H79SM088060
Project Grant
Overview
Grant Description
Concord Children's Interconnected Systems - through the Concord Children's Interconnected Systems Project, the Concord School District (CSD), in direct collaboration with Riverbend Community Mental Health Center, will serve as a hub for school-based mental health services, family behavioral health education, and timely facilitated referrals for external clinical care.
As New Hampshire's capital city, Concord is home to over 4,000 pre-K through grade 12 public school students, more than a third of whom qualify for free or reduced lunch. All five elementaries, the single middle school, and the sole high school are perennially Title I schools, and at any given time, 80-150 of our students experience homelessness.
As the state's most common refugee resettlement community, Concord has welcomed thousands of New American students to its schools over the past decade. Pre-pandemic, 35% of CSD high schoolers reported symptoms of clinical depression; that figure has risen to 39%, as has the number who have seriously considered suicide (23%).
The overarching goals of the project are to: 1) build the capacity of stakeholders with a shared interest in and responsibility for children's mental health through intentional collaboration, workforce development, community-wide training, and codified policy change; 2) implement Tier 1, preventative approaches in classrooms, preschool - grade 12, to create an equitable school climate that supports students' behavioral health needs in a post-COVID world; 3) respond to the increasing need for targeted interventions through expanded social work and alternative education capacity at the middle school, the facilitation of skills groups in the elementary schools, and the implementation of restorative practices at the secondary level; and 4) mitigate barriers to clinical care needed by school-aged youth and young adults with SED/SMI by establishing responsive pathways to school- and community-based individual therapy, wraparound, and crisis intervention.
To respond to the increased behavioral health needs of students, care coordination infrastructure is a chief priority; two CMHC/school liaisons and a home-to-school liaison will be the conduit between the school district, community mental health center, and families to effectively facilitate co-located services, participate in a multi-tiered system of supports for behavioral health and wellness (MTSS-B), and support school- and community-based prevention programming.
The district and Riverbend will partner with the state departments of Health & Human Services and Education, youth- and family-serving entities (e.g. Concord Family YMCA, Parent Information Center), and local health and social service providers (e.g. Waypoint, Community Bridges) for training and technical assistance. Tier 1 prevention programming, including evidence-based, developmentally appropriate mental health training and social-emotional instruction with a trauma-responsive lens, will benefit all students in the district, with a targeted focus on primary grades and middle school.
This project will also clinically serve 10% of our student population through Tier 2/3 services per year for a total of 1,600 unduplicated youth enrolled in school- and/or clinic-based mental health services throughout the project. We will work with no fewer than 800 families, through training and family therapies, project-wide.
As New Hampshire's capital city, Concord is home to over 4,000 pre-K through grade 12 public school students, more than a third of whom qualify for free or reduced lunch. All five elementaries, the single middle school, and the sole high school are perennially Title I schools, and at any given time, 80-150 of our students experience homelessness.
As the state's most common refugee resettlement community, Concord has welcomed thousands of New American students to its schools over the past decade. Pre-pandemic, 35% of CSD high schoolers reported symptoms of clinical depression; that figure has risen to 39%, as has the number who have seriously considered suicide (23%).
The overarching goals of the project are to: 1) build the capacity of stakeholders with a shared interest in and responsibility for children's mental health through intentional collaboration, workforce development, community-wide training, and codified policy change; 2) implement Tier 1, preventative approaches in classrooms, preschool - grade 12, to create an equitable school climate that supports students' behavioral health needs in a post-COVID world; 3) respond to the increasing need for targeted interventions through expanded social work and alternative education capacity at the middle school, the facilitation of skills groups in the elementary schools, and the implementation of restorative practices at the secondary level; and 4) mitigate barriers to clinical care needed by school-aged youth and young adults with SED/SMI by establishing responsive pathways to school- and community-based individual therapy, wraparound, and crisis intervention.
To respond to the increased behavioral health needs of students, care coordination infrastructure is a chief priority; two CMHC/school liaisons and a home-to-school liaison will be the conduit between the school district, community mental health center, and families to effectively facilitate co-located services, participate in a multi-tiered system of supports for behavioral health and wellness (MTSS-B), and support school- and community-based prevention programming.
The district and Riverbend will partner with the state departments of Health & Human Services and Education, youth- and family-serving entities (e.g. Concord Family YMCA, Parent Information Center), and local health and social service providers (e.g. Waypoint, Community Bridges) for training and technical assistance. Tier 1 prevention programming, including evidence-based, developmentally appropriate mental health training and social-emotional instruction with a trauma-responsive lens, will benefit all students in the district, with a targeted focus on primary grades and middle school.
This project will also clinically serve 10% of our student population through Tier 2/3 services per year for a total of 1,600 unduplicated youth enrolled in school- and/or clinic-based mental health services throughout the project. We will work with no fewer than 800 families, through training and family therapies, project-wide.
Awardee
Funding Goals
SAMHSA WAS GIVEN THE AUTHORITY TO ADDRESS PRIORITY SUBSTANCE ABUSE TREATMENT, PREVENTION AND MENTAL HEALTH NEEDS OF REGIONAL AND NATIONAL SIGNIFICANCE THROUGH ASSISTANCE (GRANTS AND COOPERATIVE AGREEMENTS) TO STATES, POLITICAL SUBDIVISIONS OF STATES, INDIAN TRIBES AND TRIBAL ORGANIZATIONS, AND OTHER PUBLIC OR NONPROFIT PRIVATE ENTITIES. UNDER THESE SECTIONS, CSAT, CMHS AND CSAP SEEK TO EXPAND THE AVAILABILITY OF EFFECTIVE SUBSTANCE ABUSE TREATMENT AND RECOVERY SERVICES AVAILABLE TO AMERICANS TO IMPROVE THE LIVES OF THOSE AFFECTED BY ALCOHOL AND DRUG ADDITIONS, AND TO REDUCE THE IMPACT OF ALCOHOL AND DRUG ABUSE ON INDIVIDUALS, FAMILIES, COMMUNITIES AND SOCIETIES AND TO ADDRESS PRIORITY MENTAL HEALTH NEEDS OF REGIONAL AND NATIONAL SIGNIFICANCE AND ASSIST CHILDREN IN DEALING WITH VIOLENCE AND TRAUMATIC EVENTS THROUGH BY FUNDING GRANT AND COOPERATIVE AGREEMENT PROJECTS. GRANTS AND COOPERATIVE AGREEMENTS MAY BE FOR (1) KNOWLEDGE AND DEVELOPMENT AND APPLICATION PROJECTS FOR TREATMENT AND REHABILITATION AND THE CONDUCT OR SUPPORT OF EVALUATIONS OF SUCH PROJECTS, (2) TRAINING AND TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE, (3) TARGETED CAPACITY RESPONSE PROGRAMS (4) SYSTEMS CHANGE GRANTS INCLUDING STATEWIDE FAMILY NETWORK GRANTS AND CLIENT-ORIENTED AND CONSUMER RUN SELF-HELP ACTIVITIES AND (5) PROGRAMS TO FOSTER HEALTH AND DEVELOPMENT OF CHILDREN, (6) COORDINATION AND INTEGRATION OF PRIMARY CARE SERVICES INTO PUBLICLY-FUNDED COMMUNITY MENTAL HEALTH CENTERS AND OTHER COMMUNITY-BASED BEHAVIORAL HEALTH SETTINGS
Grant Program (CFDA)
Awarding / Funding Agency
Place of Performance
New Hampshire
United States
Geographic Scope
State-Wide
Concord School District was awarded
Concord Children's Mental Health Initiative
Project Grant H79SM088060
worth $6,465,284
from the Division of Grants Management in September 2024 with work to be completed primarily in New Hampshire 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 Project AWARE (Advancing Wellness and Resiliency in Education) Program.
Status
(Ongoing)
Last Modified 4/21/25
Period of Performance
9/30/24
Start Date
9/29/29
End Date
Funding Split
$6.5M
Federal Obligation
$0.0
Non-Federal Obligation
$6.5M
Total Obligated
Activity Timeline
Transaction History
Modifications to H79SM088060
Additional Detail
Award ID FAIN
H79SM088060
SAI Number
H79SM088060-1675207222
Award ID URI
SAI UNAVAILABLE
Awardee Classifications
Independent School District
Awarding Office
75SAMH SAMHSA Division of Grants Management
Funding Office
75MS00 SAMHSA CENTER FOR MENTAL HEALTH SERVICES
Awardee UEI
HEDNDHUBEKA7
Awardee CAGE
6BZN6
Performance District
NH-90
Senators
Jeanne Shaheen
Margaret Hassan
Margaret Hassan
Modified: 4/21/25