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The Rangeland Management program conducts inventories, assessments and evaluations of soil and vegetation conditions and land health. Monitoring data is collected and analyzed to ensure progress toward meeting land health standards.Funded projects under this program will focus on high priority work effecting the program nationally by crossing state boundaries, such as, activities that support maintaining or achieving land health and productivity, increasing soil carbon sequestration, and creating resilient landscapes to benefit current and future generations. These activities could include, but are not limited to, such things as:Facilitating the restoration of rangelands.Soils mapping and development of ecological site descriptions.Engagement of community members and other stakeholders, through mentoring, training, and educational programs.
Funding Opportunity Number: L26AS00063. Assistance Listing: 15.237. Funding Instrument: CA. Category: NR. Award Amount: $50K – $250K per award.
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Search similar grants →According to the current listing, eligibility includes: Eligible applicants: State governments; County governments; City or township governments; Special district governments; Public and State controlled institutions of higher education; Native American tribal governments (Federally recognized); Native American tribal organizations (other than Federally recognized); Nonprofits having a 501(c)(3) status with the IRS, other than institutions of higher education; Nonprofits that do not have a 501(c)(3) status with the IRS, other than institutions of higher education; Private institutions of higher education. Individuals and for-profit organizations are ineligible to apply for awards under this NOFO.This program NOFO does not support entities hiring interns or crews under the Public Lands Corps Act of 1993. The Public Lands Corps Act of 1993, 16 USC, Chapter 37, Subchapter II-Public Lands Corps, is the only legislative authority that allows BLM to "hire" interns under this authority. Therefore, eligible Youth Conservation Corps may only apply for projects developed under NOFO 15.243 – BLM Youth Conservation Opportunities on Public Lands. Confirm the full requirements in the official notice before applying.
The current listing shows $50K – $250K per award. Verify award ceilings, matching requirements, and allowable costs in the official notice.
Applications for FY26 Bureau of Land Management Rangeland Resource Management - Bureau wide are due August 14, 2026. Build your timeline backwards from this date to cover registrations, approvals, and final submission checks.
Yes — FY26 Bureau of Land Management Rangeland Resource Management - Bureau wide is offered by Bureau of Land Management and this listing comes from Grants.gov, an official U.S. federal source. Federal applications generally require registrations (for example SAM.gov or an agency submission portal), so allow extra lead time.
Start from the official opportunity page linked in this listing — it carries the sponsor's submission instructions.
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FY26 Bureau of Land Management Cultural and Paleontological Resource Management - Bureau wide is sponsored by Bureau of Land Management. Broadly, the objective is to develop partnerships to improve access to, and use of, heritage resources, and promote their educational, scientific, cultural, and recreational values in a manner that meets U. S.
FY26 Bureau of Land Management Eastern Nevada Conservation, Recreation and Development - NEVADA BLM is sponsored by Bureau of Land Management. The goal is to find, study, protect, and manage archaeological resources in Lincoln County, Nevada. All work should follow U. S. Department of the Interior priorities and support Eastern Nevada"s conservation and development goals.
Broadly, the objective is to develop partnerships to improve access to, and use of, heritage resources, and promote their educational, scientific, cultural, and recreational values in a manner that meets U.S. Department of the Interior priorities and Cultural Heritage and Paleontology Program goals. Individual projects shall meet one or more of the following objectives.Conduct studies, including inventory, excavation, records research, and collections-based research to improve the understanding of America"s natural and cultural history;Monitor at-risk heritage resources to track trends in condition and project effectiveness;Stabilize at-risk heritage resources;Train future cultural resource management practitioners and paleontologists through research projects, field schools and internships that highlight BLM resources;Assist with cultural heritage data and records management activities such as organizing, maintaining, and scanning site and survey records; creating, digitizing and maintaining geospatial data; and performing data entry;Preserve existing collections at recognized curation facilities through such activities as archival housing, stabilization or conservation;Broaden public access to museum collections;Promote engagement with Native American communities and foster partnerships with tribal governments and programs;Promote public engagement, learning opportunities, and conservation/preservation ethics through heritage resources education and outreach programs, events, and products;Develop and maintain historic sites with interpretive and educational potential.Partner to support BLM"s Tribal consultation efforts Funding Opportunity Number: L26AS00058. Assistance Listing: 15.224. Funding Instrument: CA. Category: NR. Award Amount: $30K – $75K per award.
Ohio Bureau of Workers' Compensation (BWC) Safety Grants Program (FY26) is sponsored by Ohio Bureau of Workers' Compensation (BWC). This program helps schools invest in safety and injury-prevention equipment. It supports practical safety improvements such as staff training, threat assessment programs, safety planning, and physical security upgrades, including security cameras and other security equipment.
Ohio Bureau of Workers' Compensation (BWC) Safety Grants Program FY26 is sponsored by Ohio Bureau of Workers' Compensation (BWC). This program makes funds available to Ohio schools to improve school safety. It can be used to purchase a wide range of security equipment, including cameras, access control systems, and panic buttons for schools.
While headlines chase AI and defense money, USDA's National Institute of Food and Agriculture runs a tight summer competitive cycle — Equipment Grants (June 25), Agricultural Genome to Phenome (June 29), New Beginning for Tribal Students (July 2), and Crop Protection and Pest Management (July 6). Here is how the four programs fit together, who is eligible, and why the land-grant system has a structural edge.
Read articleSecretary Rollins and NIFA opened the FY26 Research Facilities Act Program on June 15 with a four-tier award structure scaling from $100K planning grants to $30M facility complexes. The dollar-for-dollar cash match, the one-project-per-institution rule, and the 32-day application window are reshaping how land-grants will prioritize their long-deferred capital backlog.
Read articleOn June 8, HHS and GSA established a new Multiple Award Schedule Special Item Number for grants management technology — the first government-wide procurement vehicle for modern grants software. The SIN covers four functional subgroups, sits under Executive Order 14332, and ties to the $1.2 trillion in annual federal grant awards now flowing through 29 agencies. Here is what the move signals for grantees, grants management vendors, and the long arc of federal grants modernization.
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