a) The Issuance of One-Year Grants
- 1) An awardee must have a minimum of 5 years of experience in administering grants (federal, State or private sources) to be eligible for a multi-year award.
2) All awardees with less than 5 years of experience in administering grants (federal, State or private sources) are eligible for a multi-year award, if conditions are met:
- A) The State awarding agency must assign specific conditions to the awardee in response to the risk posed by the applicant through the ICQ and programmatic risk assessment;
- B) Specific condition compliance must be monitored by the State awarding agency or pass-through entity throughout the grant term; and
- C) Renewal grants are conditioned on a comprehensive evaluation of the awardee's fiscal, administrative, and programmatic compliance during the preceding grant term.
b) The issuance of discretionary grants in 3-year terms (one-year initial term with the option to renew for up to 2 additional years).
- 1) A multi-year award is defined as a one-year grant with subsequent renewal grants. A multi-year award may not exceed 3 years of total funding.
- 2) All grant programs that have been in existence for 5 years may use a multi-year award.
3) Grant programs that have been in existence for less than 5 years may only use a multi-year award if:
- A) The awardee has specific expertise and experience related to the programmatic use of the fund, and has demonstrated an administrative and programmatic capacity to provide the grant services; or
- B) The grant program will function as a pilot program and requires a multi-year award to adequately evaluate the program model for feasibility.
- 4) Agencies shall use a rolling multi-year schedule to manage the administrative responsibilities of the grant application process. Under eligibility terms, agencies have discretion to stagger the grant terms and subsequent renewals.
- c) The issuance of no-cost extensions (as defined in Section 7000.30) must not be prohibited by statute (see 2 CFR 200.308(f)(1)). The grant amount may not be changed under a no-cost extension. No-cost extensions are subject to appropriation under the terms of the executed grant agreement.
(Source: Amended at 49 Ill. Reg. 3947, effective March 20, 2025)