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/ 2001
/ June
/ Friday, June 22, 2001
[Federal Register: June 22, 2001 (Volume 66, Number 121)]
[Notices]
[Page 33563-33566]
From the Federal Register Online via GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov]
[DOCID:fr22jn01-95]
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DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
National Institute of Corrections
Solicitation for a Cooperative Agreement--Resource Center for
Children of Prisoners
AGENCY: National Institute of Corrections, Department of Justice.
ACTION: Solicitation for a Cooperative Agreement.
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SUMMARY: This is one of five solicitations to address issues of
[[Page 33564]]
children who have experienced parental incarceration. There will be one
award for this solicitation of up to $1 million for a 36 month project.
The purpose of this solicitation is to create a Resource Center for
Children of Prisoners that will be responsible to provide training and
technical assistance; develop a plan for a public awareness program;
identify existing research and resources, including papers and
publications, programs and promising practices on children/youth
affected by parental incarceration; support and manage an advisory
group; and develop and conduct, as appropriate, process and outcome
evaluation for all awardees of the five solicitations for the Children
of Prisoners funds.
Background
The Department of Justice (DOJ), National Institute of Corrections
(NIC), announces the availability of funds for fiscal year 2001 for
five (5) solicitations to fund projects for children of incarcerated or
formerly incarcerated parents. Congress appropriated $4 million to NIC
``to work with cooperative agreements to fund private sector or not for
profit groups that have effective, tested programs to help children of
prisoners.'' These cooperative agreements may be for up to three (3)
years.
To prepare for this solicitation, NIC convened a Children of
Prisoners planning meeting, inviting federal and state government,
association, academic and private provider representatives. The goals
of the two-day meeting were to: (1) Identify the problems and issues
that children of prisoners or former prisoners face that put them at
risk of potential future delinquency; (2) identify the problems and
greatest needs of incarcerated parents and caretakers of these
children; (3) identify and describe evidence-based and promising
approaches to support these children and prevent their future
delinquency; and (4) describe and prioritize how the newly appropriated
funds can best address these issues.
Based on this meeting, NIC staff is announcing the following five
(5) solicitations:
1. Resource Center--(This announcement) Up to $1 million for a 36
month project will be awarded to one (1) organization or group (joint
applications are encouraged) to provide training and technical
assistance, develop a plan for a public awareness program, support and
manage an advisory group, and develop and conduct, as appropriate,
process and outcome evaluations with awardees.
2. Planning Awards--Three (3), 18-month planning awards, of up to
$100,000 for each award, will be made to three private and non profit
agencies in three different jurisdictions. The purpose of this
solicitation is to assist three (3) jurisdictions to develop a
comprehensive plan for the delivery of services to a clearly identified
target population of children/youth who have been traumatized or
damaged as a result of parental incarceration. These awards will be
given to agencies that create or build on an existing collaborative
planning process. All applications must include the appropriate
Federal, State and/or local agency/agencies.
3. Awards to Communities with High Crime and High Incarceration
Rates--Up to $1.675 million will be awarded to three (3) to five (5)
private and/or non profit agencies working with children living in
communities with high crime and incarceration rates. The purpose is to
develop three-year demonstration programs. Up to one year may be spent
planing the programs, the second and third years will focus on program
implementation and evaluation.
4. Children of Parents in Prison--Three-year demonstration awards
to two (2) agencies that work with children of parents held in State or
Federal prisons. A total of $500,000 will be available for these
awards. One award will for $30,000 per year and one will be for
$135,000 a year. Planning must be an integral part of the application.
5. Children of Parents in Jail--Three-year demonstration awards to
two (2) agencies that work with children of parents in jail. A total of
$500,000 will be available for these awards. One award will be for
$30,000 per year and one will be for $135,000 a year. Planning must be
an integral part of the application.
Applicants may apply for more than one solicitation.
Information About This Population
According to Senate Report 106-404 from the FY 2001 DOJ
appropriations bill, ``* * * children of prisoners are six times more
likely than other children to be incarcerated at some point in their
lives * * *.'' Yet, little research and few programs have targeted
children of offenders.
The number of men and women confined in prisons and jails has
increased in the 1990s from just under 1.2 million to 1.9 million. The
Bureau of Justice Statistics in its August 2000 Bulletin,
``Incarcerated Parents and Their Children,'' states that 721,500 State
and Federal inmates are parents to nearly 1.5 million children under
the age of 18, an increase of 500,000 children in the past 8 years.
This means that 2.1% of all children in the United States have a parent
in State or Federal prison. The number of children of parents in
detention is not known, but half of all youth in custody have apparent
or close relative who has been in jail.
Prior to prison admission, 64% of the women and 44% of the men
lived with their children. Once incarcerated, 90% of the men indicated
that at least one child lived with his/her mother; 28% of the women
said the father was the child's care giver. One in five of these
children was under 5 years of age, and the majority were less than 10
years old. Black children were nearly 9 times more likely to have a
parent in prison than white children, and Hispanic children were 3
times more likely than white children to have an imprisoned parent.
While the number of fathers in prison far outweighs the number of
mothers, it is mostly the mothers who were primary care givers before
incarceration. When fathers are incarcerated, the care giver usually
becomes the mother; when the mother is confined, the care giver often
becomes the child's grandparent or other relative. Three of four
parents in State prisons reported a prior conviction compared to one
out of three in Federal prisons. Many children, then, have experienced
more than one parental separation.
Parental arrest and confinement lead to stress, trauma,
stigmatization and separation problems for the children. These problems
are coupled with existing problems that include poverty, violence,
parental substance abuse, high crime environment, intrafamily abuse,
abuse and neglect, multiple care givers and/or prior separations. As a
result, these children often exhibit a broad variety of behavioral,
emotional, health, and educational problems that are compounded by the
pain of separation.
Denise Johnston from the Center for Children of Incarcerated
Parents in California found that early childhood (between the ages of
2-6) may be the most damaging time for parent-child separation as the
child remembers the trauma but cannot adjust to it without help. If
these children do not receive assistance or cannot process the
separation for themselves, their behaviors can become increasingly
maladaptive as they grow up, leading to strong negative feelings about
the criminal justice and welfare systems, delinquency, poor school
performance and other antisocial behaviors.
There are a handful of programs around the country that work with
these children. The Child Welfare League of America has published,
``Working with
[[Page 33565]]
Children and Families Separated by incarceration,'' a handbook for
child welfare agencies and staff. There is also a major initiative
funded by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services the goals of
which are to: (1) develop a research and practice baseline on the
effects of incarceration on prisoners and their children, families and
communities; (2) document the intersection of populations within the
criminal justice system and populations served by HHS programs; (3)
determine unmet health and human services needs of offenders and their
families left behind in the community; and (4) ensure that HHS takes
into account the effects of incarceration on the children and families
of inmates. HHS has commissioned a literature review and nine papers to
explore what is known and knowable about these issues.
Goals and Objectives of This Award
The Resource Center will provide many different services. Its
target audience are all awardees of Children of Prisoners cooperative
agreements, and the criminal justice, health and human services and
child welfare communities. Joint applications are encouraged.
Goal 1: Develop and disseminate information about the effects on
children/youth of parental separation due to the latter's incarceration
and on research, tested experience and promising practices that
increased the stability and positive outcomes for these children.
Objectives
1. Develop a plan for an awareness dissemination program on child/
parent separation targeted at constituent groups.
2. Develop a plan for training and technical assistance to awardees
and other constituent groups.
3. Staff an advisory/working group selected by NIC. It is
anticipated there will be two meetings in Year 1 and one meeting each
in Years 2 and 3. This group will include NIC staff and may include up
to 10 representatives from constituent groups working to coordinate
their respective agency efforts.
4. Identify existing research and resources including papers and
publications, programs and promising practices, on children/youth
affected by parental incarceration.
5. Provide training and technical assistance to awardees, as
needed, both on site and by phone, and to constituency groups to
increase awareness of the effects of parental incarceration on
children.
Goal 2: Develop and/or assist in developing process and/or outcome
evaluations for all awardees.
Objectives
1. Consult with awardees in designing and implementing appropriate
data collection protocols to evaluate their planning process and
service delivery programs(s)
2. Conduct evaluations, as appropriate, to assess planning and
program delivery outcomes.
3. Develop a design to allow for a longitudinal study of the
initiative programs if long term funding is secured.
4. All data, where possible, will be shown by gender and race.
Applicant Expertise
NIC is seeking an applicant organization or team with the necessary
expertise and experience in the following areas:
1. Child development and child-family relationships, the human
services, criminal and juvenile justice systems, and planning.
2. Developing and delivering training and technical assistance to a
variety of audiences.
3. Developing a public awareness campaign for constituent groups.
4. Meeting planning and management, including logistics and
technical support.
5. Conducting outcome evaluations.
Project Design
The project for the three-year cooperative agreement is as follows.
Year 1
1. Plan, organize and manage two advisory group meetings. Each
meeting will be coordinated with NIC project staff who will select up
to 10 advisory group members.
2. Plan, organize and manage a post-selection meeting, either on
site at each jurisdiction or as a group in one place. The site will be
determined by the needs and locations of the awardees. The purpose of
the meeting(s) is to learn about each program, share ideas and
concerns, describe the types of assistance the Resource Center can
provide and begin the work with awardees of developing the direction of
the outcome evaluations.
3. Identify existing research and resources, including papers and
publications, programs and promising practices, on children/youth
affected by parental incarceration.
4. Provide training to awardees and constituency groups, as needed.
5. Develop a technical assistance plan to include the types of
assistance to be provided, average frequency of contacts with awardees,
and how the assistance will be delivered.
6. Develop specialized training and materials for constituency
groups in, at a minimum, the following areas:
a. What is known about the effects of parental incarceration on
children and youth behavior.
b. The developmental needs of children and how those needs impact
children when separated from their primary care taker.
c. Violence and victimization in the lives of inmates and the
effects of these experiences on their ability to parent their children.
d. Promising practices that community corrections, jails, prisons,
juvenile detention and secure confinement facilities can implement to
promote positive child/family relationships, where appropriate. These
practices may come from working with similar populations, e.g., Head
Start children and parents, substance abusing parents.
e. How the correctional system can work with other systems, such as
juvenile detention, child welfare, education, mental health and
physical health.
The applicant will demonstrate cultural sensitivity in training
program design and implementation.
8. Work with awardees to identify their evaluation needs and, where
appropriate, develop and implement evaluation instrument(s). The
monetary size of the direct service award will likely impact the type
of evaluation selected.
9. Prepare a Year One progress report.
The NIC Project Manager will have the final review on all
deliverables.
Years 2 and 3
1. Plan, organize and manage one advisory group meeting in each
Year 2 and in Year 3.
2. Continue to provide training and technical assistance to
awardees as they continue to plan and implement services. Identify the
types of training and TA that might be provided.
3. Field test and deliver final training program to a constituent
group. Indicate the criteria to be used for trainee selection.
4. Implement the public information campaign.
5. Describe how the evaluations will be conducted and the results
distributed.
6. Prepare a progress report for Year Two and a final report at the
end of Year Three based on the evaluations of each project.
[[Page 33566]]
Application Requirements
The applicant must:
1. Provide a statement of what is known about the problems that
children/youth face when separated from incarcerated parents.
2. Develop a project design that meets the goals and objectives
stated above, including methodology and deliverables. Include a
workplan on how each task will be developed and implemented.
3. Describe the strengths of each proposed agency that will form
the Resource Center.
4. Provide a management plan that includes key staff, the amount of
time spent by key staff, the tasks each key staff will perform, a
timeline for the first year and a proposed timeline for Years 2 and 3.
Explain how the Resource Center will work with NIC.
5. Provide a budget and budget narrative for the first year and
proposed budgets for Years 2 and 3. Include in the budget all expenses
related to the public awareness campaign, training and technical
assistance for awardees, Advisory Group meetings, and outcome
evaluations.
6. Applications are limited to 25 typed, double spaced pages using
a 12 point font, not including letters of support, resumes, other
supporting documents and SF-424 forms. Provide 6 copies of the
application, including one that is not bound. One bound copy must be
signed in blue ink by the agency administrator or chief executive
officer.
Authority: Public Law 93-415.
Funds Available
One award will be made for up to $1 million for a 36 month project.
In addition to private and non profit agencies, educational
institutions are encouraged to apply. At this time, there are no plans
for additional funding in the future.
Deadline for Receipt of Applications
Applications must be received at the NIC offices by 4 p.m. EDT on
August 2, 2001. They should be addressed to: Director, National
Institute of Corrections, 320 First Street, NW, Room 5007, Washington,
DC 20534. Hand delivered applications may be brought to 500 First
Street, NW, Washington, DC 20534. The front desk will call Germaine
Jefferson or Bobbi Tinsley at 202-307-3106 ext. 0 for pickup.
Addresses and Further Information
Requests for the application kit, which consists of copies of this
announcement and the required application forms, can be downloaded from
the NIC website at http://www.nicic.org Click on ``Cooperative
Agreements.''
All technical and/or programmatic questions concerning this
announcement should be directed to Mary Whitaker at the above address
or by calling 800-995-6423, extension 40378, or 202-514-0378 or by e-
mail via mwhitaker@bop.gov
All specific questions regarding the application process should be
directed to Judy Evens, Cooperative Agreement Control Office, National
Institute of Corrections, 320 First Street, NW, Room 507, Washington,
DC 20534 or by calling 800-995-6423, ext. 44222 or 202-307-3106,
extension 44222 or by e-mail via jevens@bop.gov
Eligible Applicants: Applicants are private and not for profit
agencies. Educational institutions are also encouraged to apply.
Review Considerations: Applications will be reviewed by a three- to
five-member team using a peer review process.
Number of Awards: One (1).
NIC Application Number: NIC Application Number: 01K60. This number
should appear as a reference line in the cover letter and also in box
11 of Standard Form 424. This number must also appear on the outside of
the package in which the application arrives at NIC.
(The Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance Number: 16.602.)
This project is not subject to the provisions of Executive Order
12372.
Dated: June 18, 2001.
Morris L. Thigpen,
Director, National Institute of Corrections.
[FR Doc. 01-15688 Filed 6-21-01; 8:45 am]
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