Document

Tribal Tourism Grant Program; Solicitation of Proposals

The Secretary of the Interior (Secretary), through the Office of Indian Economic Development (OIED), Division of Economic Development (DED), is soliciting proposals from eligibl...

Department of the Interior
Bureau of Indian Affairs
  1. [2231A2100DD/AAKC001030/A0A501010.999900]

AGENCY:

Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA), Interior.

ACTION:

Notice.

SUMMARY:

The Secretary of the Interior (Secretary), through the Office of Indian Economic Development (OIED), Division of Economic Development (DED), is soliciting proposals from eligible federally recognized Tribes and Tribal organizations for the Tribal Tourism Grant Program (TTGP). The grant funding will be used to support Tribal tourism by providing Tribes and Tribal organizations funding to obtain technical assistance to perform feasibility studies or develop Tribal tourism business plans. The TTGP grant will provide Tribes resources to explore opportunities to increase Tribal capacity to plan, develop, and manage tourism and related infrastructure, in support of economic development and the Native American Tourism and Improving Visitor Experience Act or NATIVE Act. The feasibility study or business plan will empower Tribes to make informed decisions on potential tourism project(s).

DATES:

Grant application packages will be accepted until 5 p.m. ET, on October 24, 2022. OIED will not consider proposals received after this time and date.

ADDRESSES:

The required method of submitting proposals is through Grants.gov. For information on how to apply for grants in Grants.gov, see the instructions available at https://www.grants.gov/​help/​html/​help/​Applicants/​HowToApplyForGrants.htm. Proposals must be submitted to Grants.gov by the deadline established in the DATES section.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:

Mr. Dennis Wilson, Grant Management Specialist, Office of Indian Economic Development, telephone: (505) 917-3235; email: . If you have questions regarding the application process, please contact Ms. Jo Ann Metcalfe, Grant Officer, telephone (401) 703-3390; email . Individuals in the United States who are deaf, deafblind, hard of hearing, or have a speech disability may dial 711 (TTY, TDD, or TeleBraille) to access telecommunications relay services. Additional Program information can be found at: https://www.bia.gov/​service/​grants/​ttgp.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:

I. General Information

II. Number of Projects Funded

III. Background

IV. Eligibility for Funding

V. Who May Perform Feasibility Studies Funded by TTGP Grants?

VI. Applicant Procurement Procedures

VII. Limitations

VIII. TTGP Application Guidance

IX. Mandatory Components

X. Incomplete Applications

XI. Review and Selection Process

XII. Evaluation Criteria

XIII. Transfer of Funds

XIV. Reporting Requirements for Award Recipients

XV. Conflicts of Interest

XVI. Questions and Requests for OIED Assistance

XVII. Paperwork Reduction Act

XVIII. Authority

I. General Information

Award Ceiling: $150,000.

Award Floor: $25,000.

CFDA Number: 15.032.

Cost Sharing or Matching Requirement: No.

Number of Awards: 20-35. ( printed page 52022)

Category: Business Development.

II. Number of Projects Funded

OIED anticipates awarding of approximately 20 to 35 grants under this announcement ranging in value from approximately $25,000 to $150,000. The funded projects are for a one-year term. OIED will use a competitive evaluation process for awarding based on criteria described in the Review and Selection Process (Criteria) section of this notice. Only one application will be accepted from an eligible Tribe, and only one application will be accepted from an eligible Tribal Organization of that Tribe.

III. Background

The Office of the Assistant Secretary—Indian Affairs, through OIED, is soliciting proposals from federally recognized Tribes listed as Indian Entities Recognized by and Eligible to Receive Services from the United States Bureau of Indian Affairs at 87 FR 4636 (January 28, 2022) and Tribal Organizations eligible for TTGP grants. Indian Tribes are referred to using the term “Tribe” throughout this notice. Tribal Organization is defined by 25 U.S.C. 5304(l). The grant funding is to retain consultants to perform feasibility studies on Tribal tourism opportunities or develop a tourism business plan. The feasibility studies will help facilitate informed decision-making regarding Tribes' economic futures and may concern the viability of a tourism project. The feasibility study or business plan will empower Tribes to make informed decisions on potential tourism project(s), a Tribal tourism business, or Tribal tourism businesses recovering from the economic impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic. The OIED supports Tribes and Tribal organizations capacity building to plan, develop and manage tourism and related infrastructure in support of economic development and the NATIVE Act (Pub. L. 114-221). The OIED administers this program through its DED.

The funding periods and amounts referenced in this solicitation are subject to the availability of non-recurring appropriation funds of the BIA budget at the time of award, as well as the Department of the Interior (DOI) and Indian Affairs priorities at the time of the award. Neither DOI nor Indian Affairs will be held responsible for proposal or application preparation costs. Publication of this solicitation does not obligate DOI or Indian Affairs to award any specific grant or to obligate all or any part of available funds. Future funding is subject to the availability of Congressional appropriations and cannot be guaranteed. DOI or Indian Affairs may cancel or withdraw this solicitation at any time.

IV. Eligibility for Funding

The Office of the Assistant Secretary—Indian Affairs, through OIED, is soliciting proposals from federally recognized Tribes listed as Indian Entities Recognized by and Eligible to Receive Services from the United States Bureau of Indian Affairs at 87 FR 4636 (January 28, 2022) and eligible Tribal Organizations as defined by 25 U.S.C. 5304( l). Note: The U.S. Department of the Interior Office of Native Hawaiian Relations is managing NATIVE Act tourism grants to Native Hawaiian Organizations. For additional information on grants for Native Hawaiian Organizations, please contact Ka‘i‘ini Kaloi, Director, Office of Native Hawaiian Relations, (202) 208-7462, .

V. Who May Perform Tourism Feasibility Studies or Develop Tourism Business Plans Funded by TTGP Grants

The applicant determines who will conduct its feasibility study or business plan. An applicant has several choices, including but not limited to:

VI. Applicant Procurement Procedures

The applicant is subject to the procurement standards in 2 CFR 200.318 through 200.326. In accordance with 2 CFR 200.318, an applicant must use its own documented procurement procedures which reflect Tribal laws and regulations, provided the procurements conform to applicable Federal law and standards.

VII. Limitations

TTGP grant funding must be expended in accordance with applicable statutory and regulatory requirements, including 2 CFR 200. As part of the grant application review process, OIED may conduct a review of an applicant's prior OIED grant(s).

Applicants currently under BIA sanction Level 2 or higher resulting from non-compliance with the Single Audit Act are ineligible for a TTGP grants. Applicants at Sanction Level 1 will be considered for funding.

Only one application will be accepted from an eligible Tribe, and only one application will be accepted from an eligible Tribal Organization of that Tribe. Applications should address one project and any submissions that contain multiple project proposals will not be considered. OIED will apply the same objective ranking criteria to each proposal.

The purpose of TTGP grants is to empower Tribes to make informed decisions on potential tourism project(s), a Tribal tourism business, or Tribal tourism businesses recovering from the economic impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic. An application can request funding for a feasibility study, or a business plan, depending on the Tribe's needs.

TTGP grants may not be used for:

VIII. TTGP Application Guidance

All applications are required to be submitted in digital form to grants.gov. For instructions, see https://www.grants.gov/​help/​html/​help/​Applicants/​HowToApplyForGrants.htm.

IX. Mandatory Components

The mandatory components, and forms identified below, must be included in the proposal package. Links to the mandatory forms can be found under the “package” tab on the TTGP FY2022 grant opportunity page at ( printed page 52023) www.grants.gov. Any information in the possession of the BIA or submitted to the BIA throughout the process, including final work product, constitutes government records and may be subject to disclosure to third parties under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), 5 U.S.C. 552, and the Department of the Interior's FOIA regulations at 43 CFR part 2, unless a FOIA exemption or exception applies, or other provisions of law protect the information. Following are the names of the required forms:

Cover Page

A Cover Page must be included in the application and contain the following:

Application for Federal Assistance SF-424

Applicants are required complete the Application for Federal Assistance SF-424. Please use a descriptive file name that includes tribal name and project description. For example: TTGPSF424.Tribalname.Project. The SF-424 form requires the Congressional District number of the applicant, which can be found at https://www.house.gov/​representatives/​find-your-representative.

Cover Letter

A cover letter is not to exceed one (1) page that summarizes the interest and intent, complete with authorized signature(s) of organization leadership.

Project Abstract Summary and Project Narrative Attachment

The first paragraph of the project narrative must include the title and basic description of the proposed Tribal tourism feasibility study and/or Tribal tourism business plan. The Project Narrative must not exceed 15-pages. Supplemental information such as letters of support, graphs, charts, maps, photographs and other graphic and/or other relevant information may be included in an appendix and not counted against the 15-page Project Narrative Limit. At a minimum, it should include:

In addition, unless prohibited by Tribal procurement procedures, please include a description of the consultant(s) the applicant wishes to retain, including the consultant's contact information, technical expertise, training, qualifications, and suitability to undertake the feasibility study. These documents may be included at the end of the Project Narrative and will not be counted toward the 15-page limitation.

Project Narratives are not judged based on their length. Please do not submit any unnecessary attachments or documents beyond what is listed above, e.g., Tribal history, unrelated photos and maps.

Budget Information for Non-Construction Programs (SF-424A) [V1.0] and Budget Narrative Attachment Form [V1.2]

Applicants are required to utilize the SF-424A for the budget submission. Please use a descriptive file name that includes tribal name and project description. For example: TTGPBudget.Tribalname.Project. The budget must identify the amount of grant funding requested and a comprehensive breakdown of all projected and anticipated expenditures, including contracted personnel fees, consulting fees (hourly or fixed), travel costs, data collection and analysis costs, computer rentals, report generation, drafting, advertising costs for a proposed project and other relevant project expenses, and their subcomponents.

Attachments [V1.2]

Utilize the “attachments form” to include the Tribal resolution issued in the fiscal year of the grant application, authorizing the submission of a TTGP 2022 grant application. It must be signed by authorized Tribal representative(s). The Tribal resolution must also include a description of the feasibility study or business plan to be developed. An application submitted without a Tribal Resolution will be considered incomplete. The attachments form can also be used to include any other attachments related to the proposal.

Required Grantee Travel and Attendance at a Tribal Tourism Annual Grantee Meeting

Grantees will be required to have two individuals who work directly on the project attend an in-person annual DOI/OIED-sponsored grantee 3-day meeting in Washington, DC, during the year of the grant award. Applicants must include costs in the budget to cover this requirement. Travel costs must not exceed $6,000 per person. Applicants should follow their own travel policies to budget for this 3-day meeting. ( printed page 52024) Additional funds for these expenses will not be available once grant is awarded. In the event the meeting is converted to a virtual meeting due to timing or COVID related issues, those funds may be repurposed in the grant.

Special Note

Please make sure that the System for Award Management (SAM) number used to apply is active, not expired, with a current Unique Entity Identifier (UEI) number on the SF-424. Please make sure an active Automated Standard Application for Payment (ASAP) number is provided. Applicants must have an ASAP number and be enrolled with the BIA to be eligible. Please list counties where the project is located and congressional district number where the project will be located.

Key Contacts [V2.0]

Applicants must include the Key Contacts information page that includes:

Please list the county(ies) where the project is located and congressional district number(s) where the project is located.

X. Incomplete Applications

Incomplete applications will not be accepted. Please ensure that all forms listed in the announcement are completed and submitted in grants.gov.

XI. Review and Selection Process

Upon receiving a TTGP application, OIED will determine whether the application is complete and that the proposed project does not duplicate or overlap previous or currently funded OIED tourism projects. Any proposal that is received after the date and time in the DATES section of this notice will not be reviewed.

The OIED Review Committee, comprised of OIED staff, staff from other Federal agencies, and subject matter experts, will evaluate the proposals against the ranking criteria. Proposals will be evaluated using the five ranking criteria listed below, with a maximum achievable total of 100 points.

Final award selections will be approved by the Assistant Secretary—Indian Affairs and the Associate Deputy Secretary, U.S. Department of the Interior. Applicants not selected for an award will be notified in writing.

XII. Evaluation Criteria

Proposals (both feasibility or business plans) will be formally evaluated by an OIED review committee using the five criteria listed below. Each criterion provides a percentage of the total maximum rating of 100 points:

The Project's Economic Benefits: 50 Points

The reviewers will determine if the proposal's scope of work clearly states the tourism opportunity to be studied. Factors that the reviewers will consider when allocating points are, but not limited to:

Project Deliverables: 20 Points

The reviewers will determine if the proposal describes in detail applicable proposed deliverables. For example, a mountain biking tour study would include deliverables such as, but not limited to, site analysis, market demographics, marketing strategies, drive-time market, regional competition, market demands, and a financial model that includes investment and return on investment projections.

Project Tasks and Timeline: 10 Points

The reviewers will determine if a comprehensive timeline has been developed to address tasks that are needed to successfully complete the objectives outlined in the scope of work.

Costs of Proposal/Budget: 10 Points

The reviewers will assess the costs listed in the budget to determine if the overall value of the project is competitively priced and in accordance with the goals stated within the proposal/scope of work.

Specificity: 10 Points

In addition, the reviewers understand that applicants may retain consultant(s) that prepare the Tourism proposal to also conduct the feasibility study if the grant is awarded. This does not prejudice an applicant's chances of being selected as a grantee. However, proposals will be viewed unfavorably if they show little evidence of communication between the consultant(s) and the applicant or scant regard for the applicant community's unique circumstances. Facsimile applications prepared by the same consultant(s) and submitted by multiple applicants will receive scrutiny in this regard.

XIII. Transfer of Funds

OIED's obligation under this solicitation is contingent on receipt of congressionally appropriated funds. No liability on the part of the U.S. Government for any payment may arise until funds are made available to the awarding officer for this grant and until the recipient receives notice of such availability, to be confirmed in writing by the grant officer.

All payments under this agreement will be made by electronic funds transfer through the ASAP. All grant recipients are required to have a current and accurate UEI number to receive funds. All payments will be deposited to the banking information designated by the applicant in the System for Award Management (SAM).

XIV. Reporting Requirements for Award Recipients

The applicant must deliver all products and data required by the signed Grant Agreement for the proposed TTGP feasibility study or business plan project to OIED within 30 days of the end of each reporting period and 120 days after completion of the project. The reporting periods will be established in the terms and conditions of the final award.

OIED requires that deliverable products be provided in digital format ( printed page 52025) and submitted in the GrantSolutions system. Reports can be provided in either Microsoft Word or Adobe Acrobat PDF format. Spreadsheet data can be provided in Microsoft Excel, Microsoft Access, or Adobe PDF formats. All vector figures should be converted to PDF format. Raster images can be provided in PDF, JPEG, TIFF, or any of the Windows metafile formats. The contract between the grantee and the consultant conducting the TTGP funded feasibility study or business plan must include deliverable products and require that the products be prepared in the format described above.

The contract should include budget amounts for all printed and digital copies to be delivered in accordance with the grant agreement. In addition, the contract must specify that all products generated by a consultant belong to the grantee and cannot be released to the public without the grantee's written approval. Products include, but are not limited to, all reports and technical data obtained, maps, status reports, and the final report.

In addition, this funding opportunity and financial assistance award must adhere to the following provisions.

XV. Conflicts of Interest

Applicability

Requirements

Notification

Data Availability

○ The scientific data relied upon;

○ The analysis relied upon; and

○ The methodology, including models, used to gather and analyze data.

XVI. Questions and Requests for IED Assistance

Technical consultation from OIED may include clarifying application requirements, confirming whether an applicant previously submitted the same or similar proposal, and registration information for SAM or ASAP. Technical assistance will be provided by the OIED contractor, Tribal Tech. The applicant is solely responsible for the preparation of its grant proposal. All eligible applicants will have access to scheduled training and can request assistance from the pre-application phase through the post-award close-out. It is strongly recommended that any assistance be a consolidation of items based off reasonably completed working drafts. Please complete an in-take form at https://app.smartsheet.com/​b/​publish?​EQBCT=​98a8ecfd0f3d452693e589c6a0a678d8 to request assistance with Tribal Tech.

XVII. Paperwork Reduction Act

The information collection requirements contained in this notice have been reviewed and approved by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) under the Paperwork Reduction Act, 44 U.S.C. 3504(h). The OMB control number is 4040-0004. The authorization expires on December 31, 2022. An agency may not conduct or sponsor, and you are not required to respond to, any information collection that does not display a currently valid OMB Control Number.

XVIII. Authority

This is a discretionary grant program authorized under the NATIVE Act (25 U.S.C. 4354(b)). The NATIVE Act authorizes the head of an agency with assets or resources relating to travel, ( printed page 52026) recreation, or tourism promotion or branding enhancement for which Indian Tribes, Tribal organizations, or Native Hawaiian organizations are eligible may be used: (1) to support the efforts of Indian Tribes, Tribal organizations, and Native Hawaiian organizations to tell the story of Native Americans as the First Peoples of the United States; (2) to use the arts and humanities to help revitalize Native communities, promote economic development, increase livability, and present the uniqueness of the United States to visitors in a way that celebrates the diversity of the United States; and to carry out 25 U.S.C. 4354.

Bryan Newland,

Assistant Secretary—Indian Affairs.

[FR Doc. 2022-18242 Filed 8-23-22; 8:45 am]

BILLING CODE 4337-15-P

Legal Citation

Federal Register Citation

Use this for formal legal and research references to the published document.

87 FR 52021

Web Citation

Suggested Web Citation

Use this when citing the archival web version of the document.

“Tribal Tourism Grant Program; Solicitation of Proposals,” thefederalregister.org (August 24, 2022), https://thefederalregister.org/documents/2022-18242/tribal-tourism-grant-program-solicitation-of-proposals.