Discover opportunities months before the RFP drops
Learn more →Retrieving RFP details
Starbridge can help you:
Pain points mentioned in board meetings and strategic plans
Instantly outline and draft all requirements
Bring in your USPs and exploit competitor gaps
Starbridge can help you:
Get ahead of RFPs — target accounts planning budget or ending contracts soon
Accounts with contract expirations, meetings mentioning your product, grants, budget changes and more
Starbridge.ai books 30 - 40% of leads into meetings
Premium
Access the largest public sector contact database
Premium
Get complete source documentation & analysis
The New York State Office of Addiction Services and Supports (OASAS) is soliciting a vendor to conduct a systematic review of published and grey literature on gambling activities and product components (e.g., machine features, interface design) that may increase addictive potential. Deliverables include a systematic review, a comprehensive report with recommendations for regulatory modifications to reduce gambling-related harms, and a conceptual model summary; the project must be completed within six months. This is a discretionary procurement under $50,000 and proposals require price, scope of work, and staff resumes; the solicitation includes SDVOB/MBE/WBE contracting goals.
Starbridge can help you:
Pain points mentioned in board meetings and strategic plans
Instantly outline and draft all requirements
Bring in your USPs and exploit competitor gaps
Starbridge can help you:
Get ahead of RFPs — target accounts planning budget or ending contracts soon
Accounts with contract expirations, meetings mentioning your product, grants, budget changes and more
Starbridge.ai books 30 - 40% of leads into meetings
Establish a Gambling Addiction Workforce Institute (GAWI) to develop and deliver curricula, training, clinical supervision, and host a statewide conference to strengthen the NYS OASAS Workforce's capacity to address gambling-related harms.
Posted Date
Jan 5, 2026
Due Date
Feb 19, 2026
Release: Jan 5, 2026
Close: Feb 19, 2026
Establish a Gambling Addiction Workforce Institute (GAWI) to develop and deliver curricula, training, clinical supervision, and host a statewide conference to strengthen the NYS OASAS Workforce's capacity to address gambling-related harms.
AvailableSeeking proposals to establish a gambling addiction workforce institute (GAWI) that will strengthen and expand the capacity of the NYS OASAS Workforce to address gambling-related harms. The GAWI will enhance workforce knowledge and skills, increase provider capacity to deliver high-quality, evidence-based services, and foster regional and statewide partnerships among diverse providers, researchers, policy makers, and community stakeholders. Core activities will include curriculum development and training, regional and statewide clinical supervision, technical assistance, hosting a statewide conference, and collaboration with national, state, regional and community partners. Through these efforts, the GAWI will support NYS OASAS in expanding effective, evidence-based prevention, treatment, harm reduction, and recovery services across New York State.
Posted Date
Jan 5, 2026
Due Date
Apr 1, 2026
Release: Jan 5, 2026
Develop, implement, and manage the payment as a payor of last resort for treatment, harm reduction, and recovery services to NYS OASAS-approved gambling providers for those seeking support related to gambling harms. The Bidder will also develop, implement, and manage a network of NYS OASAS-approved private practitioners who are authorized to provide direct services, receive referrals from the New York State HOPELine and other referral sources to admit, treat, and bill for treatment, harm reduction, and recovery services. In addition, the Bidder will support the ongoing expansion of access to community-based gambling services for treatment, harm reduction, and recovery supports by recruiting private practitioners in identified high-need communities.
Posted Date
Jan 5, 2026
Due Date
Mar 2, 2026
Release: Jan 5, 2026
Close: Mar 2, 2026
Provide ambulatory services for substance use and addictive disorders.
Posted Date
Feb 6, 2024
Due Date
Jun 30, 2033
Release: Feb 6, 2024
Close: Jun 30, 2033
Provide ambulatory services for substance use and addictive disorders.
AvailableSurface intent from meeting minutes, budgets, and contract expirations. Influence RFP requirements before competitors ever see them.
See your top 10 upcoming opportunities on a demo →Premium
Access the largest public sector contact database
Premium
Get complete source documentation & analysis
Seeking proposals to establish a gambling addiction workforce institute (GAWI) that will strengthen and expand the capacity of the NYS OASAS Workforce to address gambling-related harms. The GAWI will enhance workforce knowledge and skills, increase provider capacity to deliver high-quality, evidence-based services, and foster regional and statewide partnerships among diverse providers, researchers, policy makers, and community stakeholders. Core activities will include curriculum development and training, regional and statewide clinical supervision, technical assistance, hosting a statewide conference, and collaboration with national, state, regional and community partners. Through these efforts, the GAWI will support NYS OASAS in expanding effective, evidence-based prevention, treatment, harm reduction, and recovery services across New York State.
AvailableDevelop, implement, and manage the payment as a payor of last resort for treatment, harm reduction, and recovery services to NYS OASAS-approved gambling providers for those seeking support related to gambling harms. The Bidder will also develop, implement, and manage a network of NYS OASAS-approved private practitioners who are authorized to provide direct services, receive referrals from the New York State HOPELine and other referral sources to admit, treat, and bill for treatment, harm reduction, and recovery services. In addition, the Bidder will support the ongoing expansion of access to community-based gambling services for treatment, harm reduction, and recovery supports by recruiting private practitioners in identified high-need communities.
Available