Recovery Tracker

How Much Stimulus Funding is Going to Your County?

Rice County, Minn., funds by National Science Foundation

Listing $1,607,024.00 in stimulus funds from National Science Foundation for Rice

Note: For some programs where states do not report where money will be distributed across the state, we do not have the allocation for individual counties. Those programs include: Medicaid, unemployment benefits and food stamps. Those amounts are included in the totals for where the state agency receiving that money is located.

Amount refers to both the amount of stimulus funding going toward the project and the face value of the loan.

Recipient Amount Description Federal Dept./Agency Date
ST. OLAF COLLEGE $576,780 Trans-NSF Recovery Act Reasearch Support We are requesting instrumentation that will allow us to use stable isotopes to pursue research projects ranging from carbon and nitrogen biogeochemistry, to food web dynamics, to paleoecological and forensic analyses. These projects will contribute signif National Science Foundation 8/10/2009
ST. OLAF COLLEGE $348,184 Trans-NSF Recovery Act Reasearch Support This award is funded under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (Public Law 111-5). The RAGES project (Robotic Access to Grounding zones for Exploration and Science) is one of three research components of the WISSARD (Whillans Ice Stream Sub National Science Foundation 8/21/2009
ST. OLAF COLLEGE $331,684 Trans-NSF Recovery Act Reasearch Support This award is funded under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (Public Law 111-5). The LISSARD project (Lake and Ice Stream Subglacial Access Research Drilling) is one of three research components of the WISSARD integrative initiative (Whil National Science Foundation 8/25/2009
CARLETON COLLEGE $305,000 Trans-NSF Recovery Act Reasearch Support Acquisition of an X-Ray Diffractometer for Powder and Thin Film Materials Characterization National Science Foundation 2/24/2010
ST. OLAF COLLEGE $45,376 Trans-NSF Recovery Act Reasearch Support Dopamine (DA) is an important and universal modulator of motor control, but neuroscientists have yet to determine precisely how DA-containing neurons regulate specific motor programs. This has been an especially daunting task in studying the control and National Science Foundation 7/29/2009