«August 2025»
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  • Grant Due: FY 2025 Family, Opportunity, Resilience, Grit, Engagement – Fatherhood (FORGE Fatherhood)

    Grant Due: FY 2025 Family, Opportunity, Resilience, Grit, Engagement – Fatherhood (FORGE Fatherhood)

    WHAT DOES IT FUND? The purpose of this program is to support responsible fatherhood by promoting healthy marriage, responsible parenting practices, and economic stability activities. Projects will provide a broad array of services to adult fathers. Click here for more information.

    WHO'S ELIGIBLE? State, county, city, township, and special district governments; independent school districts; public- and state-controlled institutions of higher education; federally recognized Native American tribal governments and tribal organizations; public housing authorities and Indian housing authorities; nonprofit organizations; faith-based organizations; and community organizations.

    TOTAL FUNDING AMOUNT? $55 million

    WHEN IS IT DUE? July 29, 2025

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  • Grant Due: FY 2025 Helping Every Area of Relationships Thrive – Adults (HEART)

    Grant Due: FY 2025 Helping Every Area of Relationships Thrive – Adults (HEART)

    WHAT DOES IT FUND? The purpose of this program is to support activities promoting healthy marriages or relationships to ultimately strengthen families. Projects will provide a broad array of healthy marriage and relationship promotion activities and services designed to integrate skills-based healthy marriage education, along with additional services to address relationship skills and job and career advancement opportunities. Click here for more information.

    WHO'S ELIGIBLE? State, county, city, or township governments; special district governments; independent school districts; public, state-controlled, and private institutions of higher education; Native American tribal governments and organizations; public housing authorities; nonprofits (with or without 501(c)(3) status); for-profit organizations, including small businesses; faith-based organizations; and community organizations

    TOTAL FUNDING AMOUNT? $33 million

    WHEN IS IT DUE? July 29, 2025

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  • Grant Due: FY 2025 Relationships, Education, Advancement, and Development for Youth for Life (READY4Life)

    Grant Due: FY 2025 Relationships, Education, Advancement, and Development for Youth for Life (READY4Life)

    WHAT DOES IT FUND? The purpose of this program is to support healthy marriage and relationship education activities including parenting and job and career advancement activities. Grants under this program will be targeted exclusively at projects designed to provide healthy marriage and relationship education skills, parenting (for young fathers and mothers, as applicable), financial management, job and career advancement, and other activities, for youth that are high-school aged (grades 9-12) or in late adolescence and early adulthood (ages 14 to 24), including parenting and/or pregnant youth. Click here for more information.

    WHO'S ELIGIBLE? State and local governments, special district governments, independent school districts, institutions of higher education, Native American tribal/territorial governments, public/Indian housing authorities, for profit and nonprofit organizations, and faith based and community organizations

    TOTAL FUNDING AMOUNT? $22 million

    WHEN IS IT DUE? July 29, 2025

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  • Grant Due: FY 2026 Grants for Arts Projects 2

    Grant Due: FY 2026 Grants for Arts Projects 2

    WHAT DOES IT FUND? This program provides project-based funding supporting public engagement with the arts and arts education; integration of the arts with strategies promoting the health and well-being of people and communities; and improvement of overall capacity and capabilities within the arts sector. Click here for more information.

    WHO'S ELIGIBLE? State and local governments, nonprofit organizations, and federally recognized tribes or tribal communities

    TOTAL FUNDING AMOUNT? Up to $30 million

    WHEN IS IT DUE? July 29, 2025

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  • Grant Due: FY 2024-2026 Wildlife Crossings Pilot Program

    Grant Due: FY 2024-2026 Wildlife Crossings Pilot Program

    FY 2024-2026 Wildlife Crossings Pilot Program

    WHAT DOES IT FUND? This program improve safety, protect motorists and wildlife by reducing wildlife vehicle collisions (WVCs), and improve habitat connectivity for terrestrial and aquatic species. Click here for more information.

    WHO'S ELIGIBLE? Local governments, regional transportation authorities, special purpose district or public authority with a transportation function, Indian Tribes, State Departments of Transportation, metropolitan planning organizations, and Federal Land Management Agencies

    TOTAL FUNDING AMOUNT? $145 million (FY 2024/FY 2025), $80 million (FY 2026)

    WHEN'S IT DUE?  August 1, 2025 (FY 2026)

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  • Grant Due: FY 2024-2026 Nationally Significant Federal Lands and Tribal Projects Program

    Grant Due: FY 2024-2026 Nationally Significant Federal Lands and Tribal Projects Program

    FY 2024-2026 Nationally Significant Federal Lands and Tribal Projects Program

    WHAT DOES IT FUND? The purpose of this program is to provide federal financial assistance to projects of national significance for construction, reconstruction, or rehabilitation of transportation facilities within, adjacent to, or providing access to Federal or Tribal Lands. Click here for more information.

    WHO'S ELIGIBLE? Federal Land Management Agencies and tribal governments. States, counties, and units of local government may also apply but only if sponsored by an eligible Federal Land Management Agency or federally recognized tribal government.

    TOTAL FUNDING AMOUNT? $165 million

    WHEN'S IT DUE? August 1, 2025 (FY 2025)

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  • Grant Due: FY 2025 Hepatitis C Elimination Initiative Pilot

    Grant Due: FY 2025 Hepatitis C Elimination Initiative Pilot

    WHAT DOES IT FUND? The purpose of this program is to leverage existing health care institutions' capacity to prevent, test for, treat, and cure hepatitis C (HCV) in individuals with substance use disorder (SUD) and/or severe mental illness (SMI), particularly in communities severely affected by homelessness, to gain insights on effective ways to identify patients, complete treatment, and reduce reinfection.  Click here for more information.

    WHO'S ELIGIBLE? Local governments, academic institutions, Native American Tribes, nonprofits, state government, tribal organizations and institutions and consortia

    TOTAL FUNDING AMOUNT? $100 million

    WHEN IS IT DUE? August 1, 2025

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  • Grant Due: FY 2026 Bridge Investment Program: Large Bridge Projects

    Grant Due: FY 2026 Bridge Investment Program: Large Bridge Projects

    WHAT DOES IT FUND? This program awards funds on a competitive basis for bridge replacement, rehabilitation, preservation, and protection projects with total eligible costs greater than $100 million. Click here for more information.

    WHO'S ELIGIBLE? States or groups of states, metropolitan planning organizations that serve an urbanized area (as designated by the Bureau of the Census) with a population over 200,000, local governments or groups of local governments, political subdivisions of states or local governments, special purpose districts or public authorities with transportation functions, federal land management agencies, tribal governments or an consortium of tribal governments, and multistate or multijurisdictional groups of entities as described above

    TOTAL FUNDING AMOUNT? $2.46 billion

    WHEN IS IT DUE? August 1, 2025

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  • Grant Due: FY 2025 Bureau of Land Management Youth Conservation Corps - Bureau Wide

    Grant Due: FY 2025 Bureau of Land Management Youth Conservation Corps - Bureau Wide

    WHAT DOES IT FUND? This program provides participants with opportunities to gain work experience in public lands and natural resources management. Through this experience, youth gain an appreciation for public lands, learn about conservation-related careers, and become the next generation of public land stewards. The BLM Youth Program partners with qualified youth and conservation corps through the Public Lands Corp (PLC) Program to engage individuals between the ages of 16 and 30 and veterans up to age 35, including tribal members to participate in the program. Click here for more information.

    WHO'S ELIGIBLE? State governments, county governments, city or township governments, public and state-controlled institutions of higher education, federally recognized Native American tribal governments, Native American tribal organizations, nonprofits with or without a 501(c)(3) status with the IRS, and private institutions of higher education are eligible applicants. Alaska, Arizona, Colorado, Montana/Dakotas, Nevada, New Mexico, Utah, Wyoming, Headquarters (for projects national in scope), the National Interagency Fire Center, and the National Operations Center will not be accepting applications.

    TOTAL FUNDING AMOUNT? $900,000

    WHEN IS IT DUE? August 8, 2025

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  • Grant Due: FY 2025 Emergency Management Performance Grant (EMPG) Program

    Grant Due: FY 2025 Emergency Management Performance Grant (EMPG) Program

    WHAT DOES IT FUND? This program assists state, local, tribal, and territorial emergency management agencies with implementing the National Preparedness System (NPS) and supporting the National Preparedness Goal of a secure and resilient nation. Click here for more information.

    WHO'S ELIGIBLE? Eligible applicants are state administrative agencies (SAAs) and state emergency management agencies (EMAs) in all 56 U.S. states and territories. Local governments may apply as a sub-applicant through their state specific process.

    TOTAL FUNDING AMOUNT? $319.5 million

    WHEN IS IT DUE? August 11, 2025

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  • Grant Due: FY 2025 Homeland Security Grant Program (HSGP)

    Grant Due: FY 2025 Homeland Security Grant Program (HSGP)

    WHAT DOES IT FUND? The purpose of this program is to enhance the capabilities of state, local, tribal, and territorial governments, as well as nonprofits, in preventing, protecting against, and responding to terrorist attacks. Click here for more information.

    WHO'S ELIGIBLE? Eligible applicants are the State Administrative Agencies (SAA). SAAs distribute HSGP funds through subawards to other states, local, or tribal organizations. Eligible subrecipients include county-level or equivalent governments and federally recognized tribal governments in states bordering Canada or Mexico, or those with international water borders.

    TOTAL FUNDING AMOUNT? $454.5 million

    WHEN IS IT DUE? August 11, 2025

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  • Grant Due: FY 2025 National Urban Search and Rescue Response System Readiness Cooperative Agreement

    Grant Due: FY 2025 National Urban Search and Rescue Response System Readiness Cooperative Agreement

    WHAT DOES IT FUND? The purpose of this program is to support the sustainment and readiness of the National Urban Search and Rescue (US&R) Response System and its local jurisdictions. This program provides funding to ensure adequate management, training, exercise, vehicle and equipment procurement, and storage and maintenance for the 28 national US&R task forces staffed and equipped to assist state and local governments, tribes, and territories to conduct around-the-clock search-and-rescue operations following presidentially declared major disasters or emergencies under the Stafford Act, such as earthquakes, tornadoes, floods, hurricanes, aircraft accidents, hazardous materials spills, and catastrophic structure collapses. Click here for more information.

    WHO'S ELIGIBLE? US&R task force-sponsoring agencies designated by the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA)

    TOTAL FUNDING AMOUNT? $40,274,708

    WHEN IS IT DUE? August 11, 2025

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  • Grant Due: FY 2025 Lead Hazard Reduction Grant Program

    Grant Due: FY 2025 Lead Hazard Reduction Grant Program

    WHAT DOES IT FUND? The purpose of this program is to assist units of local government in undertaking comprehensive programs to identify and control lead-based paint hazards in eligible privately-owned rental or owner-occupied housing populations. Healthy Homes Supplemental funding is also available to enhance the lead-based paint hazard control activities by comprehensively identifying and addressing other housing hazards that affect occupant health in homes being treated under this grant. Click here for more information.

    WHO'S ELIGIBLE? State, county, city or township, special district, and federally recognized Native American tribal governments

    TOTAL FUNDING AMOUNT? $364.5 million 

    WHEN IS IT DUE? August 14, 2025

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  • Grant Due JustGrants: Emergency and Transitional Pet Shelter and Housing Assistance for Victims of Domestic Violence Program

    Grant Due JustGrants: Emergency and Transitional Pet Shelter and Housing Assistance for Victims of Domestic Violence Program

    WHAT DOES IT FUND? This program provides funding for shelter and transitional housing and other assistance to victims of domestic violence and their companion animals. Under this program this includes pets, service animals, emotional support animals and horses. Click here for more information.

    WHO'S ELIGIBLE? State and local governments, federally recognized Native American tribal governments, organizations that have a documented history of effective work concerning domestic violence, and any organization that works directly with pets, service animals, emotional support animals, or horses and collaborates with any organization listed above

    TOTAL FUNDING AMOUNT? $3 million

    WHEN IS IT DUE? August 15, 2025 (Grants.gov), August 20, 2025 (JustGrants)

    Read more
  • Grant Due JustGrants: FY 2025 Services for Victims of Crime

    Grant Due JustGrants: FY 2025 Services for Victims of Crime

    WHAT DOES IT FUND? This program supports the development, expansion and strengthening of victim service programs for all victims of crime throughout the United States and its territories. The goal of the program is to increase the quality and quantity of victim services. Click here for more information.

    WHO'S ELIGIBLE? State, county, city or township, and special district governments; Native American Tribal governments; independent school districts; public, state-controlled, and private institutions of higher education; public and Indian housing authorities; nonprofits other than institutions of higher education; and other units of local government

    TOTAL FUNDING AMOUNT? $15.9 million

    WHEN IS IT DUE? August 15, 2025 (Grants.gov), August 20, 2025 (JustGrants)

    Read more
  • Grant Due JustGrants: FY 2025 Services for Victims of Technology-Facilitated Abuse

    Grant Due JustGrants: FY 2025 Services for Victims of Technology-Facilitated Abuse

    WHAT DOES IT FUND? This program supports services to victims of technology-facilitated abuse (TFA). TFA includes, but is not limited to, crimes commonly referred to as image-based sexual abuse, non-consensual distribution of intimate images, sextortion, synthetic intimate images (“deepfakes”), online stalking, harassment, and abuse. Click here for more information.

    WHO'S ELIGIBLE? State, county, city or township, and special district governments; federally recognized and non-federally recognized Native American Tribal governments; independent school districts; private, public, and state-controlled institutions of higher education; public and Indian housing authorities; nonprofits with or without a 501(c)(3) status with the IRS; and other units of local government

    TOTAL FUNDING AMOUNT? $3 million

    WHEN IS IT DUE? August 15, 2025 (Grants.gov), August 20, 2025 (JustGrants)

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  • Grant Due JustGrants: FY 2025 Technology to Support Services for Victims of Crime

    Grant Due JustGrants: FY 2025 Technology to Support Services for Victims of Crime

    WHAT DOES IT FUND? The purpose of this program is to develop, expand, and strengthen victim service programs for all victims of crime throughout the United States and its territories. Applicants may apply under Category 1: Advancing the Use of Technology to Assist Victims of Crime, or Category 2: Building State Technology Capacity to Serve Victims of Crime. Click here for more information.

    WHO'S ELIGIBLE? Eligible Category 1 applicants are states, counties, cities or townships, and special district governments; Native American Tribal governments; educational organizations; public housing organizations; nonprofit organizations; and other units of local government. Eligible Category 2 applicants are Formula Assistance and Compensation state administering agencies (SAAs).

    TOTAL FUNDING AMOUNT? $5 million

    WHEN IS IT DUE? August 15, 2025 (Grants.gov), August 20, 2025 (JustGrants)

    Read more
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  • Grant Due: FY 2024 Paul Bruhn Historic Revitalization Subgrant Program

    Grant Due: FY 2024 Paul Bruhn Historic Revitalization Subgrant Program

    WHAT DOES IT FUND? The purpose of this program is to fund subgrant programs that support the rehabilitation of historic properties to foster economic development in rural communities. These subgrant programs will select, fund, and manage preservation projects for historic properties to include architectural/engineering services and physical preservation. Click here for more information.

    WHO'S ELIGIBLE? State, county, city or township, special district, and federally-recognized Native American tribal governments; public- and state-controlled institutions of higher education; and nonprofit organizations. Units of local government must be Certified Local Governments or located within a Certified Local Government.

    TOTAL FUNDING AMOUNT? $10 million

    WHEN IS IT DUE? August 21, 2025

    Read more
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  • Grant Due: FY 2025 Rural Housing Preservation Grant

    Grant Due: FY 2025 Rural Housing Preservation Grant

    WHAT DOES IT FUND? The purpose of this program is to support low- and very low-income homeowners in repairing and rehabilitating their homes in rural areas. This program is part of the funding agency’s Housing Preservation Grant program. This program also assists rental property owners and cooperative housing complexes in repairing and rehabilitating their units if they agree to make such units available to low- and very low-income persons. Click here for more information.

    WHO'S ELIGIBLE? State and local governments, nonprofit organizations, federally recognized Native American tribal governments, Native American tribal organizations, and faith-based and community organizations are eligible. Projects must occur in rural areas and towns with 20,000 or fewer people.

    TOTAL FUNDING AMOUNT? $13.1 million

    WHEN IS IT DUE? September 4, 2025

    Read more
  • Grant Due: FY 2025 Rediscovering Our Revolutionary Tradition

    Grant Due: FY 2025 Rediscovering Our Revolutionary Tradition

    WHAT DOES IT FUND? The purpose of this program is to preserve and improve access to primary source materials that document the history of America’s founding era and of American government in federal, state, and local contexts. Supported activities include conservation treatment and rehousing, digitization and description, transcription and translation, and updating existing digital resources to ensure long-term public availability. Click here for more information.

    WHO'S ELIGIBLE? Nonprofit organizations, accredited institutions of higher education, state and local governments and their agencies, and federally recognized Native American Tribal governments

    TOTAL FUNDING AMOUNT? $14 million

    WHEN IS IT DUE? September 4, 2025; January 15, 2026

    Read more
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US Congressional Calendar

Jennifer Imo Discusses Earmarks, Federal Funding in Bloomberg Government

Today, Jennifer Imo, TFG’s Managing Partner of Client Services, shared insights from her ten years of experience securing earmarked funds.

View the full article below:

Lobbyists Temper Expectations for Clients Seeking Earmark Boom

  • Members ask tougher questions than before 2011, lobbyist says
  • Museum funding has potential for political risk, Kingston says

By Jack Fitzpatrick / June 9, 2022 05:05AM ET / Bloomberg Government

Washington lobbyists are telling clients seeking congressional earmarks to temper their expectations, look to senior appropriators for help, and weigh the political appeal of their requests as lawmakers prepare for a second year of earmarks after a 10-year hiatus.

While lawmakers are preparing for an increase in earmark funding in fiscal 2023, K Street observers say local governments, nonprofits, and other clients should keep their expectations in check and make sure they can demonstrate strong political support for their requests.

The lack of agreement on top-line spending figures and the upcoming midterm elections make for an uncertain outlook in the coming year, they say. Lawmakers are also more sensitive about avoiding politically embarrassing earmarks than they used to be, according to Brent Heberlee, a lobbyist at Ballard Spahr LLP.

“The Appropriations Committee is not afraid to ask difficult questions about a given project,” Heberlee said in a phone interview. “We really didn’t see that a decade or more ago. Projects went in and the committee took them at face value, for the most part.”

 

Photographer: Ting Shen/Bloomberg

House Appropriations Chair Rosa DeLauro (D-Conn.) speaks during a news conference at the US Capitol in Washington, D.C., on May 17.

Individual lawmakers are also being more scrupulous than they used to be rather than relying on the committees to filter out bad requests, according to Jennifer Imo, managing partner of client services at The Ferguson Group.

“In the past, members would just throw everything at the subcommittee and just see what stuck,” Imo said in a phone interview.

Lawmakers routinely added earmarks to spending bills until they were banned in 2011, when Republicans took control of the House following the 2010 Tea Party wave election. Lawmakers brought them back in the fiscal 2022 appropriations bills, with more restrictions.

For-profit entities aren’t eligible for earmarks, lawmakers must post their requests on their websites, and earmarks are limited to 1% of discretionary spending. Lawmakers operated carefully in the fiscal 2022 legislation (Public Law 117-103) signed in March, including $9.7 billion in earmarks — far less than the $15 billion that would have equated to 1% of discretionary funding.

For more on fiscal 2022 earmarks: Colleges, Cops, Airports Among Earmark Winners in 2022 Funding

There may be more earmark funding available in fiscal 2023. House appropriators allowed members to submit 15 requests each, up from 10 in fiscal 2022. And House Appropriations Chair Rosa DeLauro (D-Conn.) said there’s been an increase in requests. In total, 344 members submitted earmark requests for the upcoming bills, according to a list published by the House Appropriations Committee.

“There are increasing numbers coming in,” DeLauro said at a hearing last month. “Let me just put it this way: We’re going to do the best we can to see how many that we can get done this go ‘round, because we understand the value, and we understand the need.”

Lawmakers Dial Up Earmark Scrutiny

Those requesting earmarks shouldn’t bank on a huge influx of money, said Heberlee, who represents local governments and nonprofits.

“The project may have substantial needs for funding, but we counsel clients that this is not the ‘be all, end all’ for your project,” Heberlee said.

Clients can help their chances of getting federal funds if they exceed the typical grant requirements for state or local matching funds, which demonstrates strong local political support, said Imo, who’s also federal director of the National Association of Towns and Townships.

It helps to seek funding that would push a project across the finish line, rather than start a new project. Members see a political advantage in securing funds for a nearly finished project, Imo added.

“They like to cut the ribbon,” she said.

Those requesting earmarks also shouldn’t expect to receive multiple years of funding, unlike in previous eras, according to Rich Gold, who leads Holland & Knight’s Public Policy & Regulation Group.

“There really was a philosophy in the olden days that you could take a $10 million road project and get three years of funding and get it done,” Gold said in a phone interview. “Members don’t seem interested in that, and the committees really don’t want to get into that.”

Lawmakers will also reject projects that don’t have clear political support from multiple levels, said Jack Kingston, a lobbyist at Squire Patton Boggs and a former Republican lawmaker from Georgia who served on the House Appropriations Committee. Members who include an earmark in a spending bill want to be able to tell skeptical local journalists, “Call Mayor Jones, call County Supervisor Smith, call the commander at the military installation,” Kingston said.

Midterms Cloud Prospects

The midterm elections add uncertainty to the outlook for fiscal 2023. Republicans were divided over whether to participate in the new earmarking process, ultimately leaving it up to individual members to decide. GOP leaders will likely coordinate closely with top Republican appropriators to make sure no politically embarrassing measures make it past the committee, Kingston said.

Lawmakers avoided political pitfalls in the first year of the new earmark system, but they’ll need to be careful as colleagues submit more requests. In some cases, lawmakers included earmarks in the fiscal 2022 spending package that could garner negative press — fairly or unfairly, Kingston said.

Funding for small museums could be risky, because they sound obscure and trivial, and “that’s the kind of article that newspapers like to write,” Kingston said. The fiscal 2022 spending package included funding for small or niche museums such as the Henry Sheldon Museum of Vermont History, the Old Stone House Museum in Vermont, and the National Atomic Testing Museum in Nevada.

The first year of the new earmarking system showed how important it is to seek help from senior appropriators, Kingston said, pointing to Chair Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.), Vice Chair Richard Shelby (R-Ala.), and Sens. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.), and Roy Blunt (R-Mo.).

“In a huge budget like ours, there are hidden corridors of money, untapped veins of funding that people don’t know about unless they’ve been there for a while,” Kingston said.

Learning the top priorities of individual members is especially important when seeking earmarked funding, Imo said.

Lobbyists have also learned to pitch funding to lawmakers in a way that aligns with their ideology — a much different process than when executive branch bureaucrats make the final funding decisions for grants.

If seeking funding for a road project that runs through both Republican and Democratic districts, Democrats would look for “traffic-calming that reduces greenhouse gas emissions,” while Republicans would be interested in “economic development to help businesses along the corridor,” Gold said.

“It’s almost like you’re speaking French to one office and Spanish to another,” Gold said.

To contact the reporter on this story: Jack Fitzpatrick in Washington at jfitzpatrick@bgov.com

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Giuseppe Macri at gmacri@bgov.com; Loren Duggan at lduggan@bgov.com

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Latest TFG News

28 January 2025

TFG Monitoring Developments of Temporary Pause of Agency Grant, Loan, and Other Financial Assistance Programs

On January 27, the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) under President Trump issued a memorandum titled “Temporary Pause of Agency Grant, Loan, and Other Financial Assistance Programs.” The directive mandates Federal agencies to temporarily suspend the obligation and disbursement of federal financial assistance while conducting a comprehensive review of programs and awards to ensure alignment with the administration’s policies and priorities. As part of this review, agencies are also instructed to temporarily suspend the issuance of new program solicitations.

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