Opportunity

Alaska Online Public Notices #FY27 Highway Safety Grant

Alaska Highway Safety Office FY27 Highway Safety Grant Application Period Open

Posted

March 26, 2026

Respond By

May 01, 2026

Identifier

FY27 Highway Safety Grant

NAICS

813319, 922190

This opportunity invites eligible organizations to apply for the Alaska Highway Safety Office's FY27 Highway Safety Grant program, funded by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA). - Government Buyer: - Alaska Department of Transportation & Public Facilities Highway Safety Office (HSO) - Program Overview: - Seeks applications for projects that improve highway safety throughout Alaska - Funded by federal grants from NHTSA - Eligible Applicants: - Municipal and tribal governments - Law enforcement agencies - Non-profit organizations - Schools and universities - Community and public health organizations - Supported Initiatives: - Impaired driving prevention - Occupant protection (seat belts, child safety seats) - Speed and aggressive driving reduction - Distracted driving prevention - Pedestrian and bicycle safety - Traffic records and data improvements - Requirements: - Projects must be evidence-based and align with federal and state safety priorities - Proposals must comply with federal grant requirements - OEMs and Vendors: - No specific OEMs or vendors are named, as this is a grant program for safety initiatives, not a direct procurement of products or services

Description

The Alaska Department of Transportation & Public Facilities Highway Safety Office (HSO) is accepting applications for the Fiscal Year 2027 Highway Safety Grant until April 30, 2026. The grants support projects aimed at improving highway safety across Alaska, focusing on areas such as impaired driving prevention, occupant protection, speed and aggressive driving, distracted driving, pedestrian and bicycle safety, and traffic data improvement. Eligible applicants include local governments, Alaska Native organizations, non-profits, law enforcement, schools, and community health organizations. The program is funded by federal funds from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) and aims to reduce fatalities and serious injuries on Alaska roads through evidence-based strategies.

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