Community Opioid Intervention Pilot Projects, 65845-65855 [2020-22941]
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Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 201 / Friday, October 16, 2020 / Notices
promote the non-use of all tobacco
products. In addition, Public Law 103–
227, the Pro-Children Act of 1994,
prohibits smoking in certain facilities
(or in some cases, any portion of the
facility) in which regular or routine
education, library, day care, health care,
or early childhood development
services are provided to children. This
is consistent with the HHS mission to
protect and advance the physical and
mental health of the American people.
Michael D. Weahkee,
RADM, Assistant Surgeon General, U.S.
Public Health Service, Director, Indian Health
Service.
[FR Doc. 2020–22940 Filed 10–15–20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4165–16–P
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Indian Health Service
Community Opioid Intervention Pilot
Projects
Announcement Type: New.
Funding Announcement Number:
HHS–2021–IHS–COIPP–0001.
Catalog of Federal Domestic
Assistance Number: 93.933.
Key Dates
Application Deadline Date: December
15, 2020.
Earliest Anticipated Start Date:
January 14, 2021.
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I. Funding Opportunity Description
Statutory Authority
The Indian Health Service (IHS) is
accepting applications for grants for the
Community Opioid Intervention Pilot
Projects (COIPP). This program was first
established by the Consolidated
Appropriations Act of 2019, (Pub. L.
116–6) and the accompanying
Conference Report, H. Rpt. 116–9. IHS
received a new appropriation of $10
million in FY 2019 to better combat the
opioid epidemic by creating a pilot
program to address the opioid epidemic
in Indian Country to award grants that
support the development,
documentation, and sharing of locally
designed and culturally appropriate
prevention, treatment, recovery, and
aftercare services for mental health and
substance use disorders in American
Indian and Alaska Native communities.
The IHS received a second
appropriation of $10 million in the FY
2020 Further Consolidated
Appropriations Act (Pub. L. 116–94).
IHS will provide technical assistance to
grantees to collect and evaluate
performance of the pilot program. This
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program is authorized under the
authority of 25 U.S.C. 13, the Snyder
Act, and the Indian Health Care
Improvement Act, 25 U.S.C. 1601–1683.
This program is described in the
Assistance Listings located at https://
beta.sam.gov (formerly known as
Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance)
under 93.933.
Background
The impact of the opioid crisis on
American Indian and Alaska Native (AI/
AN) populations is immense. The rate of
drug overdose deaths among AI/ANs is
above the national average. The Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention
(CDC) data indicate that AI/ANs had the
second highest overdose death rates
from all opioids in 2017 (15.7 deaths/
100,000 population) among racial/
ethnic groups in the United States. AI/
ANs had the second highest overdose
death rates from heroin (5.2 deaths/
100,000 population), third highest from
synthetic opioids (6.5 deaths/100,000
population), and the highest rate from
prescription opioids (7.2 deaths/100,000
population) during 2016–2017. The
overall rate of overdose deaths for AI/
ANs increased by 13% during 2015–
2017. These numbers may be
underestimated for the AI/AN
population due to racial
misclassification on death certificates as
recently published by the CDC
Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report,
resulting in inaccurate public health
data for the AI/AN population.1
The family remains the primary
source of attachment, nurturing, and
socialization for humans in our current
society, and opioid use disorder (OUD)
has had a devastating effect on families.
The impact of substance use disorders
(SUDs) on the family and individual
family members merits attention. Each
family and each family member is
uniquely affected by the individual
using substances including having
unmet developmental needs, impaired
attachment, economic hardship, legal
problems, emotional distress, and
sometimes violence being perpetrated
against them. For children there is also
an increased risk of developing a SUD
themselves. Thus, treating only the
individual with the active disease of
addiction is limited in effectiveness.
This grant aims to address the
increasing number of infants born to
mothers with a SUD, and children who
reside in homes with parents with OUD
by awarding at least six grant sites to
programs that focus on maternal and
child health issues.
1 Joshi, Weiser, & Warren-Mears, Dec 2018. CDC
Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report.
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In keeping with the IHS policy stating
that Tribal consultation occurs when a
new or revised policy or program is
proposed, IHS held a tribal consultation
and Urban confer process on the
development of a new opioid grant
program from June 21, 2019 to
September 3, 2019. Formal sessions
were held to allow for feedback on
priorities, methodologies, and desired
outcomes to be used in the selection and
award process. IHS received a total of
119 comments from all 12 IHS areas.
The comments received represented a
wide range of suggestions but several
themes emerged, most notably the
importance of allowing flexibility in
program design and focus areas.
Respondents also requested that IHS
ensure that programs include: Culturally
responsive approaches to addressing the
opioid crisis; a focus on education and
training for communities on opioids and
treatment options; and a high priority
area of focus on serving addicted
pregnant women and infants preexposed to opioids. IHS published a
Dear Tribal Leader Letter and
Consultation and Conference Summary
Report in the IHS Newsroom on April
3, 2020. https://www.ihs.gov/sites/
newsroom/themes/responsive2017/
display_objects/documents/2020_
Letters/DTLL_DUIOLL_OGPP_
04032020.pdf.
Purpose
The purpose of this IHS grant is to
address the opioid crisis in AI/AN
communities by developing and
expanding community education and
awareness of prevention, treatment and/
or recovery activities for opioid misuse
and opioid use disorder. The intent is to
increase knowledge and use of
culturally appropriate interventions and
to encourage an increased use of
medication-assisted treatment (MAT).
This program will support Tribal and
Urban Indian communities in their
effort to provide prevention, treatment,
and recovery services to address the
impact of the opioid crisis within their
communities. Each application for the
COIPP will be required to address the
following objectives:
1. Increase public awareness and
education about culturally-appropriate
and family-centered opioid prevention,
treatment, and recovery practices and
programs in AI/AN communities.
2. Create comprehensive support
teams to strengthen and empower AI/
AN families in addressing the opioid
crisis in Tribal or Urban Indian
communities.
3. Reduce unmet treatment needs and
opioid overdose related deaths through
the use of MAT.
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In alignment with the IHS 2019–2023
Strategic Plan Goal 1: To ensure that
comprehensive, culturally appropriate
personal and public health services are
available and accessible to American
Indian and Alaska Native people, the
COIPP is designed to provide Tribes
with the ability to develop unique and
innovative community interventions
that will address the opioid crisis at a
local level. The IHS supports Tribal and
Urban Indian efforts that include
addressing substance use prevention,
treatment, and aftercare from a
community-driven context. The IHS
encourages applicants to develop and
submit a plan that emphasizes crosssystem collaboration, the inclusion of
family, youth, and community
resources, and culturally appropriate
approaches.
II. Award Information
Funding Instrument—Grant
Estimated Funds Available
The total funding identified for fiscal
year (FY) 2021 is approximately
$16,500,000. This includes
approximately $8,250,000 in FY 2019
funds, and $8,250,000 in FY 2020 funds.
Individual award amounts for the first
budget year are anticipated to be
$500,000. The amount of funding
available for competing and
continuation awards issued under this
announcement is subject to the
availability of appropriations and
budgetary priorities of the Agency. IHS
expects to allocate funding for each IHS
area to support Tribes, Tribal
organizations and Urban Indian
Organizations (UIO). The IHS is under
no obligation to make awards that are
selected for funding under this
announcement.
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Anticipated Number of Awards
Approximately 33 awards will be
issued under this program
announcement.
Grant awards will be distributed as
follows in the approximate numbers:
• 2 grants in each IHS Area (24
awards total).
• 6 set-aside grants for Urban Indian
Organizations.
• 3 set-aside grants with Maternal &
Child Health as the population of focus.
One grant will be funded in each of the
three highest priority IHS Areas (Alaska,
Bemidji, and Billings). These priority
areas were determined by reviewing
opioid-related mortality data from the
CDC and opioid use disorder data and
opioid-related birth data from the IHS
National Data Warehouse.
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Period of Performance
The period of performance is for three
years.
III. Eligibility Information
1. Eligibility
To be eligible for this New FY 2021
funding opportunity applicants must be
one of the following as defined by 25
U.S.C. 1603:
• A Federally-recognized Indian
Tribe as defined by 25 U.S.C. 1603(14).
The term ‘‘Indian Tribe’’ means any
Indian Tribe, band, nation, or other
organized group or community,
including any Alaska Native village or
group or regional or village corporation
as defined in or established pursuant to
the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act
(85 Stat. 688) [43 U.S.C. 1601 et seq.],
which is recognized as eligible for the
special programs and services provided
by the United States to Indians because
of their status as Indians.
• A Tribal organization as defined by
25 U.S.C. 1603(26). The term ‘‘Tribal
organization’’ has the meaning given the
term in section 4 of the Indian SelfDetermination and Education
Assistance Act (25 U.S.C. 5304): ‘‘Tribal
organization’’ means the recognized
governing body of any Indian Tribe; any
legally established organization of
Indians which is controlled, sanctioned,
or chartered by such governing body or
which is democratically elected by the
adult members of the Indian community
to be served by such organization and
which includes the maximum
participation of Indians in all phases of
its activities: Provided that, in any case
where a contract is let or grant made to
an organization to perform services
benefiting more than one Indian Tribe,
the approval of each such Indian Tribe
shall be a prerequisite to the letting or
making of such contract or grant.
Applicant shall submit letters of support
and/or Tribal Resolutions from the
Tribes to be served.
• An Urban Indian organization, as
defined by 25 U.S.C. 1603(29), that
currently has a grant or contract award
from the IHS under the Indian Health
Care Improvement Act, 25 U.S.C. 1651–
1660h. The term ‘‘Urban Indian
organization’’ means a nonprofit
corporate body situated in an urban
center, governed by an urban Indian
controlled board of directors, and
providing for the maximum
participation of all interested Indian
groups and individuals, which body is
capable of legally cooperating with
other public and private entities for the
purpose of performing the activities
described in 25 U.S.C. 1653(a).
Applicants must provide proof of non-
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profit status with the application, e.g.,
501(c)(3).
Note: Please refer to Section IV.2
(Application and Submission
Information/Subsection 2, Content and
Form of Application Submission) for
additional proof of applicant status
documents required, such as Tribal
resolutions, proof of non-profit status,
etc.
2. Cost Sharing or Matching
IHS does not require matching funds
or cost sharing for grants or cooperative
agreements.
3. Other Requirements
Applications with budget requests
that exceed the highest dollar amount
outlined under the Award Information,
Estimated Funds Available section, or
exceed the Period of Performance
outlined under Section II Award
Information, Period of Performance will
be considered not responsive and will
not be reviewed. The Division of Grants
Management (DGM) will notify the
applicant.
Additional Required Documentation
Tribal Resolution
The DGM must receive an official,
signed Tribal Resolution prior to issuing
a Notice of Award (NoA) to any
applicant selected for funding. An
Indian Tribe or Tribal organization that
is proposing a project affecting another
Indian Tribe must include resolutions
from all affected Tribes to be served.
However, if an official, signed Tribal
Resolution cannot be submitted with the
application prior to the application
deadline date, a draft Tribal Resolution
must be submitted with the application
by the deadline date in order for the
application to be considered complete
and eligible for review. The draft Tribal
Resolution is not in lieu of the required
signed resolution, but is acceptable until
a signed resolution is received. If an
official, signed Tribal Resolution is not
received by DGM when funding
decisions are made, then a NoA will not
be issued to that applicant, and the
applicant will not receive IHS funds
until it has submitted a signed
resolution to the Grants Management
Specialist listed in this funding
announcement.
Proof of Non-Profit Status
Organizations claiming non-profit
status must submit a current copy of the
501(c)(3) Certificate with the
application.
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IV. Application and Submission
Information
1. Obtaining Application Materials
The application package and detailed
instructions for this announcement are
hosted on https://www.Grants.gov.
Please direct questions regarding the
application process to Mr. Paul Gettys at
(301) 443–2114 or (301) 443–5204.
Public Policy Requirements
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2. Content and Form Application
Submission
The applicant must include the
project narrative as an attachment to the
application package. Mandatory
documents for all applicants include:
• Abstract (one page) summarizing
the project.
• Application forms:
1. SF–424, Application for Federal
Assistance.
2. SF–424A, Budget Information—
Non-Construction Programs.
3. SF–424B, Assurances—NonConstruction Programs.
• Project Narrative (not to exceed 10
pages). See Section IV.2.A Project
Narrative for instructions.
1. Background information on the
organization.
2. Proposed scope of work, objectives,
and activities that provide a description
of what the applicant plans to
accomplish.
• Budget Justification and Narrative
(not to exceed 4 pages). See Section
IV.2.B Budget Narrative for instructions.
• Timeline (one-page)
• Tribal Resolution or Tribal Letter of
Support (only required for Tribes and
Tribal organizations).
• Letter(s) of Commitment:
1. From Local Organizational
Partners;
2. From Community Partners;
3. For Tribal organizations: From the
board of directors (or relevant
equivalent);
4. For urban Indian organizations:
From the board of directors (or relevant
equivalent).
• 501(c)(3) Certificate (if applicable).
• Biographical sketches for all key
personnel (e.g., project director, project
coordinator, grants coordinator, etc.)
(not to exceed 1 page each).
• Contractor/consultant qualifications
and scope of work.
• Disclosure of Lobbying Activities
(SF–LLL).
• Certification Regarding Lobbying
(GG-Lobbying Form).
• Copy of current Negotiated Indirect
Cost rate (IDC) agreement (required in
order to receive IDC).
• Documentation of current Office of
Management and Budget (OMB)
Financial Audit (if applicable).
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Acceptable forms of documentation
include:
1. Email confirmation from Federal
Audit Clearinghouse (FAC) that audits
were submitted; or
2. Face sheets from audit reports.
Applicants can find these on the FAC
website: https://harvester.census.gov/
facdissem/Main.aspx.
All Federal public policies apply to
IHS grants and cooperative agreements
with the exception of the Discrimination
Policy.
Requirements for Project and Budget
Narratives
A. Project Narrative: This narrative
should be a separate document that is
no more than 10 pages and must: (1)
Have consecutively numbered pages; (2)
use black font 12 points or larger; (3) be
single-spaced; (4) and be formatted to fit
standard letter paper (81⁄2 x 11 inches).
Be sure to succinctly answer all
questions listed under the evaluation
criteria (refer to Section V.1, Evaluation
Criteria) and place all responses and
required information in the correct
section noted below or they will not be
considered or scored. If the narrative
exceeds the page limit, the application
will be considered not responsive and
not be reviewed. The 10-page limit for
the narrative does not include the
standard forms, Tribal Resolutions,
budget, budget justification and
narrative, and/or other appendix items.
There are four (4) parts to the project
narrative:
Part 1—Statement of Need
Part 2—Program Plan (Objectives and
Activities)
Part 3—Organizational Capacity
Part 4—Program Evaluation (Data
Collection and Reporting)
Part 1: Statement of Need (Limit—1
Page)
Describe the extent of the problem
related to opioid misuse in the
applicant’s community (‘‘community’’
means the applicant’s Tribe, village,
Tribal organization, consortium of
Tribes or Tribal organizations, or urban
center). Provide the facts and evidence
that support the need for the project and
establish that the Tribe, Tribal
organization, or UIO understand the
problems and can reasonably address
them. This section must also succinctly
but completely answer the questions
listed under the evaluation criteria in
Section V.1.A Statement of Need.
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Part 2: Program Plan (Objectives and
Activities) (Limit—6 Pages)
Describe the scope of work the Tribe,
Tribal organization, or UIO by clearly
and concisely outlining the following
required components:
1. Goals and Objectives. Reference all
required objectives.
2. Project Activities. Link your project
activities to your outlined goals and
objectives.
This section must also succinctly but
completely answer the questions listed
under the evaluation criteria in Section
V.1.B Program Plan (Objectives and
Activities).
Part 3: Organizational Capacity (Limit—
2 Pages)
Describe the Tribe, Tribal
organization, or UIO’s organizational
capacity to implement the proposed
activities, in the following areas: Ability
to provide direct care, treatment and
services, including MAT; Current or
ongoing projects related to opioid
prevention, treatment, recovery support,
and aftercare; and a detailed description
of partnerships and networks with
opioid misuse providers. Provide detail
on significant program activities and
achievements/accomplishments over
the past five years associated with
opioid prevention, treatment, recovery
support, and aftercare activities. Provide
success stories, data or other examples
of how other funded projects/programs
made an impact in your community to
address opioid use. If applicable,
provide justification for lack of progress
of previous efforts. This section must
also succinctly but completely answer
the questions listed under the
evaluation criteria in Section V.1.C
Organizational Capacity.
Part 4: Program Evaluation (Limit—1
Page)
Based on the required activities in
Section V describe how the Tribe, Tribal
organization, or UIO plans to collect
data for the proposed project and
activities. Identify any type(s) of
evaluation(s) that will be used and how
you will collaborate with partners to
complete any evaluation efforts or data
collection. Progress reports will include
compilation of quantitative data (e.g.,
number served; screenings completed)
and qualitative or narrative (text) data.
Reporting elements should be specific to
activities/programs, processes and
outcomes such as performance measures
and other data relevant to evaluation
outcomes including intended results
(i.e., impact and outcomes). The IHS
will partner with Technical Assistance
Providers to assist grantees in
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developing data collection and
evaluation plans and tools. Grantees
will be required to collect and submit
semi-annual and annual progress
reports. Additional information
regarding Data Collection refer to
Section V.1.D. Program Evaluation (Data
Collection & Reporting).
In an effort to reduce the data
collection burden for this grant program,
IHS will compile and analyze aggregate
program statistics from existing data
sources to assist in evaluation of the
projects. Aggregate data may include,
but is not limited to, associated
community-level Government
Performance and Results Act (GPRA)
health care facility data available in the
National Data Warehouse. For
additional information regarding IHS
Government Performance and Results
Act (GPRA) https://www.ihs.gov/crs/
gprareporting/. Comprehensive
information about CRS software and
logic is at https://www.ihs.gov/crs/.
B. Budget Narrative (Limit—4 Pages):
Provide a budget narrative that explains
the amounts requested for each line
item of the budget. The budget narrative
should specifically describe how each
item will support the achievement of
proposed objectives. Be very careful
about showing how each item in the
‘‘Other’’ category is justified. For
subsequent budget years, the narrative
should highlight the changes from year
1 or clearly indicate that there are no
substantive budget changes during the
period of performance. Do NOT use the
budget narrative to expand the project
narrative.
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3. Submission Dates and Times
Applications must be submitted
through Grants.gov by 11:59 p.m.
Eastern Daylight Time (EDT) on the
Application Deadline Date. Any
application received after the
application deadline will not be
accepted for review. Grants.gov will
notify the applicant via email if the
application is rejected.
If technical challenges arise and
assistance is required with the
application process, contact Grants.gov
Customer Support (see contact
information at https://www.Grants.gov).
If problems persist, contact Mr. Paul
Gettys (Paul.Gettys@ihs.gov), Acting
Director, DGM, by telephone at (301)
443–2114 or (301) 443–5204. Please be
sure to contact Mr. Gettys at least ten
days prior to the application deadline.
Please do not contact the DGM until you
have received a Grants.gov tracking
number. In the event you are not able
to obtain a tracking number, call the
DGM as soon as possible.
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IHS will not acknowledge receipt of
applications.
4. Intergovernmental Review
Executive Order 12372 requiring
intergovernmental review is not
applicable to this program.
5. Funding Restrictions
• Pre-award costs are allowable up to
90 days before the start date of the
award provided the costs are otherwise
allowable if awarded. Pre-award costs
are incurred at the risk of the applicant.
• The available funds are inclusive of
direct and indirect costs.
• Only one grant will be awarded per
applicant.
• The purchase of food (i.e., as
supplies, for meetings or events) is not
an allowable cost with this grant
funding and should not be included in
the budget/budget justification. If food
is included in the budget of an awarded
application, those funds will be
restricted until the applicant supplies a
modified budget eliminating those costs.
6. Electronic Submission Requirements
All applications must be submitted
via Grants.gov. Please use the https://
www.Grants.gov website to submit an
application. Find the application by
selecting the ‘‘Search Grants’’ link on
the homepage. Follow the instructions
for submitting an application under the
Package tab. No other method of
application submission is acceptable.
If the applicant cannot submit an
application through Grants.gov, a
waiver must be requested. Prior
approval must be requested and
obtained from Mr. Paul Gettys, Acting
Director, DGM. A written waiver request
must be sent to GrantsPolicy@ihs.gov
with a copy to Paul.Gettys@ihs.gov. The
waiver request must: (1) Be documented
in writing (emails are acceptable) before
submitting an application by some other
method, and (2) include clear
justification for the need to deviate from
the required application submission
process.
Once the waiver request has been
approved, the applicant will receive a
confirmation of approval email
containing submission instructions. A
copy of the written approval must be
included with the application that is
submitted to the DGM. Applications
that are submitted without a copy of the
signed waiver from the Acting Director
of the DGM will not be reviewed. The
Grants Management Officer of the DGM
will notify the applicant via email of
this decision. Applications submitted
under waiver must be received by the
DGM no later than 5:00 p.m., EDT, on
the Application Deadline Date. Late
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applications will not be accepted for
processing. Applicants that do not
register for both the System for Award
Management (SAM) and Grants.gov
and/or fail to request timely assistance
with technical issues will not be
considered for a waiver to submit an
application via alternative method.
Please be aware of the following:
• Please search for the application
package in https://www.Grants.gov by
entering the Assistance Listing (CFDA)
number or the Funding Opportunity
Number. Both numbers are located in
the header of this announcement.
• If you experience technical
challenges while submitting your
application, please contact Grants.gov
Customer Support (see contact
information at https://www.Grants.gov).
• Upon contacting Grants.gov, obtain
a tracking number as proof of contact.
The tracking number is helpful if there
are technical issues that cannot be
resolved and a waiver from the agency
must be obtained.
• Applicants are strongly encouraged
not to wait until the deadline date to
begin the application process through
Grants.gov as the registration process for
SAM and Grants.gov could take up to
twenty working days.
• Please follow the instructions on
Grants.gov to include additional
documentation that may be requested by
this funding announcement.
• Applicants must comply with any
page limits described in this funding
announcement.
• After submitting the application,
the applicant will receive an automatic
acknowledgment from Grants.gov that
contains a Grants.gov tracking number.
The IHS will not notify the applicant
that the application has been received.
Dun and Bradstreet (D&B) Data
Universal Numbering System (DUNS)
Applicants and grantee organizations
are required to obtain a DUNS number
and maintain an active registration in
the SAM database. The DUNS number
is a unique 9-digit identification number
provided by D&B that uniquely
identifies each entity. The DUNS
number is site specific; therefore, each
distinct performance site may be
assigned a DUNS number. Obtaining a
DUNS number is easy, and there is no
charge. To obtain a DUNS number,
please access the request service
through https://fedgov.dnb.com/
webform, or call (866) 705–5711.
The Federal Funding Accountability
and Transparency Act of 2006, as
amended (‘‘Transparency Act’’),
requires all HHS recipients to report
information on sub-awards.
Accordingly, all IHS grantees must
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notify potential first-tier sub-recipients
that no entity may receive a first-tier
sub-award unless the entity has
provided its DUNS number to the prime
grantee organization. This requirement
ensures the use of a universal identifier
to enhance the quality of information
available to the public pursuant to the
Transparency Act.
System for Award Management (SAM)
Organizations that are not registered
with SAM must have a DUNS number
first, then access the SAM online
registration through the SAM home page
at https://www.sam.gov/SAM/ (U.S.
organizations will also need to provide
an Employer Identification Number
from the Internal Revenue Service that
may take an additional 2–5 weeks to
become active). Please see SAM.gov for
details on the registration process and
timeline. Registration with the SAM is
free of charge, but can take several
weeks to process. Applicants may
register online at https://www.sam.gov/
SAM/.
Additional information on
implementing the Transparency Act,
including the specific requirements for
DUNS and SAM, are available on the
DGM Grants Management, Policy Topics
web page: https://www.ihs.gov/dgm/
policytopics/.
V. Application Review Information
Weights assigned to each section are
noted in parentheses. The 10-page
project narrative should include only
the first year of activities; information
for multi-year projects should be
included as an appendix. See ‘‘Multiyear Project Requirements’’ at the end of
this section for more information. The
narrative section should be written in a
manner that is clear to outside reviewers
unfamiliar with prior related activities
of the applicant. It should be well
organized, succinct, and contain all
information necessary for reviewers to
understand the project fully. Points will
be assigned to each evaluation criteria
adding up to a total of 100 possible
points. Points are assigned as follows:
1. Evaluation Criteria
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Required Activities
The focus of this pilot program is to
support AI/ANs in their efforts to
provide prevention, treatment, aftercare,
and recovery services to address the
impact of the opioid crisis in Native
communities. All COIPP activities
should be culturally-based, and familyoriented.
IHS is seeking applications that
include all of the following required
activities:
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1. Community Awareness and
Education:
a. Grantees shall promote family,
youth and community engagement in
the planning and implementation of
opioid use prevention.
b. Grantees shall design community
awareness campaigns and education
programs that inform and train
community members on how to
recognize the signs of opioid misuse and
overdose. Educational tool(s) shall be
culturally-appropriate and intended to
engage families.
c. Grantees will develop educational
resources, such as factsheets using
culturally relevant messaging;
disseminate materials through
community stakeholders and
community partners, and identify
culturally appropriate ways to
implement educational programs in
their local communities.
d. Awareness Campaign should
include instructions on the following,
among others:
• How to access local opioid-specific
services.
• How to safeguard controlled
prescription medications from children
and adolescents.
• How to dispose properly of unused
controlled prescription medications.
2. Expand access to MAT services that
include Tribal values, culture, and
treatments:
a. Promote family, youth and
community engagement in the planning
and implementation of opioid use
treatment.
b. Increase number of providers
receiving training in MAT services that
include Tribal values, culture, and
treatments.
c. Increase access to continuing
education on MAT.
d. Expand access to integrated MAT
services for Tribal communities,
including TeleMAT.
e. Increase the availability and
utilization of MAT to include
Buprenorphine (all FDA approved
formulations for OUD); buprenorphine/
naloxone combination product, and/or
naltrexone to Tribal communities in
both rural and urban settings.
f. Increase awareness and distribution
of naloxone as an overdose intervention
and teach skills in how to use it.
3. Build a support system for
strengthening Native families by
implementing culturally-appropriate
approaches.
a. Promote family, youth and
community engagement in the planning
and implementation of opioid use
recovery activities.
b. Develop a family-focused and
culturally-based assessment that
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captures biopsychosocial needs of AI/
ANs.
c. Link assessment needs to support
and recovery services.
d. Collaborate with relevant partners
to build a support system for recovery.
Applications will be reviewed and
scored according to the quality of
responses to the required application
components in Sections A–E. The
number of points after each heading is
the maximum number of points a
review committee may assign to that
section. Although scoring weights are
not assigned to individual numbers,
responses to each number are assessed
in deriving the overall section score.
A. Statement of Need (20 Points)
1. Describe the extent of the problem
related to opioid misuse in the
applicant’s community (‘‘community’’
means the applicant’s Tribe, village,
Tribal organization, consortium of
Tribes or Tribal organizations, or urban
center). Provide the facts and evidence
that support the need for the project and
establish that the Tribe, Tribal
organization, or UIO understands the
problems and can reasonably address
them.
2. Include a description of social
determinants of health that may
contribute to the opioid crisis in the
community. Include details on
economic stability (such as housing and
food insecurity); education (such as
early childhood education and
development, high school graduation,
and language and literacy); social and
community context (such as
discrimination, incarceration, and social
cohesion); health and health care (such
as access to health care and health
literacy); and neighborhood and built
environment (such as access to foods
that support healthy eating patterns,
crime and violence, environmental
conditions, and quality of housing).
3. Provide background information on
the Tribe, Tribal organization, or UIO.
4. Based on the information and/or
data currently available, document the
prevalence of opioid misuse rates.
5. Based on the information and/or
data currently available, document the
need to increase the capacity to
implement, sustain, and improve
effective opioid misuse prevention,
treatment, aftercare, and recovery
services in the proposed catchment area
that is consistent with the purpose of
this funding opportunity
announcement.
6. Describe the service gaps and other
problems related to the need for funds
targeting opioid misuse. Identify the
source of the data.
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7. Describe potential Tribal and
community partners and resources in
the catchment area that can participate
in the broad community awareness
campaign.
8. Affirm that the goals of the project
are consistent with priorities of the
Tribal government or board of directors
and that the governing body is in
support of this application.
B. Program Plan (Objectives and
Activities) (35 Points)
1. Identify the population of focus for
your project. Describe the purpose of the
proposed project, including goals and
objectives and how they are linked.
Describe how the achievement of goals
will increase Tribe, Tribal organization,
or UIO’s capacity to support the goals
and required activities identified in
Section I of this announcement.
2. Describe how the proposed project
activities are related to the proposed
project’s goals and objectives. Describe
how the project activities will increase
the capacity of the community to
prevent, and treat opioid addiction in
the communities.
3. Describe organizational capacity to
implement the proposed activities,
including increased public awareness
and education on opioids; developing a
comprehensive support team to
strengthen and empower AI/AN families
in addressing the opioid crisis in Tribal
or Urban Indian communities; and
integrating the use of MAT into their
community.
4. Describe how community partners
(prevention and recovery support
providers, substance use disorder
treatment programs, peer recovery
specialists, social workers, behavioral
health clinics, community health
centers, youth serving organizations,
family and youth homeless providers,
child welfare agencies, and primary care
providers, pharmacists, schools, clergy,
and law enforcement, among others)
will be involved in the planning and
implementation of the project.
5. Describe if/how the efforts of the
proposed project will be coordinated
with any other related Federal grants or
programs funded through IHS,
SAMHSA, BIA, or other Federal
agencies.
6. Provide a chart depicting a realistic
timeline for the project period showing
key activities, milestones, and
responsible staff. These key activities
should include the required activities
identified in Section V of this
announcement.
C. Organizational Capacity (15 Points)
Describe organizational capacity to
implement the proposed activities,
including increased public awareness
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and education on opioids; developing a
comprehensive support team to
strengthen and empower AI/AN families
in addressing the opioid crisis in Tribal
or Urban Indian communities; and
integrating the use of MAT into the
Tribal community.
1. Describe significant program
activities and achievements or
accomplishments over the past 5 years
associated with opioid use prevention,
treatment and aftercare.
2. Describe the applicant Tribe, Tribal
organization, or UIO’s experience and
capacity to provide culturally
appropriate/competent opioid use
services to the community and specific
populations of focus.
3. Describe the resources available for
the proposed project (e.g., facilities,
equipment, information technology
systems, and financial management
systems).
4. Describe how project continuity
will be maintained if/when there is a
change in the operational environment
(e.g., staff turnover, change in project
leadership, change in elected officials)
to ensure project stability over the life
of the grant.
5. Provide a complete list of staff
positions anticipated for the project,
including the Project Director, Project
Coordinator, and other key personnel,
showing the role of each and their level
of effort and qualifications.
6. For key staff currently on board,
include a biographical sketch for the
Project Director, Project Coordinator, or
other key positions as attachments to
the project proposal/application. Do not
include any of the following in the
biographical sketch:
D Personally Identifiable Information
(i.e., SSN, home address);
D Resumes; or
D Curriculum Vitae.
D. Program Evaluation (Data Collection
and Reporting) (20 Points)
Grantees will be required to collect
and submit semi-annual and annual
progress reports. Logic Models are
highly recommended to provide
guidance on collecting data for
evaluation purposes (see Attachment A).
Applicants are expected to collect data
within their communities on prevalence
rates on opioid use disorders and other
data metrics related to opioid-related
mortality and morbidity.
1. Progress reports will include the
compilation of quantitative data (e.g.,
number served; screenings completed)
and qualitative or narrative (text) data.
2. Reporting elements should include
data from local community-based and
evidence-based programs which pertain
to proposed activities, processes and
outcomes such as performance measures
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and other data relevant to evaluation
outcomes including intended results
(i.e., impact and outcomes).
3. Describe how the applicant will
measure variables, what method will be
used and how the data will be used for
quality improvement and sustainability
of program and meeting required
reporting deadlines.
4. Based on the required objectives,
describe the type(s) of evaluation(s) that
will be used and how the applicant will
collaborate with partners such as Tribal
Epidemiology Centers or Urban
Epidemiology Centers to complete any
evaluation efforts or data collection.
5. Describe a data plan on how to
prioritize screening efforts such as the
Screening, Brief Intervention, and
Referral to Treatment (SBIRT) to
identify patients at at-risk levels who
use illicit drugs and are referred for
appropriate services. Describe how the
data collection plan includes efforts that
support the IHS Division of Behavioral
Health (DBH) GPRA measure 1)
Proportion of AI/ANs that received the
Screening, Brief Intervention, and
Referral to Treatment (SBIRT).
6. Describe how annual progress
reports will be entered into the
Behavioral Health Reporting portal
system and capability and experience
with similar evaluations.
7. Describe any data-sharing
agreements that are established, or
which will be established, in support of
these activities.
E. Budget and Budget Justification (10
Points)
1. Include a line item budget for all
expenditures identifying reasonable and
allowable costs necessary to accomplish
the goals and objectives as outlined in
the project narrative for Project Year 1
only. The budget expenditures should
correlate with the scope of work
described in the project narrative for the
first project year expenses only.
2. Provide a narrative justification of
the budget line items, as well as a
description of existing resources and
other support the applicant expects to
receive for the proposed project. Other
support is defined as funds or resources,
whether Federal, non-Federal or
institutional, in direct support of
activities through fellowships, gifts,
prizes, in-kind contributions or nonFederal means. (This should correspond
to Item #18 on the SF–424, Estimated
Funding, and SF–424A Budget
Information, Section C Non-Federal
resources.)
3. Provide a narrative justification
supporting the development or
continued collaboration with other
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partners regarding the proposed
activities to be implemented.
4. Depending on the availability of
funds, the IHS may host annual
meetings to provide in-depth training
and technical assistance to awardees. In
order to help establish critical mass of
community and staff members who are
informed and committed to implement
the project, awardees should plan to
send a minimum of three people
(including the Project Director/Project
Coordinator) to one meeting of all
awardees in each year of the grant. At
these meetings, awardees will receive
training related to grant objectives,
discuss success and challenges in
implementation of the program, present
the results of their projects, and receive
other technical assistance from IHS staff
and/or contractors. Each meeting may
be up to 3 days. The locations will be
determined at a later date, but
applicants should estimate costs for
Denver, CO as a potential site that is
accessible to most of ‘‘Indian Country’’
and attendance is strongly encouraged.
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Multi-Year Project Requirements
Applications must include a brief
project narrative and budget (one
additional page per year) addressing the
developmental plans for each additional
year of the project. This attachment will
not count as part of the project narrative
or the budget narrative.
Additional documents can be
uploaded as Appendix Items in
Grants.gov
• Work plan, logic model and/or time
line for proposed objectives.
• Position descriptions for key staff
(i.e., Project Director, Project
Coordinator).
• Consultant or contractor proposed
scope of work and letter of commitment
(if applicable).
• Organizational chart.
• Map of area identifying project
location(s).
• Additional documents to support
narrative (e.g., data tables, relevant news
articles).
• Advisory board(s) description
(membership, roles and functions, and
frequency of meetings).
2. Review and Selection
Each application will be prescreened
for eligibility and completeness as
outlined in the funding announcement.
Applications that meet the eligibility
criteria shall be reviewed for merit by
the Objective Review Committee (ORC)
based on evaluation criteria. Incomplete
applications and applications that are
not responsive to the administrative
thresholds will not be referred to the
ORC and will not be funded. The
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applicant will be notified of this
determination.
Applicants must address all program
requirements and provide all required
documentation.
3. Notifications of Disposition
All applicants will receive an
Executive Summary Statement from the
IHS DBH within 30 days of the
conclusion of the ORC outlining the
strengths and weaknesses of their
application. The summary statement
will be sent to the Authorizing Official
identified on the face page (SF–424) of
the application.
A. Award Notices for Funded
Applications
The Notice of Award (NoA) is the
authorizing document for which funds
are dispersed to the approved entities
and reflects the amount of Federal funds
awarded, the purpose of the grant, the
terms and conditions of the award, the
effective date of the award, and the
budget/project period. Each entity
approved for funding must have a user
account in GrantSolutions in order to
retrieve the NoA. Please see the Agency
Contacts list in Section VII for the
systems contact information.
B. Approved but Unfunded
Applications
Approved applications not funded
due to lack of available funds will be
held for one year. If funding becomes
available during the course of the year,
the application may be reconsidered.
Note: Any correspondence other than
the official NoA executed by an IHS
grants management official announcing
to the project director that an award has
been made to their organization is not
an authorization to implement their
program on behalf of the IHS.
VI. Award Administration Information
1. Administrative Requirements
Grants are administered in accordance
with the following regulations and
policies:
A. The criteria as outlined in this
funding announcement.
B. Administrative Regulations for
Grants:
• Uniform Administrative
Requirements for HHS Awards, located
at 45 CFR part 75.
C. Grants Policy:
• HHS Grants Policy Statement,
Revised 01/07.
D. Cost Principles:
• Uniform Administrative
Requirements for HHS Awards, ‘‘Cost
Principles,’’ located at 45 CFR part 75,
subpart E.
E. Audit Requirements:
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65851
• Uniform Administrative
Requirements for HHS Awards, ‘‘Audit
Requirements,’’ located at 45 CFR part
75, subpart F.
2. Indirect Costs
This section applies to all recipients
that request reimbursement of indirect
costs (IDC) in their application budget.
In accordance with HHS Grants Policy
Statement, Part II–27, IHS requires
applicants to obtain a current IDC rate
agreement, and submit it to DGM, prior
to DGM issuing an award. The rate
agreement must be prepared in
accordance with the applicable cost
principles and guidance as provided by
the cognizant agency or office. A current
rate covers the applicable grant
activities under the current award’s
budget period. If the current rate
agreement is not on file with the DGM
at the time of award, the IDC portion of
the budget will be restricted. The
restrictions remain in place until the
current rate agreement is provided to
the DGM.
Available funds are inclusive of direct
and appropriate indirect costs.
Approved indirect funds are awarded as
part of the award amount, and no
additional funds will be provided.
Generally, IDC rates for IHS grantees
are negotiated with the Division of Cost
Allocation (DCA) https://rates.psc.gov/
or the Department of Interior (Interior
Business Center) https://ibc.doi.gov/
ICS/tribal. For questions regarding the
indirect cost policy, please call the
Grants Management Specialist listed
under ‘‘Agency Contacts’’ or the main
DGM office at (301) 443–5204.
3. Reporting Requirements
The awardee must submit required
reports consistent with the applicable
deadlines. Failure to submit required
reports within the time allowed may
result in suspension or termination of
an active grant, withholding of
additional awards for the project, or
other enforcement actions such as
withholding of payments or converting
to the reimbursement method of
payment. Continued failure to submit
required reports may result in one or
both of the following: (1) The
imposition of special award provisions;
and (2) the non-funding or non-award of
other eligible projects or activities. This
requirement applies whether the
delinquency is attributable to the failure
of the awardee organization or the
individual responsible for preparation
of the reports. Per DGM policy, all
reports are required to be submitted
electronically by attaching them as a
‘‘Grant Note’’ in GrantSolutions.
Personnel responsible for submitting
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reports will be required to obtain a login
and password for GrantSolutions. Please
see the Agency Contacts list in Section
VII for the systems contact information.
The reporting requirements for this
program are noted below.
A. Progress Reports
Program progress reports are required
semi-annually, within 30 days after the
budget period ends (specific dates will
be listed in the NoA Terms and
Conditions). These reports must include
a brief comparison of actual
accomplishments to the goals
established for the period, a summary of
progress to date or, if applicable,
provide sound justification for the lack
of progress, and other pertinent
information as required. A final report
must be submitted within 90 days of
expiration of the period of performance.
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B. Financial Reports
Federal Financial Report (FFR or SF–
425), Cash Transaction Reports are due
30 days after the close of every calendar
quarter to the Payment Management
Services, HHS at https://pms.psc.gov.
The applicant is also requested to
upload a copy of the FFR (SF–425) into
our grants management system,
GrantSolutions. Failure to submit timely
reports may result in adverse award
actions blocking access to funds.
Grantees are responsible and
accountable for accurate information
being reported on all required reports:
The Progress Reports and Federal
Financial Report.
C. Federal Sub-Award Reporting System
(FSRS)
This award may be subject to the
Transparency Act sub-award and
executive compensation reporting
requirements of 2 CFR part 170.
The Transparency Act requires the
OMB to establish a single searchable
database, accessible to the public, with
information on financial assistance
awards made by Federal agencies. The
Transparency Act also includes a
requirement for recipients of Federal
grants to report information about firsttier sub-awards and executive
compensation under Federal assistance
awards.
IHS has implemented a Term of
Award into all IHS Standard Terms and
Conditions, NoAs and funding
announcements regarding the FSRS
reporting requirement. This IHS Term of
Award is applicable to all IHS grant and
cooperative agreements issued on or
after October 1, 2010, with a $25,000
sub-award obligation dollar threshold
met for any specific reporting period.
Additionally, all new (discretionary)
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IHS awards (where the period of
performance is made up of more than
one budget period) and where: (1) The
period of performance start date was
October 1, 2010 or after, and (2) the
primary awardee will have a $25,000
sub-award obligation dollar threshold
during any specific reporting period
will be required to address the FSRS
reporting.
For the full IHS award term
implementing this requirement and
additional award applicability
information, visit the DGM Grants
Policy website at https://www.ihs.gov/
dgm/policytopics/.
D. Compliance With Executive Order
13166 Implementation of Services
Accessibility Provisions for All Grant
Application Packages and Funding
Opportunity Announcements
Recipients of Federal financial
assistance (FFA) from HHS must
administer their programs in
compliance with Federal civil rights
laws that prohibit discrimination on the
basis of race, color, national origin,
disability, age and, in some
circumstances, religion, conscience, and
sex. This includes ensuring programs
are accessible to persons with limited
English proficiency. The HHS Office for
Civil Rights provides guidance on
complying with civil rights laws
enforced by HHS. Please see https://
www.hhs.gov/civil-rights/for-providers/
provider-obligations/ and
https://www.hhs.gov/ocr/civilrights/
understanding/section1557/.
• Recipients of FFA must ensure that
their programs are accessible to persons
with limited English proficiency. HHS
provides guidance to recipients of FFA
on meeting their legal obligation to take
reasonable steps to provide meaningful
access to their programs by persons with
limited English proficiency. Please see
https://www.hhs.gov/civil-rights/forindividuals/special-topics/limitedenglish-proficiency/fact-sheet-guidance/
index.html and https://www.lep.gov. For
further guidance on providing culturally
and linguistically appropriate services,
recipients should review the National
Standards for Culturally and
Linguistically Appropriate Services in
Health and Health Care at https://
minorityhealth.hhs.gov/omh/browse.
aspx?lvl=2&lvlid=53.
• Recipients of FFA also have specific
legal obligations for serving qualified
individuals with disabilities. Please see
https://www.hhs.gov/ocr/civilrights/
understanding/disability/.
• HHS funded health and education
programs must be administered in an
environment free of sexual harassment.
Please see https://www.hhs.gov/civil-
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rights/for-individuals/sexdiscrimination/; https://
www2.ed.gov/about/offices/list/ocr/
docs/shguide.html; and https://
www.eeoc.gov/eeoc/publications/fssex.cfm.
• Recipients of FFA must also
administer their programs in
compliance with applicable Federal
religious nondiscrimination laws and
applicable Federal conscience
protection and associated antidiscrimination laws. Collectively, these
laws prohibit exclusion, adverse
treatment, coercion, or other
discrimination against persons or
entities on the basis of their
consciences, religious beliefs, or moral
convictions. Please see https://
www.hhs.gov/conscience/conscienceprotections/ and https://
www.hhs.gov/conscience/religiousfreedom/.
Please contact the HHS Office for
Civil Rights for more information about
obligations and prohibitions under
Federal civil rights laws at https://
www.hhs.gov/ocr/about-us/contact-us/
index.html or call 1–800–368–1019 or
TDD 1–800–537–7697.
E. Federal Awardee Performance and
Integrity Information System (FAPIIS)
The IHS is required to review and
consider any information about the
applicant that is in the Federal Awardee
Performance and Integrity Information
System (FAPIIS), at https://
www.fapiis.gov, before making any
award in excess of the simplified
acquisition threshold (currently
$150,000) over the period of
performance. An applicant may review
and comment on any information about
itself that a Federal awarding agency
previously entered. IHS will consider
any comments by the applicant, in
addition to other information in FAPIIS
in making a judgment about the
applicant’s integrity, business ethics,
and record of performance under
Federal awards when completing the
review of risk posed by applicants as
described in 45 CFR 75.205.
As required by 45 CFR part 75
Appendix XII of the Uniform Guidance,
non-Federal entities (NFEs) are required
to disclose in FAPIIS any information
about criminal, civil, and administrative
proceedings, and/or affirm that there is
no new information to provide. This
applies to NFEs that receive Federal
awards (currently active grants,
cooperative agreements, and
procurement contracts) greater than
$10,000,000 for any period of time
during the period of performance of an
award/project.
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Mandatory Disclosure Requirements
As required by 2 CFR part 200 of the
Uniform Guidance, and the HHS
implementing regulations at 45 CFR part
75, the IHS must require a non-Federal
entity or an applicant for a Federal
award to disclose, in a timely manner,
in writing to the IHS or pass-through
entity all violations of Federal criminal
law involving fraud, bribery, or gratuity
violations potentially affecting the
Federal award.
Submission is required for all
applicants and recipients, in writing, to
the IHS and to the HHS Office of
Inspector General all information
related to violations of Federal criminal
law involving fraud, bribery, or gratuity
violations potentially affecting the
Federal award. 45 CFR 75.113.
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Disclosures must be sent in writing to:
U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services, Indian Health Service,
Division of Grants Management,
ATTN: Paul Gettys, Acting Director,
5600 Fishers Lane, Mail Stop: 09E70,
Rockville, MD 20857 (Include
‘‘Mandatory Grant Disclosures’’ in
subject line), Office: (301) 443–5204,
Fax: (301) 594–0899, Email:
Paul.Gettys@ihs.gov
And
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18:59 Oct 15, 2020
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U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services, Office of Inspector General,
ATTN: Mandatory Grant Disclosures,
Intake Coordinator, 330 Independence
Avenue SW, Cohen Building, Room
5527, Washington, DC 20201, URL:
https://oig.hhs.gov/fraud/report-fraud/
index.asp (Include ‘‘Mandatory Grant
Disclosures’’ in subject line), Fax:
(202) 205–0604 (Include ‘‘Mandatory
Grant Disclosures’’ in subject line) or
Email:
MandatoryGranteeDisclosures@
oig.hhs.gov
Failure to make required disclosures
can result in any of the remedies
described in 45 CFR 75.371 Remedies
for noncompliance, including
suspension or debarment (see 2 CFR
parts 180 & 376).
VII. Agency Contacts
1. Questions on the programmatic
issues may be directed to: JB
Kinlacheeny, Alcohol and Substance
Abuse Lead, Indian Health Service,
Office of Clinical and Preventative
Services/Division of Behavioral Health,
5600 Fishers Lane 08–N34B, Rockville,
MD 20857, Phone: 301–443–0104,
Email: jb.kinlacheeny@ihs.gov.
2. Questions on grants management
and fiscal matters may be directed to:
Patience Musikikongo, Grants
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65853
Management Specialist, 5600 Fishers
Lane, Mail Stop: 09E70, Rockville, MD
20857, Phone: 301–443–2059, Fax: (301)
594–0899, Email:
Patience.Musikikongo@ihs.gov.
3. Questions on systems matters may
be directed to: Paul Gettys, Acting
Director, DGM, Rockville, MD 20857,
Phone: (301) 443–2114; or the DGM
main line (301) 443–5204, Fax: (301)
443–9602, EMail: Paul.Gettys@ihs.gov.
VIII. Other Information
The Public Health Service strongly
encourages all grant, cooperative
agreement and contract recipients to
provide a smoke-free workplace and
promote the non-use of all tobacco
products. In addition, Public Law 103–
227, the Pro-Children Act of 1994,
prohibits smoking in certain facilities
(or in some cases, any portion of the
facility) in which regular or routine
education, library, day care, health care,
or early childhood development
services are provided to children. This
is consistent with the HHS mission to
protect and advance the physical and
mental health of the American people.
Michael D. Weahkee,
RADM, Assistant Surgeon General, U.S.
Public Health Service, Director, Indian Health
Service.
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Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 201 / Friday, October 16, 2020 / Notices
[FR Doc. 2020–22941 Filed 10–15–20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4165–16–P
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
National Institutes of Health
National Institute of Mental Health;
Notice of Closed Meetings
jbell on DSKJLSW7X2PROD with NOTICES
Pursuant to section 10(d) of the
Federal Advisory Committee Act, as
amended, notice is hereby given of the
following meetings.
The meetings will be closed to the
public in accordance with the
provisions set forth in sections
552b(c)(4) and 552b(c)(6), Title 5 U.S.C.,
as amended. The grant applications and
the discussions could disclose
confidential trade secrets or commercial
property such as patentable material,
and personal information concerning
individuals associated with the grant
applications, the disclosure of which
would constitute a clearly unwarranted
invasion of personal privacy.
Name of Committee: National Institute of
Mental Health Special Emphasis Panel;
Advanced Laboratories for Accelerating the
Reach and Impact Research Centers (P50).
Date: November 9, 2020.
Time: 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
Agenda: To review and evaluate grant
applications.
Place: National Institutes of Health,
Neuroscience Center, 6001 Executive
Boulevard, Rockville, MD 20852 (Telephone
Conference Call).
Contact Person: Serena Chu, Ph.D.,
Scientific Review Officer, Division of
Extramural Activities, National Institute of
Mental Health, NIH, Neuroscience Center,
6001 Executive Blvd., Room 6000, MSC 9606,
Bethesda, MD 20852, 301–500–5829,
serena.chu@nih.gov
Name of Committee: National Institute of
Mental Health Special Emphasis Panel;
Mental Health Practices in Low-Resource
Settings to Achieve Mental Health Equity.
Date: November 9, 2020.
Time: 12:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m.
Agenda: To review and evaluate grant
applications.
Place: National Institutes of Health,
Neuroscience Center, 6001 Executive
Boulevard, Rockville, MD 20852, (Telephone
Conference Call).
Contact Person: Aileen Schulte, Ph.D.,
Scientific Review Officer, Division of
Extramural Activities, National Institute of
Mental Health, NIH, Neuroscience Center,
6001 Executive Blvd., Room 6140, MSC 9608,
Bethesda, MD 20892–9608, 301–443–1225,
aschulte@mail.nih.gov
Name of Committee: National Institute of
Mental Health Special Emphasis Panel;
NIMH Biobehavioral Research Awards for
Innovative New Scientists (NIMH BRAINS).
Date: November 9, 2020.
Time: 12:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
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Agenda: To review and evaluate grant
applications.
Place: National Institutes of Health,
Neuroscience Center, 6001 Executive
Boulevard, Rockville, MD 20852 (Telephone
Conference Call).
Contact Person: Erin E. Gray, Ph.D.,
Scientific Review Officer, Division of
Extramural Activities, National Institute of
Mental Health, National Institutes of Health,
6001 Executive Boulevard, NSC 6152B,
Bethesda, MD 20892, 301–402–8152,
erin.gray@nih.gov.
Name of Committee: National Institute of
Mental Health Special Emphasis Panel;
NIMH Pathway to Independence Awards
(K99/R00, K22).
Date: November 10, 2020.
Time: 11:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
Agenda: To review and evaluate grant
applications.
Place: National Institutes of Health,
Neuroscience Center, 6001 Executive
Boulevard, Rockville, MD 20852 (Telephone
Conference Call).
Contact Person: David W. Miller, Ph.D.,
Scientific Review Officer, Division of
Extramural Activities, National Institute of
Mental Health, NIH, Neuroscience Center,
6001 Executive Blvd., Room 6140, MSC 9608,
Bethesda, MD 20892–9608, 301–443–9734,
millerda@mail.nih.gov.
(Catalogue of Federal Domestic Assistance
Program No. 93.242, Mental Health Research
Grants, National Institutes of Health, HHS)
Dated: October 9, 2020.
Melanie J. Pantoja,
Program Analyst, Office of Federal Advisory
Committee Policy.
[FR Doc. 2020–22888 Filed 10–15–20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4140–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
National Institutes of Health
Submission for OMB Review; 30-Day
Comment Request; The National
Institute of Mental Health Data Archive
(NDA), NIMH
AGENCY:
National Institutes of Health,
HHS.
ACTION:
Notice.
In compliance with the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, the
National Institutes of Health (NIH) has
submitted to the Office of Management
and Budget (OMB) a request for review
and approval of the information
collection listed below.
DATES: Comments regarding this
information collection are best assured
of having their full effect if received
within 30-days of the date of this
publication.
ADDRESSES: Written comments and
recommendations for the proposed
information collection should be sent
SUMMARY:
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within 30 days of publication of this
notice to www.reginfo.gov/public/do/
PRAMain. Find this particular
information collection by selecting
‘‘Currently under 30-day Review—Open
for Public Comments’’ or by using the
search function.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: To
request more information on the
proposed project or to obtain a copy of
the data collection plans and
instruments, contact: Dr. Andrew
Hooper, NIMH Health Science Policy
Analyst, Science Policy and Evaluation
Branch, Office of Science Policy,
Planning, and Communications, NIMH,
Neuroscience Center, 6001 Executive
Boulevard, MSC 9667, Bethesda,
Maryland 20892, or call non-toll-free
number (301) 480–8433 or Email your
request, including your address to:
nimhprapubliccomments@mail.nih.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This
proposed information collection was
previously published in the Federal
Register on June 18, 2020, page 36869
(85 FR 36869) and allowed 60 days for
public comment. No public comments
were received. The purpose of this
notice is to allow an additional 30 days
for public comment. The National
Institute of Mental Health (NIMH),
National Institutes of Health, may not
conduct or sponsor, and the respondent
is not required to respond to, an
information collection that has been
extended, revised, or implemented on or
after October 1, 1995, unless it displays
a currently valid OMB control number.
In compliance with Section
3507(a)(1)(D) of the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995, the National
Institutes of Health (NIH) has submitted
to the Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) a request for review and
approval of the information collection
listed below.
Proposed Collection: The National
Institute of Mental Health Data Archive
(NDA), REVISION—0925–0667—
expiration date 11/30/2020, National
Institute of Mental Health (NIMH),
National Institutes of Health (NIH).
Need and Use of Information
Collection: The NIMH Data Archive
(NDA) is an infrastructure that allows
for the submission and storage of human
subjects’ data from researchers
conducting studies related to many
scientific domains, regardless of the
source of funding. The NIH and NIMH
developed this resource to allow for the
public collection of information from:
(1) Individuals who seek permission to
access data from the NDA for the
purpose of scientific investigation,
scholarship or teaching, or other forms
of research and research development,
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[Federal Register Volume 85, Number 201 (Friday, October 16, 2020)]
[Notices]
[Pages 65845-65855]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2020-22941]
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DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
Indian Health Service
Community Opioid Intervention Pilot Projects
Announcement Type: New.
Funding Announcement Number: HHS-2021-IHS-COIPP-0001.
Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance Number: 93.933.
Key Dates
Application Deadline Date: December 15, 2020.
Earliest Anticipated Start Date: January 14, 2021.
I. Funding Opportunity Description
Statutory Authority
The Indian Health Service (IHS) is accepting applications for
grants for the Community Opioid Intervention Pilot Projects (COIPP).
This program was first established by the Consolidated Appropriations
Act of 2019, (Pub. L. 116-6) and the accompanying Conference Report, H.
Rpt. 116-9. IHS received a new appropriation of $10 million in FY 2019
to better combat the opioid epidemic by creating a pilot program to
address the opioid epidemic in Indian Country to award grants that
support the development, documentation, and sharing of locally designed
and culturally appropriate prevention, treatment, recovery, and
aftercare services for mental health and substance use disorders in
American Indian and Alaska Native communities. The IHS received a
second appropriation of $10 million in the FY 2020 Further Consolidated
Appropriations Act (Pub. L. 116-94). IHS will provide technical
assistance to grantees to collect and evaluate performance of the pilot
program. This program is authorized under the authority of 25 U.S.C.
13, the Snyder Act, and the Indian Health Care Improvement Act, 25
U.S.C. 1601-1683. This program is described in the Assistance Listings
located at https://beta.sam.gov (formerly known as Catalog of Federal
Domestic Assistance) under 93.933.
Background
The impact of the opioid crisis on American Indian and Alaska
Native (AI/AN) populations is immense. The rate of drug overdose deaths
among AI/ANs is above the national average. The Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention (CDC) data indicate that AI/ANs had the second
highest overdose death rates from all opioids in 2017 (15.7 deaths/
100,000 population) among racial/ethnic groups in the United States.
AI/ANs had the second highest overdose death rates from heroin (5.2
deaths/100,000 population), third highest from synthetic opioids (6.5
deaths/100,000 population), and the highest rate from prescription
opioids (7.2 deaths/100,000 population) during 2016-2017. The overall
rate of overdose deaths for AI/ANs increased by 13% during 2015-2017.
These numbers may be underestimated for the AI/AN population due to
racial misclassification on death certificates as recently published by
the CDC Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, resulting in inaccurate
public health data for the AI/AN population.\1\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Joshi, Weiser, & Warren-Mears, Dec 2018. CDC Morbidity and
Mortality Weekly Report.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The family remains the primary source of attachment, nurturing, and
socialization for humans in our current society, and opioid use
disorder (OUD) has had a devastating effect on families. The impact of
substance use disorders (SUDs) on the family and individual family
members merits attention. Each family and each family member is
uniquely affected by the individual using substances including having
unmet developmental needs, impaired attachment, economic hardship,
legal problems, emotional distress, and sometimes violence being
perpetrated against them. For children there is also an increased risk
of developing a SUD themselves. Thus, treating only the individual with
the active disease of addiction is limited in effectiveness. This grant
aims to address the increasing number of infants born to mothers with a
SUD, and children who reside in homes with parents with OUD by awarding
at least six grant sites to programs that focus on maternal and child
health issues.
In keeping with the IHS policy stating that Tribal consultation
occurs when a new or revised policy or program is proposed, IHS held a
tribal consultation and Urban confer process on the development of a
new opioid grant program from June 21, 2019 to September 3, 2019.
Formal sessions were held to allow for feedback on priorities,
methodologies, and desired outcomes to be used in the selection and
award process. IHS received a total of 119 comments from all 12 IHS
areas. The comments received represented a wide range of suggestions
but several themes emerged, most notably the importance of allowing
flexibility in program design and focus areas. Respondents also
requested that IHS ensure that programs include: Culturally responsive
approaches to addressing the opioid crisis; a focus on education and
training for communities on opioids and treatment options; and a high
priority area of focus on serving addicted pregnant women and infants
pre-exposed to opioids. IHS published a Dear Tribal Leader Letter and
Consultation and Conference Summary Report in the IHS Newsroom on April
3, 2020. https://www.ihs.gov/sites/newsroom/themes/responsive2017/display_objects/documents/2020_Letters/DTLL_DUIOLL_OGPP_04032020.pdf.
Purpose
The purpose of this IHS grant is to address the opioid crisis in
AI/AN communities by developing and expanding community education and
awareness of prevention, treatment and/or recovery activities for
opioid misuse and opioid use disorder. The intent is to increase
knowledge and use of culturally appropriate interventions and to
encourage an increased use of medication-assisted treatment (MAT). This
program will support Tribal and Urban Indian communities in their
effort to provide prevention, treatment, and recovery services to
address the impact of the opioid crisis within their communities. Each
application for the COIPP will be required to address the following
objectives:
1. Increase public awareness and education about culturally-
appropriate and family-centered opioid prevention, treatment, and
recovery practices and programs in AI/AN communities.
2. Create comprehensive support teams to strengthen and empower AI/
AN families in addressing the opioid crisis in Tribal or Urban Indian
communities.
3. Reduce unmet treatment needs and opioid overdose related deaths
through the use of MAT.
[[Page 65846]]
In alignment with the IHS 2019-2023 Strategic Plan Goal 1: To
ensure that comprehensive, culturally appropriate personal and public
health services are available and accessible to American Indian and
Alaska Native people, the COIPP is designed to provide Tribes with the
ability to develop unique and innovative community interventions that
will address the opioid crisis at a local level. The IHS supports
Tribal and Urban Indian efforts that include addressing substance use
prevention, treatment, and aftercare from a community-driven context.
The IHS encourages applicants to develop and submit a plan that
emphasizes cross-system collaboration, the inclusion of family, youth,
and community resources, and culturally appropriate approaches.
II. Award Information
Funding Instrument--Grant
Estimated Funds Available
The total funding identified for fiscal year (FY) 2021 is
approximately $16,500,000. This includes approximately $8,250,000 in FY
2019 funds, and $8,250,000 in FY 2020 funds. Individual award amounts
for the first budget year are anticipated to be $500,000. The amount of
funding available for competing and continuation awards issued under
this announcement is subject to the availability of appropriations and
budgetary priorities of the Agency. IHS expects to allocate funding for
each IHS area to support Tribes, Tribal organizations and Urban Indian
Organizations (UIO). The IHS is under no obligation to make awards that
are selected for funding under this announcement.
Anticipated Number of Awards
Approximately 33 awards will be issued under this program
announcement.
Grant awards will be distributed as follows in the approximate
numbers:
2 grants in each IHS Area (24 awards total).
6 set-aside grants for Urban Indian Organizations.
3 set-aside grants with Maternal & Child Health as the
population of focus. One grant will be funded in each of the three
highest priority IHS Areas (Alaska, Bemidji, and Billings). These
priority areas were determined by reviewing opioid-related mortality
data from the CDC and opioid use disorder data and opioid-related birth
data from the IHS National Data Warehouse.
Period of Performance
The period of performance is for three years.
III. Eligibility Information
1. Eligibility
To be eligible for this New FY 2021 funding opportunity applicants
must be one of the following as defined by 25 U.S.C. 1603:
A Federally-recognized Indian Tribe as defined by 25
U.S.C. 1603(14). The term ``Indian Tribe'' means any Indian Tribe,
band, nation, or other organized group or community, including any
Alaska Native village or group or regional or village corporation as
defined in or established pursuant to the Alaska Native Claims
Settlement Act (85 Stat. 688) [43 U.S.C. 1601 et seq.], which is
recognized as eligible for the special programs and services provided
by the United States to Indians because of their status as Indians.
A Tribal organization as defined by 25 U.S.C. 1603(26).
The term ``Tribal organization'' has the meaning given the term in
section 4 of the Indian Self-Determination and Education Assistance Act
(25 U.S.C. 5304): ``Tribal organization'' means the recognized
governing body of any Indian Tribe; any legally established
organization of Indians which is controlled, sanctioned, or chartered
by such governing body or which is democratically elected by the adult
members of the Indian community to be served by such organization and
which includes the maximum participation of Indians in all phases of
its activities: Provided that, in any case where a contract is let or
grant made to an organization to perform services benefiting more than
one Indian Tribe, the approval of each such Indian Tribe shall be a
prerequisite to the letting or making of such contract or grant.
Applicant shall submit letters of support and/or Tribal Resolutions
from the Tribes to be served.
An Urban Indian organization, as defined by 25 U.S.C.
1603(29), that currently has a grant or contract award from the IHS
under the Indian Health Care Improvement Act, 25 U.S.C. 1651-1660h. The
term ``Urban Indian organization'' means a nonprofit corporate body
situated in an urban center, governed by an urban Indian controlled
board of directors, and providing for the maximum participation of all
interested Indian groups and individuals, which body is capable of
legally cooperating with other public and private entities for the
purpose of performing the activities described in 25 U.S.C. 1653(a).
Applicants must provide proof of non-profit status with the
application, e.g., 501(c)(3).
Note: Please refer to Section IV.2 (Application and Submission
Information/Subsection 2, Content and Form of Application Submission)
for additional proof of applicant status documents required, such as
Tribal resolutions, proof of non-profit status, etc.
2. Cost Sharing or Matching
IHS does not require matching funds or cost sharing for grants or
cooperative agreements.
3. Other Requirements
Applications with budget requests that exceed the highest dollar
amount outlined under the Award Information, Estimated Funds Available
section, or exceed the Period of Performance outlined under Section II
Award Information, Period of Performance will be considered not
responsive and will not be reviewed. The Division of Grants Management
(DGM) will notify the applicant.
Additional Required Documentation
Tribal Resolution
The DGM must receive an official, signed Tribal Resolution prior to
issuing a Notice of Award (NoA) to any applicant selected for funding.
An Indian Tribe or Tribal organization that is proposing a project
affecting another Indian Tribe must include resolutions from all
affected Tribes to be served. However, if an official, signed Tribal
Resolution cannot be submitted with the application prior to the
application deadline date, a draft Tribal Resolution must be submitted
with the application by the deadline date in order for the application
to be considered complete and eligible for review. The draft Tribal
Resolution is not in lieu of the required signed resolution, but is
acceptable until a signed resolution is received. If an official,
signed Tribal Resolution is not received by DGM when funding decisions
are made, then a NoA will not be issued to that applicant, and the
applicant will not receive IHS funds until it has submitted a signed
resolution to the Grants Management Specialist listed in this funding
announcement.
Proof of Non-Profit Status
Organizations claiming non-profit status must submit a current copy
of the 501(c)(3) Certificate with the application.
[[Page 65847]]
IV. Application and Submission Information
1. Obtaining Application Materials
The application package and detailed instructions for this
announcement are hosted on https://www.Grants.gov.
Please direct questions regarding the application process to Mr.
Paul Gettys at (301) 443-2114 or (301) 443-5204.
2. Content and Form Application Submission
The applicant must include the project narrative as an attachment
to the application package. Mandatory documents for all applicants
include:
Abstract (one page) summarizing the project.
Application forms:
1. SF-424, Application for Federal Assistance.
2. SF-424A, Budget Information--Non-Construction Programs.
3. SF-424B, Assurances--Non-Construction Programs.
Project Narrative (not to exceed 10 pages). See Section
IV.2.A Project Narrative for instructions.
1. Background information on the organization.
2. Proposed scope of work, objectives, and activities that provide
a description of what the applicant plans to accomplish.
Budget Justification and Narrative (not to exceed 4
pages). See Section IV.2.B Budget Narrative for instructions.
Timeline (one-page)
Tribal Resolution or Tribal Letter of Support (only
required for Tribes and Tribal organizations).
Letter(s) of Commitment:
1. From Local Organizational Partners;
2. From Community Partners;
3. For Tribal organizations: From the board of directors (or
relevant equivalent);
4. For urban Indian organizations: From the board of directors (or
relevant equivalent).
501(c)(3) Certificate (if applicable).
Biographical sketches for all key personnel (e.g., project
director, project coordinator, grants coordinator, etc.) (not to exceed
1 page each).
Contractor/consultant qualifications and scope of work.
Disclosure of Lobbying Activities (SF-LLL).
Certification Regarding Lobbying (GG-Lobbying Form).
Copy of current Negotiated Indirect Cost rate (IDC)
agreement (required in order to receive IDC).
Documentation of current Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) Financial Audit (if applicable).
Acceptable forms of documentation include:
1. Email confirmation from Federal Audit Clearinghouse (FAC) that
audits were submitted; or
2. Face sheets from audit reports. Applicants can find these on the
FAC website: https://harvester.census.gov/facdissem/Main.aspx.
Public Policy Requirements
All Federal public policies apply to IHS grants and cooperative
agreements with the exception of the Discrimination Policy.
Requirements for Project and Budget Narratives
A. Project Narrative: This narrative should be a separate document
that is no more than 10 pages and must: (1) Have consecutively numbered
pages; (2) use black font 12 points or larger; (3) be single-spaced;
(4) and be formatted to fit standard letter paper (8\1/2\ x 11 inches).
Be sure to succinctly answer all questions listed under the
evaluation criteria (refer to Section V.1, Evaluation Criteria) and
place all responses and required information in the correct section
noted below or they will not be considered or scored. If the narrative
exceeds the page limit, the application will be considered not
responsive and not be reviewed. The 10-page limit for the narrative
does not include the standard forms, Tribal Resolutions, budget, budget
justification and narrative, and/or other appendix items.
There are four (4) parts to the project narrative:
Part 1--Statement of Need
Part 2--Program Plan (Objectives and Activities)
Part 3--Organizational Capacity
Part 4--Program Evaluation (Data Collection and Reporting)
Part 1: Statement of Need (Limit--1 Page)
Describe the extent of the problem related to opioid misuse in the
applicant's community (``community'' means the applicant's Tribe,
village, Tribal organization, consortium of Tribes or Tribal
organizations, or urban center). Provide the facts and evidence that
support the need for the project and establish that the Tribe, Tribal
organization, or UIO understand the problems and can reasonably address
them. This section must also succinctly but completely answer the
questions listed under the evaluation criteria in Section V.1.A
Statement of Need.
Part 2: Program Plan (Objectives and Activities) (Limit--6 Pages)
Describe the scope of work the Tribe, Tribal organization, or UIO
by clearly and concisely outlining the following required components:
1. Goals and Objectives. Reference all required objectives.
2. Project Activities. Link your project activities to your
outlined goals and objectives.
This section must also succinctly but completely answer the
questions listed under the evaluation criteria in Section V.1.B Program
Plan (Objectives and Activities).
Part 3: Organizational Capacity (Limit--2 Pages)
Describe the Tribe, Tribal organization, or UIO's organizational
capacity to implement the proposed activities, in the following areas:
Ability to provide direct care, treatment and services, including MAT;
Current or ongoing projects related to opioid prevention, treatment,
recovery support, and aftercare; and a detailed description of
partnerships and networks with opioid misuse providers. Provide detail
on significant program activities and achievements/accomplishments over
the past five years associated with opioid prevention, treatment,
recovery support, and aftercare activities. Provide success stories,
data or other examples of how other funded projects/programs made an
impact in your community to address opioid use. If applicable, provide
justification for lack of progress of previous efforts. This section
must also succinctly but completely answer the questions listed under
the evaluation criteria in Section V.1.C Organizational Capacity.
Part 4: Program Evaluation (Limit--1 Page)
Based on the required activities in Section V describe how the
Tribe, Tribal organization, or UIO plans to collect data for the
proposed project and activities. Identify any type(s) of evaluation(s)
that will be used and how you will collaborate with partners to
complete any evaluation efforts or data collection. Progress reports
will include compilation of quantitative data (e.g., number served;
screenings completed) and qualitative or narrative (text) data.
Reporting elements should be specific to activities/programs, processes
and outcomes such as performance measures and other data relevant to
evaluation outcomes including intended results (i.e., impact and
outcomes). The IHS will partner with Technical Assistance Providers to
assist grantees in
[[Page 65848]]
developing data collection and evaluation plans and tools. Grantees
will be required to collect and submit semi-annual and annual progress
reports. Additional information regarding Data Collection refer to
Section V.1.D. Program Evaluation (Data Collection & Reporting).
In an effort to reduce the data collection burden for this grant
program, IHS will compile and analyze aggregate program statistics from
existing data sources to assist in evaluation of the projects.
Aggregate data may include, but is not limited to, associated
community-level Government Performance and Results Act (GPRA) health
care facility data available in the National Data Warehouse. For
additional information regarding IHS Government Performance and Results
Act (GPRA) https://www.ihs.gov/crs/gprareporting/. Comprehensive
information about CRS software and logic is at https://www.ihs.gov/crs/.
B. Budget Narrative (Limit--4 Pages): Provide a budget narrative
that explains the amounts requested for each line item of the budget.
The budget narrative should specifically describe how each item will
support the achievement of proposed objectives. Be very careful about
showing how each item in the ``Other'' category is justified. For
subsequent budget years, the narrative should highlight the changes
from year 1 or clearly indicate that there are no substantive budget
changes during the period of performance. Do NOT use the budget
narrative to expand the project narrative.
3. Submission Dates and Times
Applications must be submitted through Grants.gov by 11:59 p.m.
Eastern Daylight Time (EDT) on the Application Deadline Date. Any
application received after the application deadline will not be
accepted for review. Grants.gov will notify the applicant via email if
the application is rejected.
If technical challenges arise and assistance is required with the
application process, contact Grants.gov Customer Support (see contact
information at https://www.Grants.gov). If problems persist, contact
Mr. Paul Gettys ([email protected]), Acting Director, DGM, by
telephone at (301) 443-2114 or (301) 443-5204. Please be sure to
contact Mr. Gettys at least ten days prior to the application deadline.
Please do not contact the DGM until you have received a Grants.gov
tracking number. In the event you are not able to obtain a tracking
number, call the DGM as soon as possible.
IHS will not acknowledge receipt of applications.
4. Intergovernmental Review
Executive Order 12372 requiring intergovernmental review is not
applicable to this program.
5. Funding Restrictions
Pre-award costs are allowable up to 90 days before the
start date of the award provided the costs are otherwise allowable if
awarded. Pre-award costs are incurred at the risk of the applicant.
The available funds are inclusive of direct and indirect
costs.
Only one grant will be awarded per applicant.
The purchase of food (i.e., as supplies, for meetings or
events) is not an allowable cost with this grant funding and should not
be included in the budget/budget justification. If food is included in
the budget of an awarded application, those funds will be restricted
until the applicant supplies a modified budget eliminating those costs.
6. Electronic Submission Requirements
All applications must be submitted via Grants.gov. Please use the
https://www.Grants.gov website to submit an application. Find the
application by selecting the ``Search Grants'' link on the homepage.
Follow the instructions for submitting an application under the Package
tab. No other method of application submission is acceptable.
If the applicant cannot submit an application through Grants.gov, a
waiver must be requested. Prior approval must be requested and obtained
from Mr. Paul Gettys, Acting Director, DGM. A written waiver request
must be sent to [email protected] with a copy to
[email protected]. The waiver request must: (1) Be documented in
writing (emails are acceptable) before submitting an application by
some other method, and (2) include clear justification for the need to
deviate from the required application submission process.
Once the waiver request has been approved, the applicant will
receive a confirmation of approval email containing submission
instructions. A copy of the written approval must be included with the
application that is submitted to the DGM. Applications that are
submitted without a copy of the signed waiver from the Acting Director
of the DGM will not be reviewed. The Grants Management Officer of the
DGM will notify the applicant via email of this decision. Applications
submitted under waiver must be received by the DGM no later than 5:00
p.m., EDT, on the Application Deadline Date. Late applications will not
be accepted for processing. Applicants that do not register for both
the System for Award Management (SAM) and Grants.gov and/or fail to
request timely assistance with technical issues will not be considered
for a waiver to submit an application via alternative method.
Please be aware of the following:
Please search for the application package in https://www.Grants.gov by entering the Assistance Listing (CFDA) number or the
Funding Opportunity Number. Both numbers are located in the header of
this announcement.
If you experience technical challenges while submitting
your application, please contact Grants.gov Customer Support (see
contact information at https://www.Grants.gov).
Upon contacting Grants.gov, obtain a tracking number as
proof of contact. The tracking number is helpful if there are technical
issues that cannot be resolved and a waiver from the agency must be
obtained.
Applicants are strongly encouraged not to wait until the
deadline date to begin the application process through Grants.gov as
the registration process for SAM and Grants.gov could take up to twenty
working days.
Please follow the instructions on Grants.gov to include
additional documentation that may be requested by this funding
announcement.
Applicants must comply with any page limits described in
this funding announcement.
After submitting the application, the applicant will
receive an automatic acknowledgment from Grants.gov that contains a
Grants.gov tracking number. The IHS will not notify the applicant that
the application has been received.
Dun and Bradstreet (D&B) Data Universal Numbering System (DUNS)
Applicants and grantee organizations are required to obtain a DUNS
number and maintain an active registration in the SAM database. The
DUNS number is a unique 9-digit identification number provided by D&B
that uniquely identifies each entity. The DUNS number is site specific;
therefore, each distinct performance site may be assigned a DUNS
number. Obtaining a DUNS number is easy, and there is no charge. To
obtain a DUNS number, please access the request service through https://fedgov.dnb.com/webform, or call (866) 705-5711.
The Federal Funding Accountability and Transparency Act of 2006, as
amended (``Transparency Act''), requires all HHS recipients to report
information on sub-awards. Accordingly, all IHS grantees must
[[Page 65849]]
notify potential first-tier sub-recipients that no entity may receive a
first-tier sub-award unless the entity has provided its DUNS number to
the prime grantee organization. This requirement ensures the use of a
universal identifier to enhance the quality of information available to
the public pursuant to the Transparency Act.
System for Award Management (SAM)
Organizations that are not registered with SAM must have a DUNS
number first, then access the SAM online registration through the SAM
home page at https://www.sam.gov/SAM/ (U.S. organizations will also
need to provide an Employer Identification Number from the Internal
Revenue Service that may take an additional 2-5 weeks to become
active). Please see SAM.gov for details on the registration process and
timeline. Registration with the SAM is free of charge, but can take
several weeks to process. Applicants may register online at https://www.sam.gov/SAM/.
Additional information on implementing the Transparency Act,
including the specific requirements for DUNS and SAM, are available on
the DGM Grants Management, Policy Topics web page: https://www.ihs.gov/dgm/policytopics/.
V. Application Review Information
Weights assigned to each section are noted in parentheses. The 10-
page project narrative should include only the first year of
activities; information for multi-year projects should be included as
an appendix. See ``Multi-year Project Requirements'' at the end of this
section for more information. The narrative section should be written
in a manner that is clear to outside reviewers unfamiliar with prior
related activities of the applicant. It should be well organized,
succinct, and contain all information necessary for reviewers to
understand the project fully. Points will be assigned to each
evaluation criteria adding up to a total of 100 possible points. Points
are assigned as follows:
1. Evaluation Criteria
Required Activities
The focus of this pilot program is to support AI/ANs in their
efforts to provide prevention, treatment, aftercare, and recovery
services to address the impact of the opioid crisis in Native
communities. All COIPP activities should be culturally-based, and
family-oriented.
IHS is seeking applications that include all of the following
required activities:
1. Community Awareness and Education:
a. Grantees shall promote family, youth and community engagement in
the planning and implementation of opioid use prevention.
b. Grantees shall design community awareness campaigns and
education programs that inform and train community members on how to
recognize the signs of opioid misuse and overdose. Educational tool(s)
shall be culturally-appropriate and intended to engage families.
c. Grantees will develop educational resources, such as factsheets
using culturally relevant messaging; disseminate materials through
community stakeholders and community partners, and identify culturally
appropriate ways to implement educational programs in their local
communities.
d. Awareness Campaign should include instructions on the following,
among others:
How to access local opioid-specific services.
How to safeguard controlled prescription medications from
children and adolescents.
How to dispose properly of unused controlled prescription
medications.
2. Expand access to MAT services that include Tribal values,
culture, and treatments:
a. Promote family, youth and community engagement in the planning
and implementation of opioid use treatment.
b. Increase number of providers receiving training in MAT services
that include Tribal values, culture, and treatments.
c. Increase access to continuing education on MAT.
d. Expand access to integrated MAT services for Tribal communities,
including TeleMAT.
e. Increase the availability and utilization of MAT to include
Buprenorphine (all FDA approved formulations for OUD); buprenorphine/
naloxone combination product, and/or naltrexone to Tribal communities
in both rural and urban settings.
f. Increase awareness and distribution of naloxone as an overdose
intervention and teach skills in how to use it.
3. Build a support system for strengthening Native families by
implementing culturally-appropriate approaches.
a. Promote family, youth and community engagement in the planning
and implementation of opioid use recovery activities.
b. Develop a family-focused and culturally-based assessment that
captures biopsychosocial needs of AI/ANs.
c. Link assessment needs to support and recovery services.
d. Collaborate with relevant partners to build a support system for
recovery.
Applications will be reviewed and scored according to the quality
of responses to the required application components in Sections A-E.
The number of points after each heading is the maximum number of points
a review committee may assign to that section. Although scoring weights
are not assigned to individual numbers, responses to each number are
assessed in deriving the overall section score.
A. Statement of Need (20 Points)
1. Describe the extent of the problem related to opioid misuse in
the applicant's community (``community'' means the applicant's Tribe,
village, Tribal organization, consortium of Tribes or Tribal
organizations, or urban center). Provide the facts and evidence that
support the need for the project and establish that the Tribe, Tribal
organization, or UIO understands the problems and can reasonably
address them.
2. Include a description of social determinants of health that may
contribute to the opioid crisis in the community. Include details on
economic stability (such as housing and food insecurity); education
(such as early childhood education and development, high school
graduation, and language and literacy); social and community context
(such as discrimination, incarceration, and social cohesion); health
and health care (such as access to health care and health literacy);
and neighborhood and built environment (such as access to foods that
support healthy eating patterns, crime and violence, environmental
conditions, and quality of housing).
3. Provide background information on the Tribe, Tribal
organization, or UIO.
4. Based on the information and/or data currently available,
document the prevalence of opioid misuse rates.
5. Based on the information and/or data currently available,
document the need to increase the capacity to implement, sustain, and
improve effective opioid misuse prevention, treatment, aftercare, and
recovery services in the proposed catchment area that is consistent
with the purpose of this funding opportunity announcement.
6. Describe the service gaps and other problems related to the need
for funds targeting opioid misuse. Identify the source of the data.
[[Page 65850]]
7. Describe potential Tribal and community partners and resources
in the catchment area that can participate in the broad community
awareness campaign.
8. Affirm that the goals of the project are consistent with
priorities of the Tribal government or board of directors and that the
governing body is in support of this application.
B. Program Plan (Objectives and Activities) (35 Points)
1. Identify the population of focus for your project. Describe the
purpose of the proposed project, including goals and objectives and how
they are linked. Describe how the achievement of goals will increase
Tribe, Tribal organization, or UIO's capacity to support the goals and
required activities identified in Section I of this announcement.
2. Describe how the proposed project activities are related to the
proposed project's goals and objectives. Describe how the project
activities will increase the capacity of the community to prevent, and
treat opioid addiction in the communities.
3. Describe organizational capacity to implement the proposed
activities, including increased public awareness and education on
opioids; developing a comprehensive support team to strengthen and
empower AI/AN families in addressing the opioid crisis in Tribal or
Urban Indian communities; and integrating the use of MAT into their
community.
4. Describe how community partners (prevention and recovery support
providers, substance use disorder treatment programs, peer recovery
specialists, social workers, behavioral health clinics, community
health centers, youth serving organizations, family and youth homeless
providers, child welfare agencies, and primary care providers,
pharmacists, schools, clergy, and law enforcement, among others) will
be involved in the planning and implementation of the project.
5. Describe if/how the efforts of the proposed project will be
coordinated with any other related Federal grants or programs funded
through IHS, SAMHSA, BIA, or other Federal agencies.
6. Provide a chart depicting a realistic timeline for the project
period showing key activities, milestones, and responsible staff. These
key activities should include the required activities identified in
Section V of this announcement.
C. Organizational Capacity (15 Points)
Describe organizational capacity to implement the proposed
activities, including increased public awareness and education on
opioids; developing a comprehensive support team to strengthen and
empower AI/AN families in addressing the opioid crisis in Tribal or
Urban Indian communities; and integrating the use of MAT into the
Tribal community.
1. Describe significant program activities and achievements or
accomplishments over the past 5 years associated with opioid use
prevention, treatment and aftercare.
2. Describe the applicant Tribe, Tribal organization, or UIO's
experience and capacity to provide culturally appropriate/competent
opioid use services to the community and specific populations of focus.
3. Describe the resources available for the proposed project (e.g.,
facilities, equipment, information technology systems, and financial
management systems).
4. Describe how project continuity will be maintained if/when there
is a change in the operational environment (e.g., staff turnover,
change in project leadership, change in elected officials) to ensure
project stability over the life of the grant.
5. Provide a complete list of staff positions anticipated for the
project, including the Project Director, Project Coordinator, and other
key personnel, showing the role of each and their level of effort and
qualifications.
6. For key staff currently on board, include a biographical sketch
for the Project Director, Project Coordinator, or other key positions
as attachments to the project proposal/application. Do not include any
of the following in the biographical sketch:
[ssquf] Personally Identifiable Information (i.e., SSN, home
address);
[ssquf] Resumes; or
[ssquf] Curriculum Vitae.
D. Program Evaluation (Data Collection and Reporting) (20 Points)
Grantees will be required to collect and submit semi-annual and
annual progress reports. Logic Models are highly recommended to provide
guidance on collecting data for evaluation purposes (see Attachment A).
Applicants are expected to collect data within their communities on
prevalence rates on opioid use disorders and other data metrics related
to opioid-related mortality and morbidity.
1. Progress reports will include the compilation of quantitative
data (e.g., number served; screenings completed) and qualitative or
narrative (text) data.
2. Reporting elements should include data from local community-
based and evidence-based programs which pertain to proposed activities,
processes and outcomes such as performance measures and other data
relevant to evaluation outcomes including intended results (i.e.,
impact and outcomes).
3. Describe how the applicant will measure variables, what method
will be used and how the data will be used for quality improvement and
sustainability of program and meeting required reporting deadlines.
4. Based on the required objectives, describe the type(s) of
evaluation(s) that will be used and how the applicant will collaborate
with partners such as Tribal Epidemiology Centers or Urban Epidemiology
Centers to complete any evaluation efforts or data collection.
5. Describe a data plan on how to prioritize screening efforts such
as the Screening, Brief Intervention, and Referral to Treatment (SBIRT)
to identify patients at at-risk levels who use illicit drugs and are
referred for appropriate services. Describe how the data collection
plan includes efforts that support the IHS Division of Behavioral
Health (DBH) GPRA measure 1) Proportion of AI/ANs that received the
Screening, Brief Intervention, and Referral to Treatment (SBIRT).
6. Describe how annual progress reports will be entered into the
Behavioral Health Reporting portal system and capability and experience
with similar evaluations.
7. Describe any data-sharing agreements that are established, or
which will be established, in support of these activities.
E. Budget and Budget Justification (10 Points)
1. Include a line item budget for all expenditures identifying
reasonable and allowable costs necessary to accomplish the goals and
objectives as outlined in the project narrative for Project Year 1
only. The budget expenditures should correlate with the scope of work
described in the project narrative for the first project year expenses
only.
2. Provide a narrative justification of the budget line items, as
well as a description of existing resources and other support the
applicant expects to receive for the proposed project. Other support is
defined as funds or resources, whether Federal, non-Federal or
institutional, in direct support of activities through fellowships,
gifts, prizes, in-kind contributions or non-Federal means. (This should
correspond to Item #18 on the SF-424, Estimated Funding, and SF-424A
Budget Information, Section C Non-Federal resources.)
3. Provide a narrative justification supporting the development or
continued collaboration with other
[[Page 65851]]
partners regarding the proposed activities to be implemented.
4. Depending on the availability of funds, the IHS may host annual
meetings to provide in-depth training and technical assistance to
awardees. In order to help establish critical mass of community and
staff members who are informed and committed to implement the project,
awardees should plan to send a minimum of three people (including the
Project Director/Project Coordinator) to one meeting of all awardees in
each year of the grant. At these meetings, awardees will receive
training related to grant objectives, discuss success and challenges in
implementation of the program, present the results of their projects,
and receive other technical assistance from IHS staff and/or
contractors. Each meeting may be up to 3 days. The locations will be
determined at a later date, but applicants should estimate costs for
Denver, CO as a potential site that is accessible to most of ``Indian
Country'' and attendance is strongly encouraged.
Multi-Year Project Requirements
Applications must include a brief project narrative and budget (one
additional page per year) addressing the developmental plans for each
additional year of the project. This attachment will not count as part
of the project narrative or the budget narrative.
Additional documents can be uploaded as Appendix Items in
Grants.gov
Work plan, logic model and/or time line for proposed
objectives.
Position descriptions for key staff (i.e., Project
Director, Project Coordinator).
Consultant or contractor proposed scope of work and letter
of commitment (if applicable).
Organizational chart.
Map of area identifying project location(s).
Additional documents to support narrative (e.g., data
tables, relevant news articles).
Advisory board(s) description (membership, roles and
functions, and frequency of meetings).
2. Review and Selection
Each application will be prescreened for eligibility and
completeness as outlined in the funding announcement. Applications that
meet the eligibility criteria shall be reviewed for merit by the
Objective Review Committee (ORC) based on evaluation criteria.
Incomplete applications and applications that are not responsive to the
administrative thresholds will not be referred to the ORC and will not
be funded. The applicant will be notified of this determination.
Applicants must address all program requirements and provide all
required documentation.
3. Notifications of Disposition
All applicants will receive an Executive Summary Statement from the
IHS DBH within 30 days of the conclusion of the ORC outlining the
strengths and weaknesses of their application. The summary statement
will be sent to the Authorizing Official identified on the face page
(SF-424) of the application.
A. Award Notices for Funded Applications
The Notice of Award (NoA) is the authorizing document for which
funds are dispersed to the approved entities and reflects the amount of
Federal funds awarded, the purpose of the grant, the terms and
conditions of the award, the effective date of the award, and the
budget/project period. Each entity approved for funding must have a
user account in GrantSolutions in order to retrieve the NoA. Please see
the Agency Contacts list in Section VII for the systems contact
information.
B. Approved but Unfunded Applications
Approved applications not funded due to lack of available funds
will be held for one year. If funding becomes available during the
course of the year, the application may be reconsidered.
Note: Any correspondence other than the official NoA executed by an
IHS grants management official announcing to the project director that
an award has been made to their organization is not an authorization to
implement their program on behalf of the IHS.
VI. Award Administration Information
1. Administrative Requirements
Grants are administered in accordance with the following
regulations and policies:
A. The criteria as outlined in this funding announcement.
B. Administrative Regulations for Grants:
Uniform Administrative Requirements for HHS Awards,
located at 45 CFR part 75.
C. Grants Policy:
HHS Grants Policy Statement, Revised 01/07.
D. Cost Principles:
Uniform Administrative Requirements for HHS Awards, ``Cost
Principles,'' located at 45 CFR part 75, subpart E.
E. Audit Requirements:
Uniform Administrative Requirements for HHS Awards,
``Audit Requirements,'' located at 45 CFR part 75, subpart F.
2. Indirect Costs
This section applies to all recipients that request reimbursement
of indirect costs (IDC) in their application budget. In accordance with
HHS Grants Policy Statement, Part II-27, IHS requires applicants to
obtain a current IDC rate agreement, and submit it to DGM, prior to DGM
issuing an award. The rate agreement must be prepared in accordance
with the applicable cost principles and guidance as provided by the
cognizant agency or office. A current rate covers the applicable grant
activities under the current award's budget period. If the current rate
agreement is not on file with the DGM at the time of award, the IDC
portion of the budget will be restricted. The restrictions remain in
place until the current rate agreement is provided to the DGM.
Available funds are inclusive of direct and appropriate indirect
costs. Approved indirect funds are awarded as part of the award amount,
and no additional funds will be provided.
Generally, IDC rates for IHS grantees are negotiated with the
Division of Cost Allocation (DCA) https://rates.psc.gov/ or the
Department of Interior (Interior Business Center) https://ibc.doi.gov/ICS/tribal. For questions regarding the indirect cost policy, please
call the Grants Management Specialist listed under ``Agency Contacts''
or the main DGM office at (301) 443-5204.
3. Reporting Requirements
The awardee must submit required reports consistent with the
applicable deadlines. Failure to submit required reports within the
time allowed may result in suspension or termination of an active
grant, withholding of additional awards for the project, or other
enforcement actions such as withholding of payments or converting to
the reimbursement method of payment. Continued failure to submit
required reports may result in one or both of the following: (1) The
imposition of special award provisions; and (2) the non-funding or non-
award of other eligible projects or activities. This requirement
applies whether the delinquency is attributable to the failure of the
awardee organization or the individual responsible for preparation of
the reports. Per DGM policy, all reports are required to be submitted
electronically by attaching them as a ``Grant Note'' in GrantSolutions.
Personnel responsible for submitting
[[Page 65852]]
reports will be required to obtain a login and password for
GrantSolutions. Please see the Agency Contacts list in Section VII for
the systems contact information.
The reporting requirements for this program are noted below.
A. Progress Reports
Program progress reports are required semi-annually, within 30 days
after the budget period ends (specific dates will be listed in the NoA
Terms and Conditions). These reports must include a brief comparison of
actual accomplishments to the goals established for the period, a
summary of progress to date or, if applicable, provide sound
justification for the lack of progress, and other pertinent information
as required. A final report must be submitted within 90 days of
expiration of the period of performance.
B. Financial Reports
Federal Financial Report (FFR or SF-425), Cash Transaction Reports
are due 30 days after the close of every calendar quarter to the
Payment Management Services, HHS at https://pms.psc.gov. The applicant
is also requested to upload a copy of the FFR (SF-425) into our grants
management system, GrantSolutions. Failure to submit timely reports may
result in adverse award actions blocking access to funds.
Grantees are responsible and accountable for accurate information
being reported on all required reports: The Progress Reports and
Federal Financial Report.
C. Federal Sub-Award Reporting System (FSRS)
This award may be subject to the Transparency Act sub-award and
executive compensation reporting requirements of 2 CFR part 170.
The Transparency Act requires the OMB to establish a single
searchable database, accessible to the public, with information on
financial assistance awards made by Federal agencies. The Transparency
Act also includes a requirement for recipients of Federal grants to
report information about first-tier sub-awards and executive
compensation under Federal assistance awards.
IHS has implemented a Term of Award into all IHS Standard Terms and
Conditions, NoAs and funding announcements regarding the FSRS reporting
requirement. This IHS Term of Award is applicable to all IHS grant and
cooperative agreements issued on or after October 1, 2010, with a
$25,000 sub-award obligation dollar threshold met for any specific
reporting period. Additionally, all new (discretionary) IHS awards
(where the period of performance is made up of more than one budget
period) and where: (1) The period of performance start date was October
1, 2010 or after, and (2) the primary awardee will have a $25,000 sub-
award obligation dollar threshold during any specific reporting period
will be required to address the FSRS reporting.
For the full IHS award term implementing this requirement and
additional award applicability information, visit the DGM Grants Policy
website at https://www.ihs.gov/dgm/policytopics/.
D. Compliance With Executive Order 13166 Implementation of Services
Accessibility Provisions for All Grant Application Packages and Funding
Opportunity Announcements
Recipients of Federal financial assistance (FFA) from HHS must
administer their programs in compliance with Federal civil rights laws
that prohibit discrimination on the basis of race, color, national
origin, disability, age and, in some circumstances, religion,
conscience, and sex. This includes ensuring programs are accessible to
persons with limited English proficiency. The HHS Office for Civil
Rights provides guidance on complying with civil rights laws enforced
by HHS. Please see https://www.hhs.gov/civil-rights/for-providers/provider-obligations/ and https://www.hhs.gov/ocr/civilrights/understanding/section1557/.
Recipients of FFA must ensure that their programs are
accessible to persons with limited English proficiency. HHS provides
guidance to recipients of FFA on meeting their legal obligation to take
reasonable steps to provide meaningful access to their programs by
persons with limited English proficiency. Please see https://www.hhs.gov/civil-rights/for-individuals/special-topics/limited-english-proficiency/fact-sheet-guidance/ and https://www.lep.gov. For further guidance on providing culturally and
linguistically appropriate services, recipients should review the
National Standards for Culturally and Linguistically Appropriate
Services in Health and Health Care at https://minorityhealth.hhs.gov/omh/browse.aspx?lvl=2&lvlid=53.
Recipients of FFA also have specific legal obligations for
serving qualified individuals with disabilities. Please see https://www.hhs.gov/ocr/civilrights/understanding/disability/.
HHS funded health and education programs must be
administered in an environment free of sexual harassment. Please see
https://www.hhs.gov/civil-rights/for-individuals/sex-discrimination/; https://www2.ed.gov/about/offices/list/ocr/docs/shguide.html; and https://www.eeoc.gov/eeoc/publications/fs-sex.cfm.
Recipients of FFA must also administer their programs in
compliance with applicable Federal religious nondiscrimination laws and
applicable Federal conscience protection and associated anti-
discrimination laws. Collectively, these laws prohibit exclusion,
adverse treatment, coercion, or other discrimination against persons or
entities on the basis of their consciences, religious beliefs, or moral
convictions. Please see https://www.hhs.gov/conscience/conscience-protections/ and https://www.hhs.gov/conscience/religious-freedom/.
Please contact the HHS Office for Civil Rights for more information
about obligations and prohibitions under Federal civil rights laws at
https://www.hhs.gov/ocr/about-us/contact-us/ or call 1-800-
368-1019 or TDD 1-800-537-7697.
E. Federal Awardee Performance and Integrity Information System
(FAPIIS)
The IHS is required to review and consider any information about
the applicant that is in the Federal Awardee Performance and Integrity
Information System (FAPIIS), at https://www.fapiis.gov, before making
any award in excess of the simplified acquisition threshold (currently
$150,000) over the period of performance. An applicant may review and
comment on any information about itself that a Federal awarding agency
previously entered. IHS will consider any comments by the applicant, in
addition to other information in FAPIIS in making a judgment about the
applicant's integrity, business ethics, and record of performance under
Federal awards when completing the review of risk posed by applicants
as described in 45 CFR 75.205.
As required by 45 CFR part 75 Appendix XII of the Uniform Guidance,
non-Federal entities (NFEs) are required to disclose in FAPIIS any
information about criminal, civil, and administrative proceedings, and/
or affirm that there is no new information to provide. This applies to
NFEs that receive Federal awards (currently active grants, cooperative
agreements, and procurement contracts) greater than $10,000,000 for any
period of time during the period of performance of an award/project.
[[Page 65853]]
Mandatory Disclosure Requirements
As required by 2 CFR part 200 of the Uniform Guidance, and the HHS
implementing regulations at 45 CFR part 75, the IHS must require a non-
Federal entity or an applicant for a Federal award to disclose, in a
timely manner, in writing to the IHS or pass-through entity all
violations of Federal criminal law involving fraud, bribery, or
gratuity violations potentially affecting the Federal award.
Submission is required for all applicants and recipients, in
writing, to the IHS and to the HHS Office of Inspector General all
information related to violations of Federal criminal law involving
fraud, bribery, or gratuity violations potentially affecting the
Federal award. 45 CFR 75.113.
Disclosures must be sent in writing to:
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Indian Health Service,
Division of Grants Management, ATTN: Paul Gettys, Acting Director, 5600
Fishers Lane, Mail Stop: 09E70, Rockville, MD 20857 (Include
``Mandatory Grant Disclosures'' in subject line), Office: (301) 443-
5204, Fax: (301) 594-0899, Email: [email protected]
And
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Office of Inspector
General, ATTN: Mandatory Grant Disclosures, Intake Coordinator, 330
Independence Avenue SW, Cohen Building, Room 5527, Washington, DC
20201, URL: https://oig.hhs.gov/fraud/report-fraud/index.asp (Include
``Mandatory Grant Disclosures'' in subject line), Fax: (202) 205-0604
(Include ``Mandatory Grant Disclosures'' in subject line) or Email:
[email protected]
Failure to make required disclosures can result in any of the
remedies described in 45 CFR 75.371 Remedies for noncompliance,
including suspension or debarment (see 2 CFR parts 180 & 376).
VII. Agency Contacts
1. Questions on the programmatic issues may be directed to: JB
Kinlacheeny, Alcohol and Substance Abuse Lead, Indian Health Service,
Office of Clinical and Preventative Services/Division of Behavioral
Health, 5600 Fishers Lane 08-N34B, Rockville, MD 20857, Phone: 301-443-
0104, Email: [email protected].
2. Questions on grants management and fiscal matters may be
directed to: Patience Musikikongo, Grants Management Specialist, 5600
Fishers Lane, Mail Stop: 09E70, Rockville, MD 20857, Phone: 301-443-
2059, Fax: (301) 594-0899, Email: [email protected].
3. Questions on systems matters may be directed to: Paul Gettys,
Acting Director, DGM, Rockville, MD 20857, Phone: (301) 443-2114; or
the DGM main line (301) 443-5204, Fax: (301) 443-9602, EMail:
[email protected].
VIII. Other Information
The Public Health Service strongly encourages all grant,
cooperative agreement and contract recipients to provide a smoke-free
workplace and promote the non-use of all tobacco products. In addition,
Public Law 103-227, the Pro-Children Act of 1994, prohibits smoking in
certain facilities (or in some cases, any portion of the facility) in
which regular or routine education, library, day care, health care, or
early childhood development services are provided to children. This is
consistent with the HHS mission to protect and advance the physical and
mental health of the American people.
Michael D. Weahkee,
RADM, Assistant Surgeon General, U.S. Public Health Service, Director,
Indian Health Service.
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[FR Doc. 2020-22941 Filed 10-15-20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4165-16-P