[Federal Register: April 28, 2008 (Volume 73, Number 82)]
[Notices]
[Page 23051-23062]
From the Federal Register Online via GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov]
[DOCID:fr28ap08-118]
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Part III
Department of Housing and Urban Development
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Notice of Funding Availability (NOFA) for Fiscal Year 2008; Rural
Housing and Economic Development Program; Notice
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DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT
[Docket No. FR-5200-N-04]
Notice of Funding Availability (NOFA) for Fiscal Year 2008; Rural
Housing and Economic Development Program
AGENCY: Office of the Assistant Secretary for Community Planning and
Development, HUD.
ACTION: Notice of Funding Availability (NOFA) for HUD's Fiscal Year
(FY) 2008 Rural Housing and Economic Development Program (RHED).
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SUMMARY: Today's publication establishes the funding criteria for the
FY2008 Rural Housing and Economic Development Program. Because HUD is
required by statute to competitively award RHED assistance by September
1, 2008, HUD has decided to publish this NOFA separately and in advance
of its FY2008 Notice of Funding Availability for HUD's Discretionary
Programs (SuperNOFA). Publishing the RHED NOFA separately will permit
potential applicants additional time to prepare and submit their
applications. Today's publication is governed by the information and
instructions found in the Notice of HUD's Fiscal Year 2008 Notice of
Funding Availability (NOFA) Policy Requirements and General Section
(General Section) to the SuperNOFA that HUD published on March 19, 2008
and the FY 2008 Opportunity to Register Early and Other Important
Information for Electronic Application Submission Via Grants.gov
(FY2008 Early Registration Notice) that was published on March 10,
2008.
Application Deadline Date: The application deadline date is May 30,
2008. Applications submitted through http://www.grants.gov must be
received and validated by Grants.gov no later than 11:59:59 Eastern
time on the application deadline date. The validation process may take
up to 72 hours. Please be sure to read the General Section, published
March 19, 2008 (73 FR 14882), for electronic application submission and
receipt requirements.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: The agency contact listed in Section
VII of today's publication. Questions regarding the General Section or
the FY 2008 Early Registration Notice, should be directed to the Office
of Departmental Grants Management and Oversight at (202) 708-0667 (this
is not a toll-free number) or the NOFA Information Center at (800) HUD-
8929 (toll-free). Persons with hearing or speech impairments may access
these numbers via TTY by calling the Federal Information Relay Service
at (800) 877-8339. The NOFA Information Center is open between the
hours of 10 a.m. and 6:30 p.m. Eastern time, Monday through Friday,
except federal holidays.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Today's publication establishes the funding
criteria for the FY2008 RHED Program. HUD had originally planned to
include the RHED NOFA in its FY2008 Notice of Funding Availability for
HUD's Discretionary Programs (SuperNOFA), which will be published in
the Federal Register later this spring. However, the Federal Register
was unable to accommodate HUD's publication schedule. Since HUD is
required by statute to competitively award RHED assistance by September
1, 2008, HUD has decided to publish RHED NOFA separately and in advance
of its FY2008 SuperNOFA. Publishing the RHED NOFA separately will
permit potential applicants additional time to prepare and submit their
applications. Applicants should note that today's publication, and not
the version that will be published with HUD's FY2008 SuperNOFA,
establishes the legal requirements for the FY2008 RHED competition.
Applicants should take particular note of the ``Application Deadline
Date'' of May 30, 2008, established by today's publication.
Today's publication is governed by the information and instructions
found in the General Section (published on March 19, 2008) and the
FY2008 Early Registration Notice (published on March 10, 2008).
Applicants are encouraged to carefully review these two publications
when preparing their applications.
Overview Information
A. Federal Agency Name: Department of Housing and Urban
Development, Community Planning and Development, Office of Rural
Housing and Economic Development.
B. Funding Opportunity Title: Rural Housing and Economic
Development (RHED) program.
C. Announcement Type: Initial Announcement.
D. Funding Opportunity Number: FR-5200-N-04, OMB Approval Number
2506-0169.
E. Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance (CFDA) Numbers: 14.250,
Rural Housing and Economic Development.
F. Application Date: The application deadline date is May 30, 2008.
Applications submitted through http://www.grants.gov must be received
and validated by Grants.gov no later than 11:59:59 Eastern time on the
application deadline date. The validation process may take up to 72
hours. Please be sure to read the General Section, published March 19,
2008 (73 FR 14882), for electronic application submission and receipt
requirements.
G. Optional, Additional Overview Information:
Purpose of Program: The purpose of the Rural Housing and Economic
Development program is to provide support for innovative housing and
economic development activities in rural areas. The funds made
available under this program will be awarded competitively through a
selection process conducted by HUD in accordance with the HUD Reform
Act.
Full Text of Announcement
I. Funding Opportunity Description
A. Background
There has been a growing national recognition of the need to
provide support for local rural nonprofit organizations, community
development corporations, federally recognized Indian tribes, state
housing finance agencies (HFAs), and state economic development and
community development agencies to expand the supply of affordable
housing and to engage in economic development activities in rural
areas. A number of resources are available from the federal government
to address these problems, including programs of the U.S. Department of
Agriculture (USDA), the Economic Development Administration (EDA), the
Appalachian Regional Commission (ARC), the Department of Interior (for
Indian tribes), and HUD. The Rural Housing and Economic Development
program was developed to supplement these resources and to focus
specifically on promoting innovative approaches to housing and economic
development in rural areas. In administering these funds, HUD
encourages you to coordinate your activities with those supported by
any of the agencies listed above.
B. Definitions
1. Appalachia's Distressed Counties means those counties in
Appalachia that the Appalachian Regional Commission (ARC) has
determined to have unemployment and poverty rates that are 150 percent
of the respective U.S. rates and a per capita income that is less than
67 percent of the U.S. per capita income, and have counties with 200
percent of the U.S. poverty rate and one other indicator, such as the
percentage of overcrowded housing. Refer to http://www.arc.gov for a
list of ARC-distressed counties and more information.
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2. Colonia means any identifiable, rural community that:
a. Is located in the state of Arizona, California, New Mexico, or
Texas;
b. Is within 150 miles of the border between the United States and
Mexico; and
c. Is determined to be a colonia on the basis of objective need
criteria, including a lack of potable water supply, lack of adequate
sewage systems, and lack of decent, safe, sanitary, and accessible
housing.
3. Farm Worker means a farm employee of an owner, tenant, labor
contractor, or other operator raising or harvesting agricultural or
aquacultural commodities, or a worker who, in the employment of a farm
operator, engages in handling, planting, drying, packing, grading,
storing, delivering to storage or market, or carrying to market
agricultural or aquacultural commodities produced by the operator.
Seasonal farm workers are those farm employees who typically do not
have a constant year-round salary.
4. Firm Commitment means a letter of commitment from a partner by
which an applicant's partner agrees to perform an activity specified in
the application, demonstrates the financial capacity to deliver the
resources necessary to carry out the activity, and commits the
resources to the activity, either in cash or through in-kind
contributions. It is irrevocable, subject only to approval and receipt
of a fiscal year FY2008 Rural Housing and Economic Development grant.
Each letter of commitment must include the organization's name and
applicant's name, reference the Rural Housing and Economic Development
program, and describe the proposed total level of commitment and
responsibilities, expressed in dollar value for cash or in-kind
contributions, as they relate to the proposed program. The commitment
must be written on the letterhead of the participating organization,
must be signed by an official of the organization legally able to make
commitments on behalf of the organization, and must be dated no earlier
than the date of publication of this NOFA. In documenting a firm
commitment, the applicant's partner must:
a. Specify the authority by which the commitment is made, the
amount of the commitment, the proposed use of funds, and the
relationship of the commitment to the proposed investment. If the
committed activity is to be self-financed, the applicant's partner must
demonstrate its financial capability through a corporate or personal
financial statement or other appropriate means. If any portion of the
activity is to be financed through a lending institution, the
participant must provide evidence of the institution's commitment to
fund the loan; and
b. Affirm that the firm commitment is contingent only upon the
receipt of FY 2008 Rural Housing and Economic Development funds and
state a willingness on the part of the signatory to sign a legally
binding agreement (conditioned upon HUD's environmental review and
approval of a property, where applicable) upon award of the grant.
5. Federally Recognized Indian tribe means any tribal entity
eligible to apply for funding and services from the Bureau of Indian
Affairs by virtue of its status as an Indian tribe. The list of
federally recognized tribes can be found in the notice published by the
Department of the Interior on April 4, 2008 (73 FR 18553) and is also
available from HUD.
6. Innovative Housing Activities means projects, techniques,
methods, combinations of assistance, construction materials, energy
efficiency improvements, or financing institutions or sources new to
the eligible area or to its population. The innovative activities can
also build upon and enhance a model that already exists.
7. Local Rural Nonprofit Organization or Community Development
Corporation means either of the following:
a. Any private entity with tax-exempt status recognized by the
Internal Revenue Service (IRS) that serves the eligible rural area
identified in the application (including a local affiliate of a
national organization that provides technical assistance in rural
areas); or
b. Any public nonprofit entity such as a Council of Governments
that will serve specific local nonprofit organizations in the eligible
area.
8. Lower Mississippi Delta Region means the eight-state, 240-
county/parish region defined by Congress in the Lower Mississippi Delta
Development Act, Public Law 100-460. Refer to http://www.dra.gov for
more information.
9. Eligible Rural Area means one of the following:
a. A non-urban place having fewer than 2,500 inhabitants (within or
outside of metropolitan areas).
b. A county or parish with an urban population of 20,000
inhabitants or less.
c. Territory, including its persons and housing units, in the rural
portions of ``extended cities.'' The U.S. Census Bureau identifies the
rural portions of extended cities.
d. Open country that is not part of or associated with an urban
area. The USDA describes ``open country'' as a site separated by open
space from any adjacent, densely populated urban area. Open space
includes undeveloped land, agricultural land, or sparsely settled
areas, but does not include physical barriers (such as rivers and
canals), public parks, commercial and industrial developments, small
areas reserved for recreational purposes, or open space set aside for
future development.
e. Any place with a population of 20,000 or less and not located in
a Metropolitan Statistical Area.
10. State Community and/or Economic Development Agency means any
state agency whose primary purpose is promotion of economic development
statewide or in a local community.
11. State Housing Finance Agency means any state agency created to
assist local communities and housing providers with financing
assistance for development of housing in rural areas, particularly for
low- and moderate-income people.
II. Award Information
A. Amount Allocated
1. Available Funds. Approximately $17,000,000 in FY2008 funding
(plus any additional funds available through recapture) are being made
available through this NOFA.
2. Funding Award Amount. HUD will award up to approximately
$17,000,000 on a competitive basis for Support for Innovative Housing
and Economic Development Activities to federally recognized Indian
tribes, state housing finance agencies (HFAs), state community and/or
economic development agencies, local rural nonprofit organizations, and
community development corporations to support innovative housing and
economic development activities in rural areas. The maximum amount
awarded to a successful applicant will be $300,000.
B. Grant Amount
In the event, you, the applicant, are awarded a grant that has been
reduced (e.g., the application contained some activities that were
ineligible or budget information did not support the request), you will
be required to modify your project plans and application to conform to
the terms of HUD's approval before execution of the grant agreement.
HUD reserves the right to reduce or deobligate the award if
suitable modifications to the proposed project are not submitted by the
awardee within 90 days of the request. Any modifications must be within
the scope of the original application. HUD reserves the right to not
make awards under this NOFA.
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C. Grant Period
Recipients will have 36 months from the date of the executed grant
agreement to complete all project activities.
III. Eligibility Information
A. Eligible Applicants
Eligible applicants for the Rural Housing and Economic Development
program are local rural nonprofit organizations, community development
corporations, federally recognized Indian tribes, state housing finance
agencies, and state community and/or economic development agencies.
Also, you must meet all of the applicable eligibility requirements
described in section III.C of the General Section.
B. Cost Sharing or Matching
There is no match required under the Rural Housing and Economic
Development program. Applicants that submit evidence of leveraging
dollars under Rating Factor 4 will receive points according to the
scale under that factor.
C. Other
1. Eligible Activities
The following are examples of eligible activities under the Rural
Housing and Economic Development program.
Permissible activities may include, but are not limited to the
following:
a. The cost of using new or innovative construction, energy
efficiency, or other techniques that will result in the design or
construction of innovative housing and economic development projects;
b. Preparation of plans or of architectural or engineering
drawings;
c. Preparation of legal documents, government paperwork, and
applications necessary for construction of housing and economic
development activities to occur in the jurisdiction;
d. Acquisition of land and buildings;
e. Demolition of property to permit construction or rehabilitation
activities to occur;
f. Purchase of construction materials;
g. Homeownership counseling, including on the subjects of fair
housing counseling, credit counseling, budgeting, access to credit, and
other federal assistance available, including features for persons with
disabilities, such as full accessibility, visitability, and universal
design;
h. Conducting conferences or meetings with other federal or state
agencies, tribes, tribally designated housing entities (TDHE), or
national or regional housing organizations, to inform residents of
programs, rights, and responsibilities associated with homebuying
opportunities (all meetings and conferences should be provided in
alternative formats for persons with a variety of disabilities, as
appropriate, and in applicable languages common in the community for
limited English proficient (LEP) families);
i. Establishing Community Development Financial Institutions
(CDFIs), lines of credit, revolving loan funds, microenterprises, and
small business incubators; and
j. Provision of direct financial assistance to homeowners/
businesses/developers, etc. This can be in the form of default
reserves, pooling/securitization mechanisms, loans, grants, the funding
of existing individual development accounts, or similar activities.
2. Statutory and Regulatory Requirements
To be eligible for funding under HUD NOFAs issued during FY2008,
you, the applicant, must meet all statutory and regulatory requirements
applicable to this NOFA as described in the General Section. HUD may
also eliminate ineligible activities from funding consideration and
reduce funding amounts accordingly.
3. General HUD Threshold Requirements
You must meet all threshold requirements described in the General
Section.
a. Ineligible Applicants. HUD will not consider an application from
an ineligible applicant.
b. Economic Opportunities for Low- and Very Low-Income Persons
(Section 3).
(1) Recipients of assistance under this NOFA must comply with
section 3 of the Housing and Urban Development Act of 1968, 12 U.S.C.
1701u (Economic Opportunities for Low- and Very Low-Income Persons in
Connection with Assisted Projects) and the HUD regulations at 24 CFR
part 135, including the reporting requirements at subpart E. The
purpose of Section 3 is to ensure that employment and other economic
opportunities generated by HUD financial assistance shall, to the
greatest extent feasible, and consistent with existing Federal, state
and local laws and regulations, be directed to low- and very-low income
persons, particularly those who are recipients of government assistance
for housing, and to business concerns which provide economic
opportunities to low- and very-low income persons. Section 3 applies to
training, employment, contracting, and other economic opportunities
arising in connection with the expenditure of housing assistance
(including Section 8 assistance, and including other housing assistance
not administered by the Assistant Secretary of Housing) and community
development assistance that is used for the following projects: (1)
Housing rehabilitation (including reduction and abatement of lead-based
paint hazards, but excluding maintenance, repair and replacement); (2)
Housing construction; and (3) Other public Construction. The Section 3
requirements apply to recipients where the amount of the assistance
exceeds $200,000. Section 3 requirements apply to contractors and
subcontractors performing work on Section 3 covered projects for which
the amount of assistance exceeds $200,000 and the contract or
subcontract exceeds $100,000. If a recipient receives Section 3 covered
housing and community development assistance in excess of $200,000, but
no contract exceeds $100,000, the Section 3 preference requirements
only apply to the recipient. The Section 3 requirements apply to the
entire project or activity that is funded with section 3 covered
assistance, regardless of whether the Section 3 activity is fully or
partially funded with Section 3 covered assistance.
Applicants that propose Section 3 covered projects or activities
must demonstrate that they will train and employ Section 3 residents
and contract with Section 3 business concerns for economic
opportunities generated in conjunction with the assisted project or
activity. Recipients and covered contractors may demonstrate compliance
with the ``greatest extent feasible'' requirement of Section 3 by
providing training, employment, and contracting opportunities to
Section 3 residents and Section 3 business concerns. Numerical goals
established in 24 CFR 135.30(b)(2) may demonstrate compliance with the
requirement by committing to employ Section 3 residents as 10 percent
of the aggregate number of new hires for each year over the duration of
the Section 3 project. Numerical goals set forth in paragraph (c) apply
to contracts awarded in conjunction with all section 3 covered projects
and all section 3 covered activities. Each contractor and subcontractor
covered by the regulations, may demonstrate compliance with the
requirements by committing to award to Section 3 business concerns: (1)
At least 10 percent of the total dollar amount of all section 3 covered
contracts for building trades work arising in connection with housing
rehabilitation, housing construction and other public
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construction; and (2) At least 3 percent of the total dollar amount of
all other Section 3 covered contracts. A recipient that meets the
minimum numerical goals set forth in this Section will be considered to
have complied with the Section 3 preference requirements. In evaluation
compliance, a recipient that has not met the numerical goals set forth
in this section has the burden of demonstrating why it is not feasible
to meet the numerical goals. Such justification may include impediments
encountered despite actions taken. A recipient or contractor also can
indicate other economic opportunities, such as those listed in 24 CFR
part 135.40, which were provided in its efforts to comply with Section
3 requirements.
(2) Section 3 Reporting. Each recipient which receives directly
from HUD financial assistance that is subject to Section 3
requirements, shall submit to the Assistant Secretary an annual report.
If the program requires submission of an annual report, the section 3
report shall be submitted with the annual performance report. If the
program does not require an annual report, the Section 3 report is to
be submitted by January 10, of each year or within 10 days of project
completion, whichever is earlier. Grantees are required to report on
form HUD 60002. Section 3 shall also be reported using the RHED Logic
Model. All reports are made available to the public.
See; 24 CFR part 135 and the General Section.
4. Program-Specific Threshold Requirements
a. The application must receive a minimum rating score of 75 points
to be considered for funding.
b. HUD will only fund eligible applicants as defined in this NOFA
under section III.A.
c. Applicants must serve an eligible rural area as defined in
section I. of this NOFA.
d. Proposed activities must meet the objectives of the Rural
Housing and Economic Development program.
e. Applicants must demonstrate that their activities will continue
to serve populations that are in need and that beneficiaries will have
a choice of innovative housing and economic development opportunities
as a result of the activities.
IV. Application and Submission Information
A. Address To Request Application Package
This section describes how you may obtain application forms. Copies
of the published Rural Housing and Economic Development NOFA and
application forms may be downloaded from the Grants.gov Web site at
http://www.grants.gov/applicants/apply_for_grants.jsp. You may call
the Grants.gov support desk at 800-518-GRANTS, or e-mail the support
desk at Support@Grants.gov for assistance in downloading the
application.
B. Content and Form of Application Submission
1. Application Submission Requirements. Be sure to read and follow
the application submission requirements carefully.
a. Page Numbering. All pages of the application must be numbered
sequentially if you are submitting a paper copy application. For
electronic application submission, you should follow the directions in
the General Section.
b. Application Items. Your application must contain the items
listed below.
(1) An abstract with the dollar amount requested, the category
under which you qualify for ``Demographics of Distress--Special
Factors'' under Rating Factor 2 (Need and Extent of the Problem), which
of the five definitions of the term ``rural area'' set forth in section
I B.9 of this NOFA applies to the proposed service area, and
accompanying documentation as indicated on the SF-424 form.
(2) Table of Contents.
(3) A signed Application for Federal Assistance (SF-424)
(application form).
(4) SF-424 Supplement Survey on Equal Opportunity for Applicants
``Faith Based EEO Survey'' (SF-424 SUPP) on Grants.gov (optional
submission).
(5) Facsimile Transmittal (HUD-96011). (This must be used as the
cover page to transmit third-party documents as part of your electronic
application).
(6) Disclosure of Lobbying Activities (SF-LLL).
(7) Applicant/Recipient Disclosure/Update Report (HUD-2880) ``HUD
Applicant Recipient Disclosure Report'' on Grants.gov.
(8) You Are Our Client! Grant Applicant Survey (HUD 2994-A)
(Optional).
(9) Program Outcome Logic Model (HUD-96010).
(10) A budget for all funds (federal and non-federal including the
Detailed Budget Form (HUD-424-CB) and the Grant Application Detailed
Budget Worksheet (HUD 424-CBW).
(11) Certification of Consistency with RC/EZ/EC-II Strategic Plan
(HUD-2990), if applicable.
(12) Certification of Consistency with the Consolidated Plan (HUD-
2991), if applicable.
(13) Documentation of funds pledged in support of Rating Factor 4--
``Leveraging Resources.'' This documentation, which will not be counted
in the 15-page limitation, must be in the form of a ``firm commitment''
as defined in section I.B.4 of this NOFA.
(14) If you are a private nonprofit organization, a copy of your
organization's IRS ruling providing tax-exempt status under section 501
of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended.
(15) Narrative response to Factors for Award. The total narrative
response to all factors should not exceed 15 pages and should be
submitted on 8.5 x 11 inch single-sided paper, with 12-point font and
double lined spacing. Please note that although submitting pages in
excess of the page limit will not disqualify your application, HUD will
not consider or review the information on any excess pages, and if you
place key information on those pages, you may fail to meet a threshold
requirement. In addition, applicants should be aware that additional
pages increase the size of the application and the length of time it
will take to electronically submit the document and have it
electronically received by Grants.gov.
(16) Questionnaire for HUD's Initiative on Removal of Regulatory
Barriers (Form HUD-27300) ``HUD Communities Initiative Form'' on
Grants.gov. To get the points for this policy priority, you must
include the documentation or references to Web site links where the
information can be found.
All applicants are required to use the following format in their 15
page narrative responses to the rating factors included in the program
NOFA:
Factor 1--Relevant Organizational Experience;
Factor 2--Need and Extent of the Problem;
Factor 3--Soundness of Approach;
Factor 4--Leveraging Resources; and
Factor 5--Achieving Results and Program Evaluation.
See section V. of this NOFA for further details.
(17) Per the General Section successful applicants engaged in
housing or housing related activities are obliged to affirmatively
further fair housing including taking reasonable steps to overcome
barriers to fair housing choice in its service area such as:
(a) Identify Barriers--Applicants must submit a description of
barriers to fair
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housing in their jurisdiction or service area (based on the applicable
state or local Consolidated Plan and Analysis of Impediments or other
source of information on impediments to fair housing). See http://
www.hud.gov/offices/fheo/promotingfh.cfm for further information.
(b) Specify Activities to Affirmatively Further Fair Housing--
Applicants must describe how they will address barriers to fair
housing, including specifying applicable and eligible uses of RHED
funds--for example, housing counseling to make persons aware of
discriminatory practices, innovative housing design or construction to
increase access for persons with disabilities, language assistance
services to persons with limited English proficiency (on the basis of
national origin), affirmative fair housing marketing, or location of
new or rehabilitated housing in a manner that provides greater housing
choice or mobility for persons in classes protected by the Fair Housing
Act.
(c) Reporting--Applicants are obliged to maintain records of their
activities to affirmatively further fair housing and describe how they
plan to document such activities, as well as maintaining records on the
race, ethnicity, disability status, and family status of the
beneficiaries of RHED programs.
C. Submission Dates and Times
1. Electronic Application Submission. Applications for the Rural
Housing and Economic Development program must be received and validated
by Grants.gov no later than 11:59:59 p.m. Eastern Time on May 30, 2008,
the application deadline date. Applicants are advised to submit their
applications at least 48 to 72 hours in advance of the deadline date
and when the Grants.gov help desk is open so that any issues can be
addressed prior to the deadline date and time. Please note that
validation may take up to 72 hours. You will receive an acknowledgement
of receipt from Grants.gov when your application has been successfully
received, and later that it has been validated or rejected. Please see
the General Section for more detailed information. If you do not
receive the validation or rejection notice within 24 to 48 hours,
contact the Grants.gov help desk.
2. Applicants are advised to carefully read the application
submission and timely receipt requirements in the General Section since
they have changed from previous years.
3. Only one application will be accepted from any given
organization. If more than one application is submitted electronically,
the last application received and validated before the deadline date
will be the one reviewed by HUD. HUD will not accept application
addendums after the deadline unless HUD has specifically asked the
applicant for a correction to a technical deficiency in the
application. Responses to technical deficiencies must be received by
HUD within the time allocated to cure the deficiency and must be
submitted by facsimile using the form Facsimile Transmittal (HUD 96011)
submitted to the 800-894-4047 and (215) 825-8796 fax numbers.
Applicants must use the Facsimile Transmittal form submitted with the
last application that was received and validated by Grants.gov prior to
the deadline. This will ensure that your technical cure will be
electronically associated to your previously submitted application.
Failure to follow these instructions may result in your information
being misdirected. The request for a technical cure will also contain
instructions for when the cure must be received by the Department and
other pertinent information.
D. Intergovernmental Agency Review
Intergovernmental agency review is not required for this program.
E. Funding Restrictions
1. Administrative Costs. Administrative costs for assistance under
the Rural Housing and Economic Development program may not exceed 15
percent of the total HUD Rural Housing and Economic Development grant
award.
2. Ineligible Activities. RHED funds cannot be used for the
following activities:
a. Income payments to subsidize individuals or families;
b. Political activities;
c. General governmental expenses other than expenses related to the
administrative cost of the grant; or
d. Projects or activities intended for personal gain or private
use.
HUD reserves the right to reduce or deobligate the award if
suitable modifications to the proposed project are not submitted by the
awardee within 90 days of a request from HUD. Any modification must be
within the scope of the original application. HUD reserves the right
not to make awards under this NOFA.
F. Other Submission Requirements
Carefully review the procedures presented in Section IV of the
FY2008 General Section because HUD will only accept electronic
applications submitted through http://www.grants.gov/applicants/apply_
for_grants.jsp. Applicants may request a waiver of the electronic
submission requirement. Paper applications will not be accepted unless
the applicant has received a waiver to the electronic submission
requirement. Applicants should submit their waiver requests in writing
in the form of a letter. Waiver requests must be submitted no later
than 15 days prior to the application deadline date and should be
submitted to the Office of Rural Housing and Economic Development, 451
7th Street, SW., Room 7137, Washington, DC 20410. Instructions
regarding the number of copies to submit and to what address will be
contained in the approval to the waiver request. Paper submissions must
be received at the appropriate HUD office(s) no later than the deadline
date.
V. Application Review Information
A. Criteria
Carefully review all the Application Review procedures in Section V
of the General Section. In addition, the following Rating Factors will
be used to rate your application.
1. Rating Factor 1--Capacity of the Applicant and Relevant
Organizational Experience (25 Points)
This rating factor addresses the extent to which you have the
organizational resources necessary to successfully implement your
proposed workplan, as further described in Rating Factor 3, within the
36-month award period.
a. Team members, composition, and experience (10 points). HUD will
evaluate the experience (including for recentness and relevancy) of
your project director, core staff, and any outside consultant,
contractor, subrecipient, or project partner as it relates to
innovative housing and economic development and to the implementation
of the activities in your work plan. HUD also will assess the services
that consultants or other parties will provide to fill gaps in your
staffing structure to enable you to carry out the proposed work plan;
the experience of your project director in managing projects of similar
size, scope, and dollar amount; the lines of authority and procedures
that you have in place for ensuring that work plan goals and objectives
will be met, that consultants and other project partners will perform
as planned, and that beneficiaries will be adequately served. In
judging your response to this factor, HUD will only consider work
experience gained within the last 7 years. When responding, please be
sure to provide the dates, job titles, and relevancy of the past
experience to the work to be undertaken
[[Page 23057]]
by the employee or contractor under your proposed Rural Housing and
Economic Development award. The more recent, relevant, and successful
the experience of your team members is in relationship to the work plan
activities, the greater the number of points you will receive. Please
do not include the Social Security Numbers (SSN) of any staff members.
b. Organizational structure and management capacity (15 points).
HUD will evaluate the extent to which you can demonstrate your
organization's ability to manage a workforce composed of full-time or
part-time staff, as well as any consultant staff, and your ability to
work with community-based groups or organizations in resolving issues
related to affordable housing and economic development. In evaluating
this subfactor, HUD will take into account your experience in working
with community-based organizations to design and implement programs
that address the identified housing and economic development issues.
The more recent, relevant, and successful the experience of your
organization and any participating entity, the greater the number of
points you will receive.
c. Experience with performance based funding requirements. HUD will
evaluate your performance in any previous grant program undertaken with
HUD funds or other federal, state, local, or nonprofit or for-profit
organization funds. (Note: Previous HUD performance-based experience
will be verified through HUD's field offices as needed. Other relevant
past performance information should be included as part of the
application.) In assessing points for this sub-factor, HUD reserves the
right to take into account your past performance in meeting performance
and reporting goals for any previous HUD award, in particular whether
the program achieved its outcomes.
HUD reserves the right to give zero points for Rating Factor 1, if
the applicant has been determined to have a pattern or practice of any
or all of the following activities related to the management and
operation of previous grant awards: (1) Mismanagement of funds,
including the inability to account for funds appropriately; (2)
untimely use of funds received either from HUD or other federal, state,
or local programs; and (3) significant and consistent failure to
measure performance outcomes. Among the specific outcomes to be
measured are the increases in program accomplishments as a result of
capacity building assistance and the increase in organizational
resources as a result of assistance.
Applicants who have been awarded Rural Housing and Economic
Development program funds prior to FY 2008 must indicate in their
response to Rating Factor 1 the fiscal year and funding amount. HUD
field offices may be consulted to verify information submitted by the
applicant as a part of the review of applications.
2. Rating Factor 2--Need and Extent of the Problem (20 Points)
The Rural Housing and Economic Development program is designed to
address the problems of rural poverty, inadequate housing, and lack of
economic opportunity. This factor addresses the extent to which there
is a need for funding the proposed activities based on levels of
distress, and the urgency of meeting the need/distress in the
applicant's target area. In responding to this factor, applications
will be evaluated on the extent to which the level of need for the
proposed activity and the urgency in meeting the need are documented
and compared to target area and national data.
a. In applying this factor, HUD will compare the current levels of
need in the area (i.e., Census Tract(s) or Block Group(s)) immediately
surrounding the project site or the target area to be served by the
proposed project to national levels of need. This means that an
application that provides data that show levels of need in the project
area at a percent greater than the national average will be rated
higher under this factor. Applicants should provide data that address
indicators of need as follows:
(1) Poverty Rate (5 points)--Data should be provided in both
absolute and percentage form (i.e., whole numbers and percents) for the
target area(s). An application that compares the local poverty rate in
the following manner to the national average at the time of submission
will receive points under this section as follows:
(a) Less than the national average = 0 points;
(b) Equal to but less than twice the national average = 1 point;
(c) Twice but less than three times the national average = 3
points;
(d) Three or more times the national average = 5 points.
(2) Unemployment (5 points)--for the target area:
(a) Less than the national average = 0 points;
(b) Equal to but less than twice the national average = 1 point;
(c) Twice but less than three times the national average = 2
points;
(d) Three but less than four times the national average = 3 points;
(e) Four but less than five times the national average= 4 points;
(f) Five or more times the national average = 5 points.
(3) Other indicators of social or economic decline that best
capture the applicant's local situation (5 points).
(a) Data that could be provided under this section are information
on the community's stagnant or falling tax base, including recent
commercial or industrial closings; housing conditions, such as the
number and percentage of substandard or overcrowded units; rent burden
(defined as average housing cost divided by average income) for the
target area; and local crime statistics, falling property values, etc.
To the extent that the applicant's statewide or local Consolidated
Plan, its Analysis of Impediments to Fair Housing Choice (AI), its
Indian housing plan, or its anti-poverty strategy identify the level of
distress in the community and the neighborhood in which the project is
to be carried out, references to such documents should be included in
preparing the response to this factor.
(b) In rating applications under this factor, HUD reserves the
right to consider sources of available objective data other than or in
addition to those provided by applicants, and to compare such data to
those provided by applicants for the project site. These may include
U.S. Census data.
(c) HUD requires use of sound, verifiable, and reliable data (e.g.,
U.S. Census data, state statistical reports, university studies/
reports, or Home Mortgage Disclosure Act or Community Reinvestment Act
databases) to support distress levels cited in each application. See
http://www.ffiec.gov/ or http://www.ffiec.gov/webcensus/ffieccensus.htm
for census data. A source for all information along with the
publication or origination date must also be provided.
(d) Updated Census data are available for the following indicators:
(i) Unemployment rate--estimated monthly for counties/parishes,
with a 2-month lag;
(ii) Population--estimated for incorporated places and counties/
parishes, through 2000;
(iii) Poverty rate--through 2000.
(4) Demographics of Distress--Special Factors (5 points). Because
HUD is concerned with meeting the needs of certain underserved areas,
you will be awarded a total of five points if you are located in or
propose to serve one or more of the following populations, or if your
application demonstrates that 100 percent of the beneficiaries
supported by Rural Housing and Economic Development funds are in one or
more
[[Page 23058]]
of the following populations. You must also specifically identify how
each population will be served and that the proposed service area meet
the definition of ``eligible rural area'' in section I of this NOFA:
(a) Areas with very small populations in non-urban areas (2,500
population or less);
(b) Seasonal farm workers;
(c) Federally recognized Indian tribes;
(d) Colonias;
(e) Appalachia's Distressed Counties; or
(f) The Lower Mississippi Delta Region (eight states and 240
counties/parishes).
For these underserved areas, you should ensure that the populations
that you serve and the documentation that you provide are consistent
with the information described in the above paragraph under this rating
factor.
3. Rating Factor 3--Soundness of Approach (21 Points)
This factor addresses the overall quality of your proposed work
plan, taking into account the project and the activities proposed to be
undertaken; the cost-effectiveness of your proposed program; and the
linkages between identified needs, the purposes of this program, and
your proposed activities and tasks. In addition, this factor addresses
your ability to ensure that a clear linkage exists between innovative
rural housing and economic development. In assessing cost-
effectiveness, HUD will take into account your staffing levels,
beneficiaries to be served, and your timetable for the achievement of
program outcomes, the delivery of products and reports, and any
anticipated outcome or product. You will receive a greater number of
points if your work plan is consistent with the purpose of the Rural
Housing and Economic Development program, your program goals, and the
resources provided.
a. Management Plan (13 points). A clearly defined management plan
should be submitted that: identifies each of the projects and
activities you will carry out to further the objectives of this
program; describes the linkage between rural housing and economic
development activities; and addresses the needs identified in Factor 2,
including needs that previously were identified in a statewide or local
Analysis of Impediments to Fair Housing Choice (AI) or Consolidated
Plan. The populations that were described in Rating Factor 2 for the
purpose of documenting need should be the same populations that will
receive the primary benefit of the activities, both immediately and
over the long term. The benefits should be affirmatively marketed to
those populations least likely to apply for and receive these benefits
without such marketing. Your timetable should address the measurable
short-term and long-term goals and objectives to be achieved through
the proposed activities based on annual benchmarks; the method you will
use for evaluating and monitoring program progress with respect to
those activities; and the method you will use to ensure that the
activities will be completed on time and within your proposed budget
estimates. Your management plan should also include the budget for your
program, broken out by line item. Documented projected cost estimates
from outside sources are also required. Applicants should submit their
work plan on a spreadsheet showing each project to be undertaken and
the tasks (to the extent necessary or appropriate) in your work plan to
implement the project with your associated budget estimate for each
activity/task. Your work plan should provide the rationale for your
proposed activities and assumptions used in determining your project
timeline and budget estimates. Failure to provide your rationale may
result in your application receiving fewer points for lack of clarity
in the proposed management plan.
This subfactor should include information that indicates the extent
to which you have coordinated your activities with other known
organizations (e.g., through letters of participation or coordination)
that are not directly participating in your proposed work activities,
but with which you share common goals and objectives and that are
working toward meeting these objectives in a holistic and comprehensive
manner. The goal of this coordination is to ensure that programs do not
operate in isolation. Additionally, your application should demonstrate
the extent to which your program has the potential to be financially
self-sustaining by decreasing dependence on Rural Housing and Economic
Development funding and relying more on state, local, and private
funding. The goal of sustainability is to ensure that the activities
proposed in your application can be continued after your grant award is
complete.
b. Policy Priorities (8 Points). Policy priorities are outlined in
detail in the General Section. You should document the extent to which
HUD's policy priorities are advanced by the proposed activities.
Applicants that include activities that can result in the achievement
of the following departmental policy priorities will receive higher
rating points in evaluating their application for funding. Seven
departmental policy priorities are listed below. When you include
policy priorities, describe in brief detail how those activities will
be carried out and if selecting item (6), Removal of Barriers to
Affordable Housing, be sure to include the required Points of Contact
information and documentation or references to the documentation to
receive points.
The point values for policy priorities are as follows:
(1) Providing increased homeownership and rental opportunities for
low- and moderate-income persons, persons with disabilities, the
elderly, minorities, and families with limited English proficiency = 1
point;
(2) Improving our nation's communities = 1 point;
(3) Encouraging accessible design features = 1 point;
(4) Providing full and equal access to grassroots faith-based and
other community-based organizations in HUD program implementation = 1
point;
(5) Ending chronic homelessness = 1 point;
(6) Removal of regulatory barriers to affordable housing = 2
points; and
(7) Reducing energy costs = 1 point.
4. Rating Factor 4--Leveraging Resources (10 points)
This factor addresses the extent to which applicants have obtained
firm commitments of financial or in-kind resources from other federal,
state, local, and private sources. For every Rural Housing and Economic
Development program dollar anticipated, you should provide the specific
amount of dollars leveraged. In assigning points for this criterion,
HUD will consider the level of outside resources obtained in the form
of cash or in-kind goods or services that support activities proposed
in your application. HUD will award a greater number of points based on
a comparison of the extent of leveraged funds with the requested Rural
Housing and Economic Development award. The level of outside resources
for which commitments are obtained will be evaluated based on their
importance to the total program. Your application must provide evidence
of leveraging in the form of letters of firm commitment from any
entity, including your own organization, that will be providing the
leveraging funds to the project. Each commitment described in the
narrative of this factor must be in accordance with the definition of
``firm
[[Page 23059]]
commitment,'' as defined in section I.B. of this NOFA. The commitment
letter must be on letterhead of the participating organization, must be
signed by an official of the organization legally able to make
commitments on behalf of the organization, and must not be dated
earlier than the date this NOFA is published.
Points for this factor will be awarded based on the satisfactory
provision of evidence of leveraging and financial sustainability, as
described above, and the ratio of leveraged funds to requested HUD
Rural Housing and Economic Development funds as follows:
a. 50 percent or more of requested HUD Rural Housing and Economic
Development funds = 10 points;
b. 49-40 percent of requested HUD Rural Housing and Economic
Development funds = 8 points;
c. 39-30 percent of requested HUD Rural Housing and Economic
Development funds = 6 points;
d. 29-20 percent of requested HUD Rural Housing and Economic
Development funds = 4 points;
e. 19-9 percent of requested HUD Rural Housing and Economic
Development funds = 2 points;
f. Less than 9 percent of HUD requested Rural Housing and Economic
Development funds = 0 points.
See the General Section for instructions for submitting third-party
letters and other documents with your electronic application.
5. Rating Factor 5--Achieving Results and Program Evaluation (24
points)
This factor emphasizes HUD's commitment to ensure that applicants
keep promises made in their application. This factor assesses their
performance to ensure that rigorous and useful performance measures are
used and goals are met. Achieving results means you, the applicant,
have clearly identified the benefits or outcomes of your program.
Outcomes are ultimate project end goals. Benchmarks or outputs are
interim activities or products that lead to the ultimate achievement of
your goals. Program evaluation requires that you, the applicant,
identify program outcomes, interim products or benchmarks, and
performance indicators that will allow you to measure your performance.
Performance indicators should be objectively quantifiable and measure
actual achievements against anticipated achievements. Your evaluation
plan should identify what you are going to measure, how you are going
to measure it, and the steps you have in place to make adjustments to
your work plan if performance targets are not met within established
time frames.
Applicants must also complete the ``Logic Model'' HUD Form (HUD-
96010) included in the application instructions at http://
www.grants.gov/applicants/apply_for_grants.jsp and submit the
completed form with their application. HUD has provided an electronic
Logic Model that will enable applicants to select from lists the
appropriate needs statement(s), activities/outputs, and outcomes that
the applicant is proposing in the application submission. The listing
of the activities is referred to as the Master Logic Model List and
each list is unique to the program funding opportunity. The application
instructions found on http://www.grants.gov/applicants/apply_for_
grants.jsp include the eLogic Model\TM\ that you can complete and
attach to your electronic application submission. Applicants who do not
have Microsoft Excel software should contact the SuperNOFA Information
Center at 800-HUD-8929. Persons with speech or hearing impairments may
access this number via TTY by calling the toll-free Federal Information
Relay Service at 800-877-8339. Applicants may select items from each
column of the list that reflect their activity outputs and outcomes and
copy and paste them into the appropriate column in the Logic Model
form. In completing the Logic Model, applicants are expected to select
from the lists of appropriate outputs and outcomes for their proposed
work plan. The eLogic Model\TM\ and Master Logic Model listing also
identify the unit of measure that HUD is interested in collecting for
the outputs and outcomes selected. In making the selections for each
output and outcome, applicants are to complete the appropriate proposed
number of units of measure to be accomplished. The space next to the
output and outcome should be used to capture the anticipated units of
measure. Multiple outputs and outcomes may be selected per project.
Under this rating factor, applicants will receive a maximum of 24
points. The rating will be in accordance with the matrix found in
Attachment 1 of the General Section and how the applicant proposes to
effectively address program goals and performance measures. HUD will
evaluate and analyze how well an applicant implemented the required
Rural Housing and Economic Development output and outcome goals and
identified other stated benefits or outcomes of the applicant's
program. In order to receive the highest number of points, applicants
should present a clear plan to address the RHED output and outcome
measures.
a. Output Measures are quantifiable. RHED outputs include: number
of housing units constructed; number of housing units rehabilitated;
number of jobs created; number of participants trained; number of new
businesses created; and number of existing businesses assisted.
b. Outcomes Measures are benefits accruing to the program
participants and/or communities during or after participation in the
RHED program. RHED outcomes include: the number of housing units
rehabilitated that will be made available to low-to-moderate-income
participants; the percentage change in earnings as a result of
employment for those participants; the percent of participants trained
who find a job; annual estimated savings for low-income families as a
result of energy efficiency improvements; and the increase in
organizational resources as a result of assistance (e.g., dollars
leveraged).
You must clearly identify the outcomes to be achieved and measured.
Proposed program benefits should include program activities,
benchmarks, and interim activities or performance indicators with
timelines. Applications should include an evaluation plan that will
effectively measure actual achievements against anticipated
achievements.
c. Logic Model. HUD requires RHED applicants to develop an
effective, quantifiable, outcome-oriented evaluation plan for measuring
performance and determining whether goals have been met using the
Master Logic Model for RHED. The model can be found in the download
instructions portion of the application at http://www.grants.gov/
applicants/apply_for_grants.jsp. In preparing your Logic Model, first
open the Form HUD-96010 and go to the instruction tab and follow the
directions in the tab. Your application must include the form to
receive any points under this factor.
This rating factor reflects HUD's goal to embrace high standards of
ethics, management, and accountability. HUD will hold a training
broadcast via satellite for potential applicants to learn more about
Rating Factor 5. For more information about the date and time of the
broadcast, consult the HUD Web site at http://www.hud.gov/grants/
index.cfm.
Although the following list is not all-inclusive, program outcomes
for the Rural Housing and Economic Development program must include,
where applicable:
(1) Total number of housing units constructed;
[[Page 23060]]
(2) Total number of housing units rehabilitated;
(3) Number of Housing units rehabilitated that will be made
available to low- to moderate-income participants;
(4) Number of Housing units constructed that will be made available
to low- to moderate-income participants;
(5) Number of jobs created;
(6) Percentage change in earnings as a result of employment for
those participants;
(7) Number of participants trained;
(8) Percent of participants trained who find a job;
(9) Number of new businesses created;
(10) Number of existing businesses assisted;
(11) Annual estimated savings for low-income families as a result
of energy efficiency improvements.
(12) Increase in program accomplishments as a result of capacity
building assistance (e.g. the number of employees hired or retained, or
the efficiency or effectiveness of services provided); and
(13) Increase in organizational resources as a result of assistance
(e.g., dollars leveraged).
If you receive an award of funds, you will be required to use the
Logic Model to report progress against the proposed outcomes in your
approved application and award agreement.
The applicant's proposed budget must reflect a breakdown of
estimated dollar amount of the Rural Housing and Economic Development
grant to be expended on each of the activities/outputs and the
anticipated results included on the Form HUD-96010 and under the Rating
Factor 5 narrative section of your application.
6. RC/EZ/EC-II Bonus Points (2 Points)
HUD will award two bonus points to all applications that include
documentation stating that the proposed eligible activities/projects
will be located in and serve federally designated renewal communities
(RCs), empowerment zones (EZs), or enterprise communities (ECs)
designated by the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) in round II RC/
EZ/EC. A listing of federally designated RC/EZ/EC-II is available on
the Internet at http://www.hud.gov/crlocator.
This notice contains a certification (Form HUD-2990) that must be
completed for the applicant to be considered for Rural EZ/Round II EC
bonus points.
B. Review and Selection Process
1. Application Selection Process
a. Rating and Ranking.
(1) General. To review and rate applications, HUD may establish
panels that may include outside experts or consultants to obtain
certain expertise and outside points of view, including views from
other federal agencies.
(2) Rating. All applicants for funding will be evaluated against
applicable criteria. In evaluating applications for funding, HUD will
take into account an applicant's past performance in managing funds,
including the ability to account for funds appropriately, the
applicant's timely use of funds received either from HUD or other
federal, state, or local programs; its success in meeting performance
targets for completion of activities; and the number of persons to be
served or targeted for assistance. HUD may use information relating to
these items based on information at hand or available from public
sources such as newspapers, HUD Inspector General or Government
Accountability Office reports or findings, or hotline complaints that
have been found to have merit, or other such sources of information. In
evaluating past performance, HUD will deduct points from rating scores
as specified under Rating Factor 1.
(3) Ranking. Applicants will be selected for funding in accordance
with their rank order. An application must receive a minimum score of
75 points to be eligible for funding. If two or more applications are
rated fundable and have the same score, but there are insufficient
funds to fund all of them, the application(s) with the highest score
for Rating Factor 2 will be selected. If applications still have the
same score, the highest score in the following factors will be selected
sequentially until one highest score can be determined: Rating Factor
3, Rating Factor 1, Rating Factor 5, and Rating Factor 4.
b. Initial screening. During the period immediately following the
application deadline, HUD will screen each application to determine
eligibility. Applications will be rejected if they:
(1) Are submitted by ineligible applicants;
(2) Do not serve an eligible rural area as defined in section III
of this NOFA;
(3) Do not meet the objectives of the Rural Housing and Economic
Development program; or
(4) Propose a project for which the majority of the activities are
ineligible.
c. Rating Factors for Award Used To Evaluate and Rate Applications.
The factors for rating and ranking applicants and the maximum points
for each factor are provided above. The maximum number of points for
this program is 102. This includes 100 points for all five rating
factors and two RC/EZ/EC-II bonus points, as described above.
d. Environmental Review. Each application constitutes an assurance
that the applicant agrees to assist HUD in complying with the
provisions set forth in 24 CFR part 50. Selection for award does not
constitute approval of any proposed site. Following selection for
award, HUD will perform an environmental review of activities proposed
for assistance under this part, in accordance with 24 CFR part 50. The
results of the environmental review may require that proposed
activities be modified or that proposed sites be rejected. Applicants
are particularly cautioned not to undertake or commit HUD funds for
acquisition or development of proposed properties (including
establishing lines of credit that permit financing of such activities
or making commitments for loans that would finance such activities from
a revolving loan fund capitalized by funds under this NOFA) prior to
HUD approval of specific properties or areas. Each application
constitutes an assurance that you, the applicant, will assist HUD in
complying with part 50; will supply HUD with all available relevant
information to perform an environmental review for each proposed
property; will carry out mitigating measures required by HUD or select
alternate property; and will not acquire, rehabilitate, convert,
demolish, lease, repair, or construct property, or commit or expend HUD
or local funds for these program activities with respect to any
eligible property until HUD approval of the property is received. In
supplying HUD with environmental information, grantees must use the
guidance provided in Notice CPD 05-07, entitled ``Field Environmental
Review Processing for Rural Housing and Economic Development (RHED)
Grants,'' issued August 30, 2005, which can be found at http://
www.hud.gov/offices/cpd/energyenviron/environment/lawsandregs/
notices.cfm. HUD's funding commitment is contingent on HUD's site
approval following an environmental review.
e. Adjustments to Funding.
(1) HUD will not fund any portion of your application that is
ineligible for funding and does not meet the requirements of this NOFA,
or is duplicative of other funded programs or activities from prior
year awards or other selected applicants. Only the eligible non-
duplicative portions of your application will be funded.
[[Page 23061]]
(2) HUD reserves the right to utilize this year's funding to fund
previous years' errors prior to rating and ranking this year's
applications.
(3) If a balance remains, HUD reserves the right to utilize those
funds toward the following year's awards.
(4) Please see the section VI.A.2 and 3 of the General Section for
more information about funding.
(5) Performance and Compliance Actions of Funding Recipients. HUD
will measure and address the performance and compliance actions of
funding recipients in accordance with the applicable standards and
sanctions of the Rural Housing and Economic Development program.
f. Corrections to Deficient Applications. After the application
deadline date, HUD may not, consistent with its regulations in 24 CFR
part 4, subpart B, consider any unsolicited information that you, the
applicant, may want to provide. HUD may contact you to clarify an item
in your application or to correct technical deficiencies. See section
V.B.4. of the General Section for more detailed information on this
topic.
VI. Award Administration Information
A. Award Notice
1. HUD will notify you whether or not you have been selected for an
award. If you are selected, HUD's notice to you concerning the amount
of the grant award (based on the approved application) will constitute
HUD's conditional approval, subject to negotiation and execution of a
grant agreement by HUD. Successful Rural Housing and Economic
Development program applicants will be notified of grant award and will
receive post-award instructions by mail.
2. Debriefing. See the General Section for information on how to
obtain a debriefing on your application review and evaluation.
B. Administrative and National Policy Requirements
In addition to the requirements listed below, please review all
requirements in section III of the General Section.
1. Lead-Based Paint Hazard Control. All property assisted under the
Rural Housing and Economic Development program is covered by the Lead-
Based Paint Poisoning Prevention Act (42 U.S.C. 4821-4846), the
Residential Lead-Based Paint Hazard Reduction Act (42 U.S.C. 4851 et
seq.), and HUD's implementing regulations at 24 CFR part 35.
2. Procurement of Recovered Materials. See the General Section for
further information.
3. Executive Order 13202, ``Preservation of Open Competition and
Government Neutrality Towards Government Contractors' Labor Relations
on Federal and Federally Funded Construction Projects.'' (See the
General Section for further information.)
4. Audit Requirements. Any grantee that expends $500,000 or more in
federal financial assistance in a single year (this can be program year
or fiscal year) must meet the audit requirements established in 24 CFR
parts 84 and 85 in accordance with OMB A-133.
5. Accounting System Requirements. The Rural Housing and Economic
Development program requires that successful applicants have in place
an accounting system that meets the policies, guidance, and
requirements described in the following applicable OMB Circulars and
Code of Federal Regulations:
a. OMB Circular A-87 (Cost Principles for State, Local, and Indian
Tribal Governments);
b. OMB Circular A-122 (Cost Principles for Non-Profit
Organizations);
c. OMB Circular A-133 (Audits of States, Local Governments, and
Non-Profit Organizations);
d. 24 CFR part 84 (Grants and Agreements with Institutions of
Higher Education, Hospitals, and other Non-Profit Organizations); and
e. 24 CFR part 85 (Administrative Requirements for Grants and
Cooperative Agreements to State, Local, and Federally Recognized Indian
Tribal Governments).
C. Reporting
1. Reporting Requirements. Reporting documents apply to the award,
acceptance and use of assistance under the Rural Housing and Economic
Development program and to the remedies for noncompliance, except when
inconsistent with HUD's Appropriation Act, or other federal statutes or
the provisions of this NOFA.
For each semi-annual reporting period, as part of your required
report to HUD, grantees must include a completed Logic Model (Form HUD
96010), which identifies output and outcome achievements. For FY2008,
HUD is considering a new concept for the Logic Model. The new concept
is a Return on Investment statement. HUD will be publishing a separate
notice on the ROI concept. If you are reporting race and ethnic data,
you must use Form HUD-27061, Race and Ethnic Data Reporting Form.
2. Racial and Ethnic Data. HUD requires that funded recipients
collect racial and ethnic beneficiary data. It has adopted the Office
of Management and Budget's Standards for the Collection of Racial and
Ethnic Data. In view of these requirements, you should use Form HUD-
27061, Racial and Ethnic Data Reporting Form (instructions for its
use), found on http://www.HUDclips.org, a comparable program form, or a
comparable electronic data system for this purpose.
VII. Agency Contact(s)
Further Information and Technical Assistance. For information
concerning the HUD Rural Housing and Economic Development program,
contact Ms. Linda Streets, Community Planning and Development
Specialist, Ms. Monica Wallace, Community Planning and Development
Specialist, Mr. James Hedrick, Presidential Management Fellow, or Ms.
Nikki Bowser, Community Planning and Development Specialist, Office of
Rural Housing and Economic Development, Office of Community Planning
and Development, Department of Housing and Urban Development, 451
Seventh Street, SW., Room 7137, Washington, DC 20410-7000; telephone
202-708-2290 (this is not a toll-free number) or 1-877-787-2526 (this
is a toll-free number). Persons with speech or hearing impairments may
access this number via TTY by calling the toll-free Federal Information
Relay Service at 800-877-8339.
Prior to the application deadline, staff will be available at the
above number to provide general guidance and clarification of the NOFA,
but not guidance in actually preparing your application. Following
selection, but prior to award, HUD staff will be available to assist in
clarifying or confirming information that is a prerequisite to the
offer of an award by HUD.
VIII. Other Information
A. Satellite Broadcast
HUD will hold an information webcast via satellite for potential
applicants to learn more about the program and preparation of an
application. For more information about the date and time of this
webcast, consult the HUD Web site at http://www.hud.gov.
B. The Paperwork Reduction Act
The information collection requirements contained in this document
have been approved by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) under
the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501-3520) and assigned
OMB control number 2506-0169. In accordance with the Paperwork
Reduction Act, HUD may not conduct or
[[Page 23062]]
sponsor and a person is not required to respond to a collection of
information, unless it displays a currently valid OMB control number.
Public reporting burden for the collection of information is estimated
to average 100 hours per annum per respondent for the application and
grant administration. This includes the time for collecting, reviewing,
and reporting the data for the application, semi-annual reports, and
final report. The information will be used for grantee selection and
monitoring the administration of funds.
Dated: April 23, 2008.
Nelson R. Breg[oacute]n,
General Deputy Assistant Secretary for Community Planning and
Development.
[FR Doc. E8-9273 Filed 4-25-08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4210-67-P