Acres for America
Request for Proposal
Acres for America is National Fish and Wildlife Foundation's
premiere land conservation program, and was established to provide
urgently needed funding for projects that conserve large,
landscape-level areas that are important habitat for fish, wildlife, and
plants through acquisition of interest in real property.
Acres for America was launched in 2005 with Walmart Stores,
Inc. (www.walmart.com) as the founding partner. Walmart's
goal as a founding partner is to offset the footprint of their domestic
facilities on at least an acre by acre basis through permanent
conservation of important wildlife habitats.
Applicants are strongly urged to contact
the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation regional director in their
area to discuss project ideas prior to submitting preproposals.
Funding Available:
Approximately $2.5 million will be available annually through
2014 for conservation investments.
Programmatic Focus:
To be considered for funding through the Acres for America Program,
acquisitions of interest in real property should meet the following
criteria:
Conservation Criteria
- Endorsement by appropriate federal, state, and local government
agencies that the acquisition is of high conservation value is a primary
consideration. Preference will be given to acquisitions that are part of
published conservation plans (North American Waterfowl Management Plan,
Partners in Flight, etc.), State Wildlife Action Plans, or Endangered
Species Act Recovery Plans. Natural Heritage rankings for key species
present on the site are an important consideration when available.
Letters of support from the agencies and organizations listed above
should be available for review.
- Endorsement by non-profit conservation organizations that the
acquisition is of high conservation value using same criteria as above
is also a primary consideration.
- Acquisitions that contribute to "landscape level" conservation
efforts that help reduce fragmentation are preferred over isolated
acquisitions. Maps should be available to illustrate habitat
linkages.
- Important fish, wildlife, and/or plant resources, such as endangered
species or areas of significant biological diversity, as identified by
credible conservation agencies or organizations, should be conserved
through the acquisition. Quantification of resources is important (e.g.
10% of the state's bald eagles nest at the site vs. bald eagles nest at
the site.)
- All acquisition documents, including appraisals, title reports,
environmental hazard assessments, surveys, and where appropriate, a
local attorney's opinion of easement viability, as well as other
appropriate documents, must be available for National Fish and Wildlife
Foundation staff review as part of the application process.
- The fee transfer or perpetual easement must qualify for
"conservation purposes" as defined by Internal Revenue Code Section
170(h), which generally includes the following: the preservation of land
areas for outdoor recreation by, or the education of, the general
public; the protection of relatively natural habitats of fish, wildlife,
or plants, or similar ecosystems; the preservation of open space –
including farmland and forest land – for scenic enjoyment or
pursuant to an adopted governmental conservation policy; in either case,
such open space preservation must yield a significant public benefit;
the preservation of historically important land areas or buildings.
- Access to the land by the public is preferred but not required. It
must be clearly stated in the grant application what uses are allowed or
not allowed (hunting, nature observation, ATV use, camping, etc.).
- Debt retirement on acquisition projects is not preferred.
- Final disposition of land, including ownership, must be clearly
stated. If the federal government is to receive land, additional review
by NFWF may be necessary.
- Applicants should be able to secure letters of support from
appropriate Congressional representatives for acquisition of interest in
a real property.
The Foundation's regional directors can provide additional guidance
on National Fish and Wildlife Foundation habitat priorities in your
area.
Match:
All grant awards require a minimum 1:1 match of cash or
contributed goods and services. Federal funds may be considered as
match. Higher ratios of matching funds will at times aid in making
applications more competitive.
Process:
All applications to the Acres for America Program will be made
through a two-stage process, which includes a pre- and then a
full-proposal.
Annual pre-proposal deadlines are April 1 and
September 1. If this date falls on a weekend,
applicants have until COB the following Monday to submit their
application. Only electronic preproposals submitted through the on-line preproposal form will be considered. When
provided the opportunity on the application form, select "I am
interested in a specific program,"; and scroll down to Walmart's Acres
for America and select this option. Please check this website frequently
for updates and changes.
Following a review period of about four weeks, appropriate
preproposals will be selected and applicants will be invited to submit
full proposals. Deadlines for full proposals are June 1
(April 1 preproposals) and November 1 (September 1
preproposals). Following a review of about four months, final funding
decisions will be made by the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation's
Board of Directors. The entire application process, from the time a
preproposal is submitted until a final decision is made is approximately
six months.
As part of the Foundation's commitment to adaptive management, the
application process requires demonstrating capacity for evaluating the
effectiveness of your conservation effort. This includes creation of a
logic framework that specifies objectives and links them to discrete
inputs, short-term outputs, and long-term outcomes.
Similarly, the grant agreement requires a systematic evaluation to
ensure that the expected results do occur. The intent of this evaluation
is to help you and the Foundation improve our capacity at being good
conservation stewards of the environment and to share these
scientifically credible results to further the public interest.
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