[Code of Federal Regulations]

[Title 44, Volume 1]

[Revised as of October 1, 2005]

From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access

[CITE: 44CFR204.42]



[Page 410-411]

 

              TITLE 44--EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT AND ASSISTANCE

 

 CHAPTER I--FEDERAL EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT AGENCY, DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND 

                                SECURITY

 

PART 204_FIRE MANAGEMENT ASSISTANCE GRANT PROGRAM--Table of Contents

 

                          Subpart C_Eligibility

 

Sec. 204.42  Eligible costs.



    (a) General. (1) All eligible work and related costs must be 

associated with the incident period of a declared fire.

    (2) Before obligating Federal funds the Regional Director must 

review and approve the initial grant application, along with Project 

Worksheets submitted with the application and any subsequent amendments 

to the application.

    (3) Grantees will award Federal funds to subgrantees under State law 

and procedure and complying with 44 CFR part 13.

    (b) Equipment and supplies. Eligible costs include:

    (1) Personal comfort and safety items normally provided by the State 

under field conditions for firefighter health and safety, including:

    (2) Firefighting supplies, tools, materials, expended or lost, to 

the extent not covered by reasonable insurance, will be replaced with 

comparable items.

    (3) Operation and maintenance costs of publicly owned, contracted, 

rented, or volunteer firefighting department equipment used in eligible 

firefighting activities to the extent any of these costs are not 

included in applicable equipment rates.

    (4) Use of U.S. Government-owned equipment based on reasonable costs 

as billed by the Federal agency and paid by the State. (Only direct 

costs for use of Federal Excess Personal Property (FEPP) vehicles and 

equipment on loan to State Forestry and local cooperators may be 

eligible.)

    (5) Repair of equipment damaged in firefighting activities to the 

extent not covered by reasonable insurance. We will use the lowest 

applicable equipment rates, or other rates that we determine, to 

calculate the eligible cost of repairs.

    (6) Replacement of equipment lost or destroyed in firefighting 

activities, to the extent not covered by reasonable insurance, will be 

replaced with comparable equipment.

    (c) Labor costs. Eligible costs include:

    (1) Overtime for permanent or reassigned State and local employees.

    (2) Regular time and overtime for temporary and contract employees 

hired to perform fire-related activities.



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    (d) Travel and per diem costs. Eligible costs include:

    (1) Travel and per diem of employees who are providing services 

directly associated with eligible fire-related activities may be 

eligible.

    (2) Provision of field camps and meals when made available in place 

of per diem;

    (e) Pre-positioning costs. (1) The actual costs of pre-positioning 

Federal, out-of-State (including compact), and international resources 

for a limited period may be eligible when those resources are used in 

response to a declared fire.

    (2) The Regional Director must approve all pre-positioning costs.

    (i) Upon approval of a State's request for a fire management 

assistance declaration by the Associate Director, the State should 

immediately notify the Regional Director of its intention to seek 

funding for pre-positioning resources.

    (ii) The State must document the number of pre-positioned resources 

to be funded and their respective locations throughout the State, 

estimate the cost of the pre-positioned resources that were used on the 

declared fire and the amount of time the resources were pre-positioned, 

and provide a detailed explanation of the need to fund the pre-

positioned resources .

    (iii) The State will base the detailed explanation on recognized 

scientific indicators, that include, but are not limited to, drought 

indices, short-term weather forecasts, the current number of fires 

burning in the State, and the availability of in-State firefighting 

resources. The State may also include other quantitative indicators with 

which to measure the increased risk of the threat of a major disaster.

    (iv) Based on the information contained in the State's notification, 

the Regional Director will determine the number of days of pre-

positioning to be approved for Federal funding, up to a maximum of 21 

days before the fire declaration.

    (3) Upon rendering his/her determination on pre-positioning costs, 

the Regional Director will notify the Associate Director of his/her 

determination.

    (f) Emergency work. We may authorize the use of section 403 of the 

Stafford Act, Essential Assistance, under an approved fire management 

assistance grant when directly related to the mitigation, management, 

and control of the declared fire. Essential assistance activities that 

may be eligible include, but are not limited to, police barricading and 

traffic control, extraordinary emergency operations center expenses, 

evacuations and sheltering, search and rescue, arson investigation 

teams, public information, and the limited removal of trees that pose a 

threat to the general public.

    (g) Temporary repair of damage caused by firefighting activities. 

Temporary repair of damage caused by eligible firefighting activities 

listed in this subpart involves short-term actions to repair damage 

directly caused by the firefighting effort or activities. This includes 

minimal repairs to bulldozer lines, camps, and staging areas to address 

safety concerns; as well as minimal repairs to facilities damaged by the 

firefighting activities such as fences, buildings, bridges, roads, etc. 

All temporary repair work must be completed within thirty days of the 

close of the incident period for the declared fire.

    (h) Mobilization and demobilization. Costs for mobilization to, and 

demobilization from, a declared fire may be eligible for reimbursement. 

Demobilization may be claimed at a delayed date if deployment involved 

one or more declared fires. If resources are being used on more than one 

declared fire, mobilization and demobilization costs must be claimed 

against the first declared fire.

    (i) Fires on co-mingled Federal/State lands. Reasonable costs for 

the mitigation, management, and control of a declared fire burning on 

co-mingled Federal and State land may be eligible in cases where the 

State has a responsibility for suppression activities under an agreement 

to perform such action on a non-reimbursable basis. (This provision is 

an exception to normal FEMA policy under the Stafford Act and is 

intended to accommodate only those rare instances that involve State 

firefighting on a Stafford Act section 420 fire incident involving co-

mingled Federal/State and privately-owned forest or grassland.)



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