Opportunity

SAM #12318726Q0159

Clinical Support Services for Collbran Job Corps Center (USDA Forest Service)

Buyer

USDA Forest Service

Posted

July 02, 2026

Respond By

July 16, 2026

Identifier

12318726Q0159

NAICS

561320, 621420, 621330, 621399

The USDA Forest Service is seeking clinical support services for the Collbran Job Corps Center in Colorado. - Government Buyer: - USDA Forest Service, Job Corps Center Collbran - Services Requested: - Drug/Alcohol Abuse Counselor - 1,040 hours of substance misuse and abuse services, including assessments, treatment, case management, crisis intervention, education, and promotion for youth aged 16-24 - Center Mental Health Counselor - 1,040 hours of mental health services, including assessments, treatment, case management, crisis intervention, education, and promotion for youth aged 16-24 - Nurse - Nursing services including student assessments, care, case management, emergency care, administration, and participation in health programs (quantity not specified) - Key Requirements: - All personnel must be licensed and approved by the Department of Labor - Services are for youth aged 16-24 enrolled at the Job Corps Center - Contract is a total small business set-aside under NAICS 561320 - Firm-fixed-price contract structure - Option for a 6-month extension beyond the initial 12-month base period - No specific OEMs or product part numbers are referenced, as this is a services procurement

Description

Clinical Support Services for USDA Forest Service Job Corps Center – Services may include Nurses, Center Mental Health Counselors, and Drug/Alcohol Abuse Counselors.

The purpose of this contract is to provide the Centers Support Services. Student enrollment and outcomes for each center are affected by recruitment and attrition rates, labor market conditions, trends in provider burnout and engagement, and other factors. This has led to supply and demand imbalances that are sensitive to subtle shifts in policies and organizational priorities, variability of critical staffing needs across time and geography, and the need for expanded utilization of support services.

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