McDowell County Commission on Aging listed for $125,000 CDC grant
A federal record shows the McDowell County Commission on Aging was awarded $125,000 for drug-free prevention community capacity building, a grant that could expand local prevention work and senior services.

A federal grant of $125,000 aimed at strengthening local drug-free prevention and community capacity is tied to the McDowell County Commission on Aging, according to a consolidated federal awards record. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention award, listed under the title "Drug Free Prevention Community Capacity Building" with award number NH28CE003525, carries an action amount of $125,000 and an action date recorded as 8/13/2025. The federal recipient record was served and updated on Jan. 22, 2026.
The recipient organization is listed as MCDOWELL COUNTY COMMISSION ON AGING, INCORPORATED, located at 725 Stewart St, Welch, WV. The federal tracking record bundles Department of Health and Human Services awards by fiscal year and also shows earlier entries tied to the commission from the Administration for Community Living and other HHS programs in fiscal year 2024 and fiscal year 2025 for equipment and senior services.
This award places public health funding aimed at prevention into the hands of a county nonprofit that already receives federal support for senior programs and equipment. For residents, the grant could translate into expanded outreach, prevention training, partnerships with local health providers, or new community-based activities that connect older adults and caregivers with substance misuse prevention resources. The award title signals a focus on capacity building, which typically means investment in staff training, partnerships, and program infrastructure rather than one-time supplies.
Institutions and elected officials will need to clarify how the Commission on Aging intends to deploy the funds and what measures will be used to track results. The TAGGS federal grants summary that lists the award is designed to provide transparency about award titles, award codes, action amounts, and issue-year groupings; it is a public record useful for tracking federal funding tied to McDowell County service providers. Local accountability will depend on timely public reporting from the Commission on Aging and coordination with county health partners.
McDowell County residents relying on senior services or community prevention programs should watch for announcements from the McDowell County Commission on Aging at its Welch office, 725 Stewart St. County leaders, nonprofit partners, and public health providers will need to translate the federal award into local programming and measurable outcomes to ensure the funding addresses community needs.
What comes next is public detail: program plans, timelines, and performance metrics that show how the $125,000 will be spent and what community gaps it aims to close. Close oversight and clear communication will shape whether the award strengthens prevention capacity in McDowell County and complements existing senior services.
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