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Georgia · Grant Playbook

STEM & Farm-to-School Grants for Georgia Schools

Funding pathways for the 2,300 public K-12 schools across Georgia — from Atlanta and Augusta to Columbus and Savannah. Federal capital grants, state CTE dollars, and private foundation funding for turnkey vertical-farming STEM labs.

The Georgia opportunity

Federal grants, Georgia delivery channels.

Georgia's combination of large student populations in Atlanta and Augusta, established CTE infrastructure through Georgia Department of Education CTAE (Career, Technical and Agricultural Education), and active state-level interest in agricultural workforce development makes it a strong jurisdiction for a campus-based vertical-farming STEM lab. The federal grants that fund this program are not Georgia-specific — but the implementation channels are.

Section 1

The 4 grant pathways for Georgia schools.

Each pathway is federal at the source but reaches Georgia through a different channel. Most successful programs stack at least two.

Federal · Implementation

USDA Patrick Leahy Farm to School Grant

Competitive federal grant available to any school participating in the National School Lunch Program — including thousands of NSLP-participating schools across the state.

State-specific note

In Georgia, applications are submitted directly to USDA, but proposals that document coordination with the state Farm to School coordinator (housed within or alongside Georgia Department of Education) consistently score better on the partnership criteria.

State · Formula + Competitive

Perkins V & State CTE Funds

Federal Perkins V dollars distributed through the state, intended to fund career and technical education programs that align to high-wage, high-demand occupational pathways.

State-specific note

In Georgia, Perkins V funds flow through Georgia Department of Education, with Georgia Department of Education CTAE (Career, Technical and Agricultural Education) acting as the primary CTE delivery channel. AgTech, robotics, and controlled-environment agriculture map cleanly onto existing approved program-of-study categories.

Federal → State Sub-grant

USDA Specialty Crop Block Grant Program (SCBGP)

Federal allocation to each state, then competitively re-granted to projects that boost the competitiveness of specialty crops — leafy greens, herbs, vegetables, fruits.

State-specific note

Georgia's Specialty Crop Block Grant allocations are administered by the Georgia Department of Agriculture. Vertical-farming STEM labs qualify because they both produce specialty crops on campus and train the next generation of specialty-crop technicians.

Private · Foundation

Private STEM & Sustainability Foundations

Toshiba America Foundation, Captain Planet Foundation, Whole Kids Foundation Garden Grants, and similar corporate / family foundations. Smaller per-grant, faster turnaround, easier to stack.

State-specific note

Several national foundations score regionally — corporate foundations with operations in Atlanta or Augusta often weight Georgia applications more favorably, especially when the project aligns with their local community-investment priorities.

Section 2

Why Georgia schools are a great fit.

Four reasons Georgia consistently shows up in our pipeline of strong grant candidates.

K-12 enrollment scale across Georgia

With approximately 2,300 public schools serving students from Atlanta, Augusta, Columbus, and Savannah, Georgia has the institutional density to support large multi-site grant proposals — and the per-student impact metrics grant reviewers look for.

Established CTE infrastructure

Georgia Department of Education CTAE (Career, Technical and Agricultural Education) already operates the Perkins V delivery channel in Georgia, which means an AgTech STEM lab plugs into an existing workforce-readiness funding stream rather than requiring a new program category.

Growing AgTech workforce demand

Controlled-environment agriculture is one of the fastest-growing segments of US agriculture, and Georgia employers — especially those serving Atlanta and Augusta — increasingly need entry-level technicians who understand sensor loops, hydroponic chemistry, and automated systems.

Local food-supply resilience

Georgia's grant priorities — like those of every state since 2020 — have shifted toward food-supply resilience. An on-campus food utility producing clean leafy greens year-round directly answers the resilience priority that Georgia Department of Agriculture surfaces in its specialty-crop block-grant scoring.

Grant details verified against publicly available federal documentation. State-specific implementation details may vary — confirm with your local CTE coordinator or the relevant office at Georgia Department of Education.

School counts approximate, based on publicly available NCES data.

Check eligibility for Georgia schools