Title 40 › Subtitle SUBTITLE IV— - APPALACHIAN REGIONAL DEVELOPMENT › Chapter CHAPTER 143— - APPALACHIAN REGIONAL COMMISSION › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER II— - FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE › § 14321
The Appalachian Regional Commission can give money to help local development districts pay administrative costs, with limits on how much they cover. Normally the grant can pay up to 50% of those costs. If a district covers a county (or part of a county) that is labeled "distressed" under section 14526, the grant can cover up to 75%. If it covers a county labeled "at-risk" under section 14526, the grant can cover up to 70%. State agencies certified as local development districts can get those administrative grants for no more than 3 years from the first grant. Local contributions can be cash or things like space, equipment, or services. The Commission can also fund up to 2 years of help to strengthen state planning, and it can pay for research, studies, training, technical help, demonstrations, and related construction. For projects, money from the Commission usually may pay no more than 50% of total cost. For projects in distressed counties up to 80% may be paid, and for at-risk counties up to 70%. The Commission can make discretionary grants that ignore those limits for major regional efforts, special opportunities, or emergency economic distress. Each year, discretionary grants are capped at 10% of amounts appropriated under section 14703, except grants for COVID-19 economic distress are not counted in that cap. Grants can come from Commission appropriations alone or with other federal or nonfederal funds. Federal agencies, including the Secretary of Energy and EPA, must help when the Federal Cochairman asks. No more than $3,000,000 per year may be used for energy-related demonstrations and no more than $2,500,000 per year for indigenous arts and crafts demonstrations. The Commission and grant recipients must keep full records and make them available for audits by the President, the Comptroller General, and the Commission.
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Public Buildings, Property, and Works — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
40 U.S.C. § 14321
Title 40 — Public Buildings, Property, and Works
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73