CLOSED CFDA 16.076 ↗ Competitive Cooperative Agreement Competitive ~50h typical effort
DOJ

FY 2026 Bridging Immigration-related Deficits Experienced Nationwide (“BIDEN”) Program

🏛 Bureau of Justice Assistance (USDOJ-OJP-BJA)

✓ Free, no account · Source: Grants.gov · Last verified Jul 15, 2026

⏰ Deadline
Jul 15, 2026 ⚠ passed
📍 Scope
National

Can you apply?

This grant is for state law enforcement agencies, local government units, and tribal governments to support immigration enforcement and criminal justice operations.

Eligible applicants include state agencies with law enforcement responsibilities, units of local government, and tribal governments. Applicants must work on one or more of seven statutory purposes: apprehending criminal aliens, investigating crimes by aliens, prosecuting immigration-related crimes, supporting court operations, detaining aliens, transporting aliens, or providing law enforcement support services.

Awards support hiring sworn and non-sworn personnel, purchasing technology and equipment, or both. Preference is given to agencies participating in Homeland Security Task Force activities.

Eligible applicants
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Program description

This program, authorized under the BIDEN Reimbursement Fund established by the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, Public Law 119-21, Title X, Subtitle A, Part II (codified at 34 U.S.C. § 61101), provides funding for grants to eligible States, State agencies, and units of local government and tribal governments, pursuant to their existing statutory authorities to support the seven statutory purposes outlined in 34 U.S.C. § 61101:
1. Locating and apprehending aliens who have committed a crime under federal, state, or local law, in addition to being unlawfully present in the United States (hereafter referred to as “criminal illegal aliens”).
2. Collection and analysis of law enforcement investigative information within the United States to counter gang or other criminal activity.
3. Investigating and prosecuting (a) crimes committed by aliens within the United States; and (b) drug and human trafficking crimes committed within the United States.
4. Court operations related to the prosecution of (a) crimes committed by aliens; and (b) drug and human trafficking crimes.
5. Temporary criminal detention of aliens.
6. Transporting aliens described in paragraph (1) within the United States to locations related to the apprehension, detention, and prosecution of such aliens.
7. Vehicle maintenance, logistics, transportation, and other support provided to law enforcement agencies by a state agency to enhance the ability to locate and apprehend aliens who have committed crimes under federal, state, or local law, in addition to being unlawfully present in the United States.

Awards from this program should be used to support significant participation in and support of Homeland Security Task Force (HSTF) activities, and other DOJ efforts to combat gangs, cartels, and other violent crime.

This NOFO includes three funding categories:

Category 1: Hiring
• Sworn and Non-Sworn Law Enforcement Personnel – Funding can be used to hire or rehire full-time sworn career law enforcement officers/deputies and civilian/non-sworn personnel as outlined below:
o Hire new full-time officers/deputies and full-time civilian/non-sworn personnel, including by filling existing officer/deputy vacancies that are no longer funded in your agency’s budget.
o Rehire full-time officers/deputies and full-time civilian/non-sworn personnel who have been laid off by any jurisdiction as a result of state, local, or Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) budget reductions. The rehired officers/deputies must be rehired on or after the official award start date on the notice of award.
o Rehire full-time officers/deputies and full-time civilian/non-sworn personnel who are (at the time of application) currently scheduled to be laid off by your jurisdiction on a specific future date as a result of state, local, or BIA budget reductions. Recipients will be required to continue funding the positions with local funding until the date(s) of the scheduled layoffs.
Applicants may request funding for full-time officer/deputy salaries or a combination of officer and salaries of civilian/non-sworn. Funding will support salaries for up to three years of eligible positions to be expended within a five-year period of performance to accommodate time needed for recruitment and hiring.
• Non-Law Enforcement Personnel – Funding can be used for the hiring, retention, and training of critical personnel across the full continuum of criminal justice operations for the purposes cited above. Examples of personnel could include but need not be limited to the following: forensic, investigative, analytical; prosecution and legal support; corrections, detention, and custodial; and transportation, security, and operations logistics. Funding may not be used for co-responders, interpreters, or translators.

Category 2: Technology and Equipment – Funding can be used to purchase and support multi-year implementation, ongoing subscriptions, training, and maintenance of equipment and advanced technology to address critical resource gaps and enhance capacity to support criminal justice operations related to the purposes cited above.

Note: If you apply for and receive funding for Unmanned Arial Systems (UAS), body-worn cameras, body armor, and/or NIBIN machines, you will be required to submit equipment-specific certifications and other documentation as a condition of your award.

Category 3: Construction of Temporary Detention Facilities for Criminal Illegal Aliens – Funding can be used for the following:
• Major Construction Projects – Funding would support large-scale projects, including building temporary detention facilities to house criminal illegal aliens awaiting prosecution, immigration proceedings, or transfer to federal custody.
• Substantial Renovation/Expansion/Modernization – Funding would support the expansion or modernization/targeted improvement of existing facilities, including bolstering detention infrastructure through addition of housing units, or renovation of existing facilities to meet current detention standards and significantly enhance capacity and operational functionality for temporary detention of aliens who have committed a crime in addition to being unlawfully present in the U.S.

Who can apply

Eligible applicants

How to apply

Application links

Key dates & requirements

Required documents

  • SF-424 (federal grant application form)
  • Project narrative explaining alignment with statutory purposes
  • Detailed budget and budget narrative
  • Organizational capacity documentation
  • DUNS number and SAM.gov registration

Program contact

Funding track record

No recent recipient data available for CFDA 16.076 in our database.

This can happen for newer programs, programs that use non-standard award types (loans, direct payments, fellowships), or those funded through sub-agencies under different codes.

Search this CFDA directly on USAspending.gov →

FAQ

Who can apply for this grant?

State law enforcement agencies, units of local government, and tribal governments with existing law enforcement or criminal justice authority. You must align work with one of seven statutory purposes related to immigration enforcement and criminal justice.

What can I use funding for?

Hiring full-time law enforcement officers or civilian personnel, supporting existing employees facing layoffs, hiring non-law enforcement criminal justice staff, and purchasing technology or equipment for operations.

When is the deadline?

The fixed deadline is July 15, 2026. This is not a rolling program.

What makes applications competitive?

Strong participation in Homeland Security Task Force activities, demonstrated need for personnel or technology, and clear connection to combating gangs, cartels, or violent crime improve competitiveness.

How long will my project funding last?

Salaries can be funded for up to three years to be spent within a five-year performance period. Equipment and technology support multi-year implementation and ongoing maintenance.

💡 Tips for applicants

  • Focus on demonstrated need. Show specific staffing gaps or technology gaps your agency faces in immigration enforcement operations.
  • Highlight HSTF participation. If your agency is or plans to be part of a Homeland Security Task Force, emphasize this in your application.
  • Be clear on compliance. Document how your proposed activities align with the seven statutory purposes listed in 34 U.S.C. § 61101.
  • Plan for sustainability. Explain how you will continue funding positions or maintain equipment after grant funding ends.
  • Include detailed budgets. Provide detailed job descriptions, salary justifications, equipment specifications, and multi-year cost projections.

⚠️ Common mistakes

Applying without direct law enforcement or criminal justice responsibility. Proposing funding for interpreters, translators, or co-responders (not eligible). Failing to clearly connect activities to the seven statutory purposes or HSTF participation.

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