Title 42 › Chapter CHAPTER 163— - RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT, COMPETITION, AND INNOVATION › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER III— - NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION FOR THE FUTURE › Part Part C— - Broadening Participation › § 19014
The Director of the National Science Foundation must boost research funding and capacity in underfunded states and institutions through EPSCoR. The Director must try to meet these minimum funding targets to EPSCoR areas: 15.5% in fiscal year 2023, 16% in 2024, 16.5% in 2025, 17% in 2026, 18% in 2027, 19% in 2028, and 20% in 2029. For a second set of funds the targets are 16% in 2023, 18% in 2024, and 20% in 2025–2029. The Director must focus on things like building research infrastructure, scholarships and training, partnerships with stronger institutions, and special help for historically Black colleges and universities, Tribal Colleges or Universities, minority-serving institutions, and emerging research institutions. The Director may count a whole consortium award toward these targets if the lead is in an EPSCoR institution. The Director must keep current EPSCoR eligibility for five years from August 9, 2022, and report progress to Congress every year starting in fiscal year 2023. By December 31, 2026, the Director must send a detailed analysis of the effects of these rules, and by December 31, 2028 must report any changes to eligibility and options for helping low-funded nearby regions. The Director must also run competitive, merit-reviewed programs for institutions that are not, on average, in the top 100 for federal research spending over the prior three years. Awards must aim to grow student, faculty, and institutional research capacity. Applicants must say how they will keep activities going after the award and pick focus areas to build. Grants can pay for research programs, faculty hiring and training, student stipends, equipment, needs assessments, and administrative support. No eligible institution may get more than $10,000,000 in any single year. The Director may give extra weight to plans that serve diverse students, widen geographic and institutional reach, and use public-private partnerships. The program must not duplicate others. After three years the Director must report to Congress on results. Congress authorized $150,000,000 for each fiscal year 2023 through 2027 for these activities. The Director must also run a five-year pilot for partnerships that include emerging research institutions. Proposals over $1,000,000 must explain how they will build real partnerships, and at least 35% of each award must go to one or more emerging research institutions. The pilot must be reviewed after three years and may become permanent if it works.
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The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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42 U.S.C. § 19014
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73