Award detail

AWARD PURPOSE: THE SAINT REGIS MOHAWK RESERVATION, AKWESASNE, IS LOCATED IN NORTHERN NEW YORK STATE. AKWESASNE FORESTS ARE KNOWN FOR THEIR HISTORIC ABUNDANCE OF BLACK, WHITE, AND GREEN ASH, ALL OF WHICH, BUT ESPECIALLY BLACK ASH, ARE CULTURALLY SIGNIFICANT FOR THEIR USE IN TRADITIONAL MOHAWK BASKETRY. ASH TREES, AND BY EXTENSION, THE PRACTICE OF TRADITIONAL BASKETRY IS THREATENED BY THE GROWING POPULATIONS OF EMERALD ASH BORER (EAB) IN AKWESASNE AND IN NEARBY TRADITIONAL USE AREAS. WHILE EFFORTS HAVE BEEN TAKEN TO MITIGATE THE IMPACTS OF EAB, CONTINUED EFFORTS ARE NEEDED TO MAINTAIN LOCAL FOREST HEALTH AND TO CONTINUE TO PROTECT REMAINING ASH. THE OVERARCHING GOAL OF THIS PROJECT IS TO LIMIT IMPACTS TO TRADITIONAL BASKETRY WHILE PREPARING FOR A FUTURE RETURN OF ASH TREES TO AN ENVIRONMENT WHERE EAB IMPACTS ARE LIMITED. ACTIVITIES TO BE PERFORMED: SRMT WILL ADAPT AN INTEGRATED PEST MANAGEMENT APPROACH TO MANAGE EAB BASED ON THE LIFE-CYCLE AND DISRUPTION OF THE INSECT, WHILE ALSO IMPROVING THE CAPACITY OF THE TRIBE TO MANAGE INVASIVE INSECT SPECIES IN THE FUTURE. SLOW ASH MORTALITY (SLAM) METHODS INCLUDE SILVICULTURAL TREATMENTS, PESTICIDE APPLICATION, BIOLOGICAL CONTROL, AND ASH UTILIZATION (E.G. FIREWOOD, TIMBER, BASKETRY.) IMPROVED KNOWLEDGE BASE FOR OVERALL PEST MANAGEMENT AND INTEGRATED PEST MANAGEMENT. OUTREACH AND EDUCATION: SRMT PLANS TO PROVIDE OUTREACH ABOUT EAB AND INVASIVE SPECIES TO THE COMMUNITY, WHICH MAY INCLUDE CULTURAL AND ECONOMIC IMPACTS; CONSEQUENCES TO NATURAL RESOURCES, LANDSCAPES, AND AGRICULTURE; PREVENTION/ SAFEGUARDING; AND/OR PEST RESPONSE. INTERVIEWS: SRMT WILL RESPOND TO MEDIA INQUIRIES REGARDING THIS PROJECT AND ANY INTEREST IT MAY GENERATE. OUTREACH MATERIALS: SRMT WILL PUBLISH DOWNLOADABLE ONLINE OUTREACH MATERIAL AND DISTRIBUTE DURING COMMUNITY EVENTS. PUBLICATIONS: SRMT WILL PUBLISH 1 ARTICLE RELATED TO EAB AND THE RESPONSE IN THE SRMT COMMUNITY NEWSLETTER. DELIVERABLES AND EXPECTED OUTCOMES: THE EAB MITIGATION EFFORTS INCLUDED IN THIS PROJECT HAVE SEVERAL POTENTIAL BENEFITS THAT CONTRIBUTE TO AN OVERALL RETURN ON INVESTMENT. THEY INCLUDE: COST AVOIDANCE. EAB MITIGATION CAN PREVENT OR REDUCE THE COST ASSOCIATED WITH EXTENSIVE, WIDE-SPREAD ASH MORTALITY AND SUBSEQUENT TREE REMOVAL. ADDITIONALLY, THE PROACTIVE REMOVAL OF SOME UNFORTUNATELY LOCATED ASH TREES CAN MINIMIZE COSTS RELATED TO REMOVAL AND POTENTIAL DAMAGE TO INFRASTRUCTURE. PRESERVING ECOSYSTEM SERVICES. PREVENTING THE LOSS OF TREES IS BENEFICIAL SINCE TREES PROVIDE MANY ECOSYSTEM FUNCTIONS, INCLUDING AIR AND WATER PURIFICATION, CARBON SEQUESTRATION, WILDLIFE HABITAT, AND RUNOFF PREVENTION. ECONOMIC BENEFITS. SINCE ASH TREES HAVE INTRINSIC, ECONOMIC VALUE FOR THEIR USE AS SPLINTS AND TIMBER, THERE ARE ECONOMIC BENEFITS TO EAB MITIGATION. SOCIAL BENEFITS. THERE ARE SOCIAL BENEFITS RELATED TO THE SERVICES THAT TREES PROVIDE TO PEOPLE, INCLUDING A REDUCTION OF URBAN TEMPERATURES, CREATING MORE BREATHABLE AIR, CREATING GREENSPACE, AND ADDING AESTHETIC VALUES. CULTURAL PRESERVATION. PERHAPS MOST IMPORTANT TO THE COMMUNITY OF AKWESASNE, THE CULTURAL PRESERVATION ASPECT OF EAB MITIGATION WILL ENCOURAGE THE CONTINUED PRACTICE OF TRADITIONAL BLACK ASH BASKETRY. CAPACITY BUILDING. THE EXPERIENCE GAINED IN IMPLEMENTING A RESPONSE TO EAB WILL BETTER EQUIP SRMT TO RESPOND TO A FUTURE PEST DISASTER, AND WILL BETTER ENABLE A KNOWLEDGE TRANSFER TO OTHER TRIBES FACING SIMILAR EAB THREATS. INTENDED BENEFICIARY(IES): THE SAINT REGIS MOHAWK TRIBE, US RESIDENTS OF NORTHERN NY, THE USDA AND US GOVERNMENT THROUGH STRENGTHENED BOND BETWEEN THE PARTIES. SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES, IF KNOWN OR SPECIFIED AT THE TIME OF AWARD:

Review direct federal award facts for Saint Regis Mohawk Tribe, including awarding and funding lanes, performance dates, category codes, and source description, then move into the broader recipient, buyer, and market context quickly.

Award ID: ASST_NON_AP25PPQFO000C401_012
Signed date: 2025-07-24
Award type: COOPERATIVE AGREEMENT (B)
Last updated: April 17, 2026
Saint Regis Mohawk Tribe is the linked recipient on this award page.
Department of Agriculture / Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service is the awarding lane attached to the record.
HOGANSBURG, NY is the recipient location connected to this award.

Award amount

$306,270

Recipient

Saint Regis Mohawk Tribe

Awarding agency

Department of Agriculture

Source code

NAICS 921150

Award summary

Key facts from the source record

Total obligation

$306,270

Award type

COOPERATIVE AGREEMENT (B)

Awarding office

PPQ-FO FT COLLINS CO

Recipient

Saint Regis Mohawk Tribe

Agency

Department of Agriculture

Sub agency

Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service

Funding

Department of Agriculture / Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service

Performance state

NY

Date

2025-07-24

End date

2026-05-31

Amount

$306,270

Award description

What the source record says

AWARD PURPOSE: THE SAINT REGIS MOHAWK RESERVATION, AKWESASNE, IS LOCATED IN NORTHERN NEW YORK STATE. AKWESASNE FORESTS ARE KNOWN FOR THEIR HISTORIC ABUNDANCE OF BLACK, WHITE, AND GREEN ASH, ALL OF WHICH, BUT ESPECIALLY BLACK ASH, ARE CULTURALLY SIGNIFICANT FOR THEIR USE IN TRADITIONAL MOHAWK BASKETRY. ASH TREES, AND BY EXTENSION, THE PRACTICE OF TRADITIONAL BASKETRY IS THREATENED BY THE GROWING POPULATIONS OF EMERALD ASH BORER (EAB) IN AKWESASNE AND IN NEARBY TRADITIONAL USE AREAS. WHILE EFFORTS HAVE BEEN TAKEN TO MITIGATE THE IMPACTS OF EAB, CONTINUED EFFORTS ARE NEEDED TO MAINTAIN LOCAL FOREST HEALTH AND TO CONTINUE TO PROTECT REMAINING ASH. THE OVERARCHING GOAL OF THIS PROJECT IS TO LIMIT IMPACTS TO TRADITIONAL BASKETRY WHILE PREPARING FOR A FUTURE RETURN OF ASH TREES TO AN ENVIRONMENT WHERE EAB IMPACTS ARE LIMITED. ACTIVITIES TO BE PERFORMED: SRMT WILL ADAPT AN INTEGRATED PEST MANAGEMENT APPROACH TO MANAGE EAB BASED ON THE LIFE-CYCLE AND DISRUPTION OF THE INSECT, WHILE ALSO IMPROVING THE CAPACITY OF THE TRIBE TO MANAGE INVASIVE INSECT SPECIES IN THE FUTURE. SLOW ASH MORTALITY (SLAM) METHODS INCLUDE SILVICULTURAL TREATMENTS, PESTICIDE APPLICATION, BIOLOGICAL CONTROL, AND ASH UTILIZATION (E.G. FIREWOOD, TIMBER, BASKETRY.) IMPROVED KNOWLEDGE BASE FOR OVERALL PEST MANAGEMENT AND INTEGRATED PEST MANAGEMENT. OUTREACH AND EDUCATION: SRMT PLANS TO PROVIDE OUTREACH ABOUT EAB AND INVASIVE SPECIES TO THE COMMUNITY, WHICH MAY INCLUDE CULTURAL AND ECONOMIC IMPACTS; CONSEQUENCES TO NATURAL RESOURCES, LANDSCAPES, AND AGRICULTURE; PREVENTION/ SAFEGUARDING; AND/OR PEST RESPONSE. INTERVIEWS: SRMT WILL RESPOND TO MEDIA INQUIRIES REGARDING THIS PROJECT AND ANY INTEREST IT MAY GENERATE. OUTREACH MATERIALS: SRMT WILL PUBLISH DOWNLOADABLE ONLINE OUTREACH MATERIAL AND DISTRIBUTE DURING COMMUNITY EVENTS. PUBLICATIONS: SRMT WILL PUBLISH 1 ARTICLE RELATED TO EAB AND THE RESPONSE IN THE SRMT COMMUNITY NEWSLETTER. DELIVERABLES AND EXPECTED OUTCOMES: THE EAB MITIGATION EFFORTS INCLUDED IN THIS PROJECT HAVE SEVERAL POTENTIAL BENEFITS THAT CONTRIBUTE TO AN OVERALL RETURN ON INVESTMENT. THEY INCLUDE: COST AVOIDANCE. EAB MITIGATION CAN PREVENT OR REDUCE THE COST ASSOCIATED WITH EXTENSIVE, WIDE-SPREAD ASH MORTALITY AND SUBSEQUENT TREE REMOVAL. ADDITIONALLY, THE PROACTIVE REMOVAL OF SOME UNFORTUNATELY LOCATED ASH TREES CAN MINIMIZE COSTS RELATED TO REMOVAL AND POTENTIAL DAMAGE TO INFRASTRUCTURE. PRESERVING ECOSYSTEM SERVICES. PREVENTING THE LOSS OF TREES IS BENEFICIAL SINCE TREES PROVIDE MANY ECOSYSTEM FUNCTIONS, INCLUDING AIR AND WATER PURIFICATION, CARBON SEQUESTRATION, WILDLIFE HABITAT, AND RUNOFF PREVENTION. ECONOMIC BENEFITS. SINCE ASH TREES HAVE INTRINSIC, ECONOMIC VALUE FOR THEIR USE AS SPLINTS AND TIMBER, THERE ARE ECONOMIC BENEFITS TO EAB MITIGATION. SOCIAL BENEFITS. THERE ARE SOCIAL BENEFITS RELATED TO THE SERVICES THAT TREES PROVIDE TO PEOPLE, INCLUDING A REDUCTION OF URBAN TEMPERATURES, CREATING MORE BREATHABLE AIR, CREATING GREENSPACE, AND ADDING AESTHETIC VALUES. CULTURAL PRESERVATION. PERHAPS MOST IMPORTANT TO THE COMMUNITY OF AKWESASNE, THE CULTURAL PRESERVATION ASPECT OF EAB MITIGATION WILL ENCOURAGE THE CONTINUED PRACTICE OF TRADITIONAL BLACK ASH BASKETRY. CAPACITY BUILDING. THE EXPERIENCE GAINED IN IMPLEMENTING A RESPONSE TO EAB WILL BETTER EQUIP SRMT TO RESPOND TO A FUTURE PEST DISASTER, AND WILL BETTER ENABLE A KNOWLEDGE TRANSFER TO OTHER TRIBES FACING SIMILAR EAB THREATS. INTENDED BENEFICIARY(IES): THE SAINT REGIS MOHAWK TRIBE, US RESIDENTS OF NORTHERN NY, THE USDA AND US GOVERNMENT THROUGH STRENGTHENED BOND BETWEEN THE PARTIES. SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES, IF KNOWN OR SPECIFIED AT THE TIME OF AWARD:

Federal source facts

Direct USAspending detail fields

Source essentials

This is the shortest high-signal version of the federal award record. Open the deeper sections only when you need party, contract, or financial detail.

14 core facts
Generated award ID

ASST_NON_AP25PPQFO000C401_012

Source record ID

259570876

Award category

grant

Award type

COOPERATIVE AGREEMENT (B)

Awarding lane

Department of Agriculture / Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service

Awarding office

PPQ-FO FT COLLINS CO

Funding lane

Department of Agriculture / Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service

Funding office

PPQ-FO FT COLLINS CO

Recipient UEI

G9GLDN3W57D1

Recipient location

HOGANSBURG, NY

Place of performance

NY

Signed date

2025-07-24

Performance end

2026-05-31

Source last modified

2025-08-04

Parties and locations

Recipient, parent, address, and place-of-performance detail straight from the source record.

6 facts+
Recipient

Saint Regis Mohawk Tribe

Recipient address

71 MARGARET TERRANCE MEMORIAL WAY | HOGANSBURG, NY, 13655 | UNITED STATES

Recipient county

FRANKLIN

Recipient congressional district

21

Place of performance

NY

Performance address

NY | UNITED STATES

Contract mechanics

Competition, solicitation, vehicle, pricing, and acquisition context for the award.

0 facts+

Contract mechanics not surfaced

The direct award endpoint did not return additional contract mechanics for this record.

Financial trail

Obligation, outlay, options, and subaward figures when the source record exposes them.

3 facts+
Total obligation

$306,270

Total outlay

$5,445

Subaward count

0

Recipient business categories

Government, Native American Tribal Government

Recipient context

The company profile behind this award

Category context

Industry and service lanes around this award

Explore rankings

Ranking paths around this award