Summary:
Meyers Nave’s Maximizing Your Stimulus Series: Part I
Don’t Get Caught in the Red Tape
California may receive as much as $80 billion in federal stimulus money under
the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA). The act sets a goal of allocating
50 percent of funds to projects that can be initiated by approximately mid-June
2009.
Given the tight timeframe for allocating such a large portion of the ARRA funds,
local governments are wise to act now. The red tape begins before you apply
for funding, and doesn’t end until the project is complete. In our new
series on Maximizing Your Stimulus, we’ll be walking you through
the process of obtaining ARRA funding. In this alert, we cover the steps up
to and including applying for funding.
Before applying for funding, public agencies and contractors must complete
several registrations. First, you must make an application for a Data Universal
Number System (DUNS) number. The White House provides a guide
to obtaining (or checking whether your organization already has obtained) a
DUNS number. Second, you must register with the Central Contractor Registry
(CCR). The CCR Website (http://www.ccr.gov/Default.aspx) provides detailed registration
instructors for both contractors and grantees.
After you have completed these registrations (it generally takes about 24 hours
for your CCR registration to be validated) you can begin applying for grants
through Grants.gov,
the central clearinghouse for Federal grants. You should note that some grants
are currently being processed through alternate systems, due to heavy demand
on Grants.gov created by the ARRA; carefully read the submission instructions
on all grants listed on Grants.gov.
You can search and browse for funding opportunities on Grants.gov using a number
of criteria, including category and agency. There is a separate search section
for ARRA opportunities. When we searched recently, more than 70 opportunities
were listed, including funding for law enforcement agencies to create and preserve
jobs and an opportunity for governmental and private agencies to create environmental
job training projects that will facilitate the assessment, remediation or preparation
of brownfields sites.
Next in our series on Maximizing Your Stimulus, we’ll be discussing
several requirements for projects funded using ARRA funds, including requirements
that materials be American-made and that the local chief executive or mayor
certify the project. Watch for these alerts in the coming week. Also, our Sacramento
clients are invited to the complimentary Maximizing Your Stimulus seminar on
May 13. Check the Meyers Nave Website for details and future dates/locations
of the seminar.
If you have questions about how you can get your public project off the ground
with ARRA funds, please contact Ben Reyes,
Sam Sperry or Ed
Grutzmacher at Meyers Nave. As our experts on the ARRA, they can answer
your questions and direct you to additional resources. Reach them at 510.808.2000.
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