Grants & Contracts
Proposals Continuation YearsProposals Continuation Years
Non-Competing
Continuations
Most applications for sponsored funding are submitted
for multiple years. However, the majority of sponsors
tend to provide funding in annual increments only; and
most require that a progress report be filed prior to
the release of subsequent years' funds. The annual filing
of a progress report and any other documentation requested
by the sponsor is considered to be a non-competing
application for the continuation of funds.
For proper record keeping and reporting, it is important
that Principal Investigators plan to route annually to Grants and Contracts all paperwork a sponsor requires
for documenting the yearly progress of the project,
regardless
of whether or not the required paperwork includes budgetary
information or institutional endorsement. Routing non-competing
paperwork prior to submission to the sponsor ensures
timely set-up of the new funding once the continuation
award notice is received by Grants and Contracts.
NIH Determining Due Dates on NIH Non-Competing Continuations
It is the responsibility of the individual
PI to keep track of his/her due dates.
Most NIH non-competing applications are due 2 months prior to the budget anniversary date. The exceptions are Institutional National Research Service Awards (a.k.a. training grants), which are due 5 to 7 months prior to the budget anniversary date. Again, it is the responsibility of the individual PI to keep track of his/her due dates.
PHS 2590 NIH non-competing applications should be filed on PHS 2590 form pages and in accordance with the PHS 2590 instructions. You may use the forms and corresponding instructions revised 04/06. There are two separate criteria that can affect how much and which part of the PHS 2590 to complete: Type of Award and SNAP.
- Type
of Award
Though most NIH non-competing applications follow the
standard
instructions, there are a few exceptions depending
on the type of award.
SNAP (Streamlined Non-Competing Application Procedures)Career Development Award
(K Awards)Follow the standard instructions and the instructions found in Section IV of the PHS 2590 book. Institutional National Research Service Awards (T Awards) Follow the standard instructions and the instructions found in Section V of the PHS 2590 book. Individual National Research Service Awards
(F Awards)Follow the instructions in the PHS 416-9 instruction book. All others (e.g., R, P, U) Follow the standard instructions
These are simplified application requirements that reduce the amount of paperwork to be submitted to NIH. specifically, those awards that fall under SNAP regulation do not have to submit a detailed budget or budget justification on an annual basis. In the first year of a project period, NIH commits funding amounts for all years of the project period. The annual award will match the funds NIH defined as the commitment for that year. Each year, NIH specifies whether a given award is subject to SNAP or not. The information is found on the award notice under Section III - Terms and Conditions. If you have questions about whether your award is subject to SNAP, check your award notice or contact Grants and Contracts at 303-724-0090. Award mechanisms most often subject to SNAP: R01, R03, R13, R15, R18, R21, R24, R25, R29, R37, R42, R44 and all K series mechanisms.
