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Metropolitan Transportation Planning (Section 5303) is sponsored by Department of Transportation. The purpose of the Metropolitan Transportation Planning is to assist in development of metropolitan transportation improvement programs, long-range transportation plans, and other technical studies in a program for a unified and officially coordinated Metropolitan Transportation system(s) within the state.
This Assistance Listing 20.517 created in August 2025 was included in the previous ALN 20.505, please refer to former ALN 20.505 for FY24 and FY25 financial obligations. The new Assistance Listing 20.517 will be utilized by DOT at the start of FY 2026. This listing is currently active. Program number: 20.517. Last updated on 2026-01-14.
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Or search similar grants →According to the current listing, eligibility includes: Eligible applicants for FTA's Section 5303 Metropolitan Planning Program include; Metropolitan Planning Organizations (MPOs) designated for urbanized areas (UZAs) with populations of 50,000 or more. In addition, State Department of Transportation (State DOTs) which receive the full apportionment then allocate funds to MPOs according to a formula developed in cooperation with the MPOs and approved by the Secretary of Transportation. MPO's are the primary subrecipients responsible for carrying out the planning activities funded under this program. While MPOs do not apply through a competitive process (since this is not a formula grant) they must coordinate with their State DOTs to access and mange the funds. Eligible applicant types include: Planning Commission, Other Local Government Consortium, Regional Organization (Intrastate), or Other Local Government Combination. Confirm the full requirements in the official notice before applying.
The current listing shows recent federal obligations suggest $37,006,000 (2026). Verify award ceilings, matching requirements, and allowable costs in the official notice.
Yes — Metropolitan Transportation Planning (Section 5303) is offered by Department of Transportation and this listing comes from SAM.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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The Department of Defense FY2026 Defense University Research Instrumentation Program (DURIP) provides funding for U.S. universities to acquire research equipment and instrumentation in areas important to national defense, including AI and machine learning hardware. The program is administered jointly by the Army Research Office (ARO), Office of Naval Research (ONR), and Air Force Office of Scientific Research (AFOSR), with approximately $34 million available and 95 awards anticipated. DURIP funds the acquisition of specialized computing hardware for AI/ML research (GPU clusters, TPUs, neuromorphic processors), robotics and autonomous systems testbeds, sensor arrays and data collection systems for machine learning training, high-performance computing infrastructure for defense-relevant AI research, and laboratory equipment for human-AI interaction studies. The program specifically supports equipment that enhances research-related education in DoD-priority disciplines. While general-purpose computing is not eligible, computing equipment directly supporting DoD-relevant AI research programs qualifies. No cost sharing is required.
Vinnova, Sweden's national innovation agency, funds projects developing applied AI solutions for Swedish industry through its Advanced Digitalization Programme. Each project can apply for between 2 and 10 million SEK (approximately $190,000 to $950,000 USD) covering up to 50% of eligible project costs. The total call budget is 60 million SEK. Projects run for 12-24 months and focus on two key areas: Intelligent Edge (AI for real-time application in the sensor chain) and AI-based decision support. All projects must address industrial needs and integrate gender equality and climate change perspectives. Scientific publications must be open access. A parallel call also funds AI and cybersecurity projects at 1-10 million SEK per project with a 50 million SEK total budget.
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