FY 24 Invited to Apply- Sex Offender and Registration Notification Act (SORNA)
Posted by Bureau of Justice Assistance
Opportunity snapshot. This Grants.gov announcement — FY 24 Invited to Apply- Sex Offender and Registration Notification Act (SORNA) — is cataloged under number O-BJA-2024-172237 and tied to CFDA assistance listing 16.738, posted by Bureau of Justice Assistance. Grants.gov currently shows the opportunity as closed, first posted on September 4, 2024. The funding category is Other, delivered as a grant.
Award economics. The award range on file is Up to $749,115. The agency has projected $3.4 million in total estimated funding for this announcement. It expects to issue 22 awards. If the agency funds the expected 22 awards from the $3.4 million estimated pool, the average award works out to roughly $152,000. Cost sharing is not required, so applicants do not need to commit matching funds to be competitive on this opportunity. 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 October 16, 2024. 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 $749,115
Close Date
October 16, 2024
Posted
September 4, 2024
Est. Total Funding
$3,353,845
Expected Awards
22
Instrument
Grant
Description
The Adam Walsh Child Protection and Safety Act of 2006 is designed to protect children and adults from sexual exploitation and violent crime, prevent child abuse and child pornography, promote internet safety, and honor the memory of Adam Walsh and other crime victims. The Sex Offender Registration and Notification Act was enacted to protect the public from convicted sex offenders by establishing a comprehensive, national system for the registration of and notification about those offenders. The Adam Walsh Act established a penalty for jurisdictions that failed to substantially implement SORNA by July 27, 2011, and for any year thereafter. For those jurisdictions that did not substantially implement SORNA by July 27, 2011, the SORNA penalty was first applied in fiscal year (FY) 2012. It will continue to be applied each subsequent year in which the recipient has not substantially implemented SORNA. See 34 U.S.C. § 20927(a) for details. The Attorney General delegated the task of determining when a jurisdiction has substantially implemented SORNA’s requirements to the Office of Sex Offender Sentencing, Monitoring, Apprehending, Registering, and Tracking (SMART Office). Consistent with prior years, the SORNA penalty is calculated by subtracting 10 percent from the state government’s JAG allocation (60 percent of the total award) after deduction of the “mandatory variable pass-through” that states are required to send to local governments. Note: The penalty applies to the portion of JAG funding awarded to the state to be shared with local governments not eligible for a direct JAG award (“less than $10,000 jurisdictions”) because the states retain control over these funds and may award them to another state agency (i.e., state police) in lieu of awarding them to a local government in localities where the state provides them with direct services. The penalty is not assessed against the mandatory pass-through, which is the portion of JAG funds awarded by states to local law enforcement, because the state cannot retain any portion of that award. While BJA will be administering the SORNA reallocation funds awarded to eligible SAAs, OJP’s SMART Office will assist jurisdictions with developing and/or enhancing programs designed to implement the SORNA portion of the Adam Walsh Act (34 U.S.C. § 20901, et seq.). SAAs must pass through these reallocation funds to the designated SORNA contact agencies to carry out the activities described in the individual reallocation requests as previously approved by OJP. BJA strongly encourages all jurisdictions that have not yet substantially implemented SORNA to continue to work expeditiously to implement SORNA’s requirements to better protect their communities from sexual violence and exploitation. For additional information about SORNA implementation, please see https://smart.ojp.gov/faqs.
Eligibility
00
Official Listing on Grants.gov
View full details, application forms, and submission instructions.
Parent Grant Program
Justice Assistance Grant (JAG)
U.S. Department of Justice
Agency Contact
Flora Lawson<br/>Flora.Lawson@usdoj.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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