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The professional development I attended this year included sessions on grantmanagement, project management, change management, business branding, and the relevance of credentials to the field of higher education.
By now, I hope you are realizing grantmanagement doesn’t have to be a scary web of confusing topics and rules. With this grantmanagement series, I aim to outline some of the commonly seen issues and provide resources to learn more. NGMA divides the grant lifecycle into three phases: pre-award, award, and post-award.
Since the original Uniform Grant Guidance was issued in 2014, federalgrant recipients, subrecipients, and contractors have grumbled about the confusing jargon, lack of clarity, and general “squishiness” about some of the guidance’s language and how it applies to all recipients of federal funding.
Government Grants Government grants are typically provided at the federal, state, or local level and can be a significant source of funding for churches, for profit organizations, especially when the projects align with public policy objectives such as community development, education, or social services.
Before 2013, federalgrant requirements were located in multiple OMB circulars. OMB developed a comprehensive guide for the Federal government’s Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for federal awards that became effective in 2014. Part 200 of Title 2 is the location for the UGG.
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