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Updated July 8, 2022
Elections Grant Programs: Authorizations and Appropriations

Congress first authorized major federal grant programs for
elections in the Help America Vote Act of 2002 (HAVA;
P.L. 107-252). HAVA was enacted in response to issues
with the conduct of the 2000 elections. Like previous
federal elections statutes, it set requirements for the
administration of federal elections. Unlike previous
elections statutes, it also provided for grant programs to
help states meet those requirements and identify and
implement other improvements to election administration.
No new federal elections grant programs on the scale of
HAVA's have been authorized as of this writing. Grant
programs have been established for certain more limited
purposes, however, such as improving the collection of
election data. Congress has also provided further
appropriations under HAVA's grant programs, such as
funding for FY2020 to help states address effects of the
Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic on
administration of the 2020 elections.
This In Focus provides an overview of the elections-
specific grant programs Congress has established and
funded to date. It also briefly discusses non-elections-
specific grant programs that have been used to support
elections-related activities.
E-ec  _ons-Specifc Grant Programs
HAVA authorized two general grant programs for states:
* a general improvements grant program that was
designed to help states make certain general
improvements to election administration; and
* a requirements payments program that was intended
primarily to help states meet the requirements set by title
III of HAVA but could also be applied to more general
election administration improvements if a state limited
its spending on such improvements to a specified level
or had already met the HAVA requirements.
The act also authorized more specialized grant programs
aimed at encouraging or facilitating activities related to
voting systems, accessibility for voters with disabilities,
youth voter participation, and poll worker recruitment.
The Military and Overseas Voter Empowerment (MOVE)
Act of 2009 (enacted as part of P.L. 111-84) set new
requirements for military and overseas voting and
authorized new funding for HAVA requirements payments
to help states meet them. Federal grant programs have also
been established since HAVA for reimbursing certain costs
of replacing voting systems (P.L. 108-7), improving
election data collection (P.L. 110-161), and conducting
pilot programs to test new election technologies for military
and overseas voters (P.L. 111-84).
HAVA's two general grant programs were not originally
designed-and have not functioned-as regular sources of

new elections funding for states. Congress has returned to
them on occasion, though, to provide states with further
funding. It appropriated $400 million under HAVA's
general improvements grant program to help states address
elections effects of COVID-19 (P.L. 116-136), for example,
as well as $380 million for FY2018 (P.L. 115-141), $425
million for FY2020 (P.L. 116-93), and $75 million for
FY2022 (P.L. 117-103) for more general purposes.
With the exception of the COVID-19-related funding-
which states had to either obligate by December 31, 2020,
or return to the U.S. Treasury-funds provided under the
requirements payments and general improvements grant
programs have been available to recipients indefinitely.
States are not required to spend funds received under those
programs, or any interest the funds generate, within a
particular timeframe.
Table 1 summarizes the elections-specific grant programs
Congress has authorized and funded as of this writing. For
more information about each program, see CRS Report
R46646, Election Administration: Federal Grant Funding
for States and Localities, by Karen L. Shanton.
Other Grant Programs
The U.S. Election Assistance Commission (EAC) is the
only federal agency dedicated to election administration,
but other agencies have experience or expertise that may be
relevant to elections. The relevance of other agencies'
experience and expertise is reflected in choices about the
administration of the elections-specific grant programs
described in the previous section of this In Focus. For
example, although the EAC oversees most elections-
specific grant programs, responsibility for some of the
funding for disability access and military and overseas
voting was assigned to the U.S. Department of Health and
Human Services (HHS) and the U.S. Department of
Defense (DOD), respectively.
The relevance of other agencies to elections is also reflected
in the use of some non-elections-specific grants for
elections-related activities. A complete account of all of the
federal grant programs that have been or could be used to
support elections work is beyond the scope of this In Focus,
but U.S. Department of Education (ED), National Science
Foundation (NSF), and Federal Emergency Management
Agency (FEMA) programs offer some illustrative
examples. Grants have been awarded under an ED grant
program for educating children about the importance of
voting, for example, and under NSF programs for
conducting voting technology research. FEMA has
provided funding to help states address elections effects of
disasters-such as Hurricane Katrina and the September 11,
2001, attacks-and required applicants for some of its
homeland security grants to include election security
projects in their proposals.

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