Digital Equity Grants

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The Digital Equity Initiative funds projects or programs that address barriers to accessing and using technology. Grants will be a cornerstone of the Digital Equity Initiative to promote community-driven solutions through partners who can effectively deliver on the ground support to Arlington residents and businesses.

Focus areas may differ each grant cycle and will be informed by the 2024 Broadband Study and ongoing work of the Digital Equity Coalition.  

FY2026 Grant Cycle

The FY 2026 cycle of digital equity grants is now closed.

Research from the Broadband Study and training experiences affirmed a wide range of needs in substance and delivery for additional digital literacy and skills training opportunities. In addition, it suggested the need for more on-the-ground support to promote digital inclusion opportunities in the County. To expand digital inclusion activities, the Initiative made up to $500,000 of one-time funding available in FY2026, focusing on two core areas:  

  • Digital navigation (anticipated up to $300,000, one-year): Funds towards train-the-trainer workshops, help desk support, and communication collateral to support outreach. Prospective digital navigation programs should ensure that residents, businesses, staff, and service providers are aware of the available resources, feel secure asking for and receiving assistance, and have opportunities for personalized tech support and skill-building training. This is occurring on some level in the County, but digital navigation as a service could be formalized and better embedded in the community.
  • Digital skills programs (anticipated up to $200,000, one-year): Funds towards digital literacy and skilling programs to enhance education, lifelong learning, and employment and workforce development among residents, students, and/or businesses. Topics could vary from basic computing and internet safety to more advanced topics or technical training. Grants are anticipated to be smaller on average than for digital navigation.

Applicants must serve (or wish to serve) Arlington residents and be nonprofit organizations or Virginia public institutes of higher education. Projects are encouraged to target one or more populations identified as a high need in the Broadband Study, including older adults, incarcerated individuals, veterans, persons living with a disability, Persons of Color, English language learners or those with language barriers, and low-income households. Grantees must agree to join or support Arlington’s Digital Equity Coalition.  

Application Documents

NOFA Q + A

Click each topic heading below to expand the Q + A list for that topic.

Eligibility and Awards Questions

Do you anticipate an average award or intend to impose grant minimums or maximums?  

The County has up to $500,000 total to award for FY2026. The application does not have any grant minimums or maximums other than for the total grant for each pool. Applicants could apply for up to a combined $500,000, though it is unlikely that the County would fund only one project. If an applicant receives a large percentage of the total grant amount, their scoring or other proposal elements will need to reflect this (e.g., large point spread between other applicants). We anticipated funding less than ten applicants as part of this funding cycle.  

The funding requested may not reflect the actual amount allocated. The selection team may suggest refinements to the proposal, including areas to promote efficiency with other similar proposals or local resources. If grantees receive less than requested, applicants may be required to resubmit an updated budget/scope reflective of the available funding.  

Do potential grantees have to be based in Arlington or Virginia to be awarded?  

No. However, 100 percent of the beneficiaries of the program must be Arlington residents or businesses, and grantees must participate in the Arlington Digital Equity Coalition, which holds in-person meetings within the County.  

My nonprofit does not have a 501c3 designation (or its 501c3 status is pending). Is my organization eligible to apply?

No. Your organization must be designated as a 501(c)(3), and applicants must submit their IRS designation letter and latest Form 990 to be reviewed.

Organizations without this designation could be a partner in a project with an eligible applicant. Project narratives should discuss the relationship between partners, including fiscal sponsorships, and their individual contributions to the project.

Organizations looking to gain nonprofit status might consider a future funding cycle or a different Arlington County grant, such as the Race to Rebuilding Trust & Community grant or a grant through the Community Development Fund.

Are Digital Equity Coalition Members eligible to apply?

Yes. Digital Equity Coalition members may apply if they are eligible applicants (i.e., 501c3 nonprofits, universities, or colleges) and are not serving as reviewers for this grant.

Are programs that support basic computer skills eligible activities?  

Yes! We recognize that residents and businesses are at different levels in their digital learning journey. Centering your program/project around the most basic skill building is certainly an eligible project type. Projects may support a range of outcomes and goals related to improved technology use, from promoting workforce training and lifelong learning to social connections, life skills, civic engagement, and more.  

Narrative and Budget Questions

Should applicants proposing both digital navigation and skill-building activities submit one application with a unified budget and narrative, or should we submit two separate applications, each with its own budget and narrative?  

Applicants wishing to implement both digital navigation and digital skills training activities should apply under one unified proposal. This accommodates budget and implementation elements that serve both activities and may result in cost savings to the project. 

Applicants should submit a single budget, though provide enough detail in the narrative so that reviewers understand the breakdown of the budget towards navigator or skills training activities. 

Applicants seeking funding for both digital navigation and digital skills training should check both projects under Question 12. When both projects are checked, questions 17 and 18 will show in the Submittable application and will be required for submission. Applicants should include elements for both projects in the remaining questions. 

Does the grant have any budget cost caps or limitations? How should applicants treat indirect costs in the budget template?  

Indirect costs (e.g., facility rentals) are eligible expenses and can be inserted in the “Other” budget category as well as described in the narrative.   

This grant does not have any cost caps associated with administrative, indirect, or other budget line items. The review team will assess whether proposed budget items are clear/descriptive and legal, costs are reasonably found in the market, and the proposed budget supports the project proposed.  

Applicants should consider the impact of administrative and indirect costs on the project’s ability to deliver services and the number of beneficiaries served. Both are important criteria in the scoring rubric that will impact a proposal’s score.  

If the County anticipates executing grant agreements in Fall 2025, what should we list as our project start date?  

Applicants may use a general start date (e.g., Month 1) or identify an anticipated start month (e.g., January). Either is acceptable. The County will not hold you to a specific start date proposed in the application as the actual date is dependent upon the County grant process. Grantees, however, will be required to execute and complete their project within one year of award. 

Should applicants use specific word choices related to equity and inclusion given the federal climate?  

Applicants should propose the strategy and use word choices that put forth the most compelling proposal that answers the questions in the application. Equity and inclusion remain important values of Arlington County. Federal changes do not change this grant opportunity.  

How do you recommend addressing questions that seem to require a response to several components within a 350-limit word count?  

Each question has various questions to provide an illustration into the types of information reviewers may look for to understand and score the proposal. We strongly encourage applicants to incorporate as many details as possible about the proposed design and other elements of the project while maintaining a concise writing style. Consider using bullets to convey information or use the Attachments section to upload information that may support your application.  

What level of specificity are you looking for in the budget request? For instance, if applicants request technology supplies, should we break down the various supplies into different line items? Or can we leave it as one line item, “technology supplies,” and describe the different types of things it would cover?

Applicants may group like items in the template categories. Each technology supply would not need to be a separate line item, though you may add line items to the budget template to the extent it supports the presentation of information. For broad categories like technology supplies, specificity is requested in the narrative column to document how the budget is derived (e.g., 10 laptops, $250). This will also allow reviewers to compare the budget request to the proposed services/program.

Are laptops and other computer equipment eligible expenses?

Yes! While this grant does not focus on funding large-scale device distribution activities or device refurbishment programs, laptops and other computer equipment needed to implement a project are eligible expenses that may be incorporated into your budget. Be sure to note the need for computer equipment and how it will benefit beneficiaries and the overall project. In the budget template, describe the equipment (e.g., number of laptops and the cost per device). 

Are refreshments for skills trainings an eligible expense?

Yes. Refreshments are an allowable expense. Please note in the narrative column of the budget template a brief description and cost for the refreshments. Also incorporate into your other narratives that offering refreshments is part of your strategy and explain how it will help support the project.

Is this grant reimbursable?

The grant will likely be structured as a reimbursable grant, though alternative disbursement arrangements may be discussed during the development of the grant agreement.

Partnership Questions

If proposals involve a partnership in which another organization would receive part of the funding, should applicants structure the relationship as a prime recipient with a subcontract (passthrough), or do you prefer another model for managing collaborative applications? 

The grant agreement will likely be structured with the prime entity. Projects encompassing more than one partner should discuss partner roles and responsibilities in the narrative and provide supporting documentation in a letter of support or MOU documenting the partnership. The budget narrative should also identify passthrough dollars.  

If my organization applies, could I also serve as a partner/sub on another organization’s application?

Yes. Applicants are limited to one primary application per organization. However, they may serve as a partner/contractor on another application.

How do applicants manage finding facilities/space to facilitate programming?  

Applicants should connect with County departments, Arlington Public Schools, and community-based partners, particularly Digital Equity Coalition members, to explore facility needs.  

If the proposal is a part of a larger program that serves the Northern Virginia region or other geographies, will applicants need to break out the budget and impact numbers for Arlington specifically?

Yes. The grant should fund activities that benefit Arlington residents/businesses only; however, organizations may leverage staff or other resources that support other localities. Applicants should describe how they arrive at a budget line item. For example, if a Program Administrator covers several geographies but anticipates 15% of their time spent on administering the program proposed as part of this grant, then the applicant should note the total salary and percentage towards Arlington in the budget narrative.  

How do applicants ensure proposals are streamlined with other activities and do not duplicate County efforts?  

Applicants should include project partners with local experience. Grant reviewers may suggest refinements to encourage partnerships or streamline activities as part of this grant process. In addition, the Digital Equity Coalition will be an opportunity for applicants to build partnerships and promote streamlining. It is recommended that applicants attend upcoming coalition meetings to inform their proposal. Future meetings may also be used to refine implementation elements post-award.

Other Questions

Can I tweak my application once I have already submitted?  

Yes, however, staff must manually reopen your application. If you need to tweak your application, request reopening your application by emailing DigitalEquity@arlingtonva.us.  

What is the likelihood of future funding after this initial grant?  

The Digital Equity Initiative is funded with proceeds as part of a past real estate transaction. The funding was earmarked by the County Board to advance digital equity initiatives. Grants will likely be a cornerstone of the Initiative to promote community-driven solutions through partners who can deliver on-the-ground support to Arlington residents and businesses. Future grant cycles are likely, though future activities and grant structures will be assessed after this initial grant cycle.  

Who will review and score the proposals (e.g., County staff, community reviewers, Digital Equity Coalition members)?

The review team is made up of less than 10 County employees from various departments, including the Department of Community Planning, Housing and Development, the Department of Technology Services, the Department of Human Services, Libraries, Arlington Public Schools, and the County Manager’s Office. Some, but not all, of the reviewers are part of the Digital Equity Coalition.

Who are the current Digital Equity Coalition members?  

Digital Equity Coalition members are listed in the summary of the coalition's February Kickoff Meeting(PDF, 580KB)

 

Timeline

Milestone  Date 
 Funding opportunity announcement April 3, 2025 

Virtual Q + A (optional)

April 22, 2025

12 - 12:45 p.m.

Deadline to submit questions May 9, 2025, by 5 p.m. 
Applications due  May 15, 2025, by 5 p.m.
 Anticipated County Board approval Early Fall 2025 at latest 
 Execute grant agreements Early Fall 2025 at latest 
 Funds available to be spent by grantees Up to one year after execution of grant agreement