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U.S. Forest Service |
OMB Control No: 0596-XXX EXP Date: XX/XX/XXXX FS-1500-0045a |
USDA Forest Service State and Private Forestry
Fiscal Year 2022 Community Wildfire Defense Grant
Notice of Funding Opportunity Instructions
Northeast-Midwest
Overview and Submission Dates for Fiscal Year (FY) 2022 1
Purpose of the Community Wildfire Defense Grant 1
Detailed Eligibility and Qualifying Proposal Types 4
Cost Share Match Requirements and Waivers 10
Project Evaluation and Selection 18
Contacts for Further Information 18
Appendix I. Instructions for Submitting Applications through Grants.gov 20
Appendix II. CWDG Application Requirements Checklist 22
Applications are being requested for the FY2022 Community Wildfire Defense Grant (CWDG)
This Notice of Funding Opportunity (NOFO) is for projects that will be carried out within the footprint of the Northeast-Midwest States (Connecticut, Delaware, District of Columbia, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Vermont, West Virginia and Wisconsin). For Tribes and other regions of the United States, please see appropriate NOFO for specific instructions.
Search for the following grant Opportunity Number in grants.gov and follow the included instructions:
USDA-FS-2022-CWDG-NEMW
SUBMIT ALL APPLICATIONS BY MIDNIGHT, EASTERN TIME ZONE, OCTOBER 7, 2022
The purpose of the Community Wildfire Defense Grant is to assist at-risk local communities and Indian Tribes with planning for and mitigating against the risk created by wildfire. This program is authorized in H.R. 3684, ‘‘An Act to authorize funds for Federal-aid highways, highway safety programs, and transit programs, and for other purposes,’’ commonly referred to as the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act. Specifically, the CWDG is provided for in Title VIII, Section 40803. There are two primary project types for which the grant provides funding: The development and revising of Community Wildfire Protection Plans (CWPP), and the implementation of projects described in a CWPP that is less than ten years old. The Act prioritizes at-risk communities that are in an area identified as having high or very high wildfire hazard potential, are low-income, and/or have been impacted by a severe disaster. More details on these three priorities can be found in this NOFO.
The CWDG helps communities in the wildland urban interface (WUI) implement the three goals of the National Cohesive Wildland Fire Management Strategy (Cohesive Strategy):
Restore and Maintain Landscapes: Landscapes across all jurisdictions are resilient to fire-related disturbances, in accordance with management objectives.
Create Fire Adapted Communities: Human populations and infrastructure can withstand a wildfire without loss of life and property.
Improve Wildfire Response: All jurisdictions participate in making and implementing safe, effective, efficient risk-based wildfire management decisions.
Who Can Apply: Entities eligible to apply for funding under the CWDG include:
Units of local governments representing communities located in an area with a risk of wildfires,
Indian Tribes,
Non-profit organizations including homeowner associations that assist such communities,
State forestry agencies (including U.S. territories and interests), and
Alaska Native Corporations
For-profit entities are not eligible to apply for this funding opportunity.
Executive Order 13985: Advancing Racial Equity and Support for Underserved Communities Through the Federal Government: We prioritize applications that show a clear benefit to underserved people and the communities where they reside or the forest areas that they value. Where this is the case, this should be described in the “Project Narrative Form.” Underserved communities are also eligible to request a waiver of match requirements.
Build America/Buy America: to the extent possible, successful applicants are encouraged to purchase materials, components, equipment and supplies that were made in America.
Labor Standards: All laborers and mechanics employed by the applicant, subrecipients, contractors or subcontractors in the performance of construction, alteration, or repair work on an award or project in excess of $2000 funded directly by or assisted in whole or in part by funds made available under this grant program shall be paid wages at rates not less than those prevailing on similar projects in the locality, as determined by the Secretary of Labor in accordance with subchapter IV of chapter 31 of title 40, United States Code commonly referred to as the “Davis-Bacon Act” (DBA).
Applicants shall provide written assurance acknowledging the DBA requirements for the award or project and confirming that all laborers and mechanics performing construction, alteration, or repair work on projects in excess of $2000 funded directly by or assisted in whole or in part by and through funding under the award are paid or will be paid wages at rates not less than those prevailing on projects of a character similar in the locality as determined by the Secretary of Labor in accordance with Subchapter IV of Chapter 31 of Title 40, United States Code (Davis-Bacon Act).
Recipients of funding will also be required to undergo DBA compliance training and to maintain competency in DBA compliance. The U.S. Department of Labor offers free Prevailing Wage Seminars several times a year that meet this requirement, at https://www.dol.gov/agencies/whd/government-contracts/construction/seminars/events.
For additional guidance on how to comply with DBA provisions and clauses, see https:/www.dol.gov/agencies/whd/government-contracts/construction and https:/www.dol.gov/agencies/whd/government-contracts/protections-for-workers-in-construction.
If a non-profit or other organization is contracted with a State forestry agency for Community Wildfire Defense Grants Program related work, they will not be eligible to apply for a grant under the program unless the grant can be separately managed with no conflict of interest concerns.
A project proposal must advance objectives and priorities identified in a community wildfire protection plan that is not more than 10 years old.
A project proposal must be designed to achieve one or more of the following objectives:
Assist a community with planning to address management of wildfire risk.
Assist a community with mitigation measures or actions to reduce wildfire risk.
Examples of Planning Projects |
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Eligible Projects |
Ineligible Projects |
Creation of a CWPP or development of a wildfire section for a hazard mitigation plan. |
GIS and database systems unless they support a CWPP, wildfire risk reduction planning or fuels mitigation initiative or project |
Update of an existing CWPP/hazard mitigation plan (Existing plan must be over five (5) years old.) |
Creation and/or update of Forest Stewardship Plans |
Contract support to assist a community with developing building codes, zoning ordinances or land use planning. |
Economic development projects |
Direct staff funding support to assist a community with developing building codes, zoning ordinances or land use planning. |
Small business start-up funding |
Tabletop or functional exercises to test effectiveness of community wildfire planning. |
Research and development projects |
Plan and address public health and safety effects of smoke and mitigation from wildfire and projects that use prescribed fire (“Smoke Ready” efforts) |
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Direct staff support for community wildfire mitigation leadership/coordination |
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Training in the use of proven effective mitigation practices, such as the Forest Service’s mitigation best practices |
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Direct staff support to assist in creation of a local or regional mitigation partnership |
Wildfire Prevention/Education/Outreach |
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Eligible |
Ineligible |
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Firewise USA© or similar programs outreach to communities and property owners |
Printing of paper-based materials without an organized outreach/education program |
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Fire education presentation such as Project Learning Tree |
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Property inspections and/or assessments |
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Training to conduct property inspections and/or assessments |
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Implementation of WUI Structure / Parcel / Community Fire Hazard Mitigation Methodology (HMM) for community hazard reduction |
Examples of Hazardous Fuels Reduction/ Restoration Projects |
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Eligible |
Ineligible |
Defensible space around homes, businesses, and other structures |
Capital improvements including construction/infrastructure (building remodel, bridges, road construction, water development) |
Development, creation, and/or maintenance of fuel breaks and fire breaks, including shaded fuel breaks |
Home hardening, including but not limited to:
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Fuels reduction beyond defensible space adjacent to at-risk communities. |
Fire suppression training (unless course is a requirement for prescribed fire qualifications) |
Removal of standing woody vegetation by cutting, piling and burning. |
Fire suppression equipment and apparatus |
Removal of standing woody vegetation by cutting and chipping. |
Drones |
Removal of standing woody vegetation using a mechanical mulcher or masticator type equipment mounted on mobile equipment. |
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Reduction of hazardous fuels through the application of prescribed fire. |
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Vegetation management (pruning, mowing, chemical treatment, grazing), including rights-of-ways for roads. |
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Maintenance of fuels projects. Up to two (2) maintenance treatment allowed per project during the grant term. |
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Monitoring components of projects for effectiveness (must have established baseline) |
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Prescribed fire training, including training on smoke management associated with prescribed fires |
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Design and installation of dry hydrants and cisterns |
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Purchase of mechanical equipment that meets, or does not exceed the following requirements:
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Purchase of equipment for brush/fuel disposal, such as air curtain burner/trench burner |
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Purchase of the following equipment and supplies to support the use of prescribed fire:
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Cost Share Match Requirements and Waivers
Scoring Criteria for Community Wildfire Adaptation Grants (100 points total)
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Grant |
Match |
TOTAL |
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Funds Requested |
Non-Federal Funds |
Total Project Cost |
Personnel/Labor: |
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Fringe Benefits: |
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Travel: |
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Equipment: |
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Supplies: |
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Contractual: |
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Other: |
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Indirect Costs: |
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TOTAL: |
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The budget narrative must describe how the grant funds will be spent with specific detail for each grant expenditure. It must describe how expenditures are applicable and relevant to the goals and objectives of the project. A project proposal must also show how the applicant will meet matching requirements or qualify for a waiver.
A proposal must clearly define how a project will be accomplished, timelines and milestones, as well as measures and metrics. Examples include:
a. How the selected objectives will lead to measurable outcomes for community
wildfire risk reduction.
b. How the applicant will measure progress towards those outcomes (such as, acres
treated to reduce hazardous fuels, change in fire regime).
c. The proposed metrics for measuring progress, which must be specific, measurable, achievable, realistic, and timely.
The application should clearly define collaborative elements including support from partners, agencies, landowners, and communities. A project proposal must identify partners that will be actively engaged in carrying out the project and add value to project planning and implementation. Collaboration may be qualitative in nature, and the contribution of a partner may be more than the number of partners.
Project Sustainability (10 points)
The application should clearly define how or if the project will sustain itself after the grant period is over. Any steps or plans that will be carried out to continue the project benefits beyond the life of the grant should be described.
Low Income Community (10 points)
The application should clearly demonstrate and document whether the project benefits a low-income community.
Affected by a Severe Disaster (10 points)
The application should clearly demonstrate and document whether the project benefits a community that has been impacted by a severe disaster within the previous ten (10) years, and clearly exhibit how the severe disaster increased wildfire risk and/or hazard, and was of a scale and scope to have had landscape impacts (please see full definition on page 18 of this NOFO).
Area of Wildfire Hazard Potential (20 points)
The application should clearly demonstrate and document whether the project is located in an area identified as having high or very high wildfire hazard potential as defined by a local, state, Tribal, regional, or national wildfire hazard potential assessment.
Criteria Scoring Rubric: This rubric is for the review team members to reference while scoring the applications.
Criteria Scoring Rubric |
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Criteria |
High Score |
Medium Score |
Low Score |
1. Project Description |
7-10 points |
3-6 points |
0-2 points |
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Clearly defined purpose and goals. Paints clear picture of what project is trying to achieve and how it will be accomplished. Links to Cohesive Strategy and/or State Forest Action Plan goals and strategies
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Project described in general, but misses one or two elements that would clarify goal and intent. Outlines project well but does not clearly address risk or hazard. Mentions Cohesive Strategy or State Forest Action plan only cursory |
Weak description of purpose of project or how it will protect community. Unclear on how it will be accomplished. No linkage to Cohesive Strategy or State Forest Action Plan. |
2. Budget |
7-10 points |
3-6 points |
0-2 points |
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Budget is complete, easy to understand, and budget items are clearly labeled. Narrative provides clear and concise explanation of each budget line item and its function within the project.
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Budget items are present and detailed, but one or more budget line items lacks explanation and function within project description. |
Major errors in budget calculations. Expenditures and budget line-item functions are unclear. Poorly written. |
3. Accomplishments |
7-10 points |
3-6 points |
0-2 points |
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Compelling, clear and concise description of qualitative and quantitative outcomes. Measures are specific, achievable and clear.
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Description of how outcomes will achieve one or more objectives of grant. Outcomes are commensurate with budget |
Weak description, or lack of clarity for measures. Outcomes are not commensurate with budget. |
4. Collaboration |
7-10 points |
3-6 points |
0-2 points |
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Demonstrates strong collaboration with, and commitment by, partners. High coordination with other entities. Cross boundary collaboration
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Limited to moderate coordination with partners. Demonstrates some, but not strong, commitment by partners. |
A simple assertion, or very little or no meaningful collaboration. Little to no coordination with neighboring entities or complementary programs |
5. Landscape Impacts |
7-10 points
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3-6 points
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0-2 points
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Clearly demonstrates forethought given to project location, orientation and/or scope/magnitude of positive impact on a landscape and/or community beyond the defined project area. |
Landscape level activities or community reach are described in general or other nearby projects are listed, but it is not clear how or why the project complements directly at a landscape or community level. |
Narrative not clearly written; key descriptions of landscape community level activities, and overall project impact are absent. |
6. Project Sustainability |
7-10 points
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3-6 points
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0-2 points
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Application well-written and clearly shows that items described have been planned in advance and/or have had past success. Describes who is responsible for maintenance, duration, and if any processes or long-term plans are in place to support the project after grant funding is expended. |
Missing key details or specificity of how project will be maintained beyond life of grant, but is otherwise well written, detailed, and descriptive. |
Omits multiple details on how project will be sustained, and/or is poorly detailed and unclear. No mention of how project will provide benefit beyond the life of the grant |
7. Low income community |
10 points
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not applicable
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0 points
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All, or part of a project area is located in a low-income community as defined. |
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All of a project is located outside the footprint of a low-income community, as defined, or is not documented |
8. Impacted by Severe Disaster |
10 points
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not applicable
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0 points
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All, or part of a project area has been impacted by a severe disaster, as defined, and is documented |
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None of project area has been impacted by a severe disaster, as defined, or is not properly documented |
9. High/Very high wildfire hazard potential |
20 points
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not applicable
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0 points
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All, or part of project is located within an area of high or very high wildfire hazard potential, and is properly documented |
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Project is located outside any area with high or very high wildfire hazard potential, or is not documented properly |
Complete application packages include the following (complete all forms in your Workspace at Grants.gov):
SF-424 Application for Federal Assistance (OMB Control Number 4040-0004). Note: The Catalog of Domestic Assistance number is 10.720.
SF-424A Budget Information for Non-Construction Programs (OMB Control Number 4040-0006)
Attachments Form (must be included in the application package in order to attach additional forms below)
Community Wildfire Defense Grant Project Narrative Form (required)
Screenshot showing an ACTIVE registration in SAM.gov (required)
Documentation of at-risk community, wildfire hazard potential, low-income, and/or impacted by a severe disaster (required if applicable).
Maps or photos to accompany the narrative (optional)
Application worksheet (optional)
Letters of Support (optional)
Completed application packages are due by midnight, October 7th, 2022.
Clearly and concisely respond to each section in the Project Narrative. For the longer sections, we encourage you to include sub-headings, line spacing, and/or other formatting for ease of reading (rather than fill every line with words). You may format text in MS Word and then copy and paste it into the Form. Some text formatting is available in the PDF form, e.g., bold, underline, and italic. To format text in the Form: Highlight the text, right click, and select “Text Style.”
Project Title: Provide a uniquely descriptive title for this project. Use this full title consistently on all submission communications and supplemental documents, including letters of support, until an official application number is assigned by the Eastern Region S&PF.
Project Applicant: Enter the name of the organization applying for Federal funding.
Program Contact: Enter the name and contact information for the project or program, i.e., who would be the lead for implementing the project if funded.
Brief Project Overview and Purpose: Provide a brief purpose statement or synopsis for the project.
Grant Component Type: Check the box that best describes the project for which you are applying. Due to differing requirements for match and funding limits, check only one box per application and do not combine CWPP development proposals with project implementation proposals.
At-risk community: Check either the “yes” or “no” box. This is a fundamental eligibility requirement, so if you check “no” you are not eligible for funding under this opportunity. Please verify with state forestry agency or equivalent prior to applying. Documentation and verification will be required. This may be accomplished by either entering a link to the verification source in the application narrative, or by submitting/uploading documentation as an attachment in grants.gov (such as the optional application worksheet signed by an authorized individual). An at-risk community is defined as an area that is comprised of:
Option 1: An interface community as defined in the notice entitled ‘‘Wildland Urban Interface Communities Within the Vicinity of Federal Lands That Are at High Risk From Wildfire,’’ issued by the Secretary of Agriculture and the Secretary of the Interior in accordance with title IV of the Department of the Interior and Related Agencies Appropriations Act, 2001 (114 Stat. 1009) (66 Fed. Reg. 753, January 4, 2001);
or
Option 2: A group of homes and other structures with basic infrastructure and services (i.e., utilities, collectively maintained transportation routes, etc.) at risk from wildfire as recognized by a state, regional, or national wildfire risk assessment, in which herbaceous or woody fuel conditions in and adjacent to the community are conducive to a wildland fire disturbance event which threatens human life or values-at-risk.
Roofing Code/Ordinance: Check either the “yes” or “no” box. A roofing ordinance is not a requirement for this program but may dictate the available source of funds.
GIS Coordinates of Project Area: Include either a reference point with acreage, or boundary points for the project in lat/long entered in the following format: 39.000, _104.300. A “Reference Point” displays a single marker with name on the map and can be used for indicating a general region without specifying exact boundaries. An “Area” defines a region with a boundary defined by straight lines. At least three points are needed to define an area. For projects such as fuel treatments, provide sufficient points to define the area. For CWPP development, please include a description of the planning area and type (e.g. municipality boundary, fire response district, township, etc.). Coordinate data must be in WGS84 datum.
Project Description (10 points): Provide a comprehensive but succinct overview of the proposed project that includes basic details of who is doing what, where, and why this is important. Provide linkages to the tenets of the Cohesive Wildland Fire Management Strategy and the State Forest Action Plan. Specify if benefits to traditionally underserved or marginalized audiences are a component of the work.
Applicant Budget: Provide dollar figures (rounded to nearest dollar) for each cost proposed for each relevant budget category. This information should match your SF-424A.
Personnel: Expenses for personnel and staff salary
Fringe Benefits: Fringe benefits should be based upon actual known costs or established formula. Fringe benefits are for the personnel listed in the above category, and only for the percentage of time devoted to project.
Equipment: Non-expendable items with a single-item value >$5,000 to be purchased. Applicants should analyze the cost benefits of purchasing verses leasing equipment, especially high-cost items. Rented or leased equipment costs go in the “Contractual” category.
Supplies: Expenses for supplies <$5,000
Contractual: Expenses for product or services to be paid to a consultant, contractor or lease/rental
Other: any other eligible costs not captured in the categories above
Indirect Costs: Indirect costs must be tied to an established rate. Recipients must utilize either their approved overhead rate or the standard de-minimus rate for budget calculations.
Project Budget Explanation (10 points): Provide any additional remarks needed to clarify and justify your budget request. Clearly explain how the budget will be spent by line item, sources of match, and how expenditures are applicable and relevant to the goals and objectives of the project.
Measurable Outcomes: Measurable Outcomes Table: Provide the Planned output amounts, as relevant, for both the number and type of activities, as well as planned costs associated with those activities.
Accomplishments (10 points): Clearly define how the project will be accomplished, including describing the planned activities in the previous table, as well as identifying measurable outcomes and timelines (are the proposed activities clear and achievable, goals defined, outcomes measurable, # of acres treated, # of education/outreach programs, planning/assessment efforts clearly described, etc.)
Collaboration (10 points): Identify partners that have demonstrated a commitment and add value towards planning and carrying out the project, and describe what these partners and collaborators contribute. Demonstrate residual positive benefits, as a result of collaboration, related to capacity, skills, knowledge, infrastructure, or a replicable approach.
Landscape Impact (10 points): Clearly define the scale of the project, including relationships with past, present, or future projects that, when combined, offer more benefits than when taken individually. Describe overall landscape that the project influences.
Project Sustainability (10 points: Clearly define how, or if, the project will sustain itself after the grant period is over. Describe any plans or steps that will be taken to continue the project benefits beyond the life of the grant.
Low Income Community (10 points): Check either the “yes” or “no” box. This is a priority for funding, so if you check “no” you are still eligible for funding but will not score as high. Please verify with the appropriate state contact prior to applying. Documentation and verification will be required. This may be accomplished by either entering a link to the verification source in the application narrative, or by submitting/uploading documentation as an attachment in grants.gov. Low-income community - means: (1) A community where the median household income is less than 80% of the county’s median household income or less than 80% of the state’s median household income, whichever is higher. --Or-- (2) A county or tribal area where the median household income is less than 80% of the state’s median household income.--Or—(3) An area with low to moderate income as most recently determined by U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development: https://hud.maps.arcgis.com/home/item.html?id=ffd0597e8af24f88b501b7e7f326bedd
Impacted by a severe disaster (10 points): Check either the “yes” or “no” box. This is a priority for funding, so if you check “no” you are still eligible for funding but will not score as high. Please verify with the appropriate state contact prior to applying. Documentation and verification will be required. This may be accomplished by either entering a link to the verification source in the application narrative, or by submitting/uploading documentation as an attachment in grants.gov. Impacted by a severe disaster means any event declared, designated, or recognized by a government authority as having caused damage, loss, or destruction to an extent and scale that an unusual or abnormal increase in wildfire risk or hazard potential to a community has occurred. Examples may include Federal, State, Tribal, or county disaster declarations or declared emergencies, events declared by the USDA Farm Services Agency, communities impacted by a FEMA Fire Management Assistance Grant, or widespread insect and disease mortality.
High or Very High Wildfire Hazard Potential (20 points): Check either the “yes” or “no” box. This is a priority for funding, so if you check “no” you are still eligible for funding but will not score as high. Please verify with the appropriate state contact prior to applying. Documentation and verification will be required. This may be accomplished by either entering a link to the verification source in the application narrative, or by submitting/uploading documentation as an attachment in grants.gov. High or very high wildfire hazard potential means the project is located within an area identified as having high or very high wildfire hazard potential as defined by a local, state, Tribal, regional, or national wildfire hazard potential assessment.
Brad Simpkins, 603-312-8326, brad.simpkins@usda.gov
Burden Statement
According to the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, an agency may not conduct or sponsor, and a person is not required to respond to a collection of information unless it displays a valid OMB control number. The valid OMB control number for this information collection is 0596-0XXX. The time required to complete this information collection is estimated to average 1.25 hours per response, including the time for reviewing instructions, searching existing data sources, gathering and maintaining the data needed, and completing and reviewing the collection of information.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) prohibits discrimination in all its programs and activities on the basis of race, color, national origin, age, disability, and where applicable, sex, marital status, familial status, parental status, religion, sexual orientation, genetic information, political beliefs, reprisal, or because all or part of an individual’s income is derived from any public assistance. (Not all prohibited bases apply to all programs.) Persons with disabilities who require alternative means for communication of program information (Braille, large print, audiotape, etc.) should contact USDA’s TARGET Center at 202-720-2600 (voice and TDD).
To file a complaint of discrimination, write USDA, Director, Office of Civil Rights, 1400 Independence Avenue, SW, Washington, DC 20250-9410 or call toll free (866) 632-9992 (voice). TDD users can contact USDA through local relay or the Federal relay at (800) 877-8339 (TDD) or (866) 377-8642 (relay voice). USDA is an equal opportunity provider and employer.
Submit all applications for this funding opportunity through Grants.gov. Search for grant Opportunity Number USDA-FS-2022-CWDG-NEMW. Applicants submit your application to Grants.gov by midnight, Eastern Time Zone, October 7, 2022. The following section provides guidance on how to submit applications through Grants.gov.
Please read the following instructions carefully and completely. Grants.gov provides applicants 24/7 support via the toll-free number 1-800-518-4726 and by email at support@grants.gov.
How to Register to Apply through Grants.gov
Organizations must have an active registration with the System for Award Management (SAM.gov), which will generate a Unique Entity Identifier (UEI). Applicants must also have a Grants.gov account to apply for grants. Creating a Grants.gov account can be completed online in minutes, but a SAM registration may take several weeks or more to complete. Therefore, ensure you apply for your SAM registration promptly.
Complete Grants.gov organization registrations instructions can be found here: https://www.grants.gov/web/grants/applicants/organization-registration.html
Register with SAM: All organizations must register with the System for Award Management; registration must be renewed annually. This registration will generate a UEI.
Add a profile to a Grants.gov account: A profile in Grants.gov corresponds to a single applicant organization the user represents (i.e., an applicant) or an individual applicant. If you work for or consult with multiple organizations and have a profile for each, you may log into one Grants.gov account to access all your grant applications.
EBiz point of contact authorized profile roles: After you register with Grants.gov and create an organization applicant profile, the organization applicant's request for Grants.gov roles and access is sent to the EBiz point of contact. The EBiz point of contact will then log into Grants.gov and authorize the appropriate roles, which may include the authorized organization representative role, thereby giving you permission to complete and submit applications on behalf of the organization.
Electronic Signature: When applications are submitted through Grants.gov, the name of the organization applicant with the AOR role that submitted the application is inserted into the signature line of the application, serving as the electronic signature. The EBiz POC must authorize people who are able to make legally binding commitments on behalf of the organization as a user with the AOR role.
How to Submit an Application via Grants.gov
Workspace is a shared, online environment where members of a grant team may simultaneously access and edit different webforms within an application. For each funding opportunity announcement, you can create individual instances of a workspace. Note: Grants.gov applicants are required to use Workspace to apply online. Package forms must be completed in or downloaded from Workspace.
Below is an overview of applying on Grants.gov using Workspace. For access to complete instructions and training videos, refer to the Grants.gov “Get Started on Your Workspace Application” web page.
Create a Workspace: Log in to your Grants.gov account first. Creating a workspace allows you to complete it online and route it through your organization for review before submitting.
Complete a Workspace: Add participants to the Workspace to work on the application together, complete the required forms online or by downloading PDF versions, and check for errors before submission. The Workspace progress bar will display the state of your application process as you apply. For page-specific help: click the blue question mark icon near the upper-right corner of each page.
Mandatory Fields in Forms: In the forms, fields marked with an asterisk and a different background color are mandatory and must be completed to successfully submit your application.
Complete SF-424 Fields First: The forms are designed to fill in common required fields across other forms, such as the applicant name and address. Once the SF-424 is completed, the information will transfer to the other forms.
Note: If you decide not to apply by filling out webforms, you can download individual PDF forms in Workspace. The individual PDF forms can be downloaded and saved to your local device then accessed through Adobe Reader. Visit the Adobe Software Compatibility page on Grants.gov to download the appropriate version of the software.
Submit a Workspace: Submit your application through Workspace by clicking the Sign and Submit button on the Manage Workspace page, under the Forms tab. Grants.gov recommends submitting your application package at least 24-48 hours prior to the close date to provide you with time to correct any potential technical issues that may disrupt the application submission.
Track a Workspace Submission: After successfully submitting a Workspace application, a Grants.gov Tracking Number (GRANTXXXXXXXX) is automatically assigned to the application. The number is listed on the Confirmation page that is generated after submission. Using the tracking number, access the Track My Application page under the Applicants tab or the Details tab in the submitted Workspace.
Applicant Support: For additional training resources, including video tutorials, refer to the Grants.gov Training page. Grants.gov provides applicants 24/7 support via the toll-free number 1-800-518-4726 and by email at support@grants.gov. If you are experiencing difficulties with your submission, it is best to call the Grants.gov Support Center and get a ticket number to track your issue.
Timely Receipt Requirements and Proof of Timely Submission
All applications must be received by midnight, Eastern Time Zone, October 7, 2022. Proof of timely submission is automatically recorded by Grants.gov. An electronic date/time stamp is generated within the system when the application is successfully received by Grants.gov. The applicant with the AOR role who submitted the application will receive an acknowledgement of receipt and a tracking number (GRANTXXXXXXXX) from Grants.gov with the successful transmission of their application, serving as proof of their timely submission.
Applications received by Grants.gov after the established due date for the program will be considered late and will not be considered for funding.
Applicants using slow internet, such as dial-up connections, should be aware that transmission can take some time before Grants.gov receives your application. Again, Grants.gov will provide either an error or a successfully received transmission in the form of an email sent to the applicant with the AOR role attempting to submit the application. The Grants.gov Support Center reports that some applicants end the transmission because they think that nothing is occurring during the transmission process. Please be patient and give the system time to process the application.
This is as an aide for applicants submitting CWDG applications through Grants.gov
and is not an exhaustive list of grant requirements.
We prioritize applications that show a clear benefit to underserved/historically marginalized people and the communities where they reside or the forest areas that they value. Where this is the case, this should be described in the “Project Narrative Form.” This supports Executive Order 13985: Advancing Racial Equity and Support for Underserved Communities Through the Federal Government.
Applicant is a unit of local government, nonprofit organization (501c3), Indian Tribe, State Forestry Agency (includes US territories and interests), or Alaska Native Corporation.
Applicant organization must have an active System for Award Management (SAM) registration, and Grants.gov account.
Project is focused on reducing wildfire risk to an at-risk community.
Project is located on non-federal lands (with exception of Trust lands)
Project is not listed in the “Ineligible” column on pages 5 thru 9
Required match is met for requested federal funds (10% for CWPP development/revision; 25% for project implementation)
Submit all forms in Grants.gov by midnight, October 7, 2022
SF-424 Application for Federal Assistance (located in grants.gov)
SF-424A Budget Information for Non-Construction Programs (located in grants.gov)
Screenshot that shows ACTIVE registration in SAM.gov
Community Wildfire Defense Project Narrative Form
File Type | application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document |
Author | Simpkins, Brad - FS |
File Modified | 0000-00-00 |
File Created | 2022-07-26 |