H79SM086110
Project Grant
Overview
Grant Description
Vermont Garrett Lee Smith Project (VTGLS) - Vermont youth aged 10-24 have experienced a 30% increase in suicide-related emergency department visits from 2018 to 2021 and are disproportionately affected by suicide death compared to US youth (13.2 vs. 10.1 suicide deaths/100,000 in 2020).
The Vermont Garrett Lee Smith Project (VTGLS) will serve youth at risk of suicide by developing suicide prevention, screening, and treatment infrastructure among existing youth and family organizations. VTGLS will focus on implementing strategies in Vermont's regions with the highest youth suicide risk burden: the catchment area includes Chittenden, Rutland, Bennington, and Windham counties; youth identifying as sexual orientation and gender identity minority youth (LGBTQA); Black, Indigenous, and youth of color (BIPOC); and high-risk youth in the juvenile justice and child welfare systems.
VTGLS will expand the following evidence-based suicide prevention strategies and interventions to reach youth and their families in the catchment area. These strategies include: implementing Youth Mental Health First Aid (Y-MHFA), UMatter for Schools, and the Zero Suicide Framework; training and distributing resources promoting lethal means safety and counseling on access to lethal means; supporting youth with more risk factors, LGBTQA and BIPOC youth and their families by promoting evidence-based protective factors; providing suicide bereavement training to mental health programs, expanding suicide grief and loss support groups, and sponsoring Finding Hope sessions.
Through implementation of these strategies, VTGLS will impact an average of 2,950 unduplicated youth annually. These interventions will reach 14,750 unduplicated youth, 60 schools, 135 youth and family programs, and 3,820 youth-serving adults over the grant period.
VTGLS's goals and objectives are to:
1) Increase the number of youth-serving organizations who can identify and support youth at risk for suicide. Progress will be measured by the number of youth program staff Y-MHFA instructor trained, youth program staff Y-MHFA trained, and the number of schools adopting suicide prevention curriculum, policies, and implement lethal means safety strategies.
2) Expand Zero Suicide programming in mental health, child welfare, juvenile justice, and health care providers to increase clinical capacity to assess, manage, and treat youth at risk of suicide and improve transitions of care and follow-up. Progress will be measured by the number of youth treatment providers participating in a Zero Suicide Academy and Community of Practice (COP), completing an annual assessment of youth treatment providers, and the number of established regional youth Zero Suicide planning groups.
3) Support expansion of programming to enhance protective factors and build resiliency among youth at risk for suicide. Progress will be measured by the number program staff trained to provide Teen Youth Mental Health First Aid (TMHFA), the number of teens trained in TMHFA, and the number of hosted social events for LGBTQA and BIPOC youth and families.
4) Expand services and supports for families, communities, and organizations that have experienced a youth suicide death and families with youth experiencing suicidality. Progress will be measured by the number of new grief and loss support groups and regional Finding Hope sessions, and the number of new counselors able to provide bereavement counseling for families.
5) Use an ongoing data-driven approach to monitor effectiveness of statewide services, inform suicide prevention policy and program development and implementation, and technical assistance. Progress will be measured through regular presentation of evaluation metrics and development and maintenance of an index of need.
The Vermont Garrett Lee Smith Project (VTGLS) will serve youth at risk of suicide by developing suicide prevention, screening, and treatment infrastructure among existing youth and family organizations. VTGLS will focus on implementing strategies in Vermont's regions with the highest youth suicide risk burden: the catchment area includes Chittenden, Rutland, Bennington, and Windham counties; youth identifying as sexual orientation and gender identity minority youth (LGBTQA); Black, Indigenous, and youth of color (BIPOC); and high-risk youth in the juvenile justice and child welfare systems.
VTGLS will expand the following evidence-based suicide prevention strategies and interventions to reach youth and their families in the catchment area. These strategies include: implementing Youth Mental Health First Aid (Y-MHFA), UMatter for Schools, and the Zero Suicide Framework; training and distributing resources promoting lethal means safety and counseling on access to lethal means; supporting youth with more risk factors, LGBTQA and BIPOC youth and their families by promoting evidence-based protective factors; providing suicide bereavement training to mental health programs, expanding suicide grief and loss support groups, and sponsoring Finding Hope sessions.
Through implementation of these strategies, VTGLS will impact an average of 2,950 unduplicated youth annually. These interventions will reach 14,750 unduplicated youth, 60 schools, 135 youth and family programs, and 3,820 youth-serving adults over the grant period.
VTGLS's goals and objectives are to:
1) Increase the number of youth-serving organizations who can identify and support youth at risk for suicide. Progress will be measured by the number of youth program staff Y-MHFA instructor trained, youth program staff Y-MHFA trained, and the number of schools adopting suicide prevention curriculum, policies, and implement lethal means safety strategies.
2) Expand Zero Suicide programming in mental health, child welfare, juvenile justice, and health care providers to increase clinical capacity to assess, manage, and treat youth at risk of suicide and improve transitions of care and follow-up. Progress will be measured by the number of youth treatment providers participating in a Zero Suicide Academy and Community of Practice (COP), completing an annual assessment of youth treatment providers, and the number of established regional youth Zero Suicide planning groups.
3) Support expansion of programming to enhance protective factors and build resiliency among youth at risk for suicide. Progress will be measured by the number program staff trained to provide Teen Youth Mental Health First Aid (TMHFA), the number of teens trained in TMHFA, and the number of hosted social events for LGBTQA and BIPOC youth and families.
4) Expand services and supports for families, communities, and organizations that have experienced a youth suicide death and families with youth experiencing suicidality. Progress will be measured by the number of new grief and loss support groups and regional Finding Hope sessions, and the number of new counselors able to provide bereavement counseling for families.
5) Use an ongoing data-driven approach to monitor effectiveness of statewide services, inform suicide prevention policy and program development and implementation, and technical assistance. Progress will be measured through regular presentation of evaluation metrics and development and maintenance of an index of need.
Awardee
Funding Goals
NOT APPLICABLE
Grant Program (CFDA)
Awarding / Funding Agency
Place of Performance
Waterbury,
Vermont
056719501
United States
Geographic Scope
Single Zip Code
Related Opportunity
Analysis Notes
Amendment Since initial award the total obligations have increased 400% from $735,000 to $3,675,000.
Vermont Agency Of Human Services was awarded
Vermont Suicide Prevention Project: Enhancing Youth Mental Health Wellness
Project Grant H79SM086110
worth $3,675,000
from the Division of Grants Management in August 2022 with work to be completed primarily in Waterbury Vermont United States.
The grant
has a duration of 5 years and
was awarded through assistance program 93.243 Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Projects of Regional and National Significance.
The Project Grant was awarded through grant opportunity Garrett Lee Smith State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention and Early Intervention Grant Program.
Status
(Ongoing)
Last Modified 7/6/26
Period of Performance
8/31/22
Start Date
8/30/27
End Date
Funding Split
$3.7M
Federal Obligation
$0.0
Non-Federal Obligation
$3.7M
Total Obligated
Activity Timeline
Subgrant Awards
Disclosed subgrants for H79SM086110
Transaction History
Modifications to H79SM086110
Additional Detail
Award ID FAIN
H79SM086110
SAI Number
H79SM086110-1396608980
Award ID URI
SAI UNAVAILABLE
Awardee Classifications
State Government
Awarding Office
75SAMH SAMHSA Division of Grants Management
Funding Office
75MS00 SAMHSA CENTER FOR MENTAL HEALTH SERVICES
Awardee UEI
YLQARK22FMQ1
Awardee CAGE
3JSU0
Performance District
VT-00
Senators
Bernard Sanders
Peter Welch
Peter Welch
Budget Funding
| Federal Account | Budget Subfunction | Object Class | Total | Percentage |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mental Health, Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, Health and Human Services (075-1363) | Health care services | Grants, subsidies, and contributions (41.0) | $1,470,000 | 100% |
Modified: 7/6/26