95-29228. Notice of Request for Cooperative Agreement Applications for the Community Renaissance Fellows Program  

  • [Federal Register Volume 60, Number 230 (Thursday, November 30, 1995)]
    [Notices]
    [Pages 61634-61635]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 95-29228]
    
    
    
    
    [[Page 61633]]
    
    _______________________________________________________________________
    
    Part IV
    
    
    
    
    
    Department of Housing and Urban Development
    
    
    
    
    
    _______________________________________________________________________
    
    
    
    Notice of Request for Cooperative Agreement Applications for the 
    Community Renaissance Fellows Program; Notice
    
    Federal Register / Vol. 60, No. 230 / Thursday, November 30, 1995 / 
    Notices 
    
    [[Page 61634]]
    
    
    DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT
    
    Office of the Assistant Secretary for Policy Development and Research
    [Docket No. FR-3960-N-01]
    
    
    Notice of Request for Cooperative Agreement Applications for the 
    Community Renaissance Fellows Program
    
    AGENCY: Office of the Assistant Secretary for Policy Development and 
    Research, HUD.
    
    ACTION: Notice of request for cooperative agreement applications.
    
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    SUMMARY: The Department is seeking applications from public and private 
    universities in order to provide funding to develop and implement the 
    educational component of HUD's new Community Renaissance Fellows 
    Program. The program will place 20 Fellows in distressed public housing 
    developments undergoing conversion, for example, to mixed-income or 
    mixed-use projects. HUD hopes, with the assistance of private 
    foundations, to place additional Fellows in comparable projects being 
    undertaken by community development corporations.
    
    DATES: Application deadline. Applications must be physically received 
    at the address shown in the ADDRESSES section of this notice by 4:30 
    p.m. Eastern Standard Time on February 15, 1996. Applications faxed to 
    this address will not be accepted. The above-stated deadline date is 
    firm as to date, hour and place. In the interest of fairness to all 
    competing applicants, the Department will treat as ineligible for 
    consideration any application that is received after the deadline. 
    Applicants should take this practice into account and make early 
    submission of their materials to avoid any risk of loss of eligibility 
    brought about by unanticipated delays or other delivery-related 
    problems.
        Application kits may be requested from the address listed in the 
    ADDRESSES section of this notice.
        Bidder conference date. HUD will be holding a ``bidders'' 
    conference to explain, in more detail, the background behind this 
    solicitation and clarify application requirements. The conference will 
    be held on January 11, 1996. All interested applicants are encouraged 
    to attend this conference. For more information about this conference, 
    please call Jane Karadbil at (202) 708-1537 (this is not a toll free 
    number), or for the hearing impaired, TDD 1-800-877-TDDY.
    
    ADDRESSES: To obtain application kit. To obtain a copy of the 
    application kit, contact: Jane Karadbil, Office of University 
    Partnerships in the Office of Policy Development and Research, U.S. 
    Department of Housing and Urban Development, 451 7th Street S.W., Room 
    8110, Washington, D.C. 20410. Requests for application kits must be in 
    writing, but requests may be faxed to Ms. Karadbil at (202) 708-5536. 
    (This is not a toll free number.) Requests for application kits must 
    include the applicant's name, mailing address (including zip code), and 
    telephone number (including area code).
        To submit applications. Applications must be physically received by 
    the Office of University Partnerships, Office of Policy Development and 
    Research, U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, in care of 
    the Division of Budget, Contracts, and Program Control, in Room 8230 by 
    4:30 pm. Eastern Standard Time on February 15, 1996. Applications faxed 
    to this address will not be accepted.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Jane Karadbil, Office of University 
    Partnerships in the Office of Policy Development and Research, U.S. 
    Department of Housing and Urban Development, 451 7th Street, S.W., Room 
    8110, Washington, DC 20410. Telephone number (202) 708-1537 voice (this 
    is not a toll free number); 1-800-877-TDDY (TDD). Ms. Karadbil can also 
    be contacted via the Internet at JaneK._
    Karadbil@hud.gov.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    I. Paperwork Reduction Act Statement
    
        The information collection requirements contained in this notice 
    have been approved by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB), under 
    section 3504(h) of the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1980 (44 U.S.C. 3501-
    3520), and assigned OMB Control Number 2535-0084.
    
    II. General Information
    
        Today's urban professional graduates do not have the education or 
    skills to undertake complex, multi-disciplinary community building 
    projects--from loan packaging, to design skills, to community 
    organization to create real working partnerships with neighborhood 
    residents, to securing the necessary social services to promote self-
    sufficiency. And, too often, the brightest and the best of America's 
    young urban professionals do not view local governments, public housing 
    agencies, and community-based organizations as desirable employers, nor 
    distressed neighborhoods as places to apply their creativity. These 
    graduates are knowledgeable in the traditional methods of community 
    revitalization but need additional skills to become visionary community 
    builders, and they need an incentive to change the trajectory of their 
    career paths from ``real estate'' to community building.
        At present there are no graduate programs or fellowships to promote 
    comprehensive community building approaches. As the Federal agency 
    charged with nurturing and sustaining urban neighborhoods, HUD has 
    decided to take a catalyzing role in creating mechanisms to develop 
    these skills. The paucity of these kinds of professionals has created a 
    bottleneck in implementing important HUD programs.
        HUD is creating the Community Renaissance Fellowship program to (1) 
    meet this pressing need and (2) to support a new generation of 
    visionary, highly competent community building urban professionals. HUD 
    seeks to foster a cadre of professionals who can take the practical 
    experience gained working on community building and revitalization in 
    distressed public housing projects and urban neighborhoods and transfer 
    these skills to other complex neighborhood development projects. HUD 
    will be funding 20 Fellows for two-year Fellowships at a cost of $3 
    million (from technical assistance funding under the Public Housing 
    Modernization Technical Assistance program authorized by the 
    Department's FY 1995 Appropriations Act, Pub. L. 103-327, September 28, 
    1994) for their stipends and other expenses. These Fellows will be 
    placed in distressed public housing developments undergoing conversion, 
    for example, to mixed-income or mixed-use projects. HUD has also 
    reached out to private foundations with a stake in urban neighborhoods 
    to become potential partners and hopes to receive funding for up to an 
    additional 20 Fellows. These Fellows will be placed in community 
    development corporations undertaking similar large-scale urban physical 
    and human development projects.
        Since community building skills are evolving, there is a need to 
    ensure that the Fellows benefit from up-to-date information and 
    thinking on revitalization issues. Thus, there will be a strong 
    educational component to the program. The education the Fellows receive 
    will be provided through the highest quality courses and most respected 
    participating faculty in the country. Over the two years, the Fellows 
    will receive the equivalent of more than one full-time semester of 
    additional 
    
    [[Page 61635]]
    professional education in community-building skills.
        Subject to funding availability, HUD will be awarding a cooperative 
    agreement to a nationally known university to design an entirely new 
    path-breaking curriculum for the education component for the Fellows 
    program and offer it to the Fellows.
        The university selected must demonstrate that it currently offers 
    graduate courses in real estate and provides interdisciplinary 
    practical experiences for its graduate students.
    
        Dated: November 22, 1995.
    Michael A. Stegman,
    Assistant Secretary for Policy Development and Research.
    [FR Doc. 95-29228 Filed 11-29-95; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 4210-62-P
    
    

Document Information

Published:
11/30/1995
Department:
Housing and Urban Development Department
Entry Type:
Notice
Action:
Notice of request for cooperative agreement applications.
Document Number:
95-29228
Dates:
Application deadline. Applications must be physically received
Pages:
61634-61635 (2 pages)
Docket Numbers:
Docket No. FR-3960-N-01
PDF File:
95-29228.pdf