Title 42 › Chapter CHAPTER 16— - NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION › § 1862p–9
The Director of the National Science Foundation must keep running EPSCoR (the Experimental Program to Stimulate Competitive Research). EPSCoR began in 1979 to help States and jurisdictions that get little Federal research money. Congress found that funding is very concentrated: 28 States and jurisdictions together get about 12 percent of all NSF research funding, and each of those places gets only a fraction of 1 percent each year. EPSCoR helps those places build research and education plans, strengthen labs and people, form partnerships, and be more competitive for Federal research grants. The program must grow as NSF funding grows. An EPSCoR Interagency Coordinating Committee, led by NSF, must coordinate EPSCoR across Federal agencies. It must align agency and State goals, make measures to track progress, run cross-agency evaluations, set up workshops and mentoring, create new funding ideas to boost partnerships between EPSCoR and non-EPSCoR places, check how program officers run EPSCoR, and survey faculty about EPSCoR. The Committee must meet at least twice each fiscal year and send one report a year to Congress. Each Federal agency with EPSCoR must include in its budget request a description of strategy and recent awards (including totals by State, reviewer makeup, and partnerships) and an analysis of gains over the last 5 fiscal years. The NSF Director must hire the National Academy of Sciences to study how agencies run EPSCoR, how well the programs work, and make improvement recommendations. Agencies must also consider changes to solicitations, award types, monitoring, and evaluation to better build long-term research capacity, foster collaboration, reduce paperwork, and align metrics.
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The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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42 U.S.C. § 1862p–9
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73