15PJDP24GG01659MENT
Project Grant
Overview
Grant Description
Big Brothers Big Sisters of America (BBBSA) proposes to implement the Building Relationships to Reduce Barriers for Underserved Communities through expanded Big Brothers Big Sisters mentoring initiative.
The purpose of this initiative is to connect 9,000 youth across the U.S. to high-quality mentors, leading to long-term positive outcomes for youth at risk of juvenile justice system involvement across the U.S.
Project activities include providing 12-month, evidence-based mentoring services to new and existing at-risk, system-involved, and underserved youth.
Program enhancements to support continuous quality improvement include training and resources to advance youth & family partnerships, improvements to the systems available for technology-enhanced mentoring, and the introduction of an Agencies of Excellence framework to establish best practices and provide coaching to new and growing agencies.
Expected outcomes include significantly reducing the likelihood of youth delinquency in all forms; bolstering self-confidence; preparing young people to be contributing citizens to society through a tailored, supportive relationship with an adult mentor; and increasing youth and family involvement in shaping BBBSA programming at subrecipient agencies.
The intended beneficiaries of the project are youth 17 years old or younger who are currently or have been involved in the juvenile justice system; live in communities with high crime, violence, drug abuse, failing schools, or gang presence; are American Indian/Alaska Native; live in rural communities; live in areas of persistent poverty; have an incarcerated parent; have a parenting adult deployed in active military duty or have lost a parenting adult serving in the military; possess special physical or mental challenges; identify as LGBTQ; or have experienced bullying or violence.
BBBSA will administer subawards to approximately 85 affiliate agencies in at least 42 states to provide mentoring services based upon the results of a competitive application process.
Selection will be determined based on a record of strong grant performance, high program quality and capacity, and satisfactory financial controls and internal processes.
Once selected, BBBSA agencies will perform screening that exceeds the elements of effective practice for mentoring benchmark standards to protect mentees while developing the most impactful mentoring match.
To provide robust performance measurement, BBBSA will collect semi-annual data from affiliate organizations to track the number of mentors/mentees recruited and matched, mentor/mentee attrition rates, mentor training completion and retention, mentee behavior changes, mentee victimization, and general demographic data.
The purpose of this initiative is to connect 9,000 youth across the U.S. to high-quality mentors, leading to long-term positive outcomes for youth at risk of juvenile justice system involvement across the U.S.
Project activities include providing 12-month, evidence-based mentoring services to new and existing at-risk, system-involved, and underserved youth.
Program enhancements to support continuous quality improvement include training and resources to advance youth & family partnerships, improvements to the systems available for technology-enhanced mentoring, and the introduction of an Agencies of Excellence framework to establish best practices and provide coaching to new and growing agencies.
Expected outcomes include significantly reducing the likelihood of youth delinquency in all forms; bolstering self-confidence; preparing young people to be contributing citizens to society through a tailored, supportive relationship with an adult mentor; and increasing youth and family involvement in shaping BBBSA programming at subrecipient agencies.
The intended beneficiaries of the project are youth 17 years old or younger who are currently or have been involved in the juvenile justice system; live in communities with high crime, violence, drug abuse, failing schools, or gang presence; are American Indian/Alaska Native; live in rural communities; live in areas of persistent poverty; have an incarcerated parent; have a parenting adult deployed in active military duty or have lost a parenting adult serving in the military; possess special physical or mental challenges; identify as LGBTQ; or have experienced bullying or violence.
BBBSA will administer subawards to approximately 85 affiliate agencies in at least 42 states to provide mentoring services based upon the results of a competitive application process.
Selection will be determined based on a record of strong grant performance, high program quality and capacity, and satisfactory financial controls and internal processes.
Once selected, BBBSA agencies will perform screening that exceeds the elements of effective practice for mentoring benchmark standards to protect mentees while developing the most impactful mentoring match.
To provide robust performance measurement, BBBSA will collect semi-annual data from affiliate organizations to track the number of mentors/mentees recruited and matched, mentor/mentee attrition rates, mentor training completion and retention, mentee behavior changes, mentee victimization, and general demographic data.
Funding Goals
THIS PROGRAM SUPPORTS THE IMPLEMENTATION AND DELIVERY OF MENTORING SERVICES TO YOUTH POPULATIONS THAT ARE AT RISK OR HIGH RISK FOR DELINQUENCY, VICTIMIZATION, AND JUVENILE JUSTICE SYSTEMS INVOLVEMENT. MENTORING SERVICES CAN BE ONE-ON-ONE, GROUP, PEER, OR A COMBINATION OF THESE TYPES. APPLICANTS MUST INITIATE MENTORING SERVICES TO YOUTH WHO ARE 17 YEARS OLD OR YOUNGER AT THE TIME OF ADMISSION TO THE PROGRAM. MENTORS MUST BE AN ADULT (AGE 18 OR OLDER), OR IN CASES WHERE PEER MENTORING MODELS ARE BEING IMPLEMENTED, AN OLDER PEER AND UNDER ADULT SUPERVISION.
Grant Program (CFDA)
Awarding / Funding Agency
Place of Performance
Tampa,
Florida
33607-7907
United States
Geographic Scope
Single Zip Code
Related Opportunity
Big Brothers Big Sisters Of America Corporation was awarded
Empowering Youth: Building Relationships for Positive Outcomes
Project Grant 15PJDP24GG01659MENT
worth $11,000,000
from the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention in October 2024 with work to be completed primarily in Tampa Florida United States.
The grant
has a duration of 1 year 5 months and
was awarded through assistance program 16.726 Juvenile Mentoring Program.
The Project Grant was awarded through grant opportunity OJJDP FY24 National Mentoring Programs.
Status
(Ongoing)
Last Modified 12/6/24
Period of Performance
10/1/24
Start Date
3/31/26
End Date
Funding Split
$11.0M
Federal Obligation
$0.0
Non-Federal Obligation
$11.0M
Total Obligated
Activity Timeline
Transaction History
Modifications to 15PJDP24GG01659MENT
Additional Detail
Award ID FAIN
15PJDP24GG01659MENT
SAI Number
None
Award ID URI
SAI NOT AVAILABLE
Awardee Classifications
Nonprofit With 501(c)(3) IRS Status (Other Than An Institution Of Higher Education)
Awarding Office
15PJDP OJP JUNENILE DEL PREVENT
Funding Office
15PJDP OJP JUNENILE DEL PREVENT
Awardee UEI
E2HTZ1MEPF25
Awardee CAGE
4RVH2
Performance District
FL-14
Senators
Marco Rubio
Rick Scott
Rick Scott
Modified: 12/6/24