Grants for Special district governments - Federal
Explore 2,710 grant opportunities
Application Deadline
Dec 12, 2024
Date Added
Oct 3, 2024
This funding opportunity provides financial support for U.S.-based institutions to organize scientific conferences that promote collaboration and diverse participation in health and science research.
Application Deadline
Nov 1, 2024
Date Added
Jul 29, 2024
This funding opportunity provides long-term financial support to innovative researchers in environmental health sciences, allowing them to pursue ambitious projects and consolidate existing grants while focusing on mentoring and diversity.
Application Deadline
Feb 21, 2025
Date Added
Feb 12, 2025
This funding opportunity supports postdoctoral researchers from underrepresented backgrounds in neuroscience, helping them transition to independent faculty positions while providing financial support for their research.
Application Deadline
Feb 20, 2025
Date Added
Sep 13, 2024
This funding opportunity provides financial support to a variety of organizations working in Kenya to strengthen laboratory systems for diagnosing and treating HIV, TB, and related health threats, ultimately aiming to improve healthcare access and quality.
Application Deadline
Jun 21, 2024
Date Added
Aug 4, 2023
The Basic Center Program (BCP) provides temporary shelter and counseling services to youth who have left home without permission of their parents or guardians, have been forced to leave home, or other homeless youth who might otherwise end up in the law enforcement or in the child welfare, mental health, or juvenile justice systems. BCPs work to establish or strengthen community-based programs that meet the immediate needs of runaway and homeless youth and their families. BCP award recipients provide youth under 18 years of age with emergency shelter, food, clothing, counseling and referrals for health care. BCP award recipients can provide up to 21 days of shelter for youth and seeks to reunite young people with their families, whenever possible, or to locate appropriate alternative placements. Additional services may include: street-based services; home-based services for families with youth at risk of separation from the family; drug abuse education and prevention services; and at the request of runaway and homeless youth, testing for sexually transmitted diseases.
Application Deadline
Jun 10, 2025
Date Added
Jun 5, 2025
This funding opportunity supports U.S. institutions in creating centers focused on advancing research in nutrition and obesity through collaborative efforts and innovative projects.
Application Deadline
Oct 22, 2024
Date Added
Jun 12, 2024
The "Ending the HIV Epidemic in the U.S. Technical Assistance Provider" grant aims to fund technical assistance and systems coordination to help reduce new HIV infections in specific U.S. jurisdictions by diagnosing, treating, and preventing HIV, and responding to outbreaks, using innovative strategies and coordinating existing and new resources.
Application Deadline
Sep 2, 2024
Date Added
Jul 5, 2024
This SNOFO has been updated for Fiscal Year (FY) 2024 competition. The Office of Refugee Resettlement (ORR) has modified: Executive Summary, Section I. Program Description; Section II. Federal Award Information; Section IV.1. Address to Request Application Package; Section IV.4. Submission Dates and Times; and Section. VII. HHS Award Agency Contact(s). The Office of Refugee Resettlement (ORR), within the Administration for Children and Families, provides temporary shelter care and other child welfare-related services to Unaccompanied Children (UC) in ORR custody. Residential care services begin once ORR accepts a UC for placement and end when the minor is released from ORR custody, turns 18 years of age, or the minors immigration case results in a final disposition of removal from the United States. Residential care and other child welfare-related services are provided by state child placement licensed residential care programs in the least restrictive setting appropriate for the UCs age and special needs. ORR is announcing the availability of funds under this Standing Notice of Funding Opportunity (SNOFO) to seek residential care providers, including shelter, group home, and transitional foster care. At the time of application, applicants do not have to be licensed by an appropriate licensing agency to provide residential shelter, group, or foster care services for children. However, applicants must be prepared to obtain the appropriate state child placement and facility licensure post-award. All entities funded under this SNOFO are subject to the provisions of the Service Contract Act (SCA) and implementing regulations found in title 29 of the C.F.R. Part 4 including SCA labor standard clauses and must abide by applicable wage determinations. For further information on wage determination, please visit https://alpha.sam.gov/content/wage-determinations. This award is also subject to Executive Order 14026 Increasing the Minimum Wage for Federal Contractors, and its implementing regulations at 29 C.F.R. Part 23; and Executive Order 13706, Establishing Paid Sick Leave for Federal Contractors, and its implementing regulations at 29 C.F.R. Part 13. For additional information on the Minimum Wage and Paid Sick Leave requirements, please visit: https://www.dol.gov/agencies/whd/government-contracts/minimum-wage and https://www.dol.gov/agencies/whd/government-contracts/sick-leave. All entities, funded under this SNOFO, must also comply with the Flores Settlement Agreement Case No. CV 85-4544-RJK (C.D. Cal. 1996), pertinent regulations, laws, and ORR policies, instructions, and procedures including, but not limited to, the ORR Policy Guide and Manual of Procedures. ORR encourages applicants to review ORR's policies, instructions, and procedures at: http://www.acf.hhs.gov/programs/orr/resource/children-entering-the-united-states-unaccompanied as these will be critical to the overall program design. Please refer to the SNOFO when it publishes for more details on licensing timeframes, application closing dates and project periods.
Application Deadline
Feb 16, 2025
Date Added
Oct 11, 2024
This funding opportunity supports researchers investigating new biological, environmental, and social factors contributing to liver cancer in the U.S., particularly in relation to established risk factors and health disparities.
Application Deadline
Sep 1, 2024
Date Added
Apr 8, 2022
Through this Funding Opportunity Announcement (FOA), the National Cancer Institute (NCI) invites U01 cooperative agreement applications for Physical Sciences-Oncology Network (PS-ON). The goal of the PS-ON is to foster the convergence of physical sciences approaches and perspectives with cancer research to advance our understanding of cancer biology and oncology by forming transdisciplinary teams of physical scientists and cancer biologists/physician scientists. Examples of physical scientists may include engineers, physicists, mathematicians, chemists, and computer scientists. The research projects funded through this FOA, individually and as a collaborative Network along with other funded research projects, will support transdisciplinary research that: (1) drives a physical sciences perspective within the cancer research community; (2) facilitates team science and field convergence at the intersection of physical sciences and cancer research; and (3) collectively tests physical sciences-based experimental and theoretical concepts of cancer and promotes innovative solutions to address outstanding questions in cancer research.
Application Deadline
Feb 12, 2026
Date Added
Feb 25, 2025
This funding opportunity supports training initiatives that equip scholars, humanities professionals, and advanced graduate students with advanced digital tools and methodologies to enhance their research in the humanities.
Application Deadline
Aug 20, 2024
Date Added
Apr 2, 2024
The purpose of this Notice of Funding Opportunity (NOFO) is to support milestone-driven projects focused on developing and utilizing novel predictive models, assays, tools, and/or platforms based on penetration and efflux of small molecules to facilitate therapeutic discovery for select Gram-negative bacterial pathogens: carbapenem-resistant Acinetobacter, carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae (CRE), and multidrug-resistant Pseudomonas aeruginosa. A number of Gram-negative bacterial pathogens are associated with the alarming increase in rates of drug resistance in healthcare and community settings. This group includes carbapenem-resistant Acinetobacter , carbapenem-resistant Enterobacterales (CRE), and MDR Pseudomonas aeruginosa that have been designated as โurgentโ or โseriousโ threats in a recent report by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). A significant threat arises from the lack of effective therapeutic options available to treat some of these infections and is exacerbated by the scarcity of novel compounds effective against antimicrobial resistant (AR) and multidrug-resistant (MDR) Gram-negative bacteria in the discovery and development pipeline. In recent years, several public forums (including NIAID-sponsored workshops) identified the lack of understanding of the principles that govern compound penetration into, and efflux out of, Gram-negative bacteria as a key bottleneck for the rational discovery of novel lead therapeutic compounds. The paucity of suitable assays/tools/models to inform structure-activity relationships and guide optimization of whole cell penetration (and efflux avoidance) is reflected in the failure of medicinal chemistry efforts to advance novel chemical classes of compounds with Gram-negative activity. As more Gram-negative bacteria become resistant to antimicrobials and therapeutic options become limited or nonexistent, it becomes imperative to understand and rationalize the principles that allow molecules to penetrate Gram-negative bacteria, while avoiding efflux and overt toxicity toward eukaryotic cells. Therefore, developing new assays, tools, and models is paramount for overcoming this key bottleneck and facilitating the development of novel compounds targeting Gram-negative pathogens. Research Objectives and Scope The objective of this NOFO is to support milestone-driven projects focused on developing and utilizing novel predictive models, assays, tools, and/or platforms aimed at gaining a better understanding of the rules and compound properties that govern the penetration and efflux of drug-like small molecules into Gram-negative bacterial pathogens. This NOFO also supports the preclinical development of novel Gram-negative antibacterial therapeutics based on the tools and models hereby developed. Applications must focus on one or more of the following Gram-negative bacterial pathogens: carbapenem-resistant Acinetobacter, carbapenem-resistant Enterobacterales (CRE), and/or MDR Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Projects should complete assay/tool/model development prior to the end of the third year of the project period and initiate discovery activities to demonstrate its utility in supporting a corresponding medicinal chemistry program to generate a lead chemical series with demonstrated activity against one or more targeted Gram-negative bacteria. This NOFO will also support subsequent preclinical development of a promising lead antibacterial. Given the complex challenges of this research, this initiative encourages applications from multi-disciplinary teams composed of relevant experts in areas such as bacterial physiology, microbiology, bacterial membrane biology, medicinal chemistry, pharmacology, computation, and specialized technologies (microscopy, spectroscopy, electrophysiology, machine learning, etc.), as appropriate. Collaboration with, and utilization of, the NIAID Chemistry Center for Combating Antibiotic-Resistant Bacteria (CC4CARB), is recommended for completion of project relevant medicinal chemistry tasks. Close collaboration between academic and industry partners is highly encouraged to optimally combine innovative basic science with drug discovery expertise and proper access to compound libraries more typically available from industry. Examples of assay and model development activities include, but are not limited to: Quantitative cellular (or model system) assays to measure drug penetration and efflux, independent from standard minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) testing; Innovative quantitative assays to measure drug concentrations in the bacterial cytoplasm and/or periplasmic space; Innovative technologies for dissecting and assessment of the kinetics of drug penetration and efflux from bacteria; and Computational algorithms for describing/predicting physical-chemical properties/guidelines needed by small molecules for optimal Gram-negative penetration and efflux avoidance. Applicants should demonstrate the utility of the developed tools and/or assays to predict and measure potency of candidate therapeutics against Gram-negative targets through one or more approaches. For example, using the developed models and/or assays to guide a medicinal chemistry campaign aimed at producing a novel chemical series with Gram-negative activity; screening existing libraries using the computational algorithms developed as a tool to find compounds with Gram-negative activity; or profiling existing libraries of compounds with known Gram-negative activity. Applications including the following will be considered non-responsive and will not be reviewed: Projects that do not focus on at least one select Gram-negative pathogen (carbapenem-resistant Acinetobacter, carbapenem-resistant Enterobacterales, or MDR Pseudomonas aeruginosa); Projects focused only on Gram-positive bacteria or Mycobacterium tuberculosis; Projects that do not focus on penetration and efflux of small molecules; Applications not containing a Milestone and Timeline attachment; Applications proposing Clinical trials; and Research on HIV/AIDS.
Application Deadline
Oct 16, 2025
Date Added
Nov 26, 2024
This funding opportunity supports researchers in developing innovative animal models and biological tools to advance the understanding of Down syndrome and its related health conditions.
Application Deadline
Oct 22, 2025
Date Added
Sep 12, 2025
This program provides funding to state and local governments with accredited crime laboratories to improve their DNA analysis capabilities, reduce case backlogs, and enhance public safety through the use of advanced DNA technology.
Application Deadline
Dec 11, 2024
Date Added
Oct 25, 2024
This funding opportunity provides financial support to various organizations for projects that promote the use of wood products and energy, enhance forest health, and stimulate economic growth in forested communities across the U.S.
Application Deadline
Nov 18, 2024
Date Added
Mar 30, 2023
This funding opportunity supports innovative research projects that explore how climate change affects cancer risks, treatment, and survivorship, with a focus on developing solutions to mitigate these impacts and address health inequities.
Application Deadline
Oct 1, 2024
Date Added
Nov 29, 2023
The "Advanced Development and Validation of Emerging Molecular and Cellular Analysis Technologies for Basic and Clinical Cancer Research" grant aims to fund exploratory research projects that further develop and validate innovative technologies for analyzing molecular and cellular aspects of cancer, with the goal of improving cancer research, detection, diagnosis, treatment, and understanding of health disparities.
Application Deadline
Nov 5, 2024
Date Added
Apr 11, 2024
This grant provides funding for researchers to investigate the biological mechanisms behind adverse effects related to anti-beta-amyloid immunotherapy in Alzheimer's disease, with the goal of developing strategies to protect the blood-brain barrier and improve treatment safety.
Application Deadline
Nov 17, 2024
Date Added
Nov 23, 2022
This funding opportunity supports U.S.-based organizations in developing and testing effective cancer interventions that improve health outcomes for diverse populations across the entire cancer control continuum, particularly in under-resourced communities.
Application Deadline
Jun 20, 2024
Date Added
Aug 3, 2023
The Administration for Children and Families, Administration on Children, Youth and Families' Family and Youth Services Bureau announces the anticipated availability of funds under the General Departmental Sexual Risk Avoidance Education (GDSRAE) Program. The purpose of the GDSRAE Program is to fund projects to implement sexual risk avoidance education that teach participants how to voluntarily refrain from non-marital sexual activity. The services are targeted to participants that reside in areas with high rates of teen births and/or are at greatest risk of contracting sexually transmitted infections (STIs). The goals of GDSRAE are to empower participants to make healthy decisions, and provide tools and resources to prevent pregnancy, STIs, and youth engagement in other risky behaviors. Successful applicants are expected to submit program plans that agree to: use medically accurate information referenced to peer-reviewed publications by 1) educational, scientific, governmental, or health organizations; 2) implement sexual risk avoidance curricula and/or strategies with an evidence-based approach integrating research findings with practical implementation that aligns with the needs and desired outcomes for the intended audience; and 3) teach the benefits associated with self-regulation, success sequencing for poverty prevention, healthy relationships, goal setting, and resisting sexual coercion, dating violence, and other youth risk behaviors such as underage drinking or illicit drug use without normalizing teen sexual activity.
