Applying for Rapid Response Grants
CERF rapid response funds can help to reduce the inconsistency and delays humanitarian organizations may experience when receiving voluntary contributions. Rapid response funds help support life-saving, humanitarian activities in the initial stages of a sudden-onset crisis. They may also be used to respond to time-critical requirements or a significant deterioration in an existing emergency.
Rapid response funds are disbursed as soon as possible. They can be used as soon as a disaster occurs and must be expended within six months. The LoU between OCHA and the eligible recipient will clearly specify the date that funds can start being used. If the recipient wishes to use funds prior to this date, it must clearly explain why.
Rapid response allocations should fulfill the “life-saving” criteria, as defined by CERF’s mandate, and result from a country’s needs assessment. Activities should be chosen from a country’s set of core humanitarian programmes and be essential to the overall humanitarian response.
The provision of rapid response funds is a field-driven exercise whereby:
- The RC/HC recommends use of CERF and identifies priority life-saving needs by consulting the IASC country team.
- The RC/HC submits a package of proposals based on assessed needs.
- The ERC approves applications.
- UN disburses funds to eligible agencies.
Agencies cannot submit proposals directly to the ERC.
Application Process
- Apply using the CERF Application Template (Word - January 2013) unless the ERC agrees to fund against a Flash Appeal or similar document.
- CERF Rapid Response Window: Procedures and Criteria (PDF - September 2011)
- If funding against an appeal, the RC/HC submits a summary table with a list of projects and requested funding amounts for each.
- NOTE: Simultaneously prepare Flash Appeal and prioritize projects for CERF funding; provide CERF allocations in summary tables within Flash Appeal document if the ERC has already approved funding.
- CERF grant-proposal packages should not substitute the development of a Flash Appeal.
- In all cases, agencies must submit a CERF Budget Tool 2013 (Excel - January 2013).
- In all cases, proposals should be sent as a package with a cover letter/e-mail from the RC/HC to the ERC and the CERF secretariat at www.unocha.org/cerf/.
- Cheat Sheet on CERF, CAP and Flash Appeals (PDF - November 2008)
|
Overview of the CERF Rapid Response Window |
|
|
Amount available |
Two thirds of CERF’s allocations come from the rapid response envelope. A maximum of $30 million rapid response funds can be allocated to a crisis. |
|
Purpose |
Rapid response funding was initiated by the General Assembly in 2005. It provides funding for three types of situations: |
|
Eligible organizations |
UN organizations (excluding OCHA) and IOM. NGOs cannot request rapid response funding. |
|
Application process |
A rapid response allocation is a collaborative process and is managed by a country’s RC and/or HC. Following consultations with the humanitarian country team, an RC/HC will solicit in-country applications for rapid response funds. Applications are accepted throughout the year; the process requires the RC/HC to draft a cover letter to the ERC and provide a completed CERF application. The CERF secretariat will review the application and the ERC will make the final decision. |
|
Approval criteria |
Rapid response applications will include humanitarian projects that are critical to a country’s emergency. Projects should:
|
|
Implementation timeframe |
Funds should be committed and project activities completed within six months of the date that CERF disburses funds (CERF disburses funds directly to a recipient agency’s headquarters). In situations where agencies expense funds before CERF disburses funds, the agency may request an earlier disbursement date. However, this date must not be six weeks prior to CERF’s intended disbursement date and should not be before the emergency actually occurs. |