Title 29 › Chapter CHAPTER 29— - WORKERS TECHNOLOGY SKILL DEVELOPMENT › § 2704
The Secretary of Labor must give grants, after consulting the Secretary of Commerce and if money is available, to eligible groups to carry out the goals in section 2702. Grants can last up to six years. To get a grant, an organization must be a nonprofit (or a group of nonprofits), send an application with the information the Secretary asks for including what it will do with the money, and provide non‑Federal matching money at the required levels. Grant money must be used for things like giving technical help to workers, unions, employers, and state agencies to find and use advanced workplace technologies and practices; researching new technologies and practices that help workers’ skills, pay, job security, and link to long‑term company performance while fitting community and environmental needs; and making and sharing training programs and materials that teach these practices and encourage labor‑management cooperation and worker involvement. The recipient’s non‑Federal share must equal 15% of the grant in year 1, 20% in year 2, 33% in year 3, 40% in year 4, and 50% in years 5 and 6. The Department must create ways to judge how well the grants work and must report those findings to Congress every two years, starting no later than two years after October 20, 1994.
Full Legal Text
Labor — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Reference
Citation
29 U.S.C. § 2704
Title 29 — Labor
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73