Recovery Community Services Program - Statewide Network
This program funds domestic nonprofit and faith-based entities to strengthen statewide recovery networks and healthcare systems through recovery support services, collaboration, systems improvement, public health messaging, and training.
RESTRICTED TO: NONPROFITS
⚑ Domestic public and private non-profit entities, including faith-based organizations only; no explicit federal cost-sharing mentioned.
Unit fits — one characterization, each unit's own rules
| IPPRA | 54 partial | portfolio topic: public_health (primary); signature methods: community engaged, policy analysis; social/behavioral work is substantial; funds service delivery, not research (capped); capped at 54 (non-research funding) |
| Physical Sciences & Engineering (demo) | 25 weak | technical depth: minor; funds service delivery (capped) |
| Tom Love Innovation Hub | 10 none | deep-tech content; no commercialization signal |
Description
The purpose of this program is to strengthen recovery organizations, their statewide recovery networks, and healthcare systems to improve the delivery of recovery support services (RSS). This is accomplished through structured collaboration, systems improvement, public health messaging, and targeted training for key recovery partners.
Eligibility
Domestic public and private non-profit entities, including faith-based organizations.
Apply
View on Grants.gov → CONTACT: Gina Evans Content <NOFOBudget.CSAT@samhsa.hhs.gov>
Proposal brief SEE AN EXAMPLE →
A one-page internal memo: fit assessment, submission requirements, document scaffold, and next steps dated back from the deadline — tailored to your project idea if you add one.
Proposal shell · HHS services agencies (SAMHSA / HRSA / CDC / ACF) conventions SEE AN HHS EXAMPLE →
Funder-faithful document skeletons — HHS services agencies (SAMHSA / HRSA / CDC / ACF)'s document set with section headings, page limits, reviewer guidance, and writing prompts; add a project idea to get [DRAFT] starter bullets. Download as .md for Word or Overleaf.