[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 24, Volume 4]
[Revised as of April 1, 2003]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 24CFR1003.202]

[Page 759-761]
 
                 TITLE 24--HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT
 
CHAPTER IX--OFFICE OF ASSISTANT SECRETARY FOR PUBLIC AND INDIAN HOUSING, 
               DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT
 
PART 1003--COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT BLOCK GRANTS FOR INDIAN TRIBES AND ALASKA NATIVE VILLAGES--Table of Contents
 
                     Subpart C--Eligible Activities
 
Sec. 1003.202  Eligible rehabilitation and preservation activities.

    (a) Types of buildings and improvements eligible for rehabilitation 
or reconstruction assistance. ICDBG funds

[[Page 760]]

may be used to finance the rehabilitation of:
    (1) Privately owned buildings and improvements for residential 
purposes; improvements to a single-family residential property which is 
also used as a place of business, which are required in order to operate 
the business, need not be considered to be rehabilitation of a 
commercial or industrial building, if the improvements also provide 
general benefit to the residential occupants of the building;
    (2) Low-income public housing and other publicly owned residential 
buildings and improvements;
    (3) Publicly or privately owned commercial or industrial buildings, 
except that the rehabilitation of such buildings owned by a private for-
profit business is limited to improvements to the exterior of the 
building and the correction of code violations (further improvements to 
such buildings may be undertaken pursuant to Sec. 1003.203(b)); and
    (4) Nonprofit-owned nonresidential buildings and improvements not 
eligible under Sec. 1003.201(c);
    (5) Manufactured housing when such housing constitutes part of the 
community's permanent housing stock.
    (b) Types of assistance. ICDBG funds may be used to finance the 
following types of rehabilitation or reconstruction activities, and 
related costs, either singly, or in combination, through the use of 
grants, loans, loan guarantees, interest supplements, or other means for 
buildings and improvements described in paragraph (a) of this section, 
except that rehabilitation of commercial or industrial buildings is 
limited as described in paragraph (a)(3) of this section.
    (1) Assistance to private individuals and entities, including profit 
making and nonprofit organizations, to acquire for the purpose of 
rehabilitation, and to rehabilitate properties, for use or resale for 
residential purposes;
    (2) Labor, materials, and other costs of rehabilitation of 
properties, including repair directed toward an accumulation of deferred 
maintenance, replacement of principal fixtures and components of 
existing structures, installation of security devices, including smoke 
detectors and dead bolt locks, and renovation through alterations, 
additions to, or enhancement of existing structures, which may be 
undertaken singly, or in combination;
    (3) Loans for refinancing existing indebtedness secured by a 
property being rehabilitated with ICDBG funds if such financing is 
determined by the grantee to be necessary or appropriate to achieve the 
grantee's community development objectives;
    (4) Improvements to increase the efficient use of energy in 
structures through such means as installation of storm windows and 
doors, siding, wall and attic insulation, and conversion, modification, 
or replacement of heating and cooling equipment, including the use of 
solar energy equipment;
    (5) Improvements to increase the efficient use of water through such 
means as water saving faucets and shower heads and repair of water 
leaks;
    (6) Connection of residential structures to water distribution lines 
or local sewer collection lines;
    (7) For rehabilitation carried out with ICDBG funds, costs of:
    (i) Initial homeowner warranty premiums;
    (ii) Hazard insurance premiums, except where assistance is provided 
in the form of a grant; and
    (iii) Flood insurance premiums for properties covered by the Flood 
Disaster Protection Act of 1973, pursuant to 24 CFR 58.6(a).
    (iv) Lead-based paint activities in part 35 of this title.
    (8) Costs of acquiring tools to be lent to owners, tenants, and 
others who will use such tools to carry out rehabilitation;
    (9) Rehabilitation services, such as rehabilitation counseling, 
energy auditing, preparation of work specifications, loan processing, 
inspections, and other services related to assisting owners, tenants, 
contractors, and other entities, participating or seeking to participate 
in rehabilitation activities authorized under this section;
    (10) Improvements designed to remove material and architectural 
barriers that restrict the mobility and accessibility of elderly or 
severely disabled persons to buildings and improvements eligible for 
assistance under paragraph (a) of this section.

[[Page 761]]

    (c) Code enforcement. Code enforcement in deteriorating or 
deteriorated areas where such enforcement together with public or 
private improvements, rehabilitation, or services to be provided, may be 
expected to arrest the decline of the area.
    (d) Historic preservation. ICDBG funds may be used for the 
rehabilitation, preservation or restoration of historic properties, 
whether publicly or privately owned. Historic properties are those sites 
or structures that are either listed in or eligible to be listed in the 
National Register of Historic Places, listed in a State or local 
inventory of historic places, or designated as a State or local landmark 
or historic district by appropriate law or ordinance. Historic 
preservation, however, is not authorized for buildings for the general 
conduct of government.
    (e) Renovation of closed buildings. ICDBG funds may be used to 
renovate closed buildings, such as closed school buildings, for use as 
an eligible public facility or to rehabilitate such buildings for 
housing.

[61 FR 40090, July 31, 1996, as amended at 64 FR 50230, Sept. 15, 1999]