97-13518. Public and Indian Housing Drug Elimination Program; Notice of Funding AvailabilityFY 1997  

  • [Federal Register Volume 62, Number 100 (Friday, May 23, 1997)]
    [Notices]
    [Pages 28538-28561]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 97-13518]
    
    
    
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    Part II
    
    
    
    
    
    Department of Housing and Urban Development
    
    
    
    
    
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    Public and Indian Housing Drug Elimination Program; Funding 
    Availability--FY 1997; Notice
    
    Federal Register / Vol. 62, No. 100 / Friday, May 23, 1997 / 
    Notices
    
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    DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT
    
    [Docket No. FR-4181-N-01]
    
    
    Public and Indian Housing Drug Elimination Program; Notice of 
    Funding Availability--FY 1997
    
    AGENCY: Office of the Assistant Secretary for Public and Indian 
    Housing, HUD.
    
    ACTION: Public and Indian Housing Drug Elimination Program Notice of 
    Funding Availability (NOFA) for Fiscal Year (FY) 1997.
    
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    SUMMARY: This NOFA announces HUD's FY 1997 funding of $250,649,052 
    under the Public and Indian Housing Drug Elimination Program (PHDEP) 
    for use in reducing/eliminating drug-related crime. Hereafter, the term 
    housing authority (HA) shall include public housing agencies (PHAs) and 
    Indian housing authorities (IHAs).
        In the body of this document is information concerning the purpose 
    of the NOFA, applicant eligibility, available amounts, selection 
    criteria, financial requirements, management, and application 
    processing, including how to apply, how selections will be made, and 
    how applicants will be notified of results.
    
    DATES: Applications must be received at the local HUD Field Office on 
    or before Friday, August 8, 1997, at 3:00 pm, local time. This 
    application deadline is 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 any unanticipated or delivery-related 
    problems. A FAX is not acceptable.
    
    ADDRESSES:
    
        (a) Application Kit: An application kit may be obtained, and 
    assistance provided, from the local HUD Field Office with delegated 
    public housing responsibilities over an applying public housing 
    authority, or from the Area Offices of Native American Programs 
    (AONAPs) having jurisdiction over an Indian housing authority making an 
    application, or by calling HUD's Drug Information and Strategy 
    Clearinghouse (DISC) on (800) 578-3472. The application kit contains 
    information on all exhibits and certifications required under this 
    NOFA. Applicants requiring additional information may use the funding 
    cross-reference under HUD's Business and Community Partner HomePage on 
    the Internet's World Wide Web (http://www.hud.gov/bushome.HTML).
        (b) Application Submission: An applicant shall submit only one 
    application per housing authority under each NOFA. Joint applications 
    are not permitted under this program with the following exception: 
    housing authorities under a single administration (such as housing 
    authorities managing another housing authority under contract or 
    housing authorities sharing a common executive director) shall submit a 
    single application, even though each housing authority has its own 
    operating budget. Applications (Original and Three Identical Copies of 
    the Original Application) must be received by the deadline at the local 
    HUD Field Office with responsibilities over the applying public housing 
    authorities, Attention: Director, Office of Public Housing or, in the 
    case of Indian housing authorities, to the local HUD Administrator, 
    AONAPs with jurisdiction over the applying Indian housing authorities, 
    as appropriate. A complete listing of these offices is provided in 
    Appendix ``A'' of this NOFA. It is not sufficient for an application to 
    bear a postage date within the submission time period. Applications 
    submitted by facsimile are not acceptable. Applications received after 
    the deadline date of Friday, August 8, 1997, at 3:00 pm, Local Time, 
    Will Not be Considered.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For questions concerning the PHDEP 
    contact: the local HUD Field Office, Director, Office of Public Housing 
    or the National Office of Native American Programs (NONAPs)/local 
    Administrator, AONAPs (Appendix ``A'' of this NOFA), HUD's DISC on 
    (800) 578-3472 and/or Malcolm (Mike) E. Main in the Office of Crime 
    Prevention and Security, Office for Community Relations and 
    Involvement, Office of Public and Indian Housing, Room 4112, on (202) 
    708-1197, extension 4232.
        For questions concerning the Federally Assisted Housing Low-Income 
    Housing Drug Elimination Program (AHDEP), and/or other Federally 
    Assisted Housing Low-Income Housing programs contact Michael E. Diggs, 
    Office of Multifamily Housing Programs, Office of Housing, Room 6130 on 
    (202) 708-0614, extension 2514. A separate NOFA will be published by 
    the Office of Multifamily Housing Programs, Office of Housing for AHDEP 
    and other programs. The address for the above Headquarters persons is: 
    Department of Housing and Urban Development, 451 Seventh Street, SW, 
    Washington, DC 20410. Hearing-or-speech impaired persons may call (800) 
    877-8339. (Federal Information Relay Service TTY). Except for the 
    ``800'' number, these telephone numbers are not toll-free.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    Promoting Comprehensive Approaches to Housing and Community Development
    
        HUD is interested in promoting comprehensive, coordinated 
    approaches to housing and community development. Economic development, 
    community development, public housing revitalization, homeownership, 
    assisted housing for special needs populations, supportive services, 
    and welfare-to-work initiatives can work better if linked at the local 
    level. Toward this end, the Department in recent years has developed 
    the Consolidated Planning process designed to help communities 
    undertake such approaches.
        In this spirit, it may be helpful for applicants under this NOFA to 
    be aware of other related HUD NOFAs that have recently been published 
    or are expected to be published in the near future. By reviewing these 
    NOFAs with respect to their program purposes and the eligibility of 
    applicants and activities, applicants may be able to relate the 
    activities proposed for funding under this NOFA to the recent and 
    upcoming NOFAs and to the community's Consolidated Plan.
        The related NOFAs HUD is publishing elsewhere in this issue of the 
    Federal Register are: the Federally Assisted Housing Drug Elimination 
    NOFA, the Drug Elimination Technical Assistance NOFA, and the Safe 
    Neighborhoods Grants NOFA.
        To foster comprehensive, coordinated approaches by communities, the 
    Department intends for the remainder of FY 1997 to continue to alert 
    applicants to upcoming and recent NOFAs as each NOFA is published. In 
    addition, a complete schedule of NOFAs to be published during the 
    fiscal year and those already published appears under the HUD Homepage 
    on the Internet, which can be accessed at http://www.hud.gov/
    nofas.html. Additional steps on NOFA coordination may be considered for 
    FY 1998.
        For help in obtaining a copy of your community's Consolidated Plan, 
    please contact the community development office of your municipal 
    government.
    
    Coordination With Local Law Enforcement Agencies
    
        In addition to working closely with residents and local governing 
    bodies, it
    
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    is critically important that housing authorities establish ongoing 
    working relationships with Federal, State and local law enforcement 
    agencies in their efforts to address crime and violence in and around 
    their housing developments. The Department firmly believes that the war 
    on crime and violence in public and Indian housing can only be won 
    through the concerted and cooperative efforts of housing authorities 
    and law enforcement agencies working together in cooperation with 
    housing authority residents and local governing bodies. As such, the 
    Department expects housing authorities to demonstrate in their PHDEP 
    grant applications and anti-crime plans how they propose to establish 
    or enhance their working relationships and cooperation with law 
    enforcement agencies.
        Under the revised Public Housing Management Assessment Program 
    (PHMAP) published on December 30, 1996 (61 FR 68894), Indicator #8, 
    Security, calls for housing authorities to establish cooperative 
    systems for tracking crime and reporting incidents of crime to police 
    authorities to improve law enforcement and crime prevention. The 
    Department encourages housing authorities participating in PHDEP to not 
    only establish and implement such systems, but to engage in ongoing 
    dialogue and special cooperative efforts with their local law 
    enforcement agencies as a means of developing and putting into effect 
    needed anti-crime initiatives at housing developments.
    
    Operation Safe Home
    
        Operation Safe Home was announced jointly by Vice President Albert 
    Gore, former HUD Secretary Henry G. Cisneros, former Treasury Secretary 
    Lloyd Bentsen, Attorney General Janet Reno, and representatives of the 
    Office of National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP) at a White House 
    briefing on February 4, 1994. Operation Safe Home is a major 
    Departmental initiative focusing on violent and drug-related crime 
    within public housing authorities. As such, it is a holistic 
    enforcement approach which combines aggressive law enforcement 
    interdiction efforts with a housing authority's crime prevention and 
    intervention initiatives. Operation Safe Home is structured to combat 
    the level of violent crime activities occurring within public and 
    assisted housing, and enhance the quality of life within such complexes 
    via three simultaneous approaches:
    
    --Strong, collaborative law enforcement efforts focused on reducing the 
    level of violent crime activities occurring within public and assisted 
    housing;
    --Collaboration between law enforcement agencies and public housing 
    managers and residents in devising methods to prevent violent crime; 
    and
    --The introduction of HUD, DOJ and other agency initiatives 
    specifically geared to preventing crime.
    
        For more information on Operation Safe Home, contact Lee Isdell, 
    Office of the Inspector General, Department of Housing and Urban 
    Development, Room 8256, 451 Seventh Street, SW., Washington, DC. 20410, 
    telephone (202) 708-0430, fax number (202) 401-2505, Internet E:mail 
    www.hud.gov./oig/oigindex.html. A telecommunications device for hearing 
    or speech impaired persons (TDD) is available at (202) 708-0850. (These 
    are not toll-free telephone numbers.)
    
    Operation Weed and Seed
    
        Operation Weed and Seed, conducted through the U.S. Department of 
    Justice, is a comprehensive, multi-agency approach to combatting 
    violent crime, drug use, and gang activity in high-crime neighborhoods. 
    The goal is to ``weed out'' crime from targeted neighborhoods and then 
    to ``seed'' the targeted sites with a wide range of crime and drug 
    prevention programs, and human services agency resources to prevent 
    crime from reoccurring. Operation Weed and Seed further emphasizes the 
    importance of community involvement in combatting drugs and violent 
    crime. Community residents need to be empowered to assist in solving 
    crime-related problems in their neighborhoods. In addition, the private 
    sector needs to get involved in reducing crime. All of these entities, 
    Federal, State, and local government, the community and the private 
    sector should work together in partnership to create a safer, drug-free 
    environment.
        The Weed and Seed strategy involves four basic elements:
        Law enforcement must ``weed out'' the most violent offenders by 
    coordinating and integrating the efforts of Federal, State, and local 
    law enforcement agencies in targeted high-crime neighborhoods. No 
    social program or community activity can flourish in an atmosphere 
    poisoned by violent crime and drug abuse.
        Local municipal police departments should implement community 
    policing in each of the targeted sites. Under community policing, law 
    enforcement should work closely with the housing authority and 
    residents of the community to develop solutions to the problems of 
    violent and drug-related crime. Community policing serves as a 
    ``bridge'' between the ``weeding'' (law enforcement) and ``seeding'' 
    (neighborhood revitalization) components.
        After the ``weeding'' takes place, law enforcement and social 
    services agencies, the private sector, and the community must work to 
    prevent crime and violence from reoccurring by concentrating a broad 
    array of human services--drug and crime prevention programs, drug 
    treatment, educational opportunities, family services, and recreational 
    activities--in the targeted sites to create an environment where crime 
    cannot thrive.
        Federal, State, local, and private sector resources must focus on 
    revitalizing distressed neighborhoods through economic development and 
    must provide economic opportunities for residents.
        For further information on Operation Weed and Seed, contact the U.S 
    Department of Justice, Office of Justice Programs, 366 Indiana Avenue, 
    Room 304S, N.W., Washington, D.C., 20531 on (202) 616-1152, FAX number: 
    (202) 616-1159, or Internet E:mail: mcwhorte@ojp.usdoj.gov.
        Specific activities undertaken pursuant to Operation Safe Home and 
    Operation Weed and Seed may be eligible for PHDEP funding if they meet 
    the funding criteria outlined in this NOFA. All activities must relate 
    to one of the four selection criteria. Selection Criterion 4, in 
    section I.(d)(4) of this NOFA, below, identifies areas of collaboration 
    between applicants and Federal, State, Tribal and local law enforcement 
    agencies.
        In this FY 1997 NOFA, the Department is focusing attention on three 
    specific characteristics of the PHDEP program. First, the PHDEP program 
    has proven to be one of the Department's most successful tools in 
    assisting housing authorities in leveraging commercial, cash, non-
    profit and other local government resources for the purpose of reducing 
    or eliminating drug-related crime. One of the other important 
    characteristics of the PHDEP is that a large number of PHDEP activities 
    are implemented in community facilities that are owned and operated by 
    housing authorities. Finally, HUD wants to emphasize that a 
    comprehensive anti-crime strategy in housing authorities should include 
    effective administration of housing authority screening, leasing and 
    eviction policies. Bearing these issues in mind, housing authorities 
    applying for PHDEP funds are strongly encouraged:
         To use PHDEP resources to establish collaborative 
    relationships with, and increase over and above existing levels, the 
    efforts of local
    
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    municipal police departments and/or other law enforcement agencies, 
    local social and/or religious organizations, and other public and 
    private nonprofit organizations who provide community-wide services to 
    offer substance abuse prevention, intervention, treatment, aftercare, 
    education, assessment, and referral programs and services.
         To include in their comprehensive anti-crime strategies a 
    discussion of how the proposed PHDEP drug and crime prevention 
    activities will be coordinated with larger Empowerment and Enterprize 
    Zone strategies and Welfare Reform efforts, especially in the areas of 
    training and employment of PHA residents. The PHDEP application may 
    include specific opportunities for resident employment and training 
    with such activities as contracting or hiring of residents as security 
    guard personnel, housing authority police officers, and for referrals 
    to employment and training opportunities. The applicant must 
    demonstrate how the employment and training qualifies as an eligible 
    activity. PHDEP applicants should coordinate with Federal, Tribal, 
    State and local agencies to increase employment and training 
    opportunities for low-income residents, and thereby decrease drug-
    related crime. Many communities are already developing and providing 
    such services, and housing authorities are strongly encouraged to 
    provide community facility space to allow the provision of these 
    services for residents living ``in and around'' public and Indian 
    housing authorities.
         To increase the use of housing authority community 
    facilities, and bring back a community focus to housing authority 
    properties. Expenses related to community policing; police mini-
    stations; and resident training, substance abuse prevention, 
    intervention, treatment, structured aftercare, and other human 
    resources programs that comply with the requirements of this program 
    Are Eligible Program Expenses. The Department encourages applicants to 
    use housing authority community facilities in all eligible PHDEP 
    activities. Community policing, resident training, substance abuse 
    prevention, intervention and treatment (dependency, structured 
    aftercare, and support systems) are all activities most effectively 
    implemented in housing authority community facilities. While all PHDEP 
    activities must be carried out ``in and around'' housing authorities, 
    often the use of the community facilities is taken for granted, and not 
    considered when planning effective implementation of PHDEP activities. 
    The Department encourages applicants to consider current and future use 
    of their community facilities for eligible activities, and to 
    incorporate a strategy regarding facilities for on-site service 
    delivery.
         As applicable, to incorporate ``One Strike and You're 
    Out'' elements in applications to ensure PHAs have available the 
    broadest range of tools for making and maintaining a safe residential 
    community. ``One Strike and You're Out'' activities in applications may 
    be eligible program expenses but to qualify as eligible activities, 
    they must be included in the plan to address the crime problem in 
    public housing developments required under Selection Criterion 2 in 
    section I.(d)(2). Factors related to the One Strike initiative, such as 
    screening applicants and lease enforcement, are examined under 
    Selection Criterion 3 in section I.(d)(3) of this NOFA. As a part of 
    the Public Housing Management Assessment Program (PHMAP), PHA 
    performance will be measured, in part, by PHMAP indicator #8, 
    ``Security'', which was included in the revised PHMAP rule published on 
    December 30, 1996 (61 FR 68894). Any successful, comprehensive anti-
    crime strategy in public housing should address the elements of the 
    PHMAP security indicator: tracking and reporting crime-related 
    problems, screening applicants, enforcing lease requirements, and 
    stating and achieving anti-crime strategies/goals in appropriate HUD 
    grant programs.
        Any application that proposes any of the above activities must 
    relate the activity directly to one or more of the four selection 
    criteria in section I.(d) of this NOFA.
        In addition, the Department is very concerned about PHDEP program 
    performance by grantees because of practices such as: lack of 
    implementation of the approved PHDEP grant plan/timetables; 
    inconsistent draw down of funds based upon the approved plan; 
    inadequate tracking and measuring of performance regarding the 
    reduction/elimination of crime in housing authorities and 
    developments(s). With funding of some grantees provided for over seven 
    years, tracking and measuring performance is necessary, and 
    requirements for performance and outcome measurements are outlined in 
    this NOFA. Applicants with previous unsatisfactory PHDEP, or other 
    grant program, performance will be at a disadvantage with respect to 
    the third selection criterion, the capability of the applicant to carry 
    out the plan, at section I.(d)(3), below, of this NOFA.
    
    Paperwork Reduction Act Statement
    
        The information collection requirements contained in this Notice 
    have been approved by the Office of Management and Budget under the 
    Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501-3520), and assigned OMB 
    control number 2577-0124, which expires October 31, 1999. An agency may 
    not conduct or sponsor, and a person is not required to respond to, a 
    collection of information unless the collection displays a valid 
    control number.
    
    I. Purpose and Substantive Authority
    
        (a) Authority. These grants are authorized under Chapter 2, 
    Subtitle C, Title V of the Anti-Drug Abuse Act of 1988 (42 U.S.C. 11901 
    et. seq.), as amended by section 581 of the National Affordable Housing 
    Act of 1990 (NAHA), approved November 28, 1990, Pub. L. 101-625, and 
    section 161 of the Housing and Community Development Act of 1992 (HCDA 
    1992) (Pub. L. 102-550, approved October 28, 1992).
        (b) Allocation amounts. (1) Fiscal Year 1997 Funding. The 
    Departments of Veterans Affairs and Housing and Urban Development, and 
    Independent Agencies Appropriations Act, 1997, (approved September 26, 
    1996, Pub. L. 104-204), (97 App. Act) appropriated $290 million for the 
    Drug Elimination Program. Of the total $290 million appropriated, $1 
    million will fund drug information clearinghouse services; $10 million 
    will fund drug elimination technical assistance, contracts and other 
    assistance training, program assessments, and execution for or on 
    behalf of public housing agencies and resident organizations (including 
    the cost of necessary travel for participants in such training); $10 
    million shall be used in connection with efforts to combat violent 
    crime in public and assisted housing under the Operation Safe Home 
    Program administered by the Inspector General of HUD; and $16.875 
    million for the Federally Assisted Low-Income Housing Drug Elimination 
    Program, which is administered by the Office of Housing and is made 
    available through a separate NOFA. Additionally, a funding amount of 
    $39,000 in FY 1997 funds is being awarded to the Randolph County 
    Housing Authority, Randolph County, IL, a successful FY 1996 PHDEP 
    grantee which was mistakenly denied this amount in FY 1996 funding for 
    eligible law enforcement activities; $1,524,501 is being awarded to the 
    Chicago Housing Authority, Chicago, IL., which was mistakenly denied 
    this amount in FY 1996 funding for treatment activities; $8,400 is 
    being
    
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    awarded to the Tulsa Housing Authority which was incorrectly denied a 
    project expense in its FY 1995 application, and finally $400,100 is 
    being awarded to the Philadelphia Housing Authority, Philadelphia, PA, 
    which was incorrectly denied this amount for an eligible law 
    enforcement expense in its FY 1996 application. In addition, $496,053 
    of prior PHDEP carryover and recovery program funds will be made 
    available under the FY 1997 PHDEP NOFA. Accordingly, the total funding 
    available, to remain available until expended, for funding under this 
    FY 1997 PHDEP NOFA is $250,649,052. HUD is not funding the Youth Sports 
    Program (YSP) for FY 1997, although YSP-type activities under programs 
    to reduce/eliminate drug activities are eligible program expenses under 
    section I.(c)(6) of this NOFA.
        (2) Maximum Grant Award Amounts. HUD is distributing grant funds 
    under this NOFA on a national competition basis. Maximum grant award 
    amounts are computed on a sliding scale, using an overall maximum cap, 
    depending upon the number of housing authority units. The unit count 
    includes rental, Turnkey III Homeownership, Mutual Help Homeownership 
    and Section 23 leased housing bond-financed projects, although units in 
    the Turnkey III Homeownership, Mutual Help Homeownership and Section 23 
    bond-financed programs are counted only if they have not been conveyed. 
    Applicants should note that in determining the unit count for PHA-owned 
    or IHA-owned rental housing, a long-term vacancy unit, as defined in 24 
    CFR 950.102 or 990.102, is still included in the count. Eligible 
    projects must be covered by an annual contributions contract (ACC) 
    during the period of the grant award. For information and specific 
    guidance regarding PHA/IHA unit count contact the local HUD Field 
    Office; or Headquarters, Joan Dewitt, Director, PIH Finance and Budget 
    Division, on (202) 708-1872, extension 4035, and/or Deborah Lalancette, 
    Director, NONAP, Housing Management on (303) 675-1600, extension 3300.
        The maximum grant awards are as follows, although, as discussed 
    below, in section I.(b)(4) of this NOFA (Reduction of Requested Grant 
    Amounts and Special Conditions), the Department may adjust the amount 
    of any grant award. These estimates of the maximum grant awards are 
    based on the amount of funds available in FY 1997.
        For housing authorities with 1-1,250 units: The Minimum grant award 
    amount is $50,000 or a Maximum grant award cap of $300.00 per unit;
        For housing authorities with 1,251-24,999 units: The Maximum grant 
    award is a maximum grant award cap of $260.00 per unit;
        For housing authorities with 25,000-49,999 units: The Maximum grant 
    award is a maximum grant award cap of $230.00 per unit; and
        For housing authorities with 50,000 or more units: The Maximum 
    grant award is a maximum cap of $200.00 per unit; up to, but not to 
    exceed, a Maximum grant award of $35 million.
        An applicant shall not apply for more funding than is permitted in 
    accordance with the maximum grant award amount as described above. Any 
    application requesting funding that exceeds the maximum grant award 
    amount permitted will be rejected and will not be eligible for any 
    funding unless a computational error was involved in the FY 1997 PHDEP 
    funding request. Section IV of this NOFA provides guidance regarding 
    curable and noncurable deficiencies in the application. A computational 
    error will be considered a curable deficiency in the application. 
    Section III.(d) (Checklist of Application Requirements) of this NOFA 
    requires applicants to compute the maximum grant award amount for which 
    they are eligible. In accordance with sections I.(b)(2)(i) through 
    (iii) of this NOFA, applicants are required to validate/confirm the 
    housing authorities unit count with the local HUD Field Office prior to 
    submission of the application. The amount computed in this way must be 
    compared with the dollar amount requested in the application to make 
    certain the amount requested does not exceed the maximum grant award. 
    Units identified after the application deadline date will not be 
    accepted as part of the unit count.
        (3) Reallocation. All awards will be made to fully fund an 
    application, except as provided in section I.(b)(4) of this NOFA 
    (Reduction of Requested Grant Amounts and Special Conditions) below.
        (4) Reduction of Requested Grant Amounts and Special Conditions. 
    HUD may approve an application for an amount lower than the amount 
    requested, withhold funds after approval, take other remedies that may 
    be legally available, and/or the grantee will be required to comply 
    with special conditions added to the grant agreement, in accordance 
    with 24 CFR 85.12 (PHAs), and 24 CFR 950.135 (IHAs) as applicable, and 
    the requirements of this NOFA, or where:
        (i) HUD determines the amount requested for one or more eligible 
    activities is unreasonable or unnecessary;
        (ii) The application does not otherwise meet applicable cost 
    limitations established for the program;
        (iii) The applicant has requested an ineligible activity;
        (iv) Insufficient amounts remain in that funding round to fund the 
    full amount requested in the application and HUD determines that 
    partial funding is a viable option;
        (v) The applicant failed under previous PHDEP grants to drawdown 
    grant funds according to its plan, budget, and timetable, and/or failed 
    to submit HUD required performance and financial reports in a timely 
    manner. In addition, reports did not demonstrate satisfactory outcomes 
    that reduced/eliminated drug-related crime; or
        (vi) The applicant has demonstrated an inability to manage other 
    HUD grants.
        (c) Eligibility. Funding under this NOFA is available only for 
    housing authorities. Although section 161 of the Housing and Community 
    Development Act of 1992 (Pub. L. 102-550, approved October 28, 1992) 
    makes public housing resident management corporations (RMCs) eligible 
    for PHDEP funding, the 97 App. Act limited the funds appropriated ``for 
    grants to public and Indian housing agencies.'' RMCs may continue to 
    receive funding from housing authority grantees, as sub-grantees, to 
    develop security programs and substance abuse prevention programs 
    involving site residents as they have in the past. The Department has 
    determined that the term ``in or around'' means within, or adjacent to, 
    the physical boundaries of a public or Indian housing development. The 
    effect of this definition is to make certain that program funds and 
    program activities are targeted to benefit, as directly as possible, 
    the residents of public and Indian housing developments, the intended 
    beneficiaries of the program under the authorizing statute. The 
    definition is also consistent with, but not as strictly limited as, the 
    use of ``around'' in Federal criminal law, which makes it a Federal 
    crime to dispense drugs within 1,000 feet of public housing property. 
    An application for funding under this program may be for one or more of 
    the eligible activities. Every application must describe how the 
    proposed activities relate to the selection criteria in Section I.(d), 
    below, of this NOFA, and how the proposed activities will reduce or 
    eliminate drug-related crime. Concerning the definition of ``drug-
    related crime'', the 97 App. Act provides that the term ``drug-related 
    crime'', as defined in 42 U.S.C.
    
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    11905(2), shall also include other types of crime as determined by HUD. 
    Accordingly, for purposes of this NOFA, the term ``drug-related crime'' 
    as defined in 42 U.S.C. 11905(2) shall also include other crimes as 
    reported under the FBI's Uniform Crime Reporting Program (UCR) system. 
    These crimes are divided into two sections, Part I and Part II crimes. 
    Part I crimes are: criminal homicide, forcible rape, robbery, 
    aggravated assault (to include domestic violence--use of a weapon or by 
    means likely to produce death or great bodily harm), burglary-breaking 
    or entering, larceny-theft (except motor vehicle theft), motor vehicle 
    theft, and arson. Part II crimes are other assaults, forgery and 
    counterfeiting, fraud, embezzlement, vandalism, weapons (carrying, 
    possessing), prostitution and commercialized vice, sex offenses (except 
    forcible rape, prostitution and commercialized vice), drug abuse 
    violations, gambling, offenses against the family and children, driving 
    under the influence, liquor laws, drunkenness, disorderly conduct, 
    vagrancy, all other offenses, suspicion, and offenses related to curfew 
    and loitering laws and runaways.
        The following is a listing of eligible activities under this 
    program and guidance as to their parameters:
        (1) Employment of Security Personnel. Employment of security 
    personnel is permitted under this section. Employment of security 
    personnel is divided into two categories: Security personnel services, 
    and housing authority police departments.
        (i) General requirements. The following requirements apply to all 
    employment of security personnel activities funded under this NOFA:
        (A) Compliance. Security guard personnel and public housing 
    authority police departments funded by this NOFA must meet, and 
    demonstrate compliance with, all relevant Federal, State, Tribal or 
    local government insurance, licensing, certification, training, 
    bonding, or other similar law enforcement requirements.
        (B) Law enforcement service agreement. The applicant and the local 
    law enforcement agency, and if relevant, the contract provider of 
    security personnel services, are required to enter into a law 
    enforcement service agreement, in addition to the housing authority's 
    cooperation agreement, that describes the following:
        (1) The activities to be performed by security guard personnel or 
    the public housing authority police department; the scope of authority, 
    written policies, procedures, and practices that will govern security 
    personnel or public housing authority police department performance 
    (i.e., a policy manual as described in section I.(c)(1)(i)(C), below, 
    of this NOFA); and how security guard personnel or the public housing 
    authority police department shall coordinate activities with the local 
    law enforcement agency;
        (2) The types of activities that the approved security guard 
    personnel or the public housing authority police department are 
    expressly prohibited from undertaking.
        (C) Policy manual. Security guard personnel services and public 
    housing authority police departments funded under this NOFA shall be 
    guided by a policy manual that directs the activities of its personnel 
    and contains the policies, procedures, and general orders that regulate 
    conduct and describe in detail how jobs are to be performed. The policy 
    manual must exist before execution of the grant agreement. The housing 
    authority shall ensure all security guard personnel and housing 
    authority police officers are trained, at a minimum, in the following 
    areas that must be covered in the policy manual: use of force, resident 
    contacts, enforcement of HA rules, response criteria to calls, 
    pursuits, arrest procedures, reporting of crimes and workload, feedback 
    procedures to victims, citizens' complaint procedures, internal affairs 
    investigations, towing of vehicles, authorized weapons and other 
    equipment, radio procedures internally and with local police, training 
    requirements, patrol procedures, scheduling of meetings with residents, 
    reports to be completed, record keeping and position descriptions on 
    all personnel, post assignments, monitoring, and self-evaluation 
    program requirements.
        (D) Data management. A daily activity and incident complaint form 
    approved by the housing authority must be used by security personnel 
    and officers funded under this NOFA for the collection and analysis of 
    criminal incidents and responses to service calls. Security guard 
    personnel and housing authority police departments funded under this 
    NOFA must establish and maintain a system of records management for the 
    daily activity and incident complaint forms that appropriately ensures 
    the confidentially of personal criminal information. Management 
    Informational Systems (MIS) (computers, software, and associated 
    equipment) and management personnel in support of these activities are 
    eligible for funding.
        (ii) Security Personnel Services. Contracting for, or direct 
    housing authority employment of, security personnel services in and 
    around housing development(s) is Permitted under this program. 
    Contracts for security personnel services must be awarded on a 
    competitive basis.
        (A) Eligible services--over and above. Security guard personnel 
    funded by this program must perform services that are over and above 
    those usually performed by local municipal law enforcement agencies on 
    a routine basis. Eligible services may include patrolling inside 
    buildings, providing personnel services at building entrances to check 
    for proper identification, or patrolling and checking car parking lots 
    for appropriate parking decals.
        (B) Employment of residents. Housing authorities are Permitted and 
    encouraged to demonstrate in plans the employment of qualified 
    resident(s) as security guard personnel, and/or to contract with 
    security guard personnel firms that demonstrate in a proposed contract 
    a program to employ qualified residents as security guard personnel. An 
    applicant's program of eliminating drug-related crime should promote 
    ``welfare to work'' in housing authorities and development(s).
        (iii) Employment of Personnel and Equipment for HUD Authorized 
    Housing Authority Police Departments. Funding for equipment and 
    employment of housing authority police department personnel is 
    Permitted for housing authorities that already have their own public 
    housing authority police departments. The below-listed eleven (11) 
    housing authorities have been identified by HUD as having eligible 
    public housing police departments/agencies under the FY 1997 PHDEP:
    
    Baltimore Housing Authority and Community Development, Baltimore, MD
    Boston Housing Authority, Boston, MA
    Buffalo Housing Authority, Buffalo, NY
    Chicago Housing Authority, Chicago, IL
    Cuyahoga Metropolitan Housing Authority, Cleveland, OH
    Housing Authority of the City of Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA
    Housing Authority of the City of Oakland, Oakland, CA
    Philadelphia Housing Authority, Philadelphia, PA
    Housing Authority of the City of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA
    Waterbury Housing Authority, Waterbury, CT
    Virgin Islands Housing Authority, Virgin Islands
    
        (A) On September 22, 1995, the Department issued Notice PIH 95-58 
    (Guidelines for Creating, Implementing and Managing Public Housing 
    Authority
    
    [[Page 28543]]
    
    Police Departments in Public Housing Authorities). This notice 
    identifies the prerequisites for creating public housing police 
    departments and provides guidance regarding technical assistance to 
    housing authorities to assist in making decisions regarding public 
    housing security, analysis of security needs, and performance measures 
    and outcomes.
        (B) Housing authorities that have established their own public 
    housing authority police departments, but are not included on this 
    list, may file a written request to be recognized by the Department as 
    a public housing authority police department by contacting the Office 
    of the Deputy Assistant Secretary for Community Relations and 
    Involvement, Public and Indian Housing, Department of Housing and Urban 
    Development, Room 4126, 451 Seventh Street, SW., Washington, DC 20410. 
    This request must be submitted and approved by the Department prior to 
    the submission of the FY 1997 PHDEP application. Hearing-or-speech 
    impaired persons may call (800) 877-8339. (Federal Information Relay 
    Service TTY.) Except for the ``800'' number, these telephone numbers 
    are not toll-free.
        (C) An applicant seeking funding for this activity must describe 
    the current level of local law enforcement agency baseline services 
    being provided to the housing authority/development(s) proposed for 
    assistance. Local law enforcement baseline services are defined as 
    ordinary and routine services provided to the residents as a part of 
    the overall city and county-wide deployment of police resources, to 
    respond to crime and other public safety incidents, including: 911 
    communications, processing calls for service, routine patrol officer 
    responses to calls for service, and investigative follow-up of criminal 
    activity.
        (D) Applicants for funding of housing authority public housing 
    authority police department officers must have car-to-car (or other 
    vehicles) and portable-to-portable radio communications links between 
    public housing authority police officers and local municipal law 
    enforcement officers to assure a coordinated and safe response to 
    crimes or calls for services. The use of scanners (radio monitors) is 
    not sufficient to meet the requirements of this section. Applicants 
    that do not have such links must submit a plan and timetable for the 
    implementation of such communications links, which is an activity 
    eligible for funding. A housing authority funded under the FY 1994, 
    1995, and/or 1996 PHDEP for public housing police departments shall 
    demonstrate in its plan what progress has been made in implementing its 
    communications links. The Department will monitor results of the 
    housing authority's plan and timetable.
        (E) Public housing authority police departments funded under this 
    program that are not employing a community policing concept must submit 
    a plan and timetable for the implementation of community policing. A 
    housing authority funded under the FY 1994, 1995, and/or 1996 PHDEP for 
    public housing police departments shall demonstrate in its plan what 
    progress has been made in implementing its community policing program. 
    The Department will monitor results of the housing authority's plan and 
    timetable.
        (1) Community policing has a variety of definitions; however, for 
    the purposes of this program, it is defined as follows: Community 
    policing is a method of providing law enforcement services that 
    stresses a partnership among residents, police, schools, churches, 
    government services, the private sector, and other local, State, 
    Tribal, and Federal law enforcement agencies to prevent crime and 
    improve the quality of life by addressing the conditions and problems 
    that lead to crime and the fear of crime.
        (2) This method of policing involves a philosophy of proactive 
    measures, such as foot patrols, bicycle patrols, motor scooters 
    patrols, KOBAN activities (community police officers who operate 
    through community-based facilities in housing authorities [e.g., 
    community center, police mini station] providing human resource 
    activities as described in section I.(c)(6) of this NOFA with inner-
    city youth who demonstrate high risk behaviors which can lead to drug-
    related crime), and citizen contacts. For additional information 
    regarding KOBAN community policing contact Malcolm (Mike) E. Main, 
    (202) 708-1197, extension 4232. This concept empowers police officers 
    at the beat and zone level and residents in neighborhoods in an effort 
    to: Reduce crime and fear of crime; assure the maintenance of order; 
    provide referrals of residents, victims, and the homeless to social 
    services and government agencies; assure feedback of police actions to 
    victims of crime; and promote a law enforcement value system on the 
    needs and rights of residents.
        (F) Housing authority police departments funded under this program 
    that are not nationally or state accredited must submit a plan and 
    timetable for such accreditation. Housing authorities may use either 
    their State accreditation program, if one exists, or the Commission on 
    Accreditation for Law Enforcement Agencies (CALEA) for this purpose. 
    Use of grant funds for public housing police department accreditation 
    activities is permitted. Housing authorities receiving grants under 
    section I.(c)(1)(iii) of this NOFA (public housing police departments) 
    are required to hire a public housing police department accreditation 
    specialist to manage the accreditation program. Housing authority 
    police departments must submit a plan and timetable in order to be 
    funded for this activity. Any public housing police department funded 
    under the FY 1994, 1995, and/or 1996 PHDEP shall demonstrate in its 
    plan what progress has been made in implementing its accreditation 
    program and the projected date of accreditation. The Department will 
    monitor results of the housing authority's plan and timetable.
        (G) Housing authorities that have been identified by HUD in section 
    I.(c)(1)(iii), (public housing police departments) above, of this NOFA 
    as having authorized public housing police departments are permitted to 
    use PHDEP funds to purchase or lease any law enforcement clothing or 
    equipment, such as, vehicles, uniforms, ammunition, firearms/weapons, 
    police vehicles; including cars, vans, buses, and protective vests, or 
    any other equipment that supports their crime prevention and security 
    mission. Housing authorities not identified by HUD in Section 
    I.(c)(1)(iii), above, of this NOFA as having an authorized public 
    housing police department are not permitted to use PHDEP funds to 
    directly purchase any clothing or equipment for use by local municipal 
    police departments and/or other law enforcement agencies.
        (2) Reimbursement of Local Law Enforcement Agencies for Additional 
    (Supplemental--Over and Above Baseline Services) Security and 
    Protective Services.
        (i) Additional (supplemental) security and protective services Are 
    Permitted under this program, but such services must be over and above 
    the local police department's current level of baseline services. 
    Housing authorities are required to identify the level of local law 
    enforcement services that they are required to receive pursuant to 
    their local cooperation agreements, as well as the current level of 
    services being received. For purposes of this NOFA, local police 
    department baseline services are defined as ordinary and routine 
    services, including patrols, police officer responses to 911 
    communications and other calls for service, and investigative follow-up 
    of
    
    [[Page 28544]]
    
    criminal activity, provided to HA residents as a part of the overall 
    deployment of police resources by the local jurisdiction in which the 
    HA is located.
        In addition to providing reimbursement to local law enforcement 
    agencies for an increase over current baseline services to housing 
    authorities, funds may be used in a manner consistent with the 
    requirements of this NOFA for the equipment and employment of a local 
    police division or bureau dedicated exclusively to providing law 
    enforcement services (over and above local law enforcement baseline 
    services) to a housing authority. For convenience of reference, the 
    particular eligible activity of the equipment and employment of a local 
    police division or bureau dedicated exclusively to providing law 
    enforcement services (over and above local law enforcement baseline 
    services) to a housing authority is referred to as an HA-dedicated 
    police division/bureau. All of the requirements of this section 
    I.(c)(2) apply to this activity. In addition, specific requirements for 
    an HA-dedicated police division/bureau appear at section 
    I.(c)(2)(viii), below.
        (ii) An applicant seeking funding for activities under this section 
    I.(c)(2) of the NOFA must first define the local police department's 
    current level of baseline services to the HA residents. The description 
    of baseline services must include the number of officers and equipment 
    and the actual percent of their time assigned to the housing 
    authority's development(s) proposed for funding. The applicant must 
    then demonstrate in its plan to what extent the proposed funded 
    activity will represent an increase over and above these baseline 
    services.
        (iii) Equipment and personnel funded under this NOFA shall be used 
    exclusively for the housing authority's crime prevention and 
    comprehensive security efforts, which must be conducted in connection 
    with the establishment of a law enforcement mini-station facility and/
    or presence on the funded premises or scattered site developments of 
    the housing authority. Housing authorities are permitted to purchase, 
    but must demonstrate accountability for, communications and security 
    equipment to improve collection, analysis, and use of information about 
    drug-related crime in their development(s), such as surveillance 
    equipment (e.g., Closed Circuit Television (CCTV), software, cameras, 
    monitors, components and supporting equipment), computers accessing 
    national, Tribal, State or local government security networks and 
    databases, facsimile machines, telephone equipment, bicycles, and motor 
    scooters, or other communications and security equipment. The 
    communications and security equipment must be used in connection with 
    the establishment of law enforcement mini-station(s) and/or other law 
    enforcement facility(s) on the funded premises or scattered site 
    developments of the housing authority. The communication and security 
    equipment shall be the property of, and maintained by, the housing 
    authority.
        (iv) The local law enforcement agency shall collect its police 
    officer's PHDEP-funded activity (not just hours of work) information 
    for the housing authority. The local law enforcement agency must use a 
    housing authority-approved activity form for the collection, analysis 
    and reporting of activities by officers funded under this NOFA.
        (v) Expenditures for activities under this section must not be 
    incurred by the housing authority (grantee) and funds will not be 
    released by the local HUD Field Office until the grantee and the local 
    law enforcement agency execute a contractual agreement, with an 
    operational plan, for the additional (supplemental) law enforcement 
    services. The agreement must state that the funding to be provided by 
    the HA for additional services is over and above the police agency's 
    approved budget and that the PHDEP funds will not be used to replace 
    funds for law enforcement services in the local government's approved 
    budget. The local police department or law enforcement agency shall be 
    reimbursed in accordance with this contractual agreement.
        (vi) The Department advocates and strongly encourages local 
    community policing collaborations, between housing authorities and 
    local police departments and agencies, regarding reduction/elimination 
    of drug-related crime to improve safety and security for residents in 
    housing authorities. For additional background on community policing 
    strategy, see the discussion at section I.(c)(1)(iii)(E) of this NOFA.
        (vii) The Department advocates and strongly encourages housing 
    authorities to work closely with local police departments to permit the 
    admission to public housing of police officers and other security 
    personnel, whose visible presence may serve as a deterrent to drug-
    related crime. Section 519 of the Cranston-Gonzalez National Affordable 
    Housing Act (42 U.S.C. 1437a-1) permits housing authorities to allow 
    police officers and other security personnel not otherwise eligible for 
    occupancy to reside in public or Indian housing dwelling units under a 
    plan that will increase security for residents while minimizing both 
    the reduction of available dwelling units and loss of housing authority 
    income. HUD's final rule implementing section 519 is located at subpart 
    E of 24 CFR part 960. For assistance regarding this program, contact 
    the local HUD Field Office and/or the Office of the Deputy Assistant 
    Secretary for Public and Assisted Housing Operations, Linda Campbell, 
    Director, Marketing and Leasing Management Division, (202) 708-0744 
    and/or Malcolm (Mike) Main, (202) 708-1197, extension 4232.
        (viii) HA-dedicated police division/bureau. The following 
    additional requirements apply to an application proposing to establish 
    an HA-dedicated police division/bureau, which is a police division or 
    bureau of the local law enforcement agency, consisting of full-time 
    officers, dedicated exclusively to providing law enforcement services 
    to a housing authority:
        (A) To be an eligible activity for funding under this NOFA, an HA-
    dedicated police division must first be recognized by HUD. Local 
    governments who wish to establish an HA-dedicated police division must 
    file a written request to be recognized by the Department by contacting 
    the Office of the Deputy Assistant Secretary for Community Relations 
    and Involvement, Public and Indian Housing, Department of Housing and 
    Urban Development, Room 4126, 451 Seventh Street, SW., Washington, DC 
    20410. This request must be submitted to and approved by HUD prior to 
    the submission of the FY 1997 PHDEP application. Hearing-or-speech 
    impaired persons may call (800) 877-8339. (Federal Information Relay 
    Service TTY.) Except for the ``800'' number, these telephone numbers 
    are not toll-free.
        (B) The HA and the local law enforcement agency must have executed 
    a written law enforcement service agreement that includes: a short (up 
    to two years) and long (up to three years) range operational plan that 
    identifies the strategy, number of law enforcement personnel and the 
    equipment that will be dedicated exclusively to providing law 
    enforcement services to the HA's developments; specific performance 
    measurements; procedures for communications and coordination with the 
    housing authority; job descriptions of the officers; and the local 
    government's and the housing authority's roles and responsibilities.
        (viii) In order to assist housing authorities to develop and 
    administer relevant, fair, and productive law enforcement service 
    contracts with local
    
    [[Page 28545]]
    
    police departments for the delivery of effective security services to 
    the housing authority residents, a sample contract for law enforcement 
    services is provided with the application kit. A sample model law 
    enforcement contract is provided in the application kit and also may be 
    obtained by calling HUD's DISC, on 1-800-578-3472.
        (3) Physical Improvements to Enhance Security.
        (i) Physical improvements that are specifically designed to enhance 
    security are permitted under this program. These improvements may 
    include (but are not limited to) the installation of barriers, speed 
    bumps, lighting systems, fences, surveillance equipment (e.g., Closed 
    Circuit Television (CCTV), software, fax, cameras, monitors, components 
    and supporting equipment) bolts, locks; and the landscaping or 
    reconfiguration of common areas so as to discourage drug-related crime 
    in the housing authorities and development(s) proposed for funding.
        (ii) An activity cost that is funded under any other HUD program, 
    such as the modernization program at 24 CFR part 968, shall not also be 
    funded by this program. Housing authorities are encouraged to fund 
    physical security improvements under their approved modernization 
    programs whenever possible since the PHDEP program is designed 
    essentially to fund ``soft'' costs rather than ``hard'' costs. The 
    applicant must demonstrate program compliance, accountability, 
    financial and audit controls of PHDEP funds and prevent duplication of 
    funding any activity. Housing authorities shall not co-mingle funds of 
    HUD multiple programs such as: CIAP, CGP, OTAR, ED/SS, TOP, HOPE 
    projects, Family Investment, Elderly Service Coordinator, and Operating 
    Subsidy.
        (iii) Funding is not permitted for physical improvements that 
    involve the demolition of any units in a development.
        (iv) Funding is not permitted for any physical improvements that 
    would result in the displacement of persons.
        (v) Funding is not permitted for the acquisition of real property.
        (vi) Funding is permitted for purchase or lease of house trailers 
    used for eligible community policing, educational, employment, and 
    youth activities.
        (vii) All physical improvements must also be accessible to persons 
    with disabilities. For example, some types of locks, buzzer systems, 
    and doors, are not accessible to persons with limited strength or 
    mobility, or to persons who are hearing impaired. All physical 
    improvements must meet the accessibility requirements of 24 CFR part 8.
        (4) Employment of Investigators.
        (i) Employment of and equipment for one or more individuals is 
    permitted under this program to:
        (A) Investigate drug-related crime ``in or around'' the real 
    property comprising any housing authority's development(s); and
        (B) Provide evidence relating to any such crime in any 
    administrative or judicial proceedings.
        (ii) Housing authorities that employ investigators funded by this 
    program must meet and demonstrate compliance with all relevant Federal, 
    Tribal, State or local government insurance, licensing, certification, 
    training, bonding, or other similar law enforcement requirements.
        (iii) The housing authority (grantee), and the provider of the 
    investigative services are required to enter into and execute a written 
    agreement that describes the following:
        (A) The nature of the activities to be performed by the housing 
    authority investigators, their scope of authority, reports to be 
    completed, established policies, procedures, and practices that will 
    govern their performance (i.e., a Policy Manual as described in section 
    I.(c)(1)(i)(C) of this NOFA) and how housing authority investigators 
    will coordinate their activities with local, State, Tribal, and Federal 
    law enforcement agencies; and
        (B) The types of activities that the housing authority 
    investigators are expressly prohibited from undertaking.
        (iv) Under this section, reimbursable costs associated with the 
    investigation of drug-related crimes (e.g., travel directly related to 
    the investigator's activities, or costs associated with the 
    investigator's testimony at judicial or administrative proceedings) may 
    only be those directly incurred by the investigator.
        (v) Housing authority investigator(s) shall report on drug-related 
    crime and other part I and part II crimes in the housing authority and 
    developments. Housing authorities shall establish, implement and 
    maintain a system of records management that ensures confidentiality of 
    criminal records and information. Housing authority-approved activity 
    forms must be used for the collection, analysis and reporting of 
    activities by housing authority investigators funded under this 
    section. Management Informational Systems (MIS) (Computers, software, 
    hardware, and associated equipment) and management personnel are 
    encouraged and are eligible program expenses in support of a housing 
    authority's crime and workload data collection activity and its crime 
    prevention and security mission.
        (vi) Funding is permitted for housing authority investigator(s) to 
    use PHDEP funds to purchase or lease any law enforcement clothing or 
    equipment, such as vehicles, uniforms, ammunition, firearms/weapons, or 
    vehicles; including cars, vans, buses, protective vests, and any other 
    supportive equipment, to support the activities of the investigators.
        (vii) Expenditures for activities under this section will not be 
    incurred by the housing authority (grantee) and funds will not be 
    released by the local HUD Field Office until the grantee has met all of 
    the above requirements.
        (5) Voluntary tenant patrols. Active voluntary tenant patrol 
    activities, to include purchase of uniforms, equipment and related 
    training, are permitted under this section. For the purposes of this 
    section, the elimination of drug-related crime within and around the 
    housing authority/development(s) requires the active involvement and 
    commitment of residents and their organizations.
        (i) The provision of training and equipment (including uniforms) 
    for use by voluntary tenant patrols acting in cooperation with 
    officials of local law enforcement agencies is permitted under this 
    program. Members must be volunteers and must be residents of the 
    housing authority's development(s). Voluntary tenant patrols 
    established under this program are expected to patrol in the housing 
    authority's development(s) proposed for assistance, and to report 
    illegal activities to appropriate housing authority staff, and local, 
    State, Tribal, and Federal law enforcement agencies, as appropriate. 
    Housing authorities are required to obtain liability insurance to 
    protect themselves and the members of the voluntary tenant patrol 
    against potential liability for the activities of the patrol under this 
    program. The cost of this insurance is an eligible program expense.
        (ii) The housing authority (grantee) and cooperating local law 
    enforcement agency, and the members of the voluntary tenant patrol are 
    required, prior to expending any grant funds, to enter into and execute 
    a written housing authority/local municipal police department agreement 
    that describes the following:
        (A) The nature of the activities to be performed by the voluntary 
    tenant patrol, the patrol's scope of authority, assignment, the 
    established policies, procedures, and practices that will govern the 
    voluntary tenant patrol's
    
    [[Page 28546]]
    
    performance and how the patrol will coordinate its activities with the 
    law enforcement agency;
        (B) The types of activities that a voluntary tenant patrol is 
    expressly prohibited from undertaking, including, but not limited to, 
    the carrying or use of firearms or other weapons, nightstick, clubs, 
    handcuffs, or mace in the course of their duties under this program;
        (C) The initial and follow-up voluntary tenant patrol training the 
    members receive from the local law enforcement agency (training by the 
    local law enforcement agency is required before putting the voluntary 
    tenant patrol into effect); and
        (D) Voluntary tenant patrol members must be advised that they may 
    be subject to individual or collective liability for any actions 
    undertaken outside the scope of their authority and that such acts are 
    not covered under a housing authority's liability insurance.
        (iii) Uniforms, communication and related equipment eligible for 
    funding under this program shall be reasonable, necessary, justified 
    and related to the operation of the voluntary tenant patrol and must be 
    otherwise permissible under local, State, Tribal, or Federal law.
        (iv) Under this program, bicycles, motor scooters, all season 
    uniforms and associated equipment (voluntary tenant patrol uniforms and 
    equipment must be identified with specific housing authority/
    development(s) identification and markings) to be used, exclusively, by 
    the members of the housing authority's voluntary tenant patrol are 
    eligible items.
        (v) PHDEP grant funds shall not be used for any type of financial 
    compensation, such as any full-time wages or salaries for voluntary 
    tenant and/or patrol participants. Funding for housing authority 
    personnel or resident(s) to be hired to coordinate this activity is 
    permitted.
        (6) Programs to reduce/eliminate the use of drugs (prevention, 
    intervention, treatment, short/long range structured aftercare and 
    individual support systems). Programs that reduce/eliminate drug-
    related crime ``in or around'' the premises of the housing authority/
    development(s), including substance abuse prevention, intervention, and 
    referral programs, and programs of local social and/or religious and 
    other organizations that provide treatment services [contractual or 
    otherwise] for dependency/remission, and structured aftercare/support 
    system programs, are permitted under this program. The applicant must 
    establish a confidentiality policy regarding medical and disability-
    related information. For purposes of this section, the goals of this 
    program are best served by focusing resources directly upon housing 
    authority residents and families. Successful strategies (best 
    practices) have incorporated substance abuse prevention, intervention 
    and treatment (dependency/remission and short and long term aftercare) 
    activities into a ``continuum of care'' approach that assists persons 
    that are using or are at-risk of using drugs and/or committing drug-
    related crime by providing alternative activities, such as; education, 
    training and employment development opportunities. The applicant's goal 
    must be to reduce/eliminate drug-related crime through a program 
    designed to provide education, training and employment opportunities 
    for residents. Such programs create a prime opportunity for housing 
    authorities to leverage resources and bring additional Federal, State 
    and local resources into the housing authority community. While housing 
    authorities provide space and other infrastructure, other public or 
    private agencies can provide staff and other resources with limited 
    cost or no cost. Applicants are encouraged to use the PHDEP resources 
    in this fashion. A community-based approach requires a culturally 
    appropriate strategy. Curricula, activities, and staff should address 
    the cultural issues of the local community, which requires familiarity 
    and facility with the language and cultural norms of the community. As 
    applicable, this strategy should discuss cultural competencies 
    associated with Hispanic, African-American, Asian, Native American or 
    other racial or other ethnic communities. Applicants are encouraged to 
    develop a substance abuse/sobriety (remission)/treatment (dependency) 
    strategy to facilitate substance abuse prevention, intervention, 
    treatment, and structured aftercare efforts, that include outreach to 
    community resources, youth activities, and that facilitate bringing 
    these resources onto the premises, or providing resident referrals to 
    treatment programs or transportation to out-patient treatment programs 
    away from the premises. Funding is permitted for reasonable, necessary 
    and justified purchasing or leasing (whichever can be documented as the 
    most cost effective) of vehicles for grant administration, resident 
    youth and adult education, and training and employment opportunity 
    activities directly related to reducing/eliminating drug-related crime. 
    Based upon the current Diagnostic and Statistical Manual (DSM) of 
    Mental Disorders, of the American Psychiatric Association dated May 
    1994, as it applies to substance abuse, dependency and structured 
    aftercare, related activities and programs are eligible for funding 
    under this program. For additional information regarding the DSM Manual 
    contact APPI, 1400 K Street, NW., Suite 1100, Washington, DC 20005 on 1 
    (800) 368-5777 or World Wide Web site at http:\\www.appi.org. Funding 
    is permitted for reasonable, necessary and justified program costs, 
    such as meals, beverages and transportation, incurred only for 
    training, education and employment activities, as set forth in OMB 
    Circular A-87, directly related to reducing/eliminating drug-related 
    crime.
        (i) Prevention. Prevention programs that will be considered for 
    funding under this part should provide a comprehensive prevention 
    approach for the housing authority resident(s) that addresses the 
    individual resident and his or her relationship to family, peers, and 
    the community and that reduces/eliminates drug-related crime. 
    Prevention programs should include activities designed to identify and 
    change the factors present in housing authorities that lead to drug-
    related crime, and thereby lower the risk of drug usage. Many 
    components of a comprehensive approach, such as refusal and restraint 
    skills training programs or drug, substance abuse/dependency, family 
    counseling, may already be available in the community of the 
    applicant's housing developments.
        (A) Educational Opportunities. The causes and effects of illegal 
    drug/substance abuse must be discussed in a culturally appropriate and 
    structured setting to educate young people with the working knowledge 
    and skills they need to reject illegal drugs, which has been identified 
    by the Office of National Drug Control Policy as one of the top five 
    goals and objectives to address in their 10-Year Strategy Commitment. 
    Grantees may contract (in accordance with 24 CFR 85.36) with 
    professionals to provide such knowledge and skills with training 
    programs or workshops. The professionals contracted to provide these 
    services shall be required to base their services upon the needs 
    assessment and program plan of the grantee. These educational 
    opportunities may be a part of resident meetings, youth activities, or 
    other gatherings of public and Indian housing residents.
        (B) Family and Other Support Services. For purposes of this 
    section, the term ``supportive services'' means services to provide 
    housing authority families with access to prevention, educational and 
    employment
    
    [[Page 28547]]
    
    opportunities, such as: Child care; employment training; computer 
    skills training; remedial education; substance abuse counseling; 
    assistance in the attainment of certification of high school 
    equivalency; and other services to reduce drug-related crime. In 
    addition, substance abuse and other prevention programs must 
    demonstrate that they will provide directly, or otherwise make 
    available, services designed to distribute substance/drug education 
    information, to foster effective parenting skills, and to provide 
    referrals for treatment and other available support services in the 
    housing development or the community for housing authority families.
        (C) Adult and Youth Services. Prevention programs must demonstrate 
    that they have included groups composed of young people as a part of 
    their prevention programs. These groups should be coordinated by adults 
    with the active participation of youth to organize youth leadership, 
    sports, recreational, cultural and other activities involving housing 
    authority youth. The dissemination of information designed to reduce 
    drug-related crime, such as, prevention programs, employment 
    opportunities; employment training; literacy training; computer skills 
    training; remedial education; substance abuse and dependency/remission 
    counseling; assistance in the attainment of certification of high 
    school equivalency; and other appropriate services and the development 
    of peer leadership skills and other prevention activities must be a 
    component of youth services.
        (D) Economic and Educational Opportunities for Resident Adult and 
    Youth Activities. Prevention programs must demonstrate a capacity to 
    provide housing authority residents the opportunities for interaction 
    with or referral to established higher education or vocational 
    institutions with the goal of developing or building on the residents' 
    skills to pursue educational, vocational and economic goals. Programs 
    such as computer learning centers for both adults and youth, employment 
    service centers coordinated with Federal, Tribal, State and local 
    employment offices, and micro-business centers are eligible under this 
    program. The application should demonstrate that the proposed 
    activities will provide housing authority residents the opportunity to 
    interact with private sector businesses in their immediate and 
    surrounding communities for the same desired goals. Economic and 
    educational opportunities for residents and youth activities should be 
    discussed in the context of ``welfare to work'' and related Federal, 
    Tribal, State and local government efforts for employment training, 
    education and employment opportunities related to ``welfare to work'' 
    goals. Limited educational scholarships are permitted under this 
    section. No one individual award may exceed $500.00, and there is a 
    total maximum cap scholarship program award of $25,000. Educational 
    scholarship FY 1997 PHDEP funds must be obligated and expended during 
    the term of the grant. The applicant must demonstrate in its plan and 
    timetable the scholarship strategy; the financial and audit controls 
    that will be used; and projected outcomes. Student financial assistance 
    is permitted for individual public housing scholarship activities. 
    These activities must be reasonable, necessary and justified.
        (ii) Intervention. The aim of intervention is to provide housing 
    authority residents' substance abuse/dependency remission services, and 
    assist them in modifying their behavior and maintaining remission, and 
    in obtaining early substance abuse, treatment and structured aftercare, 
    if necessary.
        (iii) Substance Abuse/Dependency Treatment.
        (A) Treatment funded under this program should be ``in or around'' 
    the premises of the housing authority/development(s) proposed for 
    funding. The Department has defined the term ``in or around'' to mean 
    within, or adjacent to, the physical boundaries of a public or Indian 
    housing development. The intent of this definition is to make certain 
    that program funds and program activities are targeted to benefit, as 
    directly as possible, public and Indian housing developments, the 
    intended beneficiaries of PHDEP. The goals of this program are best 
    served by focusing its resources directly upon the residents of housing 
    authorities and development(s). The applicant must establish a 
    confidentiality policy regarding medical and disability-related 
    information.
        (B) Funds awarded under this program shall be targeted towards the 
    development and implementation of sobriety maintenance, substance-free 
    maintenance support groups, substance abuse counseling, referral 
    treatment services and short or long range structured aftercare, or the 
    improvement of, or expansion of, such program services for housing 
    authority residents.
        (C) Each proposed drug program must address, but is not limited to, 
    the following goals:
        (1) Increase resident accessibility to treatment services;
        (2) Decrease drug-related crime ``in or around'' the housing 
    authority/development(s) by reducing and/or eliminating drug use among 
    residents; and
        (3) Provide services designed for youth and/or adult drug abusers 
    and recovering addicts, e.g., prenatal and postpartum care, specialized 
    family and parental counseling, parenting classes, or other supportive 
    services such as domestic or youth violence counseling.
        (D) Independent approaches that have proven effective with similar 
    populations will be considered for funding. Applicants must consider in 
    the overall strategy the following criteria:
        (1) Formal referral arrangements to other treatment programs in 
    cases where the resident is able to obtain treatment costs from sources 
    other than this program.
        (2) Family/youth counseling.
        (3) Linkages to educational and vocational training and employment 
    counseling.
        (4) Coordination of services from and to appropriate local 
    substance abuse/treatment agencies, HIV-related service agencies, 
    mental health and public health programs.
        (E) As applicable, applicants must demonstrate a working 
    partnership with the Single State Agency or local, Tribal or State 
    license provider or authority with substance abuse program(s) 
    coordination responsibilities to coordinate, develop and implement the 
    substance dependency treatment proposal.
        (F) Applicants must demonstrate that counselors (contractual or 
    otherwise) meet Federal, State, Tribal, and local government licensing, 
    bonding, training, certification and continuing training re-
    certification requirements.
        (G) The Single State Agency or authority with substance abuse and 
    dependency programs coordination responsibilities must certify that the 
    proposed program is consistent with the State plan; and that the 
    service(s) meets all Federal, State, Tribal and local government 
    medical licensing, training, bonding, and certification requirements.
        (H) Funding is permitted for drug treatment of housing authority 
    residents at local in-patient medical (contractual or otherwise) 
    treatment programs and facilities. PHDEP funding for structured in-
    patient drug treatment under PHDEP funds is limited to 60 days, and 
    structured drug out-patient treatment, which includes individual/family 
    aftercare, is limited to 6 months. The applicant must demonstrate how 
    individuals that complete drug treatment will be provided employment
    
    [[Page 28548]]
    
    training, education and employment opportunities related to ``welfare 
    to work,'' if applicable.
        (I) Funding is permitted for detoxification procedures designed to 
    reduce or eliminate the short-term presence of toxic substances in the 
    body tissues of a patient.
        (J) Funding is not permitted for maintenance drug programs. 
    Maintenance drugs are medications that are prescribed regularly for a 
    short/long period of supportive therapy (e.g. methadone maintenance), 
    rather than for immediate control of a disorder.
        (K) All activities described in this section I.(c)(6) of the NOFA 
    to reduce/eliminate the use of drugs and reduce/eliminate drug-related 
    crime should demonstrate efforts to coordinate with Federal, Tribal, 
    State and local employment training and development services, ``welfare 
    to work'' efforts, or other new ``welfare reform'' efforts related to 
    education, training and employment of housing authority residents 
    receiving Federal, Tribal, State or local assistance, in public and 
    Indian housing authorities/development(s).
        (L) Funding is Permitted to contractually hire organizations and/or 
    consultant(s) to conduct independent assessments and evaluations of the 
    effectiveness of the PHDEP program.
        (7) Resident management corporations (RMCs), resident councils 
    (RCs), and resident organizations (ROs). Funding under this program is 
    permitted for housing authorities RMCs and incorporated RCs and ROs to 
    develop security and substance abuse prevention programs involving site 
    residents. Such programs may include (but are not limited to) voluntary 
    tenant patrol activities, substance abuse education, intervention, and 
    referral programs, youth programs, and outreach efforts. For the 
    purposes of this section I.(c)(7), the elimination of drug-related 
    crime within housing authorities/developments requires the active 
    involvement and commitment of public housing residents and their 
    organizations. To enhance the ability of housing authorities to combat 
    drug-related crime within their developments, Resident Councils (RCs), 
    Resident Management Corporations (RMCs), and Resident Organizations 
    (ROs) will be permitted to undertake program management functions 
    specified in this part, notwithstanding the otherwise applicable 
    requirements of 24 CFR parts 950 and 964. In order to implement the 
    approved activity, the housing authority shall be the grantee and enter 
    into a sub-contract with the RMC/RC/RO setting forth the amount of 
    funds, applicable terms, conditions, financial controls, payment 
    mechanism schedule, performance and financial report requirements, 
    special conditions, including sanctions for violation of the agreement, 
    and monitoring. Expenditures for activities under this section will not 
    be incurred by the housing authority (grantee) and/or funds will not be 
    released by the local HUD Field Office until the grantee has met all of 
    the above requirements. Activities described in this section of the 
    NOFA should demonstrate efforts to coordinate with Federal, Tribal, 
    State and local employment training and development services, ``welfare 
    to work'' efforts, or other new but related ``welfare reform'' efforts 
    related to education, employment training and employment of housing 
    authority residents receiving Federal, Tribal, State or local 
    assistance.
        (8) FY 1997 PHDEP program performance measurements and outcomes in 
    reducing and eliminating drug-related crime in housing authorities. HUD 
    will evaluate an applicant's performance under previous PHDEP grant(s). 
    The local HUD Field Office will evaluate the applicant's: financial 
    controls; audit compliance; program performance; drawdown of funds; 
    performance and financial reporting; grant agreement special condition 
    compliance; accomplishment of stated goals and objectives in reducing 
    and eliminating drug-related crime; and program adjustments made in 
    response to previous ineffective and/or unsatisfactory grant 
    performance. If the evaluation discloses a pattern under past PHDEP 
    grants of ineffective or unsatisfactory grant performance with no 
    corrective measures attempted, and with a lack of positive outcomes, it 
    will result in a deduction of points from the FY 1997 PHDEP application 
    under Selection Criterion 3, below. Since this is a competitive 
    program, HUD does not guarantee continued funding of any previously 
    funded PHDEP grant(s) or future PHDEP grants.
        (9) PHA-owned housing. Funding may be used for the activities 
    described in Sections I.(c)(1) through (7) (eligible activities) of 
    this NOFA, to eliminate drug-related crime in housing owned by public 
    housing agencies that is not public housing assisted under the United 
    States Housing Act of 1937 and is not otherwise federally assisted (for 
    example, housing that receives tenant subsidies under Section 8 is 
    federally assisted and would not qualify, but housing that receives 
    only State, Tribal or local assistance would qualify), but only if they 
    meet all of the following:
        (i) The housing is located in a high intensity drug trafficking 
    area designated pursuant to section 1005 of the Anti-Drug Abuse Act of 
    1988; and
        (ii) The PHA owning the housing demonstrates, on the basis of 
    information submitted in accordance with the requirements of sections 
    I.(d)(1), below, of this NOFA, that drug-related crime at the housing 
    has a detrimental affect on or about the housing.
        The High Intensity Drug Trafficking Areas (HIDTAs) are areas 
    identified as having the most critical drug trafficking problems that 
    adversely impact the rest of the country. These areas are designated as 
    HIDTAs by the Director, Office of National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP), 
    pursuant to the Anti-Drug Abuse Act of 1988. As of April 1997 the 
    following areas were confirmed by the ONDCP as designated HIDTAs:
    
    --New York City HIDTA: consists of the city of New York and all the 
    municipalities therein and Nassau, Suffolk, and Westchester Counties 
    (in New york), and Union, Hudson, Essex, Bergen, and Passaic Counties 
    and all municipalities therein (in New Jersey);
    --Washington, DC--Baltimore, MD HIDTA: consists of Washington, DC; the 
    city of Baltimore, and Baltimore, Howard, Anne Arundel, Prince 
    George's, Montgomery and Charles Counties (in Maryland); and the city 
    of Alexandria and Arlington, Fairfax, Prince William, and Loundoun 
    Counties (in Virginia) and all municipalities therein;
    --Miami HIDTA: consists of the city of Miami and the surrounding areas 
    of Broward, Dade, and Monroe Counties and all municipalities therein;
    --Houston HIDTA: consists of the city of Houston and surrounding areas 
    of Harris, and Galveston Counties and all municipalities therein;
    --Lake County HIDTA: consists of Lake County, Indiana, and all 
    municipalities therein;
    --Gulf Coast HIDTA: consist of Baldwin, Jefferson, Mobile, and 
    Montgomery Counties (in Alabama); Caddo, East Baton Rouge, Jefferson, 
    and Orleans Parishes (in Louisiana); and Hancock, Harrison, Hinds, and 
    Jackson Counties (in Mississippi) and the municipalities therein;
    --Midwest HIDTA: consists of Muscatine, Polk, Pottawattamie, Scott and 
    Woodbury Counties (in Iowa); Cherokee, Crawford, Johnson, Labette, 
    Leacenworth, Saline, Seward, and Wyandotte Counties (in Kansas); Cape 
    Garardeau, Christian, Clay, Jackson, Lafayette, Lawrence, Ray, Scott, 
    and St. Charles Counties, and the City of St. Louis, MO (in Missouri); 
    Dakota,
    
    [[Page 28549]]
    
    Dawson, Douglas, Hall, Lancaster, Sarpy, and Scott's Bluff Counties (in 
    Nebraska); Clay, Codington, Custer, Fall River, Lawrence, Lincoln, 
    Meade, Minnehaha, Penninton, Union, and Yankton Counties (in South 
    Dakota); and all municipalities therein;
    --Rocky Mountains HIDTA: consists of Adams, Arapahoe, Denver, Douglas, 
    Eagle, El Pasco, Garfield, Jefferson, La Plate, and Mesa Counties (in 
    Colorado); Davis, Salt Lake, Summit, Utah, and Weber Counties (in 
    Utah); Laramie, Natrona, and Sweetwater Counties (in Wyoming) and all 
    municipalities therein;
    --Southwest Border HIDTA: consists of San Diego and Imperial Counties 
    (in California), and all municipalities therein; Yuma, Maricopa, Pinal, 
    Pima, Santa Cruz, and Cochise Counties, (in Arizona) and all 
    municipalities therein; Bernalillo, Hidalgo, Grant, Luna, Dona Ana, 
    Eddy, Lea, and Otero Counties, (in New Mexico) and all municipalities 
    therein; El Paso, Hudspeth, Culberson, Jeff Davis, Presidio, Brewster, 
    Pecos, Terrell, Crockett Counties (in West Texas) and all 
    municipalities therein; exar, Val Verde, Kinney, Maverick, Zavala, 
    Dimmit, La Salle, Webb, Zapata, Jim Hogg, Starr, Hildago, Willacy and 
    Cameron Countries (in South Texas) and all municipalities therein;
    --Northwest HIDTA: consists of King, Pierce, Skagit, Snohomish, 
    Thurston, Whatcom and Yakima Counties (in the State of Washington) and 
    all municipalities therein;
    --Los Angeles HIDTA: consists of the city of Los Angeles and 
    surrounding areas of Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside, and San Bernadino 
    Counties, and all municipalities therein; and
    --Puerto Rico/U.S. Virgin Islands HIDTA: consists of the U.S. 
    territories of Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands.
    
        For further information on HIDTAs contact Rich Yamamoto, at the 
    ONDCP, Executive Office of the President, Washington, DC 20500 on (202) 
    395-6755, and/or La'Wan A. Sweetenberg on (202) 395-6603, fax (202) 
    395-6721.
        (10) Ineligible Activities. PHDEP funding is not permitted for any 
    of the activities listed below, unless otherwise specified in this 
    NOFA.
        (i) Funding is not permitted under this NOFA for costs incurred 
    before the effective date of the grant agreement (Form HUD-1044), 
    including, but not limited to, consultant fees related to the 
    development of an application or the actual writing of the application.
        (ii) Funding is not permitted under this NOFA for the purchase of 
    controlled substances for any purpose. Controlled substance shall have 
    the meaning provided in section 102 of the Controlled Substance Act (21 
    U.S.C. 802).
        (iii) Funding is not permitted under this NOFA for compensating 
    informants, including confidential informants. These should be part of 
    the baseline services provided and budgeted by local law enforcement 
    agencies.
        (iv) Funding is not permitted under this NOFA for the direct 
    purchase or lease of any law or military enforcement clothing or 
    equipment, such as vehicles, including cars, vans, buses, uniforms, 
    ammunition, firearms/weapons, protective vests, and any other 
    supportive equipment. Exceptions are set forth in sections 
    I.(c)(1)(iii)(G) and I.(c)(4)(vi) (public housing police departments, 
    and investigator activities) of this NOFA. In addition, funds may be 
    used to contract for the equipment and employment of a HA-dedicated 
    police division under section I.(c)(2) of this NOFA.
        (v) Funding is not permitted under this NOFA for any wages or 
    salaries for voluntary tenant patrol participants. Housing authorities 
    are permitted to fund housing authority/resident coordinator(s) to be 
    hired for this activity. Staffing must be reasonable, necessary and 
    justified. Excessive staffing is not permitted.
        (vi) Funding is not permitted under this NOFA for the costs of 
    constructing any facility space in a building or unit, although funding 
    is permitted for the costs of retrofitting/modifying existing building 
    space owned by the housing authorities for eligible activities/programs 
    such as: community policing mini-station operations, adult/youth 
    education, and employment training facilities. The goal of this funding 
    is to reduce/eliminate drug-related crime and form partnerships with 
    Federal, Tribal, State and local government resources. Program costs 
    are permitted if shared among other HUD programs. The applicant must 
    demonstrate the use of program compliance, accountability, financial 
    and audit controls of PHDEP funds and controls to prevent duplicate 
    funding of any activity. Housing authorities shall not co-mingle funds 
    of multiple programs such as CIAP, CGP, OTAR, TOP, ED/SS, Family 
    Investment Center, Elderly Service Coordinators, and Operating Subsidy. 
    House trailers of any type that are not designated as a building are 
    eligible items for purchase or lease for specific community policing, 
    educational, employment, and youth activities.
        (vii) Funding is not permitted under this NOFA for organized fund 
    raising, advertising, financial campaigns, endowment drives, 
    solicitation of gifts and bequests, rallies, marches, community 
    celebrations and similar expenses.
        (viii) Funding is not permitted under this NOFA for the costs of 
    entertainment, amusements, or social activities and for the expenses of 
    items such as meals, beverages, lodgings, rentals, transportation, and 
    gratuities related to these ineligible activities. However, under 
    section I.(c)(6) of this NOFA, funding is permitted for reasonable, 
    necessary and justified program costs, as defined in OMB Circular A-87, 
    such as meals, beverages and transportation, incurred only for 
    prevention programs, employment training, education and youth 
    activities directly related to reducing/eliminating drug-related crime.
        (x) Funding is not permitted under this NOFA for the costs (such 
    as, court costs, attorneys fees) related to screening or evicting 
    residents for drug-related crime. However, housing authority 
    investigators funded under this program may participate in judicial and 
    administrative proceedings as provided in Section I.(c)(4), Employment 
    of Investigator(s), of this NOFA.
        (xi) Although participation in activities with Federal drug 
    interdiction or drug enforcement agencies is encouraged, the transfer 
    of PHDEP grant funds to any Federal agency is not permitted under this 
    NOFA.
        (xii) Funding is not permitted under this NOFA for establishing 
    councils, resident associations, resident organizations, and resident 
    corporations since HUD funds these activities under a separate NOFA. 
    (xiii) Indirect costs as defined in OMB Circular A-87 are not permitted 
    under this program. Only direct costs are permitted.
        (xiv) PHDEP grant funds shall not be used to supplant existing 
    positions/activities. For purposes of the PHDEP program supplanting is 
    defined as ``taking the place of or to supersede''.
        (xv) The PHDEP is targeted by statute at controlled substances as 
    defined at section 102 of the Controlled Substances Act (21 U.S.C. 
    802). Since alcohol is a legal substance, alcohol exclusive activities 
    and programs are not eligible for funding under this NOFA. When an 
    individual's condition meets medical criteria for more than one 
    substance abuse disorder, multiple diagnoses will generally be made, 
    which may include alcohol.
        (d) Selection Criteria. HUD will review each application that it 
    determines meets the requirements of this NOFA and evaluate it by 
    assigning
    
    [[Page 28550]]
    
    points in accordance with the selection criteria. An application for 
    funding under this program may be for one or more eligible activities.
        An applicant shall submit only one application under each NOFA. 
    Joint applications are not permitted under this program with the 
    following exception: Housing authorities under a single administration 
    (such as housing authorities managing another housing authority under 
    contract or housing authorities sharing a common executive director) 
    shall submit a single application, even though each housing authority 
    has its own operating budget.
        The number of points that an application receives will depend on 
    the extent to which the application is responsive to the information 
    requested in the selection criteria. An application must receive a 
    score of at least 70 points out of the maximum of 100 points that may 
    be awarded under this competition to be eligible for funding.
        The scoring of applications under the first two criteria will be 
    done by a panel at the national PHDEP application processing site. 
    Scoring under Selection Criterion 3 will be done by the Field Offices 
    that receive the applications, and scoring under Selection Criterion 4 
    will be done by the Secretary's Representative for the area of the 
    country from which an application originates. After applications have 
    been scored, Headquarters will rank the applications on a national 
    basis. Awards will be made in ranked order until all funds are 
    expended. HUD will select the highest ranking applications that can be 
    fully funded. Applications with tie scores will be selected in 
    accordance with the procedures in Section I.(e) (Ranking Factors). The 
    terms ``housing'' and ``development(s)'' as used in the application 
    selection criteria and submission requirements may include, as 
    appropriate, housing described in Section I.(c)(9) (PHA-Owned Housing), 
    above, of this NOFA. Each application submitted for a grant under this 
    NOFA will be evaluated on the basis of the following selection 
    criteria:
        (1) First criterion: the extent of the drug-related crime 
    associated with drug-related crime problems in the applicant's 
    development or developments proposed for assistance. (Maximum Points: 
    35) To permit HUD to make an evaluation on the basis of this criterion, 
    an application must include a description of the extent and nature of 
    drug-related crime, ``in or around'' the housing authority/
    development(s) proposed for funding. The description must provide the 
    following information:
        (i) Objective crime data. The best available objective data on the 
    nature, source, and frequency of drug-related crime ``in and around'' 
    the housing authority and development(s) proposed for activity in this 
    grant. Such data should consist of verifiable records, and not 
    anecdotal reports. The requirements related to such data may include 
    (but not necessarily be limited to), as appropriate:
        (A) The nature and frequency of drug-related crime ``in or around'' 
    housing authorities/development(s) as reflected by crime statistics and 
    other supporting data from Federal, State, Tribal, or local law 
    enforcement agencies.
        (B) Housing authority, police, or other verifiable information from 
    records on the types and sources of drug-related crime in the housing 
    authority's development(s) proposed for assistance.
        (C) Verifiable, descriptive data as to the types of offenders 
    committing drug-related crime associated with drug-related local 
    problems in the applicant's housing authority and development(s) (e.g., 
    age, residence).
        (D) The number of lease terminations or evictions for drug-related 
    crime at the housing authority and development(s).
        (E) The number of local emergency room admissions for drug use or 
    that result from drug-related crime. Such information may be obtained 
    from police departments and/or fire departments, emergency medical 
    services agencies and hospitals.
        (F) The number of police calls for service from housing authorities 
    development(s) that include resident initiated calls, officer-initiated 
    calls, domestic violence calls, drug distribution complaints, found 
    drug paraphernalia, gang activity, graffiti that reflects drugs or 
    gang-related activity, vandalism, drug arrests, and abandoned vehicles.
        (G) The number of residents placed in treatment and structured 
    aftercare, the number of residents that successfully completed 
    treatment, and number of residents that successfully completed long 
    range after-care treatment for substance abuse/dependency.
        (H) Where appropriate, the statistics should be reported both in 
    real numbers and as an annual percentage of the residents in each 
    development (e.g., 20 arrests in a two-year period for distribution of 
    heroin in a development with 100 residents reflects a 20% occurrence 
    rate). The data should cover the most recent two-year period. If the 
    data from the most recent two-year period is not used, an explanation 
    should be provided. To the extent feasible, the data provided should be 
    compared with data from the prior two year period to show whether the 
    current data reflects a percentage increase or decrease in drug-related 
    crime during that prior period of time within housing authorities.
        (I) A reduction in drug-related crime in the housing authorities 
    and development(s) where previous PHDEP grants have been in effect will 
    not be considered a disadvantage to the applicant.
        (J) If funding is being sought for housing owned by public housing 
    agencies that is not public housing assisted under the United States 
    Housing Act of 1937 and is not otherwise Federally assisted, the 
    application should demonstrate that the housing is located in a high 
    intensity drug trafficking area designated pursuant to section 1005 of 
    the Anti-Drug Abuse Act of 1988, and the application must demonstrate 
    that drug-related crime at the housing has a detrimental affect in or 
    around the real property comprising the public or other federally 
    assisted low-income housing. For the purposes of this NOFA in or around 
    means: within, or adjacent to, the physical boundaries of a housing 
    development. (Maximum Points: 25)
        (ii) Other supporting data on the extent of drug-related crime. To 
    the extent that objective data as described above may not be available, 
    or to complement that data, the assessment may use data from other 
    verifiable sources that have a direct bearing on drug-related crime in 
    the developments proposed for assistance under this program. However, 
    if other relevant information is to be used in place of, rather than to 
    complement, objective data, the application must indicate the reasons 
    why objective data could not be obtained and what efforts were made to 
    obtain it and what efforts will be made during the grant period to 
    begin obtaining the data. Examples of these data include (but are not 
    necessarily limited to):
        (A) Surveys of residents and staff in the housing authority and 
    targeted developments surveyed on drug-related crime or on-site reviews 
    to determine drug/crime activity; and government or scholarly studies 
    or other research in the past year that analyze drug-related crime 
    activity in the targeted developments.
        (B) Vandalism cost at the housing authority and targeted 
    developments, to include elevator vandalism (where appropriate) and 
    other vandalism attributable to drug-related crime.
        (C) Information from schools, health service providers, residents 
    and Federal, State, local, and Tribal officials, and the verifiable 
    opinions and observations of
    
    [[Page 28551]]
    
    individuals having direct knowledge of drug-related crime and the 
    nature and frequency of these problems in the developments proposed for 
    assistance. (These individuals may include Federal, State, Tribal, and 
    local government law enforcement officials, resident or community 
    leaders, school officials, community medical officials, substance 
    abuse, treatment (dependency/remission) or counseling professionals, or 
    other social service providers.)
        (D) The school dropout rate and level of absenteeism for youth that 
    the applicant can relate to drug-related crime. If crime or other 
    statistics are not available at the development or precinct level the 
    applicant may use other verifiable, reliable and objective data.
        (iii) In awarding points, HUD will evaluate the extent to which the 
    applicant has provided the above data that reflects drug-related crime 
    in the developments targeted for activity, both in terms of the 
    frequency and nature of the drug-related crime in the housing 
    authority's development(s) proposed for funding as reflected by 
    information submitted under paragraphs (1)(i)(ii) and (iii) of this 
    section; and the extent to which such data reflects an increase in 
    drug-related crime over a period of two year(s) in the housing 
    authority and development(s) proposed for assistance. (Maximum points: 
    5)
        (iv) In awarding points, HUD will evaluate the extent to which the 
    applicant has analyzed the data compiled under paragraphs (1)(i)(ii) 
    and (iii) of this section, and has articulated its needs, analyzed the 
    data, performance measurements/outcomes, and strategies for reducing 
    drug-related crime in the housing authority and development(s) proposed 
    for assistance. (Maximum points: 5)
        (2) Second criterion: the quality of the plan to address the crime 
    problem in the public or Indian housing developments proposed for 
    assistance, including the extent to which the plan includes initiatives 
    that can be sustained over a period of several years. (Maximum points: 
    35) In assessing this criterion, HUD will consider the following 
    factors:
        (i) To permit HUD to make an evaluation on the basis of this 
    criterion, an application must include the applicant's plan for 
    addressing drug-related crime. The narrative must demonstrate the 
    relationship between the extent of the crime detailed in Selection 
    Criterion 1, section I.(d)(1) of this NOFA, and the potential crime 
    reduction and elimination of specific drug-related crime described in 
    the implementation of the plan. The narrative must include a 
    description of the applicant's activities for addressing (solutions and 
    prevention) and the strategy to reduce the specific drug-related crime 
    in each of the developments proposed for assistance under this part. 
    The activities eligible for funding under this program are listed in 
    Section I.(c) of this NOFA, above. The applicant's plan must include 
    all of the activities that will be undertaken to address the problem, 
    whether or not they are funded under this program. If the same 
    activities are proposed for all of the developments that will be 
    covered by the plan, the activities do not need to be described 
    separately for each development. Where different activities are 
    proposed for different developments, these activities and the 
    developments where they will take place must be separately described 
    and the narrative must demonstrate the relationship between the extent 
    of the crime detailed in Selection Criterion 1, section I.(d)(1) of 
    this NOFA, and the potential crime reduction and elimination of 
    specific drug-related crime described in the implementation of the 
    plan.
        The description of the plan in the application must include (but 
    not necessarily be limited to) the following information:
        (A) A detailed narrative describing each activity proposed for 
    PHDEP funding in the applicant's plan, any additional relevant 
    activities being undertaken by the applicant (e.g., law enforcement 
    services, prevention, treatment, aftercare programs for residents 
    provided by an agency other than HUD, and modifications to community 
    facilities), and how the narrative demonstrates the relationship 
    between the extent of the crime detailed in Selection Criterion 1, 
    section I.(d)(1) of this NOFA, and the potential crime reduction and 
    elimination of drug-related crime described in the implementation of 
    the plan, and how all of these activities interrelate. The applicant 
    should specifically address how the activities form a comprehensive 
    strategy relating to drug-related crime. The strategy should include 
    (as applicable) management practices such as ``One Strike and You're 
    Out'' policy [Refer to Notice PIH 96-16 (HA) Subject: ``One Strike and 
    You're Out'' Screening and Eviction Guidelines for Public Housing 
    Authorities published April 12, 1996] that improves resident screening 
    and eviction policies and procedures, local law enforcement techniques 
    (such as community policing), and a combination of substance/drug abuse 
    prevention, intervention, referral, and treatment (dependency) and 
    aftercare programs. As applicable, the narrative should demonstrate how 
    the proposed activities will be coordinated with Federal, Tribal, 
    local, and State Empowerment or Enterprise Zones, ``welfare to work'' 
    or other welfare reform measures related to specific drug-related crime 
    prevention through employment training, education, and employment 
    opportunities for housing authority residents. In addition, the 
    applicant should demonstrate how its proposed activities will 
    complement, and be coordinated with, current activities.
        (B) The narrative must demonstrate how the applicant will provide 
    qualified staff/contractors to manage the proposed PHDEP activities. 
    The applicant must include the portion of the staff's time that will be 
    spent administering this grant, and the skills which qualify him/her 
    for administering the types of proposed activities (management, law 
    enforcement, security personnel, programs to reduce/eliminate drugs 
    such as: intervention, prevention, treatment). The applicant must 
    include a reasonable staffing plan and position descriptions which 
    relate to the proposed activities, and must justify the need for the 
    proposed staff.
        (C) If grant amounts are to be used for contracting for/or 
    employment of security guard personnel services in housing authorities/
    development(s), the application must describe how the requirements of 
    section I.(c)(1)(i) (Employment of Security Personnel) of this NOFA 
    will be met.
        (D) If grant amounts are to be used for housing authority police 
    department equipment and personnel, the application must describe how 
    the requirements of Section I.(c)(1)(ii) (Housing Authority Police 
    Departments) of this NOFA will be met.
        (E) If grant amounts are to be used for a dedicated district/
    precinct/zone municipal public housing division and/or bureau, the 
    application must describe how the requirements of Section I.(c)(1)(iii) 
    (dedicated district/precinct/zone municipal public housing division 
    and/or bureau) of this NOFA will be met.
        (F) If grant amounts are to be used for reimbursement of local 
    municipal law enforcement agencies for additional security and 
    protective services, the application must describe how the requirements 
    of Section I.(c)(2) (Reimbursement of Local Law Enforcement Agencies) 
    of this NOFA will be met.
        (G) If grant amounts are to be used for physical improvements in 
    housing authority/development(s) proposed for funding under Section 
    I.(c)(3) (Physical Improvements) of this NOFA, the application must 
    describe how these
    
    [[Page 28552]]
    
    improvements will be coordinated with the applicant's modernization 
    program, if any, under 24 CFR part 950, subpart I, or 24 CFR part 968.
        (H) If grant amounts are to be used for employment of 
    investigators, the application must describe how the requirements of 
    Section I.(c)(4) (Employment of Investigators) of the NOFA will be met.
        (I) If grant amounts are to be used for voluntary tenant patrols, 
    the application must describe how the requirements of Section I.(c)(5) 
    (Voluntary Tenant Patrol) of this NOFA will be met.
        (J) If grant amounts are to be used for a ``Program to reduce/
    eliminate criminal activity/drug use, etc.'' i.e.; prevention, 
    intervention or treatment, structured aftercare programs, to eliminate 
    crime/drug use ``in or around'' the premises of the housing authority/
    development(s) as provided in I.(c)(6) of this NOFA, the application 
    should demonstrate the nature of the program, how the program 
    represents a prevention or intervention, treatment and aftercare 
    strategy, and how the housing authority's strategy will achieve and 
    demonstrate the relationship between the extent of the crime detailed 
    in Selection Criterion 1, section I.(d)(1) of this NOFA, and the 
    potential crime reduction and elimination of specific drug-related 
    crime described in the implementation of the plan. The application must 
    include a description of how funding decisions were reached 
    (specifically how costs were determined for each element of each 
    activity in the same format as shown in the application kit) and 
    financial and other resources (including funding under this program, 
    and from other resources) that may reasonably be expected to be 
    available to carry out each activity.
        (K) Implementation timetable and performance measurements/outcomes 
    that includes tasks, personnel assignments, deadlines, budget cost/
    analysis, performance measurements and outcomes, that demonstrate the 
    relationship between the extent of the crime detailed in Selection 
    Criterion 1, section I.(d)(1) of this NOFA, and the comprehensive crime 
    reduction/elimination of specific drug-related crime described in the 
    implementation of the plan, and a PHDEP manager responsible for 
    implementing (achieving identified milestones, measurements, outcomes) 
    each activity in the plan. The applicant shall demonstrate in its 
    application hiring of qualified personnel to manage its activities 
    (full-time, part time, and/or housing authority staff), including a 
    PHDEP manager.
        (L) The resources that the applicant may reasonably expect to be 
    available at the end of the grant term to continue the plan, and how 
    they will be allocated to plan activities that can be sustained over a 
    period of years.
        (M) A discussion of how the applicant's plan will serve to provide 
    training and employment or business opportunities for lower income 
    persons and businesses located in, or substantially owned by persons 
    residing within the area of the section 3 covered project (as defined 
    in 24 CFR part 135) in accordance with 24 CFR 761.40 and 24 CFR part 5, 
    subpart A, and how this plan will be coordinated with Federal, Tribal 
    or State ``welfare to work'' or other employment training and 
    employment creation efforts. Housing authorities are encouraged to hire 
    qualified residents to fill PHDEP positions.
        (N) Program Evaluation. The plan must specifically demonstrate how 
    the activities funded under this program will be evaluated by the 
    applicant, so that the program's progress can be measured and provide 
    satisfactory outcomes. Performance measurements and outcomes must be 
    developed to demonstrate the relationship between the extent of the 
    crime detailed in Selection Criterion 1, Section I.(d)(1) of this NOFA, 
    and the potential crime reduction/elimination described in the 
    implementation of the plan. The evaluation shall also be used to modify 
    activities to make them more successful or to identify unsuccessful 
    strategies. The evaluation must identify the types of information the 
    applicant will use to measure the plan's success (e.g. tracking changes 
    in identified crime statistics); and indicate each crime or drug 
    indicator to be measured, the activities targeted to reducing that 
    indicator, and the method the applicant will use to gather and analyze 
    this information. Funding is permitted to hire an outside consultant to 
    conduct an independent assessment/evaluation of the effectiveness of 
    the PHDEP program and its goals/outcomes.
        (ii) In assessing this criterion, HUD will consider the quality and 
    thoroughness of an applicant's plan in terms of the information 
    requested in Section I.(d)(2)(i), ``Quality of the plan,'' of this 
    NOFA, including the extent to which:
        (A) The applicant's plan specifically describes the activities that 
    are being proposed by the applicant, including those activities to be 
    funded under this program and those to be funded or provided from other 
    sources; describes the status and effectiveness of the applicant's 
    current working relationship with local law enforcement agencies, as 
    well as other law enforcement agencies, including the extent of its 
    participation in any special Federal, State or local law enforcement 
    programs aimed at reducing and preventing crime in and around its 
    housing developments (e.g., Operation Safe Home, Weed and Seed, etc.); 
    demonstrates how such working relationships will be sustained during 
    and after the period of PHDEP funding and will further the objectives 
    of the PHDEP program; describes the potential crime reduction/
    elimination of specific drug-related crime detailed in Selection 
    Criterion 1, section I.(d)(1) of this NOFA; describes the activities 
    that are successful initiatives such as: improved screening, leasing 
    and eviction, community building, and the training, education and 
    employment of residents, and indicates how these proposed activities 
    provide for a comprehensive approach to reduce/eliminate drug-related 
    crime (as described under Selection Criterion 1, section I.(d)(1) 
    above) in the housing authority/development(s) proposed for funding. 
    (Maximum Points: 12)
        (B) The applicant's plan provides a detailed budget narrative that 
    is realistic in terms of time, personnel and other resources. The 
    extent to which plan has supporting documentation (specifically how 
    costs were determined for each element of each activity in the same 
    format as shown in the application kit) for each activity and describes 
    the financial and other resources (under this program and other 
    sources) that may reasonably be expected to be available to carry out 
    each activity. (Maximum Points: 3)
        (C) The plan describes how other entities (e.g., Federal, Tribal, 
    and State governments and community organizations) are involved in 
    planning and carrying out the applicant's plan. (Maximum Points: 2)
        (D) The plan includes activities, to include resident training and 
    employment training and employment opportunities, that can be sustained 
    over a period of years and identifies resources that the applicant may 
    reasonably expect to be available for the continuation of the 
    activities at the end of the grant term. (Maximum Points: 2)
        (E) The applicant's plan will serve to provide training and 
    employment or business opportunities for lower income persons and 
    businesses located in, or substantially owned by persons residing 
    within the area of the section 3 covered project (as defined in 24 CFR 
    part 135) in accordance with 24 CFR 761.40 and 24 CFR part 5, subpart 
    A, and will be coordinated with other Federal, Tribal, State or other 
    efforts to provide education, training, employment training and 
    employment opportunities
    
    [[Page 28553]]
    
    for ``welfare to work'' or related strategies. (Maximum Points: 3)
        (F) The applicant's plan contains a description of its process to 
    collect, maintain, analyze and report specific data related to the 
    drug-related crime problems and workload. Specifically this will 
    include Part I and II crimes, as defined by the Uniform Crime Reporting 
    (UCR) system; as well as other police workload data to include, but not 
    limited to, all calls for service at the housing authority and 
    development(s) proposed for funding; the process used to analyze the 
    data according to individual development, patterns over a period of 
    time, by type of crime, etc., and plans to improve the collection and 
    reporting of the data. (Maximum Points: 3)
        (G) The applicant's plan includes an evaluation plan with a 
    specific process that measures performance and demonstrates outcomes 
    relative to crime workload and the extent of the crime detailed in 
    Selection Criterion 1, section I.(d)(1) of this NOFA, in the housing 
    authority/development(s) proposed for funding. (Maximum Points: 10)
        (3) Third Criterion: the Capability of the Applicant to Carry out 
    the Plan. (Maximum Points: 15) In assessing this criterion, HUD will 
    consider the following factors:
        (i) The extent of the applicant's successful and effective 
    administrative capability to manage its housing authority, as measured 
    by its performance with respect to operative HUD requirements under the 
    ACC or ACA and the Public Housing Management Assessment Program at 24 
    CFR part 901. In evaluating administrative capability under this 
    factor, HUD will also consider, and the application must include in the 
    form of a narrative discussion, the following information:
        (A) Whether there are any unresolved findings from prior HUD 
    reports (e.g. performance or finance), reviews or audits undertaken by 
    HUD, the Office of the Inspector General, the General Accounting 
    Office, or independent public accountants;
        (B) Whether the applicant is operating under court order.
        (C) If the applicant is designated a ``troubled agency'' HUD will 
    not consider this status against the applicant provided the applicant 
    substantiates capability with the assignment of housing authority staff 
    employee(s) (Full-time/part-time), and a PHDEP manager, or 
    contractually hires a PHDEP manager.
        (D) Whether the applicant has adopted and implemented policies, 
    procedures and practices and can document that it: Tracks drug-related 
    crime, screens applicants, and enforces lease requirements, for the 
    purpose of ensuring the health, safety/security, and the right to 
    peaceful enjoyment of the premises by residents and housing authority 
    personnel. (Maximum Points Under Paragraph (3)(I) (A) Through (D) of 
    this Section: 4)
        (ii) The application must demonstrate, as authorized by applicable 
    Federal, Tribal, State and local law enforcement, the extent to which 
    the applicant has formed a collaboration with the Federal, Tribal, 
    State, and law enforcement officials and courts to gain access 
    regarding the criminal conviction records of applicants for, or tenants 
    of, housing authorities regarding applicant screening, lease 
    enforcement, and eviction. The application demonstrates the extent to 
    which the applicant has implemented effective screening procedures to 
    determine an individual's suitability for public housing (consistent 
    with the requirements of 42 U.S.C. 3604(f), 24 CFR 100.202, 29 U.S.C. 
    794 and 24 CFR 8.4 which deal with individuals with disabilities); 
    implemented a plan to reduce vacancies; implemented eviction and lease 
    enforcement procedures in accordance with 24 CFR part 966, subpart B, 
    25 CFR 950.340 and Section 503 of NAHA; or undertaken other innovative 
    management actions to reduce/eliminate drug-related crime in its 
    developments. The application demonstrates that the housing authority 
    has established and implemented effective systems for tracking crime 
    and reporting incidents of crime to local law enforcement agencies, and 
    is effectively cooperating with such agencies to reduce and prevent 
    crime in and around its housing developments. (Maximum Points: 2)
        (iii) The application must identify the applicant's participation 
    in HUD grant programs (such as CGP, CIAP, child care, resident 
    management, PHDEP, HOPE VI, Tenant Opportunities Program (TOP), Family 
    Investment Centers (FIC) grants, OTAR, ED/SS) within the preceding 
    three years, and discuss the degree of the applicant's success in 
    implementing and managing (program implementation, timely drawdown of 
    funds, timely submission of required reports with satisfactory outcomes 
    related to the plan and timetable, audit compliance and other HUD 
    reviews) these grant programs. (Maximum Points: 4)
        (iv) The local HUD field office/AONAPS shall evaluate the extent of 
    the applicant's success or failure in implementing and managing an 
    effective program under previous PHDEP grants and/or other grants 
    (preceding three years). This evaluation will be based upon (but not 
    limited to) the relationship between the extent of the crime detailed 
    in Selection Criterion 1, section I.(d)(1) of grants during the 
    preceding years, and outcomes regarding reducing/eliminating drug-
    related crime described in the implementation of the plans and 
    timetables, a review of how timely the grantee has drawn down PHDEP 
    funds from HUD's Line of Credit Control System (LOCCS) reports compared 
    to the timetable of proposed activities, achievements of proposed 
    strategy regarding crime reduction goals outlined in previous PHDEP 
    and/or other HUD program performance and financial reports, audits, 
    performance outcome measurements as related to reductions in drug and 
    crime activities at previously targeted developments, and HUD reviews. 
    (Maximum Points: 5 Points)
        (4) Fourth criterion: the extent to which tenants, the local 
    Government and the local community support and participate in the 
    design and implementation of the activities proposed to be funded under 
    the application. (Maximum Points: 15) In assessing this criterion, HUD 
    will consider the following factors:
        (i) To permit HUD to make an evaluation based on this criterion, an 
    application must describe what role residents in the targeted 
    developments, applicable community leaders and organizations, and law 
    enforcement agencies have had in planning the activities described in 
    the application and what role they will have in carrying out such 
    activities.
        (ii) The application must include a discussion of the extent to 
    which community representatives and Tribal, local, State and Federal 
    government officials, including law enforcement agency officials were 
    actively involved in the design and implementation of the applicant's 
    plan, and will continue to be involved in implementing such activities 
    during and after the period of PHDEP funding. This must be evidenced by 
    descriptions of planning meetings held with community representatives 
    and local government and law enforcement agency officials; letters of 
    commitment to provide funding, staff, or in-kind resources, partnership 
    agreements; and ongoing or planned cooperative efforts with law 
    enforcement agencies designed to complement and further the objectives 
    of PHDEP. This also includes interagency activities already undertaken, 
    participation in local, State, Tribal or Federal anti-drug related 
    crime
    
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    efforts, such as: education, training and employment provision 
    components of Welfare Reform efforts, Operation Weed and Seed, 
    Operation Safe Home, local law enforcement initiatives and/or 
    successful coordination of its law enforcement or other activities with 
    local, State, Tribal or Federal law enforcement agencies. In evaluating 
    this factor HUD will also consider the extent to which these 
    initiatives are used to leverage resources for the housing authority 
    community, and are part of the comprehensive plan and performance 
    measures outlined in Selection Criteria Two. (Maximum Points: 5)
        (iii) The application must demonstrate the extent to which the 
    relevant governmental jurisdiction has met its local law enforcement 
    obligations under the Cooperation Agreement with the applicant (as 
    required by the grantee's Annual Contributions Contract with HUD). The 
    application must also include a certification by the Chief Executive 
    Officer (CEO) of a State or a unit of general local government in which 
    the developments proposed for assistance are located that the city is 
    meeting its obligations under the Cooperation Agreement with the 
    housing authority, particularly with regard to the current level of 
    baseline local law enforcement services including a cost analysis, 
    deployment of personnel, and provision and analysis of crime data and 
    trends for the targeted developments. If the jurisdiction is not 
    meeting its obligations under the cooperation agreement, the CEO should 
    identify any special circumstances relating to its failure to do so. 
    Whether or not a locality is meeting its obligations under the 
    Cooperation Agreement with the applicant, the applicant must describe 
    the current level of baseline local law enforcement services being 
    provided to the housing authority/development(s) proposed for 
    assistance. (Maximum Points: 4)
        (iv) The extent to which housing authority/development residents, 
    and/or an RMC, RC or RO, where they exist, are involved in the planning 
    and development and the implementation of the grant application and 
    plan strategy, and support and participate in the design and 
    implementation of the activities proposed to be funded under the 
    application. The application must include a description of how the 
    residents were involved, a resolution of support from any duly elected 
    resident council or RMC, a summary of resident and resident 
    organization meetings, with supporting documentation that addresses 
    (but is not limited to) subject matter, names of residents on 
    committees, copies of resident surveys and evaluations, as required by 
    24 CFR 761.25, and the applicant's response to and action on these 
    comments and suggestions. If there are no resident or resident 
    organization comments, the applicant must provide an explanation of the 
    steps taken to encourage resident participation, even though they were 
    not successful. (Maximum Points: 3)
        (v) The extent to which the applicant is already undertaking, or 
    has undertaken, participation in local, State, Tribal or Federal anti-
    drug related crime efforts, such as educational, training and 
    employment components of Welfare Reform efforts, Operation Weed and 
    Seed, Operation Safe Home, and/or has successfully coordinated its 
    local law enforcement or other activities with local, State, Tribal or 
    Federal law enforcement agencies. In evaluating this factor HUD will 
    also consider the extent to which these initiatives are used to 
    leverage resources for the housing authority community, and are part of 
    the comprehensive plan and performance measures outlined in Selection 
    Criteria 2. (Maximum Points: 3)
        (e) Ranking factors.
        (1) Each application for a grant award that is submitted in a 
    timely manner to the HUD Field Office with delegated public housing 
    responsibilities or, in the case of IHAs, to the appropriate AONAPs, 
    that otherwise meets the requirements of this NOFA, will be evaluated 
    in accordance with the selection criteria specified above.
        (2) An application must receive a score of at least 70 points out 
    of the maximum of 100 points that may be awarded under this competition 
    to be eligible for funding.
        (3) After applications have been scored, Headquarters will rank the 
    applications on a national basis.
        (4) In the event that two eligible applications receive the same 
    score, and both cannot be funded because of insufficient funds, the 
    application with the highest score in Selection Criterion 3 ``The 
    capability of the applicant to carry out the plan'' will be selected. 
    If Selection Criterion 3 is scored identically for both applications, 
    the scores in Selection Criteria 1, 2, and 4 will be compared in this 
    order, one at a time, until one application scores higher in one of the 
    factors and is selected. If the applications score identically in all 
    factors, the application that requests less funding will be selected to 
    promote the more efficient use of resources.
        (5) All awards will be made to fund fully an application, except as 
    provided in Section I.(b)(4) of this NOFA (Reduction of Requested Grant 
    Amounts and Special Conditions).
        (f) General PHDEP Grant Administration/Management.
        (1) Each grantee is responsible for ensuring that grant funds are 
    administered in accordance with the requirements of 24 CFR part 761, 
    any specific Notices of Funding Availability (NOFAs) issued for these 
    programs, 24 CFR part 85 (as applicable), applicable laws and 
    regulations, applicable OMB circular, HUD fiscal and audit controls, 
    grant agreements, grant special conditions, the grantee's approved 
    budget (SF-424A)/budget revisions, and supporting budget narrative, 
    plan, and activity timetable.
        (2) Applicability of OMB Circular and HUD fiscal and audit 
    controls. The policies, guidelines, and requirements of this NOFA, 24 
    CFR part 761, 24 CFR part 85, 24 CFR part 84, and OMB Circular A-87 
    apply to the acceptance and use of assistance by grantees under this 
    program; and OMB Circular Nos. A-110 and A-122 apply to the acceptance 
    and use of assistance by private nonprofit organizations (including 
    RMCs, RCs and ROs). In addition, grantees and sub-grantees must comply 
    with fiscal and audit controls and reporting requirements prescribed by 
    HUD, including the system and audit requirements under the Single Audit 
    Act, OMB Circular No. A-128 and HUD's implementing regulations at 24 
    CFR part 44; and OMB Circular No. A-133. The provisions of 24 CFR 24 
    apply regarding ineligible contractors relating to employment, 
    engagement of services, awarding of subcontracts during any period of 
    debarment, suspension, or placement in ineligibility status.
        (3) Cost Principles. Specific guidance in this NOFA, 24 CFR part 
    761, 24 CFR part 85, 24 CFR part 84, OMB Circular A-87, other 
    applicable OMB cost principles, HUD program regulations, Notices, HUD 
    Handbooks, and the terms of the grant agreement (Form HUD-1044 that 
    includes special conditions and subgrant agreements) will be followed 
    in determining the reasonableness and allocability of costs. All costs 
    must be reasonable, necessary and justified with cost analysis. PHDEP 
    Funds must be disbursed by the grantee within seven calendar days after 
    receipt of drawdown. Grant funds must be used only for PHDEP purposes. 
    Direct costs are those that can be identified specifically with a 
    particular activity or function in this NOFA and cost objectives in OMB 
    Circular A-87. Indirect cost are not permitted in this program. 
    Administrative requirements
    
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    for the PHDEP grants will be in accordance with 24 CFR part 85. 
    Acquisition of property or services shall be in accordance with 24 CFR 
    85.36. All equipment acquisitions will remain the property of the 
    grantee in accordance with 24 CFR 85.32. NONAPs procurement standards 
    are in 24 CFR part 950. Housing authorities shall not co-mingle funds 
    of multiple HUD programs such as: CIAP, CGP, OTAR, Operating subsidy, 
    PHDEP.
        (4) FY 1997 PHDEP Grant Staff Personnel. Compensation for personnel 
    hired for grant activities, including supervisory personnel, such as a 
    grant program managers, public housing police department accreditation 
    specialist (under section I.(c)(1)(iii)(F) of this NOFA), youth sports 
    coordinators, voluntary tenant patrol program coordinators, and support 
    staff such as counselors, security coordinators, public housing police 
    department CALEA coordinators, and clerical staff, is permitted and may 
    include wages, salaries, and fringe benefits. Housing authorities 
    awarded PHDEP funds are required and must demonstrate in their 
    applications plans to employ a PHDEP program manager (Full-time, part-
    time, contractual). These positions must be described in the 
    applicants' plans. Appropriate PHDEP administrative costs include, but 
    are not limited to: Purchase of computer(s) (hardware/software), 
    printers, office supplies, furniture, HA staff training, and other 
    supportive administrative services. Administrative costs do not include 
    grant management personnel. The grantee must justify the need for the 
    above and relate it to the approved grant activities.
        (iii) All grant personnel must be necessary, reasonable and 
    justified. Job descriptions must be provided, in the application, for 
    all grant personnel. Excessive PHDEP staffing is not permitted.
        (iv) Housing authority staff responsible for management and 
    coordination of PHDEP programs may be compensated with grant funds only 
    for work performed directly for PHDEP grant-related activities and 
    shall document the time and activity involved in accordance with 24 CFR 
    85.20.
        (5) Grant Agreement. After an application has been approved, HUD 
    and the applicant shall enter into a grant agreement (Form HUD-1044) 
    setting forth the amount of the grant and its applicable terms, 
    conditions, financial controls, payment mechanism, schedule, 
    measurements/outcomes, monitoring schedule and special conditions, 
    including sanctions for violation of the agreement. The grant agreement 
    will be effective immediately upon execution of Form HUD-1044 by the 
    Director, Office of Public Housing or Administrator, AONAP and 
    terminate within 24 months.
        (6) Term of Grant Agreement. Terms of the FY 1997 PHDEP grant 
    agreement shall not exceed 24 months from the execution date of the 
    grant agreement (Form HUD-1044). Grant extensions during the FY 1997 
    PHDEP round are not permitted. Any funds not expended at the end of the 
    FY 1997 PHDEP grant term shall be remitted to HUD.
        (7) Duplication of funds. To prevent duplicate funding of any 
    activity, the grantee must establish controls to assure that an 
    activity or program that is funded by other HUD programs, or programs 
    of other Federal agencies, shall not also be funded by the PHDEP. The 
    grantee must establish an auditable system to provide adequate 
    accountability for funds that it has been awarded. The grantee is 
    responsible for ensuring that there is no duplication of funds.
        (8) Insurance. Each grantee shall obtain adequate insurance 
    coverage to protect itself against any potential liability arising out 
    of the eligible activities under this part. In particular, applicants 
    shall assess their potential liability arising out of the employment or 
    contracting of security personnel, law enforcement personnel, 
    investigators, and drug treatment providers, and the establishment of 
    voluntary tenant patrols; evaluate the qualifications and training of 
    the individuals or firms undertaking these functions; and consider any 
    limitations on liability under Tribal, State, or local law. Grantees 
    shall obtain liability insurance to protect the members of the 
    voluntary tenant patrol against potential liability as a result of the 
    patrol's activities under Sec. 761.15(b)(5). Voluntary tenant patrol 
    liability insurance costs are eligible program expenses. Subgrantees 
    shall obtain their own liability insurance.
        (9) Risk Management. Grantees and subgrantees are required to 
    implement, administer and monitor the PHDEP so as to minimize the risk 
    of fraud, waste, and liability for losses from adversarial legal 
    action.
        (10) Failure to Implement FY 1997 PHDEP Program(s). If the grant 
    plan, approved budget, and timetable, as described in the approved 
    application, are not operational within 90 days of the grant agreement 
    date, the grantee must report by letter to the HUD Field Office the 
    steps being taken to initiate the plan and timetable, the reason for 
    the delay, and the expected starting date. Any budget/timetable 
    revisions that resulted from the delay must be included. The HUD Field 
    Office will determine if the delay is acceptable, approve/disapprove 
    the revised plan and timetable, and take any additional appropriate 
    action.
        (11) Sanctions. HUD may impose sanctions if the grantee:
        (i) Is not complying with the requirements of this part or of other 
    applicable Federal law;
        (ii) Fails to make satisfactory progress toward its PHDEP goals, as 
    specified in its plan/budget and/or revised budget/timetable and as 
    reflected in its semiannual performance and financial status reports;
        (iii) Does not establish procedures that will minimize the time 
    elapsing between drawdowns and disbursements;
        (iv) Does not adhere to grant agreement requirements or special 
    conditions;
        (v) Proposes substantial plan changes to the extent that, if 
    originally submitted, the applications would not have been selected for 
    funding;
        (vi) Engages in the improper award or administration of grant 
    subcontracts;
        (vii) Does not submit reports; or
        (viii) Files a false certification.
        (12) HUD may impose the following sanctions:
        (i) Temporarily withhold cash payments pending correction of the 
    deficiency by the grantee or subgrantee;
        (ii) Disallow all or part of the cost of the activity or action not 
    in compliance;
        (iii) Wholly or partly suspend or terminate the current award for 
    the grantee's or subgrantee's program;
        (iv) Require that some or all of the grant amounts be remitted to 
    HUD;
        (v) Condition a future grant and elect not to provide future grant 
    funds to the grantee until appropriate actions are taken to ensure 
    compliance;
        (vi) Withhold further awards for the program; or
        (vii) Take other remedies that may be legally available.
        (g) Periodic Grantee Reports. In accordance with 24 CFR part 85, 
    grantees are responsible for managing the day-to-day operations of 
    grant and subgrant supported activities. Grantees must monitor grant 
    and subgrant supported activities to assure compliance with applicable 
    Federal requirements and that performance goals are being achieved. 
    Grantee monitoring must cover each program, function or activity of the 
    grant or sub-grant.
        (1) Semiannual Grant Performance Status Reporting Requirements. 
    Grantees are required to provide the local HUD Field Office with a 
    semiannual performance report that
    
    [[Page 28556]]
    
    evaluates the grantee's overall performance against its plan and 
    strategies. This report shall include in summary form (but is not 
    limited to) the following: Any change in the reduction/elimination of 
    drug-related crime or other indicators drawn from the applicant's plan/
    strategy assessment and an explanation of any difference; successful 
    completion of any of the strategy components identified in the 
    applicant's plan/strategy; a discussion of any problems encountered in 
    implementing the plan and how they were addressed; an evaluation of 
    whether the rate of progress meets expectations and outcomes; a written 
    explanation of the grantee's efforts in encouraging resident 
    participation; a description of any other programs that may have been 
    initiated, expanded or deleted as a result of the plan, with an 
    identification of the resources and the number of people/residents 
    involved in the programs and their relation to the plan/strategy. If 
    required reports are not received by the local Field Office in a timely 
    manner, payment of grant funds to the grantee are subject to being 
    suspended.
        (2) Semiannual Grantee Financial Status Reporting Requirements. The 
    grantee shall submit, in a timely manner, a semiannual financial status 
    report to the local HUD Field Office. The grantee shall use the SF-269A 
    to report the status of funds for nonconstruction programs. The grantee 
    shall use SF-269A, Block 12, ``Remarks,'' to report on the status of 
    programs, functions, or activities within the program. If required 
    reports are not received by the local Field Office in a timely manner, 
    payment of grant funds to the grantee are subject to being suspended.
        (3) Semiannual Grantee Performance and Financial Status Reporting 
    Period and Due Dates. The semiannual performance and financial status 
    report shall cover the periods ending June 30 and December 31, and must 
    be submitted to the local HUD Field Office by July 30 and January 31 of 
    each year.
        (4) Final Grantee Performance Status Report. Grantees are required 
    to provide the local HUD Field Office with a final cumulative 
    performance report that evaluates the grantee's overall performance 
    against its plan. This report shall include in summary form (but is not 
    limited to) the following:
        (i) Any change or lack of change in crime statistics or other 
    indicators drawn from the applicant's plan assessment and an 
    explanation of any difference;
        (ii) Successful completion of overall strategy that reduced/
    eliminated drug-related crimes identified in the applicant's plan;
        (iii) A discussion of any problems encountered in implementing the 
    plan and how they were addressed;
        (iv) An evaluation of whether the rate of progress meets 
    expectations;
        (v) A discussion of the grantee's efforts in encouraging resident 
    participation; and
        (vi) A description of any other programs that may have been 
    initiated, expanded or deleted as a result of the plan, with an 
    identification of the resources and the number of people involved in 
    the programs and their relation to the plan.
        (vii) A discussion of the grantee's adopted policies, procedures 
    and practices that have produced positive outcomes regarding: tracking 
    drug-related crime, screening of applicants, lease enforcement, and the 
    health, safety/security, and the right to peaceful enjoyment of the 
    premises by residents and housing authority personnel.
        (5) Final Grantee Financial Status Report (SF-269A). The final 
    report will be a cumulative summary of expenditures to date and must 
    indicate the exact balance of unexpended funds. The grantee shall remit 
    all PHDEP funds, including any unexpended funds, owed to HUD within 90 
    days after the termination of the grant agreement.
        (6) Final Grantee Performance Status Report and Financial Status 
    Report (SF-269A) Reporting Period. The final performance and financial 
    status report shall cover the period from the date of the grant 
    agreement, to include any extensions, to the termination date of the 
    grant agreement. The report is due to the HUD Field Office within 90 
    days after the termination of the grant agreement.
        (7) Grantee Reporting Requirements. The grantee shall submit all 
    required reports to the HUD Field Office as directed above (for a 
    listing of Field Offices, refer to appendix A).
        (8) HUD Field Office Reporting Requirements to Headquarters. Field 
    Offices, NONAPs and/or AONAPs shall submit, within 30 days of receipt, 
    a copy of the semiannual performance and financial and all final 
    performance and financial reports to the Office of Crime Prevention and 
    Security at HUD Headquarters. Further instruction will be provided by 
    Headquarters to local HUD Field Offices.
        (9) Audits and Closeouts. Field Offices will make maximum use of 
    audits under 24 CFR Parts 44 and 45 as applicable in conducting grant 
    closeout.
        (10) All grantees will access grant funds through the LOCCS-VRS.
    
    II. Application Process.
    
        (a) Application kit: An application kit may be obtained, and 
    assistance provided, from the local HUD Field Office with delegated 
    public housing responsibilities over an applying public housing agency, 
    or from the AONAPs having jurisdiction over the Indian housing 
    authority making an application, or by calling HUD's DISC on (800) 578-
    3472. The application kit contains information on all exhibits and 
    certifications required under this NOFA.
        (b) Application Submission: Applications are due on or before 
    Friday, August 8, 1997, at 3:00 pm, local time. Applications (original 
    and three identical copies of the original application) must be 
    received by the deadline at the local HUD Field Office with 
    responsibilities over the applying public housing authorities. This 
    application deadline is 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.
        Applications (Original and three identical copies of the original 
    application) must be physically received by the deadline at the local 
    HUD Field Office with delegated public housing responsibilities 
    Attention: Director, Office of Public Housing, or, in the case of IHAs, 
    to the local HUD Administrator, AONAPs, as appropriate. It is not 
    sufficient for an application to bear a postage date within the 
    submission time period. Applications submitted by facsimile are not 
    acceptable. Applications received after Friday, August 8, 1997, at 3:00 
    pm, Local Time, will not be considered. Applications submitted in 
    response to this NOFA are subject to disclosure under the Freedom of 
    Information Act.
    
    III. Checklist of Application Submission Requirements
    
        To qualify for a grant under this program, the application 
    submitted to HUD shall include, in addition to those requirements 
    listed under Section I.(d) (Selection Criteria) of this NOFA, including 
    the plan to address the problem of drug-related crime in the 
    developments proposed for funding, at least the following items:
        (a) Applicant Grant Data Form. The applicant must accurately 
    complete the form for HUD's application database
    
    [[Page 28557]]
    
    entry. The form, with examples, is provided in the application kit.
        (b) Application for Federal Assistance, Standard Form SF-424. The 
    SF-424 is the face sheet for the application. The applicant must 
    accurately complete and sign the form. The form, with example, is 
    provided in the application kit.
        (c) Standard Form SF-424A Budget Information (non-construction 
    programs), with attached budget narrative(s) with supporting 
    justification and documentation (specifically showing how costs were 
    determined for each element of each activity in the same format as 
    shown in the application kit). The SF-424A, with attached budget 
    narrative, must be accurately completed and the applicant must 
    describe, as applicable, each major activity proposed for funding, 
    e.g., employment of security personnel (contracted security personnel 
    services and housing authority police departments), reimbursement of 
    local law enforcement services, HA-dedicated police division/bureau, 
    employment/equipment of investigators, voluntary tenant (resident) 
    patrols, programs to reduce drugs/crime, i.e., drug prevention, 
    intervention, and treatment programs. If additional housing authority 
    police are to be employed for a service that is also provided by a 
    local law enforcement agency, the housing authority must provide a cost 
    analysis that demonstrates the employment of housing authority police 
    is more cost efficient than obtaining the service from the local law 
    enforcement agency. Forms, with examples, are provided in the 
    application kit.
        (d) Applicants must verify their unit count with the local HUD 
    Field Office/AONAPs prior to submitting the application . In accordance 
    with Sections I.(b)(2) (i) through (iii) of this NOFA, applicants MUST 
    COMPUTE the maximum grant award amount for which they are eligible 
    (eligible dollar amount per unit x (times) number of units and compare 
    it with the dollar amount requested in the application to make certain 
    the amount requested does not exceed the permitted maximum grant award. 
    Applicants should note that in determining the unit count for PHA-owned 
    or IHA-owned Rental Housing Program, a unit that is considered to be a 
    long-term vacancy, as defined in 24 CFR 950.102 or 990.102, is still 
    included in the count.
        (e) Standard Form SF-424B, Assurances, (non-construction programs) 
    for pre-award assurances. The applicant must accurately complete and 
    sign the form. The form and example are provided in the application 
    kit.
        (f) Certifications. Applications must accurately include the 
    following certifications (certifications are provided in the 
    application kit):
        (1) A certification that the applicant will maintain a drug-free 
    workplace in accordance with the requirements of the Drug-Free 
    Workplace Act of 1988, 24 CFR part 24, subpart F. (Applicants may 
    submit a copy of their most recent drug-free workplace certification, 
    which must be dated within the past year.)
        (2) Indian Housing Authorities (IHAs) established under State law 
    that are applying for funding under this NOFA are subject to the 
    provisions of Section 319 of the Department of Interior and Related 
    Agencies Appropriation Act for Fiscal Year 1991, 31 U.S.C. Section 1352 
    (the Byrd Amendment). An IHA established by an Indian tribe as a result 
    of the exercise of its sovereign power is excluded from coverage of the 
    Byrd Amendment.
        The Byrd Amendment, which is implemented in regulations at 24 CFR 
    Part 87, prohibits applicants for Federal contracts and grants from 
    using appropriated funds to attempt to influence Federal Executive or 
    legislative officers or employees in connection with obtaining such 
    assistance, or with its extension, continuation, renewal, amendment or 
    modification. The Byrd Amendment applies to the funds that are the 
    subject of this NOFA.
        A covered applicant must file a certification stating that it has 
    not made and will not make any prohibited payments and, if any payments 
    or agreement to make payments of nonappropriated funds for these 
    purposes have been made, an SF-LLL disclosing such payments must be 
    submitted. The certification and the SF-LLL are included in the 
    application package.
        (3) If applying for drug prevention program funding, a 
    certification by the applicant that the applicant has notified and 
    consulted with the relevant Tribal commission, Single State Agency or 
    other local authority with substance program coordination 
    responsibilities concerning its application; and that the proposed 
    substance abuse prevention program has been reviewed by the relevant 
    local Tribal commission, Single State Agency or other authority and is 
    consistent with the Tribal or State prevention plan.
        (4) A certification (provided in the application kit) by the Chief 
    Executive Officer (CEO) of a State, Tribe, or a unit of general local 
    government in which the developments proposed for assistance are 
    located that:
        (i) Grant funds provided under this program will not substitute for 
    activities currently being undertaken on behalf of the applicant by the 
    jurisdiction to address drug-related crime;
        (ii) Any reimbursement of local law enforcement agencies for 
    additional security and protective services to be provided under 
    section I.(c)(2) of this NOFA meets the requirements of that section.
        (5) A certification, (An example is provided in the application 
    kit), from the chief of the local law enforcement agency:
        (i) If the application is for employment of security services, that 
    the law enforcement agency has entered into, or will enter into, an 
    agreement with the applicant and the provider of the security services 
    in accordance with the requirements of section I.(c)(1) (Security guard 
    personnel, and public housing police departments, and section I.(c)(2) 
    (HA-dedicated police division/bureau) of this NOFA;
        (ii) If the application is for employment of investigators, that 
    the law enforcement agency has entered into, or will enter into, an 
    agreement with the applicant and the investigators, in accordance with 
    the requirements of Section I.(c)(4) (employment of investigators) of 
    this NOFA;
        (iii) If the application is for voluntary tenant (resident) patrol 
    funding, that the law enforcement agency has entered into, or will 
    enter into, an agreement with the applicant and the voluntary tenant 
    patrol, in accordance with the requirements of section I.(c)(5) 
    (voluntary tenant (resident) patrol) of this NOFA.
        (6) A certification (An example is provided in the application kit) 
    by the RMC, RC or RO, or other involved resident group where an RMC, RC 
    or RO does not exist, that the residents participated in the 
    preparation of the grant application with the applicant, and that the 
    applicant's description of the activities and program evaluation that 
    the resident group will implement under the program is accurate and 
    complete.
        (7) A certification (an example is provided in the application kit) 
    by the applicant that programs will not violate civil rights laws, and 
    that there is a system in place to protect confidential information.
        (8) A certification (an example is provided in the application kit) 
    by the applicant that there is a system in place to protect 
    confidential information regarding law enforcement records, and medical 
    and disability-related information.
    
    [[Page 28558]]
    
        (g) HUD Form 2880, Applicant Disclosures. The form, with example, 
    is provided in the application kit.
    
    IV. Corrections to Deficient Applications
    
        (a) HUD will notify an applicant, in writing, of receipt of the 
    application and of any curable technical deficiencies in the 
    application. The applicant must submit corrections in accordance with 
    the information specified in HUD's letter within 14 calendar days from 
    the date on HUD's letter notifying the applicant of any such 
    deficiency.
        (b) Curable technical deficiencies relate to items that would not 
    have any effect on the applicant's score.
        (c) An example of a curable technical deficiency would be the 
    failure of an applicant to submit a required assurance, budget 
    narrative, certification, applicant data form, incomplete forms such as 
    the SF-424 or lack of such items as required signatures, appendixes and 
    documentation referenced in the application or a computational error 
    based on the use of an incorrect number(s) such as incorrect unit 
    counts. These items are discussed in the application kit and samples, 
    as appropriate, are provided.
        (d) An example of a non-curable defect or deficiency would be a 
    missing SF-424A (Budget Information).
    
    V. Other Matters
    
        (a) Non-discrimination and equal opportunity. The following 
    nondiscrimination and equal opportunity requirements apply:
        (1) The requirements of Title VIII of the Civil Rights Act of 1968, 
    42 U.S.C. 3600-20 (Fair Housing Act) and implementing regulations 
    issued at subchapter A of title 24 of the Code of Federal Regulations, 
    as amended by 54 FR 3232 (published January 23, 1989); Executive Order 
    11063 (Equal Opportunity in Housing) and implementing regulations at 24 
    CFR part 107; and title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 (42 U.S.C. 
    2000d-2000d-4) (Nondiscrimination in Federally Assisted Programs) and 
    implementing regulations issued at 24 CFR Part 1;
        (2) The Indian Civil Rights Act (ICRA) (Title II of the Civil 
    Rights Act of 1968, 25 U.S.C. 1301-1303) provides, among other things, 
    that ``no Indian tribe in exercising powers of self-government shall * 
    * * deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of 
    its laws or deprive any person of liberty or property without due 
    process of law.'' The Indian Civil Rights Act applies to any Tribe, 
    band, or other group of Indians subject to the jurisdiction of the 
    United States in the exercise of recognized powers of self-government. 
    The ICRA is applicable in all cases where an IHA has been established 
    by exercise of Tribal powers of self-government;
        (3) 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, and the prohibitions 
    against discrimination against handicapped individuals under section 
    504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 (29 U.S.C. 794) and implementing 
    regulations at 24 CFR part 8;
        (4) The requirements of Executive Order 11246 (Equal Employment 
    Opportunity) and the regulations issued under the Order at 41 CFR 
    Chapter 60;
        (5) The requirements of Executive Orders 11625, 12432, and 12138. 
    Consistent with HUD's responsibilities under these Orders, recipients 
    must make efforts to encourage the use of minority and women's business 
    enterprises in connection with funded activities.
        (b) Environmental Impact. A Finding of No Significant Impact 
    (FONSI) with respect to the environment has been made in accordance 
    with HUD regulations at 24 CFR Part 50 implementing section 102(2)(C) 
    of the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (42 U.S.C. 4332). The 
    FONSI is available for public inspection and copying between 7:30 a.m. 
    and 5:30 p.m. weekdays at the Office of the Rules Docket Clerk, 451 
    Seventh Street, SW, Room 10276, Washington, DC 20410. It is anticipated 
    that many of the eligible activities in this NOFA will only be subject 
    to 24 CFR 50.19 and, except for extraordinary circumstances, will not 
    require an environmental review. However, if activities such as 
    acquisition or capital improvements are proposed, the environmental 
    review will be performed in accordance with 24 CFR part 50 prior to the 
    award of grant funds.
        (c) Federalism Impact. The General Counsel, as the Designated 
    Official under section 6(a) of Executive Order 12612, Federalism, has 
    determined that the policies contained in this NOFA 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 and, therefore, the provisions of this NOFA do not 
    have ``Federalism implications'' within the meaning of the Order. The 
    NOFA implements a program that encourages housing authorities to 
    develop a plan for addressing the problem of drug-related crime and 
    other criminal activities associated with drug-related problems, and 
    makes available grants to housing authorities to help them carry out 
    their plans. As such, the program would help housing authorities combat 
    serious drug-related crime problems in their developments, thereby 
    strengthening their role as instrumentalities of the States. In 
    addition, further review under the Order is unnecessary, since the NOFA 
    generally tracks the statute and involves little implementing 
    discretion.
        (d) Family Impact. The General Counsel, as the Designated Official 
    for Executive Order 12606, the Family, has determined that the 
    provisions of this NOFA have the potential for a positive, although 
    indirect, impact on family formation, maintenance and general well-
    being within the meaning of the Order. This NOFA would implement a 
    program that would encourage housing authorities to develop a plan for 
    addressing the problem of drug-related crime, and to make available 
    grants to help housing authorities to carry out this plan. As such, the 
    program is intended to improve the quality of life of public and Indian 
    housing development residents, including families, by reducing the 
    incidence of drug-related crime.
        (e) Section 102 HUD Reform Act--Accountability in the Provision of 
    HUD Assistance. Section 102 of the Department of Housing and Urban 
    Development Reform Act of 1989 (42 U.S.C. 3545) (HUD Reform Act) and 
    the final rule codified at 24 CFR part 4, subpart A, published on April 
    1, 1996 (61 FR 1448), contain a number of provisions that are designed 
    to ensure greater accountability and integrity in the provision of 
    certain types of assistance administered by HUD. On January 14, 1992, 
    HUD published, at 57 FR 1942, a notice that also provides information 
    on the implementation of section 102. The documentation, public access, 
    and disclosure requirements of section 102 are applicable to assistance 
    awarded under this NOFA as follows:
        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
    
    [[Page 28559]]
    
    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.
        Disclosures. HUD will make available to the public for five years 
    all applicant disclosure reports (HUD Form 2880) submitted in 
    connection with this NOFA. Update reports (also Form 2880) will be made 
    available along with the applicant disclosure reports, but in no case 
    for a period less than three years. All reports--both applicant 
    disclosures and updates--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.
        (f) Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance. The Catalog of Federal 
    Domestic Assistance number for the Public and Indian Housing Drug 
    Elimination Program is 14.854.
        (g) Section 103 HUD Reform Act. Section 103 of the Department of 
    Housing and Urban Development Reform Act of 1989, and HUD's 
    implementing regulation codified at subpart B of 24 CFR part 4, applies 
    to the funding competition announced today. These requirements 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 limited by section 103 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 section 103 and subpart B of 24 CFR part 
    4.
        Applicants or employees who have ethics related questions should 
    contact the HUD Office of Ethics (202) 708-3815. (This is not a toll-
    free number.) For HUD employees who have specific program questions, 
    such as whether particular subject matter can be discussed with persons 
    outside HUD, the employee should contact the appropriate Field Office 
    Counsel, or Headquarters counsel for the program to which the question 
    pertains.
    
        Authority: Sec. 5127, Public Housing Drug Elimination Act of 
    1988 (42 U.S.C. 11901 et seq.); sec. 7(d), Department of Housing and 
    Urban Development Act (42 U.S.C. 3535(d)).
    
        Dated: April 24, 1997.
    Kevin E. Marchman,
    Acting Assistant Secretary for Public and Indian Housing.
    
    Appendix A: HUD, Public Housing, NONAP, and AONAP Office Addresses, 
    Phone Numbers and Office Hours
    
    HUD--New England: Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, 
    Rhode Island, Vermont
    
    Massachusetts State Office
    
    Office of Public Housing, DHUD--Massachusetts State Office, Thomas 
    P. O'Neill, Jr. Federal Building, 10 Causeway Street, Room 553, 
    Boston, MA 02222-1092, (617) 565-5196, TTY Number: (617) 565-5453, 
    Office hours: 8:30am-5:00pm local time
    
    Connecticut State Office
    
    Office of Public Housing, DHUD--Connecticut State Office 330 Main 
    Street, Hartford, Connecticut 06106-1860, (860) 240-4522, TTY 
    Number: (203) 240-4665, Office hours: 8:00am-4:30pm local time
    
    New Hampshire State Office
    
    Office of Public Housing, DHUD--New Hampshire State Office, Norris 
    Cotton Federal Building, 275 Chestnut Street, Manchester, New 
    Hampshire 03101-2487, (603) 666-7681, TTY Number: (603) 666-7518, 
    Office hours: 8:00am-4:30pm local time
    
    Rhode Island State Office
    
    Office of Public Housing, DHUD--Rhode Island State Office, 10 
    Weybosset Street, Sixth Floor, Providence, Rhode Island 02903-2808, 
    (401) 528-5351, TTY Number: (401) 528-5364, Office hours: 8:00am-
    4:30pm local time
    
    HUD--New York, New Jersey
    
    New York State Office
    
    Office of Public Housing, DHUD--New York State Office, 26 Federal 
    Plaza, Suite 3237, New York, New York 10278-0068, (212) 264-6500, 
    TTY Number: (212) 264-0927, Office hours: 8:30am-5:00pm local time
    
    Buffalo State Office
    
    Office of Public Housing, DHUD--Buffalo State Office, Lafayette 
    Court, 5th Floor, 465 Main Street, Buffalo, New York 14203-1780 
    (551) 846-5755, TTY Number: (716) 551-5787, Office hours: 8:00am-
    4:30pm local time
    
    New Jersey State Office
    
    Office of Public Housing, DHUD--New Jersey State Office, One Newark 
    Center, 12th Floor, Newark, New Jersey 07102-5260, (201) 622-7900, 
    TTY Number: (201) 645-6649, Office hours: 8:30am-5:00pm local time
    
    HUD--Mid-Atlantic: Pennsylvania, District of Columbia, Maryland, 
    Delaware, Virginia, West Virginia
    
    Pennsylvania State Office
    
    Office of Public Housing, DHUD--Pennsylvania State Office, The 
    Wanamaker Building, 100 Penn Square East, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 
    19107-3390, (215) 656-0579, TTY Number: (215) 597-5564, Office 
    hours: 8:00am-4:30pm local time
    
    District of Columbia Office (Washington, DC)
    
    Office of Public Housing, DHUD--District of Columbia Office, 820 
    First Street NE., Washington, DC 20002-4502, (202) 275-9200, TTY 
    Number: (202) 275-0967, Office hours: 8:00am-4:30pm local time
    
    Maryland State Office
    
    Office of Public Housing, DHUD--Maryland State Office, City Crescent 
    Building, 10 South Howard Street, 5th Floor, Baltimore, Maryland 
    21201-2505, (401) 962-2520, TTY Number: (410) 962-0106, Office 
    hours: 8:00am-4:30pm local time
    
    Pittsburgh Area Office
    
    Office of Public Housing, DHUD--Pittsburgh Area Office, 339 Sixth 
    Avenue, Sixth floor, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15222-2515, (412) 644-
    6428, TTY Number: (412) 644-5747, Office hours: 8:00am-4:30pm local 
    time
    
    Virginia State Office
    
    Office of Public Housing, DHUD--Virginia State Office, The 3600 
    Centre, 3600 West Broad Street, P.O. Box 90331, Richmond, Virginia 
    23230-0331, (804) 278-4507, TTY Number: (804) 278-4501, Office 
    hours: 8:00am-4:30pm local time
    
    West Virginia State Office
    
    Office of Public Housing, DHUD--West Virginia State Office, 405 
    Capitol Street, Suite 708, Charleston, West Virginia 25301-1795, 
    (304) 347-7000, TTY Number: (304) 347-5332, Office hours: 8:00am-
    4:30pm local time
    
    HUD--Southeast: Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Mississippi, 
    North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, Caribbean, Virgin 
    Islands
    
    Georgia State Office
    
    Office of Public Housing, DHUD--Georgia State Office, Richard B. 
    Russell Federal Building, 75 Spring Street, S.W., Atlanta, Georgia 
    30303-3388, (404) 331-4815, TTY Number: (404) 730-2654, Office 
    hours: 8:00am-4:30pm local time
    
    Alabama State Office
    
    Office of Public Housing, DHUD--Alabama State Office, 600 Beacon 
    Parkway West, Suite 300, Birmingham, Alabama 35209-3144, (205) 290-
    7601, TTY Number: (205) 290-7624, Office hours: 8:00am-4:30pm local 
    time
    
    Kentucky State Office
    
    Office of Public Housing, DHUD--Kentucky State Office, 601 West 
    Broadway, P.O. Box 1044, Louisville, Kentucky 40201-1044, (502) 582-
    6161, TTY Number: (502) 582-5139, Office hours: 8:00am-4:30pm local 
    time
    
    Mississippi State Office
    
    Office of Public Housing, DHUD--Mississippi State Office, Doctor 
    A.H. McCoy Federal Building, 100 West Capitol Street, Room 910, 
    Jackson, Mississippi 39269-1096, (601) 975-4746, TTY Number: (601) 
    975-4717, Office hours: 8:00am-4:45pm local time
    
    [[Page 28560]]
    
    North Carolina State Office
    
    Office of Public Housing, DHUD--North Carolina State Office, 2306 
    West Meadowview Road, Greensboro, North Carolina 27407-3707, (919) 
    547-4000, TTY Number: 919-547-4055, Office hours: 8:00am-4:45pm 
    local time
    
    Caribbean Office
    
    Office of Public Housing, DHUD--Caribbean Office, New San Office 
    Building, 159 Carlos East Chardon Avenue, Room 305, San Juan, Puerto 
    Rico 00918-1804, (809) 766-6121, TTY Number: Number not available, 
    Office hours: 8:00am-4:30pm local time
    
    South Carolina State Office
    
    Office of Public Housing, DHUD--South Carolina State Office, Strom 
    Thurmond Federal Building, 1835 Assembly Street, Columbia, South 
    Carolina 29201-2480, (803) 765-5831, TTY Number: Number not 
    available, Office hours: 8:00am-4:45pm local time
    
    Tennessee Area Office
    
    Office of Public Housing, DHUD--Tennessee Area Office, John J. 
    Duncan Federal Building, 710 Locust Street, S.W., Third Floor, 
    Knoxville, Tennessee 37902-2526, (423) 545-4389, TTY Number: (615) 
    545-4379, Office hours: 7:30am-4:15pm local time,
    
    Nashville, Tennessee State Office
    
    Office of Public Housing, DHUD--Tennessee State Office, 251 
    Cumberland Bend Drive, Suite 200, Nashville, Tennessee 37228-1803, 
    (615) 736-5213, TTY Number: (615) 736-5063, Office hours: 7:45am-
    4:15pm local time,
    
    Florida Area Office
    
    Office of Public Housing, DHUD--Florida Area Office, Southern Bell 
    Towers, 301 West Bay Street, Suite 2200, Jacksonville, Florida 
    32202-5121, (904) 232-2626, TTY Number: (904) 232-2357, Office 
    hours: 7:45am-4:30pm local time
    
    HUD--Midwest: Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio, 
    Wisconsin
    
    Illinois State Office
    
    Office of Public Housing, DHUD--Illinois State Office, Ralph H. 
    Metcalfe Federal Building, 77 West Jackson Boulevard, Chicago, IL 
    60604-3507, (312) 353-5680, TTY Number: (312) 353-7143, Office 
    hours: 8:15am-4:45pm local time
    
    Michigan State Office
    
    Office of Public Housing, DHUD--Michigan State Office, Patrick V. 
    McNamara Federal Building, 477 Michigan Avenue, Detroit, Michigan 
    48226-2592, (313) 226-6880, TTY Number: (313) 226-7812, Office 
    hours: 8:00am-4:30pm local time
    
    Indiana State Office
    
    Office of Public Housing, DHUD--Indiana State Office, 151 North 
    Delaware Street, Suite 1200, Indianapolis, Indiana 46204-2526, (317) 
    226-6303, TTY Number: (317)226-7081, Office hours: 8:00am-4:45pm 
    local time
    
    Grand Rapids, Michigan Area Office
    
    Office of Public Housing, DHUD--Grand Rapids Area Office, Trade 
    Center Building 50 Louis, N.W, Grand Rapids, Michigan 49503-2648, 
    (616) 456-2127, TTY Number: Number not available, Office hours: 
    8:00am-4:45pm local time
    
    Minnesota State Office
    
    Office of Public Housing, DHUD--Minnesota State Office, Bridge Place 
    Building, 220 South Second Street, Minneapolis, Minnesota 55401-
    2195, (612) 370-3000, TTY Number: (612) 370-3186, Office hours: 
    8:00am-4:30pm local time
    
    Cincinnati, Ohio Area Office
    
    Office of Public Housing, DHUD--Cincinnati Area Office, 525 Vine 
    Street, Suite 700, Cincinnati, Ohio 45202-3188, (513) 684-2884, TTY 
    Number: (513) 684-6180, Office hours: 8:00am-4:45pm local time
    
    Cleveland, Ohio Area Office
    
    Office of Public Housing, DHUD--Cleveland Area Office, Renaissance 
    Building, 1350 Euclid Avenue, 500, Cleveland, Ohio 44115-1815, (216) 
    522-4065, TTY Number: Number not available Office hours: 8:00am-
    4:40pm local time
    
    Ohio State Office
    
    Office of Public Housing, DHUD--Ohio State Office, 200 North High 
    Street, Columbus, Ohio 43215-2499, (614) 469-5737, TTY Number: 
    Number not available, Office hours: 8:30am-4:45pm local time
    
    Wisconsin State Office
    
    Office of Public Housing, DHUD--Wisconsin State Office, Henry S. 
    Reuss Federal Plaza, 310 West Wisconsin Avenue, Suite 1380, 
    Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53203-2289, (414) 291-3214, TTY Number: Number 
    not available, Office hours: 8:00am-4:30pm local time
    
    HUD--Southwest: Arkansas, Louisiana, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Texas
    
    Texas State Office
    
    Office of Public Housing, DHUD--Texas State Office, 1600 
    Throckmorton Street, Room 304, P.O. Box 2905, Fort Worth, Texas 
    76113-2905, (817) 885-5934, TTY Number: (817) 885-5447, Office 
    hours: 8:00am-4:30pm local time,
    
    Houston, Texas Area Office
    
    Office of Public Housing, DHUD--Houston Area Office, Norfolk Tower, 
    2211 Norfolk, Suite 200, Houston, Texas 77098-4096, (713) 834-3235, 
    TTY Number: Number not available, Office hours: 7:45am-4:30pm local 
    time
    
    San Antonio, Texas Area Office
    
    Office of Public Housing, DHUD--San Antonio Area Office, Washington 
    Square, 800 Dolorosa Street, San Antonio, Texas 78207-4563, (512) 
    229-6783, TTY Number: (512) 229-6783, Office hours: 8:00am-4:30pm 
    local time
    
    Arkansas State Office
    
    Office of Public Housing, DHUD--Arkansas State Office, TCBY Tower, 
    425 West Capitol Avenue, Room 900, Little Rock, Arkansas 72201--
    3488, (501) 324-5935, TTY Number: (501) 324-5931, Office hours: 
    8:00am-4:30pm local time
    
    Louisiana State Office
    
    Office of Public Housing, DHUD--Louisiana State Office, 501 Magazine 
    Street, Ninth Floor, New Orleans, Louisiana 70130, (504) 589-7251, 
    TTY Number: Number not available, Office hours: 8:00am-4:30pm local 
    time
    
    Oklahoma State Office
    
    Office of Public Housing, DHUD--Oklahoma State Office, 500 West Main 
    Street, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma 73102, (504) 589-7233, TTY Number: 
    None, Office hours: 8:00am-4:30pm local time
    
    New Mexico State Office
    
    Office of Public Housing, DHUD--New Mexico State Office, 625 Truman 
    Street NE., Albuquerque, NM 87110-6472, (505) 262-6463, TTY Number: 
    (505) 262-6463, Office hours: 7:45am-4:30pm local time,
    
    Great Plains: Iowa, Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska
    
    Kansas/Missouri State Office
    
    Office of Public Housing, DHUD--Kansas/Missouri State Office, 
    Gateway Tower II, 400 State Avenue, Kansas City, Kansas 66101-2406, 
    (913) 551-5488, TTY Number: (913) 551-5815, Office hours: 8:00am-
    4:30pm local time
    
    Nebraska State Office
    
    Office of Public Housing, DHUD--Nebraska State Office, Executive 
    Tower Centre, 10909 Mill Valley Road, Omaha, Nebraska 68154-3955, 
    (402) 492-3100, TTY Number: (402) 492-3183, Office hours: 8:00am-
    4:30pm local time
    
    St. Louis, Missouri Area Office
    
    Office of Public Housing, DHUD--St. Louis Area Office, Robert A. 
    Young Federal Building, 1222 Spruce Street, St. Louis, Missouri 
    63103-2836, (314) 539-6503, TTY Number: (314) 539-6331, Office 
    hours: 8:00am-4:30pm local time
    
    Iowa State Office
    
    Office of Public Housing, DHUD--Iowa State Office, Federal Building, 
    210 Walnut Street, Des Moines, Iowa 50309-2155, (515) 284-4512, TTY 
    Number: (515) 284-4728, Office hours: 8:00am-4:30pm local time
    
    HUD--Rocky Mountains: Colorado, Montana, North Dakota, South 
    Dakota, Utah, Wyoming
    
    Colorado State Office
    
    Office of Public Housing, DHUD--Colorado State Office, First 
    Interstate Tower North, 633 17th Street, Denver, CO 80202-3607, 
    (303) 672-5376, TTY Number: (303) 672-5248, Office hours: 8:00am-
    4:30pm local time
    
    [[Page 28561]]
    
    HUD--Pacific/Hawaii: Arizona, California, Hawaii, Nevada, Guam, 
    America Samoa
    
    California State Office
    
    Office of Public Housing, DHUD--California State Office, Philip 
    Burton Federal Building/Courthouse, 450 Golden Gate Avenue, PO Box 
    36003, San Francisco, California 94102-3448, (415) 436-6532, TTY 
    Number: (415) 436-6594, Office hours: 8:15am-4:45pm local time
    
    Los Angeles, California Area Office
    
    Office of Public Housing, DHUD--Los Angeles Area Office, 611 West 
    6th Street, Los Angeles, California 90017, (213) 894-7122, extension 
    3504, TTY Number: (213) 894-8047, Office hours: 8:00am-4:30pm local 
    time
    
    Hawaii State Office
    
    Office of Public Housing, Seven Waterfront Plaza, 500 Ala Moana 
    Boulevard, Suite 500, Honolulu, HI 96813-4918, (808) 522-8185, TTY 
    Number: (808) 522-8193, Office hours: 8:00am-4:30pm local time
    
    Sacramento, California Area Office
    
    Office of Public Housing, DHUD--Sacramento Area Office, 777 12th 
    Avenue, Suite 200, PO Box 1978, Sacramento, California 95814-1997, 
    (916) 498-5270, TTY Number: (916) 498-5220, Office hours: 8:00am-
    4:30pm local time
    
    Arizona State Office
    
    Office of Public Housing, DHUD--Arizona State Office, Two Arizona 
    Center, 400 North 5th Street, Suite 1600, Phoenix, Arizona 85004-
    2361, (602) 261-4434, TTY Number: (602) 379-4461, Office hours: 
    8:00am-4:30pm local time
    
    HUD--Northwest/Alaska: Alaska, Idaho, Oregon, Washington
    
    Washington State Office
    
    Office of Public Housing, DHUD--Washington State Office, Seattle 
    Federal Office Building, 909 First Avenue, Suite 200, Seattle, WA 
    98104-1000, (206) 220-5292, TTY Number: (206) 220-5185, Office 
    hours: 8:00am-4:30pm local time
    
    Oregon State Office
    
    Office of Public Housing, DHUD--Oregon State Office, 400 Southwest 
    Sixth Avenue, Suite 700, Portland, Oregon 97203-1632, (503) 326-
    2661, TTY Number: (503) 326-3656, Office hours: 8:00am--4:30pm local 
    time
    
    DHUD National Office of Native American Programs (NONAPs)
    
    NONAP Headquarters
    
    Office of the Deputy Assistant Secretary for National Native 
    American Programs, 1999 Broadway, Suite 3390, Box 90, Denver, CO 
    80202, Office hours: 8:15am-4:45pm local time, FY 1997 Round PHDEP 
    point of contact: Tracy Outlaw, Telephone (303) 675-1600, extension 
    3333
    
    NONAPs Area Offices
    
    Eastern/Woodlands--Tribes and IHAs: East of the Mississippi River, 
    including all of Minnesota and Iowa
    
    Eastern/Woodlands HUD Area Office of Native American Programs
    
    Eastern/Woodlands Office of Native American Programs, Ralph H. 
    Metcalfe Federal Building, 77 West Jackson Boulevard, Room 2400, 
    Chicago, IL 60604, (312) 886-3539 or (800) 735-3239, TTY Number: 
    (312) 886-3741 or (800) 927-9275, Office hours: 8:15am-4:45pm local 
    time
    
    Southern Plains--Tribes and IHAs: Louisiana, Missouri, Kansas, 
    Oklahoma, and Texas, except for Isleta Del Sur in Texas
    
    DHUD Area Office of Native American Programs
    
    Southern Plains Office of Native American Programs, 500 West Main 
    Street, Suite 400, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma 73102, (405) 553-7428, 
    TTY Number: (405) 231-4891 or (405) 231-4181, Office hours: 8:00am-
    4:30pm local time
    
    Northern Plains--Tribes and IHAS: Colorado, Montana, Nebraska, 
    North Dakota, South Dakota, and Wyoming
    
    DHUD Area Office of Native American Programs
    
    Northern Plains Office of Native American Programs, First Interstate 
    Tower North, 633 17th Street, 14th Floor, Denver, CO 80202-3607, 
    (303) 672-5462, TTY Number: (303) 844-6158, Office hours: 8:00am-
    4:30pm local time
    
    Southwest--Tribes and IHAS: Arizona, California, New Mexico, 
    Nevada, and Isleta Del Sur in Texas
    
    DHUD Area Office of Native American Programs
    
    Southwest Office of Native American Programs, Two Arizona Center, 
    400 North 5th Street, Suite 1650, Phoenix, Arizona 85004-2361, (602) 
    379-4156, TTY Number: (602) 379-4461, Office hours: 8:15am-4:45pm 
    local time
        or
    Albuquerque Office of Native American Programs, Albuquerque Plaza, 
    201 3rd Street, NW, Suite 1830, Albuquerque, New Mexico 87102-3368, 
    (505) 766-1372, TTY Number: None available, Office hours: 7:45am-
    4:30pm local time
    
    Northwest--Tribes and IHAs: Idaho, Oregon, and Washington
    
    DHUD Area Office of Native American Programs
    
    Northwest Office of Native American Programs, Seattle Federal Office 
    Building, 909 First Avenue, Suite 300, Seattle, WA 98104-1000, (206) 
    220-5270, TTY Number: (206) 220-5185, Office hours: 8:00am-4:30pm 
    local time
    
    Alaska--Tribes and IHAs: Alaska
    
    DHUD Area Office of Native American Programs
    
    Alaska Office of Native American Programs, University Plaza 
    Building, 949 East 36th Avenue, Suite 401, Anchorage, Alaska 99508-
    4399, (907) 271-4633, TTY Number: (907) 271-4328, Office hours: 
    8:00am-4:30pm local time
    
    [FR Doc. 97-13518 Filed 5-22-97; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 4210-33-P