Title 42 › Chapter CHAPTER 81— - ENERGY CONSERVATION AND RESOURCE RENEWAL › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER III— - ENERGY CONSERVATION AND RENEWABLE-RESOURCE ASSISTANCE FOR EXISTING BUILDINGS › Part Part A— - Weatherization Assistance for Low-Income Persons › § 6864d
Makes yearly competitive grants, when money is available, to groups that run weatherization programs or to nonprofits so they can help low-income people make their homes more energy efficient and healthier. The grants pay for things like fixing structural, plumbing, roofing, or electrical problems to get homes ready for weatherization; adding energy-saving technologies and renewable energy systems; improving indoor air quality and accessibility; sharing new methods and best practices; and hiring and keeping workers who are local or from underrepresented groups (for example, religious and ethnic minorities, women, veterans, people with disabilities, and people who are socioeconomically disadvantaged). Grants can also fund work to increase the number of retrofits, expand successful approaches, raise extra money to keep the work going, outreach and education, quality control, data collection and verification, monitoring and evaluation, training and technical help, and planning and administration (up to 15 percent of the award). Applicants must apply and will be chosen in competition. The Secretary will look at things like past work on low-income homes, how many units the applicant helped in the past 5 years, qualifications, strength of the proposal, partnerships, and regional and urban/rural diversity. Each award can be no more than $2,000,000, lasts up to 3 years, and will be reduced by the cost of any technical or training help the Secretary provides. The Secretary must issue rules within 90 days after December 27, 2020 and make the first award within 270 days after that date. The Secretary will set standards for costs, a minimum saving-to-investment ratio, training, audits, monitoring, verification, insurance, and reporting (including data on each home), review recipients’ performance, and send Congress an annual report on actions and energy and cost savings. For fiscal years 2021–2025, only a limited share of the weatherization program funds may be used for these grants (2%, 4%, or 6% depending on total funds available), no funds if those program funds are under $225,000,000, and no more than $25,000,000 in any year. No grants may be awarded after September 30, 2025. State or local laws that are stricter still apply.
Full Legal Text
The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Reference
Citation
42 U.S.C. § 6864d
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73