Susan Harwood Training Grant Program, FY 2008, 16067-16074 [E8-6108]
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Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 59 / Wednesday, March 26, 2008 / Notices
DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Employment and Training
Administration
Occupational Safety and Health
Administration
[TA–W–63,013]
Susan Harwood Training Grant
Program, FY 2008
A.O. Smith Electrical Products
Company, Scottsville, KY; Notice of
Termination of Investigation
Pursuant to section 221 of the Trade
Act of 1974, as amended, an
investigation was initiated on March 17,
2008 in response to a worker petition
filed by a company official on behalf of
workers at A.O. Smith Electrical
Products Company, Scottsville,
Kentucky.
The petitioning group of workers is
covered by an earlier petition (TA–W–
62,988) filed on March 11, 2008 that is
the subject of an ongoing investigation
for which a determination has not yet
been issued. Further investigation in
this case would duplicate efforts and
serve no purpose; therefore the
investigation under this petition has
been terminated.
Signed at Washington, DC, this 17th day of
March 2008.
Richard Church,
Certifying Officer, Division of Trade
Adjustment Assistance.
[FR Doc. E8–6110 Filed 3–25–08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4510–FN–P
DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Employment and Training
Administration
[TA–W–62,919]
Penske Logistics, Elliston, VA; Notice
of Termination of Investigation
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Pursuant to section 221 of the Trade
Act of 1974, as amended, an
investigation was initiated on February
28, 2008 in response to a worker
petition filed by a state agency
representative on behalf of workers of
Penske Logistics, Elliston, Virginia.
The petitioner has requested that the
petition be withdrawn. Consequently,
the investigation has been terminated.
Signed at Washington, DC, this 19th day of
March 2008.
Richard Church,
Certifying Officer, Division of Trade
Adjustment Assistance.
[FR Doc. E8–6119 Filed 3–25–08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4510–FN–P
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Occupational Safety and Health
Administration, Labor.
ACTION: Initial announcement of
availability of funds and solicitation for
grant applications (SGA).
AGENCY:
Funding Opportunity No.: SHTG–FY–
08–02.
Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance No.:
17.502.
SUMMARY: The U.S. Department of
Labor, Occupational Safety and Health
Administration (OSHA) awards funds to
nonprofit organizations to provide
training and educational programs for
employers and employees about safety
and health topics selected by OSHA.
Nonprofit organizations, including
community-based and faith-based
organizations, that are not an agency of
a State or local government are eligible
to apply. Additionally, State or local
government-supported institutions of
higher education are eligible to apply in
accordance with 29 CFR part 95. This
notice announces grant availability for
Susan Harwood Training Program
grants. All information and forms
needed to apply for this funding
opportunity are published as part of this
SGA or are available on the Grants.gov
site.
DATES: Grant applications must be
received electronically by the
Grants.gov system no later than 4:30
p.m., E.T., on Friday, May 23, 2008, the
application deadline date.
ADDRESSES: Applications for grants
submitted under this competition must
be submitted electronically using the
government-wide Grants.gov Apply site
at https://www.grants.gov. If applying
online poses a hardship to any
applicant, the OSHA Directorate of
Training and Education will provide
assistance to ensure that applications
are submitted online by the closing date.
Applicants must contact the OSHA
Directorate of Training and Education
office listed on the announcement at
least one week prior to the application
deadline date, (or no later than 4:30
p.m., E.T., on May 16, 2008) to speak to
a representative who can provide
assistance to ensure that applications
are submitted online by the closing date.
Requests for extensions to this deadline
will not be granted. Further information
regarding submitting your grant
application electronically is listed in
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section IV, Item 3, Submission Date,
Times, and Addresses.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Any
questions regarding this SGA should be
directed to Cynthia Bencheck, Program
Analyst, e-mail address:
bencheck.cindy@dol.gov, tel: 847–297–
4810 (note that this is not a toll-free
number), or Jim Barnes, Director, Office
of Training and Educational Programs,
e-mail address barnes.jim@dol.gov, tel:
847–297–4810. To obtain further
information on the Susan Harwood
Training Grant Program of the U.S.
Department of Labor, visit the OSHA
Web site of the Occupational Safety and
Health Administration at https://
www.osha.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Funding Opportunity Description
Overview of the Susan Harwood
Training Grant Program
The Susan Harwood Training Grant
Program provides funds for programs to
train employees and employers to
recognize, avoid, and prevent safety and
health hazards in their workplaces. The
program emphasizes four areas:
• Educating employees and
employers in small businesses. For
purposes of this grant program, a small
business is one with 250 or fewer
employees.
• Training employees and employers
about new OSHA standards.
• Training at-risk employee and
employer populations.
• Training employees and employers
about high risk activities or hazards
identified by OSHA through the
Department of Labor’s Strategic Plan, or
as part of an OSHA special emphasis
program.
Grant Category Being Announced
Under this solicitation for grant
applications, OSHA will accept
applications for the Targeted Topic
training grant category.
Topics for the Targeted Topic Training
Category
Organizations funded for Targeted
Topic training category grants are
expected to develop and provide
occupational safety and health training
and/or educational programs addressing
one of the topics selected by OSHA,
recruit employees and employers for the
training, and conduct and evaluate the
training. Grantees are also expected to
conduct follow-up evaluations with
individuals trained by their program to
determine what, if any, changes were
made to reduce hazards in their
workplaces as a result of the training. If
your organization plans to train
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employees or employers in any of the 26
states operating OSHA-approved State
Plans, State OSHA requirements for that
state must be included in the training.
Eighteen different training topics were
selected for this grant announcement.
OSHA may award grants for some or all
of the listed Targeted Topic training
topics.
Applicants wishing to address more
than one of the announced grant topics
must submit a separate grant application
for each topic. Each application must
propose a plan for developing and
conducting training programs
addressing the recognition and
prevention of safety and health hazards
for one of the topics listed below.
Construction Industry Hazards.
Programs that train employees and
employers in the recognition and
prevention of safety and health hazards
on one of the following topics.
• Falls from Scaffolds, Ladders and
Roofs in Construction.
• Construction Focus Four hazards
(training programs must include all four
hazard areas—falls, electrocution,
caught-in and struck-by.)
• Safety Hazards related to
Mechanized, Over-the-Road and Heavy
Construction Equipment, including
Compactor Rollovers.
• Work Zone Safety.
General Industry Hazards.
Programs that train employees and
employers in the recognition and
prevention of safety and health hazards
on one of the following topics.
• Combustible Dust.
• Ergonomics in Foundries.
• Foundry Contaminants Exposures.
• Electrical Safety including Arc
Flash and Personal Protective
Equipment (PPE) for Arc Flash.
• Falls in General Industry.
• Food Processing Health Hazards,
including Diacetyl Exposures in
Popcorn and Other Food Flavoring
Facilities.
• Night Time Sanitation and
Maintenance/Third Shift, including
Lockout/Tagout and Confined Spaces.
• Emergency Preparedness and
Response including Pandemic Flu
Preparation.
• Safety and Health Management
Systems for Small and Medium-Sized
Businesses.
• Powered Industrial Trucks.
• Process Safety Management,
including Chemical Plants, Ethanol
Plants, Refineries and Anhydrous
Ammonia.
• Slings and Materials Handling.
Other Safety And Health Topic Areas.
Programs that train employees and
employers in the recognition and
prevention of safety and health hazards
on one of the following topics.
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• Native American Tribal Safety and
Health Issues.
• Safety and Health Hazards and
Safety Plan Development in
Shipbreaking.
II. Award Information
Targeted Topic training grants will be
awarded for a 12-month period. The
project period for these grants begins no
later than September 30, 2008. There is
approximately $6.7 million available for
this grant category. The average federal
award will be approximately $175,000.
III. Eligibility Information
1. Eligible Applicants
Nonprofit organizations, including
community-based and faith-based
organizations, that are not an agency of
a State or local government are eligible
to apply. Additionally, State or local
government supported institutions of
higher education are eligible to apply in
accordance with 29 CFR part 95.
Eligible organizations can apply
independently for funding or in
partnership with other eligible
organizations, but in such a case, a lead
organization must be identified. Subgrants are not authorized. Subcontracts,
if any, must be awarded in accordance
with 29 CFR 95.40–48, including OMB
circulars requiring free and open
competition for procurement
transactions.
A 501(c)(4) nonprofit organization, as
described in 26 U.S.C. 501(c)(4), that
engages in lobbying activities will not
be eligible for the receipt of federal
funds constituting an award, grant or
loan. See 1 U.S.C. 1611.
Applicants other than State or local
government supported institutions of
higher education will be required to
submit evidence of nonprofit status,
preferably from the Internal Revenue
Service (IRS).
2. Cost Sharing or Matching
Applicants are not required to
contribute non-federal resources.
3. Other Eligibility Requirements
Legal Rules Pertaining to Inherently
Religious Activities by Organizations
that Receive Federal Financial
Assistance.
The U. S. Government is generally
prohibited from providing ‘‘direct’’
financial assistance for inherently
religious activities.1
1 In this context, the term direct financial
assistance means financial assistance that is
provided directly by a government entity or an
intermediate organization, as opposed to financial
assistance that an organization receives as the result
of the genuine and independent private choice of
a beneficiary. In other contexts, the term ‘‘direct’’
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The Grantee may be a faith-based
organization or work with and partner
with religious institutions; however,
‘‘direct’’ federal assistance provided
under grants with the U. S. Department
of Labor may not be used for religious
instruction, worship, prayer,
proselytizing or other inherently
religious practices. 29 CFR part 2,
subpart D governs the treatment in
Department of Labor government
programs of religious organizations and
religious activities; the Grantee and subcontractors are expected to be aware of
and observe the regulations in this
subpart.
IV. Application and Submission
Information
1. Application Package
All information and forms needed to
apply for this funding opportunity are
published as part of this SGA or are
available on the Grants.gov site. For
informational purposes, the complete
Federal Register notice and application
forms are also posted on the OSHA
Susan Harwood Training Grant Program
Web site at: https://www.osha.gov/dcsp/
ote/sharwood.html.
2. Content and Form of Application
Submission
Each grant application must address
only one of the announced topics.
Organizations interested in applying for
grants for more than one of the
announced grant topics must submit a
separate application for each grant
topic.
A. Required Contents
A complete application will contain
the following mandatory forms,
mandatory document attachments and
optional attachments.
(1) Application for Federal Assistance
form (SF 424). The individual signing
the SF 424 form on behalf of the
applicant must be authorized to bind
the applicant.
Your organization is required to have
a Data Universal Number System
(DUNS) number from Dun and
Bradstreet to complete this form.
Information about ‘‘Obtaining a DUNS
Number—A Guide for Federal Grant and
Cooperative Agreement Applicants’’ is
available at: https://
financial assistance may be used to refer to financial
assistance that an organization receives directly
from the Federal government (also know as
‘‘discretionary’’ assistance), as opposed to
assistance that it receives from a State or Local
government (also know as ‘‘indirect’’ or ‘‘block’’
grant assistance). The term ‘‘direct’’ has the former
meaning throughout this solicitation for grant
applications (SGA).
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www.whitehouse.gov/omb/grants/
duns_num_guide. pdf.
(2) Survey on Ensuring Equal
Opportunity for Applicants (Faith-Based
EEO Survey) form OMB No. 1890–0014.
(3) Program Summary (described
further in subsection B below). The
program summary is a short one-to-two
page single-sided abstract that
succinctly summarizes the proposed
project and provides information about
the applicant organization.
(4) Budget Information form (SF
424A).
(5) Detailed Project Budget Backup.
The detailed budget backup will
provide a detailed break out of the costs
that are listed in section B of the SF
424A Budget Information form. If
applicable: Provide a copy of approved
indirect cost rate agreement and
statement of program income.
(6) A description of any voluntary
non-federal resource contribution to be
provided by the applicant, including
source of funds and estimated amount.
(7) Technical Proposal program
narrative (described further in
subsection B below), not to exceed 30
single-sided pages, double-spaced, 12point font, containing: Problem
Statement/Need for Funds;
Administrative and Program Capability;
and Work Plan.
(8) Assurances form (SF 424B).
(9) Combined Assurances form (ED
80–0013).
(10) Organizational Chart.
(11) Evidence of Non-Profit status,
preferably from the Internal Revenue
Service (IRS), if applicable. (Does not
apply to State and local governmentsupported institutions of higher
education.)
(12) Accounting System Certification,
if applicable. Organizations that receive
less than $1 million annually in federal
grants must attach a certification signed
by your certifying official stating that
your organization has a functioning
accounting system that meets the
criteria below. Your organization may
also designate a qualified entity (include
the name and address in the
documentation) to maintain a
functioning accounting system that
meets the criteria below. The
certification should attest that your
organization’s accounting system
provides for the following:
(a) Accurate, current and complete
disclosure of the financial results of
each federally sponsored project.
(b) Records that identify adequately
the source and application of funds for
federally sponsored activities.
(c) Effective control over and
accountability for all funds, property
and other assets.
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(d) Comparison of outlays with budget
amounts.
(e) Written procedures to minimize
the time elapsing between the transfer of
funds.
(f) Written procedures for determining
the reasonableness, allocability and
allowability of costs.
(g) Accounting records, including cost
accounting records that are supported
by source documentation.
(13) Any attachments such as resumes
of key personnel or position
descriptions, exhibits, information on
prior government grants, and signed
letters of commitment to the project.
To be considered responsive to this
solicitation, the application must
consist of the above mentioned separate
parts. Major sections and sub-sections of
the application should be divided and
clearly identified, and all pages shall be
numbered. Standard forms, attachments,
exhibits and the Program Summary
abstract are not counted toward the page
limit.
The forms listed above are available
through the Grants.gov site and must be
submitted electronically as a part of
your grant application. In the Grants.gov
system, there is a window containing a
menu of ‘‘Mandatory Documents’’
which must be completed and
submitted online within the system. For
all other attachments such as the
Program Summary, Detailed Budget
Backup, Technical Proposal, etc., please
scan these documents into a single
Adobe Acrobat file and attach the
document in the area for attachments.
B. Budget Information
Applicants must include the
following required grant project budget
information.
(1) Budget Information form (SF
424A).
(2) A Detailed Project Budget that
clearly details the costs of performing
all of the requirements presented in this
solicitation. The detailed budget will
break out the costs that are listed in
Section B of the SF 424A Budget
Information form. Applicants are asked
to plan for a funding level based on
funds needed to perform work plan and
administrative activities for the grant
year.
Applicants are reminded to budget for
compliance with the administrative
requirements set forth. (Copies of all
regulations that are referenced in this
solicitation for grant applications (SGA)
are available online at no cost at:
https://www.osha.gov/dcsp/ote/
sharwood.html). This includes the costs
of performing activities such as travel
for two staff members, one program and
one financial, to the Chicago area to
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attend a new grantee orientation
meeting; financial audit, if required;
project closeout; document preparation
(e.g., quarterly progress reports, project
documents); and ensuring compliance
with procurement and property
standards.
The Detailed Project Budget should
break out administrative costs
separately from programmatic costs for
both federal and non-federal funds.
Administrative costs include indirect
costs from the costs pool and the cost of
activities, materials, meeting close-out
requirements as described in section VI,
and personnel (e.g., administrative
assistants) who support the management
and administration of the project but do
not provide direct services to project
beneficiaries. Indirect cost charges,
which are considered administrative
costs, must be supported with a copy of
an approved Indirect Cost Rate
Agreement form. Administrative costs
cannot exceed 25% of the total grant
budget. The project budget should
clearly demonstrate that the total
amount and distribution of funds is
sufficient to cover the cost of all major
project activities identified by the
applicant in its proposal, and must
comply with federal cost principles
(which can be found in the applicable
OMB Circulars).
(3) A description of any voluntary
non-federal resource contribution to be
provided by the applicant, including
source of funds and estimated amount.
C. Program Summary and Technical
Proposal
The Program Summary and the
Technical Proposal will contain the
narrative segments of the application.
The Program Summary abstract is not to
exceed two single-sided pages. The
Technical Proposal program narrative
section is not to exceed 30 single-sided
(81⁄2 ″ x 11″ or A4), double-spaced, 12point font, typed pages, consisting of the
Problem Statement/Need for Funds,
Administrative and Program Capability,
and Work Plan. Reviewers will only
consider Technical Proposal
information up to the 30-page limit. The
Technical Proposal must demonstrate
the capability to successfully administer
the grant and to meet the objectives of
this solicitation. The Technical Proposal
will be rated in accordance with the
selection criteria specified in section V.
The Program Summary and Technical
Proposal must include the following
sections.
(1) Program Summary. An abstract of
the application, not to exceed two
single-sided pages, that must include
the following information.
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• Applicant organization’s full legal
name.
• Project Director’s name, title, street
address, and mailing address if it is
different from the street address,
telephone and fax numbers, and e-mail
address. The Project Director is the
person who will be responsible for the
day-to-day operation and administration
of the program. The Project Director’s
name should also be the same name you
list on the Application for Federal
Assistance form (SF–424) in section f.
Name and contact information of person
to be contacted on matters involving
this application.
• Authorized Representative/
Certifying Representative’s name, title,
street address, and mailing address if it
is different from the street address,
telephone and fax numbers, and e-mail
address. The Authorized
Representative/Certifying
Representative is the official in your
organization who is authorized to enter
into grant agreements. The Authorized
Representative/Certifying
Representative’s name should also be
the same name you list on the
Application for Federal Assistance form
(SF–424) in section 21 for Authorized
Representative.
• If someone other than the
Authorized Representative/Certifying
Representative described above will be
authorized by your organization to
submit and sign off on quarterly
financial reports (SF 269 forms) for
OSHA, provide their name, title, street
address, and mailing address if it is
different from the street address,
telephone and fax numbers, and e-mail
address.
• Funding requested. List how much
federal funding you are requesting. If
your organization is contributing nonfederal resources, also list the amount of
non-federal resources and the source of
those funds.
• Grant Topic. List the grant topic
and industry or subject area your
organization has selected to target in its
application.
• Summary of the Proposed Project.
Write a brief program summary of your
proposed grant project.
• Applicant Background. Describe
your applicant organization, including
its mission, identify the type of nonprofit organization it is, and provide a
description of your membership, if any.
(2) The Technical Proposal program
narrative segment, which is not to
exceed 30 single-sided, double-spaced,
12-point font pages in length, must
address each section listed below.
• Problem Statement/Need for Funds.
Describe the hazards that will be
addressed in your program, the target
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population(s) that will benefit from your
training and educational program, and
the barriers that have prevented this
population from receiving adequate
training. When you discuss target
populations, include geographic
location(s), and the number of
employees and employers.
• Administrative and Program
Capability. Briefly describe your
organization’s functions and activities.
Relate this description of functions to
your organizational chart that you will
include in the application. If your
organization is conducting, or has
conducted within the last five years, any
other government (Federal, State, or
local) grant programs, the application
must include an attachment (which will
not count towards the page limit)
providing information regarding
previous grants including a) the
organization for which the work was
done, and b) the dollar value of the
grant. If your organization has not had
previous grant experience, you may
partner with an organization that has
grant experience to manage the grant. If
you use this approach, the management
organization must be identified and its
grant program experience discussed.
• Program Experience. Describe your
organization’s experience conducting
the type of program that you are
proposing. Include program specifics
such as program titles, numbers trained
and duration of training. Experience
includes safety and health experience,
training experience with adults, and
programs operated specifically for the
selected target population(s). Nonprofit
organizations, including communitybased and faith-based organizations,
that do not have prior experience in
safety and health may partner with an
established safety and health
organization to acquire safety and health
expertise.
• Staff Experience. Describe the
qualifications of the professional staff
you will assign to the program. Include
resumes of staff already on board. If
some positions are vacant, include
position descriptions/minimum hiring
qualifications instead of resumes.
Qualified staff are those with safety and
health experience, training experience,
or experience working with the target
population.
• Work Plan. Develop a 12-month
work plan that is broken out by quarters.
An outline of specific items required in
your work plan follows.
• Work Plan Overview. Describe your
plan for grant activities and the
anticipated outcomes. The overall plan
will describe such things as the
development of training materials, the
training content, recruiting of trainees,
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where or how training will take place,
and the anticipated benefits to
employees and employers receiving the
training.
• Work Plan Activities. Break your
overall plan down into activities or
tasks. For each activity, explain what
will be done, who will do it, when it
will be done, and the results of the
activity. When you discuss training,
include the subjects to be taught, the
length of the training sessions, and
training location (classroom, worksites).
Describe how you will recruit trainees
for the training.
• Work Plan Quarterly Projections.
For training and other quantifiable
activities, estimate how many (e.g.,
number of advisory committee
meetings, classes to be conducted,
employees and employers to be trained,
etc.,) you will accomplish each quarter
of the grant (grant quarters match
calendar quarters, i.e., January to March,
April to June) and provide the training
number totals for the grant. Quarterly
projections are used to measure your
actual performance against your plans.
If you plan to conduct a train-the-trainer
program, estimate the number of
individuals you expect to be trained
during the grant period by those who
received the train-the-trainer training.
These second tier training numbers
should only be included if your
organization is planning to follow up
with the trainers to obtain this data
during the grant period.
• Materials. Describe each
educational material you will produce
under the grant, if not treated as a
separate activity under Activities above.
Provide a timetable for developing and
producing the material. OSHA must
review and approve training materials
for technical accuracy and suitability of
content before the materials may be
used in your grant program. Therefore,
your timetable must include provisions
for an OSHA review of draft and
camera-ready products. Acceptable
formats for training materials include
Microsoft Office 2003 and Adobe Reader
version 7. For Targeted Topic training
grants, any previously developed
training materials you are proposing to
utilize in your grant training must also
go through an OSHA review before
being used.
• Evaluations. There are three types
of evaluations that should be conducted.
First, describe plans to evaluate the
training sessions. Second, describe your
plans to evaluate your progress in
accomplishing the grant work activities
listed in your application. This includes
comparing planned vs. actual
accomplishments. Discuss who is
responsible for taking corrective action
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if plans are not being met. Third,
describe your plans to assess the
effectiveness of the training your
organization is conducting. This will
involve following-up, by survey or onsite review, if feasible, with individuals
who attended the training to find out
what changes were made to abate
hazards in their workplaces. Include
timetables for follow-up and for
submitting a summary of the assessment
results to OSHA.
(3) An organizational chart of the staff
that will be working on this grant and
their location within the applicant
organization.
Attachments: Summaries of other
relevant organizational experiences;
information on prior government grants;
´
´
resumes of key personnel and/or
position descriptions; and signed letters
of commitment to the project.
Acceptable formats for document
attachments submitted as a part of a
Grants.gov grant application include
Microsoft Office 2003 and Adobe Reader
version 7.
3. Submission Date, Times, and
Addresses
Date: The deadline date for receipt of
applications is Friday, May 23, 2008.
Applications must be received by 4:30
p.m., E.T., on the closing date at:
https://www.grants.gov. Any application
received after the deadline will not be
accepted.
Electronic Submission of
Applications: Applications for Susan
Harwood grants under this competition
must be submitted electronically using
the government-wide Grants.gov Apply
site at: https://www.grants.gov. Through
this site you will be able to download
a copy of the application package,
complete it offline, and then upload and
submit your full application. Acceptable
formats for document attachments
submitted as a part of a Grants.gov grant
application include Microsoft Office
2003 and Adobe Reader version 7. In the
Grants.gov system, there is a window
containing a menu of ‘‘Mandatory
Documents’’ which must be completed
and submitted online within the system.
For all other attachments such as the
Program Summary, Detailed Budget
Backup, Technical Proposal, etc., please
scan these documents into a single
Adobe Acrobat file and attach the
document in the area for attachments.
Applications sent by mail or other
delivery services, e-mail, telegram, or
facsimile (FAX) will not be accepted.
Applications that do not meet the
conditions set forth in this notice will
not be honored.
For applicants using Grants.gov for
the first time, it is strongly
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recommended that they immediately
initiate and complete the ‘‘Get
Registered’’ steps to register with
Grants.gov, at: https://www.grants.gov/
applicants/get_registered.jsp. These
steps will probably take multiple days
to complete, which should be factored
into an applicant’s plans for electronic
application submission in order to avoid
unexpected delays that could result in
the rejection of the application.
If you have questions regarding the
process for submitting your application
through Grants.gov, or are experiencing
problems with electronic submissions,
you may contact the Grants Program
Management Office via one of the
methods below:
• E-mail at: support@grants.gov.
• Telephone the Grants.gov Contact
Center Phone: 1–800–518–4726. The
Contact Center hours of operation are
Monday–Friday, 7 a.m. to 9 p.m.,
Eastern Time; closed on Federal
holidays.
• When contacting the Grants
Program Management Office, the
following information will help
expedite your inquiry.
Æ Funding Opportunity Number
(FON).
Æ Name of Agency You Are Applying
To.
Æ Specific Area of Concern.
If applying online poses a hardship to
any applicant, the OSHA Directorate of
Training and Education will provide
assistance to ensure that applications
are submitted online by the closing date.
Applicants must contact the OSHA
Directorate of Training and Education
office listed on the announcement at
least one week prior to the application
deadline date (or not later than 4:30
p.m., E.T., on May 16, 2008) to speak to
a representative who can provide
assistance to ensure that applications
are submitted online by the closing date.
Requests for extensions to this
application deadline will not be
granted.
4. Intergovernmental Review
The Harwood Training Grant Program
is not subject to Executive Order 12372
Intergovernmental Review of Federal
Programs.
5. Funding Restrictions
Grant funds may be spent on the
following:
( a) Conducting training.
( b) Conducting other activities that
reach and inform employees and
employers about workplace
occupational safety and health hazards
and hazard abatement.
( c) Conducting outreach and
recruiting activities to increase the
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number of employees and employers
participating in the program.
( d) Developing educational materials
for use in training.
Grant funds may not be used for the
following activities under the terms of
the grant program.
(e) Any activity that is inconsistent
with the goals and objectives of the
Occupational Safety and Health Act of
1970.
(f) Training individuals not covered
by the Occupational Safety and Health
Act.
(g) Training employees or employers
from workplaces not covered by the
Occupational Safety and Health Act.
Examples include: State and local
government employees in non-State
Plan States, and employees referenced
in section 4 (b)(1) of the Act.
(h) Training on topics that do not
cover the recognition, avoidance, and
prevention of unsafe or unhealthy
working conditions. Examples of
unallowable topics include: Workers’
compensation, first aid, and publication
of materials prejudicial to labor or
management.
(i) Assisting employees in arbitration
cases or other actions against employers,
or assisting employers and employees in
the prosecution of claims against
federal, State or local governments.
(j) Duplicating services offered by
OSHA, a State under an OSHAapproved State Plan, or consultation
programs provided by State designated
agencies under section 21(d) of the
Occupational Safety and Health Act.
(k) Generating membership in the
grantee’s organization. This includes
activities to acquaint nonmembers with
the benefits of membership, inclusion of
membership appeals in materials
produced with grant funds, and
membership drives.
(l) The cost of lost-time wages paid by
you or other organizations to students
while attending grant-funded training.
(m) Administrative costs cannot
exceed 25% of the total grant budget.
While the activities described above
may be part of an organization’s regular
programs, the costs of these activities
cannot be paid for by grant funds,
whether the funds are from non-federal
matching resources or from the federally
funded portion of the grant.
Determinations of allowable costs will
be made in accordance with the
applicable federal cost principles, e.g.,
Nonprofit Organizations—2 CFR part
230, formerly OMB Circular A–122;
Educational Institutions—2 CFR part
220, formerly OMB Circular A–21.
Disallowed costs are those charges to a
grant that the grantor agency or its
representative determines to not be
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allowed in accordance with the
applicable federal cost principles or
other conditions contained in the grant.
No applicant at any time will be
entitled to reimbursement of pre-award
costs.
V. Application Review Information
Grant applications will be reviewed
by technical panels comprised of OSHA
staff. The results of the grant reviews
will be presented to the Assistant
Secretary of OSHA, who will make the
selection of organizations to be awarded
grants. OSHA may award grants for
some or all of the listed topic areas. It
is anticipated that the grant awards will
be announced no later than September
2008.
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1. Evaluation Criteria
The technical panels will review grant
applications against the criteria listed
below on the basis of 100 maximum
points. Targeted Topic training grant
category applications will be reviewed
and rated as follows.
A. Technical Approach, Program
Design—50 points total
Program Design
(1) The proposed training and
education program must address the
recognition and prevention of safety and
health hazards for one of the Targeted
Topic subject areas identified in Section
I of this SGA. (1 point)
(2) The proposal plans to train
employees and/or employers, clearly
estimates the numbers to be trained, and
clearly identifies the types of employees
and employers to be trained. The
training will reach employees and
employers from multiple employers. (4
points)
(3) If the proposal contains a train-thetrainer program, the following
information must be provided. (4
points)
• What ongoing support the grantee
will provide to new trainers;
• The number of individuals to be
trained as trainers;
• The estimated number of courses to
be conducted by the new trainers;
• The estimated number of students
to be trained by these new trainers; and
• A description of how the grantee
will obtain data from the new trainers
documenting their classes and student
numbers.
(4) There is a well-developed work
plan, and activities and training are
adequately described. The planned
activities and training are appropriately
tailored to the needs and levels of the
employees and employers to be trained.
The target audience to be served
through the grant program is described.
(20 points)
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(5) The training materials and training
programs are tailored to the training
needs of one or more of the following
target audiences; and the need for
training is established: Small
businesses; new businesses; limited
English proficiency, non-literate and
low literacy workers; youth; immigrant
and minority workers, and other hardto-reach workers; and employees in
high-hazard industries and industries
with high fatality rates. Organizations
proposing to develop Spanish-language
training materials should utilize the
OSHA Dictionaries (English-to-Spanish
and Spanish-to-English) for
terminology. The dictionaries are
available on the OSHA Web site at:
https://www.osha.gov/dcsp/
compliance_assistance/
spanish_dictionaries.html.
Organizations proposing to develop
materials in languages other than
English will also be required to provide
an English version of the materials. (10
points)
(6) There is a sound plan to recruit
trainees for the program. (4 points)
(7) If the proposal includes
developing educational materials for use
in the training program, there is a plan
for OSHA to review the educational
materials for technical accuracy and
suitability of content during
development. If previously-developed
training products will be used for the
Targeted Topic training program,
applicants have a plan for OSHA to
review the materials before using the
products in their grant program. (1
point)
(8) There are plans for three different
types of evaluation. The plans include
evaluating your organization’s progress
in accomplishing the grant work
activities and accomplishments,
evaluating your training sessions, and
evaluating the program’s effectiveness
and impact to determine if the safety
and health training and services
provided resulted in workplace change.
This includes a description of the
evaluation plan to follow up with
trainees to determine the impact the
program has had in abating hazards and
reducing worker injuries. (5 points)
(9) The application is complete,
including forms, budget detail, narrative
and work plan, and required
attachments. (1 point)
B. Budget—20 points total
(1) The budgeted costs are reasonable.
No more than 25% of the total budget
is for administration. (12 points)
(2) The budget complies with federal
cost principles (which can be found in
the applicable OMB Circulars) and with
OSHA budget requirements contained
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in the grant application instructions. (3
points)
(3) The cost per trainee is less than
$500 and the cost per training hour is
reasonable. (5 points)
C. Experience of Organization—15
points total
(1) The organization applying for the
grant demonstrates experience with
occupational safety and health.
Applicants that do not have prior
experience in providing safety and
health training to employees or
employers may partner with an
established safety and health
organization to acquire safety and health
expertise. (4 points)
(2) The organization applying for the
grant demonstrates experience training
adults in work-related subjects or in
recruiting, training and working with
the target audience for this grant. (4
points)
(3) The application organization
demonstrates that the applicant has
strong financial management and
internal control systems. (4 points)
(4) The applicant organization has
administered, or will work with an
organization that has administered, a
number of different federal and/or State
grants over the past five years. (3 points)
D. Experience and Qualification of
Personnel—15 points total
(1) The staff to be assigned to the
project has experience in occupational
safety and health, the specific topic
chosen, and in training adults. (10
points)
(2) Project staff has experience in
recruiting, training, and working with
the population your organization
proposes to serve under the grant. (5
points)
2. Review and Selection Process
OSHA will screen all applications to
determine whether all required proposal
elements are present and clearly
identifiable. Applications that do not
may be deemed non-responsive and
may not be evaluated. A technical panel
will objectively rate each complete
application against the criteria
described in this announcement. The
panel recommendations to the Assistant
Secretary are advisory in nature. The
Assistant Secretary may establish a
minimally acceptable rating range for
the purpose of selecting qualified
applicants. The Assistant Secretary will
make a final selection determination
based on what is most advantageous to
the government, considering factors
such as panel findings, geographic
presence of the applicants, Agency
priorities, the best value to the
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government, cost, and other factors. The
Assistant Secretary’s determination for
award under this solicitation for grant
applications (SGA) is final.
3. Anticipated Announcement and
Award Dates
Announcement of these awards is
expected to occur no later than
September 30, 2008.
The grant agreements will be awarded
by no later than September 2008.
VI. Award Administration Information
1. Award Process
Organizations selected as grant
recipients will be notified by a
representative of the Assistant
Secretary, usually from an OSHA
Regional Office. An applicant whose
proposal is not selected will be notified
in writing.
Notice that an organization has been
selected as a grant recipient does not
constitute approval of the grant
application as submitted. Before the
actual grant award, OSHA will enter
into negotiations concerning such items
as program components, staffing and
funding levels, and administrative
systems. If the negotiations do not result
in an acceptable submittal, the Assistant
Secretary reserves the right to terminate
the negotiation and decline to fund the
proposal.
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Note: Except as specifically provided,
OSHA’s acceptance of a proposal and an
award of federal funds to sponsor any
program(s) does not provide a waiver of any
grant requirement or procedures. For
example, if an application identifies a
specific sub-contractor to provide services,
the USDOL OSHA award does not provide
the justification or basis to sole-source the
procurement, i.e., to avoid competition.
2. Administrative and National Policy
Requirements
All grantees, including faith-based
organizations, will be subject to
applicable federal laws and regulations
(including provisions of appropriations
law) and the applicable Office of
Management and Budget (OMB)
Circulars. The grant award(s) awarded
under this SGA will be subject to the
following administrative standards and
provisions, as applicable to the
particular grantee:
29 CFR part 2, subpart D, new equal
treatment regulations.
29 CFR parts 31, 32, 35 and 36 as
applicable.
29 CFR part 93, new restrictions on
lobbying.
29 CFR part 95, which covers grant
requirements for nonprofit
organizations, including universities
and hospitals. These are the Department
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18:52 Mar 25, 2008
Jkt 214001
of Labor regulations implementing 2
CFR part 215, formerly OMB Circular
A–110.
29 CFR part 98, government-wide
debarment and suspension
(nonprocurement) and government wide
requirements for drug-free workplace
(grants).
2 CFR part 220, formerly OMB
Circular A–21, which describes
allowable and unallowable costs for
educational institutions.
2 CFR part 230, formerly OMB
circular A–122, which describes
allowable and unallowable costs for
other nonprofit organizations.
OMB Circular A–133, 29 CFR parts 96
and 99, which provide information
about audit requirements.
Certifications. All applicants are
required to certify to a drug-free
workplace in accordance with 29 CFR
part 98, to comply with the New
Restrictions on Lobbying published at
29 CFR part 93, to make a certification
regarding the debarment rules at 29 CFR
part 98, and to complete a special
lobbying certification.
Training Audience. Grant-funded
training programs must serve multiple
employers and their employees. Grantfunded training programs must serve
individuals covered by the
Occupational Safety and Health Act of
1970. As a part of the grant close-out
process, grantees must self-certify that
their grant-funded programs and
materials were not provided to
ineligible audiences.
Other. In keeping with the policies
outlined in Executive Orders 13256,
12928, 13230, and 13021 as amended,
the grantee is strongly encouraged to
provide subcontracting opportunities to
Historically Black Colleges and
Universities, Hispanic Serving
Institutions, and Tribal Colleges and
Universities.
3. Special Program Requirements
OSHA review of educational
materials. OSHA will review all
educational materials produced by the
grantee for technical accuracy and
suitability of content during
development and before final
publication. OSHA will also review
previously-developed training curricula
and purchased training materials for
technical accuracy and suitability of
content before the materials are used.
Grantees developing training materials
must follow all copyright laws and
provide written certification that their
materials are free from copyright
infringements.
When grant recipients produce
training materials, they must provide
copies of completed materials to OSHA
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before the end of the grant period.
OSHA has a lending program that
circulates grant-produced audiovisual
materials. Audiovisual materials
produced by the grantee as a part of its
grant program may be included in this
lending program. In addition, all
materials produced by grantees must be
provided to OSHA in hard copy as well
as in a digital format (CD Rom/DVD) for
possible publication on the Internet by
OSHA. Two copies of the materials
must be provided to OSHA. Acceptable
formats for training materials include
Microsoft Office 2003 and Adobe Reader
version 7.
As stated in 29 CFR 95.36, the
Department of Labor reserves a royaltyfree, nonexclusive and irrevocable right
to reproduce, publish, or otherwise use
for federal purposes any work produced
under a grant, and to authorize others to
do so. Applicants should note that
grantees must agree to provide the
Department of Labor a paid-up,
nonexclusive and irrevocable license to
reproduce, publish, or otherwise use for
federal purposes all products
developed, or for which ownership was
purchased, under an award including,
but not limited to, curricula, training
models, technical assistance products,
and any related materials, and to
authorize the Department of Labor to do
so. Such uses include, but are not
limited to, the right to modify and
distribute such products worldwide by
any means, electronic or otherwise.
Acknowledgment of USDOL Funding.
In all circumstances, all approved grantfunded materials developed by a grantee
shall contain the following disclaimer:
This material was produced under
grant number lll from the
Occupational Safety and Health
Administration, U.S. Department of
Labor. It does not necessarily reflect the
views or policies of the U.S. Department
of Labor, nor does mention of trade
names, commercial products, or
organizations imply endorsement by the
U.S. Government.
Public reference to grant: When
issuing statements, press releases,
requests for proposals, bid solicitations,
and other documents describing projects
or programs funded in whole or in part
with federal money, all grantees
receiving Federal funds must clearly
state:
• The percentage of the total costs of
the program or project that will be
financed with federal money;
• The dollar amount of federal
financial assistance for the project or
program; and
• The percentage and dollar amount
of the total costs of the project or
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program that will be financed by nongovernmental sources.
Use of U.S. Department of Labor
(USDOL) OSHA Logo: The USDOLOSHA logo may not be applied to any
grant products developed with grant
funds without advance written authority
from OSHA.
4. Reporting
Grantees are required by
Departmental regulations to submit
program and financial reports each
calendar quarter. All reports are due no
later than 30 days after the end of the
fiscal quarter and shall be submitted to
the appropriate OSHA Regional Office.
The Grantee(s) shall submit financial
reports on a quarterly basis. The first
reporting period shall end on the last
day of the fiscal quarter (December 31,
March 31, June 30, or September 30)
during which the grant was signed.
Financial reports are due within 30 days
of the end of the reporting period (i.e.,
by January 30, April 30, July 30, and
October 30).
The Grantee(s) shall use Standard
Form (SF) 269, Financial Status Report,
to report the status of funds, at the
project level, during the grant period. A
final SF269 shall be submitted no later
than 90 days following completion of
the grant period. The SF269 reports will
be submitted electronically through the
Department of Labor (DOL) E-Grants
system.
Grantees will use the U.S. Department
of Health and Human Services Payment
Management System (HHS PMS) to
receive federal funds and to report
federal expenditures, and must also
send USDOL copies of the PSC 272 that
it submits to HHS, on the same
schedule.
Technical Progress Reports: After
signing the agreement, the Grantee(s)
shall submit technical progress reports
to USDOL/OSHA Regional Offices at the
end of each fiscal quarter. Technical
progress reports provide both
quantitative and qualitative information
and a narrative assessment of
performance for the preceding threemonth period. OSHA Form 171 shall be
used for reporting training numbers and
a narrative report shall be provided that
details grant activities conducted during
the quarter, information on how the
project is progressing in achieving its
stated objectives, and notes any
problems or delays along with
corrective actions proposed. The first
reporting period shall end on the last
day of the fiscal quarter (December 31,
March 31, June 30, or September 30)
during which the grant was signed.
Quarterly progress reports are due
within 30 days of the end of the report
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18:52 Mar 25, 2008
Jkt 214001
period (i.e., by January 30, April 30, July
30, and October 30). Between reporting
dates, the Grantees(s) shall also
immediately inform USDOL/OSHA of
significant developments and/or
problems affecting the organization’s
ability to accomplish work.
and attach the document in the area for
attachments.
Authority: The Occupational Safety and
Health Act of 1970, (29 U.S.C. 670), Public
Law 110–161, and the Consolidated
Appropriations Act, 2008.
NATIONAL COUNCIL ON DISABILITY
(NCD)
Signed at Washington, DC, this 21st day of
March, 2008.
Edwin G. Foulke, Jr.
Assistant Secretary of Labor for Occupational
Safety and Health.
Quarterly Meeting.
April 21, 2008, 8:30
a.m.–5:30 p.m.
April 22, 2008, 8:30 a.m.–5 p.m.
April 23, 2008, 8:30 a.m.–12:30 p.m.
LOCATION: The Westin Arlington
Gateway, 801 North Glebe Road,
Arlington, VA.
STATUS: April 21, 2008, 8:30 a.m.–5:30
p.m.—Open.
April 21, 2008, 5:30 p.m.–6 p.m.—
Closed Executive Session.
April 22, 2008, 8:30 a.m.–5 p.m.—
Open.
April 23, 2008, 8:30 a.m.–12:30
p.m.—Open.
AGENDA: Updates on: Healthcare;
Veterans’ Issues; Civil Rights; Emerging
Trends; Employment; Public Comment
Sessions; Emergency Preparedness;
Reports from the Chairperson, Council
Members, and the Executive Director;
Unfinished Business; New Business;
Announcements; Adjournment.
SUNSHINE ACT MEETING CONTACT: Mark S.
Quigley, Director of External Affairs,
NCD, 1331 F Street, NW., Suite 850,
Washington, DC 20004; 202–272–2004
(voice), 202–272–2074 (TTY), 202–272–
2022 (fax).
AGENCY MISSION: NCD is an independent
federal agency and is composed of 15
members appointed by the President, by
and with the advice and consent of the
Senate. NCD provides advice to the
President, Congress, and executive
branch agencies promoting policies,
programs, practices, and procedures that
(A) guarantee equal opportunity for all
individuals with disabilities, regardless
of the nature or severity of the
disability; and (B) to empower
individuals with disabilities to achieve
economic self-sufficiency, independent
living, and inclusion and integration
into all aspects of society.
ACCOMMODATIONS: Those needing
reasonable accommodations should
notify NCD immediately.
LANGUAGE TRANSLATION: In accordance
with E.O. 13166, Improving Access to
Services for Persons with Limited
English Proficiency, those people with
disabilities who are limited English
proficient and seek translation services
Application Document Checklist
Application for Federal Assistance
(SF 424 form).
Budget Information (SF 424A form).
Assurances (SF 424B form).
Combined Assurances for (ED 80–
0013 form).
Survey on Ensuring Equal
Opportunity for Applicants (Faith-Based
EEO Survey), (OMB No. 1890–0014
form).
Attachments (Please Attach in the
Following Order)
Program Summary (not to exceed two
single-sided pages).
Detailed Project Budget Backup.
If applicable: provide a copy of
approved indirect cost rate agreement,
statement of program income, and a
description of any voluntary non-federal
resource contribution to be provided by
the applicant, including source of funds
and estimated amount.
Technical Proposal, program
narrative, not to exceed 30 single-sided
pages, double-spaced, 12-point font,
containing:
Problem Statement/Need for Funds;
Administrative and Program
Capability; and
Work plan.
Organizational Chart
Evidence of Nonprofit status, (letter
from the IRS) if applicable
Accounting System Certification, if
applicable
Other Attachments such as: Resumes
of key personnel or position
descriptions, exhibits, information on
prior government grants, and signed
letters of commitment to the project.
Note: In the Grants.gov system, there is a
window containing a menu of ‘‘Mandatory
Documents’’ which must be completed and
submitted online within the system. For all
other attachments such as the Program
Summary, Detailed Budget Backup,
Technical Proposal, etc., please scan these
documents into a single Adobe Acrobat file
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[FR Doc. E8–6108 Filed 3–25–08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4510–26–P
Sunshine Act Meetings
TYPE:
DATES AND TIMES:
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 73, Number 59 (Wednesday, March 26, 2008)]
[Notices]
[Pages 16067-16074]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E8-6108]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Occupational Safety and Health Administration
Susan Harwood Training Grant Program, FY 2008
AGENCY: Occupational Safety and Health Administration, Labor.
ACTION: Initial announcement of availability of funds and solicitation
for grant applications (SGA).
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Funding Opportunity No.: SHTG-FY-08-02.
Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance No.: 17.502.
SUMMARY: The U.S. Department of Labor, Occupational Safety and Health
Administration (OSHA) awards funds to nonprofit organizations to
provide training and educational programs for employers and employees
about safety and health topics selected by OSHA. Nonprofit
organizations, including community-based and faith-based organizations,
that are not an agency of a State or local government are eligible to
apply. Additionally, State or local government-supported institutions
of higher education are eligible to apply in accordance with 29 CFR
part 95. This notice announces grant availability for Susan Harwood
Training Program grants. All information and forms needed to apply for
this funding opportunity are published as part of this SGA or are
available on the Grants.gov site.
DATES: Grant applications must be received electronically by the
Grants.gov system no later than 4:30 p.m., E.T., on Friday, May 23,
2008, the application deadline date.
ADDRESSES: Applications for grants submitted under this competition
must be submitted electronically using the government-wide Grants.gov
Apply site at https://www.grants.gov. If applying online poses a
hardship to any applicant, the OSHA Directorate of Training and
Education will provide assistance to ensure that applications are
submitted online by the closing date. Applicants must contact the OSHA
Directorate of Training and Education office listed on the announcement
at least one week prior to the application deadline date, (or no later
than 4:30 p.m., E.T., on May 16, 2008) to speak to a representative who
can provide assistance to ensure that applications are submitted online
by the closing date. Requests for extensions to this deadline will not
be granted. Further information regarding submitting your grant
application electronically is listed in section IV, Item 3, Submission
Date, Times, and Addresses.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Any questions regarding this SGA
should be directed to Cynthia Bencheck, Program Analyst, e-mail
address: bencheck.cindy@dol.gov, tel: 847-297-4810 (note that this is
not a toll-free number), or Jim Barnes, Director, Office of Training
and Educational Programs, e-mail address barnes.jim@dol.gov, tel: 847-
297-4810. To obtain further information on the Susan Harwood Training
Grant Program of the U.S. Department of Labor, visit the OSHA Web site
of the Occupational Safety and Health Administration at https://
www.osha.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Funding Opportunity Description
Overview of the Susan Harwood Training Grant Program
The Susan Harwood Training Grant Program provides funds for
programs to train employees and employers to recognize, avoid, and
prevent safety and health hazards in their workplaces. The program
emphasizes four areas:
Educating employees and employers in small businesses. For
purposes of this grant program, a small business is one with 250 or
fewer employees.
Training employees and employers about new OSHA standards.
Training at-risk employee and employer populations.
Training employees and employers about high risk
activities or hazards identified by OSHA through the Department of
Labor's Strategic Plan, or as part of an OSHA special emphasis program.
Grant Category Being Announced
Under this solicitation for grant applications, OSHA will accept
applications for the Targeted Topic training grant category.
Topics for the Targeted Topic Training Category
Organizations funded for Targeted Topic training category grants
are expected to develop and provide occupational safety and health
training and/or educational programs addressing one of the topics
selected by OSHA, recruit employees and employers for the training, and
conduct and evaluate the training. Grantees are also expected to
conduct follow-up evaluations with individuals trained by their program
to determine what, if any, changes were made to reduce hazards in their
workplaces as a result of the training. If your organization plans to
train
[[Page 16068]]
employees or employers in any of the 26 states operating OSHA-approved
State Plans, State OSHA requirements for that state must be included in
the training.
Eighteen different training topics were selected for this grant
announcement. OSHA may award grants for some or all of the listed
Targeted Topic training topics.
Applicants wishing to address more than one of the announced grant
topics must submit a separate grant application for each topic. Each
application must propose a plan for developing and conducting training
programs addressing the recognition and prevention of safety and health
hazards for one of the topics listed below.
Construction Industry Hazards.
Programs that train employees and employers in the recognition and
prevention of safety and health hazards on one of the following topics.
Falls from Scaffolds, Ladders and Roofs in Construction.
Construction Focus Four hazards (training programs must
include all four hazard areas--falls, electrocution, caught-in and
struck-by.)
Safety Hazards related to Mechanized, Over-the-Road and
Heavy Construction Equipment, including Compactor Rollovers.
Work Zone Safety.
General Industry Hazards.
Programs that train employees and employers in the recognition and
prevention of safety and health hazards on one of the following topics.
Combustible Dust.
Ergonomics in Foundries.
Foundry Contaminants Exposures.
Electrical Safety including Arc Flash and Personal
Protective Equipment (PPE) for Arc Flash.
Falls in General Industry.
Food Processing Health Hazards, including Diacetyl
Exposures in Popcorn and Other Food Flavoring Facilities.
Night Time Sanitation and Maintenance/Third Shift,
including Lockout/Tagout and Confined Spaces.
Emergency Preparedness and Response including Pandemic Flu
Preparation.
Safety and Health Management Systems for Small and Medium-
Sized Businesses.
Powered Industrial Trucks.
Process Safety Management, including Chemical Plants,
Ethanol Plants, Refineries and Anhydrous Ammonia.
Slings and Materials Handling.
Other Safety And Health Topic Areas.
Programs that train employees and employers in the recognition and
prevention of safety and health hazards on one of the following topics.
Native American Tribal Safety and Health Issues.
Safety and Health Hazards and Safety Plan Development in
Shipbreaking.
II. Award Information
Targeted Topic training grants will be awarded for a 12-month
period. The project period for these grants begins no later than
September 30, 2008. There is approximately $6.7 million available for
this grant category. The average federal award will be approximately
$175,000.
III. Eligibility Information
1. Eligible Applicants
Nonprofit organizations, including community-based and faith-based
organizations, that are not an agency of a State or local government
are eligible to apply. Additionally, State or local government
supported institutions of higher education are eligible to apply in
accordance with 29 CFR part 95. Eligible organizations can apply
independently for funding or in partnership with other eligible
organizations, but in such a case, a lead organization must be
identified. Sub-grants are not authorized. Subcontracts, if any, must
be awarded in accordance with 29 CFR 95.40-48, including OMB circulars
requiring free and open competition for procurement transactions.
A 501(c)(4) nonprofit organization, as described in 26 U.S.C.
501(c)(4), that engages in lobbying activities will not be eligible for
the receipt of federal funds constituting an award, grant or loan. See
1 U.S.C. 1611.
Applicants other than State or local government supported
institutions of higher education will be required to submit evidence of
nonprofit status, preferably from the Internal Revenue Service (IRS).
2. Cost Sharing or Matching
Applicants are not required to contribute non-federal resources.
3. Other Eligibility Requirements
Legal Rules Pertaining to Inherently Religious Activities by
Organizations that Receive Federal Financial Assistance.
The U. S. Government is generally prohibited from providing
``direct'' financial assistance for inherently religious activities.\1\
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\1\ In this context, the term direct financial assistance means
financial assistance that is provided directly by a government
entity or an intermediate organization, as opposed to financial
assistance that an organization receives as the result of the
genuine and independent private choice of a beneficiary. In other
contexts, the term ``direct'' financial assistance may be used to
refer to financial assistance that an organization receives directly
from the Federal government (also know as ``discretionary''
assistance), as opposed to assistance that it receives from a State
or Local government (also know as ``indirect'' or ``block'' grant
assistance). The term ``direct'' has the former meaning throughout
this solicitation for grant applications (SGA).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Grantee may be a faith-based organization or work with and partner
with religious institutions; however, ``direct'' federal assistance
provided under grants with the U. S. Department of Labor may not be
used for religious instruction, worship, prayer, proselytizing or other
inherently religious practices. 29 CFR part 2, subpart D governs the
treatment in Department of Labor government programs of religious
organizations and religious activities; the Grantee and sub-contractors
are expected to be aware of and observe the regulations in this
subpart.
IV. Application and Submission Information
1. Application Package
All information and forms needed to apply for this funding
opportunity are published as part of this SGA or are available on the
Grants.gov site. For informational purposes, the complete Federal
Register notice and application forms are also posted on the OSHA Susan
Harwood Training Grant Program Web site at: https://www.osha.gov/dcsp/
ote/sharwood.html.
2. Content and Form of Application Submission
Each grant application must address only one of the announced
topics. Organizations interested in applying for grants for more than
one of the announced grant topics must submit a separate application
for each grant topic.
A. Required Contents
A complete application will contain the following mandatory forms,
mandatory document attachments and optional attachments.
(1) Application for Federal Assistance form (SF 424). The
individual signing the SF 424 form on behalf of the applicant must be
authorized to bind the applicant.
Your organization is required to have a Data Universal Number
System (DUNS) number from Dun and Bradstreet to complete this form.
Information about ``Obtaining a DUNS Number--A Guide for Federal Grant
and Cooperative Agreement Applicants'' is available at: https://
[[Page 16069]]
www.whitehouse.gov/omb/grants/duns_num_guide. pdf.
(2) Survey on Ensuring Equal Opportunity for Applicants (Faith-
Based EEO Survey) form OMB No. 1890-0014.
(3) Program Summary (described further in subsection B below). The
program summary is a short one-to-two page single-sided abstract that
succinctly summarizes the proposed project and provides information
about the applicant organization.
(4) Budget Information form (SF 424A).
(5) Detailed Project Budget Backup. The detailed budget backup will
provide a detailed break out of the costs that are listed in section B
of the SF 424A Budget Information form. If applicable: Provide a copy
of approved indirect cost rate agreement and statement of program
income.
(6) A description of any voluntary non-federal resource
contribution to be provided by the applicant, including source of funds
and estimated amount.
(7) Technical Proposal program narrative (described further in
subsection B below), not to exceed 30 single-sided pages, double-
spaced, 12-point font, containing: Problem Statement/Need for Funds;
Administrative and Program Capability; and Work Plan.
(8) Assurances form (SF 424B).
(9) Combined Assurances form (ED 80-0013).
(10) Organizational Chart.
(11) Evidence of Non-Profit status, preferably from the Internal
Revenue Service (IRS), if applicable. (Does not apply to State and
local government-supported institutions of higher education.)
(12) Accounting System Certification, if applicable. Organizations
that receive less than $1 million annually in federal grants must
attach a certification signed by your certifying official stating that
your organization has a functioning accounting system that meets the
criteria below. Your organization may also designate a qualified entity
(include the name and address in the documentation) to maintain a
functioning accounting system that meets the criteria below. The
certification should attest that your organization's accounting system
provides for the following:
(a) Accurate, current and complete disclosure of the financial
results of each federally sponsored project.
(b) Records that identify adequately the source and application of
funds for federally sponsored activities.
(c) Effective control over and accountability for all funds,
property and other assets.
(d) Comparison of outlays with budget amounts.
(e) Written procedures to minimize the time elapsing between the
transfer of funds.
(f) Written procedures for determining the reasonableness,
allocability and allowability of costs.
(g) Accounting records, including cost accounting records that are
supported by source documentation.
(13) Any attachments such as resumes of key personnel or position
descriptions, exhibits, information on prior government grants, and
signed letters of commitment to the project.
To be considered responsive to this solicitation, the application
must consist of the above mentioned separate parts. Major sections and
sub-sections of the application should be divided and clearly
identified, and all pages shall be numbered. Standard forms,
attachments, exhibits and the Program Summary abstract are not counted
toward the page limit.
The forms listed above are available through the Grants.gov site
and must be submitted electronically as a part of your grant
application. In the Grants.gov system, there is a window containing a
menu of ``Mandatory Documents'' which must be completed and submitted
online within the system. For all other attachments such as the Program
Summary, Detailed Budget Backup, Technical Proposal, etc., please scan
these documents into a single Adobe Acrobat file and attach the
document in the area for attachments.
B. Budget Information
Applicants must include the following required grant project budget
information.
(1) Budget Information form (SF 424A).
(2) A Detailed Project Budget that clearly details the costs of
performing all of the requirements presented in this solicitation. The
detailed budget will break out the costs that are listed in Section B
of the SF 424A Budget Information form. Applicants are asked to plan
for a funding level based on funds needed to perform work plan and
administrative activities for the grant year.
Applicants are reminded to budget for compliance with the
administrative requirements set forth. (Copies of all regulations that
are referenced in this solicitation for grant applications (SGA) are
available online at no cost at: https://www.osha.gov/dcsp/ote/
sharwood.html). This includes the costs of performing activities such
as travel for two staff members, one program and one financial, to the
Chicago area to attend a new grantee orientation meeting; financial
audit, if required; project closeout; document preparation (e.g.,
quarterly progress reports, project documents); and ensuring compliance
with procurement and property standards.
The Detailed Project Budget should break out administrative costs
separately from programmatic costs for both federal and non-federal
funds. Administrative costs include indirect costs from the costs pool
and the cost of activities, materials, meeting close-out requirements
as described in section VI, and personnel (e.g., administrative
assistants) who support the management and administration of the
project but do not provide direct services to project beneficiaries.
Indirect cost charges, which are considered administrative costs, must
be supported with a copy of an approved Indirect Cost Rate Agreement
form. Administrative costs cannot exceed 25% of the total grant budget.
The project budget should clearly demonstrate that the total amount and
distribution of funds is sufficient to cover the cost of all major
project activities identified by the applicant in its proposal, and
must comply with federal cost principles (which can be found in the
applicable OMB Circulars).
(3) A description of any voluntary non-federal resource
contribution to be provided by the applicant, including source of funds
and estimated amount.
C. Program Summary and Technical Proposal
The Program Summary and the Technical Proposal will contain the
narrative segments of the application. The Program Summary abstract is
not to exceed two single-sided pages. The Technical Proposal program
narrative section is not to exceed 30 single-sided (8\1/2\ '' x 11'' or
A4), double-spaced, 12-point font, typed pages, consisting of the
Problem Statement/Need for Funds, Administrative and Program
Capability, and Work Plan. Reviewers will only consider Technical
Proposal information up to the 30-page limit. The Technical Proposal
must demonstrate the capability to successfully administer the grant
and to meet the objectives of this solicitation. The Technical Proposal
will be rated in accordance with the selection criteria specified in
section V.
The Program Summary and Technical Proposal must include the
following sections.
(1) Program Summary. An abstract of the application, not to exceed
two single-sided pages, that must include the following information.
[[Page 16070]]
Applicant organization's full legal name.
Project Director's name, title, street address, and
mailing address if it is different from the street address, telephone
and fax numbers, and e-mail address. The Project Director is the person
who will be responsible for the day-to-day operation and administration
of the program. The Project Director's name should also be the same
name you list on the Application for Federal Assistance form (SF-424)
in section f. Name and contact information of person to be contacted on
matters involving this application.
Authorized Representative/Certifying Representative's
name, title, street address, and mailing address if it is different
from the street address, telephone and fax numbers, and e-mail address.
The Authorized Representative/Certifying Representative is the official
in your organization who is authorized to enter into grant agreements.
The Authorized Representative/Certifying Representative's name should
also be the same name you list on the Application for Federal
Assistance form (SF-424) in section 21 for Authorized Representative.
If someone other than the Authorized Representative/
Certifying Representative described above will be authorized by your
organization to submit and sign off on quarterly financial reports (SF
269 forms) for OSHA, provide their name, title, street address, and
mailing address if it is different from the street address, telephone
and fax numbers, and e-mail address.
Funding requested. List how much federal funding you are
requesting. If your organization is contributing non-federal resources,
also list the amount of non-federal resources and the source of those
funds.
Grant Topic. List the grant topic and industry or subject
area your organization has selected to target in its application.
Summary of the Proposed Project. Write a brief program
summary of your proposed grant project.
Applicant Background. Describe your applicant
organization, including its mission, identify the type of non-profit
organization it is, and provide a description of your membership, if
any.
(2) The Technical Proposal program narrative segment, which is not
to exceed 30 single-sided, double-spaced, 12-point font pages in
length, must address each section listed below.
Problem Statement/Need for Funds. Describe the hazards
that will be addressed in your program, the target population(s) that
will benefit from your training and educational program, and the
barriers that have prevented this population from receiving adequate
training. When you discuss target populations, include geographic
location(s), and the number of employees and employers.
Administrative and Program Capability. Briefly describe
your organization's functions and activities. Relate this description
of functions to your organizational chart that you will include in the
application. If your organization is conducting, or has conducted
within the last five years, any other government (Federal, State, or
local) grant programs, the application must include an attachment
(which will not count towards the page limit) providing information
regarding previous grants including a) the organization for which the
work was done, and b) the dollar value of the grant. If your
organization has not had previous grant experience, you may partner
with an organization that has grant experience to manage the grant. If
you use this approach, the management organization must be identified
and its grant program experience discussed.
Program Experience. Describe your organization's
experience conducting the type of program that you are proposing.
Include program specifics such as program titles, numbers trained and
duration of training. Experience includes safety and health experience,
training experience with adults, and programs operated specifically for
the selected target population(s). Nonprofit organizations, including
community-based and faith-based organizations, that do not have prior
experience in safety and health may partner with an established safety
and health organization to acquire safety and health expertise.
Staff Experience. Describe the qualifications of the
professional staff you will assign to the program. Include resumes of
staff already on board. If some positions are vacant, include position
descriptions/minimum hiring qualifications instead of resumes.
Qualified staff are those with safety and health experience, training
experience, or experience working with the target population.
Work Plan. Develop a 12-month work plan that is broken out
by quarters. An outline of specific items required in your work plan
follows.
Work Plan Overview. Describe your plan for grant
activities and the anticipated outcomes. The overall plan will describe
such things as the development of training materials, the training
content, recruiting of trainees, where or how training will take place,
and the anticipated benefits to employees and employers receiving the
training.
Work Plan Activities. Break your overall plan down into
activities or tasks. For each activity, explain what will be done, who
will do it, when it will be done, and the results of the activity. When
you discuss training, include the subjects to be taught, the length of
the training sessions, and training location (classroom, worksites).
Describe how you will recruit trainees for the training.
Work Plan Quarterly Projections. For training and other
quantifiable activities, estimate how many (e.g., number of advisory
committee meetings, classes to be conducted, employees and employers to
be trained, etc.,) you will accomplish each quarter of the grant (grant
quarters match calendar quarters, i.e., January to March, April to
June) and provide the training number totals for the grant. Quarterly
projections are used to measure your actual performance against your
plans. If you plan to conduct a train-the-trainer program, estimate the
number of individuals you expect to be trained during the grant period
by those who received the train-the-trainer training. These second tier
training numbers should only be included if your organization is
planning to follow up with the trainers to obtain this data during the
grant period.
Materials. Describe each educational material you will
produce under the grant, if not treated as a separate activity under
Activities above. Provide a timetable for developing and producing the
material. OSHA must review and approve training materials for technical
accuracy and suitability of content before the materials may be used in
your grant program. Therefore, your timetable must include provisions
for an OSHA review of draft and camera-ready products. Acceptable
formats for training materials include Microsoft Office 2003 and Adobe
Reader version 7. For Targeted Topic training grants, any previously
developed training materials you are proposing to utilize in your grant
training must also go through an OSHA review before being used.
Evaluations. There are three types of evaluations that
should be conducted. First, describe plans to evaluate the training
sessions. Second, describe your plans to evaluate your progress in
accomplishing the grant work activities listed in your application.
This includes comparing planned vs. actual accomplishments. Discuss who
is responsible for taking corrective action
[[Page 16071]]
if plans are not being met. Third, describe your plans to assess the
effectiveness of the training your organization is conducting. This
will involve following-up, by survey or on-site review, if feasible,
with individuals who attended the training to find out what changes
were made to abate hazards in their workplaces. Include timetables for
follow-up and for submitting a summary of the assessment results to
OSHA.
(3) An organizational chart of the staff that will be working on
this grant and their location within the applicant organization.
Attachments: Summaries of other relevant organizational
experiences; information on prior government grants;
r[eacute]sum[eacute]s of key personnel and/or position descriptions;
and signed letters of commitment to the project.
Acceptable formats for document attachments submitted as a part of
a Grants.gov grant application include Microsoft Office 2003 and Adobe
Reader version 7.
3. Submission Date, Times, and Addresses
Date: The deadline date for receipt of applications is Friday, May
23, 2008. Applications must be received by 4:30 p.m., E.T., on the
closing date at: https://www.grants.gov. Any application received after
the deadline will not be accepted.
Electronic Submission of Applications: Applications for Susan
Harwood grants under this competition must be submitted electronically
using the government-wide Grants.gov Apply site at: https://
www.grants.gov. Through this site you will be able to download a copy
of the application package, complete it offline, and then upload and
submit your full application. Acceptable formats for document
attachments submitted as a part of a Grants.gov grant application
include Microsoft Office 2003 and Adobe Reader version 7. In the
Grants.gov system, there is a window containing a menu of ``Mandatory
Documents'' which must be completed and submitted online within the
system. For all other attachments such as the Program Summary, Detailed
Budget Backup, Technical Proposal, etc., please scan these documents
into a single Adobe Acrobat file and attach the document in the area
for attachments. Applications sent by mail or other delivery services,
e-mail, telegram, or facsimile (FAX) will not be accepted. Applications
that do not meet the conditions set forth in this notice will not be
honored.
For applicants using Grants.gov for the first time, it is strongly
recommended that they immediately initiate and complete the ``Get
Registered'' steps to register with Grants.gov, at: https://
www.grants.gov/applicants/get_registered.jsp. These steps will
probably take multiple days to complete, which should be factored into
an applicant's plans for electronic application submission in order to
avoid unexpected delays that could result in the rejection of the
application.
If you have questions regarding the process for submitting your
application through Grants.gov, or are experiencing problems with
electronic submissions, you may contact the Grants Program Management
Office via one of the methods below:
E-mail at: support@grants.gov.
Telephone the Grants.gov Contact Center Phone: 1-800-518-
4726. The Contact Center hours of operation are Monday-Friday, 7 a.m.
to 9 p.m., Eastern Time; closed on Federal holidays.
When contacting the Grants Program Management Office, the
following information will help expedite your inquiry.
[cir] Funding Opportunity Number (FON).
[cir] Name of Agency You Are Applying To.
[cir] Specific Area of Concern.
If applying online poses a hardship to any applicant, the OSHA
Directorate of Training and Education will provide assistance to ensure
that applications are submitted online by the closing date. Applicants
must contact the OSHA Directorate of Training and Education office
listed on the announcement at least one week prior to the application
deadline date (or not later than 4:30 p.m., E.T., on May 16, 2008) to
speak to a representative who can provide assistance to ensure that
applications are submitted online by the closing date. Requests for
extensions to this application deadline will not be granted.
4. Intergovernmental Review
The Harwood Training Grant Program is not subject to Executive
Order 12372 Intergovernmental Review of Federal Programs.
5. Funding Restrictions
Grant funds may be spent on the following:
( a) Conducting training.
( b) Conducting other activities that reach and inform employees
and employers about workplace occupational safety and health hazards
and hazard abatement.
( c) Conducting outreach and recruiting activities to increase the
number of employees and employers participating in the program.
( d) Developing educational materials for use in training.
Grant funds may not be used for the following activities under the
terms of the grant program.
(e) Any activity that is inconsistent with the goals and objectives
of the Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970.
(f) Training individuals not covered by the Occupational Safety and
Health Act.
(g) Training employees or employers from workplaces not covered by
the Occupational Safety and Health Act. Examples include: State and
local government employees in non-State Plan States, and employees
referenced in section 4 (b)(1) of the Act.
(h) Training on topics that do not cover the recognition,
avoidance, and prevention of unsafe or unhealthy working conditions.
Examples of unallowable topics include: Workers' compensation, first
aid, and publication of materials prejudicial to labor or management.
(i) Assisting employees in arbitration cases or other actions
against employers, or assisting employers and employees in the
prosecution of claims against federal, State or local governments.
(j) Duplicating services offered by OSHA, a State under an OSHA-
approved State Plan, or consultation programs provided by State
designated agencies under section 21(d) of the Occupational Safety and
Health Act.
(k) Generating membership in the grantee's organization. This
includes activities to acquaint nonmembers with the benefits of
membership, inclusion of membership appeals in materials produced with
grant funds, and membership drives.
(l) The cost of lost-time wages paid by you or other organizations
to students while attending grant-funded training.
(m) Administrative costs cannot exceed 25% of the total grant
budget.
While the activities described above may be part of an
organization's regular programs, the costs of these activities cannot
be paid for by grant funds, whether the funds are from non-federal
matching resources or from the federally funded portion of the grant.
Determinations of allowable costs will be made in accordance with
the applicable federal cost principles, e.g., Nonprofit Organizations--
2 CFR part 230, formerly OMB Circular A-122; Educational Institutions--
2 CFR part 220, formerly OMB Circular A-21. Disallowed costs are those
charges to a grant that the grantor agency or its representative
determines to not be
[[Page 16072]]
allowed in accordance with the applicable federal cost principles or
other conditions contained in the grant.
No applicant at any time will be entitled to reimbursement of pre-
award costs.
V. Application Review Information
Grant applications will be reviewed by technical panels comprised
of OSHA staff. The results of the grant reviews will be presented to
the Assistant Secretary of OSHA, who will make the selection of
organizations to be awarded grants. OSHA may award grants for some or
all of the listed topic areas. It is anticipated that the grant awards
will be announced no later than September 2008.
1. Evaluation Criteria
The technical panels will review grant applications against the
criteria listed below on the basis of 100 maximum points. Targeted
Topic training grant category applications will be reviewed and rated
as follows.
A. Technical Approach, Program Design--50 points total
Program Design
(1) The proposed training and education program must address the
recognition and prevention of safety and health hazards for one of the
Targeted Topic subject areas identified in Section I of this SGA. (1
point)
(2) The proposal plans to train employees and/or employers, clearly
estimates the numbers to be trained, and clearly identifies the types
of employees and employers to be trained. The training will reach
employees and employers from multiple employers. (4 points)
(3) If the proposal contains a train-the-trainer program, the
following information must be provided. (4 points)
What ongoing support the grantee will provide to new
trainers;
The number of individuals to be trained as trainers;
The estimated number of courses to be conducted by the new
trainers;
The estimated number of students to be trained by these
new trainers; and
A description of how the grantee will obtain data from the
new trainers documenting their classes and student numbers.
(4) There is a well-developed work plan, and activities and
training are adequately described. The planned activities and training
are appropriately tailored to the needs and levels of the employees and
employers to be trained. The target audience to be served through the
grant program is described. (20 points)
(5) The training materials and training programs are tailored to
the training needs of one or more of the following target audiences;
and the need for training is established: Small businesses; new
businesses; limited English proficiency, non-literate and low literacy
workers; youth; immigrant and minority workers, and other hard-to-reach
workers; and employees in high-hazard industries and industries with
high fatality rates. Organizations proposing to develop Spanish-
language training materials should utilize the OSHA Dictionaries
(English-to-Spanish and Spanish-to-English) for terminology. The
dictionaries are available on the OSHA Web site at: https://
www.osha.gov/dcsp/compliance_assistance/spanish_dictionaries.html.
Organizations proposing to develop materials in languages other than
English will also be required to provide an English version of the
materials. (10 points)
(6) There is a sound plan to recruit trainees for the program. (4
points)
(7) If the proposal includes developing educational materials for
use in the training program, there is a plan for OSHA to review the
educational materials for technical accuracy and suitability of content
during development. If previously-developed training products will be
used for the Targeted Topic training program, applicants have a plan
for OSHA to review the materials before using the products in their
grant program. (1 point)
(8) There are plans for three different types of evaluation. The
plans include evaluating your organization's progress in accomplishing
the grant work activities and accomplishments, evaluating your training
sessions, and evaluating the program's effectiveness and impact to
determine if the safety and health training and services provided
resulted in workplace change. This includes a description of the
evaluation plan to follow up with trainees to determine the impact the
program has had in abating hazards and reducing worker injuries. (5
points)
(9) The application is complete, including forms, budget detail,
narrative and work plan, and required attachments. (1 point)
B. Budget--20 points total
(1) The budgeted costs are reasonable. No more than 25% of the
total budget is for administration. (12 points)
(2) The budget complies with federal cost principles (which can be
found in the applicable OMB Circulars) and with OSHA budget
requirements contained in the grant application instructions. (3
points)
(3) The cost per trainee is less than $500 and the cost per
training hour is reasonable. (5 points)
C. Experience of Organization--15 points total
(1) The organization applying for the grant demonstrates experience
with occupational safety and health. Applicants that do not have prior
experience in providing safety and health training to employees or
employers may partner with an established safety and health
organization to acquire safety and health expertise. (4 points)
(2) The organization applying for the grant demonstrates experience
training adults in work-related subjects or in recruiting, training and
working with the target audience for this grant. (4 points)
(3) The application organization demonstrates that the applicant
has strong financial management and internal control systems. (4
points)
(4) The applicant organization has administered, or will work with
an organization that has administered, a number of different federal
and/or State grants over the past five years. (3 points)
D. Experience and Qualification of Personnel--15 points total
(1) The staff to be assigned to the project has experience in
occupational safety and health, the specific topic chosen, and in
training adults. (10 points)
(2) Project staff has experience in recruiting, training, and
working with the population your organization proposes to serve under
the grant. (5 points)
2. Review and Selection Process
OSHA will screen all applications to determine whether all required
proposal elements are present and clearly identifiable. Applications
that do not may be deemed non-responsive and may not be evaluated. A
technical panel will objectively rate each complete application against
the criteria described in this announcement. The panel recommendations
to the Assistant Secretary are advisory in nature. The Assistant
Secretary may establish a minimally acceptable rating range for the
purpose of selecting qualified applicants. The Assistant Secretary will
make a final selection determination based on what is most advantageous
to the government, considering factors such as panel findings,
geographic presence of the applicants, Agency priorities, the best
value to the
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government, cost, and other factors. The Assistant Secretary's
determination for award under this solicitation for grant applications
(SGA) is final.
3. Anticipated Announcement and Award Dates
Announcement of these awards is expected to occur no later than
September 30, 2008.
The grant agreements will be awarded by no later than September
2008.
VI. Award Administration Information
1. Award Process
Organizations selected as grant recipients will be notified by a
representative of the Assistant Secretary, usually from an OSHA
Regional Office. An applicant whose proposal is not selected will be
notified in writing.
Notice that an organization has been selected as a grant recipient
does not constitute approval of the grant application as submitted.
Before the actual grant award, OSHA will enter into negotiations
concerning such items as program components, staffing and funding
levels, and administrative systems. If the negotiations do not result
in an acceptable submittal, the Assistant Secretary reserves the right
to terminate the negotiation and decline to fund the proposal.
Note: Except as specifically provided, OSHA's acceptance of a
proposal and an award of federal funds to sponsor any program(s)
does not provide a waiver of any grant requirement or procedures.
For example, if an application identifies a specific sub-contractor
to provide services, the USDOL OSHA award does not provide the
justification or basis to sole-source the procurement, i.e., to
avoid competition.
2. Administrative and National Policy Requirements
All grantees, including faith-based organizations, will be subject
to applicable federal laws and regulations (including provisions of
appropriations law) and the applicable Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) Circulars. The grant award(s) awarded under this SGA will be
subject to the following administrative standards and provisions, as
applicable to the particular grantee:
29 CFR part 2, subpart D, new equal treatment regulations.
29 CFR parts 31, 32, 35 and 36 as applicable.
29 CFR part 93, new restrictions on lobbying.
29 CFR part 95, which covers grant requirements for nonprofit
organizations, including universities and hospitals. These are the
Department of Labor regulations implementing 2 CFR part 215, formerly
OMB Circular A-110.
29 CFR part 98, government-wide debarment and suspension
(nonprocurement) and government wide requirements for drug-free
workplace (grants).
2 CFR part 220, formerly OMB Circular A-21, which describes
allowable and unallowable costs for educational institutions.
2 CFR part 230, formerly OMB circular A-122, which describes
allowable and unallowable costs for other nonprofit organizations.
OMB Circular A-133, 29 CFR parts 96 and 99, which provide
information about audit requirements.
Certifications. All applicants are required to certify to a drug-
free workplace in accordance with 29 CFR part 98, to comply with the
New Restrictions on Lobbying published at 29 CFR part 93, to make a
certification regarding the debarment rules at 29 CFR part 98, and to
complete a special lobbying certification.
Training Audience. Grant-funded training programs must serve
multiple employers and their employees. Grant-funded training programs
must serve individuals covered by the Occupational Safety and Health
Act of 1970. As a part of the grant close-out process, grantees must
self-certify that their grant-funded programs and materials were not
provided to ineligible audiences.
Other. In keeping with the policies outlined in Executive Orders
13256, 12928, 13230, and 13021 as amended, the grantee is strongly
encouraged to provide subcontracting opportunities to Historically
Black Colleges and Universities, Hispanic Serving Institutions, and
Tribal Colleges and Universities.
3. Special Program Requirements
OSHA review of educational materials. OSHA will review all
educational materials produced by the grantee for technical accuracy
and suitability of content during development and before final
publication. OSHA will also review previously-developed training
curricula and purchased training materials for technical accuracy and
suitability of content before the materials are used. Grantees
developing training materials must follow all copyright laws and
provide written certification that their materials are free from
copyright infringements.
When grant recipients produce training materials, they must provide
copies of completed materials to OSHA before the end of the grant
period. OSHA has a lending program that circulates grant-produced
audiovisual materials. Audiovisual materials produced by the grantee as
a part of its grant program may be included in this lending program. In
addition, all materials produced by grantees must be provided to OSHA
in hard copy as well as in a digital format (CD Rom/DVD) for possible
publication on the Internet by OSHA. Two copies of the materials must
be provided to OSHA. Acceptable formats for training materials include
Microsoft Office 2003 and Adobe Reader version 7.
As stated in 29 CFR 95.36, the Department of Labor reserves a
royalty-free, nonexclusive and irrevocable right to reproduce, publish,
or otherwise use for federal purposes any work produced under a grant,
and to authorize others to do so. Applicants should note that grantees
must agree to provide the Department of Labor a paid-up, nonexclusive
and irrevocable license to reproduce, publish, or otherwise use for
federal purposes all products developed, or for which ownership was
purchased, under an award including, but not limited to, curricula,
training models, technical assistance products, and any related
materials, and to authorize the Department of Labor to do so. Such uses
include, but are not limited to, the right to modify and distribute
such products worldwide by any means, electronic or otherwise.
Acknowledgment of USDOL Funding. In all circumstances, all approved
grant-funded materials developed by a grantee shall contain the
following disclaimer:
This material was produced under grant number ------ from the
Occupational Safety and Health Administration, U.S. Department of
Labor. It does not necessarily reflect the views or policies of the
U.S. Department of Labor, nor does mention of trade names, commercial
products, or organizations imply endorsement by the U.S. Government.
Public reference to grant: When issuing statements, press releases,
requests for proposals, bid solicitations, and other documents
describing projects or programs funded in whole or in part with federal
money, all grantees receiving Federal funds must clearly state:
The percentage of the total costs of the program or
project that will be financed with federal money;
The dollar amount of federal financial assistance for the
project or program; and
The percentage and dollar amount of the total costs of the
project or
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program that will be financed by non-governmental sources.
Use of U.S. Department of Labor (USDOL) OSHA Logo: The USDOL-OSHA
logo may not be applied to any grant products developed with grant
funds without advance written authority from OSHA.
4. Reporting
Grantees are required by Departmental regulations to submit program
and financial reports each calendar quarter. All reports are due no
later than 30 days after the end of the fiscal quarter and shall be
submitted to the appropriate OSHA Regional Office.
The Grantee(s) shall submit financial reports on a quarterly basis.
The first reporting period shall end on the last day of the fiscal
quarter (December 31, March 31, June 30, or September 30) during which
the grant was signed. Financial reports are due within 30 days of the
end of the reporting period (i.e., by January 30, April 30, July 30,
and October 30).
The Grantee(s) shall use Standard Form (SF) 269, Financial Status
Report, to report the status of funds, at the project level, during the
grant period. A final SF269 shall be submitted no later than 90 days
following completion of the grant period. The SF269 reports will be
submitted electronically through the Department of Labor (DOL) E-Grants
system.
Grantees will use the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
Payment Management System (HHS PMS) to receive federal funds and to
report federal expenditures, and must also send USDOL copies of the PSC
272 that it submits to HHS, on the same schedule.
Technical Progress Reports: After signing the agreement, the
Grantee(s) shall submit technical progress reports to USDOL/OSHA
Regional Offices at the end of each fiscal quarter. Technical progress
reports provide both quantitative and qualitative information and a
narrative assessment of performance for the preceding three-month
period. OSHA Form 171 shall be used for reporting training numbers and
a narrative report shall be provided that details grant activities
conducted during the quarter, information on how the project is
progressing in achieving its stated objectives, and notes any problems
or delays along with corrective actions proposed. The first reporting
period shall end on the last day of the fiscal quarter (December 31,
March 31, June 30, or September 30) during which the grant was signed.
Quarterly progress reports are due within 30 days of the end of the
report period (i.e., by January 30, April 30, July 30, and October 30).
Between reporting dates, the Grantees(s) shall also immediately inform
USDOL/OSHA of significant developments and/or problems affecting the
organization's ability to accomplish work.
Authority: The Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970, (29
U.S.C. 670), Public Law 110-161, and the Consolidated Appropriations
Act, 2008.
Signed at Washington, DC, this 21st day of March, 2008.
Edwin G. Foulke, Jr.
Assistant Secretary of Labor for Occupational Safety and Health.
Application Document Checklist
Application for Federal Assistance (SF 424 form).
Budget Information (SF 424A form).
Assurances (SF 424B form).
Combined Assurances for (ED 80-0013 form).
Survey on Ensuring Equal Opportunity for Applicants (Faith-Based
EEO Survey), (OMB No. 1890-0014 form).
Attachments (Please Attach in the Following Order)
Program Summary (not to exceed two single-sided pages).
Detailed Project Budget Backup.
If applicable: provide a copy of approved indirect cost rate
agreement, statement of program income, and a description of any
voluntary non-federal resource contribution to be provided by the
applicant, including source of funds and estimated amount.
Technical Proposal, program narrative, not to exceed 30 single-
sided pages, double-spaced, 12-point font, containing:
Problem Statement/Need for Funds;
Administrative and Program Capability; and
Work plan.
Organizational Chart
Evidence of Nonprofit status, (letter from the IRS) if applicable
Accounting System Certification, if applicable
Other Attachments such as: Resumes of key personnel or position
descriptions, exhibits, information on prior government grants, and
signed letters of commitment to the project.
Note: In the Grants.gov system, there is a window containing a
menu of ``Mandatory Documents'' which must be completed and
submitted online within the system. For all other attachments such
as the Program Summary, Detailed Budget Backup, Technical Proposal,
etc., please scan these documents into a single Adobe Acrobat file
and attach the document in the area for attachments.
[FR Doc. E8-6108 Filed 3-25-08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4510-26-P