Short Title EMS Training
Due Date
Center CSAT
FAQ's / Webinars
NOFO Number TI-22-001 (Initial)

Short Title Harm Reduction
Due Date
Center CSAP
NOFO Number SP-22-001 (Modified)

Short Title 988 State and Territory Cooperative Agreements
Due Date
Center CMHS
FAQ's / Webinars View Webinar
NOFO Number SM-22-015 (Initial)

Short Title
Due Date
Center CSAT
FAQ's / Webinars
NOFO Number TI-22-099 (Initial)

Short Title
Due Date
Center CMHS
FAQ's / Webinars
NOFO Number SM-22-F1 (Initial)

Short Title TTA-CCBHC
Due Date
Center CMHS
FAQ's / Webinars
NOFO Number SM-21-015 (Initial)

Short Title CMHC
Due Date
Center CMHS
FAQ's / Webinars FAQ Document
NOFO Number SM-21-014 (Modified)

Short Title FR-CARA
Due Date
Center CSAT
FAQ's / Webinars
NOFO Number TI-21-009 (Initial)

Short Title SPF Rx
Due Date
Center CSAP
FAQ's / Webinars
NOFO Number SP-21-001 (Modified)

Short Title MAT-PDOA
Due Date
Center CSAT
FAQ's / Webinars
NOFO Number TI-21-006 (Initial)

Short Title PCSS-Universities
Due Date
Center CSAT
FAQ's / Webinars
NOFO Number TI-21-003 (Initial)

Short Title SBIRT
Due Date
Center CSAT
FAQ's / Webinars
NOFO Number TI-21-008 (Initial)

Short Title AWARE-SEA
Due Date
Center CMHS
FAQ's / Webinars
NOFO Number SM-21-006 (Modified)

Short Title TOR
Due Date
Center CSAT
FAQ's / Webinars
NOFO Number TI-21-007 (Modified)

Short Title EMS Training
Due Date
Center CSAT
FAQ's / Webinars
NOFO Number TI-21-005 (Modified)

Short Title CCBHC Expansion Grants
Due Date
Center CMHS
FAQ's / Webinars
NOFO Number SM-21-013 (Initial)

Short Title PDO
Due Date
Center CSAP
FAQ's / Webinars
NOFO Number SP-21-002 (Initial)

Short Title NCTSI II
Due Date
Center CMHS
FAQ's / Webinars
NOFO Number SM-21-009 (Modified)

Short Title PPW-PLT
Due Date
Center CSAT
FAQ's / Webinars
NOFO Number TI-21-002 (Modified)

Short Title ReCAST Program
Due Date
Center CMHS
FAQ's / Webinars
NOFO Number SM-21-012 (Modified)

Short Title BCOR
Due Date
Center CSAT
FAQ's / Webinars
NOFO Number TI-21-004 (Modified)

Short Title NCTSI I
Due Date
Center CMHS
FAQ's / Webinars
NOFO Number SM-21-008 (Modified)

Short Title NCTSI III
Due Date
Center CMHS
FAQ's / Webinars
NOFO Number SM-21-010 (Modified)

Short Title Suicide Lifeline/DDH
Due Date
Center CMHS
FAQ's / Webinars
NOFO Number SM-21-005 (Modified)

Short Title Native Connections
Due Date
Center CMHS
FAQ's / Webinars
NOFO Number SM-21-011 (Modified)

Displaying 126 - 150 out of 413

Title PPHF-2015
Amount $736,000
Award FY 2016
Award Number SM062907-01
Project Period 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
City Jefferson City
State MO
NOFO SM-15-004
Short Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention Cooperative Agreements
Project Description The Show Me Zero Youth Suicide Initiative aims to reduce youth suicide through an integrated systems-level approach, which includes establishing a continuity of care model for youth at risk of suicide and promoting the adoption of suicide prevention as a core priority of youth-serving institutions, such as hospitals and schools. Through collaboration with these organizations, this initiative will effectively identify youth ages 10-24 who are at risk for suicide and provide immediate linkage to intensive services and follow-up care. An innovative data-driven surveillance system will document whether services reduce suicidal behaviors. Services will be focused on a five-county region in western Missouri, centered on Jackson County, which includes Kansas City, as well as surrounding counties with more rural areas. The region has higher rates of youth suicide, suicidal ideation, and intentional self-injury than Missouri averages. A multi-pronged approach will promote and support sustainable systems level change while employing strategies from the 2012 National Strategy for Suicide Prevention that focus on treatment and support services. The initiative will place special emphasis on those at higher risk for suicide, including youth who have previously attempted suicide, 18-24 year old youth, and lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and questioning youth. The overall aim of the Show Me Zero Youth Suicide Initiative is to reduce suicides and suicide attempts by accomplishing three major goals: 1) Improve the system of care for suicidal youth who use hospital emergency departments, in-patient psychiatric facilities, and/or crisis hotlines. 2) Improve the capacity of school systems to identify, respond, and refer youth at risk of suicide. 3) Strengthen overall prevention efforts for at-risk youth populations in other settings. This initiative will provide direct services to 2,000 individuals in year one and increase annually, serving 15,000 over the grant period, with... View More

Title PPHF-2015
Amount $736,000
Award FY 2017
Award Number SM062907-02
Project Period 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
City Jefferson City
State MO
NOFO SM-15-004
Short Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention Cooperative Agreements
Project Description The Show Me Zero Youth Suicide Initiative aims to reduce youth suicide through an integrated systems-level approach, which includes establishing a continuity of care model for youth at risk of suicide and promoting the adoption of suicide prevention as a core priority of youth-serving institutions, such as hospitals and schools. Through collaboration with these organizations, this initiative will effectively identify youth ages 10-24 who are at risk for suicide and provide immediate linkage to intensive services and follow-up care. An innovative data-driven surveillance system will document whether services reduce suicidal behaviors. Services will be focused on a five-county region in western Missouri, centered on Jackson County, which includes Kansas City, as well as surrounding counties with more rural areas. The region has higher rates of youth suicide, suicidal ideation, and intentional self-injury than Missouri averages. A multi-pronged approach will promote and support sustainable systems level change while employing strategies from the 2012 National Strategy for Suicide Prevention that focus on treatment and support services. The initiative will place special emphasis on those at higher risk for suicide, including youth who have previously attempted suicide, 18-24 year old youth, and lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and questioning youth. The overall aim of the Show Me Zero Youth Suicide Initiative is to reduce suicides and suicide attempts by accomplishing three major goals: 1) Improve the system of care for suicidal youth who use hospital emergency departments, in-patient psychiatric facilities, and/or crisis hotlines. 2) Improve the capacity of school systems to identify, respond, and refer youth at risk of suicide. 3) Strengthen overall prevention efforts for at-risk youth populations in other settings. This initiative will provide direct services to 2,000 individuals in year one and increase annually, serving 15,000 over the grant period, with... View More

Title PPHF-2015
Amount $736,000
Award FY 2016
Award Number SM062908-01
Project Period 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
City Missoula
State MT
NOFO SM-15-004
Short Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention Cooperative Agreements
Project Description The Sister Nations Empowerment Project (SNEP) will support the youth of the Fort Peck Assiniboine and Sioux Tribes and the agencies that serve them in their journey toward a suicide-safer community. A collaboration of the Tribes and the National Native Children's Trauma Center (NNCTC), SNEP is a reservation-wide, multi-intervention program rooted in local wisdom, cultural practices, and evidence-based practices. The project will build upon work successfully completed during SNEP's initial GLS funding period of 2011-14. The five-year grant proposed will target American Indian youth aged 10-24, including those identifying as LGBTQ or two-spirit, those with lived experience of suicide, and survivors. SNEP will be guided by four primary goals: 1) to increase the number of youth, school staff, juvenile-justice workers, elders, tribal leaders, and community members trained to identify youth at risk of suicide, refer them to clinicians, mitigate risk factors associated with youth suicide, and promote protective factors; 2) to increase the capacity of the reservation's healthcare system to provide evidence-based screening, treatment, and follow-up services for youth at risk of suicide, including those who receive treatment for substance-use and mental-health disorders; 3) to promote cross-system collaboration among the reservation's youth-serving stakeholders, ensure community input and buy-in, and enhance ongoing cross-system data collection efforts; and 4) to enhance public awareness of suicidal risk and behaviors and make suicide prevention a core priority of the reservation's youth-serving system. An estimated 1,062 community members will be served per year, for a five-year total of 5,310.... View More

Title PPHF-2015
Amount $736,000
Award FY 2017
Award Number SM062908-02
Project Period 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
City Missoula
State MT
NOFO SM-15-004
Short Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention Cooperative Agreements
Project Description The Sister Nations Empowerment Project (SNEP) will support the youth of the Fort Peck Assiniboine and Sioux Tribes and the agencies that serve them in their journey toward a suicide-safer community. A collaboration of the Tribes and the National Native Children's Trauma Center (NNCTC), SNEP is a reservation-wide, multi-intervention program rooted in local wisdom, cultural practices, and evidence-based practices. The project will build upon work successfully completed during SNEP's initial GLS funding period of 2011-14. The five-year grant proposed will target American Indian youth aged 10-24, including those identifying as LGBTQ or two-spirit, those with lived experience of suicide, and survivors. SNEP will be guided by four primary goals: 1) to increase the number of youth, school staff, juvenile-justice workers, elders, tribal leaders, and community members trained to identify youth at risk of suicide, refer them to clinicians, mitigate risk factors associated with youth suicide, and promote protective factors; 2) to increase the capacity of the reservation's healthcare system to provide evidence-based screening, treatment, and follow-up services for youth at risk of suicide, including those who receive treatment for substance-use and mental-health disorders; 3) to promote cross-system collaboration among the reservation's youth-serving stakeholders, ensure community input and buy-in, and enhance ongoing cross-system data collection efforts; and 4) to enhance public awareness of suicidal risk and behaviors and make suicide prevention a core priority of the reservation's youth-serving system. An estimated 1,062 community members will be served per year, for a five-year total of 5,310.... View More

Title PPHF-2015
Amount $736,000
Award FY 2015
Award Number SM062909-01
Project Period 2015/09/30 - 2020/09/29
City Oakland
State CA
NOFO SM-15-004
Short Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention Cooperative Agreements
Project Description Native Youth Wellness Initiative II's (NYWI II) purpose is to develop and implement a statewide suicide prevention and intervention strategy inclusive of collaboration among youth service institutions and agencies for American Indian/ Alaska Native (AIAN) youth ages 10 - 24. NYWI II's goal is to increase the protective/ risk factors and trauma informed approaches to reduce suicide, suicidal ideation, and attempts among urban American Indian/ Alaska Native youth ages 10 - 24 throughout California while addressing behavioral health disparities. NYWI II project components are as follows: 1) Provide statewide youth suicide prevention and early intervention training; 2) Provide statewide youth suicide prevention and early intervention outreach and engagement; 3) Provide behavioral health prevention and early intervention youth services; and 4) Provide culturally-competent prevention and early intervention services. NYWI II will partner with urban AIAN serving agencies through California to provide culturally competent prevention and early intervention services and implement direct intervention services at NAHC sites in Oakland, Richmond, and San Francisco utilizing a care team consisting of peer specialists and counselors at each site. NYWII will address youth suicide prevention from the lens of integrated, holistic, traditionally based prevention and treatment services. NAHC will use the Holistic System of Care for Native Americans in an Urban Environment (HSOC) with the ZERO Suicide approach; coupled with Wrap-Around Process, Honoring Children- mending the circle, GONA principles, Children's Mental Health First Aid, and Question, Persuade, Refer (QPR) Gatekeeper Training.... View More

Title PPHF-2015
Amount $736,000
Award FY 2016
Award Number SM062909-02
Project Period 2015/09/30 - 2020/09/29
City Oakland
State CA
NOFO SM-15-004
Short Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention Cooperative Agreements
Project Description Native Youth Wellness Initiative II's (NYWI II) purpose is to develop and implement a statewide suicide prevention and intervention strategy inclusive of collaboration among youth service institutions and agencies for American Indian/ Alaska Native (AIAN) youth ages 10 - 24. NYWI II's goal is to increase the protective/ risk factors and trauma informed approaches to reduce suicide, suicidal ideation, and attempts among urban American Indian/ Alaska Native youth ages 10 - 24 throughout California while addressing behavioral health disparities. NYWI II project components are as follows: 1) Provide statewide youth suicide prevention and early intervention training; 2) Provide statewide youth suicide prevention and early intervention outreach and engagement; 3) Provide behavioral health prevention and early intervention youth services; and 4) Provide culturally-competent prevention and early intervention services. NYWI II will partner with urban AIAN serving agencies through California to provide culturally competent prevention and early intervention services and implement direct intervention services at NAHC sites in Oakland, Richmond, and San Francisco utilizing a care team consisting of peer specialists and counselors at each site. NYWII will address youth suicide prevention from the lens of integrated, holistic, traditionally based prevention and treatment services. NAHC will use the Holistic System of Care for Native Americans in an Urban Environment (HSOC) with the ZERO Suicide approach; coupled with Wrap-Around Process, Honoring Children- mending the circle, GONA principles, Children's Mental Health First Aid, and Question, Persuade, Refer (QPR) Gatekeeper Training.... View More

Title PPHF-2015
Amount $676,000
Award FY 2017
Award Number SM062909-03
Project Period 2015/09/30 - 2020/09/29
City Oakland
State CA
NOFO SM-15-004
Short Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention Cooperative Agreements
Project Description Native Youth Wellness Initiative II's (NYWI II) purpose is to develop and implement a statewide suicide prevention and intervention strategy inclusive of collaboration among youth service institutions and agencies for American Indian/ Alaska Native (AIAN) youth ages 10 - 24. NYWI II's goal is to increase the protective/ risk factors and trauma informed approaches to reduce suicide, suicidal ideation, and attempts among urban American Indian/ Alaska Native youth ages 10 - 24 throughout California while addressing behavioral health disparities. NYWI II project components are as follows: 1) Provide statewide youth suicide prevention and early intervention training; 2) Provide statewide youth suicide prevention and early intervention outreach and engagement; 3) Provide behavioral health prevention and early intervention youth services; and 4) Provide culturally-competent prevention and early intervention services. NYWI II will partner with urban AIAN serving agencies through California to provide culturally competent prevention and early intervention services and implement direct intervention services at NAHC sites in Oakland, Richmond, and San Francisco utilizing a care team consisting of peer specialists and counselors at each site. NYWII will address youth suicide prevention from the lens of integrated, holistic, traditionally based prevention and treatment services. NAHC will use the Holistic System of Care for Native Americans in an Urban Environment (HSOC) with the ZERO Suicide approach; coupled with Wrap-Around Process, Honoring Children- mending the circle, GONA principles, Children's Mental Health First Aid, and Question, Persuade, Refer (QPR) Gatekeeper Training.... View More

Title PPHF-2015
Amount $736,000
Award FY 2015
Award Number SM062910-01
Project Period 2015/09/30 - 2020/09/29
City Boston
State MA
NOFO SM-15-004
Short Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention Cooperative Agreements
Project Description The goals of the MA Youth Suicide Prevention Project are: (1) Create Suicide-Safe Centers of Care to enhance effective treatment and care management of youth at-risk; (2) develop Suicide-Safe Communities in which prevention and early identification are priorities and treatment and support are available; and (3) ensure suicide prevention is integrated into state systems to create a Suicide-Safe Commonwealth. The purpose of the MA Youth Suicide Prevention Project is to reduce the rate of suicide attempts and suicide completions among youth ages 10-24. Two regional hospitals will implement Zero Suicide standards of organizational and clinical practice. Training to enhance treatment skills of clinical and behavioral health providers in treating suicide risk in youth will result in more effective prevention, early intervention and follow-up care for youth and young adults. The high risk populations of focus in these two areas include: rural youth, youth with mental illness and substance abuse disorders, LGBT youth, young veterans, victimized youth and youth who have considered or attempted suicide. Activities in communities focus on strengthening capacities to provide prevention services and early identification, referral and treatment of youth at- risk for suicide through work with schools, colleges and community organizations. System change statewide will be effected by the creation of a Learning Collaborative with the Department of Mental Health and the Massachusetts Behavioral Health Partnership (the Medicaid payor for 1200 providers) for the implementation of Zero Suicide standards and by working with youth serving state agencies to integrate suicide prevention into their services and those of their providers.... View More

Title PPHF-2015
Amount $736,000
Award FY 2016
Award Number SM062910-02
Project Period 2015/09/30 - 2020/09/29
City Boston
State MA
NOFO SM-15-004
Short Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention Cooperative Agreements
Project Description The goals of the MA Youth Suicide Prevention Project are: (1) Create Suicide-Safe Centers of Care to enhance effective treatment and care management of youth at-risk; (2) develop Suicide-Safe Communities in which prevention and early identification are priorities and treatment and support are available; and (3) ensure suicide prevention is integrated into state systems to create a Suicide-Safe Commonwealth. The purpose of the MA Youth Suicide Prevention Project is to reduce the rate of suicide attempts and suicide completions among youth ages 10-24. Two regional hospitals will implement Zero Suicide standards of organizational and clinical practice. Training to enhance treatment skills of clinical and behavioral health providers in treating suicide risk in youth will result in more effective prevention, early intervention and follow-up care for youth and young adults. The high risk populations of focus in these two areas include: rural youth, youth with mental illness and substance abuse disorders, LGBT youth, young veterans, victimized youth and youth who have considered or attempted suicide. Activities in communities focus on strengthening capacities to provide prevention services and early identification, referral and treatment of youth at- risk for suicide through work with schools, colleges and community organizations. System change statewide will be effected by the creation of a Learning Collaborative with the Department of Mental Health and the Massachusetts Behavioral Health Partnership (the Medicaid payor for 1200 providers) for the implementation of Zero Suicide standards and by working with youth serving state agencies to integrate suicide prevention into their services and those of their providers.... View More

Title PPHF-2015
Amount $660,551
Award FY 2017
Award Number SM062910-03
Project Period 2015/09/30 - 2020/09/29
City Boston
State MA
NOFO SM-15-004
Short Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention Cooperative Agreements
Project Description The goals of the MA Youth Suicide Prevention Project are: (1) Create Suicide-Safe Centers of Care to enhance effective treatment and care management of youth at-risk; (2) develop Suicide-Safe Communities in which prevention and early identification are priorities and treatment and support are available; and (3) ensure suicide prevention is integrated into state systems to create a Suicide-Safe Commonwealth. The purpose of the MA Youth Suicide Prevention Project is to reduce the rate of suicide attempts and suicide completions among youth ages 10-24. Two regional hospitals will implement Zero Suicide standards of organizational and clinical practice. Training to enhance treatment skills of clinical and behavioral health providers in treating suicide risk in youth will result in more effective prevention, early intervention and follow-up care for youth and young adults. The high risk populations of focus in these two areas include: rural youth, youth with mental illness and substance abuse disorders, LGBT youth, young veterans, victimized youth and youth who have considered or attempted suicide. Activities in communities focus on strengthening capacities to provide prevention services and early identification, referral and treatment of youth at- risk for suicide through work with schools, colleges and community organizations. System change statewide will be effected by the creation of a Learning Collaborative with the Department of Mental Health and the Massachusetts Behavioral Health Partnership (the Medicaid payor for 1200 providers) for the implementation of Zero Suicide standards and by working with youth serving state agencies to integrate suicide prevention into their services and those of their providers.... View More

Title PPHF-2015
Amount $736,000
Award FY 2015
Award Number SM062916-01
Project Period 2015/09/30 - 2020/09/29
City Hartford
State CT
NOFO SM-15-004
Short Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention Cooperative Agreements
Project Description Connecticut's Networks of Care for Suicide Prevention (NCSP) application proposes to establish a Statewide Network of Care (SNC) for suicide prevention, intervention and response, and implement an intensive community-based effort to reduce non-fatal suicide attempts and suicide deaths among at risk youth age 10-24. The SNC will be comprised of five regional, and one community network in the town of Manchester which will be the focus of an intensive community-based effort. The NCSP will embed suicide prevention as a core priority in CT and utilize interventions that are data and quality-driven, sustainable, culturally competent, formalized, uniformed, and accountable with the capacity and readiness to provide services in an organized and timely fashion. The CT Departments of Mental Health and Addiction Services, Children and Families, and Public Health, with the guidance of the CT Suicide Advisory Board (CTSAB), will co-direct the NCSP and partner with Community Health Resources; United Way of CT-National Suicide Prevention Lifeline Provider; Manchester-Public Schools, Police Department, Community College; Eastern CT Health Network; and the UConn Health Center as evaluator. The NCSP will serve an unduplicated total of 1,333 annually and 6,669 over 5-years of diverse youth and young adults age 10-24 and supportive adults representative of the CT population with emphasis on young people identified at increased risk of suicide and who have attempted suicide. NCSP goals and objectives are aligned with CT's Suicide Prevention Plan 2020 and the National Strategy for Suicide Prevention, prioritizing goals 8 and 9. The NCSP will utilize the primary EBPs of the Zero Suicide approach, Jed Foundation/Suicide Prevention Resource Center Model for Comprehensive Suicide Prevention and Mental Health Promotion, SAMHSA Strategic Prevention Framework, and other EBPs related to their implementation.... View More

Title PPHF-2015
Amount $736,000
Award FY 2016
Award Number SM062916-02
Project Period 2015/09/30 - 2020/09/29
City Hartford
State CT
NOFO SM-15-004
Short Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention Cooperative Agreements
Project Description Connecticut's Networks of Care for Suicide Prevention (NCSP) application proposes to establish a Statewide Network of Care (SNC) for suicide prevention, intervention and response, and implement an intensive community-based effort to reduce non-fatal suicide attempts and suicide deaths among at risk youth age 10-24. The SNC will be comprised of five regional, and one community network in the town of Manchester which will be the focus of an intensive community-based effort. The NCSP will embed suicide prevention as a core priority in CT and utilize interventions that are data and quality-driven, sustainable, culturally competent, formalized, uniformed, and accountable with the capacity and readiness to provide services in an organized and timely fashion. The CT Departments of Mental Health and Addiction Services, Children and Families, and Public Health, with the guidance of the CT Suicide Advisory Board (CTSAB), will co-direct the NCSP and partner with Community Health Resources; United Way of CT-National Suicide Prevention Lifeline Provider; Manchester-Public Schools, Police Department, Community College; Eastern CT Health Network; and the UConn Health Center as evaluator. The NCSP will serve an unduplicated total of 1,333 annually and 6,669 over 5-years of diverse youth and young adults age 10-24 and supportive adults representative of the CT population with emphasis on young people identified at increased risk of suicide and who have attempted suicide. NCSP goals and objectives are aligned with CT's Suicide Prevention Plan 2020 and the National Strategy for Suicide Prevention, prioritizing goals 8 and 9. The NCSP will utilize the primary EBPs of the Zero Suicide approach, Jed Foundation/Suicide Prevention Resource Center Model for Comprehensive Suicide Prevention and Mental Health Promotion, SAMHSA Strategic Prevention Framework, and other EBPs related to their implementation.... View More

Title PPHF-2015
Amount $736,000
Award FY 2017
Award Number SM062916-03
Project Period 2015/09/30 - 2020/09/29
City Hartford
State CT
NOFO SM-15-004
Short Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention Cooperative Agreements
Project Description Connecticut's Networks of Care for Suicide Prevention (NCSP) application proposes to establish a Statewide Network of Care (SNC) for suicide prevention, intervention and response, and implement an intensive community-based effort to reduce non-fatal suicide attempts and suicide deaths among at risk youth age 10-24. The SNC will be comprised of five regional, and one community network in the town of Manchester which will be the focus of an intensive community-based effort. The NCSP will embed suicide prevention as a core priority in CT and utilize interventions that are data and quality-driven, sustainable, culturally competent, formalized, uniformed, and accountable with the capacity and readiness to provide services in an organized and timely fashion. The CT Departments of Mental Health and Addiction Services, Children and Families, and Public Health, with the guidance of the CT Suicide Advisory Board (CTSAB), will co-direct the NCSP and partner with Community Health Resources; United Way of CT-National Suicide Prevention Lifeline Provider; Manchester-Public Schools, Police Department, Community College; Eastern CT Health Network; and the UConn Health Center as evaluator. The NCSP will serve an unduplicated total of 1,333 annually and 6,669 over 5-years of diverse youth and young adults age 10-24 and supportive adults representative of the CT population with emphasis on young people identified at increased risk of suicide and who have attempted suicide. NCSP goals and objectives are aligned with CT's Suicide Prevention Plan 2020 and the National Strategy for Suicide Prevention, prioritizing goals 8 and 9. The NCSP will utilize the primary EBPs of the Zero Suicide approach, Jed Foundation/Suicide Prevention Resource Center Model for Comprehensive Suicide Prevention and Mental Health Promotion, SAMHSA Strategic Prevention Framework, and other EBPs related to their implementation.... View More

Title PPHF-2015
Amount $736,000
Award FY 2017
Award Number SM062919-01
Project Period 2017/09/30 - 2022/09/29
City Denver
State CO
NOFO SM-15-004
Short Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention Cooperative Agreements
Project Description CO Connecting Youth Networks of Care... View More

Title PPHF-2015
Amount $736,000
Award FY 2016
Award Number SM062921-01
Project Period 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
City Montgomery
State AL
NOFO SM-15-004
Short Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention Cooperative Agreements
Project Description The purpose of the Alabama Youth Suicide Prevention Program (YSPP) is to develop and implement statewide youth suicide prevention and early intervention strategies that will include collaboration among schools, educational institutions, juvenile justice systems, foster care systems, substance abuse and mental health programs, and other child and youth-supporting organizations. These activities and others will be utilized to reduce suicide deaths and non-fatal suicide attempts among adolescents in Alabama, ages 10-24, of all races and ethnicities. The Alabama Department of Public Health will partner with the Alabama Suicide Prevention and Resource Coalition, the University of Alabama at Birmingham, and five crisis centers located in North, North Central, Central, Southeast, and Southwest Alabama, that will serve as behavioral health service providers to provide services at the state level as well as the community level. The multifaceted approach will allow for multiple exposure and intervention methods as well as a larger degree of community engagement for Alabama's youth population, which suffered from 11.7 suicides per 100,000 in 2013. The goals for the YSPP that are to be achieved by 2020 are to: 1) decrease the rate of adolescents (ages 15-24) who complete suicide from 11.7 to 9.2 per 100,000; 2)decrease the percentage of high school students who seriously considered attempting suicide from 18.1 to 13.1 percent; 3) decrease the percentage of high school students who made a plan about how they would attempt suicide from 14.3 to 13.8 percent; 4) decrease the percentage of high school students who attempted suicide from 10.4 to 8.9 percent; and 5) decrease the percentage of high school students who attempted suicide that resulted in an injury, poisoning, or overdose that had to be treated by a doctor or nurse from 3.6 to 2.1 percent.... View More

Title PPHF-2015
Amount $736,000
Award FY 2017
Award Number SM062921-02
Project Period 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
City Montgomery
State AL
NOFO SM-15-004
Short Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention Cooperative Agreements
Project Description The purpose of the Alabama Youth Suicide Prevention Program (YSPP) is to develop and implement statewide youth suicide prevention and early intervention strategies that will include collaboration among schools, educational institutions, juvenile justice systems, foster care systems, substance abuse and mental health programs, and other child and youth-supporting organizations. These activities and others will be utilized to reduce suicide deaths and non-fatal suicide attempts among adolescents in Alabama, ages 10-24, of all races and ethnicities. The Alabama Department of Public Health will partner with the Alabama Suicide Prevention and Resource Coalition, the University of Alabama at Birmingham, and five crisis centers located in North, North Central, Central, Southeast, and Southwest Alabama, that will serve as behavioral health service providers to provide services at the state level as well as the community level. The multifaceted approach will allow for multiple exposure and intervention methods as well as a larger degree of community engagement for Alabama's youth population, which suffered from 11.7 suicides per 100,000 in 2013. The goals for the YSPP that are to be achieved by 2020 are to: 1) decrease the rate of adolescents (ages 15-24) who complete suicide from 11.7 to 9.2 per 100,000; 2)decrease the percentage of high school students who seriously considered attempting suicide from 18.1 to 13.1 percent; 3) decrease the percentage of high school students who made a plan about how they would attempt suicide from 14.3 to 13.8 percent; 4) decrease the percentage of high school students who attempted suicide from 10.4 to 8.9 percent; and 5) decrease the percentage of high school students who attempted suicide that resulted in an injury, poisoning, or overdose that had to be treated by a doctor or nurse from 3.6 to 2.1 percent.... View More

Title Statewide Peer Networks for R&R
Amount $100,000
Award FY 2015
Award Number SM062922-01
Project Period 2015/09/30 - 2016/09/29
City Harrisburg
State PA
NOFO SM-15-013
Short Title: Statewide Peer Networks for R&R
Project Description The Pennsylvania Mental Health Consumers' Association (PMHCA) and Pennsylvania Recovery Organizations Alliance (PRO-A) serve the mental health and substance use (behavioral health) recovering community respectively and are natural collaborative partners for this proposal. Via this collaboration, the project proposes to enhance and expand workforce opportunities and advocacy for equality for the recovering community and reduce stigma and disparities associated with these conditions. The overarching goal is to create a statewide environment where members of the recovering community have equal access to employment, housing, and other recovery supports. To accomplish this goal, the partnership will (1) establish sustainable mechanisms for integrating the peer voice in behavioral health systems; (2) develop a behavioral health consortium to implement a statewide advocacy plan; and (3) conduct a statewide summit focused on enhancing employment opportunities for members of the behavioral health recovering community in treatment settings. An Advisory committee comprised of knowledgeable members of the PMHCA and PRO-A committees will attend quarterly meetings and guide this project.... View More

Title Statewide Peer Networks for R&R
Amount $100,000
Award FY 2015
Award Number SM062923-01
Project Period 2015/09/30 - 2016/09/29
City Boston
State MA
NOFO SM-15-013
Short Title: Statewide Peer Networks for R&R
Project Description The Parent/Professional Advocacy League (PPAL) and Massachusetts Organization for Addiction Recovery (MOAR) worked together in the first year of the Statewide Peer Networks for Recovery and Resiliency grant (the "R&R grant") to focus on the needs of youth and young adults with co-occurring mental health and substance use disorders. The Transformation Center (TC) is a statewide, peer support, policy and best practice center operated by and for people with lived experience of mental health, addiction recovery and trauma recovery. The Transformation Center is closely aligned with both PPAL and MOAR in promoting the growth of voices of people with lived experience, individually, in communities and in organizations. This project builds solidly upon the previous grant's work, taking the input from families, consumers, youth and community members through listening sessions across the state and creating a foundation for change. It will draw on the unique strengths of PPAL, MOAR and the TC to promote the need for a focus on co-occurring addiction recovery and mental health needs in youth and young adults in Massachusetts, linking this need to existing initiatives wherever possible. It will also address the gap in information and resources about co-occurring addiction recovery and mental health services identified during listening sessions and link them to the existing statewide networks. The goals of this project are to: (1) Increase the voice of families, youth, consumers and those in recovery from addictions; (2) Strengthen the connections between the statewide networks increase collaboration on key initiatives to promote better access and services for youth and young adults with co-occurring mental health and substance abuse disorders; and (3) Provide information and training to key people in communities in order to increase their knowledge of resources, formation and treatment for young people with co-occurring disorders.... View More

Title Statewide Peer Networks for R&R
Amount $100,000
Award FY 2015
Award Number SM062924-01
Project Period 2015/09/30 - 2016/09/29
City Indianapolis
State IN
NOFO SM-15-013
Short Title: Statewide Peer Networks for R&R
Project Description During the 2014-15 Statewide Peer Networks for Recovery and Resiliency (SPN-R&R) grant cycle, Working Together Works (WTW) has provided cross-training to behavioral health consumers (substance use and mental health) and families of children with severe emotional disturbances to promote understanding and appreciation of the strengths inherent in, challenges faced by, and similarities in each population. Continuing in this current grant cycle, WTW will convene a statewide group with representatives of all three cross-training populations from each of the five regions of the state as well as youth representatives to develop a statewide strategic plan for infrastructure development. Indiana Addictions Issues Coalition proposes for this second grant initiative, Working Together Works 2 (WTW2), to expand the work begun in WTW in the following ways: (1) Continue the engagement of the statewide advisory group and (2) Continue the cross-training activities focused on the identified needs in specific communities and regions.... View More

Title Statewide Peer Networks for R&R
Amount $100,000
Award FY 2015
Award Number SM062925-01
Project Period 2015/09/30 - 2016/09/29
City Albany
State NY
NOFO SM-15-013
Short Title: Statewide Peer Networks for R&R
Project Description The New York Peer Network for Recovery and Resiliency (NYPNRR), a collaboration of Families together in New York State (FTNYS), the National Alliance of Methadone Advocates (NAMA), and the Mental Health Empowerment Project (MHEP) has begun to strengthen the voices of mental health consumers, family members and youth, and individuals in recovery at the state and local level. This partnership has begun to increase access to the quality of behavioral health services and recovery supports that they are empowering, self-directed, recovery- and resiliency-oriented, culturally and linguistically appropriate, and promote an enhanced live in the community for those with behavioral health concerns. The NYPNRR has expanded its collaboration to develop a strategic plan and conduct ongoing needs assessments, share resources, conduct cross-training, and continue to collaborate on major issues of concerns. NYPNRR proposes to maintain a sustainable network that builds on the accomplishments to date to increase knowledge (1) through the family and recovery network about trauma, its impact, trauma-informed practices, and trauma-informed peer support among family networks and recovery-oriented peer-run programs, (2) throughout the peer and recovery network on peer empowerment and engagement, support substance use disorders and mental health recovery, and the four dimensions of recovery, and (3) throughout the networks of the benefit of working with the whole family in all decisions, taking a comprehensive view of the support needs of the child, youth, and family to achieve better outcomes.... View More

Title Statewide Peer Networks for R&R
Amount $100,000
Award FY 2015
Award Number SM062926-01
Project Period 2015/09/30 - 2016/09/29
City Elgin
State TX
NOFO SM-15-013
Short Title: Statewide Peer Networks for R&R
Project Description Texans for Recovery and Resiliency (TRR) is collaborating with the Statewide Family Mental Health Network (FSN) and the Recovery Community Services Program Statewide Network (RCSP-SN). TRR improves access to and the quality of behavioral health systems, services, treatment and recovery supports statewide. To expand the collaboration and build on previous work, TRR will invite leaders from the adult mental health and military veterans' communities to join the consortium and develop a cross-referenced directory of available trainings, a short- and long-term cross-training strategy and a plan for evaluating consistent delivery of trainings. Peer and family leaders from the mental health, trauma and substance use recovery communities will participate in a cross-Training of Trainer course and receive ongoing support as they in turn conduct trainings across their respective communities. Moreover, to improve community-based services and supports for Texans and their families in recovery, an education module on the role of peer workers and family supporters in Integrated Health Care will be developed and provided as a part of the cross-trainers series.... View More

Title Statewide Peer Networks for R&R
Amount $96,961
Award FY 2015
Award Number SM062927-01
Project Period 2015/09/30 - 2016/09/29
City West Columbia
State SC
NOFO SM-15-013
Short Title: Statewide Peer Networks for R&R
Project Description The South Carolina Coalition Of Recovery Management and Resiliency (CRMR) will combine its efforts to educate behavioral health providers and peers in recovery who receive services about peer support services, and work with policy makers to expand the peer workforce in the state as a valuable and integral component to professional services. The population to be served includes behavioral health service providers, adults with mental illness and or substance use disorders, and youth and family members of children or others with mental illness and or substance use disorders. Through mutually beneficial collaboration between SC SHARE (SCN), Federation of Families of South Carolina (SFN), and FAVOR South Carolina (RCSP-SN) the goals and objectives of this network is to increase capacity to affect behavioral health outcomes for persons in recovery in South Carolina by positioning our organizations as the experts in peer support services. The project will use a statewide public relations campaign demonstrating the need for peer support, combine cross training peer support efforts to meet the recovery needs of specific populations including veterans, the LGBT community, youth in transition and family members in need of their own recovery supports, and work with policy makers at the state level to increase the number of peer supports across the state and address Medicaid reimbursement rates for peer specialists.... View More

Title Statewide Peer Networks for R&R
Amount $100,000
Award FY 2015
Award Number SM062928-01
Project Period 2015/09/30 - 2016/09/29
City Madison
State WI
NOFO SM-15-013
Short Title: Statewide Peer Networks for R&R
Project Description Wisconsin Family Ties, along with its partners Grassroots Empowerment Project and Dryhootch of America, will collaborate on the Statewide Peer Network Development Program for Recovery and Resiliency to increase their collective impact throughout Wisconsin to improve access to and the quality of behavioral health systems, services, treatment, and resiliency / recovery supports. The goals of the Statewide Peer Network project are to (1) increase peer support model congruence across all three networks and increase cross-network training and support; (2) identify and communicate the benefits and importance of peer support, as reported by those who have received such services. And (3) strengthen the collaborative voice of the participating networks and the populations they serve by (a) collaborating on each other's main educational / policy events and, (b) creating a moderated "wiki" to enable collaborative input on critical items of mutual interest.... View More

Title Statewide Peer Networks for R&R
Amount $100,000
Award FY 2015
Award Number SM062931-01
Project Period 2015/09/30 - 2016/09/29
City Williston
State VT
NOFO SM-15-013
Short Title: Statewide Peer Networks for R&R
Project Description This project proposes to develop a unified network of recovery voices that will connect families seeking services for loved ones, consumers of mental health and addiction treatment and people on multiple/diverse pathways to recovery, and bring their issues to the attention of policy makers and the public. The VT Federation of Families for Children's Mental Health, VT Recovery Network and VT Psychiatric Survivors will partner to solicit opinions about how to improve services for individuals and families impacted by mental health and/or addictions, especially those with unmet needs. This network will bridge individuals, support groups, support organizations, peer and alternative approaches that exist in Vermont and serve to connect and unify existing initiatives, identify gaps in services, and support regionally identified action steps to improve the lives of those impacted by mental health and/or addictions. Proposed activities include developing regional action plans through engaging peers and community experts, providing technical assistance and piloting targeted funding approaches, as well as creating forums that support recovery and serve to educate policy makers.... View More

Title CCBHCs Planning Grants
Amount $728,054
Award FY 2016
Award Number SM062933-01
Project Period 2015/10/23 - 2017/03/31
City Salem
State OR
NOFO SM-16-001
Short Title: CCBHCs Planning Grants
Project Description Oregon will build upon existing and emerging health system infrastructures that have been central to the state's transformation progress to date to strengthen physical and behavioral health care delivery in behavioral health settings. The populations of focus are children and youth with serious emotional disturbances, adults with serious mental illness, individuals with long-term and serious substance use disorders and those with mental illness and substance use disorders. Oregon plans to certify clinics based on readiness and compliance with CCBHC certification criteria, geographic location, and population served. Based on ranking, clinics will be inspected to ensure that they meet the criteria and to provide technical assistance. Oregon plans to use the PPS-1 daily rate methodology and to require all CCBHCs to provide Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, Motivational Interviewing, and Co-occurring Disorder Treatment as well as evidence-based peer support services.... View More

Displaying 35401 - 35425 out of 39293

This site provides information on grants issued by SAMHSA for mental health and substance abuse services by State. The summaries include Drug Free Communities grants issued by SAMHSA on behalf of the Office of National Drug Control Policy.

Please ensure that you select filters exclusively from the options provided under 'Award Fiscal Year' or 'Funding Type', and subsequently choose a State to proceed with viewing the displayed data.

The dollar amounts for the grants should not be used for SAMHSA budgetary purposes.

Funding Summary


Non-Discretionary Funding

Substance Use Prevention and Treatment Block Grant $0
Community Mental Health Services Block Grant $0
Projects for Assistance in Transition from Homelessness (PATH) $0
Protection and Advocacy for Individuals with Mental Illness (PAIMI) $0
Subtotal of Non-Discretionary Funding $0

Discretionary Funding

Mental Health $0
Substance Use Prevention $0
Substance Use Treatment $0
Flex Grants $0
Subtotal of Discretionary Funding $0

Total Funding

Total Mental Health Funds $0
Total Substance Use Funds $0
Flex Grant Funds $0
Total Funds $0