The Tribal Wildlife Grants (TWG) Program was created to support the development and implementation of programs for the benefit of wildlife and their habitats and species of Tribal cultural or traditional importance, including those that are not hunted or fished.
The TWG Program is part of the
credit:
Congressionally-authorized State and Tribal Wildlife Grant (STWG) Program which provides wildlife conservation grants to States, Commonwealths, and to the District of Columbia, U. S. Territories, and Tribes under provisions of the Fish and Wildlife Act of 1956 and the Fish and Wildlife Coordination Act.
The TWG Program provides opportunities for federally recognized Tribes to engage in fish and wildlife conservation efforts on Tribal lands.
Many of the TWG Program-funded project activities increase fish and wildlife populations, allowing for hunting and fishing opportunities on and off Tribal lands.
Additionally, the TWG Program funds project activities that align and assist the Service with Endangered Species Act (ESA) conservation activities supporting species down-listing (threatened to endangered), delisting (removal from the list due to species recovery), and preventing new species listings under the ESA.
Obtain Full Opportunity Text:NSF Publication 24-548
Additional Information of Eligibility:Participation is limited to federally recognized Tribal governments listed in the current Federal Register Notice of Indian Entities Recognized and Eligible to Receive Services from the United States Bureau of Indian Affairs.
This is the official listing of all federally recognized Tribes in the United States pursuant to Section 104 of the Federally Recognized Indian Tribe List Act of 1994 (Pub.
L.
103-454; 108 Stat.
4791-4792).
The most recent Notice was published in the Federal Register, 89 FR 944 (January 8, 2024).
Tribal organizations and other entities may participate as subrecipients or contractors to federally recognized Tribal governments.
Tribal contact information is available in the BIA Tribal Leaders Directory.Applicant Tribes must bring all administrative and fiscal reporting for any open TWG Program grants up to date in order to be eligible to apply for new funds.
Applicants will be notified within five business days upon receiving proposals noting any outstanding reporting issues that need to be addressed.
Tribes will then have 30 days to bring these grants into compliance.
Proposals from Tribes that have not brought past due reports (e.g., interim or final performance reports, or interim or final financial status reports) up to date in this 30-day period will be found ineligible and excluded from further consideration in the FY 2024 TWG Program cycle.When an applicant is carrying two or more active TWG projects while applying for another, the Service has an administrative obligation to verify that there are no correctable problems in implementing the existing awards.
We will review the reasons why those grants are still open before proceeding with further consideration.
Tribes that demonstrate their effective use of TWG Program funds will not be affected.
Tribes that have taken no significant action on any one of their preexisting awards will not be considered eligible to apply for new TWG Program funds until any correctable problems are resolved.
Possible resolutions might be for the Tribe to demonstrate progress in the agreed-upon activities of an inactive grant, demonstrate that the assertion of “no action” is incorrect, or the Tribe may cancel the grant so that the obligated funds may be recovered and made available to other Tribes in the next grant cycle.
Full Opportunity Web Address:http://www.nsf.gov/publications/pub_summ.jsp?ods_key=nsf24548Contact: Agency Email Description: U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service - National Native American Programs
Agency Email: Date Posted: 2024-02-21
Application Due Date: Archive Date: 2026-10-23