Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs (ECA) Request for Grant Proposals: Youth Leadership Program with Algeria, 71418-71425 [2011-29643]
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Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 222 / Thursday, November 17, 2011 / Notices
involved in computer matching
programs to:
(1) Negotiate written agreements with
the other agency or agencies
participating in the matching programs;
(2) Obtain the approval of the
matching agreement by the Data
Integrity Boards of the participating
Federal agencies;
(3) Publish notice of the computer
matching program in the Federal
Register;
(4) Furnish detailed reports about
matching programs to Congress and
OMB;
(5) Notify applicants and beneficiaries
that their records are subject to
matching; and
(6) Verify match findings before
reducing, suspending, terminating, or
denying a person’s benefits or
payments.
B. SSA Computer Matches Subject to
the Privacy Act
We have taken action to ensure that
all of our computer matching programs
comply with the requirements of the
Privacy Act, as amended.
Daniel F. Callahan,
Acting Executive Director, Office of Privacy
and Disclosure, Office of the General Counsel.
Notice of Computer Matching Program,
SSA With the Law Enforcement Agency
(LEA)
A. Participating Agencies
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SSA and LEA
B. Purpose of the Matching Program
The purpose of this matching program
is to establish terms, conditions, and
safeguards under which we will
conduct a computer matching program
with law enforcement agencies and
source jurisdictions (LEA or Source
Jurisdiction) in accordance with the
Privacy Act of 1974, as amended by the
Computer Matching and Privacy
Protection Act of 1988 (5 U.S.C. 552a),
and the regulations and guidance
promulgated thereunder, to identify
individuals in the Source Jurisdiction
who are (1) Fugitive felons, parole
violators, or probation violators, as
defined by the Social Security Act (Act),
who are also (2) Supplemental Security
Income (SSI) recipients, Retirement,
Survivors and Disability Insurance
(RSDI) beneficiaries, Special Veterans
Benefit (SVB) beneficiaries, or
representative payees for SSI recipients,
RSDI beneficiaries, or SVB beneficiaries.
C. Authority for Conducting the
Matching Program
The legal authority for the matching
program conducted under this
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agreement is: Sections 1611(e)(4)(A),
202(x)(l)(A)(iv) and (v) and 804(a)(2)
and (3) of the Act (42 U.S.C.
1382(e)(4)(A), 402(x)(l)(A)(iv) and (v),
and 1004(a)(2) and (3)), which prohibit
SSI payments, or RSDI or SVB benefits
to an SSI recipient, RSDI beneficiary, or
SVB beneficiary for any month during
which such individual flees to avoid
prosecution, or custody or confinement
after conviction, under the applicable
laws of the jurisdiction from which the
person flees, for a crime or attempt to
commit a crime considered to be a
felony under the laws of said
jurisdiction. These sections of the Act
also prohibit SSI payments, or RSDI or
SVB benefits to a recipient/beneficiary
in jurisdictions that do not define such
crimes as felonies, but as crimes
punishable by death or imprisonment
for a term exceeding 1 year (regardless
of the actual sentence imposed), and to
an individual who violates a condition
of probation or parole imposed under
Federal or state law. As a result of a
settlement of a nationwide class action
in Martinez v. Astrue, No. 08–4735
(N.D. Cal. September 24, 2009), SSA’s
nonpayment of benefits under these
sections of the Act is limited to
individuals with certain flight- or
escape-coded warrants.
Sections 1631(a)(2)(B)(iii)(V),
205(j)(2)(C)(i)(V), and 807(d)(1)(E) of the
Act (42 U.S.C. 1383(a)(2)(B)(iii)(V),
405(j)(2)(C)(i)(V), 1007(d)(1)(E)), which
prohibit SSA from using a person as a
representative payee when such person
is a person described in sections
1611(e)(4)(A), 202(x)(1)(A)(iv), or
804(a)(2) of the Act.
The legal authority for SSA’s
disclosure of information to the Source
Jurisdiction is: Sections 1106(a),
1611(e)(5), 1631(a)(2)(B)(xiv),
202(x)(3)(C), 205(j)(2)(B)(iii) and
807(b)(3) of the Act; the Privacy Act of
1974, as amended by the Computer
Matching and Privacy Protection Act of
1988 (5 U.S.C. 552a(b)(3)); and SSA’s
disclosure regulations promulgated at
20 CFR 401.150.
D. Categories of Records and Persons
Covered by the Matching Program
The Source Jurisdiction will identify
individuals who are fugitive felons,
parole violators, or probation violators
in its records originating from various
databases. The Source Jurisdiction will
prepare and disclose its records
electronically with clear identification
of the record source. We will match the
following systems of records with the
incoming Source Jurisdiction records to
determine individuals who receive SSI,
RSDI, SVB benefits, or individuals
serving as representative payees: Our
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Supplemental Security Income Record/
Special Veterans Benefits SSA/ODSSIS
(60–0103), the Master Beneficiary
Record SSA/ORSIS (60–0090), the
Master Representative Payee File
System SSA/OISP (60–0222), and the
Master Files of Social Security Number
Holders and SSN Applications (the
Enumeration System) SSA/OSR (60–
0058).
E. Inclusive Dates of the Matching
Program
The effective date of this matching
program is April 10, 2012 provided that
the following notice periods have
lapsed: 30 days after publication of this
notice in the Federal Register and 40
days after notice of the matching
program is sent to Congress and OMB.
The matching program will continue for
18 months from the effective date and
may be extended for an additional 12
months thereafter, if certain conditions
are met.
[FR Doc. 2011–29681 Filed 11–16–11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4191–02–P
DEPARTMENT OF STATE
[Public Notice 7688]
Bureau of Educational and Cultural
Affairs (ECA) Request for Grant
Proposals: Youth Leadership Program
with Algeria
Announcement Type: New
Cooperative Agreement.
Funding Opportunity Number: ECA/
PE/C/PY–12–09.
Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance
Number: 19.415.
Application Deadline: January 4,
2012.
Executive Summary: The Office of
Citizen Exchanges, Youth Programs
Division, of the Bureau of Educational
and Cultural Affairs announces an open
competition for the Youth Leadership
Program with Algeria. Public and
private nonprofit organizations meeting
the provisions described in Internal
Revenue Code section 26 U.S.C.
501(c)(3) may submit proposals to
provide youth and adult participants
from Algeria with an approximately
four-week U.S.-based exchange program
in summer 2012 focused on civic
education, youth leadership
development, respect for diversity, and
community engagement, and to support
follow-on community service projects in
their home communities. The U.S.
Embassy in Algiers will recruit, screen,
and select Algerian participants. The
award recipient will be required to
recruit, screen, and select American
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participants, and collaborate with an incountry partner on logistical
arrangements and follow-on activities.
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I. Funding Opportunity Description
Authority: Overall grant making
authority for this program is contained
in the Mutual Educational and Cultural
Exchange Act of 1961, Public Law 87–
256, as amended, also known as the
Fulbright-Hays Act. The purpose of the
Act is ‘‘to enable the Government of the
United States to increase mutual
understanding between the people of
the United States and the people of
other countries* * *; to strengthen the
ties which unite us with other nations
by demonstrating the educational and
cultural interests, developments, and
achievements of the people of the
United States and other nations * * *
and thus to assist in the development of
friendly, sympathetic and peaceful
relations between the United States and
the other countries of the world.’’ The
funding authority for the program above
is provided through legislation.
Purpose: The Youth Leadership
Program with Algeria provides
approximately 24 secondary school
students and three adult participants
from Algeria the opportunity to engage
in an intensive, thematic exchange in
the United States focusing broadly on
the primary themes of civic education,
youth leadership development, respect
for diversity, and community
engagement. One of the following two
subthemes, to be selected by the
applicant, will be used as tools to
illustrate these concepts: Business/
entrepreneurship or applied
communications.
Approximately six to twelve
competitively selected American high
school students will join the Algerian
participants in U.S.-based exchange
activities. Participants will engage in a
variety of activities, such as workshops
on leadership and service, community
site visits related to the program themes
and selected subtheme, interactive
training and discussion groups, small
group work, presentations, visits to high
schools, local cultural activities,
homestays, and other activities designed
to achieve the program’s stated goals.
Follow-on activities with the Algerian
and American participants are an
integral part of the program, as the
students apply the knowledge and skills
they have acquired by planning service
projects in their home communities.
Activities should therefore be geared
toward preparing participants to
conduct projects at home that serve a
community need.
The goals of the programs are to:
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(1) Promote mutual understanding
between the people of the United States
and the people of Algeria;
(2) Inspire a sense of civic
responsibility and commitment to
community development among youth;
(3) Develop a cadre of community
leaders who will share their knowledge
and skills with their peers through
positive action; and
(4) Foster relationships among youth
from different ethnic, religious, and
national groups.
The objectives of the program are for
participants to:
(1) Demonstrate a better
understanding of the elements of a
participatory democracy as practiced in
the United States;
(2) Demonstrate critical thinking and
leadership skills; and
(3) Demonstrate skill at developing
project ideas and planning a course of
action to bring the projects to fruition.
The primary themes of the programs
are:
(1) Civic Education (citizen
participation, grassroots democracy, and
rule of law);
(2) Youth Leadership Development
(team building, public speaking,
negotiation, goal setting and project
planning);
(3) Respect for Diversity (ethnicity,
race, gender, religion, geographic
location, socio-economic status, and
disabilities); and
(4) Community Engagement
(volunteerism, philanthropy, and social/
corporate responsibility).
The exchange format will be intensive
and interactive. Applicants must
present an exchange that allows the
participants to thoroughly explore the
primary themes and selected subtheme
in a creative, memorable, and practical
way. All activities should be designed to
be replicable and provide practical
knowledge and skills that the
participants can apply to school and
civic activities at home. Opportunities
for the youth and adult participants to
interact with their American peers in a
sustained, substantive, and in-depth
manner must be prominently integrated
into the exchange.
Using these goals, objectives, and
themes, applicant organizations should
identify their own specific and
measurable outputs and outcomes based
on the project specifications provided in
this solicitation. Proposals should
indicate how recipients will achieve the
short-term program objectives, and how
these objectives will contribute to the
achievement of the stated long-term
goals.
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Participants
The participants will be secondary
school students between the ages of 15
and 17 who have demonstrated
leadership abilities in their schools and/
or communities, and have at least one
semester of high school remaining.
Adult participants will be community
leaders or educators who work with
youth and who have demonstrated
support of youth and community
activities and have an interest in youth
leadership. The adult participants will
have the role of exchange participant,
chaperone, and post-exchange mentor.
Participants must be proficient in the
English language.
The exchange will be composed of
approximately 24 secondary school
students and three adult participants
from Algeria and approximately 6–12
competitively selected American
secondary school students who will
participate in the U.S.-based activities
with the Algerian students.
Organizational Capacity
Applicants must demonstrate their
capacity for doing programs of this
nature, focusing on three areas of
competency: (1) Provision of projects
that address the goals, objectives, and
themes outlined in this document; (2)
age-appropriate programming for youth;
and (3) previous experience in working
with individuals from Algeria or other
countries in North Africa.
The program will be implemented by
a team consisting of the U.S. Embassy,
the U.S. award recipient, and an incountry partner organization. The award
recipient will collaborate with the
partner organization in Algeria in
arranging logistics, developing content
for and implementing a pre-departure
orientation in Algiers, and organizing
and managing follow-on activities. The
applicant may elect to work with an
organization of the embassy’s choosing
(to be identified after the cooperative
agreement has been awarded), or may
propose to collaborate with an
organization with which it already has
an established, long-standing
partnership. If the latter, applicants
must provide a detailed description of
the partnership, including information
on activities that have been conducted
jointly to date, as well a description of
the partner’s role and responsibilities.
The proposed partner must be based in
Algiers, have the demonstrated ability to
conduct the specified project activities
in Algeria, and must either have its own
secure facilities (i.e. conference space),
or access to such facilities for program
activities in Algiers.
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U.S. Embassy Involvement
The Public Affairs Section of the U.S.
Embassy in Algiers will recruit, screen,
and select the Algerian participants, as
well as provide advice and assistance in
the execution of program components. If
applicable, the embassy will identify a
partner organization in Algiers that will
collaborate closely with the award
recipient on program components.
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Guidelines
The total amount of funding is
$250,000, pending the availability of
funds. The Bureau intends to award one
cooperative agreement. It is anticipated
that the period of the cooperative
agreement will begin in spring 2012.
The award period will be 12 to 18
months in duration and will cover all
aspects of project planning, exchange
activities in Algeria and the United
States, and follow-on activities in
Algeria.
The total length of the exchange
program should be approximately four
weeks and be inclusive of a three- to
five-day pre-departure orientation in
Algiers, and all of the U.S.-based
exchange activities. The U.S.-based
exchange should take place between the
first week of June and the third week of
July 2012 to allow participants to
complete the exchange and return home
before the start of Ramadan, which is
estimated to begin on July 20, 2012.
Applicants should propose specific
exchange dates in their proposals, but
the exact timing may be altered through
the mutual agreement of the Department
of State and the award recipient.
The Bureau reserves the right to
reduce, revise, or increase proposal
project configurations, budgets, and
participant numbers in accordance with
the needs of the program and the
availability of funds.
In pursuit of the goals outlined above,
the award recipient will be responsible
for the following:
(1) Conducting open recruitment and
competitive selection of a diverse group
of American youth to join Algerian
participants in U.S.-based exchange
activities.
(2) Planning and implementing a predeparture orientation in Algiers for
Algerian participants, in collaboration
with the in-country partner.
(3) Conducting an orientation(s) for
staff, American participants and their
families, and those individuals
participating from the U.S. host
communities, including host families,
prior to the start of the program.
(4) Designing and planning exchange
activities with American peers that
provide a creative and substantive
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program on the specified themes.
Opportunities for the adult participants
to work with their peers must also be
included to help them foster youth
leadership, civic education, and
community service programs at home.
(5) Conducting a welcome orientation
for participants upon their arrival in the
United States to review program goals,
objectives, and expectations with
American peers.
(6) Managing logistical arrangements,
including international and domestic
travel, ground transportation,
accommodations, group meals, and
disbursement of pocket money.
(7) Arranging homestays with
properly screened and briefed host
families for a significant portion of the
exchange period. Criminal background
checks must be conducted for members
of host families and others living in the
home who are 18 years or older.
(8) Developing and implementing a
plan to monitor the participants’ safety
and well-being while on the exchange,
and to create opportunities for
participants to share potential issues
and resolve them promptly. The award
recipient will be required to provide
proper staff supervision and facilitation
to ensure that the teenagers have a safe
and pedagogically rich program. Staff,
along with mentors, will assist the
youth with cultural adjustments,
provide societal context to enhance
learning, and counsel students as
needed. Criminal background checks
must be conducted for all program staff.
(9) Making proper arrangements for
participants’ religious observances.
(10) Providing a closing session to
summarize the delegation’s activities,
prepare participants for their return
home, and to further prepare for followon activities and projects.
(11) Arranging a short, substantive
visit to Washington, DC for Algerian and
American participants at the beginning
or conclusion of the exchange that will
include a meeting at the U.S.
Department of State, cultural field trips,
and additional skill building exercises.
(12) Planning and organizing followon activities for American and Algerian
alumni in their home communities
designed to reinforce the ideas and
skills imparted during the exchange
program.
(13) Arranging international travel to
Algeria for program staff, trainers, or
educators to provide further training for
alumni and their peers.
(14) Designing and implementing an
evaluation plan that assesses the shortand medium-term impact of the project
on the participants as well as on U.S.
host and home communities.
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Please Note: The ECA award for this
program will take the form of a cooperative
agreement with the award recipient. In a
cooperative agreement, the Department of
State is substantially involved in program
activities above and beyond routine award
monitoring. The Department’s activities and
responsibilities for the Youth Leadership
Program with Algeria are as follows:
(1) Manage the recruitment and
selection of Algerian participants.
(2) Provide advice and collaboration
in the execution of all program
components.
(3) Approve the final candidate
selection of American participants and
alternates.
(4) Issue DS–2019 forms and J–1 visas.
All foreign participants will travel on a
U.S. Government designation for the J
Exchange Visitor Program.
(5) Facilitate interaction within the
Department of State, to include ECA, the
regional bureaus, and overseas posts.
(6) Arrange meetings with Department
of State officials in Washington, DC.
(7) Approve publicity materials and
calendar of exchange activities.
Additional Information
The award recipient will retain the
name ‘‘Youth Leadership Program with
Algeria’’ (or Algeria Youth Leadership
Program) to identify its project. All
materials, publicity, and
correspondence related to the program
will acknowledge this as a program of
the Bureau of Educational and Cultural
Affairs of the U.S. Department of State.
The Bureau will retain copyright use of
and be allowed to distribute materials
related to this program as it sees fit.
The organization must inform the
ECA Program Officer and the U.S.
Embassy in Algiers of its progress at
each stage of the project’s
implementation in a timely fashion, and
will be required to obtain approval of
any significant program changes in
advance of their implementation.
Proposals must demonstrate how the
stated objectives will be met. The
proposal narrative should provide
detailed information on the major
project activities, and applicants should
explain and justify their programmatic
choices. Projects must comply with J–1
visa regulations for the International
Visitor and Government Visitor
categories. Please be sure to refer to the
complete Solicitation Package—this
RFGP, the Project Objectives, Goals, and
Implementation (POGI), and the
Proposal Submission Instructions
(PSI)—for further information.
II. Award Information
Type of Award: Cooperative
Agreement. ECA’s level of involvement
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in this program is listed under number
I above.
Fiscal Year Funds: FY2012, pending
availability of funds.
Approximate Total Funding:
$250,000.
Approximate Number of Awards:
One.
Anticipated Award Date: Pending
availability of funds, March 15, 2012.
Anticipated Project Completion Date:
12 to 18 months after the onset of the
award, to be determined by the
applicant according to its program
design.
Additional Information: Pending
successful implementation of this
program and the availability of funds in
subsequent fiscal years, it is ECA’s
intent to renew this grant or cooperative
agreement for two additional fiscal
years, before openly competing it again.
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III. Eligibility Information
III.1. Eligible applicants: Applications
may be submitted by public and private
nonprofit organizations meeting the
provisions described in Internal
Revenue Code section 26 U.S.C.
501(c)(3).
III.2. Cost Sharing or Matching Funds:
There is no minimum or maximum
percentage required for this
competition. However, the Bureau
encourages applicants to provide
maximum levels of cost sharing and
funding in support of its programs.
When cost sharing is offered, it is
understood and agreed that the
applicant must provide the amount of
cost sharing as stipulated in its proposal
and later included in an approved
agreement. Cost sharing may be in the
form of allowable direct or indirect
costs. For accountability, you must
maintain written records to support all
costs which are claimed as your
contribution, as well as costs to be paid
by the Federal government. Such
records are subject to audit. The basis
for determining the value of cash and
in-kind contributions must be in
accordance with OMB Circular A–110,
(Revised), subpart C.23—Cost Sharing
and Matching. In the event you do not
provide the minimum amount of cost
sharing as stipulated in the approved
budget, ECA’s contribution will be
reduced in like proportion.
III.3. Other Eligibility Requirements
(1) Bureau grant guidelines require
that organizations with less than four
years experience in conducting
international exchanges be limited to
$60,000 in Bureau funding. ECA
anticipates making an award in an
amount exceeding $60,000 to support
program and administrative costs
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required to implement this exchange
program. Therefore, organizations with
less than four years experience in
conducting international exchanges are
ineligible to apply under this
competition. The Bureau encourages
applicants to provide maximum levels
of cost sharing and funding in support
of its programs.
(2) Proposed sub-award recipients are
also limited to grant funding of $60,000
or less if they do not have four years of
experience in conducting international
exchanges.
(3) The Bureau encourages applicants
to provide maximum levels of cost
sharing and funding in support of its
programs.
(4) Organizations may submit only
one proposal (total) under this
competition. If more than one proposal
is received from the same applicant, all
submissions will be declared
technically ineligible and will receive
no further consideration in the review
process.
Please note: Applicant organizations are
defined by their legal name, and EIN number
as stated on their completed SF–424 and
additional supporting documentation
outlined in the Proposal Submission
Instructions (PSI) document.
IV. Application and Submission
Information
Note: Please read the complete
announcement before sending inquiries or
submitting proposals. Once the RFGP
deadline has passed, Bureau staff may not
discuss this competition with applicants
until the proposal review process has been
completed.
IV.1. Contact Information To Request an
Application Package
Please contact the Youth Programs
Division, ECA/PE/C/PY, SA–5, 3rd
Floor, U.S. Department of State, 2200 C
Street NW., Washington, DC 20037, by
telephone (202) 632–9261 or Email:
ShieldsSD@State.gov to request a
Solicitation Package. Please refer to the
Funding Opportunity Number ECA/PE/
C/PY–12–09 located at the top of this
announcement when making your
request.
Alternatively, an electronic
application package may be obtained
from grants.gov. Please see section IV.3f
for further information.
The Solicitation Package contains the
Proposal Submission Instruction (PSI)
document which consists of required
application forms, and standard
guidelines for proposal preparation. It
also contains the Project Objectives,
Goals and Implementation (POGI)
document, which provides specific
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information, award criteria and budget
instructions tailored to this competition.
Please specify Program Officer Sarah
Shields and refer to the Funding
Opportunity Number ECA/PE/C/PY–12–
09 located at the top of this
announcement on all other inquiries
and correspondence.
IV.2. To Download a Solicitation
Package Via Internet
The entire Solicitation Package may
be downloaded from the Bureau’s Web
site at https://exchanges.state.gov/grants/
open2.html, or from the Grants.gov Web
site at https://www.grants.gov.
Please read all information before
downloading.
IV.3. Content and Form of Submission
Applicants must follow all
instructions in the Solicitation Package.
The application should be submitted
per the instructions under IV.3f.
‘‘Application Deadline and Methods of
Submission’’ section below.
IV.3a. You are required to have a Dun
and Bradstreet Data Universal
Numbering System (DUNS) number to
apply for a grant or cooperative
agreement from the U.S. Government.
This number is a nine-digit
identification number, which uniquely
identifies business entities. Obtaining a
DUNS number is easy and there is no
charge. To obtain a DUNS number,
access https://www.dunandbradstreet.
com or call 1–(866) 705–5711. Please
ensure that your DUNS number is
included in the appropriate box of the
SF–424 which is part of the formal
application package.
IV.3b. All proposals must contain an
executive summary, proposal narrative
and budget.
Please Refer to the Solicitation
Package. It contains the mandatory
Proposal Submission Instructions (PSI)
document and the Project Objectives,
Goals and Implementation (POGI)
document for additional formatting and
technical requirements.
IV.3c. All federal award recipients
must maintain current registrations in
the Central Contractor Registration
(CCR) database. Recipients must
maintain accurate and up-to-date
information in the CCR until all
program and financial activity and
reporting have been completed.
Recipients must review and update the
information at least annually after the
initial registration and more frequently
if required information changes or
another award is granted.
Failure to register in the CCR will
render applicants ineligible to receive
funding.
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You must have nonprofit status with
the IRS at the time of application.
Please note: Effective January 7, 2009, all
applicants for ECA federal assistance awards
must include in their application the names
of directors and/or senior executives (current
officers, trustees, and key employees,
regardless of amount of compensation). In
fulfilling this requirement, applicants must
submit information in one of the following
ways:
(1) Those who file Internal Revenue
Service Form 990, ‘‘Return of Organization
Exempt From Income Tax,’’ must include a
copy of relevant portions of this form.
(2) Those who do not file IRS Form 990
must submit information above in the format
of their choice.
In addition to final program reporting
requirements, award recipients will also
be required to submit a one-page
document, derived from their program
reports, listing and describing their
grant activities. For award recipients,
the names of directors and/or senior
executives (current officers, trustees,
and key employees), as well as the onepage description of grant activities, will
be transmitted by the State Department
to OMB, along with other information
required by the Federal Funding
Accountability and Transparency Act
(FFATA), and will be made available to
the public by the Office of Management
and Budget on its USASpending.gov
Web site as part of ECA’s FFATA
reporting requirements.
If your organization is a private
nonprofit which has not received a grant
or cooperative agreement from ECA in
the past three years, or if your
organization received nonprofit status
from the IRS within the past four years,
you must submit the necessary
documentation to verify nonprofit status
as directed in the PSI document. Failure
to do so will cause your proposal to be
declared technically ineligible.
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IV.3d. Please Take Into Consideration
the Following Information When
Preparing Your Proposal Narrative
IV.3d.1. Adherence to All Regulations
Governing the J Visa
The Office of Citizen Exchanges of the
Bureau of Educational and Cultural
Affairs is the official program sponsor of
the exchange program covered by this
RFGP, and an employee of the Bureau
will be the ‘‘Responsible Officer’’ for the
program under the terms of 22 CFR 62,
which covers the administration of the
Exchange Visitor Program (J visa
program). Under the terms of 22 CFR 62,
organizations receiving awards (either a
grant or cooperative agreement) under
this RFGP will be third parties
‘‘cooperating with or assisting the
sponsor in the conduct of the sponsor’s
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program.’’ The actions of recipient
organizations shall be ‘‘imputed to the
sponsor in evaluating the sponsor’s
compliance with’’ 22 CFR 62. Therefore,
the Bureau expects that any
organization receiving an award under
this competition will render all
assistance necessary to enable the
Bureau to fully comply with 22 CFR 62
et seq.
The Bureau of Educational and
Cultural Affairs places critically
important emphases on the secure and
proper administration of Exchange
Visitor (J visa) Programs and adherence
by recipient organizations and program
participants to all regulations governing
the J visa program status. Therefore,
proposals should explicitly state in
writing that the applicant is prepared to
assist the Bureau in meeting all
requirements governing the
administration of Exchange Visitor
Programs as set forth in 22 CFR 62. If
your organization has experience as a
designated Exchange Visitor Program
Sponsor, the applicant should discuss
their record of compliance with 22 CFR
62 et. seq., including the oversight of
their Responsible Officers and Alternate
Responsible Officers, screening and
selection of program participants,
provision of pre-arrival information and
orientation to participants, monitoring
of participants, proper maintenance and
security of forms, record-keeping,
reporting and other requirements.
The Office of Citizen Exchanges of
ECA will be responsible for issuing DS–
2019 forms to participants in this
program.
A copy of the complete regulations
governing the administration of
Exchange Visitor (J) programs is
available at https://exchanges.state.gov
or from: Office of Designation, Private
Sector Programs Division, U.S.
Department of State, ECA/EC/D/PS, SA–
5, 5th Floor, 2200 C Street NW.,
Washington, DC 20037.
IV.3d.2. Diversity, Freedom and
Democracy Guidelines
Pursuant to the Bureau’s authorizing
legislation, programs must maintain a
non-political character and should be
balanced and representative of the
diversity of American political, social,
and cultural life. ‘‘Diversity’’ should be
interpreted in the broadest sense and
encompass differences including, but
not limited to ethnicity, race, gender,
religion, geographic location, socioeconomic status, and disabilities.
Applicants are strongly encouraged to
adhere to the advancement of this
principle both in program
administration and in program content.
Please refer to the review criteria under
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the ’Support for Diversity’ section for
specific suggestions on incorporating
diversity into your proposal. Public Law
104–319 provides that ‘‘in carrying out
programs of educational and cultural
exchange in countries whose people do
not fully enjoy freedom and
democracy,’’ the Bureau ‘‘shall take
appropriate steps to provide
opportunities for participation in such
programs to human rights and
democracy leaders of such countries.’’
Public Law 106–113 requires that the
governments of the countries described
above do not have inappropriate
influence in the selection process.
Proposals should reflect advancement of
these goals in their program contents, to
the full extent deemed feasible.
IV.3d.3. Program Monitoring and
Evaluation
Proposals must include a plan to
monitor and evaluate the project’s
success, both as the activities unfold
and at the end of the program. The
Bureau recommends that your proposal
include a draft survey questionnaire or
other technique plus a description of a
methodology to use to link outcomes to
original project objectives. The Bureau
expects that the recipient organization
will track participants or partners and
be able to respond to key evaluation
questions, including satisfaction with
the program, learning as a result of the
program, changes in behavior as a result
of the program, and effects of the
program on institutions (institutions in
which participants work or partner
institutions). The evaluation plan
should include indicators that measure
gains in mutual understanding as well
as substantive knowledge.
Successful monitoring and evaluation
depend heavily on setting clear goals
and outcomes at the outset of a program.
Your evaluation plan should include a
description of your project’s objectives,
your anticipated project outcomes, and
how and when you intend to measure
these outcomes (performance
indicators). The more that outcomes are
‘‘smart’’ (specific, measurable,
attainable, results-oriented, and placed
in a reasonable time frame), the easier
it will be to conduct the evaluation. You
should also show how your project
objectives link to the goals of the
program described in this RFGP.
Your monitoring and evaluation plan
should clearly distinguish between
program outputs and outcomes. Outputs
are products and services delivered,
often stated as an amount. Output
information is important to show the
scope or size of project activities, but it
cannot substitute for information about
progress towards outcomes or the
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results achieved. Examples of outputs
include the number of people trained or
the number of seminars conducted.
Outcomes, in contrast, represent
specific results a project is intended to
achieve and is usually measured as an
extent of change. Findings on outputs
and outcomes should both be reported,
but the focus should be on outcomes.
Outcomes
We encourage you to assess the
following four levels of outcomes, as
they relate to the program goals set out
in the RFGP (listed here in increasing
order of importance):
(1) Participant satisfaction with the
program and exchange experience.
(2) Participant learning, such as
increased knowledge, aptitude, skills,
and changed understanding and
attitude. Learning includes both
substantive (subject-specific) learning
and mutual understanding.
(3) Participant behavior, concrete
actions to apply knowledge in work or
community; greater participation and
responsibility in civic organizations;
interpretation and explanation of
experiences and new knowledge gained;
continued contacts between
participants, community members, and
others.
(4) Institutional changes, such as
increased collaboration and
partnerships, policy reforms, new
programming, and organizational
improvements.
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Please note: Consideration should be given
to the appropriate timing of data collection
for each level of outcome. For example,
satisfaction is usually captured as a shortterm outcome, whereas behavior and
institutional changes are normally
considered longer-term outcomes.
Overall, the quality of your
monitoring and evaluation plan will be
judged on how well it (1) Specifies
intended outcomes; (2) gives clear
descriptions of how each outcome will
be measured; (3) identifies when
particular outcomes will be measured;
and (4) provides a clear description of
the data collection strategies for each
outcome (i.e., surveys, interviews, or
focus groups). (Please note that
evaluation plans that deal only with the
first level of outcomes [satisfaction] will
be deemed less competitive under the
present evaluation criteria.)
Recipient organizations will be
required to provide reports analyzing
their evaluation findings to the Bureau
in their regular program reports. All
data collected, including survey
responses and contact information, must
be maintained for a minimum of three
years and provided to the Bureau upon
request.
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IV.3e. Please take the following
information into consideration when
preparing your budget:
IV.3e.1. Applicants must submit SF–
424A—‘‘Budget Information—NonConstruction Programs’’ along with a
comprehensive budget for the entire
program. Budget requests may not
exceed $250,000. There must be a
summary budget as well as breakdowns
reflecting both administrative and
program budgets. Applicants may
provide separate sub-budgets for each
program component, phase, location, or
activity to provide clarification. Please
refer to the Solicitation Package (POGI
and PSI) for complete budget guidelines
and formatting instructions.
IV.3f. Application Deadline and
Methods of Submission
Application Deadline Date:
Wednesday, January 4, 2012.
Reference Number: ECA/PE/C/PY–
12–09.
Methods of Submission: Applications
may be submitted in one of two ways:
(1) In hard-copy, via a nationally
recognized overnight delivery service
(i.e., FedEx, UPS, Airborne Express, or
U.S. Postal Service Express Overnight
Mail, etc.), or
(2) Electronically through https://
www.grants.gov.
Along with the Project Title, all
applicants must enter the above
Reference Number in Box 11 on the SF–
424 contained in the mandatory
Proposal Submission Instructions (PSI)
of the solicitation document.
IV.3f.1. Submitting Printed Applications
Applications must be shipped no later
than the above deadline. Delivery
services used by applicants must have
in-place, centralized shipping
identification and tracking systems that
may be accessed via the Internet and
delivery people who are identifiable by
commonly recognized uniforms and
delivery vehicles. Proposals shipped on
or before the above deadline but
received at ECA more than seven days
after the deadline will be ineligible for
further consideration under this
competition. Proposals shipped after the
established deadlines are ineligible for
consideration under this competition.
ECA will not notify you upon receipt of
application. It is each applicant’s
responsibility to ensure that each
package is marked with a legible
tracking number and to monitor/confirm
delivery to ECA via the Internet.
Delivery of proposal packages may not
be made via local courier service or in
person for this competition. Faxed
documents will not be accepted at any
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time. Only proposals submitted as
stated above will be considered.
Important note: When preparing your
submission please make sure to include one
extra copy of the completed SF–424 form and
place it in an envelope addressed to ‘‘ECA/
EX/PM’’.
The original and six (6) copies of the
application should be sent to: Program
Management Division, ECA–IIP/EX/PM,
Ref.: ECA/PE/C/PY–12–09, SA–5, Floor
4, Department of State, 2200 C Street
NW., Washington, DC 20037.
With the submission of the proposal
package, please also email the Executive
Summary, Proposal Narrative, and
Budget sections of the proposal, as well
as any attachments essential to
understanding the program, in Microsoft
Word, Excel, and/or PDF, to
YLP@state.gov. The Bureau will provide
these files electronically to the Public
Affairs Section at the U.S. Embassy in
Algiers for its review.
IV.3f.2. Submitting Electronic
Applications
Applicants have the option of
submitting proposals electronically
through Grants.gov (https://
www.grants.gov). Complete solicitation
packages are available at Grants.gov in
the ‘‘Find’’ portion of the system.
Please note: ECA bears no responsibility
for applicant timeliness of submission or data
errors resulting from transmission or
conversion processes for proposals submitted
via Grants.gov.
Please follow the instructions
available in the ‘Get Started’ portion of
the site (https://www.grants.gov/
GetStarted).
Several of the steps in the Grants.gov
registration process could take several
weeks. Therefore, applicants should
check with appropriate staff within their
organizations immediately after
reviewing this RFGP to confirm or
determine their registration status with
Grants.gov.
Once registered, the amount of time it
can take to upload an application will
vary depending on a variety of factors
including the size of the application and
the speed of your Internet connection.
In addition, validation of an electronic
submission via Grants.gov can take up
to two business days.
Therefore, we strongly recommend
that you not wait until the application
deadline to begin the submission
process through Grants.gov.
The Grants.gov Web site includes
extensive information on all phases/
aspects of the Grants.gov process,
including an extensive section on
frequently asked questions, located
under the ‘‘For Applicants’’ section of
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the Web site. ECA strongly recommends
that all potential applicants review
thoroughly the Grants.gov Web site,
well in advance of submitting a
proposal through the Grants.gov system.
ECA bears no responsibility for data
errors resulting from transmission or
conversion processes.
Direct all questions regarding
Grants.gov registration and submission
to: Grants.gov Customer Support.
Contact Center Phone: (800) 518–
4726.
Business Hours: Monday–Friday,
7 a.m.–9 p.m. Eastern Time.
Email: support@grants.gov.
Applicants have until midnight (12
a.m.), Washington, DC time of the
closing date to ensure that their entire
application has been uploaded to the
Grants.gov site. There are no exceptions
to the above deadline. Applications
uploaded to the site after midnight of
the application deadline date will be
automatically rejected by the grants.gov
system, and will be technically
ineligible.
Please refer to the Grants.gov Web
site, for definitions of various
‘‘application statuses’’ and the
difference between a submission receipt
and a submission validation.
Applicants will receive a validation
email from grants.gov upon the
successful submission of an application.
Again, validation of an electronic
submission via Grants.gov can take up
to two business days. Therefore, we
strongly recommend that you not wait
until the application deadline to begin
the submission process through
Grants.gov. ECA will not notify you
upon receipt of electronic applications.
It is the responsibility of all
applicants submitting proposals via the
Grants.gov web portal to ensure that
proposals have been received by
Grants.gov in their entirety, and ECA
bears no responsibility for data errors
resulting from transmission or
conversion processes.
IV.3g. Intergovernmental Review of
Applications: Executive Order 12372
does not apply to this program.
V. Application Review Information
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V.1. Review Process
The Bureau will review all proposals
for technical eligibility. Proposals will
be deemed ineligible if they do not fully
adhere to the guidelines stated herein
and in the Solicitation Package. All
eligible proposals will be reviewed by
the program office, as well as the Public
Diplomacy section overseas, where
appropriate. Eligible proposals will be
subject to compliance with Federal and
Bureau regulations and guidelines and
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forwarded to Bureau grant panels for
advisory review. Proposals may also be
reviewed by the Office of the Legal
Adviser or by other Department
elements. Final funding decisions are at
the discretion of the Department of
State’s Assistant Secretary for
Educational and Cultural Affairs. Final
technical authority for assistance
awards (cooperative agreements) resides
with the Bureau’s Grants Officer.
Review Criteria
Technically eligible applications will
be competitively reviewed according to
the criteria stated below. These criteria
are not rank ordered and all carry equal
weight in the proposal evaluation:
(1) Quality of the program idea:
Objectives should be reasonable,
feasible, and flexible. The proposal
should clearly demonstrate how the
institution will meet the program’s
objectives and plan. The proposed
program should be creative, ageappropriate, respond to the design
outlined in the solicitation, and
demonstrate originality. It should be
clearly and accurately written,
substantive, and with sufficient detail.
Proposals should also include a plan to
support participants’ community
activities upon their return home.
(2) Program planning and ability to
achieve program objectives: A detailed
agenda and work plan should clearly
demonstrate how project objectives will
be achieved. The agenda and plan
should adhere to the program overview
and guidelines described above. The
substance of workshops, seminars,
presentations, school-based activities,
and/or site visits should be described in
detail.
(3) Support of diversity: The proposal
should demonstrate the applicant’s
commitment to promoting the
awareness and understanding of
diversity in participant recruitment and
selection and in program content.
Applicants should demonstrate
readiness to accommodate participants
with physical disabilities.
(4) Institutional capacity and track
record: Proposed personnel and
institutional resources should be
adequate and appropriate to achieve the
program goals. The proposal should
demonstrate an institutional record of
successful exchange programs,
including responsible fiscal
management and full compliance with
all reporting requirements for past
Bureau awards (grants or cooperative
agreements) as determined by Bureau
Grants Staff. The Bureau will consider
the past performance of prior recipients
and the demonstrated potential of new
applicants.
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(5) Program evaluation: The proposal
should include a plan to evaluate the
program’s success in meeting its goals,
both as the activities unfold and after
they have been completed. The proposal
should include a draft survey
questionnaire or other technique, plus a
description of a methodology to link
outcomes to original project objectives.
The award recipient will be expected to
submit intermediate reports after each
project component is concluded.
(6) Cost-effectiveness and cost
sharing: The applicant should
demonstrate efficient use of Bureau
funds. The overhead and administrative
components of the proposal, including
salaries and honoraria, should be kept
as low as possible. All other items
should be necessary and appropriate.
The proposal should maximize costsharing through other private sector
support as well as institutional direct
funding contributions, which
demonstrates institutional and
community commitment.
VI. Award Administration Information
VI.1a. Award Notices
Final awards cannot be made until
funds have been appropriated by
Congress, allocated and committed
through internal Bureau procedures.
Successful applicants will receive an
Federal Assistance Award (FAA) from
the Bureau’s Grants Office. The FAA
and the original proposal with
subsequent modifications (if applicable)
shall be the only binding authorizing
document between the recipient and the
U.S. Government. The FAA will be
signed by an authorized Grants Officer,
and mailed to the recipient’s
responsible officer identified in the
application.
Unsuccessful applicants will receive
notification of the results of the
application review from the ECA
program office coordinating this
competition.
VI.2. Administrative and National
Policy Requirements
Terms and Conditions for the
Administration of ECA agreements
include the following:
Office of Management and Budget
Circular A–122, ‘‘Cost Principles for
Nonprofit Organizations.’’
Office of Management and Budget
Circular A–21, ‘‘Cost Principles for
Educational Institutions.’’
OMB Circular A–87, ‘‘Cost Principles
for State, Local and Indian
Governments.’’
OMB Circular No. A–110 (Revised),
Uniform Administrative Requirements
for Grants and Agreements with
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Institutions of Higher Education,
Hospitals, and other Nonprofit
Organizations.
OMB Circular No. A–102, Uniform
Administrative Requirements for
Grants-in-Aid to State and Local
Governments.
OMB Circular No. A–133, Audits of
States, Local Government, and
Nonprofit Organizations.
Please reference the following Web
sites for additional information: https://
www.whitehouse.gov/omb/grants,
https://fa.statebuy.state.gov.
VI.3. Reporting Requirements: You
must provide ECA with a hard copy
original plus one copy of the following
reports:
(1) A final program and financial
report no more than 90 days after the
expiration of the award;
(2) A concise, one-page final program
report summarizing program outcomes
no more than 90 days after the
expiration of the award. This one-page
report will be transmitted to OMB, and
be made available to the public via
OMB’s USAspending.gov Web site—as
part of ECA’s Federal Funding
Accountability and Transparency Act
(FFATA) reporting requirements.
(3) A SF–PPR, ‘‘Performance Progress
Report’’ Cover Sheet with all program
reports, including the SF–PPR–E and
SF–PPR–F.
(4) Quarterly or interim reports, as
required in the Bureau cooperative
agreement.
Award recipients will be required to
provide reports analyzing their
evaluation findings to the Bureau in
their regular program reports. (Please
refer to IV. Application and Submission
Instructions (IV.3.d.3) above for Program
Monitoring and Evaluation information.
All data collected, including survey
responses and contact information, must
be maintained for a minimum of three
years and provided to the Bureau upon
request.
All reports must be sent to the ECA
Grants Officer and ECA Program Officer
listed in the final assistance award
document.
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VII. Agency Contacts
For questions about this
announcement, contact: Sarah Shields,
Youth Programs Division, ECA/PE/C/
PY/T, SA–5, 3rd Floor, U.S. Department
of State, 2200 C Street NW.,
Washington, DC 20522–0503, by
telephone (202) 632–9261 or email
ShieldsSD@state.gov.
All correspondence with the Bureau
concerning this RFGP should reference
the above title and number ECA/PE/C/
PY–12–09.
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Please read the complete
announcement before sending inquiries
or submitting proposals. Once the RFGP
deadline has passed, Bureau staff may
not discuss this competition with
applicants until the proposal review
process has been completed.
the remaining three in English. Each
academic institute will be five weeks in
duration, including a one-week
integrated study tour.
VIII. Other Information
Overall grant making authority for
this program is contained in the Mutual
Educational and Cultural Exchange Act
of 1961, Public Law 87–256, as
amended, also known as the FulbrightHays Act. The purpose of the Act is ‘‘to
enable the Government of the United
States to increase mutual understanding
between the people of the United States
and the people of other countries * * *;
to strengthen the ties which unite us
with other nations by demonstrating the
educational and cultural interests,
developments, and achievements of the
people of the United States and other
nations* * *and thus to assist in the
development of friendly, sympathetic
and peaceful relations between the
United States and the other countries of
the world.’’ The funding authority for
the program above is provided through
legislation.
Notice
The terms and conditions published
in this RFGP are binding and may not
be modified by any Bureau
representative. Explanatory information
provided by the Bureau that contradicts
published language will not be binding.
Issuance of the RFGP does not
constitute an award commitment on the
part of the Government. The Bureau
reserves the right to reduce, revise, or
increase proposal budgets in accordance
with the needs of the program and the
availability of funds. Awards made will
be subject to periodic reporting and
evaluation requirements per section VI.3
above.
Dated: November 9, 2011.
J. Adam Ereli,
Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary, Bureau
of Educational and Cultural Affairs, U.S.
Department of State.
[FR Doc. 2011–29643 Filed 11–16–11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4710–05–P
DEPARTMENT OF STATE
[Public Notice 7689]
Bureau of Educational and Cultural
Affairs (ECA) Request for Grant
Proposals: Study of the United States
Institutes for Student Leaders on U.S.
History and Government
Announcement Type: New
Cooperative Agreement.
Funding Opportunity Number: ECA/
A/E/USS–12–21.
Catalog of Federal Domestic
Assistance Number: 19.009.
Dates: Key Dates: July–August, 2012
and January–February, 2013.
Application Deadline: January 13,
2012.
Summary: Executive Summary: The
Branch for the Study of the United
States, Office of Academic Exchange
Programs, Bureau of Educational and
Cultural Affairs (ECA), invites proposal
submissions for the design and
implementation of six (6) Study of the
U.S. Institutes for Student Leaders on
U.S. History and Government, pending
the availability of funds. Participants
will be drawn from countries
throughout Central and South America
and the Caribbean. Three institutes will
be conducted entirely in Spanish, and
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I. Funding Opportunity Description
I. 1. Authority
I. 2. Purpose and Overview
The Study of the U.S. Institutes for
Student Leaders on U.S. History and
Government are intensive academic
programs whose purpose is to provide
groups of undergraduate students from
the Western Hemisphere with a deeper
understanding of the United States.
The principal objective of the
Institutes is to enhance participants’
knowledge of U.S. history, government,
institutions, society, and culture. In this
context, the Institutes should
incorporate a focus on American
historical events as well as
contemporary American life including
current political, social, and economic
debates. The role and influence of
principles and values such as
democracy, the rule of law, individual
rights, freedom of expression, equality,
and diversity and tolerance should be
addressed.
All Institutes should take place at U.S.
academic institutions whose
interpretation of U.S. history,
government, institutions, society, and
culture could be presented through the
lens of their location, academic mission,
and expertise. The Institutes should
address topics such as: civil rights,
minority rights, politics, religion,
economics, and U.S. relations with
Latin America.
In addition to promoting a better
understanding of the United States and
of U.S. history and government, an
important objective of the Institutes is to
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 76, Number 222 (Thursday, November 17, 2011)]
[Notices]
[Pages 71418-71425]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2011-29643]
=======================================================================
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DEPARTMENT OF STATE
[Public Notice 7688]
Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs (ECA) Request for
Grant Proposals: Youth Leadership Program with Algeria
Announcement Type: New Cooperative Agreement.
Funding Opportunity Number: ECA/PE/C/PY-12-09.
Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance Number: 19.415.
Application Deadline: January 4, 2012.
Executive Summary: The Office of Citizen Exchanges, Youth Programs
Division, of the Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs announces
an open competition for the Youth Leadership Program with Algeria.
Public and private nonprofit organizations meeting the provisions
described in Internal Revenue Code section 26 U.S.C. 501(c)(3) may
submit proposals to provide youth and adult participants from Algeria
with an approximately four-week U.S.-based exchange program in summer
2012 focused on civic education, youth leadership development, respect
for diversity, and community engagement, and to support follow-on
community service projects in their home communities. The U.S. Embassy
in Algiers will recruit, screen, and select Algerian participants. The
award recipient will be required to recruit, screen, and select
American
[[Page 71419]]
participants, and collaborate with an in-country partner on logistical
arrangements and follow-on activities.
I. Funding Opportunity Description
Authority: Overall grant making authority for this program is
contained in the Mutual Educational and Cultural Exchange Act of 1961,
Public Law 87-256, as amended, also known as the Fulbright-Hays Act.
The purpose of the Act is ``to enable the Government of the United
States to increase mutual understanding between the people of the
United States and the people of other countries* * *; to strengthen the
ties which unite us with other nations by demonstrating the educational
and cultural interests, developments, and achievements of the people of
the United States and other nations * * * and thus to assist in the
development of friendly, sympathetic and peaceful relations between the
United States and the other countries of the world.'' The funding
authority for the program above is provided through legislation.
Purpose: The Youth Leadership Program with Algeria provides
approximately 24 secondary school students and three adult participants
from Algeria the opportunity to engage in an intensive, thematic
exchange in the United States focusing broadly on the primary themes of
civic education, youth leadership development, respect for diversity,
and community engagement. One of the following two subthemes, to be
selected by the applicant, will be used as tools to illustrate these
concepts: Business/entrepreneurship or applied communications.
Approximately six to twelve competitively selected American high
school students will join the Algerian participants in U.S.-based
exchange activities. Participants will engage in a variety of
activities, such as workshops on leadership and service, community site
visits related to the program themes and selected subtheme, interactive
training and discussion groups, small group work, presentations, visits
to high schools, local cultural activities, homestays, and other
activities designed to achieve the program's stated goals. Follow-on
activities with the Algerian and American participants are an integral
part of the program, as the students apply the knowledge and skills
they have acquired by planning service projects in their home
communities. Activities should therefore be geared toward preparing
participants to conduct projects at home that serve a community need.
The goals of the programs are to:
(1) Promote mutual understanding between the people of the United
States and the people of Algeria;
(2) Inspire a sense of civic responsibility and commitment to
community development among youth;
(3) Develop a cadre of community leaders who will share their
knowledge and skills with their peers through positive action; and
(4) Foster relationships among youth from different ethnic,
religious, and national groups.
The objectives of the program are for participants to:
(1) Demonstrate a better understanding of the elements of a
participatory democracy as practiced in the United States;
(2) Demonstrate critical thinking and leadership skills; and
(3) Demonstrate skill at developing project ideas and planning a
course of action to bring the projects to fruition.
The primary themes of the programs are:
(1) Civic Education (citizen participation, grassroots democracy,
and rule of law);
(2) Youth Leadership Development (team building, public speaking,
negotiation, goal setting and project planning);
(3) Respect for Diversity (ethnicity, race, gender, religion,
geographic location, socio-economic status, and disabilities); and
(4) Community Engagement (volunteerism, philanthropy, and social/
corporate responsibility).
The exchange format will be intensive and interactive. Applicants
must present an exchange that allows the participants to thoroughly
explore the primary themes and selected subtheme in a creative,
memorable, and practical way. All activities should be designed to be
replicable and provide practical knowledge and skills that the
participants can apply to school and civic activities at home.
Opportunities for the youth and adult participants to interact with
their American peers in a sustained, substantive, and in-depth manner
must be prominently integrated into the exchange.
Using these goals, objectives, and themes, applicant organizations
should identify their own specific and measurable outputs and outcomes
based on the project specifications provided in this solicitation.
Proposals should indicate how recipients will achieve the short-term
program objectives, and how these objectives will contribute to the
achievement of the stated long-term goals.
Participants
The participants will be secondary school students between the ages
of 15 and 17 who have demonstrated leadership abilities in their
schools and/or communities, and have at least one semester of high
school remaining. Adult participants will be community leaders or
educators who work with youth and who have demonstrated support of
youth and community activities and have an interest in youth
leadership. The adult participants will have the role of exchange
participant, chaperone, and post-exchange mentor. Participants must be
proficient in the English language.
The exchange will be composed of approximately 24 secondary school
students and three adult participants from Algeria and approximately 6-
12 competitively selected American secondary school students who will
participate in the U.S.-based activities with the Algerian students.
Organizational Capacity
Applicants must demonstrate their capacity for doing programs of
this nature, focusing on three areas of competency: (1) Provision of
projects that address the goals, objectives, and themes outlined in
this document; (2) age-appropriate programming for youth; and (3)
previous experience in working with individuals from Algeria or other
countries in North Africa.
The program will be implemented by a team consisting of the U.S.
Embassy, the U.S. award recipient, and an in-country partner
organization. The award recipient will collaborate with the partner
organization in Algeria in arranging logistics, developing content for
and implementing a pre-departure orientation in Algiers, and organizing
and managing follow-on activities. The applicant may elect to work with
an organization of the embassy's choosing (to be identified after the
cooperative agreement has been awarded), or may propose to collaborate
with an organization with which it already has an established, long-
standing partnership. If the latter, applicants must provide a detailed
description of the partnership, including information on activities
that have been conducted jointly to date, as well a description of the
partner's role and responsibilities. The proposed partner must be based
in Algiers, have the demonstrated ability to conduct the specified
project activities in Algeria, and must either have its own secure
facilities (i.e. conference space), or access to such facilities for
program activities in Algiers.
[[Page 71420]]
U.S. Embassy Involvement
The Public Affairs Section of the U.S. Embassy in Algiers will
recruit, screen, and select the Algerian participants, as well as
provide advice and assistance in the execution of program components.
If applicable, the embassy will identify a partner organization in
Algiers that will collaborate closely with the award recipient on
program components.
Guidelines
The total amount of funding is $250,000, pending the availability
of funds. The Bureau intends to award one cooperative agreement. It is
anticipated that the period of the cooperative agreement will begin in
spring 2012. The award period will be 12 to 18 months in duration and
will cover all aspects of project planning, exchange activities in
Algeria and the United States, and follow-on activities in Algeria.
The total length of the exchange program should be approximately
four weeks and be inclusive of a three- to five-day pre-departure
orientation in Algiers, and all of the U.S.-based exchange activities.
The U.S.-based exchange should take place between the first week of
June and the third week of July 2012 to allow participants to complete
the exchange and return home before the start of Ramadan, which is
estimated to begin on July 20, 2012. Applicants should propose specific
exchange dates in their proposals, but the exact timing may be altered
through the mutual agreement of the Department of State and the award
recipient.
The Bureau reserves the right to reduce, revise, or increase
proposal project configurations, budgets, and participant numbers in
accordance with the needs of the program and the availability of funds.
In pursuit of the goals outlined above, the award recipient will be
responsible for the following:
(1) Conducting open recruitment and competitive selection of a
diverse group of American youth to join Algerian participants in U.S.-
based exchange activities.
(2) Planning and implementing a pre-departure orientation in
Algiers for Algerian participants, in collaboration with the in-country
partner.
(3) Conducting an orientation(s) for staff, American participants
and their families, and those individuals participating from the U.S.
host communities, including host families, prior to the start of the
program.
(4) Designing and planning exchange activities with American peers
that provide a creative and substantive program on the specified
themes. Opportunities for the adult participants to work with their
peers must also be included to help them foster youth leadership, civic
education, and community service programs at home.
(5) Conducting a welcome orientation for participants upon their
arrival in the United States to review program goals, objectives, and
expectations with American peers.
(6) Managing logistical arrangements, including international and
domestic travel, ground transportation, accommodations, group meals,
and disbursement of pocket money.
(7) Arranging homestays with properly screened and briefed host
families for a significant portion of the exchange period. Criminal
background checks must be conducted for members of host families and
others living in the home who are 18 years or older.
(8) Developing and implementing a plan to monitor the participants'
safety and well-being while on the exchange, and to create
opportunities for participants to share potential issues and resolve
them promptly. The award recipient will be required to provide proper
staff supervision and facilitation to ensure that the teenagers have a
safe and pedagogically rich program. Staff, along with mentors, will
assist the youth with cultural adjustments, provide societal context to
enhance learning, and counsel students as needed. Criminal background
checks must be conducted for all program staff.
(9) Making proper arrangements for participants' religious
observances.
(10) Providing a closing session to summarize the delegation's
activities, prepare participants for their return home, and to further
prepare for follow-on activities and projects.
(11) Arranging a short, substantive visit to Washington, DC for
Algerian and American participants at the beginning or conclusion of
the exchange that will include a meeting at the U.S. Department of
State, cultural field trips, and additional skill building exercises.
(12) Planning and organizing follow-on activities for American and
Algerian alumni in their home communities designed to reinforce the
ideas and skills imparted during the exchange program.
(13) Arranging international travel to Algeria for program staff,
trainers, or educators to provide further training for alumni and their
peers.
(14) Designing and implementing an evaluation plan that assesses
the short- and medium-term impact of the project on the participants as
well as on U.S. host and home communities.
Please Note: The ECA award for this program will take the form
of a cooperative agreement with the award recipient. In a
cooperative agreement, the Department of State is substantially
involved in program activities above and beyond routine award
monitoring. The Department's activities and responsibilities for the
Youth Leadership Program with Algeria are as follows:
(1) Manage the recruitment and selection of Algerian participants.
(2) Provide advice and collaboration in the execution of all
program components.
(3) Approve the final candidate selection of American participants
and alternates.
(4) Issue DS-2019 forms and J-1 visas. All foreign participants
will travel on a U.S. Government designation for the J Exchange Visitor
Program.
(5) Facilitate interaction within the Department of State, to
include ECA, the regional bureaus, and overseas posts.
(6) Arrange meetings with Department of State officials in
Washington, DC.
(7) Approve publicity materials and calendar of exchange
activities.
Additional Information
The award recipient will retain the name ``Youth Leadership Program
with Algeria'' (or Algeria Youth Leadership Program) to identify its
project. All materials, publicity, and correspondence related to the
program will acknowledge this as a program of the Bureau of Educational
and Cultural Affairs of the U.S. Department of State. The Bureau will
retain copyright use of and be allowed to distribute materials related
to this program as it sees fit.
The organization must inform the ECA Program Officer and the U.S.
Embassy in Algiers of its progress at each stage of the project's
implementation in a timely fashion, and will be required to obtain
approval of any significant program changes in advance of their
implementation.
Proposals must demonstrate how the stated objectives will be met.
The proposal narrative should provide detailed information on the major
project activities, and applicants should explain and justify their
programmatic choices. Projects must comply with J-1 visa regulations
for the International Visitor and Government Visitor categories. Please
be sure to refer to the complete Solicitation Package--this RFGP, the
Project Objectives, Goals, and Implementation (POGI), and the Proposal
Submission Instructions (PSI)--for further information.
II. Award Information
Type of Award: Cooperative Agreement. ECA's level of involvement
[[Page 71421]]
in this program is listed under number I above.
Fiscal Year Funds: FY2012, pending availability of funds.
Approximate Total Funding: $250,000.
Approximate Number of Awards: One.
Anticipated Award Date: Pending availability of funds, March 15,
2012.
Anticipated Project Completion Date: 12 to 18 months after the
onset of the award, to be determined by the applicant according to its
program design.
Additional Information: Pending successful implementation of this
program and the availability of funds in subsequent fiscal years, it is
ECA's intent to renew this grant or cooperative agreement for two
additional fiscal years, before openly competing it again.
III. Eligibility Information
III.1. Eligible applicants: Applications may be submitted by public
and private nonprofit organizations meeting the provisions described in
Internal Revenue Code section 26 U.S.C. 501(c)(3).
III.2. Cost Sharing or Matching Funds: There is no minimum or
maximum percentage required for this competition. However, the Bureau
encourages applicants to provide maximum levels of cost sharing and
funding in support of its programs.
When cost sharing is offered, it is understood and agreed that the
applicant must provide the amount of cost sharing as stipulated in its
proposal and later included in an approved agreement. Cost sharing may
be in the form of allowable direct or indirect costs. For
accountability, you must maintain written records to support all costs
which are claimed as your contribution, as well as costs to be paid by
the Federal government. Such records are subject to audit. The basis
for determining the value of cash and in-kind contributions must be in
accordance with OMB Circular A-110, (Revised), subpart C.23--Cost
Sharing and Matching. In the event you do not provide the minimum
amount of cost sharing as stipulated in the approved budget, ECA's
contribution will be reduced in like proportion.
III.3. Other Eligibility Requirements
(1) Bureau grant guidelines require that organizations with less
than four years experience in conducting international exchanges be
limited to $60,000 in Bureau funding. ECA anticipates making an award
in an amount exceeding $60,000 to support program and administrative
costs required to implement this exchange program. Therefore,
organizations with less than four years experience in conducting
international exchanges are ineligible to apply under this competition.
The Bureau encourages applicants to provide maximum levels of cost
sharing and funding in support of its programs.
(2) Proposed sub-award recipients are also limited to grant funding
of $60,000 or less if they do not have four years of experience in
conducting international exchanges.
(3) The Bureau encourages applicants to provide maximum levels of
cost sharing and funding in support of its programs.
(4) Organizations may submit only one proposal (total) under this
competition. If more than one proposal is received from the same
applicant, all submissions will be declared technically ineligible and
will receive no further consideration in the review process.
Please note: Applicant organizations are defined by their legal
name, and EIN number as stated on their completed SF-424 and
additional supporting documentation outlined in the Proposal
Submission Instructions (PSI) document.
IV. Application and Submission Information
Note: Please read the complete announcement before sending
inquiries or submitting proposals. Once the RFGP deadline has
passed, Bureau staff may not discuss this competition with
applicants until the proposal review process has been completed.
IV.1. Contact Information To Request an Application Package
Please contact the Youth Programs Division, ECA/PE/C/PY, SA-5, 3rd
Floor, U.S. Department of State, 2200 C Street NW., Washington, DC
20037, by telephone (202) 632-9261 or Email: ShieldsSD@State.gov to
request a Solicitation Package. Please refer to the Funding Opportunity
Number ECA/PE/C/PY-12-09 located at the top of this announcement when
making your request.
Alternatively, an electronic application package may be obtained
from grants.gov. Please see section IV.3f for further information.
The Solicitation Package contains the Proposal Submission
Instruction (PSI) document which consists of required application
forms, and standard guidelines for proposal preparation. It also
contains the Project Objectives, Goals and Implementation (POGI)
document, which provides specific information, award criteria and
budget instructions tailored to this competition.
Please specify Program Officer Sarah Shields and refer to the
Funding Opportunity Number ECA/PE/C/PY-12-09 located at the top of this
announcement on all other inquiries and correspondence.
IV.2. To Download a Solicitation Package Via Internet
The entire Solicitation Package may be downloaded from the Bureau's
Web site at https://exchanges.state.gov/grants/open2.html, or from the
Grants.gov Web site at https://www.grants.gov.
Please read all information before downloading.
IV.3. Content and Form of Submission
Applicants must follow all instructions in the Solicitation
Package. The application should be submitted per the instructions under
IV.3f. ``Application Deadline and Methods of Submission'' section
below.
IV.3a. You are required to have a Dun and Bradstreet Data Universal
Numbering System (DUNS) number to apply for a grant or cooperative
agreement from the U.S. Government. This number is a nine-digit
identification number, which uniquely identifies business entities.
Obtaining a DUNS number is easy and there is no charge. To obtain a
DUNS number, access https://www.dunandbradstreet.com or call 1-(866)
705-5711. Please ensure that your DUNS number is included in the
appropriate box of the SF-424 which is part of the formal application
package.
IV.3b. All proposals must contain an executive summary, proposal
narrative and budget.
Please Refer to the Solicitation Package. It contains the mandatory
Proposal Submission Instructions (PSI) document and the Project
Objectives, Goals and Implementation (POGI) document for additional
formatting and technical requirements.
IV.3c. All federal award recipients must maintain current
registrations in the Central Contractor Registration (CCR) database.
Recipients must maintain accurate and up-to-date information in the CCR
until all program and financial activity and reporting have been
completed. Recipients must review and update the information at least
annually after the initial registration and more frequently if required
information changes or another award is granted.
Failure to register in the CCR will render applicants ineligible to
receive funding.
[[Page 71422]]
You must have nonprofit status with the IRS at the time of
application.
Please note: Effective January 7, 2009, all applicants for ECA
federal assistance awards must include in their application the
names of directors and/or senior executives (current officers,
trustees, and key employees, regardless of amount of compensation).
In fulfilling this requirement, applicants must submit information
in one of the following ways:
(1) Those who file Internal Revenue Service Form 990, ``Return
of Organization Exempt From Income Tax,'' must include a copy of
relevant portions of this form.
(2) Those who do not file IRS Form 990 must submit information
above in the format of their choice.
In addition to final program reporting requirements, award
recipients will also be required to submit a one-page document, derived
from their program reports, listing and describing their grant
activities. For award recipients, the names of directors and/or senior
executives (current officers, trustees, and key employees), as well as
the one- page description of grant activities, will be transmitted by
the State Department to OMB, along with other information required by
the Federal Funding Accountability and Transparency Act (FFATA), and
will be made available to the public by the Office of Management and
Budget on its USASpending.gov Web site as part of ECA's FFATA reporting
requirements.
If your organization is a private nonprofit which has not received
a grant or cooperative agreement from ECA in the past three years, or
if your organization received nonprofit status from the IRS within the
past four years, you must submit the necessary documentation to verify
nonprofit status as directed in the PSI document. Failure to do so will
cause your proposal to be declared technically ineligible.
IV.3d. Please Take Into Consideration the Following Information When
Preparing Your Proposal Narrative
IV.3d.1. Adherence to All Regulations Governing the J Visa
The Office of Citizen Exchanges of the Bureau of Educational and
Cultural Affairs is the official program sponsor of the exchange
program covered by this RFGP, and an employee of the Bureau will be the
``Responsible Officer'' for the program under the terms of 22 CFR 62,
which covers the administration of the Exchange Visitor Program (J visa
program). Under the terms of 22 CFR 62, organizations receiving awards
(either a grant or cooperative agreement) under this RFGP will be third
parties ``cooperating with or assisting the sponsor in the conduct of
the sponsor's program.'' The actions of recipient organizations shall
be ``imputed to the sponsor in evaluating the sponsor's compliance
with'' 22 CFR 62. Therefore, the Bureau expects that any organization
receiving an award under this competition will render all assistance
necessary to enable the Bureau to fully comply with 22 CFR 62 et seq.
The Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs places critically
important emphases on the secure and proper administration of Exchange
Visitor (J visa) Programs and adherence by recipient organizations and
program participants to all regulations governing the J visa program
status. Therefore, proposals should explicitly state in writing that
the applicant is prepared to assist the Bureau in meeting all
requirements governing the administration of Exchange Visitor Programs
as set forth in 22 CFR 62. If your organization has experience as a
designated Exchange Visitor Program Sponsor, the applicant should
discuss their record of compliance with 22 CFR 62 et. seq., including
the oversight of their Responsible Officers and Alternate Responsible
Officers, screening and selection of program participants, provision of
pre-arrival information and orientation to participants, monitoring of
participants, proper maintenance and security of forms, record-keeping,
reporting and other requirements.
The Office of Citizen Exchanges of ECA will be responsible for
issuing DS-2019 forms to participants in this program.
A copy of the complete regulations governing the administration of
Exchange Visitor (J) programs is available at https://exchanges.state.gov or from: Office of Designation, Private Sector
Programs Division, U.S. Department of State, ECA/EC/D/PS, SA-5, 5th
Floor, 2200 C Street NW., Washington, DC 20037.
IV.3d.2. Diversity, Freedom and Democracy Guidelines
Pursuant to the Bureau's authorizing legislation, programs must
maintain a non-political character and should be balanced and
representative of the diversity of American political, social, and
cultural life. ``Diversity'' should be interpreted in the broadest
sense and encompass differences including, but not limited to
ethnicity, race, gender, religion, geographic location, socio-economic
status, and disabilities. Applicants are strongly encouraged to adhere
to the advancement of this principle both in program administration and
in program content. Please refer to the review criteria under the
'Support for Diversity' section for specific suggestions on
incorporating diversity into your proposal. Public Law 104-319 provides
that ``in carrying out programs of educational and cultural exchange in
countries whose people do not fully enjoy freedom and democracy,'' the
Bureau ``shall take appropriate steps to provide opportunities for
participation in such programs to human rights and democracy leaders of
such countries.'' Public Law 106-113 requires that the governments of
the countries described above do not have inappropriate influence in
the selection process. Proposals should reflect advancement of these
goals in their program contents, to the full extent deemed feasible.
IV.3d.3. Program Monitoring and Evaluation
Proposals must include a plan to monitor and evaluate the project's
success, both as the activities unfold and at the end of the program.
The Bureau recommends that your proposal include a draft survey
questionnaire or other technique plus a description of a methodology to
use to link outcomes to original project objectives. The Bureau expects
that the recipient organization will track participants or partners and
be able to respond to key evaluation questions, including satisfaction
with the program, learning as a result of the program, changes in
behavior as a result of the program, and effects of the program on
institutions (institutions in which participants work or partner
institutions). The evaluation plan should include indicators that
measure gains in mutual understanding as well as substantive knowledge.
Successful monitoring and evaluation depend heavily on setting
clear goals and outcomes at the outset of a program. Your evaluation
plan should include a description of your project's objectives, your
anticipated project outcomes, and how and when you intend to measure
these outcomes (performance indicators). The more that outcomes are
``smart'' (specific, measurable, attainable, results-oriented, and
placed in a reasonable time frame), the easier it will be to conduct
the evaluation. You should also show how your project objectives link
to the goals of the program described in this RFGP.
Your monitoring and evaluation plan should clearly distinguish
between program outputs and outcomes. Outputs are products and services
delivered, often stated as an amount. Output information is important
to show the scope or size of project activities, but it cannot
substitute for information about progress towards outcomes or the
[[Page 71423]]
results achieved. Examples of outputs include the number of people
trained or the number of seminars conducted. Outcomes, in contrast,
represent specific results a project is intended to achieve and is
usually measured as an extent of change. Findings on outputs and
outcomes should both be reported, but the focus should be on outcomes.
Outcomes
We encourage you to assess the following four levels of outcomes,
as they relate to the program goals set out in the RFGP (listed here in
increasing order of importance):
(1) Participant satisfaction with the program and exchange
experience.
(2) Participant learning, such as increased knowledge, aptitude,
skills, and changed understanding and attitude. Learning includes both
substantive (subject-specific) learning and mutual understanding.
(3) Participant behavior, concrete actions to apply knowledge in
work or community; greater participation and responsibility in civic
organizations; interpretation and explanation of experiences and new
knowledge gained; continued contacts between participants, community
members, and others.
(4) Institutional changes, such as increased collaboration and
partnerships, policy reforms, new programming, and organizational
improvements.
Please note: Consideration should be given to the appropriate
timing of data collection for each level of outcome. For example,
satisfaction is usually captured as a short-term outcome, whereas
behavior and institutional changes are normally considered longer-
term outcomes.
Overall, the quality of your monitoring and evaluation plan will be
judged on how well it (1) Specifies intended outcomes; (2) gives clear
descriptions of how each outcome will be measured; (3) identifies when
particular outcomes will be measured; and (4) provides a clear
description of the data collection strategies for each outcome (i.e.,
surveys, interviews, or focus groups). (Please note that evaluation
plans that deal only with the first level of outcomes [satisfaction]
will be deemed less competitive under the present evaluation criteria.)
Recipient organizations will be required to provide reports
analyzing their evaluation findings to the Bureau in their regular
program reports. All data collected, including survey responses and
contact information, must be maintained for a minimum of three years
and provided to the Bureau upon request.
IV.3e. Please take the following information into consideration
when preparing your budget:
IV.3e.1. Applicants must submit SF-424A--``Budget Information--Non-
Construction Programs'' along with a comprehensive budget for the
entire program. Budget requests may not exceed $250,000. There must be
a summary budget as well as breakdowns reflecting both administrative
and program budgets. Applicants may provide separate sub-budgets for
each program component, phase, location, or activity to provide
clarification. Please refer to the Solicitation Package (POGI and PSI)
for complete budget guidelines and formatting instructions.
IV.3f. Application Deadline and Methods of Submission
Application Deadline Date: Wednesday, January 4, 2012.
Reference Number: ECA/PE/C/PY-12-09.
Methods of Submission: Applications may be submitted in one of two
ways:
(1) In hard-copy, via a nationally recognized overnight delivery
service (i.e., FedEx, UPS, Airborne Express, or U.S. Postal Service
Express Overnight Mail, etc.), or
(2) Electronically through https://www.grants.gov.
Along with the Project Title, all applicants must enter the above
Reference Number in Box 11 on the SF-424 contained in the mandatory
Proposal Submission Instructions (PSI) of the solicitation document.
IV.3f.1. Submitting Printed Applications
Applications must be shipped no later than the above deadline.
Delivery services used by applicants must have in-place, centralized
shipping identification and tracking systems that may be accessed via
the Internet and delivery people who are identifiable by commonly
recognized uniforms and delivery vehicles. Proposals shipped on or
before the above deadline but received at ECA more than seven days
after the deadline will be ineligible for further consideration under
this competition. Proposals shipped after the established deadlines are
ineligible for consideration under this competition. ECA will not
notify you upon receipt of application. It is each applicant's
responsibility to ensure that each package is marked with a legible
tracking number and to monitor/confirm delivery to ECA via the
Internet. Delivery of proposal packages may not be made via local
courier service or in person for this competition. Faxed documents will
not be accepted at any time. Only proposals submitted as stated above
will be considered.
Important note: When preparing your submission please make sure
to include one extra copy of the completed SF-424 form and place it
in an envelope addressed to ``ECA/EX/PM''.
The original and six (6) copies of the application should be sent
to: Program Management Division, ECA-IIP/EX/PM, Ref.: ECA/PE/C/PY-12-
09, SA-5, Floor 4, Department of State, 2200 C Street NW., Washington,
DC 20037.
With the submission of the proposal package, please also email the
Executive Summary, Proposal Narrative, and Budget sections of the
proposal, as well as any attachments essential to understanding the
program, in Microsoft Word, Excel, and/or PDF, to YLP@state.gov. The
Bureau will provide these files electronically to the Public Affairs
Section at the U.S. Embassy in Algiers for its review.
IV.3f.2. Submitting Electronic Applications
Applicants have the option of submitting proposals electronically
through Grants.gov (https://www.grants.gov). Complete solicitation
packages are available at Grants.gov in the ``Find'' portion of the
system.
Please note: ECA bears no responsibility for applicant
timeliness of submission or data errors resulting from transmission
or conversion processes for proposals submitted via Grants.gov.
Please follow the instructions available in the `Get Started'
portion of the site (https://www.grants.gov/GetStarted).
Several of the steps in the Grants.gov registration process could
take several weeks. Therefore, applicants should check with appropriate
staff within their organizations immediately after reviewing this RFGP
to confirm or determine their registration status with Grants.gov.
Once registered, the amount of time it can take to upload an
application will vary depending on a variety of factors including the
size of the application and the speed of your Internet connection. In
addition, validation of an electronic submission via Grants.gov can
take up to two business days.
Therefore, we strongly recommend that you not wait until the
application deadline to begin the submission process through
Grants.gov.
The Grants.gov Web site includes extensive information on all
phases/aspects of the Grants.gov process, including an extensive
section on frequently asked questions, located under the ``For
Applicants'' section of
[[Page 71424]]
the Web site. ECA strongly recommends that all potential applicants
review thoroughly the Grants.gov Web site, well in advance of
submitting a proposal through the Grants.gov system. ECA bears no
responsibility for data errors resulting from transmission or
conversion processes.
Direct all questions regarding Grants.gov registration and
submission to: Grants.gov Customer Support.
Contact Center Phone: (800) 518-4726.
Business Hours: Monday-Friday, 7 a.m.-9 p.m. Eastern Time.
Email: grants.gov">support@grants.gov.
Applicants have until midnight (12 a.m.), Washington, DC time of
the closing date to ensure that their entire application has been
uploaded to the Grants.gov site. There are no exceptions to the above
deadline. Applications uploaded to the site after midnight of the
application deadline date will be automatically rejected by the
grants.gov system, and will be technically ineligible.
Please refer to the Grants.gov Web site, for definitions of various
``application statuses'' and the difference between a submission
receipt and a submission validation.
Applicants will receive a validation email from grants.gov upon the
successful submission of an application. Again, validation of an
electronic submission via Grants.gov can take up to two business days.
Therefore, we strongly recommend that you not wait until the
application deadline to begin the submission process through
Grants.gov. ECA will not notify you upon receipt of electronic
applications.
It is the responsibility of all applicants submitting proposals via
the Grants.gov web portal to ensure that proposals have been received
by Grants.gov in their entirety, and ECA bears no responsibility for
data errors resulting from transmission or conversion processes.
IV.3g. Intergovernmental Review of Applications: Executive Order
12372 does not apply to this program.
V. Application Review Information
V.1. Review Process
The Bureau will review all proposals for technical eligibility.
Proposals will be deemed ineligible if they do not fully adhere to the
guidelines stated herein and in the Solicitation Package. All eligible
proposals will be reviewed by the program office, as well as the Public
Diplomacy section overseas, where appropriate. Eligible proposals will
be subject to compliance with Federal and Bureau regulations and
guidelines and forwarded to Bureau grant panels for advisory review.
Proposals may also be reviewed by the Office of the Legal Adviser or by
other Department elements. Final funding decisions are at the
discretion of the Department of State's Assistant Secretary for
Educational and Cultural Affairs. Final technical authority for
assistance awards (cooperative agreements) resides with the Bureau's
Grants Officer.
Review Criteria
Technically eligible applications will be competitively reviewed
according to the criteria stated below. These criteria are not rank
ordered and all carry equal weight in the proposal evaluation:
(1) Quality of the program idea: Objectives should be reasonable,
feasible, and flexible. The proposal should clearly demonstrate how the
institution will meet the program's objectives and plan. The proposed
program should be creative, age-appropriate, respond to the design
outlined in the solicitation, and demonstrate originality. It should be
clearly and accurately written, substantive, and with sufficient
detail. Proposals should also include a plan to support participants'
community activities upon their return home.
(2) Program planning and ability to achieve program objectives: A
detailed agenda and work plan should clearly demonstrate how project
objectives will be achieved. The agenda and plan should adhere to the
program overview and guidelines described above. The substance of
workshops, seminars, presentations, school-based activities, and/or
site visits should be described in detail.
(3) Support of diversity: The proposal should demonstrate the
applicant's commitment to promoting the awareness and understanding of
diversity in participant recruitment and selection and in program
content. Applicants should demonstrate readiness to accommodate
participants with physical disabilities.
(4) Institutional capacity and track record: Proposed personnel and
institutional resources should be adequate and appropriate to achieve
the program goals. The proposal should demonstrate an institutional
record of successful exchange programs, including responsible fiscal
management and full compliance with all reporting requirements for past
Bureau awards (grants or cooperative agreements) as determined by
Bureau Grants Staff. The Bureau will consider the past performance of
prior recipients and the demonstrated potential of new applicants.
(5) Program evaluation: The proposal should include a plan to
evaluate the program's success in meeting its goals, both as the
activities unfold and after they have been completed. The proposal
should include a draft survey questionnaire or other technique, plus a
description of a methodology to link outcomes to original project
objectives. The award recipient will be expected to submit intermediate
reports after each project component is concluded.
(6) Cost-effectiveness and cost sharing: The applicant should
demonstrate efficient use of Bureau funds. The overhead and
administrative components of the proposal, including salaries and
honoraria, should be kept as low as possible. All other items should be
necessary and appropriate. The proposal should maximize cost-sharing
through other private sector support as well as institutional direct
funding contributions, which demonstrates institutional and community
commitment.
VI. Award Administration Information
VI.1a. Award Notices
Final awards cannot be made until funds have been appropriated by
Congress, allocated and committed through internal Bureau procedures.
Successful applicants will receive an Federal Assistance Award (FAA)
from the Bureau's Grants Office. The FAA and the original proposal with
subsequent modifications (if applicable) shall be the only binding
authorizing document between the recipient and the U.S. Government. The
FAA will be signed by an authorized Grants Officer, and mailed to the
recipient's responsible officer identified in the application.
Unsuccessful applicants will receive notification of the results of
the application review from the ECA program office coordinating this
competition.
VI.2. Administrative and National Policy Requirements
Terms and Conditions for the Administration of ECA agreements
include the following:
Office of Management and Budget Circular A-122, ``Cost Principles
for Nonprofit Organizations.''
Office of Management and Budget Circular A-21, ``Cost Principles
for Educational Institutions.''
OMB Circular A-87, ``Cost Principles for State, Local and Indian
Governments.''
OMB Circular No. A-110 (Revised), Uniform Administrative
Requirements for Grants and Agreements with
[[Page 71425]]
Institutions of Higher Education, Hospitals, and other Nonprofit
Organizations.
OMB Circular No. A-102, Uniform Administrative Requirements for
Grants-in-Aid to State and Local Governments.
OMB Circular No. A-133, Audits of States, Local Government, and
Nonprofit Organizations.
Please reference the following Web sites for additional
information: https://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/grants, https://fa.statebuy.state.gov.
VI.3. Reporting Requirements: You must provide ECA with a hard copy
original plus one copy of the following reports:
(1) A final program and financial report no more than 90 days after
the expiration of the award;
(2) A concise, one-page final program report summarizing program
outcomes no more than 90 days after the expiration of the award. This
one-page report will be transmitted to OMB, and be made available to
the public via OMB's USAspending.gov Web site--as part of ECA's Federal
Funding Accountability and Transparency Act (FFATA) reporting
requirements.
(3) A SF-PPR, ``Performance Progress Report'' Cover Sheet with all
program reports, including the SF-PPR-E and SF-PPR-F.
(4) Quarterly or interim reports, as required in the Bureau
cooperative agreement.
Award recipients will be required to provide reports analyzing
their evaluation findings to the Bureau in their regular program
reports. (Please refer to IV. Application and Submission Instructions
(IV.3.d.3) above for Program Monitoring and Evaluation information.
All data collected, including survey responses and contact
information, must be maintained for a minimum of three years and
provided to the Bureau upon request.
All reports must be sent to the ECA Grants Officer and ECA Program
Officer listed in the final assistance award document.
VII. Agency Contacts
For questions about this announcement, contact: Sarah Shields,
Youth Programs Division, ECA/PE/C/PY/T, SA-5, 3rd Floor, U.S.
Department of State, 2200 C Street NW., Washington, DC 20522-0503, by
telephone (202) 632-9261 or email ShieldsSD@state.gov.
All correspondence with the Bureau concerning this RFGP should
reference the above title and number ECA/PE/C/PY-12-09.
Please read the complete announcement before sending inquiries or
submitting proposals. Once the RFGP deadline has passed, Bureau staff
may not discuss this competition with applicants until the proposal
review process has been completed.
VIII. Other Information
Notice
The terms and conditions published in this RFGP are binding and may
not be modified by any Bureau representative. Explanatory information
provided by the Bureau that contradicts published language will not be
binding. Issuance of the RFGP does not constitute an award commitment
on the part of the Government. The Bureau reserves the right to reduce,
revise, or increase proposal budgets in accordance with the needs of
the program and the availability of funds. Awards made will be subject
to periodic reporting and evaluation requirements per section VI.3
above.
Dated: November 9, 2011.
J. Adam Ereli,
Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary, Bureau of Educational and
Cultural Affairs, U.S. Department of State.
[FR Doc. 2011-29643 Filed 11-16-11; 8:45 am]
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