NH75OT000023
Project Grant
Overview
Grant Description
Local Initiatives to Address COVID-19 Health Disparities Among Populations at High-Risk and Underserved, Including Racial and Ethnic Minority Populations.
During the COVID-19 response, one of our biggest learnings has been the importance of our public health infrastructure to enable us to do Public Health 3.0 and health equity work. We were able to leverage our Center for Health Equity, founded in 2006, to help shape the response. Having the right people with the right training in the right positions meant that the way our response prioritized strategies and created programs looked very different than it otherwise might have.
During this response, we have made sure to invest in staffing either through long-term hires or contracts. However, most of the expansion has gone into ensuring our immediate operational needs can be met. This includes hiring testing coordinators, contact tracers, disease investigators, and people who could transport vaccine and deliver essential needs. The Center for Health Equity staff who contributed to this response were invaluable. Our epidemiologists created public dashboards that were used internally and externally, and our planners designed interventions focused on immediate needs and root causes which may never otherwise have existed in the emergency infrastructure.
Even so, most staff worked above and beyond normal hours and acknowledged there could always be additional data analysis, more program design to support residents, and more comprehensive policy research and implementation if we had more time in the day or more staff in our Center for Health Equity.
Our goal with this grant is to make sure that we can build our capacity to more fully address root causes and systems of power. These systems have an outsized influence on how different populations experience health and wealth inequitably in our community. This proposal aims to more than double the staffing in the Center for Health Equity so that we can more effectively address root causes that impact COVID-19 and health inequities. It also builds additional capacity to ensure our work is community-centered and that residents can help lead this work through ongoing support of community advisory boards and community health worker networks.
Much of this grant will go towards staffing, which goes against traditional grantmaking orthodoxies. However, this pandemic has taught us that having a robust staffing infrastructure gives us more flexibility to meet community needs than funding specific projects and programs. Having the space to build an adequate infrastructure will give us the space to strategize and go after projects, policies, and grant funding that we may never before have been able to pursue, and to do so in partnership with our residents who have been most impacted.
We are requesting total federal funds in the amount of $4,296,855.
During the COVID-19 response, one of our biggest learnings has been the importance of our public health infrastructure to enable us to do Public Health 3.0 and health equity work. We were able to leverage our Center for Health Equity, founded in 2006, to help shape the response. Having the right people with the right training in the right positions meant that the way our response prioritized strategies and created programs looked very different than it otherwise might have.
During this response, we have made sure to invest in staffing either through long-term hires or contracts. However, most of the expansion has gone into ensuring our immediate operational needs can be met. This includes hiring testing coordinators, contact tracers, disease investigators, and people who could transport vaccine and deliver essential needs. The Center for Health Equity staff who contributed to this response were invaluable. Our epidemiologists created public dashboards that were used internally and externally, and our planners designed interventions focused on immediate needs and root causes which may never otherwise have existed in the emergency infrastructure.
Even so, most staff worked above and beyond normal hours and acknowledged there could always be additional data analysis, more program design to support residents, and more comprehensive policy research and implementation if we had more time in the day or more staff in our Center for Health Equity.
Our goal with this grant is to make sure that we can build our capacity to more fully address root causes and systems of power. These systems have an outsized influence on how different populations experience health and wealth inequitably in our community. This proposal aims to more than double the staffing in the Center for Health Equity so that we can more effectively address root causes that impact COVID-19 and health inequities. It also builds additional capacity to ensure our work is community-centered and that residents can help lead this work through ongoing support of community advisory boards and community health worker networks.
Much of this grant will go towards staffing, which goes against traditional grantmaking orthodoxies. However, this pandemic has taught us that having a robust staffing infrastructure gives us more flexibility to meet community needs than funding specific projects and programs. Having the space to build an adequate infrastructure will give us the space to strategize and go after projects, policies, and grant funding that we may never before have been able to pursue, and to do so in partnership with our residents who have been most impacted.
We are requesting total federal funds in the amount of $4,296,855.
Funding Goals
NOT APPLICABLE
Grant Program (CFDA)
Awarding Agency
Place of Performance
Louisville,
Kentucky
United States
Geographic Scope
City-Wide
Analysis Notes
Amendment Since initial award the End Date has been extended from 05/31/23 to 01/31/25.
Louisville-Jefferson County Metro Government was awarded
Enhancing Health Equity: Strengthening Local COVID-19 Response Staffing
Project Grant NH75OT000023
worth $4,296,855
from Center for State, Tribal, Local, and Territorial Support in June 2021 with work to be completed primarily in Louisville Kentucky United States.
The grant
has a duration of 3 years 7 months and
was awarded through assistance program 93.354 Public Health Emergency Response: Cooperative Agreement for Emergency Response: Public Health Crisis Response.
The Project Grant was awarded through grant opportunity National Initiative to Address COVID-19 Health Disparities Among Populations at High-Risk and Underserved, Including Racial and Ethnic Minority Populations and Rural Communities.
Status
(Complete)
Last Modified 6/20/25
Period of Performance
6/1/21
Start Date
1/31/25
End Date
Funding Split
$4.3M
Federal Obligation
$0.0
Non-Federal Obligation
$4.3M
Total Obligated
Activity Timeline
Transaction History
Modifications to NH75OT000023
Additional Detail
Award ID FAIN
NH75OT000023
SAI Number
NH75OT000023-3552229864
Award ID URI
SAI UNAVAILABLE
Awardee Classifications
City Or Township Government
Awarding Office
75CDC1 CDC Office of Financial Resources
Funding Office
75CQ00 CDC OFFICE FOR STATE, TRIBAL, LOCAL, AND TERRITORIAL SUPPORT
Awardee UEI
XTABXRBBAUB1
Awardee CAGE
3DAB1
Performance District
KY-03
Senators
Mitch McConnell
Rand Paul
Rand Paul
Modified: 6/20/25