99-4004. Public Housing Drug Elimination Program Formula Allocation; Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking  

  • [Federal Register Volume 64, Number 32 (Thursday, February 18, 1999)]
    [Proposed Rules]
    [Pages 8210-8212]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 99-4004]
    
    
    
    [[Page 8209]]
    
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    Part V
    
    
    
    
    
    Department of Housing and Urban Development
    
    
    
    
    
    _______________________________________________________________________
    
    
    
    24 CFR Part 761
    
    
    
    Public Housing Drug Elimination Program Formula Allocation; Proposed 
    Rule
    
    Federal Register / Vol. 64, No. 32 / Thursday, February 18, 1999 / 
    Proposed Rules
    
    [[Page 8210]]
    
    
    
    DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT
    
    24 CFR Part 761
    
    [Docket No. FR-4451-A-01]
    RIN 2577-AB95
    
    
    Public Housing Drug Elimination Program Formula Allocation; 
    Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
    
    AGENCY: Office of the Assistant Secretary for Public and Indian 
    Housing, HUD.
    
    ACTION: Advance notice of proposed rulemaking.
    
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    SUMMARY: This document announces HUD's intention to develop, through 
    proposed rulemaking, a formula allocation funding for HUD's Public and 
    Indian Housing Drug Elimination Program. HUD believes that formula 
    funding, as opposed to competitive funding, provides a more timely, 
    predictable and equitable allocation of funds. HUD solicits comments in 
    advance of this rulemaking on a method, components of a method, or 
    methods that would result in reliable and equitable funding to public 
    housing agencies with drug elimination programs and ensure that this 
    funding is allocated to agencies meeting certain performance standards.
    
    DATES: Comment Due Date: March 22, 1999.
    
    ADDRESSES: Interested persons are invited to submit comments to the 
    Rules Docket Clerk, Office of the General Counsel, Room 10276, 
    Department of Housing and Urban Development, 451 Seventh Street, SW, 
    Washington, DC 20410-0500. Communications should refer to the above 
    docket number and title. Facsimile (FAX) responses are not acceptable. 
    A copy of each response will be available for public inspection and 
    copying during regular business hours (7:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Eastern 
    Time at the above address).
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Sonia Burgos, Director, Office of 
    Crime Prevention and Security, Office of Public and Indian Housing, 
    Department of Housing and Urban Development, 451 Seventh Street, SW, 
    Washington, DC 20410; telephone (202) 708-1197 (this is not a toll-free 
    number). Hearing or speech-impaired individuals may access this number 
    via TTY by calling the toll-free Federal Information Relay Service at 
    1-800-877-8339.
    
    SUPPLEMENTAL INFORMATION:
    
    Background
    
        Section 586 of the Quality Housing and Work Responsibility Act of 
    1998 (Pub.L. 105-276, 112 Stat. 2461, approved October 21, 1998) 
    (QHWRA) makes certain amendments to the Public and Assisted Housing 
    Drug Elimination Act of 1990, and these amendments include some 
    important changes to HUD's Public Housing Drug Elimination Program 
    (PHDEP). The amendments to the PHDEP include authorizing the Secretary 
    to make renewable grants. Specifically, section 586(e)(6) provides for 
    a new section (b) to be added to section 5125 of the Anti-Drug Abuse 
    Act of 1988 (42 U.S.C. 11904). This new language provides as follows:
    
        An eligible applicant that is a public housing agency may apply 
    for a 1-year grant under this chapter that, subject to the 
    availability of appropriated amounts, shall be renewed annually for 
    a period of not more than 4 additional years, except that such 
    renewal shall be contingent upon the Secretary finding, upon an 
    annual or more frequent review, that the grantee agency is 
    performing under the terms of the grant and applicable laws, in a 
    satisfactory manner and meets such other requirements as the 
    Secretary may prescribe. The Secretary may adjust the amount of any 
    grant received or renewed under this paragraph to take into account 
    increases or decreases in amounts appropriated for these purposes or 
    such other factors as the Secretary determines appropriate.
    
        Section 586 also provides that the Secretary of HUD may not provide 
    drug elimination assistance to an applicant that is a public housing 
    agency unless the agency will use the grants to continue or expand drug 
    elimination activities, as in effect before October 1, 1998. The 
    Secretary of HUD is to provide preference in funding to these public 
    housing agencies, but this preference does not preclude selection by 
    the Secretary of other meritorious public housing agencies that need 
    funding to address urgent or serious crime problems.
        Section 586 further provides that the Secretary of HUD shall, by 
    regulation, issued after notice and opportunity for public comment, 
    issue criteria for establishing a class of public housing agencies that 
    have urgent or serious crime problems.
        In Senate colloquy before passage of QHWRA, Senator Mack noted that 
    the amendments made to the Public and Assisted Housing Drug Elimination 
    Act of 1990 represent a significant improvement in the program. The 
    Senator stated:
    
        The amendments will provide renewable grants for agencies that 
    meet performance standards established by HUD. In addition, housing 
    authorities with urgent or serious crime needs are protected and 
    will be assured an equitable amount of funding.
        * * * [T]he intent of these provisions is to provide more 
    certain funding for agencies with clear needs for funds and to 
    assure that both current funding recipients and other agencies with 
    more urgent or serious crime problems are appropriately assisted by 
    the program. The provisions will also reduce the administrative 
    costs of the current application process which entails a substantial 
    paperwork burden for agencies and HUD. Under the terms of the 
    amendments, HUD can establish a fixed funding mechanism in which the 
    relative needs of housing authorities are addressed with a greater 
    amount of certainty. (Congressional Record of October 8, 1998, 
    S.11842)
    
        Based upon the language of the statute and the Senate colloquy, HUD 
    believes that the intent of Congress can best be carried out by a 
    formula distribution of funds that covers both housing authorities with 
    renewable grants and those with urgent or serious crime-related needs. 
    The proposed formula however would not be applicable to statutory set-
    asides that specify other funding methods.
    
    This Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
    
        The proposed rule that HUD intends to issue will both establish the 
    performance criteria required by section 586 of the QHWRA and provide 
    the method of need-based formula funding. Therefore HUD solicits 
    comments on the following issues and proposals pertaining to the 
    methods of the need based formula in advance of issuance of the 
    proposed rule. HUD recognizes that issues of performance will have a 
    major effect on a formula system, and it is developing issues and 
    positions for which it will seek comment in a proposed rule that 
    combines both technical formula issues and performance issues in one 
    funding system. HUD's preferences for the options provided are noted 
    below. The location on the internet of results of a formula based on 
    HUD's stated preferences is also noted below.
    
    A. How To Determine ``Renewable Agencies''--Options for Consideration
    
        Option A.1. Subject to ongoing performance reviews, include all 
    housing agencies as renewable agencies that successfully competed for 
    funding in FY 1998.
        Option A.2. Subject to ongoing performance reviews and additional 
    capacity requirements, include all housing agencies that successfully 
    competed for funding in at least one of the following years: FY 1996, 
    FY 1997 or FY 1998.
        HUD Preference. HUD prefers Option 2. HUD believes that an agency 
    that
    
    [[Page 8211]]
    
    successfully competed for funding between FY 1996 and FY 1998 and that 
    meets performance standards has recently shown both need and capacity.
    
    B. How To Determine New Renewable Agencies with Urgent Needs--Options 
    for Consideration
    
        Option B.1. Subject to ongoing performance reviews and subject to 
    additional capacity requirements, include in a formula distribution a 
    smaller number of housing agencies that have not been recently funded 
    and that meet an established threshold of need of PHDEP funding.
        Option B.2. Subject to ongoing performance reviews and subject to 
    additional capacity requirements, include a smaller number of housing 
    agencies that have not been recently funded and that make a case in a 
    competition for a serious and urgent need for PHDEP funding.
        HUD Preference. HUD prefers Option 1. HUD believes that a formula 
    distribution method will be more timely and predictable than the 
    competition provided in Option 2. (Since almost all large housing 
    agencies would qualify as renewable agencies under Option A.2, housing 
    agencies that would qualify as the new renewable agencies under the 
    method of Option B.1 are generally small housing agencies.)
    
    C. How To Determine Funding for Renewable Agencies With Urgent Need--
    Issues for Consideration
    
        Option C.1. A subset of renewable agencies with urgent needs may be 
    funded by creating a standardized threshold, based on the distribution 
    of all housing agencies on a criterion such as the index of the rate of 
    violent crimes of the community multiplied by the average number of 
    bedrooms per unit of the housing agency. For the minority of housing 
    agencies lacking community-wide violent crime data, impute data based 
    on the average values of comparable communities with data where 
    comparable communities have a certain size in the State or region (and, 
    if data are available, some other characteristics). Agencies exceeding 
    the threshold would receive additional formula funding. In broad terms, 
    agencies under the threshold of need will receive no funding under this 
    factor and agencies just above the threshold will receive modest 
    funding under this factor and agencies well above the threshold will 
    receive very high funding under this factor.
        Option C.2. Allow all renewable agencies to be funded under the 
    ``urgent need'' factor through an index of the rate of violent crimes 
    of the community multiplied by the average number of bedrooms per unit 
    of the housing agency, and then allow the factor to target more funds 
    to housing agencies with relatively urgent needs. By contrast to Option 
    C.1., agencies under the threshold of need in Option C.2. will receive 
    some funding under this factor and agencies just above the threshold 
    will receive moderate funding under this factor and agencies well above 
    the threshold will receive high funding under this factor (but not as 
    much relative to what they would receive under Option C.1.).
        HUD Preference. HUD prefers Option C.1. The subset of urgent need 
    agencies follows closely the intention of the statute. At the same 
    time, HUD prefers that the factor for this subset be subsumed into a 
    funding system that covers all renewable agencies (please see the 
    discussion in Option D.2 below.)
    
    D. Funding Renewable Agencies versus Urgent Need Agencies--Issues for 
    Consideration
    
        Option D.1. Have two pools of funds based on the relative share of 
    needs of the two categories of agencies (renewable agencies and urgent 
    need agencies) and fund them by different criteria.
        Option D.2. Have a combined funding system that has different 
    factors (weighted up to 100 percent) that applies to the universe of 
    agencies to be funded and that also reflects their relative needs.
        HUD Preference. HUD prefers Option D.2. This option is the easiest 
    to understand and the easiest to compute. In this option, the weights 
    and funding impacts of the different factors are explicit.
    
    E. Standard Factors for Funding Agencies--Options for Consideration
    
        Standard factors that may be included in a formula for PHDEP 
    funding are:
        Option E.1. A minimum floor of $25,000 per year.
        Option.E.2. The share of funding (or average share) provided to the 
    housing agency during Fiscal Years 1996, 1997 and 1998.
        Option E.3. The housing agency's share of units.
        Option E.4. The housing agency's share of units multiplied by an 
    index of the average number of bedrooms per unit.
        Option E.5. The housing agency's share of units multiplied by the 
    positive difference, if any, between the housing agency's score and the 
    unit-weighted median score of all housing agencies on the following 
    index: the rate of violent crimes of the community multiplied by the 
    average number of bedrooms per unit of the housing agency. The rate of 
    violent crimes is capped at twice the median of the unit weighted 
    scores across all housing agencies. To better understand how this 
    calculation works, please see HUD's posting of a format statement of 
    its method with a printout of data and estimated formula amounts at 
    HUD's website at http://www.hud.gov/pih/legis/titlev.html.
        Option E.6. The housing agency's share of units multiplied by both 
    the rate of the violent crimes of its community and by the average 
    number of bedrooms per unit of the housing agency. The rate of violent 
    crimes is capped at twice the median of the unit weighted scores across 
    all housing agencies.
        HUD Preference. To address the statutory goal of predictable and 
    equitable funding, HUD prefers a formula system that includes the 
    factors of Options E.1, 3, 4 and 5. For a weighted formula system, HUD 
    prefers that the factor in Option E.3 be weighted .25; that the factor 
    in Option E.4 be weighted .50, and that the factor in Option E.5 be 
    weighted .25. HUD also prefers a minimum floor of $25,000. All of HUD's 
    preferences expressed in this notice are illustrated by the format 
    statement with a printout of the data and estimated formula amounts 
    that was referred to earlier and that is posted at HUD's website at 
    http://www.hud.gov/pih/legis/titlev.html.
    
    F. Impact of a Housing Agency's Performance on Funding--Issues for 
    Consideration
    
        Option F.1. Housing agencies that do not meet performance criteria 
    will have their funds for a given year returned to other housing 
    agencies--either to the pool of funds for renewable agencies or to the 
    pool of fund for urgent need agencies or to a combined pool.
        Option F.2. Housing agencies with excessive funds that are unspent 
    or unobligated, for reasons within their control, will have their funds 
    for a given year reduced in proportion to the extent of unspent or 
    unobligated funds.
        HUD Preference. HUD has no preference at this time.
    
    Solicitation of Comments
    
        HUD is requesting interested housing agencies and other interested 
    members of the public to submit public comments on the options and 
    issues for consideration of formula funding for PHDEP presented in this 
    notice, including applicable performance criteria. HUD also welcomes 
    additional options and issues that housing agencies or other members of 
    the public believe
    
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    that HUD should consider in developing a formula funding method. 
    Further, HUD welcomes any formula methods that housing agencies or 
    other interested members of the public have devised and for which they 
    request HUD's consideration. Public comments received in response to 
    this notice will be considered in the development of HUD's proposed 
    rule on formula funding for PHDEP.
    
    Executive Order 12866
    
        The Office of Management and Budget (OMB) has reviewed this 
    advanced notice of proposed rulemaking (ANPR) under Executive Order 
    12866, Regulatory Planning and Review, issued by the President on 
    September 30, 1993. Any changes made in this ANPR subsequent to its 
    submission to OMB are identified in the docket file, which is available 
    for public inspection during regular business hours in the Office of 
    the Rules Docket Clerk, Office of the General Counsel, Room 10276, U.S. 
    Department of Housing and Urban Development, 451 Seventh Street, SW, 
    Washington, DC 20410.
    
        Dated: February 9, 1999.
    Deborah Vincent,
    General Deputy Assistant Secretary for Public and Indian Housing.
    [FR Doc. 99-4004 Filed 2-17-99; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 4210-33-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Published:
02/18/1999
Department:
Housing and Urban Development Department
Entry Type:
Proposed Rule
Action:
Advance notice of proposed rulemaking.
Document Number:
99-4004
Pages:
8210-8212 (3 pages)
Docket Numbers:
Docket No. FR-4451-A-01
RINs:
2577-AB95: Public Housing Drug Elimination Program -- Formula Allocation (FR-4451)
RIN Links:
https://www.federalregister.gov/regulations/2577-AB95/public-housing-drug-elimination-program-formula-allocation-fr-4451-
PDF File:
99-4004.pdf
CFR: (1)
24 CFR 761