Air Quality Monitoring-Yellowstone National Park/ MTDEQ |
The summary for the Air Quality Monitoring-Yellowstone National Park/ MTDEQ Federal Grant is detailed below. It contains information such as the Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance (CFDA) number, who is eligible for the grant, how much grant money will be awarded, important deadlines, and a sampling of similar government grants. Verify the accuracy of the data FederalGrants.com provides by visiting the webpage noted in the Link to Full Announcement section or by contacting the appropriate person listed in the Grant Announcement Contact section. If these sections are incomplete, please visit the website of the government agency that is offering this grant.
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Federal Grant Title: Air Quality Monitoring-Yellowstone National Park/ MTDEQ CFDA Number: 15.227 CFDA Description: Distribution of Receipts to State and Local Governments Federal Agency Name: National Park Service Category of Funding Activity: Science and Technology Category Explanation: Information not provided Opportunity Category: Discretionary Funding Opportunity Number: P11AC10290 Document Type: Grants Notice Funding Instrument Type: Cooperative Agreement Posted Date: Jun 15, 2011 Creation Date: Jun 15, 2011 Original Closing Date for Applications: Jun 16, 2011 Current Closing Date for Applications: Jun 16, 2011 Archive Date: Jul 16, 2011 Expected Number of Awards: 1 Estimated Total Program Funding: 28,800 Federal Grant Award Ceiling: 28,800 Federal Grant Award Floor: 28,800 Cost Sharing or Matching Requirement: No
- Applicants Eligible for this Grant
- State governments
- Additional Information on Eligibility
- Information not provided
- Grant Description
- NOTICE OF INTENT TO AWARD This Funding Announcement is not a request for applications. This announcement is to provide public notice of the National Park Services intention to fund the following project activities without full and open competition. ABSTRACT Funding Announcement Number NPS-#P11AC10290 Project Title Air Quality Monitoring- Yellowstone National Park/MTDEQ Recipient State of Montana, Department of Environmental Quality Principle Investigator / Program Manager Roy Renkin-ATR Total Anticipated Award Amount 28,800.00 Cost Share None Required New Award or Continuation? New Award under Cooperative Agreement, P11AC10290 Anticipated Length of Agreement Through May 31, 2015 Anticipated Period of Performance Through May 31, 2015 Award Instrument Cooperative Agreement Statutory Authority 16 U.S.C. 1g CFDA # and Title 15.227 Distribution of Receipts to State & Local Government Single Source Justification Criteria Cited #4 Unique Qualifications NPS Point of Contact Tina Holland Page 1 OVERVIEW, RECIPIENT AND NPS SUBSTANTIAL INVOLVEMENT The NPS will provide a trace level nitrogen oxides analyzer, calibrator, and zero air source. This equipment will be operated by MTDEQ at the Wet Yellowstone park entrance under the same terms as the CO and PM-2.5 monitors with the exception that MTDEQ will not provide repair parts for the NPS equipment. NPS will provide the NO2 calibration gas and repair parts for the NOx analyzer. MTDEQ will provide the carbon monoxide monitor and the Beta-attenuation mass (BAM) monitor, as well as a shelter, telephone service, all required consumables and supplies, and the necessary labor for equipment maintenance and repair. MTDEQ will supply necessary repair parts for the BAM, shelter, data logger, and wind instrumentation. NPS and MTDEQ agree that the existing CO monitor is approaching the end of its useful lifetime and the point where practical repair will no longer be possible. MTDEQ will continue to provide repair parts for the existing CO monitor as long as it is practical to do so. When it is no longer practical to do so, as determined by mutual consent between NPS and MTDEQ, NPS will provide a replacement CO monitor and will provide spare parts for that monitor from that time forward. MTDEQ will continue to provide labor to repair the replacement monitor as requested by the NPS. MTDEQ staff will operate the continuous CO and PM2.5 monitors and check vital parameters to ensure proper operation, perform zero and span checks on the CO monitor to assure proper calibration, and perform flow checks on the PM2.5 monitor. Under this Agreement, MTDEQ will perform all data collection, data quality control, and data quality assurance activities. NPS will use the data derived from this air quality monitoring effort to correlate with vehicle emissions and numbers and types of vehicles to determine if the parks winter use management is meeting its goals relating to air quality. SINGLE-SOURCE JUSTIFICATION DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR SINGLE SOURCE POLICY REQUIREMENTS Department of the Interior Policy (505 DM 2) requires a written justification which explains why competition is not practicable for each single-source award. The justification must address one or more of the following criteria as well as discussion of the program legislative history, unique capabilities of the proposed recipient, and cost-sharing contribution offered by the proposed recipient, as applicable. In order for an assistance award to be made without competition, the award must satisfy one or more of the following criteria: (1)Unsolicited Proposal The proposed award is the result of an unsolicited assistance application which represents a unique or innovative idea, method, or approach which is not the subject of a current or planned contract or assistance award, but which is deemed advantageous to the program objectives; (2)Continuation The activity to be funded is necessary to the satisfactory completion of, or is a continuation of an activity presently being funded, and for which competition would have a significant adverse effect on the continuity or completion of the activity; (3)Legislative intent The language in the applicable authorizing legislation or legislative history clearly indicates Congress intent to restrict the award to a particular recipient of purpose; (4)Unique Qualifications The applicant is uniquely qualified to perform the activity based upon a variety of demonstrable factors such as location, property ownership, voluntary support capacity, cost-sharing ability if applicable, technical expertise, or other such unique qualifications; (5)Emergencies Program/award where there is insufficient time available (due to a compelling and unusual urgency, or substantial danger to health or safety) for adequate competitive procedures to be followed. The National Park Service awarded this agreement Teton County Weed and Pest District based on the following exception. (4) Unique Qualifications The National Park Service and the State of Montana have been working together for more than a decade to better understand winter and summer air quality in and near Yellowstone National Park. NPS winter planning over the past decade has called for an adaptive management strategy to determine if goals related to park resources and values are being met, and make adjustments in management if they are not. Fundamental to adaptive management is monitoring CO, PM and Knox to ensure Yellowstones Class I air shed is not being adversely affected, and to provide park managers with credible information to make future management decisions. This agreement will support a means of providing an effective cooperative working relationship between the MTDEQ and NPS and combine technical expertise, funding, and services toward the goal of monitoring air quality parameters to the benefit of visitor/employee health. These types of cooperative relationships help to more effectively address air quality concerns in the context of an overall adaptive management plan for winter use operations. This work will strengthen the working relationships of the partners involved.
- Link to Full Grant Announcement
- Information not provided
- Grant Announcement Contact
- Tina Holland Agreements Specialist Phone 307-344-2082
tina_holland@nps.gov [tina_holland@nps.gov] - Similar Government Grants
- • Weed Management-Grand Teton National Park, Teton County Weed and Pest
