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Alaska Native Organization Comanagement Grant Program

This program provides funding to Alaska Native Organizations and Tribes for projects that conserve and manage marine mammals essential to their subsistence practices and cultural heritage.

$1,500,000
Closed
Grant Description

The Alaska Native Organization Comanagement Grant Program, administered by the National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), aims to support the conservation and co-management of marine mammals vital to Alaska Native subsistence practices. This initiative stems from the statutory authority granted by 16 U.S.C. §1388, which permits federal assistance to Alaska Native Organizations (ANOs) and Tribes for this purpose. NMFS acknowledges the centrality of marine mammals in Alaska Native cultures and seeks to fund projects that contribute to their conservation, recovery, and sustainable use through cooperative agreements. The program’s primary objectives are to promote local involvement in marine mammal science and management, ensure the sustainable subsistence use of these species, and foster conservation and recovery efforts. Key priorities include harvest monitoring, integration of Indigenous knowledge, subsistence use management, collaborative research, public education and outreach, cooperative management with NMFS, and support for food security amidst environmental changes. Proposals must align with at least one of these priorities and clearly outline how proposed actions contribute to these goals. Funding may support a broad range of activities such as subsistence harvest monitoring, species-specific research projects, public outreach campaigns, educational programming, and revision or development of co-management agreements. Projects must pertain to marine mammals under NMFS jurisdiction. Activities involving species managed by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service are not eligible. The program anticipates approximately $1.5 million in total funding for fiscal year 2025, with award periods ranging from one to three years. Individual award amounts will depend on proposal content and available appropriations. Eligible applicants are limited to Alaska Native Organizations or Federally recognized Tribes with existing co-management agreements with NMFS. These agreements must be in place at the time of application. ANOs without such agreements can only participate as sub-recipients. No cost-sharing or matching is required. All proposals must include documentation verifying eligibility, such as a signed co-management agreement, legal status verification, organizational by-laws, and policies and procedures. Applications must be submitted through Grants.gov by 7:59 PM Alaska Standard Time on April 2, 2025. The application package includes several federal forms (SF-424 series, CD-511, and others), a project narrative of no more than 27 pages, a budget narrative, and several appendices including resumes, letters of support, and NEPA questionnaires. Successful applicants will be notified in June 2025, and projects may start as early as September 1, 2025. Proposals are evaluated based on relevance to program goals, technical merit, project management, and budget justification. Review involves an initial screening for completeness, followed by a panel review and final selection by the NOAA Regional Administrator. While proposals are ranked by score, the selecting official retains discretion based on factors such as geographic distribution, institutional diversity, and prior performance.

Funding Details

Award Range

$15,000 - $1,500,000

Total Program Funding

Not specified

Number of Awards

Not specified

Matching Requirement

No

Eligibility

Eligible Applicants

Native American tribal organizations

Additional Requirements

Eligible applicants are limited to Alaska Native Organizations (ANOs) (defined as a group designated by law or formally chartered which represents or consists of Indians, Aleuts, or Eskimos residing in Alaska) with an established marine mammal agreement for comanagement with NOAA Fisheries. In a case where an ANO has authorized another entity to serve as the fiduciary agent of the organization, a copy of the agreement between the ANO and fiduciary agent must be provided with the application. This agreement must outline a thorough description of the relationship and responsibilities of both parties. The ANO will be listed as the lead entity/organization on the application as reflected in the agreement. Any ANO not holding an existing agreement for co-management with NMFS may collaborate with and be listed on the application as a sub-recipient under an eligible applicant. The legal status of the ANO must be identified (see verification below) and a copy of the sub-recipient agreement between the ANO and sub-recipient must be provided with the application. This agreement must outline a thorough description of the relationship and responsibilities of both parties. Eligibility must be met at the time of application.

Geographic Eligibility

All

Key Dates

Application Opens

December 26, 2024

Application Closes

April 2, 2025

Contact Information

Grantor

US Department of Commerce (DOC NOAA - ERA Production)

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Categories
Environment
Natural Resources