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Find similar grantsSection 405: National Priority Safety Program is sponsored by National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA). This program provides grant funding to states to address selected national priorities for reducing highway deaths and injuries.
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Section 405: National Priority Safety Program | Governors Highway Safety Association Section 405: National Priority Safety Program Section 405 is the National Priority Safety Program, which provides grant funding to address selected national priorities for reducing highway deaths and injuries.
History and Administration Under the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (IIJA), which was enacted in November 2021, Section 405 is the National Priority Safety Program, which provides grant funding to address selected national priorities for reducing highway deaths and injuries.
Previously authorized under MAP-21 and the FAST Act, the IIJA made a number of substantive changes to many of the grants, removed the Graduated Driver Licensing grant and added two new grants: Preventing Roadside Deaths and Driver and Officer Safety Education. All are administered by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) at the federal level and the State Highway Safety Offices (SHSOs) at the state level.
Each program is authorized as a separate section or tier within Section 405, and each has its own eligibility criteria. States must satisfy the eligibility criteria of each tier in order to receive funding for that tier. States must submit their Section 405 applications on August 1 as part of the annual grant application process.
Section 405(b): Occupant Protection 13% of Section 405 funds are earmarked for occupant protection incentive grants. States have to provide a 20% matching share. There are two types of grants: high belt use (90%+) and low belt use (below 90%).
High belt use states must have an occupant protection plan, participate in national mobilizations, have an active network of child restraint inspection stations and maintain a sufficient number of Child Passenger Safety (CPS) technicians. Low belt use states have to satisfy these criteria plus three out of six more. High belt use states now may use up to 100% of their funds for any purpose under Section 402.
However, all states must use 10% of funding to implement programs to provide child passenger safety programs among low-income and underserved populations.
Section 405(c): State Traffic Safety Information System Improvements Section 405(d): Impaired Driving Countermeasures 53% of Section 405 funds are earmarked for impaired driving incentive grants to reduce the risk of driving under the influence of alcohol, drugs or a combination of the two. States have to provide a 20% matching share. All states receive funds under this tier.
They are divided into low-, medium-, and high-range states based on the most recent three years of Fatality Analysis Reporting System (FARS) data. Low-range states do not have to satisfy specific eligibility requirements. The requirements increase for the other two types of states.
Low-range states have more flexibility in the use of funds than medium- or high-range states and may use up to 50% of the funds for any Section 402 purpose, in addition to qualifying by having an interlock program. The IIJA clarified the authorization to use grant funds for a range of impaired driving testing, training and technologies. 3% of this funding is earmarked for states with a compliant 24/7 sobriety program.
The state must have a law that requires all individuals convicted of driving while intoxicated to receive restricted driving privileges for at least 30 days, and must have a law or program that authorizes a local or statewide 24/7 sobriety program. 12% of this tier is earmarked for ignition interlock incentive funds.
States are eligible for grants if they have an all-offender ignition interlock law, a specific requirement for interlock use after conviction, or laws requiring interlock use for test refusal and compliance-based removal requirements. The law imposes certain limited exceptions. Eligible states can use these funds for any purpose under 402.
States can qualify with both provisions and receive a total of 15% of available funding. Section 405(e): Distracted Driving 8. 5% of Section 405 funds are earmarked for distracted driving incentive grants.
States that include distracted driving awareness in their driver's license examination are eligible for 50% of funding. States that enact either a prohibition on texting, a prohibition on handheld cell phone use or ban of the use of all electronic devices for all drivers aged 18 and younger, are eligible for the other 50%. However, states with secondary enforcement laws would only receive half of the funding.
A state that enacts and enforces a law that prohibits a driver from viewing a personal wireless communications device is eligible for 25% of funding. Eligible states can use 50% of the funds for Section 402 purposes and 50% for distracted driving purposes. States with distracted driving data that conforms to the most recent MMUCC to use 75% of the funds for Section 402 purposes.
$5 million of these funds are earmarked for a national media campaign on distracted driving. Section 405(f): Motorcyclist Safety 1. 5% of Section 405 funds are earmarked for motorcyclist safety incentive grants.
A state must satisfy two out of seven eligibility criteria to receive funds, and the use of funds is limited to only certain motorcycle training and awareness programs. States with the lowest 25% of motorcycle deaths per 10,000 registrations based on the most recent calendar year for which final FARS data are available are allowed to use 50% of their grant funds for any Section 402 purpose.
Section 405(g): Nonmotorized Safety 7% of Section 405 funds are earmarked for nonmotorized safety incentive grants. States would have to provide a 20% matching share. States are eligible if the annual combined non-motorized fatalities in the state exceed 15% of the total annual crash fatalities in the state using the most recently available final data from NHTSA’s FARS.
The IIJA provides that eligible states may use grant funds for training law enforcement, enforcement mobilizations, public education and awareness programs, and collecting traffic safety data. Section 405(h): Preventing Roadside Deaths 1% of Section 405 funds are earmarked for incentive grants to prevent roadside deaths. States must provide a 20% matching share.
A state would be eligible for this grant if it submits a plan describing how they would use funds. States may use grant funds for purchasing e-digital alerting technology, educating the public about roadside safety, law enforcement and traffic safety data collection. Section 405(i): Driver and Officer Safety Education 1.
5% of Section 405 funds are earmarked for driver and officer safety education incentive grants. States must provide a 20% matching share. A state would be eligible for this grant if it either enacts a qualifying law or adopts a program, or if the state demonstrates that it is taking meaningful steps towards such an effort.
States may use grant funds to implement programs to train drivers and police officers on the safe conduct of traffic stops. A state that is taking meaningful steps toward such and effort may only receive 50% of funding.
NHTSA Grants Funding Table (FY 2024) NHTSA Highway Safety Grants Resources Guide Bicyclists, Pedestrians & Micromobility Term raw: GHSA Reports | Slug: ghsa-reports Transitioning from Reactive Planning to a Fast Loop A new report from the Governors Highway Safety Association and Cambridge Mobile Telematics explains how State Highway Safety Offices (SHSOs) can leverage telematics-based risk assessments to strengthen their Triennial Highway Safety Plans (THSPs) and save more lives.
Term raw: GHSA Reports | Slug: ghsa-reports Pedestrian Traffic Fatalities by State: 2025 Preliminary Data (January-June) Drivers struck and killed 3,024 people walking in the United States in the first six months of 2025, down 10. 9% from the year before – the largest annual decline since GHSA began tracking pedestrian deaths 15 years ago.
Term raw: News Releases | Slug: news-releases U.S. Pedestrian Deaths Fall 11% in First Half of 2025, According to New GHSA Research Drivers struck and killed 3,024 people walking during the first half of 2025, an average of 16 per day, according to a new data analysis from GHSA. That is an 11% decline from the same period the year before – the largest drop since GHSA began tracking pedestrian fatalities 15 years ago.
According to the current listing, eligibility includes: State governments. Confirm the full requirements in the official notice before applying.
Section 405: National Priority Safety Program is funded by National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA). Verify program details on the funder's official page before applying.
Start from the official opportunity page linked in this listing — it carries the sponsor's submission instructions.
Vulnerable Road User (VRU) Education, Outreach, and Engagement Projects (via PennDOT Behavioral Highway Safety Grants) is sponsored by National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) administered by Pennsylvania Department of Transportation (PennDOT). This grant focuses on providing education regarding Pennsylvania's pedestrian and bicycle laws in communities with a high incidence of vulnerable road user crashes. Projects should also address emerging issues and incorporate education on new or recent legislation affecting VRUs.
Community Traffic Safety Grant Program (administered through state offices of traffic safety) is sponsored by National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA). These grants, funded by NHTSA and administered through state offices of traffic safety, support community-based traffic safety initiatives. This can include pedestrian safety improvements and youth traffic safety education.
Empowering Communities Grants is sponsored by PPL Foundation. These grants enrich the overall vitality of the community through programs that protect the environment and improve people's lives. Focus areas include environmental stewardship and education. Projects involving native plant pollinator habitat restoration within the Schuylkill watershed could align with environmental stewardship goals.
Brown Girl Jane x SheaMoisture Grant is a grant from SheaMoisture and Brown Girl Jane that funds Black and woman-owned beauty and wellness businesses in the United States. Part of SheaMoisture's broader commitment to addressing racial inequality through its $1 million annual giving fund, this program specifically supports founders at the intersection of Black and women-owned entrepreneurship in the beauty and wellness sector. Applicants must be based in the U.S. and have operated their business for at least one year. Grants range from $10,000 to $25,000. Check the SheaMoisture Fund website for the current open cycle, as deadlines vary by cohort.
The Department of Transportation's FY26 SBIR Phase I solicitation opened June 3 and closes July 7 — a 34-day window across FHWA, FRA, FTA, NHTSA, and PHMSA topics ranging from AI trip planning to thermochromic hazmat coatings to high-voltage battery discharge for rail. Awards land in September. The strategy for which topic to chase depends on infrastructure most teams underestimate.
Read articleU.S. DOT's FY26 SBIR Phase I solicitation opens June 3 and closes July 7 with awards in September. Ten topics across FHWA, FRA, FTA, NHTSA, and PHMSA at $200K–$300K each. Why the topic distribution telegraphs DOT's three-year R&D priorities and how niche specialists can win against generalist competitors.
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