Solicitation for a Cooperative Agreement: Guidebook for Building High Performance Correctional Organizations, 41892-41894 [2010-17487]
Download as PDF
41892
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 137 / Monday, July 19, 2010 / Notices
abroad by or on behalf of, or are
imported by or on behalf of, Emcore, or
any of its affiliated companies, parents,
subsidiaries, licensees, contractors, or
other related business entities, or
successors or assigns; and (2) a cease
and desist order prohibiting Emcore
from conducting any of the following
activities in the United States:
importing, selling, marketing,
advertising, distributing, offering for
sale, transferring (except for
exportation), and soliciting U.S. agents
or distributors for, optoelectronic
devices, components thereof, and
products containing the same that are
covered by one or more of claims 1, 2,
3, and 5 of the ’447 patent.
The Commission further determined
that the public interest factors
enumerated in section 337(d)(1) (19
U.S.C. 1337(d)(1)) do not preclude
issuance of the limited exclusion order
or the cease and desist order. Finally,
the Commission determined that a three
(3) percent bond of the entered value of
the covered products is required to
permit temporary importation during
the period of Presidential review (19
U.S.C. *1337(j)). The Commission’s
orders and opinion were delivered to
the President and to the United States
Trade Representative on the day of their
issuance.
The Commission has terminated this
investigation. The authority for the
Commission’s determination is
contained in section 337 of the Tariff
Act of 1930, as amended (19 U.S.C.
1337), and in § 210.50 of the
Commission’s Rules of Practice and
Procedure (19 CFR 210.50).
By order of the Commission.
Issued: July 12, 2010.
Marilyn R. Abbott,
Secretary to the Commission.
[FR Doc. 2010–17471 Filed 7–16–10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7020–02–P
DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
National Institute of Corrections
jlentini on DSKJ8SOYB1PROD with NOTICES
Solicitation for a Cooperative
Agreement: Guidebook for Building
High Performance Correctional
Organizations
AGENCY: National Institute of
Corrections, U.S. Department of Justice.
ACTION: Solicitation for Cooperative
Agreement.
SUMMARY: The National Institute of
Corrections (NIC) is soliciting proposals
from organizations, groups, or
individuals to enter into a cooperative
agreement for an eight-month period to
VerDate Mar<15>2010
16:24 Jul 16, 2010
Jkt 220001
begin in September 2010. Work under
this agreement will continue NIC’s High
Performance Correctional Organizations
Project that has been developed over the
past four years. This project will
consolidate the work into a guidebook
to be placed in the public domain for
use by correctional administrators.
The project funded under this
cooperative agreement will continue
and extend the work of Building High
Performance Correctional Organizations
(BHPCO) and other NIC projects.
Intended outcome: The intended
outcome for this project will include
creating a guidebook for jails,
community corrections and prisons;
developing ways to address agency
inefficiencies that result from the lack of
a holistic and integrated perspective;
establishing a core set of values or
guiding principles that agencies can
apply to correctional disciplines to
enhance business practices; improving
organizational performance by assessing
strengths, weaknesses, opportunities,
resources and threats; prioritizing goals
and objectives; and containing costs
associated with operating correctional
agencies and systems.
DATES: Applications must be received
by 4 p.m. (EDT) on Monday, August 2,
2010. Selection of the successful
applicant and notification of review
results will be announced to all
applicants by September 30, 2010.
ADDRESSES: Mailed applications must be
sent to Director, National Institute of
Corrections, 320 First Street, NW., Room
5007, Washington, DC 20534.
Applicants are encouraged to use
Federal Express, UPS, or similar service
to ensure delivery by the due date.
Hand delivered applications should
be brought to 500 First Street, NW.,
Washington, DC 20534. At the front
desk, call (202) 307–3106, extension 0
for pickup. Faxed or e-mailed
applications will not be accepted.
Electronic applications can be
submitted only via https://
www.grants.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION: A copy of
this announcement and the required
application forms can be downloaded
from the NIC Web site at https://www.
nicic.gov/cooperativeagreements.
All technical questions concerning
this announcement should be directed
to Pamela Davison. She can be reached
by calling 1–800–995–6423 ext 0484 or
by e-mail at pdavison@bop.gov. All
programmatic questions concerning this
announcement should be directed to
Sherry Carroll. She can be reached by
calling 1–800–995–6423 ext 0378 or by
e-mail at scarroll@bop.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
PO 00000
Frm 00100
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
Project Goals: The BHPCO Guidebook
is a compendium of advice and best
practice guidance that inform higher
performance in correctional institutions.
Its intended audience includes
managers, executives, supervisors, and
staff personnel vested in success and
continuous improvement, contributing
to a just and humane society through
their work in safe, functional,
correctional facilities. At a minimum,
the Guidebook—a series of stand-alone
issuances that can be compiled as
chapters in a larger volume—provides
credible, easily accessible reference
material in a variety of areas in which
correctional administrators are most
vulnerable, where desired and current
state gaps are at their widest, and where
system-wide competency needs are
defined. Because the variety of
institutions is broad and the complexity
of the myriad systems influencing
performance is unique to individual
cases, material presented in the guide
cannot be expected to satisfy all endstate situational solutions. Instead, it
offers current best practice advice,
assessment, guidance, learning, and
resource direction, enabling the
foundation of a learning culture and a
high performance mindset.
The recipient of the award under this
cooperative agreement will: (1)
Coordinate chapters of the guidebook on
leadership, assessments, intervention,
change management and other related
topics; (2) schedule and provide
logistics for one face-to-face meeting
(may also include stipend fees) for NIC
selected guidebook team members of up
to ten members; (3) compile an
information library of resources and
case studies from organizations going
through organizational change; (4)
provide the guidebook in hardcopy and
electronic Word 2003 or higher format;
(5) create learning objectives in
preparation for a second cycle of the
guidebook project to train pilot
participants on the prototype
guidebook; (6) refine assessment tools
previously developed for this project
linking assessments to interventions; (7)
identify any additional information and/
or language that will enhance cohesion
of the guidebook for audience member’s
consumption; and (8) become familiar
with Baldrige criteria.
Background: Through a number of
prior cooperative agreements, NIC has
been developing a definition,
identifying characteristics of a high
performing correctional organization
(HPCO) and developing assessment
tools for an HPCO. During 2006, NIC
sponsored a workgroup of subject matter
experts. The group identified nine
categories or core guiding principles
E:\FR\FM\19JYN1.SGM
19JYN1
jlentini on DSKJ8SOYB1PROD with NOTICES
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 137 / Monday, July 19, 2010 / Notices
considered as important factors in
determining criminal justice system
performance on the state or local
governance level for community
corrections. Those principles are: (1)
Leadership and management
development, (2) information and
knowledge management; (3)
comprehensive criminal justice
planning, (4) offender management, (5)
collaborative partnerships, (6)
organizational development, (7)
accurate, fair and timely processes, (8)
stewardship of public resources, and (9)
public safety.
In 2008, the work evolved through a
series of interviews, focus groups, sites
visits, content analyses, and literature
reviews. A group of roundtable
members authored the HPCO definition
and created a preliminary draft model.
The group authored the following
definition: An HPCO provides public
safety through guiding principles,
beliefs, attitudes, and behaviors that the
organization as a whole and each
member of its workforce embody and
promote. An HPCO visibly demonstrates
alignment in values-oriented mission
statements, vision, and strategic plans;
distributive leadership that actively
engages performance measures to
instigate continuous learning within the
work force and among partners; diligent
stewardship of resources.
The HPCO realizes it is part of a wider
community, which must be related to
with open communication and
transparency.
Design Preliminary Model: Various
models were examined for visual
appeal, content, and format to be used
by the roundtable members to serve as
examples for the creation of the draft
HPCO model. The current model is
nonlinear, emphasizes nine to ten core
values and incorporates the Baldrige
National Quality Program criteria.
Required Expertise: Successful
applicants should be able to
demonstrate that they have the
organizational capacity to fulfill all the
goals of the project, including
experience in organizing and providing
ongoing support for complex, multi-year
projects, extensive experience in
correctional policy and practice, and a
record of success in working with
correctional agencies on
implementation, organizational
development, or technical assistance
projects. Preference will also be given to
applicants with a record of working
with interdisciplinary teams in a variety
of fields beyond corrections.
Application Requirements:
Applications should be concisely
written, typed double spaced and
reference the ‘‘NIC Opportunity
VerDate Mar<15>2010
16:24 Jul 16, 2010
Jkt 220001
Number’’ and Title provided in this
announcement. Please limit the program
narrative text to up to 15 double-spaced
pages, exclusive of resumes and
summaries of experience (do not submit
full curriculum vitae). The application
package must include a cover letter that
identifies the audit agency responsible
for the applicant’s financial accounts as
well as the audit period or fiscal year
that the applicant operates under (e.g.,
January 1 through December 31), a
program narrative responding to the
requirements in this announcement, a
description of the qualifications of the
applicant(s), an outline explaining
projected costs, and the following forms:
OMB Standard Form 424, Application
for Federal Assistance; OMB Standard
Form 424A, Budget Information—Non
Construction Programs; OMB Standard
Form 424B, Assurances—Non
Construction Programs (these forms are
available at https://www.grants.gov); and
DOJ/NIC Certification Regarding
Lobbying; Debarment, Suspension and
Other Responsibility Matters; and DrugFree Workplace Requirements (available
at https://www.nicic.org/Downloads/
PDF/certif-frm.pdf).
Applications may be submitted in
hard copy, or electronically via https://
www.grants.gov. If submitted in hard
copy, there needs to be an unbound
original and three copies of the full
proposal (program and budget
narratives, application forms and
assurances). The original should have
the applicant’s signature in blue ink.
Authority: Public Law 93–415.
Funds Available: Up to $100,000 is
available for this project, subject to
available funding, but preference will be
given to applicants who provide the
most cost efficient solutions in
accomplishing the scope of work.
Determination will be made based on
best value to the Government, not
necessarily the lowest bid. Funds may
be used only for the activities that are
directly related to the project.
Eligibility of Applicants: An eligible
applicant is any public or private
agency, educational institution,
organization, individual, or team with
expertise in the areas described.
This project will be a collaborative
venture with the NIC Administration
Division. A blog for the project is on
NIC’s website. Literature analysis
summaries, meeting reports, the
annotated bibliography, and a Webbased survey can be found on the blog.
Visit https://community.nicic.org/blogs/
hpco/default.aspx today!
Review Considerations: Applications
received under this announcement will
be subject to the NIC Review Process.
PO 00000
Frm 00101
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
41893
The criteria for the evaluation of each
application will be as follows:
Programmatic: Are all of the tasks
adequately discussed? Is there a clear
statement of how each of the tasks will
be accomplished, including the staffing,
resources, and strategies to be
employed? Are there any innovative
approaches, techniques, or design
aspects proposed that will enhance the
project?
Organizational: Do the skills,
knowledge, and expertise of the
organization and the proposed project
staff demonstrate the high level of
competency in high performing
organizations, culture, Baldrige criteria,
and change management needed to
complete the tasks? Does the applicant
organization have the necessary
experience and organizational capacity
to complete all eight goals of the
project? Are the proposed project
management and staffing plans realistic
and sufficient to complete the project
within the 8-month timeframe?
Project Management/Administration:
Does the applicant identify reasonable
objectives, milestones, and measures to
track progress? If consultants and/or
partnerships are proposed, is there a
reasonable justification for their
inclusion in the project and a clear
structure to ensure effective
coordination? Is the proposed budget
realistic, does it provide sufficient cost
detail/narrative, and does it represent
good value relative to the anticipated
results?
Note: NIC will NOT award a cooperative
agreement to an applicant who does not have
a Dun and Bradstreet Database Universal
Number (DUNS) and is not registered in the
Central Contractor Registry (CCR).
A DUNS number can be received at
no cost by calling the dedicated toll-free
DUNS number request line at 1–800–
333–0505 (if you are a sole proprietor,
you would dial 1–866–705–5711 and
select option 1).
Registration in the CCR can be done
online at the CCR Web site: https://
www.ccr.gov. A CCR Handbook and
work sheet can also be reviewed at the
Web site.
Number of Awards: One.
NIC Opportunity Number: 10M15.
This number should appear as a
reference line in the cover letter, where
the opportunity number is requested on
the Standard Form 424, and outside of
the envelope in which the application is
sent.
Catalog of Federal Domestic
Assistance Number: 16.602.
E:\FR\FM\19JYN1.SGM
19JYN1
41894
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 137 / Monday, July 19, 2010 / Notices
Executive Order 12372: This program
is not subject to the provisions of
Executive Order 12372.
Morris L. Thigpen,
Director, National Institute of Corrections.
Signed at Washington, DC, this 28th day of
June, 2010.
Richard Church,
Certifying Officer, Division of Trade
Adjustment Assistance.
[FR Doc. 2010–17455 Filed 7–16–10; 8:45 am]
[FR Doc. 2010–17487 Filed 7–16–10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4510–FN–P
BILLING CODE 4410–36–M
Chapter 2 of Title II of the Trade Act of 1974,
as amended.
Signed in Washington, DC, this 28th day of
June 2010.
Elliott S. Kushner,
Certifying Officer, Division of Trade
Adjustment Assistance.
[FR Doc. 2010–17448 Filed 7–16–10; 8:45 am]
DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Employment and Training
Administration
DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Employment and Training
Administration
BILLING CODE 4510–FN–P
DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
[TA–W–72,774]
[TA–W–63,832]
CRH North America Inc., Including OnSite Leased Workers from KForce and
Global Technology Associates,
Warren, Michigan; Amended
Certification Regarding Eligibility To
Apply for Worker Adjustment
Assistance
In accordance with Section 223 of the
Trade Act of 1974 (19 U.S.C. 2273), and
Section 246 of the Trade Act of 1974 (26
U.S.C. 2813), as amended, the
Department of Labor issued a
Certification of Eligibility to Apply for
Worker Adjustment Assistance and
Alternative Trade Adjustment
Assistance on September 11, 2008,
applicable to workers of Carestream
Health, Inc., X-Ray/Mammography Film
Division, Windsor, Colorado. The notice
was published in the Federal Register
on September 24, 2008 (73 FR 55136).
At the request of the State agency, the
Department reviewed the certification
for workers of the subject firm. The
workers are engaged in the production
of medical x-ray film.
New information shows that the
subject firm name was not identified in
its entirety. The company official
confirmed that the correct name of the
subject firm should read ‘‘Carestream
Health, Inc., Medical X-Ray Division,
Windsor, Colorado’’.
Based on this information, the
Department is amending the
certification to correctly identify the
name of the subject firm and extend
worker adjustment assistance eligibility
to all workers of Carestream Health,
Inc., Medical X-Ray Division, Windsor,
Colorado.
The amended notice applicable to
TA–W–63,832 is hereby issued as
follows:
jlentini on DSKJ8SOYB1PROD with NOTICES
Carestream Health, Inc. Medical X-Ray
Division Windsor, CO; Amended
Certification Regarding Eligibility To
Apply for Worker Adjustment
Assistance and Alternative Trade
Adjustment Assistance
In accordance with Section 223 of the
Trade Act of 1974, as amended (‘‘Act’’),
19 U.S.C. 2273, the Department of Labor
issued a Certification of Eligibility to
apply for Worker Adjustment Assistance
on March 11, 2010, applicable to
workers of CRH North America Inc.,
including on-site leased workers from
KForce, Warren, Michigan. The notice
was published in the Federal Register
April 23, 2010 (75 FR 21356).
At the request of the State Agency, the
Department reviewed the certification
for workers of the subject firm. The
workers are engaged in activities related
to research, development, and
administrative services (i.e. accounting,
purchasing, and sales services).
The company reports that workers
leased from Global Technology
Associates were employed on-site at the
Warren, Michigan location of CRH
North America Inc. The Department has
determined that these workers were
sufficiently under the control of the
subject firm to be considered leased
workers.
Based on these findings, the
Department is amending this
certification to include workers leased
from Global Technology Associates
working on-site at the Warren, Michigan
location of CRH North America Inc.
The amended notice applicable to
TA–W–72,774 is hereby issued as
follows:
All workers of Carestream Health, Inc.,
Medical X-Ray Division, Windsor, Colorado
who became totally or partially separated
from employment on or after August 6, 2007,
through September 11, 2010, are eligible to
apply for adjustment assistance under
Section 223 of the Trade Act of 1974, and are
also eligible to apply for alternative trade
adjustment assistance under Section 246 of
the Trade Act of 1974.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
16:24 Jul 16, 2010
Jkt 220001
All workers of CRH North America Inc.,
including on-site leased workers from KForce
and Global Technology Associates, Warren,
Michigan, who became totally or partially
separated from employment on or after
October 14, 2008, through March 11, 2012,
and all workers in the group threatened with
total or partial separation from employment
on date of certification through two years
from the date of certification, are eligible to
apply for adjustment assistance under
PO 00000
Frm 00102
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
Employment and Training
Administration
[TA–W–73,211]
Wapakoneta Machine Company,
Currently Known as EF Industrial
Technologies, Inc., Wapakoneta, OH;
Amended Certification Regarding
Eligibility To Apply for Worker
Adjustment Assistance
In accordance with Section 223 of the
Trade Act of 1974, as amended (‘‘Act’’),
19 U.S.C. 2273, the Department of Labor
issued a Certification of Eligibility to
Apply for Worker Adjustment
Assistance on May 17, 2010, applicable
to workers of Wapakoneta Machine
Company, Wapakoneta, Ohio. The
notice was published in the Federal
Register on June 7, 2010 (75 FR 32223).
At the request of the State agency, the
Department reviewed the certification
for workers of the subject firm. The
workers are engaged in the production
of machine knives.
New information shows that as of
early 2010, Wapakoneta Machine
Company is currently known as EF
Industrial Technologies, Inc. Some
workers separated from employment at
the subject firm had their wages
reported under a separate
unemployment insurance (UI) tax
account under the name EF Industrial
Technologies, Inc.
Accordingly, the Department is
amending this certification to properly
reflect this matter.
The intent of the Department’s
certification is to include all workers of
the subject firm who were adversely
affected by increased imports of
machine knives.
The amended notice applicable to
TA–W–73,211 is hereby issued as
follows:
All workers of Wapakoneta Machine
Company, currently known as EF Industrial
Technologies, Inc., Wapakoneta, Ohio
became totally or partially separated from
employment on or after December 8, 2008,
through May 17, 2012, and all workers in the
group threatened with total or partial
separation from employment on date of
certification through two years from the date
E:\FR\FM\19JYN1.SGM
19JYN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 75, Number 137 (Monday, July 19, 2010)]
[Notices]
[Pages 41892-41894]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2010-17487]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
National Institute of Corrections
Solicitation for a Cooperative Agreement: Guidebook for Building
High Performance Correctional Organizations
AGENCY: National Institute of Corrections, U.S. Department of Justice.
ACTION: Solicitation for Cooperative Agreement.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The National Institute of Corrections (NIC) is soliciting
proposals from organizations, groups, or individuals to enter into a
cooperative agreement for an eight-month period to begin in September
2010. Work under this agreement will continue NIC's High Performance
Correctional Organizations Project that has been developed over the
past four years. This project will consolidate the work into a
guidebook to be placed in the public domain for use by correctional
administrators.
The project funded under this cooperative agreement will continue
and extend the work of Building High Performance Correctional
Organizations (BHPCO) and other NIC projects.
Intended outcome: The intended outcome for this project will
include creating a guidebook for jails, community corrections and
prisons; developing ways to address agency inefficiencies that result
from the lack of a holistic and integrated perspective; establishing a
core set of values or guiding principles that agencies can apply to
correctional disciplines to enhance business practices; improving
organizational performance by assessing strengths, weaknesses,
opportunities, resources and threats; prioritizing goals and
objectives; and containing costs associated with operating correctional
agencies and systems.
DATES: Applications must be received by 4 p.m. (EDT) on Monday, August
2, 2010. Selection of the successful applicant and notification of
review results will be announced to all applicants by September 30,
2010.
ADDRESSES: Mailed applications must be sent to Director, National
Institute of Corrections, 320 First Street, NW., Room 5007, Washington,
DC 20534. Applicants are encouraged to use Federal Express, UPS, or
similar service to ensure delivery by the due date.
Hand delivered applications should be brought to 500 First Street,
NW., Washington, DC 20534. At the front desk, call (202) 307-3106,
extension 0 for pickup. Faxed or e-mailed applications will not be
accepted. Electronic applications can be submitted only via https://www.grants.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION: A copy of this announcement and the required
application forms can be downloaded from the NIC Web site at https://www.nicic.gov/cooperativeagreements.
All technical questions concerning this announcement should be
directed to Pamela Davison. She can be reached by calling 1-800-995-
6423 ext 0484 or by e-mail at pdavison@bop.gov. All programmatic
questions concerning this announcement should be directed to Sherry
Carroll. She can be reached by calling 1-800-995-6423 ext 0378 or by e-
mail at scarroll@bop.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Project Goals: The BHPCO Guidebook is a compendium of advice and
best practice guidance that inform higher performance in correctional
institutions. Its intended audience includes managers, executives,
supervisors, and staff personnel vested in success and continuous
improvement, contributing to a just and humane society through their
work in safe, functional, correctional facilities. At a minimum, the
Guidebook--a series of stand-alone issuances that can be compiled as
chapters in a larger volume--provides credible, easily accessible
reference material in a variety of areas in which correctional
administrators are most vulnerable, where desired and current state
gaps are at their widest, and where system-wide competency needs are
defined. Because the variety of institutions is broad and the
complexity of the myriad systems influencing performance is unique to
individual cases, material presented in the guide cannot be expected to
satisfy all end-state situational solutions. Instead, it offers current
best practice advice, assessment, guidance, learning, and resource
direction, enabling the foundation of a learning culture and a high
performance mindset.
The recipient of the award under this cooperative agreement will:
(1) Coordinate chapters of the guidebook on leadership, assessments,
intervention, change management and other related topics; (2) schedule
and provide logistics for one face-to-face meeting (may also include
stipend fees) for NIC selected guidebook team members of up to ten
members; (3) compile an information library of resources and case
studies from organizations going through organizational change; (4)
provide the guidebook in hardcopy and electronic Word 2003 or higher
format; (5) create learning objectives in preparation for a second
cycle of the guidebook project to train pilot participants on the
prototype guidebook; (6) refine assessment tools previously developed
for this project linking assessments to interventions; (7) identify any
additional information and/or language that will enhance cohesion of
the guidebook for audience member's consumption; and (8) become
familiar with Baldrige criteria.
Background: Through a number of prior cooperative agreements, NIC
has been developing a definition, identifying characteristics of a high
performing correctional organization (HPCO) and developing assessment
tools for an HPCO. During 2006, NIC sponsored a workgroup of subject
matter experts. The group identified nine categories or core guiding
principles
[[Page 41893]]
considered as important factors in determining criminal justice system
performance on the state or local governance level for community
corrections. Those principles are: (1) Leadership and management
development, (2) information and knowledge management; (3)
comprehensive criminal justice planning, (4) offender management, (5)
collaborative partnerships, (6) organizational development, (7)
accurate, fair and timely processes, (8) stewardship of public
resources, and (9) public safety.
In 2008, the work evolved through a series of interviews, focus
groups, sites visits, content analyses, and literature reviews. A group
of roundtable members authored the HPCO definition and created a
preliminary draft model. The group authored the following definition:
An HPCO provides public safety through guiding principles, beliefs,
attitudes, and behaviors that the organization as a whole and each
member of its workforce embody and promote. An HPCO visibly
demonstrates alignment in values-oriented mission statements, vision,
and strategic plans; distributive leadership that actively engages
performance measures to instigate continuous learning within the work
force and among partners; diligent stewardship of resources.
The HPCO realizes it is part of a wider community, which must be
related to with open communication and transparency.
Design Preliminary Model: Various models were examined for visual
appeal, content, and format to be used by the roundtable members to
serve as examples for the creation of the draft HPCO model. The current
model is nonlinear, emphasizes nine to ten core values and incorporates
the Baldrige National Quality Program criteria.
Required Expertise: Successful applicants should be able to
demonstrate that they have the organizational capacity to fulfill all
the goals of the project, including experience in organizing and
providing ongoing support for complex, multi-year projects, extensive
experience in correctional policy and practice, and a record of success
in working with correctional agencies on implementation, organizational
development, or technical assistance projects. Preference will also be
given to applicants with a record of working with interdisciplinary
teams in a variety of fields beyond corrections.
Application Requirements: Applications should be concisely written,
typed double spaced and reference the ``NIC Opportunity Number'' and
Title provided in this announcement. Please limit the program narrative
text to up to 15 double-spaced pages, exclusive of resumes and
summaries of experience (do not submit full curriculum vitae). The
application package must include a cover letter that identifies the
audit agency responsible for the applicant's financial accounts as well
as the audit period or fiscal year that the applicant operates under
(e.g., January 1 through December 31), a program narrative responding
to the requirements in this announcement, a description of the
qualifications of the applicant(s), an outline explaining projected
costs, and the following forms: OMB Standard Form 424, Application for
Federal Assistance; OMB Standard Form 424A, Budget Information--Non
Construction Programs; OMB Standard Form 424B, Assurances--Non
Construction Programs (these forms are available at https://www.grants.gov); and DOJ/NIC Certification Regarding Lobbying;
Debarment, Suspension and Other Responsibility Matters; and Drug-Free
Workplace Requirements (available at https://www.nicic.org/Downloads/PDF/certif-frm.pdf).
Applications may be submitted in hard copy, or electronically via
https://www.grants.gov. If submitted in hard copy, there needs to be an
unbound original and three copies of the full proposal (program and
budget narratives, application forms and assurances). The original
should have the applicant's signature in blue ink.
Authority: Public Law 93-415.
Funds Available: Up to $100,000 is available for this project,
subject to available funding, but preference will be given to
applicants who provide the most cost efficient solutions in
accomplishing the scope of work. Determination will be made based on
best value to the Government, not necessarily the lowest bid. Funds may
be used only for the activities that are directly related to the
project.
Eligibility of Applicants: An eligible applicant is any public or
private agency, educational institution, organization, individual, or
team with expertise in the areas described.
This project will be a collaborative venture with the NIC
Administration Division. A blog for the project is on NIC's website.
Literature analysis summaries, meeting reports, the annotated
bibliography, and a Web-based survey can be found on the blog. Visit
https://community.nicic.org/blogs/hpco/default.aspx today!
Review Considerations: Applications received under this
announcement will be subject to the NIC Review Process. The criteria
for the evaluation of each application will be as follows:
Programmatic: Are all of the tasks adequately discussed? Is there a
clear statement of how each of the tasks will be accomplished,
including the staffing, resources, and strategies to be employed? Are
there any innovative approaches, techniques, or design aspects proposed
that will enhance the project?
Organizational: Do the skills, knowledge, and expertise of the
organization and the proposed project staff demonstrate the high level
of competency in high performing organizations, culture, Baldrige
criteria, and change management needed to complete the tasks? Does the
applicant organization have the necessary experience and organizational
capacity to complete all eight goals of the project? Are the proposed
project management and staffing plans realistic and sufficient to
complete the project within the 8-month timeframe?
Project Management/Administration: Does the applicant identify
reasonable objectives, milestones, and measures to track progress? If
consultants and/or partnerships are proposed, is there a reasonable
justification for their inclusion in the project and a clear structure
to ensure effective coordination? Is the proposed budget realistic,
does it provide sufficient cost detail/narrative, and does it represent
good value relative to the anticipated results?
Note: NIC will NOT award a cooperative agreement to an
applicant who does not have a Dun and Bradstreet Database Universal
Number (DUNS) and is not registered in the Central Contractor
Registry (CCR).
A DUNS number can be received at no cost by calling the dedicated
toll-free DUNS number request line at 1-800-333-0505 (if you are a sole
proprietor, you would dial 1-866-705-5711 and select option 1).
Registration in the CCR can be done online at the CCR Web site:
https://www.ccr.gov. A CCR Handbook and work sheet can also be reviewed
at the Web site.
Number of Awards: One.
NIC Opportunity Number: 10M15. This number should appear as a
reference line in the cover letter, where the opportunity number is
requested on the Standard Form 424, and outside of the envelope in
which the application is sent.
Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance Number: 16.602.
[[Page 41894]]
Executive Order 12372: This program is not subject to the
provisions of Executive Order 12372.
Morris L. Thigpen,
Director, National Institute of Corrections.
[FR Doc. 2010-17487 Filed 7-16-10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4410-36-M