1,000+ Opportunities
Find the right grant
Search federal, foundation, and corporate grants with AI — or browse by agency, topic, and state.
Peer Recovery and Family Support Services is sponsored by Rhode Island Department of Behavioral Healthcare, Developmental Disabilities, and Hospitals (BHDDH). This program provides specialized, therapeutic interactions between trained and certified Peer Recovery Specialists and individuals in the process of recovery, promoting empowerment, self-determination, and coping skills through mentoring and service coordination.
Get alerted about grants like this
Save a search for “Rhode Island Department of Behavioral Healthcare, Developmental Disabilities, and Hospitals (BHDDH)” or related topics and get emailed when new opportunities appear.
Search similar grants →Extracted from the official opportunity page/RFP to help you evaluate fit faster.
Peer Recovery And Family Support | Dept. of Behavioral Healthcare, Developmental Disabilities, and Hospitals Peer Recovery And Family Support Peer Recovery Support Services Based on the fundamental principles of recovery, Peer Support Services (PSS) are specialized, therapeutic interactions between current or former consumers of behavioral health services and individuals in the process of recovery.
The peers are trained and certified to offer support and assistance to those in the recovery and community-integration process. Peer support is intended to inspire hope in individuals that recovery is not only possible, but probable. The service is designed to promote empowerment, self-determination, understanding, coping skills, and resiliency through mentoring and service coordination supports.
Family support services are for those who know, or have known, a feeling of desperation concerning the mental health problem of someone very near to them. When you seek support, very often you can learn that you are no longer alone, but among people who understand the problem as only a few others can. Mental Health Advocate: 401-462-2003 Mental Health Association of Rhode Island How do I contact an advocate for mental health services?
Rhode Island Office of the Mental Health Advocate The Office of the Mental Health Advocate is an independent State agency staffed by attorneys who provide an array of free legal, investigative, and advocacy services, regardless of age, to: prevent inappropriate admissions to psychiatric facilities to protect the rights and enhance the dignity of persons in mental health treatment and inpatient substance abuse treatment reduce the stigma associated with mental illness For more information contact: The Office of Mental Health Advocate 57 Howard Avenue-4th Floor How do I file a complaint about my mental health service provider?
Please call our Quality Assurance line at 401-462-2629 Community Mental Health Centers: Community Care Alliance 401-235-7121 800 Clinton Street Woonsocket, RI East Bay Community Action Program 401-246-1195 601 Wampanoag Trail East Providence, RI 2 Old County Road Barrington, RI Fellowship Health Resources 401-383-4885 45 Sockanossett Crossroad Unit 4 Cranston, RI 1443 Hartford Ave Johnston, RI 4705A Old Post Rd.
Charlestown, RI (no walk-in access) 101-103 Bacon St. Pawtucket, RI Newport Mental Health 401-846-1213 127 Johnny Cake Hill Rd. Middletown, RI The Providence Center 401-276-4020 Located at: 530 N.
Main St. Providence (no walk-in access) 50 Health Lane Warwick, RI What is a Licensed Community Mental Health Center? Rhode Island has a network of six private, nonprofit licensed community mental health centers, known as CMHCs.
They are: Community Care Alliance; Gateway; The Providence Center; Thrive Behavioral Health; East Bay Mental Health; and Newport Mental Health. Rhode Island’s network also includes a specialty provider, Fellowship Health Resources. This network provides comprehensive behavioral health services to adults with behavioral health needs.
The Community Mental Health Centers are regionally based however, as a RI resident, you may access services at any CMHC or at Fellowship Health Resources. You can also access RI’s 24/7 crisis hotline, BH Link at 988 . The 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline offers 24/7 call, text and chat access with trained crisis counselors who can help people experiencing suicidal, substance use, mental health crisis, or other emotional distress.
People can also dial 988 if they are worried about a loved one who may need crisis support. Map of Community Mental Health Centers CMHC Map and Agency Information PDF file, less than 1 mb megabytes CMHC Map and Phone Numbers- Spanish 2021 PDF file, less than 1 mb megabytes
According to the current listing, eligibility includes: Nonprofits, Behavioral health agencies, Community organizations. Confirm the full requirements in the official notice before applying.
Peer Recovery and Family Support Services is funded by Rhode Island Department of Behavioral Healthcare, Developmental Disabilities, and Hospitals (BHDDH). Verify program details on the funder's official page before applying.
Start from the official opportunity page linked in this listing — it carries the sponsor's submission instructions.
CMS distributed $10 billion in first-year Rural Health Transformation funds to all 50 states — but per-capita disparities expose a formula that may shortchange the communities that need it most.
Read articleThe June 2, 2026 White House executive order on Promoting Advanced Artificial Intelligence Innovation and Security has been read primarily as a frontier-model regulation document. The provision likely to shape grantmaking over the next eighteen months is buried in the implementation section: OMB is directed to identify existing federal grant programs that can be redirected toward AI vulnerability detection, with explicit beneficiary categories naming rural hospitals, community banks, and local utilities. The order does not create a new grant program — it instructs existing programs to fund a new use of their existing dollars. The mechanics, the deadlines, and what eligible recipients should be doing now.
Read articleARPA-H selected 13 research teams for EVIDENT, a $139.4M initiative to develop objective clinical endpoints for rapid-acting behavioral health therapies including psilocybin. At least $50M will match state psychedelic research investments under a Trump executive order.
Read article