Repatriation Program
93.579
The U.S. Repatriation Program was established to provide temporary assistance to private U.S. citizens and their dependents identified by the Department of State (DOS) as having returned from a foreign country to the U.S. because of (1) destitution, illness, war, threat of war, or a similar crisis, and are without available resources, or (2) mental illness. The U.S. Repatriation Program also provides support to organizations, states, and territories for emergency repatriation activities.
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.
One Cooperative Agreement of approximately $932,000 will be awarded. One Cooperative Agreement of $932,000 was awarded.
One Cooperative Agreement of $2,249,983 was awarded.
One Cooperative Agreement, non-competing continuation, of $1,000,000 was awarded
One Cooperative Agreement, non-competing continuation, of $938,000 was awarded
Three new Cooperative Agreements of $75,000 each, a continuation award of $1,448,837, and a $783,000 supplement were awarded.
One new discretionary Cooperative Agreement of $1,850,000 was awarded. Five new non-discretionary awards of $199,467 and $195,137 as well as three at $200,000 each were awarded.
The Office of Human Services Emergency Preparedness and Response (OHSEPR) awarded one discretionary cooperative agreement, non-competing continuation of $1,850,000, and two discretionary supplements of $80,000 and $263,360. OHSEPR awarded five non-discretionary supplements, one at $199,686 as well as four at $200,000. OHSEPR awarded one replacement non-discretionary cooperative agreement of $200,000.
OHSEPR awarded one discretionary cooperative agreement, non-competing continuation of $1,850,000. OHSEPR awarded one replacement non-discretionary cooperative agreement of $200,000. OHSEPR expects to award five non-discretionary supplements of $200,000 each.
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.