97-14275. National Survey of Indigent Defense Systems  

  • [Federal Register Volume 62, Number 105 (Monday, June 2, 1997)]
    [Notices]
    [Pages 29740-29742]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 97-14275]
    
    
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    DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
    
    Office of Justice Programs
    [OJP(BJS)-1134]
    RIN 1121-ZA80
    
    
    National Survey of Indigent Defense Systems
    
    AGENCY: Office of Justice Programs, Bureau of Justice Statistics, 
    Justice.
    
    ACTION: Solicitation for award of cooperative agreement.
    
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    SUMMARY: The purpose of this notice is to announce a public 
    solicitation for services of multi-stage sample design, survey 
    development, data collection, data verification, coding and entry, and 
    delivery of a final data set to BJS for a National Survey of Indigent 
    Defense Systems.
    
    DATES: Proposals must be postmarked on or before August 1, 1997.
    
    ADDRESSES: Proposals should be mailed to: Application Coordinator, 
    Bureau of Justice Statistics, Room 303, 633 Indiana Avenue, NW., 
    Washington, DC 20531.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Steven K. Smith, Chief, Law 
    Enforcement, Adjudication and Federal Statistics, Bureau of Justice 
    Statistics, (202) 633-3046.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    Background
    
        The National Survey of Indigent Defense Systems is a collaborative 
    effort sponsored by the Bureau of Justice Statistics with funding from 
    the Bureau of Justice Assistance, components of the Office of Justice 
    Programs, U.S. Department of Justice. The study will develop, test, and 
    implement a national-level data collection program to measure the way 
    in which states and localities provide legal services for indigent 
    criminal defendants, their caseloads, related costs, and policies and 
    practices.
        BJS is the lead agency for the study because of its prior 
    experience in conducting a comprehensive study of indigent defense 
    systems in 1982 and a smaller follow-up study in 1986. The results from 
    these studies were reported in three BJS publications entitled, 
    National Criminal Defense Systems Study: Final Report, Criminal Defense 
    Systems and Criminal Defense for the Poor, 1986.
        Court appointed legal representation plays a critical role in the 
    Nation's criminal justice system. Limited information from various BJS 
    statistical series shows that most criminal defendants rely on some 
    form of publicly-provided defense counsel. In 1986, the latest year for 
    which national level information is available, the states provided 
    indigent defense services to approximately 4.4 million criminal 
    defendants. No major data collection on criminal defense for indigent 
    offenders has been undertaken since 1986.
        Much has changed over the past decade as States and local defender 
    systems are relying more on contact and private services. The National 
    Survey of Indigent Defense Systems will provide a clearer understanding 
    of the changing nature of public defender services in the United 
    States.
    
    Objectives
    
        The purpose of this award is to develop, test, and implement a 
    national-level data collection program to identify the number and 
    characteristics of public indigent defense organizations and agencies 
    and to measure the way in which states provide legal services for 
    indigent criminal defendants, their caseloads, and policies and 
    practices. The nationally representative sample of indigent defense 
    providers will also be surveyed on types of offenses represented, 
    expenditures, funding sources, and related administrative issues. This 
    project will provide a machine readable, public-use dataset which will 
    be able to produce a comprehensive portrait of state and local efforts 
    to meet the needs of indigent criminal defendants and their interaction 
    with the other components of the criminal justice system.
    
    Type of Assistance
    
        Assistance will be made available under a cooperative agreement. 
    The total amount to be awarded under this two year project is estimated 
    to be $850,000.
        Awards will be made for a period of one year with supplemental 
    funding for an additional one year conditional upon the quality of 
    initial performance and products, adherence to project milestones, and 
    completing this project of national interest in a timely fashion. Data 
    collection agent will work closely with BJS staff in developing the 
    overall research design, survey instrument and data collection phase of 
    the project. The initial report for publication will be produced and 
    published by BJS and no data will be released by the recipient of funds 
    until BJS makes the data set available to the public.
    
    Statutory Authority
    
        The cooperative agreement to be awarded pursuant to this 
    solicitation will be funded by the BJS consistent with its mandate as 
    set forth in 42 U.S.C. 3732. Specifically, BJS is authorized by (42 
    U.S.C. 3732) to ``collect and analyze statistical information 
    concerning operations of the criminal justice system at the Federal, 
    State, and Local levels''.
    
    Eligibility Requirements
    
        Both profit-making and nonprofit organizations may apply for funds. 
    Consistent with OJP fiscal requirements, no fees may be charged against 
    the project by profit-making organizations.
    
    Scope of Work
    
        The object of this solicitation is to develop, test, and implement 
    a comprehensive data collection program to measure state and local 
    indigent defense services throughout the United States. Specifically, 
    the recipient of funds will perform the following tasks:
        1. Develop detailed research design for national-level data 
    collection on indigent defense programs; this includes a detailed 
    timetable for each task in the project. Data collection should begin 
    within 180 days of project start date with completion within 12 months. 
    After the BJS grant monitor has agreed
    
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    to the timetable, all work must be completed as scheduled.
        2. Provide detailed description of how the data will be collected 
    in state, county and other relevant offices with and without automated 
    information systems, and how information pertaining to assigned counsel 
    and contract programs will be collected. Determine the appropriate unit 
    of analysis (state, county, individual program) for the survey or 
    surveys. This includes the production of detailed profiles of how each 
    of the 50 states and the District of Columbia delivers services to 
    indigent criminal defendants and related activities.
        3. Develop a comprehensive sampling frame that would include the 
    names and addresses of organizations that provide indigent defense 
    services or funding for those services, no matter what the nature of 
    the delivery system. This includes organizations dealing with conflict 
    cases whereby a defendant is represented by counsel outside the public 
    defender's office because of conflicts of interest with staff.
        4. Design a sample that can produce reliable and accurate national 
    as well as state estimates of staff size and type, expenditures, 
    budgets, workload and other related factors. Provide detailed 
    documentation of sampling plan, including targeted CV for selected 
    variables.
        5. Develop questionnaire(s) and methodology for collecting 
    information. The final survey instrument and methodology approved by 
    BJS will include a detailed description of methods that will be used to 
    collect data from initial non-respondents.
        6. Develop new areas and expand existing areas in the questionnaire 
    to collect information on how offices provide services related to 
    juvenile issues, death penalty cases, domestic violence cases, family 
    welfare cases, and cases processed in drug courts.
        7. Mail surveys to appropriate parties. Follow-up by telephone with 
    those not completing survey or to clarify responses. Electronically 
    disseminate questionnaire to program offices with Internet 
    capabilities.
        8. Identify a coordinator in each State to assist in achieving an 
    acceptable survey response rate and in compiling individual State 
    information.
        9. Verify reported information on selected subset of the completed 
    surveys via telephone follow-up, code and enter data, apply appropriate 
    weights for national and state level estimates, and create public-use 
    data set.
        10. Provide complete documentation on verification procedures and 
    on producing final case weights. Provide standard error table 
    information for national and state level estimates.
        Formulas for standard error calculations should reflect the sample 
    design and must be fully documented.
        11. Provide machine readable data set and documentation to BJS for 
    archive at the Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social 
    Research (ICPSR). The data sets will be delivered in format readable by 
    SPSS and should include replicate weights for producing standard 
    errors.
        12. Provide comprehensive documentation for the entire project that 
    will be archived at ICPSR. Applicants should use the documentation from 
    the Civil Justice Survey of State Courts, 1992 as a model. This is 
    available from BJS on a CD-ROM or can be accessed through the BJS 
    homepage http://www:ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/.
    
    Award Procedures
    
        Proposals should describe in appropriate detail the procedures to 
    be undertaken in furtherance of the activities described under the 
    Scope of Work. Information on staffing levels and qualifications should 
    be included for each task and descriptions of experience relevant to 
    the project should be included. Resumes of the proposed project 
    director and key staff should be enclosed with the proposal.
        Applications will be reviewed by BJS. Final authority to enter into 
    a cooperative agreement is reserved for the Director, BJS, or his 
    designee.
        Applications will be evaluated on the overall extent to which they 
    respond to the priorities and technical complexities of the scope of 
    the work, conform to high standards of data collection, and appear to 
    be fiscally feasible and efficient. Specifically, applicants will be 
    evaluated on the basis of:
        1. Documentation of applicant's ability to carry out the scope of 
    the work described in this solicitation. Particular emphasis will be 
    placed on the quality of the applicant's overall proposed research 
    design to collect data on indigent defense systems and description of 
    methods and procedures for collecting standardized data on staff size 
    and type, expenditures, workload, types of cases represented, and other 
    relevant factors from different indigent defense services, organization 
    and agencies including statewide and county level systems, assigned 
    counsel programs, and contract programs.
        2. Knowledge of relevant criminal justice issues and prior research 
    related to indigent defense services for both adults and juveniles. 
    Knowledge of state-and county-based indigent services and operations. 
    Applicants should be familiar with the findings in the reports National 
    Criminal Defense Systems Study: Final Report, NCJ-94702, Criminal 
    Defense Systems, NCJ-94630, and Criminal Defense for the Poor, 1986, 
    NCJ-112991. Copies of the three reports are available from the National 
    Criminal Justice Reference Service, 1-800-732-3277. The application 
    should include a summary of key findings from these reports and outline 
    how the current study would gather the same or similar types of 
    information for comparative purposes and address additional topics.
        3. Demonstrated knowledge of the contemporary issues in indigent 
    defense services and programs. Quality of proposal for collecting data 
    on these issues, including those pertaining to juveniles cases, family 
    matters, workload levels, quality of defense representation, and cases 
    handled by speciality courts such as drug courts. Proposal will be 
    evaluated on methods for measuring quality of representation of 
    juvenile cases and death penalty cases (such as training and 
    certification) and the kinds of defense services provided relating to 
    domestic violence and family welfare matters.
        4. Documented knowledge and experience related to multi-stage and 
    multi-frame sampling design and questionnaire development.
        5. Documented evidence of research expertise and experience in 
    sample design, objective data gathering, data coding, entry and 
    verification, and production of public-use data files. This includes 
    availability of adequate computing environment and knowledge of 
    standard social science data processing software. Demonstrated ability 
    to produce SPSS readable data files for analysis and report production.
        6. Availability of qualified professional, field and support staff, 
    and suitable equipment for data gathering and processing. This includes 
    expertise in multi-stage sampling, probability sampling techniques and 
    standard error estimation from survey data.
        7. Demonstrated fiscal, management and organizational capability 
    and experience suitable for proving quality data within budget and time 
    constraints.
        8. Reasonableness of estimated costs for the total project and for 
    individual cost categories.
    
    Application and Process
    
        An original and five (5) copies of a full proposal must be 
    submitted with SF 424 (Rev. 1988), Application for Federal Assistance, 
    as the cover sheet.
        Proposals must be accompanied by SF 424A, Budget Information; OJP 
    Form 4000/3 (Rev. 1-93), Program Narrative and Assurances; OJP Form 
    4061/6,
    
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    Certifications Regarding Lobbying; Debarment, Suspension and Other 
    Responsibility Matters; and Drug-Free Workplace Requirements; and OJP 
    Form 7120-1 (Rev. 1-93), Accounting System and Financial Capability 
    Questionnaire (to be submitted by applicants who have not previously 
    received Federal funds from the Office of Justice Programs). If 
    appropriate, applicants must complete and submit Standard Form LLL, 
    Disclosure of Lobbying Activities. All applicants must sign Certified 
    Assurances that they are in compliance with Federal laws and 
    regulations which prohibit discrimination in any program or activity 
    that received Federal funds. To obtain appropriate forms, contact Getha 
    Hilario, BJS Management Assistant, at (202) 633-3031.
        The application should cover a 2-year period with information 
    provided for completion of the entire project. Proposals must include a 
    program narrative, a detailed budget and budget narrative. The program 
    narrative shall describe activities as stated in the scope of work and 
    factors for evaluation. The detailed budget must provide costs 
    including salaries of staff involved in the project and portion of the 
    salaries to be paid from the award; fringe benefits paid to each staff 
    person; travel costs; and supplies required to complete the project. 
    The budget narrative closely follows the content of the detailed 
    budget. The narrative should relate the items budgeted to the project 
    activities and should provide a justification and explanation for the 
    budgeted items. Refer to the aforementioned timetable when developing 
    the program narrative and budget information.
    
        Dated: May 23, 1997.
    Jan M. Chaiken,
    Director, Bureau of Justice Statistics.
    [FR Doc. 97-14275 Filed 5-30-97; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 4410-18-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Published:
06/02/1997
Department:
Justice Programs Office
Entry Type:
Notice
Action:
Solicitation for award of cooperative agreement.
Document Number:
97-14275
Dates:
Proposals must be postmarked on or before August 1, 1997.
Pages:
29740-29742 (3 pages)
Docket Numbers:
OJP(BJS)-1134
RINs:
1121-ZA80
PDF File:
97-14275.pdf