Significant step in Grants.gov integration
for USDA.
Washington, D.C., June 19, 2003: Turner
Consulting Group, Inc. (TCG), a Washington DC-based government
IT contractor, has been awarded a $1,399,955 contract to build the second
phase of a new grants management system for the United States Department
of Agriculture's Cooperative State Research, Education, and Extension
Service (CSREES).
CSREES is leading USDA's e-grants implementation
efforts. Under the contract, TCG will help CSREES develop more efficient,
integrated, and cost-effective methods of electronic grants management.
"TCG will implement components that will enable the agency to integrate
with Grants.gov, the government-wide grant application system that is
currently under development," notes Daniel Turner, TCG's President.
"This is the kind of project that all grant-making agencies will need
to take on. We're proud that our years of grants management systems
development expertise will help USDA satisfy this part of the President's
Management Agenda."
CSREES's vision is to develop a system that will
help USDA meet the requirements of the Government Paperwork Elimination
Act and of PL 106-107, and be responsive to the needs of the grantee
community. CSREES receives approximately 6,000 applications per year,
and makes 2,000 awards per year. The new system will enable the agency
to receive and process grant proposals in a purely electronic form.
USDA officials expect that the system will significantly reduce the
time it takes to process grants. The project follows the White House's
mandate for all Federal agencies to streamline grants management processes.
The CSREES e-grants project is the second such
award to TCG from USDA. Under the first contract TCG developed a Web-based
peer-review system that allows reviewers all over the world to review
and evaluate 6,000 applications a year in a secure environment. That
peer-review system (PRS) is integrated with CSREES's in-house database
that allows agency officials to manage the process from their desks,
bypassing the mail room and the fax machine entirely.
TCG's first task under the new contract is to
create a Communications and Distribution System (CDS), the next piece
of critical infrastructure that will enable USDA CSREES to accept and
process grant applications electronically. The CDS will receive proposals
from Grants.gov, process them according to CSREES's business rules,
and parse the appropriate information and attachments into the agency's
internal databases and management systems. TCG will be assisted in this
task by Analytical Solutions Inc. (ASI).
TCG has delivered e-grants services to the Department
of Agriculture, the National Institutes of Health, the National Science
Foundation, and the Department of Justice's Office of Justice Programs.
TCG developed the government's inventions and patents reporting portal,
Interagency Edison (http://www.iedison.gov),
and the first prototype of an inter-agency grants portal, the Federal
Commons. The company is currently working on electronic grants and other
Web-based application projects in several government agencies.
About Turner Consulting Group
Turner Consulting Group (TCG) (http://www.tcg.com)
specializes in delivering high quality, individually tailored Web application
and integration solutions to the Federal government.
TCG was one of the fastest-growing privately-held
companies in the United States in 2001, as ranked by Inc.
magazine. The firm has been on Washington
Technology's Fast 50.
TCG is at the forefront of Federal E-Gov initiatives.
TCG focuses on helping government agencies use the power of the Internet
and the Web to better interact with the public, and to do its internal
work better. Past projects have won awards for their groundbreaking
achievements, including piloting the first inter-agency
grants management system (the Federal Commons), and creating the first
and only inter-agency government system to receive secure information
from the general public. That system, Interagency Edison (http://www.iedison.gov),
was built in 1995 for NIH's specific needs. Today the system serves
the invention and patent reporting requirements of 16 Federal agencies.
For more information, see http://www.tcg.com.
About USDA CSREES
The Cooperative State Research, Education, and
Extension Service (CSREES) provides the focus to advance a global system
of research, extension and higher education in the food and agricultural
sciences and related environmental and human sciences to benefit people,
communities, and the nation. CSREES research, extension and education
leadership is provided through programs in Plant and Animal Production,
Protection, and Processing; Natural Resources and Environment; Rural,
Economic and Social Development; and Families, 4-H, and Nutrition; Competitive
Grants; Science and Education Resources Development; and Information
Systems and Technology Management (ITSM). For more information, see
http://www.reeusda.gov/. More
information on CSREES's E-Gov programs, see http://www.reeusda.gov/egov/csrees/csrees.htm.
For more information on the CSREES E-Grants project, see http://www.reeusda.gov/egov/csrees/egrants.htm.
About Grants.gov (formerly 'E-Grants')
The Federal government awards over $350-billion
in grants annually. The grants are awarded through over 600 programs
managed by 26 Federal agencies. The administration of these grants varies
from program to program. It has become critical to standardize and streamline
grants management processes, so that grant applicants are not faced
with a bewildering and daunting array of different forms and requirements.
By allowing applicants to apply for Federal grants
electronically through the simplified, unified e-grants systems, grants
management will be easier and redundancies will be eliminated. The e-grants
systems will make transactions with the government for obtaining financial
assistance easier, cheaper, quicker, and more comprehensible.
The Grants.gov (formerly 'E-Grants') initiative
is expected to be the impetus for agencies to establish new Government-wide
standards for relationships with grantees. Through work teams empowered
to question and challenge the bases of current practices, the agencies
will develop common data standards and provide a common electronic storefront
for the grantee community - Grants.gov, which is currently under development
and being managed by the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS).
In addition, the agencies will seek to identify and disseminate best
practices, change organizational paradigms to enable acceptance of these
changes, and evaluate progress and performance in grants processes.
For more information, see http://www.grants.gov/.