N/A
15.162
Tiwahe is a coordinated service delivery model that increases access to family and social services, creates alternatives to incarceration, improves links to appropriate prevention, intervention and treatment opportunities, improves case management services, and improves partnerships among the available service providers for Tribal children and families.
This chart shows obligations for the program by fiscal year. All data for this chart was provided by the
administering agency and sourced from SAM.gov, USASpending.gov, and Treasury.gov.
For more information on each of these data sources, please see the
About the data page.
New Program.
In FY 2018, the program anticipates to issue 6 awards.
In FY 2019, the program anticipates to issue 6 awards.
Indian Affairs does not have any accomplishments to report in FY2020
Bureau of Indian Affairs added the Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes in Montana, and the Paiute Indian Tribe of Utah to the list of Tiwahe communities. They also added an additional 10 Tribes and Tribal Organizations to receive one-time funding of $100,000 each to implement programming or support the development of a Tiwahe plan. Congress appropriated an additional $2 million to further expand the demonstration in the Social Service and ICWA program areas.
The President’s Budget for Fiscal Year 2024 requests an increase of $33.5 million for the Tiwahe Initiative to further expand support for Native families and communities.
Single Audit Applies (2 CFR Part 200 Subpart F):
For additional information on single audit requirements for this program, review the current Compliance Supplement.
OMB is working with the U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) and agency offices of inspectors general to include links to relevant oversight reports. This section will be updated once this information is made available.