The Promise of New Funding for
Substance Abuse Prevention and Treatment
to
Promote Safety, Permanence, and
Well-Being for Children
_______________________________________________
Questions &
Answers
About New Grants under the
Child and Family Services Improvement
Act of 2006
P.L. 109-288
February 2007
A
collaborative effort of the American Public Human Services Association, Center
for Law and Social Policy, Child Welfare League of America, Children’s Defense
Fund, Legal Action Center, National Association of State Alcohol and Drug Abuse
Directors, and the Rebecca Project for Human Rights
_______________________________________________
These Questions and
Answers (Q&A) were prepared by an informal coalition of groups, including
the American Public Human Services Association, Center for Law and Social
Policy, Child Welfare League of America, Children’s Defense Fund, Legal Action
Center, National Association of State Alcohol and Drug Abuse Directors, and the
Rebecca Project for Human Rights. Our group convened after passage of the Child
and Family Services Improvement Act of 2006 to develop materials about the new
funding and the opportunity for those concerned about alcohol and drug
addiction and its impact on children and families to use it to improve outcomes
for children and families. We hope that this Q&A will stimulate
organizations and agencies to begin planning and forming regional partnerships
so they will be ready to apply for grants under the Act once they are formally
announced by the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) in the Spring of
2007.
The Child and Family
Services Improvement Act takes an important step forward toward providing
adequate and appropriate services to children and youth involved or at risk of
becoming involved with the child welfare system. Among the provisions of the new
Act is the authorization of $145 million over five years in mandatory, targeted
grants to regional partnerships to
improve the safety, permanence, and well-being for children who are in out-of-home
placement or at risk of out-of-home placement as a result of a parent’s or
other caretaker’s methamphetamine or other substance abuse. We hope investments
in quality prevention and treatment activities supported with these funds will
help to promote the expansion of these activities in the future so more
children and families can benefit.
We know that quality
substance abuse treatment works. As noted in materials cited in Appendix A of
this Q&A, the National Institute of Drug Abuse has cited three decades of
scientific research and clinical practice that have yielded a variety of
effective approaches to drug addiction and treatment. Recent cost benefit
studies have consistently found that benefits to society associated with
reducing substance abuse, including decreased crime, improved health, increased
employment, and increased overall social functioning are greater than the cost
of addiction treatment. The particular benefits of comprehensive family treatment
for mothers with substance abuse problems who often have been victims of
violence also have been well documented in recent years. Evaluations of family
treatment by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration
(SAMHSA) in the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) demonstrate
significantly reduced alcohol and drug use, as well as decreased criminal
behavior. Such treatment is also cost-effective. As former Secretary of HHS
Tommy Thompson said almost a decade ago, “There’s no question that treatment
provides a second chance to mothers and children, and we need to do everything
we can to give them that opportunity.”
There is also evidence that prevention
activities can help to safeguard families and communities against the
deleterious effects of substance abuse. Data on model programs and
cross-site evaluations compiled by the Center for Substance Abuse Prevention in
SAMHSA offer the most compelling research to date that substance abuse
prevention works, provided certain core components are in place. The success of
these programs relates, in part, to the extent to which families and community
resources are involved in the prevention activities. Many model programs
involve community building activities or are delivered through community
organizations. They often seek to reduce risk factors and enhance protective
factors for substance abuse.
The Administration for
Children and Families in HHS will issue the announcement and request for
proposals for these new substance abuse prevention and treatment grants later
this year, likely in Spring 2007. The information noted below tracks closely
the Act’s provisions. Where additional views are expressed, they represent the
views of our various organizations.
Thank you for your
interest and good work on behalf of children and families. Please take a
careful look at the opportunities provided by these new funds. Contacts for the
collaborating organizations are noted in Appendix E. Please
contact any of us for further information.
2.
What are the intended goals and outcomes of these grants?
3.
What types of prevention or treatment activities may be supported
with these new funds?
6.
Why are these activities so important for promoting safety,
well-being, and permanence for children?
7.
Must these funds be used only for methamphetamine abuse?
Targeted Children and Families
8.
Must the funds be targeted to particular groups of children and
families?
10.
How does the Act define regional partnerships?
11.
Must state child welfare agencies be part of the regional
partnership?
13.
What special provisions are made for Indian tribes in this new
grant program?
14.
What are some things to think about in forming a regional
partnership?
15.
Who might potential partners be in your community or state?
16.
What are the requirements for the grant application?
19.
Must the grants be used to fund only statewide initiatives?
20.
Can an applicant apply for more than one grant?
21. Can a
state child welfare agency be involved with more than one application?
22.
Can an applicant apply for a grant that will support
activities in more than one state?
23.
What considerations must the Secretary take into account in
making grant award determinations?
24.
Are any factors given greater weight or extra consideration?
25.
How much money will be available and over what period of
time?
26.
Will a match for the federal funds be required?
27.
What is the size of the grants that will be available?
Timetable for Formal HHS Announcement
of Grants
29.
What are the evaluation requirements for activities
conducted with these grants?
30.
Are any funds set aside for evaluation, research, or technical
assistance?
31.
What types of reports are required of grantees?
32.
Must reports also be
made to Congress?
1.
What is the source of the new funding for substance
abuse prevention and treatment for families with children in out-of-home care
or for children at risk of placement in care?
The Child and Family Services Improvement Act of 2006 (P.L. 109-288), which reauthorized the Promoting Safe and Stable Families Program, targeted $145 million over five years of the program’s total five-year funding for competitive grants for substance abuse prevention and treatment activities for children in out-of-home care or at risk of placement in care as a result of a parent’s or other caretaker’s methamphetamine or other substance abuse. The grants, which will be made from FY 2007 through FY 2010, may be expended through FY 2011. See the Child and Family Services Improvement Act at
2.
What are the intended goals and outcomes of these grants?
These targeted grants are to address the needs of families with methamphetamine or other substance abuse whose children are at risk of or involved in the child welfare system, and to enhance the safety, permanence, and well-being of these children (§ 4(b)(2)(A)(f)(1)).
3. What types of prevention or treatment activities may be
supported with these new funds?
Competitive federal grant awards will be made to regional partnerships
to provide integrated and collaborative interagency programs and services
designed to increase the well-being, safety, and permanency outcomes for
children who are in out-of-home placement, or at risk of such placement, as a
result of a parent’s or caretaker’s methamphetamine or other substance abuse (§ 4(b)(2)(A)(f)(1)). Funds may be used to accomplish these goals
through a broad range of prevention and treatment activities. The Act
specifically mentions: family-based comprehensive long-term substance abuse
prevention and treatment services, early intervention and preventative services,
children and family counseling, mental health services, parenting skills
training, and the replication of successful models for providing family-based
comprehensive long-term substance abuse treatment services (§ 4(b)(2)(A)(f)(5)).
The list of broad uses for the funds, the focus on integrated and
collaborative approaches, and the
requirement that regional partnerships must apply for the grants (discussed in
more detail below at questions 9-15) suggest that Congress intended for the grants
to provide a range of services and take a comprehensive coordinated approach both
to the prevention and treatment of substance use disorders. For example, comprehensive
family-based long-term treatment, by definition, provides a full range of
services to address not only the substance use disorder of the parent but also children
and other family members affected by the disorder. The services often include
individual, group, and family counseling; therapy for psychological, emotional,
and sexual abuse; prenatal and pediatric care; parenting education; therapeutic
interventions for infants and young children; nursery and preschool; vocational
services; legal services; and transportation. After-care services and supports
also are often provided. The treatment programs often serve families for at
least six months and upwards of two years.
Family-based long-term
treatment is also a comprehensive approach to prevention for the children
of parents with substance use disorders. Family treatment programs providing
therapeutic intervention services addressing the emotional, psychological,
and educational needs of children, for example, can help prevent children from using
drugs in the future to reduce the symptoms of post-traumatic stress and
attachment disorders typical in children of parents with substance abuse
disorders. See Appendix B for a list of Selected Comprehensive Family-based
Treatment Programs.
There are also other approaches to prevention that build on
partnerships. Home visiting, for example, is a well-established prevention
model that can help address the multiple needs of parents and children and help
link them to appropriate services and supports. It can help identify families
in need of treatment for substance use disorders and other problems and
encourage them to seek treatment. The Nurse Family Partnership model
specifically has made consistent improvements in maternal and child health and
the prevention of child maltreatment for the families it serves.
Other prevention programs specifically target alcohol and drug abuse. For
example, in Oregon, Southern Oregon Public Television, the Oregon Criminal
Justice Commission and the Oregon Partnership (a coalition of law enforcement
agencies, treatment providers, and others) have come together to create a project
called “Target Meth: Building a Vision for a Drug Free Community.” They define
prevention as “a process that brings us together to promote conditions that
guide people to make healthy lifestyle decisions and helps people resist
decisions that will lead to unhealthy consequences.” They say that one of the
most successful prevention strategies is “the establishment of a broad-based
community anti-drug coalition” made up of youth, parents, businesses, schools,
community-based organizations, health care professionals, treatment providers,
law enforcement agencies, and local policymakers. Such an approach recognizes
that educational campaigns, with compelling public service announcements and
school programs about the danger of abusing alcohol and drug abuse, are more
likely to be effective when they are accompanied by efforts to provide safe,
healthy alternative activities for children in communities.
4.
Can states use these new federal funds to replace
other federal substance abuse prevention and treatment funds?
No. These targeted grant funds for substance abuse prevention and treatment activities cannot be used to supplant any federal funds that could also have been used for these same purposes (§ 3(c)(2)(B)).
5.
Can the funds be used for expansions of existing
activities and programs as well as for new activities and programs? What might
these expanded programs look like?
Yes. As it is written, nothing in the Act seems to
prohibit the use of these funds to expand existing prevention and treatment
activities, if proposed by a regional partnership. Possible expansions could include
increasing the capacity of a family treatment program, or adding a therapeutic child
care program, comprehensive therapeutic services that facilitate positive parent-child
interactions, or more extensive after care treatment and supports to a program.
Funds could also be used to expand collaborations between treatment providers
and the courts to establish family drug courts that can help get families into
comprehensive family treatment more quickly.
6.
Why are these activities so important for promoting
safety, well-being, and permanence for children?
As noted in the introduction to this Q&A, there
is evidence that both prevention and treatment work. However, prevention and
treatment services currently are unavailable to many parents and children who
could benefit from them. Too often there are not protective factors for
substance abuse in place in communities. Treatment, especially comprehensive family
treatment, is also limited. As a result, challenges facing families struggling
with substance abuse intensify; and untreated substance use disorders can
threaten children’s safety, permanence, and well-being, putting them at
increased risk of involvement with the child welfare system. The legislative
findings listed at the beginning of the new Act indicate the importance of
prevention and treatment for improving the conditions of children affected by
substance abuse, especially those affected by methamphetamine abuse. Congress noted
that methamphetamine use has increased by 72 percent in the past ten years, and
continues to increase, especially among women of childbearing age. The findings
cite a study by the National Association of Counties that reported that, at the
county level, methamphetamine use is often a major contributor to child abuse
and neglect, and that 40 percent of child welfare officials responding to its
survey reported an increase in out-of-home placements due to methamphetamine
abuse. (§ 2 (10)-(13)) For example, Congress notes that in
7.
Must these funds be used only for methamphetamine
abuse?
No. While the Congressional findings emphasize the deleterious effects of methamphetamine abuse and the Secretary is required to give greater weight to awarding grants that propose to address methamphetamine abuse (§ 4(b)(2)(A)(f)(7)(B), the Act clearly states that grants may be awarded to regional partnerships that aim to treat the abuse of other substances (§ 4(b)). Family treatment programs that address the use of methamphetamines, as well as the use of other drugs, will still meet the criteria for receiving priority consideration. Generally, prevention and treatment programs are not focused solely on a single drug. There is recognition that the use of certain drugs is likely to lead to the use of others and that families coming to treatment may be involved with multiple substances, including alcohol.
Targeted Children and Families
8.
Must the funds be targeted to particular groups of
children and families?
The new Act is intended to address families of children in out-of-home
care or who are at risk of being placed in out-of-home care due to substance
abuse. The written application submitted by the regional partnership to the Secretary
of HHS must include recent evidence demonstrating that the abuse of
methamphetamine or other substances has had a substantial impact on the number
of out-of-home placements, or the number of children who are at-risk for
out-of-home placements, in the region the partnership aims to serve (§
4(b)(2)(A)(f)(4)(A)).
9.
Who can apply for the funding?
The Secretary of HHS is authorized by the Act to make grants to
regional partnerships that will provide, through collaboration between public
and private agencies and integration of programs and services, activities
designed to increase the safety, permanence, and well-being of children
detrimentally affected by their parent’s or caretaker’s substance abuse (§
4(b)(2)(A)(f)(1)).
10. How does
the Act define regional partnerships?
The Act defines a regional partnership as a collaborative agreement, established on an interstate or intrastate basis, entered into by at least two of the following groups, with some exceptions noted in questions 11-13 below:
· the state child welfare agency;
· the state agency responsible for administering the federal substance abuse prevention and treatment block grant;
· an Indian tribe or tribal consortium;
· nonprofit or for-profit child welfare service providers;
· community health or mental health service providers;
· local law enforcement agencies;
· judges and court personnel;
· juvenile justice officials;
· school personnel;
· tribal child welfare agencies; or
· other provider, agency, personnel, official, or entity that is related to the kinds of services the Act intends the allocated grants to provide (§ 4(b)(2)(A)(f)(2)(A)).
11.
Must state child welfare agencies be part of the regional partnerships?
Any regional partnership entered into for the purposes of the Act must include the state child welfare agency that is responsible for administering the federal Title IV-B and IV-E State plans as a member of the partnership, except in partnerships that include Indian tribes or tribal consortia (§ 4(b)(2)(A)(f)(2)(B)(i)). Congress clearly believes that public child welfare agencies are important partners. County child welfare agencies also might be part of some of the regional partnerships.
12.
Can a state
child welfare agency and a state substance abuse prevention and
treatment
agency be the only partners in a regional partnership?
No. The Act precludes a state child welfare agency and a state substance abuse prevention and treatment agency from forming a collaborative agreement together, with no other partners (§ 4(b)(2)(A)(f)(2)(B)(iii)).
13. What
special provisions are made for Indian tribes in this new grant
program?
Indian tribes and tribal consortia may be included as members of regional partnerships (§ 4(b)(2)(A)(f)(2)(A)(iii)), but may not enter into such a collaborative agreement only with other tribal child welfare agencies (§ 4(b)(2)(A)(f)(2)(B)(ii)(II)). Unlike other members of regional partnerships applying for competitive grants, Indian tribes are not required to, but may, include the state child welfare agency as a partner in their collaborative agreement (§ 4(b)(2)(A)(f)(2)(B)(ii)(I)). When developing performance indicators, the Secretary must consult with representatives of those Indian tribes, tribal consortia, or tribal child welfare agencies that are members of regional partnership grant recipients (§ 4(b)(2)(A)(f)(8)(B) (iv)). In its application, a regional partnership including an Indian tribe, consortium, or tribal child welfare agency does not need to describe how it will collaborate with state child welfare or substance abuse treatment agencies or state law enforcement and judicial agencies, should the Secretary determine that such collaboration would not be appropriate for such a partnership (§ 4(b)(2(A))(f)(4)(E)). For further information on Indian tribes, tribal consortia, and Indian child welfare agencies in your region, contact the National Indian Child Welfare Association at info@nicwa.org or 503-222-4044.
14. What are
some things to think about in forming a regional partnership?
Congress required that regional partnerships apply for these grants because it recognized that quality substance abuse prevention and treatment will require the best efforts of multiple partners. The partners can bring valuable expertise, resources, and connections to the table as they work to plan integrated and collaborative approaches to prevention and treatment.
In thinking about forming regional partnerships to apply for the substance abuse prevention and treatment grants, there are at least nine important questions to answer:
1) Who is already active in the prevention and treatment of substance use disorders in your area and in assisting children and families in the child welfare system? What relationships exist among them, or could be established or expanded?
2) Who manages the state substance abuse prevention and treatment and child welfare agencies? How do these agencies currently relate to one another regarding the prevention and treatment of substance abuse for families whose children are at risk of or involved in the child welfare system? See Appendices C and D for lists of State Alcohol and Drug Abuse and State Child Welfare Agencies.
3) What are the unmet prevention and treatment needs of children from families with substance abuse problems who come to the attention of the child welfare system and are at risk of placement in out-of-home care or are already in care? Reach out to families to see what they need but are not getting.
4) Who can best meet these unmet needs? Consider new partners as well as existing players. Consider other public and private agencies and service providers in the region that are already in contact with the children and families whom these grants aim to help. What community-based organizations, schools, courts, juvenile agencies, police departments or precincts, health, mental health, child welfare substance abuse or domestic violence service providers, homeless shelters, soup kitchens, or food banks might be helpful allies?
5) What existing programs and activities need to be expanded? What new services are needed?
6) Who are the children and families who need to be served by the new or expanded prevention and treatment programs, and what outreach and enrollment strategies will the partnership use to reach the children and families most in need who are involved in or at risk of involvement with the child welfare system? How will organizations and agencies that have contact with these children and families be involved in the partnership? How will the broader community be made aware of the new prevention and/or treatment opportunities, and how it can help to refer children and families appropriately?
7) What will be the goal of this specific grant? How will it ensure effective prevention activities and/or clinically appropriate services and treatment? How will it ensure safety, permanence, and well-being for children?
8) How will this grant complement other substance abuse prevention and treatment
activities, and enhance child welfare services, in your state or region?
9) What are the common principles that you want the partners to share as they work together to achieve the goals of the grant and improve outcomes for children?
Experience demonstrates that partnerships work most effectively when all partners share a common vision and mission. The Act makes clear that the purpose of the funds, and thus the regional partnerships that receive them, is to enhance the safety, permanence, and well-being of children whose parents or caretakers are struggling with substance use disorders and who are at risk of out-of-home care or already in placement. It will be important for partners to share a common vision for preventing substance abuse for families in the region and for approaching these children and their families, treating their parents’ substance use disorders and the children’s related needs, and understanding and approaching child protection concerns when necessary.
15. Who might
potential partners be in your community or state?
The Act provides examples of some potential partners, including, but not limited to, the required state child welfare agency, state substance abuse and prevention agencies, an Indian tribe or consortium, a nonprofit child welfare service provider, a for-profit child welfare service provider, a community health service provider, a community mental health service provider, a local law enforcement agency, a juvenile justice official, a tribal child welfare agency, or school personnel (§ 4(b)(2)(A)(f)(2)(A)). Other partners might include comprehensive community-based family treatment programs, networks of advocates for persons in recovery, and advocates for children who have come to the attention of the child welfare system.
16. What are
the requirements for the grant application?
The Act lists several requirements for what information must be
described or included by the regional partnership in the written grant
application:
·
recent
evidence demonstrating that methamphetamine or other substance abuse has had a
substantial impact on the number of children who are in out-of-home placements
or who are at risk of being placed in an out-of-home placement in the
partnership region;
·
goals
and outcomes that the partnership aims to achieve during the funding period, in
order to enhance the well-being of children participating, lead to their safety
and permanence, and decrease the number of out-of-home placements or the number
of children at risk of being placed in out-of-home placements in the region;
·
activities
that will be carried out jointly using the grant funds, including the order in
which those activities will occur;
·
how
appropriate programs and services will be integrated; and
·
strategies
that will be put in place to collaborate with the state child welfare agency, when
that agency is not the lead partner, and consult, as appropriate, the state
substance abuse prevention and treatment agency and state law enforcement and
judicial agencies.
The Secretary may also request additional information in the application (§ (4)(2)(A)(f)(4)).
17. Where might
potential applicants turn to find evidence of the impact of
substance
abuse on children and the ability of child welfare agencies and
others to meet
the needs of children and families affected by substance
abuse?
There are a number of reports and other resources available at the national level that may be helpful to applicants. They provide national, state, and local data demonstrating the substantial impact of substance use disorders on children and families and the child welfare system, limited resources for addressing the needs of children affected by substance use disorders and methamphetamine addiction specifically, and evidence that prevention and treatment work. A number of these are noted in Appendix A. Also be sure to check with local child welfare and substance abuse prevention and treatment agencies and police departments, which may track such data or conduct special studies of local experiences. Advocates for parents and others challenged by substance abuse may be another good resource.
18. How can I
assess what substance abuse prevention and treatment
activities
already are underway in my state?
Each state’s substance abuse agency director, also known as the Single State Authority (SSA) for Substance Abuse, is responsible for planning, overseeing, and evaluating its publicly-funded addiction treatment and prevention system. Please check http://findtreatment.samhsa.gov/ufds/abusedirectors to find the SSA in your state. The SSA should be a resource, as well as a potential regional partner, for a grant application under the new Act. The publicly funded substance abuse prevention and treatment system is supported in large part by the Substance Abuse Prevention and Treatment (SAPT) Block Grant, which represents approximately 40 percent of each SSA’s prevention and treatment expenditures. At the federal level, the SAPT Block Grant is managed by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) within HHS. In addition to the SAPT Block Grant, SAMHSA also manages a more targeted group of substance abuse grant programs that address both prevention and treatment. See http://www.samhsa.gov/statesummaries/index.aspx for a list, by state, of SAMHSA grants that have been awarded for substance abuse treatment. SAMHSA also operates a useful substance abuse treatment facility locator that includes state-by-state information. It can be found at http://dasis3.samhsa.gov. It will be especially important to try to identify programs that have served children who are at risk of or already involved in the child welfare system or where there has been collaboration between the substance abuse prevention and treatment and child welfare agencies. To help you get started, a state by state list of Selected Comprehensive Family Treatment Programs is included in Appendix B.
19. Must the
grants be used to fund only statewide initiatives?
No. The Act only specifies that a partnership address problems within a region. The partnership could potentially be formed to address problems on a statewide level, on a county level, and/ or for a metropolitan area.
20. Can an
applicant apply for more than one grant?
Yes. Nothing in the Act prohibits agencies or
organizations, as part of a regional partnership, from submitting multiple
applications for grants.
21. Can
a state child welfare agency be involved with more than one
application?
Yes. The Act does not preclude a state child welfare agency from participating in more than one regional partnership or submitting more than one application. However, it should be made very clear, especially if the state child welfare agency is the lead grantee in more than one application, that the multiple partnerships will be serving different regions of the state, children and families with different needs, or providing different types or services.
22. Can an
applicant apply for a grant that will support activities in more
than one
state?
Yes. The Act specifically provides that regional partnerships and collaborative agreements may be established on an interstate regional basis (§ 4(b)(2)(A)(f)(2)(A)).
23. What
considerations must the Secretary take into account in making
grant award
determinations?
In awarding these competitive grants, the Secretary must consider the
extent to which regional partnerships:
·
demonstrate
that methamphetamine or other substance abuse by parents or caretakers has had
a substantial impact on the number of children who are in, or at risk for,
out-of-home placement in their partnership region;
·
have
limited resources to address the needs of children affected by such substance
abuse;
·
have a
lack of capacity for or access to provide comprehensive family treatment
services; and
·
demonstrate
a plan for sustaining the services they will provide with the grant funds after
the grant period has ended (§ 4(b)(2)(A)(f)(7)(A)).
24.
Are any
factors given greater weight or extra consideration?
After considering the required factors, the Secretary must also give
greater weight to awarding grants to those partnerships that propose to address
methamphetamine abuse and addiction (either alone or in combination with
treatment for other substance abuse and addiction) in the partnership region,
and that demonstrate that methamphetamine abuse is adversely affecting child
welfare in the partnership region (§ 4(b)(2)(A)(f)(7)(B)).
25. How much money
will be available and over what period of time?
The Act makes available $145 million in federal grants over five years to fund regional partnerships for substance abuse prevention and treatment. The Secretary must reserve for grant awards $40 million for FY 2007, $35 million for FY 2008, $30 million for FY 2009, and $20 million for each of FY 2010 and FY 2011 (§ 4(b)(1)(5)).
26. Will a match for the
federal funds be required?
Yes. An increasing non-federal match is required after the second
fiscal year of the grant. The federal share of the grant declines over
time to promote state and local investments in the substance abuse prevention
and treatment activities. The federal share is 85 percent for the first and
second fiscal years of the grant, 80 percent for the third and fourth fiscal
years, and 75 percent for the fifth fiscal year, meaning non-federal matches of
15, 20, and 25 percent respectively. The increasing non-federal share of the
costs may be in cash, or in the value of services rendered to the partnership
from non-federal funds. The matching funds need not consist of state dollars (§
4(b)(2)(A)(f)(6)).
Size of
Grants
27. What is the
size of the grants that will be available?
The Secretary is authorized to award grants to qualified regional partnerships of not less than $500,000 and not more than $1 million per grant per fiscal year of the grant. Individual grants may be awarded for not less than two and not more than five fiscal years (§ 4(b)(2)(A)(f)(3)).
Timetable
for Announcement of Grants
28.
When will
the availability of the new grants be formally announced?
How much time
will be given for the submission of grant applications?
HHS has not issued any guidance to date on when the grant announcement will be made. The Administration for Children and Families will prepare the grant announcement, hopefully with input from the Centers for Substance Abuse Prevention and Substance Abuse Treatment within the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration. A bidder’s conference will also be planned once the Request for Proposals is issued. HHS will convene peer reviewers, hopefully those with relevant substantive expertise in child welfare, substance abuse prevention, and substance abuse treatment activities, including parents in recovery who are familiar with the child welfare system, to renew the grants and recommend awards. Given the requirement that applicants for grants must be regional partnerships, that grantees will be eligible for relatively large grants ranging from $500,000 to $1 million, and that they will be expected to take on an increasing share of the financial responsibility for carrying out their proposed activities, it is essential that potential partners begin planning now. It will also be important for HHS to provide enough time for potential partners to prepare a thoughtful response to the formal Request for Proposals once it is issued.
Evaluation
29. What are the evaluation
requirements for activities conducted with these
grants?
The only references to evaluation in the new Act are to the performance indicators that the Secretary of HHS must establish and to the report HHS must make to Congress on the progress made in addressing the needs of families affected by substance abuse. Often, however, the Administration for Children and Families, which has responsibility for this grant in HHS, requires third party evaluations of demonstration grants.
Looking first at the Act, by the end of June 2007, the Secretary is required to establish a series of performance indicators to be used to periodically assess how well grant recipients are doing in addressing the purposes and goals of the Act. In order to establish the performance indicators, the Secretary must consult with the Assistant Secretary for the Administration for Children and Families, the Administrator of the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, representatives of states whose agencies are members of regional partnerships receiving grants, and representatives of Indian tribes, tribal consortia, or tribal child welfare agencies that are members of regional partnership grant recipients (§ 4(b)(2)(A)(f)(8)). No further information is yet available on how HHS will proceed with the establishment of these indicators.
However, as regional partnerships
are formed to apply for the grants, it is useful for the partnership to think
about how data on children and families participating in the activities, the
nature and duration of the activities, and the scope of the activities can be
collected. It is also important to decide how program performance, impacts on children
and families, and program success will be assessed and measured most
effectively consistent with the specific purposes of the grant. Such
information can help grantees direct limited resources to where they are most
needed and most effective in communities. Obviously, where programs and
activities result in successful outcomes, and the success can be documented,
the information also can be extremely useful in making the case for increased
funding for the expansion of such activities so more children and families may
benefit. To help put in place appropriate evaluation activities, HHS has
developed The Program Manager’s Guide to Evaluation. This
useful primer explains what program evaluation is, who should conduct it, how
to prepare for an evaluation, what should be in the evaluation plan, how to get
the information you need, and how to use evaluation effectively to improve
programs and benefit children and families. The Guide can be found on the ACF web site in HHS at http://www.acf.hhs.gov/programs/opre/other_resrch/pm_guide_eval/reports/pmguide/pmguide_toc.html.
Other evaluation resources can be found in Appendix A.
30. Are any
funds set aside for evaluation, research, or technical assistance?
Yes. Of the total $6 million in mandatory funds reserved each year for research, evaluation, training, and technical assistance in the Promoting Safe and Stable Families Program (42 U.S.C. § 629f(b)(1), $1 million is set aside for evaluation, research, and technical assistance related to the targeted grants to regional partnerships to address substance abuse (§ 4(c)).
Reporting
31. What types of reports
are required of grantees?
By September 30 of the first fiscal
year a grant is received, and each year after that until September 30 of the
last fiscal year in which grant funding is received, a grant recipient must
submit a report to the Secretary, providing information on the services
provided during the fiscal year using the grant funds. The Secretary can
determine what information is needed for the reports to provide an accurate
description of what services have been provided using the federal funds. At a
minimum, it will be important to know what kinds of services were provided, at
what cost, to how many children and families, and for what duration of service.
As mentioned above, it will also be important to try to track the progress made
in achieving the goals of the programs and activities funded under the grants. After
the Secretary develops performance indicators, grantees must report data
related to these indicators (§ 4(b)(2)(A)(f)(9)(A)).
32. Must
reports also be made to Congress?
Regional partnerships are not required to report directly to Congress. However, based upon the grantees’ reports, the Secretary must submit annually, to both the Committee on Ways and Means in the House of Representatives and the Committee on Finance in the Senate, a report describing the services provided with the appropriated funds, the established performance indicators, and the progress that has been made in addressing the needs of families affected by methamphetamine or other substance abuse and in achieving goals of child safety, permanence, and family stability (§ 4(b)(2)(A)(f)(9)(B)).
Appendices
Appendix B: Selected Comprehensive
Family Treatment Programs
(Provided by the Rebecca Project for
Human Rights)