Request for Information on Effectiveness in Maintaining and Improving State, Local, Tribal, and Territorial Preparedness, 35659-35660 [2020-12620]
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Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 113 / Thursday, June 11, 2020 / Notices
The Coast Guard will notify CIRCAC
by letter of the action taken on its
application. A notice will be published
in the Federal Register to advise the
public of the Coast Guard’s
determination.
Federal Emergency
Management Agency, DHS.
ACTION: Notice and request for
information.
I. Public Participation
Instructions: All submissions received
must include the agency name and
docket ID. All submissions will be
posted, without change, to the Federal
eRulemaking Portal at https://
www.regulations.gov, and will include
any personal information you provide.
Therefore, submitting this information
makes it public. You may wish to read
the Privacy and Security notice, which
can be viewed by clicking on the
‘‘Privacy and Security Notice’’ link on
the homepage of www.regulations.gov.
You may submit your comments and
material by the methods specified in the
ADDRESSES section. Please submit your
comments and any supporting material
by only one means to avoid the receipt
and review of duplicate submissions.
Docket: For access to the docket to
read background documents or
comments received, go to the Federal
eRulemaking Portal at https://
www.regulations.gov and search for the
Docket ID.
The Federal Emergency
Management Agency (FEMA) is issuing
this Request for Information (RFI) to
receive information in response to a list
of priority research questions to further
understand existing evidence on the
Homeland Security Grant Program’s
(HSGP’s) influence on State, local,
Tribal, and territorial (SLTT)
preparedness. The HSGP includes a
suite of risk-based grants to assist SLTT
efforts in preventing, preparing for,
protecting against, and responding to
acts of terrorism. HSGP funding can also
be used to enhance preparedness for
other catastrophic events (e.g.,
hurricanes, wildfires) when the use of
such funds has a nexus to preventing,
preparing for, protecting against, and
responding to terrorism.
DATES: Comments must be received by
November 9, 2020.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments,
identified by docket ID FEMA–2020–
0008, by one of the following methods:
Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://
wwww.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
See the ‘‘Public Participation’’ portion
of the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION
section for further instructions on
submitting comments.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Bethany Slater, Program Analyst,
Measures and Standards Branch,
National Preparedness Assessment
Division, National Preparedness
II. Background and Purpose
HSGP provides funds to eligible
entities to support SLTT efforts to
prevent terrorism and to prepare the
Nation for the threats and hazards that
pose the greatest risk to the security of
the United States. HSGP funding can
also be used to enhance preparedness
for other catastrophic events (e.g.,
hurricanes, wildfires) when the use of
such funds has a nexus to preventing,
preparing for, protecting against, and
responding to terrorism. Since its
creation in 2003, HSGP annually issued
between $850 million and $2.5 billion
in grant funding to support SLTT
governments.
As administered by FEMA, HSGP
consists of three subcomponent
programs: State Homeland Security
Program (SHSP), Urban Area Security
Initiative (UASI), and Operation
Stonegarden. See FEMA, Homeland
Security Grant Program, https://
www.fema.gov/homeland-securitygrant-program (last visited Feb. 28,
2020). This request for information is
limited to SHSP and UASI.
The Homeland Security Act of 2002
authorizes the Department of Homeland
Security (DHS)/FEMA to award SHSP
and UASI funding to each State,
territory, and high-risk urban area based
on: (1) Its relative threat, vulnerability,
and consequence from acts of terrorism,
and (2) the anticipated effectiveness of
the proposed use of the grant to prepare
Dated: June 5, 2020.
Matthew T. Bell, Jr.,
Rear Admiral, U.S. Coast Guard,Commander,
Seventeenth Coast Guard District.
[FR Doc. 2020–12637 Filed 6–10–20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 9110–04–P
DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND
SECURITY
Federal Emergency Management
Agency
[Docket ID: FEMA–2020–0008]
Request for Information on
Effectiveness in Maintaining and
Improving State, Local, Tribal, and
Territorial Preparedness
AGENCY:
SUMMARY:
jbell on DSKJLSW7X2PROD with NOTICES
Directorate, FEMA, DHS, 400 C St. SW,
Washington DC 20472, Bethany.Slater@
fema.dhs.gov, 202–717–4111.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:33 Jun 10, 2020
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PO 00000
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Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
35659
for, protect against, and respond to acts
of terrorism. See 6 U.S.C. 608. Grant
dollars are administrated by State
Administrative Agencies who are
generally required to pass-through at
least 80 percent of SHSP and UASI
funds to local or Tribal jurisdictions.
See 6 U.S.C. 604(d)(2)(A), 605(c)(1)(A)–
(C).
As the administrator of HSGP, FEMA
is interested in identifying existing
evidence, tools and methods to better
evaluate the effectiveness of HSGP as it
pertains to maintaining and improving
SLTT and national preparedness.
FEMA’s National Preparedness
Assessment Division has documented
its past and current grant effectiveness
strategy in its document ‘‘Grant
Effectiveness Strategic Vision 2.0
Homeland Security Grant Program.’’ See
FEMA, Grant Effectiveness Strategic
Vision 2.0—Homeland Security Grant
Program, https://www.fema.gov/medialibrary/assets/documents/186474 (last
visited Mar. 26, 2020). The objectives
for this vision are:
Objective 1: Implement projects that
address State and national priorities;
Objective 2: Improve capabilities and
achieve preparedness outcomes; and
Objective 3: Manage projects in
accordance with Federal standards and
guidance.
The purpose of this RFI is for FEMA to
receive information in response to a list
of priority research questions to further
understand existing evidence on the
influence of HSGP on SLTT and
national preparedness. FEMA requests
information on research studies,
program evaluations, and/or metaanalyses that provide empirical findings
relevant to the research questions
outlined below. FEMA is interested in
evidence on the contributions of HSGPfunded projects (or projects that could
be funded through HSGP in the future).
Such evidence would ideally include
quantitative measurements of how such
projects help maintain or improve SLTT
and national capabilities to prepare for,
protect against, respond to, recover
from, and mitigate all hazards and/or
the risk of hazards. Additional broader
quantitative research may also be
helpful, such as research pertaining to
interventions that help prevent or
reduce the risk that an event will occur,
or the impact of such events. Such
research could relate to any of a range
of interventions, including interventions
that address public health,
environmental conservation, domestic
violence, criminal recidivism, and drug
use. Helpful research may use capacity
or capability assessments to measure
changes in outcomes over time after an
E:\FR\FM\11JNN1.SGM
11JNN1
35660
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 113 / Thursday, June 11, 2020 / Notices
intervention, or may use grant
administrative data for evaluation.
Finally, FEMA would also be interested
in learning of ongoing or current studies
that are in process, for which study
findings will not be available at the time
that comments in response to this notice
are due, such as research question being
addressed, sample size, study timeline,
and registry where the study findings
will be made available.
This information will assist FEMA
understand existing empirical and other
evidence, methods being utilized,
available data, and research gaps to
prioritize future evaluation funding.
This will also help FEMA understand if
this is an area where limited research
and evaluation is available.
jbell on DSKJLSW7X2PROD with NOTICES
III. List of Questions for Commenters
FEMA seeks information on the
following: (1) Existing evidence
regarding HSGP effectiveness, and (2)
Evidence from other programs or
research areas that FEMA can rely upon
to expand or revise the HSGP research
agenda, such as by changing how FEMA
and HSGP grantees and subgrantees
measure outputs/outcomes, assess
capacity/capability, and use grants
administrative data for evaluation.
Priority Research Questions for FEMA
on HSGP include:
1. What studies and evidence exist on
assessing HSGP outcomes? What are the
study, findings, sample, and methods
employed? Is there a URL(s) publicly
available with the study report and
information?
2. What meta-analysis and/or
summaries of evidence exist on the
HSGP program?
Supporting questions specific to
HSGP:
3. What outputs and outcomes are
HSGP grants achieving?
4. How well does HSGP funding help
build and sustain core capabilities?
(https://www.fema.gov/core-capabilitydevelopment-sheets)
5. How does HSGP funding affect
identified capability gaps?
6. Which HSGP funding activities
most effectively close capability gaps?
7. How do participants’ KSAs
(knowledge, skills, and abilities) change
after completing an HSGP-funded
training, after creating or enhancing an
HSGP-funded plan, and/or after
completing an HSGP-funded exercise?
8. How does HSGP funding influence
grant recipient preparedness?
9. How well do HSGP investments
contribute to preparedness for and
response to real world incidents?
10. How well have HSGP projects
reduced the risk of real-world incidents?
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:33 Jun 10, 2020
Jkt 250001
Broader Research Questions
Outputs/Outcomes/Benefits/Success
metrics:
11. FEMA is interested in
performance management and program
evaluations conducted by HSGP award
recipients, beyond what is reported to
FEMA. What additional output and
outcome measurements have been
determined as crucial to determining
program results and are beyond FEMA
reporting requirements? What were the
results of evaluations, if conducted?
12. What are the best output and
outcome metrics to measure prevention
of either a human-caused or natural
incident (e.g., terrorism, cyber-attack,
hurricane)?
13. What are the best output and
outcome metrics to measure the
reduction of risk posed by terrorism or
other incidents?
14. What is the best way to measure
the quality of a planning document and
to measure the improvement in outputs
and outcomes resulting from the
planning document’s creation?
15. What is the best way to use
exercises to measure change or
improvement through exercises?
Capacity/Capability Assessments:
16. Are there specific interventions
that would more properly be the subject
of HSGP funding? What is the best way
to measure improvements in grant
recipient capabilities due to grant
funding?
17. With respect to specific
interventions that might properly be the
subject of HSGP funding, if measuring
change through self-reported
assessments, what is a feasible
expectation for magnitude of
improvement within a specified
timeframe?
18. Please provide examples of
instruments provided to grant recipients
for self-assessments and which result in
information that is useful for both grant
recipients and funders. Of particular
interest are instruments that can be
implemented by users with a wide range
of evaluation or measurement
experience (i.e., none to expert).
Grant Administration & Evaluation:
19. Have formula or block grants
(grants not competitively awarded) been
successfully evaluated for effectiveness?
What was the study design and sample,
and what were the findings?
20. How do Federal agencies use
administrative data to understand grant
effectiveness in instances when grant
implementation is at the state and local
level?
Evidence on Program Impacts and
Grant Effectiveness
21. Have impact evaluations been
conducted that look at the difference
PO 00000
Frm 00028
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
between a control or comparison group
and the treatment group? What are the
study research question(s), design,
sample, and findings? Where can more
information on the study be found?
Dissemination of Results:
FEMA staff developed the RFI
questions and will analyze the
responses. We expect the analysis
period to deepen our vision and
understanding of the relationships
between homeland security grants and
overall preparedness.
Rights to Materials Submitted: By
submitting material in response to this
RFI, the respondent is agreeing to grant
DHS a worldwide, royalty-free,
perpetual, irrevocable, non-exclusive
license to use the material and to make
it publicly available. Further, the
respondent agrees that it owns, has a
valid license, or is otherwise authorized
to provide the material to DHS.
This RFI is issued for information and
planning purposes only and does not
constitute an offer by the Federal
Government to fund, as a whole or in
part, the opportunities referenced
herein. This RFI does not represent a
pre-solicitation synopsis or a
solicitation and does not constitute a
request for proposal or request for quote.
The Federal Government will not pay
for any information or administrative
costs incurred in responding to this RFI;
all costs associated with responding to
this RFI will be solely at the interested
party’s expense. Any response received
will not be used as a proposal or quote.
The responses to this RFI will be
reviewed by the Federal Government
and may be used to develop
requirements for future needs.
Pete Gaynor,
Administrator, Federal Emergency
Management Agency.
[FR Doc. 2020–12620 Filed 6–10–20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 9111–46–P
INSTITUTE OF AMERICAN INDIAN AND
ALASKA NATIVE CULTURE AND ARTS
DEVELOPMENT
Request for Nominations to the Board
of Trustees
Institute of American Indian
and Alaska Native Culture and Arts
Development (aka Institute of American
Indian Arts).
ACTION: Notice; request for nominations.
AGENCY:
The Board directs the
Administration of the Institute of
American Indian and Alaska Native
Culture and Arts Development,
including soliciting, accepting, and
SUMMARY:
E:\FR\FM\11JNN1.SGM
11JNN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 85, Number 113 (Thursday, June 11, 2020)]
[Notices]
[Pages 35659-35660]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2020-12620]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND SECURITY
Federal Emergency Management Agency
[Docket ID: FEMA-2020-0008]
Request for Information on Effectiveness in Maintaining and
Improving State, Local, Tribal, and Territorial Preparedness
AGENCY: Federal Emergency Management Agency, DHS.
ACTION: Notice and request for information.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) is issuing this
Request for Information (RFI) to receive information in response to a
list of priority research questions to further understand existing
evidence on the Homeland Security Grant Program's (HSGP's) influence on
State, local, Tribal, and territorial (SLTT) preparedness. The HSGP
includes a suite of risk-based grants to assist SLTT efforts in
preventing, preparing for, protecting against, and responding to acts
of terrorism. HSGP funding can also be used to enhance preparedness for
other catastrophic events (e.g., hurricanes, wildfires) when the use of
such funds has a nexus to preventing, preparing for, protecting
against, and responding to terrorism.
DATES: Comments must be received by November 9, 2020.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments, identified by docket ID FEMA-2020-
0008, by one of the following methods:
Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://wwww.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
See the ``Public Participation'' portion of the SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION section for further instructions on submitting comments.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Bethany Slater, Program Analyst,
Measures and Standards Branch, National Preparedness Assessment
Division, National Preparedness Directorate, FEMA, DHS, 400 C St. SW,
Washington DC 20472, [email protected], 202-717-4111.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Public Participation
Instructions: All submissions received must include the agency name
and docket ID. All submissions will be posted, without change, to the
Federal eRulemaking Portal at https://www.regulations.gov, and will
include any personal information you provide. Therefore, submitting
this information makes it public. You may wish to read the Privacy and
Security notice, which can be viewed by clicking on the ``Privacy and
Security Notice'' link on the homepage of www.regulations.gov.
You may submit your comments and material by the methods specified
in the ADDRESSES section. Please submit your comments and any
supporting material by only one means to avoid the receipt and review
of duplicate submissions.
Docket: For access to the docket to read background documents or
comments received, go to the Federal eRulemaking Portal at https://www.regulations.gov and search for the Docket ID.
II. Background and Purpose
HSGP provides funds to eligible entities to support SLTT efforts to
prevent terrorism and to prepare the Nation for the threats and hazards
that pose the greatest risk to the security of the United States. HSGP
funding can also be used to enhance preparedness for other catastrophic
events (e.g., hurricanes, wildfires) when the use of such funds has a
nexus to preventing, preparing for, protecting against, and responding
to terrorism. Since its creation in 2003, HSGP annually issued between
$850 million and $2.5 billion in grant funding to support SLTT
governments.
As administered by FEMA, HSGP consists of three subcomponent
programs: State Homeland Security Program (SHSP), Urban Area Security
Initiative (UASI), and Operation Stonegarden. See FEMA, Homeland
Security Grant Program, https://www.fema.gov/homeland-security-grant-program (last visited Feb. 28, 2020). This request for information is
limited to SHSP and UASI.
The Homeland Security Act of 2002 authorizes the Department of
Homeland Security (DHS)/FEMA to award SHSP and UASI funding to each
State, territory, and high-risk urban area based on: (1) Its relative
threat, vulnerability, and consequence from acts of terrorism, and (2)
the anticipated effectiveness of the proposed use of the grant to
prepare for, protect against, and respond to acts of terrorism. See 6
U.S.C. 608. Grant dollars are administrated by State Administrative
Agencies who are generally required to pass-through at least 80 percent
of SHSP and UASI funds to local or Tribal jurisdictions. See 6 U.S.C.
604(d)(2)(A), 605(c)(1)(A)-(C).
As the administrator of HSGP, FEMA is interested in identifying
existing evidence, tools and methods to better evaluate the
effectiveness of HSGP as it pertains to maintaining and improving SLTT
and national preparedness. FEMA's National Preparedness Assessment
Division has documented its past and current grant effectiveness
strategy in its document ``Grant Effectiveness Strategic Vision 2.0
Homeland Security Grant Program.'' See FEMA, Grant Effectiveness
Strategic Vision 2.0--Homeland Security Grant Program, https://www.fema.gov/media-library/assets/documents/186474 (last visited Mar.
26, 2020). The objectives for this vision are:
Objective 1: Implement projects that address State and national
priorities;
Objective 2: Improve capabilities and achieve preparedness
outcomes; and
Objective 3: Manage projects in accordance with Federal standards
and guidance.
The purpose of this RFI is for FEMA to receive information in response
to a list of priority research questions to further understand existing
evidence on the influence of HSGP on SLTT and national preparedness.
FEMA requests information on research studies, program evaluations,
and/or meta-analyses that provide empirical findings relevant to the
research questions outlined below. FEMA is interested in evidence on
the contributions of HSGP-funded projects (or projects that could be
funded through HSGP in the future). Such evidence would ideally include
quantitative measurements of how such projects help maintain or improve
SLTT and national capabilities to prepare for, protect against, respond
to, recover from, and mitigate all hazards and/or the risk of hazards.
Additional broader quantitative research may also be helpful, such as
research pertaining to interventions that help prevent or reduce the
risk that an event will occur, or the impact of such events. Such
research could relate to any of a range of interventions, including
interventions that address public health, environmental conservation,
domestic violence, criminal recidivism, and drug use. Helpful research
may use capacity or capability assessments to measure changes in
outcomes over time after an
[[Page 35660]]
intervention, or may use grant administrative data for evaluation.
Finally, FEMA would also be interested in learning of ongoing or
current studies that are in process, for which study findings will not
be available at the time that comments in response to this notice are
due, such as research question being addressed, sample size, study
timeline, and registry where the study findings will be made available.
This information will assist FEMA understand existing empirical and
other evidence, methods being utilized, available data, and research
gaps to prioritize future evaluation funding. This will also help FEMA
understand if this is an area where limited research and evaluation is
available.
III. List of Questions for Commenters
FEMA seeks information on the following: (1) Existing evidence
regarding HSGP effectiveness, and (2) Evidence from other programs or
research areas that FEMA can rely upon to expand or revise the HSGP
research agenda, such as by changing how FEMA and HSGP grantees and
subgrantees measure outputs/outcomes, assess capacity/capability, and
use grants administrative data for evaluation.
Priority Research Questions for FEMA on HSGP include:
1. What studies and evidence exist on assessing HSGP outcomes? What
are the study, findings, sample, and methods employed? Is there a
URL(s) publicly available with the study report and information?
2. What meta-analysis and/or summaries of evidence exist on the
HSGP program?
Supporting questions specific to HSGP:
3. What outputs and outcomes are HSGP grants achieving?
4. How well does HSGP funding help build and sustain core
capabilities? (https://www.fema.gov/core-capability-development-sheets)
5. How does HSGP funding affect identified capability gaps?
6. Which HSGP funding activities most effectively close capability
gaps?
7. How do participants' KSAs (knowledge, skills, and abilities)
change after completing an HSGP-funded training, after creating or
enhancing an HSGP-funded plan, and/or after completing an HSGP-funded
exercise?
8. How does HSGP funding influence grant recipient preparedness?
9. How well do HSGP investments contribute to preparedness for and
response to real world incidents?
10. How well have HSGP projects reduced the risk of real-world
incidents?
Broader Research Questions
Outputs/Outcomes/Benefits/Success metrics:
11. FEMA is interested in performance management and program
evaluations conducted by HSGP award recipients, beyond what is reported
to FEMA. What additional output and outcome measurements have been
determined as crucial to determining program results and are beyond
FEMA reporting requirements? What were the results of evaluations, if
conducted?
12. What are the best output and outcome metrics to measure
prevention of either a human-caused or natural incident (e.g.,
terrorism, cyber-attack, hurricane)?
13. What are the best output and outcome metrics to measure the
reduction of risk posed by terrorism or other incidents?
14. What is the best way to measure the quality of a planning
document and to measure the improvement in outputs and outcomes
resulting from the planning document's creation?
15. What is the best way to use exercises to measure change or
improvement through exercises?
Capacity/Capability Assessments:
16. Are there specific interventions that would more properly be
the subject of HSGP funding? What is the best way to measure
improvements in grant recipient capabilities due to grant funding?
17. With respect to specific interventions that might properly be
the subject of HSGP funding, if measuring change through self-reported
assessments, what is a feasible expectation for magnitude of
improvement within a specified timeframe?
18. Please provide examples of instruments provided to grant
recipients for self-assessments and which result in information that is
useful for both grant recipients and funders. Of particular interest
are instruments that can be implemented by users with a wide range of
evaluation or measurement experience (i.e., none to expert).
Grant Administration & Evaluation:
19. Have formula or block grants (grants not competitively awarded)
been successfully evaluated for effectiveness? What was the study
design and sample, and what were the findings?
20. How do Federal agencies use administrative data to understand
grant effectiveness in instances when grant implementation is at the
state and local level?
Evidence on Program Impacts and Grant Effectiveness
21. Have impact evaluations been conducted that look at the
difference between a control or comparison group and the treatment
group? What are the study research question(s), design, sample, and
findings? Where can more information on the study be found?
Dissemination of Results:
FEMA staff developed the RFI questions and will analyze the
responses. We expect the analysis period to deepen our vision and
understanding of the relationships between homeland security grants and
overall preparedness.
Rights to Materials Submitted: By submitting material in response
to this RFI, the respondent is agreeing to grant DHS a worldwide,
royalty-free, perpetual, irrevocable, non-exclusive license to use the
material and to make it publicly available. Further, the respondent
agrees that it owns, has a valid license, or is otherwise authorized to
provide the material to DHS.
This RFI is issued for information and planning purposes only and
does not constitute an offer by the Federal Government to fund, as a
whole or in part, the opportunities referenced herein. This RFI does
not represent a pre-solicitation synopsis or a solicitation and does
not constitute a request for proposal or request for quote.
The Federal Government will not pay for any information or
administrative costs incurred in responding to this RFI; all costs
associated with responding to this RFI will be solely at the interested
party's expense. Any response received will not be used as a proposal
or quote. The responses to this RFI will be reviewed by the Federal
Government and may be used to develop requirements for future needs.
Pete Gaynor,
Administrator, Federal Emergency Management Agency.
[FR Doc. 2020-12620 Filed 6-10-20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 9111-46-P