Title 15 › Chapter 14A— AID TO SMALL BUSINESS › § 657d
Create a Federal and State Technology Partnership Program (FAST) to help small tech businesses in the States become more competitive. The Administrator, working with SBIR program managers at the National Science Foundation and the Department of Defense, will review proposals and give competitive awards or cooperative agreements. Awards can support tech R&D, move university research into small firms, spread new technology, build consortia of local partners, and give outreach, money, and technical help to firms interested in SBIR/STTR. That help can include grants or loans to pay for SBIR proposal costs, running Mentoring Networks that provide business advice, training people who do SBIR outreach, and activities to help commercialize SBIR-funded tech. Applicants must use some Federal funds for outreach, financial help, or technical help. Review will look at whether the plan meets real local needs, will increase SBIR success in the State (measured by past first- and second-phase SBIR awards), has reasonable costs, coordinates with other programs, measures results, and serves women-owned, minority-owned, and historically underrepresented areas. Special consideration may go to applicants in areas hit by a catastrophic incident. Only one proposal per State is allowed each fiscal year. The Administrator will set application forms and rules, and may give extra help or waive matching rules for applicants in catastrophic-incident areas. Awards can run up to 5 years. Cost-sharing rules: for non-planning activities the non-Federal match is 50 cents per Federal dollar for recipients serving small businesses in the 18 States with the fewest SBIR first-phase awards; $1 per Federal dollar for recipients in the 16 States with the most such awards (unless reduced as below); and 75 cents per Federal dollar for other States. If funds are sent directly to qualified census tracts, the match for those funds is 50 cents per Federal dollar. At least half of the non-Federal share must be cash; up to half may be indirect costs or in-kind contributions, but none may come from other Federal programs. The Administrator will recheck State rankings every 2 fiscal years starting in fiscal year 2001. The Administrator must report within 120 days after December 21, 2000 about the program design, management, and review process, then send annual reports on awards, recipients, and Mentoring Networks. The Inspector General must review program performance and report in the first quarter of fiscal year 2004. Congress authorized $10,000,000 for each fiscal year 2001 through 2005, with up to $500,000 of that total allowed for certain Administration activities. Authority to run the FAST program ends on September 30, 2005. Definitions (one line each): applicant — an entity or person that applies for an award; business advice and counseling — help for small firms through the SBIR/STTR process; catastrophic incident — a major disaster like those in the National Response Plan; FAST program — the Federal and State Technology Partnership Program; mentor — an individual who gives guidance under the program; Mentoring Network — an organization or group that meets the program’s mentoring rules; recipient — someone who gets an award or cooperative agreement; SBIR program — the Small Business Innovation Research program; State — each State, DC, Puerto Rico, Virgin Islands, Guam, American Samoa, and Northern Mariana Islands; STTR program — the Small Business Technology Transfer program.
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Commerce and Trade — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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15 U.S.C. § 657d
Title 15 — Commerce and Trade
Last Updated
Apr 3, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60