[Code of Federal Regulations]

[Title 24, Volume 3]

[Revised as of April 1, 2005]

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

[CITE: 24CFR570.210]



[Page 62-63]

 

                 TITLE 24--HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT

 

  CHAPTER V--OFFICE OF ASSISTANT SECRETARY FOR COMMUNITY PLANNING AND 

        DEVELOPMENT, DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT

 

PART 570_COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT BLOCK GRANTS--Table of Contents

 

                      Subpart C_Eligible Activities

 

Sec.  570.210  Prohibition on use of assistance for employment 

relocation activities.



    (a) Prohibition. CDBG funds may not be used to directly assist a 

business, including a business expansion, in the relocation of a plant, 

facility, or operation from one LMA to another LMA if the relocation is 

likely to result in a significant loss of jobs in the LMA from which the 

relocation occurs.

    (b) Definitions. The following definitions apply to this section:

    (1) Directly assist. Directly assist means the provision of CDBG 

funds for activities pursuant to:

    (i) Sec.  570.203(b); or

    (ii) Sec. Sec.  570.201(a)--(d), 570.201(l), 570.203(a), or Sec.  

570.204 when the grantee, subrecipient, or, in the case of an activity 

carried out pursuant to Sec.  570.204, a Community Based Development 

Organization (CDBO) enters into an agreement with a business to 

undertake one or more of these activities as a condition of the business 

relocating a facility, plant, or operation to the grantee's LMA. 

Provision of public facilities and indirect assistance that will provide 

benefit to multiple businesses does not fall under the definition of 

``directly assist,'' unless it includes the provision of infrastructure 

to aid a specific business that is the subject of an agreement with the 

specific assisted business.

    (2) Labor market area (LMA). For metropolitan areas, an LMA is an 

area defined as such by the BLS. An LMA is an economically integrated 

geographic area within which individuals can live and find employment 

within a reasonable distance or can readily change employment without 

changing their place of residence. In addition, LMAs are nonoverlapping 

and geographically exhaustive. For metropolitan areas, grantees must use 

employment data, as defined by the BLS, for the LMA in which the 

affected business is currently located and from which current jobs may 

be lost. For non-metropolitan areas, an LMA is either an area defined by 

the BLS as an LMA, or a state may choose to combine non-metropolitan 

LMAs. States are required to define or reaffirm prior definitions of 

their LMAs on an annual basis and retain records to substantiate such 

areas prior to any business relocation that would be impacted by this 

rule. Metropolitan LMAs cannot be combined, nor can a non-metropolitan 

LMA be combined with a metropolitan LMA. For the HUD-administered Small 

Cities Program, each of the three participating counties in Hawaii will 

be considered to be its own LMA. Recipients of Fiscal Year 1999 Small 

Cities Program funding in New York will follow the requirements for 

State CDBG recipients.

    (3) Operation. A business operation includes, but is not limited to, 

any equipment, employment opportunity, production capacity or product 

line of the business.

    (4) Significant loss of jobs. (i) A loss of jobs is significant if: 

The number of jobs to be lost in the LMA in which the affected business 

is currently located is equal to or greater than one-tenth of one 

percent of the total number of persons in the labor force of that LMA; 

or in all cases, a loss of 500 or more jobs. Notwithstanding the 

aforementioned, a loss of 25 jobs or fewer does not constitute a 

significant loss of jobs.

    (ii) A job is considered to be lost due to the provision of CDBG 

assistance if the job is relocated within three years of the provision 

of assistance to the business; or the time period within which jobs are 

to be created as specified by the agreement between the business and the 

recipient if it is longer than three years.

    (c) Written agreement. Before directly assisting a business with 

CDBG funds, the recipient, subrecipient, or a CDBO (in the case of an 

activity carried out pursuant to Sec.  570.204) shall sign a written 

agreement with the assisted business. The written agreement shall 

include:

    (1) Statement. A statement from the assisted business as to whether 

the assisted activity will result in the relocation of any industrial or 

commercial plant, facility, or operation from one LMA to another, and, 

if so, the number of jobs that will be relocated from each LMA;



[[Page 63]]



    (2) Required information. If the assistance will not result in a 

relocation covered by this section, a certification from the assisted 

business that neither it, nor any of its subsidiaries, has plans to 

relocate jobs at the time the agreement is signed that would result in a 

significant job loss as defined in this rule; and

    (3) Reimbursement of assistance. The agreement shall provide for 

reimbursement of any assistance provided to, or expended on behalf of, 

the business in the event that assistance results in a relocation 

prohibited under this section.

    (d) Assistance not covered by this section. This section does not 

apply to:

    (1) Relocation assistance. Relocation assistance required by the 

Uniform Assistance and Real Property Acquisition Policies Act of 1970, 

(URA) (42 U.S.C. 4601-4655);

    (2) Microenterprises. Assistance to microenterprises as defined by 

Section 102(a)(22) of the Housing and Community Development Act of 1974; 

and

    (3) Arms-length transactions. Assistance to a business that 

purchases business equipment, inventory, or other physical assets in an 

arms-length transaction, including the assets of an existing business, 

provided that the purchase does not result in the relocation of the 

sellers' business operation (including customer base or list, goodwill, 

product lines, or trade names) from one LMA to another LMA and does not 

produce a significant loss of jobs in the LMA from which the relocation 

occurs.



[70 FR 76369, Dec. 23, 2005]