97-29966. Welfare-to-Work (WtW) Grants  

  • [Federal Register Volume 62, Number 222 (Tuesday, November 18, 1997)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 61588-61613]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 97-29966]
    
    
    
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    Part II
    
    
    
    
    
    Department of Labor
    
    
    
    
    
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    Employment and Training Administration
    
    
    
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    20 CFR Part 645
    
    
    
    Welfare-to-Work (WtW) Grants; Interim
    
    
    
    Rule
    
    Federal Register / Vol. 62, No. 222 / Tuesday, November 18, 1997 / 
    Rules and Regulations
    
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    DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
    
    Employment and Training Administration
    
    20 CFR Part 645
    
    RIN 1205-AB15
    
    
    Welfare-to-Work (WtW) Grants
    
    AGENCY: Employment and Training Administration (ETA), DOL.
    
    ACTION: Interim final rule; request for comments.
    
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    SUMMARY: The Employment and Training Administration hereby issues an 
    Interim Final Rule implementing the Welfare-to-Work (WtW) grant 
    provisions of Title IV, Part A of the Social Security Act as amended by 
    the recent enactment of the Balanced Budget Act of 1997. The Interim 
    Final Rule provides an administrative framework for the WtW program 
    which is being coordinated with the closely-related Temporary 
    Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) program administered by the 
    Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS). While the use of WtW 
    funds should occur within the larger framework of the TANF program in 
    each State, these funds have a purpose that is distinct from that of 
    the TANF program. The purpose of WtW is to provide transitional 
    assistance which moves hard-to-employ welfare recipients living in high 
    poverty areas into unsubsidized employment and economic self-
    sufficiency.
    
    DATES: Effective Dates: This Interim Final Rule shall become effective 
    on November 18, 1997. However, affected parties do not have to comply 
    with the information collection requirements in Sec. 645.240 (reporting 
    requirements for WtW programs) until DOL publishes in the Federal 
    Register the control numbers assigned by the Office of Management and 
    Budget (OMB). Publication of the control numbers notifies the public 
    that OMB has approved this information collection requirement under the 
    Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995.
        Comment Period: Comments must be submitted by January 20, 1998. The 
    Department will not consider comments received after this date. 
    Comments that are less than 10 pages in length may be transmitted via 
    facsimile at (202) 219-0376, provided that submission of written text 
    follows.
    
    ADDRESSES: Submit written comments to the Employment and Training 
    Administration, Welfare-to-Work Office, 200 Constitution Avenue, NW, 
    Room S5513, Washington, D.C. 20210, Attention: Peter E. Rell.
        All comments shall be available for public inspection and copying 
    during normal business hours at the Employment and Training 
    Administration, Office of Employment and Training Programs, 200 
    Constitution Avenue, NW, Room N4459, Washington, D.C. 20210. Copies of 
    the Interim Final Rule are available in the alternate formats of large 
    print and electronic file on computer disk which may be obtained at the 
    above-stated address. The Interim Final Rule is also available on the 
    WtW web site at http://wtw.doleta.gov. Comments may be submitted 
    electronically to that web address.
        In compliance with 28 U.S.C. 2112(a), the Employment and Training 
    Administration designates the Associate Solicitor for Employment and 
    Training Services, Office of the Solicitor, U.S. Department of Labor, 
    200 Constitution Avenue, NW, Room N2101, Washington, D.C. 20210, as the 
    recipient of petitions to review this Interim Final Rule.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr. Peter E. Rell, Welfare-to-Work 
    Office, U.S. Department of Labor, 200 Constitution Avenue, NW, Room 
    S5513, Washington, D.C. 20210, Telephone: (202) 219-0181 (voice) (This 
    is not a toll-free number.) or 1-800-326-2577 (TDD).
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    Paperwork Reduction Act
    
        Pursuant to the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, information 
    collection requirements which would be imposed as a result of the 
    Interim Rule are being submitted separately to the Office of Management 
    and Budget.
    
    I. Background
    
        On August 22, 1996, President Clinton signed the Personal 
    Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act (PRWORA), a 
    comprehensive welfare reform bill, under which the TANF program was 
    established to supersede the Aid to Families with Dependent Children 
    (AFDC) welfare program, the Job Opportunities and Basic Skills (JOBS) 
    Training program and the Emergency Assistance (EA) Program. The TANF 
    program at section 401(a) of the Social Security Act (Act) established 
    the following objectives:
         Provide assistance to needy families so that children may 
    be cared for in their own homes or in the homes of relatives;
         End the dependence of needy parents on government benefits 
    by promoting job preparation, work, and marriage;
         Prevent and reduce the incidence of out-of-wedlock 
    pregnancies and establish annual numerical goals for preventing and 
    reducing the incidence of these pregnancies; and
         Encourage the formation and maintenance of two-parent 
    families.
        The TANF provisions substantially changed the nation's welfare 
    system from one in which cash assistance was provided on an entitlement 
    basis to a system in which the primary focus is on moving welfare 
    recipients to work and promoting family responsibility, accountability 
    and self-sufficiency. In general, adult welfare recipients are expected 
    to become self-sufficient within a 60-month period of time. In support 
    of this ``work-first'' objective, the TANF provisions established an 
    overall work participation rate for all households and a work 
    participation rate for two-parent families that must be met by each 
    State starting in fiscal year (FY) 97 and in each fiscal year 
    thereafter through FY 2002. States that do not meet the TANF-
    established work participation rates face significant financial 
    penalties.
        The reference to ``work-first'' refers to the TANF concept that the 
    primary focus is on placing individuals in employment activities. 
    Nevertheless, the work-first approach also recognizes that individuals 
    may be provided, as appropriate, education and skills training related 
    to the job, as well as other services to ensure lasting employment and 
    the achievement of self-sufficiency. Since the enactment of PRWORA, the 
    Administration and Congress have been concerned that those welfare 
    recipients who have the least skills, education, employment experience 
    and who live within high poverty areas may need additional assistance 
    to obtain lasting jobs and become self-sufficient.
        On August 5, 1997, the President signed the Balanced Budget Act of 
    1997. This legislation amended certain TANF provisions of the Social 
    Security Act and authorized the Secretary of Labor to provide WtW 
    grants to States and local communities for transitional employment 
    assistance to move the hard-to-employ TANF welfare recipients into 
    unsubsidized jobs and economic self-sufficiency. Approximately 75 
    percent of the funds in each fiscal year will be distributed as formula 
    grants to the States, with 85 percent to be passed through to local 
    service delivery areas (SDAs) (generally, one or more units of local 
    government with a population of 200,000 or more) in the States to be 
    administered by the
    
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    Private Industry Council (PIC) for the SDA, or an alternate 
    administering entity approved by the Secretary of Labor according to 
    the statutory requirements. The funds distributed through the WtW grant 
    program will assist States and PICs to meet their welfare reform 
    objectives by providing additional resources targeted to hard-to-employ 
    welfare recipients residing in high poverty areas within the State.
        WtW activities should be coordinated with those undertaken through 
    TANF, as hard-to-employ welfare recipients constitute a significant 
    portion of the TANF eligible population. Therefore, the ability of 
    State/County TANF agencies, the PICs under the Job Training Partnership 
    Act (JTPA), local governments and a variety of other entities (e.g., 
    One-Stop systems, private sector employers, labor organizations, 
    business and trade associations, education agencies, housing agencies, 
    community development corporations, transportation agencies, community-
    based and faith-based organizations, disability community 
    organizations, community action agencies, and colleges and universities 
    which provide some of the assistance needed by the targeted population) 
    to implement WtW programs that move these individuals into employment 
    and self-sufficiency will be a major factor in the success of the 
    national initiative to reform the welfare system.
        The Interim Final Rule provides a framework for the administration 
    of WtW programs, in coordination with the closely-related TANF program. 
    The Employment and Training Administration (ETA) has coordinated its 
    WtW regulatory efforts with the rulemaking being initiated by the 
    Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) for the TANF program. 
    The Interim Final Rule supplements TANF's emphasis on moving welfare 
    recipients into work, and on improving program evaluation and 
    performance.
        Section 403(a)(5)(A)(ii)(I) of the Act indicates that the States' 
    WtW formula plans are an ``addendum'' to the State TANF plans. In 
    keeping with the Congressional intent to allow States maximum 
    flexibility in implementing TANF requirements, the WtW regulations 
    provide States and local governments with broad discretion to design 
    and implement WtW programs that meet the needs of the hard-to-employ 
    population in the individual States. This approach is consistent with 
    PRWORA's statutory intent to provide States with maximum discretion. 
    The PRWORA Conference Report, H.R. Conf. Rep. No. 725 104th Cong. 2nd 
    Sess. (1996), states that the legislation establishes ``broad cash 
    welfare and child care block grants providing maximum flexibility so 
    that States can reform welfare in ways that are appropriate for them, 
    and can move families into jobs.''
        The WtW statute contains several provisions designed to encourage 
    creative and effective use of grant funds. In particular, section 
    403(a)(5)(B) provides that approximately 25 percent of WtW funds shall 
    be distributed through a competitive grant process which are designed, 
    in part, to expand the base of knowledge about programs to successfully 
    move hard-to-employ recipients to unsubsidized employment and self-
    sufficiency. In addition, section 403(a)(5)(E) sets aside $100 million 
    as a successful performance bonus, to be distributed in FY 2000 among 
    States who most effectively place hard-to-employ individuals in lasting 
    employment at increased earnings.
        The format, as well as the substance, of the Interim Final Rule 
    reflects the Administration's commitment to regulatory reform. The 
    current Federal Register Document Drafting Handbook encourages Federal 
    agencies to produce regulations that are reader-friendly. The 
    Department has made every effort to make these regulations clear and 
    easy to understand, as well as to anticipate issues that may arise and 
    to provide appropriate direction. To this end, the Part 645 regulatory 
    text is presented in a ``question and answer'' format.
        Section 403(a)(5)(C)(viii) of the Act requires the Secretary of 
    Labor to prescribe regulations implementing the WtW program within 90 
    days of enactment, after consultation with the Secretaries of DHHS and 
    Housing and Urban Development (HUD). Pursuant to Secretary of Labor's 
    Order No. 4-75, the Assistant Secretary for Employment and Training has 
    been delegated the responsibility to carry out WtW policies, programs, 
    and activities for the Secretary of Labor.
        Given the short time frame imposed on the Department, the 
    Employment and Training Administration (ETA) has moved quickly to 
    initiate coordination with the other Federal agencies that have related 
    concerns. In particular, the Department established a Federal Policy 
    Committee composed of officials from the Departments of HHS, HUD, 
    Transportation and Labor. The Policy Committee reviewed and provided 
    policy recommendations to the Department on issues that arose during 
    the development of the Interim Final Rule.
        In addition, ETA requested and received input from a broad range of 
    interested parties regarding guidance to be provided by the Agency on 
    how to comply with a number of WtW statutory provisions, e.g., 
    allowable matching funds, expenditure time limits, reallocation policy, 
    Governors' authority to select the State administrative agency, 
    conditions under which the Governor may select an alternate 
    administrative agency (other than the Private Industry Council) at the 
    local level, eligible grant applicants for competitive WtW grants, 
    allowable activities, post-employment and job retention services, job 
    creation through public or private sector employment wage subsidies, 
    community services and work experience programs, limits on 
    administration costs, and performance standards and bonuses.
        The Agency has determined that this Interim Final Rule, as 
    promulgated, complies with the WtW statutory mandate and will provide 
    effective direction for the implementation of WtW programs. ETA will 
    review all comments received in response to the Interim Final Rule, as 
    well as program experience, in considering what further action is 
    necessary and promulgating a Final Rule.
    
    II. Summary and Explanation
    
        This section describes and explains the individual provisions of 
    the Interim Final Rule. The explanatory text, in general, adheres 
    closely to the corresponding WtW statutory language. The supporting 
    rationale is provided for those instances where the rule provides 
    direction not prescribed by the WtW statute.
        ETA has set regulations only where they are necessary to clarify or 
    to explain how the Agency intends to interpret the WtW statute. 
    Consistent with the Act, the Interim Final Rule provides the States and 
    local governments with the primary responsibility to initiate and 
    develop program implementation procedures and policy guidance regarding 
    WtW administration. For example, while 20 CFR 645.230 indicates that 
    the OMB Circular A-102 ``Common Rule'' requirements apply to WtW 
    programs, the Department has not defined what constitutes WtW 
    ``allowable activities'' which are used under section 403(a)(5)(C) of 
    the Act.
        Pursuant to Section 411(a)(1) of the Social Security Act, DHHS has 
    the responsibility to issue WtW participant and program data reporting 
    requirements, after consultation with other appropriate parties. 
    Accordingly, this Interim Final Rule does not address such reporting 
    requirements in detail. Consistent with the purpose of WtW, which is to 
    move welfare recipients into
    
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    unsubsidized employment and economic self-sufficiency, the statute 
    anticipates reporting on these measures: placements in unsubsidized 
    employment; placements in unsubsidized employment that last at least 
    six months; placements in the private and public sectors; earnings of 
    individuals who obtain employment; and average expenditures per 
    placement.
    
    Subpart A--Scope and Purpose
    
    What Does This Part Cover? (Sec. 645.100)
        This section of the Interim Final Rule indicates that Part 645 
    provides regulatory provisions applicable to WtW formula grant funds 
    that are to be used to carry out State-level programs and programs 
    conducted by the PICs at the Service Delivery Area (SDA) level. This 
    part of the regulations also provides general guidance on WtW 
    competitive grants, but it should be clear the Department intends to 
    publish specific Solicitations for Grant Applications (SGAs) in the 
    future. The SGAs to be published will be disseminated widely and will 
    contain specific information about purpose, application requirements, 
    funding amounts, and submission instructions for competitive grant 
    awards.
    What Are the Purposes of the Welfare-to-Work Program? (Sec. 645.110)
        This section of the Interim Final Rule describes what the 
    Department believes to be the statutory objective of the WtW program, 
    which complements the overall objectives of the TANF program. For 
    example, the WtW statutory provisions indicate that the ultimate 
    objective to be achieved through the various allowable activities is to 
    ``* * * move individuals into and keep individuals in lasting 
    unsubsidized employment * * *''. In this regard, the WtW program 
    complements the TANF objective to ``* * * end the dependence of needy 
    parents by promoting job preparation, work * * *''. The WtW Program 
    focuses on assistance on hard-to-employ welfare recipients living in 
    high poverty areas.
        Although the section requires only that WtW grant funds be 
    coordinated with the State TANF expenditures, the Department also 
    intends that WtW grant funds be coordinated with available resources 
    from the Job Training Partnership Act (JTPA), the Employment Service, 
    the Child Care and Development Block Grant, One-Stop systems, private 
    sector employers, labor organizations, business and trade associations, 
    vocational rehabilitation and other education agencies, housing 
    agencies, community development corporations, transportation agencies, 
    community-based and faith-based organizations, disability community 
    organizations, community action agencies, and colleges and universities 
    and other sources that provide assistance to the WtW targeted 
    individuals.
    What Definitions Apply to This Part? (Sec. 645.120)
        This section of the Interim Final Rule includes a limited number of 
    definitions of terms, acronyms and phrases important to the 
    implementation of the WtW programs. This section is not intended to be 
    an all-inclusive listing of definitions provided within the WtW 
    legislation and WtW regulations.
        This section includes definitions for the terms ``adult'', 
    ``minor'', and ``TANF MOE'' found in the TANF statute. The Department 
    also relied on the definitions provided in the JTPA regulations at 20 
    CFR Part 626 for the terms ``PIC'' and ``SDA.'' The definition for 
    ``Chief Elected Official'' comes from Section 103(c) of the Job 
    Training Partnership Act, as amended.
        States and PICs (and alternate agencies) should keep in mind that 
    additional definitions applicable to the WtW program, but not listed in 
    this section for the sake of brevity, can be found in the definitions 
    section(s) of the pertinent OMB Circulars on Uniform Administrative 
    Requirements and the OMB Cost Principles Circulars. For example, 29 CFR 
    97.3 contains definitions for terms and acronyms relating to 
    administration of the WtW programs operated by State, local and Indian 
    tribal organizations, unless otherwise specified. Similarly, 29 CFR 
    Part 95 contains other administrative definitions relating to non-
    profit organizations.
    
    Subpart B--General Program and Administrative Requirements
    
    What Does This Part Cover? (Sec. 645.200)
        This subpart provides general program and administrative 
    requirements for WtW formula grant funds, including Governors' funds 
    for long-term recipients of assistance, and for competitive grant 
    funding.
        Of the total amount of WtW funds available for allotment (after 
    reserving an amount for Indian tribes, evaluation, and performance 
    bonuses), 75 percent is allotted to the States on a formula basis. 
    Generally, the States are required to distribute at least 85 percent of 
    this amount, pursuant to a statutory formula, to service delivery 
    areas. The Governor of a State may reserve up to 15 percent of the 
    State's allotment for projects to help long-term recipients of 
    assistance. The roughly 25 percent of the funds that is not allotted to 
    the States by formula is available for the Secretary to award through a 
    competitive grant process. The regulations which appear in this subpart 
    apply to these funds.
    What Is Meant by the Terms ``Entity'' and ``Project'' in the Statutory 
    Phrase ``An Entity that Operates a Project'' With Welfare-to-Work 
    Funds? (Sec. 645.210)
        This section defines the terms ``entity'' and ``project'' in the 
    phrase ``an entity that operates a project'' with WtW funds, as used in 
    section 403(a)(5)(C)(ii) of the Act.
        For WtW substate formula funds, ``entity'' means the PIC (or the 
    alternate agency designated by the Governor and approved by the 
    Secretary) which administers the WtW formula funds in a service 
    delivery area(s). This entity is referred to in Secs. 645.211 through 
    645.225 as the ``operating entity''. The term ``entity'' does not refer 
    to subrecipients, contractors, vendors, or other parties to which the 
    PIC or alternate agency may choose to distribute WtW formula funds to 
    provide specific services. The term ``project'' means all activities, 
    administrative and programmatic, supported by the total amount of the 
    WtW formula funds allotted to an entity as described above. Therefore, 
    the requirement relating to the expenditure of 70 percent WtW funds on 
    hard-to-employ individuals, as described in Sec. 645.211, applies to 
    all of the funds allotted to the PIC/alternate administering agency. 
    The entity need not impose these expenditure requirements on each 
    individual subrecipient, contractor, vendor or other party to whom it 
    may choose to distribute WtW funds. However, the entity must ensure 
    that, in the aggregate, it complies with the 70 percent expenditure 
    requirement.
        For Governors' funds for long-term recipients of assistance, 
    ``entity'' means the agency, group, or organization to which the 
    Governor has distributed such funds, as described in Sec. 645.410 (b) 
    and (c). This entity is referred to in Secs. 645.211 through 645.225 as 
    the ``operating entity''. The term ``project'' means all activities, 
    administrative and programmatic, supported by the total amount of any 
    one award of Governor's funds made to an entity as described above. 
    Therefore, should the entity receive more than one award from the 
    Governor, the 70 percent expenditure requirement, as described in 
    Sec. 645.211, applies individually to each award. The entity need not 
    impose the expenditure requirement on each individual
    
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    subrecipient, contractor, vendor or other party to whom it may choose 
    to distribute WtW funds. However, the entity must ensure that in the 
    aggregate it complies with the 70 percent expenditure requirement.
        For competitive WtW grants, ``entity'' means an eligible applicant, 
    as described in Sec. 645.500, which is awarded a competitive WtW grant 
    by the Secretary. This entity is referred to in Secs. 645.211 through 
    645.225 as the ``operating entity''. The term ``entity'' does not refer 
    to subrecipients, contractors, vendors, or other parties to which the 
    competitive grant recipient may choose to distribute WtW funds. The 
    term ``project'' means all activities, administrative and programmatic, 
    supported by the total amount of any one competitive grant award. 
    Therefore, should the same entity receive more than one competitive 
    grant, the 70 percent expenditure requirement, as described in 
    Sec. 645.211, applies individually to each competitive grant. The 
    entity need not impose the expenditure requirements on each individual 
    subrecipient, contractor, vendor or other party to whom it may choose 
    to distribute WtW funds. However, the entity must ensure that in the 
    aggregate it complies with the 70 percent expenditure requirement.
    How Must Welfare-to-Work Funds Be Spent by the Operating Entity? 
    (Sec. 645.211)
        This section restates the statutory provisions, at section 
    403(a)(5)(C)(ii) and (iii) of the Act, which require that an operating 
    entity, as described in Sec. 645.210 of this part, expend not less than 
    70 percent of the WtW funds allotted or awarded to it for the benefit 
    of hard-to-employ individuals, as described in Sec. 645.212, and which 
    provide that up to 30 percent of the funds may be spent to assist 
    individuals with characteristics associated with long-term welfare 
    dependence, as described in Sec. 645.213. If less than 30 percent of 
    the funds are spent to assist individuals with long-term welfare 
    dependence characteristics, as described in Sec. 645.213, the remaining 
    funds shall be spent to benefit hard-to-employ individuals, as 
    described in Sec. 645.212. This requirement applies to all WtW funds, 
    i.e., to substate formula funds, Governors' funds for long-term 
    recipients of assistance, and competitive funds. It should be noted 
    that the requirement does not apply to the proportion of WtW 
    participants served; rather, as noted above, it applies to the 
    percentage of WtW funds expended on the participants in each category 
    of eligibility.
    Who May be Served as a Hard-to-Employ Individual Under the 70 Percent 
    Provision? (Sec. 645.212)
        The WtW legislation targets those welfare recipients who will have 
    the most difficulty transitioning into employment. Specifically, the 
    Act, at sections 403(a)(5)(C)(ii) and (iv), establishes three different 
    categories of individuals who may be served under the 70 percent 
    provision. An individual is eligible if (s)he meets the criteria of any 
    one of the following three eligibility categories. (1) To be eligible 
    under the first category, individuals: (a) must be recipients of TANF 
    assistance; and (b) must have two of the three specified barriers to 
    employment; and (c) must be long-term recipients of TANF assistance or 
    will become ineligible for TANF assistance within twelve months. (2) To 
    be eligible under the second category, an individual must be a 
    noncustodial parent of a minor whose custodial parent meets the three 
    criteria of the first eligibility category. (3) To be eligible under 
    the third category, an individual must have the specified barriers to 
    employment and no longer be receiving TANF assistance because (s)he has 
    reached either the Federal five-year lifetime limit on receipt of 
    assistance, or a State-imposed lifetime limit. The regulations 
    paraphrase the statutory language.
        Eligibility: Category One. To be eligible to be served under 
    category one of the 70 percent provision, an individual must meet each 
    of the following three eligibility criteria:
        Criterion a: Recipients of TANF Assistance. The individual must be 
    a current recipient of TANF assistance. The Act, at section 
    403(a)(5)(C)(ii), uses the term ``recipients of assistance under the 
    program funded under this part.'' In order to facilitate coordination 
    at the local level, the Department has consulted with DHHS regarding 
    interpretations for ``the program funded under this part'' and 
    ``assistance''. Provisions in the statute which use the term ``the 
    program funded under this part'' refer to the State's program of family 
    assistance that is operated in accordance with the TANF statute, 
    regardless of its funding source. Thus, any individual receiving TANF 
    assistance under the State TANF program (whether funded with State or 
    Federal funds) is deemed to meet this criterion of eligibility under 
    the 70 percent provision.
        ``Assistance'' means every form of support provided to families 
    under TANF (including child care, work subsidies, and allowances to 
    meet living expenses), except: (a) services that have no direct 
    monetary value to an individual family and that do not involve implicit 
    or explicit income support, such as counseling, case management, peer 
    support, and employment services that do not involve subsidies or other 
    forms of income support; and (b) one-time, short-term assistance (i.e., 
    assistance which is paid no more than once in any 12 month period, is 
    paid within a 30 day period, and covers needs that do not extend beyond 
    a 90-day period, such as automobile repair to obtain employment and 
    avoid welfare receipt, and appliance repair to maintain living 
    arrangements). The Secretary notes that she may issue further rules to 
    conform this provision to similar provisions in forthcoming final 
    regulations governing the TANF program.
        Criterion b: Barriers to Employment. The Act, at section 
    403(a)(5)(C)(ii)(I), states that as the second criterion of eligibility 
    under category one of the 70 percent provision, an individual must face 
    at least two of the three following barriers to employment: (1) the 
    individual has not completed secondary school or obtained a certificate 
    of general equivalency, and has low skills in reading or mathematics; 
    (2) the individual requires substance abuse treatment for employment; 
    or (3) the individual has a poor work history.
        We are defining the phrase ``has low skills in reading or 
    mathematics'', which is used in the first barrier in criterion b, to 
    mean having reading or mathematics skills at or below grade level 8.9. 
    This definition is consistent with the definition which is used in the 
    Job Training Partnership (JTPA) program. We are also defining the 
    phrase ``has a poor work history'' to mean having worked no more than 
    three consecutive months in the last 12 calendar months. In this way 
    individuals who have taken the initiative to try employment but have 
    not been successful for more than a brief period of time, are eligible 
    for assistance. These definitions reinforce the intent of the WtW 
    legislation to focus assistance on hard-to-employ individuals. However, 
    we provide PICs flexibility for each of these definitions for up to 10 
    percent of participants to recognize individual circumstances, 
    specialized needs, including individuals with disabilities, and local 
    labor market conditions.
        TANF agencies are required to perform an initial assessment of the 
    skills, prior work experience and employability of each TANF recipient 
    who is at least 18 years old, or who has not completed high school (or 
    equivalent) and is not attending
    
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    secondary school. It is likely that this assessment may identify the 
    above-noted barriers, and we do not want to require further assessment 
    for the purposes of establishing eligibility where it is not needed. 
    Additionally, in relation to the criterion ``requires substance abuse 
    treatment for employment,'' we note that DHHS is suggesting that the 
    optional individual responsibility plan which the TANF agency develops 
    based on the initial assessment may require the individual to undergo 
    appropriate substance abuse treatment. We do not want to impose an 
    additional Federal definition which would cause a local WtW program 
    operator to ``second-guess'' this determination.
        Criterion c: Long-Term/Duration-Impacted TANF Recipients. The third 
    eligibility criterion under category one of the 70 percent provision 
    requires that individuals be long-term recipients of TANF assistance or 
    will become ineligible for TANF assistance within 12 months. The 
    regulations paraphrase the statutory requirements, at section 
    403(a)(5)(C)(ii)(II), which states that an individual: (1) must have 
    received assistance under a State TANF program, and/or its predecessor 
    program, for at least 30 months, whether consecutive or not; or (2) 
    will become ineligible for assistance within 12 months due to Federal 
    or State-imposed durational time limits on receipt of TANF assistance. 
    This includes individuals who have been exempted from the durational 
    limits due to hardship pursuant to section 408(a)(7)(C) of the Act, but 
    would have faced termination within 12 months without the exemption.
        Eligibility: Category Two: Noncustodial Parents. The regulations 
    paraphrase the statutory requirement at section 403(a)(5)(C)(ii). A 
    noncustodial parent of a minor child whose custodial parent meets the 
    eligibility criteria of category one, as specified in Sec. 645.212(a) 
    of this part, is eligible under the 70 percent provision. In order to 
    facilitate coordination at the local level, we are not defining the 
    term ``noncustodial'' any further. We are allowing States to develop 
    and employ their own definition of the term, which we understand States 
    generally use to mean a parent who is absent from the child's 
    household. Under TANF, States can extend employment services to 
    noncustodial parents by including them in their definition of 
    ``eligible family''. In these cases, the States are already using their 
    own non-Federal definition of ``noncustodial.'' Further, States are 
    required by statute to report to DHHS on the number of noncustodial 
    parents participating in work activities. We do not want to impose a 
    definition which would be at odds with those already existing in the 
    States. If a State does not have a definition for ``noncustodial'' 
    parent for TANF purposes, it should develop one in order to serve 
    noncustodial parents in WtW projects.
        Eligibility: Category Three: Exceeding Durational Time Limits. The 
    regulations interpret the statutory provision at section 
    403(a)(5)(C)(iv) to apply to individuals who have reached State-imposed 
    time limits on receipt of TANF assistance in addition to individuals 
    who have reached the five-year Federal limit on receipt of Federal 
    assistance. This interpretation is consistent with the purpose of the 
    WtW funds to assist those who have the most difficulty making the 
    transition from welfare to work. Therefore, an individual who has 
    barriers to employment, as specified in Sec. 645.212(a)(2) of this 
    part, and who would otherwise be eligible to receive TANF assistance 
    but is no longer receiving TANF assistance because (s)he has reached 
    either the Federal five-year lifetime limit on receipt of assistance, 
    or a State-imposed lifetime limit, is eligible.
    Who May be Served as an Individual With Long-Term Welfare Dependence 
    Characteristics Under the 30 Percent Provision? (Sec. 645.213)
        The Act, at sections 403 (a)(5)(C)(iii) and (iv), establishes three 
    different categories of individuals who may be served as individuals 
    with characteristics associated with long-term welfare dependence under 
    the 30 percent provision. An individual is eligible if (s)he meets any 
    one of the following three eligibility categories: (1) To be eligible 
    under the first category, individuals must be recipients of TANF 
    assistance and have characteristics associated with, or predictive of, 
    long-term welfare dependence. (2) To be eligible under the second 
    category, an individual must be a noncustodial parent of a minor whose 
    custodial parent is receiving TANF assistance, and the noncustodial 
    parent must have characteristics associated with, or predictive of, 
    long-term welfare dependence. (3) To be eligible under the third 
    category, an individual must have characteristics associated with, or 
    predictive of, long-term welfare dependence, be otherwise eligible to 
    receive TANF assistance, but no longer be receiving TANF assistance 
    because (s)he has reached either the Federal five-year lifetime limit 
    on receipt of assistance, or a State-imposed lifetime limit.
        Eligibility: Category One. To be eligible under category one of the 
    30 percent provision, an individual must meet both of the following 
    criteria:
        Criterion a: Recipients of TANF Assistance. The individual must be 
    a current recipient of TANF assistance. The Act states, at section 403 
    (a)(5)(C)(iii)(I), that individuals with long-term welfare dependence 
    characteristics under the 30 percent provision must be ``recipients of 
    assistance under the program funded under this part''. The regulations 
    paraphrase the statutory requirement. In order to facilitate 
    coordination at the local level, the Department has consulted with DHHS 
    regarding interpretations for ``the program funded under this part'' 
    and ``assistance''. For a fuller discussion of this approach, refer to 
    the discussion regarding recipients of TANF assistance in the preamble 
    for Sec. 645.212.
        Criterion b: Characteristics Associated With Long-Term Welfare 
    Dependence. The Act states, at section 403 (a)(5)(C)(iii)(I), that an 
    individual must have characteristics associated with long-term welfare 
    dependence, such as having dropped out of school, teenage pregnancy, or 
    having a poor work history. We are interpreting ``associated with'' to 
    include characteristics ``predictive of'' long-term welfare dependence. 
    In order to facilitate coordination at the local level, we will not 
    further define the characteristics associated with long-term welfare 
    dependence. It is likely that the TANF assessment may identify the 
    above-noted characteristics, and we do not want to require further 
    assessment for the purposes of establishing eligibility where it is not 
    needed. Moreover, the regulations interpret the statutory phrase ``such 
    as'' to mean that, in addition to the characteristics listed in the 
    statute, States and PICs may designate other characteristics associated 
    with, or predictive of, long-term welfare dependence, including having 
    a disability. In order to provide the State and local areas with 
    flexibility to design the WtW program to support the goals and 
    objectives of their overall program of assistance for welfare 
    recipients, we are not imposing any further restrictions in this area. 
    Starting with the FY99 State WtW formula plans, States will be asked to 
    include examples of characteristics which the State and PICs consider 
    to be predictive of long-term welfare dependency.
        Eligibility: Category Two: Noncustodial Parents. The Act states, at 
    section 403(a)(5)(C)(iii)(II), that noncustodial parents of minors who 
    have the characteristics associated with,
    
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    or predictive of, long-term welfare dependence, as described under 
    category one, are eligible to participate under the 30 percent 
    provision if the custodial parent is receiving TANF assistance. In 
    order to facilitate coordination at the local level, we are not 
    defining the term ``noncustodial'' any further. For a fuller discussion 
    of this approach, refer to the discussion regarding noncustodial 
    parents in the preamble for Sec. 645.212.
        Eligibility: Category Three: Exceeding Durational Time Limits. The 
    regulations interpret the statutory provision at section 
    403(a)(5)(C)(iv) to apply to individuals who have reached State-imposed 
    time limits on receipt of TANF assistance in addition to individuals 
    who have reached the five-year Federal limit on receipt of Federal 
    assistance. This interpretation is consistent with the purpose of the 
    WtW funds to assist those who have the most difficulty making the 
    transition from welfare to work. Therefore, an individual who has 
    characteristics associated with, or predictive of, long-term welfare 
    dependence, as specified in Sec. 645.213(a)(2) of this part, and who 
    would otherwise be eligible to receive TANF assistance but is no longer 
    receiving TANF assistance because (s)he has reached either the Federal 
    five-year lifetime limit on receipt of assistance, or a State-imposed 
    lifetime limit, is eligible to participate under the 30 percent 
    provision.
    How Will Welfare-to-Work Participant Eligibility be Determined? 
    (Sec. 645.214)
        The regulations state that the operating entity is accountable for 
    ensuring that WtW funds are spent on individuals who are eligible for 
    WtW projects. The regulations acknowledge, however, that the operating 
    entity may not be in the best position to determine all aspects of WtW 
    eligibility, particularly those associated with receipt of TANF 
    assistance. Therefore, the regulations require that the operating 
    entity ensure that there are mechanisms in place to establish WtW 
    eligibility based on the criteria in Secs. 645.212 and 645.213. We urge 
    that the mechanisms for determining WtW eligibility address how the PIC 
    or other WtW operating entity and the TANF agency will work together to 
    facilitate the exchange of eligibility information. The actual scope of 
    the mechanisms, operating procedures, and roles and responsibilities of 
    the cooperating parties are best left to local determination given the 
    myriad of circumstances that exist in local areas.
        Since receipt of TANF assistance will be the single most critical 
    WtW eligibility criterion in the majority of cases, it is critical that 
    the TANF agency be the source of information about whether an 
    individual is receiving TANF assistance, the length of such receipt, 
    and applicable time limits on such receipt. At a minimum, therefore, 
    for TANF recipients, WtW eligibility determination mechanisms must 
    include arrangements with the TANF agency to ensure that such a 
    determination is based on information, current at the time of the WtW 
    eligibility determination, for the factors specified in 
    Sec. 645.214(b)(1) of this part.
        In establishing WtW eligibility for the criteria of barriers to 
    employment, pursuant to Sec. 645.212(a)(2), and characteristics 
    associated with long term-welfare dependency, pursuant to 
    Sec. 645.213(a)(2) of this part, the regulations seek to minimize 
    duplication of effort and encourage coordination of TANF and WtW 
    resources. Specifically, the regulations state that for TANF 
    recipients, the operating entity may base a determination of WtW 
    eligibility for these factors on information that was collected up to 
    six months prior to the WtW eligibility determination, by or through 
    the operating entity for JTPA or for other purposes, or by the TANF 
    agency for the TANF assessment or individual responsibility plan (IRP). 
    This mechanism provides an efficient method to minimize duplication of 
    effort and utilize existing, reliable information while ensuring that a 
    WtW eligibility determination will not be made on the basis of outdated 
    information. This six-month window is intended to provide flexibility 
    to the operating entity to customize its mechanisms for determining WtW 
    eligibility to address the unique circumstances of its local area. In 
    some cases, the operating entity may determine that a shorter time 
    period is preferable. In others, the operating entity may determine 
    that for some characteristics, such as the possession of a high school 
    diploma, the individual's status immediately prior to determination of 
    eligibility should be used in the determination. We recognize that the 
    information previously collected by the operating entity or in the TANF 
    assessment and IRP: (1) may be sufficiently comprehensive to allow for 
    making the WtW eligibility determination; or (2) may not necessarily 
    provide sufficient information to determine WtW eligibility in all 
    categories. In either case, we urge close coordination between the TANF 
    agency and the operating entity to develop a coordinated mechanism for 
    eligibility determination.
        The operating entity must also have mechanisms in place to 
    determine WtW eligibility for individuals who are not receiving TANF 
    assistance (i.e., noncustodial parents and individuals who have reached 
    the time limit on receipt of TANF). Mechanisms may include approaches 
    such as: (1) using staff from the operating entity to determine WtW 
    eligibility (utilizing information from TANF and other appropriate 
    agencies); (2) entering into agreements with local agencies, such as 
    the TANF agency, and other appropriate entities, such as One-Stop 
    systems and substance abuse treatment providers, which foster 
    coordination and facilitate the exchange of eligibility information 
    among parties at the local level; and/or (3) performing joint WtW 
    eligibility determination with other appropriate agencies, including 
    the TANF agency. The TANF agency should be able to provide information 
    about assistance received by the custodial parent of minors or by 
    exhaustees to permit the PIC to determine whether an individual 
    qualifies as a noncustodial parent or about individuals who are no 
    longer receiving TANF assistance.
        In determining whether someone requires substance abuse treatment 
    for employment, the operating entity can benefit from coordinating with 
    the local recipients of funds from the Substance Abuse Prevention and 
    Treatment (SAPT) Block Grant. In some States, SAPT funds substance 
    abuse awareness and identification programs for TANF case workers. In 
    others, substance abuse counselors supported by SAPT funds are co-
    located in TANF offices. We urge close coordination by the operating 
    entity with efforts of SAPT and other agencies to identify and address 
    substance abuse among the TANF population.
        The regulations also state that once an individual begins to 
    receive WtW services, the operating entity is not required to 
    redetermine WtW eligibility. For instance, if someone ceases to receive 
    TANF assistance due to increased earnings, that individual may continue 
    to participate in appropriate WtW services (such as occupational 
    training offered as a post-employment service or job retention 
    services, if such services are not otherwise available).
    What Activities Are Allowable Under This Part? (Sec. 645.220)
        The ultimate objective for each welfare recipient is placement into 
    an unsubsidized job which provides the potential for achieving economic 
    self-sufficiency. Activities conducted with
    
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    WtW grant funds must be grounded in the ``work first'' philosophy which 
    is a fundamental tenet of the Act. Although a variety of activities are 
    authorized under WtW, these activities should be viewed as employment-
    based developmental steps for helping individuals secure and retain 
    unsubsidized employment.
        Section 403(a)(5)(C)(i) specifies the allowable activities which 
    can be funded under WtW grants. The statute prescribes the following as 
    allowable activities: job readiness, placement, and post-employment 
    services financed through job vouchers or through contracts with public 
    or private providers; community service or work experience programs; 
    job creation through public or private sector employment wage 
    subsidies; on-the-job training; and job retention or support services 
    if such services are not otherwise available. Congress did not define 
    these activities further. Some activities have commonly understood 
    meanings from their use over time or from operational definitions 
    adopted by other employment and training programs, but others may not.
        We consulted with a variety of groups to determine what others 
    thought about how these activities should be defined. A major theme 
    they expressed is the need for maximum State and local flexibility to 
    design programs to successfully move the hardest to employ welfare 
    recipients into unsubsidized employment leading to economic self-
    sufficiency.
        Another major theme expressed by those with whom we consulted is 
    the need for flexibility to provide to the WtW eligible population, 
    training in basic educational and occupational skills, English as a 
    second language training, and referral to vocational rehabilitation 
    services. Indeed, one of the eligibility factors is the lack of a high 
    school or secondary school diploma or a certificate of general 
    equivalency, coupled with low skills in math or reading. In order to 
    make it possible for these educationally disadvantaged individuals to 
    begin to achieve economic self-sufficiency, they need access to tools 
    for developing the skills necessary for achieving their employment 
    goal.
        The regulations address these concerns. They provide maximum 
    flexibility to provide transitional assistance which moves welfare 
    recipients into unsubsidized employment providing good career potential 
    for achieving economic self-sufficiency. They also encourage effective 
    linkages of welfare agencies, other agencies serving people with 
    disabilities, adult education, and the workforce development system at 
    the State and local operational levels to maximize the use of all 
    available resources and to focus resources on direct assistance to 
    recipients. Additionally, they encourage the use of training 
    interventions only after an individual begins to work to help 
    participants retain their jobs and move toward economic self-
    sufficiency.
        Specifically, in order to facilitate coordination between WtW and 
    TANF activities at the State and local level, the regulations do not 
    define or describe the activities which are common to both WtW 
    allowable activities and TANF work activities. That is, the regulations 
    provide no definitions or description for community service, work 
    experience, job creation through public or private sector employment 
    wage subsidies, on-the-job training, or job readiness activities. Job 
    readiness may, however, include training for WtW participants starting 
    their own businesses. It is expected that operating definitions for 
    these activities will be arrived at through partnership between the 
    State and local administering agencies, taking into consideration 
    applicable statutory and regulatory provisions.
        The regulations do provide examples of post-employment services. 
    Whether an individual is working in a subsidized or unsubsidized job, 
    including self-employment or participation in a registered 
    apprenticeship program, that individual may be allowed to receive post-
    employment services, which may include basic education, English as a 
    second language, occupational skills training, and mentoring. While the 
    legislation does not permit stand-alone training activities independent 
    of a job, allowing them as post-employment activities only while the 
    participant is working in a subsidized or unsubsidized job reflects the 
    basic ``work first'' thrust of the legislation, while recognizing the 
    critical importance of continuous skills acquisition and lifelong 
    learning to economic self-sufficiency. These examples of post-
    employment services are not intended to imply that only educational, 
    training, or mentoring services are allowable as post-employment 
    services.
        The regulations incorporate the statutory requirement that job 
    readiness, placement, and post-employment services be provided through 
    job vouchers or contracts with public or private providers. 
    Additionally, the requirement, at Sec. 645.230(a)(3), that contracts or 
    vouchers for job placement must include a provision to require that at 
    least one-half of the payment occur after an eligible individual has 
    been placed into the workforce for six months, is referenced.
        Given the needs of the target group for this assistance, the 
    provision of adequate job retention and support services will be 
    critical. Each participant engaged in a job readiness activity, an 
    employment activity, or in any other subsidized or unsubsidized job, 
    including participation in a registered apprenticeship program, will 
    also be allowed to receive appropriate job retention and support 
    services, if such services are not otherwise available. These could 
    include transportation assistance, substance abuse treatment, child 
    care, emergency or short-term housing assistance, disability-related 
    services, or other supportive services. However, these services can be 
    provided with WtW funds only where they are not otherwise available to 
    the participant. For instance, in the area of child care, the operating 
    entity should ensure that WtW funds are not substituted for child care 
    services available from the Child Care and Development Block Grant, 
    TANF funds, and other State and local funds.
        The availability of transportation services, to get welfare 
    recipients to work, training, and child care, is a significant factor 
    in obtaining and retaining employment. Historically, DHHS and DOL 
    programs have defined transportation in terms of the individual client, 
    and allowed reimbursement for services used rather than for service 
    availability. However, client reimbursement will not work where 
    services do not exist. WtW funds may be used for both purposes. For 
    instance, WtW funds may be used to reimburse individual participants 
    for transportation costs, to enable an administering agency to purchase 
    additional needed services from transportation providers, or 
    alternatively to support, in combination with other funding sources, 
    the development of new transportation services that may be needed in 
    order to connect individuals to jobs. Such services could include: late 
    night and other off peak hour services, shuttle service, guaranteed 
    ride home, van pooling and ridesharing, and specialized transportation 
    services provided by non-profit agencies. WtW funds cannot be 
    substituted for services available or already provided through other 
    sources. However, this is not meant to preclude funding of an 
    individual's access to existing sources. For example, although a 
    transit service may exist, an individual may need financial assistance 
    to afford such transportation.
    
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        Substance abuse treatment is specifically provided as an example of 
    a job retention service because one of the eligibility factors under 
    the hard-to-employ criteria is the need for substance abuse treatment 
    for employment. In arranging for substance abuse treatment, States and 
    localities should coordinate with the Single State Authority (SSA) (and 
    its subcontractors) designated by the Governor to receive and 
    administer the Substance Abuse Prevention and Treatment (SAPT) Block 
    Grant administered by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services 
    Administration, DHHS. This grant, totaling $1.23 billion in FY 1998, 
    accounts for approximately 40 percent of all substance abuse treatment 
    provided through State agencies. The SSA and its county or regional 
    subcontractors also coordinate with, or actually provide, substance 
    abuse treatment funded through other sources. It is imperative that use 
    of WtW funds for substance abuse treatment be coordinated with other 
    funding sources to provide only services not otherwise available. It is 
    equally important that the expertise of SAPT block grant recipients be 
    utilized in developing a strategy to provide WtW participants with 
    substance abuse treatment services.
        Regarding substance abuse treatment, States and localities need to 
    be aware that section 408(a)(6) of the Act, which bars the use of 
    Federal TANF funds for medical services, also applies to WtW funds. In 
    many, but not all, instances the treatment of alcohol and drug abuse 
    involves not just ``medical services,'' but other kinds of social and 
    support services as well. Allowing States to use Federal WtW funds for 
    substance abuse treatment is programmatically sound since it addresses 
    the need of a particular target group and may help clients make 
    successful transitions to work. Therefore, WtW funds can be used for 
    drug and alcohol abuse treatment services to the extent that such 
    services are not medical and not otherwise available to the 
    participant. States and localities will have to look at the range of 
    services offered and differentiate between those that are medical and 
    those that are not. For instance, an evaluation of a substance abuser, 
    to determine the appropriate level of care, performed by a member of 
    the medical profession is considered a medical service, as is a 
    medically supervised detoxification program. However, services 
    performed by those not in the medical profession, such as counselors, 
    technicians, social workers, and psychologists, and services not 
    provided in a hospital or clinic, including 24 hour care programs, may 
    be considered non-medical. In short, as in TANF, States and localities 
    cannot use Federal WtW funds for services that the State identifies as 
    medical; they may only use Federal WtW funds for services that are non-
    medical. States may, however, use their own funds or other funds to 
    provide these services as long as they do not commingle State and 
    Federal funds. Medicare and Medicaid funds may provide another source 
    of funding for medical substance abuse treatment.
        Individual development accounts (IDAs) are authorized by section 
    403(a)(5)(C)(v)(I) of the Act. They are described in detail at section 
    404(h) of the Act, which gives States the option to fund IDAs with 
    TANF, and by extension, WtW funds, for WtW participants. An IDA is an 
    account established by or for an individual to allow the individual to 
    accumulate funds for specific purposes enumerated in the Act, i.e., 
    postsecondary educational expenses, first home purchase, and business 
    capitalization. The Secretary of DHHS is authorized to establish 
    regulations regarding IDAs. Therefore, we are not regulating or 
    providing further guidance in this area. An entity that funds IDAs with 
    WtW grant funds must comply with Section 404(h) of the Act and the 
    applicable DHHS regulations.
        Lastly, the regulations state that intake, assessment, eligibility 
    determination, the development of an individualized service strategy, 
    and case management are allowable and may be incorporated in the 
    program design of any of the allowable activities.
    How Do Welfare-to-Work Activities Relate to Activities Provided Under 
    TANF and Other Related Programs? (Sec. 645.225)
        The regulations require that activities provided through WtW be 
    coordinated effectively with activities being provided through the TANF 
    grant and other related programs. The WtW grants provide a critical 
    tool to help States and local governments achieve their own welfare 
    reform goals and to meet their responsibilities under the Act to reduce 
    welfare caseloads and move welfare recipients into permanent employment 
    and off welfare. WtW must be an integral part of the States' and local 
    governments' overall program of assistance to move welfare recipients 
    into unsubsidized employment. WtW formula grants are intended to work 
    through the operating entity to supplement and enhance their overall 
    capacity for assisting welfare recipients find work and progress toward 
    self-sufficiency.
        Coordination of resources should include not only those available 
    through WtW and TANF grant funds, and the Child Care and Development 
    Block Grant, but also those available through other related activities 
    and programs, such as the JTPA programs, the State employment service, 
    One-Stop systems, private sector employers, labor organizations, 
    business and trade associations, education agencies, housing agencies, 
    community development corporations, transportation agencies, community-
    based and faith-based organizations, disability community 
    organizations, community action agencies, and colleges and universities 
    which provide some of the assistance needed by the targeted population.
        The regulations require that an assessment of skills, prior work 
    experience, employability, and other relevant information be in place 
    for each WtW participant. This is consistent with the TANF requirement, 
    at section 408(b)(1) of the Act, that an assessment be developed for 
    each recipient of TANF assistance who has attained 18 years of age or 
    has not completed high school or obtained a certificate of high school 
    equivalency, and is not attending secondary school. In order to 
    maximize coordination and minimize duplication of effort, we urge the 
    use of the TANF assessment to meet this requirement where feasible in 
    order to avoid duplicative assessments and unnecessary use of WtW 
    resources.
        The regulations require that an individualized strategy for 
    transition to unsubsidized employment should be in place for each 
    participant. This requirement is similar to the TANF provision, at 
    section 408(b)(2) of the Act, regarding an individual responsibility 
    plan (IRP). This strategy should take into account the individual's 
    circumstances reflected in the TANF assessment, JTPA individual service 
    strategy or any participant assessment which may have been performed by 
    the operating entity or its agent. The individualized strategy should 
    also include information regarding disabilities since the 
    characteristics associated with long-term welfare dependence can be 
    caused, or contributed to, by a physical, emotional or cognitive 
    disability. The strategy should assure that activities funded through 
    WtW are effectively coordinated with similar activities (e.g., 
    assessment, case management, supportive services, work activities) 
    being funded through TANF and other related programs to address the
    
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    individual's needs so that (s)he can obtain and retain unsubsidized 
    employment. In order to maximize coordination and minimize duplication 
    of effort, the regulations also state that, where appropriate, the TANF 
    IRP may be used for this purpose. It is our understanding that most, if 
    not all, States have exercised their option under TANF of implementing 
    an IRP requirement. The statutory guidelines for the content of an IRP, 
    at section 408(b)(2) of the Act, include an employment goal for the 
    individual and a plan for moving the individual into unsubsidized 
    employment as quickly as possible, and for increasing the 
    responsibility and amount of work the individual is to handle over 
    time. The statutory guidelines also include a description of the 
    obligations of the individual and the services to be provided so that 
    the individual will be able obtain and retain employment. In order to 
    avoid duplicative strategies and unnecessary use of staff resources, we 
    urge the use of the TANF IRP as the WtW individualized service strategy 
    where feasible.
    What General Fiscal and Administrative Rules Apply to the Use of 
    Federal Funds? (Sec. 645.230)
        This regulation identifies the appropriate DOL regulations which 
    specify the rules applicable to WtW grants in the areas of fiscal and 
    administrative requirements, audit requirements, allowable cost/cost 
    principles, debarment and suspension, drug-free workplace, restrictions 
    on lobbying, and nondiscrimination. In addition, paragraph (a)(3) of 
    this section specifically indicates that the provision at section 
    403(a)(5)(C)(i) of the Act is a requirement that is imposed in addition 
    to the procurement provisions applicable to an entity awarding a 
    contract or voucher for job placement services. That provision requires 
    that contracts or vouchers for job placement services must include a 
    provision to require that at least one-half of the payment occur after 
    an eligible individual placed into the workforce has been in the 
    workforce for at least 6 months. Consistent with the purpose of the 
    Act, we have interpreted this provision to apply to placement in 
    unsubsidized jobs. We have done this to avoid the unintended 
    consequence of having all subsidized employment last a minimum of six 
    months.
        Paragraph (a)(4) of this section adds a provision to address PIC 
    conflict of interest which is not addressed by the uniform 
    requirements. Paragraph (a)(5) of this section specifies the 
    requirement that the addition method will be required for the use of 
    program income and that the cost of generating any program income may 
    be deducted in determining the amount of program income earned. In 
    paragraph (c) of this section, the authority to grant or deny prior 
    approval for those selected items of cost which require such approval 
    has been delegated to the Governor. Paragraph (g) of this section sets 
    forth restrictions on nepotism related to individuals being hired into 
    WtW subsidized employment, work experience, on-the-job training 
    positions and the like.
    What Are the Time Limitations on the Expenditure of Welfare-to-Work 
    Grant Funds? (Sec. 645.233)
        The regulation specifies the time limitation rules for expenditure 
    of the two types of Federal WtW grant funds:
        (a) Formula funds--The general rule is that these funds will be 
    available for expenditure for a ``maximum'' period of three years which 
    commences with the effective date of the grant to a State. The grant 
    period will be specified in the Department's formula grant document for 
    each fiscal year of funds provided to the State.
        (b) Competitive funds--The general rule is that these funds have 
    the potential for being granted for the ``maximum'' three-year period 
    from the effective date of the grant award but are subject to the terms 
    and conditions of the specific grant.
        For both types of grant funds, any remaining funds unexpended at 
    the end of the approved grant period must be returned to the Department 
    in accordance with the applicable closeout rules and procedures. For 
    purposes of determining the time limitations for expenditure of 
    ``performance bonus'' grants, the provisions applicable to formula 
    funds (excluding match) will apply.
    What Types of Activities Are Subject to the Administrative Cost Limit 
    on Welfare-to-Work Grants? (Sec. 645.235)
        Paragraph (a) of the regulation restates the fact that the statute 
    imposes a 15 percent limitation on administrative costs for formula 
    grants to States. For competitive grants, the regulation permits a 
    different limitation, up to a maximum of 15 percent, to be specified in 
    the grant agreement. If no limitation is specified, then the 15 percent 
    limitation on administrative costs will also apply to competitive 
    grants.
        Paragraphs (b) & (c) spell out the definition of administrative 
    costs for these WtW grants and provide some additional cost 
    classification guidance. Because the local JTPA system is the presumed 
    delivery system for these grants, the regulation uses the JTPA 
    definition of ``administrative costs'' except that paragraph (c)(3) of 
    the regulation incorporates an exception specified at Section 404(b)(2) 
    of the Act. The exception specifically excludes from the administrative 
    cost category the costs of computer hardware and software that is used 
    for tracking and monitoring under a WtW grant. It is only the cost of 
    the assets, however, and not the salaries or wages of staff who use the 
    computers, that is excluded. The regulation also requires that all 
    information technology purchased for WtW grants must be ``year 2000 
    compliant.'' To meet this requirement, information technology must be 
    able to accurately process date/time data (including, but not limited 
    to, calculating, comparing and sequencing) from, into, and between the 
    twentieth and twenty-first centuries, and the years 1999 and 2000. The 
    information technology must also be able to make leap year 
    calculations.
        These Interim Final WtW regulations adopt the JTPA definition of 
    the term ``Administrative Costs'' to minimize the burden on PICs. The 
    Secretary notes that she may issue further rules to conform this 
    provision to similar provisions in forthcoming final regulations 
    governing the TANF program. Comments on this subject are invited and 
    would be helpful in assessing the advantages and disadvantages of such 
    a change.
    What Are the Reporting Requirements for Welfare-to-Work Grants? 
    (Sec. 645.240)
        This regulation indicates that DOL will issue instructions and 
    formats for financial reporting, that DHHS will issue the instructions 
    for participant reporting, and that DOL will issue supplemental 
    participant reporting requirements for competitive grants.
        With respect to participant reporting, DOL will, as an interim 
    measure, revise the Standard Program Information Report (SPIR) to 
    incorporate identification of WtW enrollees and WtW activity categories 
    to facilitate the use of a SPIR-based management information system by 
    PICs who choose to use it to manage their WtW funded activities. 
    However, DOL will not require the use or submission of SPIR for WtW.
    Who is Responsible for Oversight and Monitoring of Welfare-to-Work 
    Grants? (Sec. 645.245)
        The Secretary of Labor is authorized to provide WtW grants to 
    States and local entities through formula allocations and a competitive 
    process,
    
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    respectively. To ensure that Federal funds are accounted for and used 
    in a permissible manner, the Secretary is responsible for oversight of 
    grant activities and expenditure of grant funds, and may monitor any 
    WtW grant recipient or subrecipient. The regulations provide for 
    Federal and State oversight responsibilities.
        For formula grants, the Department's monitoring of the States will 
    include a sample of subrecipients. States funded under this program 
    shall develop a statewide monitoring plan and shall make the monitoring 
    plan available for Federal review. In the event that the Secretary 
    determines that a State grant recipient is not in compliance with 
    Federal statutory or regulatory requirements, the Department may 
    provide technical assistance as part of the corrective action process.
        The Governor is responsible for oversight of formula grants at the 
    substate level. The State monitoring plan shall provide for adequate 
    oversight and should include State policies and procedures for the 
    implementation, operation and management of the program, as well as 
    State monitoring of reporting requirements for WtW substate grants. The 
    State shall ensure compliance with statutory and regulatory 
    requirements of WtW at the substate level. The State monitoring plan 
    should include an annual monitoring schedule and should describe its 
    process for providing technical assistance to substate grantees that 
    are not in compliance with State or Federal requirements.
    What Procedures Apply to the Resolution of Findings Arising From 
    Audits, Investigations, Monitoring and Oversight Reviews? 
    (Sec. 645.250)
        The regulation assigns to the Governor the responsibility to 
    resolve subrecipient findings that arise from audits, investigations, 
    monitoring reviews, and the like. If the States have procedures in 
    place that are used for audit resolution, debt collection and appeal 
    for other grant programs, then the existing processes may be used. 
    Otherwise the State must develop and implement such procedures.
        The regulation reserves to the Secretary the authority for 
    resolution of findings that arise from Federal audits, investigations, 
    incident reports, and monitoring reviews, as well as recipient level 
    OMB Circular A-133 audits. The process that will be used is the grant 
    officer initial and final determination process used for other grant 
    programs which is codified at 29 CFR 96.503. Appeals of grant officer 
    final determinations are to be made to the Department's Office of 
    Administrative Law Judges in accordance with the procedures found at 29 
    CFR 96.603(b).
        So as to avoid confusion about which procedures apply to 
    nondiscrimination findings, paragraph (c) specifies that findings 
    arising from investigations or reviews conducted under 
    nondiscrimination laws are to be resolved in accordance with those 
    nondiscrimination laws and the applicable implementing regulations.
    What Nondiscrimination Protections Apply to Participants in Welfare-to-
    Work Programs? (Sec. 645.255)
        Section 645.255 of the regulations provides that participants in 
    WtW programs have such rights as are available under any applicable 
    Federal, State or local law prohibiting discrimination, including, but 
    not limited to: the Age Discrimination Act of 1975 (42 U.S.C. 6101 et 
    seq.); Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1975 (Section 504)(29 
    U.S.C. 794); the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 (ADA) (42 
    U.S.C. 12101 et seq.) and Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 
    (Title VI)(42 U.S.C. 2000d et seq.). ETA is not responsible for 
    administering any civil rights laws. Rather, it is the Civil Rights 
    Center (CRC), formerly the Directorate of Civil Rights, within the 
    Office of the Assistant Secretary for Administration and Management, 
    that has the responsibility to enforce such laws as the Age 
    Discrimination Act of 1975, Section 504 and Title VI, with respect to 
    recipients of federal financial assistance from the Department. 
    Additionally, the CRC is responsible for processing complaints alleging 
    violations of the ADA by all State and local government programs, 
    services, and regulatory activities relating to labor and the 
    workforce.
        Section 645.255 of the regulations further provides that complaints 
    alleging discrimination, except for those alleging gender 
    discrimination in violation of Sec. 645.255(d), shall be processed in 
    accordance with applicable regulations. For example, WtW recipients who 
    are not also JTPA grant recipients should process complaints that 
    allege discrimination based on race, color or national origin in 
    violation of Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 in accordance 
    with the Department's Title VI regulation at 29 CFR part 31 by 
    forwarding all such complaints to the CRC (Address at the end of this 
    paragraph.). Similarly, WtW recipients who are not also JTPA grant 
    recipients should process complaints that allege discrimination based 
    upon disability in violation of Section 504 in accordance with 29 CFR 
    32.45(b), i.e., using the complaint procedures established pursuant to 
    that section. WtW recipients who are also JTPA grant recipients should 
    process complaints of discrimination under procedures established 
    pursuant to 29 CFR 34.42.
        29 CFR 34.42 establishes the procedures under which JTPA grant 
    recipients shall process complaints involving violations of the JTPA 
    nondiscrimination and equal opportunity provisions. Since many WtW 
    grant recipients will be PICs and other entities with experience 
    operating programs under JTPA, the Department has determined that, in 
    order to avoid administrative burdens, such entities shall process WtW 
    discrimination complaints under these procedures rather than require 
    that they comply with two different sets of procedures. (Recipients of 
    financial assistance from the Department should be aware that the DOL 
    regulations, at 29 CFR Parts 31, 32, and 34, also require that programs 
    and activities meet certain administrative obligations. Among those is 
    the responsibility to notify participants of their rights under 
    nondiscrimination laws (e.g., Title VI, Section 504 and the Age 
    Discrimination Act), including the right to file a complaint with the 
    CRC. Individuals with questions about the requirements of these 
    nondiscrimination laws, or concerns about compliance by individual WtW 
    programs with these laws, should address their comments or concerns to 
    the Director, Civil Rights Center, U.S. Department of Labor, 200 
    Constitution Avenue, NW, Room N4123, Washington, D.C. 20210.)
        Both Section 408(d) of the PRWORA and its legislative history, as 
    reflected in H.R. Conf. Rep. No. 725, 104 Cong., 2nd Sess. 293 (1996), 
    clarify that recipients are subject to Federal enforcement mechanisms. 
    The Balanced Budget Act of 1997 amended the PRWORA. It provides for, 
    among other things, a new civil rights protection against gender 
    discrimination. This provision ensures that participants who may not be 
    covered under either Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 or Title 
    IX of the Education Amendments of 1972, are protected against gender 
    discrimination. The PRWORA, as amended, requires States to have 
    grievance procedures to process complaints alleging gender 
    discrimination. The legislative history makes clear that gender-based 
    discrimination is the only civil rights matter that the legislation 
    required to be resolved through a State grievance procedure. See H.R. 
    Conf. Rep. No. 217, 105th Cong., 1st Sess. 935-937 (1997). Other civil 
    rights matters are to be resolved in accordance with the
    
    [[Page 61598]]
    
    applicable statutes and regulations listed in the preceding paragraph.
    What Health and Safety Provisions Apply to Participants in Welfare-to-
    Work Programs? (Sec. 645.260)
        The regulation restates the health and safety provisions which are 
    found in section 403(a)(5)(J)(ii) of the Act and specifies that 
    participants alleging a violation of these standards may file a 
    complaint using the State's legislatively mandated grievance system. 
    The Department interprets the statutory phrase ``work activity'' to 
    refer to the allowable employment activities provided for at 
    Sec. 645.220(b) of this part.
    What Safeguards Are There to Ensure That Participants in Welfare-to-
    Work Employment Activities do not Displace Other Employees? 
    (Sec. 645.265)
        Section 403(a)(5)(J) of the Act provides protections to ensure that 
    employees are not displaced by WtW participants engaged in a work 
    activity. The Department interprets the phrase ``work activity'' to 
    refer to the allowable employment activities provided for at 
    Sec. 645.220(b) of this part.
        The regulation incorporates the statutory prohibition, in section 
    403(a)(5)(J)(i) of the Act, against allowing WtW participants to be 
    enrolled in employment activities which violate existing contracts for 
    services or collective bargaining agreements. Where an employment 
    activity would violate a collective bargaining agreement, the 
    regulations provide that the appropriate affected labor organization 
    and employer must provide written concurrence before the employment 
    activity can be undertaken.
        The regulations also incorporate the statutory prohibition against 
    allowing an individual participating in employment activities under the 
    WtW program from displacing another employee. Employment activities 
    shall not result in the employment or assignment of a WtW participant 
    or the filling of a position when any other person is on layoff from 
    the same or substantially equivalent job within the same organizational 
    unit. The use of the phrase ``within the same organizational unit'' 
    further clarifies the parameters for the concept of ``a substantially 
    equivalent job''. The employment or assignment of a WtW participant or 
    the filling of a position is prohibited when an employer has terminated 
    any regular, unsubsidized employee or otherwise reduced its workforce 
    with the intent of filling the vacancy with a WtW program participant. 
    In addition, a WtW participant may not be employed or assigned to a 
    position where the employer has caused an involuntary reduction to less 
    than full time in hours of an employee in the same or substantially 
    equivalent job.
        Consistent with the goal of this program, which is to place 
    participants in employment which will eventually lead to their economic 
    self-sufficiency, we encourage the States to safeguard the current 
    workforce, while aggressively promoting the creation of employment 
    opportunities for welfare recipients. The State's goal should be the 
    expansion of its workforce through the creation of additional new jobs.
        The regulations also specify that grievances regarding displacement 
    may be filed using the State's legislatively mandated grievance system.
    What Procedures Are There To Ensure That Currently Employed Workers May 
    File Grievances Regarding Displacement and That Welfare-to-Work 
    Participants in Employment Activities May File Grievances Regarding 
    Displacement, Health and Safety Standards and Gender Discrimination? 
    (Sec. 645.270)
        The regulations reflect the statutory language concerning the 
    requirement that a State must establish a grievance system for regular, 
    unsubsidized employees regarding displacement and for participants in 
    the WtW program regarding displacement, health and safety standards and 
    gender discrimination.
        The statute requires that the grievance system must provide an 
    opportunity for a hearing, an appeal, and a final determination within 
    120 days of the original filing date of the complaint. The regulations 
    give the State the option of including in the grievance system an 
    opportunity for informal resolution prior to the formal hearing. The 
    regulations also provide that in developing its grievance system, the 
    State must specify the time period and format for the hearing and the 
    appeal portions of the procedure. The informal resolution and hearing 
    steps in the grievance procedure may occur at either the State or SDA 
    level. This section of the regulations also restates the statutory 
    provision concerning the designation of a State agency, independent of 
    the State or local agency responsible for administering or supervising 
    the administration of State TANF and WtW programs, to hear appeals.
    
    Subpart C--Additional Formula Grant Administrative Requirements and 
    Procedures
    
    What Constitutes an Allowable Match? (Sec. 645.300)
        A State will be awarded a total of $2 in WtW formula grant funds 
    for each $1 in State matching expenditures up to the maximum amount 
    that the State is entitled to receive under the WtW allotment formula. 
    If the State chooses to propose a lesser amount of match than would be 
    required in order for it to receive the full allotment, it may do so. 
    In such cases, the amount of the Federal WtW grant will be reduced 
    accordingly.
        The regulation authorizes the States to use the uniform financial 
    and administrative requirements, codified at 29 CFR 97.24 (the Common 
    Rule), regarding match allowability and documentation, except that no 
    more than one-half of the match may be in the form of in-kind 
    contributions. We will allow 50 percent of the required match to be in-
    kind contributions in order to encourage the participation of private 
    non-profit and faith-based organizations in efforts to assist 
    individuals transition from welfare to unsubsidized employment and 
    economic self-sufficiency. These organizations can offer significant 
    resources, especially in-kind services, to assist WtW program 
    participants.
        Cash donations from non-Federal third parties that are used to pay 
    for allowable costs of the WtW grant program will be considered as cash 
    match, and not counted as in-kind contributions. Matching funds include 
    those State and local dollars in excess of funds spent to meet the TANF 
    MOE requirement when those funds are spent on WtW eligible individuals 
    and activities. Matching requirements may not be met by the use of 
    employers' share of participant wage payments, e.g., the employer's 
    share of OJT. The planning guidance issued for FY98 reiterated the 
    legislative provision requiring that the total matching funds must be 
    expended during the FY in which the WtW grant is awarded. A legislative 
    amendment eliminating this requirement and permitting the expenditure 
    of matching funds over the same three-year period as Federal funds is 
    being considered by Congress. The final rule will reflect the action 
    taken by the Congress with respect to this amendment. If match 
    expenditures do not satisfy the requirement for the full level of 
    Federal funds, the grant amount will be reduced by an appropriate 
    corresponding amount.
    
    [[Page 61599]]
    
        Paragraph (c)(7) of the regulation indicates that the burden-of-
    proof for substantiating match expenditures is to be borne by the 
    recipient of a WtW grant based on its own records and/or those of its 
    subrecipients.
    What Assurances Must a State Provide That It Will Make the Required 
    Matching Expenditures? (Sec. 645.310)
        This regulation restates the planning guidance which requires a 
    State to provide a written estimate of planned matching expenditures in 
    its State plan and to describe the process by which the funds will be 
    tracked and reported to ensure that the State meets its projected 
    match.
    What Actions Are To Be Taken if a State Fails To Make the Required 
    Matching Expenditures? (Sec. 645.315)
        This regulation requires the Department to implement an annual 
    reconciliation and grant adjustment process for WtW grants. The 
    reconciliation will be based on reported match expenditures made 
    through the end of the FY, as specified in the required report due 45 
    days after the end of each fiscal year. If the end-of-fiscal-year 
    report has not been received by December 1 of that year, then the 
    reconciliation will be based on the most current report received.
        In addition, each FY the Department will evaluate second quarter 
    matching expenditures to determine the status of each State's 
    expenditures compared with planned match. DOL will alert and consult 
    with States that appear to be underexpending matching funds concerning 
    the possibility of reducing the grant to reallot funds if match 
    requirements are not met.
    When Will Formula funds be Reallotted and What Reallotment Procedures 
    Will the Secretary Use? (Sec. 645.320)
        This section describes the reconciliation process that the 
    Department will use for determining whether or not a State has expended 
    the required level of matching funds and the process for reallotment of 
    funds that become available as a result of underexpenditure of the 
    required match or failure to fully obligate funds by either States or 
    substate entities. Funds are fully obligated by States when they are 
    awarded to the substate entities.
    
    Subpart D--State Formula Grants Administration
    
    Under What Conditions May the Governor Request an Alternate 
    Administering Agency at the Local Level? (Sec. 645.400)
        The regulations reflect the WtW legislative intent to assign PICs, 
    in cooperation with Chief Elected Officials (CEOs), a presumptive role 
    as the administering agencies for the WtW program at the local level. 
    The Act also provides the Governor authority to select an alternate 
    administrative agency and to request from the Secretary a waiver of the 
    statutory provision that PICs have the sole authority to expend funds 
    for the program at the local level. The Governor may request such a 
    waiver in the State's annual plan and must provide information 
    indicating how the selection of the alternate agency will improve the 
    effectiveness or efficiency of the program in each substate area. In 
    presenting the rationale, pursuant to section 403(a)(5)(A)(vii)(III) of 
    the Act, the Governor shall provide such information as (s)he deems is 
    necessary to establish that the designated alternate agency would 
    improve the effectiveness or efficiency of the administration of the 
    funds in each SDA.
        The Department intends for the Governors to have maximum 
    flexibility on what should be included in their presentation(s) of the 
    reason(s) for the selection of an alternate administering agency at the 
    local level. While no specific format is provided, it is suggested the 
    Governor include, as part of the rationale for the selection of an 
    alternate administering agency, information regarding the PIC's 
    performance, administrative capacity, or whether the PIC has turned 
    down the WtW role; and information on the alternate agency's capacity 
    and fiscal integrity. In addition, the Governor is to provide copies of 
    any comments from the CEOs regarding the Governor's selection of the 
    alternate agency.
        In addition, the Governor must request a waiver if, during the 
    operation of the local WtW program, s(he) determined that the PIC, or 
    alternate agency, which is administering WtW has not coordinated its 
    expenditures with expenditure of funds provided to the State under 
    TANF. Whenever the Governor requests a waiver, the Governor is to 
    provide a copy of such request to the PIC and CEO of the affected SDA.
        The Governor shall bear the burden of proving that the proposed 
    designated alternate agency, rather than the PIC, would improve the 
    effectiveness or efficiency of the administration of WtW funds in the 
    SDA. The Secretary shall assess the information provided by the 
    Governor, as well as any input from the affected CEOs, in reaching a 
    decision on the granting of the waiver requested. The regulations 
    provide the PIC and CEO 15 days in which to respond to the Governor's 
    waiver request and submit written comments to the Department. The 
    Secretary's decision on the Governor's request constitutes final agency 
    action and is not subject to further administrative review.
        It is the Department's position, consistent with section 
    403(a)(5)(A)(vii)(I) of the Act, that in WtW programs the PICs have the 
    same policy guidance and oversight functions as the PICs have under the 
    JTPA. In service delivery areas where, pursuant to the PIC/CEO 
    agreement, the PIC is not the ``administrative entity'' or the ``grant 
    recipient'' (see JTPA sections 4(2) and 103(b)(1)(B)), the PICs will 
    exercise the authority specified in the WtW legislation. In such 
    situations, consistent with section 403(a)(5)(A)(vii)(I) of the Act, 
    the PIC can use the current JTPA administering agency or grant 
    recipient to disburse WtW funds and manage the program. Finally, in 
    situations where the alternate administering agency selected and 
    approved by the Secretary is neither the SDA's administrative entity 
    nor the SDA's grant recipient entity, the Department intends for the 
    alternate agency to take steps to ensure the CEO(s) continues to be 
    consulted on WtW service strategies and activities planned for the SDA.
    What Elements Will the State Use in Distributing Funds Within the 
    State? (Sec. 645.410)
        The regulations follow closely the statutory provisions concerning 
    the Governor's responsibility to distribute funds to the SDAs in the 
    State. The Act requires the Governors to establish a formula to 
    distribute funds to the SDAs in the State and specifies the use of up 
    to three formula factors described at section 403(a)(5)(A)(vi)(I) of 
    the Act. The Governor's formula cannot contain any additional formula 
    factors.
        In developing the Governor's formula, the statute requires that a 
    weight of no less than 50 percent be given to the following factor: the 
    number by which the population of the area with an income less than the 
    poverty line exceeds 7.5 percent of the total population of the area, 
    compared to all such numbers for all SDAs in the State. This means that 
    at least 50 percent of the funds must be distributed to SDAs based on 
    this factor. If the Governor
    
    [[Page 61600]]
    
    chooses not to use this factor in distributing the rest of the funds, 
    these funds may be distributed to an SDA based on one or both of the 
    following factors: an SDA's share of the number of adults receiving 
    assistance under TANF, or the predecessor program, in the SDA for at 
    least 30 months (whether consecutive or not), relative to the number of 
    such adults residing in the State; or an SDA's share of the number of 
    unemployed individuals residing in the SDA, relative to the number of 
    such individuals residing State. If the Governor chooses to use one or 
    both of these additional factors, s(he) may not distribute more that 50 
    percent of the funds on the basis of these factors. In circumstances 
    where the Governor's formula allocation to an SDA is less than 
    $100,000, those amounts are added to the funds retained at the State 
    level, thereby increasing the amount of funds which may be retained at 
    the State above the 15 percent level. However, in cases where the 
    distribution formula would allocate at least $100,000 to an SDA, those 
    amounts must be allocated to the SDA within 30 days of the date the 
    State receives its Federal allotment.
        For guidance in determining the number of individuals with income 
    less than the poverty line, the regulations point the States to section 
    403(a)(5)(D) of the Act. This section instructs States to use the 
    methodology used by the Bureau of the Census to produce and publish 
    intercensal poverty data for States and counties. The Department is 
    aware that the Bureau of the Census in March of 1997 produced an 
    intercensal report containing State and county data estimates of the 
    number of individuals in poverty and poverty rates for 1993. States 
    should use this data, or comparable more recent data published by the 
    Bureau, to determine the number of individuals below the poverty line 
    who exceed 7.5 percent of the total population of the area. For areas 
    for which 1993 intercensal data is not produced and published by the 
    Bureau of the Census, Governors may use 1990 Census poverty data, in 
    conjunction with the intercensal poverty data for related 
    jurisdictions, where appropriate, as a basis for determining the 
    poverty data for those areas. The Governor is to use the most recent 
    year for which poverty data is available when determining the number of 
    individuals below the poverty line and should use data for the most 
    recent 12-month period when determining the number of adults receiving 
    assistance for at least 30 months.
        This section also sets forth the statutory authority of the PICs 
    (or alternate administering agency) to determine, within their 
    respective service delivery areas, the eligible individuals and the 
    allowable activities upon which to expend their within-State fund 
    allocation. The Department expects that a PIC's targeting of eligible 
    individuals and the selection of service strategies will reflect the 
    needs of the target population and the local employment opportunities, 
    and are coordinated with State TANF expenditures.
        Up to 15 percent of the funds allotted to the State may be retained 
    by the State for projects to transition long-term recipients into 
    unsubsidized jobs. For a full discussion of what other requirements are 
    applicable to funds retained by the State, please refer to the preamble 
    discussions of Secs. 645.210 through 645.225. The regulations clarify 
    that the Governor may utilize PICs, as well other entities, such as 
    One-Stop systems, private sector employers, labor organizations, 
    business and trade associations, education agencies, housing agencies, 
    community development corporations, transportation agencies, community-
    based and faith-based organizations, disability community 
    organizations, community action agencies, and colleges and 
    universities, to operate projects for long-term recipients to enter 
    unsubsidized jobs. The Department intends for the Governors to develop 
    guidelines on such matters as project application criteria, project 
    design criteria, project outcome goals, project placement expectations, 
    project duration, etc. The Department intends for the Governors to have 
    maximum flexibility in the management and operation of the funds 
    retained by the State, consistent with statutory requirements, to 
    enable the Governors to fund projects that support and complement the 
    Governors' and the PICs' strategies to transition welfare recipients 
    into unsubsidized jobs and economic self-sufficiency.
    What Planning Information Must a State Submit in Order to Receive a 
    Formula Grant? (Sec. 645.415)
        The regulation follows section 403(a)(5)(ii) of the Act and 
    specifies that a State must provide an annual plan to the Secretary for 
    each fiscal year it wishes to receive funding. The format of the State 
    plan, as well as the date for submission, will be established by the 
    Secretary and provided to the States. The plan will be an addendum to 
    the TANF plan and will be submitted to the Secretaries of Labor and 
    Health and Human Services.
        The Department will review the State plan and will accept it as 
    complete if the plan demonstrates compliance with the WtW legislation. 
    Once the plan is accepted, the Department will provide funding to the 
    State. Where a State includes in its plan a request to use an agency 
    other than the PIC to administer the program locally, the Secretary 
    will carefully assess waiver requests for each local jurisdiction and 
    will grant a waiver if the Secretary determines that the designated 
    alternate agency will more effectively or efficiently administer the 
    WtW grant funds for that area. The Secretary will use the information 
    submitted by the Governor as well as input from the affected PICs and 
    CEOs in the decision-making process. The Secretary's decision whether 
    to grant a waiver shall be considered final agency administrative 
    action.
    What Factors Will Be Used in Measuring State Performance? 
    (Sec. 645.420)
        This regulation advises that the Secretary will develop and issue a 
    formula that will be used to measure State performance and to serve as 
    the basis for the award of performance grants in FY 2000. The formula 
    will be developed in consultation with DHHS, the National Governors 
    Association (NGA), and the American Public Welfare Association (APWA), 
    and will be published in mid-1998. As required by section 403(a)(5)(E), 
    the formula will be the basis used to measure the success of States in 
    placing individuals in private sector employment or any kind of 
    employment, the duration of such placements, any increase in earnings 
    of such individuals, and other additional factors that the Secretary of 
    Labor deems to be appropriate.
    What Are the Roles and Responsibilities of the State(s) and PIC(s)? 
    (Sec. 645.425)
        This section of the regulations enumerates a number of State and 
    PIC roles and responsibilities embedded in the WtW statute. During the 
    consultation process conducted by the Department to gather input on WtW 
    policy development, there were a number of requests for the Department 
    to explain and clarify the State and PIC roles. The Department believes 
    this section of the regulation is responsive to those requests and 
    highlights the key responsibilities at the State and local level. It 
    does not attempt to create arbitrary divisions since it is our view 
    that coordination among State agencies and programs (e.g., TANF, 
    employment service, One-Stop centers), and local agencies and programs 
    (e.g., PICs, JTPA Title IIA) is essential to meeting the goals of the 
    WtW legislation and that the methods and mechanisms established to
    
    [[Page 61601]]
    
    combine resources and mount a coordinated effort to serve WtW 
    participants will necessarily vary according to State/local needs and 
    established relationships. In general, it is our view that, under the 
    Act, the State has the primary responsibility for ensuring that WtW 
    programs are consistent with and well coordinated with services under 
    TANF, and that local entities are in the best position to decide the 
    participants to be targeted and the service mix most appropriate for 
    the participants. Consistent with statutory provisions, the State may 
    not restrict PICs from exercising their authority to expend funds on 
    the statutorily eligible populations. PICs, therefore, have authority 
    to determine the individuals to be served in the service delivery 
    areas.
    
    Subpart E--Welfare-To-Work Competitive Grants
    
    Who Are Eligible Applicants for Competitive Grant Funds? (Sec. 645.500)
        According to the Act, in order to be eligible to apply for 
    competitive grant funds, an organization must be a PIC for an SDA in a 
    State, a political subdivision of a State (e.g., cities, counties), or 
    a private entity applying in conjunction with the PIC or political 
    subdivision. The proposal must be developed in consultation with the 
    Governor. The Department defines the term ``in conjunction with'' to 
    mean that the application submitted by a private entity must include a 
    signed certification by both the applicant and either the applicable 
    PIC or political subdivision that the relevant PIC/political 
    subdivision has been consulted during the development of the 
    application and that the activities proposed in the application are 
    consistent with, and will be coordinated with, the WtW efforts of the 
    PIC/political subdivision.
        We believe that this definition of ``in conjunction with'' provides 
    sufficient flexibility for private nonprofit entities, such as 
    community development corporations, community-based and faith-based 
    organizations, disability community organizations, community action 
    agencies, and public and private colleges and universities, to apply 
    for funds, while ensuring that adequate coordination with the ongoing 
    WtW formula program occurs. Our requirement for consultation and 
    certification reiterates the Department's emphasis on collaboration and 
    integration of resources at the local level.
        We are also interpreting ``private entity'' to be any qualified 
    organization, public or private, which is neither a PIC nor a political 
    subdivision of a State. The legislative intent, however, is that 
    competitive grants are for projects which are community based and 
    responsive to the circumstances in a local community. Therefore, an 
    application for competitive grant funds will be judged for its 
    connection and responsiveness to a local community.
        Although the Department considers local collaboration to be 
    critical to the development of a WtW proposal, in some limited cases, 
    providing evidence of such a collaborative effort may not be possible. 
    In these cases, where a private entity cannot obtain certification from 
    the PIC/political subdivision, the applicant must certify, and provide 
    information indicating, that the PIC/political subdivision has been 
    provided a sufficient opportunity to cooperate in the development of 
    the application and has not acted within a reasonable period of time. 
    The Department believes that 30 days is a sufficient period of time in 
    which a private entity can expect a response from the PIC or political 
    subdivision.
        This requirement applies to all PICs or political subdivisions 
    included in the area to be served by the proposed project.
    What Is the Required Consultation With the Governor? (Sec. 645.510)
        All applicants for competitive grants, including PICs and political 
    subdivisions, must submit their application to the Governor or the 
    designated State administrative entity for the WtW program for review 
    and comment prior to submission of the application to the Secretary. We 
    have defined sufficient time for review and comment at the State level 
    to be at least 15 days. For applications from private entities, the 15 
    day comment period must be consecutive to the 30 day period for 
    obtaining evidence of collaboration and support from the PIC or 
    political subdivision.
    What Are the Program and Administrative Requirements That Apply to Both 
    the Formula Grants and Competitive Grants? (Sec. 645.515)
        The regulations indicate that all of the general program and 
    administrative requirements that apply to the WtW formula grants also 
    apply to the competitive grants. Competitive grants will be subject to 
    additional reporting and monitoring requirements, however, which will 
    be tailored to the scope of work of the specific grants.
    What Are the Application Procedures and Timeframes for Competitive 
    Grant Funds? (Sec. 645.520)
        The Secretary shall establish appropriate application procedures, 
    selection criteria and an approval process to ensure that grant awards 
    accomplish the statutory purposes of the competitive grant funds and 
    that available funds are used in an effective manner. We anticipate 
    that more than one application and award process will occur in each 
    fiscal year of the WtW program. Grant application procedures will be 
    published in the Federal Register for each round of competitive grants.
    What Special Consideration Will Be Given to Rural Areas and Cities With 
    Large Concentrations of Poverty? (Sec. 645.525)
        Competitive grant awards will be targeted to areas of significant 
    need, especially rural areas and cities with large concentrations of 
    residents living in poverty.
    
    Subpart F--Administrative Appeal Process
    
    What Administrative Remedies Are Available Under This Part? 
    (Sec. 645.800)
        The WtW statute contains provisions (e.g., those addressing the 
    allowable use of funds) which contemplate the exercise of discretion by 
    ETA. It is reasonable to anticipate that there will be instances where 
    parties will seek to overturn decisions made by the Agency.
        This section sets the administrative procedures available where a 
    party seeks review of a Grant Officer determination that imposes a 
    sanction or corrective action, pursuant to Sec. 645.250(b) of this 
    part. Paragraph (a) provides that an adverse decision by a Grant 
    Officer may be appealed, within 21 days of the Grant Officer's final 
    determination, to the Department of Labor's Office of Administrative 
    Law Judges. The parties present their cases before an Administrative 
    Law Judge (ALJ) who develops the record for the proceeding, making 
    findings of fact and of law. Such proceedings are relatively informal, 
    utilizing relaxed rules of evidence. For example, a Notice of Appeal 
    functions simply as the invocation of a party's right to administrative 
    review of an Agency decision, rather than as a formal complaint.
        Paragraph (b) of this section provides that the ALJ's decision 
    regarding a case arising under this section constitutes final agency 
    action for the purpose of judicial review, unless, within 20 days of 
    the ALJ's decision, a dissatisfied
    
    [[Page 61602]]
    
    party petitions the Administrative Review Board (ARB) for review. 
    Review by the ARB is discretionary, so paragraph (b) of this section 
    provides that the ALJ's decision constitutes final Agency action unless 
    the ARB notifies the parties, within 30 days of the filing of the 
    petition for review, that the case has been accepted for review. 
    Further, the ALJ's decision constitutes final Agency action if the ARB 
    has not decided the case arising under this section within 120 days of 
    acceptance for review.
    
    III. Regulatory Flexibility and Executive Order
    
        The Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980, as amended in 1996 (5 
    U.S.C. Chapter 6), requires the Federal government to anticipate and 
    minimize the impact of rules and paperwork requirements on small 
    entities. ``Small entities'' are defined as small businesses (those 
    with fewer than 500 employees, except where otherwise provided), small 
    non-profit organizations (those with fewer than 500 employees, except 
    where otherwise provided) and small governmental entities (those in 
    areas with fewer than 50,000 residents). ETA has assessed the potential 
    impact of the draft Interim Final Rule, consulting with a wide range of 
    small entities, in order to identify any areas of concern. Based on 
    that assessment, the Agency certifies that the Interim Final Rule, as 
    promulgated, will not have a significant impact on a substantial number 
    of small entities.
        As indicated in the Background Section (Section I, above), the WtW 
    Interim Final Rule implements grant programs that enhance the resources 
    available to States and PICs or the additional WtW financial resources 
    targeted to hard-to-employ welfare recipients and which will assist in 
    efforts to move these individuals into lasting unsubsidized jobs.
        ETA has minimized any potential burdens for grant applicants and 
    recipients in order to maximize the resources that will be applied to 
    achieve the purposes of the WtW program. The Agency has further 
    ameliorated any foreseeable burdens by providing (at Sec. 645.235 of 
    the Interim Final Rule) that a grantee can allocate up to 15 percent of 
    a grant award for management and administration of the grant, rather 
    than for the direct provision of services to participants. The Agency 
    has determined that the incremental costs of applying for or 
    administering WtW grants will be minimal, because applicants and 
    grantees will, in general, already be familiar with the grant process 
    due to involvement in existing TANF and JTPA programs. Further, ETA has 
    concluded that any such costs will not place small entities at a 
    disadvantage in relation to larger entities, with regard to obtaining 
    formula grants or competitive grants. Therefore, it is unnecessary to 
    set alternative requirements for small entities.
        In addition, pursuant to the Small Business Regulatory Fairness Act 
    (SBREFA) (5 U.S.C. Chapter 8), the Agency has screened the Interim 
    Final Rule and has determined that it is not a ``major rule,'' as 
    defined in 5 U.S.C. 804(2).
    
    IV. Executive Order 12866
    
        Pursuant to Executive Order 12866, the Agency has evaluated the 
    Interim Final Rule and has determined its provisions are consistent 
    with the statement of regulatory philosophy and principles promulgated 
    by the Executive Order. The Department of Labor is required to 
    prescribe regulations for the WtW program within 90 days of the 
    enactment of the Balanced Budget Act of 1997. Within this limited time 
    frame, the Department has made every reasonable effort to obtain input 
    in a purposeful manner from a variety of interested parties (State and 
    local government officials, community-based organizations, and the 
    general public). The WtW grant program increases the resources 
    available to the public and private organizations that promote long-
    term employment and family self-sufficiency. The Agency has determined 
    the Interim Final Rule will not have an adverse effect in a material 
    way on the nation's economy.
        ETA has developed the Interim Final Rule in close consultation with 
    the Departments of HHS, HUD, and Transportation, and with other 
    responsible Federal agencies. Based on that consultation, the Agency 
    has determined the Interim Final Rule will not create a serious 
    inconsistency or otherwise interfere with any action taken or planned 
    by another agency.
        The Agency has also assessed the impact of the WtW State match 
    requirement and has determined it will not materially alter the 
    budgetary impact of entitlements and grants. States will receive $2 
    dollars in WtW grant funds for each $1 in State matching expenditures 
    up to the State WtW fund allotment. Further, ETA has determined that up 
    to 50 percent of the State matching effort can be ``in kind'' (goods 
    and services provided in lieu of cash), allowing the States additional 
    flexibility in qualifying for formula funds.
        Overall, as discussed above, the Department has determined that the 
    Interim Final Rule is not unduly burdensome and that the impacts and 
    consequences are non-material for States, local governmental entities 
    and other potentially interested parties.
        The Agency finds that this Interim Final Rule raises novel policy 
    issues and thus constitutes a significant regulatory action which has 
    been reviewed by the Office of Management and Budget for the purposes 
    of Executive Order 12866.
    
    V. Unfunded Mandates
    
        The Interim Final Rule has been reviewed in accordance with the 
    Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA) (2 U.S.C. 1501 et seq.) and 
    Executive Order 12875. Section 202 of UMRA requires that a covered 
    agency prepare a budgetary impact statement before promulgating a rule 
    that includes any Federal mandate that may result in the expenditure by 
    State, local and Tribal governments, in the aggregate, or by the 
    private sector, of $100 million or more in any one year.
        If a covered agency must prepare a budgetary impact statement, 
    section 205 of UMRA further requires that it select the most cost-
    effective and least burdensome alternative that achieves the objectives 
    of the rule and is consistent with the statutory requirements. In 
    addition, section 203 of UMRA requires a plan for informing and 
    advising any small government that may be significantly or uniquely 
    impacted.
        ETA has determined that the WtW Interim Final Rule will not 
    regulate the expenditure by the State, local, and Tribal governments, 
    in the aggregate, or by the private sector, of more than $100 million 
    in any one year (Tribal governments are covered by a separate Interim 
    Final Rule for which a separate Unfunded Mandates statement has been 
    prepared). Accordingly, the Agency has not prepared a budgetary impact 
    statement, specifically addressed the regulatory alternatives 
    considered, or prepared a plan for informing and advising any 
    significant or uniquely impacted small government.
    
    VI. Effective Date and Absence of Notice and Comment
    
        The Employment and Training Administration has determined, pursuant 
    to 5 U.S.C. 553(b)(B), that the statutory mandate to promulgate 
    regulations within 90 days of the enactment of the statute constitutes 
    good cause for waiving notice and comment proceedings. In addition, the 
    Agency has determined, pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 553(d)(3), that the WtW 
    statutory mandate provides good cause for waiving the customary 
    requirement to
    
    [[Page 61603]]
    
    delay the effective date of a final rule for 30 days following its 
    publication. The short statutory duration of the WtW program 
    underscores the importance of beginning the disbursement of WtW funds 
    at the earliest possible date. Accordingly, the issuance of a proposed 
    rule, rather than an interim final rule, (or delaying the effective 
    date for 30 days) would be contrary to the public interest. The Interim 
    Final Rule sets a comment period to elicit any concerns raised by the 
    Rule. ETA has limited the comment period to 60 days so that any input 
    is received in time for the Agency to review it in considering any 
    revisions to Part 645 while the WtW program is still in its early steps 
    of operation.
    
    VII. Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance Number
    
        The program is listed in the Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance 
    at No. 17.253, ``Employment and Training Assistance--Welfare-to-Work 
    Grants to States & Local Entities for Hard-to-Employ Welfare Recipient 
    Programs.''
    
    List of Subjects in 20 CFR Part 645
    
        Employment programs, Grant programs--labor, Welfare-to-Work 
    programs.
    
        Signed at Washington, D.C., this 10th day of November 1997.
    Alexis M. Herman,
    Secretary of Labor.
    Raymond J. Uhalde,
    Acting Assistant Secretary, Employment and Training Administration.
    
        For the reasons set forth in the preamble, 20 CFR Ch. V is amended 
    by adding Part 645 to read as follows:
    
    PART 645--PROVISIONS GOVERNING WELFARE-TO-WORK GRANTS
    
    Subpart A--Scope and Purpose
    
    Sec.
    645.100  What does this subpart cover?
    645.110  What are the purposes of the Welfare-to-Work program?
    645.120  What definitions apply to this part?
    
    Subpart B--General Program and Administrative Requirements
    
    645.200  What does this part cover?
    645.210   What is meant by the terms ``entity'' and ``project'' in 
    the statutory phrase ``an entity that operates a project'' with 
    Welfare-to-Work funds?
    645.211  How must Welfare-to-Work funds be spent by the operating 
    entity?
    645.212  Who may be served as a hard-to-employ individual under the 
    70 percent provision?
    645.213  Who may be served as an individual with long-term welfare 
    dependence characteristics under the 30 percent provision?
    645.214  How will Welfare-to-Work participant eligibility be 
    determined?
    645.220  What activities are allowable under this part?
    645.225  How do Welfare-to-Work activities relate to activities 
    provided through TANF and other related programs?
    645.230  What general fiscal and administrative rules apply to the 
    use of Federal funds?
    645.233  What are the time limitations on the expenditure of 
    Welfare-to-Work grant funds?
    645.235  What types of activities are subject to the administrative 
    cost limit on Welfare-to-Work grants?
    645.240  What are the reporting requirements for Welfare-to-Work 
    programs?
    645.245  Who is responsible for oversight and monitoring of Welfare-
    to-Work grants?
    645.250  What procedures apply to the resolution of findings arising 
    from audits, investigations, monitoring, and oversight reviews?
    645.255  What nondiscrimination protections apply to participants in 
    Welfare-to-Work programs?
    645.260  What health and safety provisions apply to participants in 
    Welfare-to-Work programs?
    645.265  What safeguards are there to ensure that participants in 
    Welfare-to-Work employment activities do not displace other 
    employees?
    645.270  What procedures are there to ensure that currently employed 
    workers may file grievances regarding displacement and that Welfare-
    to-Work participants in employment activities may file grievances 
    regarding displacement, health and safety standards and gender 
    discrimination?
    
    Subpart C--Additional Formula Grant Administrative Standards and 
    Procedures
    
    645.300  What constitutes an allowable match?
    645.310  What assurances must a State provide that it will make the 
    required matching expenditures?
    645.315  What actions are to be taken if a State fails to make the 
    required matching expenditures?
    645.320  When will formula funds be reallotted, and what reallotment 
    procedures will the Secretary use?
    
    Subpart D--State Formula Grants Administration
    
    645.400  Under what conditions may the Governor request a waiver to 
    designate an alternate local administering agency?
    645.410  What elements will the State use in distributing funds 
    within the State?
    645.415  What planning information must a State submit in order to 
    receive a formula grant?
    645.420  What factors will be used in measuring State performance?
    645.425  What are the roles and responsibilities of the State(s) and 
    PIC(s)?
    
    Subpart E--Welfare-to-Work Competitive Grants
    
    645.500  Who are eligible applicants for competitive grants?
    645.510  What is the required consultation with the Governor?
    645.515  What are the program and administrative requirements that 
    apply to both the formula grants and competitive grants?
    645.520  What are the application procedures and timeframes for 
    competitive grant funds?
    645.525  What special consideration will be given to rural areas and 
    cities with large concentrations of poverty?
    
    Subpart F--Administrative Appeal Process
    
    645.800  What administrative remedies are available under this part?
    
        Authority: 42 U.S.C. 606(a)(5)(C)(viii).
    
    Subpart A--Scope and Purpose
    
    
    Sec. 645.100  What does this subpart cover?
    
        (a) Subpart A establishes regulatory provisions that apply to the 
    Welfare-to-Work (WtW) programs conducted at the State and at the 
    Service Delivery Area (SDA) levels.
        (b) Subpart B provides general program requirements applicable to 
    all WtW formula funds. The provisions of this subpart govern how WtW 
    funds must be spent, who is eligible to participate in the program, 
    allowable activities and their relationship to TANF, Governor's 
    projects for long-term recipients, administrative and fiscal 
    provisions, and program oversight requirements. This subpart also 
    addresses worker protections and the establishment of a State grievance 
    system.
        (c) Subpart C sets forth additional administrative standards and 
    procedures for WtW Formula Grants, such as matching requirements and 
    reallotment procedures.
        (d) Subpart D sets forth the conditions under which the Governor 
    may request a waiver to designate an alternate administering agency, 
    sets forth the formula elements that must be included in the within-
    State distribution formula, the submission of a State annual plan, the 
    factors for measuring State performance, and the roles and 
    responsibilities of the States and the Private Industry Councils 
    (PICs).
        (e) Subpart E outlines general conditions and requirements for the 
    WtW Competitive Grants.
        (f) Regulatory provisions applicable to the Indian and Native 
    American Welfare-to-Work Program (INA WtW) are found at 20 CFR part 
    646.
    
    [[Page 61604]]
    
    Sec. 645.110  What are the purposes of the Welfare-to-Work Program?
    
        The purposes of the WtW program are:
        (a) To facilitate the placement of hard-to-employ welfare 
    recipients into transitional employment opportunities which will lead 
    to lasting unsubsidized employment and self-sufficiency;
        (b) To provide a variety of activities, grounded in TANF's ``work 
    first'' philosophy, to prepare individuals for, and to place them in, 
    lasting unsubsidized employment;
        (c) To provide for a variety of post-employment and job retention 
    services which will assist the hard-to-employ welfare recipient to 
    secure lasting unsubsidized employment;
        (d) To provide targeted WtW funds to high poverty areas with large 
    numbers of hard-to-employ welfare recipients.
    
    
    Sec. 645.120  What definitions apply to this part?
    
        The following definitions apply under this part:
        Act means Title IV, Part A of the Social Security Act, 42 U.S.C. 
    601-619.
        Adult means an individual who is not a minor child.
        Chief Elected Official(s) (CEOs) means:
        (1) The chief elected official of the sole unit of general local 
    government in the service delivery area,
        (2) The individual or individuals selected by the chief elected 
    officials of all units of general local government in such area as 
    their authorized representative, or
        (3) In the case of a service delivery area designated under section 
    101(a)(4)(A)(iii) of JTPA, the representative of the chief elected 
    official for such area (as defined in section 4(4)(C) of JTPA).
        Competitive Grants means those WtW funds awarded by the Department 
    under a competitive application process to local governments, PICs, and 
    private entities (such as community development corporations, 
    community-based and faith-based organizations, disability community 
    organizations, and community action agencies) who apply in conjunction 
    with a PIC or local government.
        Department or DOL means the U.S. Department of Labor.
        Employment activities means the activities enumerated at 
    Sec. 645.220(b).
        ETA means the Employment and Training Administration of the U.S. 
    Department of Labor.
        Fiscal year (FY) means any 12-month period ending on September 30 
    of a calendar year.
        Formula grants means the WtW funds allotted to each Welfare-to-Work 
    State, based on a formula prescribed by the Act, which equally 
    considers States' shares of the national number of poor individuals and 
    of adult recipients of assistance under TANF. The State is required to 
    distribute not less than 85 percent of the allotted formula grant funds 
    to service delivery areas in the State; and the State may retain not 
    more than 15 percent for projects to help long-term recipients of 
    assistance enter unsubsidized employment. Unless otherwise specified, 
    the term ``formula grant'' refers to the 85 percent and 15 percent 
    funds.
        Governor means the Chief Executive Officer of a State.
        Job Training Partnership Act or JTPA means Public Law (Pub. L.) 97-
    300, as amended, 29 U.S.C. 1501, et seq.
        Minor child means an individual who has not attained 18 years of 
    age; or has not attained 19 years of age and is a full-time student in 
    a secondary school (or in the equivalent level of vocational or 
    technical training).
        MOE means maintenance of effort. Under TANF, States are required to 
    maintain a certain level of spending on welfare based on ``historic'' 
    FY 1994 expenditure levels (Section 409 (a)(7) of the Act).
        PIC means a Private Industry Council established under Section 102 
    of the Job Training Partnership Act, which performs the functions 
    authorized at Section 103 of the JTPA.
        PRWORA means the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity 
    Reconciliation Act of 1996, Public Law (Pub. L.) 104-193, which 
    established the TANF program.
        SDA means a service delivery area designated by the Governor 
    pursuant to section 101(a)(4) of the Job Training Partnership Act.
        Secretary means the Secretary of Labor.
        Separate State program means a program operated outside of TANF in 
    which the expenditures of State funds may count for TANF MOE purposes.
        State means the 50 States of the United States, the District of 
    Columbia, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the US Virgin Islands, Guam, 
    and American Samoa, unless otherwise specified.
        State TANF Program means those funds expended under the State 
    Family Assistance Grant (SFAG), the basic block grant allocated to the 
    States under Section 403(a)(1) of the Act.
        TANF means Temporary Assistance for Needy Families Program 
    established under PRWORA.
        TANF MOE means the expenditure of State funds that must be made in 
    order to meet the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families Maintenance 
    of Effort requirement.
        WtW means Welfare-to-Work.
        WtW State means those States that the Secretary of Labor determines 
    have met the five conditions established at Section 403(a)(5)(A)(ii) of 
    the Act. Only States that are determined to be WtW States can receive 
    WtW grant funds.
        WtW statute means those provisions of the Balanced Budget Act of 
    1997 containing certain amendments to PRWORA and establishing the new 
    Welfare-to-Work program, amending Title IV of the Social Security Act, 
    (codified at 42 U.S.C. 601-619).
    
    Subpart B--General Program and Administrative Requirements
    
    
    Sec. 645.200  What does this subpart cover?
    
        This subpart provides general program and administrative 
    requirements for WtW formula funds, including Governors' funds for 
    long-term recipients of assistance, and for competitive grant funding 
    (section 403(a)(5) of the Act).
    
    
    Sec. 645.210  What is meant by the terms ``entity'' and ``project'' in 
    the statutory phrase ``an entity that operates a project'' with 
    Welfare-to-Work funds?
    
        The terms ``entity'' and ``project'', in the statutory phrase ``an 
    entity that operates a project'', means:
        (a) For WtW substate formula funds:
        (1) ``Entity'' means the PIC (or the alternate agency designated by 
    the Governor and approved by the Secretary pursuant to Sec. 645.400 of 
    this part) which administers the WtW substate formula funds in a 
    service delivery area(s). This entity is referred to in Secs. 645.211 
    through 645.225 of this part as the ``operating entity.''
        (2) ``Project'' means all activities, administrative and 
    programmatic, supported by the total amount of the WtW substate formula 
    funds allotted to the entity described in paragraph (a)(1) of this 
    section.
        (b) For WtW Governors' funds for long-term recipients of 
    assistance:
        (1) ``Entity'' means the agency, group, or organization to which 
    the Governor has distributed any of the funds for long-term recipients 
    of assistance, as described in Sec. 645.410 (b) and (c) of this part. 
    This entity is referred to in Secs. 645.211 through 645.225 of this 
    part as the ``operating entity.''
        (2) ``Project'' means all activities, administrative and 
    programmatic, supported by the total amount of one discrete award of 
    WtW Governors' funds for long-term recipients of assistance awarded to 
    the entity described in paragraph (b)(1) of this section.
        (c) For competitive WtW funds:
    
    [[Page 61605]]
    
        (1) ``Entity'' means an eligible applicant, as described in 
    Sec. 645.500 of this part, which is awarded a competitive WtW grant. 
    This entity is referred to in Secs. 645.211 through 645.225 of this 
    part as the ``operating entity.''
        (2) ``Project'' means all of the activities, administrative and 
    programmatic, supported by the total amount of one discrete WtW 
    competitive grant awarded to the entity described in paragraph (c)(1) 
    of this section (section 403(a)(5)(C) of the Act).
    
    
    Sec. 645.211  How must Welfare-to-Work funds be spent by the operating 
    entity?
    
        (a) At least 70 percent of the WtW funds allotted to or awarded to 
    an operating entity, as described in Sec. 645.210 of this part, must be 
    spent to benefit hard-to-employ individuals, as described in 
    Sec. 645.212 of this part.
        (b) Not more than 30 percent of the WtW funds allotted to or 
    awarded to an operating entity, as described in Sec. 645.210 of this 
    part, may be spent to assist individuals with long-term welfare 
    dependence characteristics, as described in Sec. 645.213 of this part. 
    If less than 30 percent of the funds is spent to assist individuals 
    with long-term welfare dependence characteristics, the remaining funds 
    shall be spent to benefit hard-to-employ individuals pursuant to 
    paragraph (a) of this section (section 403(a)(5)(C)of the Act).
    
    
    Sec. 645.212  Who may be served as a hard-to-employ individual under 
    the 70 percent provision?
    
        (a) An individual is eligible to be served under the 70 percent 
    provision if (s)he meets all three of the criteria listed in paragraphs 
    (a)(1), (2), and (3) of this section:
        (1) The individual is receiving TANF assistance; and
        (2) Barriers to employment--at least two of the three following 
    barriers to employment must apply to the individual:
        (i) Has not completed secondary school or obtained a certificate of 
    general equivalency, and has low skills in reading or mathematics. At 
    least 90 percent of individuals determined to have low skills in 
    reading or mathematics must be proficient at the 8.9 grade level or 
    below.
        (ii) Requires substance abuse treatment for employment.
        (iii) Has a poor work history. At least 90 percent of individuals 
    determined to have a poor work history must have worked no more than 3 
    consecutive months in the past 12 calendar months; and
        (3) Length of receipt of TANF assistance--the individual must be a 
    long-term recipient, meeting one of the following two criteria:
        (i) Has received assistance under a State TANF program, and/or its 
    predecessor program, for at least 30 months. The months do not have to 
    be consecutive; or
        (ii) Will become ineligible for assistance within 12 months due to 
    either Federal or State-imposed durational time limits on receipt of 
    TANF assistance. This includes individuals who have been exempted from 
    the durational limits due to hardship pursuant to section 408(a)(7)(C) 
    of the Act, but would face termination within 12 months without the 
    exemption.
        (b) A noncustodial parent of a minor is eligible to participate 
    under the 70 percent provision if the custodial parent meets the 
    eligibility requirements of paragraph (a) of this section.
        (c) An individual who has barriers to employment, as specified in 
    paragraph (a)(2) of this section, and who would be otherwise eligible 
    to receive TANF assistance but is no longer receiving TANF assistance 
    because (s)he has reached either the Federal five-year lifetime limit 
    on receipt of assistance, or a State-imposed lifetime limit, is 
    eligible to participate under the 70 percent provision (section 
    403(a)(5)(C) of the Act).
    
    
    Sec. 645.213  Who may be served as an individual with long-term welfare 
    dependence characteristics under the 30 percent provision?
    
        (a) An individual is eligible to be served under the 30 percent 
    provision if (s)he meets both criteria listed in paragraphs (a)(1) and 
    (2) of this section:
        (1) The individual is receiving TANF assistance; and
        (2) The individual has characteristics associated with, or 
    predictive of, long-term welfare dependence, such as having dropped out 
    of school, teenage pregnancy, or having a poor work history. States, in 
    consultation with the operating entity, may designate additional 
    characteristics associated with, or predictive of, long-term welfare 
    dependence.
        (b) A noncustodial parent of a minor child is eligible to 
    participate under the 30 percent provision if the noncustodial parent 
    has the characteristics specified in paragraph (a)(2) of this section, 
    and the custodial parent is receiving TANF assistance.
        (c) An individual who has characteristics associated with, or 
    predictive of, long-term welfare dependence, as specified in paragraph 
    (a)(2) of this section, and who would be otherwise eligible to receive 
    TANF assistance but is no longer receiving TANF assistance because 
    (s)he has reached either the Federal five-year lifetime limit on 
    receipt of assistance, or a State-imposed lifetime limit, is eligible 
    to participate under the 30 percent provision (section 403(a)(5)(C) of 
    the Act).
    
    
    Sec. 645.214  How will Welfare-to-Work participant eligibility be 
    determined?
    
        (a) The operating entity, as described in Secs. 645.210(a)(1), 
    (b)(1), and (c)(1) of this part, is accountable for ensuring that WtW 
    funds are spent only on individuals eligible for WtW projects.
        (b) The operating entity must ensure that there are mechanisms in 
    place to determine WtW eligibility for individuals who are receiving 
    TANF assistance. These mechanisms:
        (1) Must include arrangements with the TANF agency to ensure that a 
    WtW eligibility determination is based on information, current at the 
    time of the WtW eligibility determination, about whether an individual 
    is receiving TANF assistance, pursuant to Secs. 645.212(a)(1) and 
    645.213(a)(1) of this part, the length of receipt of TANF assistance, 
    pursuant to Sec. 645.212(a)(3)(i) of this part, and when an individual 
    may become ineligible for assistance pursuant to Sec. 645.212(a)(3)(ii) 
    of this part (section 403(a)(5)(A)(ii)(dd) of the Act).
        (2) May include a determination of WtW eligibility for barriers to 
    employment, pursuant to Sec. 645.212(a)(2) of this part, and for 
    characteristics of long-term welfare dependence, pursuant to 
    Sec. 645.213(a)(2) of this part, based on information collected by the 
    operating entity or the TANF agency up to six months prior to the WtW 
    eligibility determination.
        (c) The operating entity must ensure that there are mechanisms in 
    place to determine WtW eligibility for individuals who are not 
    receiving TANF assistance (i.e., noncustodial parents, pursuant to 
    Secs. 645.212(b) and 645.213(b) of this part, and individuals who have 
    reached the time limit on receipt of TANF, pursuant to Secs. 645.212(c) 
    and 645.213(c) of this part). Mechanisms may include, but are not 
    limited to:
        (1) Using staff from the operating entity to determine eligibility;
        (2) Entering into agreements with local agencies such as the TANF 
    agency and other appropriate agencies which foster coordination and 
    facilitate the exchange of eligibility information among parties at the 
    local level; and/or
    
    [[Page 61606]]
    
        (3) Performing joint eligibility determination with other 
    appropriate agencies, including the TANF agency.
        (d) Eligibility for WtW need not be redetermined for an individual 
    after the individual begins to receive WtW services (section 
    403(a)(5)(C) of the Act).
    
    
    Sec. 645.220  What activities are allowable under this part?
    
        Entities operating WtW projects may use WtW funds for the 
    following:
        (a) Job readiness activities financed through job vouchers or 
    through contracts with public or private providers.
        (b) Employment activities which consist of any of the following:
        (1) Community service programs;
        (2) Work experience programs;
        (3) Job creation through public or private sector employment wage 
    subsidies; and
        (4) On-the-job training.
        (c) Job placement services financed through job vouchers or through 
    contracts with public or private providers, subject to the payment 
    requirements at Sec. 645.230(a)(3).
        (d) Post-employment services financed through job vouchers or 
    through contracts with public or private providers, which are provided 
    after an individual is placed in one of the employment activities 
    listed in paragraph (b) of this section, or in any other subsidized or 
    unsubsidized job. Post-employment services include, but are not limited 
    to, such services as:
        (1) Basic educational skills training;
        (2) Occupational skills training;
        (3) English as a second language training; and
        (4) Mentoring.
        (e) Job retention services and support services which are provided 
    after an individual is placed in a job readiness activity, as specified 
    in paragraph (a) of this section, in one of the employment activities, 
    as specified in paragraph (b) of this section, or in any other 
    subsidized or unsubsidized job. These services can be provided with WtW 
    funds only if they are not otherwise available to the participant. Job 
    retention and support services include, but are not limited to, such 
    services as:
        (1) Transportation assistance;
        (2) Substance abuse treatment (except that WtW funds may not be 
    used to provide medical treatment);
        (3) Child care assistance;
        (4) Emergency or short term housing assistance; and
        (5) Other supportive services.
        (f) Individual development accounts which are established in 
    accordance with section 404 (h) of the Act.
        (g) Intake, assessment, eligibility determination, development of 
    an individualized service strategy, and case management may be 
    incorporated in the design of any of the allowable activities listed in 
    paragraphs (a) through (f) of this section (section 403(a)(5)(C) of the 
    Act).
    
    
    Sec. 645.225  How do Welfare-to-Work activities relate to activities 
    provided through TANF and other related programs?
    
        (a) Activities provided through WtW must be coordinated effectively 
    at the State and local levels with activities being provided through 
    TANF (section 403(a)(5)(A)(vii)(II) of the Act).
        (b) The operating entity must ensure that there is an assessment of 
    skills, prior work experience, employability, and other relevant 
    information in place for each WtW participant. Where appropriate, the 
    assessment performed by the TANF agency or JTPA should be used for this 
    purpose.
        (c) The operating entity must ensure that there is an 
    individualized strategy for transition to unsubsidized employment in 
    place for each participant which takes into account participant 
    assessments, including the TANF assessment and any JTPA assessment. 
    Where appropriate, the TANF individual responsibility plan (IRP) or 
    JTPA individual service strategy should be used for this purpose.
        (d) Coordination of resources should include not only those 
    available through WtW and TANF grant funds, and the Child Care and 
    Development Block Grant, but also those available through other related 
    activities and programs such as the JTPA programs, the State employment 
    service, One-Stop systems, private sector employers, labor 
    organizations, business and trade associations, education agencies, 
    housing agencies, community development corporations, transportation 
    agencies, community-based and faith-based organizations, disability 
    community organizations, community action agencies, and colleges and 
    universities which provide some of the assistance needed by the 
    targeted population (section 402(a)(5)(A) of the Act).
    
    
    Sec. 645.230  What general fiscal and administrative rules apply to the 
    use of Federal funds?
    
        (a) Uniform fiscal and administrative requirements. (1) State, 
    local, and Indian tribal government organizations are required to 
    follow the common rule ``Uniform Administrative Requirements for Grants 
    and Cooperative Agreements to State and Local Governments'' which is 
    codified in the DOL regulations at 29 CFR part 97.
        (2) Institutions of higher education, hospitals, and other non-
    profit organizations are required to follow OMB Circular A-110 which is 
    codified in the DOL regulations at 29 CFR part 95.
        (3) In addition to the requirements at 29 CFR 95.48 and 29 CFR 
    97.36(i), contracts or vouchers for job placement services supported by 
    funds provided for this program must include a provision to require 
    that at least one-half (\1/2\) of the payment occur after an eligible 
    individual placed into the workforce has been in the workforce for six 
    (6) months. This provision applies only to placement in unsubsidized 
    jobs (section 403(a)(5)(C)(i) of the Act).
        (4) In addition to the requirements at 29 CFR 95.42 and 29 CFR 
    97.36(b)(3) which address codes of conduct and conflict of interest 
    issues related to employees, it is also required that:
        (i) A PIC member shall neither cast a vote on, nor participate in, 
    any decision making capacity on the provision of services by such 
    member (or any organization which that member directly represents), nor 
    on any matter which would provide any direct financial benefit to that 
    member or a member of his immediate family.
        (ii) Neither membership on the PIC nor the receipt of WtW funds to 
    provide training and related services shall be construed, by itself, to 
    violate these conflict of interest provisions.
        (5) The addition method shall be required for the use of all 
    program income earned under WtW grants. The cost of generating program 
    income shall be subtracted from the amount earned to establish the 
    amount of program income available for use under the grants.
        (b) Audit requirements. All governmental and non-profit 
    organizations are required to follow the audit requirements of OMB 
    Circular A-133.\1\ This requirement is imposed at 29 CFR 97.26 for 
    governmental organizations and at 29 CFR 95.26 for institutions of 
    higher education, hospitals, and other non-profit organizations.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \1\ OMB Circulars are available from: Executive Office of the 
    President Publications Service, 725 17th Street NW, Suite G-2200, 
    Washington, DC 20503; 202-395-7332.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        (c) Allowable costs/cost principles. The DOL regulations at 29 CFR 
    95.27 and 29 CFR 97.22 identify the Federal principles for determining 
    allowable costs which each kind of recipient and subrecipient must 
    follow. For those selected items of cost requiring prior approval, the 
    authority to grant or deny approval is delegated to the Governor.
        (1) State, local, and Indian tribal government organizations must 
    determine allowability of costs in
    
    [[Page 61607]]
    
    accordance with the provisions of OMB Circular A-87, ``Cost Principles 
    for State and Local Governments.''
        (2) Non-profit organizations must determine allowability of costs 
    in accordance with OMB Circular A-122, ``Cost Principles for Non-Profit 
    Organizations.''
        (3) Institutions of higher education must determine allowability of 
    costs in accordance with OMB Circular A-21, ``Cost Principles for 
    Education Institutions.''
        (4) Hospitals must determine allowability of costs in accordance 
    with the provisions of appendix E of 45 CFR part 74, ``Principles for 
    Determining Costs Applicable to Research and Development Under Grants 
    and Contracts with Hospitals.''
        (5) Commercial organizations and those non-profit organizations 
    listed in Attachment C to OMB Circular A-122 must determine 
    allowability of costs in accordance with the provisions of the Federal 
    Acquisition Regulation (FAR), at 48 CFR part 31.
        (d) Government-wide debarment and suspension, and government-wide 
    drug-free workplace requirements. All WtW grant recipients and 
    subrecipients are required to comply with the government-wide 
    requirements for debarment and suspension, and the government-wide 
    requirements for a drug-free workplace which are codified in the DOL 
    regulations at 29 CFR part 98.
        (e) Restrictions on lobbying. All WtW grant recipients and 
    subrecipients are required to comply with the restrictions on lobbying 
    which are codified in the DOL regulations at 29 CFR part 93.
        (f) Nondiscrimination. All WtW grant recipients and subrecipients 
    are required to comply with the nondiscrimination provisions which are 
    codified in the DOL regulations at 29 CFR parts 31 and 32. In addition, 
    recipients of WtW grants who are also recipients under JTPA are 
    required to comply with 20 CFR part 34. For purposes of this paragraph, 
    the term ``recipient'' has the same meaning as the term is defined in 
    29 CFR parts 31, 32, and 34. Participant rights related to 
    nondiscrimination may be found at Sec. 645.255 of this part.
        (g) Nepotism. (1) No individual may be placed in a WtW employment 
    activity if a member of that person's immediate family is engaged in an 
    administrative capacity for the employing agency.
        (2) To the extent that an applicable State or local legal 
    requirement regarding nepotism is more restrictive than this provision, 
    such State or local requirement shall be followed.
    
    
    Sec. 645.233  What are the time limitations on the expenditure of 
    Welfare-to-Work grant funds?
    
        (a) Formula grant funds. The maximum time limit for the expenditure 
    of a given fiscal year allotment is three years from the effective date 
    of the Federal grant award to the State. The maximum time limit will be 
    allowed and will be specified in the Department's formula grant 
    document for each fiscal year of funds provided to the State. Any 
    remaining funds that have not been expended at the end of the 
    expenditure period must be returned to the Department in accordance 
    with the applicable closeout procedures for formula grants.
        (b) Competitive grant funds. The maximum time limit for the 
    expenditure of these funds is three years from the effective date of 
    award, but will, in all cases, be determined by the grant period and 
    the terms and conditions specified in the Federal grant award agreement 
    (including any applicable grant modification documents). Any remaining 
    funds that have not been expended at the end of the approved grant 
    period must be returned to the Department in accordance with the 
    applicable closeout procedures for competitive grants (section 
    503(a)(5)(C)(vii) of the Act).
    
    
    Sec. 645.235  What types of activities are subject to the 
    administrative cost limit on Welfare-to-Work grants?
    
        (a) Administrative cost limitation (section 404(b)(1)). (1) Formula 
    grants to States. Expenditures for administrative purposes under WtW 
    formula grants to States are limited to fifteen percent (15%) of the 
    grant award.
        (2) Competitive grants. The limitation on expenditures for 
    administrative purposes under WtW competitive grants will be specified 
    in the grant agreement but in no case shall the limitation be more than 
    fifteen percent (15%) of the grant award.
        (b) The costs of administration are that allocable portion of 
    necessary and allowable costs associated with the overall management 
    and administration of the WtW program and which are not directly 
    related to the provision of services to participants. These costs can 
    be both personnel and non-personnel and both direct and indirect. Costs 
    of administration shall include:
        (1) Except as provided in paragraph (c)(1) of this section, costs 
    of salaries, wages, and related costs of the recipient's, 
    subrecipient's or PIC's staff engaged in:
        (i) Overall program management, program coordination, and general 
    administrative functions, including the salaries and related costs of 
    the executive director, WtW director, project director, personnel 
    officer, fiscal officer/bookkeeper, purchasing officer, secretary, 
    payroll/insurance/property clerk and other costs associated with 
    carrying out administrative functions;
        (ii) Preparing program plans, budgets, schedules, and amendments 
    thereto;
        (iii) Monitoring of programs, projects, subrecipients, and related 
    systems and processes;
        (iv) Procurement activities, including the award of specific 
    subgrants, contracts, and purchase orders;
        (v) Providing State or local officials and the general public with 
    information about the program (public relations);
        (vi) Developing systems and procedures, including management 
    information systems (except as provided in paragraph (c)(3) of this 
    section), for assuring compliance with program requirements;
        (vii) Preparing reports and other documents related to the program 
    requirements;
        (viii) Coordinating the resolution of audit findings;
        (ix) Evaluating program results against stated objectives; and
        (x) Performing administrative services, including such services as 
    general legal services, accounting services, audit services; and 
    managing purchasing, property, payroll, and personnel;
        (2) Except as provided at paragraph (c)(3) of this section, costs 
    for goods and services required for administration of the program, 
    including such goods and services as rental or purchase of equipment, 
    utilities, office supplies, postage, and rental and maintenance of 
    office space;
        (3) The costs of organization-wide management functions; and
        (4) Travel costs incurred for official business in carrying out 
    program management or administrative activities.
        (5) These Interim Final WtW regulations adopt the description of 
    the term ``Administrative Costs'' found in the JTPA regulations at 29 
    CFR 627.440 to minimize the burden on PICs. The Secretary reserves the 
    right to change the definition to be consistent with the TANF 
    definition when final TANF regulations are issued.
        (c) Other cost classification guidance. (1) Personnel and related 
    non-personnel costs of the recipient's or subrecipient's staff, 
    including project directors, who perform both administrative and 
    programmatic services or activities may be allocated to the benefitting 
    cost objectives/categories based on documented distributions of actual 
    time
    
    [[Page 61608]]
    
    worked or other equitable cost allocation methods.
        (2) Indirect or overhead costs normally shall be charged to 
    administration, except that specific costs charged to an overhead or 
    indirect cost pool that can be identified directly with a cost 
    objective/category other than administration may be charged to the cost 
    objective/category directly benefitted. Documentation of such charges 
    shall be maintained.
        (3) The costs of information technology--computer hardware and 
    software--needed for tracking or monitoring under a WtW grant shall not 
    be charged to the administration of the grant (section 404(b)(2) of the 
    Act).
        Only the costs of information technology that is ``year 2000 
    compliant'' shall be allowable under WtW grants. To meet this 
    requirement, information technology must be able to accurately process 
    date/time data (including, but not limited to, calculating, comparing 
    and sequencing) from, into and between the twentieth and twenty-first 
    centuries, and the years 1999 and 2000. The information technology must 
    also be able to make leap year calculations. Furthermore, ``year 2000 
    compliant'' information technology when used in combination with other 
    information technology shall accurately process date/time data if the 
    other information technology properly exchanges date/time data with it.
    
    
    Sec. 645.240  What are the reporting requirements for Welfare-to-Work 
    programs?
    
        (a) General. All States and other direct grant recipients shall 
    report pursuant to instructions issued by DOL (financial data) and by 
    DHHS (participant data only). Reports shall be submitted no more 
    frequently than quarterly within a time period specified in the 
    reporting instructions. In addition, DOL will establish supplemental 
    reporting requirements for competitive grant recipients through the 
    grant agreements pursuant to Sec. 645.515 of this part.
        (b) Subrecipient reporting. A State or other direct grant recipient 
    may impose different forms or formats, shorter due dates, and more 
    frequent reporting requirements on subrecipients. However, the 
    recipient is required to meet the reporting requirements imposed by DOL 
    and DHHS.
        (c) Financial reports. Financial reports shall be submitted to DOL 
    by each grant recipient. Reported expenditures and program income must 
    be on the accrual basis of accounting and cumulative by fiscal year of 
    appropriation. If the recipient's accounting records are not normally 
    kept on the accrual basis of accounting, the recipient shall develop 
    accrual information through an analysis of the documentation on hand.
        (d) Due date. Financial reports will be due no later than 45 days 
    after the end of each quarter. A final financial report is required 90 
    days after the expiration of a funding period or the termination of 
    grant support.
        (e) Optional SPIR Reporting. DOL may also provide instructions for 
    an optional modified SPIR for internal program management (section 
    411(a) of the Act).
    
    
    Sec. 645.245  Who is responsible for oversight and monitoring of 
    Welfare-to-Work grants?
    
        (a) The Secretary may monitor all recipients and subrecipients of 
    all grants awarded and funds expended under WtW. Federal oversight will 
    be conducted primarily at the State level for formula grants and at the 
    recipient level for competitive grants.
        (b) The Governor shall monitor PICs (or other approved 
    administrative entities) funded under the State's formula allocated 
    grants on a periodic basis for compliance with applicable laws and 
    regulations. The Governor shall develop and make available for review a 
    State monitoring plan.
    
    
    Sec. 645.250  What procedures apply to the resolution of findings 
    arising from audits, investigations, monitoring and oversight reviews?
    
        (a) Resolution of subrecipient level findings. (1) The Governor is 
    responsible for the resolution of findings that arise from the State's 
    monitoring reviews, investigations and audits (including OMB Circular 
    A-133 audits) of subrecipients.
        (2) A State shall utilize the audit resolution, debt collection and 
    appeal procedures that it uses for other Federal grant programs.
        (3) If a State does not have such procedures, it shall prescribe 
    standards and procedures to be used for this grant program.
        (b) Resolution of State level findings. (1) The Secretary is 
    responsible for the resolution of findings that arise from federal 
    audits, monitoring reviews, investigations, incident reports, and 
    recipient level OMB Circular A-133 audits.
        (2) The Secretary will use the DOL audit resolution process, 
    consistent with the Single Audit Act of 1996 and OMB Circular A-133.
        (3) A final determination issued by a grant officer pursuant to 
    this process may be appealed to the DOL Office of Administrative Law 
    Judges under the procedures at Sec. 645.800.
        (c) Resolution of nondiscrimination findings. Findings arising from 
    investigations or reviews conducted under nondiscrimination laws shall 
    be resolved in accordance with those laws and the applicable 
    implementing regulations.
    
    
    Sec. 645.255  What nondiscrimination protections apply to participants 
    in Welfare-to-Work programs?
    
        (a) All participants in WtW programs under this part shall have 
    such rights as are available under all applicable Federal, State and 
    local laws prohibiting discrimination including:
        (1) The Age Discrimination Act of 1975 (42 U.S.C. 6101 et seq.);
        (2) Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 (29 U.S.C. 794);
        (3) The Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 (42 U.S.C. 12101 et 
    seq.); and
        (4) Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 (42 U.S.C. 2000d et 
    seq.).
        (b) Complaints alleging discrimination in violation of any 
    applicable Federal, State or local law, including those listed in 
    paragraph (a) of this section, shall be processed in accordance with 
    those laws and the implementing regulations.
        (c) Questions about or complaints alleging a violation of the 
    nondiscrimination laws in paragraph (a) of this section may be directed 
    or mailed to the Director, Civil Rights Center, U.S. Department of 
    Labor, Room N4123, 200 Constitution Avenue, NW, Washington, D.C. 20210 
    for processing.
        (d) Participants in job readiness and employment activities 
    operated with WtW funds, as defined in Sec. 645.220 of this part, shall 
    not be discriminated against because of gender. Participants alleging 
    gender discrimination may file a complaint using the State's grievance 
    system procedures as described in Sec. 645.270 of this part (section 
    403(a)(5)(J)(iii) of the Act).
    
    
    Sec. 645.260  What health and safety provisions apply to participants 
    in Welfare-to-Work programs?
    
        (a) Participants in an employment activity operated with WtW funds, 
    as defined in Sec. 645.220 of this part, are subject to the same health 
    and safety standards established under State and Federal law which are 
    applicable to similarly employed employees, of the same employer, who 
    are not participants in programs under WtW.
        (b) Participants alleging a violation of these health and safety 
    standards may file a complaint pursuant to the procedures contained in 
    Sec. 645.270 of this part (section 403(a)(5)(J)(ii) of the Act).
    
    [[Page 61609]]
    
    Sec. 645.265  What safeguards are there to ensure that participants in 
    Welfare-to-Work employment activities do not displace other employees?
    
        (a) An adult participating in an employment activity operated with 
    WtW funds, as described in Sec. 645.220 of this part, may fill an 
    established position vacancy subject to the limitations in paragraph 
    (c) of this section.
        (b) An employment activity operated with WtW funds, as described in 
    Sec. 645.220 of this part, shall not violate existing contracts for 
    services or collective bargaining agreements. Where such an employment 
    activity would violate a collective bargaining agreement, the 
    appropriate labor organization and employer shall provide written 
    concurrence before the employment activity is undertaken.
        (c) An adult participating in an employment activity operated with 
    WtW funds, as described in Sec. 645.220 of this part, shall not be 
    employed or assigned:
        (1) When any other individual is on layoff from the same or any 
    substantially equivalent job within the same organizational unit;
        (2) If the employer has terminated the employment of any regular, 
    unsubsidized employee or otherwise caused an involuntary reduction in 
    its workforce with the intention of filling the vacancy so created with 
    the WtW participant; and,
        (3) If the employer has caused an involuntary reduction to less 
    than full time in hours of any employee in the same or substantially 
    equivalent job within the same organizational unit.
        (d) Regular employees and program participants alleging 
    displacement may file a complaint pursuant to Sec. 645.270 of this part 
    (section 403(a)(5)(J)(i) of the Act).
    
    
    Sec. 645.270  What procedures are there to ensure that currently 
    employed workers may file grievances regarding displacement and that 
    Welfare-to-Work participants in employment activities may file 
    grievances regarding displacement, health and safety standards and 
    gender discrimination?
    
        (a) The State shall establish and maintain a grievance procedure 
    for resolving complaints from:
        (1) Regular employees that the placement of a participant in an 
    employment activity operated with WtW funds, as described in 
    Sec. 645.220 of this part, violates any of the prohibitions described 
    in Sec. 645.265 of this part; and
        (2) Program participants in an employment activity operated with 
    WtW funds, as described in Sec. 645.220 of this part, that any 
    employment activity violates any of the prohibitions described in 
    Secs. 645.255(d), 645.260, or 645.265 of this part.
        (b) Such grievance procedure should include an opportunity for 
    informal resolution.
        (c) If no informal resolution can be reached within the specified 
    time as established by the State as part of its grievance procedure, 
    such procedure shall provide an opportunity for the dissatisfied party 
    to receive a hearing upon request.
        (d) The State shall specify the time period and format for the 
    hearing portion of the grievance procedure, as well as the time period 
    by which the complainant will be provided the written decision by the 
    State.
        (e) A decision by the State under paragraph (d) of this section may 
    be appealed by any dissatisfied party within 30 days of the receipt of 
    the State's written decision, according to the time period and format 
    for the appeals portion of the grievance procedure as specified by the 
    State.
        (f) The State shall designate the State agency which will be 
    responsible for hearing appeals. This agency shall be independent of 
    the State or local agency which is administering, or supervising the 
    administration of the State TANF and WtW programs.
        (g) No later than 120 days of receipt of an individual's original 
    grievance, the State agency, as designated in paragraph (f) of this 
    section, shall provide a written final determination of the 
    individual's appeal.
        (h) The grievance procedure shall include remedies for violations 
    of Secs. 645.255(d), 645.260, and 645.265 of this part which may 
    continue during the grievance process and which may include:
        (1) Suspension or termination of payments from funds provided under 
    this part;
        (2) Prohibition of placement of a WtW participant with an employer 
    that has violated Secs. 645.255(d), 645.260, and 645.265 of this part;
        (3) Where applicable, reinstatement of an employee, payment of lost 
    wages and benefits, and reestablishment of other relevant terms, 
    conditions, and privileges of employment; and
        (4) Where appropriate, other equitable relief (section 
    403(a)(5)(J)(iv) of the Act).
    
    Subpart C--Additional Formula Grant Administrative Standards and 
    Procedures
    
    
    Sec. 645.300  What constitutes an allowable match?
    
        (a) A State is entitled to receive two (2) dollars of Federal funds 
    for every one (1) dollar of State match expenditures, up to the amount 
    available for allotment to the State based on the State's percentage 
    for WtW formula grant for the fiscal year. The State is not required to 
    provide a level of match necessary to support the total amount 
    available to it based on the State's percentage for WtW formula grant. 
    However, if the proposed match is less than the amount required to 
    support the full level of federal funds, the grant amount will be 
    reduced accordingly (section 403(a)(5)(A)(i)(I) of the Act).
        (b) States shall follow the match or cost-sharing requirements of 
    the ``Common Rule'' Uniform Administrative Requirements for Grants and 
    Cooperative Agreements to State and Local Governments (codified for DOL 
    at 29 CFR 97.24). Paragraphs (b)(1) (i) and (ii), (b)(3), (b)(4) and 
    (c)(1) of this section are in addition to the common rule requirements. 
    Also, paragraphs included in the common rule which relate to the use of 
    donated buildings and other real property as match have been excluded 
    from this provision.
        (1) Only costs that would be allowable if paid for with WtW grant 
    funds will be accepted as match.
        (i) Because the use of Federal funds is prohibited for construction 
    or purchase of facilities or buildings except where there is explicit 
    statutory authority permitting it, costs incurred for the construction 
    or purchase of facilities or buildings shall not be acceptable as match 
    for a WtW grant.
        (ii) Because the costs of construction or purchase of facilities or 
    buildings are unallowable as match, the donation of a building or 
    property as a third party in-kind contribution is also unallowable as a 
    match for a WtW grant.
        (2) A match or cost-sharing requirement may be satisfied by either 
    or both of the following:
        (i) Allowable costs incurred by the grantee, subgrantee or a cost 
    type contractor under the assistance agreement. This includes allowable 
    cost borne by non-Federal grants or by others and cash donations from 
    non-Federal third parties.
        (ii) The value of third party in-kind contributions applicable to 
    the FY period to which the cost-sharing or matching requirement apply.
        (3) No more than one-half (\1/2\) of the total match expenditures 
    may be in the form of third party in-kind contributions.
        (4) Match expenditures must be recorded in the books of account of 
    the entity that incurred the cost or received the contribution. These 
    amounts may be
    
    [[Page 61610]]
    
    rolled up and reported as aggregate State level match.
        (c) Qualifications and exceptions. (1) The matching requirements 
    may not be met by the use of an employer's share of participant wage 
    payments (e.g., employer share of OJT wages).
        (2) Costs borne by other Federal grant agreements. A cost-sharing 
    or matching requirement may not be met by costs borne by another 
    Federal grant. This prohibition does not apply to income earned by a 
    grantee or subgrantee from a contract awarded under another Federal 
    grant.
        (3) General revenue sharing. For the purpose of this section, 
    general revenue sharing funds distributed under 31 U.S.C. 6702 are not 
    considered Federal grant funds.
        (4) Cost or contributions counted towards other Federal cost-
    sharing requirements. Neither costs nor the values of third party in-
    kind contributions may count towards satisfying a cost-sharing or 
    matching requirement of a grant agreement if they have been or will be 
    counted towards satisfying a cost-sharing or matching requirement of 
    another Federal grant agreement, a Federal procurement contract, or any 
    other award of Federal funds.
        (5) Costs financed by program income. Costs financed by program 
    income, as defined in 29 CFR 97.25, shall not count towards satisfying 
    a cost-sharing or matching requirement unless they are expressly 
    permitted in the terms of the assistance agreement. (This use of 
    general program income is described in Sec. 97.25(g)).
        (6) Services or property financed by income earned by contractors. 
    Contractors under a grant may earn income from the activities carried 
    out under the contract in addition to the amounts earned from the party 
    awarding the contract. No costs of services or property supported by 
    this income may count toward satisfying a cost-sharing or matching 
    requirement unless other provisions of the grant agreement expressly 
    permit this kind of income to be used to meet the requirement.
        (7) Records. Costs and third party in-kind contributions counting 
    towards satisfying a cost-sharing or matching requirement must be 
    verifiable from the records of grantees and subgrantee or cost-type 
    contractors. These records must show how the value placed on third 
    party in-kind contributions was derived. To the extent feasible, 
    volunteer services will be supported by the same methods that the 
    organization uses to support the allocability of regular personnel 
    costs.
        (8) Special standards for third party in-kind contributions. (i) 
    Third party in-kind contributions count towards satisfying a cost-
    sharing or matching requirement only where, if the party receiving the 
    contributions were to pay for them, the payments would be allowable 
    costs.
        (ii) Some third party in-kind contributions are goods and services 
    that, if the grantee, subgrantee, or contractor receiving the 
    contribution had to pay for them, the payments would have been an 
    indirect costs. Cost sharing or matching credit for such contributions 
    shall be given only if the grantee, subgrantee, or contractor has 
    established, along with its regular indirect cost rate, a special rate 
    for allocating to individual projects or programs the value of the 
    contributions.
        (iii) A third party in-kind contribution to a fixed-price contract 
    may count towards satisfying a cost-sharing or matching requirement 
    only if it results in:
        (A) An increase in the services or property provided under the 
    contract (without additional cost to the grantee or subgrantee) or
        (B) A cost savings to the grantee or subgrantee.
        (iv) The values placed on third party in-kind contributions for 
    cost-sharing or matching purposes will conform to the rules in the 
    succeeding sections of this part. If a third party in-kind contribution 
    is a type not treated in those sections, the value placed upon it shall 
    be fair and reasonable.
        (d) Valuation of donated services. (1) Volunteer services. Unpaid 
    services provided to a grantee or subgrantee by individuals will be 
    valued at rates consistent with those ordinarily paid for similar work 
    in the grantee's or subgrantee's organization. If the grantee or 
    subgrantee does not have employees performing similar work, the rates 
    will be consistent with those ordinarily paid by other employers for 
    similar work in the same labor market. In either case, a reasonable 
    amount for fringe benefits may be included in the valuation.
        (2) Employees of other organizations. When an employer other than a 
    grantee, subgrantee, or cost-type contractor furnishes free of charge 
    the services of an employee in the employee's normal line of work, the 
    services will be valued at the employee's regular rate of pay exclusive 
    of the employee's fringe benefits and overhead costs. If the services 
    are in a different line of work, paragraph (d)(1) of this section 
    applies.
        (e) Valuation of third party donated supplies and loaned equipment 
    or space. (1) If a third party donates supplies, the contribution will 
    be valued at the market value of the supplies at the time of donation.
        (2) If a third party donates the use of equipment or space in a 
    building but retains title, the contribution will be valued at the fair 
    rental rate of the equipment or space.
    
    
    Sec. 645.310  What assurance must a State provide that it will make the 
    required matching expenditures?
    
        In its State plan, a State must provide a written estimate of 
    planned matching expenditures and describe the process by which the 
    funds will be tracked and reported to ensure that the State meets its 
    projected match (section 403(a)(5)(A)(i)(I) of the Act).
    
    
    Sec. 645.315  What actions are to be taken if a State fails to make the 
    required matching expenditures?
    
        (a) The Department will implement an annual reconciliation and 
    grant adjustment for WtW grants.
        (1) The reconciliation will be based on reported match expenditures 
    through the end of the FY report, which is due 45 days after the end of 
    the fiscal year.
        (2) If the end of FY report has not been received by December 1 of 
    that year, then the reconciliation will be based on the most current 
    report received.
        (b) If match expenditures do not satisfy the requirement of the FY 
    grant, the subsequent FY grant amount will be reduced by the 
    appropriate corresponding amount (i.e., the grant will reduced by two 
    (2) dollars for each one (1) dollar shortfall in State matching funds).
    
    
    Sec. 645.320  When will formula funds be reallotted, and what 
    reallotment procedures will the Secretary use?
    
        (a) No reallotment of funds among States will occur during FY 98;
        (b) For subsequent fiscal years, a reconciliation will be made 
    during the first quarter of the fiscal year under Sec. 645.315 of this 
    part to determine whether or not a State has satisfied its required 
    level of matching funds for the prior year.
        (c) If a State has failed to expend the required level of matching 
    funds, the required reduction in the State grant will be made during 
    the second quarter of the fiscal year.
        (d) Also, any funds which become available as a result of 
    underexpenditures of required match, or failure to obligate 100 percent 
    of the funds by either States or substate entities by the end of the 
    fiscal year of the grant, will be reallotted among qualifying States 
    (i.e., those which have committed a sufficient match to qualify for 
    additional funds). The reallotment
    
    [[Page 61611]]
    
    will occur during the second quarter of the following fiscal year 
    (section 403(a)(5)(A)(i)(I) of the Act).
    
    Subpart D--State Formula Grants Administration
    
    
    Sec. 645.400  Under what conditions may the Governor request a waiver 
    to designate an alternate local administering agency?
    
        (a)(1) The Governor may include in the State's WtW Plan a waiver 
    request to select an agency other than the PIC to administer the 
    program for one or more SDAs in a State; or
        (2) When the Governor determines the PIC, or alternative agency, 
    has not coordinated its expenditures with the expenditure of funds 
    provided to the State under TANF, pursuant to section 
    403(a)(5)(A)(vii)(II) of the Act, the Governor shall request a waiver.
        (b) The Governor shall bear the burden of proving that the 
    designated alternative agency, rather than the PIC or other 
    administering agency, would improve the effectiveness or efficiency of 
    the administration of WtW funds in the SDA. The Governor's waiver 
    request shall include information to meet that burden. The Governor 
    shall provide a copy of the waiver request and any supporting 
    information submitted to the Secretary to the PIC and CEO of the SDA 
    for which an alternative administering agency is requested.
        (c) The PIC and CEO shall have fifteen (15) days in which to submit 
    his or her written response to the Department. The PIC and CEO shall 
    provide a copy of such response to the Governor.
        (d) The Secretary will assess the waiver information submitted by 
    the Governor, including input from the PIC and CEO in reaching the 
    decision whether to permit the use of an alternate administrative 
    agency.
        (e) The Secretary shall approve a waiver request if she determines 
    that the Governor has established that the designated alternative 
    administering agency, rather than the PIC or other administering 
    agency, will improve the effectiveness or efficiency of the 
    administration of WtW funds provided for the benefit of the SDA.
        (f) Where an alternate administering agency is approved by the 
    Secretary, such administrative entity shall coordinate with the CEO for 
    the applicable SDA(s) regarding the expenditure of WtW grant funds in 
    the SDA(s).
        (g) The decision of the Secretary to approve or deny a waiver 
    request will be issued promptly and shall constitute final agency 
    action.
    
    
    Sec. 645.410  What elements will the State use in distributing funds 
    within the State?
    
        (a) Of the WtW funds allotted to the State, not less than 85 
    percent of the State allotment must be distributed to the SDAs in the 
    State.
        (1) The State shall prescribe a formula for determining the amount 
    of funds to be distributed to each SDA in the State using no factors 
    other than the three factors described in paragraphs (a)(2) and (3) of 
    this section;
        (2) The formula prescribed by the Governor must include as one of 
    the formula factors for distributing funds the provision at section 
    403(a)(5)(A)(vi)(I)(aa) of the Act. The Governor is to distribute funds 
    to an SDA based on the number by which the population of the area with 
    an income that is less than the poverty line exceeds 7.5 percent of the 
    total population of the area, compared to all such numbers in all such 
    areas in the State. The Governor must assign a weight of not less than 
    50 percent to this factor;
        (3) The Governor shall distribute the remaining funds, if any, to 
    the SDAs utilizing only one or both of the following factors:
        (i) The SDA's share of the number of adults receiving assistance 
    under TANF or the predecessor program in the SDA for 30 months or more 
    (whether consecutive or not), relative to the number of such adults 
    residing in the State;
        (ii) The SDA's share of the number of unemployed individuals 
    residing in the SDA, relative to the number of such individuals 
    residing in the State.
        (4) If the amount to be distributed to a service delivery area by 
    the Governor's formula is less than $100,000, the funds shall be 
    available to be used by the Governor to fund projects described at 
    paragraph (b) of this section.
        (5) States shall use the guidance provided at section 403(a)(5)(D) 
    of the Act in determining the number of individuals with an income that 
    is less than the poverty line.
        (6) PICs (or alternate administering agency) shall determine, 
    pursuant to section 403(a)(5)(A)(vii)(I) of the Act, on which 
    individual(s) and on which allowable activities to expend its WtW fund 
    allocation.
        (7) The State shall distribute the SDAs' allocations in a timely 
    manner, but not later than 30 days from receipt of the State's fund 
    allotment.
        (b) Of the funds allocated to the State, up to 15 percent of the 
    funds may be retained at the State level to fund projects that appear 
    likely to help long-term recipients of assistance enter unsubsidized 
    employment. Any additional funds available as a result of the process 
    described at paragraph (a)(4)of this section, shall also be available 
    to be used to fund projects to help long-term recipients of assistance 
    enter unsubsidized jobs.
        (c) The Governors may distribute the funds retained pursuant to 
    paragraph (b) of this section to a variety of workforce organizations, 
    in addition to PICs, and other entities such as One-Stop systems, 
    private sector employers, labor organizations, business and trade 
    associations, education agencies, housing agencies, community 
    development corporations, transportation agencies, community-based and 
    faith-based organizations, disability community organizations, 
    community action agencies, and colleges and universities which provide 
    some of the assistance needed by the targeted population.
    
    
    Sec. 645.415  What planning information must a State submit in order to 
    receive a formula grant?
    
        (a) Each State seeking financial assistance under the formula grant 
    portion of the WtW legislation must submit an annual plan meeting the 
    requirements prescribed by the Secretary. This plan shall be in the 
    form of an addendum to the TANF State plan and shall be submitted to 
    the Secretaries of Labor and Health and Human Services.
        (b) The Secretary shall review the State plan for compliance with 
    the statutory and regulatory provisions of the WtW program. The 
    Secretary's decision whether to accept a State plan as in compliance 
    with the Act shall constitute final agency action.
        (c) If the Governor has requested a waiver to permit the selection 
    of an alternative administering agency in the State plan, the 
    provisions of Sec. 645.400 of this part shall apply (section 
    403(a)(5)(A)(ii) of the Act).
    
    
    Sec. 645.420  What factors will be used in measuring State performance?
    
        (a) State performance will be measured by a formula issued by the 
    Secretary after consultation with DHHS, the National Governors 
    Association (NGA) and the American Public Welfare Association (APWA).
        (b) The formula shall be the basis for measuring the success of 
    States in placing individuals in private sector employment or any kind 
    of employment, the duration of such placements, any increase in 
    earnings of such individuals and other additional factors that the 
    Secretary of Labor deems to be appropriate. The formula will provide 
    for adjustments due to general economic conditions on a State-by-State 
    basis.
    
    [[Page 61612]]
    
        (c) The formula shall serve as the basis for the award of FY 2000 
    bonus grants based on successful performance (section 403(a)(5)(E) of 
    the Act).
    
    
    Sec. 645.425  What are the roles and responsibilities of the State(s) 
    and PIC(s)?
    
        (a) State roles and responsibilities. A State:
        (1) Designates State WtW administering agency;
        (2) Provides overall administration of WtW funds, consistent with 
    the WtW statute, WtW regulations and the State's WtW Plan;
        (3) Develops the State WtW Plan in consultation and coordination 
    with appropriate entities in substate areas, such as One-Stop systems, 
    private sector employers, labor organizations, business and trade 
    associations, education agencies, housing agencies, community 
    development corporations, transportation agencies, community-based and 
    faith-based organizations, disability community organizations, 
    community action agencies, and colleges and universities which provide 
    some of the assistance needed by the targeted population (section 
    403(a)(5)(A)(ii)(I)(cc) of the Act);
        (4) Distributes funds to SDAs, consistent with the provisions 
    described at Sec. 645.410(a) (section 403(a)(5)(A)(ii)(I)(bb));
        (5) Conducts oversight and monitoring of WtW activities and fund 
    expenditures at the State and local levels for compliance with 
    applicable laws and regulations, consistent with the provisions at 
    Sec. 645.245 and provides technical assistance as appropriate;
        (6) Ensures coordination of PIC fund expenditures with the State 
    TANF expenditures and other programs (section 403(a)(5)(A)(ii)(I)(dd));
        (7) Determines whether to request waivers to select an alternate 
    administering agency consistent with the provisions described at 
    Sec. 645.400 of this part (sections 403(a)(5)(A)(ii)(I)(ee) and 
    403(a)(5)(A)(vii)(III));
        (8) Manages and distributes State level WtW funds (15 percent), 
    consistent with the provisions at Secs. 645.410(b) and (c) (section 
    403(a)(5)(A)(vi)(III));
        (9) Ensures that the 15 percent administration limitation and the 
    match requirement are met;
        (10) Ensures that worker protections provisions are observed and 
    establishes an appropriate grievance process, consistent with 
    Secs. 645.255 through 645.270 of this part (section 403(a)(5)(J));
        (11) Provides comments on Competitive Grant Application(s) from 
    eligible entities within the State, consistent with Sec. 645.510 of 
    this part (section 403(a)(5)(B)(ii));
        (12) Cooperates with the Department of Health and Human Services on 
    the evaluation of WtW programs (section 403(a)(5)(A)(ii)(III));
        (13) Provides technical assistance to PICs or alternate 
    administering agencies; and
        (14) Establishes internal reporting requirements to ensure Federal 
    reports are accurate, complete and are submitted on a timely basis, 
    consistent with Sec. 645.240 of this part.
        (b) Private Industry Council (or alternate administering agency) 
    roles and responsibilities. A PIC:
        (1) Has sole authority, in coordination with CEOs, to expend 
    formula funds (section 403(a)(5)(A)(vii)(I) of the Act);
        (2) Has authority to determine the individuals to be served in the 
    SDA (section 403(a)(5)(A)(vii)(I));
        (3) Has authority to determine the services to be provided in the 
    SDA (section 403(a)(5)(A)(vii)(I));
        (4) Ensures funds are expended on eligible recipients and on 
    allowable activities, consistent with Sec. 645.410(a)(5) of this part;
        (5) Coordinates WtW fund expenditures with State TANF expenditures 
    and other programs (section 403(a)(5)(A)(ii)(dd));
        (6) Ensures that there is an assessment and an individual service 
    strategy in place for each WtW participant, consistent with 
    Secs. 645.225(a) and (b) of this part;
        (7) Conducts oversight and monitoring of subrecipients, consistent 
    with the provisions at Sec. 645.245 of this part;
        (8) Ensures worker protection provisions and grievance process are 
    observed, consistent with State guidelines (section 403(a)(5)(J)); and
        (9) Consults with and provides comments on private entity 
    Competitive Grant Application(s), consistent with the provisions at 
    Sec. 645.500(b)(1)(i) of this part.
    
    Subpart E--Welfare-To-Work Competitive Grants
    
    
    Sec. 645.500  Who are eligible applicants for competitive grants?
    
        (a) Eligible applicants for competitive grants are:
        (1) PICs;
        (2) Political subdivisions of a State; and
        (3) Private entities including nonprofit organizations such as 
    community development corporations, community-based and faith-based 
    organizations, disability community organizations, community action 
    agencies, and public and private colleges and universities, and other 
    qualified private organizations.
        (b) Entities other than a PIC or a political subdivision of the 
    State must submit an application for competitive grant funds in 
    conjunction with the applicable PIC or political subdivision.
        (1) The term ``in conjunction with'' shall mean that the 
    application submitted by such an entity must include a signed 
    certification by both the applicant and either the applicable PIC or 
    political subdivision that:
        (i) The applicant has consulted with the applicable PIC/political 
    subdivision during the development of the application; and
        (ii) The activities proposed in the application are consistent 
    with, and will be coordinated with, WtW efforts of the PIC/political 
    subdivision.
        (2) If the applicant is unable to include such a certification in 
    its application, the applicant will be required to certify, and provide 
    information indicating that efforts were undertaken to consult with the 
    PIC/political subdivision and that the PIC/political subdivision was 
    provided a sufficient opportunity to cooperate in the development of 
    the project plan and to review and comment on the application prior to 
    its submission to the Secretary. ``Sufficient opportunity for PIC/
    political subdivision review and comment'' shall mean at least 30 
    calendar days.
        (3) The certification described in paragraph (b)(1) of this 
    section, or the evidence of efforts to consult described in paragraph 
    (b)(2), must be with each PIC or political subdivision included in the 
    geographic area in which the project proposed in the application is to 
    operate (section 403(a)(5)(B)(ii) of the Act).
    
    
    Sec. 645.510  What is the required consultation with the Governor?
    
        (a) All applicants for competitive grants, including PICs and 
    political subdivisions, must consult with the Governor by submitting 
    their application to the Governor or the designated State 
    administrative entity for the WtW program for review and comment prior 
    to submission of the application to the Secretary. The application 
    submitted to the Secretary must include:
        (1) Comments on the application from the State; or
        (2) Information indicating that the State was provided a sufficient 
    opportunity for review and comment prior to submission to the 
    Secretary. ``Sufficient opportunity for State review and comment'' 
    shall mean at least 15 calendar days.
    
    [[Page 61613]]
    
        (b) For private entity applicants, the submission of the 
    application for State review and comment must follow the 30 day period 
    provided for PIC/political subdivision review. Evidence of PIC/
    political subdivision review should be included in the submission to 
    the State (section 403(a)(5)(B)(ii) of the Act).
    
    
    Sec. 645.515  What are the program and administrative requirements that 
    apply to both the formula grants and competitive grants?
    
        (a) All of the general program requirements and administrative 
    standards set by 29 CFR part 645 subpart B apply (section 403(a)(5)(C) 
    and section 404(b) of the Act).
        (b) In addition, competitive grants will be subject to:
        (1) Supplemental reporting requirements; and
        (2) Additional monitoring and oversight requirements based on the 
    negotiated scope-of-work of individual grant awards (section 
    403(a)(5)(B)(iii) and (v)).
    
    
    Sec. 645.520  What are the application procedures and timeframes for 
    competitive grant funds?
    
        (a) The Secretary shall establish appropriate application 
    procedures, selection criteria and an approval process to ensure that 
    grant awards accomplish the purpose of the competitive grant funds and 
    that available funds are used in an effective manner.
        (b) The Secretary shall publish such procedures in the Federal 
    Register and establish submission timeframes in a manner that allows 
    eligible applicants sufficient time to develop and submit quality 
    project plans (section 403(a)(5)(B)(i) and (iii) of the Act).
    
    
    Sec. 645.525  What special consideration will be given to rural areas 
    and cities with large concentrations of poverty?
    
        (a) Competitive grant awards will be targeted to geographic areas 
    of significant need. In developing application procedures, special 
    consideration will be given to rural areas and cities with large 
    concentrations of residents living in poverty.
        (b) Grant application guidelines will clarify specific requirements 
    for documenting need in the local area (section 403(a)(5)(B)(iv) of the 
    Act).
    
    Subpart F--Administrative Appeal Process
    
    
    Sec. 645.800  What administrative remedies are available under this 
    part?
    
        (a) Within 21 days of receipt of a final determination that has 
    directly imposed a sanction or corrective action pursuant to 
    Sec. 645.250(b) of this part, a recipient, subrecipient, or a vendor 
    directly against which the Grant Officer has imposed a sanction or 
    corrective action, may request a hearing before the Department of Labor 
    Office of Administrative Law Judges, pursuant to the provisions of 29 
    CFR part 96 subpart 96.6.
        (b) In accordance with 29 CFR 96.603(b)(2), the rules of practice 
    and procedure published at 29 CFR part 18 shall govern the conduct of 
    hearings under this section, except that a request for hearing under 
    this section shall not be considered a complaint to which the filing of 
    an answer by DOL or a DOL agency is required. Technical rules of 
    evidence shall not apply to a hearing conducted pursuant to this part; 
    however, rules or principles designed to assure production of the most 
    credible evidence available and to subject testimony to cross-
    examination shall apply.
        (c) The decision of the Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) shall 
    constitute final agency action unless, within 20 days of the decision, 
    a party dissatisfied with the decision of the ALJ has filed a petition 
    for review with the Administrative Review Board (ARB) (established 
    pursuant to the provisions of Secretary's Order No. 2-96, published at 
    61 Fed. Reg. 19977 (May 3, 1996)), specifically identifying the 
    procedure, fact, law or policy to which exception is taken. Any 
    exception not specifically urged shall be deemed to have been waived. A 
    copy of the petition for review must be sent to the opposing party at 
    that time. Thereafter, the decision of the ALJ shall constitute final 
    agency action unless the ARB, within 30 days of the filing of the 
    petition for review, has notified the parties that the case has been 
    accepted for review. Any case accepted by the ARB shall be decided 
    within 120 days of such acceptance. If not so decided, the decision of 
    the ALJ shall constitute final agency action.
    
    [FR Doc. 97-29966 Filed 11-17-97; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 4510-30-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Published:
11/18/1997
Department:
Employment and Training Administration
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Interim final rule; request for comments.
Document Number:
97-29966
Pages:
61588-61613 (26 pages)
RINs:
1205-AB15: Welfare-to-Work (WTW) Grants
RIN Links:
https://www.federalregister.gov/regulations/1205-AB15/welfare-to-work-wtw-grants
PDF File:
97-29966.pdf
CFR: (45)
20 CFR 645.213(a)(2)
20 CFR 645.213(a)(1)
20 CFR 645.213(a)(2)
20 CFR 645.214(b)(1)
20 CFR 97.36(b)(3)
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