Orr-6

ORR-6 Semi-Annual Performance Report

PRA_ORR-6_Annual Service Plan Instructions_2022nonsub

ORR-6

OMB: 0970-0036

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ORR-6

OMB Control No. 0970-0036

Expires 02/28/2022


ORR-6


ANNUAL SERVICE PLAN INSTRUCTIONS




General Overview

  1. Submission

The information supplied on the Annual Service Plan (ASP) is required as a condition for the award of Refugee Support Services (RSS) grant funds in accordance with 45 CFR § 400.11(b)(2). The Annual Service Plan (ASP) is due November 30 for the current Federal Fiscal Year (FFY) and can be attached to the ORR-6 Performance Report. The State agency/grantee responsible for the administration of the Federal Refugee Resettlement Program (RRP) must submit the ASP to its State Analyst in the Division of Refugee Assistance, Office of Refugee Resettlement (ORR). Please Note: A State’s funding for RSS services will be contingent upon the submittal and approval of its Annual Service Plan.

  1. Content

The information reported on the Annual Service Plan (ASP) shows the categories of current services provided to the ORR-eligible population in the State and the total dollar amount contracted for services within each category by source (the Refugee Support Services [RSS] program, including RSS and RSS set-aside services funded by the Afghanistan Supplemental Appropriations Act, 2022 and the Additional Afghanistan Supplemental Appropriations Act, 2022 (hereinafter “ASA”)). Required information includes:

  • the ORR grant for each category of services,

  • the amount contracted for service provision only,

  • the target number of program participants for each service based on their time in the U.S.,

  • the type of agency providing the services, and

  • the percentage of funding to each type of agency for each category of service.

ORR reviews the information reported for planning purposes and to see the extent to which funds are allocated to serve the newly arrived refugees (in the U.S. less than 12 months) who have priority for services based on 45 CFR § 400.147. Subsequent program information will be reviewed and compared to the ASP.

  1. Format

Reported data must reflect the RSS services provided to refugees in the State for the 12-month period of services under contract as of October 1 that year (for more information, see “Fiscal Year” section under “Data Elements,” below).







  1. Data Elements


Item

Data Elements

Instructions

1.

State/Grantee

If the RRP is State-administered, enter the name of the State submitting the report. If the RRP is administered by a Replacement Designee, enter the name of the agency submitting the report.

Note: States that operate county or locally-administered programs of refugee resettlement must submit a separate ASP for each local jurisdiction receiving ORR funds from the social service formula program. These States must also submit a consolidated ASP for the State.

2.

Fiscal Year

Enter the Federal Fiscal Year for which the Annual Service Plan is being submitted. Due to differences in State contracting cycles, ORR does not specify that the contract period coincide with the Federal Fiscal Year (FFY). Instead, this information is to reflect each State's 12-month period of services under contract effective at the beginning of a FFY, October 1, regardless of when that period begins and ends. All reported information is related to the various ORR-funded services.

Contract modifications occurring after November 30 that change the amount of funding or number of program participants targeted for priority services must be reported to ORR as a revised ASP or in the Schedule A: Program Narrative of the subsequent ORR-6 Performance Report.

3.

Date

Enter the date that the report is completed.

4.

Previous FFY Report (Program Participants)

In this section, report the number of program participants by service type as provided in the previous FFY (October 1 – September 30) through RSS (including ASA-funded RSS (“ASA RSS”)) funding under both 45 CFR§§ 400.154 and 400.155.

Definitions of authorized services are as follows:

4.a.

Employment

Employment services are direct services provided in accordance with an employability plan that assist an employable adult in preparation for, development of, placement in, or maintenance of employment, as defined in 45 CFR § 400.154(a).

4.b.

Employment assessment

Employment assessment services, including aptitude and skills testing.

4.c.

On-the-job training

Includes on-the-job training provided at the employment site and is expected to result in full-time, permanent, unsubsidized employment with the employer who is providing the training.

4.d.

English language instruction

Includes English language instruction, with an emphasis on English as it relates to obtaining and retaining a job.

4.e.

Vocational training

Vocation training should be short-term designed to teach refugees specific job-related skills that prepare them for a specific job or type of employment, such as driver education, nurse’s aide, electronic assembly, or power sewing.

4.f.

Skills recertification

Skills recertification services provided when such training meets the criteria for appropriate training in 45 CFR § 400.81(b).

4.g.

Day care for children

Day care for children received when necessary for participation in an employability service or for the acceptance or retention of employment; or when necessary for participation in a service other than employability.

4.h.

Transportation

Transportation services provided when necessary for participation in an employability services or for the acceptance/retention of employment; or when necessary for participation in a service other than an employability service.

4.i.

Translation and interpreter services

Translation and interpretation services provided to refugees in connection with employment or employability services; or when necessary for a purpose other than in connection with employment and as part of an employability plan.

4.j.

Case management

Case management services defined as the determination of specific service(s) to which to refer a refugee; and, may be related to active participation as part of the individual employability plan, referral to such service(s), and tracking of the refugee’s participation in such services; or may be for a purpose other than in connection with employment or participation in employability services.

4.k.

EAD assistance

Assistance in obtaining Employment Authorization Documents (EADs).

4.l.

Information and referral

Includes information and referral to other services for participants.

4.m

Outreach services

Includes activities designed to familiarize refugees with available services, to explain the purpose of these services, and facilitate access to these services.

4.n.

Social adjustment

Social adjustment services include emergency services, health related services and home management services.

4.o.

Citizenship and naturalization

Preparation services for citizenship and naturalization, including English Language training and civics instruction to prepare refugees for citizenship, application assistance for adjustment to legal permanent resident status and citizenship status, assistance to disabled refugees in obtaining disability waivers from English and civics requirements for naturalization, and the provision of interpreter services for the citizenship interview.



Definitions of services authorized under ASA RSS only are as follows:

4.p.

ASA housing

Enter the number of participants receiving ASA RSS housing assistance.

4.q.

ASA immigration-related legal assistance

Enter the number of participants receiving ASA RSS immigration-related legal assistance.

5.

Total Unduplicated

Enter the unduplicated number of participants that received the appropriate services. Same participant could have received multiple services, in this section provide unduplicated number of participants across all services.

6.

Previous FFY report RSS participation

In this section provide total unduplicated number of all RSS (including ASA RSS) service participants (45 CFR §§ 400.154 and 400.155) by the length of time in the U.S. at the end of FFY.

6. a.

Previous FFY report RSS participation

0-12 months

Enter the total unduplicated number of all RSS (including ASA RSS) service participants (45 CFR §§ 400.154 and 400.155) who are 0-12 months in the U.S. at the end of FFY.

6. b.

Previous FFY report RSS participation 13-60 months

Enter the total unduplicated number of all RSS (including ASA RSS) service participants (45 CFR §§ 400.154 and 400.155) who are 13-60 months in the U.S. at the end of FFY.

7.

Previous FFY report RSS set-asides participation

In this section provide total unduplicated number of all RSS (including ASA-funded RSS) set-asides service participants by program and by the length of time in the U.S. at the end of FFY.

7. a.

Previous FFY report RSS set-asides participation 0-12 months

Enter the total unduplicated number of all RSS (including ASA RSS) set-asides service participants for each set-aside program (Refugee School Impact [RSI], including ASA-funded RSI [ARSI]); Services to Older Refugees [SOR], including ASA-funded SOR [ASOR]; Youth Mentoring [YM], including ASA-funded YM [AYM]; Refugee Health Promotion [RHP], including ASA-funded RHP [ARHP], or any other future program) who are 0-12 months in the U.S. at the end of FFY.


7. b.

Previous FFY report RSS set-asides participation 13-60 months

Enter the total unduplicated number of all RSS set-asides service participants for each set-aside program who are 13-60 months in the U.S. at the end of FFY.

8.

Description of State-Provided or Contracted Services

Consistent with Schedule C, the ASP form includes the same priority services: Employment Services, English Language Instruction, On-the-Job Training, and Vocational Training. The ASP form also includes the categories of ASA Housing, ASA Immigration-Related Legal Assistance, and Other Services, to capture additional services as described below. States do not report contracts individually on the ASP. Instead, all contracts for the same category of services, including those services that are ASA-funded, are represented by one entry on the ASP. Definitions of the priority services are as follows:

8. a.

Employment Services

Employment services are direct services provided in accordance with an employability plan that assist an employable adult in preparation for, development of, placement in, or maintenance of employment, as defined in 45 CFR § 400.154(a) ONLY.

8. b.

English Language Instruction

English language instruction for non-native English speakers is a course of instruction in English with an emphasis on acquisition of survival and employment-related reading, writing, listening, and speaking skills.

8. c.

On-the-Job Training (OJT)

On-the-Job Training is placement of an employable adult refugee in subsidized employment, funded by ORR for a period of time not to exceed six months, after which the employer has agreed to hire the OJT trainee in permanent unsubsidized employment.

8. d.

Vocational Training

Vocational training is training of a short-term duration designed to teach refugees specific job-related skills that prepare them for a specific job or type of employment, such as nurse’s aide, electronic assembly, or power sewing.

8.e

ASA Housing

ASA housing is emergency/short-term and long-term housing for Afghans who arrived under Operation Allies Refuge/Operation Allies Welcome (OAR/OAW) utilizing ASA RSS funds.

8.f

ASA Immigration-Related Legal Assistance

ASA immigration-related legal assistance is immigration-related legal assistance to Afghans who arrived under OAR/OAW utilizing ASA RSS funding.

8. g.

Other Services

Other Services includes RSS-funded (including ASA RSS-funded) employment-related services, such as interpretation/translation, transportation, or child care. In addition, Other Services may include activities such as case management (the determination of which service[s] to refer a refugee to in accordance with an employability plan, referral to such service[s], and tracking of the refugee's participation in such services), and programming under RSI (including Early RSI and ARSI), SOR (including ASOR), YM (including AYM), and RHP (including Refugee Mental Health Initiative [ReMHI] and ARSI). The Other category should be used if ORR provides specific funding for services in addition to those already listed under 8.g.

9.

Grant

Enter the applicable funding source: RSS (base formula funding, including ASA RSS), RSI (including Early RSI and ARSI), SOR (including ASOR),YM (including AYM), RHP (including ReMHI and ARHP), or Other.

10.

Contracted Amount by Funding Source

By category of service and then by funding source, enter the total amount of ORR funds (including ASA RSS and ASA-funded RSS set-asides) used to fund all services or contracts in effect as of October 1 of the current year.

For example, if a State has the following:

    • Two RSS-funded contracts and one ASA RSS-funded contract for employment services ($100,000, $100,000, and $125,000),

    • Two RSS-funded contracts for interpretation ($50,000 and $30,000),

    • One RSS-funded contract for transportation ($30,000), and

    • One RSI-funded contract for teacher training ($25,000) and one ARSI-funded contract for parent orientation ($25,000),

Enter:

a. Employment Services RSS $325,000

e. Other Services (which includes interpretation/translation) RSS $110,000

e. Other Services RSS-RSI $50,000

11.

Program Participants

0 through 12 (0-12) months

By category of service, enter the target number of ORR-eligible participants in the U.S. less than a full 12 months to be served under existing contracts.

13 through 60 (13-60) months

By category of service, enter the target number of ORR-eligible participants in the U.S. from 13 to 60 months to be served under existing contracts.

Total Number

This field will automatically calculate, by category of service, the total target number of ORR-eligible participants to be served under existing contracts.

12.

Type of Agency and Percent of Funds

By category of service, indicate the type of agency providing the services and the percentage of the total contracted amount for each service allocated to that type of agency.

For example, if a State has employment services contracts totaling $325,000, of which

  • $100,000 is contracted to a Mutual Assistance Association

  • $125,000 to a Refugee Agency, and

  • $100,000 to a Community College,

Enter in the Type of Agency and Percent of Funds field in the row for Employment:

  • 8. B. Mutual Assistance Association 31%

  • 8. C. Refugee Agency 38%

  • 8. D. Community College 31%

  • 8. J. Total (automatically calculated) 100%; should always be 100%.


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