Applications for New Awards; Project Prevent Grant Program, 23961-23968 [2014-09604]
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Please note that comments submitted by
fax or email and those submitted after
the comment period will not be
accepted; ED will ONLY accept
comments during the comment period
in this mailbox when the regulations.gov
site is not available. Written requests for
information or comments submitted by
postal mail or delivery should be
addressed to the Director of the
Information Collection Clearance
Division, U.S. Department of Education,
400 Maryland Avenue SW., LBJ,
Mailstop L–OM–2–2E319, Room 2E115,
Washington, DC 20202.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For
specific questions related to collection
activities, please contact Felipe Lulli,
202–245–7425.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
Department of Education (ED), in
accordance with the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995 (PRA) (44 U.S.C.
3506(c)(2)(A)), provides the general
public and Federal agencies with an
opportunity to comment on proposed,
revised, and continuing collections of
information. This helps the Department
assess the impact of its information
collection requirements and minimize
the public’s reporting burden. It also
helps the public understand the
Department’s information collection
requirements and provide the requested
data in the desired format. ED is
soliciting comments on the proposed
information collection request (ICR) that
is described below. The Department of
Education is especially interested in
public comment addressing the
following issues: (1) is this collection
necessary to the proper functions of the
Department; (2) will this information be
processed and used in a timely manner;
(3) is the estimate of burden accurate;
(4) how might the Department enhance
the quality, utility, and clarity of the
information to be collected; and (5) how
might the Department minimize the
burden of this collection on the
respondents, including through the use
of information technology. Please note
that written comments received in
response to this notice will be
considered public records.
Title of Collection: Section 704
Annual Performance Report (Parts I and
II)
OMB Control Number: 1820–0606
Type of Review: An extension of an
existing information collection.
Respondents/Affected Public: Private
Sector, State, Local, or Tribal
Governments
Total Estimated Number of Annual
Responses: 412
Total Estimated Number of Annual
Burden Hours: 14,420
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Abstract: These data collection
instruments are the annual performance
reports for State Independent Living
Services (SILS) and Centers for
Independent Living (CIL) programs.
These are known as the 704 Report Part
I and the 704 Report Part II,
respectively. These reports are required
by sections 704(m)(4)(D), 706(d),
721(b)(3) and 725(c) of the
Rehabilitation Act of 1973, as amended
(the Act) and the corresponding
regulations in 34 CFR parts 364, 365,
and 366. Approval of grantees’ annual
performance reports (704 Report) is a
prerequisite for the Rehabilitation
Services Administration (RSA) approval
of the annual SILS grant awards (part B
funds) and CILs continuation grant
awards (part C funds).
Dated: April 23, 2014.
Tomakie Washington,
Acting Director, Information Collection
Clearance Division, Privacy, Information and
Records Management Services, Office of
Management.
[FR Doc. 2014–09645 Filed 4–28–14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4000–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION
Applications for New Awards; Project
Prevent Grant Program
Office of Elementary and
Secondary Education, Department of
Education.
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
Overview Information
Project Prevent Grant Program
Notice inviting applications for new
awards for fiscal year (FY) 2014.
Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance
(CFDA) Number: 84.184M.
DATES:
Applications Available: April 29,
2014.
Deadline for Transmittal of
Applications: June 30, 2014.
Deadline for Intergovernmental
Review: August 27, 2014.
Full Text of Announcement
I. Funding Opportunity Description
Purpose of Program: The Project
Prevent Grant Program provides grants
to local educational agencies (LEAs) to
increase their capacity to help schools
in communities with pervasive violence
to better address the needs of affected
students and to break the cycle of
violence.
Background
Children’s exposure to violence,
whether as victims or witnesses, is often
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associated with long-term physical,
psychological, and emotional harms.
These harms, among others, include
depression, anxiety, and post-traumatic
disorders; failing or having difficulty in
school; and delinquency or criminal
behavior, including violent acts.
Several Federal agencies have worked
to address the issues surrounding
children’s exposure to violence. Since
1980, the Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention has been studying
patterns of violence and the effects of
violence on communities and
individuals, and it has been advancing
strategies to prevent violence and
mitigate the impacts of exposure to
violence.1 Furthermore, in 2010,
Attorney General Eric Holder launched
the Defending Childhood initiative to
better understand and address the
problem of children’s exposure to
violence. As part of this initiative, the
Attorney General’s Task Force on
Children Exposed to Violence released a
report and national action plan in
December 2012, which helped inform
the development of the Project Prevent
Grant Program.2
In addition, the U.S. Department of
Health and Human Services has
launched a national effort to ‘‘reduce the
pervasive, harmful, and costly health
impact of violence and trauma by
integrating trauma-informed approaches
throughout health, behavioral health,
and related systems and addressing the
behavioral health needs of people
involved in or at risk of involvement in
the criminal and juvenile justice
systems.’’ This includes the outlining of
‘‘Principles and Guidance for a TraumaInformed Approach.’’ 3
On January 16, 2013, President
Obama proposed ‘‘Now is the Time,’’ a
comprehensive plan that proposed a
series of actions and steps to protect our
children and communities by reducing
gun violence, including Project Prevent.
The Project Prevent Grant Program also
was included in the President’s FY 2014
budget request, and Congress provided
funding for the new program in the
Department of Education
Appropriations Act, 2014.
Project Prevent grants will enable
LEAs to increase their capacity to
identify, assess, and serve students
1 National Center for Injury Prevention and
Control, Division of Violence Prevention. Retrieved
from: www.cdc.gov/violenceprevention.
2 U.S. Department of Justice. (2012). Report of the
Attorney General’s National Task Force on Children
Exposed to Violence. Retrieved from: www.justice.
gov/defendingchildhood/task-force.html.
3 Substance Abuse & Mental Health Services
Administration. (2012). SAMHSA’s Working
Definition of Trauma and Principles and Guidance
for a Trauma-Informed Approach. Retrieved from:
https://samhsa.gov/traumaJustice.
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exposed to pervasive violence, helping
to ensure that affected students are
offered mental health services for
trauma or anxiety; support conflict
resolution programs; and implement
other school-based violence prevention
strategies in order to reduce the
likelihood that these students will later
commit violent acts.
Priorities: This competition includes
one absolute priority and two
competitive preference priorities. We
are establishing the absolute priority
and competitive preference priority 1
for the FY 2014 grant competition and
any subsequent year in which we make
awards from the list of unfunded
applications from this competition, in
accordance with section 437(d)(1) of the
General Education Provisions Act
(GEPA), 20 U.S.C. 1232(d)(1).
Competitive preference priority 2 is
from the notice of final priority
published in the Federal Register on
March 27, 2014 (79 FR 17035).
Absolute Priority: For FY 2014 and any
subsequent year in which we make awards
from the list of unfunded applicants from
this competition, this priority is an absolute
priority. Under 34 CFR 75.105(c)(3) we
consider only applications that meet this
priority.
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This priority is:
Absolute Priority—Expand the Capacity
of LEAs To Assist Schools in
Communities With Pervasive Violence
To Break the Cycle of Violence by Better
Meeting the Needs of Affected Students
Under this priority, we provide
funding for projects to expand the
capacity of LEAs to more effectively
assist affected schools in communities
with pervasive violence to better meet
the needs of students directly or
indirectly exposed to pervasive
violence. These projects must offer
students: (1) Access to school-based
counseling services, or referrals to
community-based counseling services,
for assistance in coping with trauma or
anxiety; (2) school-based social and
emotional supports for students to help
address the effects of violence; (3)
conflict resolution and other schoolbased strategies to prevent future
violence; and (4) a safer and improved
school environment, which may
include, among others, activities to
decrease the incidence of harassment,
bullying, violence, gang involvement,
and substance abuse. Applicants must
address all four subparts of this absolute
priority.
Competitive Preference Priorities: For
FY 2014 and any subsequent year in
which we make awards from the list of
unfunded applicants from this
competition, these priorities are
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competitive preference priorities. Under
34 CFR 75.105(c)(2)(i) we award an
additional three points to an application
that meets competitive preference
priority 1 and an additional three points
to an application that meets competitive
preference priority 2.
Note: Applicants may address either of the
competitive preference priorities or both. An
applicant must identify in the abstract
section of its application the competitive
preference priority or priorities it wishes the
Department to consider. The Department will
not review or award points under any
competitive preference priority for any
application that fails to do so.
In addition, an applicant must
describe and list by name in the
application narrative the school(s) that
will be served under competitive
preference priority 1, including
information on how each of those
school(s) meets the definition of highpoverty school, as defined in this notice.
Applicants should submit a letter from
the lead entity of a designated Promise
Zone attesting to the contribution that
the proposed activities would make, and
supporting the application. A list of
designated Promise Zones and lead
organizations can be found at
www.hud.gov/promisezones.
These priorities are:
Competitive Preference Priority 1—
Serving High-Poverty Schools
Projects that serve students in highpoverty schools (as defined in this
notice).
Competitive Preference Priority 2—
Promise Zones
Projects that are designed to serve and
coordinate with a federally designated
Promise Zone.4
Application Requirements: The
following requirements apply to all
applications submitted under this
competition.
(1) Description of the severity and
magnitude of the problem and
identification of schools to be served by
the proposed project.
Applicants must describe how
pervasive violence in the community is
specifically affecting students in schools
to be served by project activities.
Applicants must describe the nature of
the problem for a specific geographic
area, based on information such as, but
not limited to, incidents of community
domestic violence or violent crime; rates
of child abuse and neglect; school crime
and safety data; student mental health
screenings or assessments; surveys of
4 For additional information on Promise Zones,
see www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2014/01/
08/fact-sheet-president-obama-s-promise-zonesinitiative.
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school climate; surveys of student
engagement; or other relevant data and
information as appropriate. The
description may also include
demographic data provided by U.S.
Census surveys. In order to assess the
magnitude of the problem and ensure
the schools selected have the greatest
need, data cited must be compared to
similar data at the State or local level,
and on a per capita basis (such as
homicides per 100,000 persons) when
available.
(2) Collaboration and coordination
with related Federal, State, and local
initiatives.
Applicants must describe how they
intend to work collaboratively with
Federal, State and local juvenile justice,
mental health, public health, child
welfare, and other community agencies
to achieve project goals and objectives.
Applicants must also describe proposed
coordination with existing federally
funded efforts related to youth violence
prevention and mental health
promotion (such as the National Forum
on Youth Violence Prevention,
Defending Childhood, and other
violence prevention-related grants
administered by the U.S. Department of
Justice, the Substance Abuse and Mental
Health Services Administration, and the
Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention), if applicable. Evidence of
collaboration and coordination must be
provided through letters of support from
local or State agencies and other
federally funded projects, if applicable.
Finally, applicants must describe how
they will use Project Prevent Grant
Program funds to complement, rather
than duplicate, existing, ongoing, or
new efforts to reduce youth violence
and mitigate the effects of pervasive
violence on students.
(3) Expand and improve LEA capacity
to serve students exposed to pervasive
violence and ensure affected students
receive mental health services, as
appropriate.
Applicants must describe the specific
activities they will conduct to expand
and improve LEA capacity to serve
students exposed to pervasive violence,
ensure that affected students receive
appropriate mental health services, and
break the cycle of violence. To meet this
requirement, the applicant must
propose three or more of the following:
(a) Professional development
opportunities for LEA and school
mental health staff (e.g., counselors,
psychologists, social workers, and
psychiatrists) on how to screen for and
respond to violence-related trauma and
implement appropriate school-based
mitigation strategies.
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(b) Improving the range, availability,
and quality of school-based mental
health services by hiring qualified
school psychologists, school counselors,
or school social workers with expertise
or training in violence prevention and
responding to the mental health needs
of students who have experienced
trauma as a result of exposure to
violence.
(c) Providing training to select school
staff (e.g., teachers, administrators, and
support staff), community partners,
youth, and parents on the problem of
student exposure to pervasive violence,
as well as the importance of screening
students and providing interventions to
help students cope with traumatic
events.
(d) Addressing the needs of students
in affected schools by developing or
improving processes to better target
services to these students and
developing or improving processes to
assess students who are exposed to
pervasive violence and who may be
experiencing resulting mental,
emotional, or behavioral disorders.
(e) Enhancing linkages between LEA
mental health services and community
mental health systems to ensure affected
students receive referrals to treatment as
appropriate, including linkages that
leverage new opportunities under the
Patient Protection and Affordable Care
Act, such as the expansion of mental
health and substance use disorder
coverage.
(4) Delivery of a continuum of
evidenced-based programs and
practices in selected schools to promote
conflict resolution, improve school
climate and safety, and implement other
school-based strategies to break the
cycle of violence.
Applicants must provide a
description of the continuum of the
evidence-based programs and practices
that will be implemented at the school
level to break the cycle of violence. The
threshold for evidence-based programs
is those that, at a minimum, are
supported by evidence of promise (as
defined in 34 CFR 77.1(c)). These
programs and practices must include all
of the following:
(a) Interventions and activities that
serve all students in a school, regardless
of risk level, with the goal of preventing
negative or violent behavior (such as
bullying, fighting, gang participation,
and sexual assault) and enhancing
student knowledge and skills regarding
positive behavior (such as conflict
resolution and other skills);
(b) Interventions and activities (such
as those related to anger management,
conflict resolution, promotion of
positive behavior, and development of
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protective factors) that target individual
students or a sub-group of students
whose risk of developing mental or
behavioral disorders is significantly
higher than average; and
(c) Interventions and services that
target individual students who are at
risk for, and have shown signs of,
mental, emotional, or behavioral
disorders; exhibit aggressive, violent, or
disruptive behavior; or participate in
gangs.
To meet this requirement, applicants
must discuss the research and evidence
supporting the proposed programs and
practices and the estimated effects on
the target population. Applicants may
use the Federal registries listed in the
application package for identifying such
programs and practices.
Definitions: We are establishing the
definition of ‘‘school engagement’’ in
this notice for the FY 2014 grant
competition and any subsequent year in
which we make awards from the list of
unfunded applications from this
competition, in accordance with section
437(d)(1) of GEPA, 20 U.S.C. 1232(d)(1).
The definition of ‘‘high-poverty school’’
is from the notice of final supplemental
priorities and definitions for
discretionary grant programs published
in the Federal Register on December 15,
2010 (75 FR 78486) and corrected on
May 12, 2011 (76 FR 27637). The
definition of ‘‘local educational agency’’
is from section 9101(26) of the
Elementary and Secondary Education
Act of 1965, as amended (ESEA) (20
U.S.C. 7801(26), and is included for the
convenience of the reader. The
definitions of ‘‘ambitious’’ and
‘‘baseline data’’ are from 34 CFR 77.1.
Ambitious means promoting
continued, meaningful improvement for
program participants or for other
individuals or entities affected by the
grant, or representing a significant
advancement in the field of education
research, practices, or methodologies.
When used to describe a performance
target, whether a performance target is
ambitious depends upon the context of
the relevant performance measure and
the baseline for that measure.
Baseline data means the starting point
from performance is measured and
targets are set.
High-poverty school means a school
in which at least 50 percent of students
are eligible for free or reduced-price
lunches under the Richard B. Russell
National School Lunch Act or in which
at least 50 percent of students are from
low-income families as determined
using one of the criteria specified under
section 1113(a)(5) of the ESEA, as
amended. For middle and high schools,
eligibility may be calculated on the
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basis of comparable data from feeder
schools. Eligibility as a high-poverty
school under this definition is
determined on the basis of the most
currently available data.
Local educational agency (LEA)
means:
(1) A public board of education or
other public authority legally
constituted within a State for either
administrative control or direction of, or
to perform a service function for, public
elementary schools or secondary
schools in a city, county, township,
school district, or other political
subdivision of a State, or of or for a
combination of school districts or
counties that is recognized in a State as
an administrative agency for its public
elementary schools or secondary
schools.
(2) The term includes any other
public institution or agency having
administrative control and direction of
a public elementary school or secondary
school.
(3) The term includes an elementary
school or secondary school funded by
the Bureau of Indian Affairs but only to
the extent that including the school
makes the school eligible for programs
for which specific eligibility is not
provided to the school in another
provision of law and the school does not
have a student population that is
smaller than the student population of
the local educational agency receiving
assistance under this Act with the
smallest student population, except that
the school shall not be subject to the
jurisdiction of any State educational
agency other than the Bureau of Indian
Affairs.
(4) The term includes educational
service agencies and consortia of those
agencies.
(5) The term includes the State
educational agency in a State in which
the State educational agency is the sole
educational agency for all public
schools.
School engagement means
participation in school-related activities,
and the quality of school relationships,
which may include relationships
between and among administrators,
teachers, parents, and students.
Waiver of Proposed Rulemaking:
Under the Administrative Procedure Act
(5 U.S.C. 553) the Department generally
offers interested parties the opportunity
to comment on proposed priorities,
definitions, and application
requirements. Section 437(d)(1) of
GEPA, however, allows the Secretary to
exempt from rulemaking requirements,
regulations governing the first grant
competition under a new or
substantially revised program authority.
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This is the first grant competition for
this program under the appropriation
for Safe Schools and Citizenship
Education in the Department of
Education Appropriations Act, 2014,
Title III of Division H of P.L. 113–76,
and section 4121 of the ESEA (20 U.S.C.
7131) and therefore qualifies for this
exemption. In order to ensure timely
grant awards, the Secretary has decided
to forgo public comment on the absolute
priority and competitive preference
priority 1, the application requirements
and the definitions under section
437(d)(1) of GEPA. These priorities,
application requirements, and
definitions will apply to the FY 2014
grant competition and any subsequent
year in which we make awards from the
list of unfunded applicants from this
competition.
Program Authority: 20 U.S.C. 7131; the
Department of Education Appropriations Act,
2014, Title III of Division H of Pub. L. 113–
76.
Applicable Regulations: (a) The
Education Department General
Administrative Regulations (EDGAR) in
34 CFR parts 75, 77, 79, 80, 81, 82, 84,
97, 98, and 99. (b) The Education
Department suspension and debarment
regulations in 2 CFR part 3485. (c) The
regulations in CFR part 299. (d) The
notice of final priority published in the
Federal Register on March 27, 2014 (79
FR 17035).
Note: The regulations in 34 CFR part 79
apply to all applicants except federally
recognized Indian tribes.
II. Award Information
Type of Award: Discretionary grants.
Estimated Available Funds:
$9,750,000.
Contingent upon the availability of
funds and the quality of applications,
we may make additional awards in in
FY 2015 from the list of unfunded
applicants from this competition.
Estimated Range of Awards: $250,000
to $1,000,000.
Estimated Average Size of Awards:
$487,500.
Estimated Number of Awards: 20.
Note: The Department is not bound by any
estimates in this notice.
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Project Period: Up to 60 months.
III. Eligibility Information
1. Eligible Applicants: LEAs,
including charter schools that are
considered LEAs under State law.
2. Cost Sharing or Matching: This
competition does not require cost
sharing or matching.
3. Other: An entity that receives a
grant under this program is required to
provide for the equitable participation
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of private school children and their
teachers or other educational personnel.
In order to ensure that grant program
activities address the needs of private
school children, the applicant must
engage in timely and meaningful
consultation with appropriate private
school officials during the design and
development of the program. This
consultation must take place before the
applicant makes any decision that
affects the opportunities of eligible
private school children, teachers, and
other educational personnel to
participate. Administrative direction
and control over grant funds must
remain with the grantee (See section
9501, Participation by Private School
Children and Teachers, of the ESEA).
IV. Application and Submission
Information
1. Address to Request Application
Package: You can obtain an application
package via the Internet or from the
Education Publications Center (ED
Pubs). To obtain a copy via the Internet,
use the following address: www.ed.gov/
fund/grant/apply/grantapps/.
To obtain a copy from ED Pubs, write,
fax, or call the following: ED Pubs, U.S.
Department of Education, P.O. Box
22207, Alexandria, VA 22304.
Telephone, toll free: 1–877–433–7827.
FAX: (703) 605–6794. If you use a
telecommunications device for the deaf
(TDD) or a text telephone (TTY), call,
toll free: 1–877–576–7734.
You can contact ED Pubs at its Web
site, also: www.EDPubs.gov or at its
email address: edpubs@inet.ed.gov.
If you request an application from ED
Pubs, be sure to identify this
competition as follows: CFDA number
84.184M.
Individuals with disabilities can
obtain a copy of the application package
in an accessible format (e.g., braille,
large print, audiotape, or compact disc)
by contacting the person listed under
Accessible Format in section VIII of this
notice.
2. Content and Form of Application
Submission: Requirements concerning
the content of an application, together
with the forms you must submit, are in
the application package for this
competition.
Page Limit: The application narrative
is where you, the applicant, provide the
project narrative and management plan
to address the selection criteria that
reviewers use to evaluate your
application. The required budget and
budget narrative will be provided in a
separate section. You must limit the
application narrative to the equivalent
of no more than 50 pages, using the
following standards:
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• A ‘‘page’’ is 8.5″ x 11″, on one side
only, with 1″ margins at the top, bottom,
and both sides.
• Double space (no more than three
lines per vertical inch) all text in the
application narrative, including titles,
headings, footnotes, quotations,
references, and captions, as well as all
text in charts, tables, figures, and
graphs.
• Use a font that is either 12 point or
larger or no smaller than 10 pitch
(characters per inch).
• Use one of the following fonts:
Times New Roman, Courier, Courier
New, or Arial.
The page limit does not apply to the
cover sheet; the budget section,
including the narrative budget
justification; the assurances and
certifications; or the one-page abstract,
the resumes, the bibliography, or the
letters of support. However, the page
limit does apply to all of the application
narrative section.
Our reviewers will not read any pages
of your application that exceed the page
limit.
3. Submission Dates and Times:
Applications Available: April 29, 2014.
Deadline for Transmittal of
Applications: June 30, 2014.
Applications for grants under this
competition must be submitted
electronically using the Grants.gov
Apply site (Grants.gov). For information
(including dates and times) about how
to submit your application
electronically, or in paper format by
mail or hand delivery, please refer to
section IV. 7. Other Submission
Requirements of this notice.
We do not consider an application
that does not comply with the deadline
requirements.
Individuals with disabilities who
need an accommodation or auxiliary aid
in connection with the application
process should contact the person listed
under FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
CONTACT in section VII of this notice. If
the Department provides an
accommodation or auxiliary aid to an
individual with a disability in
connection with the application
process, the individual’s application
remains subject to all other
requirements and limitations in this
notice.
Deadline for Intergovernmental
Review: August 27, 2014.
4. Intergovernmental Review: This
competition is subject to Executive
Order 12372 and the regulations in 34
CFR Part 79. Information about
Intergovernmental Review of Federal
Programs under Executive Order 12372
is in the application package for this
competition.
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5. Funding Restrictions: We reference
regulations outlining funding
restrictions in the Applicable
Regulations section of this notice.
6. Data Universal Numbering System
Number, Taxpayer Identification
Number, and System for Award
Management: To do business with the
Department of Education, you must—
a. Have a Data Universal Numbering
System (DUNS) number and a Taxpayer
Identification Number (TIN);
b. Register both your DUNS number
and TIN with the System for Award
Management (SAM) (formerly the
Central Contractor Registry (CCR)), the
Government’s primary registrant
database;
c. Provide your DUNS number and
TIN on your application; and
d. Maintain an active SAM
registration with current information
while your application is under review
by the Department and, if you are
awarded a grant, during the project
period.
You can obtain a DUNS number from
Dun and Bradstreet. A DUNS number
can be created within one-to-two
business days.
If you are a corporate entity, agency,
institution, or organization, you can
obtain a TIN from the Internal Revenue
Service. If you are an individual, you
can obtain a TIN from the Internal
Revenue Service or the Social Security
Administration. If you need a new TIN,
please allow 2–5 weeks for your TIN to
become active.
The SAM registration process can take
approximately seven business days, but
may take upwards of several weeks,
depending on the completeness and
accuracy of the data entered into the
SAM database by an entity. Thus, if you
think you might want to apply for
Federal financial assistance under a
program administered by the
Department, please allow sufficient time
to obtain and register your DUNS
number and TIN. We strongly
recommend that you register early.
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Note: Once your SAM registration is active,
you will need to allow 24 to 48 hours for the
information to be available in Grants.gov and
before you can submit an application through
Grants.gov.
If you are currently registered with
SAM, you may not need to make any
changes. However, please make certain
that the TIN associated with your DUNS
number is correct. Also note that you
will need to update your registration
annually. This may take three or more
business days.
Information about SAM is available at
www.SAM.gov. To further assist you
with obtaining and registering your
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DUNS number and TIN in SAM or
updating your existing SAM account,
we have prepared a SAM.gov Tip Sheet,
which you can find at: https://
www2.ed.gov/fund/grant/apply/samfaqs.html.
In addition, if you are submitting your
application via Grants.gov, you must (1)
be designated by your organization as an
Authorized Organization Representative
(AOR); and (2) register yourself with
Grants.gov as an AOR. Details on these
steps are outlined at the following
Grants.gov Web page: https://
www.grants.gov/web/grants/
register.html.
7. Other Submission Requirements:
Applications for grants under this
competition must be submitted
electronically unless you qualify for an
exception to this requirement in
accordance with the instructions in this
section.
a. Electronic Submission of
Applications
Applications for grants under the
Project Prevent Grant Program, CFDA
number 84.184M, must be submitted
electronically using the
Governmentwide Grants.gov Apply site
at www.Grants.gov. Through this site,
you will be able to download a copy of
the application package, complete it
offline, and then upload and submit
your application. You may not email an
electronic copy of a grant application to
us.
We will reject your application if you
submit it in paper format unless, as
described elsewhere in this section, you
qualify for one of the exceptions to the
electronic submission requirement and
submit, no later than two weeks before
the application deadline date, a written
statement to the Department that you
qualify for one of these exceptions.
Further information regarding
calculation of the date that is two weeks
before the application deadline date is
provided later in this section under
Exception to Electronic Submission
Requirement.
You may access the electronic grant
application for the Project Prevent Grant
Program at www.Grants.gov. You must
search for the downloadable application
package for this competition by the
CFDA number. Do not include the
CFDA number’s alpha suffix in your
search (e.g., search for 84.184, not
84.184M).
Please note the following:
• When you enter the Grants.gov site,
you will find information about
submitting an application electronically
through the site, as well as the hours of
operation.
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• Applications received by Grants.gov
are date and time stamped. Your
application must be fully uploaded and
submitted and must be date and time
stamped by the Grants.gov system no
later than 4:30:00 p.m., Washington, DC
time, on the application deadline date.
Except as otherwise noted in this
section, we will not accept your
application if it is received—that is, date
and time stamped by the Grants.gov
system—after 4:30:00 p.m., Washington,
DC time, on the application deadline
date. We do not consider an application
that does not comply with the deadline
requirements. When we retrieve your
application from Grants.gov, we will
notify you if we are rejecting your
application because it was date and time
stamped by the Grants.gov system after
4:30:00 p.m., Washington, DC time, on
the application deadline date.
• 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.
Therefore, we strongly recommend that
you do not wait until the application
deadline date to begin the submission
process through Grants.gov.
• You should review and follow the
Education Submission Procedures for
submitting an application through
Grants.gov that are included in the
application package for this competition
to ensure that you submit your
application in a timely manner to the
Grants.gov system. You can also find the
Education Submission Procedures
pertaining to Grants.gov under News
and Events on the Department’s G5
system home page at www.G5.gov.
• You will not receive additional
point value because you submit your
application in electronic format, nor
will we penalize you if you qualify for
an exception to the electronic
submission requirement, as described
elsewhere in this section, and submit
your application in paper format.
• You must submit all documents
electronically, including all information
you typically provide on the following
forms: the Application for Federal
Assistance (SF 424), the Department of
Education Supplemental Information for
SF 424, Budget Information—NonConstruction Programs (ED 524), and all
necessary assurances and certifications.
• You must upload any narrative
sections and all other attachments to
your application as files in a PDF
(Portable Document) read-only, nonmodifiable format. Do not upload an
interactive or fillable PDF file. If you
upload a file type other than a readonly, non-modifiable PDF or submit a
password-protected file, we will not
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review that material. (Additional,
detailed information on how to attach
files is in the application instructions.)
• Your electronic application must
comply with any page-limit
requirements described in this notice.
• After you electronically submit
your application, you will receive from
Grants.gov an automatic notification of
receipt that contains a Grants.gov
tracking number. (This notification
indicates receipt by Grants.gov only, not
receipt by the Department.) The
Department then will retrieve your
application from Grants.gov and send a
second notification to you by email.
This second notification indicates that
the Department has received your
application and has assigned your
application a PR/Award number (an EDspecified identifying number unique to
your application).
• We may request that you provide us
original signatures on forms at a later
date.
Application Deadline Date Extension
in Case of Technical Issues with the
Grants.gov System: If you are
experiencing problems submitting your
application through Grants.gov, please
contact the Grants.gov Support Desk,
toll free, at 1–800–518–4726. You must
obtain a Grants.gov Support Desk Case
Number and must keep a record of it.
If you are prevented from
electronically submitting your
application on the application deadline
date because of technical problems with
the Grants.gov system, we will grant you
an extension until 4:30:00 p.m.,
Washington, DC time, the following
business day to enable you to transmit
your application electronically or by
hand delivery. You also may mail your
application by following the mailing
instructions described elsewhere in this
notice.
If you submit an application after
4:30:00 p.m., Washington, DC time, on
the application deadline date, please
contact the person listed under FOR
FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT in
section VII of this notice and provide an
explanation of the technical problem
you experienced with Grants.gov, along
with the Grants.gov Support Desk Case
Number. We will accept your
application if we can confirm that a
technical problem occurred with the
Grants.gov system and that that problem
affected your ability to submit your
application by 4:30:00 p.m.,
Washington, DC time, on the
application deadline date. The
Department will contact you after a
determination is made on whether your
application will be accepted.
Note: The extensions to which we refer in
this section apply only to the unavailability
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of, or technical problems with, the Grants.gov
system. We will not grant you an extension
if you failed to fully register to submit your
application to Grants.gov before the
application deadline date and time or if the
technical problem you experienced is
unrelated to the Grants.gov system.
Exception to Electronic Submission
Requirement: You qualify for an
exception to the electronic submission
requirement, and may submit your
application in paper format, if you are
unable to submit an application through
the Grants.gov system because—
• You do not have access to the
Internet; or
• You do not have the capacity to
upload large documents to the
Grants.gov system; and
• No later than two weeks before the
application deadline date (14 calendar
days or, if the fourteenth calendar day
before the application deadline date
falls on a Federal holiday, the next
business day following the Federal
holiday), you mail or fax a written
statement to the Department, explaining
which of the two grounds for an
exception prevent you from using the
Internet to submit your application.
If you mail your written statement to
the Department, it must be postmarked
no later than two weeks before the
application deadline date. If you fax
your written statement to the
Department, we must receive the faxed
statement no later than two weeks
before the application deadline date.
Address and mail or fax your
statement to: Earl Myers, Jr., U.S.
Department of Education, 400 Maryland
Avenue SW., Room 3E247, Washington,
DC 20202. FAX: (202) 453–6742.
Your paper application must be
submitted in accordance with the mail
or hand delivery instructions described
in this notice.
b. Submission of Paper Applications by
Mail.
If you qualify for an exception to the
electronic submission requirement, you
may mail (through the U.S. Postal
Service or a commercial carrier) your
application to the Department. You
must mail the original and two copies
of your application, on or before the
application deadline date, to the
Department at the following address:
U.S. Department of Education,
Application Control Center, Attention:
(CFDA Number 84.184M), LBJ Basement
Level 1, 400 Maryland Avenue SW.,
Washington, DC 20202–4260.
You must show proof of mailing
consisting of one of the following:
(1) A legibly dated U.S. Postal Service
postmark.
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(2) A legible mail receipt with the
date of mailing stamped by the U.S.
Postal Service.
(3) A dated shipping label, invoice, or
receipt from a commercial carrier.
(4) Any other proof of mailing
acceptable to the Secretary of the U.S.
Department of Education.
If you mail your application through
the U.S. Postal Service, we do not
accept either of the following as proof
of mailing:
(1) A private metered postmark.
(2) A mail receipt that is not dated by
the U.S. Postal Service.
If your application is postmarked after
the application deadline date, we will
not consider your application.
Note: The U.S. Postal Service does not
uniformly provide a dated postmark. Before
relying on this method, you should check
with your local post office.
c. Submission of Paper Applications by
Hand Delivery
If you qualify for an exception to the
electronic submission requirement, you
(or a courier service) may deliver your
paper application to the Department by
hand. You must deliver the original and
two copies of your application by hand,
on or before the application deadline
date, to the Department at the following
address: U.S. Department of Education,
Application Control Center, Attention:
CFDA Number 84.184M, 550 12th Street
SW., Room 7039, Potomac Center Plaza,
Washington, DC 20202–4260.
The Application Control Center
accepts hand deliveries daily between
8:00 a.m. and 4:30:00 p.m., Washington,
DC time, except Saturdays, Sundays,
and Federal holidays.
Note for Mail or Hand Delivery of Paper
Applications: If you mail or hand deliver
your application to the Department—
(1) You must indicate on the envelope
and—if not provided by the Department—in
Item 11 of the SF 424 the CFDA number,
including suffix letter, if any, of the
competition under which you are submitting
your application; and
(2) The Application Control Center will
mail to you a notification of receipt of your
grant application. If you do not receive this
notification within 15 business days from the
application deadline date, you should call
the U.S. Department of Education
Application Control Center at (202) 245–
6288.
V. Application Review Information
1. Selection Criteria: The selection
criteria for this program are from 34 CFR
75.210 of EDGAR and are listed in the
application package.
2. Review and Selection Process: We
remind potential applicants that in
reviewing applications in any
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discretionary grant competition, the
Secretary may consider, under 34 CFR
75.217(d)(3), the past performance of the
applicant in carrying out a previous
award, such as the applicant’s use of
funds, achievement of project
objectives, and compliance with grant
conditions. The Secretary may also
consider whether the applicant failed to
submit a timely performance report or
submitted a report of unacceptable
quality.
In addition, in making a competitive
grant award, the Secretary also requires
various assurances including those
applicable to Federal civil rights laws
that prohibit discrimination in programs
or activities receiving Federal financial
assistance from the Department of
Education (34 CFR 100.4, 104.5, 106.4,
108.8, and 110.23).
3. Special Conditions: Under 34 CFR
74.14 and 80.12, the Secretary may
impose special conditions on a grant if
the applicant or grantee is not
financially stable; has a history of
unsatisfactory performance; has a
financial or other management system
that does not meet the standards in 34
CFR parts 74 or 80, as applicable; has
not fulfilled the conditions of a prior
grant; or is otherwise not responsible.
VI. Award Administration Information
1. Award Notices: If your application
is successful, we notify your U.S.
Representative and U.S. Senators and
send you a Grant Award Notification
(GAN). We may notify you informally,
also.
If your application is not evaluated or
not selected for funding, we notify you.
2. Administrative and National Policy
Requirements: We identify
administrative and national policy
requirements in the application package
and reference these and other
requirements in the Applicable
Regulations section of this notice.
We reference the regulations outlining
the terms and conditions of an award in
the Applicable Regulations section of
this notice and include these and other
specific conditions in the GAN. The
GAN also incorporates your approved
application as part of your binding
commitments under the grant.
3. Reporting: (a) If you apply for a
grant under this competition, you must
ensure that you have in place the
necessary processes and systems to
comply with the reporting requirements
in 2 CFR part 170 should you receive
funding under the competition. This
does not apply if you have an exception
under 2 CFR 170.110(b).
(b) At the end of your project period,
you must submit a final performance
report, including financial information,
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as directed by the Secretary. If you
receive a multi-year award, you must
submit an annual performance report
that provides the most current
performance and financial expenditure
information as directed by the Secretary
under 34 CFR 75.118. The Secretary
may also require more frequent
performance reports under 34 CFR
75.720(c). For specific requirements on
reporting, please go to www.ed.gov/
fund/grant/apply/appforms/
appforms.html.
4. Performance Measures: (a) Program
Performance Measures. The Department
has established the following
performance measures for assessing the
effectiveness of the Project Prevent
Grant Program:
(1) The percentage of grantees that
report a measurable decrease in violent,
aggressive, and disruptive behavior in
schools served by the grant.
(2) The percentage of grantees that
report a measurable increase in the
number of students in schools served by
the grant receiving school-based and
community mental health services to
address student needs resulting from
exposure to violence.
(3) The percentage of grantees that
report a measurable increase in the
school engagement (as defined in this
notice) of students served by the grant.
These measures constitute the
Department’s indicators of success for
this program.
(b) Project Performance Measures. The
project performance measures are:
(1) Annual decrease in violent,
aggressive, and disruptive behavior in
schools served by the grant.
(2) Annual increase in the number of
students in schools served by the grant
receiving school-based and community
mental health services to address
student needs resulting from exposure
to violence.
(3) Annual increase in the school
engagement (as defined in this notice) of
students served by the grant.
(c) Baseline data. Applicants must
provide baseline data (as defined in this
notice) for each of the project
performance measures listed in (b) and
explain why each proposed baseline is
valid; or, if the applicant has
determined that there are no established
baseline data for a particular
performance measure, explain why
there is no established baseline and
explain how and when, during the
project period, the applicant will
establish a valid baseline for the
performance measure.
(d) Performance measure targets. In
addition, the applicant must propose
annual targets for the measures listed in
paragraph (b) in their application.
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Applications must also provide the
following information as directed under
34 CFR 75.110(b) and (c):
(1) Why each proposed performance
target is ambitious (as defined in this
notice) yet achievable compared to the
baseline for the performance measure.
(2) (a) The data collection and
reporting methods the applicant would
use and why those methods are likely to
yield reliable, valid, and meaningful
performance data; and (b) the
applicant’s capacity to collect and
report reliable, valid, and meaningful
performance data, as evidenced by highquality data collection, analysis, and
reporting in other projects or research.
Note: If the applicant does not have
experience with collection and reporting of
performance data through other projects or
research, the applicant should provide other
evidence of capacity to successfully carry out
data collection and reporting for its proposed
project.
The reviewers of each application will
score related selection criteria on the
basis of how well an applicant has
considered these measures in
paragraphs (b), (c), and (d) in
conceptualizing the approach and
evaluation of the project.
All grantees must submit an annual
performance report and final
performance report with information
that is responsive to these performance
measures.
5. Continuation Awards: In making a
continuation award, the Secretary may
consider, under 34 CFR 75.253, the
extent to which a grantee has made
‘‘substantial progress toward meeting
the objectives in its approved
application’’ and the performance
measurement and target requirements in
the application notice. This
consideration includes the review of a
grantee’s progress in meeting the targets
and projected outcomes in its approved
application, and whether the grantee
has expended funds in a manner that is
consistent with its approved application
and budget. In making a continuation
grant, the Secretary also considers
whether the grantee is operating in
compliance with the assurances in its
approved application, including those
applicable to Federal civil rights laws
that prohibit discrimination in programs
or activities receiving Federal financial
assistance from the Department (34 CFR
100.4, 104.5, 106.4, 108.8, and 110.23).
VII. Agency Contact
Earl
Myers, Jr., U.S. Department of
Education, 400 Maryland Avenue SW.,
Room 3E247, Washington, DC 20202.
Telephone: (202) 453–6716 or by email:
Earl.Myers@ed.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
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VIII. Other Information
Accessible Format: Individuals with
disabilities can obtain this document
and a copy of the application package in
an accessible format (e.g., braille, large
print, audiotape, or compact disc) on
request to the program contact person
listed under FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
CONTACT in section VII of this notice.
Electronic Access to This Document:
The official version of this document is
the document published in the Federal
Register. Free Internet access to the
official edition of the Federal Register
and the Code of Federal Regulations is
available via the Federal Digital System
at: www.gpo.gov/fdsys. At this site you
can view this document, as well as all
other documents of this Department
published in the Federal Register, in
text or Adobe Portable Document
Format (PDF). To use PDF you must
have Adobe Acrobat Reader, which is
available free at the site.
You may also access documents of the
Department published in the Federal
Register by using the article search
feature at: www.federalregister.gov.
Specifically, through the advanced
search feature at this site, you can limit
your search to documents published by
the Department.
Dated: April 23, 2014.
Deborah S. Delisle,
Assistant Secretary for Elementary and
Secondary Education.
[FR Doc. 2014–09604 Filed 4–28–14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4000–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission
[Docket No. IC14–8–000]
Commission Information Collection
Activities (Ferc–521); Comment
Request
Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission, Department of Energy
(DOE).
ACTION: Comment request.
AGENCY:
In compliance with the
requirements of the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995, 44 U.S.C.
3507(a)(1)(D), the Federal Energy
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SUMMARY:
1 16
U.S.C. 803.
Commission defines burden as the total
time, effort, or financial resources expended by
2 The
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Regulatory Commission (Commission or
FERC) is submitting the information
collection FERC–521 (Payments for
Benefits from Headwater Benefits) to the
Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) for review of the information
collection requirements. Any interested
person may file comments directly with
OMB and should address a copy of
those comments to the Commission as
explained below. The Commission
issued a Notice in the Federal Register
(79 FR 8949, 2/14/2014) requesting
public comments. FERC received no
comments on the FERC–521 and is
making this notation in its submittal to
OMB.
DATES: Comments on the collection of
information are due by May 29, 2014.
ADDRESSES: Comments filed with OMB,
identified by the OMB Control No.
1902–0087, should be sent via email to
the Office of Information and Regulatory
Affairs: oiralsubmission@omb.gov.
Attention: Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission Desk Officer. The Desk
Officer may also be reached via
telephone at 202–395–4718.
A copy of the comments should also
be sent to the Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission, identified by the Docket
No. IC14–8–000, by either of the
following methods:
• eFiling at Commission’s Web site:
https://www.ferc.gov/docs-filing/
efiling.asp.
• Mail/Hand Delivery/Courier:
Federal Energy Regulatory Commission,
Secretary of the Commission, 888 First
Street NE., Washington, DC 20426.
Instructions: All submissions must be
formatted and filed in accordance with
submission guidelines at: https://
www.ferc.gov/help/submissionguide.asp.For user assistance contact
FERC Online Support by email at
ferconlinesupport@ferc.gov, or by phone
at: (866) 208–3676 (toll-free), or (202)
502–8659 for TTY.
Docket: Users interested in receiving
automatic notification of activity in this
docket or in viewing/downloading
comments and issuances in this docket
may do so at https://www.ferc.gov/docsfiling/docs-filing.asp.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Ellen Brown may be reached by email
at DataClearance@FERC.gov, by
telephone at (202) 502–8663, and by fax
at (202) 273–0873.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Title: Payments for Benefits from
Headwater Benefits.
OMB Control No.: 1902–0087.
Type of Request: Three-year extension
of the FERC–521 information collection
requirements with no changes to the
reporting requirements.
Abstract: The information collected
under the requirements of FERC–521 is
used by the Commission to implement
the statutory provisions of Section 10(f)
of the Federal Power Act (FPA).1 The
FPA authorizes the Commission to
determine headwater benefits received
by downstream hydropower project
owners. Headwater benefits are the
additional energy production possible at
a downstream hydropower project
resulting from the regulation of river
flows by an upstream storage reservoir.
When the Commission completes a
study of a river basin, it determines
headwater benefits charges that will be
apportioned among the various
downstream beneficiaries. A headwater
benefits charge and the cost incurred by
the Commission to complete an
evaluation are paid by downstream
hydropower project owners. In essence,
the owners of non-federal hydropower
projects that directly benefit from a
headwater improvement must pay an
equitable portion of the annual charges
for interest, maintenance, and
depreciation of the headwater project to
the U.S. Treasury. The regulations
provide for apportionment of these costs
between the headwater project and
downstream projects based on
downstream energy gains and propose
equitable apportionment methodology
that can be applied to all rivers basins
in which headwater improvements are
built. The Commission requires owners
of non-federal hydropower projects to
file data for determining annual charges
as outlined in 18 Code of Federal
Regulations (CFR) part 11.
Type of Respondents: There are two
types of entities that respond, Federal
and Non-Federal hydropower project
owners. The Federal entities that
typically respond are the US Army
Corps of Engineers and the US
Department of Interior Bureau of
Reclamation. The Non-Federal entities
may consist of any Municipal or NonMunicipal hydropower project owner.
Estimate of Annual Burden: 2 The
Commission estimates the annual public
reporting burden for the information
collection as:
persons to generate, maintain, retain, or disclose or
provide information to or for a Federal agency. For
further explanation of what is included in the
If you use a TDD or a TTY, call the
FRS, toll free, at 1–800–877–8339.
information collection burden, reference 5 Code of
Federal Regulations 1320.3.
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 79, Number 82 (Tuesday, April 29, 2014)]
[Notices]
[Pages 23961-23968]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2014-09604]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION
Applications for New Awards; Project Prevent Grant Program
AGENCY: Office of Elementary and Secondary Education, Department of
Education.
ACTION: Notice.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Overview Information
Project Prevent Grant Program
Notice inviting applications for new awards for fiscal year (FY)
2014.
Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance (CFDA) Number: 84.184M.
DATES:
Applications Available: April 29, 2014.
Deadline for Transmittal of Applications: June 30, 2014.
Deadline for Intergovernmental Review: August 27, 2014.
Full Text of Announcement
I. Funding Opportunity Description
Purpose of Program: The Project Prevent Grant Program provides
grants to local educational agencies (LEAs) to increase their capacity
to help schools in communities with pervasive violence to better
address the needs of affected students and to break the cycle of
violence.
Background
Children's exposure to violence, whether as victims or witnesses,
is often associated with long-term physical, psychological, and
emotional harms. These harms, among others, include depression,
anxiety, and post-traumatic disorders; failing or having difficulty in
school; and delinquency or criminal behavior, including violent acts.
Several Federal agencies have worked to address the issues
surrounding children's exposure to violence. Since 1980, the Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention has been studying patterns of
violence and the effects of violence on communities and individuals,
and it has been advancing strategies to prevent violence and mitigate
the impacts of exposure to violence.\1\ Furthermore, in 2010, Attorney
General Eric Holder launched the Defending Childhood initiative to
better understand and address the problem of children's exposure to
violence. As part of this initiative, the Attorney General's Task Force
on Children Exposed to Violence released a report and national action
plan in December 2012, which helped inform the development of the
Project Prevent Grant Program.\2\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Division
of Violence Prevention. Retrieved from: www.cdc.gov/violenceprevention.
\2\ U.S. Department of Justice. (2012). Report of the Attorney
General's National Task Force on Children Exposed to Violence.
Retrieved from: www.justice.gov/defendingchildhood/task-force.html.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In addition, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services has
launched a national effort to ``reduce the pervasive, harmful, and
costly health impact of violence and trauma by integrating trauma-
informed approaches throughout health, behavioral health, and related
systems and addressing the behavioral health needs of people involved
in or at risk of involvement in the criminal and juvenile justice
systems.'' This includes the outlining of ``Principles and Guidance for
a Trauma-Informed Approach.'' \3\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ Substance Abuse & Mental Health Services Administration.
(2012). SAMHSA's Working Definition of Trauma and Principles and
Guidance for a Trauma-Informed Approach. Retrieved from: https://samhsa.gov/traumaJustice.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
On January 16, 2013, President Obama proposed ``Now is the Time,''
a comprehensive plan that proposed a series of actions and steps to
protect our children and communities by reducing gun violence,
including Project Prevent. The Project Prevent Grant Program also was
included in the President's FY 2014 budget request, and Congress
provided funding for the new program in the Department of Education
Appropriations Act, 2014.
Project Prevent grants will enable LEAs to increase their capacity
to identify, assess, and serve students
[[Page 23962]]
exposed to pervasive violence, helping to ensure that affected students
are offered mental health services for trauma or anxiety; support
conflict resolution programs; and implement other school-based violence
prevention strategies in order to reduce the likelihood that these
students will later commit violent acts.
Priorities: This competition includes one absolute priority and two
competitive preference priorities. We are establishing the absolute
priority and competitive preference priority 1 for the FY 2014 grant
competition and any subsequent year in which we make awards from the
list of unfunded applications from this competition, in accordance with
section 437(d)(1) of the General Education Provisions Act (GEPA), 20
U.S.C. 1232(d)(1). Competitive preference priority 2 is from the notice
of final priority published in the Federal Register on March 27, 2014
(79 FR 17035).
Absolute Priority: For FY 2014 and any subsequent year in which
we make awards from the list of unfunded applicants from this
competition, this priority is an absolute priority. Under 34 CFR
75.105(c)(3) we consider only applications that meet this priority.
This priority is:
Absolute Priority--Expand the Capacity of LEAs To Assist Schools in
Communities With Pervasive Violence To Break the Cycle of Violence by
Better Meeting the Needs of Affected Students
Under this priority, we provide funding for projects to expand the
capacity of LEAs to more effectively assist affected schools in
communities with pervasive violence to better meet the needs of
students directly or indirectly exposed to pervasive violence. These
projects must offer students: (1) Access to school-based counseling
services, or referrals to community-based counseling services, for
assistance in coping with trauma or anxiety; (2) school-based social
and emotional supports for students to help address the effects of
violence; (3) conflict resolution and other school-based strategies to
prevent future violence; and (4) a safer and improved school
environment, which may include, among others, activities to decrease
the incidence of harassment, bullying, violence, gang involvement, and
substance abuse. Applicants must address all four subparts of this
absolute priority.
Competitive Preference Priorities: For FY 2014 and any subsequent
year in which we make awards from the list of unfunded applicants from
this competition, these priorities are competitive preference
priorities. Under 34 CFR 75.105(c)(2)(i) we award an additional three
points to an application that meets competitive preference priority 1
and an additional three points to an application that meets competitive
preference priority 2.
Note: Applicants may address either of the competitive
preference priorities or both. An applicant must identify in the
abstract section of its application the competitive preference
priority or priorities it wishes the Department to consider. The
Department will not review or award points under any competitive
preference priority for any application that fails to do so.
In addition, an applicant must describe and list by name in the
application narrative the school(s) that will be served under
competitive preference priority 1, including information on how each of
those school(s) meets the definition of high-poverty school, as defined
in this notice. Applicants should submit a letter from the lead entity
of a designated Promise Zone attesting to the contribution that the
proposed activities would make, and supporting the application. A list
of designated Promise Zones and lead organizations can be found at
www.hud.gov/promisezones.
These priorities are:
Competitive Preference Priority 1--Serving High-Poverty Schools
Projects that serve students in high-poverty schools (as defined in
this notice).
Competitive Preference Priority 2--Promise Zones
Projects that are designed to serve and coordinate with a federally
designated Promise Zone.\4\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ For additional information on Promise Zones, see
www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2014/01/08/fact-sheet-president-obama-s-promise-zones-initiative.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Application Requirements: The following requirements apply to all
applications submitted under this competition.
(1) Description of the severity and magnitude of the problem and
identification of schools to be served by the proposed project.
Applicants must describe how pervasive violence in the community is
specifically affecting students in schools to be served by project
activities. Applicants must describe the nature of the problem for a
specific geographic area, based on information such as, but not limited
to, incidents of community domestic violence or violent crime; rates of
child abuse and neglect; school crime and safety data; student mental
health screenings or assessments; surveys of school climate; surveys of
student engagement; or other relevant data and information as
appropriate. The description may also include demographic data provided
by U.S. Census surveys. In order to assess the magnitude of the problem
and ensure the schools selected have the greatest need, data cited must
be compared to similar data at the State or local level, and on a per
capita basis (such as homicides per 100,000 persons) when available.
(2) Collaboration and coordination with related Federal, State, and
local initiatives.
Applicants must describe how they intend to work collaboratively
with Federal, State and local juvenile justice, mental health, public
health, child welfare, and other community agencies to achieve project
goals and objectives. Applicants must also describe proposed
coordination with existing federally funded efforts related to youth
violence prevention and mental health promotion (such as the National
Forum on Youth Violence Prevention, Defending Childhood, and other
violence prevention-related grants administered by the U.S. Department
of Justice, the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services
Administration, and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), if
applicable. Evidence of collaboration and coordination must be provided
through letters of support from local or State agencies and other
federally funded projects, if applicable. Finally, applicants must
describe how they will use Project Prevent Grant Program funds to
complement, rather than duplicate, existing, ongoing, or new efforts to
reduce youth violence and mitigate the effects of pervasive violence on
students.
(3) Expand and improve LEA capacity to serve students exposed to
pervasive violence and ensure affected students receive mental health
services, as appropriate.
Applicants must describe the specific activities they will conduct
to expand and improve LEA capacity to serve students exposed to
pervasive violence, ensure that affected students receive appropriate
mental health services, and break the cycle of violence. To meet this
requirement, the applicant must propose three or more of the following:
(a) Professional development opportunities for LEA and school
mental health staff (e.g., counselors, psychologists, social workers,
and psychiatrists) on how to screen for and respond to violence-related
trauma and implement appropriate school-based mitigation strategies.
[[Page 23963]]
(b) Improving the range, availability, and quality of school-based
mental health services by hiring qualified school psychologists, school
counselors, or school social workers with expertise or training in
violence prevention and responding to the mental health needs of
students who have experienced trauma as a result of exposure to
violence.
(c) Providing training to select school staff (e.g., teachers,
administrators, and support staff), community partners, youth, and
parents on the problem of student exposure to pervasive violence, as
well as the importance of screening students and providing
interventions to help students cope with traumatic events.
(d) Addressing the needs of students in affected schools by
developing or improving processes to better target services to these
students and developing or improving processes to assess students who
are exposed to pervasive violence and who may be experiencing resulting
mental, emotional, or behavioral disorders.
(e) Enhancing linkages between LEA mental health services and
community mental health systems to ensure affected students receive
referrals to treatment as appropriate, including linkages that leverage
new opportunities under the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act,
such as the expansion of mental health and substance use disorder
coverage.
(4) Delivery of a continuum of evidenced-based programs and
practices in selected schools to promote conflict resolution, improve
school climate and safety, and implement other school-based strategies
to break the cycle of violence.
Applicants must provide a description of the continuum of the
evidence-based programs and practices that will be implemented at the
school level to break the cycle of violence. The threshold for
evidence-based programs is those that, at a minimum, are supported by
evidence of promise (as defined in 34 CFR 77.1(c)). These programs and
practices must include all of the following:
(a) Interventions and activities that serve all students in a
school, regardless of risk level, with the goal of preventing negative
or violent behavior (such as bullying, fighting, gang participation,
and sexual assault) and enhancing student knowledge and skills
regarding positive behavior (such as conflict resolution and other
skills);
(b) Interventions and activities (such as those related to anger
management, conflict resolution, promotion of positive behavior, and
development of protective factors) that target individual students or a
sub-group of students whose risk of developing mental or behavioral
disorders is significantly higher than average; and
(c) Interventions and services that target individual students who
are at risk for, and have shown signs of, mental, emotional, or
behavioral disorders; exhibit aggressive, violent, or disruptive
behavior; or participate in gangs.
To meet this requirement, applicants must discuss the research and
evidence supporting the proposed programs and practices and the
estimated effects on the target population. Applicants may use the
Federal registries listed in the application package for identifying
such programs and practices.
Definitions: We are establishing the definition of ``school
engagement'' in this notice for the FY 2014 grant competition and any
subsequent year in which we make awards from the list of unfunded
applications from this competition, in accordance with section
437(d)(1) of GEPA, 20 U.S.C. 1232(d)(1). The definition of ``high-
poverty school'' is from the notice of final supplemental priorities
and definitions for discretionary grant programs published in the
Federal Register on December 15, 2010 (75 FR 78486) and corrected on
May 12, 2011 (76 FR 27637). The definition of ``local educational
agency'' is from section 9101(26) of the Elementary and Secondary
Education Act of 1965, as amended (ESEA) (20 U.S.C. 7801(26), and is
included for the convenience of the reader. The definitions of
``ambitious'' and ``baseline data'' are from 34 CFR 77.1.
Ambitious means promoting continued, meaningful improvement for
program participants or for other individuals or entities affected by
the grant, or representing a significant advancement in the field of
education research, practices, or methodologies. When used to describe
a performance target, whether a performance target is ambitious depends
upon the context of the relevant performance measure and the baseline
for that measure.
Baseline data means the starting point from performance is measured
and targets are set.
High-poverty school means a school in which at least 50 percent of
students are eligible for free or reduced-price lunches under the
Richard B. Russell National School Lunch Act or in which at least 50
percent of students are from low-income families as determined using
one of the criteria specified under section 1113(a)(5) of the ESEA, as
amended. For middle and high schools, eligibility may be calculated on
the basis of comparable data from feeder schools. Eligibility as a
high-poverty school under this definition is determined on the basis of
the most currently available data.
Local educational agency (LEA) means:
(1) A public board of education or other public authority legally
constituted within a State for either administrative control or
direction of, or to perform a service function for, public elementary
schools or secondary schools in a city, county, township, school
district, or other political subdivision of a State, or of or for a
combination of school districts or counties that is recognized in a
State as an administrative agency for its public elementary schools or
secondary schools.
(2) The term includes any other public institution or agency having
administrative control and direction of a public elementary school or
secondary school.
(3) The term includes an elementary school or secondary school
funded by the Bureau of Indian Affairs but only to the extent that
including the school makes the school eligible for programs for which
specific eligibility is not provided to the school in another provision
of law and the school does not have a student population that is
smaller than the student population of the local educational agency
receiving assistance under this Act with the smallest student
population, except that the school shall not be subject to the
jurisdiction of any State educational agency other than the Bureau of
Indian Affairs.
(4) The term includes educational service agencies and consortia of
those agencies.
(5) The term includes the State educational agency in a State in
which the State educational agency is the sole educational agency for
all public schools.
School engagement means participation in school-related activities,
and the quality of school relationships, which may include
relationships between and among administrators, teachers, parents, and
students.
Waiver of Proposed Rulemaking: Under the Administrative Procedure
Act (5 U.S.C. 553) the Department generally offers interested parties
the opportunity to comment on proposed priorities, definitions, and
application requirements. Section 437(d)(1) of GEPA, however, allows
the Secretary to exempt from rulemaking requirements, regulations
governing the first grant competition under a new or substantially
revised program authority.
[[Page 23964]]
This is the first grant competition for this program under the
appropriation for Safe Schools and Citizenship Education in the
Department of Education Appropriations Act, 2014, Title III of Division
H of P.L. 113-76, and section 4121 of the ESEA (20 U.S.C. 7131) and
therefore qualifies for this exemption. In order to ensure timely grant
awards, the Secretary has decided to forgo public comment on the
absolute priority and competitive preference priority 1, the
application requirements and the definitions under section 437(d)(1) of
GEPA. These priorities, application requirements, and definitions will
apply to the FY 2014 grant competition and any subsequent year in which
we make awards from the list of unfunded applicants from this
competition.
Program Authority: 20 U.S.C. 7131; the Department of Education
Appropriations Act, 2014, Title III of Division H of Pub. L. 113-76.
Applicable Regulations: (a) The Education Department General
Administrative Regulations (EDGAR) in 34 CFR parts 75, 77, 79, 80, 81,
82, 84, 97, 98, and 99. (b) The Education Department suspension and
debarment regulations in 2 CFR part 3485. (c) The regulations in CFR
part 299. (d) The notice of final priority published in the Federal
Register on March 27, 2014 (79 FR 17035).
Note: The regulations in 34 CFR part 79 apply to all applicants
except federally recognized Indian tribes.
II. Award Information
Type of Award: Discretionary grants.
Estimated Available Funds: $9,750,000.
Contingent upon the availability of funds and the quality of
applications, we may make additional awards in in FY 2015 from the list
of unfunded applicants from this competition.
Estimated Range of Awards: $250,000 to $1,000,000.
Estimated Average Size of Awards: $487,500.
Estimated Number of Awards: 20.
Note: The Department is not bound by any estimates in this
notice.
Project Period: Up to 60 months.
III. Eligibility Information
1. Eligible Applicants: LEAs, including charter schools that are
considered LEAs under State law.
2. Cost Sharing or Matching: This competition does not require cost
sharing or matching.
3. Other: An entity that receives a grant under this program is
required to provide for the equitable participation of private school
children and their teachers or other educational personnel.
In order to ensure that grant program activities address the needs
of private school children, the applicant must engage in timely and
meaningful consultation with appropriate private school officials
during the design and development of the program. This consultation
must take place before the applicant makes any decision that affects
the opportunities of eligible private school children, teachers, and
other educational personnel to participate. Administrative direction
and control over grant funds must remain with the grantee (See section
9501, Participation by Private School Children and Teachers, of the
ESEA).
IV. Application and Submission Information
1. Address to Request Application Package: You can obtain an
application package via the Internet or from the Education Publications
Center (ED Pubs). To obtain a copy via the Internet, use the following
address: www.ed.gov/fund/grant/apply/grantapps/. To obtain a
copy from ED Pubs, write, fax, or call the following: ED Pubs, U.S.
Department of Education, P.O. Box 22207, Alexandria, VA 22304.
Telephone, toll free: 1-877-433-7827. FAX: (703) 605-6794. If you use a
telecommunications device for the deaf (TDD) or a text telephone (TTY),
call, toll free: 1-877-576-7734.
You can contact ED Pubs at its Web site, also: www.EDPubs.gov or at
its email address: edpubs@inet.ed.gov.
If you request an application from ED Pubs, be sure to identify
this competition as follows: CFDA number 84.184M.
Individuals with disabilities can obtain a copy of the application
package in an accessible format (e.g., braille, large print, audiotape,
or compact disc) by contacting the person listed under Accessible
Format in section VIII of this notice.
2. Content and Form of Application Submission: Requirements
concerning the content of an application, together with the forms you
must submit, are in the application package for this competition.
Page Limit: The application narrative is where you, the applicant,
provide the project narrative and management plan to address the
selection criteria that reviewers use to evaluate your application. The
required budget and budget narrative will be provided in a separate
section. You must limit the application narrative to the equivalent of
no more than 50 pages, using the following standards:
A ``page'' is 8.5'' x 11'', on one side only, with 1''
margins at the top, bottom, and both sides.
Double space (no more than three lines per vertical inch)
all text in the application narrative, including titles, headings,
footnotes, quotations, references, and captions, as well as all text in
charts, tables, figures, and graphs.
Use a font that is either 12 point or larger or no smaller
than 10 pitch (characters per inch).
Use one of the following fonts: Times New Roman, Courier,
Courier New, or Arial.
The page limit does not apply to the cover sheet; the budget
section, including the narrative budget justification; the assurances
and certifications; or the one-page abstract, the resumes, the
bibliography, or the letters of support. However, the page limit does
apply to all of the application narrative section.
Our reviewers will not read any pages of your application that
exceed the page limit.
3. Submission Dates and Times: Applications Available: April 29,
2014.
Deadline for Transmittal of Applications: June 30, 2014.
Applications for grants under this competition must be submitted
electronically using the Grants.gov Apply site (Grants.gov). For
information (including dates and times) about how to submit your
application electronically, or in paper format by mail or hand
delivery, please refer to section IV. 7. Other Submission Requirements
of this notice.
We do not consider an application that does not comply with the
deadline requirements.
Individuals with disabilities who need an accommodation or
auxiliary aid in connection with the application process should contact
the person listed under FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT in section VII
of this notice. If the Department provides an accommodation or
auxiliary aid to an individual with a disability in connection with the
application process, the individual's application remains subject to
all other requirements and limitations in this notice.
Deadline for Intergovernmental Review: August 27, 2014.
4. Intergovernmental Review: This competition is subject to
Executive Order 12372 and the regulations in 34 CFR Part 79.
Information about Intergovernmental Review of Federal Programs under
Executive Order 12372 is in the application package for this
competition.
[[Page 23965]]
5. Funding Restrictions: We reference regulations outlining funding
restrictions in the Applicable Regulations section of this notice.
6. Data Universal Numbering System Number, Taxpayer Identification
Number, and System for Award Management: To do business with the
Department of Education, you must--
a. Have a Data Universal Numbering System (DUNS) number and a
Taxpayer Identification Number (TIN);
b. Register both your DUNS number and TIN with the System for Award
Management (SAM) (formerly the Central Contractor Registry (CCR)), the
Government's primary registrant database;
c. Provide your DUNS number and TIN on your application; and
d. Maintain an active SAM registration with current information
while your application is under review by the Department and, if you
are awarded a grant, during the project period.
You can obtain a DUNS number from Dun and Bradstreet. A DUNS number
can be created within one-to-two business days.
If you are a corporate entity, agency, institution, or
organization, you can obtain a TIN from the Internal Revenue Service.
If you are an individual, you can obtain a TIN from the Internal
Revenue Service or the Social Security Administration. If you need a
new TIN, please allow 2-5 weeks for your TIN to become active.
The SAM registration process can take approximately seven business
days, but may take upwards of several weeks, depending on the
completeness and accuracy of the data entered into the SAM database by
an entity. Thus, if you think you might want to apply for Federal
financial assistance under a program administered by the Department,
please allow sufficient time to obtain and register your DUNS number
and TIN. We strongly recommend that you register early.
Note: Once your SAM registration is active, you will need to
allow 24 to 48 hours for the information to be available in
Grants.gov and before you can submit an application through
Grants.gov.
If you are currently registered with SAM, you may not need to make
any changes. However, please make certain that the TIN associated with
your DUNS number is correct. Also note that you will need to update
your registration annually. This may take three or more business days.
Information about SAM is available at www.SAM.gov. To further
assist you with obtaining and registering your DUNS number and TIN in
SAM or updating your existing SAM account, we have prepared a SAM.gov
Tip Sheet, which you can find at: https://www2.ed.gov/fund/grant/apply/sam-faqs.html.
In addition, if you are submitting your application via Grants.gov,
you must (1) be designated by your organization as an Authorized
Organization Representative (AOR); and (2) register yourself with
Grants.gov as an AOR. Details on these steps are outlined at the
following Grants.gov Web page: https://www.grants.gov/web/grants/register.html.
7. Other Submission Requirements: Applications for grants under
this competition must be submitted electronically unless you qualify
for an exception to this requirement in accordance with the
instructions in this section.
a. Electronic Submission of Applications
Applications for grants under the Project Prevent Grant Program,
CFDA number 84.184M, must be submitted electronically using the
Governmentwide Grants.gov Apply site at www.Grants.gov. Through this
site, you will be able to download a copy of the application package,
complete it offline, and then upload and submit your application. You
may not email an electronic copy of a grant application to us.
We will reject your application if you submit it in paper format
unless, as described elsewhere in this section, you qualify for one of
the exceptions to the electronic submission requirement and submit, no
later than two weeks before the application deadline date, a written
statement to the Department that you qualify for one of these
exceptions. Further information regarding calculation of the date that
is two weeks before the application deadline date is provided later in
this section under Exception to Electronic Submission Requirement.
You may access the electronic grant application for the Project
Prevent Grant Program at www.Grants.gov. You must search for the
downloadable application package for this competition by the CFDA
number. Do not include the CFDA number's alpha suffix in your search
(e.g., search for 84.184, not 84.184M).
Please note the following:
When you enter the Grants.gov site, you will find
information about submitting an application electronically through the
site, as well as the hours of operation.
Applications received by Grants.gov are date and time
stamped. Your application must be fully uploaded and submitted and must
be date and time stamped by the Grants.gov system no later than 4:30:00
p.m., Washington, DC time, on the application deadline date. Except as
otherwise noted in this section, we will not accept your application if
it is received--that is, date and time stamped by the Grants.gov
system--after 4:30:00 p.m., Washington, DC time, on the application
deadline date. We do not consider an application that does not comply
with the deadline requirements. When we retrieve your application from
Grants.gov, we will notify you if we are rejecting your application
because it was date and time stamped by the Grants.gov system after
4:30:00 p.m., Washington, DC time, on the application deadline date.
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. Therefore, we
strongly recommend that you do not wait until the application deadline
date to begin the submission process through Grants.gov.
You should review and follow the Education Submission
Procedures for submitting an application through Grants.gov that are
included in the application package for this competition to ensure that
you submit your application in a timely manner to the Grants.gov
system. You can also find the Education Submission Procedures
pertaining to Grants.gov under News and Events on the Department's G5
system home page at www.G5.gov.
You will not receive additional point value because you
submit your application in electronic format, nor will we penalize you
if you qualify for an exception to the electronic submission
requirement, as described elsewhere in this section, and submit your
application in paper format.
You must submit all documents electronically, including
all information you typically provide on the following forms: the
Application for Federal Assistance (SF 424), the Department of
Education Supplemental Information for SF 424, Budget Information--Non-
Construction Programs (ED 524), and all necessary assurances and
certifications.
You must upload any narrative sections and all other
attachments to your application as files in a PDF (Portable Document)
read-only, non-modifiable format. Do not upload an interactive or
fillable PDF file. If you upload a file type other than a read-only,
non-modifiable PDF or submit a password-protected file, we will not
[[Page 23966]]
review that material. (Additional, detailed information on how to
attach files is in the application instructions.)
Your electronic application must comply with any page-
limit requirements described in this notice.
After you electronically submit your application, you will
receive from Grants.gov an automatic notification of receipt that
contains a Grants.gov tracking number. (This notification indicates
receipt by Grants.gov only, not receipt by the Department.) The
Department then will retrieve your application from Grants.gov and send
a second notification to you by email. This second notification
indicates that the Department has received your application and has
assigned your application a PR/Award number (an ED-specified
identifying number unique to your application).
We may request that you provide us original signatures on
forms at a later date.
Application Deadline Date Extension in Case of Technical Issues
with the Grants.gov System: If you are experiencing problems submitting
your application through Grants.gov, please contact the Grants.gov
Support Desk, toll free, at 1-800-518-4726. You must obtain a
Grants.gov Support Desk Case Number and must keep a record of it.
If you are prevented from electronically submitting your
application on the application deadline date because of technical
problems with the Grants.gov system, we will grant you an extension
until 4:30:00 p.m., Washington, DC time, the following business day to
enable you to transmit your application electronically or by hand
delivery. You also may mail your application by following the mailing
instructions described elsewhere in this notice.
If you submit an application after 4:30:00 p.m., Washington, DC
time, on the application deadline date, please contact the person
listed under FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT in section VII of this
notice and provide an explanation of the technical problem you
experienced with Grants.gov, along with the Grants.gov Support Desk
Case Number. We will accept your application if we can confirm that a
technical problem occurred with the Grants.gov system and that that
problem affected your ability to submit your application by 4:30:00
p.m., Washington, DC time, on the application deadline date. The
Department will contact you after a determination is made on whether
your application will be accepted.
Note: The extensions to which we refer in this section apply
only to the unavailability of, or technical problems with, the
Grants.gov system. We will not grant you an extension if you failed
to fully register to submit your application to Grants.gov before
the application deadline date and time or if the technical problem
you experienced is unrelated to the Grants.gov system.
Exception to Electronic Submission Requirement: You qualify for an
exception to the electronic submission requirement, and may submit your
application in paper format, if you are unable to submit an application
through the Grants.gov system because--
You do not have access to the Internet; or
You do not have the capacity to upload large documents to
the Grants.gov system; and
No later than two weeks before the application deadline
date (14 calendar days or, if the fourteenth calendar day before the
application deadline date falls on a Federal holiday, the next business
day following the Federal holiday), you mail or fax a written statement
to the Department, explaining which of the two grounds for an exception
prevent you from using the Internet to submit your application.
If you mail your written statement to the Department, it must be
postmarked no later than two weeks before the application deadline
date. If you fax your written statement to the Department, we must
receive the faxed statement no later than two weeks before the
application deadline date.
Address and mail or fax your statement to: Earl Myers, Jr., U.S.
Department of Education, 400 Maryland Avenue SW., Room 3E247,
Washington, DC 20202. FAX: (202) 453-6742.
Your paper application must be submitted in accordance with the
mail or hand delivery instructions described in this notice.
b. Submission of Paper Applications by Mail.
If you qualify for an exception to the electronic submission
requirement, you may mail (through the U.S. Postal Service or a
commercial carrier) your application to the Department. You must mail
the original and two copies of your application, on or before the
application deadline date, to the Department at the following address:
U.S. Department of Education, Application Control Center, Attention:
(CFDA Number 84.184M), LBJ Basement Level 1, 400 Maryland Avenue SW.,
Washington, DC 20202-4260.
You must show proof of mailing consisting of one of the following:
(1) A legibly dated U.S. Postal Service postmark.
(2) A legible mail receipt with the date of mailing stamped by the
U.S. Postal Service.
(3) A dated shipping label, invoice, or receipt from a commercial
carrier.
(4) Any other proof of mailing acceptable to the Secretary of the
U.S. Department of Education.
If you mail your application through the U.S. Postal Service, we do
not accept either of the following as proof of mailing:
(1) A private metered postmark.
(2) A mail receipt that is not dated by the U.S. Postal Service.
If your application is postmarked after the application deadline
date, we will not consider your application.
Note: The U.S. Postal Service does not uniformly provide a dated
postmark. Before relying on this method, you should check with your
local post office.
c. Submission of Paper Applications by Hand Delivery
If you qualify for an exception to the electronic submission
requirement, you (or a courier service) may deliver your paper
application to the Department by hand. You must deliver the original
and two copies of your application by hand, on or before the
application deadline date, to the Department at the following address:
U.S. Department of Education, Application Control Center, Attention:
CFDA Number 84.184M, 550 12th Street SW., Room 7039, Potomac Center
Plaza, Washington, DC 20202-4260.
The Application Control Center accepts hand deliveries daily
between 8:00 a.m. and 4:30:00 p.m., Washington, DC time, except
Saturdays, Sundays, and Federal holidays.
Note for Mail or Hand Delivery of Paper Applications: If you
mail or hand deliver your application to the Department--
(1) You must indicate on the envelope and--if not provided by
the Department--in Item 11 of the SF 424 the CFDA number, including
suffix letter, if any, of the competition under which you are
submitting your application; and
(2) The Application Control Center will mail to you a
notification of receipt of your grant application. If you do not
receive this notification within 15 business days from the
application deadline date, you should call the U.S. Department of
Education Application Control Center at (202) 245-6288.
V. Application Review Information
1. Selection Criteria: The selection criteria for this program are
from 34 CFR 75.210 of EDGAR and are listed in the application package.
2. Review and Selection Process: We remind potential applicants
that in reviewing applications in any
[[Page 23967]]
discretionary grant competition, the Secretary may consider, under 34
CFR 75.217(d)(3), the past performance of the applicant in carrying out
a previous award, such as the applicant's use of funds, achievement of
project objectives, and compliance with grant conditions. The Secretary
may also consider whether the applicant failed to submit a timely
performance report or submitted a report of unacceptable quality.
In addition, in making a competitive grant award, the Secretary
also requires various assurances including those applicable to Federal
civil rights laws that prohibit discrimination in programs or
activities receiving Federal financial assistance from the Department
of Education (34 CFR 100.4, 104.5, 106.4, 108.8, and 110.23).
3. Special Conditions: Under 34 CFR 74.14 and 80.12, the Secretary
may impose special conditions on a grant if the applicant or grantee is
not financially stable; has a history of unsatisfactory performance;
has a financial or other management system that does not meet the
standards in 34 CFR parts 74 or 80, as applicable; has not fulfilled
the conditions of a prior grant; or is otherwise not responsible.
VI. Award Administration Information
1. Award Notices: If your application is successful, we notify your
U.S. Representative and U.S. Senators and send you a Grant Award
Notification (GAN). We may notify you informally, also.
If your application is not evaluated or not selected for funding,
we notify you.
2. Administrative and National Policy Requirements: We identify
administrative and national policy requirements in the application
package and reference these and other requirements in the Applicable
Regulations section of this notice.
We reference the regulations outlining the terms and conditions of
an award in the Applicable Regulations section of this notice and
include these and other specific conditions in the GAN. The GAN also
incorporates your approved application as part of your binding
commitments under the grant.
3. Reporting: (a) If you apply for a grant under this competition,
you must ensure that you have in place the necessary processes and
systems to comply with the reporting requirements in 2 CFR part 170
should you receive funding under the competition. This does not apply
if you have an exception under 2 CFR 170.110(b).
(b) At the end of your project period, you must submit a final
performance report, including financial information, as directed by the
Secretary. If you receive a multi-year award, you must submit an annual
performance report that provides the most current performance and
financial expenditure information as directed by the Secretary under 34
CFR 75.118. The Secretary may also require more frequent performance
reports under 34 CFR 75.720(c). For specific requirements on reporting,
please go to www.ed.gov/fund/grant/apply/appforms/appforms.html.
4. Performance Measures: (a) Program Performance Measures. The
Department has established the following performance measures for
assessing the effectiveness of the Project Prevent Grant Program:
(1) The percentage of grantees that report a measurable decrease in
violent, aggressive, and disruptive behavior in schools served by the
grant.
(2) The percentage of grantees that report a measurable increase in
the number of students in schools served by the grant receiving school-
based and community mental health services to address student needs
resulting from exposure to violence.
(3) The percentage of grantees that report a measurable increase in
the school engagement (as defined in this notice) of students served by
the grant.
These measures constitute the Department's indicators of success
for this program.
(b) Project Performance Measures. The project performance measures
are:
(1) Annual decrease in violent, aggressive, and disruptive behavior
in schools served by the grant.
(2) Annual increase in the number of students in schools served by
the grant receiving school-based and community mental health services
to address student needs resulting from exposure to violence.
(3) Annual increase in the school engagement (as defined in this
notice) of students served by the grant.
(c) Baseline data. Applicants must provide baseline data (as
defined in this notice) for each of the project performance measures
listed in (b) and explain why each proposed baseline is valid; or, if
the applicant has determined that there are no established baseline
data for a particular performance measure, explain why there is no
established baseline and explain how and when, during the project
period, the applicant will establish a valid baseline for the
performance measure.
(d) Performance measure targets. In addition, the applicant must
propose annual targets for the measures listed in paragraph (b) in
their application. Applications must also provide the following
information as directed under 34 CFR 75.110(b) and (c):
(1) Why each proposed performance target is ambitious (as defined
in this notice) yet achievable compared to the baseline for the
performance measure.
(2) (a) The data collection and reporting methods the applicant
would use and why those methods are likely to yield reliable, valid,
and meaningful performance data; and (b) the applicant's capacity to
collect and report reliable, valid, and meaningful performance data, as
evidenced by high-quality data collection, analysis, and reporting in
other projects or research.
Note: If the applicant does not have experience with collection
and reporting of performance data through other projects or
research, the applicant should provide other evidence of capacity to
successfully carry out data collection and reporting for its
proposed project.
The reviewers of each application will score related selection
criteria on the basis of how well an applicant has considered these
measures in paragraphs (b), (c), and (d) in conceptualizing the
approach and evaluation of the project.
All grantees must submit an annual performance report and final
performance report with information that is responsive to these
performance measures.
5. Continuation Awards: In making a continuation award, the
Secretary may consider, under 34 CFR 75.253, the extent to which a
grantee has made ``substantial progress toward meeting the objectives
in its approved application'' and the performance measurement and
target requirements in the application notice. This consideration
includes the review of a grantee's progress in meeting the targets and
projected outcomes in its approved application, and whether the grantee
has expended funds in a manner that is consistent with its approved
application and budget. In making a continuation grant, the Secretary
also considers whether the grantee is operating in compliance with the
assurances in its approved application, including those applicable to
Federal civil rights laws that prohibit discrimination in programs or
activities receiving Federal financial assistance from the Department
(34 CFR 100.4, 104.5, 106.4, 108.8, and 110.23).
VII. Agency Contact
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Earl Myers, Jr., U.S. Department of
Education, 400 Maryland Avenue SW., Room 3E247, Washington, DC 20202.
Telephone: (202) 453-6716 or by email: Earl.Myers@ed.gov.
[[Page 23968]]
If you use a TDD or a TTY, call the FRS, toll free, at 1-800-877-
8339.
VIII. Other Information
Accessible Format: Individuals with disabilities can obtain this
document and a copy of the application package in an accessible format
(e.g., braille, large print, audiotape, or compact disc) on request to
the program contact person listed under FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT
in section VII of this notice.
Electronic Access to This Document: The official version of this
document is the document published in the Federal Register. Free
Internet access to the official edition of the Federal Register and the
Code of Federal Regulations is available via the Federal Digital System
at: www.gpo.gov/fdsys. At this site you can view this document, as well
as all other documents of this Department published in the Federal
Register, in text or Adobe Portable Document Format (PDF). To use PDF
you must have Adobe Acrobat Reader, which is available free at the
site.
You may also access documents of the Department published in the
Federal Register by using the article search feature at:
www.federalregister.gov. Specifically, through the advanced search
feature at this site, you can limit your search to documents published
by the Department.
Dated: April 23, 2014.
Deborah S. Delisle,
Assistant Secretary for Elementary and Secondary Education.
[FR Doc. 2014-09604 Filed 4-28-14; 8:45 am]
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