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America the Beautiful Challenge Grant Program

See Funder Details for: National Fish and Wildlife Foundation (NFWF)
Deadline: Apr 21, 2025

categories applicant type

Government Entity
Indigenous Group
Nonprofit

categories applicant type ineligibility

categories country of field work preference

categories country of residency

American Samoa
Guam
Northern Mariana Islands
Puerto Rico
United States
Virgin Islands

categories country of residency preference

categories ecosystem

categories featured set

categories field of work

Carbon / Greenhouse Gas Reduction
Climate Change Resilience
Coastal Conservation
Environmental Education
Environmental Health
Environmental Stewardship
Freshwater Conservation
Green Economy & Jobs
Habitat & Ecosystem Restoration
Indigenous Sovereignty & Rights
Land/Habitat Conservation
Outdoor Equity
Outdoor Recreation

categories funding uses

Education / Outreach
Project / Program
Training / Capacity Building

categories location of field work

American Samoa
Guam
Northern Mariana Islands
Puerto Rico
United States
Virgin Islands

categories must travel to

categories specific faiths

created at

2022-05-13T13:09:42Z

exclusive to minorities

False

external reference id

funder

funder created at

2016-07-09T17:02:48Z

funder ein

521384139

funder is custom

False

funder name

National Fish and Wildlife Foundation (NFWF)

funder updated at

2023-11-01T14:08:27Z

Funding Cycles

Interval:
yearly
Deadline 1 Type:
date
Expires: Jul 22, 2022
Interval:
yearly
Pre Proposal
date
Expires: Apr 21, 2023
Full Proposal
invitation_with_date
Expires: Jul 21, 2023
Interval:
yearly
Pre Proposal
date
Expires: Apr 5, 2024
Full Proposal
invitation_with_date
Expires: Jul 19, 2024
Interval:
yearly
Pre Proposal
date
Expires: Apr 21, 2025
Full Proposal
invitation_with_date
Expires: Jul 21, 2025
Interval:
yearly
Pre Proposal
date
Expires: Apr 21, 2026
Full Proposal
invitation_with_date
Expires: Jul 21, 2026

gender

hidden account wide

False

is custom

False

is limited submission

limited submission requirements

overview

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America the Beautiful Challenge

The National Fish and Wildlife Foundation (NFWF), through anticipated cooperative agreements from the Department of the Interior (DOI), Department of Defense (DoD), and the Department of Agriculture’s U.S. Forest Service (USFS) and Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS), is pleased to announce the launch of the America the Beautiful Challenge (ATBC) 2022 Request for Proposals (RFP). The ATBC vision is to streamline grant funding opportunities for new voluntary conservation and restoration projects around the United States. This Request for Proposals is a first step toward consolidating funding from multiple federal agencies and the private sector to enable applicants to conceive and develop large-scale, locally led projects that address shared funder priorities spanning public and private lands.

In year three of the ATBC, approximately $119 million will be awarded in nationwide funding to conserve, connect, and restore the lands, waters, and wildlife upon which we all depend. The ATBC seeks to fund projects across the following themes:

  • Conserving and restoring rivers, coasts, wetlands and watersheds 
  • Conserving and restoring forests, grasslands and other important ecosystems that serve as carbon sinks 
  • Connecting and reconnecting wildlife corridors, large landscapes, watersheds and seascapes 
  • Improving ecosystem and community resilience to flooding, drought and other climate-related threats
  • Expanding access to the outdoors, particularly in underserved communities

Collectively, these themes allow applicants to develop landscape-level ATBC proposals that address conservation and public access needs that showcase cumulative benefits to fish and wildlife, carbon sequestration and storage benefits, engage with and benefit underserved communities, support community access to nature, and help safeguard ecosystems through conservation, resilience-focused and nature-based solutions. 

Program Priorities

ATBC will prioritize proposals that implement voluntary large-scale, on-the-ground conservation activities or otherwise lead to on-the-ground implementation through capacity building, community engagement, planning and project design. The overarching goal is to advance existing landscape conservation plans and/or propose to knit together a diverse stakeholder partnership that develops and/or implements new conservation plans. As part of this, projects should address priority species and/or habitat conservation actions identified in existing plans or other species recovery or conservation plans. Projects that are informed by Indigenous Traditional Knowledge (ITK) and promote Tribal co-stewardship are also encouraged. 

Competitive proposals will increase interagency and intergovernmental collaboration and address more than one of the program priorities below. 

Benefit At-Risk Fish, Wildlife and Plant Species

Conserve and restore habitat to improve ecosystem function and biological diversity, as identified by conservation plans, ITK, or emerging information for priority fish, wildlife and/or plant resources, such as threatened and endangered species, species of greatest conservation need (including game species). 

Expand Habitat Connectivity

Conserve and restore priority habitat and stopover areas along key migratory routes; conserve, restore or improve fish passage; conserve or restore lands and/or waters that are critical to habitat connectivity; or expand and enhance wildlife corridors that contribute to larger-scale conservation efforts (e.g., removing and right-sizing culverts, removing encroaching trees from grassland and sagebrush ecosystems, rehabilitating areas damaged by fire, treating exotic/invasive vegetation to improve habitat values, or voluntary conservation easements to strengthen habitat connectivity).

Provide a Range of Ecosystem Services

Demonstrate and quantify a range of ecosystem services restored (e.g., improving stream flow for aquatic resources, watershed health, carbon sequestration, restoration of Tribal subsistence resources).

Strengthen Ecosystem and Community Resilience

Conserve and restore natural systems that help ecosystems and/or communities respond to, mediate and recover from disturbances such as floods, wildfire, drought (e.g., enhancing a wetland to improve coastal resilience, invasive species prevention or removal to reduce wildfire risk, restoring fire resilient stand structure and species composition in fire prone forests, water conservation to address drought, expansion of wetlands to protect from flooding, grassland restoration to promote natural prairie ecosystems).

Expand Public and Community Access to Nature

Create, improve or expand opportunities for public access and recreation, in particular for underserved communities that lack access to the outdoors, in a manner consistent with the ecological needs of fish and wildlife habitat. Projects should be conducive to high-quality recreational experiences, such as biking, birding, boating, fishing, hiking, outdoor education, cultural activities, hunting and wildlife viewing. Projects should be predominantly nature-based in application. Hard infrastructure, such as parking lots and visitor center amenities, are not eligible under this funding opportunity.

Engage Local Communities

Applicants are encouraged to develop projects that incorporate outreach to communities, particularly underserved communities in accordance with the Administration’s Justice40 initiative, foster community engagement, and pursue collaboration with farmers, ranchers, Tribal Nations, states or other land managers to produce measurable conservation benefits. When possible, projects should be developed through community input and co-design processes, and incorporating ITK when possible. Additionally, projects should engage community-level partners (e.g., municipalities, NGOs, community organizations), as appropriate, to help design, implement, and maintain projects to secure maximum benefits for communities, maintenance, and sustainability post-grant award. 

Support Tribally Led Conservation and Restoration Priorities

Consistent with the Administration’s commitment to honoring Tribal sovereignty and advancing equity for Indigenous people, applicants are encouraged to prioritize projects that uplift Tribal and Indigenous-led efforts. These efforts may include but are not limited to Tribal co-stewardship of federal or other lands, restoration of Tribal homelands, access to and/or restoration of sacred sites, and elevation of ITK.  

Contribute to Local or Tribal Economies

Implement conservation projects that, as a co-benefit, directly contribute to local economies and underserved communities. For example, projects could help expand tourism or recreational economies, promote regenerative agriculture, or contribute to working lands and/or community or Tribal forestry. Applicants are encouraged to estimate the economic benefits that are expected because of the project (e.g., number of jobs sustained or created). 

Contribute to Workforce Development

Develop the next generation of conservation professionals, including through support for national service, youth and conservation corps engaged in conservation and climate-related work. Projects that develop the restoration workforce, in particular with AmeriCorps and 21st Century Conservation Service Corps programs, are encouraged.

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