SAMHSA Grant Awards by State FY 2005 |
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Discretionary Funds in Detail |
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CALIFORNIA |
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| Grantee: United Indian Health Services, Inc | Arcata, CA | |
| Program: Children's Services | SM52904 | |
| Congressional District: CA-01 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $615,023 | ||
| Project Period: 05/01/2000 - 04/30/2006 | ||
| United Indian Health Services, Inc. serves as the coordinating agency for tribal and county organizations to assure an appropriate, individualized system of care for American Indian children with serious emotional disturbance. Components of the wraparound model include: 1)developing an early-intervention and family strength-based treatment system; 2) providing continuing cultural competency training for all participants; 3) developing a transportation network to facilitate access to services or treatment; 4) evaluation; 5) early intervention through early identification via Tribal Head Start programs, public schools, probation departments, and the American Indian community; 6) prevention through expansion of existing cultural community-based programs (Healthy Nations). The area encompassed by this project includes 4,500 square miles and an estimated 15,000 American Indians of whom 10,000 are registered within the United Indian Health Services, Inc. | ||
| Grantee: Department of Mental Health | Sacramento, CA | |
| Program: Evidence Based Training & Evaluation | SM56171 | |
| Congressional District: CA-01 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $325,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2003 - 09/29/2006 | ||
| The California State Department of Mental Health (CSDMH), with the California State Dept. of Alcohol and Drug Programs (CSDADP), will provide training and technical assistance to implement the IDDT model in 8 sites, evaluate the process and develop the infrastructure to foster statewide implementation of evidenced-based practices (EBPs). CSDMH and CSDADP will direct the project and contract with the California Institute of Mental Health (CIMH) to conduct training and evaluation. A statewide steering committee will provide ongoing direction. Mastering the challenges of IDDT toolkit implementation in culturally specific settings is of critical importance. The project includes eight implementation sites, two in each of four counties. All sites are multicultural and one is primarily Latino. A range of organizations, including county-operated regional clinics or service teams and nonprofit provider agencies are amongst the sites. Four sites, one in each county, will implement the IDDT model in the first year. These sites currently have programs with some degree of fidelity to the IDDT model. The remaining four sites will implement the IDDT in the second year. Each county will have an advisory group (Implementation Team). The Steering Committee will become a peer-learning group regarding system change issues. CIMH will train site supervisors to provide weekly EBP supervision. CIMH will contract with expert trainers, consumers and family members to provide training in the IDDT Toolkit for all program staff at each of the program sites. The evaluation team includes a Latino evaluator and will train site staff in evaluation tools, collect independent measures to evaluate the impact of training and TA, measure and attempt to explain the variations in fidelity and outcomes found among agencies and counties, including any variations specific to the Latino site and Latino subpopulations, model the relationships among client outcomes, fidelity, client & program characteristics. | ||
| Grantee: Yolo County | Woodland, CA | |
| Program: TCE Jail Diversion | SM57315 | |
| Congressional District: CA-01 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $400,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2008 | ||
| Project AIM will serve 85 persons with mental illness per year through a post booking jail diversion program in northern California's rural Yolo County. The project will provide intensive services through an ACT team model. | ||
| Grantee: Butte County California | Chico, CA | |
| Program: Child Mental Health Initiative | SM57052 | |
| Congressional District: CA-02 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $992,919 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2011 | ||
| Connecting Circles of Care will transform Butte County services for youth into a complete system of care through wraparound services for children with severe emotional disturbance (SED) and their families, in a family driven, strength based, culturally competent delivery of evidence-based practices. Connecting Circles of Care is an innovative partnership of a family run organization, Native American tribal organization, and county behavioral health department. The unique collaboration includes Rowell Family Empowerment of Northern California, Feather River Tribal Health (FRTH), Youth Services of Butte County Department of Behavioral Health (BCDBH), law enforcement agencies, and a broad array of public and private agencies. We propose a more encompassing system of care, with family driven community wraparound teams, based in Family Resource Centers in the diverse communities of Butte County. Our innovative program introduces a dramatic change in service delivery by involving parents from family run organizations in all aspects of service design and delivery. A ground breaking new service is a first response team for families in crisis, working in concert with law enforcement agencies. Community wraparound teams will assist families in obtaining services. | ||
| Grantee: Sacramento County | Sacramento, CA | |
| Program: Children's Services | SM54482 | |
| Congressional District: CA-03 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $500,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2002 - 09/29/2008 | ||
| Sacramento County Department of Health and Human Services' Mental Health Division, in partnership with youth, family members, United Advocates for Children of California, Sacramento City Unified School District, Sacramento County Child Welfare, Probation, Alcohol and Drug Program, and Department of Human Assistance have partnered to develop the Sacramento Model system of care. The target population will be transition aged children and adolescents who have a serious emotional disturbance in which multi-agency interventions are needed. These youth are in an "access gap." Parents of these children, absent appropriate care, are compelled to relinquish custody so that their children can be placed into residential treatment programs. In other families, the youth run away ending up homeless and victims, or in the juvenile justice system.An Integrated Services Agency (ISA) is a multifaceted, private, not-for-profit mental health agency. A single ISA will be responsible for providing the full continuum of required and optional treatment, support, and transition services. The Interagency Universal Care Management Team will be responsible for ensuring seamless coordination of care across agencies and overtime into adulthood. The care management team consists of senior direct service staff from each of the partner agencies including: County Mental Health Child and Adult Divisions, Sacramento Unified School District, Child Welfare, Probation, and County Alcohol and Drug Services. Sacramento County will be initiating sustainability activities immediately upon receipt. In the early years of the Cooperative Agreement, Medi-Cal (Medicaid) funds will be used to enhance capacity. | ||
| Grantee: County of Glenn | Willows, CA | |
| Program: Children's Services | SM54501 | |
| Congressional District: CA-03 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $620,472 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2002 - 09/29/2008 | ||
| The Glenn County, CA Mental Health Department is using this cooperative agreement to enhance and expand their current Children's Systems of Care to deliver comprehensive community mental health services for young children (ages 0-4), children and adolescents (ages 5-18) and transition age youth (ages 14-22) with serious emotional disturbance and their families. Youth with a dual diagnosis of mental health and substance abuse will also be served. This project will enhance and continue to develop a community service delivery system for these children and youth, improving access to a broad array of local partner-agency services. The program goals include keeping children and youth at home with their families, in school, out of trouble with the legal system, off illegal substances, and healthy. Glenn County is committed to measuring the effectiveness of system development, improved outcomes for children and communities, and fiscal effectiveness. Youth and families will be involved in all aspects of the System of Care including planning, service delivery, evaluation, quality improvement, social marketing, advocacy and cultural competency awareness. Paid positions for Parent Partners and Peer Advocates are an important component of this System of Care. A significant outcome of this funding will be shown when county agencies become more culturally competent in hiring minorities reflective of Glenn County's ethnic makeup and delivering services in a culturally competent manner. All children's agencies in the county are committed to work together to share resources, blend funds and build a comprehensive and coordinated system for these children and their families. | ||
| Grantee: Placer County Health and Human Services | Auburn, CA | |
| Program: Child Mental Health Initiative | SM57070 | |
| Congressional District: CA-04 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $914,114 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2011 | ||
| Placer County, California will complete the transformation of children's mental health services in its existing multi-agency System of Care through a partnership with our Latino, Native American, and transition-age communities that brings parents and youth into positions of authority, influence, and leadership at every level of the system and that establishes cultural and linguistic competence in every aspect of children's mental health services. In order to establish this, Placer County will: form a System Transformation Team to oversee and govern the children's mental health transformation process. Placer will form an independent Youth and Family Organization to recruit, train, hire, and support Parent and Youth Advocates who have personal experience with the mental health system. Placer will position parents and youth at all levels of the system of care including governance, planning, management, service delivery, family advocacy, and evaluation. Placer will establish a partnership with community-based service providers and a tribal agency that serves Latino and Native American children, families, and transition-age youth. Placer will work with our partners to develop the cultural and linguistic competence of all CSOC staff and ultimately develop new service philosophies, practices, approaches, and methods that honor and value the cultures of the children and families we serve. | ||
| Grantee: California Network of Mntal Hlth Clients | Sacramento, CA | |
| Program: CMHS Statewide Consumer Network Grants | SM56341 | |
| Congressional District: CA-05 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $70,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2004 - 09/29/2007 | ||
| Through self-help and consumer-run service delivery, the California Network of Mental Health Clients plans to utilize funds to develop core principles that will establish the foundation of a consumer leadership and recovery based system of care for the state's mental health system. The project proposes to introduce consumer focused self-help principles into state activities. Implementation of this effort will occur in several steps such as a centralized self-help resource, technical support and education/training for expanding self-help activities and promotion of self-help principles, and a self-help master plan that will chart the path for other self-help program statewide. Using this plan of implementation, the network will be able provide the consumer support needed to assist the state in developing the infrastructure and promote self-help services in the mental health system. | ||
| Grantee: California Department of Mental Health | Sacramento, CA | |
| Program: State Mental Health Data Infrastructure Grants | SM56658 | |
| Congressional District: CA-05 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $160,684 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2004 - 09/29/2007 | ||
| This project will continue the State's effort to build infrastructure to collect data and report the remaining Mental Health Block Grant Uniform Reporting System Developmental Measures. Grant efforts will focus on (1) local provider training to improve data quality, (2) implementation of web-based technology using DS2K + data standards to collect, report, and improve accessibility of data, and (3) strengthening internal and external database linkages. Project outcomes will include consistent data definitions, timely capture of data, improved measure of service outcomes and client change, improved data quality, and enhanced ability to analyze and report on developmental measures such as school attendance, school performance, and involvement with the criminal justice system. The project outcomes will be evaluated based on the ability to produce the data required for URS and other desired reporting. The project will also be evaluated in terms of its ability to produce data that is useful to and is used by system stakeholders. | ||
| Grantee: California Department of Mental Health | Sacramento, CA | |
| Program: Disaster Relief | SM00185 | |
| Congressional District: CA-05 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $1,915,314 | ||
| Project Period: 03/23/2004 - 12/22/2004 | ||
| In response to flooding, the State of California received a Regular Services grant through the Crisis Counseling Assistance and Training Program, which is conducted through an interagency partnership between the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) and the Center for Mental Health Services. Services provided through this grant include outreach, individual and group counseling, and public education regarding the mental health effects of disasters. | ||
| Grantee: California Rural Indian Hlth Board, Inc | Sacramento, CA | |
| Program: Child Mental Health Initiative | SM57011 | |
| Congressional District: CA-05 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $1,000,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2011 | ||
| The California Rural Indian Health Board (CRIHB) in partnership with United American Indian Involvement, Inc. (UAII) will implement a System of Care Model (SCM) for delivering mental health services to urban American Indian and Alaska Native children (ages 0-21) who have a serious emotional disturbance and their families in Los Angeles County. The overall goal of the project is to strengthen culturally and linguistically appropriate mental health services for the American Indian community and be informed directly by consumers, parents, youth and providers within the Los Angeles American Indian community. Program goals include: (1) Designing and implement a system of care for American Indian and Alaska Native (Al/AN) children who have a serious emotional disturbance and their families. (2) Provide children and families with a comprehensive assessment and evidence-based interventions that will be included in an individualized service plan. (4) Ensuring that cultural and linguistically competent practices are incorporated. | ||
| Grantee: United Advocates for Children of CA | Sacramento, CA | |
| Program: CMHS Statewide Family Network Grants | SM56444 | |
| Congressional District: CA-05 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $70,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2004 - 09/29/2007 | ||
| United Advocates for Children of California (UACC), is proposing to (1) strengthen the capacity of over 50 local parent partner programs active throughout California, (2) coordinate the activities of these local family-run programs to achieve state-level reforms, and (3) initiate efforts to establish a statewide youth advocacy program. | ||
| Grantee: Contra Costa County Health Services Dept | Martinez, CA | |
| Program: Initiative to End Chronic Homelessness | SM55883 | |
| Congressional District: CA-07 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $617,894 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2003 - 09/29/2006 | ||
| Implement an integrated two-part expansion of the existing program called Project Coming Home that will address and resolve the specific mental health, substance abuse, and related conditions that can prevent chronically homeless individuals from successfully making the transition to permanent supportive and long-term housing | ||
| Grantee: San Francisco Dept of Public Health | San Francisco, CA | |
| Program: Initiative to End Chronic Homelessness | SM55886 | |
| Congressional District: CA-08 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $617,311 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2003 - 09/29/2006 | ||
| Expand permanent supportive housing, behavioral services, and primary care for chronically homeless disabled individuals in San Francisco. | ||
| Grantee: SF Dept Pub Hlth Comm Ment Hlth | San Francisco, CA | |
| Program: Children's Services | SM54494 | |
| Congressional District: CA-08 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $1,733,409 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2002 - 09/29/2008 | ||
| The San Francisco System of Care (SFSOC) will integrate several critical service and infrastructure improvements in order to: 1) improve the functioning and well-being of SFSOC clients; 2) increase cultural competence and youth participation in the system; 3) reduce juvenile justice recidivism; and 4) maintain children in their homes whenever possible. The SFSOC will provide services to all children and youth with multi-systemic involvement across all of the major youth-serving systems in the County. Elements of the SFSOC include: * Incorporation of youth development principles into the System of Care Model; * A focus on cultural competence that includes the development of targeted services for San Francisco's diverse ethnic communities; * Implementation across the System of Care of the Family Group Conferencing model, which places the family in a key care planning role; * Identification, implementation and evaluation of empirically-based treatment methodologies in a real- world context; * Development of outreach, engagement, and service strategies for "street youth;" * An evaluation that will involve consumers in its design, provide real-time feedback for program improvement, collect and report required outcome measures as well as those unique to SFSOC, and document the process of implementation to allow for future dissemination of the model; * Expansion of San Francisco's Child and Family Data Archive, providing integrated access to data for care planning, policy development, and outcome evaluation. | ||
| Grantee: San Francisco Sheriff's Dept. | San Francisco, CA | |
| Program: TCE Jail Diversion | SM57364 | |
| Congressional District: CA-08 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $311,603 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2008 | ||
| This program targets incarcerated women through two tracks. The Behavioral Health Court will divert women to community treatment services including ACT and other evidence based practices. Walden House, a transitional housing program will serve as an alternative to women who have already been sentenced. | ||
| Grantee: San Francisco Dept of Public Health | San Francisco, CA | |
| Program: CMHS 2005 Earmarks | SM56819 | |
| Congressional District: CA-08 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $1,488,000 | ||
| Project Period: 07/01/2005 - 06/30/2006 | ||
| Grantee: The Regents of the UC Berkeley Campus | Berkeley, CA | |
| Program: Campus Suicide | SM57493 | |
| Congressional District: CA-09 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $74,521 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2008 | ||
| The University of California, Berkeley is proposing the Cal Suicide Training, Education, and Prevention Project (Cal-STEPS) program to support a comprehensive and coordinated campus approach to prevent suicide and attempted suicide. The lead department will be the campus University Health Services (UHS). The Cal-STEPS program will ensure that the University of California, Berkeley has a comprehensive and coordinated approach to prevent suicide and attempted suicide through: -Empowering faculty, staff, and students to identify, respond to, and assist students at risk for suicide; -Strengthening the campus safety network for students with mental health needs and at risk for suicide, and increasing the campus community’s knowledge of this network; -Increasing the level of awareness and knowledge of the campus community about mental health and suicide, including addressing the stigma associated with these issues. The contribution of the proposed program is in its focus on graduate students as an at-risk population, and on faculty and academic staff as key connectors to graduate students.Therefore, we will prioritize training faculty, academic staff, and graduate student instructors as campus advocates to increase their ability to identify and refer students at risk. Health and mental health providers will also be targeted in Year 1. In Year 2 and 3 we plan to expand to campus staff and student leaders and the campus at large. | ||
| Grantee: Asian Community Mental Health Services | Oakland, CA | |
| Program: Youth Violence Prevention | SM55461 | |
| Congressional District: CA-09 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $150,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2004 - 09/29/2006 | ||
| The Asian and Pacific Islander Youth Services Network (APIYN) proposes to expand and enhance their existing coalition to build broad-based understanding and mobilization to address youth victimization and youth violence. The expanded coalition will add to the six current community-based youth service providers to include other community, government and law enforcement leaders, educators, and youth and parents. The new coalition will also strengthen collaboration among these constituents. The APIYN targets low-income, Asian and Pacific Islander youth age 12-18 in six ethnic communities and neighborhoods located throughout the City of Oakland. | ||
| Grantee: City of Oakland | Oakland, CA | |
| Program: Children's Services | SM56051 | |
| Congressional District: CA-09 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $999,923 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2003 - 09/29/2009 | ||
| The City of Oakland and the Native American Health Center are collaborating to implement a system of care for American Indian and Alaska Native children and their families who have severe emotional disturbances. The project builds upon a strategic plan developed in the CMHS funded Circles of Care grant of 1998-2001, linking Native American non-profit organizations, advocacy groups, charter schools, and treatment programs with mainstream agencies and schools operated by Alameda County and the city of Oakland. | ||
| Grantee: Urban Indian Health Board, Inc | Oakland, CA | |
| Program: AIDS TCE-Service Capacity Bldg in Minority Communities | SM53893 | |
| Congressional District: CA-09 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $400,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2001 - 09/29/2006 | ||
| Native Circle will provide culturally-competent mental health services to Native Americans with HIV/AIDS in San Francisco, CA. A holistic system of care for Native Americans living in an urban environment will be utilized. This model is an integrated system of care, linking mental health, substance abuse, medical care, and social services within a cultural framework. The cultural component consists of talking circles, support groups, beading classes, ceremonies, prayer, and traditional Native American medicine. | ||
| Grantee: The Regents of the Univ of California | San Francisco, CA | |
| Program: National Child Traumati Stress Initiative-Treatment and Service Adapation Centers | SM54294 | |
| Congressional District: CA-12 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $600,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2001 - 09/29/2009 | ||
| The Early Trauma Treatment Network (ETTN) is a collaborative of four national programs that have pioneered trauma treatment, training and dissemination for children aged birth to five exposed to family/community violence, physical/sexual abuse and traumatic bereavement. Partners include Child Trauma Research Project at UCSF, Child Witness to Violence at Boston Medical Center, Child Violence Exposure Program at Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center, and the Infant Team at Tulane University Medical Center. These ETTN sites deliver and provide training in Child-Parent Psychotherapy (CPP), an empirically supported intervention designed for children under age six. ETTN will assume the leadership in this area and will adapt and standardize CPP and Childhood Traumatic Grief by developing protocols and sponsoring trainings in this area, nationwide. | ||
| Grantee: California School-Age Consortium | San Francisco, CA | |
| Program: Youth Violence Prevention | SM55364 | |
| Congressional District: CA-14 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $150,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2004 - 09/29/2006 | ||
| The Links to Learning Collaborative of San Jose and Santa Clara County is a collaborative effort of Santa Clara County's major after school programs, community organizations and other stakeholders. The Collaborative is designed to identify the needs of the community and to implement sustainable programs to meet those needs. The Collaborative founding members include the California School Age Consortium, Santa Clara YMCA, the San Jose Unified School District, City of San Jose Parks, Recreation and Neighborhood Services and the National Institute on Out of School Time. Its, target population is elementary and middle school children in Santa Clara County. Especially those at risk for violence and substance abuse as demonstrated by the prevalence of risk factors and environments. | ||
| Grantee: ETR Associates, Inc. | Scotts Valley, CA | |
| Program: Linking Adolescents at Risk to Mental Health Services Grant Program | SM57423 | |
| Congressional District: CA-14 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $237,534 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2007 | ||
| The proposed project will conduct an in-depth evaluation of the San Francisco Wellness Initiative (SF Wellness) a comprehensive school-based prevention program that addresses the need to provide increased identification of suicidal behaviors and their precursors in adolescents, and the need to increase access to mental health services for at-risk youth. It accomplishes this by: 1) providing training, education, and outreach to students within the school milieu and 2) providing on-site mental health counseling and linkages to offsite community-based service providers for youth possessing risk factors for suicidality (at-risk students).Many high schools in San Francisco have significant populations of ethnic minorities or whom the stigma surrounding mental health issues is relatively great (e.g., certain Asian cultures). These schools are reluctant to openly address the topic of suicide through formal suicide-focused prevention programs. SF Wellness was developed as a holistic, un-stigmatizing health systems approach to prevention that promotes the link between mental health and school performance and provides students access to services through multiple points of entry. | ||
| Grantee: Monterey County Health Dept. | Salinas, CA | |
| Program: Children's Services | SM56058 | |
| Congressional District: CA-17 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $2,264,963 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2003 - 09/29/2009 | ||
| Monterey County Health Dept. Behavioral Health Division proposes to improve its system of care for children's mental health services by increasing the use of evidence-based practices, improving cultural competence, and integrating family members at all levels. Our system has already made strides in cultural competency (Latinos are 62% of county's children and youth; 60% of new children's services clients are Latino), implementing evidence-based practices (including wraparound), interdepartmental collaboration (a Children's Council unites key agencies), and involving parents as partners (through a Family Coordinator, focus groups, etc.). The proposed La Familia Sana/The Healthy Family SOC will build on these strengths and expand system capacity, improve service quality, and improve outcomes for children and youth. The Council and project team will develop a strategic plan and identify at least two new evidence-based practices, and then oversee their implementation. The new SOC will increase cultural competence (build new linkages, establish a diverse council, provide cultural competence training and technical assistance, hire new bilingual/bicultural staff, implement a social marketing program, and modify programs to address service disparities), increase involvement of families and sensitivity to families through various means, increase implementation of evidence-based practices (such as Parent Child Interaction Therapy and Aggression Replacement Therapy) to improve client outcomes, and establish an evaluation team. | ||
| Grantee: Partners for Peace | Salinas, CA | |
| Program: Youth Violence Prevention | SM55755 | |
| Congressional District: CA-17 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $150,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2004 - 09/29/2006 | ||
| Clearly, there is a need for the formation of a strong community based coalition to foster resiliency skills among Salinas's youth. Particularly in portions of East Salinas, where unemployment runs as high as 25 percent, where 87 percent of students qualify for free or reduced lunch, and where gang violence in and around local schools increased 40 percent between 2001 and 2002, strong, culturally appropriate intervention is needed. With a proven track record of bringing together business and government leaders and galvanizing community groups of neighborhoods and parent groups, Partners for Peace in Salinas is in a unique position to build upon existing partnerships to create a system of early intervention for Salinas's youth ages 6 12. With more than five years of leadership to its credit, PFP proposes to expand its network to mobilize a coalition that will include experienced providers and community leaders in areas of law enforcement, gang prevention and diversion, substance abuse prevention and treatment, mental health, education, the business community and representatives of affected children and families. Using methodology developed through SAMHSA Prevention Decision Support System, the coalition will conduct a thorough needs assessment, develop a logic model for intervention, address capacity issues, develop an implementation plan and evaluate both process and outcome impacts. From its initial planning and activity the coalition will focus on an intervention, "Strengthening Families Program 4" with the idea of providing that service to parents and students at East Salinas schools. | ||
| Grantee: Ventura County Probation Agency | Ventura, CA | |
| Program: CMHS 2005 Earmarks | SM56860 | |
| Congressional District: CA-23 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $297,600 | ||
| Project Period: 07/01/2005 - 06/30/2006 | ||
| Grantee: County of Los Angeles | Los Angeles, CA | |
| Program: Child Mental Health Initiative | SM57055 | |
| Congressional District: CA-24 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $1,000,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2011 | ||
| The Integrated Service System for Infants, Preschoolers, and Families Program will provide comprehensive, family-centered, culturally competent mental health services to young children, ages birth to five, and their families. These children are either already in the child welfare system or at risk of entry, have a serious emotional or behavioral problem, and live in an underserved geographical area of Los Angeles County that receives over 5600 child abuse and neglect referrals of children ages birth to five annually. Approximately 500 young children and families will be enrolled during the six-year period of performance. In addition to providing core mental health services, the project will identify and coordinate a broad palette of community- based services including primary care, nutrition, early education, childcare, family support, family mental health, and alcohol and drug Services. The interagency Care Team will develop services in true collaboration with families to ensure integrated and coordinated care. | ||
| Grantee: SSG/OTTP | Los Angeles, CA | |
| Program: Youth Violence Prevention | SM55473 | |
| Congressional District: CA-29 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $150,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2004 - 09/29/2006 | ||
| The target population of this grant are at risk youth ages 10 17 who are functioning "on the fringe" of the juvenile justice system. These are the youth who have not yet been arrested for criminal offenses, but are demonstrating a significant level of negative behaviors correlated with juvenile violence. Our target area includes Pico Rivera and Carson (our 2 project sties) and surrounding areas of Whittier, Long Beach, Compton, Montebello, Santa Fe Springs, South Central Los Angeles, Downey, Inglewood, Torrance, Lomita, Wilmington and Redondo Beach. Majority are African American and Latino youth. Goals of the Project: The primary goal of the "OTTP Youth Development Coalition's Vital Intervention Directional Alternatives (VEDA) Project" is to decrease the incidence of harmful personal and violent behaviors among at risk, non probation youth in the targeted geographic areas through a community mobilization effort that includes the expansion/development of a youth focused coalition and specific multi phased social cognitive youth intervention strategies. | ||
| Grantee: The Regents of the Univ of CA | Los Angeles, CA | |
| Program: Post Traumatic Stress Disorder in Children | SM54284 | |
| Congressional District: CA-30 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $5,000,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2001 - 09/29/2009 | ||
| The UCLA-Duke University National Center for Child Traumatic Stress (NCCTS) will lead the National Child Traumatic Stress Network in transforming treatment and services to meet the needs of traumatized children and their families across the United States. The NCCTS will provide strong technical assistance capacity to support Network data collection, cross-site collaborative activities, product development and dissemination, training, adoption and adaptation of interventions, communications, policy analysis and initiatives, and program evaluation. In the next four years, the NCCTS will utilize state-of-the-art training platforms so that high quality, evidence-based, trauma-specific treatments "take hold" within and beyond Network centers. | ||
| Grantee: Children's Hospital Los Angeles | Los Angeles, CA | |
| Program: Community TX & Service Ctrs of the National Child Traumatic Stress Initiative | SM57247 | |
| Congressional District: CA-30 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $400,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2009 | ||
| The purpose of the proposed program is to establish and sustain evidence-based clinical treatment and trauma informed services for runaway and homeless youth in the Hollywood community and to transform the service delivery system so that the entire system of care is more educated about trauma and its impact, and more able to effectively respond to these needs. The major goals of the project are: 1. To continue meaningful collaborative planning regarding critical service needs of runaway and homeless youth in Hollywood; 2. To select, evaluate, and adopt an evidence-based trauma intervention in the runaway and homeless youth service delivery system; 3. To develop and implement coordinated training approaches to ensure fidelity to the model and effective interventions with runaway and homeless youth; 4. To develop and disseminate treatment and service products locally and nationally; 5. To sustain trauma services for runaway and homeless youth in Hollywood. The Division of Adolescent Medicine has been providing services to runaway and homeless youth in the Hollywood community for over two decades. A key aspect of our success has been the development and maintenance of partnerships with both public and private agencies serving youth. This funding would help support these collaborative efforts, enhance the community’s capacity to address trauma in this population, and enable us to identify effective prevention and intervention programs based on the specific needs of youth in our community. | ||
| Grantee: Prototypes | Culver City, CA | |
| Program: AIDS TCE-Service Capacity Bldg in Minority Communities | SM53821 | |
| Congressional District: CA-32 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $400,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2001 - 09/29/2006 | ||
| PROTOTYPES WomensLink proposes to design and implement a mental health program for African American and Latino women living with HIV disease. Through the use of trained peer health advocates, client-identified community and natural helpers, psychotherapy, psychiatric care, and social activities, a culturally competent mental health program will be delivered. PROTOTYPES has provided services for women living with HIV disease and their family members since 1994 through two direct service programs: WomensLink, a psychosocial program which includes a substance abuse day treatment program, and WomensCare, two outpatient early intervention medical clinics specializing in HIV care. | ||
| Grantee: City of El Monte | El Monte, CA | |
| Program: CMHS 2005 Earmarks | SM56839 | |
| Congressional District: CA-32 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $198,400 | ||
| Project Period: 07/01/2005 - 06/30/2006 | ||
| Grantee: Lamp, Inc | Los Angeles, CA | |
| Program: Initiative to End Chronic Homelessness | SM55909 | |
| Congressional District: CA-33 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $589,210 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2003 - 09/29/2006 | ||
| Provide comprehensive services and permanent supportive housing to chronically homeless adults who have mental health, substance abuse or co-occurring disorders. They project will serve veterans and non- veterans. | ||
| Grantee: Pacific Clinics | Arcadia, CA | |
| Program: CMHS 2005 Earmarks | SM56789 | |
| Congressional District: CA-34 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $496,000 | ||
| Project Period: 07/01/2005 - 06/30/2006 | ||
| Grantee: Los Angeles Unified School District | Los Angeles, CA | |
| Program: National Child Traumati Stress Initiative-Treatment and Service Adapation Centers | SM57283 | |
| Congressional District: CA-34 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $599,814 | ||
| Project Period: 09/01/2005 - 08/31/2009 | ||
| The Los Angeles Unified School District Trauma Services Adaptation Center for Schools and Communities will lead the National Child Traumatic Stress Network's (NCTSN) effort to disseminate sustainable school-based trauma services. The TSA Center will 1) identify evidence-based and promising practice programs for use in school settings, 2) assess school and community needs and capacity to deliver trauma-informed services, and 3) support adaptation, implementation, and sustainability of promising practices and evidence-based interventions in schools across the country. | ||
| Grantee: Miller Children's Hospital | Long Beach, CA | |
| Program: National Child Traumati Stress Initiative-Treatment and Service Adapation Centers | SM57276 | |
| Congressional District: CA-37 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $600,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/30/2009 | ||
| Miller Children's Abuse and Violence Intervention Center (MCAVIC) at Miller Children's Hospital and the University of Southern California (USC) are collaborating to form the MCAVIC-USC Child and Adolescent Trauma Program. As a Treatment and Service Adaptation (TSA) Center, this venture will provide leadership, program development, and training in the treatment of multiply-traumatized children and adolescents. Empirically-informed approaches developed by MCAVIC, combined with similar treatment protocols for traumatized adolescents from the USC Psychological Trauma Program, will be adapted and disseminated. | ||
| Grantee: Southern California Alcohol/Drug Progs | Downey, CA | |
| Program: AIDS TCE-Service Capacity Bldg in Minority Communities | SM53781 | |
| Congressional District: CA-38 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $400,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2001 - 09/29/2006 | ||
| This project proposes enhancement of Positive Steps HIV/AIDS services in the under served East Service Planning Area of Los Angeles County. Staffed by persons of color, Positive Steps provides bilingual, culturally competent residential and day treatment services targeting substance-abusing African American and Latinos/as living with HIV/AIDS. SAMSHA funding will strengthen Positive Steps, mental health counseling services via the addition of on-site clinicians and a psychiatrist to provide mental health diagnosis, treatment, and medications management within the existing Positive Steps continuum of HIV/AIDS care. | ||
| Grantee: Regents of the University of California | Irvine, CA | |
| Program: Campus Suicide | SM57517 | |
| Congressional District: CA-48 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $75,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2008 | ||
| The University of California Irvine proposes the establishment of Project COURAGE (Campus Opportunities Uniting Resources Around Giving Encouragement). The overall goal of Project COURAGE is to prevent suicide by promoting a campus norm that honors achievement and competition while encouraging and allowing students to seek support when it is needed. The project will initially target first-year students with increased education, screening, and support services.Consistent with the framework suggested by the Suicide Prevention Resource Center, the activities of Project COURAGE will strengthen and fill gaps in existing services to "expand the safety net" for students vulnerable to suicidal ideations.Activities will include the formation of Project COURAGE teams consisting of faculty, staff, and students who will be trained by clinical providers to assist in identification and referral of students at risk for suicide. Project staff will work with Better World Advertising to formulate and produce a social marketing campaign to support project goals. Clinical staff will also work to increase screenings for depression, substance abuse, and other mental disorders that put students at higher risk for suicide. Project materials will be distributed to parents through a quarterly Parents’ Newsletter and Parents’ Weekend programs. Staff will also attend trainings on Stress Management Prevention at the Harvard Mind/Body Medical Institute, in order to integrate their research on stress into the Project COURAGE work. Evaluation strategies include an annual online student survey designed to measure two outcomes: 1) First year students will report decreases in measures of poor mental health/depression (PMHD) and 2) First year students will report increased awareness and regard for campus mental health services. | ||
| Grantee: YMCA of San Diego County | San Diego, CA | |
| Program: Youth Violence Prevention | SM55406 | |
| Congressional District: CA-48 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $200,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2004 - 09/29/2006 | ||
| The goals of this project are to: raise community awareness about the impact of youth violence on the community, youth involvement in the criminal justice system, and community resources to prevent youth violence and promote youth development; increase collaboration between governmental entities, service providing organizations, and community stakeholders including youth to better prewvent youth violence and increase youth development; and expand and enhance the GYRLS program, an intervention designed to strengthen literacy, personal and interpersonal skills, and prosocial development of girls ages 12-17, who are involved in the criminal justice system in San Diego County. | ||
| Grantee: Children's Hospital & Hlth Ctr San Diego | San Diego, CA | |
| Program: National Child Traumati Stress Initiative-Treatment and Service Adapation Centers | SM54289 | |
| Congressional District: CA-49 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $600,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/01/2002 - 09/30/2009 | ||
| The Chadwick Center for Children and Families at Children's Hospital in San Diego, in partnership with the Child and Adolescent Services Research Center (CASRC), will focus on expanding the current leadership role in the identification and dissemination of the Trauma Assessment Pathway (TAP) model and other Evidenced Based Practices, for children traumatized as a consequence of child maltreatment, neglect or exposure to interpersonal violence. The Center will adapt the TAP model and other evidenced-based practices for Spanish-speaking clientele. The Center will serve as a resource to the public child welfare system and child advocacy agencies, nationwide. | ||
| Grantee: San Diego LGBT Community Center | San Diego, CA | |
| Program: CMHS 2005 Earmarks | SM56826 | |
| Congressional District: CA-49 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $79,360 | ||
| Project Period: 07/01/2005 - 06/30/2006 | ||
| Grantee: Vista Community Clinic | Vista, CA | |
| Program: Youth Violence Prevention | SM55488 | |
| Congressional District: CA-49 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $150,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2004 - 09/29/2006 | ||
| The goals of this project are to: design and conduct community development activities to reduce the incidence of youth violence through expansion of the scope of the North Coastal Prevention Coalition to include a focus on youth violence prevention; provide youth development activities designed to reduce the incidence of youth violence including street and gang related violence and intimate partner violence among high-risk youth ages 12-19; and increase communication skills regarding violence prevention and related issues among parents of high-risk youth ages 12-19. | ||
| Grantee: Senior Community Centers | San Diego, CA | |
| Program: CMHS 2005 Earmarks | SM56829 | |
| Congressional District: CA-53 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $99,200 | ||
| Project Period: 07/01/2005 - 06/30/2006 | ||
| Grantee: Action Network | Gualala, CA | |
| Program: Drug Free Communities | SP13108 | |
| Congressional District: CA-01 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $100,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2010 | ||
| The grantee will: (1) reduce substance abuse among youth and over time, among adults by addressing factors in the community that increase the risk of substance abuse and promote factors to minimize the risk of substance abuse; (2) establish and strengthen citizen participation and collaboration among communities, nonprofit agencies, and federal, state, local, and tribal governments to support community efforts to deliver effective substance use prevention strategies for youth; (3) use the Strategic Prevention Framework of evidence based prevention strategies to assess needs, build capacity, plan, implement and evaluate community prevention initiatives; and (4) assess and report on the effectiveness of community prevention initiatives to reduce age of onset of any drug use, frequency of use in the past 30 days, increased perception of risk or harm, and increased perception of disapproval of use by peers and adults. | ||
| Grantee: Napa County Office of Education | Napa, CA | |
| Program: Drug Free Communities | SP12934 | |
| Congressional District: CA-01 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $100,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2010 | ||
| The grantee will: (1) reduce substance abuse among youth and over time, among adults by addressing factors in the community that increase the risk of substance abuse and promote factors to minimize the risk of substance abuse; (2) establish and strengthen citizen participation and collaboration among communities, nonprofit agencies, and federal, state, local, and tribal governments to support community efforts to deliver effective substance use prevention strategies for youth; (3) use the Strategic Prevention Framework of evidence based prevention strategies to assess needs, build capacity, plan, implement and evaluate community prevention initiatives; and (4) assess and report on the effectiveness of community prevention initiatives to reduce age of onset of any drug use, frequency of use in the past 30 days, increased perception of risk or harm, and increased perception of disapproval of use by peers and adults. | ||
| Grantee: Asian Pacific Psychological Services | Oakland, CA | |
| Program: Drug Free Communities | SP11560 | |
| Congressional District: CA-01 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $100,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2009 | ||
| The grantee will: (1) Reduce substance abuse among youth and, over time, among adults by addressing the factors in a community that increase the risk of substance abuse and promoting the factors that minimize the risk of substance abuse and; (2) Establish and strengthen community anti-drug coalitions. | ||
| Grantee: California Dept of Alcohol & Drug Prgms | Sacramento, CA | |
| Program: Cooperative Agreement for Ecstasy & Other Club Drugs Prevention Services | SP11170 | |
| Congressional District: CA-01 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $292,356 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2004 - 09/30/2009 | ||
| The California Department of Alcohol and Drug Programs (ADP) will deliver the services of the Ecstasy and Other Club Drug (EOCD) Grant through a cooperative agreement with the Kern County Mental Health Department. They will deliver direct services in cooperation with the Community Action Partnership of Kern and Youth Together (Y2) Program to provide prevention and intervention services, and case management to 120 at-risk middle school and high school students. The high school students will also receive additional mentoring training. By addressing factors that influence early substance abuse in youth, students who successfully complete the Y2 program will have a reduced potential for early onset experimentation and use of gateway and club drugs. The Youth Together (Y2) Program will integrate the SAMHSA recognized mode, CASASTART, to effectively deal with prevention, intervention and educational goals and objectives of the Y2 project. | ||
| Grantee: Asian American Recovery Services, Inc | SanFrancisco, CA | |
| Program: HIV/Strategic Prevention Framework | SP13273 | |
| Congressional District: CA-01 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $254,320 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2010 | ||
| Asian American Recovery Services, Inc. in San Francisco, CA has received a 5 year Strategic Prevention Framework (SPF) grant to provide substance abuse prevention and HIV and Hepatitis prevention services to minority populations and minority reentry populations. Targeting Asian Americans and Pacific Islander Americans, the needs of the reentry population, limited English-speaking immigrants and other high risk individuals | ||
| Grantee: Mendocino County Dept of Public Health | Ukiah, CA | |
| Program: Drug Free Communities | SP12148 | |
| Congressional District: CA-01 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $100,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2006 | ||
| The grantee will: (1) Reduce substance abuse among youth and, over time, among adults by addressing the factors in a community that increase the risk of substance abuse and promoting the factors that minimize the risk of substance abuse and; (2) Establish and strengthen community anti-drug coalitions. | ||
| Grantee: Gridley Unified School District | Gridley, CA | |
| Program: Drug Free Communities | SP12334 | |
| Congressional District: CA-02 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $100,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2008 | ||
| The grantee will: (1) Reduce substance abuse among youth and, over time, among adults by addressing the factors in a community that increase the risk of substance abuse and promoting the factors that minimize the risk of substance abuse and; (2) Establish and strengthen community anti-drug coalitions. | ||
| Grantee: Butte County Office of Education | Oroville, CA | |
| Program: Drug Free Communities | SP12884 | |
| Congressional District: CA-02 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $100,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2010 | ||
| The grantee will: (1) reduce substance abuse among youth and over time, among adults by addressing factors in the community that increase the risk of substance abuse and promote factors to minimize the risk of substance abuse; (2) establish and strengthen citizen participation and collaboration among communities, nonprofit agencies, and federal, state, local, and tribal governments to support community efforts to deliver effective substance use prevention strategies for youth; (3) use the Strategic Prevention Framework of evidence based prevention strategies to assess needs, build capacity, plan, implement and evaluate community prevention initiatives; and (4) assess and report on the effectiveness of community prevention initiatives to reduce age of onset of any drug use, frequency of use in the past 30 days, increased perception of risk or harm, and increased perception of disapproval of use by peers and adults. | ||
| Grantee: Shasta County Chemical People Inc. | Redding, CA | |
| Program: Drug Free Communities | SP11387 | |
| Congressional District: CA-02 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $100,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2009 | ||
| The grantee will: (1) Reduce substance abuse among youth and, over time, among adults by addressing the factors in a community that increase the risk of substance abuse and promoting the factors that minimize the risk of substance abuse and; (2) Establish and strengthen community anti-drug coalitions. | ||
| Grantee: Proj Help Sacramento Mobilizing Agnst SA | Sacramento, CA | |
| Program: Drug Free Communities | SP12140 | |
| Congressional District: CA-03 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $100,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2006 | ||
| The grantee will: (1) Reduce substance abuse among youth and, over time, among adults by addressing the factors in a community that increase the risk of substance abuse and promoting the factors that minimize the risk of substance abuse and; (2) Establish and strengthen community anti-drug coalitions. | ||
| Grantee: El Dorado Hills Community Vision, Inc. | El Dorado Hills, CA | |
| Program: Drug Free Communities | SP12909 | |
| Congressional District: CA-04 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $100,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2010 | ||
| The grantee will: (1) reduce substance abuse among youth and over time, among adults by addressing factors in the community that increase the risk of substance abuse and promote factors to minimize the risk of substance abuse; (2) establish and strengthen citizen participation and collaboration among communities, nonprofit agencies, and federal, state, local, and tribal governments to support community efforts to deliver effective substance use prevention strategies for youth; (3) use the Strategic Prevention Framework of evidence based prevention strategies to assess needs, build capacity, plan, implement and evaluate community prevention initiatives; and (4) assess and report on the effectiveness of community prevention initiatives to reduce age of onset of any drug use, frequency of use in the past 30 days, increased perception of risk or harm, and increased perception of disapproval of use by peers and adults. | ||
| Grantee: Office of the Governor | Sacramento, CA | |
| Program: State Incentive Cooperative Agreements | SP09961 | |
| Congressional District: CA-05 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $4,000,000 | ||
| Project Period: 04/30/2003 - 04/29/2007 | ||
| The State of California will implement an initiative to systematically coordinate state efforts to reduce alcohol and other drug (AOD) use by our nearly 6.2 million youth and young adults (ages 12-25) and promote systematic changes in the use of AOD prevention resources. California will use a State Incentive Grant (SIG) to develop a comprehensive, science-based system of community and environmental prevention programs and services. The SIG will facilitate (1) widespread adoption and application of outcome-based planning, using both logic models and risk/protective factor framework; (2) the selection and use of science-based programs; (3) the replication of community and environmental model programs; and (4) the implementation of outcome-based evaluation. The Governor will establish an Alcohol and Other Drug prevention Coordination Council to be the focal point for coordinating AOD prevention policies, determining unified operational directions, and leveraging service resources. | ||
| Grantee: People Reaching Out, Inc | Sacramento, CA | |
| Program: Drug Free Communities | SP13040 | |
| Congressional District: CA-05 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $100,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2010 | ||
| The grantee will: (1) reduce substance abuse among youth and over time, among adults by addressing factors in the community that increase the risk of substance abuse and promote factors to minimize the risk of substance abuse; (2) establish and strengthen citizen participation and collaboration among communities, nonprofit agencies, and federal, state, local, and tribal governments to support community efforts to deliver effective substance use prevention strategies for youth; (3) use the Strategic Prevention Framework of evidence based prevention strategies to assess needs, build capacity, plan, implement and evaluate community prevention initiatives; and (4) assess and report on the effectiveness of community prevention initiatives to reduce age of onset of any drug use, frequency of use in the past 30 days, increased perception of risk or harm, and increased perception of disapproval of use by peers and adults. | ||
| Grantee: Sacramento Cty Dept of Hlth & Human Svcs | Sacramento, CA | |
| Program: Drug Free Communities | SP12123 | |
| Congressional District: CA-05 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $99,934 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2006 | ||
| The grantee will: (1) Reduce substance abuse among youth and, over time, among adults by addressing the factors in a community that increase the risk of substance abuse and promoting the factors that minimize the risk of substance abuse and; (2) Establish and strengthen community anti-drug coalitions. | ||
| Grantee: Tenderloin AIDS Resource Center | San Francisco, CA | |
| Program: HIV/Strategic Prevention Framework | SP13403 | |
| Congressional District: CA-06 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $254,320 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2010 | ||
| The Tenderloin AIDS Resource Center has received a 5 year grant to provide integrated substance abuse and HIV/AIDS prevention services to its targeted homeless resident's community in San Francisco. | ||
| Grantee: New Connections | Concord, CA | |
| Program: HIV/Strategic Prevention Framework | SP13394 | |
| Congressional District: CA-07 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $254,320 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2010 | ||
| New Connection in Concord, CA has received a 5 year Strategit Prevention Framework (SPF) grante to provide substance abuse prevention and HIV and Hepatitis prevention services to minority populations and minority reentry populations. During the first year of the project the grantee will conduct a needs assessment that includes a review of previous studies, local and state indicator data, interviews and focus groups with providers and other key informants. During the second year and subsequent years, the grantee will implement several new program models, designed primarily to address the needs of minority populations in substance abuse prevention, including those returning from jail or prison focusing on the needs of African American and Latino clients. | ||
| Grantee: New Connections | Concord, CA | |
| Program: Drug Free Communities | SP12969 | |
| Congressional District: CA-07 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $100,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2010 | ||
| The grantee will: (1) reduce substance abuse among youth and over time, among adults by addressing factors in the community that increase the risk of substance abuse and promote factors to minimize the risk of substance abuse; (2) establish and strengthen citizen participation and collaboration among communities, nonprofit agencies, and federal, state, local, and tribal governments to support community efforts to deliver effective substance use prevention strategies for youth; (3) use the Strategic Prevention Framework of evidence based prevention strategies to assess needs, build capacity, plan, implement and evaluate community prevention initiatives; and (4) assess and report on the effectiveness of community prevention initiatives to reduce age of onset of any drug use, frequency of use in the past 30 days, increased perception of risk or harm, and increased perception of disapproval of use by peers and adults. | ||
| Grantee: Asian Community Mental Health Board | Oakland, CA | |
| Program: Drug Free Communities | SP11289 | |
| Congressional District: CA-07 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $100,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2009 | ||
| The grantee will: (1) Reduce substance abuse among youth and, over time, among adults by addressing the factors in a community that increase the risk of substance abuse and promoting the factors that minimize the risk of substance abuse and; (2) Establish and strengthen community anti-drug coalitions. | ||
| Grantee: Native American Health Center, Inc. | Oakland, CA | |
| Program: HIV/Strategic Prevention Framework | SP13330 | |
| Congressional District: CA-07 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $254,320 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2010 | ||
| The Native American Health Center in Oakland, CA has received a 5 year Strategic Prevention Framework (SPF) grant to provide substance abuse prevention and HIV and Hepatitis prevention services to minority populations and minority reentry populations. The Native Voices project targets high-risk Native American adolescents, adults re-entering from the criminal justice system and men who have sex with men. In collaboration with the Friendship House Association of American Indians, a community needs assessment will be conducted, a Gathering of Native Americans (GONA) will be held and Rapid HIV Testing Services will be implemented. Evidenced-based prevention interventions will be implemented to reduce substance abuse, increase perceptions of drug use as harmful, reduce HIV risk behaviors, increase Hepatitis A and B immunizations, and decrease involvement in the criminal and juvenile justice systems. | ||
| Grantee: Vallejo Cmty Cnsrtm Fightingback Ptnrshp | Vallejo, CA | |
| Program: Drug Free Communities | SP11229 | |
| Congressional District: CA-07 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $100,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2009 | ||
| The grantee will: (1) Reduce substance abuse among youth and, over time, among adults by addressing the factors in a community that increase the risk of substance abuse and promoting the factors that minimize the risk of substance abuse and; (2) Establish and strengthen community anti-drug coalitions. | ||
| Grantee: Inst for Advanced Study Black Fam Life | Oakland, CA | |
| Program: HIV/AIDS Cohort 4 Services | SP10538 | |
| Congressional District: CA-08 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $349,262 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2003 - 09/29/2008 | ||
| The Institute for Advanced Study of Black Family Life in Oakland, CA has received a 5 year grant to provide integrated substance abuse and HIV/AIDS prevention services to minority and underserved populations. This program is going to further explore the power of an integrated HIV/AIDS and substance abuse prevention model, currently being used with African -American women, by applying it to an adolescent population. Through the intervention activities, this project will provide African-American adolescents with a delivery of culturally competent substance abuse prevention and HIV prevention services designed to enable them to fully engage in risk-reduction behavior and initiate and/or sustain behavior that will reduce or eliminate their risk of transmitting the virus. | ||
| Grantee: Walden House, Inc. | San Francisco, CA | |
| Program: HIV/AIDS Cohort 4 Services | SP10518 | |
| Congressional District: CA-08 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $346,873 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2003 - 09/29/2008 | ||
| The Walden House, Inc. in Berkeley, CA has received a 5 year grant to provide integrated substance abuse and HIV/AIDS prevention services to minority and underserved populations. Walden House will use a three tiered asset-based intervention project with a primary prevention component, positive youth development through peer education, a related secondary component, community awareness, and the third competent capacity building. This program will also partner with two local faith based-organizations. | ||
| Grantee: Iris Center Womens Counseling/Recovery | San Francisco, CA | |
| Program: HIV/AIDS Cohort 4 Services | SP10447 | |
| Congressional District: CA-08 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $349,090 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2003 - 09/29/2008 | ||
| The Iris Center in San Francisco, CA has received a 5 year grant to provide integrated substance abuse and HIV/AIDS prevention services to minority and underserved populations. The grantee will provide comprehensive HIV and substance abuse prevention services to low-income Africian American female adolescents and young women throughout San Francisco who are 13 to 24 years of age. | ||
| Grantee: SAGE Project, Inc | San Francisco, CA | |
| Program: HIV/Strategic Prevention Framework | SP13259 | |
| Congressional District: CA-08 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $254,320 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2010 | ||
| SAGE Project, Inc. in San Francisco, CA has received a 5 year Strategic Prevention Framework (SPF) grant to provide substance abuse prevention and HIV and Hepatitis prevention services to minority populations and minority reentry populations. The SAGE Project, a 501 (c) (3) community-based organization, will implement the Strategic Prevention Framework in the San Francisco Bay Area in collaboration with the DPH Practice Improvement Collaborative (PIC) a SAMHSA-funded initiative. The "law enforcement," "substance abuse" and "Youth and Families" workgroups from the PIC will be solicited to participate in a strategic planning process with DPH and SAGE. From this process a workgroup consisting of selected providers will be formed and a schedule of meetings developed. Using the community needs assessment as a guide, the workgroup will develop a strategic plan to mobilize current resources and build capacity by adding additional resources, ultimately forming a coalition of public and private agencies that will carry out the activities indicated in the strategic plan. Simultaneously with the strategic plan development process SAGE will pilot Hepatitis Education seminars using a curriculum developed specifically for this purpose. SAGE will offer training to both service providers and their clients, initially at selected agencies that serve individuals with criminal justice histories and also minority populations. By year three the coalition of agencies that have been brought together for this project will implement evidence-based prevention programs according to a timeline and work plan which will be part of the strategic plan. The DPH will be involved from program inception to culmination and will design and implement an evaluation of the project. | ||
| Grantee: Health Initiatives for Youth | San Francisco, CA | |
| Program: HIV/Strategic Prevention Framework | SP13286 | |
| Congressional District: CA-08 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $254,320 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2010 | ||
| Health Initiatives for Youth (HIFY), a nationally respected developer of youth-centered health education, and personal empowerment programs with thirteen years experience in San Francisco, proposes to increase local understanding of HIV/AIDS, substance abuse, and hepatitis prevention needs among minority youth populations ages 14-24, including re-entry youth, and improve systemic capacity among youth-serving organizations and peer educators to meet these needs. Our broad goals include: o increasing local understanding of specific HIV/AIDS, substance abuse, and hepatitis prevention needs among the most vulnerable minority youth populations including re-entry populations; o responding to identified training needs of providers in youth-serving organizations and peer educators to achieve effective prevention programs; o improving systemic capacity among youth-serving organizations and peer educators to implement and sustain culturally-competent, evidence-based prevention programs to reduce HIV/AIDS, substance abuse, and hepatitis in the most vulnerable groups of the target population, including minority re-entry youth; o improving systemic capacity among youth-serving organizations and peer educators to implement and sustain linkages to appropriate care for the most vulnerable groups of the target population, including minority re-entry youth in order to improve behavioral outcomes for these populations with regard to these risks; and o ultimately reducing HIV/AIDS, substance abuse, and hepatitis in the target population, while ensuring that members of the target population have the knowledge and capacity to get tested for HIV and hepatitis and to access appropriate care if they do have HIV/AIDS or hepatitis, or are struggling with substance problems. Recognizing that youth have different risks and needs than adults, we will conduct a local, youth-specific, HIV substance abuse/hepatitis needs assessment with key stakeholders in year one (including a synthesis of | ||
| Grantee: San Francisco Dept of Public Health | San Francisco, CA | |
| Program: Drug Free Communities | SP12260 | |
| Congressional District: CA-08 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $100,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2007 | ||
| The grantee will: (1) Reduce substance abuse among youth and, over time, among adults by addressing the factors in a community that increase the risk of substance abuse and promoting the factors that minimize the risk of substance abuse and; (2) Establish and strengthen community anti-drug coalitions. | ||
| Grantee: Health Initiatives for Youth | San Francisco, CA | |
| Program: HIV/AIDS Cohort 4 Services | SP10544 | |
| Congressional District: CA-08 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $349,995 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2003 - 09/29/2008 | ||
| The Health Initiatives for Youth (HIFY) in San Francisco, CA has received a 5 year grant to provide integrated substance abuse and HIV/AIDS prevention services to minority and underserved populations. This program will build upon a previous SAMHSA funded project that consists of three interrelated components, each designed to explore the effectiveness of youth drug and HIV prevention. | ||
| Grantee: Centerforce | San Rafael, CA | |
| Program: HIV/AIDS Cohort 5 Services | SP10496 | |
| Congressional District: CA-08 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $250,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2003 - 09/29/2008 | ||
| Minorities make up over 70% of California's prison population. For a majority of inmates, drugs or alcohol played a role in their criminal behavior. After release from prison, these individuals typically return to low income neighborhoods where illicit drugs and alcohol are readily available. Because of higher rates of HIV infection within California prison populations than in the general public, intimate partners of inmates - largely low-income women of color - are at a much high risk for HIV infection than other women. Centerforce, a community based organization that serves inmates, ex-offenders and their families in Northern and Central California, currently offers a peer -driven, comprehensive system of health and social service programs. Centerforce is proposing a new, integrated substance abuse prevention and HIV prevention program called ASAP (AIDS and Substance Abuse Prevention Project). The target population for ASAP comprises minority inmates and ex-offenders and the intimate partners of these individuals. ASAP will serve these three client groups at three prisons in Central and Northern California: San Quentin State Prison and the Family Wellness Center (called "The House of San Quentin") in Marin County (1) Valley State Prison and (3) Central California Women's Facility both in Madera County. | ||
| Grantee: Centerforce | San Rafael, CA | |
| Program: SAMHSA Conference Grants | SP12827 | |
| Congressional District: CA-08 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $25,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2006 | ||
| Centerforce is a national leader in the provision of education, advocacy and services to prisoners, ex-prisoners, their families and communities. Centerforce hosts an annual conference that highlights specific public health and social service issues and their relationship to the criminal justice system. The 2005 Centerforce Inside/Out Summit, to be held September 14 -15, 2005 in San Francisco and will focus on successful partnerships with corrections, including substance abuse prevention programs. These programs will target prisoners, ex-prisoners and their families, all of which are under-served populations that are at increased risk for substance use. The goals and objectives of the 2005 Summit are to: 1) advance substance abuse prevention among the target populations by identifying successful substance abuse prevention programs; 2) educate the 300 conference attendees about the theories, principles, strategies and action plans that can be replicated to create programs for the target populations that will meet specific contextual and cultural needs; and 3) provide the 300 conference attendees with the tools, resources and networking connections needed for successful prevention programs with these groups. | ||
| Grantee: Castro Valley Unified School District | Castro Valley, CA | |
| Program: Drug Free Communities | SP12395 | |
| Congressional District: CA-09 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $100,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2008 | ||
| The grantee will: (1) Reduce substance abuse among youth and, over time, among adults by addressing the factors in a community that increase the risk of substance abuse and promoting the factors that minimize the risk of substance abuse and; (2) Establish and strengthen community anti-drug coalitions. | ||
| Grantee: California Prostitutes Prev & Educ Proj. | Oakland, CA | |
| Program: HIV/AIDS Cohort 5 Services | SP10607 | |
| Congressional District: CA-09 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $250,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2003 - 09/29/2008 | ||
| CAL-PEP proposes to enhance and expand its capacity to continue offering culturally competent integrated substance abuse prevention and HIV services to unduplicated 1,750 adolescent African American sexual minorities in Alameda County, California over a 5-year period. The overall goal of CAL-PEP's SAP/HIV project is to test the efficacy of using a blend of behavior change approaches to reduce or prevent substance abuse and HIV among adolescent African American sexual minorities. Our program proposes to use a multi-component approach that addresses behavioral change in a primary domain, individual; a secondary domain, the family; and a tertiary domain, the community. Our prevention program model is culturally competent, sensitive to the issues of sexual and gender identity, and developmental and linguistically appropriate to our target groups. Risk factors this program aims at minimizing or eliminating are injection drug use (IDU), binge drinking, or use of alcohol or drugs and engaging in unprotected sex; use of alcohol or drugs that may lead to rape/non-consensual sex, having sex without a condom, to other unsafe sexual practices, women having unprotected sex with MSMs, having unprotected sex with and IDU user, and trading sex for drugs. The major components of CAL-PEP's integrated substance abuse prevention and HIV prevention services are strategic planning to enhance CAL-PEP's SAP/HIVP service delivery and evaluation capacity, outreach and intensive case management, and substance abuse and HIV risk reduction education and prevention Currently, like many other agencies across the county - CAL-PEP provides outreach, prevention case management, and risk-reduction education, but these services are not sufficient to address the serious needs of the mostly adolescents who trade sex for money or drugs, or engage in other forms of risky health behaviors. | ||
| Grantee: La Clinica de la Raza-FHP Inc | Oakland, CA | |
| Program: HIV/AIDS Cohort 5 Services | SP10671 | |
| Congressional District: CA-09 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $250,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2003 - 09/29/2008 | ||
| La Clinica de La Raza - Fruitvale Health Project, Inc. (La Clinica) is a community health center in the city of Oakland in Alameda County, California. Oakland has great cultural diversity, but it also presents a host of risks to youth: poverty, violence, low educational achievement, early and unsafe sexual activity, and high rates or substance abuse. As a result, Oakland youth, especially youth of color, are at high risk for addiction and HIV infection by their early 20s. In 2003, the Oakland Unified School District (OUSD) sought La Clinica's assistance to develop a model substance abuse and HIV prevention intervention for its students. The proposed Project Substance and HIV Free, or Project SAHF Project Substance and HIV Free, or Project SAHF (pronounced "safe") has been designed in response. Throughout the five year grant period, Project SAHF will be implemented at five OUSD schools which have or are in the process of developing school-based health centers. These are Oakland Technical High School, Fremont High School, and Roosevelt Middle School (which have health centers operated by La Clinica), and Castlemont and McClymonds High Schools, which have health centers being developed by OUSD and a community collaborative. Project SAHF aims to provide integrated, science-based substance abuse and HIV prevention services in these five middle and high schools. The target population includes Latino, African American and Asian American youth, including lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender teens. Proposed interventions are intended to increase knowledge about substance abuse and HIV, create attitude and behavior change to reduce risk, and enhance resiliency factors. | ||
| Grantee: Perinatal Council | Oakland, CA | |
| Program: HIV/AIDS Cohort 5 Services | SP10486 | |
| Congressional District: CA-09 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $250,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2004 - 09/29/2008 | ||
| The Perinatal Council's Gathering of the Brothers Peer Educator Training Project will use a small-group intervention to provide education and training in prevention of substance abuse and HIV infection to African-American boys (age14-18) and men (age 19-55) residing in Oakland and Richmond, California. Over 5 years, 192-256 boys and 192-256 men will be served. The Perinatal Council (TPC) is a non-profit organization that provides comprehensive case management and support services to a caseload of 1500+ at-risk families in Alameda and Contra Costa Counties in California. The proposed project is designed to address the inter-related problems of chronic substance abuse and HIV/STD risk behaviors, which are common and widely supported by the target population's social subgroup norms. The Project's goals are to increase resiliency and reduce the incidence of substance abuse and HIV/AIDS among African-American teen boys and men in the East Bay cities of Oakland and Richmond. Specific project activities include: (1) group and community-level interventions that provide prevention education and skills building curricula and training in peer education; and (2) comprehensive in-home case management; employment counseling. Project evaluation will focus on the efficacy of the training in changing behavior and attitudes of the peer educators. | ||
| Grantee: Latino Commission on A/D | Oakland, CA | |
| Program: HIV/Strategic Prevention Framework | SP13401 | |
| Congressional District: CA-09 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $254,320 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2010 | ||
| The Latino Commission on Alcohol and Drug Abuse of Alameda County in Oakland, CA has received a 5 year Strategic Prevention Framework (SPF) grant to provide substance abuse prevention and HIV and Hepatitis prevention services to minority populations and minority reentry populations. The grantee will address the epidemics of Substance Abuse, HIV, and Hepatitis disproportionately affecting Minority populations, especially those reentering society from incarceration in Oakland, California. The program will target African American and Hispanic/Latino men and women who have histories of substance abuse, and through them, we will also reach their families and communities with evidence-based prevention programs to reduce the onset of Substance Abuse, and transmission of HIV and Hepatitis. | ||
| Grantee: San Ramon Valley Unified School District | Danville, CA | |
| Program: Drug Free Communities | SP12084 | |
| Congressional District: CA-10 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $100,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2006 | ||
| The grantee will: (1) Reduce substance abuse among youth and, over time, among adults by addressing the factors in a community that increase the risk of substance abuse and promoting the factors that minimize the risk of substance abuse and; (2) Establish and strengthen community anti-drug coalitions. | ||
| Grantee: United Way of Santa Cruz County | Capitola, CA | |
| Program: Drug Free Communities | SP12999 | |
| Congressional District: CA-17 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $75,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2010 | ||
| The grantee will: (1) reduce substance abuse among youth and over time, among adults by addressing factors in the community that increase the risk of substance abuse and promote factors to minimize the risk of substance abuse; (2) establish and strengthen citizen participation and collaboration among communities, nonprofit agencies, and federal, state, local, and tribal governments to support community efforts to deliver effective substance use prevention strategies for youth; (3) use the Strategic Prevention Framework of evidence based prevention strategies to assess needs, build capacity, plan, implement and evaluate community prevention initiatives; and (4) assess and report on the effectiveness of community prevention initiatives to reduce age of onset of any drug use, frequency of use in the past 30 days, increased perception of risk or harm, and increased perception of disapproval of use by peers and adults. | ||
| Grantee: Amador Tuolumne Community Action Agency | Jackson, CA | |
| Program: Drug Free Communities | SP12215 | |
| Congressional District: CA-19 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $100,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2007 | ||
| The grantee will: (1) Reduce substance abuse among youth and, over time, among adults by addressing the factors in a community that increase the risk of substance abuse and promoting the factors that minimize the risk of substance abuse and; (2) Establish and strengthen community anti-drug coalitions. | ||
| Grantee: Comprehensive Youth Svcs of Fresno Inc | Fresno, CA | |
| Program: Drug Free Communities | SP12302 | |
| Congressional District: CA-20 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $100,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2008 | ||
| The grantee will: (1) Reduce substance abuse among youth and, over time, among adults by addressing the factors in a community that increase the risk of substance abuse and promoting the factors that minimize the risk of substance abuse and; (2) Establish and strengthen community anti-drug coalitions. | ||
| Grantee: Tarzana Treatment Centers, Inc. | Tarzana, CA | |
| Program: HIV/AIDS Cohort 5 Services | SP10667 | |
| Congressional District: CA-20 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $250,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2003 - 09/29/2008 | ||
| Tarzana Treatment Centers, Inc. (TTC), Southern California's leading behavioral health care organization, provides Substance Abuse and HIV prevention services to youth throughout Los Angeles County. TTC will expand capacity for prevention services for minority youth in the Antelope Valley, by engaging a Core Group of 60-80 high risk youth each year in a weekly, interactive, arts-based curriculum delivered at four different sites. With its sparse population, lack of services, and rapid growth, the Antelope Valley fosters a high-risk environment that is a major problem for law enforcement and human service workers. High rates of criminal behavior, teen pregnancy, and school dropout plague the region, which is recognized as having the highest HIV related disease burden in the County. The proposed program would be the first significant Substance Abuse and HIV prevention program in the region, establishing the partnerships, community awareness, and support infrastructure necessary to combat what will undoubtedly be a rising tide of societal ills. Through the process of developing a group art project around a prevention theme, the program will increase risk awareness, resiliency and protective factors in the Core Group of 60-80 youth. The program will integrate Substance Abuse and HIV prevention by focusing on developing decision-making and life skills that bolster ability in youth to ability in youth to avoid and resist high-risk behaviors. Through one-on-one counseling sessions, Core Group participants will set personal prevention goals and tailor activities to meet their needs. Behavior change activities will be informed by the Transtheoretical Model, which moves individuals through a process based on their readiness, willingness and ability to implement change. The program will impact a broader segment of the population through: 1) Core Group participant outreach to their peers, and 2) Public presentation of the art projects. | ||
| Grantee: Tarzana Treatment Centers, Inc. | Tarzana, CA | |
| Program: HIV/Strategic Prevention Framework | SP13399 | |
| Congressional District: CA-20 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $254,320 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2010 | ||
| The Tarzana Treatment Center, Inc.(TTC) has received a 5 year grant to provide integrated substance abuse and HIV/AIDS prevention services to Black and Latino populations, including persons recently released from prison or jail. | ||
| Grantee: Tarzana Treatment Centers, Inc. | Tarzana, CA | |
| Program: Drug Free Communities | SP13124 | |
| Congressional District: CA-20 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $100,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2010 | ||
| The grantee will: (1) reduce substance abuse among youth and over time, among adults by addressing factors in the community that increase the risk of substance abuse and promote factors to minimize the risk of substance abuse; (2) establish and strengthen citizen participation and collaboration among communities, nonprofit agencies, and federal, state, local, and tribal governments to support community efforts to deliver effective substance use prevention strategies for youth; (3) use the Strategic Prevention Framework of evidence based prevention strategies to assess needs, build capacity, plan, implement and evaluate community prevention initiatives; and (4) assess and report on the effectiveness of community prevention initiatives to reduce age of onset of any drug use, frequency of use in the past 30 days, increased perception of risk or harm, and increased perception of disapproval of use by peers and adults. | ||
| Grantee: Day One | Pasadena, CA | |
| Program: Drug Free Communities | SP12972 | |
| Congressional District: CA-22 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $100,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2010 | ||
| The grantee will: (1) reduce substance abuse among youth and over time, among adults by addressing factors in the community that increase the risk of substance abuse and promote factors to minimize the risk of substance abuse; (2) establish and strengthen citizen participation and collaboration among communities, nonprofit agencies, and federal, state, local, and tribal governments to support community efforts to deliver effective substance use prevention strategies for youth; (3) use the Strategic Prevention Framework of evidence based prevention strategies to assess needs, build capacity, plan, implement and evaluate community prevention initiatives; and (4) assess and report on the effectiveness of community prevention initiatives to reduce age of onset of any drug use, frequency of use in the past 30 days, increased perception of risk or harm, and increased perception of disapproval of use by peers and adults. | ||
| Grantee: San Luis Obispo Co Behavioral Hlth Svcs | San Luis Obispo, CA | |
| Program: Drug Free Communities | SP12329 | |
| Congressional District: CA-22 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $100,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2008 | ||
| The grantee will: (1) Reduce substance abuse among youth and, over time, among adults by addressing the factors in a community that increase the risk of substance abuse and promoting the factors that minimize the risk of substance abuse and; (2) Establish and strengthen community anti-drug coalitions. | ||
| Grantee: Council on Alcoholism and Drug Abuse | Santa Barbara, CA | |
| Program: Drug Free Communities | SP12336 | |
| Congressional District: CA-22 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $100,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2008 | ||
| The grantee will: (1) Reduce substance abuse among youth and, over time, among adults by addressing the factors in a community that increase the risk of substance abuse and promoting the factors that minimize the risk of substance abuse and; (2) Establish and strengthen community anti-drug coalitions. | ||
| Grantee: Oxnard Police Department | Oxnard, CA | |
| Program: Drug Free Communities | SP12125 | |
| Congressional District: CA-23 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $99,824 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2006 | ||
| The grantee will: (1) Reduce substance abuse among youth and, over time, among adults by addressing the factors in a community that increase the risk of substance abuse and promoting the factors that minimize the risk of substance abuse and; (2) Establish and strengthen community anti-drug coalitions. | ||
| Grantee: United Way of the Central Coast, Inc | Santa Maria, CA | |
| Program: Drug Free Communities | SP13215 | |
| Congressional District: CA-23 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $96,470 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2010 | ||
| The grantee will: (1) reduce substance abuse among youth and over time, among adults by addressing factors in the community that increase the risk of substance abuse and promote factors to minimize the risk of substance abuse; (2) establish and strengthen citizen participation and collaboration among communities, nonprofit agencies, and federal, state, local, and tribal governments to support community efforts to deliver effective substance use prevention strategies for youth; (3) use the Strategic Prevention Framework of evidence based prevention strategies to assess needs, build capacity, plan, implement and evaluate community prevention initiatives; and (4) assess and report on the effectiveness of community prevention initiatives to reduce age of onset of any drug use, frequency of use in the past 30 days, increased perception of risk or harm, and increased perception of disapproval of use by peers and adults. | ||
| Grantee: NATHA | Pasadena, CA | |
| Program: Drug Free Communities | SP11596 | |
| Congressional District: CA-27 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $99,986 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2009 | ||
| The grantee will: (1) Reduce substance abuse among youth and, over time, among adults by addressing the factors in a community that increase the risk of substance abuse and promoting the factors that minimize the risk of substance abuse and; (2) Establish and strengthen community anti-drug coalitions. | ||
| Grantee: Prototypes A Ctr/I in Health MH | Culver City, CA | |
| Program: HIV/Strategic Prevention Framework | SP13281 | |
| Congressional District: CA-28 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $254,320 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2010 | ||
| The PROTOTYPES has received a 5 year grant to provide integated substance abuse and HIV/AIDS prevention services to prevent and reduce the onset of substance abuse and the transmission of HIV and hepatitis among African American and Latino men and women in Los Angeles County Service Planning Area 6 who are reentering the community after a period of incarceration. | ||
| Grantee: South Bay Coalition | Hermosa Beach, CA | |
| Program: Drug Free Communities | SP13485 | |
| Congressional District: CA-28 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $99,908 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2010 | ||
| The grantee will: (1) reduce substance abuse among youth and over time, among adults by addressing factors in the community that increase the risk of substance abuse and promote factors to minimize the risk of substance abuse; (2) establish and strengthen citizen participation and collaboration among communities, nonprofit agencies, and federal, state, local, and tribal governments to support community efforts to deliver effective substance use prevention strategies for youth; (3) use the Strategic Prevention Framework of evidence based prevention strategies to assess needs, build capacity, plan, implement and evaluate community prevention initiatives; and (4) assess and report on the effectiveness of community prevention initiatives to reduce age of onset of any drug use, frequency of use in the past 30 days, increased perception of risk or harm, and increased perception of disapproval of use by peers and adults. | ||
| Grantee: Children's Hospital Los Angeles | Los Angeles, CA | |
| Program: Drug Free Communities | SP13135 | |
| Congressional District: CA-30 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $100,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2010 | ||
| The grantee will: (1) reduce substance abuse among youth and over time, among adults by addressing factors in the community that increase the risk of substance abuse and promote factors to minimize the risk of substance abuse; (2) establish and strengthen citizen participation and collaboration among communities, nonprofit agencies, and federal, state, local, and tribal governments to support community efforts to deliver effective substance use prevention strategies for youth; (3) use the Strategic Prevention Framework of evidence based prevention strategies to assess needs, build capacity, plan, implement and evaluate community prevention initiatives; and (4) assess and report on the effectiveness of community prevention initiatives to reduce age of onset of any drug use, frequency of use in the past 30 days, increased perception of risk or harm, and increased perception of disapproval of use by peers and adults. | ||
| Grantee: Asian Pacific Family Center | Rosemead, CA | |
| Program: HIV/AIDS Cohort 4 Services | SP10647 | |
| Congressional District: CA-30 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $350,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2003 - 09/29/2008 | ||
| The Asian Pacific Family Center in Rosemead, CA has received a 5 year grant to provide integrated substance abuse and HIV/AIDS prevention services to minority and underserved populations. This program is specifically designed to address the substance abuse and HIV prevention needs of those high school age Chinese and Korean immigrant youths in the East San Gabriel Valley area of Los Angeles County. | ||
| Grantee: Sunrise Community Counseling Center | Los Angeles, CA | |
| Program: HIV/Strategic Prevention Framework | SP13271 | |
| Congressional District: CA-33 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $254,320 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2010 | ||
| Sunrise County Counseling Center, Inc. (SCCC) in Los Angeles, CA has received and 5 year Strategic Prevention Framework (SPF) grant to provide substance abuse prevention and HIV and Hepatitis prevention services to minority populations and minority reentry populations. The grantee will deliver integrated prevention services for substance abuse, HIV, Hepatitis and sexually transmitted infections as well as counseling, testing and referral services to target Latino and reentry youth aged 12-17. In addition, SCCC will utilize needs assessment methodology to build component in the SFT model that address specific issues in substance abuse, HIV and hepatitis prevention. | ||
| Grantee: AMASSI Center of So Central LA | Inglewood, CA | |
| Program: HIV/AIDS Cohort 5 Services | SP10758 | |
| Congressional District: CA-35 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $250,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2004 - 09/29/2008 | ||
| The African American Advocacy Support Services and Survival Institute (AmASSI') is a health, wellness, and cultural center serving the largely African American communities in Los Angeles County's Service Planning Area (SPA) 6, which includes South Central Los Angeles, Crenshaw, and in Inglewood (in SPA8). These areas have numerous health and socioeconomic disparities and are disproportionately impacted by HIV and substance abuse. The goal of the project is to halt the spread of the twin epidemics of HIV and substance abuse among the groups at highest risk of HIV and substance abuse, a history of incarceration, multiple sex partners, and participation in homosexual acts despite identifying as heterosexual), through a Critical Thinking and Cultural Affirmation (CTCA) Model. The CTCA, which involves 1-800-STOP-HIV helpline providing HIV testing information and referral, Peer led street outreach, Peer Risk Reduction Group Sessions, mental health counseling, self-help groups and referral to substance abuse treatment, is a cultural and identity affirming HIV and substance abuse prevention model delivered by staff and volunteers who reflect the demographics of the target populations. Consistent with the goals of this RFP, we are respectfully requesting $350,00 in funding to expand our organizational capacity to provide and sustain these services. We will expand our organizational capacity to provide these services by: (1) Increasing the hours of our Clinical Director, which will in turn allow us to double the number of mental health interns who provide therapy, and thusly, the number of clients who receive therapy to 100 per year; (2) Increasing the hours of our Mental Health Intake Specialist, who conducts mental health assessments and matches clients with therapists, to handle the increased number of clients; (3) Hiring a Peer Prevention Counselor to work with Men, our highest risk population | ||
| Grantee: AMASSI Center of So Central LA | Inglewood, CA | |
| Program: HIV/Strategic Prevention Framework | SP13268 | |
| Congressional District: CA-35 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $254,320 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2010 | ||
| The African American Advocacy, Support and Survival Institute has received a 5 year grant to provide integrated substance abuse and HIV/AIDS prevention services to the needs od high risks African American living in the South Central and Crenshaw neighborhoods of Los Angeles, as well as the adjacent City of Inglewood. | ||
| Grantee: Inglewood Coaltn for Drug & Violnce Prev | Inglewood, CA | |
| Program: Drug Free Communities | SP11702 | |
| Congressional District: CA-35 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $100,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2009 | ||
| The grantee will: (1) Reduce substance abuse among youth and, over time, among adults by addressing the factors in a community that increase the risk of substance abuse and promoting the factors that minimize the risk of substance abuse and; (2) Establish and strengthen community anti-drug coalitions. | ||
| Grantee: Asian American Drug Abuse Program Inc | Los Angeles, CA | |
| Program: HIV/AIDS Cohort 5 Services | SP10661 | |
| Congressional District: CA-35 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $250,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2003 - 09/29/2008 | ||
| The Asian American Drug Abuse Program (AADAP) Inc" recognizes that Asians and Pacific Islanders (API's) are at a critical juncture with respect to HIV and AIDS. We remain in the early stages of the epidemic and are in prime position to prevent and avoid unnecessary infection and subsequent death with groups who demonstrate specific high-risk behaviors. Because of our relative insularity, once HIV takes hold, the course of the epidemic in our communities could come to resemble that of the African American and Hispanic/Latino populations if effective prevention interventions are not initiated and sustained. The taboo of homosexuality compel gay, lesbian, transgender, bisexual, and questioning APIs to consume illicit substances like methamphetamines and ketamine in order to escape self-hatred and engage in sexual practices. Crystal methamphetamine catalyzes hypersexuality and incoherence of safe sexual practices. In addition, an alarming number of API women in Los Angeles County are employing "crystal meth" as a source of weight reduction, facilitating HIV transmittal. AADAP's SAP and HIV Case Management Program is two fold: a) providing college-aged API's with risk reduction skills and b) changing community norms surrounding the stigmatization of substance abuse and HIV AIDS. The target ethnic groups are: Filipino, Japanese, Chinese, and Vietnamese, the four API communities currently reflecting the highest rate of advanced HUIV (AIDS) disease. | ||
| Grantee: Dunbar Economic Development Corporation | Los Angeles, CA | |
| Program: Drug Free Communities | SP12052 | |
| Congressional District: CA-35 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $100,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2006 | ||
| The grantee will: (1) Reduce substance abuse among youth and, over time, among adults by addressing the factors in a community that increase the risk of substance abuse and promoting the factors that minimize the risk of substance abuse and; (2) Establish and strengthen community anti-drug coalitions. | ||
| Grantee: Cmty Coalition for SA Prev and Treatment | Los Angeles, CA | |
| Program: Drug Free Communities | SP11514 | |
| Congressional District: CA-35 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $100,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2009 | ||
| The grantee will: (1) Reduce substance abuse among youth and, over time, among adults by addressing the factors in a community that increase the risk of substance abuse and promoting the factors that minimize the risk of substance abuse and; (2) Establish and strengthen community anti-drug coalitions. | ||
| Grantee: Bienestar Human Services, Inc | Los Angeles, CA | |
| Program: HIV/AIDS Cohort 5 Services | SP10669 | |
| Congressional District: CA-38 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $250,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2003 - 09/30/2008 | ||
| Bienestar Human Services, Inc. proposes to implement the Substance Abuse Prevention and HIV Education Program ("pronounces SAFE"), a Latino-specific integrated HIV and substance use prevention program in San Bernardino and Los Angeles Counties, California. This program will target Latino young adults, ages 18 to 27. The evaluation will test the effectiveness of a culturally specific, multidimensional approach to prevention services. The SAPHE Program will include a variety of culturally-specific outreach, group-level, peer-level, and community level interventions. This approach is designed to enhance both the personal and culture-specific protective factors in the target population in order to prevent the onset of substance use or progression to abuse, as well as the associated risk for HIV infection. Outreach will target young adults where they congregate, e.g., at "raves," which are all-night dance parties where club drugs are abundant, on college campuses, and in other popular locations. Through outreach participants will be invited to participate in other program interventions, for example health education/public information events, a 5-week closed small group experience, a training to become "natural leaders" to promote positive peer influences, and finally a community-level intervention that will consist of painting murals that depict HIV and substance use prevention themes. Mural painting is part of the Latino tradition and history. In order to fully involve the target population and community in all aspects of the program design and delivery, Bienestar will establish two Community Advisory Boards (CAB), one located in the neighboring regions of the Pomona Valley of Los Angeles County and the other in San Bernardino County. These CABs will provide ongoing feedback, which will serve to refine the SAPHE program to ensure that it meets the needs of Latino young adults. | ||
| Grantee: Bienestar Human Services, Inc | Los Angeles, CA | |
| Program: HIV/Strategic Prevention Framework | SP13388 | |
| Congressional District: CA-38 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $254,320 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2010 | ||
| Bienestar Human Services in Los Angeles, CA has received a 5 year Strategic Prevention Framework (SPF) grant to provide substance abuse prevention and HIV and Hepatitis prevention services to minority populations and minority reentry populations. Bienestar proposes the Substance Abuse Prevention, HIV /Hepatitis Education - among Reentry (or SAPHE-R pronounced "SAFER.") program to address gaps in services to the high risk Latino population in Los Angeles County, California. SAPHE-R aims to decrease the risk of substance abuse, HIV, and hepatitis among Latinos by providing prevention education, individualized counseling, HIV Testing, and referrals for other services as needed. SAPHE-R will target young adults, ages 18 to 35, which are at greater risk for unsafe sexual practices or using drugs that may lead to unprotected sex and exposure to HIV and hepatitis. The SAPHE-R program will consist of a variety of culturally specific outreach, peer-level, and community level interventions designed to raise awareness and prevent substance abuse and HIV and hepatitis infections. Bienestar will work with a number of service providers in the community to ensure that members of the target population have a linkage to necessary medical care, including screening for hepatitis infection. Bienestar will conduct outreach to the community to raise awareness of the co-occurrence of the issues of substance abuse, HIV, and hepatitis. The program will utilize an evidence-based intervention and will include a community service project for the high-risk population and a family and support structure component for the reentry population. | ||
| Grantee: Drug Use Is Life Abuse | Santa Ana, CA | |
| Program: Drug Free Communities | SP12055 | |
| Congressional District: CA-39 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $100,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2006 | ||
| The grantee will: (1) Reduce substance abuse among youth and, over time, among adults by addressing the factors in a community that increase the risk of substance abuse and promoting the factors that minimize the risk of substance abuse and; (2) Establish and strengthen community anti-drug coalitions. | ||
| Grantee: Orange County Bar Foundation | Santa Ana, CA | |
| Program: HIV/Strategic Prevention Framework | SP13328 | |
| Congressional District: CA-46 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $254,320 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2010 | ||
| The Orange County Bar Foundation proposes enhancing our model Stop Short of Addition substance abuse intervention to include integrated HIV/Hepatitis prevention education and counseling, testing, and referral services for a target population of hard to reach Latino and re- entry youth in Orange County, California that are currently identified as abusing alcohol/drugs and therefore at high risk of HIV/AIDS and Hepatitis. The purpose of the proposed project is to reduce the spread of substance abuse, which increases the risk for HIV/AIDS, Hepatitis, and other infectious diseases among Latino and re-entry youth populations. The project will provide integrated substance abuse and HIV/Hepatitis prevention services in a culturally competent manner to the target population. The Orange County Bar Foundation will target Latino youth, males and females, ages 12-18, in Orange County, CA that are at high risk of substance abuse and HIV/Hepatitis infection. These youth will be identified by: 1) A law enforcement agency, parent/family member, school official, or a community agency as currently using alcohol and/or drugs; or 2) The County's juvenile detention facilities as reentering the Orange County population. The Orange County Bar Foundation's model program, Stop Short of Addiction, includes: 1) clinical intake assessment; 2) substance abuse prevention sessions; 3) ethnic-specific, science- based Brief Strategic Family Therapy, and 4) Case management and referral services. All program services will be provided in Spanish, in a culturally appropriate and sensitive manner. The project will incorporate components of the HIV/Hepatitis prevention curriculum from our current CSAP and CDC approved programs, Project Youth Connect and Hermana Project, to the existing Stop Short of Addition program services. Access will be provided to HIV and Hepatitis C testing, pre/post counseling, and referrals to Hepatitis A/B immunization services. | ||
| Grantee: America on Track | Santa Ana, CA | |
| Program: Drug Free Communities | SP12335 | |
| Congressional District: CA-46 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $100,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2008 | ||
| The grantee will: (1) Reduce substance abuse among youth and, over time, among adults by addressing the factors in a community that increase the risk of substance abuse and promoting the factors that minimize the risk of substance abuse and; (2) Establish and strengthen community anti-drug coalitions. | ||
| Grantee: Irvine Unified School District | Irvine, CA | |
| Program: Drug Free Communities | SP11230 | |
| Congressional District: CA-47 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $100,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2009 | ||
| The grantee will: (1) Reduce substance abuse among youth and, over time, among adults by addressing the factors in a community that increase the risk of substance abuse and promoting the factors that minimize the risk of substance abuse and; (2) Establish and strengthen community anti-drug coalitions. | ||
| Grantee: YMCA of San Diego County | San Diego, CA | |
| Program: Drug Free Communities | SP12301 | |
| Congressional District: CA-48 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $100,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2008 | ||
| The grantee will: (1) Reduce substance abuse among youth and, over time, among adults by addressing the factors in a community that increase the risk of substance abuse and promoting the factors that minimize the risk of substance abuse and; (2) Establish and strengthen community anti-drug coalitions. | ||
| Grantee: Californians for Drug Free Youth Inc | San Diego, CA | |
| Program: Drug Free Communities Mentoring | SP13575 | |
| Congressional District: CA-49 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $75,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2007 | ||
| The grantee will: (1) support and encourage the development of new or the expansion of existing community anti-drug coalitions that are focused on the prevention and treatment of substance abuse; (2) assist one or more communities in efforts to begin coalition operations or to expand the operations of community coalitions that want to receive assistance. | ||
| Grantee: Californians for Drug Free Youth Inc | San Diego, CA | |
| Program: Drug Free Communities | SP11573 | |
| Congressional District: CA-49 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $100,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2009 | ||
| The grantee will: (1) Reduce substance abuse among youth and, over time, among adults by addressing the factors in a community that increase the risk of substance abuse and promoting the factors that minimize the risk of substance abuse and; (2) Establish and strengthen community anti-drug coalitions. | ||
| Grantee: San Diego County Prevention Coalition | San Diego, CA | |
| Program: Drug Free Communities | SP11313 | |
| Congressional District: CA-49 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $100,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2009 | ||
| The grantee will: (1) Reduce substance abuse among youth and, over time, among adults by addressing the factors in a community that increase the risk of substance abuse and promoting the factors that minimize the risk of substance abuse and; (2) Establish and strengthen community anti-drug coalitions. | ||
| Grantee: Vista Community Clinic | Vista, CA | |
| Program: Drug Free Communities | SP12300 | |
| Congressional District: CA-49 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $100,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2008 | ||
| The grantee will: (1) Reduce substance abuse among youth and, over time, among adults by addressing the factors in a community that increase the risk of substance abuse and promoting the factors that minimize the risk of substance abuse and; (2) Establish and strengthen community anti-drug coalitions. | ||
| Grantee: San Dieguito for Drug Free Youth | Del Mar, CA | |
| Program: Drug Free Communities Mentoring | SP13551 | |
| Congressional District: CA-50 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $75,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2007 | ||
| The grantee will: (1) support and encourage the development of new or the expansion of existing community anti-drug coalitions that are focused on the prevention and treatment of substance abuse; (2) assist one or more communities in efforts to begin coalition operations or to expand the operations of community coalitions that want to receive assistance. | ||
| Grantee: San Dieguito for Drug Free Youth | Del Mar, CA | |
| Program: Drug Free Communities | SP12307 | |
| Congressional District: CA-50 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $100,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2008 | ||
| The grantee will: (1) Reduce substance abuse among youth and, over time, among adults by addressing the factors in a community that increase the risk of substance abuse and promoting the factors that minimize the risk of substance abuse and; (2) Establish and strengthen community anti-drug coalitions. | ||
| Grantee: San Diego Co Committee Against Sub Abuse | El Cajon, CA | |
| Program: Drug Free Communities Mentoring | SP11751 | |
| Congressional District: CA-52 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $75,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2004 - 09/29/2007 | ||
| The grantee is to support and encourage the development of new or expansion of existing community anti-drug coalitions that are focused on the prevention and treatment of substance abuse in the new or expanded coalition's community. | ||
| Grantee: San Diego Co Committee Against Sub Abuse | El Cajon, CA | |
| Program: Drug Free Communities | SP11252 | |
| Congressional District: CA-52 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $100,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2009 | ||
| The grantee will: (1) Reduce substance abuse among youth and, over time, among adults by addressing the factors in a community that increase the risk of substance abuse and promoting the factors that minimize the risk of substance abuse and; (2) Establish and strengthen community anti-drug coalitions. | ||
| Grantee: Imperial County Office of Education | El Centro, CA | |
| Program: Drug Free Communities | SP12186 | |
| Congressional District: CA-52 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $95,438 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2006 | ||
| The grantee will: (1) Reduce substance abuse among youth and, over time, among adults by addressing the factors in a community that increase the risk of substance abuse and promoting the factors that minimize the risk of substance abuse and; (2) Establish and strengthen community anti-drug coalitions. | ||
| Grantee: Jamul Indian Village of CA | Jamul , CA | |
| Program: Cooperative Agreement for Ecstasy & Other Club Drugs Prevention Services | SP11164 | |
| Congressional District: CA-52 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $292,356 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2004 - 09/29/2009 | ||
| The East County Tribal Club Drug Project is a diverse partnership between the Jamul Indian Village, Institute of Public Strategies (IPS) and prevention groups. IPS will assist the Tribe to replicate parts of the Border Project to address club drug availability to east county youth. The Jamul Village will lead a binational effort between the Tribal Government and the San Diego East Region of California and the United States government represented by SAMHSA/CSAP. This cooperative agreement will implement culturally appropriate prevention services including assessment of problems and solutions, community organizing to support an East County Tribal Club Drug Task Force, media advocacy to raise the issue on the public agenda, policy development to address raves and drug availability, and work with law enforcement partners to monitor ordinances and laws. | ||
| Grantee: Bayside Community Center | San Diego, CA | |
| Program: Drug Free Communities | SP12221 | |
| Congressional District: CA-53 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $100,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2007 | ||
| The grantee will: (1) Reduce substance abuse among youth and, over time, among adults by addressing the factors in a community that increase the risk of substance abuse and promoting the factors that minimize the risk of substance abuse and; (2) Establish and strengthen community anti-drug coalitions. | ||
| Grantee: San Diego Tijuana Border Initiative | San Diego, CA | |
| Program: Drug Free Communities | SP12191 | |
| Congressional District: CA-53 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $100,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2006 | ||
| The grantee will: (1) Reduce substance abuse among youth and, over time, among adults by addressing the factors in a community that increase the risk of substance abuse and promoting the factors that minimize the risk of substance abuse and; (2) Establish and strengthen community anti-drug coalitions. | ||
| Grantee: Asian American Recovery Services, Inc | SanFrancisco, CA | |
| Program: Effective Adolescent Treatment | TI15577 | |
| Congressional District: CA-01 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $225,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2004 - 09/29/2007 | ||
| This program is designed for youth age 12- 21 who meet medical criteria for substance abuse or dependence. The program will adopt or expand use of a treatment protocol that combines two types of therapy, Motivational Enhancement Therapy and Cognitive Behavior Therapy. This Motivational Enhancement Therapy/Cognitive Behavior Therapy, a five-session protocol, was previously proved to be effective with substance abusing youth. | ||
| Grantee: Mendocino County Dept of Public Health | Ukiah, CA | |
| Program: TCE Rural Populations | TI17159 | |
| Congressional District: CA-01 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $500,000 | ||
| Project Period: 08/15/2005 - 08/14/2008 | ||
| The Methamphetamine Treatment Project for Mendocino (MTM) will increase capacity to provide comprehensive, integrated, community-based methamphetamine treatment services to 360 methamphetamine users (120 per year) and 180 (60 per year) family members over the 3 year grant period. The MTM will increase retention and improve treatment outcomes by expanding capacity to provide same day service for clients in need of treatment, family support and education, residential treatment, and recovery support. MTM clients are estimated at 80% white/non- Hispanic, 10% American Indian and 10% Hispanic with a gender ratio of 40% female and 60% male and an age range that has historically been 50% young adults between 18 and 30. | ||
| Grantee: Mexican American Alcohol Program | Sacramento, CA | |
| Program: Targeted Capacity - HIV/AIDS | TI14576 | |
| Congressional District: CA-03 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $500,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2002 - 09/29/2007 | ||
| To provide at least 1,050 substance abusing, at risk for HIV, men who have sex with men, and criminal justice people of color treatment services. Expanded substance abuse, psychiatric and medical services will be augmented with case management, peer advocacy, and facilitated intake procedures. | ||
| Grantee: Vallejo Community Consortuim | Vallejo, CA | |
| Program: CSAT 05 Earmarks | TI17419 | |
| Congressional District: CA-03 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $248,000 | ||
| Project Period: 07/01/2005 - 06/30/2006 | ||
| FAST is an early intervention targeting 3rd, 4th, and 5th graders at risk for substance abuse who attend one of four of Vallejo's most socially and economically improvised schools. FAST is designed to increase protective factors such as increased family functioning and attachment to school. Students and families will be referred to FAST by teachers, school counselors and other school staff. This eight - week program includes sessions for students with and without their parents. Each session is facilitated by a multi-disciplinary team: a representative from school, a substance abuse specialist, a FAST program graduate, and a mental health specialist. The program's effectiveness will be measured using FAST pre/post test scales, and client satisfaction surveys. MET/CBT7 is being piloted for the first time among Vallejo's alternative and continuation school students, ages 14-18. a mostly African American and Hispanic population. | ||
| Grantee: California Rural Indian Hlth Board, Inc | Sacramento, CA | |
| Program: Access to Recovery | TI16840 | |
| Congressional District: CA-05 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $5,701,468 | ||
| Project Period: 08/03/2004 - 08/02/2007 | ||
| This coalition of California tribes, tribal and urban Indian health professionals, and substance abuse clinical treatment and recovery support service providers is seeking to provide every American Indian or Alaska Native in California with a substance abuse problem access to treatment opportunities that will foster recovery. The program will allow patients to select among Indian and non-Indian providers of services; traditional native spiritual and mainstream faith-based services; restrictive or non-restrictive environments; and discrete or wrap-around services. | ||
| Grantee: Office of the Governor | Sacramento, CA | |
| Program: Access to Recovery | TI16804 | |
| Congressional District: CA-05 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $7,575,685 | ||
| Project Period: 08/03/2004 - 08/02/2007 | ||
| The state program will address the most critical treatment need in the state -- service for substance abusing youth between 12 and 20 years of age. The program will target four cities -- Los Angeles, Sacramento, San Diego and San Francisco. California will provide incentives to programs based upon consumer satisfaction and client outcomes. The program will expand clinical treatment and recovery support capability to nontraditional providers, such as faith-based organizations. | ||
| Grantee: ONTRACK Program Resources, Inc. | Sacramento, CA | |
| Program: SAMHSA Conference Grants | TI17117 | |
| Congressional District: CA-05 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $49,863 | ||
| Project Period: 06/01/2005 - 05/31/2006 | ||
| Conference is planned for Los Angeles, CA, on March 23-24, 2006. This conference will address the following programmtic and community priorities: 1) Criminal Justice Disparties and Culturally Competent Community Re-entry Services; 2) Research and Resources for Treating African Americans, and 3) Cultural Considerations for Relapse Prevention. The conference plans to accomplish goals such as to impart effective, culturally competent clinical techniques and knowledge for counselors and other practitioners working with African American clients; to study, strategize and prepare for emerging issues impacting the criminal justice and treatment systems' service capacity and resources; and to generate new knowledge, skills and advocacy strategies to reduce the rates of recidivism in the criminal justice system among substance abusing and addicted African Americans. | ||
| Grantee: County of Marin | San Rafael, CA | |
| Program: Methamphetamine Populations | TI16295 | |
| Congressional District: CA-06 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $500,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2004 - 09/29/2007 | ||
| The grant supports the Marin County Division of Alcohol, Drug and Tobacco Programs and Center Point Inc.'s program by expanding responsiveness of Marin County systems to fill gaps in methamphetamine services, expand and enhance outreach services and expand substance abuse treatment capacity. | ||
| Grantee: Phoenix Programs, Inc | Concord, CA | |
| Program: Homeless Addictions Treatment | TI16440 | |
| Congressional District: CA-07 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $399,695 | ||
| Project Period: 07/01/2005 - 06/30/2010 | ||
| Provide outreach and intensive case management, wrap around services, and dedicated treatment beds/slots to homeless individuals suffering from co-occurring MH and SA disorders. | ||
| Grantee: Native American Health Center, Inc. | Oakland, CA | |
| Program: TCE - American Indians/Native Alaskans | TI17203 | |
| Congressional District: CA-07 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $500,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2008 | ||
| This Native Men project will expand residential substance abuse treatment services to 24 clients; outpatient treatment to 36 clients, and aftercare services to 24 clients. The model used will allow clients to progress from one treatment component to another with no gap in services, improving linkages among service providers for high-risk Native American men. The project is designed to meet the needs of addicted Native American men: 1) with co-occurring disorders, 2) who need parenting training and domestic violence prevention, and 3) men who have sex with men. | ||
| Grantee: City and County of San Francisco | San Francisco, CA | |
| Program: Methamphetamine Populations | TI16411 | |
| Congressional District: CA-08 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $500,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2004 - 09/29/2007 | ||
| Funding will be used to expand treatment capacity for methamphetamine abuse in San Francisco and to co-locate services in community-based organizations in two of the hardest hit neighborhoods in the city. | ||
| Grantee: San Francisco Dept of Public Health | San Francisco, CA | |
| Program: Targeted Capacity Expansion | TI13791 | |
| Congressional District: CA-08 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $500,000 | ||
| Project Period: 06/01/2003 - 05/31/2006 | ||
| The San Francisco DPH AIDS, Office, in collaboration with the AIDS Health Project (AHP) will provide Assertive Case Management (ACM) to people with HIV and co-occurring substance abuse and mental health disorders who are high service utilizers. | ||
| Grantee: Walden House, Inc. | San Francisco, CA | |
| Program: Targeted Capacity - HIV/AIDS | TI15892 | |
| Congressional District: CA-08 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $491,715 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2003 - 09/29/2008 | ||
| The Reconnecting, Educating, and Advocating Community Health (REACH) Project is proposed by Walden House in San Francisco, California. REACH will enhance substance abuse treatment to provide comprehensive and culturally focused state-of-the-art programming for 660 African America and Latino men and women, including the Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual and Transgender population, with or at risk of HIV/AIDS who have been released from prisons and jails within the past two years | ||
| Grantee: Friendship House Assn of American Indian | San Francisco, CA | |
| Program: Targeted Capacity - HIV/AIDS | TI13140 | |
| Congressional District: CA-08 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $499,905 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2001 - 09/29/2006 | ||
| To increase the number of treatment slots and enhance accessibility of HIV/AIDS, sexually transmitted diseases, tuberculosis, and hepatitis C services for Native Americans released from prisons and jails. | ||
| Grantee: Walden House, Inc. | San Francisco, CA | |
| Program: Recovery Community Support - Facilitating | TI16198 | |
| Congressional District: CA-08 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $350,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2004 - 09/29/2008 | ||
| Walden House, Inc., proposes a unique strength-based peer-to-peer recovery program for men and women in recovery who have been incarcerated, and their families/significant others in Los Angeles County. Governed and operated by peers, the program offers stage-appropriate, holistic social support through a strategic mix of services comprised of a peer-run cafe, resource space, support groups, coaching, workshops/seminars, social and recreational activities, and community events. Featuring Recovery Support, Health & Wellness, and Skills to Prosper components, the project aims to provide a compelling alternative community to counteract negative forces in the lives of those in recovery. | ||
| Grantee: Friendship House Assn of American Indian | San Francisco, CA | |
| Program: Homeless Addictions Treatment | TI16671 | |
| Congressional District: CA-08 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $396,800 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2004 - 09/29/2009 | ||
| This program will provide integrated culturally appropriate residential substance abuse treatment, aftercare, case management, community outreach and mental health services to Native Americans. | ||
| Grantee: Mount St Joseph-St Elizabeth | San Francisco, CA | |
| Program: Homeless Addictions Treatment | TI16656 | |
| Congressional District: CA-08 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $396,800 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2004 - 09/29/2009 | ||
| This program will support a residential treatment program and expand its addiction treatment services to homeless women with co-occurring substance abuse and mental health disorders (with children 0-3 years old or without children). | ||
| Grantee: Alameda County Behavioral | Oakland, CA | |
| Program: Methamphetamine Populations | TI16246 | |
| Congressional District: CA-09 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $498,633 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2004 - 09/29/2007 | ||
| The grant supports the Marin County Division of Alcohol, Drug and Tobacco Programs and Center Point Inc.'s program by expanding responsiveness of Marin County systems to fill gaps in methamphetamine services, expand and enhance outreach services and expand substance abuse treatment capacity. | ||
| Grantee: East Bay Community Recovery Project | Oakland, CA | |
| Program: Targeted Capacity - HIV/AIDS | TI15802 | |
| Congressional District: CA-09 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $494,820 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2003 - 09/29/2008 | ||
| The Keeping It Real project will expand a substance abuse treatment program in Oakland, California to serve a growing population of people recently released from jails and prisons who engage in high risk sexual and drug using behaviors. Over five years, the project will provide outreach to 4,750 individuals and enroll 360 clients. The services provided will include health education, substance abuse counseling, support groups, case management, mental health services, van transportation, and medical care. | ||
| Grantee: California Prostitutes Prev & Educ Proj. | Oakland, CA | |
| Program: Targeted Capacity - HIV/AIDS | TI13150 | |
| Congressional District: CA-09 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $498,325 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2001 - 09/29/2006 | ||
| To increase capacity to provide appropriate alcohol, drug and HIV services when and wherever needed. | ||
| Grantee: East Bay Community Recovery Project | Oakland, CA | |
| Program: Pregnant/Post-Partum Women | TI16005 | |
| Congressional District: CA-09 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $498,489 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2003 - 09/29/2006 | ||
| East Bay Community Recovery Project (Oakland, CA) proposes to add slots for ten mothers and their children to our residential therapeutic community substance abuse treatment program, and to enhance services for all families in Project Pride, including on site primary medical care, abuse and trauma treatment, smoking cessation, and late recovery services during their reintegration into the community. | ||
| Grantee: Bonita House, Inc | Oakland, CA | |
| Program: Homeless Addictions Treatment | TI13954 | |
| Congressional District: CA-09 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $592,001 | ||
| Project Period: 06/01/2003 - 05/31/2006 | ||
| Bonita House, Inc. (BHI), with the Corporation for Supportive Housing (CSH), will enhance a collaboration of housing and service providers known as the Health, Housing & Integrated Services Network (HHISN) by importing evidence-based integrated dual diagnosis services and expertise into a proven supportive housing model. | ||
| Grantee: Urban Indian Health Board, Inc | Oakland, CA | |
| Program: Targeted Capacity - HIV/AIDS | TI13141 | |
| Congressional District: CA-09 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $437,687 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2001 - 09/29/2006 | ||
| To expand substance abuse, mental health and HIV/AIDS services for American Indian adolescents in a more comprehensive array of community based family services. | ||
| Grantee: Urban Indian Health Board, Inc | Oakland, CA | |
| Program: Targeted Capacity - HIV/AIDS | TI15707 | |
| Congressional District: CA-09 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $499,920 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2003 - 09/29/2008 | ||
| Native Women is designed to meet the needs of substance-abusing Native American women who are high risk for HIV/AIDS in Oakland, California. A collaboration of the Native American Health Center and Friendship House Association of American Indians, Native Women provides a holistic substance abuse treatment system for American Indian women. Our innovative, comprehensive approach integrates substance abuse, mental health, medical, and HIV/AIDS services for Native American women and their children through internal capacity expansion and improved linkages with existing Native American programs. | ||
| Grantee: Adolescent Treatment Ctr, Inc | Oakland, CA | |
| Program: Strengthening Communities - Youth | TI13313 | |
| Congressional District: CA-09 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $749,162 | ||
| Project Period: 03/31/2002 - 03/30/2007 | ||
| Adolescent Treatment Centers is working with other direct treatment providers to develop a system of care to serve youth in Western Contra Costa and Alameda Counties. The grantee has partnered with a community-based Asian organization working with local schools, a hospital with an inpatient mental health and substance abuse treatment facility primarily serving acute populations, and a community-based program affiliated with a juvenile drug court. The target population is youth between 13 and 19 years. Approximately 150 adolescents will be served over 5 years. | ||
| Grantee: Urban Indian Health Board, Inc | Oakland, CA | |
| Program: Effective Adolescent Treatment | TI15511 | |
| Congressional District: CA-09 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $205,661 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2003 - 09/29/2006 | ||
| Generation 7 is an adolescent treatment program based on the implementation of Motivational Enhancement Therapy and Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for substance abusing Native American youth in Oakland, California. The treatment plan interweaves MET/CBT 5 with the holistic approach of the Family & Child Guidance Clinic of the Native American Health Center. The target population consists of Native American youth, ages 12-21, who live in the San Francisco Bay Area, have substance abuse or dependence diagnoses, and who are appropriate for outpatient settings. The program is designed to serve 120 youth during the course of the 3-year project. | ||
| Grantee: Santa Clara Cnty Bur of Drug Abuse Serv | Santa Clara, CA | |
| Program: Young Offender Reentry Program (YORP) 2004 | TI16915 | |
| Congressional District: CA-10 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $453,347 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2004 - 09/29/2008 | ||
| The Teens in Transition Evolve program will provide substance abuse treatment and related reentry services to sentenced juvenile offenders aged 4-17. Between 48-64 youth returning to the community from incarceration will be served each year of the project. The project will target youth from San Jose's Mayfair District and other surrounding economically distressed neighborhoods. | ||
| Grantee: San Mateo County Human Services Agency | Belmont, CA | |
| Program: TCE Rural Populations | TI17317 | |
| Congressional District: CA-12 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $398,685 | ||
| Project Period: 08/15/2005 - 08/14/2008 | ||
| The Coastside Project aims to expand treatment services on the rural coast side of San Mateo County, CA. The target population will be low or moderate-income, English and Spanish-speaking adults, 70% Caucasian and 24% Latino. Services will include Enhancement Therapy Groups, Primary Treatment, Co-Occurring Groups,Continuing Care including relapse prevention, Family Education classes, and an aggressive program of Community Outreach. The program aims to provide interventions specific to methamphetamine and other stimulant use to an additional 29 individuals receiving Motivational Enhancement Counseling, 39 individuals completing Primary Treatment, 10 individuals participating in Co-Occurring Disorders Treatment, and 32 families participating in Co-Occurring Disorders Treatment each year of the 3 year grant period. A total of 234 clients will receive services | ||
| Grantee: San Mateo County Human Services Agency | Belmont, CA | |
| Program: TCE - American Indians/Native Alaskans | TI17308 | |
| Congressional District: CA-12 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $494,592 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2008 | ||
| The Family Oasis Project will expand substance abuse treatment services to 165 Asian American/Pacific Islander youths in three San Mateo County high schools or on juvenile probation, and enhance treatment for 240 youths and their families using the brief Strategic Family Therapy protocol. The project is designed to: 1) strengthen family functioning, and reduce substance abuse among AA/PI youth, and 2) address and reduce substance abuse risks and co-occurring problems among non-probation AA/PI youths. | ||
| Grantee: San Mateo County Human Services Agency | Belmont, CA | |
| Program: Juvenile Drug Courts | TI17446 | |
| Congressional District: CA-12 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $388,990 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2008 | ||
| The GIRLS (Gaining Independence and Reclaiming Lives Successfully) project aims to serve 85 girls per year for three years, totaling 255 girls over the course of the grant. The project will conduct family assessments and interventions, treatment specifically focused on trauma, mentoring, vocational and educational programming, and pregnancy prevention, alongside Cannabis Youth Treatment, using the assessment and follow-up tools of Global Appraisal of Individual Needs (GAIN) and GAIN M93. The target population is young women ages 13-18 who have significant alcohol or other drug problems, who are presented with a current charge, and whose offense history makes an out-of-county placement likely without drug court services. | ||
| Grantee: San Mateo County Human Services Agency | Belmont, CA | |
| Program: Homeless Addictions Treatment | TI16683 | |
| Congressional District: CA-12 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $393,260 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2004 - 09/29/2009 | ||
| This project will provide outreach, engagement and intensive outpatient treatment services in two homeless shelters in the county. Services will incorporate motivational interviewing and cognitive behavioral therapy. | ||
| Grantee: University of California San Francisco | San Francisco, CA | |
| Program: Targeted Capacity - HIV/AIDS | TI15807 | |
| Congressional District: CA-12 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $399,099 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2003 - 09/29/2008 | ||
| The project will expand and enhance an existing outreach and drug abuse and HIV prevention project for gender variant individuals in collaboration with AIDS service organizations, substance abuse treatment agencies, and a University-based community intervention team in San Francisco. | ||
| Grantee: University of California San Francisco | San Francisco, CA | |
| Program: Targeted Capacity - HIV/AIDS | TI14476 | |
| Congressional District: CA-12 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $488,124 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2002 - 09/29/2007 | ||
| To enhance and expand outreach and substance abuse treatment services. The program will provide outreach, assessment, and referral services to Asian Pacific Islanders (API), men who have sex with men, Asian female sex workers and other risk groups of API. | ||
| Grantee: San Mateo County Health Services Agency | San Mateo, CA | |
| Program: Targeted Capacity - HIV/AIDS | TI14581 | |
| Congressional District: CA-12 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $489,357 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2002 - 09/29/2007 | ||
| To expand and enhance HIV/AIDS and substance abuse treatment services through outreach services. The total number of persons to be served through this expansion and enhancement of HIV and substance abuse treatment services will be 475 clients during the grant period. The program will use outreach to target women, adolescents, injection drug users, men who sleep with men, and criminal justice individuals from the African-American and Latino populations. | ||
| Grantee: Santa Cruz County, California | Santa Cruz, CA | |
| Program: Effective Adolescent Treatment | TI15584 | |
| Congressional District: CA-15 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $250,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2004 - 09/29/2007 | ||
| This program is designed for youth age 12- 21 who meet medical criteria for substance abuse or dependence. The program will adopt or expand use of a treatment protocol that combines two types of therapy, Motivational Enhancement Therapy and Cognitive Behavior Therapy. This Motivational Enhancement Therapy/Cognitive Behavior Therapy, a five-session protocol, was previously proved to be effective with substance abusing youth. | ||
| Grantee: Catholic Charities of San Jose | San Jose, CA | |
| Program: Homeless Addictions Treatment | TI16680 | |
| Congressional District: CA-16 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $396,013 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2004 - 09/29/2009 | ||
| The project will develop ACT teams in the Department of Alcohol and Drug Abuse to provide services to homeless persons with substance abuse and mental health disorders. This project is expected to receive $399,207 in year two, $400,000 in year three, $397,581 in year four and $400,000 in year five. | ||
| Grantee: Santa Clara Valley Hlth/Hosp System | San Jose, CA | |
| Program: Adult Juvenile and Family Drug Courts | TI14284 | |
| Congressional District: CA-16 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $400,000 | ||
| Project Period: 06/01/2003 - 05/31/2006 | ||
| Santa Clara County's Department of Alcohol and Drug Services and Superior Court will create a project to provide integrated substance abuse and mental health treatment services to participants in the County's Dual Diagnosis Treatment Drug Court (DD- TDC) with co-occurring substance abuse disorders and moderate mental illnesses. | ||
| Grantee: Monterey County Health Dept. | Salinas, CA | |
| Program: TCE Rural Populations | TI16354 | |
| Congressional District: CA-17 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $499,734 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2004 - 09/29/2007 | ||
| The grant provides substance abuse treatment to youth using the Family Support Network evidenced based practice. The majority of clients are Latino. The rural county has high levels of gang activity and substance abuse and youth have minimal access to substance abuse treatment services. | ||
| Grantee: Monterey County Health Dept. | Salinas, CA | |
| Program: Homeless Addictions Treatment | TI16539 | |
| Congressional District: CA-17 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $399,951 | ||
| Project Period: 07/01/2005 - 06/30/2010 | ||
| The Monterey County (MC) Behavioral Health Division (BHD) proposes to provide Integrated Treatment and Intensive Case Management to individuals in rural Monterey County who are homeless with mental illnesses and have substance abuse disorders. The proposed Integrated Treatment Project (ITP) will serve as a "door to treatment" by providing integrated mental health and substance abuse services to help individuals stabilize enough to access housing and long-term treatment services. Through evidence-based Intensive Case Management, the project will facilitate clients' enrollment in entitlement programs and place clients in housing and other needed services. | ||
| Grantee: Mental Health Systems Inc | San Diego, CA | |
| Program: Homeless Addictions Treatment | TI16518 | |
| Congressional District: CA-19 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $396,800 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2004 - 09/29/2009 | ||
| This program will increase the provision of outpatient services to dually diagnosed homeless persons based on the Comprehensive, Continuous, Integrated System of Care (CCISC) model. | ||
| Grantee: Community Action Partnership of Kern | Bakersfield, CA | |
| Program: Targeted Capacity - HIV/AIDS | TI14505 | |
| Congressional District: CA-20 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $233,803 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2002 - 09/29/2007 | ||
| To expand and enhance its HIV/AIDS Prevention Education Program to reach 555 more African-American and Latino men who have sex with men who engage in risky sexual behavior and substance use. | ||
| Grantee: Tarzana Treatment Centers, Inc. | Tarzana, CA | |
| Program: Effective Adolescent Treatment | TI15485 | |
| Congressional District: CA-20 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $250,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2004 - 09/29/2007 | ||
| This program is designed for youth age 12- 21 who meet medical criteria for substance abuse or dependence. The program will adopt or expand use of a treatment protocol that combines two types of therapy, Motivational Enhancement Therapy and Cognitive Behavior Therapy. This Motivational Enhancement Therapy/Cognitive Behavior Therapy, a five-session protocol, was previously proved to be effective with substance abusing youth. | ||
| Grantee: Kern County | Bakersfield, CA | |
| Program: TCE Rural Populations | TI17307 | |
| Congressional District: CA-22 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $493,165 | ||
| Project Period: 08/15/2005 - 08/14/2008 | ||
| Kern County Mental Health (KCMH) intends to expand and enhance adult outpatient methamphetamine treatment services by implementing Matrix Model versions appropriate to younger adult (18-25 years of age) and Spanish-speaking adult clients in two treatment sites: Taft and Wasco. It is anticipated that the majority of clients will be referred by the criminal justice system. It is also expected that Taft will have 51% women, 9% Hispanic, 84% White, and 2% African American and that Wasco will serve 33% women, 67% Hispanic, 26% White, and 2% African American populations. KCMH aims to increase client retention and successful treatment completion, improve client outcomes, including attitudes towards and rates of substance abuse. The program plans to serve a total of 450 clients over three years, consisting of 110 clients in their first year and 170 in each of the following two years. | ||
| Grantee: Santa Barbara County | Santa Barbara, CA | |
| Program: Pregnant/Post-Partum Women | TI16869 | |
| Congressional District: CA-22 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $500,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2004 - 09/29/2007 | ||
| This award funds the First Steps System of Care. The system coordinates a wide variety of early intervention and integrated treatments for substance abuse and mental health problems including providing an array of shelter, transitional residential services and supportive housing for women and their minor children | ||
| Grantee: Council on Alcoholism & Drug Abuse | Santa Barbara, CA | |
| Program: Effective Adolescent Treatment | TI15469 | |
| Congressional District: CA-22 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $250,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2004 - 09/29/2007 | ||
| This program is designed for youth age 12- 21 who meet medical criteria for substance abuse or dependence. The program will adopt or expand use of a treatment protocol that combines two types of therapy, Motivational Enhancement Therapy and Cognitive Behavior Therapy. This Motivational Enhancement Therapy/Cognitive Behavior Therapy, a five-session protocol, was previously proved to be effective with substance abusing youth. | ||
| Grantee: Tarzana Treatment Center, Inc. | Tarzana, CA | |
| Program: Juvenile Drug Courts | TI17475 | |
| Congressional District: CA-24 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $400,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2008 | ||
| Tarzana Treatment Centers (TTC) will serve 192 ethnically and culturally diverse, low-income youths, ages 15-18 over the course of the three-year grant. 52 clients will be served in the first year, and 70 will be served in each of the subsequent years. TTC aims to integrate the Motivational Enhancement Therapy and Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Adolescent Cannabis Users Model (MET/CBT 5) along with the full version of the Global Appraisal of Individual Needs (GAIN). | ||
| Grantee: Tarzana Treatment Center, Inc. | Tarzana, CA | |
| Program: Homeless Addictions Treatment | TI16644 | |
| Congressional District: CA-24 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $396,800 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2004 - 09/29/2009 | ||
| This program will expand and enhance residential treatment services for homeless women with substance use disorders. | ||
| Grantee: Bienvenidos Children's Center, Inc | Altandena, CA | |
| Program: Targeted Capacity - HIV/AIDS | TI14506 | |
| Congressional District: CA-27 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $500,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2002 - 09/29/2007 | ||
| To expand and enhance recovery and HIV/AIDS treatment services. The program will provide primary and reproductive health care, treatment and screening, prevention education activities and support services to adolescents, women, and women and their children from Latino populations. | ||
| Grantee: Atlantic Recovery Services | Long Beach, CA | |
| Program: Young Offender Reentry Program (YORP) 2004 | TI16961 | |
| Congressional District: CA-27 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $500,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2004 - 09/29/2008 | ||
| The project will assist juvenile substance abusers aged 14 to 25 who are exiting the juvenile justice system. The goal is to provide comprehensive substance abuse treatment services to 71 participants in the first year. | ||
| Grantee: Prototypes | Culver City, CA | |
| Program: Targeted Capacity - HIV/AIDS | TI13129 | |
| Congressional District: CA-28 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $490,041 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2001 - 09/29/2006 | ||
| To enhance alcohol and drug treatment-recovery and HIV/AIDS services for women. | ||
| Grantee: Prototypes | Culver City, CA | |
| Program: Strengthening Access and Retention (SAR) | TI15612 | |
| Congressional District: CA-28 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $200,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2003 - 09/29/2006 | ||
| PROTOTYPES propose an Organizational Team effort to improve access and retention in its comprehensive treatment center that includes residential and outpatient programs. | ||
| Grantee: Prototypes | Culver City, CA | |
| Program: Effective Adolescent Treatment | TI15670 | |
| Congressional District: CA-28 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $250,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2003 - 09/29/2006 | ||
| The objectives of the project are: (1) to reduce substance abuse or dependence, with the goal of abstinence, in a sample of 450 adolescents who are identified as needing substance abuse treatment, through the provision of an adolescent sensitive MET/CBT5 treatment approach; (2) to increase the adolescent's mental health, social adjustments, and self-efficacy skills; (3) to reduce criminal justice involvements; and (4) to promote family strengthening and community continuing care. An independent evaluation will be implemented by The Measurement Group. | ||
| Grantee: Matrix Institute | Los Angeles, CA | |
| Program: Targeted Capacity - HIV/AIDS | TI15867 | |
| Congressional District: CA-29 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $497,902 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2003 - 09/29/2008 | ||
| The Matrix Institute will expand and enhance treatment to 590 opioid dependent, injection drug users to reduce drug use and the subsequent risk of HIV transmission in a predominantly African-American/Hispanic community. Evidence-based services for men and women including specialized HIV and HCV groups, cognitive/behavioral therapy, contingency management, and motivational interviewing will be implemented throughout the course of this five- year project. Matrix model groups will be provided to reduce use of other drugs and alcohol, and to promote pro-social lifestyle changes. | ||
| Grantee: New Directions, Inc | Los Angeles, CA | |
| Program: Homeless Addictions Treatment | TI14039 | |
| Congressional District: CA-29 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $447,381 | ||
| Project Period: 06/01/2003 - 05/31/2006 | ||
| New Directions North is a residential rehabilitation center providing integrated treatment services to veterans in Los Angeles County who are homeless and suffering from co-occurring mental illness and chronic substance abuse disorders. The program offers long- term residential drug and alcohol rehabilitation, psychiatric counseling and stabilization, and job-training and housing placement services. | ||
| Grantee: Matrix Institute | Los Angeles, CA | |
| Program: Effective Adolescent Treatment | TI15586 | |
| Congressional District: CA-29 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $249,066 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2004 - 09/29/2007 | ||
| This program is designed for youth age 12- 21 who meet medical criteria for substance abuse or dependence. The program will adopt or expand use of a treatment protocol that combines two types of therapy, Motivational Enhancement Therapy and Cognitive Behavior Therapy. This Motivational Enhancement Therapy/Cognitive Behavior Therapy, a five-session protocol, was previously proved to be effective with substance abusing youth. | ||
| Grantee: University of California Los Angeles | Los Angeles, CA | |
| Program: Addiction Technical Transfer Center | TI13594 | |
| Congressional District: CA-29 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $650,000 | ||
| Project Period: 03/31/2002 - 03/30/2007 | ||
| Serving the states of California, New Mexico, Arizona, and sharing services to Colorado, the Pacific Southwest ATTC (PSATTC) provides state-of-the-art addiction education and training activities to health care professionals in their region. The science to services activities of this center are closely linked to the needs identified by community based organization, state and local governments, and associated institutions of higher education. | ||
| Grantee: Regents of the University of California | Los Angeles, CA | |
| Program: TCE- Campus Screening/Colleges & Universities | TI17244 | |
| Congressional District: CA-30 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $500,000 | ||
| Project Period: 07/01/2005 - 06/30/2008 | ||
| "UCLA Access to Care," will develop and implement screening and brief intervention services for students engaging in high-risk use of alcohol and other drugs (AOD). These services will take place at the UCLA Student Psychological Services. Over the course of the 3-year project, Student Psychological Services will screen a minimum of 3,000 students per year and conduct brief interventions with 300 students per year. Staff at Student Psychological Services will use evidence-based tools developed specifically for college students, refined through collaboration with student representatives, campus groups, researchers, and community service providers. Central to the screening and brief intervention activity to be refined, implemented, and tested is the Brief Alcohol Screening and Intervention of College Students curriculum (BASICS) developed by Dr. Alan Marlatt and his colleagues at the University of Washington. | ||
| Grantee: Los Angeles County Dept of Mental Health | Los Angeles, CA | |
| Program: TCE - American Indians/Native Alaskans | TI17245 | |
| Congressional District: CA-33 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $435,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2008 | ||
| This grantee will implement Project Fact, Families Coming Together, to provide a 12-month course of outpatient treatment to 228 substance-addicted Korean, Cambodian, and Samoan families in Los Angeles. It will also provide intensive family-centered pre-treatment outreach, education, and support services to 150 families. The primary goal of the program is to increase the number and percent of individuals and families aware of their alcohol and drug problems and who voluntarily enter treatment. | ||
| Grantee: Homeless Health Care, Los Angeles | Los Angeles , CA | |
| Program: Homeless Addictions Treatment | TI16505 | |
| Congressional District: CA-34 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $400,000 | ||
| Project Period: 07/01/2005 - 06/30/2010 | ||
| Homeless Health Care Los Angeles and Prototypes have joined together along with the County of Los Angeles Department of Mental Health, and other service providers to implement an integrated comprehensive seamless, no-wrong-door, non-linear, client-driven model of substance abuse and mental health treatment that incorporates: housing, primary health care, interpersonal socialization activities and wrap-around services to assist participants in obtaining overall health and well-being. | ||
| Grantee: Special Service for Groups, Inc | Los Angeles, CA | |
| Program: Homeless Addictions Treatment | TI16476 | |
| Congressional District: CA-35 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $393,861 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2004 - 09/29/2009 | ||
| The project will provide integrated mental health and substance abuse services and shelter services for homeless individuals using cognitive behavioral therapy and motivational enhancement therapy. | ||
| Grantee: Charles R. Drew University of Med & Sci | Los Angeles, CA | |
| Program: Targeted Capacity - HIV/AIDS | TI14528 | |
| Congressional District: CA-37 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $495,685 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2002 - 09/29/2007 | ||
| Charles R. Drew University of Medicine and Science, Los Angeles, CA -- $495, 685-- to enhance HIV- specific substance abuse services. The program will use abstinence-based and motivational enhancement groups, detoxification, medication management, family support, and referral services to injection drug users, men who have sex with men, and criminal justice clients from African-American and Latino populations. | ||
| Grantee: Shields for Families Projects, Inc. | Los Angeles, CA | |
| Program: Targeted Capacity - HIV/AIDS | TI14497 | |
| Congressional District: CA-37 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $499,963 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2002 - 09/29/2007 | ||
| To enhance and expand substance abuse treatment and HIV services. The program will provide HIV/AIDS education, prevention and treatment referral services to pregnant and postpartum women and women with children from the African-American and Latino populations. | ||
| Grantee: Southern California Alcohol/Drug Progs | Downey, CA | |
| Program: Targeted Capacity - HIV/AIDS | TI15805 | |
| Congressional District: CA-38 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $500,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2003 - 09/29/2008 | ||
| Southern California Alcohol & Drug Program, Inc., will expand residential and outpatient treatment slots within our Positive Steps HIV/AIDS program targeting African American and Latina women in Los Angeles County to serve 45 additional participants each year, for a total of 210 new participants during the five-year grant period. | ||
| Grantee: Southern California Alcohol/Drug Progs | Downey, CA | |
| Program: Targeted Capacity - HIV/AIDS | TI14480 | |
| Congressional District: CA-38 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $500,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2002 - 09/29/2007 | ||
| To expand residential treatment slots to 20 and enhance treatment programming. The program will provide residential services, therapeutic counseling, life skills education, full-time children's services program, and aftercare to target women, and women and their children from the African-American and Latino populations. | ||
| Grantee: Southern California Alcohol/Drug Progs | Downey, CA | |
| Program: Pregnant/Post-Partum Women | TI16766 | |
| Congressional District: CA-38 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $500,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2004 - 09/29/2007 | ||
| The program proposes to reopen 24 critical perinatal beds closed recently due to county budget cuts. Although the program serves pregnant, postpartum and parenting women throughout Los Angeles County, it will target Long Beach, focusing on the needs of the African American community. | ||
| Grantee: Southern California Alcohol/Drug Progs | Downey, CA | |
| Program: Homeless Addictions Treatment | TI16538 | |
| Congressional District: CA-38 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $396,800 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2004 - 09/29/2009 | ||
| This program will expand and strengthen their established substance abuse treatment services with onsite mental health treatment for homeless persons. | ||
| Grantee: San Diego County Health & Human Services | San Diego, CA | |
| Program: Adult Juvenile and Family Drug Courts | TI14333 | |
| Congressional District: CA-48 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $400,000 | ||
| Project Period: 06/01/2003 - 05/31/2006 | ||
| County of San Diego Health and Human Services Agency will enhance wraparound services and create an aftercare component of the Dependency Drug Court (DDC) within its Dependency Court Recovery Project (DCRP). DDC participants, who have had difficulty reaching DCRP substance abuse treatment goals, will receive enhanced support and aftercare to help them avoid relapse and to improve their life functioning. | ||
| Grantee: Superior Court of CA, County of Riversid | Murrieta, CA | |
| Program: Family Drug Courts | TI17507 | |
| Congressional District: CA-49 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $400,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2008 | ||
| The Riverside County Superior Court's "Family Preservation Court" (FPC) proposes an expansion and enhancement of treatment support services county-wide to families of parents who are at risk of losing or have lost custody of their children (up to age 18) due to substance abuse. The project will enhance the dependency drug court program and provide a timelier, integrated, and coordinated suite of services. Over the three year grant, the project plans to serve 360 drug-dependent clients. | ||
| Grantee: Mental Health Systems, Inc. | San Diego, CA | |
| Program: CSAT 05 Earmarks | TI17424 | |
| Congressional District: CA-49 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $49,600 | ||
| Project Period: 07/01/2005 - 06/30/2006 | ||
| Mental Health Systems, Inc. proposes to enhance our comprehensive, substance abuse treatment services for low-income pregnant, postpartum and parenting women, age 18 and over, and their minor children, age 17 and under, who are at risk for contracting HIV, via the SAMHSA Grants for Programmatic Directives funding opportunity (PA# OA 04-002). Via this U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS), Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) funding opportunity, we will enhance our current treatment program by serving 10 more women in the next year who are at risk for HIV contraction. Mental Health Systems' Family Recovery Center goals for the proposed program are as follows: 1. To provide women enrolled in the Family Recovery Center residential treatment program with an environment, treatment, training and tools with which they can abstain from alcohol and drug use during and after pregnancy. 2. To provide women, infants and children enrolled in the Family Recovery Center residential treatment program with onsite, and referrals to offsite, physical and mental health services, including treatment for co-existing disorders, to ensure their maximum health. 3. To provide women enrolled in the Family Recovery Center residential treatment program with training, preparation and skills with which they can become employed or enrolled in employment preparation programs, and remain employed or enrolled in such programs. 4. To provide women, infants and children enrolled in the Family Recovery Center residential treatment program with onsite childcare services and activities, including diagnostic developmental stage evaluations, which in turn will strengthen the family unit. 5. To provide women enrolled in the Family Recovery Center residential treatment program with training, preparation and skills with which they can avoid criminal involvement or victimization of themselves and their children. | ||
| Grantee: North County Serenity House, Inc. | Escondido, CA | |
| Program: Pregnant/Post-Partum Women | TI16857 | |
| Congressional District: CA-50 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $499,670 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2004 - 09/29/2007 | ||
| The grant supports expansion and enhancement of primary health, mental health, and social services to an additional 48 pregnant, postpartum, and parenting San Diego County women and their children annually. Eighty percent of those served are from minority populations. | ||
| Grantee: North County Serenity House, Inc. | Escondido, CA | |
| Program: Homeless Addictions Treatment | TI16483 | |
| Congressional District: CA-50 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $395,943 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2004 - 09/29/2009 | ||
| This program will expand its program to offer comprehensive services from licensed detoxification through residential treatment and two years of aftercare support for homeless women in the earliest phases of recovery from substance abuse. | ||
| Grantee: Welcome Home Ministries | Oceanside, CA | |
| Program: Recovery Community Support - Recovery | TI16279 | |
| Congressional District: CA-50 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $340,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2004 - 09/29/2008 | ||
| Welcome Home Ministries (WHM), located in San Diego County, targets women who are caught up in the revolving door of addiction, incarceration, release, relapse, and recidivism. The purpose of the project is to provide options for their recovery, and hope for their future and the futures of their children. The program is also designed to help members in early recovery maintain newly found sobriety and assist them should relapse occur. WHM offers support during incarceration and more intensive support services following release from jail. | ||
| Grantee: Office of the Governor State of CA | Sacramento, CA | |
| Program: State TCE Screening Brief Intervention Referral Treatment | TI15954 | |
| Congressional District: CA-52 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $3,485,238 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2003 - 09/29/2008 | ||
| The CASBIRT Program proposes to reduce substance use by screening and providing appropriate brief interventions, brief treatments and referrals to 1,000,000 adult patients over five years, in 36 medical settings across four counties. Services will be concentrated in hospital emergency and trauma settings where patient volume and substance use rates are higher. | ||
| Grantee: Phoenix House San Diego Inc | Lake View Terrace, CA | |
| Program: Young Offender Reentry Program (YORP) 2004 | TI16992 | |
| Congressional District: CA-53 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $491,128 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2004 - 09/29/2008 | ||
| The program will provide a model reentry program for youth returning to the community from incarceration at the Department of Probation's Juvenile Ranch Facility at Rancho del Campo. The facility serves youth who have received substance abuse treatment at the ranch and are returning to the Mid-City and South Bay regions of San Diego. | ||
| Grantee: Regents of the University of California | Los Angeles, CA | |
| Program: SAMHSA Dissertation Grants-2005 | OA00090 | |
| Congressional District: CA-30 | ||
| FY 2005 Funding: $30,000 | ||
| Project Period: 09/30/2005 - 09/29/2006 | ||
| Pubertal timing, or the child's stage of pubertal development relative to same sex, same age peers, is clearly linked to early initiation of cigarette and alcohol use for girls and sometimes for boys, such that early maturers are more likely to be early substance users. However, the exact mechanisms by which early maturation influences substance use are unclear. This proposal utilizes an existing data set to examine family, peer, and individual difference factors that may moderate or mediate the relation between early pubertal maturation and early influence of tobacco, alcohol, marijuana, and inhalants. Specifically, the family factors are (1) parental monitoring and (2) family relationships; the peer variable is (3) affiliation with deviant peers; and individual differences are (4) social competence and (5) athletic competence. The sample population is a recently collected cohort-sequential, longitudinal data set of over 1000 mostly at-risk children, their parents, and their teachers. Five annual assessments were obtained for five grade cohorts who were in the1st through 5th grade (age 6 to 11) at the initial assessment until they were in 5th through 9th grade (age 11 to 15). A subset of appropriately-aged participants with data on all relevant variables will be used in the current study. Knowledge of risk and protective factors associated with early maturation can aid in identifying populations at increased risk of early substance use, can help target and refine intervention programs, and can aid in the design of treatment services. | ||
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Substance Abuse & Mental Health Services Administration • 1 Choke Cherry Road • Rockville, MD 20857
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