[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 44, Volume 1]
[Revised as of October 1, 2002]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 44CFR204.3]

[Page 405-407]
 
              TITLE 44--EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT AND ASSISTANCE
 
             CHAPTER I--FEDERAL EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT AGENCY
 
PART 204--FIRE MANAGEMENT ASSISTANCE GRANT PROGRAM--Table of Contents
 
                           Subpart A--General
 
Sec. 204.3  Definitions used throughout this part.

    Applicant. A State or Indian tribal government submitting an 
application to us for a fire management assistance grant, or a State, 
local, or Indian tribal government submitting an application to the 
Grantee for a subgrant under an approved fire management assistance 
grant.
    Associate Director. The Associate Director or Assistant Director, as 
applicable, of the Readiness, Response and Recovery Directorate of FEMA, 
or his/her designated representative.
    Declared fire. An uncontrolled fire or fire complex, threatening 
such destruction as would constitute a major disaster, which the 
Associate Director has approved in response to a State's request for a 
fire management assistance declaration and in accordance with the 
criteria listed in Sec. 204.21.
    Demobilization. The process and procedures for deactivating, 
disassembling, and transporting back to their point of origin all 
resources that had been provided to respond to and support a declared 
fire.
    FEMA Form 90-91. See Project Worksheet.
    Fire complex. Two or more individual fires located in the same 
general area, which are assigned to a single Incident Commander.
    Governor's Authorized Representative (GAR). The person empowered by 
the Governor to execute, on behalf of the State, all necessary documents 
for fire management assistance, including the request for a fire 
management assistance declaration.
    Grant. An award of financial assistance, including cooperative 
agreements, by FEMA to an eligible Grantee. The grant award will be 
based on the projected amount of total eligible costs for which a State 
submits an application and that FEMA approves related to a declared 
fire.
    Grantee. The Grantee is the government to which a grant is awarded 
which is accountable for the use of the funds provided. The Grantee is 
the entire legal entity even if only a particular component of the 
entity is designated in the grant award document. Generally, the State, 
as designated in the FEMA-State Agreement for the

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Fire Management Assistance Grant Program, is the Grantee. However, after 
a declaration, an Indian tribal government may choose to be a Grantee, 
or it may act as a subgrantee under the State. An Indian tribal 
government acting as Grantee will assume the responsibilities of a 
``state'', as described in this Part, for the purpose of administering 
the grant.
    Hazard mitigation plan. A plan to develop actions the State, local, 
or tribal government will take to reduce the risk to people and property 
from all hazards. The intent of hazard mitigation planning under the 
Fire Management Assistance Grant Program is to identify wildfire hazards 
and cost-effective mitigation alternatives that produce long-term 
benefits. We address mitigation of fire hazards as part of the State's 
comprehensive Hazard Mitigation Plan, described in 44 CFR part 206, 
subpart M.
    Incident commander. The ranking official responsible for overseeing 
the management of fire operations, planning, logistics, and finances of 
the field response.
    Incident period. The time interval during which the declared fire 
occurs. The Regional Director, in consultation with the Governor's 
Authorized Representative and the Principal Advisor, will establish the 
incident period. Generally, costs must be incurred during the incident 
period to be considered eligible.
    Indian tribal government. An Indian tribal government is any 
Federally recognized governing body of an Indian or Alaska Native tribe, 
band, nation, pueblo, village, or community that the Secretary of 
Interior acknowledges to exist as an Indian tribe under the Federally 
Recognized Tribe List Act of 1994, 25 U.S.C. 479a. This does not include 
Alaska Native corporations, the ownership of which is vested in private 
individuals.
    Individual assistance. Supplementary Federal assistance provided 
under the Stafford Act to individuals and families adversely affected by 
a major disaster or an emergency. Such assistance may be provided 
directly by the Federal Government or through State or local governments 
or disaster relief organizations. For further information, see subparts 
D, E, and F of part 206.
    Local government. A local government is any county, municipality, 
city, town, township, public authority, school district, special 
district, intrastate district, council of governments (regardless of 
whether the council of governments is incorporated as a nonprofit 
corporation under State law), regional or interstate government entity, 
or agency or instrumentality of a local government; any Indian tribal 
government or authorized tribal organization, or Alaska Native village 
or organization; and any rural community, unincorporated town or 
village, or other public entity, for which an application for assistance 
is made by a State or political subdivision of a State.
    Mitigation, management, and control. Those activities undertaken, 
generally during the incident period of a declared fire, to minimize 
immediate adverse effects and to manage and control the fire. Eligible 
activities may include associated emergency work and pre-positioning 
directly related to the declared fire.
    Mobilization. The process and procedures used for activating, 
assembling, and transporting all resources that the Grantee requested to 
respond to support a declared fire.
    Performance period. The time interval designated in block 13 on the 
Application for Federal Assistance (Standard Form 424) for the Grantee 
and all subgrantees to submit eligible costs and have those costs 
processed, obligated, and closed out by FEMA.
    Pre-positioning. Moving existing fire prevention or suppression 
resources from an area of lower fire danger to one of higher fire danger 
in anticipation of an increase in fire activity likely to constitute the 
threat of a major disaster.
    Principal advisor. An individual appointed by the Forest Service, 
United States Department of Agriculture, or Bureau of Land Management, 
Department of the Interior, who is responsible for providing FEMA with a 
technical assessment of the fire or fire complex for which a State is 
requesting a fire management assistance declaration. The Principal 
Advisor also frequently

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participates with FEMA on other wildland fire initiatives.
    Project worksheet. FEMA Form 90-91, which identifies actual costs 
incurred by eligible applicants as a result of the eligible firefighting 
activities.
    Public assistance. Supplementary Federal assistance provided under 
the Stafford Act to State and local governments or certain private, 
nonprofit organizations for eligible emergency measures and repair, 
restoration, and replacement of damaged facilities. For further 
information, see Subparts G and H of Part 206.
    Regional Director. A director of a regional office of FEMA, or his/
her designated representative.
    Request for Federal Assistance. See Standard Form (SF) 424.
    Standard Form (SF) 424. The SF 424 is the Request for Federal 
Assistance. This is the form the State submits to apply for a grant 
under a fire management assistance declaration.
    Subgrant. An award of financial assistance under a grant by a 
Grantee to an eligible subgrantee.
    Subgrantee. An applicant that is awarded a subgrant and is 
accountable to the Grantee for the use of grant funding provided.
    Threat of a major disaster. The potential impact of the fire or fire 
complex is of a severity and magnitude that would result in a 
presidential major disaster declaration for the Public Assistance 
Program, the Individual Assistance Program, or both.
    Uncontrolled fire. Any fire not safely confined to predetermined 
control lines as established by firefighting resources.
    We, our, us mean FEMA.