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Find similar grantsRural Catalyst Grant is sponsored by North Dakota Department of Commerce. The Rural Catalyst Grant targets small communities across North Dakota, offering funding for various projects focusing on community development, health and wellness, and reopening essential businesses like rural grocery stores.
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Application Window is now closed The purpose of the Rural Catalyst Grant program is to support quality of life improvement and economic development projects for rural communities in the state. This is a reimbursable grant. Reimbursements will not be provided for any purchases made before a grant agreement is signed.
The Department of Commerce leads the efforts to attract, retain, and expand wealth and improve the quality of life for the people of North Dakota. Strengthen rural communities addressing critical needs in the areas of community and economic development, health and wellness or for the purpose of preserving or reopening rural grocery stores.
Support quality of life improvement such as improving access to healthcare, essential services, education, housing or transportation within the community. Encourage partnerships and collaboration between local organizations, businesses, and government entities. Support innovative approaches to address unique challenges faced by rural areas.
Foster community development and revitalization efforts in rural regions. This grant will not fund debt of the applicant, planning grants, or miscellaneous fees. It will not fund salaries, business operating expenses and is not intended to fund childcare.
Eligible Entities – Political subdivisions, Tribal entities, and Regional Councils How much funding is available? Up to $500,000 per *rural* applicant. *Rural shall be defined as any community or region, based on the application, with a population of 4,500 or fewer.
Note: 50% of these grant funds must be awarded to rural communities with a population of 1,500 or fewer. A one-for-one non-state funded match is required. This can be provided by public, private, or other nonprofit support, and includes in-kind donation.
This is a reimbursable grant. Reimbursements will not be provided for any purchases made before a grant is awarded and a grant agreement being signed. All projects must be completed within 18 months of being awarded and reimbursements must be completed by June 30, 2027.
Rural Catalyst Grant Guidance Rural Catalyst Grant Guidelines Rural Catalyst Application Questions Purpose: SB 2390; To support quality of life improvement and economic development projects for rural communities, created and enacted in the state beginning July 1, 2025 and ending June 30, 2027.
This grant program aims to assist communities to address a critical need in the areas of community and economic development, education, health and wellness, or for the purpose of preserving or reopening rural grocery stores. Administering Agency: North Dakota Department of Commerce Funding Source: State legislative general funds, $2.
5 million is appropriated for the Rural Catalyst Grant program: Strategic and Investment and Improvements Fund. This is one-time funding and requires matching funds. Funds are provided through reimbursement and are authorized for after the date the award contract is signed by both parties.
Be a municipality, county, tribe, job development authority, regional council or political subdivision of the state of North Dakota to apply. Must be a rural community with a population of 4,500 or fewer. *At least 50% of the grant funds must be allocated to communities with populations of fewer than 1,500.
Submit a complete application for RCG funding to North Dakota Department of Commerce (Commerce). Comply with the requirements, conditions, restrictions, and limitations imposed by SB 2390. Support quality of life improvement and economic development such as improving access to healthcare, food, essential services, education, housing or transportation within the community.
Promotes community vitality such as livability, safety, recreational opportunities, cultural enrichment or walkability. Must have local match: one dollar for every dollar provided from the Rural Catalyst Grant must come from non-state sources. Up to 100% of the match requirement may come from in-kind donations.
In-kind donations are defined as donated labor (must submit labor payroll), product donation (supplies, computers, furniture, building materials, etc), services (graphic design, accounting, or other professional services donated at no cost) or the use of property (free or reduced-cost use of space or vehicles). Upon application, proof of in-kind match amount/type must be provided. Eligible Uses of Funds.
The total project cost may include the direct costs associated with: Slum/blight removal and/ or remediation *see below for further stipulations related to slum/blight removal Community health and wellness project Expansion or new business project that addresses a critical need in the area of: quality of life improvement, economic development projects, education, or health/wellness Preserving or opening a rural grocery store Placemaking, vibrancy, and downtown improvement area projects Recreation-related projects Slum/blight removal stipulations, further defined: An applicant may apply for a project which would include an activity to be located outside city limits if the proposed activity involves property/facilities over which the city has direct control as the owner/operator, and for which a county could not apply.
A county is the eligible applicant for activities designed to take place outside the limits of an incorporated city and in unincorporated areas. A county, however, may apply for an activity within an incorporated city that involves property/facilities over which the county has direct control as the owner/operator, and for which a city could not apply, such as a county courthouse.
The improved facility or land must be publicly owned, or the municipality must have a purchase agreement in place at the time of the Rural Catalyst Grant application. After project completion, the city or county may sell the building or land at its discretion. Proposed projects must have a rehab or redevelopment plan to be eligible for funding.
Ineligible Uses of Funds. RCG grant dollars may not be used for the following: Reimbursement without city or political subdivision approval and or written support Architecture and engineering fees, city planning fees, legal fees, permit fees, inspection fees, miscellaneous fees, taxes, or mortgages Salaries/operating expenses Communities may apply for multiple, separate projects per round.
A community may re-apply in the second round only if there are unexpended funds. On April 1, 2027, if there are any unspent or unobligated funds, the Rural Catalyst Committee may reallocate or award any remaining funds to viable projects. Must have local match: one dollar for every dollar provided from the Rural Catalyst Grant must come from non-state sources.
Up to 100% of the match requirement may come from in-kind donations. In-kind donations are defined as donated labor (must submit labor payroll), product donation (supplies, computers, furniture, building materials, etc), services (graphic design, accounting, or other professional services donated at no cost) or the use of property (free or reduced-cost use of space or vehicles).
Upon application, proof of in-kind match amount/type must be provided. Grant amounts and limits are appropriated using the 2020 Census Data: Maximum of $500,000. 00 per community that has 4,500 or fewer individuals.
At least 50% of the RCG funds must be allocated to communities with populations of 1,500 or fewer individuals. Reimbursement cannot be made for purchases prior to the grant agreement being signed. Timeline: Applications will be accepted for submission on October 28th, 2025 The application window will close on January 7 th , 2026.
If there are remaining funds, a second round will be opened on March 2 nd , 2026 and will close on April 15th, 2026. How to Apply: Online portal only, located at the ND Department of Commerce website. All documents will be reviewed through the portal.
Emailed and/or mailed documents will be returned without action. Required Documentation: Information and documentation necessary for the Rural Catalyst Committee (RCC) to evaluate the proposed project based on the criteria set forth.
A submitted application must contain plans demonstrating that the total project cost is reasonable based on current market conditions and the components included in the total project cost are necessary and allowable. Application documents are complete, accurate and are the applicant’s original work and authentic voice. Fully computer AI-generated documents may be disqualified by the Committee.
See complete application at the ND commerce website. Review Process: Applications will be reviewed by the Rural Catalyst Committee (RCC) comprised of 13 members.
Committee members include the Department of Commerce Commissioner (or designee appointed by the Commissioner), one individual from each Regional Council (appointed by executive boards of the Regional Councils), two members from communities eligible for grants under this chapter (Governor appointed), one member of the legislative assembly (appointed by the Chairman of Legislative management), the Governor or a designee appointed by the Governor.
The Governor and the Commissioner are permanent members. The term of office for the remaining members is four years. Criteria: The Rural Catalyst Committee shall evaluate an application based on the following criteria: Economic development impact.
The ability for the project to create or preserve jobs and/or to support entrepreneurship or new business activities. Quality of life improvement. The ability to improve access to healthcare, essential services, educations, housing or transportation.
Innovation and replicability. Ability to create creative, replicable solutions to address rural challenges. Local commitment and match.
Financial or in-kind contributions from local government or partners. Demonstrates strong local buy-in and input through community letters of support. Community vitality.
Promotes livability, safety, recreational opportunities or cultural enrichment. Project sustainability. How likely the project is to sustain itself after the grant has been awarded.
Application completeness. Documents are complete, accurate and reflects the applicant’s original work and authentic voice. It represents critical thinking and is not fully AI-generated.
Other factors relevant to the Committee in making a sound decision to award funding to applicants. Approval by local governing body: An applicant shall submit with the application a resolution or a letter of support from the city, political subdivision or tribal council stating: The city, county, political subdivision, or Tribal Council has approved the proposed project.
The project satisfies the requirements of the city, political subdivision or Tribal Council/Segment. The city, political subdivision or Tribal Council/Segment shall own or has confidence in the maintenance, or support the public infrastructure to be developed in the project; and the city, political subdivision or Tribal Council/Segment has the capacity to support the public infrastructure to be developed in the project.
Notification: Notification to grantees on acceptance, adjustments or denial will be provided within 30 days after the grant closes. Applicants may correct the application and reapply to a second round, if funds remain. Program Requirements & Compliance Reimbursements are to be expended no later than June 30, 2027.
Periodic reporting. Applicants must provide quarterly progress reports that includes a report on money expended and current pictures of the project. This will be reported through the application portal every 90 days after the grant was awarded.
Monitoring and Evaluation The Rural Catalyst Committee will track outcomes (e.g., number of projects completed, new residents to the community, geographic reach, capacity building, testimonial). On-site inspections or desk side audits may occur. Final project evaluation form.
A final project evaluation will be submitted through the portal. Additionally, to measure return on investment and success of the grant, projects are subject to follow-up 1-3 years post award.
The Rural Catalyst Committee shall provide a report to the legislative management and the Governor by September 1st, 2026, regarding the status of the program, including expenditures to date, the number of projects supported, communities applying for grants and matching funds raised by political subdivisions, local developers, and communities, in addition to how the project has affected local communities.
To receive periodic reimbursement of funding, the applicant must: Enter into a written grant agreement. Remain in compliance with the written agreement, applicable law, SB 2390. Provide all required documentation as required by the Rural Catalyst Committee.
The Department of Commerce will reimburse funds based on receipts provided periodically or at the conclusion of the project but will NOT advance funds. All receipts must be uploaded online. Emailed and/or mailed receipts will not be accepted.
Your local Regional Council member; your region can be found here: https://www. commerce. nd.
gov/community-services/low-income-programs/community-development-block-grant-cdbg/regional-councils The Department of Commerce point of contact for this grant is Nicolette Blumler , 701-328-7924. Nine communities awarded $2. 5 million in Rural Catalyst Grants Nine rural North Dakota communities will receive a combined $2.
5 million through the Rural Catalyst Grant program to advance locally driven projects that strengthen community vitality and economic resilience. From fire department upgrades to healthcare expansion and grocery store development, these initiatives reflect the power of community-led solutions. The 2026 grant recipients and award amounts are: Bowman County Fire Department – $500,000 City of Harvey, SMP St.
Alosius Oncology Center – $500,000 Red River Regional Council, Reylick Project – $500,000 City of Walhalla, Outdoor aquatic facility – $465,526 City of Mooreton, residential housing development redevelopment project – $350,821 City of Lakota – Satellite health clinic project $104,633 City of Edinburg, Market on Main Grocery Store – $49,652 Roosevelt Custer Regional Council, Home on the Range – $25,000 South Central Dakota Regional Council, James River Senior Citizens Center, Inc. – $4,368 This marks the final round of funding under SB 2390, with each award matched by local investment to ensure sustainability.
Based on current listing details, eligibility includes: Small communities across North Dakota, with a focus on towns with populations under 1500. Projects should address community development, health and wellness, and essential business reopening. Applicants should confirm final requirements in the official notice before submission.
Current published award information indicates Up to $500,000 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.
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