Sentences with phrase «pot of grant money»

Not exact matches

In the past the pots of money were shared between the governor and legislature, many ended up as member item grants.
The waiver money, a matching grant program from the federal government that allows providers across the state to invest in new ways to provide and deliver care to their communities, is divided into several different pots of money.
One part of the initiative is a grants program funded at up to $ 6.75 million over 3 years, $ 6 million of it from NIH's Common Fund, a pot of money for cross-cutting projects.
These grants provide a modest pot of money to help returning scientists get started in their new positions.
The dysfunction stems from a Spanish peculiarity: In the national science budget, the government not only includes lump sums to public research institutes and competitive grants to research teams, but also a pot of money aimed at supporting companies, universities, and public research institutions with loans.
There's one pot of stimulus money we haven't talked about yet that pertains specifically to districts — the Investing in Innovation, or i3, grants.
First, because federal and state funds are often distributed through a variety of formula and restricted grant programs, schools are limited in how they can spend certain pots of money.
This third pot of cash also includes money for discretionary spending or, as it is categorized in the union's financial disclosure report, «contributions, gifts and grants
Among its provisions, Tillman's rewrite would require public school systems to share more pots of money with local charters, including sales tax revenues, gifts and grants and funds received for «indirect» costs.
While RttT seemed to get all of the publicity, another pot of money was almost as big — and it was spread among all states: $ 3 billion in school improvement grants aimed at fixing the schools that persistently rank in the bottom five percent in each state.
In 2010, the participating nations in the U.N. Framework Convention on Climate Change established the Green Climate Fund, or GCF, a pot of money that would be doled out to developing countries to fund, through grants or loans, specific projects aimed at addressing climate change.
The rider took effect beginning with the 2006 funding cycle, and the consequences were immediate: That year alone, more than 41,000 fewer women were provided with reproductive health care funded by three main pots of federal money — Title V (the Maternal & Child Health Block Grant), Title XX (the Social Services Block Grant), and Title X; together, the three provide services for women not eligible for Medicaid.
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