Prairie Band Potawatomi Nation Selected for $489,155 Grant to Upgrade Municipal Fleet to Reduce Emissions from Diesel Vehicles
EPA is awarding $5.4 million nationwide in grant funding for tribal and insular areas to establish lower-emission diesel projects

Contact Information: EPA Press Office, press@epa.gov

LENEXA, KAN. (MARCH 17, 2022) – The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) today announced that the Prairie Band Potawatomi Nation is expected to be awarded $489,155 grant to establish lower-emission diesel projects to upgrade their municipal fleet. The Tribal Nation plans to replace two, inefficient larger engine vehicles; a municipal, short-haul dump truck; and a fire department water tanker.

Nationally, 12 tribal and insular area assistance agreements are expected to be awarded totaling $5.4 million in grant funding as part of the Diesel Emissions Reduction (DERA) program, which funds projects to clean up the nation’s legacy fleet of diesel engines.

“The Biden administration continues to work with tribal nations across the country to replace or upgrade older, higher-polluting diesel engines, making important progress in reducing pollution and advancing environmental justice across the country,” said EPA Administrator Michael S. Regan. “With an unprecedented $5 billion investment in low- and zero-emission school buses from the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law coming soon for communities across the country, this is only the beginning.”

The DERA program is prioritizing projects that help achieve the goals of President Biden’s Justice40 initiative, which aims to ensure that federal agencies deliver at least 40% of benefits from certain investments to underserved communities.

Older diesel engines emit more air pollutants, such as nitrogen oxides and particulate matter, than newer diesel engines. These pollutants are linked to a range of serious health problems, including asthma, lung and heart disease, other respiratory ailments, and premature death. The projects include replacing municipal trucks, marine engines used in fishing vessels, generators used for energy production in tribal villages; and adding four new electric school buses. Tribal projects will occur in areas across the country.

Recognizing that tribes and insular areas have various administrative, technical, and financial considerations that other DERA National Grant program applicants may not, EPA established a separate funding opportunity with flexibilities to address the unique considerations of tribal and insular area applicants. In 2021, EPA offered the first DERA Tribal and Insular Area Request for Applications (RFA) with no mandatory cost share. Although funds were competed under a single RFA, tribal applicants only competed against tribal applicants, and insular areas only competed against other insular area applicants. The 2021 competitive process saw more tribal application submissions than in any previous year, with 15 completely new tribal applicants.

The DERA Tribal and Insular Area Grants program gives priority to projects that achieve significant reductions in diesel emissions and exposure in areas designated as having poor air quality. Priority for funding is given to projects that address the needs and concerns of local communities; those that use partnerships to leverage additional resources and expertise to advance the goals of the project; and those that can demonstrate the ability to promote and continue efforts to reduce emissions after the project has ended. 

The awards are expected as follows:

APPLICANT NAME 

EPA REGION 

AWARD 

PROJECT TYPE 

 

Prairie Band Potawatomi Nation 

7

$489,155

Municipal Fleet 

 

*Fort McDowell Yavapai Nation

9

$158,000

Mining Equipment

 

*Ho-Chunk Nation 

5

$841,500

Construction Equipment 

 

*Quinault Indian Nation 

10

$510,508

Ports – Marine Engines 

 

Native Village of Deering 

10

$418,140

Stationary Generators 

 

*Yocha Dehe Wintun Nation 

9

$415,000

Agriculture

 

Tanana Chiefs Conference 

10

$800,000

Stationary Generators 

 

Lummi Tribe of the Lummi Reservation 

10

$364,900

Ports – Marine Engines 

 

*Swinomish Indian Tribal Community 

10

$379,511

Ports – Marine Engines 

 

*Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians 

4

$502,797

4 Electric School Buses 

 

Insular Area Grants

Port Authority of Guam

9

$250,000

Ports – Cargo Handling Equipment

 

Guam Power Authority

9

$250,000

Municipal Fleet

 

*These awardees’ grants have been finalized with funding awarded

Since 2008, DERA grants have funded projects that have significantly improved air quality and provided critical health benefits by reducing hundreds of thousands of tons of air pollution and saving millions of gallons of fuel.

EPA will offer clean school bus funding through the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, which provides an unprecedented $5 billion over five years for the Clean School Bus program. In spring 2022, EPA plans to announce a new Clean School Bus rebate program for applicants to replace existing school buses with low- or zero-emission school buses. EPA may prioritize applications that replace school buses in high-need local educational agencies, low-income and rural areas, and tribal schools; and applications that provide cost share. To learn more about the upcoming Clean School Bus program, please visit EPA’s Clean School Bus Program Funding page.

For more information on the Tribal and Insular Area Request for Applications (RFA) and related documents, visit EPA’s Tribal and Insular Area Grants: Diesel Emissions Reduction Act (DERA) page.
 
For more information on the Diesel Emissions Reduction Act (DERA) program, visit EPA’s DERA Funding page.

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U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Region 7, 11201 Renner Blvd., Lenexa, KS 66219
Iowa, Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska, and Nine Tribal Nations