Contract Services for engineers, municipalities,
state agencies, & funding agencies

Although NCRCAP services provided for very low-income qualifying rural communities can be obtained on a pro bono basis, NCRCAP also provides fee-for-services contracts and assistance to other communities, engineering firms, state agencies, and funding agencies.

Some examples of services offered to municipalities, engineering firms, state and private agencies, etc., by NCRCAP

  • Grant Research & Writing Services
  • Grant Administration Assistance
  • Community development needs assessments and surveys
  • Provide comprehensive statewide and local trainings and workshop development, coordination, facilitation and evaluation
  • Community asset mapping and GIS data formatting
  • Water and Wastewater facilities asset inventory and asset management planning
  • Environmental Health Surveys
  • Community organizing, planning, and education efforts, including the facilitation of community meetings and door-to-door outreach
  • Assist unincorporated areas in forming water and/or sewer districts as necessary
  • Provide assistance to municipalities in evaluation and selection of engineers and other contract consultants
  • Environmental conflict resolution
  • Meeting facilitation
  • Comprehensive Watershed Planning
  • Annual Water Quality Reports
  • Interpretation/translation services (English/Spanish) for public health , environmental quality, and housing related projects
  • Small water treatment system operation
  • On-site wastewater system management
  • Wastewater subsurface system operation

Some examples of past and present contractors with NCRCAP

  • Chatham County Government
  • Wake County Government
  • North Carolina Rural Center for Economic Development
  • North Carolina Department of Environment and Natural Resources
  • Wooten Company
  • McGill and Associates
  • Walnut Island Sanitary District
  • Environmental Protection Agency Region IV
  • Southeast Rural Community Assistance Project, Inc. (Roanoke VA)
  • Small Flows Clearinghouse, West Virginia University