95-10012. Special American Business Internship Training Program (SABIT)  

  • [Federal Register Volume 60, Number 78 (Monday, April 24, 1995)]
    [Notices]
    [Pages 20075-20078]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 95-10012]
    
    
    
    =======================================================================
    -----------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
    
    International Trade Administration
    [Docket No. 950329080-5080-01]
    
    
    Special American Business Internship Training Program (SABIT)
    
    AGENCY: International Trade Administration, Commerce.
    
    ACTION: Notice.
    
    -----------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    SUMMARY: This Notice announces availability of funds for the Special 
    American Business Internship Training Program (SABIT), for training 
    business executives and scientists (also referred to as ``interns'') 
    from the New Independent States (NIS) of the former Soviet Union. The 
    Department of Commerce, International Trade Administration (ITA) 
    established the SABIT program in September 1990 to assist the former 
    Soviet Union's transition to a market economy. Since that time, SABIT 
    has been matching business executives and scientists from the NIS with 
    U.S. firms which provide them with three to six months of hands-on 
    training in a market economy.
        Under the SABIT program, qualified U.S. firms will receive funds 
    through a cooperative agreement with ITA to help defray the cost of 
    hosting interns. ITA will interview and recommend eligible interns to 
    participating companies. Interns may be from any of the following 
    Independent States: Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Georgia, Kazakhstan, 
    Kyrgyzstan, Moldova, Russia, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Ukraine, and 
    Uzbekistan. The U.S. firms will be expected to provide the interns with 
    a hands-on, non-academic, executive training program designed to 
    maximize their exposure to management or commercially-oriented 
    scientific operations. At the end of the training program, interns must 
    return to the NIS.
    
    DATES: The closing date for applications is April 30, 1996. An original 
    and two copies of the application (Standard Form 424 (Rev. 4-92) and 
    supplemental material) are to be sent to the address designated in the 
    Application Kit and postmarked by the closing date. Applications will 
    be considered on a ``rolling'' basis as they are received, subject to 
    the availability of funds. If available funds are depleted prior to the 
    closing date, a notice to that effect will be published in the Federal 
    Register. Processing of complete applications takes approximately two 
    to three months.
    
    ADDRESSES: Request for Applications: Competitive Application kits will 
    be available from ITA starting on the day [[Page 20076]] this notice is 
    published. To obtain a copy of the Application Kit please telephone 
    (202) 482-0073, or facsimile (202) 482-2443 (these are not toll free 
    numbers) or send a written request with two self-addressed mailing 
    labels to Liesel C. Duhon, Acting Director, SABIT Program, HCHB Room 
    3319, U.S. Department of Commerce, 14th Street and Constitution Avenue, 
    NW., Washington, DC 20230. Only one copy of the Application Kit will be 
    provided to each organization requesting it, but it may be reproduced 
    by the requester.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Liesel C. Duhon, Acting Director, 
    SABIT Program, U.S. Department of Commerce, phone--(202) 482-0073, 
    facsimile--(202) 482-2443. These are not toll free numbers.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: SABIT exposes NIS business managers and 
    scientists to a completely new way of thinking in which demand, 
    consumer satisfaction, and profits drive production. Senior-level 
    interns visiting the U.S. for internship programs with public or 
    private sector companies will be exposed to an environment which will 
    provide them with practical knowledge for transforming their countries' 
    enterprises and economies to the free market. The program provides 
    first-hand, eye-opening experience to managers and scientists which 
    cannot be duplicated by American managers travelling to their 
    territories.
        Business Executives: SABIT assists economic restructuring in the 
    NIS by providing top-level business managers with practical training in 
    American methods of innovation and management in such areas as 
    strategic planning, financing, production, distribution, marketing, 
    accounting, wholesaling, and labor relations. This first-hand 
    experience in the U.S. economy enables interns to become leaders in 
    establishing and operating a market economy in the NIS, and creates a 
    unique opportunity for U.S. firms to familiarize key executives from 
    the NIS with their products and services.
        Scientists: SABIT provides opportunities for gifted scientists to 
    apply their skills to peaceful research and development in the civilian 
    sector, in areas such as defense conversion, medical research, and the 
    environment, and exposes them to the role of scientific research in a 
    market economy where applicability of research relates to business 
    success. Sponsoring firms in the U.S. scientific community also benefit 
    from exchanging information and ideas, and different approaches to new 
    technologies.
        All internships are for three to six months; however, ITA reserves 
    the right to allow an intern to stay for a shorter period if the U.S. 
    company agrees and the intern demonstrates a need for a shorter 
    internship based on his or her management responsibilities.
        Funding Availability: Pursuant to section 632(a) of the Foreign 
    Assistance Act of 1961, as amended (the ``Act'') funding for the 
    program will be provided by the United States Agency for International 
    Development (A.I.D). ITA will award financial assistance and administer 
    the program pursuant to the authority contained in section 635(b) of 
    the Act. The estimated amount of financial assistance available for the 
    program is $1.4 million. Additional funding may become available during 
    this funding period.
        Funding Instrument and Project Duration: Federal assistance will be 
    awarded pursuant to a cooperative agreement between ITA and the 
    recipient firm. ITA will reimburse companies for the round trip 
    international travel of each intern from the intern's home city in the 
    NIS to the U.S. internship site, upon submission to ITA of the travel 
    invoice and the form SF-270, ``Request for Advance or Reimbursement.'' 
    Travel under the program is subject to the Fly America Act. Recipient 
    firms provide $30 per day directly to interns; ITA will reimburse 
    companies for this stipend of $30 per day per intern for up to six 
    months, upon submission by company of an end-of-internship report and 
    form SF-270. Each award will have a cap of $7,500 per intern for total 
    cost of airline travel and stipend. ITA reserves the right to allow an 
    award to exceed this amount in cases of unusually high costs, such as 
    airfare from remote regions of the NIS. There are no specific matching 
    requirements for the awards. Host firms, however, are expected to bear 
    the costs beyond those covered by the award, including: visa fees, 
    housing, insurance, any food and incidentals costs beyond $30 per day, 
    any training-related travel within the U.S., and provision of the 
    hands-on training for the interns.
        U.S. firms wishing to utilize SABIT in order to be matched with an 
    intern without applying for financial assistance may do so. Such firms 
    will be responsible for all costs, including travel expenses, related 
    to sponsoring the intern.
        Eligibility: Eligible applicants for the SABIT program will be any 
    for profit or non-profit U.S. corporation, association, organization or 
    other public or private entity. Branches or divisions of the federal 
    government are not eligible.
        Evaluation Criteria: Consideration for financial assistance will be 
    given to those SABIT proposals which:
        (1) Demonstrate a commitment to the intent and goals of the program 
    to provide practical, on-the-job, non-academic, non-classroom, 
    training: in the case of manager interns, an appropriate management 
    training experience, or, in the case of scientist interns, a practical, 
    commercially-oriented scientific training experience.
        (2) Respond to the priority needs of senior business managers and 
    scientists in the NIS, as determined by ITA. Host firms must be solidly 
    committed to interns' return to their own countries upon completion of 
    the internships.
        (3) Present a realistic work plan describing in detail the training 
    program to be provided to the SABIT intern(s). Work plans must include 
    the following: (a) Whether Applicant is applying to host managers or 
    scientists, or both (and the number of each); (b) the duration of the 
    internship (at least three but not more than six months.) As noted 
    above, ITA reserves the right to allow an intern with very senior 
    management responsibilities to stay for a shorter period (minimum of 
    one month) if the U.S. company agrees and the intern demonstrates a 
    compelling need for a shorter internship based on his or her management 
    responsibilities; (c) the location(s) of the internship; (d) the name, 
    address, and telephone number of the designated internship coordinator; 
    (e) name(s) of division(s) in which the intern(s) will be placed; (f) 
    the individual(s) in the U.S. company under whose supervision the 
    intern will train; (g) the proposed internship training activities. The 
    components of the training activities must be described in as much 
    detail as possible, preferably on a week-by-week basis. The description 
    of the training activities should include an accounting of what the 
    intern's(s') duties and responsibilities will be during the training; 
    (h) the anticipated housing arrangements to be provided for the 
    intern(s). Note that housing arrangements should be suitable for mid- 
    and senior-level professionals, and that each intern must be provided 
    with a private room.
        (4) Include a brief objectives section indicating why the Applicant 
    wishes to provide an internship to a manager(s) or scientist(s) from 
    the NIS, and how the proposed internship would further the purpose of 
    the SABIT program as described above. If Applicant is nominating a 
    specific individual for training, this objectives section must describe 
    any existing relationship between the Applicant and the 
    individual. [[Page 20077]] 
        (5) Provide a general description of the profile of the intern(s) 
    the Applicant would like to host, including: educational background; 
    occupational/professional background (including number of years and 
    areas of experience); size and nature of organization at which the 
    intern(s) is/are presently employed; preference for the region of the 
    NIS where the intern(s) is/are employed; and whether Applicant is open 
    to sponsoring interns from a variety of NIS countries.
        (6) Indicate whether Applicant organization operates in one or more 
    of the following business sectors: (a) Agribusiness (including food 
    processing and distribution, and agricultural equipment), (b) Defense 
    conversion, (c) Energy, (d) Environment (including environmental clean-
    up), (e) Financial services (including banking and accounting), (f) 
    Housing, construction and infrastructure, (g) Medical equipment, 
    supplies, pharmaceuticals, and health care management, (h) Product 
    standards and quality control, (i) Telecommunications, and (j) 
    Transportation. Applicant proposal must provide an explanation 
    including description and extent of involvement in the sector(s). While 
    Applicants involved in any industry sector may apply to the program, 
    priority consideration is given to those operating in the above 
    sectors.
        Evaluation criteria 1-6 will be weighted equally. ITA does not 
    guarantee that it will match Applicant with the profile provided to 
    SABIT.
        Additional Information: Applicants must submit: (1) Evidence of 
    adequate financial resources of Applicant organization to cover the 
    costs involved in providing an internship(s). As evidence of such 
    resources, Applicant should submit financial statements audited by an 
    outside organization or an annual report including such statements. If 
    these are not available, a letter should be provided from the 
    Applicant's bank or outside accountant attesting to the financial 
    capability of the firm to undertake the scope of work involved in 
    training an intern under the SABIT program. (2) Evidence of a 
    satisfactory record of performance in grants, contracts and/or 
    cooperative agreements with the Federal Government, if applicable. 
    (Applicants who are or have been deficient in current or recent 
    performance in their grants, contracts, and/or cooperative agreements 
    with the Federal Government shall be presumed to be unable to meet this 
    requirement). (3) A statement that the Applicant will provide medical 
    insurance coverage for interns during their internships. Recipients 
    will be required to submit proof of the interns' medical insurance 
    coverage to the Federal Program Officer, before the interns' arrivals. 
    The insurance coverage must include an accident and comprehensive 
    medical insurance program as well as coverage for accidental death, 
    emergency medical evacuation, and repatriation.
        Selection Procedures: Each application will receive an independent, 
    objective review by one or more three or four-member ITA review panels 
    qualified to evaluate applications submitted under the program. 
    Applications will be evaluated on a competitive, ``rolling'' basis as 
    they are received in accordance with the selection criteria set forth 
    above. Awards will be made to those applications which successfully 
    meet the selection criteria. If funds are not available for all those 
    applications which successfully meet the criteria, awards will be made 
    to the first applications received which successfully do so. ITA review 
    panel(s) reserve(s) the right to reject any application; to limit the 
    number of interns per applicant; to waive informalities and minor 
    irregularities in applications received; and to consider other than 
    competitive procedures to distribute assistance under this program and 
    in accordance with the law. ITA review panel(s) reserve(s) the right to 
    make awards based on U.S. geographic and organization size diversity 
    among applicants. Recipients may be eligible, pursuant to approval of 
    an amendment to the award, to host additional interns under the 
    program.
        Other Requirements: All applicants are advised of the following:
        1. No award of Federal funds shall be made to an Applicant who has 
    an outstanding delinquent Federal debt until either the delinquent 
    account is paid in full, a negotiated repayment schedule is established 
    and at least one payment is received, or other arrangements 
    satisfactory to DOC are made.
        2. A false statement on the application is grounds for denial or 
    termination of funds and grounds for possible punishment by a fine or 
    imprisonment as provided in 18 U.S.C.1001.
        3. Recipients and subrecipients are subject to all Federal laws and 
    Federal and Departmental regulations, policies and procedures 
    applicable to financial assistance awards.
        4. Participating companies will be required to comply with all 
    relevant U.S. tax and export regulations. Export controls may relate 
    not only to licensing of products for export, but also to technical 
    data transfer.
        5. Applications under this program are not subject to Executive 
    Order 12372, ``Intergovernmental Review of Federal Programs.''
        6. If applicants incur any costs prior to an award being made, they 
    do solely at their own risk of not being reimbursed by the Government. 
    Notwithstanding any verbal or written assurance that may have been 
    received, there is no obligation on the part of DOC to cover pre-award 
    costs.
        7. Past performance: Unsatisfactory performance by an applicant 
    under prior Federal awards may result in an application not being 
    considered for funding.
        8. No obligation for future funding: If an application is selected 
    for funding, DOC has no obligation to provide any additional future 
    funding in connection with that award. Renewal of an award to increase 
    funding or extend the period of performance is at the total discretion 
    of DOC.
        9. Primary Applicant Certifications: All primary applicants must 
    submit a completed Form CD-511, ``Certifications Regarding Debarment, 
    Suspension and Other Responsibility Matters; Drug-Free Workplace 
    Requirements and Lobbying,'' and the following explanations are hereby 
    provided:
        (a) Nonprocurement Debarment and Suspension: Prospective 
    participants (as defined at 15 CFR Part 26, Section 105) are subject to 
    15 CFR Part 26, ``Nonprocurement Debarment and Suspension'' and the 
    related section of the certification form prescribed above applies.
        (b) Drug Free Workplace: Grantees (as defined at 15 CFR Part 26, 
    Section 605) are subject to 15 CFR Part 26, Subpart F, ``Governmentwide 
    Requirements for Drug-Free Workplace (Grants)'' and the related section 
    of the certification form prescribed above applies.
        (c) Anti-Lobbying: Funds provided under the SABIT program may not 
    be used for lobbying activities. Persons (as defined at 15 CFR Part 28, 
    Section 105) are subject to the lobbying provisions of 31 U.S.C. 1352, 
    ``Limitation on use of appropriated funds to influence certain Federal 
    contracting and financial transactions,'' and the lobbying section of 
    the certification form prescribed above applies to applications/bids 
    for grants, cooperative agreements, and contracts for more than 
    $100,000, and loans and loan guarantees for more than $150,000, or the 
    single family maximum mortgage limit for affected programs, whichever 
    is greater.
        (d) Anti-Lobbying Disclosures: Any applicant that has paid or will 
    pay for lobbying in connection with this award [[Page 20078]] using any 
    funds must submit an SF-LLL, ``Disclosure of Lobbying Activities,'' as 
    required under 15 CFR Part 28, Appendix B.
        10. Lower Tier Certifications: Recipients shall require applicants/
    bidders for subgrants, contracts, subcontracts, or other lower tier 
    covered transactions at any tier under the award to submit, if 
    applicable, a completed Form CD-512, ``Certifications Regarding 
    Debarment, Suspension, Ineligibility and Voluntary Exclusion--Lower 
    Tier Covered Transactions and Lobbying'' and disclosure form, SF-LLL, 
    ``Disclosure of Lobbying Activities.'' Form CD-512 is intended for the 
    use of recipients and should not be transmitted to DOC. SF-LLL 
    submitted by any tier recipient or subrecipient should be submitted to 
    DOC in accordance with the instructions contained in the award 
    document.
        11. Indirect Costs: Indirect costs are not allowed under the SABIT 
    program.
        12. Buy-American-made equipment or products: Applicants are hereby 
    notified that any equipment or products authorized to be purchased with 
    funding provided under this program must be American-made to the 
    maximum extent feasible in accordance with Public Law 103-121, Sections 
    606. (a) and (b).
        13. The following statutes apply to this program: Restriction on 
    Assistance to the Government of Azerbaijan (Section 907 of the FREEDOM 
    Support Act, Public Law 102-511); Chapter 11 of Part I of the Foreign 
    Assistance Act of 1961, as amended, including section 498A (b), 
    regarding ineligibility for assistance; provisions in annual Foreign 
    Operations, Export Financing, and Related Programs Appropriations Act, 
    including the following provisions contained in Public Law 103-87: Use 
    of American Resources (Section 559 of the Foreign Operation, Export 
    Financing, and Related Programs Appropriations Act, 1995, Pub. L. 103-
    87); Impact on Jobs in the United States (Section 545 of the Foreign 
    Operation, Export Financing, and Related Programs Appropriations Act, 
    1995, Pub. L. 103-87); Bumpers Amendment (Section 513(b) of the Foreign 
    Operations, Export Financing, and Related Programs Appropriations Act, 
    1994, Pub. L. 103-87); Lautenberg Amendment (Section 513(b) of the 
    Foreign Operations, Export Financing, and Related Programs 
    Appropriations Act, 1994, Pub. L. 103-87); and Section 660(a) of the 
    Foreign Assistance Act of 1961, as amended.
    
        Dated: April 18, 1995.
    Liesel C. Duhon,
    Acting Director, SABIT Program.
    [FR Doc. 95-10012 Filed 4-21-95; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 3510-HE-P
    
    

Document Information

Published:
04/24/1995
Department:
International Trade Administration
Entry Type:
Notice
Action:
Notice.
Document Number:
95-10012
Dates:
The closing date for applications is April 30, 1996. An original and two copies of the application (Standard Form 424 (Rev. 4-92) and
Pages:
20075-20078 (4 pages)
Docket Numbers:
Docket No. 950329080-5080-01
PDF File:
95-10012.pdf