Deadline: 6-Apr-23
The U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), Office of Justice Programs (OJP), Office for Victims of Crime (OVC) seek applications for funding from states or Tribes to develop, enhance, and coordinate programs and activities geared toward improving outcomes for child and youth victims of sex and labor trafficking.
This program aims to improve statewide coordination and multidisciplinary collaboration across systems to address human trafficking involving children and youth. This program furthers the Department’s mission by enhancing the field’s response to child and youth victims of human trafficking.
Goals
Objectives
- Develop and implement a state or Tribal jurisdiction-wide strategy to combat the greatest challenges in addressing child and youth sex and labor trafficking within the state or Tribe.
- Develop protocols and procedures to make sure child and youth victims receive appropriate services, including developmentally and age-appropriate and culturally specific referrals and/or services in their own language or with access to interpretation and translation, and strengthening data collection across multiple systems that work with and provide services to youth.
- Develop a unified strategy to provide training to professionals throughout the jurisdiction, including, but not limited to, law enforcement officers, first responders such as hospital workers or paramedics, victim service providers, mental health care professionals, educators, child welfare or social workers, juvenile justice personnel, prosecutors, and other court personnel.
- Fill gaps in services and coordinate responses in existing anti-trafficking and youth-serving efforts, including those related to victim assistance, law enforcement, child welfare, runaway and homeless youth, and juvenile justice, among others. Using online directories available from OVC and the Office on Trafficking in Persons (OTIP), applicants should determine if there is an existing federally funded trafficking victim service provider within their jurisdiction, and work to make sure that an application under this program does not duplicate existing services currently funded by OVC or OTIP.
- Collect data and engage in performance measurement activities to determine if the program is meeting its stated goals and objectives (e.g., if there has been improved collaboration among systems).
Priority Areas
The Department of Justice 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.
- Applications that propose project(s) that are designed to promote racial equity and the removal of barriers to access and opportunity for communities that have been historically underserved, marginalized, and adversely affected by inequality.
- To receive this consideration, the applicant must describe how the proposed project(s) will address potential racial inequities and contribute to greater access to services and opportunities for communities that have been historically underserved, marginalized, and adversely affected by inequality, and identify how the project design and implementation will specifically incorporate the input or participation of those communities and populations disproportionately impacted by crime, violence, and the criminal justice system overall.
- Applicants that demonstrate that their capabilities and competencies for implementing their proposed project(s) are enhanced because they (or at least one proposed subrecipient that will receive at least 40% of the requested award funding, as demonstrated in the Budget Web-Based Form) identify as a culturally specific organization.
- To receive this additional priority consideration, applicants must describe how being a culturally specific organization (or funding the culturally specific subrecipient organization(s)) will enhance their ability to implement the proposed project(s) and should also specify which populations are intended or expected to be served or to have their needs addressed under the proposed project(s).
Funding Information
- Estimated Total Program Funding: $6,000,000
- Award Ceiling: $1,500,000
- Award Floor: $0
- Expected Number of Awards: 4
Deliverables
All deliverables listed should be inclusive of both sex and labor trafficking:
- A written strategic plan should be developed with project partners and supported by the baseline data provided in the application. The strategy must be finalized by the grantee and approved by OVC within the first year of the project start date. The strategic plan should be reviewed and updated annually based on lessons learned during the project.
- Documented lessons learned related to implementing the statewide strategy and the potential impacts on child and youth victims of human trafficking.
- Written protocols and procedures ensuring child and youth victims receive appropriate services, including developmentally appropriate, culturally responsive referrals and/or services in victims’ primary language.
- A written training plan and training materials for jurisdiction stakeholders.
- Outreach and awareness materials, including social media and technology efforts, designed and tailored for those working with children and youth victims of human trafficking.
- Regular performance reports documenting services provided.
Eligibility Criteria
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For the purposes of this solicitation, “state” means any state of the United States, the District of Columbia, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, Guam, American Samoa, and the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands.
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Eligible subrecipients are states, units of local government, federally recognized Indian Tribal governments (as determined by the Secretary of the Interior), and nonprofit (defined as an organization that is described in section 501(c)(3) of Title 26 and is exempt fromtaxation under 501(a) of such title) organizations (including Tribal nonprofits).
For more information, visit Grants.gov.