BJA FY 23 Residential Substance Abuse Treatment for State Prisoners Program Formula Grant Solicitation
Posted by Bureau of Justice Assistance
Opportunity snapshot. This Grants.gov announcement — BJA FY 23 Residential Substance Abuse Treatment for State Prisoners Program Formula Grant Solicitation — is cataloged under number O-BJA-2023-171785 and tied to CFDA assistance listing 16.593, posted by Bureau of Justice Assistance. Grants.gov currently shows the opportunity as closed, first posted on June 7, 2023 and last updated on August 3, 2023. The funding category is Other, delivered as a grant.
Award economics. The award range on file is Up to $1,000,000. The agency has projected $40.3 million in total estimated funding for this announcement. It expects to issue 56 awards. If the agency funds the expected 56 awards from the $40.3 million estimated pool, the average award works out to roughly $719,000. Cost sharing or matching funds are required, meaning applicants must contribute a portion of the project budget from non-federal sources — factor this into your financial plan before drafting the proposal. Federal award ranges are often upper bounds; actual allocations reflect program appropriations, the strength of the applicant pool, and the evaluation committee's scoring.
Deadline and action path. This opportunity closed on August 9, 2023. Future funding cycles may be published under the same CFDA number, so monitoring the parent program page is the most reliable way to catch re-announcements. Every Grants.gov submission requires an active SAM.gov registration and a Unique Entity ID. Review the Eligibility section below carefully — federal eligibility categories (nonprofit, state or local government, tribal, individual, educational institution, small business) have distinct registration and reporting requirements. Pre-application outreach to the listed agency contact is permitted and often welcomed — it helps clarify scope and scoring priorities.
Award Range
Up to $1,000,000
Close Date
August 9, 2023
Posted
June 7, 2023
Est. Total Funding
$40,257,160
Expected Awards
56
Instrument
Grant
Cost Sharing
Required
Description
OJP is committed to advancing work that promotes civil rights and racial equity, increases access to justice, supports crime victims and individuals impacted by the justice system, strengthens community safety and protects the public from crime and evolving threats, and builds trust between law enforcement and the community. Initially declared a public health emergency in October 2017, the opioid crisis remains a significant public health emergency. This crisis continues to take a devastating toll on the lives of individuals, families, and communities across the nation. In recent years, the increase in synthetic opioids in the nation's drug supply has only served to exacerbate and expand the reach of this devastation with over 100,000 drug overdose deaths in 2021, an increase of almost 15 percent from the prior year. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention data also show that overdose deaths disproportionately impact Black and American Indian/Alaska Native people. To combat the morbidity and mortality of overdose and the chronic disease of opioid use disorder (OUD), it is critical that individuals with OUD have access to evidence-based, FDA-approved treatments. The Biden-Harris administration has made addressing the overdose epidemic a priority, including increasing access to evidence-based treatment—namely, medications for opioid use disorder (MOUD)—across all settings. In April 2022, the Department of Justice's Civil Rights Division published guidance further clarifying protections under the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) for individuals with OUD, including potential violations of the ADA by facilities or programs that do not allow individuals to be able to continue taking doctor-prescribed MOUD. Recent agreements with state and county correctional facilities resolved allegations that the entities' refusal to permit the use of and provide MOUD violates the ADA. Similarly, a DOJ findings report regarding suicides and failure to provide MOUD in a county jail also helps to illustrate specific instances that were considered to violate the 8th and 14th amendment rights of institutionalized persons. Both the guidance and enforcement reflect the federal government's position that a correctional facility's refusal to permit incarcerated individuals to continue or initiate treatment for OUDs when clinically needed may violate the ADA, the U.S. Constitution, or both. This information is intended to educate and inform applicants about the ways that this and other funding opportunities could help enhance capacity to identify, screen, and assess individuals who may have substance use disorder (SUD) treatment and recovery support needs, as well as inform efforts in support of the treatment and long-term recovery of individuals with substance use disorders. Pursuant to 34 U.S.C. 10421 et. seq., the BJA RSAT Program seeks to increase access to evidence-based prevention and treatment, reduce overdose deaths, and support increased access to evidence-based substance use disorder treatment and recovery support services, including medication-assisted treatment (MAT), which is the use of medication in combination with counseling and behavior therapies to treat incarcerated individuals.
Eligibility
00
Official Listing on Grants.gov
View full details, application forms, and submission instructions.
Parent Grant Program
Residential Substance Abuse Treatment — Juvenile
U.S. Department of Justice
Agency Contact
For assistance with the requirements of this solicitation, contact the OJP Response Center at 800-851-3420, 301-240-6310 (TTY for hearing-impaired callers only), or grants@ncjrs.gov. The OJP Response Center hours of operation are 10:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. eastern time (ET) Monday-Friday, and 10:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m. ET on the solicitation close date.<br/>grants@ncjrs.gov
Key Dates
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Disclaimer: This information is sourced from Grants.gov and SAM.gov and is for informational purposes only. Opportunity details, deadlines, and eligibility requirements change frequently. Always verify current information directly on Grants.gov before applying. PlainGrants is not affiliated with any federal agency.
Read our methodology — how this data is sourced, computed, and verified.
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| Sources | Public official public datasets |