Bureau of International Labor Affairs
This Notice of Intent (NOI) is not a request for applications. Subject to the availability of funds, the U.S. Department of Labor s (USDOL) Bureau of International Labor Affairs (ILAB) intends to award, through a competitive and merit-based process, one or more cooperative agreements to an organization(s) to implement a project(s) in Paraguay to support the country s efforts to reduce the worst forms of child labor and improve labor law enforcement and working conditions in the country, with a particular focus on the Department of Guair . The Employment and Training Administration's (ETA) Office of Grants Management anticipates publishing the Funding Opportunity Announcement (FOA) by the end of September 2015 (this date is subject to change). Please refer to: http://www.dol.gov/ilab/grants/ and http://www.dol.gov/ilab/grants/SGAguidelines.htm for general guidelines and examples of previous projects. This NOI does not include an FOA or any attachments. It only constitutes a notice of USDOL s intent to publish an FOA at a later date. Interested applicants are encouraged to monitor www.grants.gov for the FOA because this is the method by which it will be made available to the public. No email or paper copies will be provided.
Up to $6M
rolling
One-time $749 fee · Includes AI drafting + templates + PDF export
Detailed requirements not yet analyzed
Have the NOFO? Paste it below for AI-powered requirement analysis.
Strengthening Compliance with International Labor Standards in Vietnam and Malaysia
Bureau of International Labor Affairs — up to $10M
Project to Promote Ratification and Implementation of the 2014 ILO Protocol and Recommendation on Forced Labor
Bureau of International Labor Affairs — up to $9M
Global Gold Mining Project
Bureau of International Labor Affairs — up to $5M
Partnership to Reduce Child Labor and Forced Labor in Imported Agricultural Products
Bureau of International Labor Affairs — up to $4.9M
Project to Mobilize Community Action and Youth Employment (MOCA-Youth Project) in Ghana s Cocoa Growing Communities
Bureau of International Labor Affairs — up to $4M
Project to Reduce Hazardous and Exploitative Child Labor in C te d Ivoire s Cocoa-Growing Areas
Bureau of International Labor Affairs — up to $4M