE AT FLORIDA STATE UNIVERSITY; PULSED FIELD AT LOS ALAMOS NATIONAL LABORATORY; AND HIGH B/T AND ADVANCED MAGNETIC RESONANCE IMAGING AND SPECTROSCOPY AT THE UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA. USER ACCESS IS PROVIDED THROUGH A COMPETITIVE PROPOSAL REVIEW PROCESS. MAGNETIC FIELDS BOTH PROBE AND MANIPULATE QUANTUM MATERIALS THROUGH COUPLING TO ELECTRON SPINS, ORBITALS, AND CURRENTS, CONTROLLING NUCLEAR SPINS, IMPOSING COMMENSURABILITIES IN ENERGY OR LENGTH SCALES, BREAKING SYMMETRIES AND/OR INDUCING MAGNETIC VORTICES. SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH AT THE NHMFL IS PRIMARILY FOCUSED, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, ON ADVANCING OUR UNDERSTANDING ALONG SEVEN BROAD FRONTIERS: (A) EMERGENT BEHAVIORS THAT RESULTS FROM ELECTRONIC INTERACTIONS IN QUANTUM MATERIALS; (B) THE ROLE OF TOPOLOGY IN GIVING RISE TO NEW PHYSICS IN QUANTUM MATTER; (C) EXPLORING THE NEW PHYSICS REVEALED IN ATOMICALLY-THIN MATERIALS FROM MONOLAYERS TO MULTI-LAYERS TO STRUCTURES WITH MULTI-LAYER STRUCTURES WITH TWISTED INTERLAYER ORIENTATIONS; (D) EXTRACTING ATOMIC-LEVEL DESCRIPTIONS OF COMPLEX ? OFTEN DISORDERED ? MATERIALS, INCLUDING CATALYSTS, GLASSES, AND BATTERIES, USING BOTH NUCLEAR AND ELECTRON MAGNETIC RESONANCE; (E) USING RESONANCE TECHNIQUES ON METABOLITES, BIOMOLECULAR ASSEMBLIES, AND LIVING ORGANISMS TO MEASURE STRUCTURE, DYNAMICS, AND DEVELOPMENT UNDER PHYSIOLOGICAL AND IN VIVO CONDITIONS; (F) USING ION CYCLOTRON RESONANCE TO PROBE CHEMICALLY-COMPLEX ORGANIC MIXTURES AT A MOLECULAR LEVEL, FROM DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER TO ANTHROPOGENIC CONTAMINANTS; AND (G) RESEARCHING HIGH-STRENGTH CONDUCTORS AND SUPERCONDUCTORS NECESSARY TO ADVANCE MAGNET TECHNOLOGIES. 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. | research |
| 2026-05-19 | GOVERNMENT OF THE VIRGIN ISLANDS | Department of Homeland Security | $140,712,611 | GRANT TO LOCAL GOVERNMENT FOR REPAIR OR REPLACEMENT OF DISASTER DAMAGED FACILITIES | housing |
Page 31 of 94