96-2015. Title I, Part CEducation of Migratory Children  

  • [Federal Register Volume 61, Number 22 (Thursday, February 1, 1996)]
    [Proposed Rules]
    [Pages 3772-3773]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 96-2015]
    
    
    
    
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    Part III
    
    
    
    
    
    Department of Education
    
    
    
    
    
    _______________________________________________________________________
    
    
    
    Office of Elementary and Secondary Education
    
    
    
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    34 CFR Part 201
    
    
    
    Title I, Part C--Education in Migratory Children; Proposed Rule
    
    Federal Register / Vol. 61, No. 22 / Thursday, February 1, 1996 / 
    Proposed Rules 
    
    [[Page 3772]]
    
    
    DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION
    
    Office of Elementary and Secondary Education
    
    34 CFR Part 201
    
    RIN 1830-ZA03
    
    
    Title I, Part C--Education of Migratory Children
    
    AGENCY: Department of Education.
    
    ACTION: Notice of proposed criteria for consortium incentive grants in 
    fiscal year (FY) 1996 and subsequent fiscal years, available under part 
    C of title I of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965.
    
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    SUMMARY: Under the authority of section 1308(d) of Title I of the 
    Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA), as amended by the 
    Improving America's Schools Act (IASA), the Assistant Secretary for 
    Elementary and Secondary Education (Assistant Secretary) proposes 
    criteria for awarding Migrant Education Program (MEP) consortium 
    incentive grants to State educational agencies (SEAs) with approved 
    consortium arrangements.
    
    DATES: Comments must be received on or before March 4, 1996.
    
    ADDRESSES: All comments concerning these proposed criteria should be 
    addressed to James English, U.S. Department of Education, 600 
    Independence Avenue, S.W., Portals Building, Room 4100, Washington, 
    D.C. 20202-6135. Comments may also be sent via FAX to (202) 205-0089 or 
    through the Internet to JamesXEnglish@ed.gov.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: James English. Telephone: (202) 260-
    1394. Individuals who use a telecommunications device for the deaf 
    (TDD) may call the Federal Information Relay Service (FIRS) at 1-800-
    877-8339 between 8 a.m. and 8 p.m., Eastern time, Monday through 
    Friday.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    Background
    
        The MEP, authorized in Title I, Part C of the ESEA, is a State-
    operated, formula grant program under which SEAs receive funds to 
    improve the academic achievement and welfare of migratory children who 
    reside in their States. Consistent with the emphasis that the 
    reauthorized ESEA places upon removing barriers to cross-program 
    coordination and integration of programs that serve migratory children, 
    sections 1303(d) and 1308(d) of the ESEA encourage SEAs to consider 
    whether consortium arrangements with other States or appropriate 
    entities would result in a more effective and efficient delivery of MEP 
    services.
        In this regard, section 1303(d) directs the Secretary to consult 
    with States whose MEP allocations in any year will be $1 million or 
    less about the desirability of forming consortia. This section also 
    directs the Secretary to approve any State's consortium proposal that 
    (1) reduces MEP administrative costs or program function costs, and (2) 
    increases the amount of MEP funds that are made available for direct 
    services to migratory children that add substantially to the 
    educational attainment or welfare of those children. While an SEA may 
    form a consortium arrangement with any appropriate entity, the 
    Secretary, in light of the strong interstate emphases in the MEP, 
    encourages SEAs to establish multi-State consortium arrangements.
        To encourage States to form consortium arrangements that meet the 
    requirements of section 1303(d), section 1308(d) of the ESEA directs 
    the Secretary to reserve up to $1.5 million of the funds appropriated 
    for the MEP for competitive incentive awards to SEAs with consortium 
    arrangements approved by the Secretary. Section 1308(d) also limits the 
    size of each of these grants to not more than $250,000, and provides 
    that not fewer than 10 grants be made to eligible SEAs with approved 
    consortium arrangements whose MEP allocations are less than $1 million. 
    While the provision offers all States an incentive to participate in 
    consortium arrangements, it was enacted particularly to benefit those 
    States that, because of the small size of their MEP allocations, may 
    have particular difficulty in both administering the MEP and providing 
    direct services to migratory children.
        Last year, for FY 1995, the Department exercised its authority 
    under section 437(d)(1) of the General Education Provisions Act (GEPA) 
    to waive public comment on the criteria and process for first-year 
    implementation of the consortium incentive grant program. The notice of 
    final criteria for the FY 1995 grants was published in the Federal 
    Register on March 30, 1995. FY 1995 awards went to 15 SEAs 
    participating in five approved consortium arrangements.
        Based on the Department's experience with the FY 1995 grants and 
    subsequent discussions with staff from SEAs that applied or considered 
    applying last year, the Secretary proposes to continue using the same 
    criteria and process, as follows, in order to award the consortium 
    incentive grants authorized under section 1308(d) of the ESEA in FY 
    1996 and subsequent fiscal years:
    
    Eligibility for Consortium Incentive Grants
    
        The Secretary will reserve $1.5 million to implement this 
    consortium incentive grant program in FY 1996. For subsequent fiscal 
    years, the Secretary shall announce, in the Federal Register, the 
    amount of funds that will be available under this grant authority.
        The Secretary will use a variety of methods, including meetings and 
    telephone calls, to discuss with SEA officials in States receiving MEP 
    allocations of less than $1 million, the circumstances in which 
    consortium arrangements might enhance their programs for migratory 
    children.
        Consistent with section 1303(d), a consortium arrangement will be 
    approved if it (1) reduces the overall amount of MEP administrative or 
    program function costs across the participating SEAs from the amount 
    that would be incurred in the absence of the consortium, and (2) makes 
    more funds available, in total across the participating SEAs, for 
    direct educational or support services to migratory children, so as to 
    add substantially to their welfare or educational attainment than would 
    have been available in the absence of the consortium.
        For purposes of section 1303(d), ``administrative or program 
    function costs'' include all costs that an SEA or its local operating 
    agencies pay from MEP funds to support MEP activities other than direct 
    educational or support services for migratory children. Administrative 
    and program function costs would include the costs of general program 
    administration paid from funds reserved under section 1603(c) of ESEA, 
    as well as the costs of other, program-specific administrative 
    activities, such as identification and recruitment, interstate, 
    intrastate, and interagency coordination, and parent advisory councils. 
    The term ``direct educational or support services'' means any 
    instructional or support activities provided directly to migratory 
    children, as well as training of instructional or support staff who 
    provide instructional or support services directly to migratory 
    children. For purposes of section 1303(d), the term ``other appropriate 
    entity'' can mean any public or private agency or organization.
        A single SEA may be part of more than one consortium arrangement. 
    However, consistent with section 1303(d) of the ESEA, each consortium 
    arrangement that the Secretary approves must separately decrease the 
    amount of 
    
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    MEP administrative or program function costs in total for the 
    participating SEAs and, conversely, increase the amount of MEP funds 
    available for direct services to migratory children in total for the 
    participating SEAs. An SEA will submit the information that the 
    Department needs to review and approve the SEA's consortium 
    arrangement, and determine the size of the SEA's consortium incentive 
    grant, through its MEP-specific application or in conjunction with the 
    optional consolidated State plan under section 14302 of the ESEA.
    
    Amount of Incentive Grants
    
        Each SEA with one or more consortium arrangements that the 
    Secretary determines meet the criteria in section 1303(d) of the ESEA, 
    and whose consortium arrangements increase the amount of MEP funds 
    available for direct services to migratory children in its State, will 
    receive one incentive award. In determining the size of an SEA's award, 
    the Secretary will rank SEAs seeking incentive grants on the basis of 
    the total percentage increase in MEP funds that the SEA will make 
    available for direct services to migratory children in its State as a 
    result of the SEA's participation in the consortium arrangements, as 
    compared to the level of direct services that would be made available 
    to migratory children in the State in the absence of the consortia.
        Example I: SEA A has one consortium arrangement that increases 
    the amount of funds available for direct services in State A by 10 
    percent, while SEA B has two consortium arrangements that increase 
    the total amount of funds available for direct services in State B 
    by 8 percent. SEA A would be ranked higher than SEA B even if SEA 
    B's consortium arrangements permit more total funds to be used for 
    direct services.
        Example II: SEA C and SEA D participate together in one 
    consortium and this consortium is the only one in which each SEA 
    participates. If the amount available for direct services increases 
    in total across the two States due to participation in the 
    consortium, but the amount available for direct services in State C 
    does not increase, the consortium arrangement will be approved, but 
    only State D, and not State C, will receive an incentive grant.
        From the information that an SEA submits, the Department will 
    calculate, for each State, the total percentage increase in MEP funds 
    available for direct services as a result of all the approved 
    consortium arrangements in which the applicant SEA participates. The 
    Department will then rank these percentages in descending order and 
    divide the distribution into thirds (that is, into terciles). Each SEA 
    ranked in the highest third of the distribution will receive an 
    incentive grant that is three times the size of the grant received by 
    each SEA ranked in the lowest third, while each SEA ranked in the 
    middle third will receive an incentive grant that is twice the size of 
    that provided to each SEA ranked in the lowest third. Within each 
    third, grant awards will be of equal size, except that adjustments will 
    be made so that no consortium incentive grant will be greater than 
    $250,000 or 100 percent of the amount of funds awarded to the SEA under 
    its formula grant allocation, whichever is less.
        An SEA may use incentive grant funds awarded under section 1308(d) 
    of the ESEA only to provide direct services to migratory children. 
    These funds are in addition to, and not in place of, the funds awarded 
    under the MEP formula grant.
        The Secretary implements section 1308(d) in this way in order to 
    (1) reward all SEAs whose participation in consortium arrangements 
    increases direct services to migratory children in their State, (2) 
    provide larger awards to those SEAs whose consortium arrangements most 
    enhance their capacity to deliver direct services, and (3) ensure that 
    funds under this program are available to SEAs as soon as possible.
    
    Applicability of the Education Department General Administrative 
    Regulations (EDGAR)
    
        In view of the process that the Department proposes to use to 
    obtain information on proposed SEA consortium arrangements, and the 
    criteria it proposes to use to determine, by formula, the amount of 
    consortium incentive grant that each applicant SEA will receive, the 
    regulations in 34 CFR Part 75 (Direct Grant Programs of the Education 
    Department General Administrative Regulations (EDGAR)) do not apply. 
    Instead, the consortium incentive grant program will be administered, 
    like the MEP itself, under the provisions of 34 CFR Parts 76, 77, 79, 
    80, and 85 of EDGAR.
    
    Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
    
        These proposed criteria have been examined under the Paperwork 
    Reduction Act of 1995 and have been found to contain no information 
    collection requirements.
    
    Intergovernmental Review
    
        The MEP is subject to the requirements of Executive Order 12372 and 
    the regulations in 34 CFR part 79. The objective of the Executive order 
    is to foster an intergovernmental partnership and a strengthened 
    federalism by relying on processes developed by State and local 
    governments for coordination and review of proposed Federal financial 
    assistance.
        In accordance with this order, this document is intended to provide 
    early notification of the Department's specific plans and actions for 
    this program.
    
    Invitation to Comment
    
        Interested persons are invited to submit comments and 
    recommendations regarding these proposed criteria. The Secretary is 
    particularly interested in views from applicants for and recipients of 
    FY 1995 consortium incentive grant awards.
        All comments submitted in response to these proposed criteria will 
    be available for public inspection, during and after the comment 
    period, in Room 4100, 1250 Maryland Avenue, S.W., Washington, D.C., 
    between the hours of 8:30 a.m. and 4:00 p.m., Monday through Friday of 
    each week except Federal holidays.
    
    (Program Authority: 20 U.S.C. 6393(d), 6398(d))
    
    (Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance Number: 84.011, Migratory 
    Education Basic State Formula Grant Program)
    
        Dated: January 24, 1996.
    Gerald N. Tirozzi,
    Acting Assistant Secretary for Elementary and Secondary Education.
    [FR Doc. 96-2015 Filed 1-31-96; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 4000-01-P
    
    

Document Information

Published:
02/01/1996
Department:
Education Department
Entry Type:
Proposed Rule
Action:
Notice of proposed criteria for consortium incentive grants in fiscal year (FY) 1996 and subsequent fiscal years, available under part C of title I of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965.
Document Number:
96-2015
Dates:
Comments must be received on or before March 4, 1996.
Pages:
3772-3773 (2 pages)
RINs:
1830-ZA03
PDF File:
96-2015.pdf
CFR: (1)
34 CFR 201