Healthy
People 2010
- Before
Bill Clinton left office, he authorized 2001 an 84%
increase in the government's investment in nanotechnology research and
development, National Nanotechnology Initiative (NNI) http://clinton4.nara.gov/WH/New/html/20000121_4.html
and made it a top priority.
- This
governmental increase has been combined with non-governmental
organizations (NGO) and grant programs. These NGOs have been creating
partnerships with existing governmental agencies and masking initiatives
as Federal and State grant reward programs. They are not.
- Here,
at the CDC is an overview of what is called, Healthy People 2010
http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/about/otheract/hpdata2010/abouthp.htm
.
- As you
can see from www.cdc.gov/nchs/about/otheract/hpdata2010/abouthp.htm,
the initiative is driven with 28 different categories. All of these
categories have grant award programs that are awarding monies
through various agencies to promote a ‘healthy initiative program'.
Some of the programs alone, sound harmless. When
they are tied together though, they are disturbing.
- Former
President Clinton's budget for his NATIONAL
NANOTECHNOLOGY INITIATIVE
is fueled by funding from the National Nanotechnology Initiative, National
Science Foundation, National Institutes of Health, Department of Homeland
Security, Department of Energy and the Department of Defense in
combination with private and nonprofit funds from non-governmental
organizations.
These funds now make available monies for grant projects
for:
Focus Areas at a Glance (28)
- Access to Quality Health Services
- Arthritis, Osteoporosis and Chronic Back Conditions
- Cancer
- Chronic Kidney Disease
- Diabetes
- Disability and Secondary Conditions
- Educational and Community-Based Programs
- Environmental Health
- Family Planning
- Food Safety
- Health Communication
- Heart Disease and Stroke
- Immunizations and Infectious Diseases
- Nutrition and Overweight
- Injury and Violence Prevention
- Maternal, Infant, and Child Health
- Medical Product Safety
- Mental Health and Mental Disorders
- Occupational Safety and Health
- Oral Health
- Physical Activity and Fitness
- Public Health Infrastructure
- Respiratory Diseases
- Sexually Transmitted Diseases -STD
- Substance Abuse
- Tobacco Use
- Vision and Hearing
- An
association, state, or company applies for the grants to fund these
initiatives
- In turn
they authorize a Freedom of Information Release to all their data. This is
a sample of the data collected from a grant application. All the data
requirements are the same, the only difference is the partnered
agency that is acting as a liaison for relaying the data.
Example, this one below is using the USDA as the partnered liaison. If
this was a hospital application, it would say the CDC.
Other Federal Statutes and Regulations That Apply
- Several
Federal statutes and regulations apply to proposals considered for review
and to grants awarded by USDA. These include, but are not limited to:
- 7 CFR part 1.1--USDA implementation of the Freedom of
Information Act.
- 7 CFR part 15a--USDA implementation of title VI of the Civil
Rights Act of 1964.
- 7 CFR part 3015--USDA Uniform Federal Assistance Regulations.
- CFR
part 3016--Uniform Administrative Requirements for Grants and Cooperative
Agreements to State and Local Governments.
- 7 CFR
part 3017—Government-wide Debarment and Suspension (non-procurement) and
Government-wide Requirements for drug-free workplace (grants).
- 7 CFR part 3018--New Restrictions on Lobbying.
- 7 CFR part 3019--Uniform Administrative Requirements for
Grants and Agreements with Institutions of Higher Education, Hospitals,
and Other Nonprofit Organizations.
- 7 CFR part 3052--Audits of State, Local Governments, and
Non-Profit Organizations.
The terms of the above parts will be incorporated in a grant made by the
NSIIC.
(snip)
·
Further Provisions. This section establishes
further provisions that must be
understood and agreed to by the Grantee.
(a) All of the terms and provisions of the application submitted by the Grantee
for this SGIGI, including any attachments, amendments or conditions that are
otherwise not in conflict with this Agreement are attached to and incorporated
into this agreement. Any changes to these documents or this Agreement must be
approved in writing by the Grantor,
(b) Grantee certifies that it is in compliance with, and will comply in
the course of the Agreement with grant conditions and all applicable laws,
regulations, Executive Orders, or other applicable requirements,
(c) The provisions of the following are incorporated into this Agreement by
reference:
7 CFR part 3015--``USDA Uniform
Federal Assistance Regulations''; 7 CFR part 3016--``Uniform Administrative
Requirements for Grants and Cooperative Agreements to State and Local
Governments''; 7 CFR part 3017--``Government-wide Debarment and Suspension (Non-procurement)
and Government-wide Requirements for Drug-Free Workplace (Grants)''; 7 CFR part
3018--``New Restrictions on Lobbying''; 7 CFR part 3019--``Uniform
Administrative Requirements for Grants and Agreements with Institutions of
Higher Education, Hospitals, and Other Nonprofit Organizations''; and 7 CFR
part 3052--``Audits of State, Local Governments, and Non-Profit
Organizations,''
(d) The Grantee shall not encumber, transfer or dispose of any property,
equipment or other asset, or any part thereof, acquired wholly or in part with
Grantor funds without the written consent of the Grantor,
(e) Grantees shall adequately control and safeguard all assets
associated with the grant to ensure that they are used solely for authorized
purposes,
(f) Grantor shall monitor performance in accordance with the applicable
terms of the Agreement. Grantor reserves the right to monitor meetings and
request documents applicable to the terms of the Agreement.
8. Assurances. Grantee has executed.
(a) Form AD-1047, ``Certification Regarding Debarment, Suspension, and Other
Responsibility Matters--Primary Covered Transactions,'' to certify that your
organization is not debarred or suspended from Government assistance,
(b) AD-1048, ``Certification Regarding Debarment, Suspension, Ineligibility and
Voluntary Exclusion--Lower Tier Covered Transactions,'' from anyone you do
business with as a result of this Government assistance,
(c) AD-1950, ``Certification Regarding a Drug-Free Workplace Requirements
(Grants)'' to certify you will provide a drug-free awareness program for
employees,
(d) RD 400-1, ``Equal Opportunity Agreement,''
(e) ``Certification Regarding Lobbying--Contracts, Grants, Loans and
Cooperative Agreement.''
9. Accounting, Audits and Reporting Requirements.
(a) Generally Accepted Accounting Principles: The Grantee agrees to account for
all amounts associated with this grant using Generally Accepted Accounting
Principles. Records must at least include:
(i) financial records that identify the source of
all funds used for grant-supported activities, including Grant Funds, any
matching funds, other funds, and;
(ii) source documentation to support activities.
(b) Audit: The project will be audited by a Certified Public Accountant
annually or as otherwise agreed to in writing by the Grantor. All audits will
be in accordance with Generally Accepted Accounting Principles. The audit for
the years the Grantee receives this financial assistance will be conducted in
accordance with 7 CFR part 3052. Audits are due within
90 days after September 30 of the respective year and the Grantor is to receive
a copy of this audit,
(c) Reports: The grantee will provide periodic reports as required by the
Grantor. A financial status report and a project performance report will be
submitted by the Grantee on a semi-annual basis (due each March 31 and
September 30). The financial status report must show how Grant Funds and any
matching funds have been used to date and project the funds needed and their
purposes for the next six-month period. A final report may serve as the last
semi-annual report.
Grantees
shall constantly monitor performance to ensure that time schedules are being
met and projected goals by time periods are being accomplished. The project
performance report and final report shall include at least:
(i) A
comparison of timeline, tasks and objectives outlined in the proposal as
compared to the actual
accomplishments,
(ii) If report varies from the stated objectives or they were not met, the
reasons why established objectives were not met,
(iii) Problems, delays, or adverse conditions which will materially affect
attainment of planned project objectives,
(iv) Objectives established for the next reporting period, and
(v) Status of compliance with any special conditions on the use of awarded
funds.
(d) Proposal Results: Grantee shall deliver the results of any study or
activity to the Grantor upon completion of each task outlined in the
proposal. These include, but are not limited to, feasibility studies, marketing
plans, business operations plans, articles of incorporation and bylaws. All
items delivered to the Grantor will be held as proprietary information to the
extent provided by law.
(e) Record Retention: Financial records, supporting documents, statistical
records, and all other records pertinent to the grant must be kept for a period
of at least 3 years after grant closing, except that the records shall be
retained beyond the 3-year period if audit findings have not been resolved.
Microfilm or photocopies or similar methods may be substituted in lieu of
original records. The Grantor and the Comptroller General of the United States,
or any of their duly authorized representatives, shall have access to any
books, documents, papers, and records of the Grantee's which are pertinent to
the specific grant program for the purpose of making audits, examinations,
excerpts, and transcripts.
10. Funding.
(a) Payment: Requests for cash
advances should be for the minimum amount needed and timed to the actual,
immediate cash requirements for carrying out the grant purpose. The funds will
be reimbursed or advanced based on submission of Standard Form 270, ``Request
for Advance or Reimbursement.''
(b) Distribution of Funds: Once the Agreement is entered into, grant funds will
be transferred electronically to an account specified by the Grantee.
(c) Pre-award costs: The grantee may incur or claim no cost prior to the
Effective Date as provided for in this Agreement.
11. Code of Conduct and Conflict of Interest.
Conflict of interest for the purpose of this Agreement is defined in 7 U.S.C.
2008j and Grantee agrees to disclose any conflict of interest to Grantor.
12. Other Parties. This Agreement is not for the benefit of third parties.
Grantor shall not be under any obligation to any such parties, whether directly
or indirectly interested in this Agreement, to pay any charges or expenses
incidental to compliance by Grantee with any of the duties or obligations
imposed hereby.
13. Event of Default and Remedies.
(a) Events of Default of Grantee. By delineation and not limitation, any of the
following occurrences shall be an ``event of default''. Written notice of
default shall be provided within 90 days of such occurrence of an event of
default:
(i) Any representation or warranty made by the
Grantee in connection with this Agreement shall prove to have been false or
misleading in any material respect on or as of the date made or deemed made,
(ii) Failure, inability or unwillingness of Grantee to carry out or comply
with the terms or conditions of this Agreement, or any applicable laws,
(iii) The Grantee becomes insolvent, or ceases being able, or admits in writing
to its inability to pay its debts as they mature, suspends its business
operations, become a debtor in a bankruptcy proceeding or makes a general
assignment for the benefit of, or enters into any composition or arrangement
with, creditors, proceeds with the appointment of a receiver, trustee or
liquidator, or like action and is not dismissed within 90 days.
(iv) A judgment or other like order for payment is
rendered against the Grantee or any material adverse change occurs in the
Grantee's financial condition.
(v) Submission or making of any report, statement, warranty, or
representation by Grantee or agent on its behalf to Grantor in connection with
the grant hereunder which is false, incomplete or incorrect in any material
respect.
(b) Remedies:
(i) Upon the occurrence and during the continuation
of any event of default, Grantor shall have no obligation to continue funding
the Grantee as contemplated in this Agreement. Accordingly, Grantor shall
suspend operations contemplated by this Agreement until the declaration of
default is cured and Grantor notifies in writing such acknowledgment of cure,
(ii) The Grantee shall have 60 days from the notice of default to propose
remedies and cures to Grantor to remove the event of default,
(iii) Grantor reserves the right to waive any and all events of default.
Exercise of this waiver shall not preclude Grantor from declaring a similar
future event as an event of default.
14. Notice. All notices hereunder and for whatever purpose, including
declaration of default, shall be in writing and shall be deemed to be duly
given upon delivery if personally delivered or sent by telecommunication
(facsimile or e-mail) or 3 days after mailing if sent by express, certified or
registered United States Postal Service mail, to the parties. The grantees
address and contact person shall be the one provided on SF 424 and the Grantor
shall be the National Sheep Industry Improvement Center, USDA, PO Box 23483,
Washington, DC 20026-3483, if using the U.S. Postal Service or Room 2117, South
Agriculture Building, 1400 Independence Avenue, SW., Washington, DC 20250 if
using other carriers.
15. Amendments, Termination and Changes. The Agreement may be amended,
changed or terminated by mutual consent of the parties in writing.
(a) Amendment: This Agreement may be amended with the mutual written consent of
the Parties.
(b) Scope of Work: Any changes in project costs, source of funds, scope of
services, or any other changes in the project or applicant must be reported to
and approved by the Grantor by written amendment of this Agreement. Any changes
not approved by the Grantor shall be cause for de-obligating grant funding.
(c) Termination: The Agreement may be terminated by either party upon 30 days'
notice in writing to the other party.
16. Conflict. Nothing herein is intended to conflict with current USDA
directives. If the terms of this agreement are inconsistent with existing
law or agency directives, then those portions of this agreement which are
determined to be inconsistent shall be invalid, but the remaining terms and the
agreement will remain in effect. All necessary changes will be accomplished
either by an amendment to this agreement or by entering into a new agreement,
whichever is deemed expedient to the interest of both parties.
17. In witness whereof, Grantee has this day authorized and caused this
Agreement to
be
executed by:
What the schools, states,
associations, and hospitals are doing, when they take the grant money, they are
turning over the data, your data.

·
Initiative 10. Food Safety, The National
Animal Identification System (NAIS)
http://animalid.aphis.usda.gov/nais/index.shtml is being mandated to livestock
producers.
About the NAIS:
·
Food-borne diseases have declined
significantly, said the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) and
Prevention April 29. In its annual report on the incidence of infections from
food-borne pathogens, CDC noted significant declines from 1996 to 2003 in illnesses caused by E. coli O157:H7 (42
percent), Salmonella (17
percent), Campylobacter (28
percent) and Yersinia (49 percent). Illnesses caused by Salmonella Typhimurium (typically
associated with meat and poultry) decreased
by 38 percent. Most significantly, between 2002 and 2003, illnesses caused by E. coli O157:H7, typically associated with ground beef, dropped by 36 percent. The reduction in
E. coli O157:H7
illnesses brings the United
States very close to achieving the Healthy
People 2010 goal of 1.0
case per 100,000 people. The data, while inclusive of all
foods, generally tracks the trends revealed through random regulatory testing
of meat, poultry and egg products by the Food Safety and Inspection Service. In
addition to testing results, recalls for Salmonella,
E. coli O157:H7 and Listeria in
FSIS regulated products also dropped
from 65 in 2002 to 28 in 2003.
· Framework for implementing
animal ID was announced April 27 by Agriculture Secretary Ann M. Veneman. The National Animal Identification System (NAIS)
is designed to identify any agricultural premise exposed to a foreign animal
disease so that it can be more quickly contained and eradicated.
Implementation
of a NAIS will be conducted in three main phases.
·
Under Phase I, USDA would evaluate current
federally funded animal identification systems and determine which system(s)
should be used for a NAIS, further the dialogue with producers and other
stakeholders on the operation of a NAIS, identify staffing needs, and
develop any regulatory and legislative proposals needed for implementing the
system.
·
Phase II would involve the implementation
of the selected animal identification system at regional levels for one or
more selected species, continuation of the communication and education
effort, addressing regulatory needs and working with Congress on any needed
legislation.
·
In Phase III, the selected animal identification
system(s) would be scaled up to the national level. U.S.
Department of Agriculture
It looks like it is being launched from the USDA; but it
isn't. The receiving of the data is going through the USDA and the grant monies
are being funneled out through the USDA. The data isn't being stored with the
USDA.
World
Health Organization
http://www.healthypeople.gov/Implementation/Consortium/Annual_Meetings/1996_consortium/kickbusch.htm
- Division
of Health Promotion, Education and Communication
- 12
indicators of GLOBAL HEALTH FOR ALL strategy that were to be
assessed by all countries in the world
- At
least 5% of the Gross National Product to be spent on health; A reasonable
percentage of the national health expenditure devoted to local health
care; Equal distribution of resources; (snip)
- Same
with the Model
School Nutrition Program
http://www.state.nj.us/agriculture/PolicyQA.pdf which falls under 7.
Educational and Community-Based Programs and 10. Food Safety programs
listed above. Our state just mandated it. So what does that mean? Our
state took the grant money. Now, agents of this program get to enter
our school systems to gather data and have auditing rights to the schools
records.
- They
have now criminalized the peanut butter and jelly sandwich so these
agents can come in and gather information on our children in public and
private schools.
One of the three overarching goals for the Healthy People
2000 Prevention Initiative was to reduce health disparities among Americans(and globally).
- The framework of Healthy People 2010 has
taken this a step further by proposing to eliminate health disparities
as one of the two primary goals for the next decade.
(snip)
DATA2010 is a SAS database that contains one record (or
observation) for each objective and subpart found in the 28 focus areas. The database
will also contain records for the measures used to track the goals and the
Leading Health Indicators.
Each record in the database contains the following
information:
- Objective text
- Objective text (abbreviated)
- Baseline year
- Baseline data
- Tracking data for subsequent years (future)
- 2010 Target
- Comments (definitions, clarifications, and explanations)
- Data source(s)
In the future, DATA2010 will
contain additional population groups, and include options for chart and map
generation. State data are expected to be added to the database,
and users will be able to select national and/or State data. There also will be
links to the operational definitions in Tracking Healthy People 2010 and
to the Healthy People 2010 Web site http://health.gov/healthypeople/.
Where available, standard errors of the estimates will be included in the
database.
 |
|
 |
|
 |
 |
|
 |
|