Title 42 › Chapter CHAPTER 6A— - PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICE › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER V— - HEALTH PROFESSIONS EDUCATION › Part Part E— - Health Professions and Public Health Workforce › Subpart subpart 1— - health professions workforce information and analysis › § 294r
Creates a competitive grant program to help State teams plan and carry out clear health care workforce strategies at the State and local level. The Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) runs the grants with input from the National Health Care Workforce Commission. HRSA will give planning grants for up to 1 year and up to $150,000. To get a planning grant, a State workforce investment board must include at least one representative from each of these types of groups: a health care employer, a labor organization, a public 2‑year college, a public 4‑year college, the State federation of labor, the State public secondary education agency, the State P–16 or P–20 Council if one exists, and a philanthropic group that helps recruit and train people for health careers. Planning grant winners must analyze labor market data, find high‑demand health sectors, list existing funding and programs, describe skill and education standards and policies, identify barriers and ways to fix them, set performance benchmarks with HRSA, join HRSA evaluations, provide at least 15% matching funds, and report to HRSA within 1 year. HRSA will report to Congress about the results. HRSA will also award competitive implementation grants to put plans into action. These grants run up to 2 years and can get 1 extra year if the grantee is high performing. To qualify a partnership must have finished a planning grant or submit a full, acceptable implementation application. Implementation grantees must name fiscal and admin agents, describe partners, activities, budgets, benchmarks, and data plans, and may reserve at least 60% of funds to make competitive regional grants. They must bring regional leaders together, work to remove policy barriers, develop and share a statewide strategy, meet at least twice a year, help regions build capacity, track performance, join HRSA evaluations, provide at least 25% matching funds, and report each grant year. Congress authorized $8,000,000 for planning grants for fiscal year 2010 and such sums as needed later, and $150,000,000 for implementation grants for fiscal year 2010 and such sums as needed later.
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The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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42 U.S.C. § 294r
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73