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Holocaust and Anti-Hate Education Grant Program (Proposed Legislation) is sponsored by Pennsylvania Commission on Crime and Delinquency (Proposed). Proposed legislation in Pennsylvania aims to establish a grant program to help museums, cultural institutions, libraries, community organizations, and schools provide educational programming focused on the Holocaust, the consequences of religious and ethnic persecution, or comba…
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Reps. Khan, Waxman and Daley Introduce Holocaust and Anti-Hate Education Grant Program Reps. Khan, Waxman and Daley Introduce Holocaust and Anti-Hate Education Grant Program Rep.
Mary Jo Daley June 16, 2026 | 10:32 AM HARRISBURG, June 16 — State Reps. Tarik Khan, Ben Waxman, both D-Phila.
, and Mary Jo Daley, D-Montgomery, have introduced legislation to establish a Holocaust and Anti-Hate Education Grant Program to help museums, cultural institutions, libraries, community organizations and schools provide educational programming focused on the Holocaust, the consequences of religious and ethnic persecution, or combating hate.
Museums, cultural institutions, libraries, community organizations and schools play a vital role in preserving the lessons of the Holocaust, educating the public about religious and ethnic persecution, and fostering respect and civility in communities.
The program would be administered by the Pennsylvania Commission on Crime and Delinquency and would provide grants of $500 to $10,000 to support Holocaust education, instruction on religious, racial and ethnic persecution, anti-hate initiatives, educator training, educational exhibits, field trips, guest speakers and community engagement programs.
“The Holocaust stands as one of history’s most horrifying examples of evil and a reminder of where hatred and dehumanization can lead when left unchecked,” Khan said. “As antisemitism, Islamophobia and other forms of hate continue to rise, we have a responsibility to stand with communities that are feeling vulnerable and targeted.
This bill creates opportunities for museums, cultural institutions, libraries, community organizations and schools to develop programming that combats hate in its many forms. This timely grant program will empower these institutions and organizations with the resources they need to meet people where they are and address and prevent hate through art, culture, education and community engagement.
” “The stories and experiences of Holocaust survivors continue to provide powerful lessons for new generations," Waxman said. "Education is one of our strongest tools for combating antisemitism and ensuring that future generations understand the consequences of hatred, bigotry and indifference." "We cannot assume that future generations will learn these lessons on their own," Daley said.
"Museums, libraries, schools and community organizations help bring history to life and remind us why respect, civility and peace matter. This program will help strengthen those efforts across Pennsylvania."
Under the legislation, eligible entities would be able to use grant funding to develop or expand curriculum, public programming, educational initiatives, professional development opportunities, exhibits, field trips and community engagement efforts related to the Holocaust, religious, racial and ethnic persecution, and anti-hate education.
The lawmakers said the goal of the legislation is to strengthen educational opportunities across the Commonwealth, teach the lessons of the Holocaust and the consequences of religious, racial and ethnic persecution, and help build resilient communities rooted in respect, civility and peace.
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According to the current listing, eligibility includes: Museums, cultural institutions, libraries, community organizations, and schools in Pennsylvania. Confirm the full requirements in the official notice before applying.
The current listing shows $500 to $10,000. Verify award ceilings, matching requirements, and allowable costs in the official notice.
Holocaust and Anti-Hate Education Grant Program (Proposed Legislation) is funded by Pennsylvania Commission on Crime and Delinquency (Proposed). Verify program details on the funder's official page before applying.
This opportunity targets applicants in Pennsylvania. If your organization operates elsewhere, check the official notice for location requirements.
Start from the official opportunity page linked in this listing — it carries the sponsor's submission instructions.
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OMB's proposed Uniform Grants Regulation would replace 2 CFR Part 200, insert political appointees into award decisions, make peer review 'advisory only,' and let agencies terminate discretionary awards that no longer serve 'agency priorities or the national interest.' Comments are due July 13, 2026, with an October 1 effective date. Here's what changes, who's exposed, and how grantees should respond.
Read articleOn May 29, 2026, OMB published a 412-page proposed rule that rewrites 2 CFR Part 200 — the Uniform Guidance governing roughly $1 trillion in annual federal grant funding. Comments close July 13. The rule codifies pre-issuance political appointee review of every discretionary award, expands termination-for-convenience to cover shifting agency priorities, makes E-Verify mandatory for all federal grant employees, restricts DEI and gender-related programming, and converts the Uniform Guidance from guidance into binding regulation. OMB targets October 1 finalization for FY27 implementation. For every county, state agency, university, hospital, and nonprofit that touches a federal dollar, this is the most consequential regulatory event of the year.
Read articleThe Office of Management and Budget's May 29 proposed Uniform Grants Regulation rewrites 2 CFR Part 200 — installing senior political review of every discretionary award, demoting peer review to advisory, expanding termination authority, and converting nine years of guidance into binding regulation. Comments close July 13. Implementation begins October 1, 2026.
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