[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 24, Volume 3]
[Revised as of April 1, 2004]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 24CFR599.107]

[Page 318-319]
 
                 TITLE 24--HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT
 
  CHAPTER V--OFFICE OF ASSISTANT SECRETARY FOR COMMUNITY PLANNING AND 
        DEVELOPMENT, DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT
 
PART 599_RENEWAL COMMUNITIES--Table of Contents
 
Subpart B_Eligibility Requirements for Nomination of Renewal Communities
 
Sec. 599.107  Required State and local commitments.

    (a) Commitment to a course of action--(1) Agreement of State and 
local governments. The nominating State and local governments must agree 
in writing that, for any period during which the area is a Renewal 
Community, the governments will follow a specified course of action 
which meets the requirements of paragraph (a)(2) of this section. If 
each nominating State and local government is a signatory to a course of 
action under paragraph (a)(2) of this section, a separate written 
agreement is not necessary to meet the requirements of this paragraph.
    (2) Course of action requirements--(i) In general. A course of 
action is a written document, signed by the nominated area's State and/
or local governments and community-based organizations which commits 
each signatory to undertake and achieve measurable goals and actions 
within the nominated area upon its designation as a Renewal Community.
    (ii) Community-based organizations. For purposes of the course of 
action, ``community-based organizations'' includes for-profit and non-
profit private entities, businesses and business organizations, 
neighborhood organizations, and community groups. Community-based 
organizations are not required to be located in the nominated area as 
long as they commit to achieving the goals of the course of action in 
the Renewal Community.
    (iii) Timetable. The course of action must include a timetable that 
identifies the significant steps and target dates for implementing the 
goals and actions.
    (iv) Performance measures. The course of action must include a 
description of how the performance of the course of action will be 
measured and evaluated.
    (v) Required goals and actions. The course of action must include at 
least four of the following:
    (A) A reduction of tax rates or fees applying within the Renewal 
Community;
    (B) An increase in the level of efficiency of local services within 
the Renewal Community, such as services for residents funded through the 
Federal Temporary Assistance for Needy Families program and related 
Federal programs including, for example, job support services, child 
care and after school care for children of working residents, employment 
training, transportation services and other services that help residents 
become economically self-sufficient;
    (C) Crime reduction strategies, such as crime prevention, including 
the provision of crime prevention services by nongovernmental entities;
    (D) Actions to reduce, remove, simplify, or streamline governmental 
requirements applying within the Renewal Community, such as:
    (1) Density bonus. Permission to develop or redevelop real property 
at a higher density level than otherwise permitted under the zoning 
ordinance, e.g., increased height or increased number of residential or 
business units;
    (2) Incentive zoning. Providing a density bonus or other real 
property-related incentive for the development, redevelopment, or 
preservation of a parcel in the designated area;
    (3) Comprehensive or one-stop permit. Streamlining construction or 
other development permitting processes, rather than requiring multiple 
applications for multiple permits, e.g., for demolition, site 
preparation, and construction, the developer or redeveloper submits a 
single application that is circulated for the necessary reviews by the 
various planning, engineering, and other departments in the county or 
municipality;
    (4) Variance and exception policies. Counties or municipalities may 
pass ordinancesthat permit variances to or exceptions from certain 
zoning or other land use limitations. Examples include a reduced 
building set-back requirement or a reduced requirement for the provision 
of parking. Thepolicy may be limited to a particular geographic area;
    (5) Voluntary environmental compliance program. A shared or limited 
environmental liability program, with limited

[[Page 319]]

liability from certain legal or administrative action in exchange for 
undertaking an approved program of environmental investigation, hazard 
control, and on-going risk reduction activities. Typically, the 
liability limitation is for future environmental cleanup (and not 
against lawsuit for damages). Risk of cleanup may be shared by the 
developer or property owner and the government;
    (E) Involvement in economic development activities by private 
entities, organizations, neighborhood organizations, and community 
groups, particularly those in the Renewal Community, including a 
commitment from such private entities to provide jobs and job training 
for, and technical, financial, or other assistance to, employers, 
employees, and residents from the Renewal Community;
    (F) The gift or sale at below fair market value of surplus real 
property held by State or local governments, such as land, homes, and 
commercial or industrial structures in the Renewal Community to 
neighborhood organizations, community development corporations, or 
private companies.
    (3) Certification requirement for crime incidence. If preference 
points are being sought for the nominated area because it qualifies for 
preference points in accordance with Sec. 599.303(c)(1), the course of 
action must contain a certification by each nominating State and local 
government of the 1999 Local Crime Index rate per 100,000 inhabitants 
(LCI) determined for the nominated area. The offenses used in 
determining the LCI are the violent crimes of murder and nonnegligent 
manslaughter, forcible rape, robbery, and aggravated assault, and the 
property crimes of burglary, larceny-theft, and motor vehicle theft.
    (b) Economic growth promotion requirements--(1) Required 
certification. The State and local governments in which a nominated area 
is located must certify in writing that they have repealed or reduced, 
will not enforce, or will reduce within the nominated area at least four 
of the following:
    (i) Licensing requirements for occupations that do not ordinarily 
require a professional degree;
    (ii) Zoning restrictions on home-based businesses which do not 
create a public nuisance;
    (iii) Permit requirements for street vendors who do not create a 
public nuisance;
    (iv) Zoning or other restrictions that impede the formation of 
schools or child care centers; and
    (v) Franchises or other restrictions on competition for businesses 
providing public services, including taxicabs, jitneys, cable 
television, or trash hauling.
    (2) Exception. The requirements of paragraph (b)(1) of this section 
do not apply to the extent that a regulation of businesses and 
occupations is necessary for and well-tailored to the protection of 
health and safety. The certifications required under paragraph (b)(1) of 
this section may be limited to exclude or include specific businesses 
and occupations.
    (c) Recognition of past efforts. The course of action and economic 
growth requirements under paragraphs (a) and (b), respectively, of this 
section are not limited to future goals and actions. Past efforts within 
the previous eight years, either completed or on-going, of the 
nominating State or local governments to undertake any of the goals or 
actions listed in paragraph (a)(2)(v) or (b)(1) of this section qualify 
to meet these requirements. If past efforts are used, the nominating 
governments must identify which of the required goals and actions listed 
in paragraph (a)(2)(v) or (b)(1) of this section they address; the 
timetable for their continued implementation, if on-going; and the 
community-based organizations involved, if any.

[66 FR 35855, July 9, 2001, as amended at 66 FR 52675, Oct. 17, 2001]