Technical Assistance Grants
The Federal Community Technical Assistance Grant (TAG) Program
Background

In the aftermath of pipeline tragedies in Bellingham, Washington, in 1999 and Carlsbad, New Mexico, in 2000, Congress began working to strengthen the nation’s pipeline safety laws in 2001. During this process, members of SafeBellingham, the forerunner of The Pipeline Safety Trust, pushed for the creation of a federal program that would provide money to local governments and communities for hiring independent experts. These experts would help them obtain information so they could be informed and active participants in decision-making activities about pipelines running through—or proposed for siting in—their communities.
In the Pipeline Safety Improvement Act of 2002, Congress authorized the Technical Assistance Grant (TAG) program, which was based on a successful Superfund grant program that had been operating within the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency since 1988. However, Congress did not appropriate any program funds when it passed this law.
Over the next four years, Congress failed to fund the TAG program and the Office of Pipeline Safety (OPS), which is within the federal Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration (PHMSA), didn’t move ahead to implement it. Consequently, the Pipeline Safety Trust worked with supporters in Congress to break this “logjam” and a provision was inserted in the Pipeline Inspection, Protection, Enforcement and Safety Act of 2006 to withhold funding from other activities until PHMSA established procedures and criteria for initiating the TAG program.
In 2008, Congress—through the efforts of Senator Patty Murray of Washington—provided $1 million in the federal budget for funding this program and in 2009 the Pipeline Safety Trust helped OPS develop criteria for evaluating grant applications.
General Description of the TAG Program
OPS can award grants of up to $100,000 to local governments and not-for-profit community groups for technical assistance relating to the safety of pipeline facilities in local communities.
Grant recipients are required to make the technical findings of their project available to the relevant pipeline operators. In addition, they are encouraged to have open communications with local pipeline operators, local communities, and other interested parties.
Other TAG program requirements include:
- The grants must be awarded through a competitive process with established criteria.
- The grants cannot be used for lobbying or in direct support of litigation.
New! 2019 TAG Grant opportunity opens!
PHMSA recently announced the opening of the application period for FY 2019 grants. The FY 2019 Technical Assistance Grant (TAG) Notice of Funding Opportunity was published on www.Grants.gov on March 8, 2019, and closes on May 3, 2019. The Funding Opportunity Number is 693JK319NF0002. PHMSA’s TAG program provides funding to local communities and non-profit organizations for technical assistance related to pipeline safety issues and can be used for engineering or other scientific analysis of pipeline safety issues. The funding can be used to promote public participation in official proceedings. For purposes of grants eligibility, communities are defined as cities, towns, villages, counties, parishes, townships, and similar governmental subdivisions, or consortia of such subdivisions. A nongovernmental group of individuals is eligible for a grant under the TAG program if its members are affected or potentially affected individuals who are incorporated as a non-profit organization in the state where they are located. The maximum award is $100,000 and there is a total of $1,500,000 available for FY 2019.
Learning About TAG Program Competitions
The Grants.Gov web home page (found here) is the portal for information about the federal grant application process and for submitting applications for federal grants.
To view the specific information page about the FY 2019 TAG Grants, click here
PHMSA posts summaries of current and past TAG awards on their website.
The Trust has summaries of the earliest 2009 TAG grant recipients and project summaries here.