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Federal Grant · Environmental Protection Agency

Training and Technical Assistance to Improve Water Quality and Enable Small Public Water Systems to Provide Safe Drinking Water

Last verified by NonDilute: 2026-04-29. Official notice and agency instructions control.

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The pitch

If your nonprofit or university has expertise in water system operations and compliance, this $13M EPA program funds you to deliver training directly to struggling small water utilities across the country.

Award range
Up to $13M
Closes
May 13, 2026 · 14d left
Open date
Apr 13, 2026
Difficulty
Medium
Source
Grants.gov
Agency
Environmental Protection Agency
Last verified
2026-04-29
Fit language
Possible fit only
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What this is

The EPA's Training and Technical Assistance program awards up to $13 million to help small public water systems build technical, managerial, and financial capabilities required by the Safe Drinking Water Act. Eligible applicants—nonprofits, public universities, and nonprofit private colleges—deliver direct training and technical assistance to improve water quality operations, maintain regulatory compliance, and enhance eligibility for state loan programs. The program also extends support to small wastewater systems and private well owners, addressing public health and long-term water system sustainability.

Who can apply

Only nonprofit organizations, public institutions of higher education, and nonprofit private universities/colleges are eligible. Applicants must be capable of providing direct technical assistance and training to small drinking water systems, small wastewater systems, and/or private well owners. Geographic scope and specific partner requirements not detailed in provided text.

Eligible applicant types

Full description — from the agency

The Training and Technical Assistance to Improve Water Quality and Enable Small Public Water Systems to Provide Safe Drinking Water grant program supports small public water systems (PWS) in operations and maintenance to achieve and maintain compliance with the Safe Drinking Water Act (SDWA). The 1996 amendments of the Safe Drinking Water Act (SDWA) provide a framework for states and water systems to work together to protect public health. By law, every state has a Capacity Development Program to assist public water systems in building technical, managerial, and financial (TMF) capabilities (sometimes referred to as “capacity”). Additionally, provisions of the SDWA Section 1452(a)(3) have a requirement for PWSs to demonstrate TMF capability in order to receive loan assistance from the Drinking Water State Revolving Fund (DWSRF). Without TMF capabilities, States are not permitted to provide PWSs with loan assistance unless the system has agreed to make the necessary changes in operation to ensure that it has the TMF capabilities to comply over the long term. Aside from enhancing eligibility for DWSRF funding, ensuring TMF capabilities of PWSs is essential to ensuring PWSs reliably deliver safe drinking water and protect public health. Strong TMF capabilities are necessary for systems to maintain or attain compliance with the SDWA National Primary Drinking Water Regulations (NPDWR) and state regulations. The grant program also assists small publicly-owned wastewater systems and onsite/decentralized wastewater systems to improve operational performance and sustainable operations over the long term, improving public health and water quality. Additionally, the grant program provides technical assistance to private well owners to protect their drinking water supply and improve water quality. Eligible applicants are nonprofit organizations, public institutions of higher education (IHEs), and nonprofit private universities and colleges. Selected applicants are expected to provide direct technical assistance and training to assist small drinking water systems, small publicly-owned wastewater systems and onsite/decentralized wastewater systems, and private well owners.

Topics: water quality training · safe drinking water · small public water systems · technical assistance · capacity development · wastewater systems

Public-source funding discovery only. This summary is generated from public agency data and may be incomplete or stale. NonDilute is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or acting on behalf of any government agency. Official notices and agency instructions control. NonDilute does not determine eligibility, provide grant-writing advice, or guarantee funding.