OUT.NAVIGATOR

Navigators. The whole program, every jurisdiction, one clear map.

A navigator turns a sprawling federal program into a current, source-pinned picture for every state, so you see exactly where you fit and how to qualify.

What it is

A navigator is a per-jurisdiction map of a federal program: for every state, who administers the money, what it funds, how much, and by when. Instead of reading a thousand pages, you see the shape of the whole program at a glance and drill into any jurisdiction for the detail that decides whether you qualify.

How it is built

We find the program across every state's government sources, verify each jurisdiction's facts against the document they came from, and productize the result into a navigator that stays current. When a state changes a rule or a date, the navigator moves with it.

find verify productize

What makes it remarkable

Three things you can count on.

  • DEPTH

    Per-jurisdiction depth

    Who administers it, what it funds, how much, and by when. Each state, side by side.

  • SOURCE

    Pinned to source

    Every detail links to the government document it came from, so you can verify it in one click.

  • CURRENT

    Always current

    When a state changes its rules or its dates, the navigator updates to match.

An example

A maternal-health vendor sees, state by state, which programs fund remote monitoring, the agency that runs each, the allowable uses, and the next deadline, without reading a thousand pages.

Answers

Frequently asked questions

What is a navigator?

A navigator is a per-jurisdiction map of a federal program: for every state, who administers the money, what it funds, how much, and by when. Instead of reading a thousand pages, you see the shape of the whole program at a glance and drill into any jurisdiction for the detail that decides whether you qualify.

Where does the data come from?

Every detail is drawn from each state's government sources and pinned to the .gov document it came from, such as cms.gov. You can verify any fact at its origin in one click.

How is a navigator kept current?

The corpus is watched, and when a state changes a rule or a date, the navigator moves with it. Each jurisdiction's facts are re-verified against the document they came from.

What makes a navigator trustworthy?

Every detail is provenance-sealed and links to its source. The RHTP Navigator is a fully built example: the live navigator for the $50 billion Rural Health Transformation Program administered by CMS across all 50 states.

Proven in production

See a fully built navigator: RHTP Navigator.

VerisGov already runs a dedicated navigator for the Rural Health Transformation Program, the $50 billion federal rural-health program administered by CMS across all 50 states. See what a fully built program navigator looks like, every fact pinned to its source.

Point the engine at this.

Tell us the programs, data, or questions that matter to you. We will find them, verify them, and turn them into a product your team can use.

  • Pinned to .gov sources
  • Verified
  • Provenance-sealed