Opportunity
Marin County Marincounty #HHS-2026-08
Early Intervention Behavioral Health Services for Children and Youth in Marin County
Posted
February 12, 2026
Respond By
March 24, 2026
Identifier
HHS-2026-08
NAICS
621330, 624110
This opportunity involves the County of Marin Health and Human Services seeking providers for Early Intervention Behavioral Health services for children and youth ages 0–18 in Marin County. - Government Buyer: - County of Marin Health and Human Services - Services Requested: - Early Intervention Behavioral Health services for children and youth (ages 0–18) - Six projects divided by age group (Early Childhood 0–5, School-Age 5–18) and geographic region - Each project funded between $200,000 and $300,000 - Requirements: - Services must align with the Behavioral Health Services Act (BHSA) Early Intervention framework - Focus on outreach, access, linkage to care, and early treatment for high-need populations (e.g., trauma, homelessness, justice or child welfare involvement, disparities in access) - Use of evidence-based or community-defined practices - Culturally and linguistically appropriate services - Collaboration across systems of care - Tracking and reporting on service levels, demographics, satisfaction, outcomes, and annual results using Results-Based Accountability - Awards: - May be made to one or multiple providers - Intent-to-award notices for organizations such as First 5 Marin Help Me Grow, HYP, JFCS, Marin City Health and Wellness, NMCS, and Youth Transforming Justice - No OEMs or specific product manufacturers are involved, as this is a services procurement.
Description
The County of Marin is seeking proposals from qualified agencies to provide Early Intervention Behavioral Health services for children and youth ages 0–18 across Marin County. Six projects are available, organized by age group (Early Childhood 0–5 and School-Age 5–18) and geographic region, with funding ranging from $200,000 to $300,000 per project. Contracts begin July 1, 2026, for an initial 12-month term, with possible annual renewals up to four additional years. Services must align with the Behavioral Health Services Act Early Intervention framework, prioritize high-need populations, use evidence-based practices, and include performance tracking and reporting.