Tallo logoTallo logo

Senior Foreign Assistance Program Analyst IV

Job

Competitive Innovations, LLC

Washington, DC (In Person)

$146,000 Salary, Full-Time

Posted 3 days ago (Updated 12 hours ago) • Actively hiring

Expires 6/13/2026

Apply for this opportunity

This job application is on an outside website. Be sure to review the job posting there to verify it's the same.

Review key factors to help you decide if the role fits your goals.
Pay Growth
?
out of 5
Not enough data
Not enough info to score pay or growth
Job Security
?
out of 5
Not enough data
Calculating job security score...
Total Score
71
out of 100
Average of individual scores

Were these scores useful?

Skill Insights

Compare your current skills to what this opportunity needs—we'll show you what you already have and what could strengthen your application.

Job Description

Senior Foreign Assistance Program Analyst
IV 4.0 4.0
out of 5 stars Washington, DC $140,000
  • $152,000 a year
  • Full-time Competitive Innovations, LLC 5 reviews $140,000
  • $152,000 a year
  • Full-time Competitive Innovations, LLC (CI) is seeking a Sr.
Foreign Assistance Program Analyst/Subject Matter Expert to support the U.S. Department of State, Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor (DRL). The Sr. Subject Matter Expert represents and communicates DRL's program objectives to other State Department and U.S government offices involved in programming Democracy Fund and Human Rights and Democracy Funds (HRDF) and other transfer funding to include, but not be limited to, regional bureaus, Office of Acquisitions Management, Office of the Legal Advisor, Congressional Liaison office, Office of Management and Budget and USAID offices. They liaise and consult on program administration, financial planning and acquisition of programming funds. They will respond to Congressional requests for information regarding programs and DRL program objectives. They will also provide information to the NGO community and other implementing organizations regarding the USG's and DRL grants processes. This is a full-time position located in Washington, D.C. Salary range is $140
  • 152K.
Responsibilities:
In coordination with the Program Lead, develop strategies, and work with the Applied Learning and Evaluation team to develop portfolio specific evaluation indicators as needed. Work closely with Subject Matter Experts to ensure that program deadlines are being met in a timely and efficient matter. Coordinate with the GOR in the administration and coordination of programs. Work directly with Team Lead and Deputy Directors to oversee program funding for assigned portfolio. Develop goals, objectives and programs for utilization of the foreign assistance funding. Collect grant documentation for review by decision-making panels who will select grant recipients within available funding levels. Liaise with offices involved in administration, financial planning and acquisition of program funding. Skillfully communicate verbally and in writing to provide briefings, status reviews, and advice upon request to the other DRL program staff and senior personnel on grant issues. Work on designated portfolio in ensure pre-award, award, and ongoing management and monitoring of programs globally. Monitoring grantee budget execution and drawdowns to ensure program objectives are met and are in accordance with 2 CFR 200. Negotiate program solicitation language with regional bureaus, Post leadership, and within DRL. Advise senior Bureau officials on development of goals, objectives and programs for utilization of foreign assistance funding. Remain informed on the changing political environment in the designated portfolio as well as global issues impacting the region by regularly meeting with grantees, human rights defenders, researchers, and other funders. Communicate DRL's regional and thematic foreign assistance program objectives to other State Department and U.S government offices involved in programming Democracy Fund and Human Rights and Democracy Funds (HRDF) and other transfer funding to include, but not be limited to, regional bureaus, Office of Global Acquisitions, Office of the Legal Advisor, Congressional Liaison office, Office of Management and Budget and Regional and thematic offices. Coordinate with policy colleagues to prepare paper and brief DRL Bureau leadership for meetings on issues related to a specific region or thematic area. Prepare budget and programmatic reports that track grant obligation data and program successes for active grants. Review and provide analysis of program proposals to decision-making panels who will select grant recipients within available funding levels. Prepare responses to auditor inquiries on programs. Assist with responding to Congressional requests for information regarding programs and DRL program objectives. Attend stakeholder workshops and conferences on topics related to their duties and responsibilities, provide program monitoring and technical assistance to grantees, while supporting the FTE. Coordinate and assist the DRL Leadership in the administration and coordination of international human rights and democracy foreign assistance programs. May be responsible for office-level actions related to the federal foreign assistance funding program lifecycle. This may include internal and external Communications and Outreach, including managing Hill engagements and paper May serve as PRU's OIG/GAO Coordinator, including coordinating draft responses May lead on tasker management, including coordinating with program teams on internal document retrieval, drafting, and clearing responses. Depending on experience, may organize regular and ad-hoc trainings for PRU staff such as on managing federal funding and State Department tradecraft. May coordinate closely with PRU's financial team to manage DRL's Master Award Tracker, coordinate funds planning processes within DRL, including utilizing State department systems such as
MyGrants and FACTSInfo Strategic Planning:
Provide strategic guidance on sensitive human rights issue including working with private sector and other government donors. In coordination with the Program Lead, this position will liaise with the Administration priority issues. Work with leadership to engage with and advance high level public private engagements. Obtain and maintain expertise in programming and familiarity with the community including expertise in the Do No Harm principals. Work with DRL policy counterparts and outside stakeholders to strengthen the DRL portfolio. Communications Develops communication strategies to disseminate new policy requirements to effectively streamline procedures in the Bureau. Maintains documentation and audit trails of past plans, policies, and decision-making activities to provide for organizational continuity.
Additional responsibilities may include:
Liaise with U.S. embassies and consulates regarding the award, management, and monitoring of grants. Drafting reports and other documents for the team and program staff. Drafting and clearing internal papers and memoranda regarding evaluations. Organize and participate in meetings, trainings, and/or conference events. Undertake additional training to ensure they obtain relevant skills needed to advance U.S. policy and programming priorities and meet requirements of this SOW. Attend trainings or conferences to further knowledge in relations to duties and responsibilities listed avobe and/or hone expertise in regional or thematic areas including but not limited to: Human Rights, Labor, Internet Freedom, International Religious Freedom, Monitoring and Evaluations. As needed and as resources permit, the individual may be asked to directly support the travel of senior DRL, Regional Bureaus and Offices under the purview of the newly established F Bureau and U.S. Department of State officials and/or at the direction of and in coordination with the Grants Officer Representative and/or Grants Officer, conduct program monitoring visits at the project implementation site to monitor grantee activities. Report on program activities monitored and analyze to support both the Grants Officer Representative and/or the Grants Officer in their evaluation of programs. Develops communication strategies to disseminate new policy requirements to effectively streamline procedures in the Bureau.
Minimum Qualifications:
Active Secret Security Clearance Bachelors' degree with 12-15 years of experience or a master's degree with 8-10 years of experience or a PhD with 5-7 years of work experience Knowledge of and experience in international programming in addition to relevant education and training, ideally with a strong understanding of domestic and foreign NGO administration Understand the legal requirements of different types of foreign assistance funds Strong knowledge of 2 CFR 200 Experience working in professional, fast-paced, and demanding environments The ability to manage competing priorities with minimal supervision Experience leading teams and ability to handle diverse work styles Qualified candidates that are HUBZone residents, preferred (check your status here: https://maps.certify.sba.gov/hubzone/map#center=39.828200
  • 98.
579500&zoom=5)

Similar remote jobs

Similar jobs in Washington, DC

Similar jobs in Washington, D.C. (District of Columbia)