95-4449. NOFA for the John Heinz Neighborhood Development Program  

  • [Federal Register Volume 60, Number 37 (Friday, February 24, 1995)]
    [Notices]
    [Pages 10438-10443]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 95-4449]
    
    
    
    
    [[Page 10437]]
    
    _______________________________________________________________________
    
    Part III
    
    
    
    
    
    Department of Housing and Urban Development
    
    
    
    
    
    _______________________________________________________________________
    
    
    
    Office of the Assistant Secretary for Community Planning and 
    Development
    
    
    
    _______________________________________________________________________
    
    
    
    John Heinz Neighborhood Development Program; Funding Availability; 
    Notice
    
    Federal Register / Vol. 60, No. 37 / Friday, February 24, 1995 / 
    Notices 
    [[Page 10438]] 
    
    DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT
    
    Office of the Assistant Secretary for Community Planning and 
    Development
    [Docket No. N-95-3877; FR-3855-N-01]
    
    
    NOFA for the John Heinz Neighborhood Development Program
    
    AGENCY: Office of the Assistant Secretary for Community Planning and 
    Development, HUD.
    
    ACTION: Notice of funding availability for Fiscal Year 1995.
    
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    SUMMARY: This NOFA announces the availability of $4,750,000 in funding 
    for the FY 1995 John Heinz Neighborhood Development Program. Interested 
    persons should apply for FY 1995 program funds according to the 
    procedures and requirements set out in this NOFA.
        In the body of this NOFA is information concerning:
        (1) This year's round of funding for this program;
        (2) The purposes and objectives of the program;
        (3) The method of allocation and distribution of funds;
        (4) Eligibility requirements for neighborhood development 
    organizations;
        (5) Eligible neighborhood development activities;
        (6) Selection criteria for the award of funds;
        (7) Application requirements for the funds;
        (8) Grantee reporting requirements; and
        (9) Other applicable administrative requirements associated with 
    the program.
    
    DATES: Applications may be requested beginning February 24, 1995. 
    Completed applications must be submitted no later than 4:30 p.m. 
    (Eastern Time), by the date specified in the application kit. The 
    application deadline will be firm as to date and hour. 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.
    
    ADDRESSES: To obtain a copy of the application kit, call: American 
    Communities at 1-800-998-9999, or fax your request to: (301) 251-5747 
    (this is not a toll-free number). Speech- or hearing-impaired persons 
    may request an application by contacting the TDD number: (202) 708-2565 
    (not a toll-free number), as listed under the
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT heading in this NOFA. Faxed requests 
    for application kits must include the applicant's name, mailing address 
    (including zip code), telephone number (including area code), and must 
    refer to FR-3855. Completed applications may not be submitted by fax.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ophelia Wilson or Gene Hix, Office of 
    Community Planning and Development, Department of Housing and Urban 
    Development, Room 7218, 451 Seventh Street, S.W., Washington, D.C. 
    20410; telephone number (202) 708-1189 and (202) 708-2565 (TDD). (These 
    numbers are not toll-free.)
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    Paperwork Reduction Act
        The information collection requirements contained in this Notice 
    have been approved by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) under 
    the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1980. The control number for information 
    collections described in this document is 2535-0084.
    
    I. Purpose and Substantive Description
    
    A. Authority
    
        Section 123 of the Housing and Urban-Rural Recovery Act of 1983 (42 
    U.S.C. 5318 note) (Section 123) authorized the John Heinz Neighborhood 
    Development Program. For Fiscal Year 1995, a total of $5 million has 
    been appropriated for this program under the Departments of Veterans 
    Affairs and Housing and Urban Development and Independent Agencies 
    Appropriations Act, 1995 (Pub. L. 103-327, approved September 28, 
    1994).
        Section 123(e)(6)(D) permits the Secretary of Housing and Urban 
    Development (Secretary) to use no more than five percent of the funds 
    appropriated for administrative or other expenses in connection with 
    the program. The remaining funds are to be used to match monetary 
    support raised over a one-year grant period from individuals, 
    businesses, neighborhood development funding organizations, and 
    nonprofit or other organizations located within established 
    neighborhood boundaries. For purposes of this NOFA the term 
    ``neighborhood development funding organization'' means:
        (1) A depository institution, the accounts of which are insured 
    pursuant to the Federal Credit Union Act, and any subsidiary (as such 
    term is defined in section 3(w) of the Federal Deposit Insurance Act) 
    thereof;
        (2) A depository institution holding company and any subsidiary (as 
    such term is defined in section 3(w) of the Federal Deposit Insurance 
    Act) thereof; or
        (3) A company at least 75 percent of the common stock of which is 
    owned by one or more insured depository institutions or depository 
    institution holding companies.
        The purpose of the program is to support eligible neighborhood 
    development activities using cooperative efforts and monetary 
    contributions from local sources. The Federal funds are incentive funds 
    to promote neighborhood development initiatives and to encourage 
    neighborhood organizations to become more self-sufficient in their 
    development activities. Not more than 50 percent of the 1995 awards may 
    be to previous grantees in the program; the remaining awards will be 
    made to organizations selected from among new applicants. Applications 
    will be selected for funding on the basis of evaluation criteria that 
    reflect the program purposes and priorities and are contained in this 
    notice.
        The objectives of the Neighborhood Development Program are:
    --To help neighborhood development organizations increase their 
    capacities to carry out larger or more complex activities, in 
    cooperation with private and public institutions; and
    --To assist neighborhood development organizations to achieve long-term 
    financial support for their activities. The activities must benefit 
    low-income persons within the neighborhood.
    
    B. Allocation Amounts
    
        The Department will make grants, in the form of matching funds, to 
    eligible neighborhood development organizations. Under Section 
    123(e)(3), a grantee organization may receive no more than $75,000 in 
    Federal matching funds in a single program year. HUD reserves the right 
    to make grants for less than the maximum amount. When the amount of 
    funds requested is greater than the amount of funds appropriated, HUD 
    also reserves the right to consider the degree an applicant has 
    previously been funded under the John Heinz Program, and greater 
    consideration may be given to those organizations which have received 
    the least amount of funding under this program.
        The amount of Federal matching funds that an applicant receives 
    during the program year will depend in part upon the amount of monetary 
    [[Page 10439]] contributions raised in the preceding quarter of the 
    program year from individuals, businesses, neighborhood development 
    funding organizations, and nonprofit and other organizations located 
    within established neighborhood boundaries. Contributions attributable 
    to organizations or persons not residing in or conducting business 
    within the grantee's neighborhood, loans, in-kind services, 
    contributions by owners of properties to be improved, fees for 
    services, public funds, and any in-lieu-of-cash contributions cannot be 
    used to match Federal funds. These contributions may, however, be used 
    to carry out project activities. The neighborhood monetary 
    contributions for matching purposes must be raised within the one-year 
    grant period. However, grant activities may be programmed over a one- 
    to three-year period.
        A Federal matching ratio will be established for each participating 
    applicant in accordance with the statutory requirement that the highest 
    ratios be established for neighborhoods having the greatest degree of 
    economic distress. Subject to the statutory maximum of $75,000, the 
    Federal match for this program year will range from one to six Federal 
    dollars for each qualifying dollar raised by the grantee. Applications 
    selected to receive Federal funds will be rank-ordered and the matching 
    ratios will be determined in accordance with this criterion. The 
    Department also reserves the right to fund applications, in other than 
    rank order, on the basis of achieving geographic balance.
        Any application selected for the award of Federal funds that 
    proposed a matching funds ratio in excess of the ratio HUD determines 
    for it will be offered an award of funds at the HUD determined ratio. 
    However, any application selected for award that proposed a match below 
    the maximum ratio HUD determines for it will be funded at the level 
    proposed by the applicant.
        Federal payments to participating neighborhood organizations will 
    be made on a quarterly basis following receipt of quarterly performance 
    and financial reports. The maximum Federal payment to an applicant will 
    be governed by the amount of verified, qualifying monetary 
    contributions received from local sources in the preceding quarter, 
    multiplied by the matching funds ratio established for the 
    neighborhood. Ten percent of the total grant award will be held pending 
    receipt of the final report and close-out documentation.
    
    C. Eligibility
    
    1. Eligible Applicants--Definition
        An eligible neighborhood development organization must be located 
    in and serve the neighborhood for which assistance is to be provided. 
    It cannot be a city-wide organization, a multi-neighborhood consortium, 
    or, in general, an organization serving a large area of the city. The 
    applicant must meet all of the following statutory requirements:
        (a) The applicant must be incorporated as a private, voluntary, 
    nonprofit corporation under the laws of the State in which it operates;
        (b) The applicant must be responsible through a governing body to 
    the residents of the neighborhood it serves. Not less than 51 percent 
    of the members of the governing body must be residents of the 
    neighborhood;
        (c) The applicant must have conducted business for at least one 
    year before the date of its application;
        (d) The applicant must operate within an area that meets at least 
    one of the following criteria:
        (i) The area meets the requirements for Federal assistance under 
    section 119 of the Housing and Community Development Act of 1974 (Urban 
    Development Action Grants);
        (ii) The area is designated as an empowerment zone or an enterprise 
    community under Federal law;
        (iii) The area is designated as an enterprise zone under State law, 
    and is recognized by the Secretary as a State enterprise zone for 
    purposes of this section; or
        (iv) The area is a qualified distressed community within the 
    meaning of section 233(b)(1) of the Bank Enterprise Act of 1991; and
        (e) The applicant must have conducted one or more eligible 
    neighborhood development activities that primarily benefit low-income 
    persons, as defined in section 102(a)(20) of the Housing and Community 
    Development Act of 1974. (In general, low-income residents means 
    families and individuals whose incomes do not exceed 50 percent of the 
    median income of the area involved.)
    2. Eligible Applicants--Other Threshold Requirements
        In addition, an applicant must:
        (a) Specify a business/management plan for accomplishing one or 
    more of the activities listed in Section I.C(3), Eligible Activities, 
    of this NOFA;
        (b) Specify a strategy for achieving greater long-term private 
    sector support, especially in cooperation with a neighborhood 
    development funding organization. An applicant that is otherwise 
    eligible will be deemed to have the full benefit of the cooperation of 
    a neighborhood development funding organization if the eligible 
    applicant:
        (i) Is located in an area described in paragraph (d) of Section 
    I.C(1) of this NOFA (Eligible Applicants--Definition) that does not 
    contain a neighborhood development funding organization; or
        (ii) Demonstrates that it has been unable to obtain the cooperation 
    of any neighborhood development funding organization in the area 
    despite having made a good faith effort to obtain such cooperation; and
        (c) Specifies a strategy for increasing the capacity of the 
    applicant.
    3. Eligible Activities
        Eligible activities include the following, but are not limited to 
    the examples given:
        (a) Developing economic development activities that include:
        (i) Creating permanent jobs in the neighborhood; and
        (ii) Establishing or expanding businesses within the neighborhood 
    (such as a business incubator);
        (b) Developing new housing, rehabilitating existing housing, or 
    managing housing stock within the neighborhood;
        (c) Developing delivery mechanisms for essential services that have 
    lasting benefits to the neighborhood. Examples include fair housing 
    counseling services, child care centers, youth training, and health 
    services; or
        (d) Planning, promoting, or financing voluntary neighborhood 
    improvement efforts, such as, but not limited to:
        (i) Establishing a neighborhood credit union, demolishing abandoned 
    buildings, removing abandoned cars, and establishing an on-going street 
    and alley cleanup program;
        (ii) Strategic planning to integrate housing, economic development, 
    essential services, the remediation of hazards (such as brownfields), 
    and neighborhood urban design activities; and
        (iii) Integrating neighborhood strategic planning or community-
    based projects into city- and metropolitan-wide planning or service 
    delivery, as a means of establishing linkages with city and 
    metropolitan planning, job markets, and service delivery mechanisms in 
    other areas within the metropolitan region.
    
    D. Selection Criteria/Ranking Factors
    
        Applications will be evaluated on the basis of the following 
    factors. In addition, two (2) bonus points will be added in determining 
    the final score for an application submitted by an 
    [[Page 10440]] applicant that is located in a Federal Empowerment Zone 
    or Enterprise Community. Every applicant is encouraged to demonstrate 
    how its program activities will enhance citizen involvement in the 
    development of the locality's Consolidated Plan. Further, HUD is 
    interested in supporting activities of applicants that have 
    demonstrated capacity to engage citizens in planning and program 
    implementation initiatives that benefit neighborhoods, but have not 
    previously participated in this program.
        (1) The degree of economic distress within the neighborhood served 
    by the applicant and the extent to which the proposed activities will 
    benefit persons of low-income residing in the neighborhood. The degree 
    of economic distress is based on the percentage of poverty within the 
    neighborhood area, as determined from the 1990 U.S. Census data. 
    Applicants with the highest poverty level relative to their population 
    will be given higher points. (25 points)
        (2) The record of past performance and staff capability in carrying 
    out one or more of the activities specified under Section I.C(3), 
    Eligible Activities, of this NOFA, and in promoting fair housing, equal 
    employment opportunity, and minority-owned business entrepreneurial 
    opportunities. (20 points)
        (3) The quality of the management/business plan submitted for 
    accomplishing the activities proposed by the applicant, including the 
    budget and budget narrative, fundraising plan and matching ratio, and 
    evidence of a sound financial management system. (25 points)
        (4) The extent of neighborhood residents' participation in the 
    activities of the applicant; the level of coordination with local 
    governments, which may be evidenced through a certification from the 
    Chief Executive Officer of the unit of local government; and the extent 
    of participation of a neighborhood development funding organization in 
    the proposed activities. (20 points)
        (5) The extent to which the applicant has developed a strategy to 
    increase its capacity to carry out larger or more complex project 
    activities and to address its long-term financial and organizational 
    development needs. (10 points)
    
    E. Determination of Ratio for Federal Contribution
    
        The Secretary will determine the ratio by which Federal funds will 
    be used to match monetary contributions made to each eligible applicant 
    that is selected for funding under this NOFA. The ratio will be based 
    on the degree of economic distress. Neighborhoods indicating the 
    greatest degree of economic distress will be assigned higher ratios 
    under this factor than those with lesser degrees of economic distress.
    
    F. Environmental Reviews
    
        HUD will conduct the appropriate environmental review and comply 
    with all the environmental requirements in 24 CFR Part 50 before award 
    of a grant. Grantees will be expected to adhere to all assurances 
    applicable to environmental concerns as contained in the RFGA and grant 
    agreements.
    
    II. Application Submissions Process
    
    A. Obtaining Application
    
        For an application kit, call: American Communities at 1-800-998-
    9999 or fax your request to (301) 251-5747. (This is not a toll-free 
    number). Speech- or hearing-impaired persons may request an application 
    by contacting the TDD number: (202) 708-2565 (not a toll-free number), 
    as listed under the ``For Further Information Contact'' heading in this 
    NOFA.
        Faxed requests for application kits must include the applicant's 
    name, mailing address (including zip code), and telephone number 
    (including area code), and must refer to FR-3855. The RFGA contains the 
    application, forms, and other information regarding the application 
    process and the administration of the program, including relevant 
    provisions from OMB Circulars A-110 and A-122. (This NOFA summarizes 
    major provisions of the RFGA.)
    
    B. Application Submission
    
        An original and three copies of an application must be submitted 
    to: Processing and Control Branch, Office of Community Planning and 
    Development, Department of Housing and Urban Development, 451 Seventh 
    Street, SW, Room 7255, Washington, DC 20410. HUD will accept only one 
    application per neighborhood organization. Responses to the application 
    kit must be limited to 50 pages, single-spaced, exclusive of the 
    following required forms: Cover Page, Standard Form-424, Assurance Form 
    SF-424B, Applicant/Recipient Disclosure Update Report HUD-2880, Drug-
    Free Workplace Certification, Articles of Incorporation and Bylaws, 
    Audit Report and Miscellaneous Materials. All pages and attachments 
    must be numbered consecutively, in arabic numbers. Reviewers are not 
    required to read beyond the 50-page maximum.
    
    C. Application Deadline
    
        Applications may be requested beginning February 24, 1995. 
    Applications must be submitted no later than 4:30 p.m. (Eastern Time), 
    by the date specified in the application kit. The application deadline 
    will be firm as to date and hour. 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.
    
    III. Checklist of Application Submission Requirements
    
    A. Preapplication Determination of Eligibility
    
        Before preparing an application, the applicant should carefully 
    check the eligibility requirements described in Section I.C, 
    Eligibility, of this NOFA. Applicants that are uncertain whether the 
    city or urban county in which they are located meets the current 
    minimum standards of physical and economic distress (used in 
    determining which cities and urban counties were potentially eligible 
    applicants under the Urban Development Action Grant Program) are 
    advised to consult the following two notices published by the 
    Department in the Federal Register: (1) ``Urban Development Action 
    Grant: Revised Minimum Standards for Small Cities'' (52 FR 37876, 
    October 9, 1987); and (2) ``Urban Development Action Grant; Revised 
    Minimum Standards for Large Cities and Urban Counties'' (52 FR 38174, 
    October 14, 1987).
        Any applicant that needs additional help in determining its 
    eligibility should contact the nearest Department of Housing and Urban 
    Development Field Office (Community Planning and Development Division). 
    If assistance is needed, the city or county community development 
    office serving a neighborhood organization should be able to provide an 
    applicant with the HUD Field Office contact number. If unable to obtain 
    a local contact, the HUD Headquarters contact for this information is 
    Mrs. Stella Hall, telephone number (202) 708-2186, or contact the TDD 
    number: (202) 708-0564. (These are not toll free numbers.)
    
    B. Application Checklist
    
        Each application must contain the following, as required by the 
    RFGA.
        (1) A signed copy of Standard Form SF-424; [[Page 10441]] 
        (2) An abstract describing, among other things, the applicant and 
    its achievements, the proposed project, its intended beneficiaries, its 
    projected impact on the neighborhood, and the manner in which the 
    proposed project will be carried out;
        (3) A completed fact sheet that lists neighborhood and 
    organizational characteristics;
        (4) Evidence that the applicant meets eligibility criteria and 
    provides the following data:
        (a) A city map, with street names, delineating the applicant's 
    neighborhood boundaries and indicating where project activities will 
    take place;
        (b) Census tract, block, or enumeration district references and zip 
    code references must also be delineated on the map or on other maps 
    submitted;
        (c) Census data on the size of the neighborhood population, 
    including the number of low-income persons and the size of the minority 
    population, broken down by ethnic, racial, and gender composition;
        (d) A copy of the applicant organization's corporate charter, along 
    with the incorporation papers, bylaws, and a statement of purpose;
        (e) A list of the names of the neighborhood governing board members 
    and their addresses (with zip codes) to show that at least 51% reside 
    in the neighborhood. Indicate those who reside in the neighborhood 
    separately from those who conduct business in the neighborhood;
        (f) Identification of the applicant organization's past and current 
    neighborhood projects, including those projects that are eligible 
    neighborhood development activities as defined in Section I.C(3), 
    Eligible Activities, of this NOFA;
        (g) A description of the means by which the governing board members 
    account to residents of the neighborhood, including the method and 
    frequency of selection of members of the governing board, the 
    consultation process with residents, the frequency of meetings, and a 
    statement showing how the board is representative of the demographics 
    of the neighborhood (i.e., a breakdown by tenants, homeowners, race, 
    sex, ethnic composition, etc.);
        (h) Evidence of the applicant's sound financial management system, 
    determined from its financial statements or audits;
        (i) A letter from the Chief Executive Officer of the unit of 
    general local government in which assisted activities are to be carried 
    out, certifying that the activities are consistent with the 
    Consolidated Plan of the jurisdiction to be served.
        (j) Evidence of cooperation with a neighborhood development funding 
    organization. In lieu of this participation, evidence may be presented 
    that the applicant:
        (i) Has no neighborhood development funding organization within the 
    applicable boundaries; or
        (ii) Has been unsuccessful, despite having made a good faith 
    effort, in obtaining this participation.
        (k) A certification that the applicant will comply with the 
    requirements of Federal law governing the application, acceptance, and 
    use of Federal funds;
        (l) A narrative statement defining how neighborhood matching funds 
    will be raised and their anticipated sources; what neighborhood 
    development activities will be funded; and a strategy for achieving 
    greater long-term private sector support;
        (m) A project management plan, including a schedule of tasks for 
    both fund raising and project implementation;
        (n) A project budget and budget narrative; and
        (o) A certification that a potential grantee will comply with the 
    drug-free workplace requirements in accordance with 24 CFR part 24, 
    subpart F; and
        (5) Equal Opportunity Requirements. The neighborhood development 
    organization must certify that it will carry out activities assisted 
    under the program in compliance with:
        (a) The requirements of the Fair Housing Act (42 U.S.C. 3601-3619) 
    and implementing regulations at 24 CFR parts 100, 108, 109, 110, and 
    115; part 200, Subpart M; and Executive Order 11063 (Equal Opportunity 
    Housing implementing regulations at 24 CFR Part 107; and Title VI of 
    the Civil Rights Act of 1964 (42 U.S.C. 2000d) (Nondiscrimination in 
    Federally Assisted Programs) and implementing regulations issued at 24 
    CFR part 1;
        (b) The prohibitions against discrimination on the basis of age 
    under the Age Discrimination Act of 1975 (42 U.S.C. 6101-07) and 
    implementing regulations at 24 CFR part 146; the prohibition against 
    discrimination against individuals with a disability under section 504 
    of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 (29 U.S.C. 794) and implementing 
    regulations at 24 CFR part 8; and the requirements of Executive Order 
    11246 and the implementing regulations issued at 41 CFR chapter 60;
        (c) The requirements of section 3 of the Housing and Urban 
    Development Act of 1968, 12 U.S.C. 1701u and implementing regulations 
    at 24 CFR part 135; and
        (d) The requirements of Executive Orders 11625, 12432, and 12138. 
    Consistent with HUD's responsibilities under these Orders, the grantee 
    must make efforts to encourage the use of minority and women's business 
    enterprises in connection with activities funded under this notice.
        (e) The prohibitions against discrimination and related 
    requirements of section 109 of the Housing and Community Development 
    Act of 1974 (42 U.S.C. 5309).
        (f) The requirement of the Americans with Disabilities Act (42 
    U.S.C. 12181-12189) and implementing regulations at 28 CFR part 36, as 
    applicable.
    
    IV. Corrections to Deficient Applications
    
        After the submission deadline date, HUD will screen each 
    application to determine whether it is complete. If an application 
    lacks certain technical items or contains a technical error, such as an 
    incorrect signatory, HUD will notify the applicant in writing that it 
    has 14 calendar days from the date of HUD's written notification to 
    cure the technical deficiency. If the applicant fails to submit the 
    missing material within the 14-day cure period, HUD will disqualify the 
    application.
        This 14-day cure period applies only to nonsubstantive deficiencies 
    or errors. Deficiencies capable of cure will involve only items not 
    necessary for HUD to assess the merits of an application against the 
    factors specified in this NOFA.
        Examples of deficiencies that may be cured are:
    
    --Omitted or improper signatures;
    --Omitted certifications or assurances; and
    --Omitted financial statements or audits.
    
    V. Other Matters
    
    A. Reporting Requirements
    
        In addition to complying with relevant provisions of OMB Circulars 
    A-110 and A-122, grantees will be required to submit quarterly 
    performance and financial reports. These reports should inform HUD of 
    any changes that may affect the outcome of the program, such as changes 
    in any of the following: the governing board membership, staffing, 
    working relationships with local government and private organizations, 
    fund raising activities, volunteer efforts, the management plan, and 
    the budget. The quarterly reports must also verify the amount of 
    monetary contributions received from within the neighborhood, as a 
    basis for Federal disbursement of [[Page 10442]] matching funds. 
    Grantees must certify that none of the monetary contributions 
    originated through public funding sources.
        Grantees will be required also to submit a final report at the 
    completion of the grant period. Ten (10) percent of the total grant 
    amount will be held until a final report and close-out documents are 
    received from the grantee. This final report must describe fully the 
    successes and failures associated with the project, including the 
    reasons for the successes and failures. It should also describe 
    possible improvements in the methods used. The quarterly and final 
    reports will be used for evaluation purposes, reports to the Congress 
    on the program, and a report on successful projects that will be 
    distributed to other neighborhood organizations.
    
    B. Other Federal Requirements
    
        In addition to the Equal Opportunity Requirements set forth in 
    Section III.B(4) of this NOFA, grantees must comply with the following 
    requirements:
        (1) Ineligible contractors. The provisions of 24 CFR part 24 
    relating to the employment, engagement of services, awarding of 
    contracts, or funding of any contractors or subcontractors during any 
    period of debarment, suspension, or placement in ineligibility status.
        (2) Flood insurance. No building proposed for acquisition, 
    construction, reconstruction, repair, or improvement to be assisted 
    under this program may be located in an area that has been identified 
    by the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) as having special 
    flood hazards, unless the community in which the area is situated is 
    participating in the National Flood Insurance Program (implemented in 
    regulations at 44 CFR parts 59-79), or less than a year has passed 
    since FEMA notification regarding such hazards, and the grantee ensures 
    that flood insurance on the structure is obtained in compliance with 
    section 102(a) of the Flood Disaster Protection Act of 1973 (42 U.S.C. 
    4001 et seq.).
        (3) Lead-based paint. The requirements, as applicable, of the Lead-
    Based Paint Poisoning Prevention Act (42 U.S.C. 4821-4846), and 
    implementing regulations at 24 CFR part 35.
        (4) Applicability of OMB Circulars. The policies, guidelines, and 
    requirements of OMB Circular Nos. A-110 and A-122 with respect to the 
    acceptance and use of assistance by private nonprofit organizations.
        (5) Relocation and Real Property Acquisition. The Uniform 
    Relocation Assistance and Real Property Acquisition Policies Act of 
    1970 (URA), 49 CFR part 24, and HUD Handbook 1378, Tenant Assistance, 
    Relocation and Real Property Acquisition, apply to the acquisition of 
    real property for an assisted project and the displacement of any 
    person (households, business, nonprofit organization, or farm) as a 
    direct result of acquisition, rehabilitation, or demolition for the 
    HUD-assisted project.
        (6) Certifications. In the absence of independent evidence that 
    tends to challenge in a substantial manner the certifications made by 
    the applicant, the required certifications will be accepted by HUD. 
    However, if independent evidence is available, HUD may require further 
    information or assurances to be submitted in order to determine whether 
    the applicant's certifications are satisfactory.
    
    C. National Environmental Policy Act
    
        A finding of no significant impact with respect to the environment 
    has been made in accordance with HUD regulations in 24 CFR part 50 that 
    implement section 102(2)(C) of the National Environmental Policy Act of 
    1969. (42 U.S.C. 4332). The finding of no significant impact is 
    available for public inspection and copying Monday through Friday 
    during regular business hours at the Office of the Rules Docket Clerk, 
    Office of General Counsel, Room 10276, Department of Housing and Urban 
    Development, 451 Seventh Street, S.W., Washington, D.C. 20410.
    
    Executive Order 12612, Federalism
    
        The General Counsel, as the Designated Official under section 6(a) 
    of Executive Order 12612, Federalism, has determined that the policies 
    contained in this notice will not have substantial direct effects on 
    states or their political subdivisions, or the relationship between the 
    federal government and the states, or on the distribution of power and 
    responsibilities among the various levels of government. As a result, 
    the notice is not subject to review under the order. The notice 
    announces incentive funds to encourage neighborhood organizations to 
    become more self-sufficient in their development activities.
    
    E. Executive Order 12606, the Family
    
        The General Counsel, as the Designated Official under Executive 
    Order 12606, The Family, has determined that this notice has potential 
    for a significant impact on family formation, maintenance, and general 
    well-being. The purpose of the notice is to provide funding to improve 
    neighborhood opportunities relating to employment, business, housing, 
    and the provision of essential services, all of which could benefit 
    families significantly. However, because the impact on families would 
    be indirect and would be beneficial, no further review is considered 
    necessary.
    
    F. Section 102 HUD Reform Act: Documentation and Public Access 
    Requirements
    
        HUD will ensure that documentation and other information regarding 
    each application submitted pursuant to this NOFA are sufficient to 
    indicate the basis upon which assistance was provided or denied. This 
    material, including any letters of support, will be made available for 
    public inspection for a five-year period beginning not less than 30 
    days after the award of the assistance. Material will be made available 
    in accordance with the Freedom of Information Act (5 U.S.C. 552) and 
    HUD's implementing regulations at 24 CFR part 15. In addition, HUD will 
    include the recipients of assistance pursuant to this NOFA in its 
    Federal Register notice of all recipients of HUD assistance awarded on 
    a competitive basis. (See 24 CFR 12.14(a) and 12.16(b), and the notice 
    published in the Federal Register on January 16, 1992 (57 FR 1942), for 
    further information on these requirements.)
    
    G. Section 103 of the HUD Reform Act
    
        HUD's regulation implementing section 103 of the Department of 
    Housing and Urban Development Reform Act of 1989 (42 U.S.C. 3537a) was 
    published on May 13, 1991 (56 FR 22088) and became effective on June 
    12, 1991. That regulation, codified as 24 CFR part 4, applies to the 
    funding competition announced today. The requirements of the rule 
    continue to apply until the announcement of the selection of successful 
    applicants.
        HUD employees involved in the review of applications and in the 
    making of funding decisions are restrained by part 4 from providing 
    advance information to any person (other than an authorized employee of 
    HUD) concerning funding decisions, or from otherwise giving any 
    applicant an unfair competitive advantage. Persons who apply for 
    assistance in this competition should confine their inquiries to the 
    subject areas permitted under 24 CFR part 4.
        Applicants who have questions should contact the HUD Office of 
    Ethics (202) 708-3815 (voice/TDD). (This is not a toll-free number.) 
    The Office of Ethics can provide information of a general nature to HUD 
    employees, as [[Page 10443]] well. However, a HUD employee who has 
    specific program questions, such as whether particular subject matter 
    can be discussed with persons outside the Department, should contact 
    his or her Field Office Counsel, or Headquarters counsel for the 
    program to which the question pertains.
    
    H. Section 112 of the Reform Act
    
        Section 13 of the Department of Housing and Urban Development Act 
    (42 U.S.C. 3537b) contains two provisions dealing with efforts to 
    influence HUD's decisions with respect to financial assistance. The 
    first imposes disclosure requirements on those who are typically 
    involved in these efforts--those who pay others to influence the award 
    of assistance or the taking of a management action by the Department 
    and those who are paid to provide the influence. The second restricts 
    the payment of fees to those who are paid to influence the award of HUD 
    assistance, if the fees are tied to the number of housing units 
    received or are based on the amount of assistance received, or if they 
    are contingent upon the receipt of assistance.
        Section 13 has been implemented by 24 CFR part 86. If readers are 
    involved in any efforts to influence the Department in these ways, they 
    are urged to read part 86, particularly the examples contained in 
    Appendix A of that part.
        Any questions about the rule should be directed to the Office of 
    Ethics, room 2158, Department of Housing and Urban Development, 451 
    Seventh Street, S.W., Washington, D.C. 20410-3000. Telephone: (202) 
    708-3815 (voice/TDD) (This is not a toll-free number.) Forms necessary 
    for compliance with the rule may be obtained from the local HUD office.
    
        Authority: 42 U.S.C. 5318 note and 3535(d).
    
        Dated: February 17, 1995.
    Andrew Cuomo,
    Assistant Secretary for Community Planning and Development.
    [FR Doc. 95-4449 Filed 2-21-95; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 4210-29-P