H79SP083346
Project Grant
Overview
Grant Description
Maine Prevention Network Partnerships for Success 2022 - The Maine Prevention Network Partnerships for Success (MPN PFS) project will enhance the capacity and infrastructure of Maine's network of community prevention and youth engagement providers. The project priorities include decreased use of alcohol and cannabis and an increased sense of mattering in the community. The work will impact Maine's 10-25 year old population with attention on LGBTQ+ youth and young adults and low-income youth.
MPN PFS project goals are to:
1. Prevent the initiation of substance use and high-risk substance use by Maine's youth and young adults, ages 10-25.
2. Strengthen Maine's prevention infrastructure to reach priority populations and carry out upstream prevention activities.
3. Promote life skills, resilience building, and community connection for Maine youth and young adults, with a priority focus being on those identifying as LGBTQ+.
4. Turn data into action by expanding state and local level surveillance and evaluation efforts.
Maine has some of the highest rates in the nation for substance use disorder (SUD) among young adults (18-25), ranking 3rd in the nation with one in three young adults qualifying as having an SUD. Fewer young adults in Maine perceive binge drinking (31%) or smoking cannabis monthly (6%) as a risky behavior compared to those over 26 (42% and 17%, respectively). Rates of underage substance use are higher among students who identify as LGBTQ+ than among their peers. In 2019, rates of both past month alcohol and cannabis use were significantly higher amongst LGBTQ+ students than their non-LGBTQ+ peers - 27% vs 22% for alcohol, and 30% vs 21% for cannabis. The biggest increases in alcohol and cannabis use among Maine's youth and young adults happen at key transition periods in their lives - the transition from middle to high school and high school to college or the workforce.
Maine will address this trend by increasing the capacity of our network of prevention coalitions, increasing programming to middle school aged youth, enhancing community connection through LGBTQ+ inclusive programs and policies, and the youth employment program, Gateway to Opportunity.
The primary project objectives are:
1. By September 2027, reduce by 10%, past 30-day alcohol and cannabis use by Maine middle and high school students, binge drinking in the high school and young adult populations.
2. Increase by 15% the number of middle and high school youth who feel they matter to their community and the number of LGBTQ+ youth who feel they matter to their community.
Based on historical programmatic reach, for the 10-25 year old population, the expected reach is 25,000 10-25 year olds with individual-based programs annually and 930,000 with population-based programs. This translates to 125,000 individual reach and 4.5 million population reach over five years.
MPN PFS project goals are to:
1. Prevent the initiation of substance use and high-risk substance use by Maine's youth and young adults, ages 10-25.
2. Strengthen Maine's prevention infrastructure to reach priority populations and carry out upstream prevention activities.
3. Promote life skills, resilience building, and community connection for Maine youth and young adults, with a priority focus being on those identifying as LGBTQ+.
4. Turn data into action by expanding state and local level surveillance and evaluation efforts.
Maine has some of the highest rates in the nation for substance use disorder (SUD) among young adults (18-25), ranking 3rd in the nation with one in three young adults qualifying as having an SUD. Fewer young adults in Maine perceive binge drinking (31%) or smoking cannabis monthly (6%) as a risky behavior compared to those over 26 (42% and 17%, respectively). Rates of underage substance use are higher among students who identify as LGBTQ+ than among their peers. In 2019, rates of both past month alcohol and cannabis use were significantly higher amongst LGBTQ+ students than their non-LGBTQ+ peers - 27% vs 22% for alcohol, and 30% vs 21% for cannabis. The biggest increases in alcohol and cannabis use among Maine's youth and young adults happen at key transition periods in their lives - the transition from middle to high school and high school to college or the workforce.
Maine will address this trend by increasing the capacity of our network of prevention coalitions, increasing programming to middle school aged youth, enhancing community connection through LGBTQ+ inclusive programs and policies, and the youth employment program, Gateway to Opportunity.
The primary project objectives are:
1. By September 2027, reduce by 10%, past 30-day alcohol and cannabis use by Maine middle and high school students, binge drinking in the high school and young adult populations.
2. Increase by 15% the number of middle and high school youth who feel they matter to their community and the number of LGBTQ+ youth who feel they matter to their community.
Based on historical programmatic reach, for the 10-25 year old population, the expected reach is 25,000 10-25 year olds with individual-based programs annually and 930,000 with population-based programs. This translates to 125,000 individual reach and 4.5 million population reach over five years.
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
Augusta,
Maine
043306841
United States
Geographic Scope
Single Zip Code
Related Opportunity
Analysis Notes
Amendment Since initial award the total obligations have increased 286% from $1,250,000 to $4,820,854.
Maine Department Of Health And Human Services was awarded
Maine Youth Substance Use Prevention & Community Engagement Initiative
Project Grant H79SP083346
worth $4,820,854
from the Division of Grants Management in September 2022 with work to be completed primarily in Augusta Maine 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 Strategic Prevention Framework-Partnerships for Success.
Status
(Ongoing)
Last Modified 9/26/25
Period of Performance
9/30/22
Start Date
9/29/27
End Date
Funding Split
$4.8M
Federal Obligation
$0.0
Non-Federal Obligation
$4.8M
Total Obligated
Activity Timeline
Subgrant Awards
Disclosed subgrants for H79SP083346
Transaction History
Modifications to H79SP083346
Additional Detail
Award ID FAIN
H79SP083346
SAI Number
H79SP083346-2874610220
Award ID URI
SAI UNAVAILABLE
Awardee Classifications
State Government
Awarding Office
75SAMH SAMHSA Division of Grants Management
Funding Office
75MP00 SAMHSA CENTER FOR SUBSTANCE ABUSE PREVENTION
Awardee UEI
GJEPWTMKF5A3
Awardee CAGE
43CF9
Performance District
ME-02
Senators
Susan Collins
Angus King
Angus King
Budget Funding
| Federal Account | Budget Subfunction | Object Class | Total | Percentage |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Substance Abuse Prevention, Substance Abuse and Mental Health Administration, Health and Human Services (075-1365) | Health care services | Grants, subsidies, and contributions (41.0) | $2,500,000 | 100% |
Modified: 9/26/25