1,000+ Opportunities
Find the right grant
Search federal, foundation, and corporate grants with AI — or browse by agency, topic, and state.
This program will provide funding to support direct services to children and youth who are crime victims as a result of the nation's addiction crisis (Purpose Area 1); and training and technical assistance for the direct services grantees (Purpose Area 2). Applicants may apply under only one of the purpose areas. OVC anticipates making up to 25 awards under purpose area 1 of up to $700,000 each and 1 award under purpose 2 of up to $1.5 million. OVC expects to make awards for a 36-month period of performance, to begin on October 1, 2020. OVC will conduct a pre-application webinar on Monday, March 23, 2020, from 1:00 to 2:00 p.m. e.t. Register at www.ovc.gov/grants/webinars.html. Apply by May 4, 2020.
Funding Opportunity Number: OVC-2020-17912. Assistance Listing: 16.582. Funding Instrument: G. Category: ISS,LJL. Award Amount: Up to $700K per award.
Get alerted about grants like this
Get emailed when new opportunities from “Office for Victims of Crime” or related funders appear. Free, weekly, unsubscribe anytime.
Or search similar grants →According to the current listing, eligibility includes: Eligible applicants: Others (see text field entitled Additional Information on Eligibility for clarification). The following entities are eligible to apply: 1) States and territories2) Units of local government3) Federally Recognized Indian tribes4) Nonprofit, nongovernmental victim and social service organizations with the capacity to serve young crime victims impacted by the addiction crisis 5) For profit organizations with the capacity to serve young crime victims impacted by the addiction crisis6) Institutions of higher education (including tribal institutions of higher education) In FYs 2018 and 2019, OVC funded a total of 59 programs, spanning 37 states and 8 tribes, to help youth impacted by the opioids crisis under OVCs Enhancing Community Responses to the Opioid Crisis: Serving Our Youngest Crime Victims. (See OVC Grant Award Search for a list of awarded grants). The Department remains committed to supporting young crime victims affected by the nations addiction crisis and intends to reach additional communities with grant funding in FY 2020. Grantees who received FY 2018 or FY 2019 awards under OVCs Enhancing Community Responses to the Opioid Crisis: Serving Our Youngest Crime Victims program may be eligible for this FY 2020 program if their new proposed project serves a different geographic area or justifies an expanded scope or quantity of services to the original population.All recipients and subrecipients (including any for-profit organization) must forgo any profit or management fee. Confirm the full requirements in the official notice before applying.
The current listing shows up to $700K per award. Verify award ceilings, matching requirements, and allowable costs in the official notice.
The published deadline was May 4, 2020, which has passed. Check the official notice for any future application windows before investing time in a proposal.
Yes — OVC FY 2020 Enhancing Community Responses to America's Addiction Crisis: Serving Our Youngest Crime Victims is offered by Office for Victims of Crime and this listing comes from Grants.gov, an official U.S. federal source. Federal applications generally require registrations (for example SAM.gov or an agency submission portal), so allow extra lead time.
Start from the official opportunity page linked in this listing — it carries the sponsor's submission instructions.
Past winners and funding trends for this program
OVC's Tribal Victim Services Set-Aside is a non-competitive formula program — every federally recognized Tribe that applies receives an award, sized by a population certification submitted months earlier. With the FY2026 Grants.gov deadline on August 6, 2026, here is how the formula works, what the money funds (including support for families of missing and murdered Indigenous persons), and why the March certification was the decisive step.
Read articleThe Justice Department's new Model Cities Initiative will hand 2 to 4 American cities roughly $300 million in 36-month cooperative agreements to rebuild public safety from the ground up. Applications are due September 1, 2026. The catch that will decide who wins: this is not a police grant, a prosecutor grant, or a behavioral-health grant. It is a single citywide proposal that has to braid all of them together. Here is who is eligible, what the money actually funds, and how a mayor's office should build a proposal that survives DOJ review.
Read article