White-label USDA Rural Development and Community Facilities application writing — behind your brand, on your timeline.
When a small city hires your firm for a water plant, a fire hall, or a community facility, the project usually depends on a USDA Rural Development funding package — a 40 to 50 page application that pulls your engineers off the work they were hired to do. Larger firms keep a funding department for exactly this. For everyone else, it lands on whoever has a free afternoon.
That's where I come in. I write and assemble the funding application behind your brand, so your team stays on the engineering and your client never waits on the paperwork.
| Funding application package | Me |
|---|---|
| Project narrative & statement of need | ✔ |
| Census demographics & eligibility / scoring analysis (7 CFR 3570) | ✔ |
| Budget & funding request, built from your cost estimate | ✔ |
| Federal forms (SF-424 family) | ✔ |
| Environmental record assembly (NEPA / RD 1970) | ✔ |
| Letters of support — drafted for partners to sign | ✔ |
Stays with you: the engineering, the Preliminary Architectural Report and cost estimate, and — always — the client relationship. I never contact your client. Your firm's name is on the work.
Project description, your cost estimate, and the target program. One email — no meetings required.
Full narrative and package, written to the program's scoring criteria, returned for your review.
You review, put your firm's name on it, and submit. One round of revisions included.
A fixed fee per application, typically $1,200–$1,500, agreed in writing before any work begins — less than a city pays going direct, since you keep the client and I work behind the scenes. Volume arrangements for firms with regular municipal pursuits.
Never a percentage of the award, never contingent on approval — consistent with the GPA Code of Ethics. Exact quote depends on program and project scope; ask and I'll price your next application.
I'd rather earn your trust with work than with a résumé. So the first one is on me.
No contract, no commitment, no cost — until you've seen the work with your own eyes. I'm building this into an official, tax-paying practice, and zero-risk proof is how I'd want to be hired too.
Tell me the project and the program — I'll tell you the fee and the turnaround.
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