94-32151. Community Development Block Grant Program Economic Development Guidelines  

  • [Federal Register Volume 60, Number 3 (Thursday, January 5, 1995)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 1922-1954]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 94-32151]
    
    
    
    
    [[Page 1921]]
    
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    Part VII
    
    
    
    
    
    Department of Housing and Urban Development
    
    
    
    
    
    _______________________________________________________________________
    
    
    
    24 CFR Part 570
    
    
    
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    Community Development Block Grant Program Economic Development 
    Guidelines; Final Rule
    
    Federal Register / Vol. 60, No. 3 / Thursday, January 5, 1995 / Rules 
    and Regulations 
    [[Page 1922]]
    
    DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT
    
    Office of the Assistant Secretary for Community Planning and 
    Development
    
    24 CFR Part 570
    
    [Docket No. R-94-1729; FR-3474-F-02]
    RIN 2506-AB53
    
    
    Community Development Block Grant Program Economic Development 
    Guidelines
    
    AGENCY: Office of the Assistant Secretary for Community Planning and 
    Development, HUD.
    
    ACTION: Final rule and guidelines.
    
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    SUMMARY: This rule establishes guidelines to assist Community 
    Development Block Grant (CDBG) recipients in evaluating and selecting 
    economic development activities for assistance with CDBG funds. The 
    guidelines deal with project costs and financial requirements and with 
    the public benefit provided by such activities. This rule also makes 
    certain other changes to facilitate the use of CDBG funds for economic 
    development objectives.
    
    EFFECTIVE DATE: February 6, 1995.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: James R. Broughman, Director, Office 
    of Block Grant Assistance, Room 7286, 451 Seventh Street, SW, 
    Washington, DC 20410. Telephone: (202) 708-3587; TDD: (202) 708-2565. 
    (These are not toll-free numbers.)
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: One of the Department of Housing and Urban 
    Development's (HUD's) expressed goals is to provide an economic lift 
    for distressed cities. Toward this end, HUD has embarked on a course 
    designed to make the Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) program a 
    potentially major contributor to the provision of jobs, especially for 
    low-income persons residing in our poorest areas. To accomplish this 
    goal, the Department recognizes that it will need to change both the 
    perception and the reality concerning the usefulness of CDBG for 
    economic development objectives.
        Section 806 of the Housing and Community Development Act of 1992 
    (the 1992 Act) requires the Secretary to establish, by regulation, 
    guidelines to assist CDBG recipients to evaluate and select economic 
    development activities for assistance with CDBG funds. The 1992 Act 
    also made further changes in the CDBG program affecting the use of 
    funds for economic development activities, particularly those carried 
    out under the national objective of benefiting low- and moderate-income 
    persons through the creation or retention of jobs. These changes 
    necessitate revisions to the CDBG regulations. HUD has also determined 
    that it is appropriate to take this opportunity to make certain other 
    changes to the regulations to facilitate the use of CDBG funds for 
    economic development objectives. These changes are designed to reduce 
    the administrative burden on grantees while, at the same time, focusing 
    efforts on assisting the residents of low- and moderate-income 
    neighborhoods.
        A proposed rule regarding these issues was published on May 31, 
    1994, at 59 FR 28175. The rule gave the public 30 days in which to 
    submit comments. Fifty-one comments were received, and many of the 
    comments were extensive. The following types and numbers of commenters 
    were represented: 14 local government agencies, 7 state agencies, 12 
    national associations, 7 development organizations, 1 regional planning 
    agency, 3 private citizens, and 7 HUD Field staff.
    
    Applicability of This Rule to the State CDBG Program
    
        Separate regulatory language for the Entitlement and State CDBG 
    programs is contained in this rule. This preamble generally discusses 
    the changes for the two programs together, with differences between the 
    requirements for the two programs noted. Overall, such differences have 
    been kept to a minimum.
        The State CDBG program regulations do not contain an explanatory 
    list of eligible activities, and relatively few terms are defined in 
    regulation. The changes to Secs. 570.201, 570.203, 570.204, 570.500 and 
    570.506 (and the accompanying preamble discussions thereof) are thus 
    not applicable to the State CDBG program, as there are no comparable 
    sections in the State regulations. In interpreting the list of eligible 
    activities found in Section 105 of the Housing and Community 
    Development Act of 1974, as amended, states may use the Entitlement 
    regulations as interpretive guidance.
    
    Applicability of This Rule to the HUD-Administered Small Cities and 
    Insular Areas CDBG Programs
    
        Portions of the Entitlement CDBG Program regulations are 
    incorporated by reference into the regulations for the HUD-Administered 
    Small Cities program and the Insular Areas CDBG program. Thus, the 
    changes to the Entitlement regulations also apply to the HUD-
    Administered Small Cities and Insular Areas programs. Further 
    clarification will be provided (such as through annual Notices of 
    Funding Availability or other instructions) for those programs, 
    particularly regarding applications proposing a limited number of 
    activities subject to the public benefit guidelines.
    
    Applicability of This Rule to the Indian CDBG Program
    
        It has been determined by the Office of Native American Programs 
    that this regulation will not be applicable to the Indian Community 
    Development Block Grant (ICDBG) program. The nature of the ICDBG 
    program is so separate and distinct from the Entitlement or the State 
    and Small Cities program that it is in the best interest of the ICDBG 
    to address these issues separately. A specific rule will be proposed at 
    a later date to address the needs of the Indian Tribes and Alaskan 
    Native Villages served by the ICDBG program to comply with the 
    requirements of the Housing and Community Development Act of 1992.
    
    Summary of Public Comments and HUD Responses
    
    Assistance for Microenterprises
    
        Issue. Three commenters requested that the maximum number of 
    employees permitted in order for a business to be considered a 
    microenterprise be increased. (2 local government agencies and 1 state 
    agency)
        Response. The term ``microenterprise'' is defined by Section 
    807(c)(2) of the 1992 Act as a ``commercial enterprise that has five or 
    fewer employees, one or more of whom owns the enterprise.'' With this 
    statutory limitation, the maximum number of employees cannot be 
    increased.
        Issue. Four commenters requested further clarification of the 
    definition of a microenterprise. Issues raised included: whether the 
    limitation on the number of employees applies to actual persons or 
    full-time-equivalent positions; the scope of the term ``commercial''; 
    and the length of time a CDBG-assisted microenterprise must remain 
    within the five-employee maximum. (2 national associations, 1 state 
    agency, and 1 private citizen)
        Response. The Department interprets the statutory language 
    regarding the size limitations for a microenterprise as referring to 
    number of actual persons employed by the business, including the 
    owner(s).
        As noted above, the statutory definition of a microenterprise 
    describes [[Page 1923]] such a business as a ``commercial enterprise. . 
    . .'' The Department does not believe that it was Congress' intent to 
    construe the term ``commercial'' so narrowly in this instance that it 
    would encompass only retail businesses. Rather, the HUD interprets this 
    term broadly to mean any ``entity engaged in commerce,'' subject to the 
    size limitations further imposed by the statutory definition of a 
    microenterprise. Definitions of the terms ``microenterprise'' and 
    ``small business'' are being incorporated into the CDBG regulations at 
    Sec. 570.3 in this final rule.
        In regard to the length of time a CDBG-assisted microenterprise 
    must remain within these size limitations, the same general rule that 
    applies to other CDBG activities would also apply to microenterprise 
    assistance. That is, the size limitation applies only at the time the 
    CDBG assistance is provided. There may often be the expectation that, 
    in the future, the business will grow beyond five employees; that 
    expectation should not block assistance to a currently qualified 
    microenterprise. A grantee need not track the size of the business 
    throughout the term of any CDBG loan received, as the commenters feared 
    might be the case. However, it should be noted that when CDBG 
    assistance is provided on an ongoing basis, as may often be the case 
    for ``general support'' activities, such assistance ceases to qualify 
    under the microenterprise eligibility category at the point when the 
    business grows beyond the five-employee size limitation. Further 
    assistance to the business after that time must qualify under other 
    existing eligibility categories.
        Issue. Two commenters requested that HUD further define the term 
    ``persons developing microenterprises.'' (1 state agency and 1 private 
    citizen)
        Response. HUD agrees that it is useful to include such a definition 
    in the regulations. Thus, a new paragraph Sec. 570.201(o)(3) has been 
    added to this final rule to provide such a definition. Generally, the 
    term ``persons developing microenterprises'' is defined as 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. It should be noted that HUD does not expect that all 
    such persons will actually start a microenterprise; some ``fallout'' is 
    expected. However, patterns of excessive ``fallout'' rates in a 
    grantee's microenterprise activities may cause HUD to question whether 
    such activities truly serve ``persons developing microenterprises.''
        Issue. Two commenters requested that HUD revise the regulations to 
    permit ``general support'' services to also be provided, outside of the 
    public service cap, to businesses larger than microenterprises. (1 
    state agency and 1 national association)
        Response. The Department cannot accommodate the requested change. 
    Flexibility to provide such services outside the public service 
    category is only statutorily provided for microenterprise assistance 
    carried out under Section 105(a)(23) of the Housing and Community 
    Development Act of 1974, as amended, and, to a less direct extent, 
    qualified activities carried out under Section 105(a)(15) of the Act 
    (Sec. 570.204 of the Entitlement regulations). As noted above, the 
    statute also imposes the five-employee size limitation on 
    microenterprises.
        Issue. Seven commenters requested that HUD clarify various aspects 
    of the ``general support'' portion of the microenterprise eligibility 
    provision. Issues raised included: whether there were any circumstances 
    in which such support activities would be considered public service 
    activities; whether ``general support'' could be provided to employees 
    of microenterprises who are not part-owners; whether ``general 
    support'' included costs related to the delivery of microenterprise 
    assistance; and whether the entities providing assistance under this 
    category would be those most attuned to the special needs of 
    microenterprises. (1 local government agency, 3 national associations, 
    2 development organizations, and 1 private citizen)
        Response. As noted above, the statute limits the instances in which 
    ``general support'' services may be provided to businesses outside the 
    public service eligibility category. In any circumstances which fall 
    outside the specified instances, the provision of such support services 
    would need to qualify as public service activities.
        Under the microenterprise eligibility provision, the statute limits 
    the direct provision of ``general support'' to ``owners of 
    microenterprises and persons developing microenterprises.'' Thus, 
    ``general support'' cannot be provided directly to employees of 
    microenterprises who are not part-owners. However, there may often be 
    other ways of structuring the activity to achieve essentially the same 
    end result. For example, financial assistance may be provided to the 
    microenterprise owner under Sec. 570.201(o)(1)(i) to permit the owner 
    to provide certain benefits to his/her employees if that can be shown 
    to assist in the ``development, stabilization, or expansion'' of the 
    microenterprise. Alternatively, the extent of financial assistance 
    provided to the microenterprise owner for the capital needs of the 
    business could be sized taking into account the owner's cost of 
    providing such benefits for his/her employees.
        The term ``general support'' as it is used in the statute and 
    Sec. 570.201(o)(1)(iii) is not intended to specifically include the 
    activity administrator's cost of delivering microenterprise assistance 
    to owners of microenterprises and persons developing them. As with any 
    CDBG activity, it is recognized that there are various necessary costs 
    associated with carrying out a microenterprise assistance activity. As 
    the commenters note, these may include the costs of outreach and 
    screening, curriculum development, coordination with other agencies, 
    formation and management of peer lending groups, and certain staff 
    training and development. As with any other CDBG activity, such costs 
    directly related to carrying out the microenterprise assistance 
    activity are considered eligible as part of that activity, without 
    being categorized as ``general support.'' Such ``activity delivery'' 
    costs are not considered to be general administrative costs that would 
    be subject to the 20 percent cap.
        In regard to the nature of the entities carrying out activities 
    under this eligibility category and their familiarity with the needs of 
    microenterprises, HUD has interpreted the statutory provision as 
    broadly as possible in developing this rule. This should permit 
    grantees significant flexibility in determining how, and by whom, 
    microenterprise assistance activities should be carried out, based on 
    local needs and priorities. The specific selection of service providers 
    is a matter of local discretion.
        Issue. Four commenters recommended that some form of 
    ``appropriate'' test be required for microenterprise assistance carried 
    out under the new eligibility category or that the rule include some 
    language stating that such assistance must be reasonable and necessary. 
    (2 local government agencies, 1 state agency, and 1 HUD Field staff 
    person)
        Response. As noted in the preamble to the proposed rule, this new 
    microenterprise eligibility category was added to the Act as a new 
    Section 105(a)(23). This new paragraph of the statute does not contain 
    any requirement that assistance for such activities be determined to be 
    ``appropriate.'' In addition, this new paragraph is not included among 
    those eligibility categories listed as covered by [[Page 1924]] the 
    economic development ``guidelines'' to be established pursuant to the 
    new Section 105(e) of the statute, as added by Section 806(a) of the 
    1992 Act. HUD does not believe that adding any regulatory requirements 
    to this eligibility category that are not required by statute is 
    warranted. As with any other CDBG activity, however, grantees are free 
    to develop more restrictive local policies as they feel are appropriate 
    to meeting their local needs and objectives. Also, pursuant to 
    Secs. 570.200(a)(5) and 570.502 of the CDBG regulations, all costs 
    incurred for CDBG assisted activities must be in conformance with the 
    applicable uniform administrative requirements. This includes the 
    requirement that the costs be necessary and reasonable for the proper 
    and efficient administration of the program. Thus, HUD does not believe 
    it is necessary to include any special language in this regard in 
    Sec. 570.201(o).
        Issue. A concern was raised over the fact that no revision to the 
    Section 108 Loan Guarantee regulations at Sec. 570.703 was proposed to 
    reflect the addition of microenterprise assistance as a separate 
    eligibility category. (1 HUD Field staff person)
        Response. Activities eligible for assistance under the Section 108 
    Loan Guarantee program are specifically delineated at Section 108(a) of 
    the Act. While the 1992 Act added the separate microenterprise 
    eligibility category as a new Section 105(a)(23) of the statute, no 
    reference to this new paragraph was added to Section 108(a) of the 
    statute. Thus, this eligibility category is not directly eligible for 
    assistance using Section 108 Loan Guarantees. However, the provision of 
    direct assistance to microenterprises has long been, and continues to 
    be, eligible as a special economic development activity under Section 
    105(a)(17) of the Act (Sec. 570.203(b) of the Entitlement regulations). 
    Section 105(a)(17) is included at Section 108(a) among the list of 
    activities eligible for Loan Guarantee assistance under that section. 
    Therefore, grantees may use Section 108 Loan Guarantees to directly 
    assist microenterprises, subject to the statutorily required 
    ``appropriateness'' determination and coverage under the economic 
    development ``guidelines'' (established in this final rule as a new 
    Sec. 570.209 of the Entitlement regulations and additions to 
    Sec. 570.482 of the State regulations). These ``guidelines'' take into 
    account the special needs and limitations arising from the size of such 
    businesses assisted under Sec. 570.203(b) as required by the new 
    Section 105(g)(1) of the statute (as added by Section 807(c)(1) of the 
    1992 Act).
        Issue. One commenter asked whether (or how) certain assistance to 
    in-home day care providers might be eligible under the proposed 
    Sec. 570.201(o) or Sec. 570.203. The commenter noted that day care is 
    often provided by people within their own homes. Improvements to the 
    house may be necessary or beneficial to the provision of day care 
    services. The existing regulations do not provide guidance as to 
    whether improvements to a residence in this case should be classified 
    as rehabilitation or as assistance to a business.
        Response. The Department agrees that this issue is not clear in the 
    existing regulations; the addition of the microenterprise assistance 
    eligibility section further muddies the issue, as many home day care 
    providers might also qualify as a microenterprise. Situations in which 
    businesses are operated from a residence are not limited to day care 
    provision. To address this comment, the Department has revised 
    Sec. 570.202 (eligible rehabilitation activities) of the Entitlement 
    regulations. With this revision, certain situations in which physical 
    improvements to a residence are undertaken to benefit a business 
    operated therein may be classified as housing rehabilitation.
    
    Ensuring That Economic Development Projects Minimize Displacement
    
        Issue. Section 907(a) of the National Affordable Housing Act of 
    1990 amended Section 105(a)(17) of the statute to require, in part, 
    that economic development projects assisted under this provision must 
    minimize, to the extent practicable, displacement of existing 
    businesses and jobs in neighborhoods. The proposed rule implemented 
    this provision by amending Sec. 570.203 of the Entitlement regulations 
    with language on displacement that was identical to that contained in 
    the statute. Six commenters addressed this issue, and several of them 
    recommended that further guidance be provided. However, few specific 
    recommendations were received. (3 national associations, 1 local 
    government agency, 1 private citizen, and 1 HUD Field staff person)
        Response. HUD has determined that it is most appropriate to leave 
    the final rule provision as proposed on this issue. Within the 
    parameters of the statutory language, grantees will have flexibility to 
    demonstrate compliance with this requirement as appropriate for their 
    circumstances. One possible way in which a grantee could demonstrate 
    compliance with this requirement is by conducting an analysis for each 
    covered economic development project to determine that any displacement 
    of existing businesses and jobs that is likely to occur as a result of 
    the economic development project, both in the neighborhood in which the 
    project is located and in other surrounding neighborhoods, is 
    justifiable given an examination of possible alternatives.
    
    Additional Changes to Sec. 570.203, Special Economic Development 
    Activities
    
        Issue. A total of eight commenters addressed the new paragraph (c) 
    that was proposed to be added to Sec. 570.203 of the Entitlement 
    regulations to specifically address items that may be considered 
    activity delivery costs in conjunction with special economic 
    development activities assisted under this section. The Department's 
    principal purpose in proposing the addition of this paragraph was to 
    permit certain job training and placement activities in direct 
    conjunction with otherwise assisted CDBG special economic development 
    activities to be considered part of the ``delivery cost'' of those 
    special economic development activities. All eight commenters supported 
    this general concept, but five of them requested modification or 
    clarification of the provision. The recommended modifications included: 
    extending this provision to include construction jobs created as part 
    of CDBG projects; extending it to include all ``CDBG-eligible'' 
    economic development projects rather than just actual ``CDBG-assisted'' 
    projects; limiting the job training and placement activities permitted 
    under this provision to actual low- and moderate-income persons; and 
    reclassifying the outreach and monitoring portions of this provision as 
    general administrative costs subject to the 20 percent cap. 
    Clarification was also requested as to whether there were any 
    circumstances where the job training activities discussed would still 
    be considered a public service. (3 local government agencies, 3 
    national associations, and 2 development organizations)
        Response. HUD has determined that it is not appropriate to extend 
    the coverage of this provision to include job training for construction 
    jobs created as part of all CDBG projects in general. This new economic 
    development services provision specifically applies only to activities 
    qualifying as special economic development activities under the CDBG 
    program. Costs for training and apprenticeship programs directly 
    related to the construction for these activities can generally be 
    considered to be covered under this provision. Costs of such programs 
    for other types of [[Page 1925]] CDBG projects can often be considered 
    as activity delivery costs of the respective projects to which they 
    pertain.
        In regard to the comment that the proposed provision should be 
    extended to include all ``CDBG-eligible'' economic development projects 
    rather than just otherwise ``CDBG-assisted'' projects, the Department 
    has determined that this recommendation has merit. Under the CDBG 
    program, grant funds may be used to assist an activity ``in whole or in 
    part,'' as noted at Sec. 570.200(a) of the Entitlement regulations. 
    There are many cases in which ``activity delivery'' costs are the only 
    portion of an activity's overall costs that are paid for with CDBG 
    funds. Thus, Sec. 570.203(c) has been revised in this final rule to 
    reflect the recommended change. In order to qualify under this 
    provision, job training and placement activities must still constitute 
    activity delivery costs for an economic development project that would 
    otherwise be eligible for further assistance under Sec. 570.203. HUD 
    considers this to permit such training activities only where the 
    grantee has an agreement with a specific business(es) to actually 
    employ the person(s) trained. This provision does not authorize 
    programs that will merely create a ``pool'' of trained persons from 
    which a business(es) may possibly hire. (Such activities must continue 
    to qualify as public service activities under Sec. 570.201(e) of the 
    Entitlement regulations unless they meet the requirements of the new 
    Sec. 570.201(o) or Sec. 570.204.) It should also be noted that the use 
    of CDBG funds for activity delivery costs qualifying under 
    Sec. 570.203(c) constitutes CDBG assistance to the related economic 
    development project, regardless of the funding sources for any other 
    portion of the project. Thus, that project becomes subject to all 
    applicable CDBG requirements, including national objective and public 
    benefit requirements.
        In regard to the comment that the job training and placement 
    activities permitted under this provision should be limited to actual 
    low- and moderate-income persons, the Department has decided not to 
    adopt this recommendation. Such a proposal confuses the distinction 
    between eligibility and national objective requirements. As activity 
    delivery costs, job training and placement activities carried out under 
    Sec. 570.203(c) are considered part of the economic development project 
    to which they relate. Thus, they are generally considered to qualify 
    under the same national objective as that economic development project. 
    Such CDBG special economic development activities can qualify under a 
    variety of national objective provisions; they are not limited to 
    creating or retaining jobs for low- and moderate-income persons.
        This comment has raised an issue, however, that HUD found to merit 
    further consideration. Under existing regulations, with very few 
    exceptions, the majority of persons benefiting from a CDBG-assisted 
    activity must be low- and moderate-income persons. HUD is aware of 
    various proposals under which certain entities have indicated a 
    willingness to train low- and moderate-income persons for jobs and/or 
    provide such persons with other employment opportunities, but these 
    entities cannot agree that 51 percent of all assisted persons will be 
    low or moderate income. HUD believes that such proposals can often 
    provide valuable opportunities for employment of low- and moderate-
    income persons and that a way should be found to permit CDBG funds to 
    assist such efforts. Thus, HUD is amending the low- and moderate-income 
    limited clientele national objective requirements in this final rule 
    [with a new Sec. 570.208(a)(2)(iv) in the Entitlement regulations and a 
    new Sec. 570.483(b)(2)(v) in the State regulations] to authorize the 
    use of CDBG funds for such activities that provide training and/or 
    other employment support services in limited circumstances. This 
    provision is discussed more fully in detail in the national objective 
    portion of this preamble.
        There also appears to be some general confusion regarding what can 
    be considered as activity delivery costs and what must be classified as 
    general administration subject to the 20 percent cap. Apart from the 
    job training and placement activities discussed above, most of the 
    remaining types of activities delineated in the proposed 
    Sec. 570.203(c) are already considered to be activity delivery costs 
    eligible under the currently-existing Sec. 570.203. The proposed new 
    paragraph only provides a more specific statement of this point. One 
    commenter specifically took issue with the outreach and monitoring 
    portions of this provision, arguing that such activities should be 
    considered part of general administration. HUD agrees that 
    ``monitoring'' should be considered a general administration activity, 
    and thus, that term has been deleted from the new Sec. 570.203(c) in 
    this final rule. However, reasonable outreach efforts by grantees to 
    obtain applicants for available assistance and the direct management of 
    resulting activities are routinely considered part of the delivery cost 
    of such activities. The commenter compares the above type of outreach 
    and marketing efforts to activities designed to help inform low-income 
    residents about CDBG. If that reference is to activities that are 
    designed to make residents generally aware of the CDBG program and how 
    they may participate in determining what types of activities the 
    community funds, such a comparison is imprecise. Rather, the type of 
    outreach and marketing efforts included under the new Sec. 570.203(c) 
    would be comparable to activities designed to make residents aware of 
    how they could apply for assistance under specific activities, such as 
    a housing rehabilitation program.
    
    Special Activities by Community-Based Development Organizations 
    (CBDOs)--Sec. 570.204  (Section 105(a)(15) of the Act)
    
        Issue. Six commenters addressed the eligible activities and project 
    definition sections of the proposed rule changes at Sec. 570.204 (a) 
    and (b). Most of these commenters requested clarification of the 
    proposed definitions and discussion of eligible activities. (2 national 
    associations, 1 local government agency, 1 private individual, and 2 
    HUD Field staff persons)
        Response. HUD has not accepted the recommendation from one national 
    association to add language to the beginning of Sec. 570.204(a) to 
    specifically state that the recipient may provide CDBG funds to a 
    subrecipient under this section ``if permitted by state or local law.'' 
    Compliance with applicable state or local laws is a requirement for 
    recipients in carrying out all CDBG activities; thus, there is no need 
    to make a special statement here.
        In response to the various requests for clarification of the 
    definitions for the projects made eligible by Section 105(a)(15) of the 
    Act, HUD has made minor changes to those definitions included in 
    Sec. 570.204(a) (1), (2), and (3) in this final rule. For the 
    definition of a ``community economic development project,'' this 
    includes a cross-reference to the Consolidated Plan rule at 24 CFR 
    91.1(a)(1)(iii), which describes the types of activities HUD generally 
    considers to aid in ``expanding economic opportunities,'' which is part 
    of the primary objective of the CDBG program as delineated at Section 
    101(c)(1) of the Act. The definition also notes the general conditions 
    under which the construction or rehabilitation of housing may be 
    included as part of a ``community economic development 
    project.'' [[Page 1926]] 
        One commenter, a private citizen, raised a question as to whether a 
    ``project'' qualifying under Sec. 570.204 included only activities for 
    which there is funding committed and which are occurring now or whether 
    it could include proposed future activities for which no funding has 
    yet been secured. HUD has determined that specific limits on the scope 
    of a project cannot easily be prescribed in this regard. Thus, it has 
    not been addressed in the text of this final rule. HUD expects 
    recipients to use a plausible interpretation of the term ``project'' 
    and only include activities that are to be carried out within a 
    reasonable period of time. Such an interpretation should at least 
    exclude activities which have not yet received necessary conceptual 
    approvals from the local government.
        HUD has also revised the reference to permitted services under 
    Sec. 570.204. Two commenters, a private citizen and a HUD Field staff 
    person, requested clarification of this provision. Also, under a 
    similar expansion of service activities as part of the new 
    microenterprise eligibility category at Sec. 570.201(o), one of those 
    same commenters raised a concern about potential abuse of the expanded 
    flexibility if the requirements were not clearly defined. HUD has 
    reconsidered the proposed provision and has determined that it is 
    appropriate to limit the type of services that may be excluded from the 
    public service cap by qualifying under this section to those (1) that 
    are specifically designed to increase economic opportunities by 
    supporting the development of permanent jobs, or (2) services of any 
    type carried out under this section pursuant to a strategy approved by 
    HUD under the provisions of Sec. 91.215(e). To reflect this change, the 
    proposed paragraph Sec. 570.204(a)(5) has been deleted, the proposed 
    paragraph Sec. 570.204(b)(2) has been renumbered to (b)(3), and a new 
    paragraph Sec. 570.204(b)(2) has been added to this final rule. In the 
    State program regulations, proposed Sec. 570.482(c)(2) has been 
    deleted, and a new paragraph Sec. 570.482(d) has been added to discuss 
    the eligibility of employment-related services and microenterprise 
    support services.
        Issue. One commenter recommended that the Department consider the 
    eligible project carried out by the qualified organization under 
    Sec. 570.204 to be a single eligible activity instead of ``only a loose 
    grouping of other eligible activities.'' The commenter recommends that 
    this approach be reflected throughout the regulations, including 
    national objective requirements, the economic development guidelines, 
    and record keeping requirements. (1 HUD Field staff person)
        Response. In regard to eligibility requirements under Sec. 570.204, 
    it already is the overall project that is assessed to determine if it 
    qualifies as one of the three types of projects authorized by this 
    section. Problems arise when trying to apply this approach for 
    assessing compliance with national objective requirements, economic 
    development guidelines, and other applicable requirements, however, 
    because of statutory requirements that must be applied to specific 
    types of activities that may be part of the qualified project. For 
    example, Section 105(c)(3) of the Act limits the manner in which any 
    housing activities may be considered to benefit low- and moderate-
    income persons. Also, Section 105(e) of the Act, as added by Section 
    806(a) of the 1992 Act, subjects economic development activities to 
    compliance with the public benefit requirements. Beyond such statutory 
    restrictions, the Department also believes that requiring detailed 
    information on what the organization is actually doing with the CDBG 
    funds helps ensure accountability to both the local citizens and HUD. 
    However, HUD has determined that the commenter's recommendation does 
    have a certain degree of merit. Thus, HUD has made certain changes to 
    the CDBG regulations in this final rule to ease grantees' burden in 
    tracking national objective compliance for certain activities that may 
    qualify for eligibility under this category. These changes are 
    discussed further in the respective national objective portions of this 
    preamble.
        Issue. In regard to the types of entities that qualify under 
    Sec. 570.204, one commenter noted that such entities are commonly 
    referred to by practitioners as ``community-based development 
    organizations (CBDOs)'' or ``community development corporations 
    (CDCs).'' (1 national association)
        Response. HUD has determined that is appropriate, in adopting a 
    single generic name for the entities that may qualify under 
    Sec. 570.204, to use a name that is commonly understood by 
    practitioners. It was also apparent from various comments that the 
    proposed rule's use of the term ``local development corporations 
    (LDCs)'' in this regard caused some confusion with some commenters 
    thinking HUD was ``picking'' one of the entities in the current rule 
    over the others. Use of the ``CDC'' term noted by the above commenter 
    could create confusion with existing entities funded under other 
    Federal programs. Therefore, to reduce confusion, the term ``community-
    based development organization (CBDO)'' is now used in this final rule 
    as the generic term to describe all entities that may qualify under 
    Sec. 570.204.
        Issue. Five commenters addressed the proposed revision to the 
    definition of the term ``subrecipient'' at Sec. 570.500(c). The 
    proposed revision was intended only to expand that current provision to 
    include for-profit entities that are now specifically authorized by 
    statute to carry out microenterprise assistance activities under the 
    new eligibility provision implemented in this final rule by a new 
    Sec. 570.201(o) in the Entitlement regulations [Section 105(a)(23) of 
    the Act]. Most of the commenters recommended that HUD not consider any 
    entities carrying out activities under the new microenterprise category 
    as ``subrecipients'' but rather as ``end beneficiaries.'' These 
    commenters also requested a similar change in classification for 
    entities receiving CDBG assistance under Sec. 570.204 of the 
    Entitlement regulations [Section 105(a)(15) of the Act]. Other 
    commenters asked only for a clarification of the proposed revision to 
    Sec. 570.500(c). (1 local government agency, 1 development 
    organization, and 3 HUD Field staff persons)
        Response. The comments regarding entities carrying out activities 
    under the new microenterprise category will be discussed later in this 
    preamble in further discussion of the revision to Sec. 570.500(c) in 
    this final rule. This specific section will only respond to these 
    comments as they relate to entities receiving CDBG assistance under 
    Sec. 570.204 of the Entitlement regulations (Section 105(a)(15) of the 
    Act). The Department has re-examined the status of these entities 
    within the context of the statutory language at Section 105(a)(15). 
    This section of the statute authorizes the provision of CDBG assistance 
    to certain qualified entities to carry out specific types of projects. 
    Upon review, HUD has determined that the comments questioning the 
    status of these entities as subrecipients have merit. The Department 
    has determined that, similar to for-profit businesses carrying out 
    economic development projects, the entities carrying out qualified 
    activities under Sec. 570.204 (Section 105(a)(15) of the Act) can be 
    considered not to be an intermediary organization in the grant 
    assistance chain acting for the grantee, but rather as being 
    specifically eligible to receive CDBG assistance itself. While these 
    entities are not true ``end beneficiaries'' as the commenters argue 
    (that term applies to the persons served by the activities), they are 
    not strictly intermediaries either. Thus, the Department has determined 
    that such [[Page 1927]] eligible entities carrying out qualified 
    activities under this section will no longer be considered as 
    subrecipients under the CDBG program. In this final rule, 
    Sec. 570.500(c) has been amended, in part, to reflect this change.
        Issue. Two commenters addressed the general jurisdictional 
    limitations for organizations qualifying under this section as proposed 
    at Sec. 570.204(c)(1)(i). One of these, a national association, 
    recommended that these regulations mirror the Community Housing 
    Development Organization (CHDO) requirements which permit an entity to 
    operate in a rural ``multi-county area (but not a whole state).'' The 
    other commenter, a local government agency, recommended that the 
    proposed regulatory language be amended to read:
        ``. . . primarily within an identified geographic area of operation 
    within the jurisdiction of the recipient. . . .'' The commenter argues 
    that this would permit an organization with a successful track record 
    to share its experience by consulting or entering into a joint venture 
    to support a project in other areas. (1 national association and 1 
    local government agency)
        Response. HUD has determined not to accept the ``multi-county'' 
    recommendation because maintaining local community control of a 
    organization qualifying under Sec. 570.204 is crucial. Also, it should 
    be noted that truly rural organizations would not be subject to these 
    regulatory restrictions anyway. This is because Section 807(f) of the 
    1992 Act expanded the list of organizations eligible to carry out 
    activities in nonentitlement areas under Section 105(a)(15) of the 
    Housing and Community Development Act of 1974, as amended. ``Nonprofit 
    organizations serving the development needs of the communities of 
    nonentitlement areas'' now qualify under Section 105(a)(15) of the Act. 
    Since the State CDBG program regulations contain no listing of eligible 
    activities, no regulatory language is needed to implement that change.
        In regard to the second comment above regarding jurisdictional 
    limitations, the Department agrees with the commenter's reasoning and 
    has revised Sec. 570.204(c)(1)(i) to reflect the recommended language 
    in this final rule. In this regard, however, HUD does note that it 
    interprets the term ``primarily'' as it is used in this section to mean 
    that most of the organization's projects are located, funds are used, 
    and staff time is expended on a project or projects within the 
    identified geographic area of operation and that outside projects are 
    largely incidental to the organization's activities and purposes.
        Issue. One commenter recommended that HUD provide a definition for 
    the term ``particular attention'' as it is used in the new 
    Sec. 570.204(c)(1)(ii) regarding addressing the needs of low- and 
    moderate-income persons. (1 national association)
        Response. The ``particular attention'' language as used in the 
    above-noted section comes from those statutes that have been referenced 
    for several years in the CDBG regulations at Sec. 570.204(c)(3) 
    defining local development corporations. The Department is not aware of 
    any significant problems with conflicting interpretations of this 
    language, which is the commenter's stated concern. Thus, the rule has 
    not been modified to include a formal definition of this term. In 
    general, HUD would expect the charter, bylaws, etc., of the CBDO to 
    reflect a commitment to meeting the needs of low- and moderate-income 
    persons.
        Issue. In reference to the new Sec. 570.204(c)(1)(iii), another 
    commenter expressed ``serious reservations'' about allowing for-profit 
    organizations to qualify under this section of the regulations. (1 
    development organization)
        Response. The statute at Section 105(a)(15) and the CDBG 
    regulations at Sec. 570.204 have long permitted for-profit 
    organizations under this section with the inclusion of Small Business 
    Investment Companies. The rule now includes only a clearer statement of 
    what already is permitted. The rule does provide a stipulation that any 
    monetary profits to a CBDO's shareholders or members must be only 
    incidental to its operations.
        Issue. Four commenters addressed the board structure requirements 
    under Sec. 570.204(c)(1)(iv). Concerns raised included an objection to 
    excluding organizations composed solely of institutional members from 
    qualifying under this section and comments both for and against the 
    inclusion of business owners in defining permitted board structures. 
    One of the commenters also recommended that HUD permit the low- and 
    moderate-income presumptions added by the 1992 Act to be used under 
    this section in determining whether a sufficient percentage of board 
    members are low- and moderate-income persons. (1 local government 
    agency, 2 development organizations, and 1 national association)
        Response. HUD has determined that all of the comments regarding the 
    inclusion of institutions and business owners on the boards of 
    qualifying CBDOs have some merit. Thus, the Department has refined the 
    requirements at Sec. 570.204(c)(1)(iv) in this final rule to permit 
    consideration of both institutional board members and business owners, 
    but only to the extent that the entities that they represent are both 
    located in and serve the CBDO's geographic area of operation. In regard 
    to the comment about permitting the presumption of low- and moderate-
    income residents status under this section, it is noted that the 
    presumptions at Section 105(c)(4) of the HCD Act, as added by Section 
    806(e) of the 1992 Act, apply only to activities qualifying under the 
    national objective of job creation or retention for low- and moderate-
    income persons. Permitting them to be used in determining compliance 
    with the board structure requirements of this section would include too 
    broad of a spectrum of organizations to qualify under this provision. 
    Thus, the Department has rejected this comment.
        Issue. Three commenters addressed the proposed Sec. 570.204(c)(2) 
    that provided further ways in which an organization might qualify as an 
    eligible CBDO under this section. These commenters requested 
    clarification of when this paragraph would apply, and two of the 
    commenters specifically requested that HUD expand the jurisdictional 
    restrictions imposed on CHDOs, as designated by the HOME program, 
    qualifying under this paragraph. (1 national association, 1 development 
    organization, and 1 HUD Field staff person)
        Response. HUD's intent in the proposed Sec. 570.204(c)(2) was to 
    give organizations that did not meet the general qualification 
    requirements of (c)(1) certain additional ways of qualifying as a CBDO 
    under this section of the CDBG regulations. It was not intended that 
    qualifying organizations would have to meet both (c) (1) and (2); an 
    entity can qualify under either standard. HUD has revised the 
    introductory language to Sec. 570.204(c)(2) in this final rule to 
    clarify that intent. An understanding of this approach is critical in 
    assessing the requirements that a CHDO under the HOME program must meet 
    in order to qualify under Sec. 570.204 of the CDBG Entitlement 
    regulations. A CHDO qualifying under the HOME program may or may not 
    meet the general qualification requirements for a CBDO under the CDBG 
    Entitlement program, as delineated at Sec. 570.204(c)(1) of this final 
    rule. If a CHDO meets those requirements, it may have an area of 
    operation as large as the jurisdiction of the recipient, just as any 
    other qualified CBDO. The more restrictive jurisdictional limits at 
    Sec. 570.204(c)(2)(iii) are only applicable to [[Page 1928]] CHDOs that 
    cannot meet the general CDBG Entitlement qualification requirements for 
    CBDOs. An example of such an entity would be a CHDO that meets only the 
    minimum HOME percentage requirement for low- and moderate-income 
    persons on its board (33 percent) and cannot show that it has 
    sufficient types of representatives on that board to meet the 51 
    percent standard delineated in Sec. 570.204(c)(1)(iv).
        In assessing the comments on this issue, HUD has determined that it 
    is appropriate to provide organizations with an additional alternative 
    for qualifying as a CBDO under this section of the CDBG regulations. 
    Thus, in this final rule, HUD has added a new Sec. 570.204(c)(3) under 
    which an organization that does not qualify under either 
    Sec. 570.204(c) (1) or (2) may also be determined to qualify as an 
    eligible entity under this section if the grantee demonstrates to the 
    satisfaction of HUD, through the provision of information regarding the 
    organization's charter and by-laws, that the organization is 
    sufficiently similar in purpose, function, and scope to those entities 
    qualifying under the above-referenced paragraphs. The Department 
    intends to have this determination made at the HUD Field Office level.
        Also in this regard, it should be noted that HUD expects that many 
    Community Development Financial Institutions meeting the criteria in 
    Title I, Subtitle A of the Riegle Community Development and Regulatory 
    Improvement Act of 1994 (P. L. 103-325, enacted September 23, 1994) 
    will qualify as CBDOs under Sec. 570.204 of the CDBG Entitlement 
    regulations. The above-referenced subtitle comprises the Community 
    Development Banking and Financial Institutions Act. The purpose of this 
    subtitle is to create a Community Development Financial Institutions 
    Fund to promote economic revitalization and community development 
    through investment in, and assistance to, CDFIs, including enhancing 
    the liquidity of such institutions. The CDFI Fund is to be a wholly-
    owned Government corporation that will not be affiliated with any other 
    agency of the Federal Government. In this final rule, HUD is adding to 
    the Entitlement regulations a definition of the term CDFI that 
    references the above-noted new legislation. A CDFI is generally defined 
    at Section 103 of that Act as an entity that (i) has a primary mission 
    of promoting community development; (ii) serves an investment area or a 
    targeted population; (iii) provides development services in conjunction 
    with equity investments or loans, directly or through a subsidiary or 
    affiliate; (iv) maintains accountability to residents of its investment 
    area or targeted population; and (v) is not a government agency or 
    instrumentality. An ``investment area'' is defined as an area that 
    either (i) meets objective criteria of economic distress developed by 
    the Fund and has significant unmet needs for loans or equity 
    investments; or (ii) is located in a designated Empowerment Zone or 
    Enterprise Community. These CDFI criteria are similar to those now set 
    forth in Sec. 570.204(c).
        It should again be noted that the requirements of Sec. 570.204 only 
    apply to the qualification of CBDOs serving Entitlement jurisdictions 
    under the CDBG program. As discussed earlier in this preamble, Section 
    807(f) of the 1992 Act expanded the list of organizations eligible to 
    carry out activities in nonentitlement areas under Section 105(a)(15) 
    of the HCD Act. Any nonprofit organization serving the development 
    needs of nonentitlement areas now qualifies under Section 105(a)(15) of 
    the Act for the State CDBG program.
        Issue. One commenter also recommended that HUD allow a limited 
    partnership in which the managing general partner is an eligible CBDO 
    to qualify under Sec. 570.204. The commenter argues that the use of 
    low-income tax credits (LITCs) necessitates a limited partnership 
    structure and that adding the limited partnership itself as a 
    qualifying entity would remove the necessity of having two levels of 
    contracts--one between the grantee and the CBDO and one between that 
    CBDO and the limited partnership. (1 local government agency)
        Response. Limited partnerships are single purpose entities which 
    exist to syndicate and develop one project. It would be difficult to 
    construe the definitions of the statutorily eligible entities to 
    include limited partnerships. Thus, HUD has decided against expressly 
    adding a provision to the regulations to include the type of limited 
    partnership described by the commenter. However, in cases in which the 
    activities of an LIHTC limited partnership are controlled by a 
    Sec. 570.204 qualified entity, usually by that entity either serving as 
    the general partner of the limited partnership or establishing such an 
    entity as a subsidiary, the Department has accepted that CDBG 
    assistance may be provided by the Sec. 570.204 qualified entity to the 
    limited partnership for the purpose of carrying out all or part of the 
    eligible project. The Department will continue to explore ways of 
    removing unnecessary administrative burdens for such projects.
        Issue. Specifically in regard to qualified entities in 
    nonentitlement areas, one commenter (a state agency) took issue with 
    the discussion of such entities contained in the preamble to the 
    proposed rule. The state agency disagreed with HUD's statutory 
    interpretation that the term ``nonprofit organizations serving the 
    development needs of communities in non-entitlement areas'' excludes 
    units of general local government. This interpretation, according to 
    the state, would restrict the use of CDBG funds by certain State-
    sanctioned local entities.
        Response. The Department has chosen not to accept this comment. The 
    preamble to the proposed rule noted that a public nonprofit 
    organization which meets Internal Revenue Service requirements for 
    nonprofit status may qualify under Section 105(a)(15) of the Act. The 
    Department does not define a number of terms (``neighborhood 
    revitalization project'', ``community economic development project'', 
    ``energy conservation project'', ``carrying out an activity'') which 
    are significant to the discussion of CBDOs above, in order to give 
    States maximum flexibility to implement Section 105(a)(15) within the 
    context of their particular situations.
    
    National Objective Standards for Low- and Moderate-Income Area Benefit 
    Activities
    
        Issue. A total of seven commenters addressed the proposed revisions 
    to Sec. 570.208(a)(1)(i) of the Entitlement regulations and 
    Sec. 570.483(b)(1)(i) of the State regulations dealing with activities 
    qualifying under the national objective of benefiting low- and 
    moderate-income persons as area benefit activities. This revision 
    relates specifically to a proposed presumption of compliance for 
    special economic development activities that may be carried out under 
    Sec. 570.203 [Sections 105(a) (14) and (17) of the HCD Act] by a 
    community development financial institution (CDFI) meeting certain 
    criteria. Concerns raised by the commenters included statements both 
    for and against the proposed presumption; requests for clarification of 
    the types of entities that would qualify as CDFIs; and requests for 
    revisions to the ``primarily residential'' and other aspects of the 
    regulation. (1 local government agency, 1 state agency, 1 development 
    organization, 1 national association, 1 private citizen, and 2 HUD 
    Field staff persons)
        Response. Supporting the development and growth of CDFIs can be a 
    critical component in the comprehensive revitalization of 
    [[Page 1929]] distressed neighborhoods because they often address the 
    financing needs of these areas that are otherwise unmet. Existing CDFIs 
    have demonstrated their ability to identify and respond to community 
    needs for equity investments, loans, and development services. Thus, 
    HUD has decided to include a modified version of the proposed 
    presumption in this final rule.
        First, it is important to define the types of entities that may 
    qualify as CDFIs, as some of the commenters noted. As noted earlier in 
    this preamble, HUD is herein adding to the CDBG regulations a 
    definition of the term CDFI that references the Title I, Subtitle A of 
    the Riegle Community Development and Regulatory Improvement Act of 1994 
    (P. L. 103-325, enacted September 23, 1994). Secondly, HUD has 
    determined that it is more appropriate to create separate paragraphs in 
    Sec. 570.208 of the Entitlement regulations and Sec. 570.483 of the 
    State regulations to reflect the options that may be used for 
    activities carried out by certain CDFIs, rather than to simply include 
    the proposed presumption in Sec. 570.208(a)(1)(i) and 
    Sec. 570.483(b)(1). Thus, in this final rule, HUD has added new 
    paragraphs under the ``additional criteria'' section of the national 
    objective requirements at Sec. 570.208(d)(6) of the Entitlement 
    regulations and Sec. 570.483(e)(4) of the State regulations to list the 
    options that may be used for CDBG activities carried out by any CDFI 
    whose charter limits its investment area to a primarily residential 
    area consisting of at least 51 percent low- and moderate-income 
    persons. The new paragraphs Sec. 507.208(d)(6)(i) and 
    Sec. 570.483(e)(4)(i) cross reference with additional new paragraphs 
    Sec. 570.208(a)(1)(v) and Sec. 570.483(b)(1)(iv) of the Entitlement and 
    State regulations, respectively. Pursuant to these paragraphs, job 
    creation or retention activities carried out by CDFIs meeting the above 
    criteria may be presumed to meet the low- and moderate-income area 
    benefit criteria. It should be noted that with the area benefit 
    presumption applied in this manner, the ``exception criteria'' for 
    Entitlement communities cannot be used in this regard. Thus, in order 
    to take advantage of the area benefit presumption, the CDFI's 
    investment area must be at least 51 percent low- and moderate-income 
    regardless of the community's usual area benefit threshold requirement.
        HUD has determined that it is also appropriate to offer a similar 
    benefit for job creation or retention activities carried out under 
    certain other circumstances. Thus, in this final rule, HUD has also 
    added Sec. 570.208(d)(5) in the Entitlement regulations, which is 
    cross-referenced in Sec. 570.208(a)(1)(v). Under this provision, job 
    creation or retention activities undertaken in an area pursuant to a 
    HUD-approved economic revitalization strategy developed in accordance 
    with the authority of Sec. 91.215(e) of the Consolidated Plan final 
    rule may be presumed to meet the low- and moderate-income area benefit 
    criteria. It should be noted that in order to reduce the potential for 
    abuse of this provision, HUD is limiting this form of area benefit 
    presumption to areas that are primarily residential and contain a 
    percentage of low- and moderate-income residents that is no less than 
    the percentage computed by HUD pursuant to Sec. 570.208(a)(1)(ii) but 
    in no event less than 51 percent. This means that the required low- and 
    moderate-income percentage for the area may be significantly higher 
    than that which the community generally uses for its area benefit 
    activities. For those communities that generally use the ``exception 
    criteria,'' the required low- and moderate-income percentage for this 
    area benefit presumption is 51 percent. For a community that generally 
    is required to meet 51 percent for regular area benefit activities, the 
    required low- and moderate-income percentage for this area benefit 
    presumption is that percentage level of low- and moderate-income 
    persons in the last census block group in the community's highest 
    quartile of block groups ranked in order of proportion of low- and 
    moderate-income persons, as computed by HUD pursuant to 
    Sec. 570.208(a)(1)(ii).
        The Department will develop guidelines for determining when 
    grantees should be authorized to take advantage of the benefits of this 
    economic revitalization strategy area approach. These guidelines will 
    be distributed to both grantees and HUD Field Office staff.
        In developing this approach for the Entitlement program, the 
    Department became aware of significant issues concerning how the 
    economic revitalization strategy provision might be applied to the 
    State program. Therefore, the Department is not implementing comparable 
    regulation language for the State program at this time. In order to 
    gain public comment, the economic revitalization strategy area concept 
    for states will be the subject of a future proposed rule. In the 
    meantime, the Department welcomes any comments or suggestions on how 
    the economic revitalization strategy area approach might be applied to 
    the State CDBG program.
        Two commenters expressed concern about the requirement in 
    Sec. 570.208(a)(1)(i) that limits the use of the low- and moderate-
    income area benefit provision in general to only those activities that 
    serve areas that are ``primarily residential.'' It should be noted this 
    requirement is a long-standing provision of the CDBG regulations and 
    has served the program well. Thus, HUD has decided not to make any 
    changes to that requirement in this final rule. One of the commenters, 
    a HUD Field staff person, recommended that a specific exception to the 
    ``primarily residential'' requirement be made for projects qualifying 
    under Sec. 570.204 of the Entitlement regulations [Section 105(a)(15) 
    of the HCD Act] because the types of projects made eligible under that 
    section, including ``neighborhood revitalization'' and ``community 
    economic development,'' appear to lend themselves to an area-wide 
    benefit test. Such a change has not been incorporated into this final 
    rule. The activities most often carried out under Sec. 570.204 [Section 
    105(a)(15)] involve the provision of housing, and Section 105(c)(3) of 
    the HCD Act specifically precludes the use of a low- and moderate-
    income area benefit national objective claim for such activities. 
    However, in recognition of the merit of the recommendation, HUD has 
    made certain changes in this final rule to ease grantees' burden in 
    tracking low- and moderate-income national objective compliance for 
    housing activities in certain areas. These changes are more fully 
    discussed later in this preamble.
        One commenter, a national association, expressed support for a 
    supposed ``revision to permit area benefit . . . without requiring that 
    the area be defined in terms of census tracts or other official 
    boundaries.'' The commenter appears to misunderstand current 
    requirements. While the CDBG regulations do require entitlement 
    grantees to use, to the greatest extent feasible, the most recently 
    available decennial census data to support the low- and moderate-income 
    character of the area (and Sec. 570.208(a)(1)(iv) has been modified to 
    incorporate a reference to the new Sec. 570.208(a)(1)(v) in this 
    regard), there is no current requirement that the service area be 
    defined along census tract or other official boundaries. The language 
    included in this regard in Sec. 570.208(a)(1)(i) (for Entitlements) and 
    Sec. 570.483(b)(1) (for States) in the proposed rule is unchanged from 
    current requirements. [[Page 1930]] 
    
    National Objective Compliance by Microenterprise Assistance Activities
    
        Issue. A total of 15 commenters addressed the proposed new 
    Sec. 570.208(a)(2)(iii) to be added to the Entitlement regulations and 
    the proposed new Sec. 570.483(b)(2)(iv) to be added to the State 
    regulations to specifically provide the limited clientele national 
    objective option for activities qualifying under the new 
    microenterprise assistance eligibility category. Many of these 
    commenters specifically supported the provision, and a few specifically 
    opposed it. Various commenters requested revisions to or clarification 
    of certain aspects of the provision, most of which related to the 
    manner in which jobs created by such activities would be considered (2 
    local government agencies, 3 state agencies, 4 national associations, 4 
    development organizations, 1 private citizen, and 1 HUD Field staff 
    person).
        Response. As discussed in the preamble to the proposed rule, 
    activities carried out under the new microenterprise eligibility 
    category are not statutorily subject to the same low- and moderate 
    income national objective limitations as are generally applicable to 
    special economic development activities carried out under Sec. 570.203 
    [and Sections 105(a)(14) & (17) of the HCD Act]. Thus, the low- and 
    moderate-income limited clientele method of meeting a national 
    objective becomes an option for activities carried out under the new 
    microenterprise eligibility category. While many commenters 
    specifically supported the subject proposed provision, a few commenters 
    specifically opposed it, particularly the fact that only 51 percent of 
    the owners of microenterprises and persons developing them would be 
    required to be low- and moderate-income persons. Thus, there would be 
    the potential to permit sizable numbers of non-low- and moderate-income 
    persons to receive financial assistance to develop a for-profit 
    business. HUD has found these arguments to be compelling. Thus, the 
    Department has revised the subject limited clientele provision in this 
    final rule to restrict its use to qualify only those assisted owners of 
    microenterprises and persons developing microenterprises who are low- 
    and moderate-income persons. This change should not be a significant 
    issue for many of the microenterprise activities assisted under the 
    CDBG program. Many such programs are designed to provide a means to 
    help disadvantaged persons become more economically self-sufficient and 
    are thus often targeted to persons who meet income qualification 
    criteria at least as restrictive as the CDBG definition of low and 
    moderate income. Also, to allow for some continuity of service to a 
    low- or moderate-income person initially assisted under a 
    microenterprise activity who later may no longer meet the income 
    guidelines after the microenterprise actually becomes operational, the 
    Department has retained the option that permits, for purposes of 
    meeting this national objective requirement, any person determined to 
    be of low or moderate income to be presumed to continue to qualify as 
    such for up to a three-year period before that person would have to 
    requalify. The language in this final rule also clarifies that under 
    this new limited clientele provision, it is only owners of 
    microenterprises and persons developing microenterprises that are 
    considered for national objective purposes and not employees of such 
    businesses who are not part-owners.
        While the new limited clientele provision has been restricted to 
    only low- and moderate-income persons, activities qualifying under the 
    new microenterprise eligibility category that may serve non-low- and 
    moderate-income entrepreneurs may still be assisted under the criteria 
    for creation and/or retention of jobs principally for low- and 
    moderate-income persons. Under that national objective claim, all 
    employees of a microenterprise, including the owner(s), are considered, 
    and a grantee can use the new presumptions added by Section 806(e) of 
    the 1992 Act for determining a person's status as a low- or moderate-
    income person, as implemented in this final rule at Sec. 570.208(a)(4) 
    of the Entitlement regulations and Sec. 570.483(b)(4) of the State 
    regulations. These presumptions cannot be used under the new limited 
    clientele provision because the 1992 Act added them as a new Section 
    105(c)(4) of the HCD Act which refers only to activities qualifying 
    under the national objective of job creation or retention for low- and 
    moderate-income persons.
        One commenter asked that HUD specifically name examples of low- and 
    moderate-income clientele. Certain such examples that apply to all 
    activities benefiting low- and moderate-income persons are included in 
    Sec. 570.506(b) of the Entitlement regulations.
        Two commenters requested clarification as to whether HUD's 
    proposing the limited clientele provision for microenterprise 
    assistance activities means that ``cost per job'' created will not be a 
    primary consideration in the evaluation of a CDBG-funded 
    microenterprise program. ``Cost per job'' is not a primary HUD 
    consideration for any microenterprise assistance activities carried out 
    under the new separate microenterprise eligibility category. Such a 
    calculation only comes into play in the public benefit standards 
    (established elsewhere in this final rule), which are not statutorily 
    applicable to activities carried out under the new microenterprise 
    eligibility category. As with any CDBG activity, however, grantees have 
    the flexibility to add additional local criteria for activity 
    evaluation. Also, given the general requirement that all costs charged 
    to the CDBG program must be necessary and reasonable for the proper and 
    efficient administration of the program, HUD expects grantees to 
    consider cost in relation to results for all activities and to take 
    steps to curb unusually high costs.
    
    National Objective Compliance for Employment Support Activities
    
        As delineated earlier in this preamble under the discussion of the 
    new Sec. 570.203(c) economic development services provision in the 
    Entitlement regulations, HUD is aware of various proposals under which 
    certain entities have indicated a willingness to train low- and 
    moderate-income persons for jobs and/or provide such persons with other 
    employment opportunities, but these entities cannot agree that 51 
    percent of all assisted persons will be low- or moderate-income. HUD 
    believes that such proposals can often provide valuable opportunities 
    for employment of low- and moderate-income persons and that a way 
    should be found to permit CDBG funds to assist such efforts. Thus, HUD 
    is amending the low- and moderate-income limited clientele national 
    objective requirements in this final rule [with a new 
    Sec. 570.208(a)(2)(iv) in the Entitlement regulations and a new 
    Sec. 570.483(b)(2)(v) in the State regulations] to authorize the use of 
    CDBG funds for such activities that provide training and/or other 
    employment support services in limited circumstances. In order to 
    qualify under this provision, CDBG assistance for the project must be 
    limited to the provision of such training and/or supportive services; 
    the percentage of the total project cost borne by CDBG may not exceed 
    the percentage of all persons assisted who are low or moderate income. 
    HUD has included this provision under the limited clientele category 
    rather than the job creation or retention national objective category 
    because while such use of CDBG funds solely for job training and/or 
    supportive services can often be considered to [[Page 1931]] ``involve 
    employment'' of low- and moderate-income persons (reference Section 
    105(c)(1) of the Act), they cannot generally be considered to directly 
    ``create'' or ``retain'' jobs as those terms are used in the CDBG 
    regulations.
    
    National Objective Standards for Low- and Moderate-Income Housing 
    Activities
    
        As noted under the low- and moderate-income area benefit discussion 
    earlier in this preamble, HUD has added in this final rule new 
    paragraphs Sec. 570.208(d)(5) and (6) in the Entitlement regulations 
    and Sec. 570.483(e)(4) in the State regulations. These paragraphs lay 
    out various national objective options for activities undertaken in 
    certain lower-income areas either by a CDFI or (in Entitlement 
    communities) pursuant to a HUD-approved economic revitalization 
    strategy. Paragraph (ii) of each of these new sections refers to 
    housing activities carried out under these circumstances, and they are 
    cross referenced in Sec. 570.208(a)(3) in the Entitlement regulations 
    and Sec. 570.483(b)(3) in the State regulations in this final rule. As 
    noted earlier, Section 105(c)(3) of the Act limits the manner in which 
    housing activities may be considered to benefit low- and moderate-
    income persons, and it precludes the use of an area benefit claim for 
    such activities. As an alternative, the new provisions in this final 
    rule permit all housing activities carried out under the delineated 
    limited circumstances to be grouped together and considered as a single 
    structure for purposes of complying with the low- and moderate-income 
    housing national objective requirements. (For example, a grantee 
    providing rehabilitation assistance to 10 single-family housing units 
    in such an area could classify all 10 units as meeting the low- and 
    moderate-income benefit national objective if at least six of the units 
    were occupied by low- and moderate-income persons.) For the calculation 
    of the overall low- and moderate-income benefit level of a grantee's 
    CDBG program, such housing is still subject to the limitation on 
    benefit to low- and moderate-income persons relative to activity costs, 
    pursuant to Sec. 570.200(a)(3)(iv) of the Entitlement regulations and 
    Sec. 570.484(b)(4) of the State regulations.
    
    National Objective Standards for Benefiting Low- and Moderate-Income 
    Persons Through the Creation or Retention of Jobs
    
    Presumptions Added by 1992 Act
    
        Issue. A total of 19 commenters addressed the general manner in 
    which HUD proposed to implement the presumptions for determining an 
    employee's status as a low- and moderate-income person that were added 
    to the HCD Act as a new Section 105(c)(4) by Section 806(e) of the 1992 
    Act for job creation and retention activities. Of the total number of 
    commenters, 11 clearly indicated their support for the proposed change, 
    and five stated their opposition. Most of the support comments were 
    based on the reduced burden and ``less intrusive'' means for 
    determining the low- and moderate-income status of employees. Most of 
    the comments opposing the proposed change referenced the fact that the 
    proposed rule used only the minimum test for Empowerment Zone and 
    Enterprise Community census tract. Concern was particularly expressed 
    that there was no reference to the ``pervasive poverty, unemployment, 
    and general distress'' requirement for Empowerment Zone and Enterprise 
    Communities. (6 local government agencies, 6 national associations, 1 
    state agency, 3 development organizations, 2 private citizens, and 1 
    HUD Field staff person)
        Response. After a thorough review of all of the above comments and 
    the applicable statutory references at Title XIII, Chapter I, 
    Subchapter C, Part I of the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1993 
    regarding the eligibility criteria for Empowerment Zones and Enterprise 
    Communities, HUD has determined that the presumptions added by the 1992 
    Act should be implemented in a more stringent manner than was set forth 
    in the proposed rule. The Department particularly agrees with those 
    commenters who noted that the ``pervasive poverty, unemployment, and 
    general distress'' eligibility requirement for Empowerment Zone and 
    Enterprise Communities should be reflected in the implementation of the 
    subject low- and moderate-income presumptions for job creation and 
    retention activities under the CDBG program. Thus, a new paragraph 
    Sec. 570.208(a)(4)(v) of the Entitlement regulations and a new 
    paragraph Sec. 570.483(b)(4)(v) of the State regulations have been 
    added to define the requirements a census tract (or block numbering 
    area) must meet in order to qualify for the presumptions added by the 
    1992 Act. Under these provisions, a census tract must, in part, 
    demonstrate pervasive poverty and general distress by meeting at least 
    one of three delineated standards. Two of these standards relate to the 
    poverty levels in the various block groups comprising the census tract. 
    The third standard provides a grantee with the option of requesting a 
    determination from HUD that a census tract meets the ``pervasive'' test 
    based on other objectively determinable signs of general distress. The 
    Department intends to have the subject determinations made at the HUD 
    Field Office level.
        A conforming change to the new Sec. 570.506(b)(7) of the 
    Entitlement regulations regarding records that need to be maintained 
    for the subject presumptions is also included in the final rule.
        Issue. A total of 10 commenters responded to HUD's specific request 
    for comment as to whether tighter presumption standards should be 
    established for census tracts that comprise or include any part of a 
    community's central business district (CBD), as discussed in the 
    Empowerment Zone and Enterprise Community legislation. Six of the 
    commenters wanted no special standards for CBDs. Four of the commenters 
    argued that there must be tighter standards for such areas given the 
    statutory eligibility criteria for Empowerment Zones and Enterprise 
    Communities (4 local government agencies, 3 national associations, 1 
    development organization, and 2 private citizens).
        Response. After a thorough review of all of the above comments and 
    the applicable statutory references, HUD has determined that tighter 
    presumption standards must be established for CBDs. The statutory 
    arguments are compelling. Thus, in the new paragraph 
    Sec. 570.208(a)(4)(v) of the Entitlement regulations and a new 
    paragraph Sec. 570.483(b)(4)(v) of the State regulations added by this 
    final rule, HUD has included language similar to that which appears in 
    the Empowerment Zone and Enterprise Community regulations regarding 
    this issue, establishing a 30 percent poverty standard for any census 
    tract that includes any portion of a CBD (as that term is used in the 
    most recent Census of Retail Trade).
        Issue. Two commenters recommended that HUD revise the proposed rule 
    language to include census tracts that qualify for Empowerment Zone or 
    Enterprise Community eligibility under that program's special rules 
    relating to the determination of poverty rates for census tracts with 
    small populations, particularly those tracts that are more 
    [[Page 1932]] than 75 percent zoned for commercial or industrial use (1 
    local government agency and 1 development organization).
        Response. HUD has determined that it is not appropriate to revise 
    the regulations implementing the CDBG presumptions to include such 
    tracts in general. While the Empowerment Zone/Enterprise Community 
    legislation does permit these tracts to be considered as passing the 
    minimum poverty tests, this is done mainly in the context of qualifying 
    the tract as part of an overall area to be designated. Because the CDBG 
    presumptions apply only on an individual census tract basis, the 
    Department has determined that including such tracts without limitation 
    would unduly broaden the scope of the subject presumptions. However, it 
    is recognized that many federally designated Empowerment Zones and 
    Enterprise Communities could include such census tracts. Thus, the new 
    paragraph Sec. 570.208(a)(4)(v) of the Entitlement regulations and a 
    new paragraph Sec. 570.483(b)(4)(v) of the State regulations added in 
    this final rule to implement the CDBG presumptions permit any census 
    tract that is part of a federally designated Empowerment Zone or 
    Enterprise Community to qualify for the CDBG presumption regardless of 
    whether it meets the other general criteria delineated in the 
    regulation.
        Issue. Several commenters raised other concerns that relate to the 
    statutory bases for the subject presumptions of a person's low- and 
    moderate-income status for CDBG activities carried out under the 
    national objective of job creation or retention. Issues raised 
    included: concerns regarding the use of census tract data instead of 
    block group or ``neighborhood'' data; a recommendation to permit 
    communities to use data obtained through a survey; questions as to why 
    one of the presumptions only applied to the residence of the employee 
    while the other applied to either the employee's residence or the 
    location of the assisted business; and concerns about the 
    interpretation of the terms ``assisted business'' and ``job under 
    consideration'' as used in the proposed rule, as opposed to the term 
    ``assisted activity'' as used in the Act (4 national associations and 1 
    private citizen).
        Response. Section 105(c)(4) of the Act, as added by Section 806(e) 
    of the 1992 Act, which expressly authorizes the subject low- and 
    moderate-income presumptions for job creation and retention activities, 
    specifically refers to ``census tracts.'' Thus, overall tract data must 
    be used in determining these presumptions. In regard to the presumption 
    that is determined by the tract meeting what Section 105(c)(4) calls 
    ``Federal enterprise zone eligibility criteria,'' it is noted that the 
    Empowerment Zone/Enterprise Community legislation requires poverty 
    rates to be determined using the most recent decennial census data 
    available. Thus, this requirement is carried over into a new paragraph 
    Sec. 570.208(a)(4)(v) of the Entitlement regulations and a new 
    paragraph Sec. 570.483(b)(4)(v) of the State regulations added in this 
    final rule to implement the related CDBG presumption. The other CDBG 
    presumption, which is based on the low- and moderate-income character 
    of the census tract in which an employee resides, does not carry with 
    it the specific requirement that the most recent decennial census data 
    available must be used. Thus, while HUD expects grantees to follow the 
    general CDBG rule of using such census data to the fullest extent 
    feasible, it would be possible for a grantee to conduct a survey to 
    support a census tract's qualification for that presumption. However, 
    given the statutory ``census tract'' language noted above, the area for 
    which such a survey would be undertaken must coincide with the census 
    tract boundary. It is further noted that this latter presumption only 
    applies to a census tract in which an employee resides and not to the 
    location of the assisted economic development project because of the 
    statutory language in Section 105(c)(4).
        In expressing concern over the possible interpretation of the terms 
    ``assisted business'' and ``job under consideration,'' as used in the 
    regulations implementing the broader presumption, one commenter gave 
    two examples. First, the commenter states that assistance to a ``branch 
    office'' located in a qualified tract should be able to use the 
    presumption resulting from ``Federal enterprise zone eligibility 
    criteria'' even if the business' principal office is located elsewhere. 
    This is entirely consistent with the language included in the new 
    paragraph Sec. 570.208(a)(4)(iv) of the Entitlement regulations and the 
    new paragraph Sec. 570.483(b)(4)(iv) of the State regulations. In using 
    the term ``assisted business'' in those portions of the rule, HUD does 
    not intend to imply that the business' main office or corporate 
    headquarters must be located in a qualified tract in order to use the 
    presumption. The regulatory language is designed to provide sufficient 
    restrictions to prohibit businesses from establishing only a ``shell'' 
    office to make use of the location presumption while the actual 
    activity being assisted is in fact being carried out elsewhere. 
    Assistance to legitimate ``branch offices'' is not restricted under the 
    regulatory language. As a second example, the commenter states that a 
    ``job training center or small business assistance office'' should be 
    able to use the presumption even though such a facility ``helps people 
    who do not yet have businesses nor specific `jobs under 
    consideration'.'' It is not clear how this second example would be able 
    to use the presumption given the statutory language at Section 
    105(c)(4). Based on that provision, the new presumptions can only be 
    used for activities qualifying under the national objective of job 
    creation or retention for low- and moderate-income persons. Job 
    training centers or business assistance offices such as those which 
    appear to be described in the commenter's second example generally 
    would not qualify under that national objective and would thus not be 
    able to use the presumption.
        Issue. Two commenters raised questions about how the subject 
    presumptions would be implemented. The first question relates to 
    whether the presumptions based on an employee's residence could be used 
    together with the traditional way of documenting an employee as a low- 
    or moderate-income person in order to meet the overall 51 percent low- 
    and moderate-income requirement for jobs created or retained by a 
    particular assisted business. One of the commenters also asked what 
    documentation HUD will require to verify that jobs are created when the 
    presumption on the basis of the location of the business is used. (1 
    state agency and 1 private citizen)
        Response. In regard to the first question, it is entirely 
    permissible for a grantee, in a single activity, to combine counting 
    employees presumed to be low- and moderate-income persons on the basis 
    of their residence with those employees documented as being such 
    persons under more traditional means. Any concerns that this could 
    possibly lead to the company and/or the grantee being accused of 
    ``singling out certain individuals'' for requests for income 
    information (as one of the commenters states), is as unfounded as the 
    ``privacy'' concerns certain persons have raised for several years in 
    discussions of this section of the CDBG regulations. In regard to the 
    second question, a grantee qualifying a business based on its location 
    must still obtain sufficient documentation to demonstrate that jobs are 
    actually created or retained by the activity. This documentation would 
    be [[Page 1933]] similar to that which the grantee currently receives 
    for such activities, with the exception that any employee income 
    information would be omitted.
        Issue. Two commenters recommended that the final rule contain 
    language which would make it easy for low- and moderate-income people 
    to challenge an ``unwarranted presumption.'' They recommend that HUD 
    reiterate the regulatory ``substantial evidence to the contrary'' 
    language in this section of the regulations and add wording that would 
    encourage residents to submit challenges and direct HUD to quickly 
    respond to such challenges. (1 national association and 1 development 
    organization)
        Response. HUD cannot accommodate this recommendation. The subject 
    presumptions of a person's low- and moderate-income status for job 
    creation or retention activities is specifically authorized by statute. 
    It does not matter if the presumption appears ``unwarranted'' in a 
    specific case; if the activity meets the requirements delineated in 
    Section 105(c)(4) of the Act, it is entitled to use the presumption. 
    There is a distinct difference between these presumptions and those 
    that are HUD has otherwise established only on a regulatory basis under 
    the limited clientele standards.
    
    Job Creation or Retention by Public Infrastructure Improvements
    
        The Department proposed another amendment to Sec. 570.208(a)(4) of 
    the CDBG Entitlement regulations and Sec. 570.483(b)(4) of the State 
    regulations concerning the requirements for demonstrating national 
    objective compliance by CDBG-assisted infrastructure improvements. 
    Eight entities commented on this proposed change: 4 states, 2 national 
    associations, one HUD staff person and one citizen. Nearly all 
    commenters supported HUD's efforts to provide more flexibility in this 
    area. Several comments suggested specific revisions to HUD's proposal.
        Issue. Communities often over-design public facilities to 
    accommodate future growth; this frequently makes sense for the 
    community. However, CDBG funds should only be used to pay costs 
    associated with the capacity needed by presently-identified businesses, 
    or else the grantee should track future job creation for three years.
        Response. The Department has chosen not to accept this suggestion. 
    As noted in the preamble to the proposed rule, the Department proposed 
    shortening the three-year tracking period to one year because it has 
    received numerous comments from states that the existing State CDBG 
    regulations are unduly burdensome. The Department believes it would be 
    cumbersome for HUD staff to attempt to identify and prorate 
    construction costs associated with current vs. future capacity needs; 
    this could place HUD staff in the role of second-guessing grantees' 
    engineering reports.
        Issue. Two commenters requested that projected, rather than actual, 
    job creation/retention be compared to the $10,000 CDBG cost-per-job 
    threshold. Because grantees cannot be completely certain how many jobs 
    will actually be created, there may be instances where the projected 
    cost per job is less than $10,000, but the actual cost per job is over 
    $10,000.
        Response. The Department concurs with these comments. The 
    Department is concerned that grantees might intentionally overstate the 
    projected number of jobs so as to take advantage of the less stringent 
    requirements for projects whose per-job cost is less than $10,000. 
    However, it is impossible for job creation or retention estimates to be 
    100% accurate. As the proposed regulations are worded, a grantee could 
    be retroactively held responsible for tracking a wider universe of 
    businesses for job creation/retention if the actual cost per job was 
    over $10,000, even though the projected cost per job was under $10,000. 
    In the final regulations, references to actual vs. projected job 
    creation/retention have been eliminated. Instead, the regulations refer 
    to jobs ``to be created or retained.''
        In the regulations on public benefit documentation, the Department 
    indicates that, where a grantee shows a pattern of substantial 
    variation between projected and actual benefits received, a grantee 
    will be expected to take actions to improve the accuracy of its 
    projections. The Department has not included comparable language in 
    this section. If, for purposes of this section, a grantee's projections 
    show a pattern of substantial variation from actual job creation/
    retention, the Department will expect grantees to take steps to improve 
    the accuracy of their projections.
        Issue. One commenter recommended that, rather than requiring 
    grantees to conduct an assessment of businesses in the service area of 
    the public facility or improvement, the rule should require an 
    ``appropriate'' review for public improvement projects undertaken to 
    create or retain jobs.
        Response. The Department does not accept this comment, for two 
    reasons. This suggestion confuses requirements for meeting a national 
    objective with requirements for demonstrating the eligibility of an 
    activity. Equally significant is that the new statutory requirements 
    regarding evaluating and selecting economic development projects 
    effectively replace the ``appropriate'' determinations previously 
    required. The Guidelines for Evaluating Project Costs and Financial 
    Requirements are not applicable to public improvement projects; a 
    grantee may choose to develop guidelines for evaluating public 
    improvement projects if it wishes. The Department has chosen to apply 
    the public Benefit standards only to those public improvement projects 
    (undertaken to create or retain jobs) for which the projected cost per 
    job is $10,000 or more.
        Issue. HUD should restrict the use of CDBG funds in situations 
    where economic development infrastructure activities cross privately-
    owned property. This would be construed as a potential windfall to the 
    private property owner or company.
        Response. The Department has chosen not to accept this 
    recommendation. HUD is unaware of any evidence that this is a 
    significant problem in the CDBG program. As the commenter acknowledges, 
    states and localities have legal mechanisms to govern hookup access to 
    public utilities.
        Issue. One commenter noted that the proposed Entitlement and State 
    regulation language differs regarding businesses with which agreements 
    must be signed; the commenter prefers the language in the proposed 
    State CDBG regulation.
        Response. The Department has revised the relevant sections [which 
    are now Sec. 570.483(b)(4)(vi)(F) and Sec. 570.208(a)(4)(vi)(F) to 
    provide greater consistency between the two paragraphs. In revamping 
    this section of the regulations, the Department has eliminated 
    references to agreements with businesses.
        Issue. Two states urged the Department to delete portions of the 
    proposed regulations: the requirement for conducting an assessment of 
    businesses in the service area of the public facility or improvement; 
    the requirement that job creation should be tracked for each business 
    until the business' job creation/retention obligation is fulfilled; 
    and, where the cost per job is $10,000 or more, applying the time 
    period for tracking businesses to just the business(es) with signed 
    agreements for which the improvement is undertaken.
        Response. Based on relevant statutory language in the Housing and 
    Community Development Act, the Department disagrees with the 
    implication that documentation regarding national objectives should 
    cease once the originally-projected [[Page 1934]] number of jobs has 
    been created. Furthermore, these recommendations would eliminate the 
    distinction in requirements between activities in which the cost per 
    job is $10,000 or more and those in which the cost per job is under 
    $10,000. Based on the data from the State CDBG program, the $10,000 per 
    job created/retained threshold appears to be significantly above the 
    median costs for public facility/improvement projects of this sort; few 
    projects should thus be subject to the stricter requirements. The 
    Department believes that stricter requirements are appropriate for 
    projects costing $10,000 per job or more, because less public benefit 
    is being obtained per CDBG dollar expended.
        However, the Department has taken seriously the underlying desire 
    for simplicity, and as a result has worked to streamline this section 
    of the regulations. Eliminated in the final regulations is the 
    requirement that the recipient undertake an assessment of all 
    businesses in the service area of the public facility/improvement to 
    determine which businesses may create/retain jobs as a result of the 
    public facility/improvement. Grantees are cautioned, however, that 
    should the CDBG per-job cost of the project be $10,000 or more, the 
    recipient must still aggregate jobs created/retained by all businesses 
    which locate or expand in the service area of the public improvement/
    facility. Grantees will thus need some mechanism for identifying such 
    businesses.
        Issue. One state requested that the proposed public improvement-job 
    creation requirements for the State program be made retroactively 
    applicable to projects funded by states after December 9, 1992. That 
    was the effective date of the current State CDBG regulations, in which 
    the existing requirements concerning public improvement-job creation 
    activities were first effected.
        Response. A recent U.S. Supreme Court decision casts uncertainty on 
    the constitutionality of retroactive rulemaking. The Department feels 
    an attempt to provide some retroactive flexibility through the rule-
    making process could be legally problematic. States may, as always, 
    request a waiver of the existing regulations for individual cases.
    Other Job Creation/Retention Issues
        Issue. One commenter raised a concern regarding the provision at 
    the new Sec. 570.208(a)(4)(vi)(B) of the Entitlement regulations which 
    permits the aggregation of jobs for loan funds administered by a 
    subrecipient where CDBG pays only for the staff and overhead and loans 
    are made exclusively from non-CDBG funds. The commenter recommended 
    that HUD change the phrase ``. . . jobs created by all the businesses 
    receiving loans during each program year'' to ``. . . jobs projected by 
    all the businesses receiving . . .'' This recommendation is based on 
    the claim that during the early years of a program's operation, ``few 
    jobs may actually have been created, even though many loans have been 
    `committed.''' (1 private citizen)
        Response. The commenter appears to misunderstand the subject 
    provision. The regulation does not measure the number of jobs actually 
    created in each program year. Instead, it measures all the jobs created 
    as a result of the CDBG assistance by all the businesses that receive 
    loans in each program year, regardless of when the jobs are actually 
    created.
        In developing this final rule, HUD has pursued additional job 
    aggregation options in consideration of the many comments received in 
    support of less burdensome job tracking. Also, in considering the 
    comments on the public benefit standards, HUD has determined that it is 
    appropriate to offer certain flexibility for activities that serve 
    important national interests. Thus, in this final rule, HUD is 
    delineating three additional instances under which jobs created or 
    retained may be aggregated for purposes of determining compliance with 
    national objective requirements. Aggregation of jobs is now also 
    permitted for (1) activities providing technical assistance to for-
    profit businesses; (2) activities meeting the criteria in the public 
    benefit standards at Sec. 570.209(b)(2)(v) of the Entitlement 
    regulations and Sec. 570.482(f)(3)(v) of the State regulations; and (3) 
    for activities carried out by a CDFI. To reflect this, 
    Sec. 570.208(a)(4)(vi) of the Entitlement regulations and 
    Sec. 570.483(b)(4)(vi) of the State regulations have been amended. In 
    this regard, it should also be noted new paragraphs Sec. 570.208(d)(7) 
    and Sec. 570.483(e)(5), added to the Entitlement and State regulations 
    respectively, require that for an activity that may meet the standards 
    for more than one of these options, the grantee may elect only one 
    option under which to qualify the activity. No ``double counting'' is 
    permitted.
        Issue. One commenter raised a concern regarding the requirement 
    regarding the criteria now at Sec. 570.208(a)(4)(iii) and 
    Sec. 570.483(b)(4) making jobs ``available to'' low- and moderate-
    income persons, particularly the ``no special skills'' requirement 
    unless the business agrees to hire unqualified people and then provide 
    training. The commenters argues that HUD should not ``presume'' that 
    low- and moderate-income persons have no education because many such 
    persons may have a community college or vocational technical education 
    and still be underemployed or poorly paid because of various factors. 
    The commenter also notes that in certain cases, the jobs to be created 
    by an assisted activity will not actually be created for a year or 
    more, which would provide time for necessary training before the 
    business completes its hiring process. (1 national association)
        Response. The reference requirement is important to ensure that no 
    special skill or education requirements form a barrier to low- and 
    moderate-income persons being considered for the jobs under the 
    ``available to'' option under Sec. 570.208(a)(4). If a community knows 
    that there is a pool of more skilled low- and moderate-income persons 
    available, it can always choose to demonstrate compliance with the 
    national objective requirement under the ``held by'' option where skill 
    level is not considered. The new low- and moderate-income presumptions 
    should also make it easier for grantees to use the ``held by'' option. 
    In regard to the issue of the timing of the training versus hiring, the 
    Department wants to ensure that any training claimed under the new 
    ``economic development services'' provision at Sec. 570.203(c) of the 
    Entitlement regulations and Sec. 570.482(d) of the State regulations is 
    limited to persons whom the respective business has actually agreed to 
    employ and not to include training just to provide a general ``pool'' 
    of persons from which a business may possibly hire. This is important 
    in distinguishing ``economic development services'' that qualify as 
    part of the ``delivery costs'' of a related economic development 
    project from more generic public service activities that qualify under 
    Sec. 570.201(e) of the Entitlement regulations. It is noted that under 
    this final rule, activities qualifying under either of these 
    eligibility categories can also take advantage of the new low- and 
    moderate-income limited clientele option at Sec. 570.208(a)(2)(iv) of 
    the Entitlement regulations and Sec. 570.483(b)(2)(v) of the State 
    regulations in certain circumstances.
    Request for Comment on Certain Other Job Creation/Retention Issues Not 
    Contained in the Proposed Rule
        In addition to a discussion of specific regulatory revisions, the 
    preamble to the May 31, 1994, proposed rule also contained a specific 
    request for public comment on certain other issues which HUD is 
    examining in an attempt to [[Page 1935]] determine whether further 
    changes should be proposed regarding the national objective standards 
    for benefiting low- and moderate-income persons through the creation or 
    retention of jobs. These issues included: (1) whether any further low- 
    and moderate-income presumptions should be made for job creation or 
    retention activities; (2) whether any modification should be made to 
    the CDBG job retention requirement to document that jobs claimed as 
    being retained would actually be lost without the CDBG assistance; and 
    (3) whether any modification should be made to the requirement in job 
    retention activities that, except for some allowance for jobs that may 
    become available through turnover, the low- and moderate-income 
    standards are applied at the time the assistance is provided, which is 
    while the employees still have the income from the jobs that they are 
    subject to lose. (Please refer to the preamble to the proposed rule 
    published in the Federal Register on May 31, 1994, for a more complete 
    discussion of these issues.)
        A sizable amount of public comment in response to these issues was 
    received. Many of the comments offered interesting suggestions, and HUD 
    will be publishing an additional proposed rule in response to some of 
    the recommendations provided. Such items must go through the proposed 
    rulemaking process in order to provide the general public with an 
    opportunity to comment on them before they would be published for 
    effect. The public comments received on these issues based on the 
    request contained in the preamble to the May 31, 1994, proposed rule 
    will be discussed fully in the preamble to the new proposed rule.
    
    National Objective Standards for Addressing Slums or Blight on an Area 
    Basis
    
        The proposed rule included a revision to Sec. 570.208(b)(1)(ii) of 
    the Entitlement regulations and Sec. 570.483(c)(1)(ii) of the State 
    regulations. This proposal would allow designated slum/blighted areas 
    to qualify under the slum/blight national objective if the area 
    exhibited pervasive economic disinvestment in the form of high turnover 
    or vacancy rates in previously occupied commercial or industrial 
    buildings.
        In addition, the Department sought comment on whether instances of 
    environmental contamination should be considered as evidence of 
    blighting conditions. No specific regulatory language was proposed in 
    that area, however.
        The Department received valuable input on both topics relating to 
    the slum/blight national objective. As a result, the Department has 
    decided to propose additions to the slum/blight criteria to accommodate 
    environmental contamination, and to revise its initially proposed 
    criteria regarding pervasive economic disinvestment. The existing 
    regulations would be significantly restructured to accommodate these 
    changes.
        The Department has decided to publish a new set of proposed 
    regulations dealing with the slum/blight national objectives. The 
    comments received by the Department on slum/blight issues will be 
    discussed in the preamble to those new proposed regulations.
    
    Guidelines for Evaluating and Selecting Economic Development Activities 
    for CDBG Assistance
    
        The proposed rule contained language implementing section 806(a) of 
    the 1992 Act at a proposed new Sec. 570.209 in the Entitlement 
    regulations and additions to Sec. 570.482 in the State regulations. The 
    proposed regulations described guidelines for evaluating certain 
    economic development activities assisted with CDBG funds. These 
    guidelines consist of two parts: guidelines and objectives for 
    evaluating project costs and financial requirements, the use of which 
    are not mandatory, and public benefit standards, which are mandatory.
        Numerous comments were received on various aspects of this section 
    of the proposed regulations. The comments can be categorized into 
    groups of issues, and will be discussed by category of issue.
    
    Underwriting Guidelines--General
    
        The proposed rule described HUD's Guidelines and Objectives for 
    Evaluating Project Costs and Financial Requirements (the ``underwriting 
    guidelines''); the proposed guidelines themselves were published as a 
    separate Federal Register notice on the same day. Sixteen commenters 
    commented on HUD's proposed Guidelines and Objectives for Evaluating 
    Project Costs and Financial Requirements: 5 local governments, 4 
    national associations, 2 States, 3 HUD Field Office staffs, one citizen 
    and one business development entity. Four commenters expressed overall 
    support for the approach proposed to be taken by the Department in 
    implementing the requirements of the 1992 Act.
        Issue. Three commenters stated that the underwriting guidelines 
    themselves should be included in the text of the regulations, rather 
    than in a separate Federal Register notice. By not being part of the 
    regulations themselves, commenters felt that the guidelines would be 
    more easily overlooked or forgotten about in future years.
        Response. These issues were carefully considered by the Department 
    in developing the proposed rule. The rule stated that the use of the 
    underwriting guidelines proposed at Sec. 570.209(a) and Sec. 570.482(e) 
    is not mandatory. To further demonstrate this point, the specific 
    elements of the underwriting guidelines were not included within the 
    text of the proposed rule itself. Instead, they were proposed to be 
    published in a concurrent but separate Federal Register notice. 
    Outweighing the conmmenters' concerns is the fact that, while Congress 
    directed that the guidelines be published by regulation, the use of the 
    underwriting guidelines is not mandatory. To publish non-binding 
    guidance within a set of otherwise binding regulations would be 
    contradictory and confusing. In disseminating information on the final 
    regulations, the Department will take steps to include the guidelines 
    along with the final regulations, to help ensure that the Federal 
    Register notice does not get overlooked.
        Issue. Three widely divergent comments were received regarding the 
    applicability of the underwriting guidelines to microenterprise and 
    small business assistance programs. One commenter argued that 
    ``appropriate determinations'' should not be required on a loan-by-loan 
    basis for microenterprise activities, but could be addressed by overall 
    program design. Another argued that the underwriting guidelines should 
    apply to microenterprise assistance activities, so that communities 
    will have a stronger regulatory framework upon which to develop their 
    own guidelines for evaluating microenterprise loans. A third commenter 
    stated that small businesses which do not qualify as microenterprises 
    should be given some relief from the underwriting criteria and 
    financial documentation requirements.
        Response. The 1992 Act specifies that HUD is to develop guidelines 
    for evaluating and selecting economic development activities funded 
    under sections 105(a) (14), (15) and (17) of the Act. Microenterprise 
    assistance activities were made separately eligible under the new 
    Sec. 105(a)(23) of the 1992 Act, and thus were not subjected to the 
    underwriting guidelines by Congress. The Department feels it is 
    inappropriate to extend coverage of the underwriting guidelines to 
    programs which provide assistance exclusively to microenterprises and 
    which are eligible under Sec. 105(a)(23). Grantees may 
    [[Page 1936]] develop their own underwriting guidelines for the 
    evaluation of microenterprise assistance programs. However, if a 
    grantee designs a program to provide assistance to both 
    microenterprises and other small businesses, the public benefit 
    standards and underwriting guidelines apply to the entire program, and 
    grantees will be expected to evaluate each instance of assistance 
    individually. Regarding the third comment, both the proposed and the 
    final regulations state that different levels of review and financial 
    documentation are appropriate for different sizes of projects and 
    businesses; grantees are encouraged to develop guidelines which take 
    into consideration the size of the business being assisted.
        From the first of these comments, as well as from several comments 
    addressed elsewhere in this preamble, it is clear that the relationship 
    between the financial guidelines, the public benefit standards and the 
    ``appropriate determination'' requirements (which the Department has 
    heretofore relied on) is not understood. In the 1987 ``Stokvis Memo'' 
    and in the 1992 ``Kondratas Memo'', the Department outlined its policy 
    for implementing the statutory requirement that assistance to private 
    for-profit entities must be ``appropriate to carry out an economic 
    development project''. The Department believes that the new 
    underwriting guidelines and public benefit standards, taken together, 
    effectively comprise a methodology for determining that such assistance 
    is appropriate, and supplant the previously-required ``appropriate 
    determinations''.
        It is important to note that the financial and public benefit 
    standards cover a wider range of activities than did the ``appropriate 
    determinations'', including all economic development activities funded 
    under sections 105(a) (14) and (15) of the Act. Grantees are encouraged 
    to develop guidelines to cover the evaluation and selection of other 
    types of economic development activities, beyond those statutorily 
    required. However, HUD will not evaluate or enforce locally-developed 
    guidelines covering economic development activities other than those 
    described in the regulations.
        Issue. Three commenters expressed apprehension about a statement 
    contained in the preamble to the proposed regulations. The Department 
    noted that, in cases where an activity receiving CDBG financial 
    assistance fails to meet other applicable program requirements, such as 
    the public benefit standards or the national objective requirements, 
    HUD will consider the extent to which the recipient conducted prudent 
    underwriting in determining appropriate sanctions to be imposed on the 
    recipient for such noncompliance. Commenters questioned the consistency 
    of this statement with statutory language, felt this represented a 
    ``gotcha'' mentality by HUD, and opened the door to HUD ``second-
    guessing'' grantees' underwriting decisions.
        Response. Commenters are correct in noting that the Department is 
    prohibited from basing a determination of project ineligibility on the 
    failure of a project to meet the objectives of the underwriting 
    guidelines. The Department will not monitor grantees' projects for 
    compliance with HUD's underwriting guidelines. The proposed 
    underwriting guidelines also state, however, that the Department 
    expects that grantees will engage in some form of underwriting of 
    projects, regardless of whether or not a grantee adopts HUD's 
    guidelines. The intent of the preamble statement was not to suggest 
    that HUD would ``second-guess'' local underwriting guidelines or 
    decisions about specific projects pursuant to them. When the Department 
    discovers cases of noncompliance with other program requirements (such 
    as national objectives or eligibility), it has flexibility to determine 
    the appropriate action to resolve the noncompliance. In cases of 
    noncompliance with other program requirements, the Department reserves 
    the right to examine whether the grantee conducted any underwriting on 
    the activity in question. If a grantee performed no underwriting 
    whatsoever (or purely perfunctory underwriting) on a project that 
    fails, the Department may look to see whether even rudimentary 
    underwriting would have disclosed to the grantee that the project was 
    likely to fall into noncompliance. Similarly, the Department will also 
    consider whether a grantee's underwriting disclosed that a project was 
    likely to fail, but the grantee chose to fund the project anyway for 
    reasons unrelated to underwriting decisions.
        Issue. One HUD staff person inquired about the relationship between 
    the public benefit standards and the underwriting guidelines. The 
    commenter asked what HUD would do in a case where a grantee followed 
    established underwriting guidelines, yet knowingly chose to fund a 
    project which exceeded the public benefit standards (particularly the 
    individual activity standards).
        Response. Having complied with a grantee's underwriting standards 
    would not recuse this project from failure to meet the regulatory 
    requirements for public benefit. In such a situation, the Department 
    may still consider the extent to which underwriting was performed in 
    assessing what corrective action is appropriate to resolve the 
    noncompliance.
        Issue. One correspondent requested clarification or examples of 
    what is meant by the statement that guidelines also apply to 
    ``activities carried out under the authority of Sec. 570.204 that would 
    otherwise be eligible under Sec. 570.203.''
        Response. The Department's position is, and has been, that all 
    activities involving assistance to a for-profit business are subject to 
    the same requirements (including the underwriting guidelines, the 
    public benefit standards, and the previously- required ``appropriate 
    determinations''). Provision of CDBG assistance to a for-profit 
    business through a non-profit subrecipient does not exempt such an 
    activity from the underwriting guidelines or public benefit standards. 
    In the final regulations, this principle is clarified and illustrated 
    with an example.
        Issue. Three commenters raised questions about the treatment of 
    non-financial or indirect assistance to businesses in the underwriting 
    guidelines. Two commenters felt that by not specifically addressing the 
    level of underwriting documentation needed for technical assistance 
    activities, the proposed regulations imply that the same degree of 
    analysis is required for technical assistance to a business as for 
    direct financial assistance. Two commenters also urged the department 
    to accept yearly aggregation of technical assistance activities for 
    demonstrating compliance with national objectives.
        Response. The Department concurs with the comments regarding 
    technical assistance activities. The underwriting guidelines published 
    today specifically mention that different levels of underwriting 
    documentation may be appropriate for technical assistance activities, 
    given the nature and dollar value of assistance being provided to 
    businesses. The Department has also added a provision to the national 
    objectives requirements for low- and moderate-income benefit, to allow 
    job creation/retention to be aggregated for technical assistance 
    activities.
        Certain indirect forms of assistance to business, such as land 
    acquisition or certain public improvement projects, are not statutorily 
    subject to the underwriting guidelines. The Department believes that, 
    while not mandatory, grantees should evaluate all forms of assistance 
    to businesses, to ensure that the project represents an appropriate use 
    of the grantee's funds. Grantees are encouraged to develop 
    [[Page 1937]] underwriting guidelines which include other economic 
    development activities beyond those subject to the regulations.
        Issue. Several comments were received on the wording of several of 
    the objectives in the guidelines. These comments generally spring from 
    the commenters' professional opinions on the desirable design features 
    or outcomes of individual programs.
        Response. Because the underwriting guidelines are not mandatory, 
    the Department has chosen not to adopt most of these suggestions. 
    Commenters are encouraged to incorporate their ideas into their local 
    guidelines.
    
    Public Benefit Standards
    
        HUD heard from 20 different commenters on the public benefit 
    standards (and how they would be applied) in the proposed regulations: 
    3 local governments, 2 states, 8 national associations, 2 development 
    organizations, one citizen and 4 HUD staff. Comments on public benefit 
    fell into four categories of concern: the overall approach and 
    terminology used; the individual activity standards; activities 
    providing insufficient public benefit; and the aggregate standards. 
    While numerous questions and concerns were raised, individual 
    commenters also expressed general support for various aspects of the 
    proposed approach to public benefit: the concept of aggregating public 
    benefit; the flexibility provided by multiple approaches to measuring 
    public benefit; and the concept of allowing certain categories of 
    activities to be excluded from the aggregate dollar standards.
        It was also very clear that many commenters did not understand the 
    relationship among the different public benefit standards. Confusion 
    was also expressed about the meaning of various terms used in the 
    proposed regulations, which apparently added to confusion over the 
    relationships among the standards. To overcome this confusion, the 
    Department has substantially rewritten and reorganized the final 
    regulations sections on public benefit.
    
    Overall Approach and Terminology
    
        Issue. Three different commenters asked for clarification of 
    various terms such as ``tests'', ``criteria'', ``portfolio'' and 
    ``obligated''. One asked what constituted an ``activity'' for purposes 
    of aggregation: an individual loan? All activity in one particular loan 
    program run by a grantee? Would a grantee with 10 different programs 
    subject to the public benefit standards develop 10 aggregate numbers, 
    or one? Another asked for confirmation that the public benefit 
    measurement period differs from the time period in which job creation/
    retention is measured for national objectives documentation.
        Response. In the final regulation, the Department has attempted to 
    use more precise wording. The term ``obligated'' here has the same 
    meaning as it does elsewhere in the CDBG program--a formal commitment 
    of funds to fund a specific activity, such as a signed contract with a 
    business, or written notification of loan approval. The term ``test'' 
    has been replaced with ``standard''; each numerical measure by which 
    activities are judged (individually or in aggregate) is a standard. Use 
    of the term ``portfolio'' has been avoided in discussing the aggregate 
    standards. Use of the term ``criteria'' is limited to describing the 
    ``important national interests'' activities which may be excluded from 
    the aggregate standards.
        The comment regarding the measurement period for public benefit vs. 
    national objectives is correct. For most covered activities designed to 
    create/retain jobs, each provision of assistance to a business is 
    judged separately for whether it meets a national objective; each 
    business is discretely tracked for job creation/retention until the 
    business has fulfilled its jobs commitment. In contrast, public benefit 
    for any given business is judged at the time assistance is first 
    obligated to the business; the levels of public benefit determined at 
    the time funds are obligated are then aggregated for all instances of 
    assistance provided by a grantee through all covered activities. (The 
    period of time over which activities are aggregated varies among the 
    Entitlement, State, Insular and HUD-Administered CDBG programs.) Thus, 
    for any given business, job creation/retention is primarily measured 
    prospectively for public benefit and retrospectively for national 
    objectives purposes. (However, this explanation does not apply 
    universally; as the regulations note, certain types of activities may 
    be aggregated differently. In addition, grantees are to keep 
    comparative documentation on the projected vs. actual public benefit 
    from projects.)
        Issue. A number of commenters voiced various objections to the 
    overall approach to public benefit: the proposed standards are 
    arbitrary and simplistic, and invite ``second-guessing'' of projects by 
    HUD; more study is needed in this area before specific standards are 
    proposed; the standards focus too much on the cost per job and assume 
    that more jobs per CDBG dollar is a more important outcome than job 
    quality; the standards ignore present or future values of assistance 
    provided; the standards focus too much on individual activities, 
    ignoring overall program outcomes; the standards focus too much on 
    aggregate benefits, ignoring individual activities.
        Response. As discussed in the preamble to the proposed regulations, 
    the Department considered all of these issues in developing the 
    proposed public benefit standards. More sophisticated measurement 
    systems involve greater complexity, and may increase the documentation 
    burden on grantees and/or reduce flexibility. The Department strives to 
    effect a system which is flexible enough to encompass the great variety 
    of individual programs and individual activities which exist across the 
    CDBG program, and yet ensures at least some modicum of public benefit 
    will be obtained from any given activity. The Department has made 
    revisions to the public benefit standards in response to comments, but 
    has chosen not to radically change the overall approach.
        Issue. Two commenters (including one state) suggested that each 
    community (or the state) be allowed to establish its own public benefit 
    standards; HUD could then monitor communities or states for compliance 
    with their standards.
        Response. The Department believes these suggestions are 
    inconsistent with the statute. The 1992 Act specified that HUD is to 
    develop, by regulation, guidelines to ensure that public benefit is 
    appropriate relative to the amount of CDBG assistance provided. The 
    commenters' approach could increase, not decrease, grantee complaints 
    about HUD ``second guessing'' local decisions.
    
    Individual Activity Standards
    
        Issue. Five commenters opined that the proposed $100,000-per-job 
    individual activity standard is much too high to ensure reasonable 
    public benefit for any given activity; various figures between $12,000 
    and $50,000 were suggested as replacements. On the other hand, one 
    commenter expressed concern that the $100,000 standard could preclude 
    use of CDBG funds for massive real estate redevelopment projects or 
    capital-intensive industrial projects; other public benefits from such 
    projects may well justify the expenditure of CDBG funds even when the 
    cost per job is high.
        Response. After weighing these arguments, the Department has 
    decided to lower the individual activity per-job standard to $50,000. 
    This should still provide flexibility to undertake vitally important 
    projects with high capital costs per job created or retained; 
    [[Page 1938]] grantees may request a waiver of regulations for projects 
    which would exceed this level. The ``CDBG cost per job'' and the ``CDBG 
    cost per low- and moderate-income person served'' standards are 
    designed to establish absolute upper limits for what HUD would consider 
    to be reasonable on an individual project basis. Grantees are free to 
    set lower per-job maximums for their own projects, if they wish.
        Another example of high-cost projects which the Department has 
    become aware of is the removal of environmental contaminants as part of 
    a redevelopment project. The use of CDBG funds for such ``brownfields 
    remediation'' activities is of growing interest among grantees. 
    Projects of this nature can present high costs relative to the amount 
    of public benefit as defined in these regulations. However, grantees 
    may have additional flexibility in structuring the use of CDBG funds to 
    treat environmental conditions. For example, publicly-owned land may be 
    cleaned up before title is transferred to a private owner. In this way, 
    the environmental remediation activity would not be subject to the 
    public benefit standards.
        Issue. Two commenters opined that the proposed $1,000 per area-
    resident standard is similarly too high to ensure reasonable public 
    benefit; one recommended $50 instead.
        Response. The Department has decided to leave the per-area-resident 
    standard as proposed. A lower figure could hinder economic development 
    activities in small communities or sparsely-populated rural areas. 
    Grantees are free to set lower per-area-resident maximums for their own 
    projects, if they wish.
    
    ``Insufficient Public Benefit'' Activities
    
        The proposed regulations contained a list of activities for which 
    HUD believes insufficient public benefit is derived; these activities 
    would therefore not be eligible for CDBG assistance. Six comments were 
    received on this list of activities (one each from a citizen, a local 
    government, a national association and a HUD staff person, and two from 
    states). Three commenters suggested additional activities to be added 
    to the list of activities, two commenters objected to the inclusion of 
    one activity on the list, and two commenters requested clarification of 
    language.
        Issue. Use of grant funds for projects that will directly compete 
    with existing businesses should be prohibited.
        Response. The Department believes this proposal would severely 
    restrict grantees' use of CDBG funds for economic development and would 
    handcuff the Department's efforts to make CDBG a more flexible funding 
    resource. There is nothing which would prevent individual grantees from 
    adopting such a policy, if they wish.
        Issue. Gaming facilities (whether on or off Indian Reservations) 
    should also be made ineligible.
        Response. The Department has considered this issue in the past and 
    has decided not to pursue it.
        Issue. Job Pirating (the use of CDBG funds to move a business from 
    one community to another, with no net expansion of activity) is a waste 
    of taxpayers' money and should be determined to be an ineligible 
    activity.
        Response. The Department has studied the problem of job piracy a 
    number of times in the past, but has not taken action to prohibit this 
    activity. Determining whether a business is relocating principally 
    because of the CDBG assistance, or because of other reasons, is a 
    particularly intractable problem in attempting to define job piracy. 
    Recently, Congress has shown interest in legislating on this issue. The 
    Department has therefore decided to defer action on the issue of job 
    piracy until it is clear what action might be taken in authorizing 
    legislation.
        Issue. Three commenters opposed including the acquisition of land 
    for which no specific use has been determined on the list of 
    ``insufficient public benefit'' activities. Commenters argued that this 
    would eliminate future economic development activities, and that 
    forcing grantees to prematurely identify the use of land drives up the 
    development cost. One commenter suggested that HUD require land 
    acquisition to meet a national objective within two years of the 
    expenditure of funds.
        Response. The Department does not find the arguments for removing 
    this activity from the list to be convincing. The Department is aware 
    of a number of situations in which land has been purchased using CDBG 
    funds with no specific use in mind, and in which the Department later 
    determined that no national objective was ever met by the acquisition. 
    In the Department's opinion, ``landbanking'' with CDBG funds does not 
    provide any public benefit. It should be noted that the proposed 
    regulation would not prohibit the construction of speculative buildings 
    for which no tenant has been identified; nor does it mean that a 
    specific occupant must be identified before land can be purchased. 
    However, a grantee should at least be able to identify the intended use 
    of the property (such as for a shopping center or office building). 
    That does not mean, however, that grantees could satisfy the regulatory 
    intent simply by identifying just any vaguely described proposed use. 
    The language has been revised slightly in the final regulations to 
    refer to ``acquisition of land for which the specific use has not been 
    identified''.
        Issue. One commenter requested specific examples of types of 
    privately-owned recreational facilities serving a predominantly-higher 
    income clientele which might be determined ineligible under the 
    proposed regulations. Concerning another activity on the list, this 
    commenter also noted that the proposed language would not prevent the 
    provision of assistance to a ``corporate shell'' or another corporate 
    entity established by the same owner(s) of a business which is the 
    subject of unresolved findings.
        Response. The Department has chosen not to try to develop such a 
    list of recreational facilities, as that list might be misinterpreted 
    as all-encompassing; furthermore, a comparison of the recreational 
    benefits vs. other benefit to low- and moderate-income persons must of 
    necessity be done on a case-by-case basis. The Department concurs with 
    the second comment; the final regulations have been revised to include 
    other businesses owned by the same owner(s). The final rule also makes 
    minor clarifying revisions to several of the other ``insufficient 
    public benefit'' activities.
    
    Aggregate Activity Standards
    
        Issue. Three commenters argued that the aggregate standards are too 
    complex, and so should be eliminated. Some commenters feared that 
    grantees may focus only on the individual activity standards and 
    overlook the aggregate standards; the human tendency will be to fund 
    high-profile, high-cost-per-benefit projects first and ``make it up 
    later'' with smaller projects. Another commenter expressed concern that 
    for low-volume economic development programs, the individual and 
    aggregate standards would effectively be the same; if a grantee does 
    one loan early in a year with a per-job cost over $35,000 and then ends 
    up making no other loans, the grantee automatically fails the aggregate 
    standard.
        Response. To reinforce the significance of the aggregate public 
    standards, the regulations concerning public benefit have been re-
    ordered to discuss the aggregate standards first. It is not the 
    Department's intent to unduly penalize low-volume economic development 
    programs for noncompliance by one or two loans. However, in evaluating 
    projects for possible funding, all grantees are well 
    [[Page 1939]] advised to consider their historical levels of economic 
    development activity to ensure that the aggregate standards will be 
    met. It should be noted that HUD's decision to lower the individual 
    activity standard for job creation/retention from $100,000 to $50,000 
    should reduce the possibility that grantees will fail the aggregate 
    standard because they funded very high cost-per-job projects early in 
    the year.
        Issue. One commenter argued that the $35,000 per-job aggregate 
    standard is too high to ensure reasonable public benefit; several 
    alternative standards in the range of $5,000-$10,000 per job were 
    recommended instead.
        Response. The Department has chosen not to accept this 
    recommendation. This commenter also raised other objections to HUD's 
    proposed method for assessing public benefit; taken together, their 
    comments argue for a much more rigorous approach to economic 
    development funding, which would reduce grantee flexibility.
        Issue. One commenter argued in favor of either eliminating the $350 
    per low- and moderate-income area resident standard, or at least 
    raising it to $500.
        Response. The Department has decided to retain the proposed $350 
    figure.
        Issue. One HUD staff person questioned how public benefit would be 
    measured in the aggregate under the HUD-Administered Small Cities CDBG 
    program, given that many grantees have revolving loan funds funded with 
    program income from previous grants.
        Response. The Department agrees that the proposed regulations do 
    not adequately address this issue. In the final Entitlement 
    regulations, Sec. 570.209(b)(2) has been revised to address aggregate 
    public benefit in the HUD-Administered Small Cities and Insular Areas 
    CDBG programs.
        Issue. Four comments were received on the list of ``important 
    national interest'' activities. Two commenters felt that more than 75% 
    of a grantee's funds should be used for such ``important national 
    interest'' activities in order to meet the alternate aggregate 
    standard. One commenter felt the criteria were so broadly written as to 
    allow virtually all activities to qualify, and particularly objected to 
    four of the proposed criteria [(E), (F), (H), (L)] as inappropriate. 
    Another questioned why microenterprise assistance activities [(G)] were 
    included on the list, when microenterprise assistance activities funded 
    under Sec. 105(a)(23) of the Act are not subject to the public benefit 
    standards. One commenter favored keeping the percentage of funds 
    requirement at 75%.
        Response. In developing final regulations, the Department has 
    substantially revised the concept that certain activities can be 
    excluded from the $35,000 per-job or $350 per-area-resident aggregate 
    standards. The 75% provision has been eliminated as an alternate to the 
    aggregate dollar standards. Instead, grantees may, at their option, 
    exclude individual ``important national interest'' activities from the 
    aggregate standards. The list of ``important national interest'' 
    activities which can be excluded from the aggregate standards has also 
    been revised. Proposed criterion (G) has been eliminated, and proposed 
    criteria (A) and (B) have been combined. Two new criteria [(L) and (M)] 
    have been added to the Entitlement program final rule; these criteria 
    provide additional flexibility in support of the new ``economic 
    revitalization strategy area'' approach to demonstrating national 
    objectives compliance. (This approach is discussed under ``Low and 
    Moderate Income Area Benefit Activities'' above; as noted there, the 
    approach is being implemented in the Entitlement program only at this 
    time.) The remaining criteria are now more narrowly defined to better 
    target assistance to certain population groups. One significant effect 
    of these changes to the ``important national interest'' activities is 
    worth noting. All activities which do not meet one of these ``important 
    national interest'' criteria must be subject to the aggregate dollar 
    standards.
        Issue. Two commenters expressed concern about the relationship of 
    the aggregate standards to the Section 108 Loan Guarantee Program. 
    Concern is expressed that the $35,000 per-job aggregate standard will 
    hinder grantees' use of the Section 108 Loan Guarantee program; Section 
    108 projects are often big projects which could overwhelm the aggregate 
    average. If an expenditure of CDBG funds is required several years down 
    the line to cover a default, the grantee's aggregate level of public 
    benefit would suddenly become skewed too late for a grantee to make 
    adjustments.
        Response. It is acknowledged that certain large Section 108 
    projects might have a high cost per job; however, the Department 
    believes Section 108 projects should be treated consistently with other 
    CDBG-funded projects. The Department has revised the requirements 
    applying to the ``important national interests'' activities listed in 
    the final rule; grantees may now, at their option, exclude activities 
    meeting these criteria from the aggregate standards. The Department 
    believes many Section 108 projects could meet one or more of these 
    criteria. Grantees may also request a waiver of the regulations for 
    individual activities which may not meet the public benefit 
    requirements. Concerning an unexpected skewing of aggregate benefit 
    resulting from a default, grantees should consider the possibility of a 
    default when deciding whether to fund proposed projects.
        Issue. One commenter suggested that economic development services 
    activities funded under proposed Sec. 570.203(c) of the Entitlement 
    regulations be excluded from the public benefit standards, either 
    categorically or at the grantee's option.
        Response. The Department does not believe it possible to exempt 
    this type of economic development activity from the public benefit 
    standards, given the statutory language mandating the development of 
    public benefit standards for activities qualifying under this 
    authority.
        The Department has added language to the discussion of public 
    benefit which clarifies how to apply the individual and aggregate 
    standards to activities which provide job training, job placement and 
    other employment support services. Except for microenterprise 
    assistance activities eligible under Sec. 105(a)(23) of the Act, many 
    such activities will be subject to the public benefit standards because 
    they are undertaken pursuant to Sections 105(a)(14), (15) or (17) of 
    the Act. For purposes of the individual and aggregate public benefit 
    standards only, the jobs which such services involve are counted as 
    jobs created or retained. (See also the preamble discussion of national 
    objectives for further information on these activities.)
    
    Public Benefit Standards--Documentation of Benefit
    
        Five commenters (two states and three national associations) 
    offered comments on proposed paragraphs 570.209(d) and 570.482(e)(6). 
    Comments fell into two groups: those concerned about what constitutes a 
    substantial difference in actual versus projected benefits; and those 
    concerned about what sanctions the Department might take where actual 
    benefits were found to be substantially less than projected benefits. 
    One of the comments expressed general support for the approach to allow 
    adjustment to the projection process.
        Issue. One commenter felt that if a grantee re-evaluates an amended 
    project, it should be held accountable to its amended projections, not 
    to its initial projections. The commenter recommended that the 
    regulations [[Page 1940]] should refer to ``initial or amended 
    projections''.
        Response. The Department concurs with this point; the final 
    regulations discuss benefits in terms of benefits ``anticipated when 
    the CDBG assistance was obligated.'' This is intended to include 
    situations in which projections are revised because of changes in a 
    project which a grantee agrees to allow.
        Issue. One commenter recommended that grantees' records concerning 
    the amount of public benefit derived from projects be made available to 
    the public at no cost. This commenter also recommended that Entitlement 
    grantees' Grantee Performance Reports should contain information on 
    differences between projected and actual public benefits from projects.
        Response. Existing requirement concerning the availability of 
    documents to the public (such as the CDBG citizen participation 
    requirements) already cover the commenter's first concern. The 
    Department will take under advisement the suggestion concerning 
    reporting of benefits, at such time in the future that reporting 
    requirements are revised.
        Issue. One commenter expressed the opinion that if a grantee shows 
    a pattern of substantial differences between projected and actual 
    benefits, over perhaps a two year period, HUD should impose a two-year 
    moratorium on the offending activity for that grantee.
        Response. The Department does not accept this recommendation, as it 
    is inconsistent with existing CDBG regulations concerning sanctions for 
    noncompliance. The Department opposes the concept of developing 
    different, prescribed sanctions for different categories of 
    noncompliance.
        Issue. One commenter expressed concern over the proposal that the 
    Department might hold a grantee to more stringent public benefit 
    standards in the future when the Department found a grantee to have 
    failed the public benefit standards. The commenter recommended that the 
    Department not take such action unless a grantee failed the standards 
    for two consecutive years, so as not to punish a grantee which might do 
    only one project in a year and have that one project prove 
    unsuccessful.
        Response. While the Department agrees that low-volume economic 
    development programs should not be unduly penalized for the failure of 
    one project, the Department considers it inappropriate to identify a 
    specific time period over which to measure success or failure. The 
    final regulations have been revised to discuss situations in which ``a 
    pattern of substantial variation'' occurs.
        Issue. Two states expressed concern about proposed language 
    requiring a state to ``take all actions reasonably within its control'' 
    to improve a unit of local government's public benefit projections, 
    when actual results vary substantially from initial projections. This 
    language was seen as imprecise, and calls into question just what 
    actions are within a state's (versus the local government's) control to 
    rectify the problem. One state expressed concern that HUD might 
    sanction a state even after the state took all actions available to it 
    to correct a problem. The other state, while recognizing HUD's 
    oversight role, felt it inappropriate for HUD to second-guess a state's 
    actions, as only the state can impose on itself those actions necessary 
    to resolve the problem at the local level.
        Response. These comments, as well as those discussed previously, 
    clearly indicate concern by grantees over what sanctions the Department 
    might take against a grantee, and over what local-level actions are 
    ``enough'' to address a problem. The Department concurs up to a point 
    with the states' comments. The intended meaning of this paragraph was 
    that if local governments' results disclose a pattern of inaccurately 
    projecting pubic benefits, then the state should take actions to insure 
    that localities improve projection accuracy; if a state were to do 
    little or nothing to correct the problems, then HUD could impose 
    stricter standards upon a state. Similarly, if an Entitlement grantee 
    demonstrates that its projection process is inaccurate, it should take 
    steps to improve the accuracy of its projections; if local efforts to 
    resolve the problem were ineffective or nonexistent, then HUD could 
    impose stricter public benefit standards upon the grantee. HUD does not 
    intend that problems by one state recipient should be cause for 
    sanctions against an entire state's program.
        HUD does not consider it useful to attempt to define what actions 
    are ``reasonably within the grantee's control'', as every situation 
    would involve a judgement call as to what could or should be done. The 
    concept of deferring entirely to a state's judgement about what actions 
    could or should be taken (against a state grant recipient) is 
    impractical, given HUD's statutory mandate to determine grantees' 
    compliance.
        The paragraphs on documentation have been revised to respond to all 
    the above comments, and to provide greater clarity of meaning. In 
    addition, Sec. 570.482(f)(6) of the final State regulations clarifies 
    HUD's expectations upon states concerning local governments' 
    performance.
    
    Amendments to Projects After Determinations
    
        Four commenters (three local governments and one national 
    association) commented on the paragraphs concerning amendments to 
    projects after a funding decision has been reached.
        Issue. Three commenters questioned as imprecise HUD's use of the 
    term ``material change'' in referring to situations in which a grantee 
    should reevaluate a project (after committing funding to it) because of 
    changes in the project. One commenter felt the proposed wording implied 
    that reanalysis would be required for any change, which would in their 
    opinion be overkill. Another commenter suggested use of the term 
    ``substantial change'', which is used in the existing Entitlement 
    regulations to describe situations in which the Final Statement must be 
    amended.
        Response. It is not the Department's intent that any change in a 
    project should necessitate its complete reevaluation. Minor changes, 
    such as the shifting of small dollar amounts among budget categories, 
    or a one-month extension to the construction period, probably would not 
    affect the underlying assumptions upon which a grantee decided to 
    assist the project. However, if the project changes to the extent that 
    the revised project would be very different in its scope, public 
    benefit, total cost or CDBG cost (compared to the project as initially 
    approved by the grantee), the Department believes that the project 
    should be reexamined under the public benefit and underwriting 
    guidelines. A grantee should confirm whether it still wishes to 
    participate in the project, whether the costs and benefits of the 
    project are still reasonable, and whether the amount of public benefit 
    is still reasonable given the amount of assistance being provided.
        In the final regulations, these paragraphs have been rewritten to 
    state that a project should be reevaluated if the project changes to 
    the extent that ``a significant amendment to the contract (with the 
    business) is appropriate.'' The use of the term ``substantial'' was 
    avoided, as some might attempt to apply the same concept of 
    ``substantial'' as used concerning Final Statement amendments--a 
    borrowing of concepts which the Department feels is not appropriate or 
    relevant. The Department has chosen not to define what constitutes a 
    ``significant amendment'', nor to define the types of changes which 
    [[Page 1941]] would call for reevaluation. Grantees are strongly 
    encouraged, in developing their guidelines, to define what they will 
    consider to be ``significant changes'', and to identify how they will 
    reevaluate projects.
        Issue. One commenter objected to the example provided at the end of 
    the paragraph concerning a situation in which total project costs 
    change. In this example, the Department suggested that if total project 
    costs decreased, it would be appropriate to reduce the amount of CDBG 
    assistance to the project. The commenter felt that this implies that 
    any reduction in total project cost should automatically result in a 
    comparable reduction in the amount of CDBG assistance, which may not be 
    practical. The commenter recommended eliminating the example.
        Response. The Department concurs with the basic point that it may 
    not always be appropriate to reduce the amount of CDBG assistance in 
    such cases. The example has been retained in the final rule, but has 
    been modified to state that ``it may be appropriate'' to reduce the 
    amount of CDBG assistance. The final regulation also notes that when a 
    project is amended to receive additional CDBG assistance, the project 
    as amended must still comply with the public benefit standards.
    
    Modification to the Definition of Subrecipient Related to 
    Microenterprise Assistance Activities
    
        Issue. As noted earlier under the CBDO discussion regarding 
    Sec. 570.204 of the Entitlement regulations (Section 105(a)(15) of the 
    Act), five commenters addressed the proposed revision to the definition 
    of the term ``subrecipient'' at Sec. 570.500(c) to expand that 
    provision to include for-profit entities that are now specifically 
    authorized by statute to carry out microenterprise assistance 
    activities under the new eligibility provision implemented in this 
    final rule by a new Sec. 570.201(o) in the Entitlement regulations 
    [Section 105(a)(23) of the Act]. Most of the commenters recommended 
    that HUD not consider any entities carrying out activities under the 
    new microenterprise category as ``subrecipients'' but rather as ``end 
    beneficiaries.'' These commenters also requested a similar change in 
    classification for entities receiving CDBG assistance under 
    Sec. 570.204 of the Entitlement regulations [Section 105(a)(15) of the 
    Act]. Other commenters asked only for a clarification of the proposed 
    revision to Sec. 570.500(c). (1 local government agency, 1 development 
    organization, and 3 HUD Field staff persons)
        Response. The new Section 105(a)(23) of the Act authorizes ``the 
    provision of assistance to public and private organizations, agencies, 
    and other entities (including nonprofit and for-profit entities) to 
    enable such entities to facilitate economic development'' by providing 
    various forms of assistance to owners of microenterprises and persons 
    developing microenterprises. The Department interprets this provision 
    to mean that any such entities beyond the grantee itself are to serve 
    as intermediaries in the grant assistance chain rather than being 
    considered beneficiaries in and of themselves. Thus, the Department 
    considers such organizations to be subrecipients under the CDBG 
    program. The existing definition of the term ``subrecipient'' at 
    Sec. 570.500(c) of the CDBG Entitlement regulations is being revised in 
    this final rule only to include a specific reference to the for-profit 
    entities now authorized to carry out microenterprise assistance 
    activities. (Nonprofit entities carrying out such activities are 
    already covered by the existing definition of a ``subrecipient.'') The 
    language in the proposed change to Sec. 570.500(c) has been revised, 
    however, to clarify the Department's intent.
    
    Other Issues Regarding Income Documentation
    
        Issue. One commenter recommended that HUD take this opportunity to 
    clarify what is meant by a ``verifiable certification'' as the term is 
    used in Sec. 570.506(b). The commenter asks whether this term implies 
    that a sample of the certifications should be verified. (1 private 
    citizen)
        Response. HUD does not believe that this issue need be further 
    specified in the text of the regulation itself. However, as guidance 
    for grantees, it should be noted that, over time, HUD does expect that 
    some sample of such certifications would be verified by the grantee or 
    subrecipient, as applicable. This verification is important to 
    maintaining program accountability and integrity.
        Issue. One commenter raised concerns about the burden of keeping 
    family size and income data for job creation or retention activities. 
    As another option, the commenter recommended that HUD only look at the 
    wages of the individual employee and compare that figure against the 
    income limits for one-person households. (1 development organization)
        Response. HUD cannot accept this recommendation. First, the 
    proposal is not consistent with the general statutory definition of a 
    low- and moderate-income person as being a member of a low- and 
    moderate-income family. Secondly, the proposal's use of the wages of a 
    created job as the basis for determining a person's income status runs 
    counter to CDBG program requirements. To be counted toward compliance 
    with low- and moderate-income national objective compliance, a person 
    need only be low- and moderate-income at the time the CDBG assistance 
    is provided, i.e., for a created job, at the time he or she is hired. 
    The CDBG program does not and should not impose any requirement that 
    the person would have to stay low- and moderate-income based on the 
    wages of the created job. Finally, it should be noted that presumptions 
    added by the 1992 Act for determining whether a person is considered 
    low- and moderate-income for job creation or retention activities, as 
    implemented in this final rule, should significantly reduce the burden 
    described by the commenter.
        Issue. One commenter stated that, in regard to the State CDBG 
    program, it is good that HUD is consulting and negotiating with States 
    on record keeping issue, but the commenter complained that the number 
    of States being consulted was too small. The commenter argued that HUD 
    should negotiate record keeping requirements with each and every State 
    because since they represent such broad and varied regions. (1 state 
    agency)
        Response. It is not logistically possible for HUD to negotiate with 
    each and every State before issuing record keeping regulations for the 
    State CDBG program. HUD is still negotiating with a sample of States 
    and is hoping to devise certain minimum record keeping standards for 
    States that will be accepted on a consensus basis.
    
    Other Issues Not Specifically Addressed in the Proposed Rule
    
        A number of comments were received on issues not specifically 
    addressed in the proposed regulations, but which were seen (by 
    commenters) as having significant bearing on the use of CDBG funds for 
    economic development activity.
        Issue. Two commenters (both local governments) requested that the 
    Department address the issue of using CDBG funds for economic 
    development activities on military bases which are being closed.
        Response. The Department does not see the reuse or redevelopment of 
    closed military bases as an activity per se, but rather a goal which 
    CDBG funds can be used to address. The Department believes the current 
    regulations concerning eligibility and national objectives, along with 
    these revised [[Page 1942]] regulations, give communities considerable 
    flexibility to carry out a broad range of economic development 
    activities, including those on former military bases.
        Issue. Six commenters (3 national associations, 2 states and one 
    local government) identified other Federal requirements as major 
    inhibitors to the use of CDBG for economic development (particularly 
    for microenterprise assistance), and asked the Department to examine 
    ways to streamline these other requirements. Specifically identified 
    were environmental review procedures, program income requirements, and 
    the Davis-Bacon Wage Rate Act.
        Response. HUD acknowledges that these areas are the source of 
    frequent complaints. However, as some commenters noted, the underlying 
    bases for many of the regulatory requirements in these areas are 
    statutory, and thus lie beyond HUD's span of control. HUD is willing to 
    explore ways in which regulations governing these other federal 
    requirements might be made more amenable to the use of CDBG funds for 
    economic development.
        In particular, the Department realizes that CDBG regulations 
    governing the use of CDBG program income must be revised to include 
    1992 changes to the Act. Issues concerning program income will be dealt 
    with more comprehensively in separate future rule-making. In the 
    meantime, and in response to these comments, the Department has 
    identified three incremental changes which can be made regarding 
    program income, and has included them in this final rule.
        1. The 1992 State CDBG program regulations included a provision 
    excluding from the definition of program income an amount of up to 
    $10,000 per year per state grant recipient. This provision was 
    consistent with 1992 amendments to the Act, which permitted the 
    Secretary to exclude from program requirements amounts of program 
    income that are determined to be so small that compliance with 
    requirements would place an unreasonable administrative burden on units 
    of local government. During the past two years, a number of states have 
    commented to HUD that many of their grant recipients regularly receive 
    over $10,000 per year in program income; thus, at its present level, 
    this exclusion provision is of little or no benefit to state grant 
    recipients. Since state grant award amounts are typically smaller than 
    the average yearly entitlement grant amount, state grant recipients 
    typically receive less program per year than entitlement grantees. The 
    problem noted by states is likely to be equally or more problematic for 
    entitlement grantees.
        The Department has determined that $25,000 is a more appropriate 
    level at which to set the yearly exclusion amount. These final 
    regulations also extend the exclusion provision to the Entitlement 
    program for the first time. In a separate rulemaking, the Department is 
    also adding the exclusion provision to the HUD-Administered Small 
    Cities program regulations.
        2. The existing definition of program income includes revenue 
    generated by activities carried out with the proceeds from loans 
    guaranteed under Section 108. Such revenue is now treated as program 
    income even if the guaranteed loan is repaid with non-CDBG funds. Such 
    revenue is treated as program income notwithstanding that it is 
    required to be pledged to the repayment of the Section 108 loan. The 
    final rule excludes from the definition of program income certain 
    amounts generated by activities financed by Section 108 loans, to the 
    extent that non-CDBG funds are used to repay the loan. Activities which 
    can qualify for this exclusion are those meeting the criteria at 
    Sec. 570.209(b)(2)(v) or Sec. 570.482(f)(3)(v) (the ``important 
    national interest'' activities), and those carried out in conjunction 
    with an Economic Development Initiative grant in an area determined by 
    the Department to meet the eligibility requirements for Urban 
    Empowerment Zone designation.
        Any revenue generated by activities financed with Section 108 loan 
    guarantees which is not defined as program income would be 
    miscellaneous revenue. In addition, any amounts in debt service 
    accounts that were funded with non-CDBG funds (e.g. Section 108 funds 
    and monies provided by the assisted business) that remain after full 
    and final repayment of the guaranteed loan would also be considered 
    miscellaneous revenue.
        3. As discussed earlier under the heading of Community-Based 
    Development Organizations, the Department has substantially revised the 
    requirements governing activities funded under Sec. 105(a)(15) of the 
    Act (and Sec. 570.204 of the Entitlement regulations). As a result of 
    those changes, the department has determined that amounts generated by 
    such activities can also be excluded from the requirements governing 
    the use of program income.
        Because Sec. 105(a)(15) of the Act differentiates between the types 
    of eligible entities in entitlement jurisdictions and nonentitled 
    areas, this change has been effected by different means for the 
    Entitlement and State CDBG programs. Section 570.500(c) of the 
    Entitlement regulations, which defines the term ``subrecipient'', has 
    been revised; entities described in Sec. 570.204(c) [which implements 
    Sec. 105(a)(15) of the Act], are no longer defined as subrecipients. As 
    noted previously, the term ``subrecipient'' is not defined in the State 
    CDBG program. Section 570.489(e) of the State rule (which comprises 
    program income requirements) has been revised to exclude from the 
    definition of program income amounts generated by Sec. 105(a)(15) 
    activities. States are expected to ensure that any such activities are 
    indeed carried out by an entity pursuant to Sec. 105(a)(15).
        It should be noted that this exclusion does not cover situations in 
    which a grantee provides CDBG assistance to one of these entities in 
    the form of a loan. Any repayments of principal or interest from the 
    entity to the grantee for such a loan would be considered to be CDBG 
    program income, regardless of the source of the funds used for 
    repayment.
        Issue. Numerous commenters noted that HUD needs to provide 
    additional training for grantees and HUD Field Office staff to ensure 
    uniform understanding, interpretation and implementation of the revised 
    regulations. HUD should also go beyond formal training to provide other 
    mechanisms (such as national conferences, development of model 
    programs, resource guidebooks and computer bulletin boards) for sharing 
    information on economic development activities. Areas in which certain 
    commenters were particularly interested in seeing greater information-
    sharing included: related federal initiatives such as welfare reform 
    and Empowerment Zones/Enterprise Communities; sharing of model 
    programs; microenterprise assistance programs; use of ``first source'' 
    agreements for job creation activities; and combining CDBG with other 
    federal economic development resources.
        Response. The Department acknowledges the importance of training on 
    new regulations, and is planning to provide training to both grantees 
    and HUD Field Office staff once these regulations are effective. HUD is 
    also developing a CDBG economic development reference manual which will 
    include model programs. The Department's Consolidated Technical 
    Assistance initiative, which is already being implemented, should also 
    result in additional training opportunities on economic development 
    issues.
        The Department plans to develop guidelines by which those 
    communities [[Page 1943]] demonstrating the best performance in the 
    area of economic development may be identified. These guidelines will 
    be distributed to both grantees and HUD Field Office staff. The 
    Department will also identify administrative mechanisms through which 
    additional relief may be provided to communities with the best economic 
    development performance records.
    
    Relationship to Section 3 Economic Opportunity Requirements
    
        Recipients of CDBG funds must also comply with the requirements of 
    Section 3 of the Housing and Urban Development Act of 1968 (Section 3), 
    as amended by Section 915 of the 1992 Act. Section 3 requires that, to 
    the greatest extent feasible, and consistent with existing Federal, 
    State and local laws and regulations, employment and other economic 
    opportunities arising in connection with CDBG assistance to any Section 
    3 covered project are given to low- and very low-income persons 
    residing within the metropolitan area (or nonmetropolitan county) in 
    which the project is located. For the CDBG program, Section 3 covered 
    projects include housing rehabilitation, housing construction, and 
    other public construction. The Section 3 requirements apply to 
    training, employment and contracting opportunities arising in 
    connection with a covered project, as well as job (or other 
    opportunities) which may be retained or created as a result of the 
    project. An interim rule implementing the 1992 amendments to Section 3 
    was published by the Department in the Federal Register on June 30, 
    1994, and it became effective August 1, 1994.
    
    Other Matters
    
    Executive Order 12612, Federalism
    
        The General Counsel, as the Designated Official under section 6(a) 
    of Executive Order 12612, Federalism, has determined that the policies 
    in this rule do not have Federalism implications when implemented and, 
    thus, are not subject to review under the Order. Nothing in the rule 
    implies any preemption of State or local law, nor does any provision of 
    the rule disturb the existing relationship between the Federal 
    Government and State and local governments.
    
    Executive Order 12606, the Family
    
        The General Counsel, as the designated Official under Executive 
    Order 12606, has determined that this rule does not have potential 
    significant impact on family formation, maintenance, and general well-
    being, and, thus, is not subject to review under the Order.
    
    Environmental Finding
    
        A Finding of No Significant Impact with regard to the environment 
    has been made in accordance with HUD regulations in 24 CFR part 50, 
    which implement section 102(2)(C) of the National Environmental Policy 
    Act of 1969, 42 U.S.C. 4321. The Finding of No Significant Impact is 
    available for public inspection between 7:30 a.m. and 5:30 p.m. 
    weekdays in the Office of the Rules Docket Clerk, Room 10276, 451 
    Seventh Street, SW., Washington, DC 20410.
    
    Regulatory Flexibility
    
        Under the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 605(b)), the 
    Secretary by his approval of publication of this rule hereby certifies 
    that this rule does not have a significant economic impact on a 
    substantial number of small entities. The rule does not affect the 
    amount of funds provided in the CDBG program, but rather modifies and 
    updates program administration and procedural requirements to comport 
    with recently enacted legislation.
    
    Semiannual Agenda
    
        This rule was listed as item 1848 in the Department's Semiannual 
    Agenda of Regulations published on November 14, 1994 (59 FR 57632, 
    57664) under Executive Order 12866 and the Regulatory Flexibility Act.
    
    Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance
    
        The Community Development Block Grant Program is listed in the 
    Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance under the following numbers: 
    Entitlements--14.218, HUD-administered Small Cities--14.219, Indian--
    14.223, Insular Areas--14.225, State's Program--14.228.
    
    List of Subjects in 24 CFR Part 570
    
        Administrative practice and procedure, American Samoa, Community 
    development block grants, Grant programs--education, Grant programs--
    housing and community development, Guam, Indians, Lead poisoning, Loan 
    programs--housing and community development, Low and moderate income 
    housing, New communities, Northern Mariana Islands, Pacific Islands 
    Trust Territory, Pockets of poverty, Puerto Rico, Reporting and 
    recordkeeping requirements, Small cities, Student aid, Virgin Islands.
    
        Accordingly, 24 CFR part 570, subparts A, C, I, and J, are amended 
    as follows:
    
    PART 570--COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT BLOCK GRANTS
    
        1. The authority citation for 24 CFR part 570 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 42 U.S.C. 3535(d) and 5300-5320.
    
    Subpart A--General Provisions
    
        2. In Sec. 570.3, definitions for ``Community Development Financial 
    Institution'', ``Microenterprise'', and ``Small business'', are added 
    in alphabetical order to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 570.3  Definitions.
    
    * * * * *
        Community Development Financial Institution has the same meaning as 
    used in the Community Development Banking and Financial Institutions 
    Act of 1994 (12 U.S.C. 4701 note).
    * * * * *
        Microenterprise means a business that has five or fewer employees, 
    one or more of whom owns the enterprise.
    * * * * *
        Small business means a business that meets the criteria set forth 
    in section 3(a) of the Small Business Act (15 U.S.C. 631, 636, 637).
    * * * * *
    
    Subpart C--Eligible Activities
    
        3. In Sec. 570.200, paragraph (e) is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 570.200  General policies.
    
    * * * * *
        (e) Recipient determinations required as a condition of 
    eligibility. In several instances under this subpart, the eligibility 
    of an activity depends on a special local determination. Recipients 
    shall maintain documentation of all such determinations. A written 
    determination is required for any activity carried out under the 
    authority of Secs. 570.201(f), 570.202(b)(3), 570.204, 570.206(f), and 
    570.209.
    * * * * *
        4. In Sec. 570.201, paragraph (o) is added to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 570.201  Basic eligible activities.
    
    * * * * *
        (o)(1) The provision of assistance either through the recipient 
    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, [[Page 1944]] 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 this paragraph (o) shall not be subject to 
    the restrictions on public services contained in paragraph (e) of this 
    section.
        (3) For purposes of this paragraph (o), ``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.
        5. In Sec. 570.202, paragraph (a)(1) is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 570.202  Eligible rehabilitation and preservation activities.
    
        (a) * * *
        (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;
    * * * * *
        6. Section 570.203 is amended by revising the introductory text and 
    paragraph (b), and by adding a new paragraph (c), to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 570.203  Special economic development activities.
    
        A recipient may use CDBG funds for special economic development 
    activities in addition to other activities authorized in this subpart 
    which may be carried out as part of an economic development project. 
    Guidelines for selecting activities to assist under this paragraph are 
    provided at Sec. 570.209. The recipient must ensure that the 
    appropriate level of public benefit will be derived pursuant to those 
    guidelines before obligating funds under this authority. Special 
    activities authorized under this section do not include assistance for 
    the construction of new housing. Special economic development 
    activities include:
    * * * * *
        (b) The provision of assistance to a private for-profit business, 
    including, but not limited to, grants, loans, loan guarantees, interest 
    supplements, technical assistance, and other forms of support, for any 
    activity where the assistance is appropriate to carry out an economic 
    development project, excluding those described as ineligible in 
    Sec. 570.207(a). In selecting businesses to assist under this 
    authority, the recipient shall minimize, to the extent practicable, 
    displacement of existing businesses and jobs in neighborhoods.
        (c) Economic development services in connection with activities 
    eligible under this section, including, but not limited to, outreach 
    efforts to market available forms of assistance; screening of 
    applicants; reviewing and underwriting applications for assistance; 
    preparation of all necessary agreements; management of assisted 
    activities; and the screening, referral, and placement of applicants 
    for employment opportunities generated by CDBG-eligible economic 
    development activities, including the costs of providing necessary 
    training for persons filling those positions.
        7. Section 570.204 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 570.204  Special activities by Community-Based Development 
    Organizations (CBDOs).
    
        (a) Eligible activities. The recipient may provide CDBG funds as 
    grants or loans to any CBDO qualified under this section to carry out a 
    neighborhood revitalization, community economic development, or energy 
    conservation project. The funded project activities may include those 
    listed as eligible under this subpart, and, except as described in 
    paragraph (b) of this section, activities not otherwise listed as 
    eligible under this subpart. For purposes of qualifying as a project 
    under paragraphs (a)(1), (a)(2), and (a)(3) of this section, the funded 
    activity or activities may be considered either alone or in concert 
    with other project activities either being carried out or for which 
    funding has been committed. For purposes of this section:
        (1) Neighborhood revitalization project includes activities of 
    sufficient size and scope to have an impact on the decline of a 
    geographic location within the jurisdiction of a unit of general local 
    government (but not the entire jurisdiction) designated in 
    comprehensive plans, ordinances, or other local documents as a 
    neighborhood, village, or similar geographical designation; or the 
    entire jurisdiction of a unit of general local government which is 
    under 25,000 population;
        (2) Community economic development project includes activities that 
    increase economic opportunity, principally for persons of low- and 
    moderate-income, or that stimulate or retain businesses or permanent 
    jobs, including projects that include one or more such activities that 
    are clearly needed to address a lack of affordable housing accessible 
    to existing or planned jobs and those activities specified at 24 CFR 
    91.1(a)(1)(iii);
        (3) Energy conservation project includes activities that address 
    energy conservation, principally for the benefit of the residents of 
    the recipient's jurisdiction; and
        (4) To carry out a project means that the CBDO undertakes the 
    funded activities directly or through contract with an entity other 
    than the grantee, or through the provision of financial assistance for 
    activities in which it retains a direct and controlling involvement and 
    responsibilities.
        (b) Ineligible activities. Notwithstanding that CBDOs may carry out 
    activities that are not otherwise eligible under this subpart, this 
    section does not authorize:
        (1) Carrying out an activity described as ineligible in 
    Sec. 570.207(a);
        (2) Carrying out public services that do not meet the requirements 
    of Sec. 570.201(e), except that:
        (i) Services carried out under this section that are specifically 
    designed to increase economic opportunities through job training and 
    placement and other employment support services, including, but not 
    limited to, peer support programs, counseling, child care, 
    transportation, and other similar services; and
        (ii) Services of any type carried out under this section pursuant 
    to a strategy approved by HUD under the provisions of 24 CFR 91.215(e) 
    shall not be subject to the limitations in Sec. 570.201(e)(1) or (2), 
    as applicable;
        (3) Providing assistance to activities that would otherwise be 
    eligible under Sec. 570.203 that do not meet the requirements of 
    Sec. 570.209; or
        (4) Carrying out an activity that would otherwise be eligible under 
    Sec. 570.205 or Sec. 570.206, but that would result in the recipient's 
    exceeding the spending limitation in Sec. 570.200(g).
        (c) Eligible CBDOs. (1) A CBDO qualifying under this section is an 
    organization which has the following characteristics:
        (i) Is an association or corporation organized under State or local 
    law to engage in community development activities (which may include 
    housing [[Page 1945]] and economic development activities) primarily 
    within an identified geographic area of operation within the 
    jurisdiction of the recipient, or in the case of an urban county, the 
    jurisdiction of the county; and
        (ii) Has as its primary purpose the improvement of the physical, 
    economic or social environment of its geographic area of operation by 
    addressing one or more critical problems of the area, with particular 
    attention to the needs of persons of low and moderate income; and
        (iii) May be either non-profit or for-profit, provided any monetary 
    profits to its shareholders or members must be only incidental to its 
    operations; and
        (iv) Maintains at least 51 percent of its governing body's 
    membership for low- and moderate-income residents of its geographic 
    area of operation, owners or senior officers of private establishments 
    and other institutions located in and serving its geographic area of 
    operation, or representatives of low- and moderate-income neighborhood 
    organizations located in its geographic area of operation; and
        (v) Is not an agency or instrumentality of the recipient and does 
    not permit more than one-third of the membership of its governing body 
    to be appointed by, or to consist of, elected or other public officials 
    or employees or officials of an ineligible entity (even though such 
    persons may be otherwise qualified under paragraph (c)(1)(iv) of this 
    section); and
        (vi) Except as otherwise authorized in paragraph (c)(1)(v) of this 
    section, requires the members of its governing body to be nominated and 
    approved by the general membership of the organization, or by its 
    permanent governing body; and
        (vii) Is not subject to requirements under which its assets revert 
    to the recipient upon dissolution; and
        (viii) Is free to contract for goods and services from vendors of 
    its own choosing.
        (2) A CBDO that does not meet the criteria in paragraph (c)(1) of 
    this section may also qualify as an eligible entity under this section 
    if it meets one of the following requirements:
        (i) Is an entity organized pursuant to section 301(d) of the Small 
    Business Investment Act of 1958 (15 U.S.C. 681(d)), including those 
    which are profit making; or
        (ii) Is an SBA approved Section 501 State Development Company or 
    Section 502 Local Development Company, or an SBA Certified Section 503 
    Company under the Small Business Investment Act of 1958, as amended; or
        (iii) Is a Community Housing Development Organization (CHDO) under 
    24 CFR 92.2, designated as a CHDO by the HOME Investment Partnerships 
    program participating jurisdiction, with a geographic area of operation 
    of no more than one neighborhood, and has received HOME funds under 24 
    CFR 92.300 or is expected to receive HOME funds as described in and 
    documented in accordance with 24 CFR 92.300(e).
        (3) A CBDO that does not qualify under paragraphs (c) (1) or (2) of 
    this section may also be determined to qualify as an eligible entity 
    under this section if the recipient demonstrates to the satisfaction of 
    HUD, through the provision of information regarding the organization's 
    charter and by-laws, that the organization is sufficiently similar in 
    purpose, function, and scope to those entities qualifying under 
    paragraphs (c) (1) or (2) of this section.
        8. Section 570.207 is amended by revising paragraphs (b) 
    introductory text and (b)(3)(iii) to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 570.207  Ineligible activities.
    
    * * * * *
        (b) The following activites may not be assisted with CDBG funds 
    unless authorized under provisions of Sec. 570.203 or as otherwise 
    specifically noted herein or when carried out by a entity under the 
    provisions of Sec. 570.204.
    * * * * *
        (3) * * *
        (iii) When carried out by an entity pursuant to Sec. 570.204(a);
    * * * * *
        9. Section 570.208 is amended by:
        a. Revising the paragraph heading of paragraph (a), revising 
    paragraph (a)(1)(i), the first sentence in paragraph (a)(1)(iv), and 
    adding a new paragraph (a)(1)(v);
        b. Revising paragraph (a)(2)(i) introductory text and by adding new 
    paragraphs (a)(2)(iii) and (a)(2)(iv);
        c. Revising the introductory text of paragraph (a)(3);
        d. Revising paragraph (a)(4); and
        e. Adding new paragraphs (d)(5), (d)(6), and (d)(7), to read as 
    follows:
    
    
    Sec. 570.208  Criteria for national objectives.
    
    * * * * *
        (a) Activities benefiting low- and moderate-income persons.
    * * * * *
        (1) Area benefit activities. (i) An activity, the benefits of which 
    are available to all the residents in a particular area, where at least 
    51 percent of the residents are low and moderate income persons. Such 
    an area need not be coterminous with census tracts or other officially 
    recognized boundaries but must be the entire area served by the 
    activity. An activity that serves an area that is not primarily 
    residential in character shall not qualify under this criterion.
    * * * * *
        (iv) In determining whether there is a sufficiently large 
    percentage of low and moderate income persons residing in the area 
    served by an activity to qualify under paragraphs (a)(1)(i), (ii), or 
    (v) of this section, the most recently available decennial census 
    information shall be used to the fullest extent feasible, together with 
    the Section 8 income limits that would have applied at the time the 
    income information was collected by the Census Bureau. * * *
        (v) Activities meeting the requirements of paragraph (d)(5)(i) of 
    this section may be considered to qualify under this paragraph, 
    provided that the area covered by the strategy is primarily residential 
    and contains a percentage of low- and moderate-income residents that is 
    no less than the percentage computed by HUD pursuant to paragraph 
    (a)(1)(ii) of this section but in no event less than 51 percent. 
    Activities meeting the requirements of paragraph (d)(6)(i) of this 
    section may also be considered to qualify under paragraph (a)(1) of 
    this section.
        (2) Limited clientele activities. (i) An activity which benefits a 
    limited clientele, at least 51 percent of whom are low- or moderate-
    income persons. (The following kinds of activities may not qualify 
    under paragraph (a)(2) of this section: activities, the benefits of 
    which are available to all the residents of an area; activities 
    involving the acquisition, construction or rehabilitation of property 
    for housing; or activities where the benefit to low- and moderate-
    income persons to be considered is the creation or retention of jobs, 
    except as provided in paragraph (a)(2)(iv) of this section.) To qualify 
    under paragraph (a)(2) of this section, the activity must meet one of 
    the following tests:
    * * * * *
        (iii) A microenterprise assistance activity carried out in 
    accordance with the provisions of Sec. 570.201(o) with respect to those 
    owners of microenterprises and persons developing microenterprises 
    assisted under the activity during each program year who are low- and 
    moderate-income persons. For purposes of this paragraph, persons 
    determined to be low and moderate income may be presumed to continue to 
    qualify as such for up to a three-year period. [[Page 1946]] 
        (iv) An activity designed to provide job training and placement 
    and/or other employment support services, including, but not limited 
    to, peer support programs, counseling, child care, transportation, and 
    other similar services, in which the percentage of low- and moderate-
    income persons assisted is less than 51 percent may qualify under this 
    paragraph in the following limited circumstance:
        (A) In such cases where such training or provision of supportive 
    services assists business(es), the only use of CDBG assistance for the 
    project is to provide the job training and/or supportive services; and
        (B) The proportion of the total cost of the project borne by CDBG 
    funds is no greater than the proportion of the total number of persons 
    assisted who are low or moderate income.
        (3) Housing activities. An eligible activity carried out for the 
    purpose of providing or improving permanent residential structures 
    which, upon completion, will be occupied by low- and moderate-income 
    households. This would include, but not necessarily be limited to, the 
    acquisition or rehabilitation of property, conversion of non-
    residential structures, and new housing construction. If the structure 
    contains two dwelling units, at least one must be so occupied, and if 
    the structure contains more than two dwelling units, at least 51 
    percent of the units must be so occupied. Where two or more rental 
    buildings being assisted are or will be located on the same or 
    contiguous properties, and the buildings will be under common ownership 
    and management, the grouped buildings may be considered for this 
    purpose as a single structure. Where housing activities being assisted 
    meet the requirements of paragraph Sec. 570.208 (d)(5)(ii) or 
    (d)(6)(ii) of this section, all such housing may also be considered for 
    this purpose as a single structure. For rental housing, occupancy by 
    low and moderate income households must be at affordable rents to 
    qualify under this criterion. The recipient shall adopt and make public 
    its standards for determining ``affordable rents'' for this purpose. 
    The following shall also qualify under this criterion:
    * * * * *
        (4) Job creation or retention activities. An activity designed to 
    create or retain permanent jobs where at least 51 percent of the jobs, 
    computed on a full time equivalent basis, involve the employment of 
    low- and moderate-income persons. To qualify under this paragraph, the 
    activity must meet the following criteria:
        (i) For an activity that creates jobs, the recipient must document 
    that at least 51 percent of the jobs will be held by, or will be 
    available to, low- and moderate-income persons.
        (ii) For an activity that retains jobs, the recipient must document 
    that the jobs would actually be lost without the CDBG assistance and 
    that either or both of the following conditions apply with respect to 
    at least 51 percent of the jobs at the time the CDBG assistance is 
    provided:
        (A) The job is known to be held by a low- or moderate-income 
    person; or
        (B) The job can reasonably be expected to turn over within the 
    following two years and that steps will be taken to ensure that it will 
    be filled by, or made available to, a low- or moderate-income person 
    upon turnover.
        (iii) Jobs that are not held or filled by a low- or moderate-income 
    person may be considered to be available to low- and moderate-income 
    persons for these purposes only if:
        (A) Special skills that can only be acquired with substantial 
    training or work experience or education beyond high school are not a 
    prerequisite to fill such jobs, or the business agrees to hire 
    unqualified persons and provide training; and
        (B) The recipient and the assisted business take actions to ensure 
    that low- and moderate-income persons receive first consideration for 
    filling such jobs.
        (iv) For purposes of determining whether a job is held by or made 
    available to a low- or moderate-income person, the person may be 
    presumed to be a low- or moderate-income person if:
        (A) He/she resides within a census tract (or block numbering area) 
    that either:
        (1) Meets the requirements of paragraph (a)(4)(v) of this section; 
    or
        (2) Has at least 70 percent of its residents who are low- and 
    moderate-income persons; or
        (B) The assisted business is located within a census tract (or 
    block numbering area) that meets the requirements of paragraph 
    (a)(4)(v) of this section and the job under consideration is to be 
    located within that census tract.
        (v) A census tract (or block numbering area) qualifies for the 
    presumptions permitted under paragraphs (a)(4)(iv)(A)(1) and (B) of 
    this section if it is either part of a Federally-designated Empowerment 
    Zone or Enterprise Community or meets the following criteria:
        (A) It has a poverty rate of at least 20 percent as determined by 
    the most recently available decennial census information;
        (B) It does not include any portion of a central business district, 
    as this term is used in the most recent Census of Retail Trade, unless 
    the tract has a poverty rate of at least 30 percent as determined by 
    the most recently available decennial census information; and
        (C) It evidences pervasive poverty and general distress by meeting 
    at least one of the following standards:
        (1) All block groups in the census tract have poverty rates of at 
    least 20 percent;
        (2) The specific activity being undertaken is located in a block 
    group that has a poverty rate of at least 20 percent; or
        (3) Upon the written request of the recipient, HUD determines that 
    the census tract exhibits other objectively determinable signs of 
    general distress such as high incidence of crime, narcotics use, 
    homelessness, abandoned housing, and deteriorated infrastructure or 
    substantial population decline.
        (vi) As a general rule, each assisted business shall be considered 
    to be a separate activity for purposes of determining whether the 
    activity qualifies under this paragraph, except:
        (A) In certain cases such as where CDBG funds are used to acquire, 
    develop or improve a real property (e.g., a business incubator or an 
    industrial park) the requirement may be met by measuring jobs in the 
    aggregate for all the businesses which locate on the property, provided 
    such businesses are not otherwise assisted by CDBG funds.
        (B) Where CDBG funds are used to pay for the staff and overhead 
    costs of a subrecipient making loans to businesses exclusively from 
    non-CDBG funds, this requirement may be met by aggregating the jobs 
    created by all of the businesses receiving loans during each program 
    year.
        (C) Where CDBG funds are used by a recipient or subrecipient to 
    provide technical assistance to businesses, this requirement may be met 
    by aggregating the jobs created or retained by all of the businesses 
    receiving technical assistance during each program year.
        (D) Where CDBG funds are used for activities meeting the criteria 
    listed at Sec. 570.209(b)(2)(v), this requirement may be met by 
    aggregating the jobs created or retained by all businesses for which 
    CDBG assistance is obligated for such activities during the program 
    year, except as provided at paragraph (d)(7) of this section.
        (E) Where CDBG funds are used by a Community Development Financial 
    Institution to carry out activities for the purpose of creating or 
    retaining jobs, this requirement may be met by 
    [[Page 1947]] aggregating the jobs created or retained by all 
    businesses for which CDBG assistance is obligated for such activities 
    during the program year, except as provided at paragraph (d)(7) of this 
    section.
        (F) Where CDBG funds are used for public facilities or improvements 
    which will result in the creation or retention of jobs by more than one 
    business, this requirement may be met by aggregating the jobs created 
    or retained by all such businesses as a result of the public facility 
    or improvement.
        (1) Where the public facility or improvement is undertaken 
    principally for the benefit of one or more particular businesses, but 
    where other businesses might also benefit from the assisted activity, 
    the requirement may be met by aggregating only the jobs created or 
    retained by those businesses for which the facility/improvement is 
    principally undertaken, provided that the cost (in CDBG funds) for the 
    facility/improvement is less than $10,000 per permanent full-time 
    equivalent job to be created or retained by those businesses.
        (2) In any case where the cost per job to be created or retained 
    (as determined under paragraph (a)(4)(v)(C)(1) of this section) is 
    $10,000 or more, the requirement must be met by aggregating the jobs 
    created or retained as a result of the public facility or improvement 
    by all businesses in the service area of the facility/improvement. This 
    aggregation must include businesses which, as a result of the public 
    facility/improvement, locate or expand in the service area of the 
    facility/improvement between the date the recipient identifies the 
    activity in its final statement and the date one year after the 
    physical completion of the facility/improvement. In addition, the 
    assisted activity must comply with the public benefit standards at 
    Sec. 570.209(b).
    * * * * *
        (d) * * *
        (5) Where the grantee has elected to prepare an area revitalization 
    strategy pursuant to the authority of Sec. 91.215(e) of this title and 
    HUD has approved the strategy, the grantee may also elect the following 
    options:
        (i) Activities undertaken pursuant to the strategy for the purpose 
    of creating or retaining jobs may, at the option of the grantee, be 
    considered to meet the requirements of this paragraph under the 
    criteria at paragraph (a)(1)(v) of this section in lieu of the criteria 
    at paragraph (a)(4) of this section; and
        (ii) All housing activities in the area for which, pursuant to the 
    strategy, CDBG assistance is obligated during the program year may be 
    considered to be a single structure for purposes of applying the 
    criteria at paragraph (a)(3) of this section.
        (6) Where CDBG-assisted activities are carried out by a Community 
    Development Financial Institution whose charter limits its investment 
    area to a primarily residential area consisting of at least 51 percent 
    low- and moderate-income persons, the grantee may also elect the 
    following options:
        (i) Activities carried out by the Community Development Financial 
    Institution for the purpose of creating or retaining jobs may, at the 
    option of the grantee, be considered to meet the requirements of this 
    paragraph under the criteria at paragraph (a)(1)(v) of this section in 
    lieu of the criteria at paragraph (a)(4) of this section; and
        (ii) All housing activities for which the Community Development 
    Financial Institution obligates CDBG assistance during the program year 
    may be considered to be a single structure for purposes of applying the 
    criteria at paragraph (a)(3) of this section.
        (7) Where an activity meeting the criteria at Sec. 570.209(b)(2)(v) 
    may also meet the requirements of either paragraph (d)(5)(i) or 
    (d)(6)(i) of this section, the grantee may elect to qualify the 
    activity under either the area benefit criteria at paragraph (a)(1)(v) 
    of this section or the job aggregation criteria at paragraph 
    (a)(4)(vi)(D) of this section, but not both. Where an activity may meet 
    the job aggregation criteria at both paragraphs (a)(4)(vi) (D) and (E) 
    of this section, the grantee may elect to qualify the activity under 
    either criterion, but not both.
        10. A new Sec. 570.209 is added to subpart C to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 570.209  Guidelines for evaluating and selecting economic 
    development projects.
    
        The following guidelines are provided to assist the recipient to 
    evaluate and select activities to be carried out for economic 
    development purposes. Specifically, these guidelines are applicable to 
    activities that are eligible for CDBG assistance under Sec. 570.203. 
    These guidelines also apply to activities carried out under the 
    authority of Sec. 570.204 that would otherwise be eligible under 
    Sec. 570.203, were it not for the involvement of a Community-Based 
    Development Organization (CBDO). (This would include activities where a 
    CBDO makes loans to for-profit businesses.) These guidelines are 
    composed of two components: guidelines for evaluating project costs and 
    financial requirements; and standards for evaluating public benefit. 
    The standards for evaluating public benefit are mandatory, but the 
    guidelines for evaluating projects costs and financial requirements are 
    not.
        (a) Guidelines and Objectives for Evaluating Project Costs and 
    Financial Requirements. HUD has developed guidelines that are designed 
    to provide the recipient with a framework for financially underwriting 
    and selecting CDBG-assisted economic development projects which are 
    financially viable and will make the most effective use of the CDBG 
    funds. These guidelines, also referred to as the underwriting 
    guidelines, are published as appendix A to this part. The use of the 
    underwriting guidelines published by HUD is not mandatory. However, 
    grantees electing not to use these guidelines would be expected to 
    conduct basic financial underwriting prior to the provision of CDBG 
    financial assistance to a for-profit business. Where appropriate, HUD's 
    underwriting guidelines recognize that different levels of review are 
    appropriate to take into account differences in the size and scope of a 
    proposed project, and in the case of a microenterprise or other small 
    business to take into account the differences in the capacity and level 
    of sophistication among businesses of differing sizes. Recipients are 
    encouraged, when they develop their own programs and underwriting 
    criteria, to also take these factors into account. The objectives of 
    the underwriting guidelines are to ensure:
        (1) That project costs are reasonable;
        (2) That all sources of project financing are committed;
        (3) That to the extent practicable, CDBG funds are not substituted 
    for non-Federal financial support;
        (4) That the project is financially feasible;
        (5) That to the extent practicable, the return on the owner's 
    equity investment will not be unreasonably high; and
        (6) That to the extent practicable, CDBG funds are disbursed on a 
    pro rata basis with other finances provided to the project.
        (b) Standards for Evaluating Public Benefit. The grantee is 
    responsible for making sure that at least a minimum level of public 
    benefit is obtained from the expenditure of CDBG funds under the 
    categories of eligibility governed by these guidelines. The standards 
    set forth below identify the types of public benefit that will be 
    recognized for this purpose and the minimum level of each that must be 
    obtained for the amount of CDBG funds used. Unlike the guidelines for 
    project costs and financial requirements covered under paragraph (a) of 
    this section, the use of the standards for public benefit is mandatory. 
    Certain public facilities and [[Page 1948]] improvements eligible under 
    Sec. 570.201(c) of the regulations, which are undertaken for economic 
    development purposes, are also subject to these standards, as specified 
    in Sec. 570.208(a)(4)(vi)(D)(2).
        (1) Standards for activities in the aggregate. Activities covered 
    by these guidelines must, in the aggregate, either:
        (i) Create or retain at least one full-time equivalent, permanent 
    job per $35,000 of CDBG funds used; or
        (ii) Provide goods or services to residents of an area, such that 
    the number of low- and moderate-income persons residing in the areas 
    served by the assisted businesses amounts to at least one low- and 
    moderate-income person per $350 of CDBG funds used.
        (2) Applying the aggregate standards. (i) A metropolitan city or an 
    urban county shall apply the aggregate standards under paragraph (b)(1) 
    of this section to all applicable activities for which CDBG funds are 
    first obligated within each single CDBG program year, without regard to 
    the source year of the funds used for the activities. A grantee under 
    the HUD-Administered Small Cities or Insular Areas CDBG programs shall 
    apply the aggregate standards under paragraph (b)(1) of this section to 
    all funds obligated for applicable activities from a given grant; 
    program income obligated for applicable activities will, for these 
    purposes, be aggregated with the most recent open grant. For any time 
    period in which a community has no open HUD-Administered or Insular 
    Areas grants, the aggregate standards shall be applied to all 
    applicable activities for which program income is obligated during that 
    period.
        (ii) The grantee shall apply the aggregate standards to the number 
    of jobs to be created/retained, or to the number of persons residing in 
    the area served (as applicable), as determined at the time funds are 
    obligated to activities.
        (iii) Where an activity is expected both to create or retain jobs 
    and to provide goods or services to residents of an area, the grantee 
    may elect to count the activity under either the jobs standard or the 
    area residents standard, but not both.
        (iv) Where CDBG assistance for an activity is limited to job 
    training and placement and/or other employment support services, the 
    jobs assisted with CDBG funds shall be considered to be created or 
    retained jobs for the purposes of applying the aggregate standards.
        (v) Any activity subject to these guidelines which meets one or 
    more of the following criteria may, at the grantee's option, be 
    excluded from the aggregate standards described in paragraph (b)(1) of 
    this section:
        (A) Provides jobs exclusively for unemployed persons or 
    participants in one or more of the following programs:
        (1) Jobs Training Partnership Act (JTPA);
        (2) Jobs Opportunities for Basic Skills (JOBS); or
        (3) Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC);
        (B) Provides jobs predominantly for residents of Public and Indian 
    Housing units;
        (C) Provides jobs predominantly for homeless persons;
        (D) Provides jobs predominantly for low-skilled, low- and moderate-
    income persons, where the business agrees to provide clear 
    opportunities for promotion and economic advancement, such as through 
    the provision of training;
        (E) Provides jobs predominantly for persons residing within a 
    census tract (or block numbering area) that has at least 20 percent of 
    its residents who are in poverty;
        (F) Provides assistance to business(es) that operate(s) within a 
    census tract (or block numbering area) that has at least 20 percent of 
    its residents who are in poverty;
        (G) Stabilizes or revitalizes a neighborhood that has at least 70 
    percent of its residents who are low- and moderate-income;
        (H) Provides assistance to a Community Development Financial 
    Institution that serve an area that is predominantly low- and moderate-
    income persons;
        (I) Provides assistance to a Community-Based Development 
    Organization serving a neighborhood that has at least 70 percent of its 
    residents who are low- and moderate-income;
        (J) Provides employment opportunities that are an integral 
    component of a project designed to promote spatial deconcentration of 
    low- and moderate-income and minority persons;
        (K) With prior HUD approval, provides substantial benefit to low-
    income persons through other innovative approaches;
        (L) Provides services to the residents of an area pursuant to a 
    strategy approved by HUD under the provisions of Sec. 91.215(e) of this 
    title;
        (M) Creates or retains jobs through businesses assisted in an area 
    pursuant to a strategy approved by HUD under the provisions of 
    Sec. 91.215(e) of this title.
        (3) Standards for individual activities. Any activity subject to 
    these guidelines which falls into one or more of the following 
    categories will be considered by HUD to provide insufficient public 
    benefit, and therefore may under no circumstances be assisted with CDBG 
    funds:
        (i) The amount of CDBG assistance exceeds either of the following, 
    as applicable:
        (A) $50,000 per full-time equivalent, permanent job created or 
    retained; or
        (B) $1,000 per low- and moderate-income person to which goods or 
    services are provided by the activity.
        (ii) The activity consists of or includes any of the following:
        (A) General promotion of the community as a whole (as opposed to 
    the promotion of specific areas and programs);
        (B) Assistance to professional sports teams;
        (C) Assistance to privately-owned recreational facilities that 
    serve a predominantly higher-income clientele, where the recreational 
    benefit to users or members clearly outweighs employment or other 
    benefits to low- and moderate-income persons;
        (D) Acquisition of land for which the specific proposed use has not 
    yet been identified; and
        (E) Assistance to a for-profit business while that business or any 
    other business owned by the same person(s) or entity(ies) is the 
    subject of unresolved findings of noncompliance relating to previous 
    CDBG assistance provided by the recipient.
        (4) Applying the individual activity standards. (i) Where an 
    activity is expected both to create or retain jobs and to provide goods 
    or services to residents of an area, it will be disqualified only if 
    the amount of CDBG assistance exceeds both of the amounts in paragraph 
    (b)(3)(i) of this section.
        (ii) The individual activity standards in paragraph (b)(3)(i) of 
    this section shall be applied to the number of jobs to be created or 
    retained, or to the number of persons residing in the area served (as 
    applicable), as determined at the time funds are obligated to 
    activities.
        (iii) Where CDBG assistance for an activity is limited to job 
    training and placement and/or other employment support services, the 
    jobs assisted with CDBG funds shall be considered to be created or 
    retained jobs for the purposes of applying the individual activity 
    standards in paragraph (b)(3)(i) of this section.
        (c) Amendments to economic development projects after review 
    determinations. If, after the grantee enters into a contract to provide 
    assistance to a project, the scope or financial elements of the project 
    change [[Page 1949]] to the extent that a significant contract 
    amendment is appropriate, the project should be reevaluated under these 
    and the recipient's guidelines. (This would include, for example, 
    situations where the business requests a change in the amount or terms 
    of assistance being provided, or an extension to the loan payment 
    period required in the contract.) If a reevaluation of the project 
    indicates that the financial elements and public benefit to be derived 
    have also substantially changed, then the recipient should make 
    appropriate adjustments in the amount, type, terms or conditions of 
    CDBG assistance which has been offered, to reflect the impact of the 
    substantial change. (For example, if a change in the project elements 
    results in a substantial reduction of the total project costs, it may 
    be appropriate for the recipient to reduce the amount of total CDBG 
    assistance.) If the amount of CDBG assistance provided to the project 
    is increased, the amended project must still comply with the public 
    benefit standards under paragraph (b) of this section.
        (d) Documentation. The grantee must maintain sufficient records to 
    demonstrate the level of public benefit, based on the above standards, 
    that is actually achieved upon completion of the CDBG-assisted economic 
    development activity(ies) and how that compares to the level of such 
    benefit anticipated when the CDBG assistance was obligated. If the 
    grantee's actual results show a pattern of substantial variation from 
    anticipated results, the grantee is expected to take all actions 
    reasonably within its control to improve the accuracy of its 
    projections. If the actual results demonstrate that the recipient has 
    failed the public benefit standards, HUD may require the recipient to 
    meet more stringent standards in future years as appropriate.
    
    Subpart I--State Community Development Block Grant Program
    
        11. Section 570.482 is amended by adding paragraphs (c), (d), (e), 
    (f), and (g) to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 570.482   Eligible activities.
    
    * * * * *
        (c) Provision of Assistance for Microenterprise Development. 
    Microenterprise development activities eligible under Section 
    105(a)(23) of the Housing and Community Development Act of 1974 (the 
    Act), as amended, (42 U.S.C. 5301 et seq.) may be carried out either 
    through the recipient directly or through public and private 
    organizations, agencies, and other subrecipients (including nonprofit 
    and for-profit subrecipients).
        (d) Provision of Public Services. The following activities shall 
    not be subject to the restrictions on public services under Section 
    105(a)(8) of the Housing and Community Development Act of 1974, as 
    amended:
        (1) Support services provided under Section 105(a)(23) of the 
    Housing and Community Development Act of 1974, as amended, and 
    paragraph (c) of this section; and
        (2) Services carried out under the provisions of Section 105(a)(15) 
    of the Housing and Community Development Act of 1974, as amended, that 
    are specifically designed to increase economic opportunities through 
    job training and placement and other employment support services, 
    including, but not limited to, peer support programs, counseling, child 
    care, transportation, and other similar services.
        (e) Guidelines and Objectives for Evaluating Project Costs and 
    Financial Requirements--(1) Applicability. The following guidelines, 
    also referred to as the underwriting guidelines, are provided to assist 
    the recipient to evaluate and select activities to be carried out for 
    economic development purposes. Specifically, these guidelines are 
    applicable to activities that are eligible for CDBG assistance under 
    section 105(a)(17) of the Act, economic development activities eligible 
    under section 105(a)(14) of the Act, and activities that are part of a 
    community economic development project eligible under section 
    105(a)(15) of the Act. The use of the underwriting guidelines published 
    by HUD is not mandatory. However, states electing not to use these 
    guidelines would be expected to ensure that the state or units of 
    general local government conduct basic financial underwriting prior to 
    the provision of CDBG financial assistance to a for-profit business.
        (2) Objectives. The underwriting guidelines are designed to provide 
    the recipient with a framework for financially underwriting and 
    selecting CDBG-assisted economic development projects which are 
    financially viable and will make the most effective use of the CDBG 
    funds. Where appropriate, HUD's underwriting guidelines recognize that 
    different levels of review are appropriate to take into account 
    differences in the size and scope of a proposed project, and in the 
    case of a microenterprise or other small business to take into account 
    the differences in the capacity and level of sophistication among 
    businesses of differing sizes. Recipients are encouraged, when they 
    develop their own programs and underwriting criteria, to also take 
    these factors into account. These underwriting guidelines are published 
    as appendix A to this part. The objectives of the underwriting 
    guidelines are to ensure:
        (i) That project costs are reasonable;
        (ii) That all sources of project financing are committed;
        (iii) That to the extent practicable, CDBG funds are not 
    substituted for non-Federal financial support;
        (iv) That the project is financially feasible;
        (v) That to the extent practicable, the return on the owner's 
    equity investment will not be unreasonably high; and
        (vi) That to the extent practicable, CDBG funds are disbursed on a 
    pro rata basis with other finances provided to the project.
        (f) Standards for Evaluating Public Benefit. (1) Purpose and 
    Applicability. The grantee is responsible for making sure that at least 
    a minimum level of public benefit is obtained from the expenditure of 
    CDBG funds under the categories of eligibility governed by these 
    standards. The standards set forth below identify the types of public 
    benefit that will be recognized for this purpose and the minimum level 
    of each that must be obtained for the amount of CDBG funds used. These 
    standards are applicable to activities that are eligible for CDBG 
    assistance under section 105(a)(17) of the Act, economic development 
    activities eligible under section 105(a)(14) of the Act, and activities 
    that are part of a community economic development project eligible 
    under section 105(a)(15) of the Act. Certain public facilities and 
    improvements eligible under Section 105(a)(2) of the Act, which are 
    undertaken for economic development purposes, are also subject to these 
    standards, as specified in Sec. 570.483(b)(4)(vi)(F)(2). Unlike the 
    guidelines for project costs and financial requirements covered under 
    paragraph (a) of this section, the use of the standards for public 
    benefit is mandatory.
        (2) Standards for activities in the aggregate. Activities covered 
    by these standards must, in the aggregate, either:
        (i) Create or retain at least one full-time equivalent, permanent 
    job per $35,000 of CDBG funds used; or
        (ii) Provide goods or services to residents of an area, such that 
    the number of low- and moderate-income persons residing in the areas 
    served by the assisted businesses amounts to at least one low- and 
    moderate-income person per $350 of CDBG funds used.
        (3) Applying the aggregate standards. (i) A state shall apply the 
    aggregate [[Page 1950]] standards under paragraph (e)(2) of this 
    section to all funds distributed for applicable activities from each 
    annual grant. This includes the amount of the annual grant, any funds 
    reallocated by HUD to the state, any program income distributed by the 
    state and any guaranteed loan funds made under the provisions of 
    subpart M of this part covered in the method of distribution in the 
    final statement for a given annual grant year.
        (ii) The grantee shall apply the aggregate standards to the number 
    of jobs to be created/retained, or to the number of persons residing in 
    the area served (as applicable), as determined at the time funds are 
    obligated to activities.
        (iii) Where an activity is expected both to create or retain jobs 
    and to provide goods or services to residents of an area, the grantee 
    may elect to count the activity under either the jobs standard or the 
    area residents standard, but not both.
        (iv) Where CDBG assistance for an activity is limited to job 
    training and placement and/or other employment support services, the 
    jobs assisted with CDBG funds shall be considered to be created or 
    retained jobs for the purposes of applying the aggregate standards.
        (v) Any activity subject to these standards which meets one or more 
    of the following criteria may, at the grantee's option, be excluded 
    from the aggregate standards described in paragraph (f)(2) of this 
    section:
        (A) Provides jobs exclusively for unemployed persons or 
    participants in one or more of the following programs:
        (1) Jobs Training Partnership Act (JTPA);
        (2) Jobs Opportunities for Basic Skills (JOBS); or
        (3) Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC);
        (B) Provides jobs predominantly for residents of Public and Indian 
    Housing units;
        (C) Provides jobs predominantly for homeless persons;
        (D) Provides jobs predominantly for low-skilled, low- and moderate-
    income persons, where the business agrees to provide clear 
    opportunities for promotion and economic advancement, such as through 
    the provision of training;
        (E) Provides jobs predominantly for persons residing within a 
    census tract (or block numbering area) that has at least 20 percent of 
    its residents who are in poverty;
        (F) Provides assistance to business(es) that operate(s) within a 
    census tract (or block numbering area) that has at least 20 percent of 
    its residents who are in poverty;
        (G) Stabilizes or revitalizes a neighborhood income that has at 
    least 70 percent of its residents who are low- and moderate-income;
        (H) Provides assistance to a Community Development Financial 
    Institution (as defined in the Community Development Banking and 
    Financial Institutions Act of 1994, (12 U.S.C. 4701 note)) serving an 
    area that has at least 70 percent of its residents who are low- and 
    moderate-income;
        (I) Provides assistance to an organization eligible to carry out 
    activities under section 105(a)(15) of the Act serving an area that has 
    at least 70 percent of its residents who are low- and moderate-income;
        (J) Provides employment opportunities that are an integral 
    component of a project designed to promote spatial deconcentration of 
    low- and moderate-income and minority persons;
        (K) With prior HUD approval, provides substantial benefit to low-
    income persons through other innovative approaches.
        (4) Standards for individual activities. Any activity subject to 
    these standards which falls into one or more of the following 
    categories will be considered by HUD to provide insufficient public 
    benefit, and therefore may under no circumstances be assisted with CDBG 
    funds:
        (i) The amount of CDBG assistance exceeds either of the following, 
    as applicable:
        (A) $50,000 per full-time equivalent, permanent job created or 
    retained; or
        (B) $1,000 per low- and moderate-income person to which goods or 
    services are provided by the activity.
        (ii) The activity consists of or includes any of the following:
        (A) General promotion of the community as a whole (as opposed to 
    the promotion of specific areas and programs);
        (B) Assistance to professional sports teams;
        (C) Assistance to privately-owned recreational facilities that 
    serve a predominantly higher-income clientele, where the recreational 
    benefit to users or members clearly outweighs employment or other 
    benefits to low- and moderate-income persons;
        (D) Acquisition of land for which the specific proposed use has not 
    yet been identified; and
        (E) Assistance to a for-profit business while that business or any 
    other business owned by the same person(s) or entity(ies) is the 
    subject of unresolved findings of noncompliance relating to previous 
    CDBG assistance provided by the recipient.
        (5) Applying the individual activity standards. (i) Where an 
    activity is expected both to create or retain jobs and to provide goods 
    or services to residents of an area, it will be disqualified only if 
    the amount of CDBG assistance exceeds both of the amounts in paragraph 
    (f)(4)(i) of this section.
        (ii) The individual activity tests in paragraph (f)(4)(i) of this 
    section shall be applied to the number of jobs to be created or 
    retained, or to the number of persons residing in the area served (as 
    applicable), as determined at the time funds are obligated to 
    activities.
        (iii) Where CDBG assistance for an activity is limited to job 
    training and placement and/or other employment support services, the 
    jobs assisted with CDBG funds shall be considered to be created or 
    retained jobs for the purposes of applying the individual activity 
    standards in paragraph (f)(4)(i) of this section.
        (6) Documentation. The state and its grant recipients must maintain 
    sufficient records to demonstrate the level of public benefit, based on 
    the above standards, that is actually achieved upon completion of the 
    CDBG-assisted economic development activity(ies) and how that compares 
    to the level of such benefit anticipated when the CDBG assistance was 
    obligated. If a state grant recipient's actual results show a pattern 
    of substantial variation from anticipated results, the state and its 
    recipient are expected to take those actions reasonably within their 
    respective control to improve the accuracy of the projections. If the 
    actual results demonstrate that the state has failed the public benefit 
    standards, HUD may require the state to meet more stringent standards 
    in future years as appropriate.
        (g) Amendments to economic development projects after review 
    determinations. If, after the grantee enters into a contract to provide 
    assistance to a project, the scope or financial elements of the project 
    change to the extent that a significant contract amendment is 
    appropriate, the project should be reevaluated under these and the 
    recipient's guidelines. (This would include, for example, situations 
    where the business requests a change in the amount or terms of 
    assistance being provided, or an extension to the loan payment period 
    required in the contract.) If a reevaluation of the project indicates 
    that the financial elements and public benefit to be derived have also 
    substantially changed, then the recipient should make appropriate 
    adjustments in the amount, type, terms [[Page 1951]] or conditions of 
    CDBG assistance which has been offered, to reflect the impact of the 
    substantial change. (For example, if a change in the project elements 
    results in a substantial reduction of the total project costs, it may 
    be appropriate for the recipient to reduce the amount of total CDBG 
    assistance.) If the amount of CDBG assistance provided to the project 
    is increased, the amended project must still comply with the public 
    benefit standards under paragraph (f) of this section.
        12. Section 570.483 is amended by:
        a. Revising the section heading;
        b. Adding a new paragraph (b)(1)(iv):
        c. Revising paragraph (b)(2)(i)(C), and adding new paragraphs 
    (b)(2)(iv) and (b)(2)(v);
        d. Revising paragraph (b)(3) introductory text;
        e. Redesignating paragraph (b)(4)(iv) as (b)(4)(vi), and by adding 
    new paragraphs (b)(4)(iv) and (v);
        f. Revising newly designated paragraph (b)(4)(vi)(B);
        g. Redesignating newly designated paragraph (b)(4)(vi)(c) as 
    paragraph (b)(4)(vi)(F) and revising it;
        h. Adding new paragraphs (b)(4)(vi)(C), (D) and (E); and
        i. Adding new paragraphs (e)(4) and (5), to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 570.483  Criteria for national objectives.
    
    * * * * *
        (b) * * *
        (1) * * *
        (iv) Activities meeting the requirements of paragraph (e)(4)(i) of 
    this section may also be considered to qualify under this paragraph 
    (b).
        (2) * * *
        (i) * * *
        (C) Activities where the benefit to low- and moderate-income 
    persons to be considered is the creation or retention of jobs, except 
    as provided in paragraph (b)(2)(v) of this section.
    * * * * *
        (iv) A microenterprise assistance activity (carried out in 
    accordance with the provisions of Section 105(a)(23) of the Act or 
    Sec. 570.482(c) and limited to microenterprises) with respect to those 
    owners of microenterprises and persons developing microenterprises 
    assisted under the activity who are low- and moderate-income persons. 
    For purposes of this paragraph, persons determined to be low and 
    moderate income may be presumed to continue to qualify as such for up 
    to a three-year period.
        (v) An activity designed to provide job training and placement and/
    or other employment support services, including, but not limited to, 
    peer support programs, counseling, child care, transportation, and 
    other similar services, in which the percentage of low- and moderate-
    income persons assisted is less than 51 percent may qualify under this 
    paragraph in the following limited circumstances:
        (A) In such cases where such training or provision of supportive 
    services is an integrally-related component of a larger project, the 
    only use of CDBG assistance for the project is to provide the job 
    training and/or supportive services; and
        (B) The proportion of the total cost of the project borne by CDBG 
    funds is no greater than the proportion of the total number of persons 
    assisted who are low or moderate income.
        (3) Housing activities. An eligible activity carried out for the 
    purpose of providing or improving permanent residential structures 
    which, upon completion, will be occupied by low- and moderate-income 
    households. This would include, but not necessarily be limited to, the 
    acquisition or rehabilitation of property, conversion of non-
    residential structures, and new housing construction. If the structure 
    contains two dwelling units, at least one must be so occupied, and if 
    the structure contains more than two dwelling units, at least 51 
    percent of the units must be so occupied. Where two or more rental 
    buildings being assisted are or will be located on the same or 
    contiguous properties, and the buildings will be under common ownership 
    and management, the grouped buildings may be considered for this 
    purpose as a single structure. Where housing activities being assisted 
    meet the requirements of paragraph (e)(4)(ii) of this section, all such 
    housing may also be considered for this purpose as a single structure. 
    For rental housing, occupancy by low and moderate income households 
    must be at affordable rents to qualify under this criterion. The 
    recipient shall adopt and make public its standards for determining 
    ``affordable rents'' for this purpose. The following shall also qualify 
    under this criterion:
    * * * * *
        (4) * * *
        (iv) For purposes of determining whether a job is held by or made 
    available to a low- or moderate-income person, the person may be 
    presumed to be a low- or moderate-income person if:
        (A) He/she resides within a census tract (or block numbering area) 
    that either:
        (1) Meets the requirements of paragraph (b)(4)(v) of this section; 
    or
        (2) Has at least 70 percent of its residents who are low- and 
    moderate-income persons; or
        (B) The assisted business is located within a census tract (or 
    block numbering area) that meets the requirements of paragraph 
    (b)(4)(v) of this section and the job under consideration is to be 
    located within that census tract.
        (v) A census tract (or block numbering area) qualifies for the 
    presumptions permitted under paragraphs (b)(4)(iv) (A)(1) and (B) of 
    this section if it is either part of a Federally-designated Empowerment 
    Zone or Enterprise Community or meets the following criteria:
        (A) It has a poverty rate of at least 20 percent as determined by 
    the most recently available decennial census information;
        (B) It does not include any portion of a central business district, 
    as this term is used in the most recent Census of Retail Trade, unless 
    the tract has a poverty rate of at least 30 percent as determined by 
    the most recently available decennial census information; and
        (C) It evidences pervasive poverty and general distress by meeting 
    at least one of the following standards:
        (1) All block groups in the census tract have poverty rates of at 
    least 20 percent;
        (2) The specific activity being undertaken is located in a block 
    group that has a poverty rate of at least 20 percent; or
        (3) Upon the written request of the recipient, HUD determines that 
    the census tract exhibits other objectively determinable signs of 
    general distress such as high incidence of crime, narcotics use, 
    homelessness, abandoned housing, and deteriorated infrastructure or 
    substantial population decline.
        (vi) * * *
        (B) Where CDBG funds are used to pay for the staff and overhead 
    costs of a subrecipient specified in section 105(a)(15) of the Act 
    making loans to businesses exclusively from non-CDBG funds, this 
    requirement may be met by aggregating the jobs created by all of the 
    businesses receiving loans during any one-year period.
        (C) Where CDBG funds are used by a recipient or subrecipient to 
    provide technical assistance to businesses, this requirement may be met 
    by aggregating the jobs created or retained by all of the businesses 
    receiving technical assistance during any one-year period.
        (D) Where CDBG funds are used for activities meeting the criteria 
    listed at Sec. 570.482(f)(3)(v), this requirement may be met by 
    aggregating the jobs created or retained by all businesses for which 
    CDBG assistance is obligated for such activities during any one-year 
    period, except as provided at paragraph (e)(5) of this 
    section. [[Page 1952]] 
        (E) Where CDBG funds are used by a Community Development Financial 
    Institution to carry out activities for the purpose of creating or 
    retaining jobs, this requirement may be met by aggregating the jobs 
    created or retained by all businesses for which CDBG assistance is 
    obligated for such activities during any one-year period, except as 
    provided at paragraph (e)(5) of this section.
        (F) Where CDBG funds are used for public facilities or improvements 
    which will result in the creation or retention of jobs by more than one 
    business, this requirement may be met by aggregating the jobs created 
    or retained by all such businesses as a result of the public facility 
    or improvement.
        (1) Where the public facility or improvement is undertaken 
    principally for the benefit of one or more particular businesses, but 
    where other businesses might also benefit from the assisted activity, 
    the requirement may be met by aggregating only the jobs created or 
    retained by those businesses for which the facility/improvement is 
    principally undertaken, provided that the cost (in CDBG funds) for the 
    facility/improvement is less than $10,000 per permanent full-time 
    equivalent job to be created or retained by those businesses.
        (2) In any case where the cost per job to be created or retained 
    (as determined under paragraph (b)(4)(iii)(C)(1) of this section) is 
    $10,000 or more, the requirement must be met by aggregating the jobs 
    created or retained as a result of the public facility or improvement 
    by all businesses in the service area of the facility/improvement. This 
    aggregation must include businesses which, as a result of the public 
    facility/improvement, locate or expand in the service area of the 
    public facility/improvement between the date the state awards the CDBG 
    funds to the recipient and the date one year after the physical 
    completion of the public facility/improvement. In addition, the 
    assisted activity must comply with the public benefit standards at 
    Sec. 570.482(e).
    * * * * *
        (e) * * *
        (4) Where CDBG-assisted activities are carried out by a Community 
    Development Financial Institution whose charter limits its investment 
    area to a primarily residential area consisting of at least 51 percent 
    low- and moderate-income persons, the unit of general local government 
    may also elect the following options:
        (i) Activities carried out by the Community Development Financial 
    Institution for the purpose of creating or retaining jobs may, at the 
    option of the unit of general local government, be considered to meet 
    the requirements of this paragraph under the criteria at paragraph 
    (b)(1)(iv) of this section in lieu of the criteria at paragraph (b)(4) 
    of this section; and
        (ii) All housing activities for which the Community Development 
    Financial Institution obligates CDBG assistance during any one-year 
    period may be considered to be a single structure for purposes of 
    applying the criteria at paragraph (b)(3) of this section.
        (5) Where an activity meeting the criteria at Sec. 570.482(f)(3)(v) 
    also meets the requirements at paragraph (e)(4)(i) of this section, the 
    unit of general local government may elect to qualify the activity 
    under either the area benefit criteria at paragraph (b)(1)(iv) of this 
    section or the job aggregation criteria at paragraph (b)(4)(vi)(D) of 
    this section, but not both. Where an activity may meet the job 
    aggregation criteria at both paragraphs (b)(4)(vi) (D) and (E) of this 
    section, the unit of general local government may elect to qualify the 
    activity under either criterion, but not both.
    * * * * *
        13. Section 570.489 is amended by:
        a. Revising paragraph (e)(1) introductory text;
        b. Redesignating paragraph (e)(2) as paragraph (e)(3); and
        c. Adding a new paragraph (e)(2), to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 570.489  Program administrative requirements.
    
    * * * * *
        (e) Program income. (1) For the purposes of this subpart, ``program 
    income'' is defined as gross income received by a state, a unit of 
    general local government or a subrecipient of a unit of general local 
    government that was generated from the use of CDBG funds, except as 
    provided in paragraph (e)(2) of this section. When income is generated 
    by an activity that is only partially assisted with CDBG funds, the 
    income shall be prorated to reflect the percentage of CDBG funds used 
    (e.g., a single loan supported by CDBG funds and other funds; a single 
    parcel of land purchased with CDBG funds and other funds). Program 
    income includes, but is not limited to, the following:
    * * * * *
        (2) ``Program income'' does not include the following:
        (i) The total amount of funds which is less than $25,000 received 
    in a single year that is retained by a unit of general local government 
    and its subrecipients;
        (ii) Amounts generated by activities eligible under section 
    105(a)(15) of the Act and carried out by an entity under the authority 
    of section 105(a)(15) of the Act;
        (iii) Amounts generated by activities that are financed by a loan 
    guaranteed under Section 108 of the Act and meet one or more of the 
    public benefit criteria specified at Sec. 570.482(f)(3)(v) or are 
    carried out in conjunction with a grant under Section 108(q) of the Act 
    in an area determined by HUD to meet the eligibility requirements for 
    designation as an Urban Empowerment Zone pursuant to 24 CFR part 597, 
    subpart B. Such exclusion shall not apply if CDBG funds are used to 
    repay the guaranteed loan. When such a guaranteed loan is partially 
    repaid with CDBG funds, the amount generated shall be prorated to 
    reflect the percentage of CDBG funds used. Amounts generated by 
    activities financed with loans guaranteed under Section 108 of the Act 
    which are not defined as program income shall be treated as 
    miscellaneous revenue and shall not be subject to any of the 
    requirements of this part. However, such treatment shall not affect the 
    right of the Secretary to require the Section 108 borrower to pledge 
    such amounts as security for the guaranteed loan. The determination 
    whether such amounts shall constitute program income shall be governed 
    by the provisions of the contract required at Sec. 570.705(b)(1).
    * * * * *
    
    Subpart J--Grant Administration
    
        14. Section 570.500 is amended by revising paragraph (a) 
    introductory text; by adding a new paragraph (a)(4); and by revising 
    paragraph (c); to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 570.500  Definitions.
    
    * * * * *
        (a) Program income means gross income received by the recipient or 
    a subrecipient directly generated from the use of CDBG funds, except as 
    provided in paragraph (a)(4) of this section.
    * * * * *
        (4) Program income does not include:
        (i) Any income received in a single program year by the recipient 
    and all its subrecipients if the total amount of such income does not 
    exceed $25,000; and
        (ii) Amounts generated by activities that are financed by a loan 
    guaranteed under Section 108 of the Act and meet one or more of the 
    public benefit criteria specified at Sec. 570.209(b)(2)(v) or are 
    carried out in conjunction with a grant under Section 108(q) in an area 
    determined by HUD to meet the eligibility requirements for designation 
    as an Urban Empowerment Zone pursuant to 24 CFR part 597, subpart B. 
    Such exclusion shall not apply if CDBG [[Page 1953]] funds are used to 
    repay the guaranteed loan. When such a guaranteed loan is partially 
    repaid with CDBG funds, the amount generated shall be prorated to 
    reflect the percentage of CDBG funds used. Amounts generated by 
    activities financed with loans guaranteed under Section 108 which are 
    not defined as program income shall be treated as miscellaneous revenue 
    and shall not be subject to any of the requirements of this Part. 
    However, such treatment shall not affect the right of the Secretary to 
    require the Section 108 borrower to pledge such amounts as security for 
    the guaranteed loan. The determination whether such amounts shall 
    constitute program income shall be governed by the provisions of the 
    contract required at Sec. 570.705(b)(1).
    * * * * *
        (c) Subrecipient means a public or private nonprofit agency, 
    authority or organization, or a for-profit entity authorized under 
    Sec. 570.201(o), receiving CDBG funds from the recipient to undertake 
    activities eligible for such assistance under Subpart C of this part. 
    The term excludes an entity receiving CDBG funds from the recipient 
    under the authority of Sec. 570.204. The term includes a public agency 
    designated by a metropolitan city or urban county to receive a loan 
    guarantee under Subpart M of this part, but does not include 
    contractors providing supplies, equipment, construction or services 
    subject to the procurement requirements in 24 CFR 85.36 or in 
    Attachment O of OMB Circular A-110, as applicable.
        15. Section 570.506 is amended by revising paragraph (b) 
    introductory text; by removing the semicolon at the end of paragraph 
    (b)(2)(iii) and adding a period in its place; by redesignating 
    paragraphs (b)(7) through (b)(11) as paragraphs (b)(8) through (b)(12), 
    respectively; by adding a new paragraph (b)(7); and by revising 
    paragraph (c), to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 570.506  Records to be maintained.
    
    * * * * *
        (b) Records demonstrating that each activity undertaken meets one 
    of the criteria set forth in Sec. 570.208. (Where information on income 
    by family size is required, the recipient may substitute evidence 
    establishing that the person assisted qualifies under another program 
    having income qualification criteria at least as restrictive as that 
    used in the definitions of ``low and moderate income person'' and ``low 
    and moderate income household'' (as applicable) at Sec. 570.3, such as 
    Job Training Partnership Act (JTPA) and welfare programs; or the 
    recipient may substitute evidence that the assisted person is homeless; 
    or the recipient may substitute a copy of a verifiable certification 
    from the assisted person that his or her family income does not exceed 
    the applicable income limit established in accordance with Sec. 570.3; 
    or the recipient may substitute a notice that the assisted person is a 
    referral from a state, county or local employment agency or other 
    entity that agrees to refer individuals it determines to be low and 
    moderate income persons based on HUD's criteria and agrees to maintain 
    documentation supporting these determinations.) Such records shall 
    include the following information:
    * * * * *
        (7) For purposes of documenting, pursuant to paragraphs 
    (b)(5)(i)(B), (b)(5)(ii)(C), (b)(6)(iii) or (b)(6)(v) of this section, 
    that the person for whom a job was either filled by or made available 
    to a low- or moderate-income person based upon the census tract where 
    the person resides or in which the business is located, the recipient, 
    in lieu of maintaining records showing the person's family size and 
    income, may substitute records showing either the person's address at 
    the time the determination of income status was made or the address of 
    the business providing the job, as applicable, the census tract in 
    which that address was located, the percent of persons residing in that 
    tract who either are in poverty or who are low- and moderate-income, as 
    applicable, the data source used for determining the percentage, and a 
    description of the pervasive poverty and general distress in the census 
    tract in sufficient detail to demonstrate how the census tract met the 
    criteria in Sec. 570.208(a)(4)(v), as applicable.
    * * * * *
        (c) Records which demonstrate that the recipient has made the 
    determinations required as a condition of eligibility of certain 
    activities, as prescribed in Secs. 570.201(f), 570.201(i), 
    570.202(b)(3), 570.203(b), 570.204(a), 570.206(f), and 570.209.
    * * * * *
        16. Appendix A is added to part 570 to read as follows:
    
    Appendix A to Part 570--Guidelines and Objectives for Evaluating 
    Project Costs and Financial Requirements
    
        I. Guidelines and Objectives for Evaluating Project Costs and 
    Financial Requirements. HUD has developed the following guidelines 
    that are designed to provide the recipient with a framework for 
    financially underwriting and selecting CDBG-assisted economic 
    development projects which are financially viable and will make the 
    most effective use of the CDBG funds. The use of these underwriting 
    guidelines as published by HUD is not mandatory. However, grantees 
    electing not to use these underwriting guidelines would be expected 
    to conduct basic financial underwriting prior to the provision of 
    CDBG financial assistance to a for-profit business. States electing 
    not to use these underwriting guidelines would be expected to ensure 
    that the state or units of general local government conduct basic 
    financial underwriting prior to the provision of CDBG financial 
    assistance to a for-profit business.
        II. Where appropriate, HUD's underwriting guidelines recognize 
    that different levels of review are appropriate to take into account 
    differences in the size and scope of a proposed project, and in the 
    case of a microenterprise or other small business to take into 
    account the differences in the capacity and level of sophistication 
    among businesses of differing sizes.
        III. Recipients are encouraged, when they develop their own 
    programs and underwriting criteria, to also take these factors into 
    account. For example, a recipient administering a program providing 
    only technical assistance to small businesses might choose to apply 
    underwriting guidelines to the technical assistance program as a 
    whole, rather than to each instance of assistance to a business. 
    Given the nature and dollar value of such a program, a recipient 
    might choose to limit its evaluation to factors such as the extent 
    of need for this type of assistance by the target group of 
    businesses and the extent to which this type of assistance is 
    already available.
        IV. The objectives of the underwriting guidelines are to ensure:
        (1) that project costs are reasonable;
        (2) that all sources of project financing are committed;
        (3) that to the extent practicable, CDBG funds are not 
    substituted for non-Federal financial support;
        (4) that the project is financially feasible;
        (5) that to the extent practicable, the return on the owner's 
    equity investment will not be unreasonably high; and
        (6) that to the extent practicable, CDBG funds are disbursed on 
    a pro rata basis with other finances provided to the project.
        i. Project costs are reasonable. i. Reviewing costs for 
    reasonableness is important. It will help the recipient avoid 
    providing either too much or too little CDBG assistance for the 
    proposed project. Therefore, it is suggested that the grantee obtain 
    a breakdown of all project costs and that each cost element making 
    up the project be reviewed for reasonableness. The amount of time 
    and resources the recipient expends evaluating the reasonableness of 
    a cost element should be commensurate with its cost. For example, it 
    would be appropriate for an experienced reviewer looking at a cost 
    element of less than $10,000 to judge the reasonableness of that 
    cost based upon his or her knowledge and common sense. For a cost 
    element in excess of $10,000, it would be more appropriate for the 
    reviewer to compare the cost element with a third-party, fair-market 
    price quotation for that cost element. Third-party price quotations 
    may also be used by a reviewer to help determine the reasonableness 
    of cost elements below $10,000 when the reviewer evaluates projects 
    [[Page 1954]] infrequently or if the reviewer is less experienced in 
    cost estimations. If a recipient does not use third-party price 
    quotations to verify cost elements, then the recipient would need to 
    conduct its own cost analysis using appropriate cost estimating 
    manuals or services.
        ii. The recipient should pay particular attention to any cost 
    element of the project that will be carried out through a non-arms-
    length transaction. A non-arms-length transaction occurs when the 
    entity implementing the CDBG assisted activity procures goods or 
    services from itself or from another party with whom there is a 
    financial interest or family relationship. If abused, non-arms-
    length transactions misrepresent the true cost of the project.
        2. Commitment of all project sources of financing. The recipient 
    should review all projected sources of financing necessary to carry 
    out the economic development project. This is to ensure that time 
    and effort is not wasted on assessing a proposal that is not able to 
    proceed. To the extent practicable, prior to the commitment of CDBG 
    funds to the project, the recipient should verify that: sufficient 
    sources of funds have been identified to finance the project; all 
    participating parties providing those funds have affirmed their 
    intention to make the funds available; and the participating parties 
    have the financial capacity to provide the funds.
        3. Avoid substitution of CDBG funds for non-Federal financial 
    support. i. The recipient should review the economic development 
    project to ensure that, to the extent practicable, CDBG funds will 
    not be used to substantially reduce the amount of non-Federal 
    financial support for the activity. This will help the recipient to 
    make the most efficient use of its CDBG funds for economic 
    development. To reach this determination, the recipient's reviewer 
    would conduct a financial underwriting analysis of the project, 
    including reviews of appropriate projections of revenues, expenses, 
    debt service and returns on equity investments in the project. The 
    extent of this review should be appropriate for the size and 
    complexity of the project and should use industry standards for 
    similar projects, taking into account the unique factors of the 
    project such as risk and location.
        ii. Because of the high cost of underwriting and processing 
    loans, many private financial lenders do not finance commercial 
    projects that are less than $100,000. A recipient should familiarize 
    itself with the lending practices of the financial institutions in 
    its community. If the project's total cost is one that would 
    normally fall within the range that financial institutions 
    participate, then the recipient should normally determine the 
    following:
        A. Private debt financing--whether or not the participating 
    private, for-profit business (or other entity having an equity 
    interest) has applied for private debt financing from a commercial 
    lending institution and whether that institution has completed all 
    of its financial underwriting and loan approval actions resulting in 
    either a firm commitment of its funds or a decision not to 
    participate in the project; and
        B. Equity participation--whether or not the degree of equity 
    participation is reasonable given general industry standards for 
    rates of return on equity for similar projects with similar risks 
    and given the financial capacity of the entrepreneur(s) to make 
    additional financial investments.
        iii. If the recipient is assisting a microenterprise owned by a 
    low- or moderate-income person(s), in conducting its review under 
    this paragraph, the recipient might only need to determine that non-
    Federal sources of financing are not available (at terms appropriate 
    for such financing) in the community to serve the low- or moderate-
    income entrepreneur.
        4. Financial feasibility of the project. i. The public benefit a 
    grantee expects to derive from the CDBG assisted project (the 
    subject of separate regulatory standards) will not materialize if 
    the project is not financially feasible. To determine if there is a 
    reasonable chance for the project's success, the recipient should 
    evaluate the financial viability of the project. A project would be 
    considered financially viable if all of the assumptions about the 
    project's market share, sales levels, growth potential, projections 
    of revenue, project expenses and debt service (including repayment 
    of the CDBG assistance if appropriate) were determined to be 
    realistic and met the project's break-even point (which is generally 
    the point at which all revenues are equal to all expenses). 
    Generally speaking, an economic development project that does not 
    reach this break-even point over time is not financially feasible. 
    The following should be noted in this regard:
        A. some projects make provisions for a negative cash flow in the 
    early years of the project while space is being leased up or sales 
    volume built up, but the project's projections should take these 
    factors into account and provide sources of financing for such 
    negative cash flow; and
        B. it is expected that a financially viable project will also 
    project sufficient revenues to provide a reasonable return on equity 
    investment. The recipient should carefully examine any project that 
    is not economically able to provide a reasonable return on equity 
    investment. Under such circumstances, a business may be overstating 
    its real equity investment (actual costs of the project may be 
    overstated as well), or it may be overstating some of the project's 
    operating expenses in the expectation that the difference will be 
    taken out as profits, or the business may be overly pessimistic in 
    its market share and revenue projections and has downplayed its 
    profits.
        ii. In addition to the financial underwriting reviews carried 
    out earlier, the recipient should evaluate the experience and 
    capacity of the assisted business owners to manage an assisted 
    business to achieve the projections. Based upon its analysis of 
    these factors, the recipient should identify those elements, if any, 
    that pose the greatest risks contributing to the project's lack of 
    financial feasibility.
        5. Return on equity investment. To the extent practicable, the 
    CDBG assisted activity should provide not more than a reasonable 
    return on investment to the owner of the assisted activity. This 
    will help ensure that the grantee is able to maximize the use of its 
    CDBG funds for its economic development objectives. However, care 
    should also be taken to avoid the situation where the owner is 
    likely to receive too small a return on his/her investment, so that 
    his/her motivation remains high to pursue the business with vigor. 
    The amount, type and terms of the CDBG assistance should be adjusted 
    to allow the owner a reasonable return on his/her investment given 
    industry rates of return for that investment, local conditions and 
    the risk of the project.
        6. Disbursement of CDBG funds on a pro rata basis. To the extent 
    practicable, CDBG funds used to finance economic development 
    activities should be disbursed on a pro rata basis with other 
    funding sources. Recipients should be guided by the principle of not 
    placing CDBG funds at significantly greater risk than non-CDBG 
    funds. This will help avoid the situation where it is learned that a 
    problem has developed that will block the completion of the project, 
    even though all or most of the CDBG funds going in to the project 
    have already been expended. When this happens, a recipient may be 
    put in a position of having to provide additional financing to 
    complete the project or watch the potential loss of its funds if the 
    project is not able to be completed. When the recipient determines 
    that it is not practicable to disburse CDBG funds on a pro rata 
    basis, the recipient should consider taking other steps to safeguard 
    CDBG funds in the event of a default, such as insisting on 
    securitizing assets of the project.
    
        Dated: December 22, 1994.
    Mark C. Gordon,
    General Deputy Assistant Secretary for Community Planning and 
    Development.
    [FR Doc. 94-32151 Filed 12-29-94; 4:33 pm]
    BILLING CODE 4210-29-P
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
2/6/1995
Published:
01/05/1995
Department:
Housing and Urban Development Department
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Final rule and guidelines.
Document Number:
94-32151
Dates:
February 6, 1995.
Pages:
1922-1954 (33 pages)
Docket Numbers:
Docket No. R-94-1729, FR-3474-F-02
RINs:
2506-AB53
PDF File:
94-32151.pdf
CFR: (38)
24 CFR 570.204(a)
24 CFR 105(a)(23)
24 CFR 105(a)(15)
24 CFR 570.207(a)
24 CFR 570.208(a)(1)(i)
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