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Currently focused on US federal, state, and foundation grants.
Outreach Education and Technical Assistance for Disaster Assistance Programs is sponsored by AGRICULTURE, DEPARTMENT OF. These cooperative agreements require recipients to work with producers to evaluate their operations and assist them in strengthening their business through USDA programs and resources, and activities such as farm registration, implementing conservation practices, transitioning to organic production, setting up a financial records system, loan application assistance, and developing a tax management and asset protection strategy. This listing is currently active. Program number: 10.983. Last updated on 2026-02-02.
Application snapshot: target deadline rolling deadlines or periodic funding windows; published funding information Funding amounts vary by year and recipient.; eligibility guidance Eligible applicant types include: Nonprofit Organization, County Government (inclusive of boroughs in Alaska, parishes and other governmental entities with geographic regional control and authority), State, U.S. State Government (including the District of Columbia), Indian/Native American/Alaska Native Tribal Government (Other than Federally Recognized).
Use the official notice and source links for final requirements, attachment checklists, allowable costs, and submission instructions before applying.
Applicants should map project outcomes and evaluation metrics directly to sponsor priorities and confirm all compliance requirements in the current official notice.
Applicants should map project outcomes and evaluation metrics directly to sponsor priorities and confirm all compliance requirements in the current official notice.
Applicants should map project outcomes and evaluation metrics directly to sponsor priorities and confirm all compliance requirements in the current official notice.
Applicants should map project outcomes and evaluation metrics directly to sponsor priorities and confirm all compliance requirements in the current official notice.
Applicants should map project outcomes and evaluation metrics directly to sponsor priorities and confirm all compliance requirements in the current official notice.
Applicants should map project outcomes and evaluation metrics directly to sponsor priorities and confirm all compliance requirements in the current official notice.
Applicants should map project outcomes and evaluation metrics directly to sponsor priorities and confirm all compliance requirements in the current official notice.
Based on current listing details, eligibility includes: Eligible applicant types include: Nonprofit Organization, County Government (inclusive of boroughs in Alaska, parishes and other governmental entities with geographic regional control and authority), State, U.S. State Government (including the District of Columbia), Indian/Native American/Alaska Native Tribal Government (Other than Federally Recognized). Applicants should confirm final requirements in the official notice before submission.
Current published award information indicates Funding amounts vary by year and recipient. Always verify allowable costs, matching requirements, and funding caps directly in the sponsor documentation.
The current target date is rolling deadlines or periodic funding windows. Build your timeline backwards from this date to cover registrations, approvals, attachments, and final submission checks.
Minority-Serving Institutions Partnership is sponsored by AGRICULTURE, DEPARTMENT OF. The objective of this program is to strengthen the partnership between the United States Department of Agriculture’s Office of Partnerships and Public Engagement and universities that will help USDA connect communities to the education, tools, and resources available to them through USDA’s programs and initiatives. This listing is currently active. Program number: 10.466. Last updated on 2024-11-25. Application snapshot: target deadline rolling deadlines or periodic funding windows; published funding information Funding amounts vary by year and recipient.; eligibility guidance Minority-serving state agricultural experiment stations, state cooperative extension services, all colleges and universities, other research or education institutions and organizations, Federal and private agencies and organizations, individuals, and any other contractor or recipient, either foreign or domestic, to further research, extension, or teaching programs in the food and agricultural sciences of the Department of Agriculture. Eligible applicant types include: U.S. Territories and possessions (includes institutions of higher education and hospitals), Public nonprofit institution/organization (includes institutions of higher education and hospitals), Local (includes State-designated lndian Tribes, excludes institutions of higher education and hospitals, Private nonprofit institution/organization (includes institutions of higher education and hospitals), State (includes District of Columbia, public institutions of higher education and hospitals). Use the official notice and source links for final requirements, attachment checklists, allowable costs, and submission instructions before applying.
Livestock Forage Disaster Program is sponsored by AGRICULTURE, DEPARTMENT OF. The objective of LFP is to provide financial assistance from the Agricultural Disaster Relief Trust Fund (Trust Fund). The Secretary of Agriculture (henceforth the Secretary) has the authority to use sums from the Trust Fund to provide compensation to livestock producers who suffered grazing losses due to drought or fire. For drought, the losses must have occurred because of a qualifying drought during the normal grazing period for the county on land that is native or improved pastureland with permanent vegetative cover or is planted to a crop planted specifically for grazing covered livestock. For fire, LFP provides payments to eligible livestock producers that have suffered grazing losses on range land managed by a Federal agency if the eligible livestock producer is prohibited by the Federal agency from grazing the normal permitted livestock on the managed range land because of a qualifying fire. Eligible grazing losses must have occurred on or after January 1, 2008, and before October 1, 2011. The eligible grazing losses must occur within the same calendar year for which benefits are being requested. ATRA provides extending benefits to livestock producers for grazing losses due to drought and wildfires on Federal lands through September 30, 2013, subject to appropriations. This listing is currently active. Program number: 10.089. Last updated on 2026-01-23. Application snapshot: target deadline rolling deadlines or periodic funding windows; published funding information Recent federal obligations suggest $25,000 (2026).; eligibility guidance An eligible applicant or livestock producer may use assistance for grazing or fire losses for any specific purpose. Eligible covered livestock includes cattle (including dairy cattle); buffalo/beefalo/ alpacas, deer, elk, emu, equine, goats, llamas, poultry; reindeer, sheep; swine; and other livestock as determined by the Secretary. Eligible applicant types include: Unrestricted by Entity Type. Use the official notice and source links for final requirements, attachment checklists, allowable costs, and submission instructions before applying.
Livestock Indemnity Program-2014 Farm Bill is sponsored by AGRICULTURE, DEPARTMENT OF. LIP provides benefits to eligible livestock owners or livestock contract growers for livestock deaths in excess of normal mortality caused by eligible loss conditions, including eligible adverse weather, eligible disease and by attacks by animals reintroduced into the wild by the federal government or protected by federal law, including wolves and avian predators. In addition, LIP provides assistance to eligible livestock owners that must sell livestock at a reduced price because of an injury from an eligible loss condition. This listing is currently active. Program number: 10.108. Last updated on 2026-01-23. Application snapshot: target deadline rolling deadlines or periodic funding windows; published funding information Recent federal obligations suggest $87,157,718 (2026).; eligibility guidance To be eligible for benefits, an individual or legal entity must be a citizen of the United States (U.S.); legal Resident alien in the U.S.; Partnership comprised of U.S. citizens; Corporation, limited liability corporation or company, or other organization structure established under State law; or an Indian tribe or tribal organization. An eligible livestock owner must have had the production and market risks associated with the agricultural production of livestock and who had legal ownership of the eligible livestock on the day the livestock died or were injured and under conditions in which no contract grower could have been eligible for benefits with respect to the livestock. To be eligible livestock, the livestock must have died in excess of normal mortality as a direct result of an eligible loss condition and no later than 30 calendar days after the ending date of the applicable eligible loss condition. An eligible contract grower must have interest in the livestock, not as owner but as a person or entity whose interest is in poultry or swine, as of the day of the eligible loss condition, a written agreement setting the specific terms, conditions and obligations of the parties involved regarding the production of livestock with the owner of eligible livestock, on the day the poultry or swine died, and a risk of loss in the animal. Eligible livestock for livestock owners are alpacas, adult or non-adult beef, beefalo, buffalo/bison and dairy cattle, caribou, chickens, deer, ducks, elk, emus, equine, geese, goats, llamas, ostrich, reindeer, sheep, swine, or turkeys. Eligible livestock for contract growers are chickens, ducks, geese, swine, or turkeys. The eligible livestock must have been maintained for commercial use as part of a farming operation before dying and on the day the eligible livestock died. An eligible loss condition includes an eligible adverse weather event, eligible disease, and eligible attack. Eligible adverse weather event means extreme or abnormal damaging weather that is not expected to occur during the loss period for which it occurred, which directly results in eligible livestock losses. An eligible adverse weather event must occur in the calendar year for which benefits are requested. Eligible adverse weather events include, but are not limited to, as determined by the FSA Deputy Administrator of Farm Programs or designee, earthquake; hail; lightning; tornado; tropical storm; typhoon; vog, if directly related to a volcanic eruption; winter storm; hurricanes; floods; blizzards; wildfires; extreme heat; extreme cold; and straight-line winds. Drought is not an eligible adverse weather event except when associated with anthrax, and mycoplasma bovis in bison, conditions that occur or are exacerbated because of drought and results in the death of eligible livestock. Eligible disease means a disease that is exacerbated by an eligible adverse weather event that directly results in eligible livestock losses, including, but not limited to, anthrax, cyanobacteria, (beginning in 2015 calendar year) and larkspur poisoning (beginning in 2015 calendar year) and mycoplasma bovis (beginning in 2022). In addition, eligible disease means a disease that is caused and/or transmitted by vectors and vaccination or acceptable management practices are not available, whether or not they were or were not implemented, that directly result in death of eligible livestock in excess of normal mortality, including but not limited to Blue Tongue, EHD, Theileria Orientalis and CVV. Eligible attack means an attack by animals reintroduced into the wild by the Federal Government or protected by Federal law, including wolves and avian predators, that directly results in either injured livestock sold at a reduced price or death of eligible livestock, in excess of normal mortality. Eligible applicant types include: Unrestricted by Entity Type. Use the official notice and source links for final requirements, attachment checklists, allowable costs, and submission instructions before applying.