
Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo speaks during a White House press conference on the department’s new pandemic recovery grant programs.
(Image credit – White House)
Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo speaks during a White House press conference on the department’s new pandemic recovery grant programs.
(Image credit – White House)
Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo announced
The funds were provided to EDA through the American Rescue Plan legislation that President Biden signed into law in March. Congress is currently considering further legislative proposals to formally establish a program within the Commerce Department for supporting initiatives focused specifically on regional innovation.
EDA’s regional industry cluster challenge is planning to distribute grants through a two-phase process that will be guided by the agency’s investment priorities
“I have to make sure that women, people of color, veterans, people who’ve been left out will be included in this. So it’s a lens that we’re going to take across the $3 billion,” she said.
In the first phase of the regional industry cluster challenge, which is accepting applications until Oct. 19, EDA will provide technical assistance grants of about $500,000 each to between 50 and 60 “regional coalitions” comprising state or local governments, tribal communities, nonprofit organizations, and universities that “share a common vision” for how to spur specific industries. From this group, EDA will select between 20 and 30 coalitions to receive implementation awards ranging from $25 million up to $100 million. At least $100 million of the program’s funding is reserved for supporting communities “negatively impacted by the downturn in the coal economy and that are transitioning away from coal.”
EDA requires applicants to propose between three and eight “tightly aligned projects” that together focus on “developing a long-term, transformational vision and execution plan for a region’s industry.” It notes that such an effort could “reflect a hub-and-spoke model, anchored around a ‘hub’ such as a city, business park, port, educational or research institution, or technology center and complemented by significant investment strategies in multiple ‘spokes’ that represent demographic and geographic diversity.”
As possible examples of regional clusters, EDA lists an “artificial intelligence corridor”, an “agriculture-technology cluster in rural coal counties,” a “blue economy cluster” in coastal regions, and a “climate-friendly electric vehicle cluster.” For the AI corridor example, EDA states its grants could support projects such as improvements to roads and utilities in industrial parks, a partnership with a local university to create new AI training and commercialization programs, and rural manufacturing initiatives to integrate more local companies into the supply chain.
Among all eligible uses of funding
Apart from the Build Back Better Regional Challenge and existing programs such as EDA’s Build to Scale program
The U.S. Innovation and Competition Act, which the Senate passed in June, recommends
In addition, the House bill includes a provision recommending Congress provide the Department of Energy $250 million over five years to create regional clean energy innovation partnerships. Both bills include provisions directing the hubs to coordinate with other federal programs, such as the public-private institutes in the Manufacturing USA network.
Whatever proposal may eventually emerge from negotiations, the regional innovation program would still have to be funded through separate appropriations legislation.