Know Your Grant

Know Your Grantgrants → State Water Resources Control Board

Emergency Drinking Water / Cleanup & Abatement Account Programs

State Water Resources Control Board · Disadvantaged Communities; Environment & Water

The Cleanup and Abatement Account (CAA) funds may be utilized to fund: (1) projects that clean up and/or abate the effects of a waste on waters of the State, or (2) projects that address urgent drinking water needs.

Award amount
up to $9,700,000
Deadline
Rolling
Who can apply
Nonprofits
Match required
Yes
Grant breakdown · $29

4 documents required — get the full breakdown

We read the entire official notice so you don't have to. Unlocks:

Ready to apply? · $699

We draft it, you fill in what's yours, we check it before you submit

  1. We write the first draft — structured to this notice's exact requirements.
  2. We mark exactly what's yours to fill in — your numbers, your narrative. Never a blank page.
  3. We review your finished version before you submit — completeness + competitiveness.

A grant writer for this runs $1,500–$5,000+. Flat fee, never a percentage of your award.

Emergency Drinking Water / Cleanup & Abatement Account Programs — frequently asked

Am I eligible for Emergency Drinking Water / Cleanup & Abatement Account Programs?

This opportunity lists Nonprofits among eligible applicants. The $29 breakdown spells out the exact eligibility rules — org type, location, size, and status — so you know for certain before you invest time.

What's the deadline for Emergency Drinking Water / Cleanup & Abatement Account Programs?

This opportunity is rolling or unspecified — see the official notice.

What do I need to apply?

4 documents are required. The $29 breakdown lists every form, attachment, narrative and certification, plus the scoring criteria and what gets applications rejected.

Can you write the application for me?

Our $699 draft-&-review service writes the first draft, marks exactly what only you can fill in (your numbers and narrative), and reviews your finished version before you submit — a fraction of a $1,500–$5,000 grant writer.

This report compiles and structures publicly available grant information from official federal and state sources. It is not legal, financial, or grant-writing advice, is not an endorsement by any grantor, and does not replace reading the official grant solicitation or consulting a grants professional. Eligibility, funding amounts, and deadlines are current as of the source’s publication date — always confirm against the official notice of funding opportunity before you apply. Many federal grants are not available to for-profit businesses or individuals; where that applies, the report says so.