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Border-to-Border Broadband Development Grant Program is sponsored by Minnesota Office of Broadband Development (administered by Minnesota Department of Employment and Economic Development - DEED). This program provides financial resources to encourage new and existing providers to invest in broadband infrastructure in unserved and underserved areas of Minnesota.
It offers a 50% match to communities, co-ops, nonprofits, or private providers. Subsequent grant rounds will be funded through federal BEAD dollars.
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Search similar grants →According to the current listing, eligibility includes: Communities, co-ops, nonprofits, or private providers who wish to expand broadband in 'unserved' (no broadband service) or 'underserved' (poor service) areas. Confirm the full requirements in the official notice before applying.
The current listing shows varies (received $100 million in 2023-24 biennium, with subsequent rounds funded through federal BEAD dollars). Verify award ceilings, matching requirements, and allowable costs in the official notice.
Border-to-Border Broadband Development Grant Program is funded by Minnesota Office of Broadband Development (administered by Minnesota Department of Employment and Economic Development - DEED). Verify program details on the funder's official page before applying.
Start from the official opportunity page linked in this listing — it carries the sponsor's submission instructions.
Past winners and funding trends for this program
Farm to School Implementation Grant is sponsored by USDA Food and Nutrition Service. This program aims to increase the availability of local foods in schools and connect students to the sources of their food through education, taste tests, school gardens, field trips, and local food sourcing for school meals. Projects should incorporate both local sourcing and agricultural education efforts.
The Homeless Youth Program is a grant from the Illinois Department of Human Services that funds services for homeless and at-risk youth across Illinois. Administered through the Office of Community and Positive Youth Development, it supports nonprofit organizations delivering shelter, outreach, and support services to young people experiencing homelessness or housing instability. Eligible applicants are Illinois-based nonprofits with demonstrated capacity to serve youth. Awards range from $100,000 to $800,000 per year under CSFA number 444-80-0711. This is a FY 2026 funding opportunity with an application deadline of May 21, 2025.
Community Investment Tax Credit Program (CITC) is a grant from the Maryland Department of Housing and Community Development that provides state tax credit allocations to 501(c)(3) nonprofits, enabling them to attract private donations from individuals and businesses. Donors contributing $500 or more to approved projects receive tax credits equal to 50% of their contribution. The program has leveraged nearly $27 million in charitable contributions to approximately 700 projects statewide. Eligible project areas include education, housing, job training, arts and culture, economic development, and services for at-risk populations. Projects must be located in or serve residents of Maryland's Priority Funding Areas. The application period is typically held annually.
The Department of Education quietly published the FY2026 RPED competition in the May 29 Federal Register: $45M total, awards of $1.5M-$2.5M each over 48 months, applications due June 23 at 11:59 p.m. ET. The program funds rural community colleges and regional universities to build career pathways into high-wage industries. With FIPSE under structural review by the second Trump administration, this may be the last cycle under the existing rubric. Here's the eligibility math, the partner architecture that wins, the NCES locale codes that gate the absolute priority, and the 25-day sprint that determines who gets funded.
Read article52 of 56 BEAD final proposals are approved, 52 award agreements are signed, and construction on the first BEAD-funded networks begins this summer. The next 12 months are the subcontracting and digital-equity-partnership window — not the application window most nonprofits are still waiting for.
Read articleUSDA's Community Connect Grant Program for FY2026 funds broadband deployment in the least-connected rural communities — but the program's 10/1 Mbps eligibility ceiling and five-award expected count make targeted, well-documented service-gap proposals far more important than total funding size.
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