Title 15 › Chapter CHAPTER 63— - TECHNOLOGY INNOVATION › § 3704
Create a program starting in fiscal year 1999 called the Experimental Program to Stimulate Competitive Technology to help States that have gotten less federal research and development money than most States. The Secretary must work with State committees under the National Science Foundation, State science and technology councils, and small technology businesses. The Secretary can give grants or make cooperative agreements for technology research and development, moving university research into use, spreading and deploying technology, and building stronger tech capacity through consortia of small tech firms, industry, universities, and State or local development agencies. Awards must be made competitively based on merit. Non‑Federal partners must pay at least 25 percent of project costs (except for planning). The Secretary must set goals each State must meet, and a State that meets all goals stops being eligible. The Secretary should also try to coordinate this program with other Department of Commerce programs. Create a separate Minority Serving Institution Digital and Wireless Technology Opportunity Program to award grants, cooperative agreements, and contracts to eligible minority‑serving institutions so they can get and use digital and wireless networking technology to improve education. Institutions must apply and follow published rules. An advisory council and review panels will help review applications, and reviewers must avoid conflicts of interest. An institution that receives more than $2,500,000 cannot get another award under this program. Funds can be used for equipment and networks, training and faculty development, teacher education, technical assistance, and improving research and instruction. Awardees must hold an annual meeting and give yearly reports. Awardees must provide non‑Federal matching funds equal to 25 percent of the award or $500,000, whichever is less; the Secretary must waive this match for institutions with no endowment or with an endowment under $50,000,000. Not later than 6 months after August 14, 2008, the Secretary must hire the National Academy of Public Administration to assess the program every 3 years during the 10‑year period after August 14, 2008, covering program effectiveness, access to technology, review procedures, and recommendations; each assessment must go to Congress with the Secretary’s response. Definitions used: "digital and wireless networking technology" = computer and communications gear and software for sending digital information; "eligible institution" = the listed types of minority‑serving institutions (Part B institutions, certain other Title 20 categories, Hispanic‑serving, Tribal Colleges, Alaska Native‑serving, Native Hawaiian‑serving, Predominately Black, Native American‑serving nontribal, Asian American and Native American Pacific Islander‑serving, and other minority institutions with needy students); other terms (institution of higher education, local educational agency, minority business, minority individual, State, State educational agency) are defined elsewhere in Title 20 or the statute.
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Commerce and Trade — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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15 U.S.C. § 3704
Title 15 — Commerce and Trade
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73