Home / Agencies / Education / 2026-07504
Proposed Rule

Proposed Waiver and Extension of the Project Period With Funding-Title I, Part C Consortium Incentive Grant Program

Document Number
2026-07504
Published
April 17, 2026
Effective Date
-

Abstract

The Secretary proposes to waive the requirements in the Education Department General Administrative Regulations (EDGAR) that generally prohibit project period extensions involving the obligation of additional Federal funds. The proposed waiver and extension would enable 39 projects under Assistance Listing Number (ALN) 84.144F to receive funding for up to two additional 12-month periods, not to exceed September 30, 2028.

Federal Register Source

This document is published by the Office of the Federal Register, National Archives and Records Administration. Access the full regulatory text, preamble, and docket comments below.

View Full Text on FederalRegister.gov →

Opens in new tab · federalregister.gov

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the 2026-07504 Federal Register document?
Document 2026-07504 is a Proposed Rule published by the Department of Education in the Federal Register on April 17, 2026. The Secretary proposes to waive the requirements in the Education Department General Administrative Regulations (EDGAR) that generally prohibit project period extensions involving the obligation of additional Federal funds. The proposed waiver and extension would enable 39 projects under Assistance Listing Number (ALN) 84.144F to receive funding for up to two additional 12-month periods, not to exceed September 30, 2028. View the original at https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2026/04/17/2026-07504/proposed-waiver-and-extension-of-the-project-period-with-funding-title-i-part-c-consortium-incentive.
Is document 2026-07504 an economically significant rule?
No. Document 2026-07504 is not classified as economically significant under Executive Order 12866. Economically significant rules require OIRA review and are estimated to have impacts of $100 million or more per year.
Data sourced from official state legislatures, IAPP, NCSL, and federal regulatory trackers. See our methodology for details. Retrieved and formatted by PlainRegWatch Editorial

Every figure on PlainRegWatch is rendered directly from state source data, no number is typed in by an editor. This page draws directly on federal and state source data, no figure is typed in by an editor. See our editorial standards & corrections policy, the methodology behind these numbers, or report a data error.