[Federal Register Volume 69, Number 218 (Friday, November 12, 2004)]
[Notices]
[Pages 65437-65441]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 04-25187]


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DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES

Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration


Grants and Cooperative Agreements; Notice of Availability

    Funding Opportunity Title: State Adolescent Substance Abuse 
Treatment Coordination (Short Title: Adolescent Treatment Coordination)
    Announcement Type: Initial Announcement.
    Funding Opportunity Number: TI 05-006.
    Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance (CFDA) Number: 93.243.
    Due Date for Applications: January 12, 2005.

[Note: Letters from State Single Point of Contact (SPOC) in response 
to E.O. 12372 are due March 12, 2005.]

    Summary: The Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services 
Administration (SAMHSA), Center for Substance Abuse Treatment (CSAT), 
announces the availability of FY 2005 funds for State Adolescent 
Substance Abuse Treatment Coordination. A synopsis of this Notice of 
Funding Availability (NOFA), as well as many other Federal Government 
funding opportunities, are also available at the Internet site: http://www.grants.gov.
    For complete instructions, potential applicants must obtain a copy 
of SAMHSA's standard Infrastructure Grants Program Announcement (INF-05 
PA), and the PHS 5161-1 (Rev. 7/00) application form before preparing 
and submitting an application. The INF-05 PA describes the general 
program design and provides instructions for applying for all SAMHSA 
Infrastructure Grants, including the State Adolescent Substance Abuse 
Treatment Coordination program. SAMHSA's Infrastructure Grants provide 
funds to develop or enhance service system infrastructure in order to 
support effective substance abuse services. Additional instructions and 
specific requirements for this funding opportunity are described below.

I. Funding Opportunity Description

    Authority: Section 509 of the Public Health Service Act, as 
amended and subject to the availability of funds.

    The State Adolescent Substance Abuse Treatment Coordination grant 
program is one of SAMHSA's Infrastructure Grant programs. The purpose 
of State Adolescent Substance Abuse Treatment Coordination grants is to 
build capacity in States to provide effective, accessible, and 
affordable substance abuse treatment for youth and their families. 
Grants will provide funding to support a staff position (a State 
official whose sole responsibility is ensuring the effectiveness of 
adolescent substance abuse treatment State-wide) and a State process to 
assess, facilitate, and coordinate ongoing, self-sustaining cross-
system planning for effective adolescent substance abuse treatment.
    Grantees are required to hire and/or dedicate a full-time employee 
at the State level vested with the authority to convene and coordinate 
all of the State agencies that allocate public health resources that 
may provide funding and other support for adolescents and their 
families needing early intervention and treatment services for 
substance use disorders. The State adolescent substance abuse treatment 
coordinator shall also form linkages with other service systems that 
provide mental health, education, health, child welfare, and juvenile 
justice services for youth and their families and identify 
opportunities to coordinate funding and treatment resources across 
these systems to the fullest extent possible. It is incumbent upon the 
grantee to create a position vested with the authority necessary to 
accomplish these tasks, and to hire/designate an individual who has the 
necessary skills and experience appropriate for the position, including 
an understanding of the correlation of co-occurring mental health and 
substance use disorders.

Background

    Although there has been increased awareness around the need for 
accessible, effective substance abuse treatment for youth, there are 
problems within State structures that make providing funding and 
services for youth extremely difficult. Responsibility for adolescent 
treatment is located in a number of State agencies, and is frequently 
not in the office that oversees substance abuse treatment services. 
Only one State has best practices guidelines for adolescent substance 
abuse treatment. Only five States' substance abuse counselor licensure 
requirements include any knowledge of youth addiction, childhood 
development, or families. None has a specific licensure for clinicians 
working with youth addiction. Of the six States that have separate 
certification requirements for adolescent substance abuse treatment, 
four do not address required staffing levels; none addresses the issue 
of parental notification; only one addresses the use of discipline/
restraint; only three require background checks for staff; and only 
three require any specialized training for staff. A major contributor 
to the aforementioned weaknesses in the adolescent substance abuse 
treatment system is that most States do not have a single locus of 
responsibility for ensuring an accessible, effective substance abuse 
treatment system for youth and their families.

Allowable Activities

    Grants funds may be used to carry out all of the allowable 
activities listed in Section I-2.1 of the INF-05 PA except that grant 
funds may not be used for data infrastructure/MIS development. In 
addition, these are Category I--Small Infrastructure Grants; 
implementation

[[Page 65438]]

pilots are not an allowable activity under this mechanism.

Required Activities

    Grantees must use funds to carry out the following required 
activities:
     Develop a full-time position within a unit of State 
government to oversee and coordinate the adolescent substance abuse 
treatment system Statewide.
     Link and coordinate with other service systems to promote 
comprehensive, integrated services for youth with substance abuse and/
or co-occurring problems. Such service systems include mental health, 
health, juvenile justice, education, child welfare, and Medicaid.
     Coordinate the budget formulation and benefit plans (e.g., 
Medicaid services for adolescent treatment) of all State agencies that 
have responsibility for funds that may be used to support adolescent 
substance abuse treatment services, including screening, assessment, 
early intervention, treatment, family involvement in treatment, case 
management, and continuing care/aftercare.
     Identify barriers (fiscal, regulatory, and policy) that 
impede the adoption and provision of accessible evidence-based 
treatment across the full continuum of care recommended by the American 
Society of Addiction Medicine (ASAM)*. Devise and implement strategies, 
in concert with all other State-agencies that may fund and/or regulate 
these services, to improve the access to treatment, increase capacity 
and quality, and expand the available continuum in communities and 
throughout the State implementing treatment interventions with a 
scientific evidence base for the population to be served.
     Import tools, coordinate training, and support providers 
in the adoption of screening and assessment protocols that cross-walk 
to DSM-IV/ICD 10 criteria for substance abuse/dependence, mental health 
diagnoses, and ASAM Patient Placement Criteria, Version 2--
Revised*.
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    \*\Mee-lee D, Shulman GD, Fishman M, Gastfriend DR, and Griffith 
JH, eds. (2001). ASAM Patient Placement Criteria for the Treatment 
of Substance-Related Disorders, 2nd Ed-Revised (ASAM PPC-2R). Chevy 
Chase, MD: American Society of Addiction Medicine, Inc.
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     Develop/improve State standards for licensure/
certification/accreditation of programs that provide substance abuse 
treatment services for adolescents and their families.
     Develop/improve State standards for licensure/
certification/credentialing of adolescent substance abuse treatment 
counselors.
     Identify and provide linkages across the universe of 
discretionary federal and foundation-funded adolescent substance abuse 
treatment grant programs for the purpose of supporting and 
disseminating learning across the State-wide treatment system and to 
provide assistance to ensure sustainability and adoption of best/
evidence based practices identified in these programs.
     Identify, disseminate, and support training and technical 
assistance resources that expand the capacity and quality of adolescent 
substance abuse treatment throughout the State provider system, 
including cross-training for adolescent mental health and substance 
abuse treatment providers.
     Participate in and actively share learning across the 
community created by the States funded in this grant program to 
leverage training, support, dissemination, intervention adoption, and 
evaluation/research to improve the treatment system for youth and their 
families both intra-State and inter-State.
     Promote coordination and collaboration with family support 
organizations to strengthen services for youth, with or at risk of 
substance abuse and/or co-occurring problems.
     Facilitate the development of a State-wide provider 
association for adolescent substance abuse treatment across programs 
and for counselors engaged in providing these services, regardless of 
the State or local system within which they work.
     Keep abreast of the research findings related to 
adolescent substance abuse treatment and disseminate this information 
State-wide in a form that is easily digested by clinical staff, 
providing insight on the application of the research to improve 
clinical practice at the program level.

II. Award Information

    1. Estimated Funding Available/Number of Awards: It is expected 
that up to $7.1 million will be available to fund up to 22 awards in FY 
2005. The maximum allowable award is $400,000 in total costs (direct 
and indirect) per year for up to 3 years. Proposed budgets cannot 
exceed the allowable amount in any year of the proposed project. The 
actual amount available for the awards may vary, depending on 
unanticipated program requirements and the number and quality of the 
applications received. Annual continuations will depend on the 
availability of funds, grantee progress in meeting program goals and 
objectives, and timely submission of required data and reports.
    This program is being announced prior to the annual appropriation 
for FY 2005 for SAMHSA's programs, with funding estimates based on the 
President's budget request for FY 2005. Applications are invited based 
on the assumption that sufficient funds will be appropriated for FY 
2005 to permit funding of a reasonable number of applications hereby 
solicited. All applicants are reminded, however, that we cannot 
guarantee that sufficient funds will be appropriated to permit SAMHSA 
to fund any applications.
    2. Funding Instrument: Grant.

III. Eligibility Information

    1. Eligible Applicants: Funding is limited to States, the District 
of Columbia, Territories and federally recognized tribal governments. 
Since this program is designed to facilitate State-level coordination 
of adolescent substance abuse treatment services, only States, the 
District of Columbia, Territories and federally recognized tribal 
governments are eligible to apply. These eligibility criteria supersede 
the criteria specified in Section III-1 of the INF-05 PA.
    2. Cost Sharing or Matching is not required.
    3. Other: Applicants must also meet certain application formatting 
and submission requirements or the application will be screened out and 
will not be reviewed. These requirements are described in Section IV-2 
below, as well as in Section IV of the INF-05 PA.

IV. Application and Submission Information

    1. Address to Request Application Package: Complete application 
kits may be obtained from the National Clearinghouse for Alcohol and 
Drug Information (NCADI) at 1-800-729-6686. When requesting an 
application kit for this program, the applicant must specify the 
funding opportunity title ``Adolescent Treatment Coordination'' and the 
funding opportunity number (TI 05-006). All information necessary to 
apply, including where to submit applications and application deadline 
instructions, is included in the application kit. The PHS 5161-1 
application form is also available electronically via SAMHSA's World 
Wide Web Home Page: http://www.samhsa.gov (click on `Grants'). The INF-
05 PA is available electronically at http://www.samhsa.gov/grants/standard/Infrastructure/index.aspx.
    When submitting an application, be sure to type ``TI 05-006/
Adolescent Treatment Coordination'' in Item Number 10 on the face page 
of the application form. Also, SAMHSA applicants are required to 
provide a DUNS Number on the face page of the

[[Page 65439]]

application. To obtain a DUNS Number, access the Dun and Bradstreet Web 
site at http://www.dunandbradstreet.com or call 1-866-705-5711.
    2. Content and Form of Application Submission: Information, 
including required documents, required application components, and 
application formatting requirements, is available in the INF-05 PA in 
Section IV-2.

Checklist for Application Formatting Requirements

    SAMHSA's goal is to review all applications submitted for grant 
funding. However, this goal must be balanced against SAMHSA's 
obligation to ensure equitable treatment of applications. For this 
reason, SAMHSA has established certain formatting requirements for its 
applications. If you do not adhere to these requirements, your 
application will be screened out and returned to you without review.
    [ballot] Use the PHS 5161-1 application.
    [ballot] Applications must be received by the application deadline. 
Applications received after this date must have a proof of mailing date 
from the carrier dated at least 1 week prior to the due date. Private 
metered postmarks are not acceptable as proof of timely mailing. 
Applications not received by the application deadline or not postmarked 
at least 1 week prior to the application deadline will not be reviewed.
    [ballot] Information provided must be sufficient for review.
    [ballot] Text must be legible. (For Project Narratives submitted 
electronically in Microsoft Word, see separate requirements below under 
``Guidance for Electronic Submission of Applications.'')
     Type size in the Project Narrative cannot exceed an 
average of 15 characters per inch, as measured on the physical page. 
(Type size in charts, tables, graphs, and footnotes will not be 
considered in determining compliance.)
     Text in the Project Narrative cannot exceed 6 lines per 
vertical inch.
    [ballot] Paper must be white paper and 8.5 inches by 11.0 inches in 
size.
    [ballot] To ensure equity among applications, the amount of space 
allowed for the Project Narrative cannot be exceeded. (For Project 
Narratives submitted electronically in Microsoft Word, see separate 
requirements below under ``Guidance for Electronic Submission of 
Applications.'')
     Applications would meet this requirement by using all 
margins (left, right, top, bottom) of at least one inch each, and 
adhering to the page limit for the Project Narrative stated in the INF-
05 PA.
     Should an application not conform to these margin or page 
limits, SAMHSA will use the following method to determine compliance: 
The total area of the Project Narrative (excluding margins, but 
including charts, tables, graphs and footnotes) cannot exceed 58.5 
square inches multiplied by the page limit. This number represents the 
full page less margins, multiplied by the total number of allowed 
pages.
     Space will be measured on the physical page. Space left 
blank within the Project Narrative (excluding margins) is considered 
part of the Project Narrative, in determining compliance.
    To facilitate review of your application, follow these additional 
guidelines. Failure to adhere to the following guidelines will not, in 
itself, result in your application being screened out and returned 
without review. However, the information provided in your application 
must be sufficient for review. Following these guidelines will help 
ensure your application is complete, and will help reviewers to 
consider your application.
    [ballot] The 10 application components required for SAMHSA 
applications should be included. These are:
     Face page (Standard Form 424, which is in PHS 5161-1).
     Abstract.
     Table of contents.
     Budget form (Standard Form 424A, which is in PHS 5161-1).
     Project narrative and supporting documentation.
     Appendices.
     Assurances (Standard Form 424B, which is in PHS 5161-1).
     Certifications (a form in PHS 5161-1).
     Disclosure of lobbying activities (Standard Form LLL, 
which is in PHS 5161-1).
     Checklist (a form in PHS 5161-1).
    [ballot] Applications should comply with the following 
requirements:
     Provisions relating to confidentiality, participant 
protection and the protection of human subjects, as indicated in the 
INF-05 PA.
     Budgetary limitations as indicated in Sections I, II, and 
IV-5 of the INF-05 PA.
     Documentation of nonprofit status as required in the PHS 
5161-1.
    [ballot] Pages should be typed single-spaced in black ink, with one 
column per page. Pages should not have printing on both sides.
    [ballot] Please number pages consecutively from beginning to end so 
that information can be located easily during review of the 
application. The cover page should be page 1, the abstract page should 
be page 2, and the table of contents page should be page 3. Appendices 
should be labeled and separated from the Project Narrative and budget 
section, and the pages should be numbered to continue the sequence.
    [ballot] The page limit for Appendices stated in the INF-05 PA 
should not be exceeded.
    [ballot] Send the original application and two copies to the 
mailing address in the funding announcement. Please do not use staples, 
paper clips, and fasteners. Nothing should be attached, stapled, 
folded, or pasted. Do not use heavy or lightweight paper, or any 
material that cannot be copied using automatic copying machines. Odd-
sized and oversized attachments such as posters will not be copied or 
sent to reviewers. Do not include videotapes, audiotapes, or CD-ROMs.
    3. Submission Dates and Times: Applications must be received by 
January 12, 2005. You will be notified by postal mail that your 
application has been received. Additional submission information is 
available in the INF-05 PA in Section IV-3.

Guidance for Electronic Submission of Applications

    SAMHSA is now offering the opportunity for you to submit your 
application to us either in electronic or paper format. Electronic 
submission is voluntary. No review points will be added or deducted, 
regardless of whether you use the electronic or paper format.
    To submit an application electronically, you must use the http://
www.Grants.gov apply site. You will be able to download a copy of the 
application package from http://www.Grants.gov, complete it off-line, 
and then upload and submit the application via the Grants.gov site. E-
mail submissions will not be accepted.
    You must search the Grants.gov site for the downloadable 
application package, by the Catalogue of Federal Domestic Assistance 
(CFDA) number. You can find the CFDA number on the first page of the 
funding announcement.
    You must follow the instructions in the User Guide available at: 
http://www.Grants.gov apply site, on the Customer Support tab. In 
addition to the User Guide, you may wish to use the following sources 
for help:
     By e-mail: Grants.gov">support@Grants.gov.
     By phone: 1-800-518-4726 (1-800-518-GRANTS). The Customer 
Support Center is open from 7 a.m. to 9 p.m. Eastern Time, Monday 
through Friday.
    If this is the first time you have submitted an application through 
Grants.gov, you must complete four

[[Page 65440]]

separate registration processes before you can submit your application. 
Allow at least two weeks (10 business days) for these registration 
processes, prior to submitting your application. The processes are: 
DUNS Number registration, Central Contractor Registry (CCR) 
registration, Credential Provider registration, and Grants.gov 
registration.
    It is strongly recommended that you submit your grant application 
using Microsoft Office products (e.g., Microsoft Word, Microsoft Excel, 
etc.). If you do not have access to Microsoft Office products, you may 
submit a PDF file. Directions for creating PDF files can be found on 
the Grants.gov Web site. Use of file formats other than Microsoft 
Office or PDF may result in your file being unreadable by our staff.
    The Project Narrative must be a separate document in the electronic 
submission. Formatting requirements for SAMHSA grant applications are 
described above, and in Section IV-2.3 and Appendix A of the standard 
grant announcement. These requirements also apply to applications 
submitted electronically, with the following exceptions only for 
Project Narratives submitted electronically in Microsoft Word. These 
requirements help to ensure the accurate transmission and equitable 
treatment of applications.
     Text Legibility: Use a font of Times New Roman 12, line 
spacing of single space, and all margins (left, right, top, bottom) of 
one inch each. Adhering to these standards will help to ensure the 
accurate transmission of your document. If the type size in the Project 
Narrative of an electronic submission exceeds 15 characters per inch, 
or the text exceeds 6 lines per vertical inch, SAMHSA will reformat the 
document to Times New Roman 12, with line spacing of single space. 
Please note that this may alter the formatting of your document, 
especially for charts, tables, graphs, and footnotes.
     Amount of Space Allowed for Project Narrative: The Project 
Narrative for an electronic submission may not exceed 12,875 words. Any 
part of the Project Narrative in excess of the word limit will not be 
submitted to review. To determine the number of words in your Project 
Narrative document in Microsoft Word, select file/properties/
statistics.
    Applicants are strongly encouraged to submit their applications to 
Grants.gov early enough to resolve any unanticipated difficulties prior 
to the deadline. You may also submit a back-up paper submission of your 
application. Any such paper submission must be received in accordance 
with the requirements for timely submission detailed in Section IV-3 of 
the grant announcement. The paper submission must be clearly marked: 
``Back-up for electronic submission.'' The paper submission must 
conform with all requirements for non-electronic submissions. If both 
electronic and back-up paper submissions are received by the deadline, 
the electronic version will be considered the official submission.
    After you electronically submit your application, you will receive 
an automatic acknowledgement from Grants.gov that contains a Grants.gov 
tracking number. It is important that you retain this number.
    The Grants.gov Web site does not accept electronic signatures at 
this time. Therefore, you must submit a signed paper original of the 
face page (SF 424), the assurances (SF 424B), and the certifications, 
and hard copy of any other required documentation that cannot be 
submitted electronically. You must reference the Grants.gov tracking 
number for your application, on these documents with original 
signatures, and send the documents to the following address. The 
documents must be received at the following address within 5 business 
days of your electronic submission. Delays in receipt of these 
documents may impact the score your application receives or the ability 
of your application to be funded.
    For United States Postal Service: Crystal Saunders, Director of 
Grant Review, Office of Program Services, Substance Abuse and Mental 
Health Services Administration, Room 3-1044, 1 Choke Cherry Road, 
Rockville, MD 20857, ATTN: Electronic Applications.
    For Other Delivery Service (DHL, Falcon Carrier, Federal Express, 
United Parcel Service): Crystal Saunders, Director of Grant Review, 
Office of Program Services, Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services 
Administration, Room 3-1044, 1 Choke Cherry Road, Rockville, MD 20850, 
ATTN: Electronic Applications.
    If you require a phone number for delivery, you may use (240) 276-
1199.
    4. Intergovernmental Review: Applicants for this funding 
opportunity must comply with Executive Order 12372 (E.O. 12372). E.O. 
12372, as implemented through Department of Health and Human Services 
(DHHS) regulation at 45 CFR Part 100, sets up a system for State and 
local review of applications for Federal financial assistance. 
Instructions for complying with E.O. 12372 are provided in the INF-05 
PA in Section IV-4. A current listing of State Single Points of Contact 
(SPOCs) is included in the application kit and is available at http://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/grants/spoc.html.
    5. Funding Restrictions: Information concerning funding 
restrictions is available in the INF-05 PA in Section IV-5.

V. Application Review Information

    1. Evaluation Criteria: Applications will be reviewed against the 
Evaluation Criteria and requirements for the Project Narrative 
(Sections A-D) specified in Section V-1 in the INF-05 PA. The following 
information describes exceptions/limitations/special requirements to 
the Project Narrative (Sections A-D) in the INF-05 PA that Adolescent 
Treatment Coordination applicants must address. Two bullets in the 
Evaluation Criteria in INF-05 PA are modified/clarified as follows:

1.1 In Section B: Proposed Approach

    The second bullet is modified to read: ``Describe the proposed 
project. In the description of the project, address the Required 
Activities listed in Section I, Funding Opportunity Description of the 
Adolescent Treatment Coordination NOFA (TI 05-006). Provide evidence 
that the Required Activities (and any other activities you propose) 
meet your State's infrastructure needs and show how your proposed 
infrastructure development strategy will meet the goals and objectives 
of the project (i.e., meet both goals and objectives proposed by the 
State and those for the Required Activities).''

1.2 In Section D: Evaluation and Data

    The first bullet is modified to read: ``Describe the process and 
outcome evaluation for your project. Include specific performance 
measures and target outcomes related to the goals and objectives 
identified for the project in Section B of your Project Narrative. 
These measures and outcomes also must address the Required Activities 
listed in Section I, Funding Opportunity Description of the Adolescent 
Treatment Coordination NOFA (TI 05-006).''
    Performance Measurement: All SAMHSA grantees are required to 
collect and report certain data so that SAMHSA can meet its obligations 
under the Government Performance and Results Act (GPRA) and grantees 
can meet their requirements to provide semi-annual progress reports to 
SAMHSA as outlined below. All applicants must document their ability to 
collect and report data using the Knowledge Application Customer 
Satisfaction GPRA tool. This tool can be found at http://www.csat-gpra.samhsa.gov (click on `Data Collection Tools/Instruments'), along 
with instructions for completing it.

[[Page 65441]]

    GPRA data must be collected at the end of each event and thirty 
days post event. GPRA data must be entered into the GPRA web system 
within 7 business days of the forms being completed. In addition, 80% 
of the participants must be followed up on. GPRA data are to be 
collected and then entered into CSAT's GPRA Data Entry and Reporting 
System (http://www.csat-gpra.samhsa.gov). Training and technical 
assistance on data collecting, as well as data entry, will be provided 
by CSAT.
    In addition to GPRA, grantees of the Adolescent Treatment 
Coordination program will be required to report semiannually on their 
progress in meeting the Required Activities in Section I, Funding 
Opportunity Description of this NOFA. These reports will assess each 
grantee's progress as compared to both the performance measures and 
target outcomes established by the grantee for the project and a common 
set of performance measures, to be established, that will be aligned 
with the Required Activities and program goals in Section I, Funding 
Opportunity Description of this NOFA.
    In Section D of their project narratives, applicants must describe 
their current ability to collect and report data on their progress in 
meeting the Required Activities. Applicants may also propose 
performance measures to be considered by SAMHSA for inclusion in the 
common set of measures. Prior to award, applicants will have the 
opportunity to attend a policy academy during which participants will 
work to build consensus around this common set of performance measures. 
Grantees (including those who do not attend the policy academy) will be 
required to report in narrative format on the broad themes around their 
progress in their semi-annual reports. Once SAMHSA has obtained 
necessary approval from the Office of Management and Budget (OMB), 
further data requirements will be mandated based on the common set of 
performance measures developed from the policy academy. At any time, 
grantees may choose to begin collecting more specific data related to 
the common measures to assist in building local support for continued 
sustainability for their activities once the period of federal funding 
ends. SAMHSA will work with grantees to assist them in building 
performance measurement systems that will provide needed local policy 
information.
    2. Review and Selection Process: Information about the review and 
selection process is available in the INF-05 PA in Section V-2.

VI. Award Administration Information

    Award administration information, including award notices, 
administrative and national policy requirements, and reporting 
requirements are available in the INF-05 PA in Section VI. SAMHSA's 
standard terms and conditions are available at http://www.samhsa.gov/grants/generalinfo/useful_info.aspx.

VII. Agency Contact for Additional Information

    For questions concerning program issues contact: Randolph D. Muck, 
SAMHSA/CSAT/DSI, 1 Choke Cherry Road, Room 5-1083, Rockville, MD 20857; 
phone 240-276-1576; [email protected]. For questions on grants 
management issues contact: Kimberly Pendleton, SAMHSA/Division of 
Grants Management, 1 Choke Cherry Road, Room 7-1097, Rockville, MD 
20857; 240-276-1421; E-mail: [email protected].

    Dated: November 5, 2004.
Daryl Kade,
Director, Office of Policy, Planning and Budget, Substance Abuse and 
Mental Health Services Administration.
[FR Doc. 04-25187 Filed 11-10-04; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4162-20-P