Bipartisan Safer Communities Act (BSCA) Psychological First Aid Trainings for DBH

Location: Ohio
Posted: Nov 19, 2025
Due: Dec 10, 2025
Agency: State Government of Ohio
Type of Government: State & Local
Category:
  • 69 - Training Aids and Devices
  • U - Education and Training Services
Solicitation No: SRC0000035377
Publication URL: To access bid details, please log in.
Solicitation ID: SRC0000035377
Solicitation Name: Bipartisan Safer Communities Act (BSCA) Psychological First Aid Trainings for DBH
Original Begin Date: 11/19/2025 7:33:05 AM
Begin Date: 11/19/2025 7:33:05 AM
End Date: 12/10/2025 2:00:00 PM
Inquiry End Date: 12/8/2025 2:00:00 PM
Commodity: Project administration or planning
MBE Set Aside: MBE Set Aside
Agency: DMH104209 FINANCIAL MGMT - HCM ONLY JRST11
Solicitation Status: Open for Bidding
Solicitation Type: Request For Proposal (RFP) (Double Envelope)

Solicitation General Information
In an MBE set-aside solicitation, only those bidders/suppliers with an active MBE certification at the time the solicitation closes can submit a response
Solicitation ID
SRC0000035377
Solicitation Name
Bipartisan Safer Communities Act (BSCA) Psychological First Aid Trainings for DBH
RFx Type
Request For Proposal (RFP) (Double Envelope)
Lot #
1
Solicitation Status
Open for Bidding
Round #
1
MBE Set Aside
Begin Date
11/19/2025 7:33:05 AM (ET)
Amendment?
End Date
12/10/2025 2:00:00 PM (ET)
Inquiry End Date
12/8/2025 2:00:00 PM
Summary
  1. MISSION & GUIDING PRINCIPLES

The mission of the Ohio Department of Behavioral Health (DBH) is to provide statewide leadership of a high-quality mental health and addiction prevention, treatment and recovery system that is effective and valued by all Ohioans. DBH strives to be a national leader in implementing a comprehensive, accessible, and quality-focused system of addiction and mental health care and wellness for all Ohio citizens.
  1. PURPOSE

The Ohio Department of Behavioral Health ( DBH ) is seeking proposals from qualified contractors to conduct a minimum of four virtual Psychological First Aid (PFA) trainings and expand knowledge of this evidence-informed approach to behavioral health disaster recovery.)
  1. BACKGROUND

The Bipartisan Safer Communities Act (BSCA) (P.L. 117-159) provides supplemental funding for the Community Mental Health Services Block Grant (MHBG) to enable states, the District of Columbia, and territories to expand access to behavioral health care. Overseen by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA), the BSCA supplemental funding seeks to support state behavioral health systems in examining what is needed to address the behavioral health needs in the aftermath of traumatic events and natural disasters within our communities. To address the trauma caused by the massive disruption and loss of life caused by these crises, SAMHSA is recommending that states utilize this funding to strengthen and enhance behavioral health disaster preparedness and crisis response efforts. This funding provides a unique opportunity to develop improved and sustainable public behavioral health systems that are more adept at meeting the needs of vulnerable people, including those with more complex presentations. This opportunity will provide funding to conduct Psychological First Aid (PFA) trainings within Ohio’s communities and expand knowledge of this evidence-informed approach to behavioral health disaster recovery.

Developed by the National Child Traumatic Stress Network (NCTSM) and the National Center for PTSD, Psychological First Aid (PFA) is an evidence-informed approach to helping children, youth, adults, and families in the immediate aftermath of a disaster, natural and/or human-made. Following a disaster or traumatic event, survivors, witnesses, and/or responders may struggle and face new challenges. The NCTSM describes PFA as “designed to reduce the initial stress caused by traumatic events and to foster short- and long-term adaptive functioning and coping. PFA does not assume that all survivors will develop severe mental health problems or long-term difficulties in recovery. Instead, it is based on an understanding that disaster survivors and others affected by such events will experience a broad range of early reactions (e.g., physical, psychological, behavioral, spiritual). Some of these reactions will cause enough distress to interfere with adaptive coping, and recovery may be helped by support from compassionate and caring disaster responders.” (NCTSN, n.d., para. 2)

PFA’s core objectives are to provide early assistance within the days or weeks following an event. The eight PFA Core Actions include:

PFA can be used by first responders, incident command systems, primary and emergency health care providers, school crisis response teams, faith-based organizations, disaster relief organizations, Community Emergency Response Teams (CERT), Medical Reserve Corps (MRC), and Citizens Corps. PFA is designed to be delivered in diverse settings. These core objectives can be delivered in the field, shelters, medical triage areas, emergency departments and hospital settings, staging areas, respite centers, emergency operations centers, crisis hotlines, feeding locations, disaster assistance service centers, family reception and assistance centers, homes, businesses, and a variety of other community settings to meet the needs of the populations affected.

This funding opportunity seeks to hire a qualified contractor to provide a minimum of four virtual PFA training opportunities to Ohio’s communities and disaster response teams in an effort to reduce stress symptoms and assist in health recovery following a traumatic event, natural disaster, public health emergency, or even a personal crisis.
  1. SCOPE OF WORK AND DELIVERABLES

All work outlined in the Scope of Work and Deliverables must be completed by September 29. 2026. Contractor will provide the following:

Trainings
Contractor Responsibilities
DBH Responsibilities
  1. MINIMUM QUALIFICATIONS OF CONTRACTOR

The Contractor must be able to provide the trainings outlined within the Scope of Work section of this RFP. To be eligible to participate in this application process, the proposal must describe the Contractor’s qualifications to conduct the identified scope of work activities, expertise, knowledge, and experience. Experience must include examples of conducting similar or related work. The Contractor will include in their proposal experience with the behavioral health field, in particular county ADAMHS boards, local health departments, emergency management systems, and first responders.

Contractor shall not be subject to an “unresolved” finding for recovery under Section 9.24 of Ohio Revised Code.
Predecessor Contract
Process

PART FOUR: EVALUATION OF PROPOSALS

  1. Evaluation Process

OhioMHAS’s evaluation process of responses submitted to this request may consist of up to four distinct phases:
  1. OhioMHAS’s initial review of all proposals for timely submission;
  2. An evaluation committee review of the proposals for defects and scoring;
  3. OhioMHAS’s request for more information (clarifications, interviews, presentations, and/or demonstrations); and,
  4. Negotiations or best offer requests.
At its sole discretion, OhioMHAS will determine whether phases three and/or four are necessary under this RFP, reserving for itself the ability to eliminate or add phases three or four at any time during the evaluation process. OhioMHAS may add or remove sub-phases to phases 2 through 4 at any time if MHAS believes doing so will improve the evaluation process.
  1. Proposal Evaluation Criteria

In the proposal evaluation phase, OhioMHAS staff or reviewers selected by OhioMHAS (the committee) will rate the proposals submitted in response to this RFP based on the following criteria and weight assigned to each criterion.

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DMH104209 FINANCIAL MGMT - HCM ONLY JRST11
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Attachment Preview

REQUEST FOR PROPOSALS (RFP)
The Ohio Department of Behavioral Health (DBH), Office of Treatment Services, is requesting
proposals for:
Bipartisan Safer Communities Act (BSCA)
Psychological First Aid Trainings
For the Period: State Fiscal Year 2026-2027 - November 1, 2025 through September 29, 2026
Submit Proposals through the Ohio|Buys website for this particular RFP.
This RFP consists of 47 pages. Please verify that you have a complete copy.
Please submit all inquiries about this RFP through the Ohio|Buys website for this
particular RFP. Please refer to Part Three of this RFP, “General Instructions”, for more
information about submitting inquiries. All responses to inquiries submitted by Proposers
will be posted on the RFP Inquiry tab for viewing by all prospective Proposers.
1
Revised October 2025
PART ONE: STRUCTURE OF THIS RFP
PARTS
Part One
Part Two
Part Three
Part Four
Part Five
Structure of this RFP
Information on requested services
General Instructions
Evaluation of Proposals
Contract Award
ATTACHMENTS
Appendix 1 – Standard Affirmation and Disclosure Form
o Standard Affirmation and Disclosure Form must be signed by an
authorized official of Proposer’s organization and must be included for
any proposal to be scored
Appendix 2 – Contractor Information Form
o Contractor Information Form must be completed and submitted with the
proposal.
2
Revised October 2025
PART TWO: SERVICES REQUESTED INFORMATION
I.
MISSION & GUIDING PRINCIPLES
The mission of the Ohio Department of Behavioral Health (DBH) is to provide statewide
leadership of a high-quality mental health and addiction prevention, treatment and
recovery system that is effective and valued by all Ohioans. DBH strives to be a national
leader in implementing a comprehensive, accessible, and quality-focused system of
addiction and mental health care and wellness for all Ohio citizens.
II. PURPOSE
The Ohio Department of Behavioral Health (DBH) is seeking proposals from
qualified contractors to conduct a minimum of four virtual Psychological First Aid
(PFA) trainings and expand knowledge of this evidence-informed approach to
behavioral health disaster recovery.)
III. BACKGROUND
The Bipartisan Safer Communities Act (BSCA) (P.L. 117-159) provides
supplemental funding for the Community Mental Health Services Block Grant
(MHBG) to enable states, the District of Columbia, and territories to expand access
to behavioral health care. Overseen by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health
Services Administration (SAMHSA), the BSCA supplemental funding seeks to
support state behavioral health systems in examining what is needed to address
the behavioral health needs in the aftermath of traumatic events and natural
disasters within our communities. To address the trauma caused by the massive
disruption and loss of life caused by these crises, SAMHSA is recommending that
states utilize this funding to strengthen and enhance behavioral health disaster
preparedness and crisis response efforts. This funding provides a unique
opportunity to develop improved and sustainable public behavioral health systems
that are more adept at meeting the needs of vulnerable people, including those
with more complex presentations. This opportunity will provide funding to conduct
Psychological First Aid (PFA) trainings within Ohio’s communities and expand
knowledge of this evidence-informed approach to behavioral health disaster
recovery.
Developed by the National Child Traumatic Stress Network (NCTSM) and the
National Center for PTSD, Psychological First Aid (PFA) is an evidence-informed
approach to helping children, youth, adults, and families in the immediate
aftermath of a disaster, natural and/or human-made. Following a disaster or
traumatic event, survivors, witnesses, and/or responders may struggle and face
new challenges. The NCTSM describes PFA as “designed to reduce the initial
stress caused by traumatic events and to foster short- and long-term adaptive
functioning and coping. PFA does not assume that all survivors will develop severe
mental health problems or long-term difficulties in recovery. Instead, it is based on
3
Revised October 2025
an understanding that disaster survivors and others affected by such events will
experience a broad range of early reactions (e.g., physical, psychological,
behavioral, spiritual). Some of these reactions will cause enough distress to
interfere with adaptive coping, and recovery may be helped by support from
compassionate and caring disaster responders.” (NCTSN, n.d., para. 2)
PFA’s core objectives are to provide early assistance within the days or weeks
following an event. The eight PFA Core Actions include:
Contact and Engagement – Respond to survivors in a non-intrusive and
helpful manner
Safety and Comfort – Enhance immediate and ongoing safety needs and
provide physical and emotional comfort
Stabilization (if needed) – Calm and orient emotionally overwhelmed and
disoriented survivors
Information Gathering on Current Needs and Concerns – Identify
immediate needs, concerns, and assist in gathering additional information
to tailor interventions
Practical Assistance – Offer practice and reasonable help to survivors in
addressing their immediate needs and concerns
Connection with Social Supports – Help survivors establish brief and
ongoing contacts with support persons including family members, friends,
and community resources
Information on Coping – Provide information on stress reactions, coping
to reduce distress, and promote adaptive functioning
Linkage with Collaborative Services – Link survivors with available
services needed in the immediate aftermath and/or in the future
PFA can be used by first responders, incident command systems, primary and
emergency health care providers, school crisis response teams, faith-based
organizations, disaster relief organizations, Community Emergency Response
Teams (CERT), Medical Reserve Corps (MRC), and Citizens Corps. PFA is
designed to be delivered in diverse settings. These core objectives can be
delivered in the field, shelters, medical triage areas, emergency departments and
hospital settings, staging areas, respite centers, emergency operations centers,
crisis hotlines, feeding locations, disaster assistance service centers, family
reception and assistance centers, homes, businesses, and a variety of other
community settings to meet the needs of the populations affected.
This funding opportunity seeks to hire a qualified contractor to provide a minimum
of four virtual PFA training opportunities to Ohio’s communities and disaster
response teams in an effort to reduce stress symptoms and assist in health
recovery following a traumatic event, natural disaster, public health emergency, or
even a personal crisis.
4
Revised October 2025
IV. SCOPE OF WORK AND DELIVERABLES
All work outlined in the Scope of Work and Deliverables must be completed by
September 29. 2026. Contractor will provide the following:
Trainings
Develop content and materials and deliver a minimum of four virtual PFA
trainings
o Supply virtual platform for virtual attendees
o Manage virtual groups in training activities
o Work with DBH staff to determine the best and most effective training
cadence
Trainings are to be tailored and provided to persons of all backgrounds and
experiences thereby increasing a community’s resilience in the aftermath of
a disaster/emergency
Contractor must educate participants on eight PFA Core Actions within their
training. Contractor must be able to provide Psychological First Aid training
outlined within the Background section of this RFP
The selected Contractor shall be a certified Psychological First Aid trainer
Additionally, the Contractor must have prior experience:
o Conducting large group Psychological First Aid trainings virtually
o Must have completed Psychological First Aid training and be able to
demonstrate their proven ability to conduct trainings on this model
o Apply principles of Psychological First Aid to mediate the traumatic
impact of disasters
Contractor Responsibilities
Contractor will complete the Scope of Work within the timeframe given
Contractor will provide training materials, staffing, and staffing expenses
Contractor must provide previous work and references to demonstrate their
experience and ability to provide the Psychological First Aid trainings
virtually
If training on a specific model of PFA, Contractor must provide description
of this specific model and how it will be delivered
Contractor will provide a description of their virtual platform they intend to
use for the virtual PFA trainings
Contractor will manage training registration.
o Registration must include attendee name, county of
residence/employment, email address, job title (if applicable), and
place of employment (if applicable)
o Contractor must use a system that records attendance and
completion of the training
o Contractor must share all registrant, participant, and successful
completion information with DBH for future follow-up
Contractor must obtain, provide, and oversee management of continuing
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Revised October 2025
This is the opportunity summary page. It provides an overview of this opportunity and a preview of the attached documentation.
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