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Day 2

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Take 15 minutes to read 3 scenarios concerning prior approval, ... http://www.cdc.gov/prc/ Navigating Cooperative Agreements. Slide 42. Other Federal Agencies ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Day 2


1
Navigating Cooperative Agreements
  • Day 2

2
Today's Agenda
  • Budget and Work Plan Changes Prior Approvals and
    Unobligated Balances
  • Break
  • Roles and Relationships in Cooperative Agreements
  • Lunch
  • Getting Technical Assistance
  • Break
  • Communicating Challenges and Successes
  • Wrap-Up and Evaluations

3
  • Budget and Work Plan Changes
  • Prior Approvals and Unobligated Balances

4
Prior Approvals Scenarios
  • Groups of 4
  • Take 15 minutes to read 3 scenarios concerning
    prior approval, and answer the questions
  • Scenarios are in your binders

5
Common Prior Approvals (1 of 2)
  • Revision of project scope or objectives
  • Time extension
  • Change in project director, PI, or other key
    staff
  • Contracting an activity out, or changing an
    existing contract

6
Common Prior Approvals (2 of 2)
  • Change in the state organization
  • Activity involves medical care (research)
  • Request for additional funds
  • For a C.A. over 100K, request to re-budget more
    than 25 of funds
  • Moving money into an object class you didnt
    originally have money in
  • Carryover

7
Prior Approval Tips
  • Include grant number and GMS name on each page
  • Have PO review a draft of your request
  • Inform PO when you send the request
  • Must be signed by program AND fiscal officials
  • Make your request for change or carryover by the
    time specified in NOA
  • Allow time for approval/signing procedures
    required by your state.

8
Redirection Request
  • Where the money is coming from
  • Where it will be redirected to
  • Objectives for the tasks proposed
  • How these objectives tie to program outcomes
  • Itemized budget justification showing how the
    funds will be used

9
Sample Redirection Summary
10
Carryover Request
  • Include
  • Final FSR
  • Objectives for the tasks proposed
  • How new tasks tie to program outcomes
  • Itemized budget justification showing how the
    funds will be used

11
Unspent v. Unobligated
  • Unspent
  • the expenditure is planned and the money will be
    spent this year, but hasn't been spent yet
  • Unobligated
  • no plans to spend the money this budget year
  • Report estimated unobligated funds, but not
    unspent funds

12
Anticipating Unobligated Funds
  • Observe delays to the release of funds
  • Consider impact of technical, political, or other
    challenges on timelines and expenditures
  • Use all available info to compare expenditures to
    work accomplished
  • Estimate project costs for the coming year based
    on your experiences of the past year

13
Using Unobligated Balances
  • Re-budget (redirect) funds for current budget
    year
  • Request carryover to next budget year CDC adds
    the funds to next year's award
  • Request carryover CDC uses the funds to offset
    next year's award

14
  • Break

15
  • Roles and Relationships in the
  • Cooperative Agreement Process

16
Six Key Roles
  • State Program Manager
  • State Principal Investigator
  • State Financial Manager or Fiscal Office
  • State Chronic Disease Director
  • CDC Project Officer
  • CDC Grants Management and intermediaries

17
Relationships
  •  

18
Relationships with PI



19
Roles Relationships Exercise
  • Reflection on your CA roles relationships
  • 10 minutes
  • Small group discussion
  • 20 minutes
  • Large group debrief

20
Program Managers
  • Program management, leadership and direction
  • Determining and advocating for priority health
    needs.
  • Maximizing the use of resources to achieve
    program objectives
  • Representing their state
  • Ensuring the program adheres to all applicable
    laws and regulations (state and federal)
  • Coordinating partnerships
  • Providing expertise on the content and their state

21
Chronic Disease Director (1 of 2)
  • Oversees multiple chronic disease and related
    programs
  • May help to coordinate the activities and budgets
    of several programs
  • May have decision-making authority over program
    activities
  • May serve as a principal investigator.
  • Often involved in recommending policies that
    influence the programs

22
Chronic Disease Director (2 of 2)
  • Point of contact for many key partners
  • Often has a unique relationship with
    decision-makers in the state health department
  • May have a close relationship with higher level
    staff at CDC
  • Your connection to key people in your partner
    organizations and high-level officials in your
    state

23
When there's a Principal Investigator
  • Principal Investigator (PI) is sometimes called
    the Program Director
  • Does not have the same role as a PI for NIH or
    other research initiative
  • PI (PD) must sign all official documentation and
    ensure the program adheres to all applicable laws
    and regulations (state and federal)

24
Financial Manager
  • Program accounting
  • Tracking funds from different sources
  • Ensuring all transactions comply with applicable
    regulations, laws and procedures
  • Assisting the program manager in preparing
    budgets and requests for redirection and
    carryovers
  • Providing timely, useful expenditure information
    to the program manager

25
CDC Procurement Grants Office
  • Grants Management Official
  • high-level official who signs the documents
  • Grants Management Specialist
  • part of the GMO's team processes the work
    associated with your cooperative agreement

26
PGO
  • Assists programs with financial and management
    expertise
  • Budget discussions
  • Budget and costs analyses
  • Signs contractual documents
  • Maintains official grant file
  • Ensures that both federal program staff and
    states fulfil regulatory requirements

27
CDC Project Officer
  • Provides technical assistance
  • Provides you with feedback on reports
  • Provides PGO with information when appropriate
  • Gives guidance about how to get things done
    efficiently and effectively at CDC
  • Connects you to other relevant programs and
    opportunities at CDC

28
Expect Your Project Officer To...
  • Ask good questions
  • Listen and learn from you
  • Provide timely feedback
  • Advise you on how best to comply with HHS and PGO
    requirements and policies
  • Help you prepare your documents to expedite the
    approval process.
  • Help you work with PGO

29
Difficulties with Project Officers
  • Talk to principal investigator, chronic disease
    director, or immediate supervisor
  • Call the project officer to discuss concerns
  • Have principal investigator or chronic disease
    director work with the project officers
    supervisor
  • Ask NACDD for help

30
Regional Public Health Advisor
  • Knows CDC and recipient well
  • Provides assistance with programmatic aspects of
    the cooperative agreement

31
Transitions program manager
  • Ideally meet with prior program manager
  • Call project officer
  • Learn how the team works together
  • Read the relevant project documents
  • Consider a site visit or a reverse site visit

32
Transition Kit
  • Orientation checklist
  • Transition manual- program description -
    organizational charts- partnership descriptions
  • Calendar of key dates
  • Performance standards and expectations

33
Transitions project officer
  • Be proactive -dont wait for the project officer
    to call you
  • Brief new project officer on the immediate
    concerns of the program
  • Communicate your expectations how you would
    like the PO to communicate and interact with you

34
Get to know your PO
  • Expectations of you
  • What has (and hasn't) worked for them in the past
  • Preferred style of communicating, coordinating,
    and planning
  • When documentation is needed, and what
    documentation is helpful
  • Constraints and sources of stress

35
  • LUNCH

36
  • Getting Technical Assistance

37
Technical Assistance
  • Gives access to expertise
  • Provides the opportunity to learn from others'
    experiences
  • Opens the channels of communication about the
    project (esp. with CDC)
  • Helps you define and articulate the program's
    progress

38
State Experts
  • Info on how a program was implemented in a
    specific context
  • Ideas about how to overcome implementation
    barriers
  • Input on issues that affect all state programs,
    such as legislation or partnership issues

39
NACDD (1 of 2)
  • Info on the latest science and policy issues
  • Info on who is doing what and best practices
  • Expertise on particular state health departments
  • Key current issues within each of the diseases/
    risk factors
  • Connection to data sources, helpful resources or
    programs, and relevant reports

40
NACDD (2 of 2)
  • Current NACDD legislative or advocacy activities
  • Advocacy activities other organizations and
    partners are involved in
  • Conferences and professional development
    opportunities, including training and support on
    program management skills
  • www.chronicdisease.org/

41
Prevention Research Centers
  • Latest research on health- or population-specific
    issues
  • Info on conducting research within communities
  • http//www.cdc.gov/prc/

42
Other Federal Agencies
  • Agency for Healthcare Research Quality (AHRQ)
  • NIH Institutes
  • Health Resources and Services Agency (HRSA)
  • Indian Health Service (IHS)

43
Voluntary Organizations
  • Health education materials
  • Policy information
  • Presentations and papers
  • American Cancer Society - www.cancer.org
  • American Heart Association - www.americanheart.o
    rg

44
Making the Most of PO's
  • Keep them up to date on your project
  • Provide information about your state and the
    program's context
  • Inform them of all your funding sources and the
    multiple priorities you must address

45
Project officers may connect you to...
  • Epidemiologists
  • Evaluation specialists
  • Health communication specialists
  • Other experts
  • Other states

46
Tracking Progress Discussion
  • Groups of 4 - 5
  • Discuss tools and strategies you use to keep
    track of the different program work streams
  • 15 minutes for discussion

47
Tracking Progress
  • Progress on SMART objectives
  • Alignment between resources and work plan
    priorities
  • Adequate capacity to meet goals
  • Timeliness

48
CDC Response to Program Challenges
Restriction of Funds
PGO
Program Improvement Plan
Site Visit
Consultation w/ program office
Technical assistance
49
Your Documentation Responsibilities
  • Interim progress report. Part of non-competing
    continuation application.
  • Annual report. Due after the end of the budget
    period.
  • Financial status report (FSR). Due after the end
    of the budget period.

50
Documentation at the End of the Award
  • Final FSR and progress report
  • Data sets, evaluation reports, or other summary
    documents
  • For your own records, document lessons learned
    and success stories

51
Your PO's Documentation Responsibilities
  • Site visit planning, notes, recommendations for
    action
  • Conference call notes and recommended next steps
  • Feedback on progress reports and other things you
    submit
  • Their understanding of the programs challenges
    and successes, and any technical assistance
    provided in response

52
When to Have a Site Visit
  • Within 60 days of a new cooperative agreement
    award
  • Change in the program manager
  • Change in the project officer
  • Coinciding with a special event, activity, or
    special task
  • You express a need for it

53
Schedule the Site Visit
  • What is most important to accomplish?
  • - strategically
  • - operationally
  • Discuss potential site visit meetings and other
    activities
  • - Who should participate?
  • - Schedule time to debrief w/ PO at end

54
Once Your Site Visit is Scheduled
  • Decide which internal and external stakeholders
    and senior leaders should attend
  • Communicate with your program staff and other
    stakeholders about the site visit
  • dates
  • who is visiting why
  • roles
  • what your organization expects to get out of the
    experience
  • what stakeholders can expect during the site
    visit

55
Setting the Agenda
  • Plan end-of-visit debrief w/Project Officer
  • Share agenda w/PO
  • Brief PO on attendees of each meeting
  • Share logistical travel info w/PO
  • Book meeting space
  • Inform sites

56
Your Project Officer Will Look For.
  • Technical assistance needs
  • How your organizations infrastructure and
    politics affect the program
  • Indicators of capacity to implement program
  • level of awareness, engagement, and commitment of
    key partners to the program

57
Preparing Your Messages
  • Decide on key messages
  • Inform PO of messages stakeholders should hear
    from him/her
  • Use PO as voice of CDC authority

58
  • Break

59
Balanced Site Visits Discussion
  • Groups of 4-5
  • Discuss how to have a balanced site visit so you
    can have technical assistance AND promote the
    program
  • Use discussion questions in binder
  • 15 minutes

60
Presenting Program Challenges
  • Frame challenges and technical assistance needs
    without putting your program at a disadvantage-
    Do not create impression that your program is not
    capable or strong.
  • Ask for technical assistance or describe a
    program challenge while at the same time
    highlighting the accomplishments of the program.

61
Presenting Program Challenges Example
  • REPLACE THIS...
  • Unfortunately, we overspent by 8,000 due to some
    trouble we had tracking expenditures.
  • WITH THIS...
  • We were able to reach more of this population
    than expected, and we overspent by 8,000 as a
    result. Maybe we can discuss how to better
    anticipate these expenses.

62
Presenting Program Challenges Exercise
  • Rewrite 5 statements about program challenges so
    they are success-oriented
  • Work in pairs
  • 10 minutes
  • Reconvene as a large group

63
Success Stories
  • Prepare you to respond to a legislator
  • Help you explain what you did, how it worked, and
    why it was worth the money
  • Make the invisible work of public health visible
    to the public
  • Inspire programs in other states

64
Success Stories Elements
  • Compelling problem statement
  • Clear description of the intervention
  • Measurable results
  • Reproducible actions

65
Writing Success Stories Exercise
  • Take 10 minutes to outline a Success Story for
    one of your programs
  • Include
  • A statement of the public health problem
  • A brief description of the program and its
    intentions
  • The impact of the program

66
Wrap Up
  • Parking Lot review
  • Do differently?
  • Evaluations
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