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Urban Area Security Initiative (UASI) Grant is a grant from the Department of Homeland Security and FEMA that funds investments to build and sustain capabilities in high-threat, high-density urban areas to prevent terrorism and prepare for catastrophic events. The program supports the 32 core capabilities outlined in the National Preparedness Goal, including prevention, protection, mitigation, response, and recovery.
LETPA investments must align with capability targets from the THIRA process and gaps identified in the State Preparedness Report. Eligibility is typically limited to state and local government agencies within DHS-designated urban areas. The Kansas City Urban Area was eligible for $1,476,785 in FY24.
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Urban Area Security Initiative Federal Fiscal Year 2025 – Regular Projects (UASI-R) Urban Area Security Initiative Federal Fiscal Year 2025 – Regular Projects (UASI-R) The Public Safety Office (PSO) is soliciting applications for projects that support state and local efforts to prevent terrorism and other catastrophic events and prepare for the threats and hazards that pose the greatest risk to the security of Texas citizens.
PSO provides funding to implement investments that build, sustain, and deliver the 32 core capabilities essential to achieving a secure and resilient state. The purpose of this solicitation is to assist high-threat, high-density Urban Areas in efforts to build and sustain the capabilities necessary to prevent terrorist attacks and support critical prevention and protection activities.
All LETPA investments must be consistent with capability targets set during the Threat and Hazard Identification and Risk Assessment (THIRA) process, and gaps identified in the State Preparedness Report (SPR).
The Urban Area Security Initiative (UASI) is intended to support investments that improve the ability of jurisdictions to: Prevent a threatened or an actual act of terrorism; and/or Protect its citizens, residents, visitors, and assets against the greatest threats and hazards.
Mitigate the loss of life and property by lessening the impact of future catastrophic events; Respond quickly to save lives, protect property and the environment, and meet basic human needs in the aftermath of a catastrophic incident; and/or Recover through a focus on the timely restoration, strengthening, accessibility and revitalization of infrastructure, housing, and a sustainable economy, as well as the health, social, cultural, historic, and environmental fabric of communities affected by a catastrophic incident.
Many activities which support the achievement of target capabilities related to terrorism preparedness may simultaneously support enhanced preparedness for other hazards unrelated to acts of terrorism. However, all UASI projects must assist grantees in achieving target capabilities related to preventing or thwarting an initial or follow-on terrorist attack.
Federal funds are authorized under Section 2002 of the Homeland Security Act of 2002, as amended (Pub. L. No. 107-296), (6 U.S.C.
603). Urban Area Security Initiative (UASI) funds are made available through a Congressional appropriation to the United States Department of Homeland Security (DHS). All awards are subject to the availability of appropriated federal funds and any modifications or additional requirements that may be imposed by law.
1. Eligible applicants must be located within a designated high-risk Urban Area receiving a FY 2025 federal allocation based upon an analysis of the relative risk of terrorism faced by the 100 most populous metropolitan statistical areas in the United States. Most recently, these areas in Texas include the Dallas/Fort Worth/Arlington Area, the Houston Area, the Austin Area and the San Antonio Area.
2. Applications from the following entities will be considered*: Regional councils of governments; Units of local government; Universities or Colleges. *Note: All applicant entities must have a mission to serve in an Urban Area operational role or be partnering on plans, training, and exercises within the Urban Area 1.
Applicants must contact the applicable Urban Area Working Group (UAWG) regarding their application. 2. Each UAWG holds its own application planning workshops, workgroups, and/or subcommittees and facilitates application prioritization for certain programs within its area.
Failure to comply with requirements imposed by the UAWG will render an application ineligible. 3. Upon approval of the UAWG, eligible applicants must access PSO’s eGrants website at https://eGrants.
gov.texas. gov to register and continue the application process. Funding Announcement Release Online System Opening Date Final Date to Submit and Certify an Application Earliest Project Start Date Projects selected for funding must begin between September 1, 2025 and March 1, 2026, and expire on or before August 31, 2027.
Additional guidelines are below: 1. PSO prefers project periods be structured so that projects that include grant-funded salaries and/or annual recurring costs do not overlap with the project periods of previous or future grant awards with the same costs. 2.
PSO prefers project periods be structured so that projects that include grant-funded salaries and/or annual recurring costs are on a 12 or 24-month grant cycle/performance period. 3. PSO prefers project periods for equipment only projects are generally be awarded a 6 to 12-month grant period.
4. PSO will consider proposed start or end dates falling outside of these guidelines on a case-by-case basis. Grantees must comply with standards applicable to this fund source cited in the Texas Grant Management Standards ( TxGMS ), Federal Uniform Grant Guidance , and all statutes, requirements, and guidelines applicable to this funding.
Eligible Activities and Costs 1. Grant projects must be consistent with the program purpose stated above and must be submitted in support of one of the approved urban area investment categories. Contact the applicable Urban Area Working Group (UAWG) for an updated list of investment categories.
2. The Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) has established National Priority Areas (NPA) for the Homeland Security Grant Program and requires designated Urban Areas to dedicate at least 30% of allocated funds to projects under the NPAs. The NPAs and prescribed amounts for each NPA are noted below.
PSO anticipates these priorities will remain in place for the 2025 UASI grant cycle. Applicants are encouraged to submit projects under these National Priority Areas when the primary core capability addressed is consistent with a National Priority Area description below. Note: The National Priority Areas are subject to change without notice upon release of the federal Notice of Funding Opportunity (NOFO).
The required National Priority Areas and examples of projects include: Community Preparedness and Resilience (NPA) Projects supporting training and equipping regional and local Citizen Corps Programs (CCP) including Community Emergency Response Teams (CERT).
Provide continuity training, such as FEMA’s Organizations Preparing for Emergency Needs training to faith-based organizations, local businesses, and community-based organizations including homeless shelters, food pantries, nonprofit medical providers, and senior care facilities to bolster their resilience to all hazard.
Community Mapping: identify community resources and characteristics in order to identify gaps in resources, identify hazards and vulnerabilities, and inform action to promote resilience.
Combating Domestic Violent Extremism (NPA) - Core Capabilities: Interdiction & Disruption; Screening, Search and Detection; Physical Protective Measures; Intelligence and Information Sharing; Planning; Public Information and Warning; Operational Coordination; Risk management for protection programs and activities Sharing and leveraging intelligence and information, including open-source analysis Execution and management of threat assessment programs to identify, evaluate, and analyze indicators and behaviors indicative of domestic violent extremists.
Information and Intelligence Sharing/Cooperation (NPA) (Note: Applicants should submit Fusion Center projects under the UASI-Law Enforcement Terrorism Prevention Activities (LETPA) solicitation.)
- Core Capability: Intelligence and Information Sharing Identifying, developing, providing, and sharing timely, accurate, and actionable information, data, or knowledge among government or private sector entities to include information sharing with all DHS components, fusion centers, and other entities designated by DHS. Cooperation with DHS officials and other entities designated by DHS in intelligence, threat recognition and analysis.
Joint training and planning with DHS officials and other entities designated by DHS Enabling interdiction and disruption of terrorist activity through enhanced understanding and recognition of pre-operational activity and other crimes that may be precursors or indicators of terrorist activity.
Paying for personnel or contractors to serve as qualified intelligence analysts and/or to participate in information, investigative, and intelligence sharing activities specifically related to homeland security. Assessing threat information to inform continued prevention operations and ongoing response activities. Implementing and maintaining suspicious activity reporting initiatives.
Implementing or sustaining public information and warning systems to relay information regarding terrorism threats.
Protection of Soft Targets/Crowded Places (NPA) - Core Capabilities: Operational Coordination; Public Information and Warning; Intelligence and Information Sharing; Interdiction and Disruption; Screening, Search, and Detection; Access Control/Identity Verification; Physical Protective Measures; Risk Management for Protection Programs Implementing target hardening and other measures associated with increased security to mitigate risks at places where people gather, such as schools, workplaces, entertainment venues, transportation nodes, and houses of worship.
Assessing critical infrastructure vulnerabilities and interdependencies, particularly those involving multiple sites and/or sectors. Planning, training, exercises, equipment, and modeling enabling responsible jurisdictions to mitigate threats to and vulnerabilities of critical infrastructure facilities, assets, networks, and systems. Analyzing critical infrastructure threats and information sharing with private sector partners.
Enhancing public awareness, education and communications, and increasing reporting of suspicious activities related to critical infrastructure. Enhancing Elections Security (NPA, Required to fund at least 3%) - Core Capabilities: Cybersecurity; Intelligence and Information Sharing; Planning; Long-term Vulnerability Reduction; Situational Assessment; Infrastructure Systems Physical security planning support.
Physical/site security measures – e.g., locks, shatter proof glass, alarms, etc. for elections infrastructure. General election security navigator support. Cybersecurity risk assessments, training, and planning for elections systems.
Projects that address vulnerabilities identified in cybersecurity risk assessments of elections systems. Iterative backups, encrypted backups, network segmentation, software to monitor/scan, and endpoint protection. Distributed Denial of Service protection.
Migrating online services to the “. gov” internet domain. Online harassment and targeting prevention services.
Public awareness/preparedness campaigns discussing election security and integrity measures Enhancing Cybersecurity (NPA) - Core Capabilities: Cybersecurity; Intelligence and Information Sharing Assessing organizational cybersecurity risk and potential risk. Creating or updating strategic cybersecurity plans and related response and recovery plans and exercises.
Developing approaches for identifying, authenticating, and authorizing individuals to access an organization’s assets and systems. Purchasing software such as anti-virus, anti-malware, continuous monitoring, encryption, enhanced remote authentication, patch management or distributed denial of service protection.
Purchasing hardware such as intrusion detection systems, firewalls, additional servers, routers or switches for the purpose of reducing cybersecurity vulnerabilities. Implementing awareness and training measures. Establishing anomalous activity detection and system/asset monitoring.
Developing or sustaining response activities, including information sharing or other mitigation efforts. Conducting other cyber-related activities derived from a prioritized, risk management plan and consistent with objectives of the Texas Cybersecurity Framework (TXCSF) or other comparable framework. 3.
Interoperable communications projects must enhance current capabilities or address capability gaps identified by the Texas Department of Public Safety (DPS) or Texas Interoperable Communications Coalition (TxICC) in either the Texas Statewide Communications Interoperability Plan (SCIP) or DPS Report on Interoperable Communications to the Texas Legislature.
Notes: Projects to increase voice communications interoperability for counties with the lowest interoperability levels are preferred over other types of communications projects. If a project is funded (after an agency receives the grant award from the PSO), the planned expenditures must be submitted to and receive validation from the Statewide Interoperability Coordinator (SWIC) prior to purchase .
Radios purchased must: a) follow the Statewide Radio ID Management Plan; b) be programmed following the Statewide Interoperability Channel Plan, and c) include encryption options capable of Advanced Encryption Standard (AES) encryption, IF encryption is being purchased. 4.
Cybersecurity projects must enhance current cyber-related activities or address cyber-related capability gaps derived from a prioritized, risk management decision that is consistent with the objectives of the Texas Cyber Security Framework (TXCSF) or other cybersecurity guidance and priorities established by your UAWG. Program-Specific Requirements 1.
All capabilities being built or sustained must have a clear link to one or more Core Capabilities in the National Preparedness Goal. 2. Many capabilities which support terrorism preparedness simultaneously support preparedness for other hazards.
Grantees must demonstrate this dual-use quality for any activities implemented under this program that are not explicitly focused on terrorism preparedness. Activities implemented under UASI must support terrorism preparedness by building or sustaining capabilities that relate to the prevention of, protection from, mitigation of, response to, and recovery from terrorism. 3.
Grantees are required to maintain adoption and implementation of the National Incident Management System (NIMS). The NIMS uses a systematic approach to integrate the best existing processes and methods into a unified national framework for incident management across all homeland security activities including prevention, protection, response, mitigation, and recovery.
Grantees must use standardized resource management concepts for resource typing, credentialing, and an inventory to facilitate the effective identification, dispatch, deployment, tracking and recovery of resources. 4.
Cities and counties must have a current emergency management plan or be a legally established member of an inter-jurisdictional emergency management program with a plan on file with the Texas Department of Public Safety, Texas Division of Emergency Management (TDEM). Plans must be maintained throughout the entire grant performance period.
If you have questions concerning your Emergency Management Plan (preparedness) level, contact your Emergency Management Coordinator (EMC) or your regional Council of Governments (COG). For questions concerning plan deficiencies, contact TDEM at tdem. plans@tdem.
texas. gov. 1. Local units of governments must comply with the Cybersecurity Training requirements described in Section 772.
012 and Section 2054. 5191 of the Texas Government Code. Local governments determined to not be in compliance with the cybersecurity requirements required by Section 2054.
5191 of the Texas Government Code are ineligible for OOG grant funds until the second anniversary of the date the local government is determined ineligible. Government entities must annually certify their compliance with the training requirements using the Cybersecurity Training Certification for State and Local Governments . A copy of the Training Certification must be uploaded to your eGrants application.
For more information or to access available training programs, visit the Texas Department of Information Resources Statewide Cybersecurity Awareness Training page. 2.
Entities receiving funds from PSO must be located in a county that has an average of 90% or above on both adult and juvenile dispositions entered into the computerized criminal history database maintained by the Texas Department of Public Safety (DPS) as directed in the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure, Chapter 66.
This disposition completeness percentage is defined as the percentage of arrest charges a county reports to DPS for which a disposition has been subsequently reported and entered into the computerized criminal history system.
Counties applying for grant awards from the Office of the Governor must commit that the county will report at least 90% of convictions within five business days to the Criminal Justice Information System at the Department of Public Safety. 3. Eligible applicants operating a law enforcement agency must be current on reporting complete UCR data and the Texas specific reporting mandated by 411.
042 TGC, to the Texas Department of Public Safety (DPS) for inclusion in the annual Crime in Texas (CIT) publication. To be considered eligible for funding, applicants must have submitted a full twelve months of accurate data to DPS for the most recent calendar year by the deadline(s) established by DPS.
Due to the importance of timely reporting, applicants are required to submit complete and accurate UCR data, as well as the Texas-mandated reporting, on a no less than monthly basis and respond promptly to requests from DPS related to the data submitted. 4. In accordance with Texas Government Code, Section 420.
034, any facility or entity that collects evidence for sexual assault or other sex offenses or investigates or prosecutes a sexual assault or other sex offense for which evidence has been collected, must participate in the statewide electronic tracking system developed and implemented by the Texas Department of Public Safety.
Visit DPS’s Sexual Assault Evidence Tracking Program website for more information or to set up an account to begin participating. Additionally, per Section 420. 042 "A law enforcement agency that receives evidence of a sexual assault or other sex offense...
shall submit that evidence to a public accredited crime laboratory for analysis no later than the 30th day after the date on which that evidence was received." A law enforcement agency in possession of a significant number of Sexual Assault Evidence Kits (SAEK) where the 30-day window has passed may be considered noncompliant. 5.
Eligible applicants must be registered in the federal System for Award Management (SAM) database and have an UEI (Unique Entity ID) number assigned to its agency (to get registered in the SAM database and request an UEI number, https://www. sam. gov/ .
Grant funds may not be used to support the unallowable costs listed in the Guide to Grants or any of the following unallowable costs: 1. inherently religious activities such as prayer, worship, religious instruction, or proselytization; 3. any portion of the salary of, or any other compensation for, an elected or appointed government official; 4.
vehicles or equipment for government agencies that are for general agency use and/or do not have a clear nexus to terrorism prevention, interdiction, and disruption (i.e. mobile data terminals, body cameras, in-car video systems, or radar units, etc. for officers assigned to routine patrol; general firefighting equipment or uniforms); 5.
weapons, ammunition, tasers, weaponized vehicles or explosives (exceptions may be granted when explosives are used for bomb squad training); 6. weapons accessories to include but not limited to optics/sights, ammunition pouches, slings, or other accessories designed for use with any firearms/weapon; 7. admission fees or tickets to any amusement park, recreational activity or sporting event; 8.
promotional items or gifts; 9. food, meals, beverages, or other refreshments, except for eligible per diem associated with grant-related travel or where pre-approved for working events; 10. membership dues for individuals; 11.
any expense or service that is readily available at no cost to the grant project; 12. any use of grant funds to replace (supplant) funds that have been budgeted for the same purpose through non-grant sources; 14. legal services for adult offenders; 15.
amateur radios and equipment, FMS radios, GMRS radios, or other radio equipment that is not P25 compliant; 16. riot equipment including but not limited to shields, batons, less-lethal ammunition, and grenades designed or intended for dispersing crowds; and 17. any other prohibition imposed by federal, state, or local law.
Application Screening: PSO will screen all applications to ensure that they meet the requirements included in the funding announcement. 1. The UAWG’s sub-committee(s) will prioritize all eligible applications based on state and UAWG priorities, the UAWG risk-informed methodology, cost, and program effectiveness.
2. PSO will accept priority listings that are approved by the UAWG’s executive committee. Final Decisions – All Projects: The executive director will consider UAWG rankings along with other factors and make all final funding decisions.
Other factors may include cost effectiveness, overall funds availability, reasonableness, or other relevant factors. PSO may not fund all applications or may only award part of the amount requested. In the event that funding requests exceed available funds, PSO may revise projects to address a more limited focus.
For more information, contact the eGrants help desk at eGrants@gov.texas. gov or (512) 463-1919. Contact the Office of the Governor (OOG) Contact the Office of the Governor (OOG) 1100 San Jacinto Blvd.
, Austin, Texas 78701 P. O. Box 12428, Austin, Texas 78711-2428 Public Safety Office (PSO)
Based on current listing details, eligibility includes: High-threat, high-density urban areas designated by DHS/FEMA. Eligibility is typically for state and local government agencies within these urban areas. Applicants should confirm final requirements in the official notice before submission.
Current published award information indicates Varies (Kansas City Urban Area was eligible for $1,476,785 in FY24) 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.
Federal grant success rates typically range from 10-30%, varying by agency and program. Build a strong proposal with clear objectives, measurable outcomes, and a well-justified budget to improve your chances.
Requirements vary by sponsor, but typically include a project narrative, budget justification, organizational capability statement, and key personnel CVs. Check the official notice for the complete list of required attachments.
Yes — AI tools like Granted can help research funders, draft proposal sections, and check compliance. However, always review and customize AI-generated content to reflect your organization's unique strengths and the specific requirements of the solicitation.
Review timelines vary by funder. Federal agencies typically take 3-6 months from submission to award notification. Foundation grants may be faster, often 1-3 months. Check the program's timeline in the official solicitation for specific dates.
Many federal programs offer multi-year funding or allow competitive renewals. Check the official solicitation for continuation and renewal policies. Non-competing continuation applications are common for multi-year awards.
Targeted Violence and Terrorism Prevention (TVTP) Grant Program is sponsored by Department of Homeland Security (DHS)/FEMA, Center for Prevention Programs and Partnerships (CP3). This program provides funding to state, local, tribal, and territorial governments, nonprofits, and institutions of higher education to establish or enhance capabilities to prevent targeted violence and terrorism. It focuses on developing behavioral threat assessment teams, creating public awareness campaigns, and establishing prevention programs.
The Transit Security Grant Program (TSGP) is a grant from the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and FEMA that funds public transportation systems seeking to protect transit infrastructure from terrorism threats. The program supports security enhancements for intra-city bus systems, ferries, and all forms of passenger rail, enabling transit agencies to identify vulnerabilities, implement security improvements, and build resilience against terrorism and other security risks. Funds may be used for security planning, training, exercises, and capital improvements. Eligible applicants are public transportation systems including intra-city bus operators, ferry operators, and passenger rail systems in the United States. Total program funding is $83,700,000.
Assistance to Firefighters Grant (AFG) Program is sponsored by Department of Homeland Security - FEMA. The Assistance to Firefighters Grant (AFG) Program provides financial assistance directly to eligible fire departments, nonaffiliated emergency medical service (EMS) organizations, and State Fire Training Academies (SFTAs). The goal is to equip and train emergency personnel, enhance operational efficiencies, foster interoperability, and support community resilience. Reimbursement for grant writing fees is possible if included in the application budget and competitively procured.
Assistance to Firefighters Grant (AFG) Program is sponsored by Department of Homeland Security (DHS) / Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA). The AFG Program provides critically needed resources to equip and train emergency personnel, enhance operational efficiencies, foster interoperability, and support community resilience. It funds activities such as training, equipment (including communication devices like radios, pagers, and mobile data terminals), personal protective equipment (PPE), wellness and fitness initiatives, and modifications to facilities.
Targeted Violence and Terrorism Prevention (TVTP) Grant Program is sponsored by U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Center for Prevention Programs and Partnerships (CP3) / Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA). This program provides funding for state, local, tribal, and territorial governments; nonprofits; and institutions of higher education to establish or enhance capabilities to prevent targeted violence and terrorism. It supports the development of sustainable, multidisciplinary prevention capabilities in local communities, piloting innovative prevention approaches, and identifying prevention best practices. Behavioral threat assessment and management (BTAM) is an evidence-based and systematic process to identify, inquire, assess, and manage potential threats.