The National Board uses a formula involving population, poverty, and unemployment data to determine the eligibility of a civil jurisdiction. There is no national application process. Poverty data is from the American Community Survey (ACS) (source: U.S. Bureau of the Census); unemployment data is from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Poverty figures from the ACS 5-year average period of 2016-2020 were used in Phase 40.
For Phase 40, fiscal year 2022 funding, jurisdictions qualified for funding if they met one of the following criteria:
Number of unemployed: 300 or more with a 3.9% rate of unemployment
Number of unemployed: 300 or more with a 12.8% rate of poverty
For Phases 39 and ARPAR, fiscal year 2021 funding, jurisdictions qualified for funding if they met one of the following criteria:
(Poverty figures from the ACS 5-year average period of 2015-2019 were used in Phase 39 and Phase ARPAR.)
Number of unemployed: 300 or more with a 5.6% rate of unemployment
Number of unemployed: 300 or more with a 16.6% rate of poverty
The actual award amounts are determined by dividing the available funds by the number of unemployed persons within each jurisdiction that qualifies. Jurisdictions that do not qualify under the formula and thus do not receive funding directly from the National Board may receive funds through the State Set-Aside process, and jurisdictions that do qualify may receive additional funding the same way.