Crash Causal Factors Grant Program

CCFP
CFDA 20.246 Active Cooperative Agreement
No open Grants.gov opportunities under this program right now. Browse all Department of Transportation programs →

Program Funding

Annual program obligations reported to SAM.gov.

Latest annual funding (estimated)
$7M FY2026
$7M
FY26*
* estimated

Program Objective

The principal purpose of the CCFP Cooperative Agreement Program is to transfer funding to eligible States and local jurisdictions in order to collect the data required for a comprehensive study of commercial motor vehicle (CMV) crash causal factors, as required by statute under section 23006 of the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, Public Law Number 117-58 (2021). The CCFP was established to accomplish this congressionally mandated study. Through the CCFP Cooperative Agreement Program, FMCSA seeks to fund activities that maximize effective data collection in support of CCFP goals and objectives.

Eligibility

Eligible Applicants

  • U.S. State Government

All States were surveyed via an Information Collection Request (OMB Control No. 2126-0079) in 2024. Based upon the results of the survey, the States and local entities listed below met the following criteria for eligibility: 1) they have the capacity and infrastructure in place to provide the information required for this study, and 2) a historically sufficient number of qualifying crashes occur within their jurisdiction.
1.1 General Eligibility
Applicants eligible for CCFP funding must be located within a participating sample State.
CCFP funded awards are available to the following entities:
• Participating States:
o East Region: Massachusetts, New York, Missouri, New Jersey, Maine, Connecticut, Maryland, Indiana, Ohio, Wisconsin
o South Region: Mississippi, Texas, Oklahoma, Alabama
o Southeast Region: South Carolina, Kentucky, Virginia, North Carolina, Florida
o West Region: Washington, South Dakota, Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, Utah, Nevada, Nebraska, Idaho, Arizona, New Mexico
• Alternate States:
o Southeast Region: Georgia, West Virginia
o West Region: Montana
• Local Entities listed below:
o Florida: City Police Department (CPD) Hillsborough, CPD Miami-Dade, CPD Palm Beach, CPD Polk,
o Indiana: Indianapolis Metro PD,
o Kentucky: Louisville PD,
o Missouri: Kansas City PD and St. Louis PD,
o New York: New York City PD,
o Ohio: Columbus PD,
o Texas: Austin PD, El Paso PD, Fort Worth PD, Houston, PD, San Antonio PD.
All applicants are subject to a review of their compatibility to participate in the CCFP. The review is intended to verify jurisdictions' ability to complete the requisite tasks for inclusion in the study sample.
For profit organizations and individuals are NOT eligible recipients.

How to Apply

Award Procedure

Following the evaluation of applications, The Notice of Grant Award (NGA) signed by the FMCSA Grant Officer is the authorizing financial assistance document. The NGA will be sent through GrantSolutions and should be accepted by the recipient as soon as possible. FMCSA may approve full or partial funding of a grant application. The NGA issued to the recipient will specify whether the award is a grant or a cooperative agreement and will include any specific award terms and conditions, if applicable.

Although the process is intended to be collaborative, FMCSA reserves the right to make final decisions on all awards. If being considered for funding, applicants may be required to submit an updated SF-424, SF-424A, supplemental budget, or project narrative based on a partial or modified grant recommendation. FMCSA expects to contact applicants, if necessary, during the Fall of 2025. This contact between applicants and FMCSA does not constitute any assurance that funding will be awarded.

Applicants chosen for grant funding are formally notified electronically by the FMCSA grant management system (www.grantsolutions.gov) before the grant’s execution. Unsuccessful applicants will be notified by email. FMCSA cannot award grants or release information concerning applications recommended for funding until approval is obtained from the Secretary of Transportation. Further, FMCSA cannot award grants until the enactment of authorizing legislation, an appropriations act, budget authority, and apportionment from OMB. FMCSA may issue partial funding awards up to the level authorized.

Acceptance of the grant award constitutes the recipient’s agreement to comply with all applicable statutes, regulations, executive orders, OMB circulars, and terms and conditions of the award, including the reporting requirements

Decision Timeline

  • Approval: From 120 to 180 days
Program details & compliance

Description

The CCFP Cooperative Agreement Program provides supplemental funding to eligible States and local jurisdictions participating in the CCFP’s nationally representative Heavy-Duty Truck Study. Under this program, eligible States and local jurisdictions may request equipment and related expenses to supplement their support of CCFP projects if they can clearly demonstrate a necessity beyond their current Motor Carrier Safety Assistance Program (MCSAP) allocation. This program is uniquely associated with the CCFP. Funds awarded under this program may only be used for CCFP-eligible expenses (i.e., crash response activities, advanced post-crash inspection and data collection activities, and equipment needed to collect data for qualifying CMV crashes).

Mission Categories

Primary: Highways, Public Roads, and Bridges

Use of Funds

Allowed Uses

The goal of the CCFP is to provide nuanced insight into the factors that contribute to crashes involving CMVs and to empower stakeholders to refine their safety programs and activities and ultimately reduce crashes. To do so, the program will carry out a series of peer-reviewed studies that focus on specific vehicle types and crash severities. It will make the anonymized datasets available to stakeholders while also carrying out analysis and producing an analytical report. In addition to the studies, the CCFP will establish a foundation for continued data collection and ad hoc analysis through a database, dashboards, and other resources.

Success depends on the participation of State and local jurisdiction partners who will be asked to collect much of the crash data and submit it to the CCFP database. The program strives to streamline data collection activities, creating an efficient, cost-effective program that can sustain subsequent studies. To prepare effectively, the team previously asked FMCSA Divisions, States, and local jurisdiction agencies to complete a series of surveys regarding existing crash response and data collection processes. Engaging these groups at an early stage and fostering a sense of collaboration and joint ownership will help ensure the program is successful.

Ultimately, advances in safety are the main impetus for the CCFP. The CCFP aims to produce scientific, trustworthy resources and analysis that will drive further research and help optimize safety programs. The program needs to reach groups that can leverage the data and insights to carry out activities that improve safety. These include government agencies, safety advocacy groups, research institutions, and other entities interested in using crash data to make decisions and drive the development of countermeasures.

Reporting & Compliance

Records Retention
3 years

Applicable 2 CFR 200 Subparts

  • Subpart B — General Provisions
  • Subpart C — Pre-Federal Award Requirements
  • Subpart D — Post-Federal Award Requirements
  • Subpart E — Cost Principles
  • Subpart F — Audit Requirements

Contacts

Thomas Martin
2023660621
U.S. Department of Transportation, Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration Grants Management Office (MC-BG), 1200 New Jersey Ave, SE, West Building, Washington, DC 20590
Dan Meyer
217-492-4606
Department of Transportation FMCSA Illinois Division 3250 Executive Park Drive Springfield, IL 62703, Springfield, IL 62703
Data from SAM.gov Federal Assistance Listings. Source published: 2026-01-19. Spec v2.0. Last synced: 2026-05-29 05:43:06.