Opportunity ID: 297939

General Information

Document Type: Grants Notice
Funding Opportunity Number: CDC-RFA-TP18-1802
Funding Opportunity Title: Cooperative Agreement for Emergency Response: Public Health Crisis Response
Opportunity Category: Discretionary
Opportunity Category Explanation:
Funding Instrument Type: Cooperative Agreement
Category of Funding Activity: Health
Category Explanation:
Expected Number of Awards: 69
Assistance Listings: 93.354 — Public Health Emergency Response: Cooperative Agreement for Emergency Response: Public Health Crisis Response
Cost Sharing or Matching Requirement: No
Version: Synopsis 24
Posted Date: Oct 11, 2017
Last Updated Date: Oct 10, 2018
Original Closing Date for Applications: Dec 11, 2017 Electronically submitted applications must be submitted no later than 5:00 p.m., ET, on the listed application due date.
Current Closing Date for Applications: Nov 30, 2018 Electronically submitted applications must be submitted no later than 5:00 p.m., ET, on the listed application due date.
Archive Date: Dec 30, 2018
Estimated Total Program Funding: $345,000,000
Award Ceiling: $5,000,000
Award Floor: $100,000

Eligibility

Eligible Applicants: County governments
State governments
City or township governments
Native American tribal governments (Federally recognized)
Additional Information on Eligibility: The eligible applicants to receive funding are limited to governmental public health departments that are constitutionally empowered to protect the health and welfare of their respective communities. Eligible applicants must have functional public health emergency management programs, legal authority, and already existing public health emergency management capacity, thus they are pre-positioned to act expeditiously to meet the requirements of this cooperative agreement. Administrative preparedness and existing public health emergency management capacity are integral components of the infrastructure of the entities that receive funding and this funding will give grantees additional capacity to respond to public health crises.The eligible entities are limited to the 50 state public health departments, local public health departments with current alignment to PHEP or ELC (includes Washington D.C.), and territorial governments in the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, the Commonwealth of the Northern Marianna Islands, American Samoa, Guam, the Federated States of Micronesia, the Republic of the Marshall Islands, and the Republic of Palau.In addition tribal governments meeting the requirements laid out in this NOFO and serving a population of at least 50,000 members are eligible to compete.Limited Source Competitions:State governments or their bona fide agents (N=50)Local health departments or their bona fide agents (N=6) (city or county) consistent with PHEP and ELC awardees, which include: Chicago Department of Public Health, Houston Department of Health and Human Services, L.A. County Department of Health Services – Public Health, New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, Philadelphia Department of Public Health, and Washington D.C. Department of HealthAmerican Indian or Alaska Native Federally recognized tribal governments or their bona fide agents that meet requirements listed in Section C.3 of this NOFO for Justification for Less than Maximum Competition and that serve, through their own PH infrastructure, at least 50,000 people (N~5)Territorial governments or their bona fide agents (N=8) in the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands, the Commonwealth of the Northern Marianna Islands, American Samoa, Guam, the Federated States of Micronesia, the Republic of the Marshall Islands, and the Republic of Palau

Additional Information

Agency Name: Centers for Disease Control – OPHPR
Description: CDC seeks to enhance the Nation’s ability to rapidly mobilize and respond to specific public health emergencies, which may include infectious disease outbreaks, pandemics, and other public health emergencies that exceed the capacity of jurisdictional public health resources. From experience through previous emergency events, CDC recognizes the impact that initial funding and immediate response can have in mitigating negative health outcomes. Thus, CDC is creating this Notice of Funding Opportunity (NOFO) to rapidly fund pre-approved applicants to address immediate and time-sensitive needs that are integral to specific public health responses. This NOFO is intended to fund jurisdictional public health departments for response to HHS Secretarial declared and nondeclared public health emergencies and other public health emergencies which CDC deems in accordance with the purpose of the NOFO.The award dates and project periods listed are subject to change and are contingent upon the occurence of a public health crisis as defined in this NOFO and the availability of funding for the response. Awardees would be approved but unfunded until a crisis occurs, enabling them to plan for emergency activation activities.CDC has strong relationships with state and local health departments, community-based organizations and other domestic partners and supports them for planning, capacity-building, preparedness, and response to public health emergencies. This support is provided through various programs including the Public Health Emergency Preparedness (PHEP) and the Epidemiology and Laboratory Capacity for Infectious Diseases (ELC) cooperative agreements. This new NOFO complements these ongoing capacity-building and response programs by providing a mechanism for CDC to rapidly mobilize and fund jurisdictions for specific response needs for specific public health emergencies. CDC will consider funding pre-award costs.This NOFO is comprised of two components: A and B. These components may be funded sequentially or simultaneously as determined by CDC regarding an identified specific public health emergency.Component A is focused on initial emergency response activation and stand-up activities routinely required in preparing for and responding to an impending or existing emergency. In response to Component A of this NOFO, applicants will describe/address initial activities required to strengthen incident management for crisis response, including but not limited to, emergency operations center (EOC) activation, staffing contracts, needs assessment, accelerated planning, call center activation, and strengthening jurisdictional recovery efforts.Component B is focused on the actions necessary to tackle a specific emergency. Applicants will address the crisis-specific response activities required to respond based on the four additional domains of the provided logic model (information management, countermeasures and mitigation, surge management, and biosurveillance). A scenario has been provided in section “D” work plan, which applicants will use to develop their proposal to this component. The scenario is broad and focused on emerging infectious disease as that such an event is most likely to require federal support to respond. However, it is not CDC’s intent to restrict the use of this mechanism to infectious disease. As previously stated, CDC will provide additional information and supplemental guidance regarding its intent to implement this NOFO.Upon occurrence of a significant public health emergency, CDC will establish and provide supplemental guidance specific to that emergency and can then rapidly fund specific applicants for start-up and specific interventions, mitigation, and other activities based on the particular situation and needs. Categories/functional areas to be addressed include, but are not limited to:Staffing (e.g., Epidemiologists, Laboratorians, Health Communication Specialists, Planners, Logisticians, Public Health Nurses, etc.)EquipmentLaboratory supportRisk communicationsSurveillanceTechnical assistanceEmergency response/operationsMass dispensingTechnical assistanceInformation technologyVector controlData entry and analysis
Link to Additional Information:
Grantor Contact Information: If you have difficulty accessing the full announcement electronically, please contact:

Celia Toles
crt3@cdc.gov

Email:crt3@cdc.gov

Version History

Version Modification Description Updated Date
The following is a list of forms applicants must complete and submit to the CDC via Grants.gov.
For assistance please contact OGSTIMS for assistance.

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
Office of Grant Services (OGS)
Technical Information Management Section (TIMS)
Phone: 770-488-2700

Oct 10, 2018
The following is a list of forms applicants must complete and submit to the CDC via Grants.gov.
For assistance please contact OGSTIMS for assistance.

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
Office of Grant Services (OGS)
Technical Information Management Section (TIMS)
Phone: 770-488-2700

Oct 10, 2018
This NOFO synopsis is being updated to reflect the FY19 funding cycle and application due dates. Oct 10, 2018
This NOFO is being updated to reflect FY19 dates and allow the applicants the opportunity to respond to any necessary updates. Oct 09, 2018
Revised closing date from July 30, 2018 to July 31, 2018 Oct 02, 2018
Revised closing date from July 30, 2018 to July 31, 2018 Jul 24, 2018
This is an update Notification for this NOFO CDC-RFA-TP18-1802 (INFORMATION PURPOSE ONLY)

The closing date has been changed from December 17, 2017 to July 30, 2018.

Jul 24, 2018
This is an update Notification for this NOFO CDC-RFA-TP18-1802 (INFORMATION PURPOSE ONLY)

The closing date has been changed from December 17, 2017 to July 30, 2018.

Jun 22, 2018
This is an update Notification for this NOFO CDC-RFA-TP18-1802 (INFORMATION PURPOSE ONLY) Jun 22, 2018
This is an update Notification for this NOFO CDC-RFA-TP18-1802 (INFORMATION PURPOSE ONLY) Jun 22, 2018
Completing the workflow process Jun 22, 2018
Updated Grants.gov with FAQs Jun 19, 2018
Hurricane guidance May 15, 2018
Hurricane Supplemental Guidance Mar 30, 2018
The application closing time has been modified from 5:00 PM EST to 11:59 PM EST. Mar 30, 2018
The application closing time has been modified from 5:00 PM EST to 11:59 PM EST. Dec 07, 2017
NOFO amended to incorporate Budget Guidance and FAQs. Dec 07, 2017
NOFO Amended to incorporate Budget Guidance and FAQs. Nov 30, 2017
NOFO amended to include Work Plan Guidance. Nov 30, 2017
The closing time for this Notice of Funding Opportunity (NOFO) has been adjusted from 5:00 pm EDT to 11:59 pm EDT on December 11, 2017. Nov 02, 2017
The closing time for this Notice of Funding Opportunity (NOFO) has been adjusted from 5:00 pm EDT to 11:59 pm EDT on December 11, 2017. Oct 12, 2017
The closing time for this Notice of Funding Opportunity (NOFO) has been adjusted from 5:00 pm EDT to 11:59 pm EDT on December 11, 2017. Oct 12, 2017
The closing time for this Notice of Funding Opportunity (NOFO) has been adjusted from 5:00 pm EDT to 11:59 pm EDT on December 11, 2017. Oct 12, 2017
Oct 12, 2017

DISPLAYING: Synopsis 24

General Information

Document Type: Grants Notice
Funding Opportunity Number: CDC-RFA-TP18-1802
Funding Opportunity Title: Cooperative Agreement for Emergency Response: Public Health Crisis Response
Opportunity Category: Discretionary
Opportunity Category Explanation:
Funding Instrument Type: Cooperative Agreement
Category of Funding Activity: Health
Category Explanation:
Expected Number of Awards: 69
Assistance Listings: 93.354 — Public Health Emergency Response: Cooperative Agreement for Emergency Response: Public Health Crisis Response
Cost Sharing or Matching Requirement: No
Version: Synopsis 24
Posted Date: Oct 11, 2017
Last Updated Date: Oct 10, 2018
Original Closing Date for Applications: Dec 11, 2017 Electronically submitted applications must be submitted no later than 5:00 p.m., ET, on the listed application due date.
Current Closing Date for Applications: Nov 30, 2018 Electronically submitted applications must be submitted no later than 5:00 p.m., ET, on the listed application due date.
Archive Date: Dec 30, 2018
Estimated Total Program Funding: $345,000,000
Award Ceiling: $5,000,000
Award Floor: $100,000

Eligibility

Eligible Applicants: County governments
State governments
City or township governments
Native American tribal governments (Federally recognized)
Additional Information on Eligibility: The eligible applicants to receive funding are limited to governmental public health departments that are constitutionally empowered to protect the health and welfare of their respective communities. Eligible applicants must have functional public health emergency management programs, legal authority, and already existing public health emergency management capacity, thus they are pre-positioned to act expeditiously to meet the requirements of this cooperative agreement. Administrative preparedness and existing public health emergency management capacity are integral components of the infrastructure of the entities that receive funding and this funding will give grantees additional capacity to respond to public health crises.The eligible entities are limited to the 50 state public health departments, local public health departments with current alignment to PHEP or ELC (includes Washington D.C.), and territorial governments in the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, the Commonwealth of the Northern Marianna Islands, American Samoa, Guam, the Federated States of Micronesia, the Republic of the Marshall Islands, and the Republic of Palau.In addition tribal governments meeting the requirements laid out in this NOFO and serving a population of at least 50,000 members are eligible to compete.Limited Source Competitions:State governments or their bona fide agents (N=50)Local health departments or their bona fide agents (N=6) (city or county) consistent with PHEP and ELC awardees, which include: Chicago Department of Public Health, Houston Department of Health and Human Services, L.A. County Department of Health Services – Public Health, New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, Philadelphia Department of Public Health, and Washington D.C. Department of HealthAmerican Indian or Alaska Native Federally recognized tribal governments or their bona fide agents that meet requirements listed in Section C.3 of this NOFO for Justification for Less than Maximum Competition and that serve, through their own PH infrastructure, at least 50,000 people (N~5)Territorial governments or their bona fide agents (N=8) in the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands, the Commonwealth of the Northern Marianna Islands, American Samoa, Guam, the Federated States of Micronesia, the Republic of the Marshall Islands, and the Republic of Palau

Additional Information

Agency Name: Centers for Disease Control – OPHPR
Description: CDC seeks to enhance the Nation’s ability to rapidly mobilize and respond to specific public health emergencies, which may include infectious disease outbreaks, pandemics, and other public health emergencies that exceed the capacity of jurisdictional public health resources. From experience through previous emergency events, CDC recognizes the impact that initial funding and immediate response can have in mitigating negative health outcomes. Thus, CDC is creating this Notice of Funding Opportunity (NOFO) to rapidly fund pre-approved applicants to address immediate and time-sensitive needs that are integral to specific public health responses. This NOFO is intended to fund jurisdictional public health departments for response to HHS Secretarial declared and nondeclared public health emergencies and other public health emergencies which CDC deems in accordance with the purpose of the NOFO.The award dates and project periods listed are subject to change and are contingent upon the occurence of a public health crisis as defined in this NOFO and the availability of funding for the response. Awardees would be approved but unfunded until a crisis occurs, enabling them to plan for emergency activation activities.CDC has strong relationships with state and local health departments, community-based organizations and other domestic partners and supports them for planning, capacity-building, preparedness, and response to public health emergencies. This support is provided through various programs including the Public Health Emergency Preparedness (PHEP) and the Epidemiology and Laboratory Capacity for Infectious Diseases (ELC) cooperative agreements. This new NOFO complements these ongoing capacity-building and response programs by providing a mechanism for CDC to rapidly mobilize and fund jurisdictions for specific response needs for specific public health emergencies. CDC will consider funding pre-award costs.This NOFO is comprised of two components: A and B. These components may be funded sequentially or simultaneously as determined by CDC regarding an identified specific public health emergency.Component A is focused on initial emergency response activation and stand-up activities routinely required in preparing for and responding to an impending or existing emergency. In response to Component A of this NOFO, applicants will describe/address initial activities required to strengthen incident management for crisis response, including but not limited to, emergency operations center (EOC) activation, staffing contracts, needs assessment, accelerated planning, call center activation, and strengthening jurisdictional recovery efforts.Component B is focused on the actions necessary to tackle a specific emergency. Applicants will address the crisis-specific response activities required to respond based on the four additional domains of the provided logic model (information management, countermeasures and mitigation, surge management, and biosurveillance). A scenario has been provided in section “D” work plan, which applicants will use to develop their proposal to this component. The scenario is broad and focused on emerging infectious disease as that such an event is most likely to require federal support to respond. However, it is not CDC’s intent to restrict the use of this mechanism to infectious disease. As previously stated, CDC will provide additional information and supplemental guidance regarding its intent to implement this NOFO.Upon occurrence of a significant public health emergency, CDC will establish and provide supplemental guidance specific to that emergency and can then rapidly fund specific applicants for start-up and specific interventions, mitigation, and other activities based on the particular situation and needs. Categories/functional areas to be addressed include, but are not limited to:Staffing (e.g., Epidemiologists, Laboratorians, Health Communication Specialists, Planners, Logisticians, Public Health Nurses, etc.)EquipmentLaboratory supportRisk communicationsSurveillanceTechnical assistanceEmergency response/operationsMass dispensingTechnical assistanceInformation technologyVector controlData entry and analysis
Link to Additional Information:
Grantor Contact Information: If you have difficulty accessing the full announcement electronically, please contact:

Celia Toles
crt3@cdc.gov

Email:crt3@cdc.gov

DISPLAYING: Synopsis 23

General Information

Document Type: Grants Notice
Funding Opportunity Number: CDC-RFA-TP18-1802
Funding Opportunity Title: Cooperative Agreement for Emergency Response: Public Health Crisis Response
Opportunity Category: Discretionary
Opportunity Category Explanation:
Funding Instrument Type: Cooperative Agreement
Category of Funding Activity: Health
Category Explanation:
Expected Number of Awards: 69
Assistance Listings: 93.354 — Public Health Emergency Response: Cooperative Agreement for Emergency Response: Public Health Crisis Response
Cost Sharing or Matching Requirement: No
Version: Synopsis 23
Posted Date: Oct 10, 2018
Last Updated Date: Oct 10, 2018
Original Closing Date for Applications:
Current Closing Date for Applications: Nov 30, 2018 Electronically submitted applications must be submitted no later than 5:00 p.m., ET, on the listed application due date.
Archive Date: Dec 30, 2018
Estimated Total Program Funding: $345,000,000
Award Ceiling: $5,000,000
Award Floor: $100,000

Eligibility

Eligible Applicants: County governments
State governments
Native American tribal governments (Federally recognized)
City or township governments
Additional Information on Eligibility: The eligible applicants to receive funding are limited to governmental public health departments that are constitutionally empowered to protect the health and welfare of their respective communities. Eligible applicants must have functional public health emergency management programs, legal authority, and already existing public health emergency management capacity, thus they are pre-positioned to act expeditiously to meet the requirements of this cooperative agreement. Administrative preparedness and existing public health emergency management capacity are integral components of the infrastructure of the entities that receive funding and this funding will give grantees additional capacity to respond to public health crises.The eligible entities are limited to the 50 state public health departments, local public health departments with current alignment to PHEP or ELC (includes Washington D.C.), and territorial governments in the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, the Commonwealth of the Northern Marianna Islands, American Samoa, Guam, the Federated States of Micronesia, the Republic of the Marshall Islands, and the Republic of Palau.In addition tribal governments meeting the requirements laid out in this NOFO and serving a population of at least 50,000 members are eligible to compete.Limited Source Competitions:State governments or their bona fide agents (N=50)Local health departments or their bona fide agents (N=6) (city or county) consistent with PHEP and ELC awardees, which include: Chicago Department of Public Health, Houston Department of Health and Human Services, L.A. County Department of Health Services – Public Health, New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, Philadelphia Department of Public Health, and Washington D.C. Department of HealthAmerican Indian or Alaska Native Federally recognized tribal governments or their bona fide agents that meet requirements listed in Section C.3 of this NOFO for Justification for Less than Maximum Competition and that serve, through their own PH infrastructure, at least 50,000 people (N~5)Territorial governments or their bona fide agents (N=8) in the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands, the Commonwealth of the Northern Marianna Islands, American Samoa, Guam, the Federated States of Micronesia, the Republic of the Marshall Islands, and the Republic of Palau

Additional Information

Agency Name: Centers for Disease Control – OPHPR
Description: CDC seeks to enhance the Nation’s ability to rapidly mobilize and respond to specific public health emergencies, which may include infectious disease outbreaks, pandemics, and other public health emergencies that exceed the capacity of jurisdictional public health resources. From experience through previous emergency events, CDC recognizes the impact that initial funding and immediate response can have in mitigating negative health outcomes. Thus, CDC is creating this Notice of Funding Opportunity (NOFO) to rapidly fund pre-approved applicants to address immediate and time-sensitive needs that are integral to specific public health responses. This NOFO is intended to fund jurisdictional public health departments for response to HHS Secretarial declared and nondeclared public health emergencies and other public health emergencies which CDC deems in accordance with the purpose of the NOFO.The award dates and project periods listed are subject to change and are contingent upon the occurence of a public health crisis as defined in this NOFO and the availability of funding for the response. Awardees would be approved but unfunded until a crisis occurs, enabling them to plan for emergency activation activities.CDC has strong relationships with state and local health departments, community-based organizations and other domestic partners and supports them for planning, capacity-building, preparedness, and response to public health emergencies. This support is provided through various programs including the Public Health Emergency Preparedness (PHEP) and the Epidemiology and Laboratory Capacity for Infectious Diseases (ELC) cooperative agreements. This new NOFO complements these ongoing capacity-building and response programs by providing a mechanism for CDC to rapidly mobilize and fund jurisdictions for specific response needs for specific public health emergencies. CDC will consider funding pre-award costs.This NOFO is comprised of two components: A and B. These components may be funded sequentially or simultaneously as determined by CDC regarding an identified specific public health emergency.Component A is focused on initial emergency response activation and stand-up activities routinely required in preparing for and responding to an impending or existing emergency. In response to Component A of this NOFO, applicants will describe/address initial activities required to strengthen incident management for crisis response, including but not limited to, emergency operations center (EOC) activation, staffing contracts, needs assessment, accelerated planning, call center activation, and strengthening jurisdictional recovery efforts.Component B is focused on the actions necessary to tackle a specific emergency. Applicants will address the crisis-specific response activities required to respond based on the four additional domains of the provided logic model (information management, countermeasures and mitigation, surge management, and biosurveillance). A scenario has been provided in section “D” work plan, which applicants will use to develop their proposal to this component. The scenario is broad and focused on emerging infectious disease as that such an event is most likely to require federal support to respond. However, it is not CDC’s intent to restrict the use of this mechanism to infectious disease. As previously stated, CDC will provide additional information and supplemental guidance regarding its intent to implement this NOFO.Upon occurrence of a significant public health emergency, CDC will establish and provide supplemental guidance specific to that emergency and can then rapidly fund specific applicants for start-up and specific interventions, mitigation, and other activities based on the particular situation and needs. Categories/functional areas to be addressed include, but are not limited to:Staffing (e.g., Epidemiologists, Laboratorians, Health Communication Specialists, Planners, Logisticians, Public Health Nurses, etc.)EquipmentLaboratory supportRisk communicationsSurveillanceTechnical assistanceEmergency response/operationsMass dispensingTechnical assistanceInformation technologyVector controlData entry and analysis
Link to Additional Information:
Grantor Contact Information: If you have difficulty accessing the full announcement electronically, please contact:

Celia Toles
crt3@cdc.gov

Email:crt3@cdc.gov

DISPLAYING: Synopsis 22

General Information

Document Type: Grants Notice
Funding Opportunity Number: CDC-RFA-TP18-1802
Funding Opportunity Title: Cooperative Agreement for Emergency Response: Public Health Crisis Response
Opportunity Category: Discretionary
Opportunity Category Explanation:
Funding Instrument Type: Cooperative Agreement
Category of Funding Activity: Health
Category Explanation:
Expected Number of Awards: 69
Assistance Listings: 93.354 — Public Health Emergency Response: Cooperative Agreement for Emergency Response: Public Health Crisis Response
Cost Sharing or Matching Requirement: No
Version: Synopsis 22
Posted Date: Oct 10, 2018
Last Updated Date: Oct 09, 2018
Original Closing Date for Applications:
Current Closing Date for Applications: Nov 30, 2018 Electronically submitted applications must be submitted no later than 5:00 p.m., ET, on the listed application due date.
Archive Date: Dec 30, 2018
Estimated Total Program Funding: $345,000,000
Award Ceiling: $5,000,000
Award Floor: $100,000

Eligibility

Eligible Applicants: County governments
State governments
Native American tribal governments (Federally recognized)
City or township governments
Additional Information on Eligibility: The eligible applicants to receive funding are limited to governmental public health departments that are constitutionally empowered to protect the health and welfare of their respective communities. Eligible applicants must have functional public health emergency management programs, legal authority, and already existing public health emergency management capacity, thus they are pre-positioned to act expeditiously to meet the requirements of this cooperative agreement. Administrative preparedness and existing public health emergency management capacity are integral components of the infrastructure of the entities that receive funding and this funding will give grantees additional capacity to respond to public health crises.The eligible entities are limited to the 50 state public health departments, local public health departments with current alignment to PHEP or ELC (includes Washington D.C.), and territorial governments in the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, the Commonwealth of the Northern Marianna Islands, American Samoa, Guam, the Federated States of Micronesia, the Republic of the Marshall Islands, and the Republic of Palau.In addition tribal governments meeting the requirements laid out in this NOFO and serving a population of at least 50,000 members are eligible to compete.Limited Source Competitions:State governments or their bona fide agents (N=50)Local health departments or their bona fide agents (N=6) (city or county) consistent with PHEP and ELC awardees, which include: Chicago Department of Public Health, Houston Department of Health and Human Services, L.A. County Department of Health Services – Public Health, New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, Philadelphia Department of Public Health, and Washington D.C. Department of HealthAmerican Indian or Alaska Native Federally recognized tribal governments or their bona fide agents that meet requirements listed in Section C.3 of this NOFO for Justification for Less than Maximum Competition and that serve, through their own PH infrastructure, at least 50,000 people (N~5)Territorial governments or their bona fide agents (N=8) in the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands, the Commonwealth of the Northern Marianna Islands, American Samoa, Guam, the Federated States of Micronesia, the Republic of the Marshall Islands, and the Republic of Palau

Additional Information

Agency Name: Centers for Disease Control – OPHPR
Description: CDC seeks to enhance the Nation’s ability to rapidly mobilize and respond to specific public health emergencies, which may include infectious disease outbreaks, pandemics, and other public health emergencies that exceed the capacity of jurisdictional public health resources. From experience through previous emergency events, CDC recognizes the impact that initial funding and immediate response can have in mitigating negative health outcomes. Thus, CDC is creating this Notice of Funding Opportunity (NOFO) to rapidly fund pre-approved applicants to address immediate and time-sensitive needs that are integral to specific public health responses. This NOFO is intended to fund jurisdictional public health departments for response to HHS Secretarial declared and nondeclared public health emergencies and other public health emergencies which CDC deems in accordance with the purpose of the NOFO.The award dates and project periods listed are subject to change and are contingent upon the occurence of a public health crisis as defined in this NOFO and the availability of funding for the response. Awardees would be approved but unfunded until a crisis occurs, enabling them to plan for emergency activation activities.CDC has strong relationships with state and local health departments, community-based organizations and other domestic partners and supports them for planning, capacity-building, preparedness, and response to public health emergencies. This support is provided through various programs including the Public Health Emergency Preparedness (PHEP) and the Epidemiology and Laboratory Capacity for Infectious Diseases (ELC) cooperative agreements. This new NOFO complements these ongoing capacity-building and response programs by providing a mechanism for CDC to rapidly mobilize and fund jurisdictions for specific response needs for specific public health emergencies. CDC will consider funding pre-award costs.This NOFO is comprised of two components: A and B. These components may be funded sequentially or simultaneously as determined by CDC regarding an identified specific public health emergency.Component A is focused on initial emergency response activation and stand-up activities routinely required in preparing for and responding to an impending or existing emergency. In response to Component A of this NOFO, applicants will describe/address initial activities required to strengthen incident management for crisis response, including but not limited to, emergency operations center (EOC) activation, staffing contracts, needs assessment, accelerated planning, call center activation, and strengthening jurisdictional recovery efforts.Component B is focused on the actions necessary to tackle a specific emergency. Applicants will address the crisis-specific response activities required to respond based on the four additional domains of the provided logic model (information management, countermeasures and mitigation, surge management, and biosurveillance). A scenario has been provided in section “D” work plan, which applicants will use to develop their proposal to this component. The scenario is broad and focused on emerging infectious disease as that such an event is most likely to require federal support to respond. However, it is not CDC’s intent to restrict the use of this mechanism to infectious disease. As previously stated, CDC will provide additional information and supplemental guidance regarding its intent to implement this NOFO.Upon occurrence of a significant public health emergency, CDC will establish and provide supplemental guidance specific to that emergency and can then rapidly fund specific applicants for start-up and specific interventions, mitigation, and other activities based on the particular situation and needs. Categories/functional areas to be addressed include, but are not limited to:Staffing (e.g., Epidemiologists, Laboratorians, Health Communication Specialists, Planners, Logisticians, Public Health Nurses, etc.)EquipmentLaboratory supportRisk communicationsSurveillanceTechnical assistanceEmergency response/operationsMass dispensingTechnical assistanceInformation technologyVector controlData entry and analysis
Link to Additional Information:
Grantor Contact Information: If you have difficulty accessing the full announcement electronically, please contact:

Celia Toles
crt3@cdc.gov

Email:crt3@cdc.gov

DISPLAYING: Synopsis 21

General Information

Document Type: Grants Notice
Funding Opportunity Number: CDC-RFA-TP18-1802
Funding Opportunity Title: Cooperative Agreement for Emergency Response: Public Health Crisis Response
Opportunity Category: Discretionary
Opportunity Category Explanation:
Funding Instrument Type: Cooperative Agreement
Category of Funding Activity: Health
Category Explanation:
Expected Number of Awards: 69
Assistance Listings: 93.354 — Public Health Emergency Response: Cooperative Agreement for Emergency Response: Public Health Crisis Response
Cost Sharing or Matching Requirement: No
Version: Synopsis 21
Posted Date: Oct 09, 2018
Last Updated Date: Oct 02, 2018
Original Closing Date for Applications:
Current Closing Date for Applications: Nov 30, 2018 Electronically submitted applications must be submitted no later than 5:00 p.m., ET, on the listed application due date.
Archive Date: Dec 30, 2018
Estimated Total Program Funding: $345,000,000
Award Ceiling: $5,000,000
Award Floor: $100,000

Eligibility

Eligible Applicants: County governments
State governments
Native American tribal governments (Federally recognized)
City or township governments
Additional Information on Eligibility: The eligible applicants to receive funding are limited to governmental public health departments that are constitutionally empowered to protect the health and welfare of their respective communities. Eligible applicants must have functional public health emergency management programs, legal authority, and already existing public health emergency management capacity, thus they are pre-positioned to act expeditiously to meet the requirements of this cooperative agreement. Administrative preparedness and existing public health emergency management capacity are integral components of the infrastructure of the entities that receive funding and this funding will give grantees additional capacity to respond to public health crises.
The eligible entities are limited to the 50 state public health departments, local public health departments with current alignment to PHEP or ELC (includes Washington D.C.), and territorial governments in the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, the Commonwealth of the Northern Marianna Islands, American Samoa, Guam, the Federated States of Micronesia, the Republic of the Marshall Islands, and the Republic of Palau.
In addition tribal governments meeting the requirements laid out in this NOFO and serving a population of at least 50,000 members are eligible to compete.
Limited Source Competitions:

State governments or their bona fide agents (N=50)
Local health departments or their bona fide agents (N=6) (city or county) consistent with PHEP and ELC awardees, which include: Chicago Department of Public Health, Houston Department of Health and Human Services, L.A. County Department of Health Services – Public Health, New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, Philadelphia Department of Public Health, and Washington D.C. Department of Health
American Indian or Alaska Native Federally recognized tribal governments or their bona fide agents that meet requirements listed in Section C.3 of this NOFO for Justification for Less than Maximum Competition and that serve, through their own PH infrastructure, at least 50,000 people (N~5)
Territorial governments or their bona fide agents (N=8) in the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands, the Commonwealth of the Northern Marianna Islands, American Samoa, Guam, the Federated States of Micronesia, the Republic of the Marshall Islands, and the Republic of Palau

Additional Information

Agency Name: Centers for Disease Control – OPHPR
Description: CDC seeks to enhance the Nation’s ability to rapidly mobilize and respond to specific public health emergencies, which may include infectious disease outbreaks, pandemics, and other public health emergencies that exceed the capacity of jurisdictional public health resources. From experience through previous emergency events, CDC recognizes the impact that initial funding and immediate response can have in mitigating negative health outcomes. Thus, CDC is creating this Notice of Funding Opportunity (NOFO) to rapidly fund pre-approved applicants to address immediate and time-sensitive needs that are integral to specific public health responses. This NOFO is intended to fund jurisdictional public health departments for response to HHS Secretarial declared and nondeclared public health emergencies and other public health emergencies which CDC deems in accordance with the purpose of the NOFO.
The award dates and project periods listed are subject to change and are contingent upon the occurence of a public health crisis as defined in this NOFO and the availability of funding for the response. Awardees would be approved but unfunded until a crisis occurs, enabling them to plan for emergency activation activities.
CDC has strong relationships with state and local health departments, community-based organizations and other domestic partners and supports them for planning, capacity-building, preparedness, and response to public health emergencies. This support is provided through various programs including the Public Health Emergency Preparedness (PHEP) and the Epidemiology and Laboratory Capacity for Infectious Diseases (ELC) cooperative agreements. This new NOFO complements these ongoing capacity-building and response programs by providing a mechanism for CDC to rapidly mobilize and fund jurisdictions for specific response needs for specific public health emergencies. CDC will consider funding pre-award costs.
This NOFO is comprised of two components: A and B. These components may be funded sequentially or simultaneously as determined by CDC regarding an identified specific public health emergency.
Component A is focused on initial emergency response activation and stand-up activities routinely required in preparing for and responding to an impending or existing emergency. In response to Component A of this NOFO, applicants will describe/address initial activities required to strengthen incident management for crisis response, including but not limited to, emergency operations center (EOC) activation, staffing contracts, needs assessment, accelerated planning, call center activation, and strengthening jurisdictional recovery efforts.
Component B is focused on the actions necessary to tackle a specific emergency. Applicants will address the crisis-specific response activities required to respond based on the four additional domains of the provided logic model (information management, countermeasures and mitigation, surge management, and biosurveillance). A scenario has been provided in section “D” work plan, which applicants will use to develop their proposal to this component. The scenario is broad and focused on emerging infectious disease as that such an event is most likely to require federal support to respond. However, it is not CDC’s intent to restrict the use of this mechanism to infectious disease. As previously stated, CDC will provide additional information and supplemental guidance regarding its intent to implement this NOFO.
Upon occurrence of a significant public health emergency, CDC will establish and provide supplemental guidance specific to that emergency and can then rapidly fund specific applicants for start-up and specific interventions, mitigation, and other activities based on the particular situation and needs. Categories/functional areas to be addressed include, but are not limited to:

Staffing (e.g., Epidemiologists, Laboratorians, Health Communication Specialists, Planners, Logisticians, Public Health Nurses, etc.)
Equipment
Laboratory support
Risk communications
Surveillance
Technical assistance
Emergency response/operations
Mass dispensing
Technical assistance
Information technology
Vector control
Data entry and analysis

Link to Additional Information:
Grantor Contact Information: If you have difficulty accessing the full announcement electronically, please contact:

Celia Toles
crt3@cdc.gov

Email:crt3@cdc.gov

DISPLAYING: Synopsis 20

General Information

Document Type: Grants Notice
Funding Opportunity Number: CDC-RFA-TP18-1802
Funding Opportunity Title: Cooperative Agreement for Emergency Response: Public Health Crisis Response
Opportunity Category: Discretionary
Opportunity Category Explanation:
Funding Instrument Type: Cooperative Agreement
Category of Funding Activity: Health
Category Explanation:
Expected Number of Awards: 69
Assistance Listings: 93.354 — Public Health Emergency Response: Cooperative Agreement for Emergency Response: Public Health Crisis Response
Cost Sharing or Matching Requirement: No
Version: Synopsis 20
Posted Date: Oct 02, 2018
Last Updated Date: Jul 24, 2018
Original Closing Date for Applications:
Current Closing Date for Applications: Jul 31, 2018 Electronically submitted applications must be submitted no later than 5:00 p.m., ET, on the listed application due date.
Archive Date: Aug 29, 2018
Estimated Total Program Funding: $345,000,000
Award Ceiling: $5,000,000
Award Floor: $100,000

Eligibility

Eligible Applicants: County governments
State governments
Native American tribal governments (Federally recognized)
City or township governments
Additional Information on Eligibility: The eligible applicants to receive funding are limited to governmental public health departments that are constitutionally empowered to protect the health and welfare of their respective communities. Eligible applicants must have functional public health emergency management programs, legal authority, and already existing public health emergency management capacity, thus they are pre-positioned to act expeditiously to meet the requirements of this cooperative agreement. Administrative preparedness and existing public health emergency management capacity are integral components of the infrastructure of the entities that receive funding and this funding will give grantees additional capacity to respond to public health crises.The eligible entities are limited to the 50 state public health departments, local public health departments with current alignment to PHEP or ELC (includes Washington D.C.), and territorial governments in the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, the Commonwealth of the Northern Marianna Islands, American Samoa, Guam, the Federated States of Micronesia, the Republic of the Marshall Islands, and the Republic of Palau.In addition tribal governments meeting the requirements laid out in this NOFO and serving a population of at least 50,000 members are eligible to compete.Limited Source Competitions:State governments or their bona fide agents (N=50)Local health departments or their bona fide agents (N=6) (city or county) consistent with PHEP and ELC awardees, which include: Chicago Department of Public Health, Houston Department of Health and Human Services, L.A. County Department of Health Services – Public Health, New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, Philadelphia Department of Public Health, and Washington D.C. Department of HealthAmerican Indian or Alaska Native Federally recognized tribal governments or their bona fide agents that meet requirements listed in Section C.3 of this NOFO for Justification for Less than Maximum Competition and that serve, through their own PH infrastructure, at least 50,000 people (N~5)Territorial governments or their bona fide agents (N=8) in the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands, the Commonwealth of the Northern Marianna Islands, American Samoa, Guam, the Federated States of Micronesia, the Republic of the Marshall Islands, and the Republic of Palau

Additional Information

Agency Name: Centers for Disease Control – OPHPR
Description: CDC seeks to enhance the Nation’s ability to rapidly mobilize and respond to specific public health emergencies, which may include infectious disease outbreaks, pandemics, and other public health emergencies that exceed the capacity of jurisdictional public health resources. From experience through previous emergency events, CDC recognizes the impact that initial funding and immediate response can have in mitigating negative health outcomes. Thus, CDC is creating this Notice of Funding Opportunity (NOFO) to rapidly fund pre-approved applicants to address immediate and time-sensitive needs that are integral to specific public health responses. This NOFO is intended to fund jurisdictional public health departments for response to HHS Secretarial declared and nondeclared public health emergencies and other public health emergencies which CDC deems in accordance with the purpose of the NOFO.The award dates and project periods listed are subject to change and are contingent upon the occurence of a public health crisis as defined in this NOFO and the availability of funding for the response. Awardees would be approved but unfunded until a crisis occurs, enabling them to plan for emergency activation activities.CDC has strong relationships with state and local health departments, community-based organizations and other domestic partners and supports them for planning, capacity-building, preparedness, and response to public health emergencies. This support is provided through various programs including the Public Health Emergency Preparedness (PHEP) and the Epidemiology and Laboratory Capacity for Infectious Diseases (ELC) cooperative agreements. This new NOFO complements these ongoing capacity-building and response programs by providing a mechanism for CDC to rapidly mobilize and fund jurisdictions for specific response needs for specific public health emergencies. CDC will consider funding pre-award costs.This NOFO is comprised of two components: A and B. These components may be funded sequentially or simultaneously as determined by CDC regarding an identified specific public health emergency.Component A is focused on initial emergency response activation and stand-up activities routinely required in preparing for and responding to an impending or existing emergency. In response to Component A of this NOFO, applicants will describe/address initial activities required to strengthen incident management for crisis response, including but not limited to, emergency operations center (EOC) activation, staffing contracts, needs assessment, accelerated planning, call center activation, and strengthening jurisdictional recovery efforts.Component B is focused on the actions necessary to tackle a specific emergency. Applicants will address the crisis-specific response activities required to respond based on the four additional domains of the provided logic model (information management, countermeasures and mitigation, surge management, and biosurveillance). A scenario has been provided in section “D” work plan, which applicants will use to develop their proposal to this component. The scenario is broad and focused on emerging infectious disease as that such an event is most likely to require federal support to respond. However, it is not CDC’s intent to restrict the use of this mechanism to infectious disease. As previously stated, CDC will provide additional information and supplemental guidance regarding its intent to implement this NOFO.Upon occurrence of a significant public health emergency, CDC will establish and provide supplemental guidance specific to that emergency and can then rapidly fund specific applicants for start-up and specific interventions, mitigation, and other activities based on the particular situation and needs. Categories/functional areas to be addressed include, but are not limited to:Staffing (e.g., Epidemiologists, Laboratorians, Health Communication Specialists, Planners, Logisticians, Public Health Nurses, etc.)EquipmentLaboratory supportRisk communicationsSurveillanceTechnical assistanceEmergency response/operationsMass dispensingTechnical assistanceInformation technologyVector controlData entry and analysis
Link to Additional Information:
Grantor Contact Information: If you have difficulty accessing the full announcement electronically, please contact:

Celia Toles

crt3@cdc.gov

Email:crt3@cdc.gov

DISPLAYING: Synopsis 19

General Information

Document Type: Grants Notice
Funding Opportunity Number: CDC-RFA-TP18-1802
Funding Opportunity Title: Cooperative Agreement for Emergency Response: Public Health Crisis Response
Opportunity Category: Discretionary
Opportunity Category Explanation:
Funding Instrument Type: Cooperative Agreement
Category of Funding Activity: Health
Category Explanation:
Expected Number of Awards: 69
Assistance Listings: 93.354 — Public Health Emergency Response: Cooperative Agreement for Emergency Response: Public Health Crisis Response
Cost Sharing or Matching Requirement: No
Version: Synopsis 19
Posted Date: Jul 24, 2018
Last Updated Date: Jul 24, 2018
Original Closing Date for Applications:
Current Closing Date for Applications: Jul 31, 2018 Electronically submitted applications must be submitted no later than 5:00 p.m., ET, on the listed application due date.
Archive Date: Aug 29, 2018
Estimated Total Program Funding: $345,000,000
Award Ceiling: $5,000,000
Award Floor: $100,000

Eligibility

Eligible Applicants: County governments
State governments
Native American tribal governments (Federally recognized)
City or township governments
Additional Information on Eligibility: The eligible applicants to receive funding are limited to governmental public health departments that are constitutionally empowered to protect the health and welfare of their respective communities. Eligible applicants must have functional public health emergency management programs, legal authority, and already existing public health emergency management capacity, thus they are pre-positioned to act expeditiously to meet the requirements of this cooperative agreement. Administrative preparedness and existing public health emergency management capacity are integral components of the infrastructure of the entities that receive funding and this funding will give grantees additional capacity to respond to public health crises.The eligible entities are limited to the 50 state public health departments, local public health departments with current alignment to PHEP or ELC (includes Washington D.C.), and territorial governments in the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, the Commonwealth of the Northern Marianna Islands, American Samoa, Guam, the Federated States of Micronesia, the Republic of the Marshall Islands, and the Republic of Palau.In addition tribal governments meeting the requirements laid out in this NOFO and serving a population of at least 50,000 members are eligible to compete.Limited Source Competitions:State governments or their bona fide agents (N=50)Local health departments or their bona fide agents (N=6) (city or county) consistent with PHEP and ELC awardees, which include: Chicago Department of Public Health, Houston Department of Health and Human Services, L.A. County Department of Health Services – Public Health, New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, Philadelphia Department of Public Health, and Washington D.C. Department of HealthAmerican Indian or Alaska Native Federally recognized tribal governments or their bona fide agents that meet requirements listed in Section C.3 of this NOFO for Justification for Less than Maximum Competition and that serve, through their own PH infrastructure, at least 50,000 people (N~5)Territorial governments or their bona fide agents (N=8) in the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands, the Commonwealth of the Northern Marianna Islands, American Samoa, Guam, the Federated States of Micronesia, the Republic of the Marshall Islands, and the Republic of Palau

Additional Information

Agency Name: Centers for Disease Control – OPHPR
Description: CDC seeks to enhance the Nation’s ability to rapidly mobilize and respond to specific public health emergencies, which may include infectious disease outbreaks, pandemics, and other public health emergencies that exceed the capacity of jurisdictional public health resources. From experience through previous emergency events, CDC recognizes the impact that initial funding and immediate response can have in mitigating negative health outcomes. Thus, CDC is creating this Notice of Funding Opportunity (NOFO) to rapidly fund pre-approved applicants to address immediate and time-sensitive needs that are integral to specific public health responses. This NOFO is intended to fund jurisdictional public health departments for response to HHS Secretarial declared and nondeclared public health emergencies and other public health emergencies which CDC deems in accordance with the purpose of the NOFO.The award dates and project periods listed are subject to change and are contingent upon the occurence of a public health crisis as defined in this NOFO and the availability of funding for the response. Awardees would be approved but unfunded until a crisis occurs, enabling them to plan for emergency activation activities.CDC has strong relationships with state and local health departments, community-based organizations and other domestic partners and supports them for planning, capacity-building, preparedness, and response to public health emergencies. This support is provided through various programs including the Public Health Emergency Preparedness (PHEP) and the Epidemiology and Laboratory Capacity for Infectious Diseases (ELC) cooperative agreements. This new NOFO complements these ongoing capacity-building and response programs by providing a mechanism for CDC to rapidly mobilize and fund jurisdictions for specific response needs for specific public health emergencies. CDC will consider funding pre-award costs.This NOFO is comprised of two components: A and B. These components may be funded sequentially or simultaneously as determined by CDC regarding an identified specific public health emergency.Component A is focused on initial emergency response activation and stand-up activities routinely required in preparing for and responding to an impending or existing emergency. In response to Component A of this NOFO, applicants will describe/address initial activities required to strengthen incident management for crisis response, including but not limited to, emergency operations center (EOC) activation, staffing contracts, needs assessment, accelerated planning, call center activation, and strengthening jurisdictional recovery efforts.Component B is focused on the actions necessary to tackle a specific emergency. Applicants will address the crisis-specific response activities required to respond based on the four additional domains of the provided logic model (information management, countermeasures and mitigation, surge management, and biosurveillance). A scenario has been provided in section “D” work plan, which applicants will use to develop their proposal to this component. The scenario is broad and focused on emerging infectious disease as that such an event is most likely to require federal support to respond. However, it is not CDC’s intent to restrict the use of this mechanism to infectious disease. As previously stated, CDC will provide additional information and supplemental guidance regarding its intent to implement this NOFO.Upon occurrence of a significant public health emergency, CDC will establish and provide supplemental guidance specific to that emergency and can then rapidly fund specific applicants for start-up and specific interventions, mitigation, and other activities based on the particular situation and needs. Categories/functional areas to be addressed include, but are not limited to:Staffing (e.g., Epidemiologists, Laboratorians, Health Communication Specialists, Planners, Logisticians, Public Health Nurses, etc.)EquipmentLaboratory supportRisk communicationsSurveillanceTechnical assistanceEmergency response/operationsMass dispensingTechnical assistanceInformation technologyVector controlData entry and analysis
Link to Additional Information:
Grantor Contact Information: If you have difficulty accessing the full announcement electronically, please contact:

Celia Toles

crt3@cdc.gov

Email:crt3@cdc.gov

DISPLAYING: Synopsis 18

General Information

Document Type: Grants Notice
Funding Opportunity Number: CDC-RFA-TP18-1802
Funding Opportunity Title: Cooperative Agreement for Emergency Response: Public Health Crisis Response
Opportunity Category: Discretionary
Opportunity Category Explanation:
Funding Instrument Type: Cooperative Agreement
Category of Funding Activity: Health
Category Explanation:
Expected Number of Awards: 69
Assistance Listings: 93.354 — Public Health Emergency Response: Cooperative Agreement for Emergency Response: Public Health Crisis Response
Cost Sharing or Matching Requirement: No
Version: Synopsis 18
Posted Date: Jul 24, 2018
Last Updated Date: Jun 22, 2018
Original Closing Date for Applications:
Current Closing Date for Applications: Jul 30, 2018 Electronically submitted applications must be submitted no later than 5:00 p.m., ET, on the listed application due date.
Archive Date: Aug 29, 2018
Estimated Total Program Funding: $345,000,000
Award Ceiling: $5,000,000
Award Floor: $100,000

Eligibility

Eligible Applicants: County governments
State governments
Native American tribal governments (Federally recognized)
City or township governments
Additional Information on Eligibility: The eligible applicants to receive funding are limited to governmental public health departments that are constitutionally empowered to protect the health and welfare of their respective communities. Eligible applicants must have functional public health emergency management programs, legal authority, and already existing public health emergency management capacity, thus they are pre-positioned to act expeditiously to meet the requirements of this cooperative agreement. Administrative preparedness and existing public health emergency management capacity are integral components of the infrastructure of the entities that receive funding and this funding will give grantees additional capacity to respond to public health crises.The eligible entities are limited to the 50 state public health departments, local public health departments with current alignment to PHEP or ELC (includes Washington D.C.), and territorial governments in the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, the Commonwealth of the Northern Marianna Islands, American Samoa, Guam, the Federated States of Micronesia, the Republic of the Marshall Islands, and the Republic of Palau.In addition tribal governments meeting the requirements laid out in this NOFO and serving a population of at least 50,000 members are eligible to compete.Limited Source Competitions:State governments or their bona fide agents (N=50)Local health departments or their bona fide agents (N=6) (city or county) consistent with PHEP and ELC awardees, which include: Chicago Department of Public Health, Houston Department of Health and Human Services, L.A. County Department of Health Services – Public Health, New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, Philadelphia Department of Public Health, and Washington D.C. Department of HealthAmerican Indian or Alaska Native Federally recognized tribal governments or their bona fide agents that meet requirements listed in Section C.3 of this NOFO for Justification for Less than Maximum Competition and that serve, through their own PH infrastructure, at least 50,000 people (N~5)Territorial governments or their bona fide agents (N=8) in the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands, the Commonwealth of the Northern Marianna Islands, American Samoa, Guam, the Federated States of Micronesia, the Republic of the Marshall Islands, and the Republic of Palau

Additional Information

Agency Name: Centers for Disease Control – OPHPR
Description: CDC seeks to enhance the Nation’s ability to rapidly mobilize and respond to specific public health emergencies, which may include infectious disease outbreaks, pandemics, and other public health emergencies that exceed the capacity of jurisdictional public health resources. From experience through previous emergency events, CDC recognizes the impact that initial funding and immediate response can have in mitigating negative health outcomes. Thus, CDC is creating this Notice of Funding Opportunity (NOFO) to rapidly fund pre-approved applicants to address immediate and time-sensitive needs that are integral to specific public health responses. This NOFO is intended to fund jurisdictional public health departments for response to HHS Secretarial declared and nondeclared public health emergencies and other public health emergencies which CDC deems in accordance with the purpose of the NOFO.The award dates and project periods listed are subject to change and are contingent upon the occurence of a public health crisis as defined in this NOFO and the availability of funding for the response. Awardees would be approved but unfunded until a crisis occurs, enabling them to plan for emergency activation activities.CDC has strong relationships with state and local health departments, community-based organizations and other domestic partners and supports them for planning, capacity-building, preparedness, and response to public health emergencies. This support is provided through various programs including the Public Health Emergency Preparedness (PHEP) and the Epidemiology and Laboratory Capacity for Infectious Diseases (ELC) cooperative agreements. This new NOFO complements these ongoing capacity-building and response programs by providing a mechanism for CDC to rapidly mobilize and fund jurisdictions for specific response needs for specific public health emergencies. CDC will consider funding pre-award costs.This NOFO is comprised of two components: A and B. These components may be funded sequentially or simultaneously as determined by CDC regarding an identified specific public health emergency.Component A is focused on initial emergency response activation and stand-up activities routinely required in preparing for and responding to an impending or existing emergency. In response to Component A of this NOFO, applicants will describe/address initial activities required to strengthen incident management for crisis response, including but not limited to, emergency operations center (EOC) activation, staffing contracts, needs assessment, accelerated planning, call center activation, and strengthening jurisdictional recovery efforts.Component B is focused on the actions necessary to tackle a specific emergency. Applicants will address the crisis-specific response activities required to respond based on the four additional domains of the provided logic model (information management, countermeasures and mitigation, surge management, and biosurveillance). A scenario has been provided in section “D” work plan, which applicants will use to develop their proposal to this component. The scenario is broad and focused on emerging infectious disease as that such an event is most likely to require federal support to respond. However, it is not CDC’s intent to restrict the use of this mechanism to infectious disease. As previously stated, CDC will provide additional information and supplemental guidance regarding its intent to implement this NOFO.Upon occurrence of a significant public health emergency, CDC will establish and provide supplemental guidance specific to that emergency and can then rapidly fund specific applicants for start-up and specific interventions, mitigation, and other activities based on the particular situation and needs. Categories/functional areas to be addressed include, but are not limited to:Staffing (e.g., Epidemiologists, Laboratorians, Health Communication Specialists, Planners, Logisticians, Public Health Nurses, etc.)EquipmentLaboratory supportRisk communicationsSurveillanceTechnical assistanceEmergency response/operationsMass dispensingTechnical assistanceInformation technologyVector controlData entry and analysis
Link to Additional Information:
Grantor Contact Information: If you have difficulty accessing the full announcement electronically, please contact:

Celia Toles

crt3@cdc.gov

Email:crt3@cdc.gov

DISPLAYING: Synopsis 17

General Information

Document Type: Grants Notice
Funding Opportunity Number: CDC-RFA-TP18-1802
Funding Opportunity Title: Cooperative Agreement for Emergency Response: Public Health Crisis Response
Opportunity Category: Discretionary
Opportunity Category Explanation:
Funding Instrument Type: Cooperative Agreement
Category of Funding Activity: Health
Category Explanation:
Expected Number of Awards: 69
Assistance Listings: 93.354 — Public Health Emergency Response: Cooperative Agreement for Emergency Response: Public Health Crisis Response
Cost Sharing or Matching Requirement: No
Version: Synopsis 17
Posted Date: Jun 22, 2018
Last Updated Date: Jun 22, 2018
Original Closing Date for Applications:
Current Closing Date for Applications: Dec 11, 2017 Electronically submitted applications must be submitted no later than 5:00 p.m., ET, on the listed application due date.
Archive Date: Jan 10, 2018
Estimated Total Program Funding: $345,000,000
Award Ceiling: $5,000,000
Award Floor: $100,000

Eligibility

Eligible Applicants: County governments
State governments
Native American tribal governments (Federally recognized)
City or township governments
Additional Information on Eligibility: The eligible applicants to receive funding are limited to governmental public health departments that are constitutionally empowered to protect the health and welfare of their respective communities. Eligible applicants must have functional public health emergency management programs, legal authority, and already existing public health emergency management capacity, thus they are pre-positioned to act expeditiously to meet the requirements of this cooperative agreement. Administrative preparedness and existing public health emergency management capacity are integral components of the infrastructure of the entities that receive funding and this funding will give grantees additional capacity to respond to public health crises.The eligible entities are limited to the 50 state public health departments, local public health departments with current alignment to PHEP or ELC (includes Washington D.C.), and territorial governments in the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, the Commonwealth of the Northern Marianna Islands, American Samoa, Guam, the Federated States of Micronesia, the Republic of the Marshall Islands, and the Republic of Palau.In addition tribal governments meeting the requirements laid out in this NOFO and serving a population of at least 50,000 members are eligible to compete.Limited Source Competitions:State governments or their bona fide agents (N=50)Local health departments or their bona fide agents (N=6) (city or county) consistent with PHEP and ELC awardees, which include: Chicago Department of Public Health, Houston Department of Health and Human Services, L.A. County Department of Health Services – Public Health, New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, Philadelphia Department of Public Health, and Washington D.C. Department of HealthAmerican Indian or Alaska Native Federally recognized tribal governments or their bona fide agents that meet requirements listed in Section C.3 of this NOFO for Justification for Less than Maximum Competition and that serve, through their own PH infrastructure, at least 50,000 people (N~5)Territorial governments or their bona fide agents (N=8) in the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands, the Commonwealth of the Northern Marianna Islands, American Samoa, Guam, the Federated States of Micronesia, the Republic of the Marshall Islands, and the Republic of Palau

Additional Information

Agency Name: Centers for Disease Control – OPHPR
Description: CDC seeks to enhance the Nation’s ability to rapidly mobilize and respond to specific public health emergencies, which may include infectious disease outbreaks, pandemics, and other public health emergencies that exceed the capacity of jurisdictional public health resources. From experience through previous emergency events, CDC recognizes the impact that initial funding and immediate response can have in mitigating negative health outcomes. Thus, CDC is creating this Notice of Funding Opportunity (NOFO) to rapidly fund pre-approved applicants to address immediate and time-sensitive needs that are integral to specific public health responses. This NOFO is intended to fund jurisdictional public health departments for response to HHS Secretarial declared and nondeclared public health emergencies and other public health emergencies which CDC deems in accordance with the purpose of the NOFO.The award dates and project periods listed are subject to change and are contingent upon the occurence of a public health crisis as defined in this NOFO and the availability of funding for the response. Awardees would be approved but unfunded until a crisis occurs, enabling them to plan for emergency activation activities.CDC has strong relationships with state and local health departments, community-based organizations and other domestic partners and supports them for planning, capacity-building, preparedness, and response to public health emergencies. This support is provided through various programs including the Public Health Emergency Preparedness (PHEP) and the Epidemiology and Laboratory Capacity for Infectious Diseases (ELC) cooperative agreements. This new NOFO complements these ongoing capacity-building and response programs by providing a mechanism for CDC to rapidly mobilize and fund jurisdictions for specific response needs for specific public health emergencies. CDC will consider funding pre-award costs.This NOFO is comprised of two components: A and B. These components may be funded sequentially or simultaneously as determined by CDC regarding an identified specific public health emergency.Component A is focused on initial emergency response activation and stand-up activities routinely required in preparing for and responding to an impending or existing emergency. In response to Component A of this NOFO, applicants will describe/address initial activities required to strengthen incident management for crisis response, including but not limited to, emergency operations center (EOC) activation, staffing contracts, needs assessment, accelerated planning, call center activation, and strengthening jurisdictional recovery efforts.Component B is focused on the actions necessary to tackle a specific emergency. Applicants will address the crisis-specific response activities required to respond based on the four additional domains of the provided logic model (information management, countermeasures and mitigation, surge management, and biosurveillance). A scenario has been provided in section “D” work plan, which applicants will use to develop their proposal to this component. The scenario is broad and focused on emerging infectious disease as that such an event is most likely to require federal support to respond. However, it is not CDC’s intent to restrict the use of this mechanism to infectious disease. As previously stated, CDC will provide additional information and supplemental guidance regarding its intent to implement this NOFO.Upon occurrence of a significant public health emergency, CDC will establish and provide supplemental guidance specific to that emergency and can then rapidly fund specific applicants for start-up and specific interventions, mitigation, and other activities based on the particular situation and needs. Categories/functional areas to be addressed include, but are not limited to:Staffing (e.g., Epidemiologists, Laboratorians, Health Communication Specialists, Planners, Logisticians, Public Health Nurses, etc.)EquipmentLaboratory supportRisk communicationsSurveillanceTechnical assistanceEmergency response/operationsMass dispensingTechnical assistanceInformation technologyVector controlData entry and analysis
Link to Additional Information:
Grantor Contact Information: If you have difficulty accessing the full announcement electronically, please contact:

Celia Toles
crt3@cdc.gov

Email:crt3@cdc.gov

DISPLAYING: Synopsis 16

General Information

Document Type: Grants Notice
Funding Opportunity Number: CDC-RFA-TP18-1802
Funding Opportunity Title: Cooperative Agreement for Emergency Response: Public Health Crisis Response
Opportunity Category: Discretionary
Opportunity Category Explanation:
Funding Instrument Type: Cooperative Agreement
Category of Funding Activity: Health
Category Explanation:
Expected Number of Awards: 69
Assistance Listings: 93.354 — Public Health Emergency Response: Cooperative Agreement for Emergency Response: Public Health Crisis Response
Cost Sharing or Matching Requirement: No
Version: Synopsis 16
Posted Date: Jun 22, 2018
Last Updated Date: Jun 22, 2018
Original Closing Date for Applications:
Current Closing Date for Applications: Dec 11, 2017 Electronically submitted applications must be submitted no later than 5:00 p.m., ET, on the listed application due date.
Archive Date: Jan 10, 2018
Estimated Total Program Funding: $345,000,000
Award Ceiling: $5,000,000
Award Floor: $100,000

Eligibility

Eligible Applicants: County governments
State governments
Native American tribal governments (Federally recognized)
City or township governments
Additional Information on Eligibility: The eligible applicants to receive funding are limited to governmental public health departments that are constitutionally empowered to protect the health and welfare of their respective communities. Eligible applicants must have functional public health emergency management programs, legal authority, and already existing public health emergency management capacity, thus they are pre-positioned to act expeditiously to meet the requirements of this cooperative agreement. Administrative preparedness and existing public health emergency management capacity are integral components of the infrastructure of the entities that receive funding and this funding will give grantees additional capacity to respond to public health crises.The eligible entities are limited to the 50 state public health departments, local public health departments with current alignment to PHEP or ELC (includes Washington D.C.), and territorial governments in the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, the Commonwealth of the Northern Marianna Islands, American Samoa, Guam, the Federated States of Micronesia, the Republic of the Marshall Islands, and the Republic of Palau.In addition tribal governments meeting the requirements laid out in this NOFO and serving a population of at least 50,000 members are eligible to compete.Limited Source Competitions:State governments or their bona fide agents (N=50)Local health departments or their bona fide agents (N=6) (city or county) consistent with PHEP and ELC awardees, which include: Chicago Department of Public Health, Houston Department of Health and Human Services, L.A. County Department of Health Services – Public Health, New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, Philadelphia Department of Public Health, and Washington D.C. Department of HealthAmerican Indian or Alaska Native Federally recognized tribal governments or their bona fide agents that meet requirements listed in Section C.3 of this NOFO for Justification for Less than Maximum Competition and that serve, through their own PH infrastructure, at least 50,000 people (N~5)Territorial governments or their bona fide agents (N=8) in the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands, the Commonwealth of the Northern Marianna Islands, American Samoa, Guam, the Federated States of Micronesia, the Republic of the Marshall Islands, and the Republic of Palau

Additional Information

Agency Name: Centers for Disease Control – OPHPR
Description: CDC seeks to enhance the Nation’s ability to rapidly mobilize and respond to specific public health emergencies, which may include infectious disease outbreaks, pandemics, and other public health emergencies that exceed the capacity of jurisdictional public health resources. From experience through previous emergency events, CDC recognizes the impact that initial funding and immediate response can have in mitigating negative health outcomes. Thus, CDC is creating this Notice of Funding Opportunity (NOFO) to rapidly fund pre-approved applicants to address immediate and time-sensitive needs that are integral to specific public health responses. This NOFO is intended to fund jurisdictional public health departments for response to HHS Secretarial declared and nondeclared public health emergencies and other public health emergencies which CDC deems in accordance with the purpose of the NOFO.The award dates and project periods listed are subject to change and are contingent upon the occurence of a public health crisis as defined in this NOFO and the availability of funding for the response. Awardees would be approved but unfunded until a crisis occurs, enabling them to plan for emergency activation activities.CDC has strong relationships with state and local health departments, community-based organizations and other domestic partners and supports them for planning, capacity-building, preparedness, and response to public health emergencies. This support is provided through various programs including the Public Health Emergency Preparedness (PHEP) and the Epidemiology and Laboratory Capacity for Infectious Diseases (ELC) cooperative agreements. This new NOFO complements these ongoing capacity-building and response programs by providing a mechanism for CDC to rapidly mobilize and fund jurisdictions for specific response needs for specific public health emergencies. CDC will consider funding pre-award costs.This NOFO is comprised of two components: A and B. These components may be funded sequentially or simultaneously as determined by CDC regarding an identified specific public health emergency.Component A is focused on initial emergency response activation and stand-up activities routinely required in preparing for and responding to an impending or existing emergency. In response to Component A of this NOFO, applicants will describe/address initial activities required to strengthen incident management for crisis response, including but not limited to, emergency operations center (EOC) activation, staffing contracts, needs assessment, accelerated planning, call center activation, and strengthening jurisdictional recovery efforts.Component B is focused on the actions necessary to tackle a specific emergency. Applicants will address the crisis-specific response activities required to respond based on the four additional domains of the provided logic model (information management, countermeasures and mitigation, surge management, and biosurveillance). A scenario has been provided in section “D” work plan, which applicants will use to develop their proposal to this component. The scenario is broad and focused on emerging infectious disease as that such an event is most likely to require federal support to respond. However, it is not CDC’s intent to restrict the use of this mechanism to infectious disease. As previously stated, CDC will provide additional information and supplemental guidance regarding its intent to implement this NOFO.Upon occurrence of a significant public health emergency, CDC will establish and provide supplemental guidance specific to that emergency and can then rapidly fund specific applicants for start-up and specific interventions, mitigation, and other activities based on the particular situation and needs. Categories/functional areas to be addressed include, but are not limited to:Staffing (e.g., Epidemiologists, Laboratorians, Health Communication Specialists, Planners, Logisticians, Public Health Nurses, etc.)EquipmentLaboratory supportRisk communicationsSurveillanceTechnical assistanceEmergency response/operationsMass dispensingTechnical assistanceInformation technologyVector controlData entry and analysis
Link to Additional Information:
Grantor Contact Information: If you have difficulty accessing the full announcement electronically, please contact:

Celia Toles
crt3@cdc.gov

Email:crt3@cdc.gov

DISPLAYING: Synopsis 15

General Information

Document Type: Grants Notice
Funding Opportunity Number: CDC-RFA-TP18-1802
Funding Opportunity Title: Cooperative Agreement for Emergency Response: Public Health Crisis Response
Opportunity Category: Discretionary
Opportunity Category Explanation:
Funding Instrument Type: Cooperative Agreement
Category of Funding Activity: Health
Category Explanation:
Expected Number of Awards: 69
Assistance Listings: 93.354 — Public Health Emergency Response: Cooperative Agreement for Emergency Response: Public Health Crisis Response
Cost Sharing or Matching Requirement: No
Version: Synopsis 15
Posted Date: Jun 22, 2018
Last Updated Date: Jun 22, 2018
Original Closing Date for Applications:
Current Closing Date for Applications: Dec 11, 2017 Electronically submitted applications must be submitted no later than 5:00 p.m., ET, on the listed application due date.
Archive Date: Jan 10, 2018
Estimated Total Program Funding: $345,000,000
Award Ceiling: $5,000,000
Award Floor: $100,000

Eligibility

Eligible Applicants: County governments
State governments
Native American tribal governments (Federally recognized)
City or township governments
Additional Information on Eligibility: The eligible applicants to receive funding are limited to governmental public health departments that are constitutionally empowered to protect the health and welfare of their respective communities. Eligible applicants must have functional public health emergency management programs, legal authority, and already existing public health emergency management capacity, thus they are pre-positioned to act expeditiously to meet the requirements of this cooperative agreement. Administrative preparedness and existing public health emergency management capacity are integral components of the infrastructure of the entities that receive funding and this funding will give grantees additional capacity to respond to public health crises.The eligible entities are limited to the 50 state public health departments, local public health departments with current alignment to PHEP or ELC (includes Washington D.C.), and territorial governments in the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, the Commonwealth of the Northern Marianna Islands, American Samoa, Guam, the Federated States of Micronesia, the Republic of the Marshall Islands, and the Republic of Palau.In addition tribal governments meeting the requirements laid out in this NOFO and serving a population of at least 50,000 members are eligible to compete.Limited Source Competitions:State governments or their bona fide agents (N=50)Local health departments or their bona fide agents (N=6) (city or county) consistent with PHEP and ELC awardees, which include: Chicago Department of Public Health, Houston Department of Health and Human Services, L.A. County Department of Health Services – Public Health, New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, Philadelphia Department of Public Health, and Washington D.C. Department of HealthAmerican Indian or Alaska Native Federally recognized tribal governments or their bona fide agents that meet requirements listed in Section C.3 of this NOFO for Justification for Less than Maximum Competition and that serve, through their own PH infrastructure, at least 50,000 people (N~5)Territorial governments or their bona fide agents (N=8) in the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands, the Commonwealth of the Northern Marianna Islands, American Samoa, Guam, the Federated States of Micronesia, the Republic of the Marshall Islands, and the Republic of Palau

Additional Information

Agency Name: Centers for Disease Control – OPHPR
Description: CDC seeks to enhance the Nation’s ability to rapidly mobilize and respond to specific public health emergencies, which may include infectious disease outbreaks, pandemics, and other public health emergencies that exceed the capacity of jurisdictional public health resources. From experience through previous emergency events, CDC recognizes the impact that initial funding and immediate response can have in mitigating negative health outcomes. Thus, CDC is creating this Notice of Funding Opportunity (NOFO) to rapidly fund pre-approved applicants to address immediate and time-sensitive needs that are integral to specific public health responses. This NOFO is intended to fund jurisdictional public health departments for response to HHS Secretarial declared and nondeclared public health emergencies and other public health emergencies which CDC deems in accordance with the purpose of the NOFO.The award dates and project periods listed are subject to change and are contingent upon the occurence of a public health crisis as defined in this NOFO and the availability of funding for the response. Awardees would be approved but unfunded until a crisis occurs, enabling them to plan for emergency activation activities.CDC has strong relationships with state and local health departments, community-based organizations and other domestic partners and supports them for planning, capacity-building, preparedness, and response to public health emergencies. This support is provided through various programs including the Public Health Emergency Preparedness (PHEP) and the Epidemiology and Laboratory Capacity for Infectious Diseases (ELC) cooperative agreements. This new NOFO complements these ongoing capacity-building and response programs by providing a mechanism for CDC to rapidly mobilize and fund jurisdictions for specific response needs for specific public health emergencies. CDC will consider funding pre-award costs.This NOFO is comprised of two components: A and B. These components may be funded sequentially or simultaneously as determined by CDC regarding an identified specific public health emergency.Component A is focused on initial emergency response activation and stand-up activities routinely required in preparing for and responding to an impending or existing emergency. In response to Component A of this NOFO, applicants will describe/address initial activities required to strengthen incident management for crisis response, including but not limited to, emergency operations center (EOC) activation, staffing contracts, needs assessment, accelerated planning, call center activation, and strengthening jurisdictional recovery efforts.Component B is focused on the actions necessary to tackle a specific emergency. Applicants will address the crisis-specific response activities required to respond based on the four additional domains of the provided logic model (information management, countermeasures and mitigation, surge management, and biosurveillance). A scenario has been provided in section “D” work plan, which applicants will use to develop their proposal to this component. The scenario is broad and focused on emerging infectious disease as that such an event is most likely to require federal support to respond. However, it is not CDC’s intent to restrict the use of this mechanism to infectious disease. As previously stated, CDC will provide additional information and supplemental guidance regarding its intent to implement this NOFO.Upon occurrence of a significant public health emergency, CDC will establish and provide supplemental guidance specific to that emergency and can then rapidly fund specific applicants for start-up and specific interventions, mitigation, and other activities based on the particular situation and needs. Categories/functional areas to be addressed include, but are not limited to:Staffing (e.g., Epidemiologists, Laboratorians, Health Communication Specialists, Planners, Logisticians, Public Health Nurses, etc.)EquipmentLaboratory supportRisk communicationsSurveillanceTechnical assistanceEmergency response/operationsMass dispensingTechnical assistanceInformation technologyVector controlData entry and analysis
Link to Additional Information:
Grantor Contact Information: If you have difficulty accessing the full announcement electronically, please contact:

Celia Toles
crt3@cdc.gov

Email:crt3@cdc.gov

DISPLAYING: Synopsis 14

General Information

Document Type: Grants Notice
Funding Opportunity Number: CDC-RFA-TP18-1802
Funding Opportunity Title: Cooperative Agreement for Emergency Response: Public Health Crisis Response
Opportunity Category: Discretionary
Opportunity Category Explanation:
Funding Instrument Type: Cooperative Agreement
Category of Funding Activity: Health
Category Explanation:
Expected Number of Awards: 69
Assistance Listings: 93.354 — Public Health Emergency Response: Cooperative Agreement for Emergency Response: Public Health Crisis Response
Cost Sharing or Matching Requirement: No
Version: Synopsis 14
Posted Date: Jun 22, 2018
Last Updated Date: Jun 19, 2018
Original Closing Date for Applications:
Current Closing Date for Applications: Dec 11, 2017 Electronically submitted applications must be submitted no later than 5:00 p.m., ET, on the listed application due date.
Archive Date: Jan 10, 2018
Estimated Total Program Funding: $345,000,000
Award Ceiling: $5,000,000
Award Floor: $100,000

Eligibility

Eligible Applicants: County governments
State governments
Native American tribal governments (Federally recognized)
City or township governments
Additional Information on Eligibility: The eligible applicants to receive funding are limited to governmental public health departments that are constitutionally empowered to protect the health and welfare of their respective communities. Eligible applicants must have functional public health emergency management programs, legal authority, and already existing public health emergency management capacity, thus they are pre-positioned to act expeditiously to meet the requirements of this cooperative agreement. Administrative preparedness and existing public health emergency management capacity are integral components of the infrastructure of the entities that receive funding and this funding will give grantees additional capacity to respond to public health crises.
The eligible entities are limited to the 50 state public health departments, local public health departments with current alignment to PHEP or ELC (includes Washington D.C.), and territorial governments in the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, the Commonwealth of the Northern Marianna Islands, American Samoa, Guam, the Federated States of Micronesia, the Republic of the Marshall Islands, and the Republic of Palau.
In addition tribal governments meeting the requirements laid out in this NOFO and serving a population of at least 50,000 members are eligible to compete.
Limited Source Competitions:

State governments or their bona fide agents (N=50)
Local health departments or their bona fide agents (N=6) (city or county) consistent with PHEP and ELC awardees, which include: Chicago Department of Public Health, Houston Department of Health and Human Services, L.A. County Department of Health Services – Public Health, New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, Philadelphia Department of Public Health, and Washington D.C. Department of Health
American Indian or Alaska Native Federally recognized tribal governments or their bona fide agents that meet requirements listed in Section C.3 of this NOFO for Justification for Less than Maximum Competition and that serve, through their own PH infrastructure, at least 50,000 people (N~5)
Territorial governments or their bona fide agents (N=8) in the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands, the Commonwealth of the Northern Marianna Islands, American Samoa, Guam, the Federated States of Micronesia, the Republic of the Marshall Islands, and the Republic of Palau

Additional Information

Agency Name: Centers for Disease Control – OPHPR
Description: CDC seeks to enhance the Nation’s ability to rapidly mobilize and respond to specific public health emergencies, which may include infectious disease outbreaks, pandemics, and other public health emergencies that exceed the capacity of jurisdictional public health resources. From experience through previous emergency events, CDC recognizes the impact that initial funding and immediate response can have in mitigating negative health outcomes. Thus, CDC is creating this Notice of Funding Opportunity (NOFO) to rapidly fund pre-approved applicants to address immediate and time-sensitive needs that are integral to specific public health responses. This NOFO is intended to fund jurisdictional public health departments for response to HHS Secretarial declared and nondeclared public health emergencies and other public health emergencies which CDC deems in accordance with the purpose of the NOFO.
The award dates and project periods listed are subject to change and are contingent upon the occurence of a public health crisis as defined in this NOFO and the availability of funding for the response. Awardees would be approved but unfunded until a crisis occurs, enabling them to plan for emergency activation activities.
CDC has strong relationships with state and local health departments, community-based organizations and other domestic partners and supports them for planning, capacity-building, preparedness, and response to public health emergencies. This support is provided through various programs including the Public Health Emergency Preparedness (PHEP) and the Epidemiology and Laboratory Capacity for Infectious Diseases (ELC) cooperative agreements. This new NOFO complements these ongoing capacity-building and response programs by providing a mechanism for CDC to rapidly mobilize and fund jurisdictions for specific response needs for specific public health emergencies. CDC will consider funding pre-award costs.
This NOFO is comprised of two components: A and B. These components may be funded sequentially or simultaneously as determined by CDC regarding an identified specific public health emergency.
Component A is focused on initial emergency response activation and stand-up activities routinely required in preparing for and responding to an impending or existing emergency. In response to Component A of this NOFO, applicants will describe/address initial activities required to strengthen incident management for crisis response, including but not limited to, emergency operations center (EOC) activation, staffing contracts, needs assessment, accelerated planning, call center activation, and strengthening jurisdictional recovery efforts.
Component B is focused on the actions necessary to tackle a specific emergency. Applicants will address the crisis-specific response activities required to respond based on the four additional domains of the provided logic model (information management, countermeasures and mitigation, surge management, and biosurveillance). A scenario has been provided in section “D” work plan, which applicants will use to develop their proposal to this component. The scenario is broad and focused on emerging infectious disease as that such an event is most likely to require federal support to respond. However, it is not CDC’s intent to restrict the use of this mechanism to infectious disease. As previously stated, CDC will provide additional information and supplemental guidance regarding its intent to implement this NOFO.
Upon occurrence of a significant public health emergency, CDC will establish and provide supplemental guidance specific to that emergency and can then rapidly fund specific applicants for start-up and specific interventions, mitigation, and other activities based on the particular situation and needs. Categories/functional areas to be addressed include, but are not limited to:

Staffing (e.g., Epidemiologists, Laboratorians, Health Communication Specialists, Planners, Logisticians, Public Health Nurses, etc.)
Equipment
Laboratory support
Risk communications
Surveillance
Technical assistance
Emergency response/operations
Mass dispensing
Technical assistance
Information technology
Vector control
Data entry and analysis

Link to Additional Information:
Grantor Contact Information: If you have difficulty accessing the full announcement electronically, please contact:

Celia Toles
crt3@cdc.gov

Email:crt3@cdc.gov

DISPLAYING: Synopsis 13

General Information

Document Type: Grants Notice
Funding Opportunity Number: CDC-RFA-TP18-1802
Funding Opportunity Title: Cooperative Agreement for Emergency Response: Public Health Crisis Response
Opportunity Category: Discretionary
Opportunity Category Explanation:
Funding Instrument Type: Cooperative Agreement
Category of Funding Activity: Health
Category Explanation:
Expected Number of Awards: 69
Assistance Listings: 93.354 — Public Health Emergency Response: Cooperative Agreement for Emergency Response: Public Health Crisis Response
Cost Sharing or Matching Requirement: No
Version: Synopsis 13
Posted Date: Jun 19, 2018
Last Updated Date: May 15, 2018
Original Closing Date for Applications:
Current Closing Date for Applications: Dec 11, 2017 Electronically submitted applications must be submitted no later than 5:00 p.m., ET, on the listed application due date.
Archive Date: Jan 10, 2018
Estimated Total Program Funding: $345,000,000
Award Ceiling: $5,000,000
Award Floor: $100,000

Eligibility

Eligible Applicants: County governments
State governments
Native American tribal governments (Federally recognized)
City or township governments
Additional Information on Eligibility: The eligible applicants to receive funding are limited to governmental public health departments that are constitutionally empowered to protect the health and welfare of their respective communities. Eligible applicants must have functional public health emergency management programs, legal authority, and already existing public health emergency management capacity, thus they are pre-positioned to act expeditiously to meet the requirements of this cooperative agreement. Administrative preparedness and existing public health emergency management capacity are integral components of the infrastructure of the entities that receive funding and this funding will give grantees additional capacity to respond to public health crises.
The eligible entities are limited to the 50 state public health departments, local public health departments with current alignment to PHEP or ELC (includes Washington D.C.), and territorial governments in the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, the Commonwealth of the Northern Marianna Islands, American Samoa, Guam, the Federated States of Micronesia, the Republic of the Marshall Islands, and the Republic of Palau.
In addition tribal governments meeting the requirements laid out in this NOFO and serving a population of at least 50,000 members are eligible to compete.
Limited Source Competitions:

State governments or their bona fide agents (N=50)
Local health departments or their bona fide agents (N=6) (city or county) consistent with PHEP and ELC awardees, which include: Chicago Department of Public Health, Houston Department of Health and Human Services, L.A. County Department of Health Services – Public Health, New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, Philadelphia Department of Public Health, and Washington D.C. Department of Health
American Indian or Alaska Native Federally recognized tribal governments or their bona fide agents that meet requirements listed in Section C.3 of this NOFO for Justification for Less than Maximum Competition and that serve, through their own PH infrastructure, at least 50,000 people (N~5)
Territorial governments or their bona fide agents (N=8) in the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands, the Commonwealth of the Northern Marianna Islands, American Samoa, Guam, the Federated States of Micronesia, the Republic of the Marshall Islands, and the Republic of Palau

Additional Information

Agency Name: Centers for Disease Control – OPHPR
Description: CDC seeks to enhance the Nation’s ability to rapidly mobilize and respond to specific public health emergencies, which may include infectious disease outbreaks, pandemics, and other public health emergencies that exceed the capacity of jurisdictional public health resources. From experience through previous emergency events, CDC recognizes the impact that initial funding and immediate response can have in mitigating negative health outcomes. Thus, CDC is creating this Notice of Funding Opportunity (NOFO) to rapidly fund pre-approved applicants to address immediate and time-sensitive needs that are integral to specific public health responses. This NOFO is intended to fund jurisdictional public health departments for response to HHS Secretarial declared and nondeclared public health emergencies and other public health emergencies which CDC deems in accordance with the purpose of the NOFO.
The award dates and project periods listed are subject to change and are contingent upon the occurence of a public health crisis as defined in this NOFO and the availability of funding for the response. Awardees would be approved but unfunded until a crisis occurs, enabling them to plan for emergency activation activities.
CDC has strong relationships with state and local health departments, community-based organizations and other domestic partners and supports them for planning, capacity-building, preparedness, and response to public health emergencies. This support is provided through various programs including the Public Health Emergency Preparedness (PHEP) and the Epidemiology and Laboratory Capacity for Infectious Diseases (ELC) cooperative agreements. This new NOFO complements these ongoing capacity-building and response programs by providing a mechanism for CDC to rapidly mobilize and fund jurisdictions for specific response needs for specific public health emergencies. CDC will consider funding pre-award costs.
This NOFO is comprised of two components: A and B. These components may be funded sequentially or simultaneously as determined by CDC regarding an identified specific public health emergency.
Component A is focused on initial emergency response activation and stand-up activities routinely required in preparing for and responding to an impending or existing emergency. In response to Component A of this NOFO, applicants will describe/address initial activities required to strengthen incident management for crisis response, including but not limited to, emergency operations center (EOC) activation, staffing contracts, needs assessment, accelerated planning, call center activation, and strengthening jurisdictional recovery efforts.
Component B is focused on the actions necessary to tackle a specific emergency. Applicants will address the crisis-specific response activities required to respond based on the four additional domains of the provided logic model (information management, countermeasures and mitigation, surge management, and biosurveillance). A scenario has been provided in section “D” work plan, which applicants will use to develop their proposal to this component. The scenario is broad and focused on emerging infectious disease as that such an event is most likely to require federal support to respond. However, it is not CDC’s intent to restrict the use of this mechanism to infectious disease. As previously stated, CDC will provide additional information and supplemental guidance regarding its intent to implement this NOFO.
Upon occurrence of a significant public health emergency, CDC will establish and provide supplemental guidance specific to that emergency and can then rapidly fund specific applicants for start-up and specific interventions, mitigation, and other activities based on the particular situation and needs. Categories/functional areas to be addressed include, but are not limited to:

Staffing (e.g., Epidemiologists, Laboratorians, Health Communication Specialists, Planners, Logisticians, Public Health Nurses, etc.)
Equipment
Laboratory support
Risk communications
Surveillance
Technical assistance
Emergency response/operations
Mass dispensing
Technical assistance
Information technology
Vector control
Data entry and analysis

Link to Additional Information:
Grantor Contact Information: If you have difficulty accessing the full announcement electronically, please contact:

Celia Toles
crt3@cdc.gov

Email:crt3@cdc.gov

DISPLAYING: Synopsis 12

General Information

Document Type: Grants Notice
Funding Opportunity Number: CDC-RFA-TP18-1802
Funding Opportunity Title: Cooperative Agreement for Emergency Response: Public Health Crisis Response
Opportunity Category: Discretionary
Opportunity Category Explanation:
Funding Instrument Type: Cooperative Agreement
Category of Funding Activity: Health
Category Explanation:
Expected Number of Awards: 69
Assistance Listings: 93.354 — Public Health Emergency Response: Cooperative Agreement for Emergency Response: Public Health Crisis Response
Cost Sharing or Matching Requirement: No
Version: Synopsis 12
Posted Date: May 15, 2018
Last Updated Date: Mar 30, 2018
Original Closing Date for Applications:
Current Closing Date for Applications: Dec 11, 2017 Electronically submitted applications must be submitted no later than 5:00 p.m., ET, on the listed application due date.
Archive Date: Jan 10, 2018
Estimated Total Program Funding: $345,000,000
Award Ceiling: $5,000,000
Award Floor: $100,000

Eligibility

Eligible Applicants: County governments
State governments
Native American tribal governments (Federally recognized)
City or township governments
Additional Information on Eligibility: The eligible applicants to receive funding are limited to governmental public health departments that are constitutionally empowered to protect the health and welfare of their respective communities. Eligible applicants must have functional public health emergency management programs, legal authority, and already existing public health emergency management capacity, thus they are pre-positioned to act expeditiously to meet the requirements of this cooperative agreement. Administrative preparedness and existing public health emergency management capacity are integral components of the infrastructure of the entities that receive funding and this funding will give grantees additional capacity to respond to public health crises.
The eligible entities are limited to the 50 state public health departments, local public health departments with current alignment to PHEP or ELC (includes Washington D.C.), and territorial governments in the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, the Commonwealth of the Northern Marianna Islands, American Samoa, Guam, the Federated States of Micronesia, the Republic of the Marshall Islands, and the Republic of Palau.
In addition tribal governments meeting the requirements laid out in this NOFO and serving a population of at least 50,000 members are eligible to compete.
Limited Source Competitions:

State governments or their bona fide agents (N=50)
Local health departments or their bona fide agents (N=6) (city or county) consistent with PHEP and ELC awardees, which include: Chicago Department of Public Health, Houston Department of Health and Human Services, L.A. County Department of Health Services – Public Health, New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, Philadelphia Department of Public Health, and Washington D.C. Department of Health
American Indian or Alaska Native Federally recognized tribal governments or their bona fide agents that meet requirements listed in Section C.3 of this NOFO for Justification for Less than Maximum Competition and that serve, through their own PH infrastructure, at least 50,000 people (N~5)
Territorial governments or their bona fide agents (N=8) in the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands, the Commonwealth of the Northern Marianna Islands, American Samoa, Guam, the Federated States of Micronesia, the Republic of the Marshall Islands, and the Republic of Palau

Additional Information

Agency Name: Centers for Disease Control – OPHPR
Description: CDC seeks to enhance the Nation’s ability to rapidly mobilize and respond to specific public health emergencies, which may include infectious disease outbreaks, pandemics, and other public health emergencies that exceed the capacity of jurisdictional public health resources. From experience through previous emergency events, CDC recognizes the impact that initial funding and immediate response can have in mitigating negative health outcomes. Thus, CDC is creating this Notice of Funding Opportunity (NOFO) to rapidly fund pre-approved applicants to address immediate and time-sensitive needs that are integral to specific public health responses. This NOFO is intended to fund jurisdictional public health departments for response to HHS Secretarial declared and nondeclared public health emergencies and other public health emergencies which CDC deems in accordance with the purpose of the NOFO.
The award dates and project periods listed are subject to change and are contingent upon the occurence of a public health crisis as defined in this NOFO and the availability of funding for the response. Awardees would be approved but unfunded until a crisis occurs, enabling them to plan for emergency activation activities.
CDC has strong relationships with state and local health departments, community-based organizations and other domestic partners and supports them for planning, capacity-building, preparedness, and response to public health emergencies. This support is provided through various programs including the Public Health Emergency Preparedness (PHEP) and the Epidemiology and Laboratory Capacity for Infectious Diseases (ELC) cooperative agreements. This new NOFO complements these ongoing capacity-building and response programs by providing a mechanism for CDC to rapidly mobilize and fund jurisdictions for specific response needs for specific public health emergencies. CDC will consider funding pre-award costs.
This NOFO is comprised of two components: A and B. These components may be funded sequentially or simultaneously as determined by CDC regarding an identified specific public health emergency.
Component A is focused on initial emergency response activation and stand-up activities routinely required in preparing for and responding to an impending or existing emergency. In response to Component A of this NOFO, applicants will describe/address initial activities required to strengthen incident management for crisis response, including but not limited to, emergency operations center (EOC) activation, staffing contracts, needs assessment, accelerated planning, call center activation, and strengthening jurisdictional recovery efforts.
Component B is focused on the actions necessary to tackle a specific emergency. Applicants will address the crisis-specific response activities required to respond based on the four additional domains of the provided logic model (information management, countermeasures and mitigation, surge management, and biosurveillance). A scenario has been provided in section “D” work plan, which applicants will use to develop their proposal to this component. The scenario is broad and focused on emerging infectious disease as that such an event is most likely to require federal support to respond. However, it is not CDC’s intent to restrict the use of this mechanism to infectious disease. As previously stated, CDC will provide additional information and supplemental guidance regarding its intent to implement this NOFO.
Upon occurrence of a significant public health emergency, CDC will establish and provide supplemental guidance specific to that emergency and can then rapidly fund specific applicants for start-up and specific interventions, mitigation, and other activities based on the particular situation and needs. Categories/functional areas to be addressed include, but are not limited to:

Staffing (e.g., Epidemiologists, Laboratorians, Health Communication Specialists, Planners, Logisticians, Public Health Nurses, etc.)
Equipment
Laboratory support
Risk communications
Surveillance
Technical assistance
Emergency response/operations
Mass dispensing
Technical assistance
Information technology
Vector control
Data entry and analysis

Link to Additional Information:
Grantor Contact Information: If you have difficulty accessing the full announcement electronically, please contact:

Celia Toles
crt3@cdc.gov

Email:crt3@cdc.gov

DISPLAYING: Synopsis 11

General Information

Document Type: Grants Notice
Funding Opportunity Number: CDC-RFA-TP18-1802
Funding Opportunity Title: Cooperative Agreement for Emergency Response: Public Health Crisis Response
Opportunity Category: Discretionary
Opportunity Category Explanation:
Funding Instrument Type: Cooperative Agreement
Category of Funding Activity: Health
Category Explanation:
Expected Number of Awards: 69
Assistance Listings: 93.354 — Public Health Emergency Response: Cooperative Agreement for Emergency Response: Public Health Crisis Response
Cost Sharing or Matching Requirement: No
Version: Synopsis 11
Posted Date: Mar 30, 2018
Last Updated Date: Mar 30, 2018
Original Closing Date for Applications:
Current Closing Date for Applications: Dec 11, 2017 Electronically submitted applications must be submitted no later than 5:00 p.m., ET, on the listed application due date.
Archive Date: Jan 10, 2018
Estimated Total Program Funding: $345,000,000
Award Ceiling: $5,000,000
Award Floor: $100,000

Eligibility

Eligible Applicants: County governments
State governments
Native American tribal governments (Federally recognized)
City or township governments
Additional Information on Eligibility: The eligible applicants to receive funding are limited to governmental public health departments that are constitutionally empowered to protect the health and welfare of their respective communities. Eligible applicants must have functional public health emergency management programs, legal authority, and already existing public health emergency management capacity, thus they are pre-positioned to act expeditiously to meet the requirements of this cooperative agreement. Administrative preparedness and existing public health emergency management capacity are integral components of the infrastructure of the entities that receive funding and this funding will give grantees additional capacity to respond to public health crises.
The eligible entities are limited to the 50 state public health departments, local public health departments with current alignment to PHEP or ELC (includes Washington D.C.), and territorial governments in the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, the Commonwealth of the Northern Marianna Islands, American Samoa, Guam, the Federated States of Micronesia, the Republic of the Marshall Islands, and the Republic of Palau.
In addition tribal governments meeting the requirements laid out in this NOFO and serving a population of at least 50,000 members are eligible to compete.
Limited Source Competitions:

State governments or their bona fide agents (N=50)
Local health departments or their bona fide agents (N=6) (city or county) consistent with PHEP and ELC awardees, which include: Chicago Department of Public Health, Houston Department of Health and Human Services, L.A. County Department of Health Services – Public Health, New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, Philadelphia Department of Public Health, and Washington D.C. Department of Health
American Indian or Alaska Native Federally recognized tribal governments or their bona fide agents that meet requirements listed in Section C.3 of this NOFO for Justification for Less than Maximum Competition and that serve, through their own PH infrastructure, at least 50,000 people (N~5)
Territorial governments or their bona fide agents (N=8) in the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands, the Commonwealth of the Northern Marianna Islands, American Samoa, Guam, the Federated States of Micronesia, the Republic of the Marshall Islands, and the Republic of Palau

Additional Information

Agency Name: Centers for Disease Control – OPHPR
Description: CDC seeks to enhance the Nation’s ability to rapidly mobilize and respond to specific public health emergencies, which may include infectious disease outbreaks, pandemics, and other public health emergencies that exceed the capacity of jurisdictional public health resources. From experience through previous emergency events, CDC recognizes the impact that initial funding and immediate response can have in mitigating negative health outcomes. Thus, CDC is creating this Notice of Funding Opportunity (NOFO) to rapidly fund pre-approved applicants to address immediate and time-sensitive needs that are integral to specific public health responses. This NOFO is intended to fund jurisdictional public health departments for response to HHS Secretarial declared and nondeclared public health emergencies and other public health emergencies which CDC deems in accordance with the purpose of the NOFO.
The award dates and project periods listed are subject to change and are contingent upon the occurence of a public health crisis as defined in this NOFO and the availability of funding for the response. Awardees would be approved but unfunded until a crisis occurs, enabling them to plan for emergency activation activities.
CDC has strong relationships with state and local health departments, community-based organizations and other domestic partners and supports them for planning, capacity-building, preparedness, and response to public health emergencies. This support is provided through various programs including the Public Health Emergency Preparedness (PHEP) and the Epidemiology and Laboratory Capacity for Infectious Diseases (ELC) cooperative agreements. This new NOFO complements these ongoing capacity-building and response programs by providing a mechanism for CDC to rapidly mobilize and fund jurisdictions for specific response needs for specific public health emergencies. CDC will consider funding pre-award costs.
This NOFO is comprised of two components: A and B. These components may be funded sequentially or simultaneously as determined by CDC regarding an identified specific public health emergency.
Component A is focused on initial emergency response activation and stand-up activities routinely required in preparing for and responding to an impending or existing emergency. In response to Component A of this NOFO, applicants will describe/address initial activities required to strengthen incident management for crisis response, including but not limited to, emergency operations center (EOC) activation, staffing contracts, needs assessment, accelerated planning, call center activation, and strengthening jurisdictional recovery efforts.
Component B is focused on the actions necessary to tackle a specific emergency. Applicants will address the crisis-specific response activities required to respond based on the four additional domains of the provided logic model (information management, countermeasures and mitigation, surge management, and biosurveillance). A scenario has been provided in section “D” work plan, which applicants will use to develop their proposal to this component. The scenario is broad and focused on emerging infectious disease as that such an event is most likely to require federal support to respond. However, it is not CDC’s intent to restrict the use of this mechanism to infectious disease. As previously stated, CDC will provide additional information and supplemental guidance regarding its intent to implement this NOFO.
Upon occurrence of a significant public health emergency, CDC will establish and provide supplemental guidance specific to that emergency and can then rapidly fund specific applicants for start-up and specific interventions, mitigation, and other activities based on the particular situation and needs. Categories/functional areas to be addressed include, but are not limited to:

Staffing (e.g., Epidemiologists, Laboratorians, Health Communication Specialists, Planners, Logisticians, Public Health Nurses, etc.)
Equipment
Laboratory support
Risk communications
Surveillance
Technical assistance
Emergency response/operations
Mass dispensing
Technical assistance
Information technology
Vector control
Data entry and analysis

Link to Additional Information:
Grantor Contact Information: If you have difficulty accessing the full announcement electronically, please contact:

Celia Toles
crt3@cdc.gov

Email:crt3@cdc.gov

DISPLAYING: Synopsis 10

General Information

Document Type: Grants Notice
Funding Opportunity Number: CDC-RFA-TP18-1802
Funding Opportunity Title: Cooperative Agreement for Emergency Response: Public Health Crisis Response
Opportunity Category: Discretionary
Opportunity Category Explanation:
Funding Instrument Type: Cooperative Agreement
Category of Funding Activity: Health
Category Explanation:
Expected Number of Awards: 69
Assistance Listings: 93.354 — Public Health Emergency Response: Cooperative Agreement for Emergency Response: Public Health Crisis Response
Cost Sharing or Matching Requirement: No
Version: Synopsis 10
Posted Date: Mar 30, 2018
Last Updated Date: Dec 07, 2017
Original Closing Date for Applications:
Current Closing Date for Applications: Dec 11, 2017 Electronically submitted applications must be submitted no later than 11:59:00 p.m., ET, on the listed application due date.
Archive Date: Jan 10, 2018
Estimated Total Program Funding: $345,000,000
Award Ceiling: $5,000,000
Award Floor: $100,000

Eligibility

Eligible Applicants: County governments
State governments
Native American tribal governments (Federally recognized)
City or township governments
Additional Information on Eligibility: The eligible applicants to receive funding are limited to governmental public health departments that are constitutionally empowered to protect the health and welfare of their respective communities. Eligible applicants must have functional public health emergency management programs, legal authority, and already existing public health emergency management capacity, thus they are pre-positioned to act expeditiously to meet the requirements of this cooperative agreement. Administrative preparedness and existing public health emergency management capacity are integral components of the infrastructure of the entities that receive funding and this funding will give grantees additional capacity to respond to public health crises.The eligible entities are limited to the 50 state public health departments, local public health departments with current alignment to PHEP or ELC (includes Washington D.C.), and territorial governments in the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, the Commonwealth of the Northern Marianna Islands, American Samoa, Guam, the Federated States of Micronesia, the Republic of the Marshall Islands, and the Republic of Palau.In addition tribal governments meeting the requirements laid out in this NOFO and serving a population of at least 50,000 members are eligible to compete.Limited Source Competitions:State governments or their bona fide agents (N=50)Local health departments or their bona fide agents (N=6) (city or county) consistent with PHEP and ELC awardees, which include: Chicago Department of Public Health, Houston Department of Health and Human Services, L.A. County Department of Health Services – Public Health, New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, Philadelphia Department of Public Health, and Washington D.C. Department of HealthAmerican Indian or Alaska Native Federally recognized tribal governments or their bona fide agents that meet requirements listed in Section C.3 of this NOFO for Justification for Less than Maximum Competition and that serve, through their own PH infrastructure, at least 50,000 people (N~5)Territorial governments or their bona fide agents (N=8) in the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands, the Commonwealth of the Northern Marianna Islands, American Samoa, Guam, the Federated States of Micronesia, the Republic of the Marshall Islands, and the Republic of Palau

Additional Information

Agency Name: Centers for Disease Control – OPHPR
Description: CDC seeks to enhance the Nation’s ability to rapidly mobilize and respond to specific public health emergencies, which may include infectious disease outbreaks, pandemics, and other public health emergencies that exceed the capacity of jurisdictional public health resources. From experience through previous emergency events, CDC recognizes the impact that initial funding and immediate response can have in mitigating negative health outcomes. Thus, CDC is creating this Notice of Funding Opportunity (NOFO) to rapidly fund pre-approved applicants to address immediate and time-sensitive needs that are integral to specific public health responses. This NOFO is intended to fund jurisdictional public health departments for response to HHS Secretarial declared and nondeclared public health emergencies and other public health emergencies which CDC deems in accordance with the purpose of the NOFO.The award dates and project periods listed are subject to change and are contingent upon the occurence of a public health crisis as defined in this NOFO and the availability of funding for the response. Awardees would be approved but unfunded until a crisis occurs, enabling them to plan for emergency activation activities.CDC has strong relationships with state and local health departments, community-based organizations and other domestic partners and supports them for planning, capacity-building, preparedness, and response to public health emergencies. This support is provided through various programs including the Public Health Emergency Preparedness (PHEP) and the Epidemiology and Laboratory Capacity for Infectious Diseases (ELC) cooperative agreements. This new NOFO complements these ongoing capacity-building and response programs by providing a mechanism for CDC to rapidly mobilize and fund jurisdictions for specific response needs for specific public health emergencies. CDC will consider funding pre-award costs.This NOFO is comprised of two components: A and B. These components may be funded sequentially or simultaneously as determined by CDC regarding an identified specific public health emergency.Component A is focused on initial emergency response activation and stand-up activities routinely required in preparing for and responding to an impending or existing emergency. In response to Component A of this NOFO, applicants will describe/address initial activities required to strengthen incident management for crisis response, including but not limited to, emergency operations center (EOC) activation, staffing contracts, needs assessment, accelerated planning, call center activation, and strengthening jurisdictional recovery efforts.Component B is focused on the actions necessary to tackle a specific emergency. Applicants will address the crisis-specific response activities required to respond based on the four additional domains of the provided logic model (information management, countermeasures and mitigation, surge management, and biosurveillance). A scenario has been provided in section “D” work plan, which applicants will use to develop their proposal to this component. The scenario is broad and focused on emerging infectious disease as that such an event is most likely to require federal support to respond. However, it is not CDC’s intent to restrict the use of this mechanism to infectious disease. As previously stated, CDC will provide additional information and supplemental guidance regarding its intent to implement this NOFO.Upon occurrence of a significant public health emergency, CDC will establish and provide supplemental guidance specific to that emergency and can then rapidly fund specific applicants for start-up and specific interventions, mitigation, and other activities based on the particular situation and needs. Categories/functional areas to be addressed include, but are not limited to:Staffing (e.g., Epidemiologists, Laboratorians, Health Communication Specialists, Planners, Logisticians, Public Health Nurses, etc.)EquipmentLaboratory supportRisk communicationsSurveillanceTechnical assistanceEmergency response/operationsMass dispensingTechnical assistanceInformation technologyVector controlData entry and analysis
Link to Additional Information: .
Grantor Contact Information: If you have difficulty accessing the full announcement electronically, please contact:

Celia Toles

crt3@cdc.gov

Email:crt3@cdc.gov

DISPLAYING: Synopsis 9

General Information

Document Type: Grants Notice
Funding Opportunity Number: CDC-RFA-TP18-1802
Funding Opportunity Title: Cooperative Agreement for Emergency Response: Public Health Crisis Response
Opportunity Category: Discretionary
Opportunity Category Explanation:
Funding Instrument Type: Cooperative Agreement
Category of Funding Activity: Health
Category Explanation:
Expected Number of Awards: 69
Assistance Listings: 93.354 — Public Health Emergency Response: Cooperative Agreement for Emergency Response: Public Health Crisis Response
Cost Sharing or Matching Requirement: No
Version: Synopsis 9
Posted Date: Dec 07, 2017
Last Updated Date: Dec 07, 2017
Original Closing Date for Applications:
Current Closing Date for Applications: Dec 11, 2017 Electronically submitted applications must be submitted no later than 11:59:00 p.m., ET, on the listed application due date.
Archive Date: Jan 10, 2018
Estimated Total Program Funding: $345,000,000
Award Ceiling: $5,000,000
Award Floor: $100,000

Eligibility

Eligible Applicants: County governments
State governments
Native American tribal governments (Federally recognized)
City or township governments
Additional Information on Eligibility: The eligible applicants to receive funding are limited to governmental public health departments that are constitutionally empowered to protect the health and welfare of their respective communities. Eligible applicants must have functional public health emergency management programs, legal authority, and already existing public health emergency management capacity, thus they are pre-positioned to act expeditiously to meet the requirements of this cooperative agreement. Administrative preparedness and existing public health emergency management capacity are integral components of the infrastructure of the entities that receive funding and this funding will give grantees additional capacity to respond to public health crises.The eligible entities are limited to the 50 state public health departments, local public health departments with current alignment to PHEP or ELC (includes Washington D.C.), and territorial governments in the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, the Commonwealth of the Northern Marianna Islands, American Samoa, Guam, the Federated States of Micronesia, the Republic of the Marshall Islands, and the Republic of Palau.In addition tribal governments meeting the requirements laid out in this NOFO and serving a population of at least 50,000 members are eligible to compete.Limited Source Competitions:State governments or their bona fide agents (N=50)Local health departments or their bona fide agents (N=6) (city or county) consistent with PHEP and ELC awardees, which include: Chicago Department of Public Health, Houston Department of Health and Human Services, L.A. County Department of Health Services – Public Health, New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, Philadelphia Department of Public Health, and Washington D.C. Department of HealthAmerican Indian or Alaska Native Federally recognized tribal governments or their bona fide agents that meet requirements listed in Section C.3 of this NOFO for Justification for Less than Maximum Competition and that serve, through their own PH infrastructure, at least 50,000 people (N~5)Territorial governments or their bona fide agents (N=8) in the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands, the Commonwealth of the Northern Marianna Islands, American Samoa, Guam, the Federated States of Micronesia, the Republic of the Marshall Islands, and the Republic of Palau

Additional Information

Agency Name: Centers for Disease Control – OPHPR
Description: CDC seeks to enhance the Nation’s ability to rapidly mobilize and respond to specific public health emergencies, which may include infectious disease outbreaks, pandemics, and other public health emergencies that exceed the capacity of jurisdictional public health resources. From experience through previous emergency events, CDC recognizes the impact that initial funding and immediate response can have in mitigating negative health outcomes. Thus, CDC is creating this Notice of Funding Opportunity (NOFO) to rapidly fund pre-approved applicants to address immediate and time-sensitive needs that are integral to specific public health responses. This NOFO is intended to fund jurisdictional public health departments for response to HHS Secretarial declared and nondeclared public health emergencies and other public health emergencies which CDC deems in accordance with the purpose of the NOFO.The award dates and project periods listed are subject to change and are contingent upon the occurence of a public health crisis as defined in this NOFO and the availability of funding for the response. Awardees would be approved but unfunded until a crisis occurs, enabling them to plan for emergency activation activities.CDC has strong relationships with state and local health departments, community-based organizations and other domestic partners and supports them for planning, capacity-building, preparedness, and response to public health emergencies. This support is provided through various programs including the Public Health Emergency Preparedness (PHEP) and the Epidemiology and Laboratory Capacity for Infectious Diseases (ELC) cooperative agreements. This new NOFO complements these ongoing capacity-building and response programs by providing a mechanism for CDC to rapidly mobilize and fund jurisdictions for specific response needs for specific public health emergencies. CDC will consider funding pre-award costs.This NOFO is comprised of two components: A and B. These components may be funded sequentially or simultaneously as determined by CDC regarding an identified specific public health emergency.Component A is focused on initial emergency response activation and stand-up activities routinely required in preparing for and responding to an impending or existing emergency. In response to Component A of this NOFO, applicants will describe/address initial activities required to strengthen incident management for crisis response, including but not limited to, emergency operations center (EOC) activation, staffing contracts, needs assessment, accelerated planning, call center activation, and strengthening jurisdictional recovery efforts.Component B is focused on the actions necessary to tackle a specific emergency. Applicants will address the crisis-specific response activities required to respond based on the four additional domains of the provided logic model (information management, countermeasures and mitigation, surge management, and biosurveillance). A scenario has been provided in section “D” work plan, which applicants will use to develop their proposal to this component. The scenario is broad and focused on emerging infectious disease as that such an event is most likely to require federal support to respond. However, it is not CDC’s intent to restrict the use of this mechanism to infectious disease. As previously stated, CDC will provide additional information and supplemental guidance regarding its intent to implement this NOFO.Upon occurrence of a significant public health emergency, CDC will establish and provide supplemental guidance specific to that emergency and can then rapidly fund specific applicants for start-up and specific interventions, mitigation, and other activities based on the particular situation and needs. Categories/functional areas to be addressed include, but are not limited to:Staffing (e.g., Epidemiologists, Laboratorians, Health Communication Specialists, Planners, Logisticians, Public Health Nurses, etc.)EquipmentLaboratory supportRisk communicationsSurveillanceTechnical assistanceEmergency response/operationsMass dispensingTechnical assistanceInformation technologyVector controlData entry and analysis
Link to Additional Information: .
Grantor Contact Information: If you have difficulty accessing the full announcement electronically, please contact:

Celia Toles

crt3@cdc.gov

Email:crt3@cdc.gov

DISPLAYING: Synopsis 8

General Information

Document Type: Grants Notice
Funding Opportunity Number: CDC-RFA-TP18-1802
Funding Opportunity Title: Cooperative Agreement for Emergency Response: Public Health Crisis Response
Opportunity Category: Discretionary
Opportunity Category Explanation:
Funding Instrument Type: Cooperative Agreement
Category of Funding Activity: Health
Category Explanation:
Expected Number of Awards: 69
Assistance Listings: 93.354 — Public Health Emergency Response: Cooperative Agreement for Emergency Response: Public Health Crisis Response
Cost Sharing or Matching Requirement: No
Version: Synopsis 8
Posted Date: Dec 07, 2017
Last Updated Date: Nov 30, 2017
Original Closing Date for Applications:
Current Closing Date for Applications: Dec 11, 2017 Electronically submitted applications must be submitted no later than 5:00 p.m., ET, on the listed application due date.
Archive Date: Jan 10, 2018
Estimated Total Program Funding: $345,000,000
Award Ceiling: $5,000,000
Award Floor: $100,000

Eligibility

Eligible Applicants: County governments
State governments
Native American tribal governments (Federally recognized)
City or township governments
Additional Information on Eligibility: The eligible applicants to receive funding are limited to governmental public health departments that are constitutionally empowered to protect the health and welfare of their respective communities. Eligible applicants must have functional public health emergency management programs, legal authority, and already existing public health emergency management capacity, thus they are pre-positioned to act expeditiously to meet the requirements of this cooperative agreement. Administrative preparedness and existing public health emergency management capacity are integral components of the infrastructure of the entities that receive funding and this funding will give grantees additional capacity to respond to public health crises.
The eligible entities are limited to the 50 state public health departments, local public health departments with current alignment to PHEP or ELC (includes Washington D.C.), and territorial governments in the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, the Commonwealth of the Northern Marianna Islands, American Samoa, Guam, the Federated States of Micronesia, the Republic of the Marshall Islands, and the Republic of Palau.
In addition tribal governments meeting the requirements laid out in this NOFO and serving a population of at least 50,000 members are eligible to compete.
Limited Source Competitions:

State governments or their bona fide agents (N=50)
Local health departments or their bona fide agents (N=6) (city or county) consistent with PHEP and ELC awardees, which include: Chicago Department of Public Health, Houston Department of Health and Human Services, L.A. County Department of Health Services – Public Health, New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, Philadelphia Department of Public Health, and Washington D.C. Department of Health
American Indian or Alaska Native Federally recognized tribal governments or their bona fide agents that meet requirements listed in Section C.3 of this NOFO for Justification for Less than Maximum Competition and that serve, through their own PH infrastructure, at least 50,000 people (N~5)
Territorial governments or their bona fide agents (N=8) in the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands, the Commonwealth of the Northern Marianna Islands, American Samoa, Guam, the Federated States of Micronesia, the Republic of the Marshall Islands, and the Republic of Palau

Additional Information

Agency Name: Centers for Disease Control – OPHPR
Description: CDC seeks to enhance the Nation’s ability to rapidly mobilize and respond to specific public health emergencies, which may include infectious disease outbreaks, pandemics, and other public health emergencies that exceed the capacity of jurisdictional public health resources. From experience through previous emergency events, CDC recognizes the impact that initial funding and immediate response can have in mitigating negative health outcomes. Thus, CDC is creating this Notice of Funding Opportunity (NOFO) to rapidly fund pre-approved applicants to address immediate and time-sensitive needs that are integral to specific public health responses. This NOFO is intended to fund jurisdictional public health departments for response to HHS Secretarial declared and nondeclared public health emergencies and other public health emergencies which CDC deems in accordance with the purpose of the NOFO.
The award dates and project periods listed are subject to change and are contingent upon the occurence of a public health crisis as defined in this NOFO and the availability of funding for the response. Awardees would be approved but unfunded until a crisis occurs, enabling them to plan for emergency activation activities.
CDC has strong relationships with state and local health departments, community-based organizations and other domestic partners and supports them for planning, capacity-building, preparedness, and response to public health emergencies. This support is provided through various programs including the Public Health Emergency Preparedness (PHEP) and the Epidemiology and Laboratory Capacity for Infectious Diseases (ELC) cooperative agreements. This new NOFO complements these ongoing capacity-building and response programs by providing a mechanism for CDC to rapidly mobilize and fund jurisdictions for specific response needs for specific public health emergencies. CDC will consider funding pre-award costs.
This NOFO is comprised of two components: A and B. These components may be funded sequentially or simultaneously as determined by CDC regarding an identified specific public health emergency.
Component A is focused on initial emergency response activation and stand-up activities routinely required in preparing for and responding to an impending or existing emergency. In response to Component A of this NOFO, applicants will describe/address initial activities required to strengthen incident management for crisis response, including but not limited to, emergency operations center (EOC) activation, staffing contracts, needs assessment, accelerated planning, call center activation, and strengthening jurisdictional recovery efforts.
Component B is focused on the actions necessary to tackle a specific emergency. Applicants will address the crisis-specific response activities required to respond based on the four additional domains of the provided logic model (information management, countermeasures and mitigation, surge management, and biosurveillance). A scenario has been provided in section “D” work plan, which applicants will use to develop their proposal to this component. The scenario is broad and focused on emerging infectious disease as that such an event is most likely to require federal support to respond. However, it is not CDC’s intent to restrict the use of this mechanism to infectious disease. As previously stated, CDC will provide additional information and supplemental guidance regarding its intent to implement this NOFO.
Upon occurrence of a significant public health emergency, CDC will establish and provide supplemental guidance specific to that emergency and can then rapidly fund specific applicants for start-up and specific interventions, mitigation, and other activities based on the particular situation and needs. Categories/functional areas to be addressed include, but are not limited to:

Staffing (e.g., Epidemiologists, Laboratorians, Health Communication Specialists, Planners, Logisticians, Public Health Nurses, etc.)
Equipment
Laboratory support
Risk communications
Surveillance
Technical assistance
Emergency response/operations
Mass dispensing
Technical assistance
Information technology
Vector control
Data entry and analysis

Link to Additional Information: .
Grantor Contact Information: If you have difficulty accessing the full announcement electronically, please contact:

Celia Toles
crt3@cdc.gov

Email:crt3@cdc.gov

DISPLAYING: Synopsis 7

General Information

Document Type: Grants Notice
Funding Opportunity Number: CDC-RFA-TP18-1802
Funding Opportunity Title: Cooperative Agreement for Emergency Response: Public Health Crisis Response
Opportunity Category: Discretionary
Opportunity Category Explanation:
Funding Instrument Type: Cooperative Agreement
Category of Funding Activity: Health
Category Explanation:
Expected Number of Awards: 69
Assistance Listings: 93.354 — Public Health Emergency Response: Cooperative Agreement for Emergency Response: Public Health Crisis Response
Cost Sharing or Matching Requirement: No
Version: Synopsis 7
Posted Date: Nov 30, 2017
Last Updated Date: Nov 30, 2017
Original Closing Date for Applications:
Current Closing Date for Applications: Dec 11, 2017 Electronically submitted applications must be submitted no later than 5:00 p.m., ET, on the listed application due date.
Archive Date: Jan 10, 2018
Estimated Total Program Funding: $345,000,000
Award Ceiling: $5,000,000
Award Floor: $100,000

Eligibility

Eligible Applicants: County governments
State governments
Native American tribal governments (Federally recognized)
City or township governments
Additional Information on Eligibility: The eligible applicants to receive funding are limited to governmental public health departments that are constitutionally empowered to protect the health and welfare of their respective communities. Eligible applicants must have functional public health emergency management programs, legal authority, and already existing public health emergency management capacity, thus they are pre-positioned to act expeditiously to meet the requirements of this cooperative agreement. Administrative preparedness and existing public health emergency management capacity are integral components of the infrastructure of the entities that receive funding and this funding will give grantees additional capacity to respond to public health crises.The eligible entities are limited to the 50 state public health departments, local public health departments with current alignment to PHEP or ELC (includes Washington D.C.), and territorial governments in the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, the Commonwealth of the Northern Marianna Islands, American Samoa, Guam, the Federated States of Micronesia, the Republic of the Marshall Islands, and the Republic of Palau.In addition tribal governments meeting the requirements laid out in this NOFO and serving a population of at least 50,000 members are eligible to compete.Limited Source Competitions:State governments or their bona fide agents (N=50)Local health departments or their bona fide agents (N=6) (city or county) consistent with PHEP and ELC awardees, which include: Chicago Department of Public Health, Houston Department of Health and Human Services, L.A. County Department of Health Services – Public Health, New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, Philadelphia Department of Public Health, and Washington D.C. Department of HealthAmerican Indian or Alaska Native Federally recognized tribal governments or their bona fide agents that meet requirements listed in Section C.3 of this NOFO for Justification for Less than Maximum Competition and that serve, through their own PH infrastructure, at least 50,000 people (N~5)Territorial governments or their bona fide agents (N=8) in the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands, the Commonwealth of the Northern Marianna Islands, American Samoa, Guam, the Federated States of Micronesia, the Republic of the Marshall Islands, and the Republic of Palau

Additional Information

Agency Name: Centers for Disease Control – OPHPR
Description: CDC seeks to enhance the Nation’s ability to rapidly mobilize and respond to specific public health emergencies, which may include infectious disease outbreaks, pandemics, and other public health emergencies that exceed the capacity of jurisdictional public health resources. From experience through previous emergency events, CDC recognizes the impact that initial funding and immediate response can have in mitigating negative health outcomes. Thus, CDC is creating this Notice of Funding Opportunity (NOFO) to rapidly fund pre-approved applicants to address immediate and time-sensitive needs that are integral to specific public health responses. This NOFO is intended to fund jurisdictional public health departments for response to HHS Secretarial declared and nondeclared public health emergencies and other public health emergencies which CDC deems in accordance with the purpose of the NOFO.The award dates and project periods listed are subject to change and are contingent upon the occurence of a public health crisis as defined in this NOFO and the availability of funding for the response. Awardees would be approved but unfunded until a crisis occurs, enabling them to plan for emergency activation activities.CDC has strong relationships with state and local health departments, community-based organizations and other domestic partners and supports them for planning, capacity-building, preparedness, and response to public health emergencies. This support is provided through various programs including the Public Health Emergency Preparedness (PHEP) and the Epidemiology and Laboratory Capacity for Infectious Diseases (ELC) cooperative agreements. This new NOFO complements these ongoing capacity-building and response programs by providing a mechanism for CDC to rapidly mobilize and fund jurisdictions for specific response needs for specific public health emergencies. CDC will consider funding pre-award costs.This NOFO is comprised of two components: A and B. These components may be funded sequentially or simultaneously as determined by CDC regarding an identified specific public health emergency.Component A is focused on initial emergency response activation and stand-up activities routinely required in preparing for and responding to an impending or existing emergency. In response to Component A of this NOFO, applicants will describe/address initial activities required to strengthen incident management for crisis response, including but not limited to, emergency operations center (EOC) activation, staffing contracts, needs assessment, accelerated planning, call center activation, and strengthening jurisdictional recovery efforts.Component B is focused on the actions necessary to tackle a specific emergency. Applicants will address the crisis-specific response activities required to respond based on the four additional domains of the provided logic model (information management, countermeasures and mitigation, surge management, and biosurveillance). A scenario has been provided in section “D” work plan, which applicants will use to develop their proposal to this component. The scenario is broad and focused on emerging infectious disease as that such an event is most likely to require federal support to respond. However, it is not CDC’s intent to restrict the use of this mechanism to infectious disease. As previously stated, CDC will provide additional information and supplemental guidance regarding its intent to implement this NOFO.Upon occurrence of a significant public health emergency, CDC will establish and provide supplemental guidance specific to that emergency and can then rapidly fund specific applicants for start-up and specific interventions, mitigation, and other activities based on the particular situation and needs. Categories/functional areas to be addressed include, but are not limited to:Staffing (e.g., Epidemiologists, Laboratorians, Health Communication Specialists, Planners, Logisticians, Public Health Nurses, etc.)EquipmentLaboratory supportRisk communicationsSurveillanceTechnical assistanceEmergency response/operationsMass dispensingTechnical assistanceInformation technologyVector controlData entry and analysis
Link to Additional Information: .
Grantor Contact Information: If you have difficulty accessing the full announcement electronically, please contact:

Celia Toles

crt3@cdc.gov

Email:crt3@cdc.gov

DISPLAYING: Synopsis 6

General Information

Document Type: Grants Notice
Funding Opportunity Number: CDC-RFA-TP18-1802
Funding Opportunity Title: Cooperative Agreement for Emergency Response: Public Health Crisis Response
Opportunity Category: Discretionary
Opportunity Category Explanation:
Funding Instrument Type: Cooperative Agreement
Category of Funding Activity: Health
Category Explanation:
Expected Number of Awards: 69
Assistance Listings: 93.354 — Public Health Emergency Response: Cooperative Agreement for Emergency Response: Public Health Crisis Response
Cost Sharing or Matching Requirement: No
Version: Synopsis 6
Posted Date: Nov 30, 2017
Last Updated Date: Nov 02, 2017
Original Closing Date for Applications:
Current Closing Date for Applications: Dec 11, 2017 Electronically submitted applications must be submitted no later than 5:00 p.m., ET, on the listed application due date.
Archive Date: Jan 10, 2018
Estimated Total Program Funding: $345,000,000
Award Ceiling: $5,000,000
Award Floor: $100,000

Eligibility

Eligible Applicants: County governments
State governments
Native American tribal governments (Federally recognized)
City or township governments
Additional Information on Eligibility: The eligible applicants to receive funding are limited to governmental public health departments that are constitutionally empowered to protect the health and welfare of their respective communities. Eligible applicants must have functional public health emergency management programs, legal authority, and already existing public health emergency management capacity, thus they are pre-positioned to act expeditiously to meet the requirements of this cooperative agreement. Administrative preparedness and existing public health emergency management capacity are integral components of the infrastructure of the entities that receive funding and this funding will give grantees additional capacity to respond to public health crises.
The eligible entities are limited to the 50 state public health departments, local public health departments with current alignment to PHEP or ELC (includes Washington D.C.), and territorial governments in the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, the Commonwealth of the Northern Marianna Islands, American Samoa, Guam, the Federated States of Micronesia, the Republic of the Marshall Islands, and the Republic of Palau.
In addition tribal governments meeting the requirements laid out in this NOFO and serving a population of at least 50,000 members are eligible to compete.
Limited Source Competitions:

State governments or their bona fide agents (N=50)
Local health departments or their bona fide agents (N=6) (city or county) consistent with PHEP and ELC awardees, which include: Chicago Department of Public Health, Houston Department of Health and Human Services, L.A. County Department of Health Services – Public Health, New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, Philadelphia Department of Public Health, and Washington D.C. Department of Health
American Indian or Alaska Native Federally recognized tribal governments or their bona fide agents that meet requirements listed in Section C.3 of this NOFO for Justification for Less than Maximum Competition and that serve, through their own PH infrastructure, at least 50,000 people (N~5)
Territorial governments or their bona fide agents (N=8) in the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands, the Commonwealth of the Northern Marianna Islands, American Samoa, Guam, the Federated States of Micronesia, the Republic of the Marshall Islands, and the Republic of Palau

Additional Information

Agency Name: Centers for Disease Control – OPHPR
Description: CDC seeks to enhance the Nation’s ability to rapidly mobilize and respond to specific public health emergencies, which may include infectious disease outbreaks, pandemics, and other public health emergencies that exceed the capacity of jurisdictional public health resources. From experience through previous emergency events, CDC recognizes the impact that initial funding and immediate response can have in mitigating negative health outcomes. Thus, CDC is creating this Notice of Funding Opportunity (NOFO) to rapidly fund pre-approved applicants to address immediate and time-sensitive needs that are integral to specific public health responses. This NOFO is intended to fund jurisdictional public health departments for response to HHS Secretarial declared and nondeclared public health emergencies and other public health emergencies which CDC deems in accordance with the purpose of the NOFO.
The award dates and project periods listed are subject to change and are contingent upon the occurence of a public health crisis as defined in this NOFO and the availability of funding for the response. Awardees would be approved but unfunded until a crisis occurs, enabling them to plan for emergency activation activities.
CDC has strong relationships with state and local health departments, community-based organizations and other domestic partners and supports them for planning, capacity-building, preparedness, and response to public health emergencies. This support is provided through various programs including the Public Health Emergency Preparedness (PHEP) and the Epidemiology and Laboratory Capacity for Infectious Diseases (ELC) cooperative agreements. This new NOFO complements these ongoing capacity-building and response programs by providing a mechanism for CDC to rapidly mobilize and fund jurisdictions for specific response needs for specific public health emergencies. CDC will consider funding pre-award costs.
This NOFO is comprised of two components: A and B. These components may be funded sequentially or simultaneously as determined by CDC regarding an identified specific public health emergency.
Component A is focused on initial emergency response activation and stand-up activities routinely required in preparing for and responding to an impending or existing emergency. In response to Component A of this NOFO, applicants will describe/address initial activities required to strengthen incident management for crisis response, including but not limited to, emergency operations center (EOC) activation, staffing contracts, needs assessment, accelerated planning, call center activation, and strengthening jurisdictional recovery efforts.
Component B is focused on the actions necessary to tackle a specific emergency. Applicants will address the crisis-specific response activities required to respond based on the four additional domains of the provided logic model (information management, countermeasures and mitigation, surge management, and biosurveillance). A scenario has been provided in section “D” work plan, which applicants will use to develop their proposal to this component. The scenario is broad and focused on emerging infectious disease as that such an event is most likely to require federal support to respond. However, it is not CDC’s intent to restrict the use of this mechanism to infectious disease. As previously stated, CDC will provide additional information and supplemental guidance regarding its intent to implement this NOFO.
Upon occurrence of a significant public health emergency, CDC will establish and provide supplemental guidance specific to that emergency and can then rapidly fund specific applicants for start-up and specific interventions, mitigation, and other activities based on the particular situation and needs. Categories/functional areas to be addressed include, but are not limited to:

Staffing (e.g., Epidemiologists, Laboratorians, Health Communication Specialists, Planners, Logisticians, Public Health Nurses, etc.)
Equipment
Laboratory support
Risk communications
Surveillance
Technical assistance
Emergency response/operations
Mass dispensing
Technical assistance
Information technology
Vector control
Data entry and analysis

Link to Additional Information: .
Grantor Contact Information: If you have difficulty accessing the full announcement electronically, please contact:

Celia Toles
crt3@cdc.gov

Email:crt3@cdc.gov

DISPLAYING: Synopsis 5

General Information

Document Type: Grants Notice
Funding Opportunity Number: CDC-RFA-TP18-1802
Funding Opportunity Title: Cooperative Agreement for Emergency Response: Public Health Crisis Response
Opportunity Category: Discretionary
Opportunity Category Explanation:
Funding Instrument Type: Cooperative Agreement
Category of Funding Activity: Health
Category Explanation:
Expected Number of Awards: 69
Assistance Listings: 93.354 — Public Health Emergency Response: Cooperative Agreement for Emergency Response: Public Health Crisis Response
Cost Sharing or Matching Requirement: No
Version: Synopsis 5
Posted Date: Nov 02, 2017
Last Updated Date: Oct 12, 2017
Original Closing Date for Applications:
Current Closing Date for Applications: Dec 11, 2017 Electronically submitted applications must be submitted no later than 11:59 p.m., ET, on the listed application due date.
Archive Date: Jan 10, 2018
Estimated Total Program Funding: $345,000,000
Award Ceiling: $5,000,000
Award Floor: $100,000

Eligibility

Eligible Applicants: County governments
State governments
Native American tribal governments (Federally recognized)
City or township governments
Additional Information on Eligibility: The eligible applicants to receive funding are limited to governmental public health departments that are constitutionally empowered to protect the health and welfare of their respective communities. Eligible applicants must have functional public health emergency management programs, legal authority, and already existing public health emergency management capacity, thus they are pre-positioned to act expeditiously to meet the requirements of this cooperative agreement. Administrative preparedness and existing public health emergency management capacity are integral components of the infrastructure of the entities that receive funding and this funding will give grantees additional capacity to respond to public health crises.The eligible entities are limited to the 50 state public health departments, local public health departments with current alignment to PHEP or ELC (includes Washington D.C.), and territorial governments in the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, the Commonwealth of the Northern Marianna Islands, American Samoa, Guam, the Federated States of Micronesia, the Republic of the Marshall Islands, and the Republic of Palau. These agencies have participated in a large number of activities in cooperation with many CDC programs for many decades.In addition tribal governments meeting the requirements laid out in this NOFO and serving a population of at least 50,000 members are eligible to compete. ——Limited Source Competitions:State governments or their bona fide agents (N=50)Local health departments or their bona fide agents (N=6) (city or county) consistent with PHEP and ELC awardees, which include: Chicago Department of Public Health, Houston Department of Health and Human Services, Los Angeles County Department of Health Services – Public Health, New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, Philadelphia Department of Public Health, and Washington D.C. Department of HealthAmerican Indian or Alaska Native Federally recognized tribal governments or their bona fide agents that meet requirements listed in Section C.3 of this NOFO for Justification for Less than Maximum Competition and that serve, through their own PH infrastructure, at least 50,000 people (N~5)Territorial governments or their bona fide agents (N=8) in the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands, the Commonwealth of the Northern Marianna Islands, American Samoa, Guam, the Federated States of Micronesia, the Republic of the Marshall Islands, and the Republic of PalauAll applicants must provide certification from the applicant’s Public Health Director (or equivalent) that the applicant has an existing capacity, capability, and infrastructure to provide the 10 essential public health services (https://www.cdc.gov/nphpsp/essentialservices.html) and that within that public health infrastructure there currently exists an established public health emergency management program that can provide the 15 Public Health Preparedness Capabilities: National Standards for State and Local Planning (https://www.cdc.gov/phpr/readiness/00_docs/DSLR_capabilities_July.pdf ).In addition, applicants must submit: (1) an organizational chart that represents their emergency preparedness program or Incident Command System (ICS), and (2) a crisis response plan/concept of operations, that includes a provision outlining expedited business processes, including but not limited to: rapidly hiring surge staff, contracting, procuring, and travel procedures.

Additional Information

Agency Name: Centers for Disease Control – OPHPR
Description: CDC seeks to enhance the Nation’s ability to rapidly mobilize and respond to specific public health emergencies, which may include infectious disease outbreaks, pandemics, and other public health emergencies that exceed the capacity of jurisdictional public health resources. From experience through previous emergency events, CDC recognizes the impact that initial funding and immediate response can have in mitigating negative health outcomes. Thus, CDC is creating this Notice of Funding Opportunity (NOFO) to rapidly fund pre-approved applicants to address immediate and time-sensitive needs that are integral to specific public health responses. This NOFO is intended to fund jurisdictional public health departments for response to HHS Secretarial declared and nondeclared public health emergencies and other public health emergencies which CDC deems in accordance with the purpose of the NOFO.The award dates and project periods listed are subject to change and are contingent upon the occurence of a public health crisis as defined in this NOFO and the availability of funding for the response. Awardees would be approved but unfunded until a crisis occurs, enabling them to plan for emergency activation activities.CDC has strong relationships with state and local health departments, community-based organizations and other domestic partners and supports them for planning, capacity-building, preparedness, and response to public health emergencies. This support is provided through various programs including the Public Health Emergency Preparedness (PHEP) and the Epidemiology and Laboratory Capacity for Infectious Diseases (ELC) cooperative agreements. This new NOFO complements these ongoing capacity-building and response programs by providing a mechanism for CDC to rapidly mobilize and fund jurisdictions for specific response needs for specific public health emergencies. CDC will consider funding pre-award costs.This NOFO is comprised of two components: A and B. These components may be funded sequentially or simultaneously as determined by CDC regarding an identified specific public health emergency.Component A is focused on initial emergency response activation and stand-up activities routinely required in preparing for and responding to an impending or existing emergency. In response to Component A of this NOFO, applicants will describe/address initial activities required to strengthen incident management for crisis response, including but not limited to, emergency operations center (EOC) activation, staffing contracts, needs assessment, accelerated planning, call center activation, and strengthening jurisdictional recovery efforts.Component B is focused on the actions necessary to tackle a specific emergency. Applicants will address the crisis-specific response activities required to respond based on the four additional domains of the provided logic model (information management, countermeasures and mitigation, surge management, and biosurveillance). A scenario has been provided in section “D” work plan, which applicants will use to develop their proposal to this component. The scenario is broad and focused on emerging infectious disease as that such an event is most likely to require federal support to respond. However, it is not CDC’s intent to restrict the use of this mechanism to infectious disease. As previously stated, CDC will provide additional information and supplemental guidance regarding its intent to implement this NOFO.Upon occurrence of a significant public health emergency, CDC will establish and provide supplemental guidance specific to that emergency and can then rapidly fund specific applicants for start-up and specific interventions, mitigation, and other activities based on the particular situation and needs. Categories/functional areas to be addressed include, but are not limited to:Staffing (e.g., Epidemiologists, Laboratorians, Health Communication Specialists, Planners, Logisticians, Public Health Nurses, etc.)EquipmentLaboratory supportRisk communicationsSurveillanceTechnical assistanceEmergency response/operationsMass dispensingTechnical assistanceInformation technologyVector controlData entry and analysis
Link to Additional Information:
Grantor Contact Information: If you have difficulty accessing the full announcement electronically, please contact:

Celia Toles

crt3@cdc.gov

Email:crt3@cdc.gov

DISPLAYING: Synopsis 4

General Information

Document Type: Grants Notice
Funding Opportunity Number: CDC-RFA-TP18-1802
Funding Opportunity Title: Cooperative Agreement for Emergency Response: Public Health Crisis Response
Opportunity Category: Discretionary
Opportunity Category Explanation:
Funding Instrument Type: Cooperative Agreement
Category of Funding Activity: Health
Category Explanation:
Expected Number of Awards: 69
Assistance Listings: 93.354 — Public Health Emergency Response: Cooperative Agreement for Emergency Response: Public Health Crisis Response
Cost Sharing or Matching Requirement: No
Version: Synopsis 4
Posted Date: Oct 12, 2017
Last Updated Date: Oct 12, 2017
Original Closing Date for Applications:
Current Closing Date for Applications: Dec 11, 2017 Electronically submitted applications must be submitted no later than 11:59 p.m., ET, on the listed application due date.
Archive Date: Jan 10, 2018
Estimated Total Program Funding: $345,000,000
Award Ceiling: $5,000,000
Award Floor: $100,000

Eligibility

Eligible Applicants: County governments
State governments
Native American tribal governments (Federally recognized)
City or township governments
Additional Information on Eligibility: The eligible applicants to receive funding are limited to governmental public health departments that are constitutionally empowered to protect the health and welfare of their respective communities. Eligible applicants must have functional public health emergency management programs, legal authority, and already existing public health emergency management capacity, thus they are pre-positioned to act expeditiously to meet the requirements of this cooperative agreement. Administrative preparedness and existing public health emergency management capacity are integral components of the infrastructure of the entities that receive funding and this funding will give grantees additional capacity to respond to public health crises.The eligible entities are limited to the 50 state public health departments, local public health departments with current alignment to PHEP or ELC (includes Washington D.C.), and territorial governments in the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, the Commonwealth of the Northern Marianna Islands, American Samoa, Guam, the Federated States of Micronesia, the Republic of the Marshall Islands, and the Republic of Palau. These agencies have participated in a large number of activities in cooperation with many CDC programs for many decades.In addition tribal governments meeting the requirements laid out in this NOFO and serving a population of at least 50,000 members are eligible to compete. ——Limited Source Competitions:State governments or their bona fide agents (N=50)Local health departments or their bona fide agents (N=6) (city or county) consistent with PHEP and ELC awardees, which include: Chicago Department of Public Health, Houston Department of Health and Human Services, Los Angeles County Department of Health Services – Public Health, New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, Philadelphia Department of Public Health, and Washington D.C. Department of HealthAmerican Indian or Alaska Native Federally recognized tribal governments or their bona fide agents that meet requirements listed in Section C.3 of this NOFO for Justification for Less than Maximum Competition and that serve, through their own PH infrastructure, at least 50,000 people (N~5)Territorial governments or their bona fide agents (N=8) in the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands, the Commonwealth of the Northern Marianna Islands, American Samoa, Guam, the Federated States of Micronesia, the Republic of the Marshall Islands, and the Republic of PalauAll applicants must provide certification from the applicant’s Public Health Director (or equivalent) that the applicant has an existing capacity, capability, and infrastructure to provide the 10 essential public health services (https://www.cdc.gov/nphpsp/essentialservices.html) and that within that public health infrastructure there currently exists an established public health emergency management program that can provide the 15 Public Health Preparedness Capabilities: National Standards for State and Local Planning (https://www.cdc.gov/phpr/readiness/00_docs/DSLR_capabilities_July.pdf ).In addition, applicants must submit: (1) an organizational chart that represents their emergency preparedness program or Incident Command System (ICS), and (2) a crisis response plan/concept of operations, that includes a provision outlining expedited business processes, including but not limited to: rapidly hiring surge staff, contracting, procuring, and travel procedures.

Additional Information

Agency Name: Centers for Disease Control – OPHPR
Description: CDC seeks to enhance the Nation’s ability to rapidly mobilize and respond to specific public health emergencies, which may include infectious disease outbreaks, pandemics, and other public health emergencies that exceed the capacity of jurisdictional public health resources. From experience through previous emergency events, CDC recognizes the impact that initial funding and immediate response can have in mitigating negative health outcomes. Thus, CDC is creating this Notice of Funding Opportunity (NOFO) to rapidly fund pre-approved applicants to address immediate and time-sensitive needs that are integral to specific public health responses. This NOFO is intended to fund jurisdictional public health departments for response to HHS Secretarial declared and nondeclared public health emergencies and other public health emergencies which CDC deems in accordance with the purpose of the NOFO.The award dates and project periods listed are subject to change and are contingent upon the occurence of a public health crisis as defined in this NOFO and the availability of funding for the response. Awardees would be approved but unfunded until a crisis occurs, enabling them to plan for emergency activation activities.CDC has strong relationships with state and local health departments, community-based organizations and other domestic partners and supports them for planning, capacity-building, preparedness, and response to public health emergencies. This support is provided through various programs including the Public Health Emergency Preparedness (PHEP) and the Epidemiology and Laboratory Capacity for Infectious Diseases (ELC) cooperative agreements. This new NOFO complements these ongoing capacity-building and response programs by providing a mechanism for CDC to rapidly mobilize and fund jurisdictions for specific response needs for specific public health emergencies. CDC will consider funding pre-award costs.This NOFO is comprised of two components: A and B. These components may be funded sequentially or simultaneously as determined by CDC regarding an identified specific public health emergency.Component A is focused on initial emergency response activation and stand-up activities routinely required in preparing for and responding to an impending or existing emergency. In response to Component A of this NOFO, applicants will describe/address initial activities required to strengthen incident management for crisis response, including but not limited to, emergency operations center (EOC) activation, staffing contracts, needs assessment, accelerated planning, call center activation, and strengthening jurisdictional recovery efforts.Component B is focused on the actions necessary to tackle a specific emergency. Applicants will address the crisis-specific response activities required to respond based on the four additional domains of the provided logic model (information management, countermeasures and mitigation, surge management, and biosurveillance). A scenario has been provided in section “D” work plan, which applicants will use to develop their proposal to this component. The scenario is broad and focused on emerging infectious disease as that such an event is most likely to require federal support to respond. However, it is not CDC’s intent to restrict the use of this mechanism to infectious disease. As previously stated, CDC will provide additional information and supplemental guidance regarding its intent to implement this NOFO.Upon occurrence of a significant public health emergency, CDC will establish and provide supplemental guidance specific to that emergency and can then rapidly fund specific applicants for start-up and specific interventions, mitigation, and other activities based on the particular situation and needs. Categories/functional areas to be addressed include, but are not limited to:Staffing (e.g., Epidemiologists, Laboratorians, Health Communication Specialists, Planners, Logisticians, Public Health Nurses, etc.)EquipmentLaboratory supportRisk communicationsSurveillanceTechnical assistanceEmergency response/operationsMass dispensingTechnical assistanceInformation technologyVector controlData entry and analysis
Link to Additional Information:
Grantor Contact Information: If you have difficulty accessing the full announcement electronically, please contact:

Celia Toles

crt3@cdc.gov

Email:crt3@cdc.gov

DISPLAYING: Synopsis 3

General Information

Document Type: Grants Notice
Funding Opportunity Number: CDC-RFA-TP18-1802
Funding Opportunity Title: Cooperative Agreement for Emergency Response: Public Health Crisis Response
Opportunity Category: Discretionary
Opportunity Category Explanation:
Funding Instrument Type: Cooperative Agreement
Category of Funding Activity: Health
Category Explanation:
Expected Number of Awards: 69
Assistance Listings: 93.354 — Public Health Emergency Response: Cooperative Agreement for Emergency Response: Public Health Crisis Response
Cost Sharing or Matching Requirement: No
Version: Synopsis 3
Posted Date: Oct 12, 2017
Last Updated Date: Oct 12, 2017
Original Closing Date for Applications:
Current Closing Date for Applications: Dec 11, 2017 Electronically submitted applications must be submitted no later than 11:59 p.m., ET, on the listed application due date.
Archive Date: Jan 10, 2018
Estimated Total Program Funding: $345,000,000
Award Ceiling: $5,000,000
Award Floor: $100,000

Eligibility

Eligible Applicants: County governments
State governments
Native American tribal governments (Federally recognized)
City or township governments
Additional Information on Eligibility: The eligible applicants to receive funding are limited to governmental public health departments that are constitutionally empowered to protect the health and welfare of their respective communities. Eligible applicants must have functional public health emergency management programs, legal authority, and already existing public health emergency management capacity, thus they are pre-positioned to act expeditiously to meet the requirements of this cooperative agreement. Administrative preparedness and existing public health emergency management capacity are integral components of the infrastructure of the entities that receive funding and this funding will give grantees additional capacity to respond to public health crises.The eligible entities are limited to the 50 state public health departments, local public health departments with current alignment to PHEP or ELC (includes Washington D.C.), and territorial governments in the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, the Commonwealth of the Northern Marianna Islands, American Samoa, Guam, the Federated States of Micronesia, the Republic of the Marshall Islands, and the Republic of Palau. These agencies have participated in a large number of activities in cooperation with many CDC programs for many decades.In addition tribal governments meeting the requirements laid out in this NOFO and serving a population of at least 50,000 members are eligible to compete. ——Limited Source Competitions:State governments or their bona fide agents (N=50)Local health departments or their bona fide agents (N=6) (city or county) consistent with PHEP and ELC awardees, which include: Chicago Department of Public Health, Houston Department of Health and Human Services, Los Angeles County Department of Health Services – Public Health, New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, Philadelphia Department of Public Health, and Washington D.C. Department of HealthAmerican Indian or Alaska Native Federally recognized tribal governments or their bona fide agents that meet requirements listed in Section C.3 of this NOFO for Justification for Less than Maximum Competition and that serve, through their own PH infrastructure, at least 50,000 people (N~5)Territorial governments or their bona fide agents (N=8) in the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands, the Commonwealth of the Northern Marianna Islands, American Samoa, Guam, the Federated States of Micronesia, the Republic of the Marshall Islands, and the Republic of PalauAll applicants must provide certification from the applicant’s Public Health Director (or equivalent) that the applicant has an existing capacity, capability, and infrastructure to provide the 10 essential public health services (https://www.cdc.gov/nphpsp/essentialservices.html) and that within that public health infrastructure there currently exists an established public health emergency management program that can provide the 15 Public Health Preparedness Capabilities: National Standards for State and Local Planning (https://www.cdc.gov/phpr/readiness/00_docs/DSLR_capabilities_July.pdf ).In addition, applicants must submit: (1) an organizational chart that represents their emergency preparedness program or Incident Command System (ICS), and (2) a crisis response plan/concept of operations, that includes a provision outlining expedited business processes, including but not limited to: rapidly hiring surge staff, contracting, procuring, and travel procedures.

Additional Information

Agency Name: Centers for Disease Control – OPHPR
Description: CDC seeks to enhance the Nation’s ability to rapidly mobilize and respond to specific public health emergencies, which may include infectious disease outbreaks, pandemics, and other public health emergencies that exceed the capacity of jurisdictional public health resources. From experience through previous emergency events, CDC recognizes the impact that initial funding and immediate response can have in mitigating negative health outcomes. Thus, CDC is creating this Notice of Funding Opportunity (NOFO) to rapidly fund pre-approved applicants to address immediate and time-sensitive needs that are integral to specific public health responses. This NOFO is intended to fund jurisdictional public health departments for response to HHS Secretarial declared and nondeclared public health emergencies and other public health emergencies which CDC deems in accordance with the purpose of the NOFO.The award dates and project periods listed are subject to change and are contingent upon the occurence of a public health crisis as defined in this NOFO and the availability of funding for the response. Awardees would be approved but unfunded until a crisis occurs, enabling them to plan for emergency activation activities.CDC has strong relationships with state and local health departments, community-based organizations and other domestic partners and supports them for planning, capacity-building, preparedness, and response to public health emergencies. This support is provided through various programs including the Public Health Emergency Preparedness (PHEP) and the Epidemiology and Laboratory Capacity for Infectious Diseases (ELC) cooperative agreements. This new NOFO complements these ongoing capacity-building and response programs by providing a mechanism for CDC to rapidly mobilize and fund jurisdictions for specific response needs for specific public health emergencies. CDC will consider funding pre-award costs.This NOFO is comprised of two components: A and B. These components may be funded sequentially or simultaneously as determined by CDC regarding an identified specific public health emergency.Component A is focused on initial emergency response activation and stand-up activities routinely required in preparing for and responding to an impending or existing emergency. In response to Component A of this NOFO, applicants will describe/address initial activities required to strengthen incident management for crisis response, including but not limited to, emergency operations center (EOC) activation, staffing contracts, needs assessment, accelerated planning, call center activation, and strengthening jurisdictional recovery efforts.Component B is focused on the actions necessary to tackle a specific emergency. Applicants will address the crisis-specific response activities required to respond based on the four additional domains of the provided logic model (information management, countermeasures and mitigation, surge management, and biosurveillance). A scenario has been provided in section “D” work plan, which applicants will use to develop their proposal to this component. The scenario is broad and focused on emerging infectious disease as that such an event is most likely to require federal support to respond. However, it is not CDC’s intent to restrict the use of this mechanism to infectious disease. As previously stated, CDC will provide additional information and supplemental guidance regarding its intent to implement this NOFO.Upon occurrence of a significant public health emergency, CDC will establish and provide supplemental guidance specific to that emergency and can then rapidly fund specific applicants for start-up and specific interventions, mitigation, and other activities based on the particular situation and needs. Categories/functional areas to be addressed include, but are not limited to:Staffing (e.g., Epidemiologists, Laboratorians, Health Communication Specialists, Planners, Logisticians, Public Health Nurses, etc.)EquipmentLaboratory supportRisk communicationsSurveillanceTechnical assistanceEmergency response/operationsMass dispensingTechnical assistanceInformation technologyVector controlData entry and analysis
Link to Additional Information:
Grantor Contact Information: If you have difficulty accessing the full announcement electronically, please contact:

Celia Toles

crt3@cdc.gov

Email:crt3@cdc.gov

DISPLAYING: Synopsis 2

General Information

Document Type: Grants Notice
Funding Opportunity Number: CDC-RFA-TP18-1802
Funding Opportunity Title: Cooperative Agreement for Emergency Response: Public Health Crisis Response
Opportunity Category: Discretionary
Opportunity Category Explanation:
Funding Instrument Type: Cooperative Agreement
Category of Funding Activity: Health
Category Explanation:
Expected Number of Awards: 69
Assistance Listings: 93.354 — Public Health Emergency Response: Cooperative Agreement for Emergency Response: Public Health Crisis Response
Cost Sharing or Matching Requirement: No
Version: Synopsis 2
Posted Date: Oct 12, 2017
Last Updated Date: Oct 12, 2017
Original Closing Date for Applications:
Current Closing Date for Applications: Dec 11, 2017 Electronically submitted applications must be submitted no later than 11:59 p.m., ET, on the listed application due date.
Archive Date: Jan 10, 2018
Estimated Total Program Funding: $345,000,000
Award Ceiling: $5,000,000
Award Floor: $100,000

Eligibility

Eligible Applicants: County governments
State governments
Native American tribal governments (Federally recognized)
City or township governments
Additional Information on Eligibility: The eligible applicants to receive funding are limited to governmental public health departments that are constitutionally empowered to protect the health and welfare of their respective communities. Eligible applicants must have functional public health emergency management programs, legal authority, and already existing public health emergency management capacity, thus they are pre-positioned to act expeditiously to meet the requirements of this cooperative agreement. Administrative preparedness and existing public health emergency management capacity are integral components of the infrastructure of the entities that receive funding and this funding will give grantees additional capacity to respond to public health crises.The eligible entities are limited to the 50 state public health departments, local public health departments with current alignment to PHEP or ELC (includes Washington D.C.), and territorial governments in the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, the Commonwealth of the Northern Marianna Islands, American Samoa, Guam, the Federated States of Micronesia, the Republic of the Marshall Islands, and the Republic of Palau. These agencies have participated in a large number of activities in cooperation with many CDC programs for many decades.In addition tribal governments meeting the requirements laid out in this NOFO and serving a population of at least 50,000 members are eligible to compete. ——Limited Source Competitions:State governments or their bona fide agents (N=50)Local health departments or their bona fide agents (N=6) (city or county) consistent with PHEP and ELC awardees, which include: Chicago Department of Public Health, Houston Department of Health and Human Services, Los Angeles County Department of Health Services – Public Health, New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, Philadelphia Department of Public Health, and Washington D.C. Department of HealthAmerican Indian or Alaska Native Federally recognized tribal governments or their bona fide agents that meet requirements listed in Section C.3 of this NOFO for Justification for Less than Maximum Competition and that serve, through their own PH infrastructure, at least 50,000 people (N~5)Territorial governments or their bona fide agents (N=8) in the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands, the Commonwealth of the Northern Marianna Islands, American Samoa, Guam, the Federated States of Micronesia, the Republic of the Marshall Islands, and the Republic of PalauAll applicants must provide certification from the applicant’s Public Health Director (or equivalent) that the applicant has an existing capacity, capability, and infrastructure to provide the 10 essential public health services (https://www.cdc.gov/nphpsp/essentialservices.html) and that within that public health infrastructure there currently exists an established public health emergency management program that can provide the 15 Public Health Preparedness Capabilities: National Standards for State and Local Planning (https://www.cdc.gov/phpr/readiness/00_docs/DSLR_capabilities_July.pdf ).In addition, applicants must submit: (1) an organizational chart that represents their emergency preparedness program or Incident Command System (ICS), and (2) a crisis response plan/concept of operations, that includes a provision outlining expedited business processes, including but not limited to: rapidly hiring surge staff, contracting, procuring, and travel procedures.

Additional Information

Agency Name: Centers for Disease Control – OPHPR
Description: CDC seeks to enhance the Nation’s ability to rapidly mobilize and respond to specific public health emergencies, which may include infectious disease outbreaks, pandemics, and other public health emergencies that exceed the capacity of jurisdictional public health resources. From experience through previous emergency events, CDC recognizes the impact that initial funding and immediate response can have in mitigating negative health outcomes. Thus, CDC is creating this Notice of Funding Opportunity (NOFO) to rapidly fund pre-approved applicants to address immediate and time-sensitive needs that are integral to specific public health responses. This NOFO is intended to fund jurisdictional public health departments for response to HHS Secretarial declared and nondeclared public health emergencies and other public health emergencies which CDC deems in accordance with the purpose of the NOFO.The award dates and project periods listed are subject to change and are contingent upon the occurence of a public health crisis as defined in this NOFO and the availability of funding for the response. Awardees would be approved but unfunded until a crisis occurs, enabling them to plan for emergency activation activities.CDC has strong relationships with state and local health departments, community-based organizations and other domestic partners and supports them for planning, capacity-building, preparedness, and response to public health emergencies. This support is provided through various programs including the Public Health Emergency Preparedness (PHEP) and the Epidemiology and Laboratory Capacity for Infectious Diseases (ELC) cooperative agreements. This new NOFO complements these ongoing capacity-building and response programs by providing a mechanism for CDC to rapidly mobilize and fund jurisdictions for specific response needs for specific public health emergencies. CDC will consider funding pre-award costs.This NOFO is comprised of two components: A and B. These components may be funded sequentially or simultaneously as determined by CDC regarding an identified specific public health emergency.Component A is focused on initial emergency response activation and stand-up activities routinely required in preparing for and responding to an impending or existing emergency. In response to Component A of this NOFO, applicants will describe/address initial activities required to strengthen incident management for crisis response, including but not limited to, emergency operations center (EOC) activation, staffing contracts, needs assessment, accelerated planning, call center activation, and strengthening jurisdictional recovery efforts.Component B is focused on the actions necessary to tackle a specific emergency. Applicants will address the crisis-specific response activities required to respond based on the four additional domains of the provided logic model (information management, countermeasures and mitigation, surge management, and biosurveillance). A scenario has been provided in section “D” work plan, which applicants will use to develop their proposal to this component. The scenario is broad and focused on emerging infectious disease as that such an event is most likely to require federal support to respond. However, it is not CDC’s intent to restrict the use of this mechanism to infectious disease. As previously stated, CDC will provide additional information and supplemental guidance regarding its intent to implement this NOFO.Upon occurrence of a significant public health emergency, CDC will establish and provide supplemental guidance specific to that emergency and can then rapidly fund specific applicants for start-up and specific interventions, mitigation, and other activities based on the particular situation and needs. Categories/functional areas to be addressed include, but are not limited to:Staffing (e.g., Epidemiologists, Laboratorians, Health Communication Specialists, Planners, Logisticians, Public Health Nurses, etc.)EquipmentLaboratory supportRisk communicationsSurveillanceTechnical assistanceEmergency response/operationsMass dispensingTechnical assistanceInformation technologyVector controlData entry and analysis
Link to Additional Information:
Grantor Contact Information: If you have difficulty accessing the full announcement electronically, please contact:

Celia Toles

crt3@cdc.gov

Email:crt3@cdc.gov

DISPLAYING: Synopsis 1

General Information

Document Type: Grants Notice
Funding Opportunity Number: CDC-RFA-TP18-1802
Funding Opportunity Title: Cooperative Agreement for Emergency Response: Public Health Crisis Response
Opportunity Category: Discretionary
Opportunity Category Explanation:
Funding Instrument Type: Cooperative Agreement
Category of Funding Activity: Health
Category Explanation:
Expected Number of Awards: 69
Assistance Listings: 93.354 — Public Health Emergency Response: Cooperative Agreement for Emergency Response: Public Health Crisis Response
Cost Sharing or Matching Requirement: No
Version: Synopsis 1
Posted Date: Oct 12, 2017
Last Updated Date:
Original Closing Date for Applications:
Current Closing Date for Applications: Dec 11, 2017 Electronically submitted applications must be submitted no later than 5:00 p.m., ET, on the listed application due date.
Archive Date: Jan 10, 2018
Estimated Total Program Funding: $345,000,000
Award Ceiling: $5,000,000
Award Floor: $100,000

Eligibility

Eligible Applicants: County governments
State governments
Native American tribal governments (Federally recognized)
City or township governments
Additional Information on Eligibility: The eligible applicants to receive funding are limited to governmental public health departments that are constitutionally empowered to protect the health and welfare of their respective communities. Eligible applicants must have functional public health emergency management programs, legal authority, and already existing public health emergency management capacity, thus they are pre-positioned to act expeditiously to meet the requirements of this cooperative agreement. Administrative preparedness and existing public health emergency management capacity are integral components of the infrastructure of the entities that receive funding and this funding will give grantees additional capacity to respond to public health crises.
The eligible entities are limited to the 50 state public health departments, local public health departments with current alignment to PHEP or ELC (includes Washington D.C.), and territorial governments in the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, the Commonwealth of the Northern Marianna Islands, American Samoa, Guam, the Federated States of Micronesia, the Republic of the Marshall Islands, and the Republic of Palau. These agencies have participated in a large number of activities in cooperation with many CDC programs for many decades.
In addition tribal governments meeting the requirements laid out in this NOFO and serving a population of at least 50,000 members are eligible to compete.
——
Limited Source Competitions:

State governments or their bona fide agents (N=50)
Local health departments or their bona fide agents (N=6) (city or county) consistent with PHEP and ELC awardees, which include: Chicago Department of Public Health, Houston Department of Health and Human Services, Los Angeles County Department of Health Services – Public Health, New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, Philadelphia Department of Public Health, and Washington D.C. Department of Health
American Indian or Alaska Native Federally recognized tribal governments or their bona fide agents that meet requirements listed in Section C.3 of this NOFO for Justification for Less than Maximum Competition and that serve, through their own PH infrastructure, at least 50,000 people (N~5)
Territorial governments or their bona fide agents (N=8) in the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands, the Commonwealth of the Northern Marianna Islands, American Samoa, Guam, the Federated States of Micronesia, the Republic of the Marshall Islands, and the Republic of Palau

All applicants must provide certification from the applicant’s Public Health Director (or equivalent) that the applicant has an existing capacity, capability, and infrastructure to provide the 10 essential public health services (https://www.cdc.gov/nphpsp/essentialservices.html) and that within that public health infrastructure there currently exists an established public health emergency management program that can provide the 15 Public Health Preparedness Capabilities: National Standards for State and Local Planning (https://www.cdc.gov/phpr/readiness/00_docs/DSLR_capabilities_July.pdf ).
In addition, applicants must submit: (1) an organizational chart that represents their emergency preparedness program or Incident Command System (ICS), and (2) a crisis response plan/concept of operations, that includes a provision outlining expedited business processes, including but not limited to: rapidly hiring surge staff, contracting, procuring, and travel procedures.

Additional Information

Agency Name: Centers for Disease Control – OPHPR
Description: CDC seeks to enhance the Nation’s ability to rapidly mobilize and respond to specific public health emergencies, which may include infectious disease outbreaks, pandemics, and other public health emergencies that exceed the capacity of jurisdictional public health resources. From experience through previous emergency events, CDC recognizes the impact that initial funding and immediate response can have in mitigating negative health outcomes. Thus, CDC is creating this Notice of Funding Opportunity (NOFO) to rapidly fund pre-approved applicants to address immediate and time-sensitive needs that are integral to specific public health responses. This NOFO is intended to fund jurisdictional public health departments for response to HHS Secretarial declared and nondeclared public health emergencies and other public health emergencies which CDC deems in accordance with the purpose of the NOFO.
The award dates and project periods listed are subject to change and are contingent upon the occurence of a public health crisis as defined in this NOFO and the availability of funding for the response. Awardees would be approved but unfunded until a crisis occurs, enabling them to plan for emergency activation activities.
CDC has strong relationships with state and local health departments, community-based organizations and other domestic partners and supports them for planning, capacity-building, preparedness, and response to public health emergencies. This support is provided through various programs including the Public Health Emergency Preparedness (PHEP) and the Epidemiology and Laboratory Capacity for Infectious Diseases (ELC) cooperative agreements. This new NOFO complements these ongoing capacity-building and response programs by providing a mechanism for CDC to rapidly mobilize and fund jurisdictions for specific response needs for specific public health emergencies. CDC will consider funding pre-award costs.
This NOFO is comprised of two components: A and B. These components may be funded sequentially or simultaneously as determined by CDC regarding an identified specific public health emergency.
Component A is focused on initial emergency response activation and stand-up activities routinely required in preparing for and responding to an impending or existing emergency. In response to Component A of this NOFO, applicants will describe/address initial activities required to strengthen incident management for crisis response, including but not limited to, emergency operations center (EOC) activation, staffing contracts, needs assessment, accelerated planning, call center activation, and strengthening jurisdictional recovery efforts.
Component B is focused on the actions necessary to tackle a specific emergency. Applicants will address the crisis-specific response activities required to respond based on the four additional domains of the provided logic model (information management, countermeasures and mitigation, surge management, and biosurveillance). A scenario has been provided in section “D” work plan, which applicants will use to develop their proposal to this component. The scenario is broad and focused on emerging infectious disease as that such an event is most likely to require federal support to respond. However, it is not CDC’s intent to restrict the use of this mechanism to infectious disease. As previously stated, CDC will provide additional information and supplemental guidance regarding its intent to implement this NOFO.
Upon occurrence of a significant public health emergency, CDC will establish and provide supplemental guidance specific to that emergency and can then rapidly fund specific applicants for start-up and specific interventions, mitigation, and other activities based on the particular situation and needs. Categories/functional areas to be addressed include, but are not limited to:

Staffing (e.g., Epidemiologists, Laboratorians, Health Communication Specialists, Planners, Logisticians, Public Health Nurses, etc.)
Equipment
Laboratory support
Risk communications
Surveillance
Technical assistance
Emergency response/operations
Mass dispensing
Technical assistance
Information technology
Vector control
Data entry and analysis

Link to Additional Information:
Grantor Contact Information: If you have difficulty accessing the full announcement electronically, please contact:

Celia Toles
crt3@cdc.gov

Email:crt3@cdc.gov

Folder 297939 Full Announcement-CDC-RFA-TP18-1802 -> FY19 Crisis Response NOFO Fast Facts (002).pdf

Folder 297939 Full Announcement-CDC-RFA-TP18-1802 -> APPLICANT APPLICATION GUIDE CDC-RFA-TP18-1802 FINAL.pdf

Folder 297939 Full Announcement-CDC-RFA-TP18-1802 -> Crisis NOFO Frequently Asked Questions_October 2018.docx (002).pdf

Folder 297939 Full Announcement-CDC-RFA-TP18-1802 -> FY2019 Crisis NOFO Application Renewal Requirements Template (004).pdf

Folder 297939 Full Announcement-CDC-RFA-TP18-1802 -> TP18-1802 Crisis NOFO 2019 FINAL.pdf

Packages

Agency Contact Information: Celia Toles
crt3@cdc.gov

Email: crt3@cdc.gov

Who Can Apply: Organization Applicants

Assistance Listing Number Competition ID Competition Title Opportunity Package ID Opening Date Closing Date Actions
93.354 CDC-RFA-TP18-1802 Cooperative Agreement for Emergency Response: Public Health Crisis Response PKG00245460 Oct 10, 2018 Nov 30, 2018 View

Package 1

Mandatory forms

297939 SF424_2_1-2.1.pdf

297939 SF424A-1.0.pdf

297939 ANA_ObjectiveWorkPlan_1_2-1.2.pdf

297939 Project_Abstract_1_2-1.2.pdf

297939 ProjectNarrativeAttachments_1_2-1.2.pdf

Optional forms

297939 OtherNarrativeAttachments_1_2-1.2.pdf

297939 BudgetNarrativeAttachments_1_2-1.2.pdf

2025-07-09T18:15:05-05:00

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