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Search verified grants from New York State (specific agency not cited, but state-level program) →This listing may be outdated. Verify details at the official source before applying.
Find similar grantsNew York's Matching Grant Program is sponsored by New York State (specific agency not cited, but state-level program). New York's Matching Grant Program supplements federal awards to help companies advance research and development and bring products closer to market. This program aims to support local medtech startups.
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How It Works | New York City Campaign Finance Board CFB Campaign Finance Dashboard Independent Expenditures Portal Daily Pre-Election Disclosure Summary Registered Political Committees Statements of Active Candidacy Independent Expenditure Impact Charts Post-Election/Enforcement Final Audit Reports/Final Board Determinations (FARs/FBDs) Outstanding Penalties & Repayments Independent Spender Determinations Campaign Finance Resources Campaign Finance Handbook Consultant and Vendor Guide Bank Balance and Fundraising Post-Election Information Transition and Inauguration Entities (TIEs) Independent Spender Resources Independent Spender Guide Political Consultants Guide Independent Spender Determinations Final Board Determinations (FBDs) Freedom of Information Law (FOIL) New York City’s landmark Campaign Finance Program provides public funds to candidates for city office.
Matching funds provide candidates with a strong incentive to finance their campaigns by engaging with average New Yorkers instead of seeking large contributions from special interests. The Program empowers more candidates to run for office, even without access to wealth; ones who join can build viable, competitive campaigns for office by relying on support from their neighbors.
The voluntary public financing program matches small-dollar contributions from individuals who reside in New York City, helping to amplify the voices of New Yorkers in city elections. A $10 contribution from a NYC resident to a participating candidate in the 2021 election could be worth as much as $90 to their campaign.
Any candidate running for municipal office (mayor, comptroller, public advocate, borough president, and city council) may join the program. The program does not cover county district attorney offices or state or federal offices. To receive public funds, candidates must: Meet a two-part fundraising threshold : Collect a minimum number of contributions (of $10 or more) from the area they seek to represent.
(For instance: candidates for City Council must have 75 contributors from their district; candidates for borough president must have 100 contributors from their borough.) Raise a minimum amount of qualifying contributions from NYC residents (only the matchable portion of the contributions counts towards this threshold). Certify agreement to and demonstrate compliance with the requirements of the Act and Board Rules .
Be on the ballot, and have an opponent on the ballot. Submit a personal financial disclosure filing with the Conflicts of Interest Board What Is Required of Candidates Who Participate? Spending Limits & Restrictions Candidates who seek public funds agree to abide by spending limits, which ensure money will not decide an election between participating candidates.
The spending limit varies by office sought. Candidates who receive an early public funds payment may be required to return public funds if they: Terminate their candidacies prior to the petitioning period; Fail to get on the ballot in the primary and/or general election; Fail to gather and submit petitions; or Eventually do not face opposition on the ballot. There is a cap on the total amount of public funds available to each candidate.
Candidates may only spend public funds to further their campaign, and must agree to return public funds that were not spent in accordance with the rules. After the election, candidates who have received public funding must return any remaining funds to the city. As a result, there are strict limits on what publicly-funded campaigns can spend after the election.
All campaigns are audited, and those who receive public funds must provide a thorough accounting of the way public funds were spent. Those who fail to comply with the law may face penalties. Candidates with outstanding penalties or public funds repayment obligations from a previous election may not receive matching funds for the current election until payment is made.
Ready to run for office and join the Program? Join the Matching Funds Program today . Join the Matching Funds Program Campaign Finance Handbook CFB Campaign Finance Dashboard Independent Expenditures Portal Post-Election/Enforcement Campaign Finance Resources Independent Spender Resources Independent Spender Determinations Final Board Determinations (FBDs) Freedom of Information Law (FOIL)
According to the current listing, eligibility includes: Companies that have received federal awards for R&D and are based in New York. Confirm the full requirements in the official notice before applying.
New York's Matching Grant Program is funded by New York State (specific agency not cited, but state-level program). Verify program details on the funder's official page before applying.
This opportunity targets applicants in New York. If your organization operates elsewhere, check the official notice for location requirements.
FEMA's Nonprofit Security Grant Program funds physical security for nonprofits at high risk of terrorist attack — up to $150,000 per site for target hardening. The catch: you apply through your State Administrative Agency on its calendar, not FEMA's, and the Investment Justification plus a vulnerability assessment decide everything. Here is how the FY2026 cycle is structured and how to write a fundable application.
Read articlePublic Law 119-83 was signed April 13, 2026, reauthorizing SBIR/STTR through 2031. The Department of War issued its implementation announcement April 20 and released over 90 topics in six weeks. The new Accelerated Research for Transition (ART) Program restructures Phase II-to-acquisition transition, Strategic Breakthrough Awards offer $30M per project with 100% matching, and CMMC Level 2 self-assessment has been the compliance floor since November 10, 2025. Here is how to read the post-reauthorization DoW pipeline.
Read articleNOT-OD-26-006 closed all 23 NIH SBIR/STTR opportunities on Nov 17, 2025. The Small Business Innovation and Economic Security Act (S. 3971) was signed April 13, 2026, reauthorizing the program through 2031. NIH posted no active SBIR/STTR NOFOs through early June 2026 while it rebuilt its solicitation suite around new statutory requirements. The September 5 standard receipt date is the first real test of the post-freeze pipeline — here is what the unwind looks like and how to position for it.
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