[Code of Federal Regulations]

[Title 24, Volume 4]

[Revised as of April 1, 2006]

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

[CITE: 24CFR1003.201]



[Page 773-776]

 

                 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.  1003.201  Basic eligible activities.



    ICDBG funds may be used for the following activities:

    (a) Acquisition. Acquisition in whole or in part by the grantee, or 

other public or private nonprofit entity, by purchase, long-term lease, 

donation, or otherwise, of real property (including air rights, water 

rights, rights-of-way, easements, and other interests therein) for any 

public purpose, subject to the limitations of Sec.  1003.207.

    (b) Disposition. Disposition, through sale, lease, donation, or 

otherwise, of any real property acquired with ICDBG funds or its 

retention for public purposes, including reasonable costs of temporarily 

managing such property or property acquired under urban renewal, 

provided that the proceeds from any such disposition shall be program 

income subject to the requirements set forth in Sec.  1003.503.

    (c) Public facilities and improvements. Acquisition, construction, 

reconstruction, rehabilitation or installation of public facilities and 

improvements, except as provided in Sec.  1003.207(a), carried out by 

the grantee or other public or private nonprofit entities. In 

undertaking such activities, design features and improvements which 

promote energy efficiency may be included. [However, activities under 

this paragraph may be directed to the removal of material and 

architectural barriers that restrict the mobility and accessibility of 

elderly or severely disabled persons to publicly owned and privately 

owned buildings, facilities, and improvements including those provided 

for in Sec.  1003.207(a)(1).] Such activities may also include the 

execution of architectural design features, and similar treatments 

intended to enhance the



[[Page 774]]



aesthetic quality of facilities and improvements receiving ICDBG 

assistance. Facilities designed for use in providing shelter for persons 

having special needs are considered public facilities and not subject to 

the prohibition of new housing construction described in Sec.  

1003.207(b)(3). Such facilities include shelters for the homeless; 

convalescent homes; hospitals, nursing homes; battered spouse shelters; 

halfway houses for run-away children, drug offenders or parolees; group 

homes for mentally retarded persons and temporary housing for disaster 

victims. In certain cases, nonprofit entities and subrecipients 

including those specified in Sec.  1003.204 may acquire title to public 

facilities. When such facilities are owned by nonprofit entities or 

subrecipients, they shall be operated so as to be open for use by the 

general public during all normal hours of operation. Public facilities 

and improvements eligible for assistance under this paragraph (c) are 

subject to the following policies in paragraphs (c)(1) through (c)(3) of 

this section:

    (1) Special policies governing facilities. The following special 

policies apply to:

    (i) Facilities containing both eligible and ineligible uses. A 

public facility otherwise eligible for assistance under the ICDBG 

program may be provided with ICDBG funds even if it is part of a 

multiple use building containing ineligible uses, if:

    (A) The facility which is otherwise eligible and proposed for 

assistance will occupy a designated and discrete area within the larger 

facility; and

    (B) The grantee can determine the costs attributable to the facility 

proposed for assistance as separate and distinct from the overall costs 

of the multiple-use building and/or facility. Allowable costs are 

limited to those attributable to the eligible portion of the building or 

facility.

    (ii) Equipment purchase. As stated in Sec.  1003.207(b)(1), the 

purchase of equipment with ICDBG funds is generally ineligible. However, 

the purchase of construction equipment for use as part of a solid waste 

facility is eligible. In addition, the purchase of fire protection 

equipment is considered to be an integral part of a public facility, 

and, therefore, the purchase of such equipment is also eligible.

    (2) Fees for use of facilities. Reasonable fees may be charged for 

the use of the facilities assisted with ICDBG funds, but charges such as 

excessive membership fees, which will have the effect of precluding low 

and moderate income persons from using the facilities, are not 

permitted.

    (3) Special assessments under the ICDBG program. The following 

policies relate to special assessments under the ICDBG program:

    (i) Definition of special assessment. The term special assessment 

means the recovery of the capital costs of a public improvement, such as 

streets, water or sewer lines, curbs, and gutters, through a fee or 

charge levied or filed as a lien against a parcel of real estate as a 

direct result of benefit derived from the installation of a public 

improvement, or a one-time charge made as a condition of access to a 

public improvement. This term does not relate to taxes, or the 

establishment of the value of real estate for the purpose of levying 

real estate, property, or ad valorem taxes, and does not include 

periodic charges based on the use of a public improvement, such as water 

or sewer user charges, even if such charges include the recovery of all 

or some portion of the capital costs of the public improvement.

    (ii) Special assessments to recover capital costs. Where ICDBG funds 

are used to pay all or part of the cost of a public improvement, special 

assessments may be imposed as follows:

    (A) Special assessments to recover the ICDBG funds may be made only 

against properties owned and occupied by persons not of low and moderate 

income. Such assessments constitute program income.

    (B) Special assessments to recover the non-ICDBG portion may be made 

provided that ICDBG funds are used to pay the special assessment on 

behalf of all properties owned and occupied by low and moderate income 

persons; except that ICDBG funds need not be used to pay the special 

assessments on behalf of properties owned and occupied by moderate 

income persons if the grantee certifies that it does not have



[[Page 775]]



sufficient ICDBG funds to pay the assessments in behalf of all of the 

low and moderate income owner-occupant persons. Funds collected through 

such special assessments are not program income.

    (iii) Public improvements not initially assisted with ICDBG funds. 

The payment of special assessments with ICDBG funds constitutes ICDBG 

assistance to the public improvement. Therefore, ICDBG funds may be used 

to pay special assessments provided:

    (A) The installation of the public improvements was carried out in 

compliance with requirements applicable to activities assisted under 

this part including environmental and citizen participation 

requirements; and

    (B) The installation of the public improvement meets a criterion for 

the primary objective in Sec.  1003.208; and,

    (C) The requirements of Sec.  1003.201(c)(3)(ii))(B) are met.

    (d) Clearance activities. Clearance, demolition, and removal of 

buildings and improvements, including movement of structures to other 

sites. Demolition of HUD-assisted housing units may be undertaken only 

with the prior approval of HUD.

    (e) Public services. Provision of public services (including labor, 

supplies, materials, and the purchase of personal property and 

furnishings) which are directed toward improving the community's public 

services and facilities, including but not limited to those concerned 

with employment, crime prevention, child care, health, drug abuse, 

education, fair housing counseling, energy conservation, welfare (but 

excluding the provision of income payments identified under Sec.  

1003.207(b)(4)), homebuyer downpayment assistance or recreational needs. 

To be eligible for ICDBG assistance, a public service must be either a 

new service, or a quantifiable increase in the level of an existing 

service above that which has been provided by or on behalf of the 

grantee through funds raised by the grantee, or received by the grantee 

from the Federal government in the twelve calendar months before the 

submission of the application for ICDBG assistance. (An exception to 

this requirement may be made if HUD determines that any decrease in the 

level of a service was the result of events not within the control of 

the grantee.) The amount of ICDBG funds used for public services shall 

not exceed 15 percent of the grant. Such projects must therefore be 

submitted with one or more other projects, which must comprise at least 

85 percent of the total requested ICDBG grant amount.

    (f) Interim assistance. (1) The following activities may be 

undertaken on an interim basis in areas exhibiting objectively 

determinable signs of physical deterioration where the grantee has 

determined that immediate action is necessary to arrest the 

deterioration and that permanent improvements will be carried out as 

soon as practicable:

    (i) The repairing of streets, sidewalks, parks, playgrounds, 

publicly owned utilities, and public buildings; and

    (ii) The execution of special garbage, trash, and debris removal, 

including neighborhood cleanup campaigns, but not the regular curbside 

collection of garbage or trash in an area.

    (2) In order to alleviate emergency conditions threatening the 

public health and safety in areas where the chief executive officer of 

the grantee determines that such an emergency condition exists and 

requires immediate resolution, ICDBG funds may be used for:

    (i) The activities specified in paragraph (f)(1) of this section, 

except for the repair of parks and playgrounds;

    (ii) The clearance of streets, including snow removal and similar 

activities; and

    (iii) The improvement of private properties.

    (3) All activities authorized under paragraph (f)(2) of this section 

are limited to the extent necessary to alleviate emergency conditions.

    (g) Payment of non-Federal share. Payment of the non-Federal share 

required in connection with a Federal grant-in-aid program undertaken as 

part of ICDBG activities, provided, that such payment shall be limited 

to activities otherwise eligible and in compliance with applicable 

requirements under this subpart.

    (h) Relocation. Relocation payments and other assistance for 

permanently and temporarily relocated individuals



[[Page 776]]



families, businesses, nonprofit organizations, and farm operations where 

the assistance is:

    (1) Required under the provisions of Sec.  1003.602 (b) or (c); or

    (2) Determined by the grantee to be appropriate under the provisions 

of Sec.  1003.602(d).

    (i) Loss of rental income. Payments to housing owners for losses of 

rental income incurred in holding, for temporary periods, housing units 

to be used for the relocation of individuals and families displaced by 

program activities assisted under this part.

    (j) Housing services. Housing services, as provided in section 

105(a)(21) of the Housing and Community Development Act of 1974 [42 

U.S.C. 5305(a)(21)].

    (k) Privately owned utilities. ICDBG funds may be used to acquire, 

construct, reconstruct, rehabilitate, or install the distribution lines 

and facilities of privately owned utilities, including the placing 

underground of new or existing distribution facilities and lines.

    (l) The provision of assistance to facilitate economic development. 

(1) The provision of assistance either through the grantee directly or 

through public and private organizations, agencies, and other 

subrecipients (including nonprofit and for-profit subrecipients) to 

facilitate economic development by:

    (i) Providing credit, including, but not limited to, grants, loans, 

loan guarantees, and other forms of financial support, for the 

establishment, stabilization, and expansion of microenterprises;

    (ii) Providing technical assistance, advice, and business support 

services to owners of microenterprises and persons developing 

microenterprises; and

    (iii) Providing general support, including, but not limited to, peer 

support programs, counseling, child care, transportation, and other 

similar services, to owners of microenterprises and persons developing 

microenterprises.

    (2) Services provided under paragraph (l)(1) of this section shall 

not be subject to the restrictions on public services contained in Sec.  

1003.201(e).

    (3) For purposes of this paragraph (l), persons developing 

microenterprises means such persons who have expressed interest and who 

are, or after an initial screening process are expected to be, actively 

working toward developing businesses, each of which is expected to be a 

microenterprise at the time it is formed.

    (m) Technical assistance. Provision of technical assistance to 

public or nonprofit entities to increase the capacity of such entities 

to carry out eligible neighborhood revitalization or economic 

development activities. Capacity building for private or public entities 

(including grantees) for other purposes may be eligible as a planning 

cost under Sec.  1003.205.

    (n) Assistance to institutions of higher education. Provision of 

assistance by the grantee to institutions of higher education where the 

grantee determines that such an institution has demonstrated a capacity 

to carry out eligible activities under this subpart.

    (o) Homeownership assistance. ICDBG funds may be used to provide 

direct homeownership assistance to low- and moderate-income households 

to:

    (1) Subsidize interest rates and mortgage principal amounts for low-

and moderate-income homebuyers;

    (2) Finance the acquisition by low-and moderate-income homebuyers of 

housing that is occupied by the homebuyers;

    (3) Acquire guarantees for mortgage financing obtained by low-and 

moderate-income homebuyers form private lenders (except that ICDBG funds 

may not be used to guarantee such mortgage financing directly, and 

grantees may not provide such guarantees directly);

    (4) Provide up to 50 percent of any downpayment required from a low-

and moderate-income homebuyer; or

    (5) Pay reasonable closing costs (normally associated with the 

purchase of a home) incurred by a low-or moderate-income homebuyer.