This Will be a 36 month project that the Hope foundation will implement in Washington, DC based  the need shown through the data and market research in Washington, DC.  I have attached a document that will be helpful in complete this task. We are drafting a proposal for category 1. The projected budget is 650,000 over 3 years and everyone on this grant is part time. This is for a grant writing class. 

Ready, Set, Grow:Pathway to Recovery 

This project will enhance and expand mentoring services for children and youth affected by

opioids and other substance use, as well as their families. Mentoring services may include one-

on-one, group, or peer mentoring—or a combination of these approaches. In addition to

mentoring services, this NOFO may support supplemental activities that are consistent with the

proposed mentoring model and have a clear connection to the mentoring program. Up to 20

percent of the total funds may be allocated for other non-mentoring direct services, such as

mental health treatment, substance use treatment, or other supportive services identified and

aligned with the project design. Please see the Eligible Applicants section for the eligibility

criteria.

Category 1: Local Project Sites 

Category 1 will provide mentoring services as part of a prevention, treatment, recovery,

and supportive approach for those youth impacted by substance use in a local

jurisdiction. For more information, see the section titled Eligibility.

This NOFO supports the implementation and delivery of high-quality mentoring services for

youth who are currently using or dependent on substances, as well as youth at risk of substance

use or who have close family members experiencing substance use or dependency. Mentoring

services may include one-on-one, group, or peer mentoring—or a combination of these

approaches. Applicants are required to provide mentoring services to youth ages 17 years or

younger at the time of admission into the program. Mentors must be adults ages 18 or older—in

cases where peer mentoring models are implemented, older peers may act as mentors under

the supervision of an adult. Applicants must clearly indicate the number of new and existing

matches they intend to serve during the project period.

Applicants should target both the impacted youth and their families. Proposed projects should

provide training for mentors to recognize the signs and symptoms of substance use among

individuals at risk of opioid and other substance use. The proposed project may support

supplemental activities that are consistent with the proposed mentoring model and have a clear

connection to the mentoring program. Applicants must clearly articulate the connection between

such services and the project and the reason they are critical to a project providing mentoring

services for this particular youth population and assisting such youth in sustaining recovery.

Up to 20 percent of the total project funds may be allocated for other non-mentoring direct

services, such as mental health treatment, substance use treatment, or other supportive

services identified and aligned with the project design.

Applicants are expected to include a fully executed Mentoring Program Profile document (refer

to Appendix A) as a component of their application

There are two categories under this NOFO:

Category 1: Local Project Sites. The focus of this category is to provide mentoring services as

part of a prevention, treatment, recovery, and supportive approach for those youth impacted by

substance use. See the section titled Eligibility. Mentoring organizations under Category 1 must

establish a formal relationship through a Memorandum of Understanding with a public or private

substance use treatment organization serving the targeted project site location that can

demonstrate they are licensed and/or accredited prior to application submission

Agency Funding Priorities

In order to advance public safety and help meet its mission, OJP will provide priority

consideration to applicants that propose (as applicable within the scope of this funding

opportunity) projects designed to advance the goals listed below. Applicants seeking priority

consideration should specify in the proposal narrative (and in the budget detail form, if

applicable) which of the following goal(s) the project is intended to advance and how it will do

so:

(a) Directly supporting law enforcement operations (including immigration law enforcement

operations);

(b) Combatting violent crime;

(c) Supporting services to American citizens;

(d) Protecting American children; and

(e) Supporting American victims of trafficking and sexual assault 

Program Goals and Objectives

Goal 1: Improve outcomes (such as improved academic performance and reduced school

dropout rates) for youth impacted by opioid and other substance use through mentoring.

Objective 1: Expand the capacity of existing mentoring programs to provide high-quality

services to youth that reduce substance use, delinquency, or other problem behaviors.

Goal 2: Reduce the impact of opioid or other substance use on youth.

Objective 1: Promote the development of innovative approaches to mentoring youth

impacted by opioid and other substance use.

Objective 2: Develop/utilize/provide access to related services (including educational

and support services) for mentees in the program and their families to address opioid or

other substance use issues.

How Awards Will Contribute to Program Goals/Objectives

OJJDP expects award recipients to reduce opioid and other substance use and their negative

impact through targeted goals that promote resilience, strengthen communities, and develop

sustainable prevention and treatment systems. Efforts will include mentoring services,

enhanced with appropriate behavioral health support and recovery assistance for youth and

their families and improving family dynamics and sobriety rates. To enhance mentoring capacity,

the focus will be recruiting and training mentors to understand the signs and symptoms of

substance use for those at risk of using opioids and other substances. Strengthening

communities will involve collaborations with treatment providers. The initiative seeks to divert at-

risk populations from the juvenile justice system through mentoring and prevention programs,

ultimately reducing opioid and other substance use and improving long-term family and

community outcomes. Programs will:

• Enhance and/or expand their mentoring services to meet the needs of youth impacted

by opioids and other substance use.

• Monitor the program’s target population, new and existing matches, and delivered

services as specified in the project design and Mentoring Program Profile attachment

(see details below in Program Design and Implementation).

Expected Outcomes: Deliverables and Performance Measures

For any applicants that receive funding, OJP expects to require the recipient to submit the

following deliverables and performance measures. (See the Application Resource Guide for the

definitions of “deliverable” and “performance measure.”)

OJP will measure success by reviewing a recipient's submission of performance reports and

data and the extent to which project implementation reflects progress toward the goals and

objectives of this NOFO.

Deliverables

Recipients under this funding opportunity do not need to submit any deliverables other than the

standard Post-Award Requirements and Administration.

Performance Measures

Recipients will be required to submit regular performance reports that show their progress

toward achieving the goals and objectives identified in Program Goals and Objectives. See

Performance Measure Reporting in this NOFO for details.

A list of performance measure questions for this funding opportunity can be found here. OJJDP

will provide further guidance on performance measures and the post-award submission process

to successful awardees.

Standard Applicant Information *REQUIRED ELEMENT*

The Standard Applicant Information section of the JustGrants application is prepopulated with

the SF-424 data submitted in Grants.gov. Review the Standard Applicant Information in

JustGrants and make whatever edits are needed. Add ZIP codes for areas affected by the

project; confirm the Authorized Representative; and confirm the organization’s unique entity

identifier, legal name, and address.

Proposal Abstract

Enter a proposal abstract (no more than 2,000 characters) summarizing the proposed project.

Abstracts will be made publicly available on OJP.gov and USASpending.gov if the project is

awarded, so the abstract should not contain any personally identifiable information (e.g., the

name of the project director).

Write the abstract in paragraph form without bullets or tables and in the third person (e.g.,

they/their, the community, rather than I/we). Include the following information:

• Name of the proposed project.

• Purpose of the proposed project (i.e., what the project will do and why it is necessary).

• Where the project will take place (i.e., the service area, if applicable).

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Eligibility Program

Description

Application

Submission

Application

Review

Award

Notices

Post-Award

Requirements

Other

Information

Application

Checklist

• Who will be served by the project (i.e., who will be helped or have their needs

addressed).

• What activities will be carried out to complete the project (see Purpose of the Funding).

• Subrecipient(s)/partner organizations or entities, if known.

• Deliverables and expected outcomes (i.e., what the project will achieve; see Expected

Outcomes: Deliverables and Performance Measures).

See the Application Resource Guide for an example of a proposal abstract.

Data Requested With Application

Financial Management and System of Internal Controls Questionnaire

(including Applicant Disclosure of High-Risk Status)

Complete the Financial Management and System of Internal Controls Questionnaire, which

helps OJP assess:

• What financial management and internal control systems you have in place.

• Whether these systems would be sufficient to maintain a funding award.

• The associated potential risks of your entity as part of the pre-award risk assessment

process.

If you are applying as an “individual,

” you do not need to complete this form.

See the Application Resource Guide: Financial Management and System of Internal Controls

Questionnaire (including Applicant Disclosure of High-Risk Status) for additional guidance on

how to complete the questionnaire.

Agency Funding Priorities Inventory

Applicants should complete the Agency Funding Priorities Inventory to indicate whether they are

seeking priority consideration based on any of the items listed in the Agency Funding Priorities

section, and if so, which priority(ies) their project will address.

Project Description *REQUIRED ELEMENT*

You have the choice of two formats to submit the Project Description:

1. 2. Attaching a narrative document in JustGrants OR

Submitting answers to a set of questions in JustGrants.

You will need to indicate which of the two formats will be used in the “Project

Description” question set (labeled “JJ Ment Opioids QS”) in JustGrants.

If you choose to attach a narrative document, you do not need to answer any other questions in

the question set. Instead, you will attach the document under Proposal Narrative in the

application.

If you choose to complete the question set, then you will proceed through the other questions.

You do not need to also attach a document under Proposal Narrative.

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Application

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Formatting Guidance

Attached document format uploaded under Proposal Narrative (if selected):

• File type: PDF or Word document

• Spacing: Double-spaced

• Font size: 12 pt. Tables, charts, and graphs included in the Proposal Narrative can

be created in a legible font smaller than 12 point and will count toward the page

limit. Margins: 1-inch margins or larger.

• Page limit: 30 pages; include consecutive page numbers. If the narrative exceeds

these limits, only the text within the limits will be considered for the review.

Question and answer format (if selected):

• Respond to all questions in the Project Description questionnaire in JustGrants. Do

not attach any files under Proposal Narrative.

• Do not exceed 90,000 total characters across all responses (90,000 total characters

is approximately 30 pages of text).

If responses to any of the questions exceed the text limit, only the text within the limits will

be considered.

Content of the Project Description: Regardless of the format chosen, the Project Description

must include the four sections listed below. If you seek priority consideration, the Project

Description must state which priority goal(s) the applicant’s project will advance and describe

how (see section Agency Funding Priorities under Program Description).

1. Description of the Need: What critical issue or problem related to the purpose of this

funding opportunity are you proposing to address with this project? How do you know the

problem exists? Please answer the following:

• What is the need, gap, or issue to be addressed by the proposed project?

• How does supporting information, data, and/or evidence demonstrate the need’s

existence, size, and impact on the target population and community?

• How does this problem relate to the purpose of the funding opportunity?

2. Project Goals and Objectives: How closely will the proposed project address the identified

need and purpose of this funding opportunity (see Program Goals and Objectives). Please

answer the following:

• What are the project goals? (Goals are broad, visionary statements on what you hope to

accomplish.)

• What are the project objectives? (Objectives are specific outcomes you plan to achieve

through project activities.)

• How do the project goals and objectives address the identified need?

• How do the project goals and objectives relate to the purpose of this funding

opportunity?

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Post-Award

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Application

Checklist

3. Project Design and Implementation: What is your plan to implement project activities that

are likely to meet the goals and objectives of the proposed project? Please answer the

following:

• What activities will you conduct to achieve the proposed goals and objectives?

• Who are your target populations, including the exact number of youth to be served and

the type of program model to be used (individual, group, or peer)?

• What are your partnerships and referral services?

• How will the partnership with a substance abuse agency work to help you meet the

needs of the targeted youth?

• What are your strategies for addressing issues of underserved youth within your service

delivery framework?

• Why do you believe these activities will be effective? (For example, are they based on

your organization’s previous experience, were they used in a similar program conducted

elsewhere, or are they drawn from research or evidence?)

• How will you deliver or complete the activities? When will the activities take place?

• How will the mentoring approach respond to the unique needs of targeted youth in a way

that is likely to promote positive outcomes?

• Who in your organization will conduct the activities, including key staff?

• Who will participate in and benefit from the activity?

• What deliverables, reports, and other items will be produced as part of the project?

• If subrecipients will help conduct the project, please name them (if they are known) or

describe how they will be identified. What will their role be in conducting project

activities?

• What public or private substance use treatment agency are you partnering with? What

will be their role in your project?

• Do you plan to use local resources to support this project? If so, how?

• What are your plans to sustain the mentoring project’s work beyond the grant period?

4. Capabilities and Competencies: How will you bring administrative and technical capacity

and expertise to successfully complete this project? Please answer the following:

• What demonstrates your capacity to deliver the proposed project and meet the

requirements of the award, including grant management and administration?

• How do the skills and composition of the project staff, including any proposed

subrecipients, demonstrate their ability to deliver the proposed project and meet the

requirements of the award?

• How does your experience conducting related projects or activities (either in the past or

currently) demonstrate your ability to undertake the proposed project activities?

• How does the relevant experience of team members with key responsibilities support the

implementation of the project?

• How do your staffing and management patterns for the project connect to the project

design?

• What are the relevant history, capabilities, and competencies of the public or private

substance use treatment agency are you partnering with?

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Eligibility Program

Description

Application

Submission

Application

Review

Award

Notices

Post-Award

Requirements

Other

Information

Application

Checklist

Project Evaluations: If you propose to use award funds to conduct project evaluations, you

must follow the guidance in the “Note on Project Evaluations” section in the Application

Resource Guide. Costs for data- and evaluation-related activities are allowable grant costs.1

Budget and Associated Documentation: Budget Detail Form *REQUIRED

ELEMENT*

Complete the budget detail form.

• Non-mentoring expenses must be explicitly detailed in the budget narrative.

• List each individual cost needed to implement your proposed project under the

appropriate cost category.

• Make sure the name/description of each cost is clear. Provide the detailed calculation

(e.g., cost per unit and number of units) for the total cost.

• Consider if the costs are reasonable, allocable to, and necessary for the performance of

the project, and if they will comply with the funding statute and agency requirements.

This includes the conditions of the award and the cost principles set out in 2 C.F.R. Part

200, Subpart E and the DOJ Grants Financial Guide.

• Enter additional narrative, as needed, to fully describe the cost calculations and

connection to your project goals and objectives.