Photo by Mark Andre.

There are $2 million up for grabs to rehabilitate historic sites in need of preservation, and who gets the money is entirely up to you.

The Partners in Preservation: National Parks campaign is determining how the grants gets parceled out through a popular vote. Already, the campaign has narrowed down the candidates to 20 places, including one in D.C.—the Christopher Columbus Memorial Fountain at the entrance to Union Station. The Union Station Redevelopment Corporation and National Mall and Memorial Parks are seeking $249,000 for the sculpture.

“Columbus Fountain currently suffers from significant structural deficiencies,” said Beverley Swaim-Staley, president of Union Station Redevelopment Corporation, in a release. “It does not function as it once did, the statuary has been painted over to hide expanding discoloration, and the fountain base is currently boarded up to prevent further damage.”

According to the Smithsonian’s art inventories catalog, the Knights of Columbus began lobbying for a memorial to Christopher Columbus in 1906, and Congress obliged a year later with $100,000. American artist Lorado Taft created the marble sculpture, which was dedicated in 1912 in the aptly named Columbus Circle.

The fountain’s competition is stiff. Other sites reside in Governors Island, Mount Rainier National Park, Great Smoky Mountains National Park, Zion National Park, and more. Luckily, none are looking for more than $250,000, so at least eight of them will receive grants. Plus, all 20 selected sites already received $10,000 for awareness campaigns.

The polls open today and will remain that way until July 5. Unlike in presidential elections, you can vote daily if you like.

This nationwide expansion of the Partners in Preservation program is part of the National Park Service Centennial celebration, which also includes coloring books designed by Joseph Gordon-Levitt. The campaign is a partnership of the National Trust for Historic Preservation, American Express, and National Geographic, which is sponsoring a trip for one voter to Yellowstone.

Go to VoteYourPark.org to vote.