80_FR_76024 80 FR 75791 - Homeless Emergency Assistance and Rapid Transition to Housing: Defining “Chronically Homeless”

80 FR 75791 - Homeless Emergency Assistance and Rapid Transition to Housing: Defining “Chronically Homeless”

DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT

Federal Register Volume 80, Issue 233 (December 4, 2015)

Page Range75791-75806
FR Document2015-30473

This final rule establishes the definition of ``chronically homeless'' that will be used in HUD's Continuum of Care Program, and in the Consolidated Submissions for Community Planning and Development Programs. This definition has been the subject of significant public comment which has guided HUD in establishing the definition of ``chronically homeless'' that will be used in its homeless assistance programs. The final rule also establishes the necessary recordkeeping requirements that correspond to the definition of ``chronically homeless'' for the Continuum of Care Program. Historically, other programs within HUD, as well as other agencies such as the United States Interagency Council on Homelessness and the Department of Veteran Affairs, have adopted HUD's definition of chronically homeless and may also choose to adopt the definition of ``chronically homeless'' included in this final rule, however, it is not required.

Federal Register, Volume 80 Issue 233 (Friday, December 4, 2015)
[Federal Register Volume 80, Number 233 (Friday, December 4, 2015)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 75791-75806]
From the Federal Register Online  [www.thefederalregister.org]
[FR Doc No: 2015-30473]


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DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT

24 CFR Parts 91 and 578

[Docket No. FR-5809-F-01]
RIN 2506-AC37


Homeless Emergency Assistance and Rapid Transition to Housing: 
Defining ``Chronically Homeless''

AGENCY: Office of the Assistant Secretary for Community Planning and 
Development, HUD.

ACTION: Final rule.

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SUMMARY: This final rule establishes the definition of ``chronically 
homeless'' that will be used in HUD's Continuum of Care Program, and in 
the Consolidated Submissions for Community Planning and Development 
Programs. This definition has been the subject of significant public 
comment which has guided HUD in establishing the definition of 
``chronically homeless'' that will be used in its homeless assistance 
programs. The final rule also establishes the necessary recordkeeping 
requirements that correspond to the definition of ``chronically 
homeless'' for the Continuum of Care Program. Historically, other 
programs within HUD, as well as other agencies such as the United 
States Interagency Council on Homelessness and the Department of 
Veteran Affairs, have adopted HUD's definition of chronically homeless 
and

[[Page 75792]]

may also choose to adopt the definition of ``chronically homeless'' 
included in this final rule, however, it is not required.

DATES: Effective Date: January 4, 2016.
    Compliance Dates: Continuum of Care recipients must comply with the 
regulations promulgated by this rule as of January 15, 2016. The 
Continuum of Care Program grant agreement provides that upon 
publication of a final rule for the Continuum of Care Program, that 
follows the July 31, 2012, interim rule, the final rule, not the prior 
interim rule, will govern the grant agreement. Continuum of Care 
Program recipients, therefore, must comply with the regulations 
promulgated by this rule for all program participants admitted after 
January 15, 2016. The regulations promulgated by this rule do not apply 
retroactively to program participants admitted to a Continuum of Care 
Program project prior to January 15, 2016.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Norm Suchar, Director, Office of 
Special Needs Assistance Programs, Office of Community Planning and 
Development, Department of Housing and Urban Development, 451 7th 
Street SW., Washington, DC 20410-7000; telephone number 202-708-4300 
(this is not a toll-free number). Hearing- and speech-impaired persons 
can access this number through TTY by calling the Federal Relay Service 
at 800-877-8339 (this is a toll-free number).

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: 

I. Executive Summary

Purpose and Legal Authority

    The purpose of this rule is to establish a final definition of the 
term ``chronically homeless'' that will be used in HUD's Continuum of 
Care Program (24 CFR part 578) and the Consolidated Submissions for 
Community Planning and Development Programs (24 CFR part 91). 
``Chronically homeless'' is defined in section 401(2) of the McKinney-
Vento Homeless Assistance Act, 42 U.S.C. 11360 (McKinney-Vento Act or 
Act), as an individual or family that is homeless and resides in a 
place not meant for human habitation, a safe haven, or in an emergency 
shelter, and has been homeless and residing in such a place for at 
least 1 year or on at least four separate occasions in the last 3 
years. The statutory definition also requires that the individual or 
family has a head of household with a diagnosable substance use 
disorder, serious mental illness, developmental disability, post-
traumatic stress disorder, cognitive impairments resulting from a brain 
injury, or chronic physical illness or disability.
    Following the statutory definition, HUD first proposed a regulatory 
definition of ``chronically homeless'' in a December 5, 2011, interim 
rule that established regulations for the Emergency Solutions Grants 
program and made conforming amendments to HUD's Consolidated Plan 
regulations (76 FR 75954). In response to concerns raised in public 
comments, HUD amended the definition of ``chronically homeless'' in the 
Continuum of Care Program interim rule, published July 31, 2012 (77 FR 
45422), and sought further public comment on the definition of 
``chronically homeless.'' At a convening held on May 30, 2012, HUD also 
solicited feedback from nationally recognized experts on a workable 
definition of ``chronically homeless,'' as described in the Rural 
Housing Stability Assistance Program proposed rule, published March 27, 
2013 (78 FR 18726). This final rule results from HUD's consideration of 
the public comments on the definition of ``chronically homeless'' and 
feedback from the convening of nationally recognized experts.

Summary of Major Provisions

    This rule provides a definition of ``chronically homeless'' in 24 
CFR 91.5, which applies to Consolidated Submissions for Community 
Planning and Development Programs, and in 24 CFR 578.3, which applies 
to the Continuum of Care Program. In addition, this rule amends 24 CFR 
578.103, which stipulates recordkeeping requirements for the Continuum 
of Care Program, to include requirements that recipients and 
subrecipients of Continuum of Care funds must follow in order to 
demonstrate that an individual or family has met the definition of 
``chronically homeless.''
    A ``chronically homeless'' individual is defined to mean a homeless 
individual with a disability who lives either in a place not meant for 
human habitation, a safe haven, or in an emergency shelter, or in an 
institutional care facility if the individual has been living in the 
facility for fewer than 90 days and had been living in a place not 
meant for human habitation, a safe haven, or in an emergency shelter 
immediately before entering the institutional care facility. In order 
to meet the ``chronically homeless'' definition, the individual also 
must have been living as described above continuously for at least 12 
months, or on at least four separate occasions in the last 3 years, 
where the combined occasions total a length of time of at least 12 
months. Each period separating the occasions must include at least 7 
nights of living in a situation other than a place not meant for human 
habitation, in an emergency shelter, or in a safe haven.
    Chronically homeless families are families with adult heads of 
household who meet the definition of a chronically homeless individual. 
If there is no adult in the family, the family would still be 
considered chronically homeless if a minor head of household meets all 
the criteria of a chronically homeless individual. A chronically 
homeless family includes those whose composition has fluctuated while 
the head of household has been homeless.
    Recipients and subrecipients of Continuum of Care Program funds are 
required to maintain and follow written intake procedures to ensure 
compliance with the ``chronically homeless'' definition. The procedures 
must establish the order of priority for obtaining evidence as third-
party documentation first, intake worker observations second, and 
certification from the individual seeking assistance third.

Benefits and Costs

    This final rule establishes a regulatory definition for the term 
``chronically homeless'' that meets the statutory definition of the 
term established in the McKinney-Vento Act and focuses on persons with 
the longest histories of homelessness, who often also have the highest 
need. This will ensure that funds are targeted to providing permanent 
supportive housing solutions for these individuals and families.
    This final definition of ``chronically homeless'' provides greater 
clarity than the statutory definition and HUD's previous proposed 
definitions so that recipients and subrecipients can benefit from 
understanding which homeless individuals and families can be considered 
``chronically homeless.'' This final definition will ensure that 
communities are consistently using the same criteria when considering 
whether a person is chronically homeless, and that HUD receives 
consistent and accurate information nationwide. Communities previously 
used various standards for the length of time to define an ``episode'' 
for a person to be considered chronically homeless, which made it 
difficult for HUD to compare data nationally and failed to ensure 
resources were going to those with the longest histories of 
homelessness.
    Although recordkeeping necessarily entails costs, and this rule 
establishes certain recordkeeping requirements for

[[Page 75793]]

the Continuum of Care Program, recipients of Continuum of Care Program-
funded permanent supportive housing projects that serve the chronically 
homeless have always been required to document the chronically homeless 
status of program participants. Failure to maintain appropriate 
documentation of a household's eligibility is the monitoring finding 
that most often requires recipients of HUD funds to repay grant funds. 
This rule establishes recordkeeping requirements to assist Continuum of 
Care Program recipients in appropriately and consistently documenting 
chronically homeless status, which will help to ensure that recipients 
are not required to repay grant funds due to inappropriately 
documenting eligibility for these projects.

II. Background--HEARTH Act

    The Homeless Emergency Assistance and Rapid Transition to Housing 
Act of 2009 (HEARTH Act), which was enacted on May 20, 2009, amended 
the McKinney-Vento Act and consolidates three separate homeless 
assistance programs administered by HUD under the McKinney-Vento Act 
into a single grant program, the Continuum of Care Program; revises the 
Emergency Shelter Grants Program and renames the program the Emergency 
Solutions Grants program; and creates the Rural Housing Stability 
Assistance Program to replace the Rural Homelessness Grant program. 
Commencing in 2010 with the publication of the proposed rule on the 
definition of ``homeless,'' HUD initiated the rulemaking process to 
establish the regulations for these new and revised programs. In this 
rule, HUD provides the final definition of ``chronically homeless'' 
that will apply to its homeless assistance programs, and makes this 
definition applicable, through amendments, to the regulations at 24 CFR 
part 91(Consolidated Submissions for Community Planning and Development 
Programs) and 24 CFR part 578 (Continuum of Care Program).

III. Prior Proposed Rules

    On December 5, 2011, at 76 FR 75954, HUD published an interim rule 
which established the regulations for the Emergency Solutions Grants 
program and made conforming amendments to HUD's Consolidated Plan 
regulations at 24 CFR part 91, which included a definition of 
``chronically homeless.'' HUD received 28 public comments on this 
definition of ``chronically homeless.'' The majority of the commenters 
raised concerns over HUD's clarification that ``an occasion'' must 
equal at least 15 days of living or residing in a place not meant for 
human habitation, in a safe haven, or in an emergency shelter. In 
response to these concerns, HUD included a definition of ``chronically 
homeless'' that omitted this clarification in the Continuum of Care 
Program interim rule, published July 31, 2012, in the Federal Register 
(77 FR 45422) and HUD sought further comment on the definition of 
``chronically homeless.'' At a convening held on May 30, 2012, HUD also 
solicited feedback from nationally recognized experts on a workable 
definition of ``chronically homeless'' which was described in the Rural 
Housing Stability Assistance Program proposed rule. After considering 
the 28 public comments submitted in response to the conforming 
amendments to the Consolidated Plan published with the Emergency 
Solutions Grants interim rule, the 42 comments submitted in response to 
the Continuum of Care Program interim rule, and the feedback solicited 
at the convening of nationally recognized experts, HUD determined to 
propose for public comment a revised definition of ``chronically 
homeless.''
    On March 27, 2013, HUD published a proposed rule at 78 FR 18726 
that would establish the regulations for the Rural Housing Stability 
Assistance Program. In addition to proposing the regulations that would 
govern this program, the Rural Housing Stability Assistance Program 
proposed rule submitted for public comment a further revised definition 
of ``chronically homeless.'' The public comment period for the 
definition of ``chronically homeless'' closed on May 28, 2013, and 
these public comments and HUD's responses to these comments are 
addressed later in this preamble.

IV. Overview of the Final Rule--Key Clarifications

    In the Rural Housing Stability Assistance Program proposed rule, 
HUD defined a chronically homeless person as follows:
    1. An individual who:
     Is homeless and lives in a place not meant for human 
habitation, a safe haven, or in an emergency shelter; and
     Has been homeless and living or residing in a place not 
meant for human habitation, a safe haven, or in an emergency shelter 
continuously for at least 1 year or on at least four separate occasions 
in the last 3 years, where the cumulative total of the four occasions 
is at least one year. Stays in institutions of 90 days or less will not 
constitute as a break in homelessness, but rather such stays are 
included in the cumulative total; and
     Can be diagnosed with one or more of the following 
conditions: Substance use disorder, serious mental illness, 
developmental disability (as defined in section 102 of the 
Developmental Disabilities Assistance Bill of Rights Act of 2000 (42 
U.S.C. 15002)), post-traumatic stress disorder, cognitive impairments 
resulting from brain injury, or chronic physical illness or disability;
    2. An individual who has been residing in an institutional care 
facility, including a jail, substance abuse or mental health treatment 
facility, hospital, or other similar facility for fewer than 90 days 
and met all of the criteria in paragraph (1), before entering that 
facility; or
    3. A family with an adult head of household (or if there is no 
adult in the family, a minor head of household) who meets all of the 
criteria in paragraph (1), including a family whose composition has 
fluctuated while the head of household has been homeless.
    After reviewing the public comments, which are discussed in Section 
IV of this preamble, and upon HUD's further consideration of concerns 
related to the proposed definition of ``chronically homeless,'' the 
following highlights the changes that are made by this final rule.
    The cumulative total of the length of homelessness spent living in 
a place not meant for human habitation, a safe haven, or in an 
emergency shelter must be at least 12 months. The final rule provides 
that a person must have been homeless and living in a place not meant 
for human habitation, a safe haven, or in an emergency shelter for a 
period of at least 12 months as opposed to ``one year.'' This includes 
a provision that where a person has experienced at least four occasions 
of homelessness living in a place not meant for human habitation, a 
safe haven, or in an emergency shelter over a period of 3 years, the 
cumulative total of the occasions must total at least 12 months as 
opposed to ``one year.'' While the requirement is essentially the same 
as that which was included in the Rural Housing Stability Assistance 
Program proposed rule, the change clarifies HUD's intent for less 
burdensome recordkeeping requirements, as discussed in Section IV of 
this preamble.
    Establishing a break in homelessness. The final rule provides that 
a break in homelessness spent living in a place not meant for human 
habitation, a safe haven, or in an emergency shelter is considered to 
be any period of 7 or more consecutive nights where an individual or 
family is not living or residing in such a place. Stays in an 
institutional care facility (e.g., a jail, substance abuse

[[Page 75794]]

or mental health treatment facility, hospital, or other similar 
facility) for fewer than 90 days and where the individual or family had 
been living in a place not meant for human habitation, a safe haven, or 
in an emergency shelter immediately before entering the institutional 
care facility will not constitute as a break.
    Establish clear recordkeeping requirements. The final rule provides 
recordkeeping requirements at 24 CFR part 578 to help recipients and 
subrecipients of Continuum of Care Program funds understand the 
evidence that must be kept in the program participant file in order to 
demonstrate that an individual or family met the definition of 
``chronically homeless'' at the point of entry into a program, when 
required. In general, the recordkeeping requirements establish HUD's 
preferred order of documentation; provide clarity about how the length 
of time of homelessness spent living in a place not meant for human 
habitation, a safe haven, or in an emergency shelter must be 
documented; and provide documentation standards for documenting 
disability.
    Technical and additional clarifying changes. In addition to the 
changes highlighted above, this final rule also includes technical and 
minor clarifying changes to certain proposed regulatory provisions. 
Several of these changes are in response to requests by commenters for 
clarification, and are further discussed in Section IV of this 
preamble. HUD's response to public comments identifies where the final 
rule makes these changes.

V. Discussion of the Public Comments

A. The Comments, Generally

    The public comment period on the definition of ``chronically 
homeless'' portion of the Rural Housing Stability Assistance Program 
proposed rule closed on May 28, 2013, and HUD received 177 public 
comments related to this definition. HUD also received 23 comments for 
the Rural Housing Stability Assistance Program proposed rule unrelated 
to the definition of ``chronically homeless'' and will respond to those 
comments in the final rule for the Rural Housing Stability Assistance 
Program. Regarding the public comments on the definition of 
``chronically homeless,'' HUD received comments from a variety of 
sources: Advocacy groups, service providers, case managers, State and 
local government agencies, nonprofit organizations, private companies, 
and private citizens.
    General concerns most frequently expressed by commenters about the 
proposed definition were: (1) The length of time an individual or 
family must be homeless and living in a place not meant for human 
habitation, a safe haven, or in an emergency shelter based on the 
proposed definition was too long and would require households to 
experience longer periods of homelessness in order to qualify as 
chronically homeless, and (2) documenting chronically homeless status 
based on the proposed definition would be too burdensome.
    Regarding the first concern, it is not HUD's intent to make an 
individual or family experience a longer period of homelessness. 
Rather, HUD's primary intent is to align the period of time of those 
experiencing occasional homelessness with that of those who are 
experiencing continuous homelessness. This will also ensure that 
individuals and families who already meet these criteria are 
prioritized for assistance, that recipients and subrecipients can 
demonstrate to HUD that they are complying with the requirements 
established by HUD, and that HUD is able to make its required reports 
to Congress. Where there are no persons within a Continuum of Care that 
meet the definition of ``chronically homeless,'' permanent supportive 
housing beds that are required through their grant agreement to serve 
this population may serve other vulnerable and eligible households. HUD 
will provide guidance to assist communities on which populations to 
prioritize when there are no persons that meet the definition of 
``chronically homeless'' established in this rule.
    Regarding the second concern, it is critical to note that 
recipients of Continuum of Care Program-funded permanent supportive 
housing projects with one or more beds that are required through a 
grant agreement to serve individuals and families experiencing chronic 
homelessness have always been required to document the chronically 
homeless status of program participants that will occupy those beds, at 
the point of program entry. Failure to maintain appropriate 
documentation of a household's eligibility is the monitoring finding 
that most often requires recipients of HUD funds to repay grant funds. 
HUD recognizes that not including recordkeeping requirements for 
documenting chronically homeless status in the regulatory text of the 
Rural Housing Stability Assistance Program proposed rule resulted in 
some confusion about HUD's expectations and resulted in a number of 
commenters raising concerns that recordkeeping requirements would be 
overly burdensome for those recipients. Therefore, this final rule 
includes, in the regulatory text, recordkeeping requirements to assist 
Continuum of Care Program recipients in appropriately documenting 
chronically homeless status that take into consideration that 
documenting the length of time homeless will be challenging. In 
addition, HUD notes that the revised Homeless Management Information 
System Data Standards published in May 2014 include data elements that 
are aligned with this definition in order to more easily allow for 
chronically homeless persons to be identified through the Continuum of 
Care's Homeless Management Information System.

B. The Definition of ``Chronically Homeless'' in 24 CFR Parts 91 and 
578

The Comments Generally
    Comment: Concern that the expert panel was mainly composed of 
researchers and not practitioners. Several commenters expressed 
disappointment that the expert panel hosted by HUD to develop the 
proposed definition of ``chronically homeless'' was composed mostly of 
researchers and not practitioners or technicians. These commenters 
recommended that HUD invite stakeholders responsible for service 
delivery to such discussions prior to final rulemaking.
    HUD Response: Although several of the experts that participated in 
the convening were researchers, HUD also included several 
practitioners. As stated in the summary of the convening, posted at 
www.hudexchange.info/rhsp, the group of experts included researchers, 
advocates, homeless services providers, and homelessness technical 
assistance providers, as well as Federal representatives from HUD, the 
United States Interagency Council on Homelessness, and the U.S. 
Department of Health and Human Services. In addition, by publishing the 
definition of ``chronically homeless'' one more time as a proposed 
definition, HUD provided a third opportunity for stakeholders 
responsible for service delivery and reporting to submit their comments 
on the proposed definition of ``chronically homeless.''
    Comment: Definition of ``chronically homeless'' should have been 
issued separately from the Rural Housing Stability Assistance Program 
proposed rule. A few commenters stated that in order to solicit the 
most comments on the definition of ``chronically homeless,'' requesting 
comments on the definition of ``chronically homeless''

[[Page 75795]]

should have been a separate notice from the Rural Housing Stability 
Assistance Program proposed rule since the definition will apply to all 
programs authorized by the statute.
    HUD Response: HUD's proposed rule on the Rural Housing Stability 
Assistance Program offered an opportunity to further solicit public 
comment on HUD's definition of ``chronically homeless.'' HUD first 
introduced the definition of ``chronically homeless'' as part of its 
``Emergency Solutions Grants program and Consolidated Plan Conforming 
Amendments interim rule,'' not as a stand-alone rule on defining 
chronically homeless. Although HUD did not solicit public comment on 
specific aspects of the definition of ``chronically homeless'' in its 
Continuum of Care Program rule, HUD did address the definition in that 
rule, and informed interested parties of its intent to solicit further 
public comment. As the commenters note, the definition of ``chronically 
homeless'' applies to all of HUD's homeless assistance programs. 
Soliciting comments on HUD's proposed definition in connection with 
solicitation of comments on the Emergency Solutions Grants program 
interim rule or on the Rural Housing Stability Assistance Program rule 
did not diminish the importance of this definition, but rather 
underscored the significant role that this definition will have in each 
of these programs, and underscores the value that HUD placed on 
receiving public comment on this definition. Although HUD did not issue 
the definition of ``chronically homeless'' as a stand-alone proposed 
rule, it is HUD's intent to issue a final rule solely on the 
definition.
    Comment: HUD needs to account for estimated hours and costs to 
service providers trying to meet requirements of the definition. A few 
commenters requested that HUD account for the total estimated hours and 
financial costs it would take service providers to complete the 
requirements of this rule.
    HUD Response: This final rule establishes the final definition of 
``chronically homeless'' by incorporating the definition into 24 CFR 
parts 91 and 578. HUD requires Continuum of Care Program recipients of 
permanent supportive housing that are required to serve persons 
experiencing chronic homelessness to determine and document that any 
individual or family assisted meets the definition of ``chronically 
homeless'' as defined in this final rule. Each recipient must obtain 
documentation of homeless status, disability, and the specific period 
of time the individual or head of household was living in an emergency 
shelter, safe haven, or place not meant for human habitation. The 
burden for collecting the required homeless status and disability 
information was considered in the burden estimates for the Continuum of 
Care Program interim rule (77 FR 45421). The public had the opportunity 
to provide comments on those estimates during the public comment 
period. In some instances, the documentation obtained under the 
existing burden of the Continuum of Care Program interim rule will 
already meet the standards for documenting the length of time an 
individual or head of household resided in a place not meant for human 
habitation, an emergency shelter, or a safe haven as required in this 
rule. In other instances, recipients and subrecipients may need to 
spend more time acquiring the documents necessary to show that an 
individual meets the timeframe necessary residing in a place not meant 
for human habitation, an emergency shelter, or a safe haven to qualify 
as ``chronically homeless.'' See Section VI, Information Collection 
Requirements, for more information about HUD's change to its existing 
recordkeeping and reporting requirements.
Comments Related to Data Collection and Reporting
    Comment: Problems in reporting such information in Homeless 
Management Information Systems. Several commenters expressed concerns 
about how to document and report chronically homeless status in their 
Homeless Management Information System. One commenter pointed to the 
variations across the country around how chronic homelessness is 
reported in the Homeless Management Information System and noted that 
Continuums of Care would not be able to uniformly and accurately 
document homelessness spent living in a place not meant for human 
habitation, a safe haven, or in an emergency shelter over a 3-year 
period in their Homeless Management Information Systems. Other 
commenters stated that many Homeless Management Information Systems are 
closed and do not share information with other Continuums of Care, 
which could create a problem in documenting chronically homeless status 
for homeless persons moving between Continuums of Care. Another 
commenter expressed concern that data entry personnel and case managers 
do not have the expertise to determine whether a person meets the 
criteria to be classified as chronically homeless, and concern about 
the time service providers would spend on data entry rather than on 
providing services. Further, the commenter requested that HUD improve 
the Homeless Management Information System and the data entry process 
and establish data elements to capture a person's chronically homeless 
status.
    HUD Response: HUD acknowledges that Homeless Management Information 
Systems across the country do not always collect data on chronically 
homeless status uniformly. HUD believes that the promulgation of its 
definition of ``chronically homeless'' will assist communities in 
collecting consistent data. HUD also included specific data elements in 
the 2014 Homeless Management Information System Data Standards to allow 
for uniform data collection on chronically homeless status. These data 
standards take into account that not all chronically homeless persons 
have a service interaction with the Continuum of Care's Homeless 
Management Information System and allow for history of homelessness to 
be documented based on the information provided by the program 
participant. It should also be noted that it is not HUD's expectation 
that the person entering data into the Homeless Management Information 
System also be responsible for determining program eligibility.
    Comment: Proposed definition impedes ability to compare data. Many 
commenters expressed concerns that the new definition of ``chronically 
homeless'' would impede their ability to compare current and future 
data with data from previous years. A few commenters stated that the 
new definition would hinder efforts to measure ``real'' progress in 
reducing the chronically homeless population, as data would not be 
comparable.
    HUD Response: HUD acknowledges that the change in the definition of 
``chronically homeless'' may mean that the number of persons 
experiencing chronic homelessness within a community may change as a 
result of the new definition. However, this more detailed definition is 
necessary in order to ensure that communities are consistently using 
the same criteria when considering whether a person is chronically 
homeless. A uniformly applied definition also serves to ensure that HUD 
has more consistent and accurate information. Previously, communities 
used various standards for the length of time to define an ``episode'' 
for a person to be considered chronically homeless, which made it 
difficult for HUD to compare data nationally. The definition of 
``chronically homeless'' in the final rule will ensure consistency in 
the data nationwide. HUD notes that this will

[[Page 75796]]

only affect the number of persons considered to be chronically homeless 
and not the Continuum of Care's total homeless count.
Comments Related to Community Strategies To Serve the Chronically 
Homeless, Including Eligibility for Housing Resources
    Comment: A narrow definition of ``chronically homeless'' will 
result in an increase in vacancies in units designated for the 
chronically homeless and individuals and families spending a longer 
time in a place not meant for human habitation. Several commenters 
expressed concerns that the more narrow definition of ``chronically 
homeless'' included in the proposed rule would result in an increase in 
vacant units otherwise dedicated to the chronically homeless. Several 
commenters suggested that they would have difficulty locating 
individuals or families who meet the criteria of the proposed 
definition.
    One commenter expressed concern that the proposed definition would 
affect local and State governments, in addition to homeless 
individuals, stating that the new definition would result in more 
people being on the street for longer periods of time resulting in the 
following: an increased demand for emergency shelters, a burden on 
local police services since more individuals would be in unstable 
situations, and a decrease in property values. The commenter suggested 
that HUD phase in the new definition over a few years by incrementally 
increasing the cumulative episode threshold in order to provide 
localities time to plan their budgets and give homeless individuals 
time to adjust their expectations.
    Another commenter requested guidance on what providers with 
dedicated permanent supportive housing beds should do if they are 
unable to locate persons that meet this definition.
    Several commenters recommended that HUD establish a ``tiering 
system'' where communities that are unable to identify people who meet 
requirements for ``chronically homeless'' may target permanent 
supportive housing for other vulnerable homeless persons. Similarly, 
other commenters recommended that HUD consider a prioritization policy 
for homeless individuals eligible for permanent supportive housing and 
remove the requirement that 100 percent of new permanent supportive 
housing units be designated for the chronically homeless.
    HUD Response: HUD recognizes that the definition of ``chronically 
homeless'' is not inclusive of all vulnerable homeless populations; 
however, HUD has intentionally focused the definition of ``chronically 
homeless'' on those persons with the longest histories of homelessness 
and with the highest need and believes that this is a reasonable 
implementation of the statutory requirements established in section 401 
of the McKinney-Vento Act. The definition is not intended to require 
individuals and families to have longer periods of homelessness before 
being served; rather, the definition allows for persons who already 
meet such criteria to be prioritized for Continuum of Care Program-
funded permanent supportive housing dedicated to persons experiencing 
chronic homelessness.
    In addition, HUD published guidance \1\ to clarify that, to the 
extent that there are no persons who meet the criteria of chronic 
homelessness included in this rule, Continuum of Care Program-funded 
dedicated permanent supportive housing providers are not required to 
keep a unit vacant. Instead, the recipient may house non-chronically 
homeless individuals or families who are eligible for permanent 
supportive housing generally and are encouraged to prioritize those 
homeless individuals or families who are the most vulnerable or at risk 
of becoming chronically homeless.
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    \1\ Notice CPD-14-012: Prioritizing Persons Experiencing Chronic 
Homelessness in Permanent Supportive Housing and Recordkeeping 
Requirements for Documenting Chronic Homeless Status. Available at: 
https://www.hudexchange.info/resource/3897/notice-cpd-14-012-prioritizing-persons-experiencing-chronic-homelessness-in-psh-and-recordkeeping-requirements/.
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    Comment: Definition does not target those with longest histories 
and most severe cases of homelessness. One commenter stated that the 
proposed definition of ``chronically homeless'' does not target those 
with the longest histories and most severe cases of homelessness, such 
as those with histories of homelessness that have four or more episodes 
in more than the past 3 years.
    HUD Response: HUD recognizes that there are individuals and 
families with long histories of homelessness that may not meet the 
definition of ``chronically homeless'' included in the final rule. For 
example, individuals and families who have been homeless and living in 
a place not meant for human habitation, a safe haven, or in an 
emergency shelter for 12 months or longer in the past 3 years but where 
there were fewer than four distinct occasions and the current occasion 
lasted less than 12 months would not be considered chronically 
homeless. However, because the statutory definition of ``chronically 
homeless'' requires at least four occasions over a 3-year time frame, 
the number of occasions necessary to be considered chronically homeless 
cannot be changed. Individuals or families who have longer histories of 
homelessness spent living a place not meant for human habitation, a 
safe haven, or in an emergency shelter and who have experienced at 
least four occasions in the last 3 years are considered chronically 
homeless so long as the adult head of household (or minor head of 
household where no adult is present) has a disability as required by 
the definition. However, an individual or family who has a history of 
homelessness spent living in a place not meant for human habitation, a 
safe haven, or in an emergency shelter where the period of homelessness 
has not totaled 12 months either continuously or over a period of at 
least four occasions in the past 3 years would not be considered 
chronically homeless. For this reason, HUD has provided flexibility 
around what constitutes an occasion of homelessness and how to document 
the period of homelessness while still maintaining a uniform standard 
to ensure consistency across the country. HUD encourages recipients of 
Continuum of Care Program-funded permanent supportive housing not 
dedicated to the chronically homeless to prioritize persons that are 
most at risk of becoming chronically homeless and who are the most 
vulnerable.
    Comment: Periods of homelessness do not automatically correlate to 
need. A commenter stated that those who have been homeless for shorter, 
sporadic periods of time that do not cumulatively total 365 days might 
be more physically and mentally prepared to use permanent supportive 
housing than those who have had longer episodes of homelessness. 
Similarly, one commenter stated that a longer length of time spent 
homeless does not necessarily indicate a higher level of need, and 
those who have been homeless for shorter periods might make better use 
of housing services.
    HUD Response: HUD has determined that the definition of 
``chronically homeless'' in section 401 of the McKinney-Vento Act 
should define those persons as chronically homeless that have had the 
longest histories of homelessness and highest need. The definition of 
``chronically homeless'' set forth in 24 CFR parts 91 and 578 
intentionally narrows the statutory definition to further ensure that 
limited resources targeted to this population are used to serve persons 
with the longest histories of homelessness and highest need. HUD 
acknowledges that there are

[[Page 75797]]

other factors that might also correlate to need, however, length of 
time residing in emergency shelters, safe havens, and places not meant 
for human habitation is one factor of need, and when combined with the 
statutory requirement that the head of household have a disabling 
condition, HUD has determined that it effectively defines those persons 
with the highest needs as chronically homeless. Therefore, the 
definition of ``chronically homeless'' included in this final rule 
maintains the requirement that was included in the Rural Housing 
Stability Assistance Program proposed rule, that the four or more 
separate occasions of homelessness living in a place not meant for 
human habitation, a safe haven, or in an emergency shelter must total 
12 months or include additional criteria related to vulnerability. HUD 
also recognizes that persons meeting the definition of ``chronically 
homeless'' included in the final rule may require a higher level of 
support in order to obtain and maintain housing. Not all permanent 
supportive housing is limited to serving persons that meet the 
definition of chronically homeless. HUD has encouraged Continuums of 
Care and recipients of Continuum of Care Program-funded permanent 
supportive housing to take other factors, such as vulnerability, into 
account when prioritizing households for permanent supportive housing.
    Comment: Require jurisdictions to produce a plan to specifically 
address dealing with chronic homelessness. A commenter stated that 
every region in the country should be required to have a plan that 
deals directly with the chronically homeless to show proof that they 
have worked on the issue through a statement with a local provider.
    HUD Response: Each Continuum of Care submits its plan for 
addressing chronic homelessness through the Continuum of Care 
Application submitted under each Notice of Funding Availability for the 
Continuum of Care Program. This requirement will continue to be 
addressed through the Continuum of Care Program Competition; therefore, 
no additional requirements have been added to the final rule. In 
addition, each Consolidated Plan jurisdiction is required to develop a 
homeless strategy and this strategy must address the needs of, and 
resources available to, chronically homeless persons. This requirement 
will continue to be addressed through the Consolidated Plan 
requirements at 24 CFR part 91.
Comments Related to the Definition
    Comment: Adhere to the definition of ``chronically homeless'' 
included in the conforming amendments to the Consolidated Plan 
published with the Emergency Solutions Grants program interim rule. 
Several commenters stated that they preferred the definition of 
``chronically homeless'' that was included in the conforming amendments 
to the Consolidated Plan published with the Emergency Solutions Grants 
program interim rule, which defined a homeless occasion as a period of 
at least 15 days.
    HUD Response: The majority of public comments received on the 
definition of ``chronically homeless'' that was included in the 
conforming amendments to the Consolidated Plan published with the 
Emergency Solutions Grants program interim rule related to the 
requirement that to be considered an ``occasion'' a period of 
homelessness had to be a period of at least 15 days. Several commenters 
stated that the period of 15 days to define an ``occasion'' was 
arbitrary and was not the ideal definition. Upon review of these 
comments, HUD concluded that the 15-day standard did not effectively 
target persons with the longest histories of homelessness and highest 
level of need. The definition in the conforming amendments to the 
Consolidated Plan published with the Emergency Solutions Grants interim 
rule would have allowed for an individual or family experiencing 
occasions of homelessness to be considered chronically homeless within 
a period of as few as 65 days, while persons experiencing homelessness 
without a break would have to be homeless and residing in a place not 
meant for human habitation, in a safe haven, or an emergency shelter 
for at least 1 year. Consistent with research,\2\ HUD has determined 
that requiring 1 year (12 months) of homelessness living in a place not 
meant for human habitation, a safe haven, or an emergency shelter will 
ensure that the definition focuses on those persons with the longest 
histories of such homelessness and highest needs. The definition 
included in this final rule allows for limited resources to be 
effectively targeted and does not adopt the definition originally 
published in 24 CFR part 91.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \2\ Thomas Byrne and Dennis P. Culhane. ``Testing Alternative 
Definitions of Chronic Homelessness'' Psychiatric Services 66.5 
(2015). Available at: http://works.bepress.com/dennis_culhane/146.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Comment: Use ``vulnerability index'' to measure chronic 
homelessness. Several commenters proposed alternative definitions for 
targeting the homeless population most in need of permanent supportive 
housing. Several commenters recommended that HUD replace the proposed 
definition of ``chronically homeless'' with ``homeless persons 
determined to be vulnerable through the application of a standardized 
vulnerability index tool'' that would be developed with stakeholders. 
These commenters also stated that homeless persons could be assigned 
spots on a community's ``vulnerability list'' so those most in need of 
services could be identified.
    HUD Response: HUD agrees that it is important to consider a 
person's vulnerability or the severity of a person's needs when 
determining housing placement; however, the statutory definition of 
``chronically homeless'' does not permit HUD to adopt the definition 
proposed by the commenters. HUD recognizes that individuals and 
families should be prioritized for permanent supportive housing under 
the Continuum of Care Program based on the severity of their needs. To 
this point, HUD has provided guidance to recipients of all Continuum of 
Care Program-funded permanent supportive housing encouraging Continuums 
of Care and permanent supportive housing providers to take other 
factors, such as vulnerability, into account when prioritizing 
households for permanent supportive housing.
    Comment: Allow communities to define ``chronically homeless'' 
locally. A commenter suggested that establishing a global definition of 
``chronically homeless'' has limitations and that communities should be 
encouraged to set their own ``prioritization benchmarks'' based on 
local conditions.
    Another commenter recommended that the term ``chronic'' is a 
medical term, and is not an appropriate term to measure severity of 
homelessness, and suggested that HUD allow local Continuums of Care to 
submit their own definitions based on people with serious health 
conditions who have experienced multiple and/or long episodes of 
homelessness.
    Finally, another commenter suggested that HUD provide rural 
communities the flexibility to determine what is meant by ``not meant 
for human habitation'' since many of these communities do not have 
condemnation procedures like those often used by urban areas.
    HUD Response: The definition of ``chronically homeless'' in section 
401 of the McKinney-Vento Act provides the basis for the definition of 
``chronically homeless'' set forth in 24 CFR parts 91 and 578. Although 
the Act does allow

[[Page 75798]]

HUD the discretion to allow communities to define certain terms such as 
``not meant for human habitation'' locally, HUD has determined that all 
Continuums of Care must use the same standard when determining whether 
or not an individual or family is chronically homeless. Using a 
universal standard will also allow HUD to track progress, nationally, 
on the goal of ending chronic homelessness.
    Comment: Include individuals and families who meet the McKinney-
Vento Homeless Assistance Education Act in the definition of 
chronically homeless. A commenter stated that individuals or families 
who meet the McKinney-Vento Homeless Education Act definition of 
``homeless'' should also be considered chronically homeless.
    HUD Response: The definition of ``chronically homeless'' included 
in this final rule reflects the statutory definition in section 401 of 
the Act. The statutory definition provides specific minimum criteria 
that an individual or family must meet in order to be defined as 
chronically homeless. Although HUD has the discretion to make the 
definition of ``chronically homeless'' more narrow in the final rule, 
the definition must include the minimum statutory requirements. 
Further, it is HUD's intention to ensure that the definition of 
``chronically homeless'' targets those persons with the longest 
histories of homelessness who have been living in a place not meant for 
human habitation, a safe haven, or in an emergency shelter. Therefore, 
HUD has chosen to not change the final rule to include all individuals 
and families who meet the definition in section 725(2) of the McKinney-
Vento Act. HUD recognizes that there are vulnerable populations who are 
not included in this definition of ``chronically homeless.'' The 
definition of ``chronically homeless'' is not intended to include all 
vulnerable populations.
    Comment: HUD should consider persons chronically at risk of 
homelessness the same as chronically homeless. A commenter suggested 
that HUD should treat ``chronically homeless'' and ``chronically at 
risk of homelessness'' as the same so that those who have not been able 
to maintain permanent supportive housing because of a loss of income 
due to a disability and inability to attain a permanent voucher are not 
penalized.
    HUD Response: HUD recognizes that there are vulnerable populations 
who are not included in this definition of ``chronically homeless''; 
however, defining chronically homeless more narrowly will allow limited 
resources to be prioritized for persons with the longest histories of 
homelessness and who are most likely to have the most severe service 
needs, which is consistent with the requirements established in section 
401 of the McKinney-Vento Act. The statute does not support defining 
persons who are ``at risk of homelessness'' (on a recurring basis or 
otherwise) as chronically homeless as these persons do not meet the 
definition of homeless or chronically homeless as set forth in the Act. 
HUD reminds stakeholders that individuals and families who meet the 
definition of at risk of homelessness might be eligible for 
homelessness prevention assistance under either the Continuum of Care 
Program, if the Continuum of Care is a High Performing Community, or 
the Emergency Solutions Grants program.
    Comment: Provide for different definitional criteria for 
``chronically homeless'' for youth and families with children. Several 
commenters suggested that the definition of ``chronically homeless'' 
should have different definitional criteria for families with children 
and youth than for adult individuals. One commenter suggested that 
there should be different cumulative time frames for individuals, 
families, and youth. Specifically, the commenter proposed, ``that the 
definition be changed so that a chronically homeless individual is 
defined as one who is homeless for at least 1 year or for a cumulative 
total of 180 days in the previous 3 years over multiple occasions, a 
chronically homeless family is defined as one that is currently 
homeless and has moved multiple times in the previous 12 months, where 
an adult and/or child family member is involved with more than one 
public service system, and a category is added for chronically homeless 
youth, who would be currently homeless individuals under the age of 25 
who have moved multiple times in the previous 6 months, and this 
pattern of housing instability can be expected to continue.''
    HUD Response: The single statutory definition of ``chronically 
homeless'' is inclusive of individuals, families with children, and 
unaccompanied youth and sets a minimum threshold that must be met for 
any person, regardless of age or household composition. HUD strived to 
reasonably implement the statutory definition by clarifying in the 
regulation that, for family households, only the head of household must 
meet the criteria for individuals who are defined as chronically 
homeless. The definition in the regulation also allows for changes to 
family composition over time. Beyond this clarification, creating a 
broader or less restrictive threshold for unaccompanied youth or 
families with children would undermine one of the goals of the 
``chronically homeless'' definition, which is to help ensure that 
resources are focused on individuals and families with the longest 
experiences of homelessness spent living in a place not meant for human 
habitation, a safe haven, or in an emergency shelter. In addition, a 
person's status as part of a family may change and a youth may become 
an adult during his or her time living in an emergency shelter, safe 
haven, or place not meant for human habitation. Therefore, a single 
definition helps ensure that an individual's status does not change 
depending on whether he or she is part of a family at the time of 
intake or turns 25. Therefore, in the final rule, HUD has maintained 
that the standard for qualifying as chronically homeless is the same 
for all individuals, families with children, and unaccompanied youth. 
Families with children and unaccompanied youth, like single adults, who 
do not meet the criteria of chronically homeless might still meet the 
definition of ``homeless'' and if they do they are eligible for 
assistance under the Continuum of Care Program and Emergency Solutions 
Grants program.
    Comment: Define family in the definition of ``chronically 
homeless.'' Several commenters sought clarification on how HUD defines 
``family'' for the purposes of defining ``chronically homeless.'' One 
commenter asked that HUD define the term ``family'' in a manner 
consistent with how it is defined in the Equal Access to Housing in HUD 
Program Regardless of Sexual Orientation or Gender Identity final rule. 
Another commenter expressed confusion over whether a chronically 
homeless family must have a child under the age of 18. Another 
commenter stated that the term family is ``misused to identify a 
demographic of a household and that the term ``household'' should be 
defined consistently with the proposed data standards.''
    HUD Response: The proposed definition of ``chronically homeless'' 
did not define the term ``family.'' The Equal Access to Housing in HUD 
Programs Regardless of Sexual Orientation or Gender Identity final rule 
provides the following definition of ``family'' in 24 CFR 5.403 which 
applies to programs authorized under the Act. The definition ``Family'' 
includes, but is not limited to, the following, regardless of actual or 
perceived sexual orientation, gender identity, or marital

[[Page 75799]]

status: (1) A single person, who may be an elderly person, displaced 
person, disabled person, near-elderly person, or any other single 
person; or, (2) A group of persons residing together, and such group 
includes, but is not limited to, a family with or without children, an 
elderly family, a near-elderly family, a disabled family, a displaced 
family, and remaining members of a tenant family.
    This definition of ``family'' applies in both the Emergency 
Solutions Grants and Continuum of Care Program rules. The McKinney-
Vento Act distinguishes individuals from families. Therefore, paragraph 
(1) of the definition of ``family'' under the Equal Access Rule is 
considered an individual for the purposes of the definition of 
``chronically homeless'' included in this final rule. This means that a 
chronically homeless family is any group of persons presenting for 
assistance together, where the head of household meets all of the 
criteria established in this final rule, regardless of marital status, 
actual or perceived sexual orientation, or gender identity, with or 
without children and irrespective of age or relationship. A child who 
is temporarily away from the home because of placement in foster care 
is considered a member of the family.
    Comment: Clarify that any family member who meets the criteria of 
chronically homeless can qualify the family as chronically homeless. A 
few commenters requested that any member of the family could make the 
entire family meet the definition of ``chronically homeless.'' A 
commenter recommended that HUD consider revising the definition of 
``chronically homeless'' specifically to allow for a minor child in a 
family to qualify the family household as chronically homeless. Another 
commenter recommended only that the children, instead of the adult head 
of household, be able to have one of the listed disabling conditions 
and qualify the family as chronically homeless because the barriers a 
disability presents to an individual are similar to the barriers faced 
by a parent of a child with a disability. Similarly, one commenter 
proposed adding language to clarify that the members of a family 
household all qualify as chronically homeless based on the head of 
household regardless of changes within the household composition.
    HUD Response: The statutory definition of ``chronically homeless'' 
dictates that the adult head of household (or minor head of household 
if there is no adult in the family) must meet the criteria set forth in 
the definition. Therefore, the final rule cannot be revised from the 
proposed rule to allow for any household member besides the head of 
household to qualify the family as chronically homeless; this includes 
experiencing the occasion(s) of homelessness and being diagnosed with 
the disabling condition.
    However, because it is the adult head of household who qualifies a 
family as chronically homeless, the whole family is considered 
chronically homeless even if the household composition changed during 
the course of the head of household's homelessness. Language stating 
this was included in the proposed definition of ``chronically 
homeless'' and remains in the final definition of ``chronically 
homeless.'' For example, if an adult head of household has a qualifying 
disability and has been homeless continuously for 12 months and has 
been accompanied by another family member for only part of that time 
frame, the whole household meets the definition of a chronically 
homeless family.
    Comment: Eliminate the requirement that to be chronically homeless 
an individual or family must experience four separate occasions of 
homelessness. Several commenters requested that HUD eliminate the 
requirement for four separate occasions of homelessness in favor of 
considering anyone that has been homeless for a cumulative total of 365 
days over the past 3 years to be considered chronically homeless. One 
commenter stated that occasions are ``too sloppy to define'' and the 
concept is of little value.
    HUD Response: HUD recognizes that the requirement for four or more 
separate occasions of homelessness over a 3-year period will not 
include individuals or families who have experienced only two occasions 
of homelessness over a 3-year period where the cumulative total is 12 
months or greater. However, the requirement of four or more occasions 
is statutory and included in the definition of ``chronically homeless'' 
in the McKinney-Vento Act and, therefore, cannot be changed without a 
change to the statute. For this reason, HUD has provided maximum 
flexibility within the statutory framework about what constitutes a 
break between occasions and how to document the period of homelessness. 
In addition, HUD notes, for those stakeholders who submitted this 
comment because of concerns about these individuals and families not 
being eligible for needed resources, that the Continuum of Care and 
Emergency Solutions Grants programs fund a variety of housing and 
services for individuals and families who are homeless, but do not meet 
the criteria of chronically homeless.
    Comment: Include a cumulative time frame for the four or more 
occasions but make that time frame less than 1 year. Many commenters 
disagreed with the proposed rule's cumulative length of time the four 
or more occasions must total in order for an individual or family to be 
considered chronically homeless. A few commenters proposed reducing the 
requirement from 1 year to 120 days. Several commenters suggested that 
the time frame should be reduced from 1 year to 6 months or 180 days. 
One commenter proposed that this 6-month time frame should apply to 
both occasional and consecutive periods of homelessness.
    HUD Response: The statutory definition of ``chronically homeless'' 
requires individuals and families who meet the definition through a 
continuous occasion to have been homeless and living or residing in a 
place not meant for human habitation, safe haven, or in an emergency 
shelter for at least 1 year. The statute set a different standard for 
persons who experience frequent occasions of homelessness, requiring at 
least four occasions over 3 years. The statute was silent on what 
qualified as an occasion of homelessness. HUD has determined that 
requiring four or more occasions to total at least 12 months would set 
a threshold of need comparable to the requirement for a continuous 
episode. This will help ensure that resources that are dedicated to 
serving chronically homeless persons are targeted to individuals and 
families with the longest experiences of homelessness regardless of 
whether they meet the threshold for chronic homelessness through a 
continuous occasion or through multiple occasions.
    Comment: For the cumulative time frame for four or more occasions, 
count the time in months as opposed to days. One commenter proposed 
that the definition be revised to count homeless occasions in terms of 
months and not days. Another commenter recommended that the actual 
number of days homeless need not be counted and a single encounter with 
a service provider on a single day in one month could count for 
homeless status for the entire month.
    HUD Response: The definition of ``chronically homeless'' included 
in the proposed rule did not specify how the time frame should be 
counted and instead just stated that the cumulative total of occasions 
must total at least 1 year. HUD agrees with the comment that changing 1 
year to 12 months helps provide clarification about how to count

[[Page 75800]]

an individual or family's time spent in places not meant for human 
habitation, in a safe haven or in an emergency shelter. Furthermore, 
since HUD did not include recordkeeping requirements in the proposed 
rule, it was not clear that HUD does not intend to make homeless 
service providers document every day of homelessness spent living in a 
place not meant for human habitation, a safe haven, or in an emergency 
shelter to equal 365 days, for either continuous or occasional 
homelessness. HUD agrees that counting in months instead of days is a 
more reasonable requirement for documentation purposes. In addition, 
HUD agrees with the comment that a single encounter with a homeless 
service provider on a single day within 1 month would be sufficient to 
count the individual or family as homeless for the entire month. HUD 
understands that there is not an Homeless Management Information System 
record for every interaction or for every day in which a person is 
homeless and did not want to create a recordkeeping requirement that 
was overly burdensome. This requirement has been clarified in the 
recordkeeping requirements; however, HUD has also added language 
stating that this does not apply if the provider has evidence of a 
break, defined as 7 or more consecutive nights not living in a safe 
haven or in an emergency shelter, or living in a place meant for human 
habitation, during that month. Again, this will help ensure that 
resources dedicated to persons experiencing chronic homelessness are 
targeted to individuals and families with the longest experiences of 
homelessness. When considering how to determine a break, HUD 
understands that people often find themselves with a place to stay for 
a couple of nights (hotel, with a friend, etc.), however, their primary 
nighttime residence is still a place not meant for human habitation, an 
emergency shelter, or a safe haven. HUD determined that up to 7 nights 
is a reasonable period of time for an individual or family to stay for 
a few nights in a place other than an emergency shelter, a safe haven, 
or in a place that is meant for human habitation without considering it 
a break in their total length of time homeless for purposes of 
determining chronically homeless status.
    Rule clarification. To clarify that, for documentation purposes, 
the cumulative length of time of occasions must total 12 months instead 
of 365 days, the language in paragraph (1)(ii) of the definition of 
``chronically homeless'' has been revised to provide that the homeless 
individual with a disability has been homeless and living as described 
continuously for at least 12 months or on at least 4 separate occasions 
in the last 3 years, as long as the combined occasions equal at least 
12 months and each break in homelessness separating the occasions 
included at least 7 consecutive nights of not living in a place not 
meant for human habitation. The definition further provides that stays 
in institutional care facilities for fewer than 90 days will generally 
not constitute as a break in homelessness, but rather such stays are 
included in the 12-month total.
    In addition, to clarify the recordkeeping requirements related to 
paragraph (1)(ii), Sec.  578.103(a)(4) has been revised to include 
language on how documenting a single encounter within 1 month is 
sufficient documentation to count the individual or family as homeless 
for the entire month.
    Comment: Give discretion to Continuums of Care to determine the 
length of the occasions of homelessness. Several commenters suggested 
that Continuums of Care should be provided with the flexibility to 
determine when an individual or family is chronically homeless and 
whether they have been homeless at least four times over the past 3 
years.
    HUD Response: In order to ensure that Continuums of Care nationwide 
are defining chronically homeless consistently for counting, 
eligibility, and reporting purposes, it is necessary to have one 
uniform definition of ``chronically homeless'' that applies nationwide. 
A uniform definition will allow for data from each community to be 
compared nationally, and that persons with the longest histories of 
homelessness who have been living in a place not meant for human 
habitation, a safe haven, or in an emergency shelter and with the most 
severe service needs are prioritized for assistance in permanent 
supportive housing. As more communities meet the Administration's goal 
of ending chronic homelessness, HUD will use the annual Continuum of 
Care Program Competition Notice of Funding Availability to reflect 
changes in priorities. However, the definition of ``chronically 
homeless'' will not change, as it is meant to encompass those homeless 
persons with the longest histories of living in places not meant for 
human habitation, in a safe haven, or in emergency shelters and who 
have the most severe service needs, and to the extent that there are 
persons that meet this criteria within a Continuum of Care they should 
always be counted and be prioritized for assistance.
    Comment: Need guidance on what constitutes as a break in 
homelessness. Many commenters requested guidance on what constitutes as 
a break in homelessness in order to distinguish between occasions. One 
commenter requested guidance on how to document such breaks in Homeless 
Management Information System. Another commenter suggested that 
temporary housing situations of less than 1 week not constitute as a 
break. Several commenters suggested that periods of ``couch surfing'' 
should not constitute as a break in homelessness.
    HUD Response: HUD agrees that in order to accurately document 
occasions of homelessness, it is necessary to understand and document 
the housing situation that ended the occasion; therefore, HUD has 
clarified in the recordkeeping requirements that a break in 
homelessness is any period of 7 or more consecutive nights where the 
individual or family is not residing in a safe haven, or in an 
emergency shelter or is residing in a place meant for human habitation. 
In addition, the final rule allows for stays in an institutional care 
facility where the individual has been residing for fewer than 90 days 
to not constitute as a break in homelessness either. HUD provided this 
clarification because of a comment provided through the comment process 
on the Continuum of Care Program interim rule recognizing that many 
hard-to-serve chronically homeless individuals and families have an 
opportunity to spend 1 or 2 nights on someone's couch, in a motel using 
all or most of the beneficiary's monthly Social Security Income or 
Social Security Disability Income check, in another location that 
allows them to briefly not sleep in a place not meant for human 
habitation, in an emergency shelter, or in a safe haven. HUD does not 
consider these periods of less than 7 nights a break in homelessness. 
Instead, these days would be counted towards a single occasion of 
homelessness living in a place not meant for human habitation, a safe 
haven, or in an emergency shelter. Only periods of 7 or more 
consecutive nights where the individual or family is not living in a 
place not meant for human habitation, in a safe haven, or in an 
emergency shelter would qualify as a break. Intake workers must follow 
the general recordkeeping standards of third-party evidence first, 
intake worker observation second, and self-certification of the head of 
household third, when documenting the break in homelessness.
    Rule Clarification: Section 578.3 of the final rule includes 
language in paragraph (1)(ii) of the definition of

[[Page 75801]]

``chronically homeless'' that clarifies that a break is considered to 
be 7 or more consecutive nights where the individual or family is not 
living in a place not meant for human habitation, in a safe haven or in 
an emergency shelter.
    Comment: Stays in living situations other than the streets, 
emergency shelters, or safe havens should be included in places an 
individual or family can reside and still meet the definition of 
``chronically homeless.'' Several commenters suggested that HUD 
consider expanding the definition to allow for individuals and families 
in certain living situations to be considered chronically homeless. 
Numerous commenters suggested that individuals and families who have 
been living in ``doubled up'' situations should qualify as being 
chronically homeless. One commenter stated that periods spent ``doubled 
up'' should be counted if the individual or family moves two or more 
times within 60 days. Another commenter suggested that in addition to 
periods of living in ``doubled up'' situations, the definition should 
also include those living in unsuitable housing for long periods of 
time, such as old mobile homes or cabins without electricity and 
sewage. Another commenter suggested that the definition include ``a 
person or family who does not have a permanent residence AND has moved 
two or more times in the past 60 days.''
    Several commenters asked HUD to consider stays in transitional 
housing towards a person's homeless history when determining an 
individual or family's chronically homeless status. The commenters had 
various suggestions about how such stays could be incorporated. One 
commenter suggested that stays of 90 days or less in transitional 
housing should not constitute as a break. Similarly, another commenter 
asked HUD to consider including transitional housing programs in the 
definition of ``institutional care facility,'' which would allow stays 
in transitional housing for 90 days or less to not constitute as a 
break in homelessness. Another commenter proposed that the definition 
be expanded so that persons who have been living in transitional 
housing, for any period of time, may also be considered chronically 
homeless. Finally, one commenter was concerned that excluding time in 
transitional housing would disadvantage homeless veterans who would 
otherwise be eligible for the HUD-Veterans Affairs Supportive Housing 
(HUD-VASH) program because many of those veterans are initially housed 
in transitional housing.
    HUD Response: HUD has interpreted the criteria in paragraphs (1) 
and (2) of the statutory definition by clarifying that short-term stays 
in institutional care facilities do not count as breaks in 
homelessness. HUD believes this clarification is supported by the 
widespread and longstanding recognition that persons experiencing 
chronic homelessness frequently cycle between short-term stays in 
institutional care facilities and emergency shelters, safe havens, and 
places not meant for human habitation. HUD also believes this 
widespread and longstanding recognition is implicit in paragraph (2) of 
the statutory definition, which allows certain individuals to qualify 
as chronically homeless even if they currently live in an institutional 
care facility, as opposed to an emergency shelter, safe haven, or place 
not meant for human habitation. There is nothing in the statutory 
definition to suggest that certain people should qualify as chronically 
homeless even if they are currently living in transitional housing or 
in ``doubled up'' locations as opposed to emergency shelters, safe 
havens, or places not meant for human habitation. Therefore, HUD has 
decided not to expand the qualifying residences beyond the places 
explicitly mentioned in paragraphs (1) and (2) of the statute.
    Regarding HUD-VASH, specifically, the U.S. Department of Veterans 
Affairs (VA) determines chronic homeless status at the initial intake 
to VA homeless services. Therefore, veterans who qualify as chronically 
homeless at initial intake will maintain that status throughout the 
episode of care, even if they are served in a VA program that is 
characterized as transitional housing immediately prior to entry into 
HUD-VASH.
    Comment: Clarification of how the word ``continuously'' is defined 
in the phrase ``continuously homeless for at least one year.'' A 
commenter asked how HUD is defining the word ``continuously'' in the 
phrase ``continuously homeless for at least one year'' in the 
definition of ``chronically homeless.''
    HUD Response: HUD has clarified that a break in homelessness is 
defined as 7 or more consecutive nights in a place that does not 
qualify as a place not meant for human habitation, a safe haven, or an 
emergency shelter and, therefore, does not consider it to be necessary 
to define the word ``continuously.''
    Comment: Clarification is needed on ``conditions'' versus 
``disability.'' Several commenters wrote about paragraph (1)(iii) in 
the proposed rule's definition of ``chronically homeless,'' which 
provides that a chronically homeless person is a person who can be 
diagnosed with one of the following conditions: ``substance use 
disorder, serious mental illness, developmental disability (as defined 
in section 102 of the Developmental Disabilities Assistance and Bill of 
Rights Act of 2000 (42 U.S.C. 15002)), post-traumatic stress disorder, 
cognitive impairments resulting from brain injury, or chronic physical 
illness or disability.''
    Commenters asked for clarification on what constitutes a 
``condition.'' Other commenters asked about the specific list of 
``conditions'' included in the definition. One commenter asked why the 
term ``serious mental illness'' is used instead of ``severe and 
persistent mental illness,'' while another commenter asked why ``post-
traumatic stress disorder'' was included here but not in the definition 
of ``disability'' included in the McKinney-Vento Act. Other commenters 
referenced the Homeless Management Information System Data Standards 
and recommended that they be consistent.
    Another commenter suggested that the language be revised to say 
that a chronically homeless person is a person who has been diagnosed 
with a condition as opposed to saying can be diagnosed, so that it is 
more definitive.
    Finally, one commenter said that the requirement to have a 
disability determination for each of the identified disabilities will 
cause an underreporting of disabilities, which will result in an 
underreporting of chronic homelessness.
    HUD Response: The language included in the proposed definition of 
``chronically homeless'' regarding the types of conditions a person 
must have in order to qualify as chronically homeless comes from the 
statute. HUD analyzed the list of conditions included in the statute in 
comparison with those included under the definition of ``homeless 
individual with a disability'' under the Act and determined that each 
of the ``conditions'' included under the statutory definition of 
``chronically homeless'' are also included under the definition of 
``homeless individual with a disability.'' Because an individual with 
one or more of the ``conditions'' included under the statutory 
definition of ``chronically homeless'' would qualify as a ``homeless 
individual with a disability'' under the Act, and because HUD wants to 
clarify that chronically homeless individuals and families are eligible 
for permanent supportive housing, which under the Continuum of Care 
Program interim rule means

[[Page 75802]]

``permanent housing in which supportive services are provided to assist 
homeless persons with a disability to live independently,'' HUD has 
replaced the list of ``conditions'' found in the proposed rule with the 
requirement that an individual must meet the definition of ``homeless 
individual with a disability'' in the Act. In addition, HUD has added 
to the Continuum of Care Program interim rule recordkeeping 
requirements for documenting the disability, and has created standards 
for collecting information on disability in the Homeless Management 
Information System Data Standards that are consistent with this 
definition.
    Regarding the comment related to the phrase ``can be diagnosed'' 
found in the proposed rule, HUD decided to replace the list of 
``conditions'' found in the proposed rule with the requirement that an 
individual must meet the definition of ``homeless individual with a 
disability'' in the Act. Therefore, the phrase ``can be diagnosed'' is 
not found in the final rule. It should be noted, however, that for the 
purposes of recordkeeping, the final rule permits evidence of a 
disability to be documented using an intake staff-recorded observation 
of disability that, no later than 45 days of the application for 
assistance, is confirmed and accompanied by evidence in 24 CFR 
578.103(a)(4)(i)(B)(1), (2), (3), or (5).
    Finally, regarding the last comment, there is no such ``requirement 
to have a disability determination for each of the identified 
disabilities.'' An adult head of household is only required to meet the 
definition of ``homeless individual with a disability'' as defined in 
section 401(9) of the McKinney-Vento Act in order to meet the 
definition of ``chronically homeless'' and the recipient is only 
required to keep on file evidence of the qualifying disabling condition 
as HUD has clarified in the recordkeeping requirements.
    Rule Clarification: To provide for a more uniform definition, this 
final rule revised the language in paragraph (3) of the definition of 
``chronically homeless'' to state that to be considered chronically 
homeless a family must have an adult head of household (or a minor head 
of household if no adult is present in the household) who meets the 
criteria of ``homeless individual with a disability'' as defined in 
section 401(9) of the McKinney-Vento Act.
    Comment: The definition of ``chronically homeless'' should include 
an income variable. A commenter recommended that HUD add an income 
variable as an indicator of chronic homelessness.
    HUD Response: HUD disagrees with this recommendation. The statute 
does not include an income variable for either the definition of 
``homeless'' or ``chronically homeless'' and HUD does not seek to 
expand either definition to include this component.
    Comment: Provide guidance on what is meant by ``institution.'' One 
commenter stated that HUD should provide clear guidance on what 
constitutes an ``institution.'' Other commenters suggested that HUD 
include foster care in the definition of an institution and clarify 
that temporary placement in child welfare systems and foster care 
should constitute as a break in homelessness.
    HUD Response: HUD acknowledges that clarification of institutional 
care facility is necessary, however, rather than establishing a fixed 
set of institutional care facilities in the final rule, HUD intends to 
issue guidance on the meaning of ``institutional care facility.''
    Comment: Consistently refer to stays in institutions that do not 
constitute as a break in homelessness for purposes of defining 
``chronically homeless'' as either ``90 days or less'' or ``fewer than 
90 days.'' One commenter stated that HUD should be consistent when 
referencing institutional stays because ``90 days or less'' in 
paragraph (1)(ii) of the definition is not the same as ``fewer than 90 
days'' in paragraph (2) of this definition.
    HUD Response: HUD agrees that the language around stays in an 
institution included in the proposed definition was inconsistent. The 
definition in this rule has been revised to clarify that an individual 
can be considered chronically homeless if they are residing in or have 
a history of residing in an institution for fewer than 90 days, where 
the individual or family resided in a place not meant for human 
habitation, in a safe haven, or in an emergency shelter immediately 
prior to entering the institution.
    Rule clarification: HUD has revised the definition of ``chronically 
homeless'' to state that a homeless individual with a disability may be 
considered to be chronically homeless if they live in an institutional 
care facility, as long as the individual has been living there for 
fewer than 90 days and had been living in a place not meant for human 
habitation, a safe haven, or an emergency shelter prior to entering the 
institutional care facility.
    Comment: Define residence in institutional care facility as present 
and not past residence. A commenter suggested that HUD change the 
wording in paragraph (2) of the definition from ``An individual who has 
been residing in an institutional care facility. . ..'' to ``An 
individual who is residing in an institutional care facility. . .''
    HUD Response: HUD disagrees that this rewording is necessary. The 
phrase ``has been residing in an institutional care facility'' 
encompasses both the recent past and the current living situation of 
the individual and describes persons who are currently living or 
residing in an institutional care facility and whose total current stay 
in that facility will be fewer than 90 days.
    Comment: Difficulty in documenting periods of homelessness. Many 
commenters expressed concern that it would be difficult to document or 
verify the time period of homelessness required in the proposed 
definition of ``chronically homeless.'' Some commenters stated that it 
would be difficult to verify where homeless individuals or families 
have slept if the individual or family had not had regular interaction 
with a homeless service provider. Other commenters stated that 
chronically homeless individuals and families would not be able to 
remember or provide documentation for the exact period of time during 
which they had been homeless. Several commenters suggested that self-
certification by the head of household of homeless status should be 
sufficient for documenting homeless status and history. Many commenters 
expressed concern that the requirement to track and verify cumulative 
lengths of homelessness would place an undue burden on homeless service 
providers, particularly in rural areas where there are fewer 
institutions or shelters. Commenters also requested that the final rule 
include specific guidance on how to document homeless status and 
history, particularly for persons that have been unsheltered. Finally, 
several commenters expressed concern that the definition would make 
counting chronically homeless persons in the Point-in-Time counts more 
difficult because enumerators will not have sufficient time to 
determine lengths of homelessness.
    HUD Response: After reviewing the public comments, HUD acknowledges 
the lack of recordkeeping requirements for chronically homeless status 
in the proposed rule caused confusion and concern and HUD agrees it 
must provide specific guidance on documentation requirements for 
projects that are required to serve the chronically homeless. For this 
reason, the final rule includes a section on recordkeeping 
requirements. When creating the recordkeeping requirements, HUD 
acknowledged many of the potential difficulties expressed by the

[[Page 75803]]

commenters might occur if the burden-of-proof is too high. Therefore, 
the language in the recordkeeping section will allow for the period of 
homelessness to be documented by a self-certification by the head of 
household seeking assistance on a limited basis. In rare instances 
where persons have been unsheltered and out of contact for long periods 
of time, the recordkeeping requirements provide that up to the full 
period of homelessness could be documented by a self-certification by 
the individual or head of household seeking assistance, however, this 
accommodation is limited to no more than 25 percent of all chronically 
homeless individuals and families assisted. HUD determined that 25 
percent was a reasonable limit for this accommodation as it is 
consistent with a previous policy used by HUD that limited the 
percentage of program participants in transitional housing funded 
through the Supportive Housing Program who could be assisted for longer 
than 2 years. Further, the recordkeeping section clarifies that 
homeless service providers are not required to verify every day of 
homelessness in a given month but instead, that a single encounter with 
a homeless service provider in a given month would be sufficient third-
party evidence that the individual or family has been homeless for the 
entire month, unless there is evidence that the individual or family 
had a break of at least 7 consecutive nights in their homeless occasion 
during that month (e.g., was housed with a friend or family member). 
HUD does not expect Continuums of Care to document a person's 
chronically homeless status when conducting the annual Point-in-Time 
count. HUD will provide clarification and guidance regarding how to 
enumerate persons experiencing chronic homelessness through notices and 
other guidance in advance of the Point-in-Time count.
    Rule clarification. To clarify the records HUD expects Continuum of 
Care Program recipients and subrecipients to maintain when they are 
required to serve chronically homeless individuals and families, HUD 
has revised Sec.  578.103(a)(4) to incorporate recordkeeping 
requirements for the definition of ``chronically homeless.'' In 
addition, as a result of incorporating a new paragraph (4) in Sec.  
578.103(a), the remainder of Sec.  578.103(a) has been reordered and 
HUD has amended Sec.  578.87(b)(4) to update the reference from Sec.  
578.103(a)(13) to Sec.  578.103(a)(14).
    Comment: If there is no penalty for lying there will be fraud. A 
commenter expressed concern that if there is no penalty for lying by 
the program participants about the length of time homeless, there is 
likely to be fraud.
    HUD Response: In general, HUD expects that all homeless service 
providers will exercise due diligence when documenting periods of 
homelessness. The final rule includes recordkeeping requirements that 
will require third-party documentation where it is available, but 
allows for self-certification by the head of household seeking 
assistance in certain instances.
    Rule clarification: To clarify that HUD expects Continuum of Care 
Program recipients and subrecipients documenting chronic homeless 
status to obtain third-party documentation whenever possible, HUD has 
established Sec.  578.103(a)(4) to incorporate recordkeeping 
requirements for the definition of ``chronically homeless'' and to 
provide that the order of priority for documenting chronically homeless 
status is third-party documentation first, intake worker observations 
second, and certification from the person seeking assistance third. In 
addition, HUD has clarified that, except for in limited circumstances, 
at least 9 months of the homeless occasion(s) must be documented with 
third-party documentation.

VI. Findings and Certifications

Regulatory Planning and Review

    This final rule establishes a regulatory definition for the term 
``chronically homeless.'' This rule focuses on persons with the longest 
histories of homelessness to ensure that funds are targeted to 
providing permanent supportive housing solutions for these individuals 
and families who are chronically homeless, consistent with the 
statutory definition of the term established in the McKinney-Vento Act. 
This definition will also ensure that communities are using the same 
criteria in determining whether a person is chronically homeless, and 
that HUD receives consistent and accurate information nationwide.
    This new definition will use existing recordkeeping requirements 
for the Continuum of Care Program to document the homeless status of 
program participants, but adds that such documentation covers a program 
participant's homelessness status over a specific time period--at least 
1 year or on at least 4 separate occasions in the last 3 years--to 
document the chronically homeless status of program participants. While 
in some instances additional program participant records will need to 
be obtained to identify an individual's ``chronically homeless'' 
status, the additional burden of obtaining these records will ensure 
that communities are appropriately targeting HUD funds to those with 
the greatest need.
    The Office of Management and Budget (OMB) reviewed this rule under 
Executive Order 12866, ``Regulatory Planning and Review.'' This rule 
was determined to be a ``significant regulatory action,'' as defined in 
section 3(f) of the order (although not an economically significant 
regulatory action under the order). The docket file is available for 
public inspection in the Regulations Division, Office of the General 
Counsel, 451 7th Street SW., Room 10276, Washington, DC 20410-0500. Due 
to security measures at the HUD Headquarters building, please schedule 
an appointment to review the docket file by calling the Regulations 
Division at 202-402-3055 (this is not a toll-free number). Individuals 
with speech or hearing impairments may access this number via TTY by 
calling the Federal Relay Service at 800-877-8339 (this is a toll-free 
number).

Information Collection Requirements

    The information collection requirements contained in this final 
rule have been submitted to OMB under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 
1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501-3520) and assigned OMB control number 2506-0112. 
In accordance with the Paperwork Reduction Act, 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 currently 
valid OMB control number.

Environmental Impact

    This rule does not direct, provide for assistance or loan and 
mortgage insurance for, or otherwise govern or regulate, real property 
acquisition, disposition, leasing, rehabilitation, alteration, 
demolition, or new construction, or establish, revise, or provide for 
standards for construction or construction materials, manufactured 
housing, or occupancy. Accordingly, under 24 CFR 50.19(c)(1), this rule 
is categorically excluded from environmental review under the National 
Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (42 U.S.C. 4321).

Unfunded Mandates Reform Act

    The Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (2 U.S.C. 1531-1538) 
(UMRA) establishes requirements for Federal agencies to assess the 
effects of their regulatory actions on State, local, and tribal 
governments and on the private

[[Page 75804]]

sector. This rule does not impose a Federal mandate on any State, 
local, or tribal government, or on the private sector, within the 
meaning of UMRA.

Regulatory Flexibility Act

    The Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.) generally 
requires an agency to conduct a regulatory flexibility analysis of any 
rule subject to notice and comment rulemaking requirements, unless the 
agency certifies that the rule will not have a significant economic 
impact on a substantial number of small entities. This rule solely 
addresses the definition of ``chronically homeless.'' The purpose of 
this rule is to determine the universe of individuals and families who 
qualify as ``chronically homeless'' under the McKinney-Vento Act. Given 
the narrow scope of this rule, HUD has determined that it would not 
have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small 
entities.

Executive Order 13132, Federalism

    Executive Order 13132 (entitled ``Federalism'') prohibits an agency 
from publishing any rule that has federalism implications if the rule 
either imposes substantial direct compliance costs on State and local 
governments and is not required by statute or the rule preempts State 
law, unless the agency meets the consultation and funding requirements 
of section 6 of the Executive order. This final rule does not have 
federalism implications and does not impose substantial direct 
compliance costs on State and local governments nor preempt State law 
within the meaning of the Executive order.

List of Subjects

24 CFR Part 91

    Aged, Grant programs--housing and community development, Homeless, 
Individuals with disabilities, Low- and moderate-income housing, 
Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.

24 CFR Part 578

    Community development, Community facilities, Grant programs--
housing and community development, Grant program--social programs, 
Homeless, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.

    Accordingly, for the reasons described in the preamble, parts 91 
and 578 of title 24 of the Code of Federal Regulations are amended as 
follows:

PART 91--CONSOLIDATED SUBMISSIONS FOR COMMUNITY PLANNING AND 
DEVELOPMENT PROGRAMS

0
1. The authority citation for 24 CFR part 91 continues to read as 
follows:

    Authority:  42 U.S.C. 3535(d), 3601-3619, 5301-5315, 11331-
11388, 12701-12711, 12741-12756, and 12901-12912.


0
2. In Sec.  91.5, the definition of ``Chronically homeless'' is revised 
to read as follows:


Sec.  91.5  Definitions.

* * * * *
    Chronically homeless means:
    (1) A ``homeless individual with a disability,'' as defined in 
section 401(9) of the McKinney-Vento Homeless Assistance Act (42 U.S.C. 
11360(9)), who:
    (i) Lives in a place not meant for human habitation, a safe haven, 
or in an emergency shelter; and
    (ii) Has been homeless and living as described in paragraph (1)(i) 
of this definition continuously for at least 12 months or on at least 4 
separate occasions in the last 3 years, as long as the combined 
occasions equal at least 12 months and each break in homelessness 
separating the occasions included at least 7 consecutive nights of not 
living as described in paragraph (1)(i). Stays in institutional care 
facilities for fewer than 90 days will not constitute as a break in 
homelessness, but rather such stays are included in the 12-month total, 
as long as the individual was living or residing in a place not meant 
for human habitation, a safe haven, or an emergency shelter immediately 
before entering the institutional care facility;
    (2) An individual who has been residing in an institutional care 
facility, including a jail, substance abuse or mental health treatment 
facility, hospital, or other similar facility, for fewer than 90 days 
and met all of the criteria in paragraph (1) of this definition, before 
entering that facility; or
    (3) A family with an adult head of household (or if there is no 
adult in the family, a minor head of household) who meets all of the 
criteria in paragraph (1) or (2) of this definition, including a family 
whose composition has fluctuated while the head of household has been 
homeless.
* * * * *

PART 578--CONTINUUM OF CARE PROGRAM

0
3. The authority citation for 24 CFR part 578 continues to read as 
follows:

    Authority:  42 U.S.C. 11371 et seq., 42 U.S.C. 3535(d).


0
4. In Sec.  578.3, the definition of ``Chronically homeless'' is 
revised to read as follows:


Sec.  578.3  Definitions.

* * * * *
    Chronically homeless means:
    (1) A ``homeless individual with a disability,'' as defined in 
section 401(9) of the McKinney-Vento Homeless Assistance Act (42 U.S.C. 
11360(9)), who:
    (i) Lives in a place not meant for human habitation, a safe haven, 
or in an emergency shelter; and
    (ii) Has been homeless and living as described in paragraph (1)(i) 
of this definition continuously for at least 12 months or on at least 4 
separate occasions in the last 3 years, as long as the combined 
occasions equal at least 12 months and each break in homelessness 
separating the occasions included at least 7 consecutive nights of not 
living as described in paragraph (1)(i). Stays in institutional care 
facilities for fewer than 90 days will not constitute as a break in 
homelessness, but rather such stays are included in the 12-month total, 
as long as the individual was living or residing in a place not meant 
for human habitation, a safe haven, or an emergency shelter immediately 
before entering the institutional care facility;
    (2) An individual who has been residing in an institutional care 
facility, including a jail, substance abuse or mental health treatment 
facility, hospital, or other similar facility, for fewer than 90 days 
and met all of the criteria in paragraph (1) of this definition, before 
entering that facility; or
    (3) A family with an adult head of household (or if there is no 
adult in the family, a minor head of household) who meets all of the 
criteria in paragraph (1) or (2) of this definition, including a family 
whose composition has fluctuated while the head of household has been 
homeless.
* * * * *


Sec.  578.87  [Amended]

0
5. In Sec.  578.87, paragraph (b)(4) is amended by removing the 
reference ``Sec.  578.103(a)(13)'' and adding in its place ``Sec.  
578.103(a)(14)''.

0
6. In Sec.  578.103, redesignate paragraphs (a)(4) through (17) as 
paragraphs (a)(5) through (18) and add paragraph (a)(4) to read as 
follows:


Sec.  578.103  Recordkeeping requirements.

    (a) * * *
    (4) Chronically homeless status. The recipient must maintain and 
follow

[[Page 75805]]

written intake procedures to ensure compliance with the chronically 
homeless definition in Sec.  578.3. The procedures must require 
documentation at intake of the evidence relied upon to establish and 
verify chronically homeless status. The procedures must establish the 
order of priority for obtaining evidence as third-party documentation 
first, intake worker observations second, and certification from the 
person seeking assistance third. Records contained in an HMIS, or 
comparable database used by victim service or legal service providers, 
are acceptable evidence of third-party documentation and intake worker 
observations if the HMIS, or comparable database, retains an auditable 
history of all entries, including the person who entered the data, the 
date of entry, and the change made, and if the HMIS prevents overrides 
or changes of the dates on which entries are made.
    (i) For paragraph (1) of the ``Chronically homeless'' definition in 
Sec.  578.3, evidence that the individual is a ``homeless individual 
with a disability'' as defined in section 401(9) of the McKinney-Vento 
Homeless Assistance Act (42 U.S.C. 11360(9)) must include:
    (A) Evidence of homeless status as set forth in paragraph (a)(3) of 
this section; and
    (B) Evidence of a disability. In addition to the documentation 
required under paragraph (a)(4)(i)(A) of this section, the procedures 
must require documentation at intake of the evidence relied upon to 
establish and verify the disability of the person applying for homeless 
assistance. The recipient must keep these records for 5 years after the 
end of the grant term. Acceptable evidence of the disability includes:
    (1) Written verification of the disability from a professional 
licensed by the state to diagnose and treat the disability and his or 
her certification that the disability is expected to be long-continuing 
or of indefinite duration and substantially impedes the individual's 
ability to live independently;
    (2) Written verification from the Social Security Administration;
    (3) The receipt of a disability check (e.g., Social Security 
Disability Insurance check or Veteran Disability Compensation);
    (4) Intake staff-recorded observation of disability that, no later 
than 45 days from the application for assistance, is confirmed and 
accompanied by evidence in paragraph (a)(4)(i)(B)(1), (2), (3), or (5) 
of this section; or
    (5) Other documentation approved by HUD.
    (ii) For paragraph (1)(i) of the ``Chronically homeless'' 
definition in Sec.  578.3, evidence that the individual lives in a 
place not meant for human habitation, a safe haven, or an emergency 
shelter, which includes:
    (A) An HMIS record or record from a comparable database;
    (B) A written observation by an outreach worker of the conditions 
where the individual was living;
    (C) A written referral by another housing or service provider; or
    (D) Where evidence in paragraphs (a)(4)(ii)(A) through (C) of this 
section cannot be obtained, a certification by the individual seeking 
assistance, which must be accompanied by the intake worker's 
documentation of the living situation of the individual or family 
seeking assistance and the steps taken to obtain evidence in paragraphs 
(a)(4)(ii)(A) through (C).
    (iii) For paragraph (1)(ii) of the ``Chronically homeless'' 
definition in Sec.  578.3, evidence must include a combination of the 
evidence described in paragraphs (a)(4)(ii)(A) through (D) of this 
section, subject to the following conditions:
    (A) Third-party documentation of a single encounter with a homeless 
service provider on a single day within 1 month is sufficient to 
consider an individual as homeless and living or residing in a place 
not meant for human habitation, a safe haven, or an emergency shelter 
for the entire calendar month (e.g., an encounter on May 5, 2015, 
counts for May 1--May 31, 2015), unless there is evidence that there 
have been at least 7 consecutive nights not living or residing in a 
place not meant for human habitation, a safe haven, or an emergency 
shelter during that month (e.g., evidence in HMIS of a stay in 
transitional housing);
    (B) Each break in homelessness of at least 7 consecutive nights not 
living or residing in a place not meant for human habitation, a safe 
haven, or in an emergency shelter between separate occasions must be 
documented with the evidence described in paragraphs (a)(4)(ii)(A) 
through (D) of this section;
    (C) Evidence of stays in institutional care facilities fewer than 
90 days included in the total of at least 12 months of living or 
residing in a place not meant for human habitation, a safe haven, or an 
emergency shelter must include the evidence in paragraphs (a)(4)(iv)(A) 
through (B) of this section and evidence described in paragraphs 
(a)(4)(ii)(A) through (D) of this section that the individual was 
living or residing in a place not meant for human habitation, a safe 
haven, or an emergency shelter immediately prior to entering the 
institutional care facility; and
    (D) For at least 75 percent of the chronically homeless individuals 
and families assisted by a recipient in a project during an operating 
year, no more than 3 months of living or residing in a place not meant 
for human habitation, a safe haven, or an emergency shelter may be 
documented using the evidence in paragraph (a)(4)(ii)(D) of this 
section for each assisted chronically homeless individual or family. 
This limitation does not apply to documentation of breaks in 
homelessness between separate occasions, which may be documented 
entirely based on a self-report by the individual seeking assistance.
    (iv) If an individual qualifies as chronically homeless under 
paragraph (2) of the ``Chronically homeless'' definition in Sec.  578.3 
because he or she has been residing in an institutional care facility 
for fewer than 90 days and met all of the criteria in paragraph (1) of 
the definition, before entering that facility, evidence must include 
the following:
    (A) Discharge paperwork or a written or oral referral from a social 
worker, case manager, or other appropriate official of the 
institutional care facility stating the beginning and end dates of the 
time residing in the institutional care facility. All oral statements 
must be recorded by the intake worker; or
    (B) Where the evidence in paragraph (a)(4)(iv)(A) of this section 
is not obtainable, a written record of the intake worker's due 
diligence in attempting to obtain the evidence described in paragraph 
(a)(4)(iv)(A) and a certification by the individual seeking assistance 
that states that he or she is exiting or has just exited an 
institutional care facility where he or she resided for fewer than 90 
days; and
    (C) Evidence as set forth in paragraphs (a)(4)(i) through (iii) of 
this section that the individual met the criteria in paragraph (1) of 
the definition for ``Chronically homeless'' in Sec.  578.3, immediately 
prior to entry into the institutional care facility.
    (v) If a family qualifies as chronically homeless under paragraph 
(3) of the ``Chronically homeless'' definition in Sec.  578.3, evidence 
must include the evidence as set forth in paragraphs (a)(4)(i) through 
(iv) of this section that the adult head of household (or if there is 
no adult in the family, a minor head of household) met all of the 
criteria in paragraph (1) or (2) of the definition.
* * * * *


[[Page 75806]]


    Dated: November 13, 2015.
Harriet Tregoning,
Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary for Community Planning and 
Development.

    Dated: Approved on November 24, 2015.
Nani A. Coloretti,
Deputy Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2015-30473 Filed 12-3-15; 8:45 am]
 BILLING CODE 4210-67-P



                                                             Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 233 / Friday, December 4, 2015 / Rules and Regulations                                              75791

                                           (i) Revision to AFM—In-flight Warning                   2 to paragraph (i) of this AD. This may be            included in the general revisions of the AFM,
                                              Within 15 days after the effective date of           done by inserting a copy of this AD into the          the general revisions may be inserted into the
                                           this AD, revise the Limitations section of the          AFM. When a statement identical to that in            AFM, and the copy of this AD may be
                                           AFM to include the statement found in figure            figure 2 to paragraph (i) of this AD has been         removed from the AFM.




                                           (j) Credit for Previous Actions                         approval of an AMOC, provided the RC steps,             Issued in Renton, Washington, on
                                              This paragraph provides credit for the               including substeps and identified figures, can        November 25, 2015.
                                           actions required by paragraph (g)(1) of this            still be done as specified, and the airplane          Michael Kaszycki,
                                           AD, if those actions were performed before              can be put back in an airworthy condition.            Acting Manager, Transport Airplane
                                           the effective date of this AD using Gulfstream                                                                Directorate, Aircraft Certification Service.
                                           G650 Alert Customer Bulletin 4, dated                   (m) Related Information
                                                                                                                                                         [FR Doc. 2015–30629 Filed 12–3–15; 8:45 am]
                                           November 6, 2015; or Gulfstream G650ER                    For more information about this AD,
                                           Alert Customer Bulletin 4, dated November                                                                     BILLING CODE 4910–13–P
                                                                                                   Gideon Jose, Aerospace Engineer, Systems
                                           6, 2015; which are not incorporated by                  and Equipment Branch, ACE–119A, FAA,
                                           reference in this AD.
                                                                                                   Atlanta Aircraft Certification Office (ACO),
                                           (k) No Reporting Requirement                            1701 Columbia Avenue, College Park, GA                DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND
                                                                                                   30337; phone: 404–474–5569; fax: 404–474–             URBAN DEVELOPMENT
                                             Although Gulfstream G650 Alert Customer
                                           Bulletin 4A, dated November 13, 2015; and               5606; email: Gideon.Jose@faa.gov.
                                                                                                                                                         24 CFR Parts 91 and 578
                                           Gulfstream G650ER Alert Customer Bulletin
                                           4A, dated November 13, 2015; specify to                 (n) Material Incorporated by Reference
                                                                                                                                                         [Docket No. FR–5809–F–01]
                                           submit certain information to the                          (1) The Director of the Federal Register
                                           manufacturer, this AD does not require that             approved the incorporation by reference               RIN 2506–AC37
                                           action.                                                 (IBR) of the service information listed in this
                                                                                                                                                         Homeless Emergency Assistance and
                                           (l) Alternative Methods of Compliance                   paragraph under 5 U.S.C. 552(a) and 1 CFR
                                                                                                                                                         Rapid Transition to Housing: Defining
                                           (AMOCs)                                                 part 51.
                                                                                                                                                         ‘‘Chronically Homeless’’
                                              (1) The Manager, Atlanta Aircraft                       (2) You must use this service information
                                           Certification Office (ACO), FAA, has the                as applicable to do the actions required by           AGENCY:  Office of the Assistant
                                           authority to approve AMOCs for this AD, if              this AD, unless the AD specifies otherwise.           Secretary for Community Planning and
                                           requested using the procedures found in 14                 (i) Gulfstream G650 Alert Customer                 Development, HUD.
                                           CFR 39.19. In accordance with 14 CFR 39.19,             Bulletin 4A, dated November 13, 2015.                 ACTION: Final rule.
                                           send your request to your principal inspector              (ii) Gulfstream G650ER Alert Customer
                                           or local Flight Standards District Office, as           Bulletin 4A, dated November 13, 2015.                 SUMMARY:   This final rule establishes the
                                           appropriate. If sending information directly               (3) For Gulfstream service information
                                           to the manager of the ACO, send it to the
                                                                                                                                                         definition of ‘‘chronically homeless’’
                                                                                                   identified in this AD, contact Gulfstream             that will be used in HUD’s Continuum
                                           attention of the person identified in
                                           paragraph (m) of this AD.                               Aerospace Corporation, Technical                      of Care Program, and in the
                                              (2) Before using any approved AMOC,                  Publications Dept., P.O. Box 2206, Savannah,          Consolidated Submissions for
                                           notify your appropriate principal inspector,            GA 31402–2206; telephone 800–810–4853;                Community Planning and Development
                                           or lacking a principal inspector, the manager           fax 912–965–3520; email pubs@                         Programs. This definition has been the
                                           of the local flight standards district office/          gulfstream.com; Internet http://                      subject of significant public comment
                                           certificate holding district office.                    www.gulfstream.com/product_support/                   which has guided HUD in establishing
                                              (3) For service information that contains            technical_pubs/pubs/index.htm.
                                           steps that are labeled as Required for
                                                                                                                                                         the definition of ‘‘chronically homeless’’
                                                                                                      (4) You may view this service information          that will be used in its homeless
                                           Compliance (RC), the provisions of                      at FAA, Transport Airplane Directorate, 1601
                                           paragraphs (l)(3)(i) and (l)(3)(ii) of this AD                                                                assistance programs. The final rule also
                                                                                                   Lind Avenue SW., Renton, WA. For                      establishes the necessary recordkeeping
                                           apply.
                                              (i) The steps labeled as RC, including               information on the availability of this               requirements that correspond to the
                                           substeps under an RC step and any figures               material at the FAA, call 425–227–1221.
                                                                                                                                                         definition of ‘‘chronically homeless’’ for
                                           identified in an RC step, must be done to                  (5) You may view this service information
                                                                                                                                                         the Continuum of Care Program.
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                                           comply with the AD. An AMOC is required                 that is incorporated by reference at the
                                                                                                                                                         Historically, other programs within
                                           for any deviations to RC steps, including               National Archives and Administration
                                           substeps and identified figures.
                                                                                                                                                         HUD, as well as other agencies such as
                                                                                                   (NARA). For information on the availability
                                              (ii) Steps not labeled as RC may be                                                                        the United States Interagency Council
                                                                                                   of this material at NARA, call 202–741–6030,
                                           deviated from using accepted methods in                                                                       on Homelessness and the Department of
                                                                                                   or go to: http://www.archives.gov/federal-
                                           accordance with the operator’s maintenance              register/cfr/ibr-locations.html.
                                                                                                                                                         Veteran Affairs, have adopted HUD’s
                                                                                                                                                                                                          ER04DE15.001</GPH>




                                           or inspection program without obtaining                                                                       definition of chronically homeless and


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                                           75792             Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 233 / Friday, December 4, 2015 / Rules and Regulations

                                           may also choose to adopt the definition                 impairments resulting from a brain                    occasions total a length of time of at
                                           of ‘‘chronically homeless’’ included in                 injury, or chronic physical illness or                least 12 months. Each period separating
                                           this final rule, however, it is not                     disability.                                           the occasions must include at least 7
                                           required.                                                  Following the statutory definition,                nights of living in a situation other than
                                                                                                   HUD first proposed a regulatory                       a place not meant for human habitation,
                                           DATES:  Effective Date: January 4, 2016.
                                              Compliance Dates: Continuum of Care                  definition of ‘‘chronically homeless’’ in             in an emergency shelter, or in a safe
                                                                                                   a December 5, 2011, interim rule that                 haven.
                                           recipients must comply with the
                                                                                                   established regulations for the                          Chronically homeless families are
                                           regulations promulgated by this rule as
                                                                                                   Emergency Solutions Grants program                    families with adult heads of household
                                           of January 15, 2016. The Continuum of
                                                                                                   and made conforming amendments to                     who meet the definition of a chronically
                                           Care Program grant agreement provides
                                                                                                   HUD’s Consolidated Plan regulations                   homeless individual. If there is no adult
                                           that upon publication of a final rule for
                                                                                                   (76 FR 75954). In response to concerns                in the family, the family would still be
                                           the Continuum of Care Program, that
                                                                                                   raised in public comments, HUD                        considered chronically homeless if a
                                           follows the July 31, 2012, interim rule,
                                                                                                   amended the definition of ‘‘chronically               minor head of household meets all the
                                           the final rule, not the prior interim rule,
                                                                                                   homeless’’ in the Continuum of Care                   criteria of a chronically homeless
                                           will govern the grant agreement.
                                                                                                   Program interim rule, published July 31,              individual. A chronically homeless
                                           Continuum of Care Program recipients,                   2012 (77 FR 45422), and sought further                family includes those whose
                                           therefore, must comply with the                         public comment on the definition of                   composition has fluctuated while the
                                           regulations promulgated by this rule for                ‘‘chronically homeless.’’ At a convening              head of household has been homeless.
                                           all program participants admitted after                 held on May 30, 2012, HUD also                           Recipients and subrecipients of
                                           January 15, 2016. The regulations                       solicited feedback from nationally                    Continuum of Care Program funds are
                                           promulgated by this rule do not apply                   recognized experts on a workable                      required to maintain and follow written
                                           retroactively to program participants                   definition of ‘‘chronically homeless,’’ as            intake procedures to ensure compliance
                                           admitted to a Continuum of Care                         described in the Rural Housing Stability              with the ‘‘chronically homeless’’
                                           Program project prior to January 15,                    Assistance Program proposed rule,                     definition. The procedures must
                                           2016.                                                   published March 27, 2013 (78 FR                       establish the order of priority for
                                           FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:                        18726). This final rule results from                  obtaining evidence as third-party
                                           Norm Suchar, Director, Office of Special                HUD’s consideration of the public                     documentation first, intake worker
                                           Needs Assistance Programs, Office of                    comments on the definition of                         observations second, and certification
                                           Community Planning and Development,                     ‘‘chronically homeless’’ and feedback                 from the individual seeking assistance
                                           Department of Housing and Urban                         from the convening of nationally                      third.
                                           Development, 451 7th Street SW.,                        recognized experts.                                   Benefits and Costs
                                           Washington, DC 20410–7000; telephone                    Summary of Major Provisions
                                           number 202–708–4300 (this is not a toll-                                                                         This final rule establishes a regulatory
                                           free number). Hearing- and speech-                         This rule provides a definition of                 definition for the term ‘‘chronically
                                           impaired persons can access this                        ‘‘chronically homeless’’ in 24 CFR 91.5,              homeless’’ that meets the statutory
                                           number through TTY by calling the                       which applies to Consolidated                         definition of the term established in the
                                           Federal Relay Service at 800–877–8339                   Submissions for Community Planning                    McKinney-Vento Act and focuses on
                                           (this is a toll-free number).                           and Development Programs, and in 24                   persons with the longest histories of
                                                                                                   CFR 578.3, which applies to the                       homelessness, who often also have the
                                           SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
                                                                                                   Continuum of Care Program. In                         highest need. This will ensure that
                                           I. Executive Summary                                    addition, this rule amends 24 CFR                     funds are targeted to providing
                                                                                                   578.103, which stipulates recordkeeping               permanent supportive housing solutions
                                           Purpose and Legal Authority
                                                                                                   requirements for the Continuum of Care                for these individuals and families.
                                              The purpose of this rule is to establish             Program, to include requirements that                    This final definition of ‘‘chronically
                                           a final definition of the term                          recipients and subrecipients of                       homeless’’ provides greater clarity than
                                           ‘‘chronically homeless’’ that will be                   Continuum of Care funds must follow in                the statutory definition and HUD’s
                                           used in HUD’s Continuum of Care                         order to demonstrate that an individual               previous proposed definitions so that
                                           Program (24 CFR part 578) and the                       or family has met the definition of                   recipients and subrecipients can benefit
                                           Consolidated Submissions for                            ‘‘chronically homeless.’’                             from understanding which homeless
                                           Community Planning and Development                         A ‘‘chronically homeless’’ individual              individuals and families can be
                                           Programs (24 CFR part 91). ‘‘Chronically                is defined to mean a homeless                         considered ‘‘chronically homeless.’’
                                           homeless’’ is defined in section 401(2)                 individual with a disability who lives                This final definition will ensure that
                                           of the McKinney-Vento Homeless                          either in a place not meant for human                 communities are consistently using the
                                           Assistance Act, 42 U.S.C. 11360                         habitation, a safe haven, or in an                    same criteria when considering whether
                                           (McKinney-Vento Act or Act), as an                      emergency shelter, or in an institutional             a person is chronically homeless, and
                                           individual or family that is homeless                   care facility if the individual has been              that HUD receives consistent and
                                           and resides in a place not meant for                    living in the facility for fewer than 90              accurate information nationwide.
                                           human habitation, a safe haven, or in an                days and had been living in a place not               Communities previously used various
                                           emergency shelter, and has been                         meant for human habitation, a safe                    standards for the length of time to
                                           homeless and residing in such a place                   haven, or in an emergency shelter                     define an ‘‘episode’’ for a person to be
                                           for at least 1 year or on at least four                 immediately before entering the                       considered chronically homeless, which
                                           separate occasions in the last 3 years.                 institutional care facility. In order to              made it difficult for HUD to compare
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                                           The statutory definition also requires                  meet the ‘‘chronically homeless’’                     data nationally and failed to ensure
                                           that the individual or family has a head                definition, the individual also must                  resources were going to those with the
                                           of household with a diagnosable                         have been living as described above                   longest histories of homelessness.
                                           substance use disorder, serious mental                  continuously for at least 12 months, or                  Although recordkeeping necessarily
                                           illness, developmental disability, post-                on at least four separate occasions in the            entails costs, and this rule establishes
                                           traumatic stress disorder, cognitive                    last 3 years, where the combined                      certain recordkeeping requirements for


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                                                             Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 233 / Friday, December 4, 2015 / Rules and Regulations                                          75793

                                           the Continuum of Care Program,                          residing in a place not meant for human                  • Can be diagnosed with one or more
                                           recipients of Continuum of Care                         habitation, in a safe haven, or in an                 of the following conditions: Substance
                                           Program-funded permanent supportive                     emergency shelter. In response to these               use disorder, serious mental illness,
                                           housing projects that serve the                         concerns, HUD included a definition of                developmental disability (as defined in
                                           chronically homeless have always been                   ‘‘chronically homeless’’ that omitted                 section 102 of the Developmental
                                           required to document the chronically                    this clarification in the Continuum of                Disabilities Assistance Bill of Rights Act
                                           homeless status of program participants.                Care Program interim rule, published                  of 2000 (42 U.S.C. 15002)), post-
                                           Failure to maintain appropriate                         July 31, 2012, in the Federal Register                traumatic stress disorder, cognitive
                                           documentation of a household’s                          (77 FR 45422) and HUD sought further                  impairments resulting from brain injury,
                                           eligibility is the monitoring finding that              comment on the definition of                          or chronic physical illness or disability;
                                           most often requires recipients of HUD                   ‘‘chronically homeless.’’ At a convening                 2. An individual who has been
                                           funds to repay grant funds. This rule                   held on May 30, 2012, HUD also                        residing in an institutional care facility,
                                           establishes recordkeeping requirements                  solicited feedback from nationally                    including a jail, substance abuse or
                                           to assist Continuum of Care Program                     recognized experts on a workable                      mental health treatment facility,
                                           recipients in appropriately and                         definition of ‘‘chronically homeless’’                hospital, or other similar facility for
                                           consistently documenting chronically                    which was described in the Rural                      fewer than 90 days and met all of the
                                           homeless status, which will help to                     Housing Stability Assistance Program                  criteria in paragraph (1), before entering
                                           ensure that recipients are not required                 proposed rule. After considering the 28               that facility; or
                                           to repay grant funds due to                             public comments submitted in response                    3. A family with an adult head of
                                           inappropriately documenting eligibility                 to the conforming amendments to the                   household (or if there is no adult in the
                                           for these projects.                                     Consolidated Plan published with the                  family, a minor head of household) who
                                                                                                   Emergency Solutions Grants interim                    meets all of the criteria in paragraph (1),
                                           II. Background—HEARTH Act                                                                                     including a family whose composition
                                                                                                   rule, the 42 comments submitted in
                                              The Homeless Emergency Assistance                    response to the Continuum of Care                     has fluctuated while the head of
                                           and Rapid Transition to Housing Act of                  Program interim rule, and the feedback                household has been homeless.
                                           2009 (HEARTH Act), which was enacted                                                                             After reviewing the public comments,
                                                                                                   solicited at the convening of nationally
                                           on May 20, 2009, amended the                                                                                  which are discussed in Section IV of
                                                                                                   recognized experts, HUD determined to
                                           McKinney-Vento Act and consolidates                                                                           this preamble, and upon HUD’s further
                                                                                                   propose for public comment a revised
                                           three separate homeless assistance                                                                            consideration of concerns related to the
                                                                                                   definition of ‘‘chronically homeless.’’
                                           programs administered by HUD under                                                                            proposed definition of ‘‘chronically
                                                                                                      On March 27, 2013, HUD published a                 homeless,’’ the following highlights the
                                           the McKinney-Vento Act into a single
                                                                                                   proposed rule at 78 FR 18726 that                     changes that are made by this final rule.
                                           grant program, the Continuum of Care
                                                                                                   would establish the regulations for the                  The cumulative total of the length of
                                           Program; revises the Emergency Shelter
                                           Grants Program and renames the                          Rural Housing Stability Assistance                    homelessness spent living in a place not
                                           program the Emergency Solutions                         Program. In addition to proposing the                 meant for human habitation, a safe
                                           Grants program; and creates the Rural                   regulations that would govern this                    haven, or in an emergency shelter must
                                           Housing Stability Assistance Program to                 program, the Rural Housing Stability                  be at least 12 months. The final rule
                                           replace the Rural Homelessness Grant                    Assistance Program proposed rule                      provides that a person must have been
                                           program. Commencing in 2010 with the                    submitted for public comment a further                homeless and living in a place not
                                           publication of the proposed rule on the                 revised definition of ‘‘chronically                   meant for human habitation, a safe
                                           definition of ‘‘homeless,’’ HUD initiated               homeless.’’ The public comment period                 haven, or in an emergency shelter for a
                                           the rulemaking process to establish the                 for the definition of ‘‘chronically                   period of at least 12 months as opposed
                                           regulations for these new and revised                   homeless’’ closed on May 28, 2013, and                to ‘‘one year.’’ This includes a provision
                                           programs. In this rule, HUD provides                    these public comments and HUD’s                       that where a person has experienced at
                                           the final definition of ‘‘chronically                   responses to these comments are                       least four occasions of homelessness
                                           homeless’’ that will apply to its                       addressed later in this preamble.                     living in a place not meant for human
                                           homeless assistance programs, and                       IV. Overview of the Final Rule—Key                    habitation, a safe haven, or in an
                                           makes this definition applicable,                       Clarifications                                        emergency shelter over a period of 3
                                           through amendments, to the regulations                                                                        years, the cumulative total of the
                                           at 24 CFR part 91(Consolidated                             In the Rural Housing Stability                     occasions must total at least 12 months
                                           Submissions for Community Planning                      Assistance Program proposed rule, HUD                 as opposed to ‘‘one year.’’ While the
                                           and Development Programs) and 24 CFR                    defined a chronically homeless person                 requirement is essentially the same as
                                           part 578 (Continuum of Care Program).                   as follows:                                           that which was included in the Rural
                                                                                                      1. An individual who:                              Housing Stability Assistance Program
                                           III. Prior Proposed Rules                                  • Is homeless and lives in a place not             proposed rule, the change clarifies
                                              On December 5, 2011, at 76 FR 75954,                 meant for human habitation, a safe                    HUD’s intent for less burdensome
                                           HUD published an interim rule which                     haven, or in an emergency shelter; and                recordkeeping requirements, as
                                           established the regulations for the                        • Has been homeless and living or                  discussed in Section IV of this
                                           Emergency Solutions Grants program                      residing in a place not meant for human               preamble.
                                           and made conforming amendments to                       habitation, a safe haven, or in an                       Establishing a break in homelessness.
                                           HUD’s Consolidated Plan regulations at                  emergency shelter continuously for at                 The final rule provides that a break in
                                           24 CFR part 91, which included a                        least 1 year or on at least four separate             homelessness spent living in a place not
                                           definition of ‘‘chronically homeless.’’                 occasions in the last 3 years, where the              meant for human habitation, a safe
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                                           HUD received 28 public comments on                      cumulative total of the four occasions is             haven, or in an emergency shelter is
                                           this definition of ‘‘chronically                        at least one year. Stays in institutions of           considered to be any period of 7 or more
                                           homeless.’’ The majority of the                         90 days or less will not constitute as a              consecutive nights where an individual
                                           commenters raised concerns over HUD’s                   break in homelessness, but rather such                or family is not living or residing in
                                           clarification that ‘‘an occasion’’ must                 stays are included in the cumulative                  such a place. Stays in an institutional
                                           equal at least 15 days of living or                     total; and                                            care facility (e.g., a jail, substance abuse


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                                           75794             Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 233 / Friday, December 4, 2015 / Rules and Regulations

                                           or mental health treatment facility,                       General concerns most frequently                   requirements would be overly
                                           hospital, or other similar facility) for                expressed by commenters about the                     burdensome for those recipients.
                                           fewer than 90 days and where the                        proposed definition were: (1) The length              Therefore, this final rule includes, in the
                                           individual or family had been living in                 of time an individual or family must be               regulatory text, recordkeeping
                                           a place not meant for human habitation,                 homeless and living in a place not                    requirements to assist Continuum of
                                           a safe haven, or in an emergency shelter                meant for human habitation, a safe                    Care Program recipients in
                                           immediately before entering the                         haven, or in an emergency shelter based               appropriately documenting chronically
                                           institutional care facility will not                    on the proposed definition was too long               homeless status that take into
                                           constitute as a break.                                  and would require households to                       consideration that documenting the
                                              Establish clear recordkeeping                        experience longer periods of                          length of time homeless will be
                                           requirements. The final rule provides                   homelessness in order to qualify as                   challenging. In addition, HUD notes that
                                           recordkeeping requirements at 24 CFR                    chronically homeless, and (2)                         the revised Homeless Management
                                           part 578 to help recipients and                         documenting chronically homeless                      Information System Data Standards
                                           subrecipients of Continuum of Care                      status based on the proposed definition               published in May 2014 include data
                                           Program funds understand the evidence                   would be too burdensome.                              elements that are aligned with this
                                                                                                      Regarding the first concern, it is not             definition in order to more easily allow
                                           that must be kept in the program
                                                                                                   HUD’s intent to make an individual or                 for chronically homeless persons to be
                                           participant file in order to demonstrate
                                                                                                   family experience a longer period of                  identified through the Continuum of
                                           that an individual or family met the
                                                                                                   homelessness. Rather, HUD’s primary                   Care’s Homeless Management
                                           definition of ‘‘chronically homeless’’ at
                                                                                                   intent is to align the period of time of              Information System.
                                           the point of entry into a program, when
                                                                                                   those experiencing occasional
                                           required. In general, the recordkeeping                 homelessness with that of those who are               B. The Definition of ‘‘Chronically
                                           requirements establish HUD’s preferred                  experiencing continuous homelessness.                 Homeless’’ in 24 CFR Parts 91 and 578
                                           order of documentation; provide clarity                 This will also ensure that individuals
                                           about how the length of time of                                                                               The Comments Generally
                                                                                                   and families who already meet these
                                           homelessness spent living in a place not                criteria are prioritized for assistance,                 Comment: Concern that the expert
                                           meant for human habitation, a safe                      that recipients and subrecipients can                 panel was mainly composed of
                                           haven, or in an emergency shelter must                  demonstrate to HUD that they are                      researchers and not practitioners.
                                           be documented; and provide                              complying with the requirements                       Several commenters expressed
                                           documentation standards for                             established by HUD, and that HUD is                   disappointment that the expert panel
                                           documenting disability.                                 able to make its required reports to                  hosted by HUD to develop the proposed
                                              Technical and additional clarifying                  Congress. Where there are no persons                  definition of ‘‘chronically homeless’’
                                           changes. In addition to the changes                     within a Continuum of Care that meet                  was composed mostly of researchers
                                           highlighted above, this final rule also                 the definition of ‘‘chronically                       and not practitioners or technicians.
                                           includes technical and minor clarifying                 homeless,’’ permanent supportive                      These commenters recommended that
                                           changes to certain proposed regulatory                  housing beds that are required through                HUD invite stakeholders responsible for
                                           provisions. Several of these changes are                their grant agreement to serve this                   service delivery to such discussions
                                           in response to requests by commenters                   population may serve other vulnerable                 prior to final rulemaking.
                                           for clarification, and are further                      and eligible households. HUD will                        HUD Response: Although several of
                                           discussed in Section IV of this                         provide guidance to assist communities                the experts that participated in the
                                           preamble. HUD’s response to public                      on which populations to prioritize when               convening were researchers, HUD also
                                           comments identifies where the final rule                there are no persons that meet the                    included several practitioners. As stated
                                           makes these changes.                                    definition of ‘‘chronically homeless’’                in the summary of the convening,
                                                                                                   established in this rule.                             posted at www.hudexchange.info/rhsp,
                                           V. Discussion of the Public Comments                       Regarding the second concern, it is                the group of experts included
                                           A. The Comments, Generally                              critical to note that recipients of                   researchers, advocates, homeless
                                                                                                   Continuum of Care Program-funded                      services providers, and homelessness
                                              The public comment period on the                     permanent supportive housing projects                 technical assistance providers, as well
                                           definition of ‘‘chronically homeless’’                  with one or more beds that are required               as Federal representatives from HUD,
                                           portion of the Rural Housing Stability                  through a grant agreement to serve                    the United States Interagency Council
                                           Assistance Program proposed rule                        individuals and families experiencing                 on Homelessness, and the U.S.
                                           closed on May 28, 2013, and HUD                         chronic homelessness have always been                 Department of Health and Human
                                           received 177 public comments related to                 required to document the chronically                  Services. In addition, by publishing the
                                           this definition. HUD also received 23                   homeless status of program participants               definition of ‘‘chronically homeless’’
                                           comments for the Rural Housing                          that will occupy those beds, at the point             one more time as a proposed definition,
                                           Stability Assistance Program proposed                   of program entry. Failure to maintain                 HUD provided a third opportunity for
                                           rule unrelated to the definition of                     appropriate documentation of a                        stakeholders responsible for service
                                           ‘‘chronically homeless’’ and will                       household’s eligibility is the monitoring             delivery and reporting to submit their
                                           respond to those comments in the final                  finding that most often requires                      comments on the proposed definition of
                                           rule for the Rural Housing Stability                    recipients of HUD funds to repay grant                ‘‘chronically homeless.’’
                                           Assistance Program. Regarding the                       funds. HUD recognizes that not                           Comment: Definition of ‘‘chronically
                                           public comments on the definition of                    including recordkeeping requirements                  homeless’’ should have been issued
                                           ‘‘chronically homeless,’’ HUD received                  for documenting chronically homeless                  separately from the Rural Housing
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                                           comments from a variety of sources:                     status in the regulatory text of the Rural            Stability Assistance Program proposed
                                           Advocacy groups, service providers,                     Housing Stability Assistance Program                  rule. A few commenters stated that in
                                           case managers, State and local                          proposed rule resulted in some                        order to solicit the most comments on
                                           government agencies, nonprofit                          confusion about HUD’s expectations                    the definition of ‘‘chronically
                                           organizations, private companies, and                   and resulted in a number of commenters                homeless,’’ requesting comments on the
                                           private citizens.                                       raising concerns that recordkeeping                   definition of ‘‘chronically homeless’’


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                                                             Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 233 / Friday, December 4, 2015 / Rules and Regulations                                        75795

                                           should have been a separate notice from                 household was living in an emergency                  Further, the commenter requested that
                                           the Rural Housing Stability Assistance                  shelter, safe haven, or place not meant               HUD improve the Homeless
                                           Program proposed rule since the                         for human habitation. The burden for                  Management Information System and
                                           definition will apply to all programs                   collecting the required homeless status               the data entry process and establish data
                                           authorized by the statute.                              and disability information was                        elements to capture a person’s
                                              HUD Response: HUD’s proposed rule                    considered in the burden estimates for                chronically homeless status.
                                           on the Rural Housing Stability                          the Continuum of Care Program interim                    HUD Response: HUD acknowledges
                                           Assistance Program offered an                           rule (77 FR 45421). The public had the                that Homeless Management Information
                                           opportunity to further solicit public                   opportunity to provide comments on                    Systems across the country do not
                                           comment on HUD’s definition of                          those estimates during the public                     always collect data on chronically
                                           ‘‘chronically homeless.’’ HUD first                     comment period. In some instances, the                homeless status uniformly. HUD
                                           introduced the definition of                            documentation obtained under the                      believes that the promulgation of its
                                           ‘‘chronically homeless’’ as part of its                 existing burden of the Continuum of                   definition of ‘‘chronically homeless’’
                                           ‘‘Emergency Solutions Grants program                    Care Program interim rule will already                will assist communities in collecting
                                           and Consolidated Plan Conforming                        meet the standards for documenting the                consistent data. HUD also included
                                           Amendments interim rule,’’ not as a                     length of time an individual or head of               specific data elements in the 2014
                                           stand-alone rule on defining chronically                household resided in a place not meant                Homeless Management Information
                                           homeless. Although HUD did not solicit                  for human habitation, an emergency                    System Data Standards to allow for
                                           public comment on specific aspects of                   shelter, or a safe haven as required in               uniform data collection on chronically
                                           the definition of ‘‘chronically homeless’’              this rule. In other instances, recipients             homeless status. These data standards
                                           in its Continuum of Care Program rule,                  and subrecipients may need to spend                   take into account that not all chronically
                                           HUD did address the definition in that                  more time acquiring the documents                     homeless persons have a service
                                           rule, and informed interested parties of                necessary to show that an individual                  interaction with the Continuum of
                                           its intent to solicit further public                    meets the timeframe necessary residing                Care’s Homeless Management
                                           comment. As the commenters note, the                    in a place not meant for human                        Information System and allow for
                                           definition of ‘‘chronically homeless’’                  habitation, an emergency shelter, or a                history of homelessness to be
                                           applies to all of HUD’s homeless                        safe haven to qualify as ‘‘chronically                documented based on the information
                                           assistance programs. Soliciting                         homeless.’’ See Section VI, Information               provided by the program participant. It
                                           comments on HUD’s proposed                              Collection Requirements, for more                     should also be noted that it is not HUD’s
                                           definition in connection with                           information about HUD’s change to its                 expectation that the person entering
                                           solicitation of comments on the                         existing recordkeeping and reporting                  data into the Homeless Management
                                           Emergency Solutions Grants program                      requirements.                                         Information System also be responsible
                                           interim rule or on the Rural Housing                                                                          for determining program eligibility.
                                           Stability Assistance Program rule did                   Comments Related to Data Collection                      Comment: Proposed definition
                                           not diminish the importance of this                     and Reporting                                         impedes ability to compare data. Many
                                           definition, but rather underscored the                    Comment: Problems in reporting such                 commenters expressed concerns that the
                                           significant role that this definition will              information in Homeless Management                    new definition of ‘‘chronically
                                           have in each of these programs, and                     Information Systems. Several                          homeless’’ would impede their ability to
                                           underscores the value that HUD placed                   commenters expressed concerns about                   compare current and future data with
                                           on receiving public comment on this                     how to document and report chronically                data from previous years. A few
                                           definition. Although HUD did not issue                  homeless status in their Homeless                     commenters stated that the new
                                           the definition of ‘‘chronically homeless’’              Management Information System. One                    definition would hinder efforts to
                                           as a stand-alone proposed rule, it is                   commenter pointed to the variations                   measure ‘‘real’’ progress in reducing the
                                           HUD’s intent to issue a final rule solely               across the country around how chronic                 chronically homeless population, as
                                           on the definition.                                      homelessness is reported in the                       data would not be comparable.
                                              Comment: HUD needs to account for                    Homeless Management Information                          HUD Response: HUD acknowledges
                                           estimated hours and costs to service                    System and noted that Continuums of                   that the change in the definition of
                                           providers trying to meet requirements of                Care would not be able to uniformly and               ‘‘chronically homeless’’ may mean that
                                           the definition. A few commenters                        accurately document homelessness                      the number of persons experiencing
                                           requested that HUD account for the total                spent living in a place not meant for                 chronic homelessness within a
                                           estimated hours and financial costs it                  human habitation, a safe haven, or in an              community may change as a result of
                                           would take service providers to                         emergency shelter over a 3-year period                the new definition. However, this more
                                           complete the requirements of this rule.                 in their Homeless Management                          detailed definition is necessary in order
                                              HUD Response: This final rule                        Information Systems. Other commenters                 to ensure that communities are
                                           establishes the final definition of                     stated that many Homeless Management                  consistently using the same criteria
                                           ‘‘chronically homeless’’ by                             Information Systems are closed and do                 when considering whether a person is
                                           incorporating the definition into 24 CFR                not share information with other                      chronically homeless. A uniformly
                                           parts 91 and 578. HUD requires                          Continuums of Care, which could create                applied definition also serves to ensure
                                           Continuum of Care Program recipients                    a problem in documenting chronically                  that HUD has more consistent and
                                           of permanent supportive housing that                    homeless status for homeless persons                  accurate information. Previously,
                                           are required to serve persons                           moving between Continuums of Care.                    communities used various standards for
                                           experiencing chronic homelessness to                    Another commenter expressed concern                   the length of time to define an
                                           determine and document that any                         that data entry personnel and case                    ‘‘episode’’ for a person to be considered
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                                           individual or family assisted meets the                 managers do not have the expertise to                 chronically homeless, which made it
                                           definition of ‘‘chronically homeless’’ as               determine whether a person meets the                  difficult for HUD to compare data
                                           defined in this final rule. Each recipient              criteria to be classified as chronically              nationally. The definition of
                                           must obtain documentation of homeless                   homeless, and concern about the time                  ‘‘chronically homeless’’ in the final rule
                                           status, disability, and the specific period             service providers would spend on data                 will ensure consistency in the data
                                           of time the individual or head of                       entry rather than on providing services.              nationwide. HUD notes that this will


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                                           75796             Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 233 / Friday, December 4, 2015 / Rules and Regulations

                                           only affect the number of persons                       homeless populations; however, HUD                    statutory definition of ‘‘chronically
                                           considered to be chronically homeless                   has intentionally focused the definition              homeless’’ requires at least four
                                           and not the Continuum of Care’s total                   of ‘‘chronically homeless’’ on those                  occasions over a 3-year time frame, the
                                           homeless count.                                         persons with the longest histories of                 number of occasions necessary to be
                                                                                                   homelessness and with the highest need                considered chronically homeless cannot
                                           Comments Related to Community
                                                                                                   and believes that this is a reasonable                be changed. Individuals or families who
                                           Strategies To Serve the Chronically
                                                                                                   implementation of the statutory                       have longer histories of homelessness
                                           Homeless, Including Eligibility for
                                                                                                   requirements established in section 401               spent living a place not meant for
                                           Housing Resources
                                                                                                   of the McKinney-Vento Act. The                        human habitation, a safe haven, or in an
                                              Comment: A narrow definition of                      definition is not intended to require                 emergency shelter and who have
                                           ‘‘chronically homeless’’ will result in an              individuals and families to have longer               experienced at least four occasions in
                                           increase in vacancies in units                          periods of homelessness before being                  the last 3 years are considered
                                           designated for the chronically homeless                 served; rather, the definition allows for             chronically homeless so long as the
                                           and individuals and families spending a                 persons who already meet such criteria                adult head of household (or minor head
                                           longer time in a place not meant for                    to be prioritized for Continuum of Care               of household where no adult is present)
                                           human habitation. Several commenters                    Program-funded permanent supportive                   has a disability as required by the
                                           expressed concerns that the more                        housing dedicated to persons                          definition. However, an individual or
                                           narrow definition of ‘‘chronically                      experiencing chronic homelessness.                    family who has a history of
                                           homeless’’ included in the proposed                        In addition, HUD published                         homelessness spent living in a place not
                                           rule would result in an increase in                     guidance 1 to clarify that, to the extent             meant for human habitation, a safe
                                           vacant units otherwise dedicated to the                 that there are no persons who meet the                haven, or in an emergency shelter where
                                           chronically homeless. Several                           criteria of chronic homelessness                      the period of homelessness has not
                                           commenters suggested that they would                    included in this rule, Continuum of                   totaled 12 months either continuously
                                           have difficulty locating individuals or                 Care Program-funded dedicated                         or over a period of at least four
                                           families who meet the criteria of the                   permanent supportive housing                          occasions in the past 3 years would not
                                           proposed definition.                                    providers are not required to keep a unit             be considered chronically homeless. For
                                              One commenter expressed concern                      vacant. Instead, the recipient may house              this reason, HUD has provided
                                           that the proposed definition would                                                                            flexibility around what constitutes an
                                                                                                   non-chronically homeless individuals or
                                           affect local and State governments, in                                                                        occasion of homelessness and how to
                                                                                                   families who are eligible for permanent
                                           addition to homeless individuals,                                                                             document the period of homelessness
                                                                                                   supportive housing generally and are
                                           stating that the new definition would                                                                         while still maintaining a uniform
                                                                                                   encouraged to prioritize those homeless
                                           result in more people being on the street                                                                     standard to ensure consistency across
                                                                                                   individuals or families who are the most
                                           for longer periods of time resulting in                                                                       the country. HUD encourages recipients
                                                                                                   vulnerable or at risk of becoming
                                           the following: an increased demand for                                                                        of Continuum of Care Program-funded
                                                                                                   chronically homeless.
                                           emergency shelters, a burden on local                                                                         permanent supportive housing not
                                                                                                      Comment: Definition does not target
                                           police services since more individuals                                                                        dedicated to the chronically homeless to
                                                                                                   those with longest histories and most
                                           would be in unstable situations, and a                                                                        prioritize persons that are most at risk
                                                                                                   severe cases of homelessness. One
                                           decrease in property values. The                                                                              of becoming chronically homeless and
                                                                                                   commenter stated that the proposed
                                           commenter suggested that HUD phase in                                                                         who are the most vulnerable.
                                                                                                   definition of ‘‘chronically homeless’’
                                           the new definition over a few years by                                                                           Comment: Periods of homelessness do
                                                                                                   does not target those with the longest
                                           incrementally increasing the cumulative                                                                       not automatically correlate to need. A
                                                                                                   histories and most severe cases of
                                           episode threshold in order to provide                                                                         commenter stated that those who have
                                                                                                   homelessness, such as those with
                                           localities time to plan their budgets and                                                                     been homeless for shorter, sporadic
                                                                                                   histories of homelessness that have four
                                           give homeless individuals time to adjust                                                                      periods of time that do not cumulatively
                                                                                                   or more episodes in more than the past
                                           their expectations.                                                                                           total 365 days might be more physically
                                                                                                   3 years.
                                              Another commenter requested                                                                                and mentally prepared to use permanent
                                                                                                      HUD Response: HUD recognizes that
                                           guidance on what providers with                                                                               supportive housing than those who have
                                                                                                   there are individuals and families with
                                           dedicated permanent supportive                                                                                had longer episodes of homelessness.
                                                                                                   long histories of homelessness that may
                                           housing beds should do if they are                                                                            Similarly, one commenter stated that a
                                                                                                   not meet the definition of ‘‘chronically
                                           unable to locate persons that meet this                                                                       longer length of time spent homeless
                                                                                                   homeless’’ included in the final rule.
                                           definition.                                                                                                   does not necessarily indicate a higher
                                              Several commenters recommended                       For example, individuals and families
                                                                                                   who have been homeless and living in                  level of need, and those who have been
                                           that HUD establish a ‘‘tiering system’’                                                                       homeless for shorter periods might
                                           where communities that are unable to                    a place not meant for human habitation,
                                                                                                                                                         make better use of housing services.
                                           identify people who meet requirements                   a safe haven, or in an emergency shelter
                                                                                                                                                            HUD Response: HUD has determined
                                           for ‘‘chronically homeless’’ may target                 for 12 months or longer in the past 3
                                                                                                                                                         that the definition of ‘‘chronically
                                           permanent supportive housing for other                  years but where there were fewer than                 homeless’’ in section 401 of the
                                           vulnerable homeless persons. Similarly,                 four distinct occasions and the current               McKinney-Vento Act should define
                                           other commenters recommended that                       occasion lasted less than 12 months                   those persons as chronically homeless
                                           HUD consider a prioritization policy for                would not be considered chronically                   that have had the longest histories of
                                           homeless individuals eligible for                       homeless. However, because the                        homelessness and highest need. The
                                           permanent supportive housing and                          1 Notice CPD–14–012: Prioritizing Persons
                                                                                                                                                         definition of ‘‘chronically homeless’’ set
                                           remove the requirement that 100                                                                               forth in 24 CFR parts 91 and 578
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                                                                                                   Experiencing Chronic Homelessness in Permanent
                                           percent of new permanent supportive                     Supportive Housing and Recordkeeping                  intentionally narrows the statutory
                                           housing units be designated for the                     Requirements for Documenting Chronic Homeless         definition to further ensure that limited
                                           chronically homeless.                                   Status. Available at: https://                        resources targeted to this population are
                                                                                                   www.hudexchange.info/resource/3897/notice-cpd-
                                              HUD Response: HUD recognizes that                    14-012-prioritizing-persons-experiencing-chronic-
                                                                                                                                                         used to serve persons with the longest
                                           the definition of ‘‘chronically homeless’’              homelessness-in-psh-and-recordkeeping-                histories of homelessness and highest
                                           is not inclusive of all vulnerable                      requirements/.                                        need. HUD acknowledges that there are


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                                                             Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 233 / Friday, December 4, 2015 / Rules and Regulations                                        75797

                                           other factors that might also correlate to              Comments Related to the Definition                    alternative definitions for targeting the
                                           need, however, length of time residing                     Comment: Adhere to the definition of               homeless population most in need of
                                           in emergency shelters, safe havens, and                 ‘‘chronically homeless’’ included in the              permanent supportive housing. Several
                                           places not meant for human habitation                   conforming amendments to the                          commenters recommended that HUD
                                           is one factor of need, and when                         Consolidated Plan published with the                  replace the proposed definition of
                                           combined with the statutory                             Emergency Solutions Grants program                    ‘‘chronically homeless’’ with ‘‘homeless
                                           requirement that the head of household                  interim rule. Several commenters stated               persons determined to be vulnerable
                                           have a disabling condition, HUD has                     that they preferred the definition of                 through the application of a
                                           determined that it effectively defines                  ‘‘chronically homeless’’ that was                     standardized vulnerability index tool’’
                                           those persons with the highest needs as                 included in the conforming                            that would be developed with
                                           chronically homeless. Therefore, the                    amendments to the Consolidated Plan                   stakeholders. These commenters also
                                           definition of ‘‘chronically homeless’’                  published with the Emergency                          stated that homeless persons could be
                                                                                                   Solutions Grants program interim rule,                assigned spots on a community’s
                                           included in this final rule maintains the
                                                                                                   which defined a homeless occasion as a                ‘‘vulnerability list’’ so those most in
                                           requirement that was included in the
                                                                                                   period of at least 15 days.                           need of services could be identified.
                                           Rural Housing Stability Assistance                                                                               HUD Response: HUD agrees that it is
                                           Program proposed rule, that the four or                    HUD Response: The majority of
                                                                                                   public comments received on the                       important to consider a person’s
                                           more separate occasions of                                                                                    vulnerability or the severity of a
                                           homelessness living in a place not                      definition of ‘‘chronically homeless’’
                                                                                                   that was included in the conforming                   person’s needs when determining
                                           meant for human habitation, a safe                                                                            housing placement; however, the
                                                                                                   amendments to the Consolidated Plan
                                           haven, or in an emergency shelter must                                                                        statutory definition of ‘‘chronically
                                                                                                   published with the Emergency
                                           total 12 months or include additional                   Solutions Grants program interim rule                 homeless’’ does not permit HUD to
                                           criteria related to vulnerability. HUD                  related to the requirement that to be                 adopt the definition proposed by the
                                           also recognizes that persons meeting the                considered an ‘‘occasion’’ a period of                commenters. HUD recognizes that
                                           definition of ‘‘chronically homeless’’                  homelessness had to be a period of at                 individuals and families should be
                                           included in the final rule may require a                least 15 days. Several commenters                     prioritized for permanent supportive
                                           higher level of support in order to                     stated that the period of 15 days to                  housing under the Continuum of Care
                                           obtain and maintain housing. Not all                    define an ‘‘occasion’’ was arbitrary and              Program based on the severity of their
                                           permanent supportive housing is                         was not the ideal definition. Upon                    needs. To this point, HUD has provided
                                           limited to serving persons that meet the                review of these comments, HUD                         guidance to recipients of all Continuum
                                           definition of chronically homeless. HUD                 concluded that the 15-day standard did                of Care Program-funded permanent
                                           has encouraged Continuums of Care and                   not effectively target persons with the               supportive housing encouraging
                                           recipients of Continuum of Care                         longest histories of homelessness and                 Continuums of Care and permanent
                                           Program-funded permanent supportive                     highest level of need. The definition in              supportive housing providers to take
                                           housing to take other factors, such as                  the conforming amendments to the                      other factors, such as vulnerability, into
                                           vulnerability, into account when                        Consolidated Plan published with the                  account when prioritizing households
                                           prioritizing households for permanent                   Emergency Solutions Grants interim                    for permanent supportive housing.
                                                                                                   rule would have allowed for an                           Comment: Allow communities to
                                           supportive housing.
                                                                                                   individual or family experiencing                     define ‘‘chronically homeless’’ locally.
                                              Comment: Require jurisdictions to                                                                          A commenter suggested that
                                           produce a plan to specifically address                  occasions of homelessness to be
                                                                                                   considered chronically homeless within                establishing a global definition of
                                           dealing with chronic homelessness. A                                                                          ‘‘chronically homeless’’ has limitations
                                                                                                   a period of as few as 65 days, while
                                           commenter stated that every region in                                                                         and that communities should be
                                                                                                   persons experiencing homelessness
                                           the country should be required to have                                                                        encouraged to set their own
                                                                                                   without a break would have to be
                                           a plan that deals directly with the                                                                           ‘‘prioritization benchmarks’’ based on
                                                                                                   homeless and residing in a place not
                                           chronically homeless to show proof that                                                                       local conditions.
                                                                                                   meant for human habitation, in a safe
                                           they have worked on the issue through                                                                            Another commenter recommended
                                                                                                   haven, or an emergency shelter for at
                                           a statement with a local provider.                                                                            that the term ‘‘chronic’’ is a medical
                                                                                                   least 1 year. Consistent with research,2
                                              HUD Response: Each Continuum of                                                                            term, and is not an appropriate term to
                                                                                                   HUD has determined that requiring 1                   measure severity of homelessness, and
                                           Care submits its plan for addressing                    year (12 months) of homelessness living               suggested that HUD allow local
                                           chronic homelessness through the                        in a place not meant for human                        Continuums of Care to submit their own
                                           Continuum of Care Application                           habitation, a safe haven, or an                       definitions based on people with serious
                                           submitted under each Notice of Funding                  emergency shelter will ensure that the                health conditions who have experienced
                                           Availability for the Continuum of Care                  definition focuses on those persons with              multiple and/or long episodes of
                                           Program. This requirement will                          the longest histories of such                         homelessness.
                                           continue to be addressed through the                    homelessness and highest needs. The                      Finally, another commenter suggested
                                           Continuum of Care Program                               definition included in this final rule                that HUD provide rural communities the
                                           Competition; therefore, no additional                   allows for limited resources to be                    flexibility to determine what is meant
                                           requirements have been added to the                     effectively targeted and does not adopt               by ‘‘not meant for human habitation’’
                                           final rule. In addition, each                           the definition originally published in 24             since many of these communities do not
                                           Consolidated Plan jurisdiction is                       CFR part 91.                                          have condemnation procedures like
                                           required to develop a homeless strategy                    Comment: Use ‘‘vulnerability index’’               those often used by urban areas.
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                                           and this strategy must address the needs                to measure chronic homelessness.                         HUD Response: The definition of
                                           of, and resources available to,                         Several commenters proposed                           ‘‘chronically homeless’’ in section 401
                                           chronically homeless persons. This                                                                            of the McKinney-Vento Act provides the
                                                                                                     2 Thomas Byrne and Dennis P. Culhane. ‘‘Testing
                                           requirement will continue to be                                                                               basis for the definition of ‘‘chronically
                                                                                                   Alternative Definitions of Chronic Homelessness’’
                                           addressed through the Consolidated                      Psychiatric Services 66.5 (2015). Available at:       homeless’’ set forth in 24 CFR parts 91
                                           Plan requirements at 24 CFR part 91.                    http://works.bepress.com/dennis_culhane/146.          and 578. Although the Act does allow


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                                           75798             Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 233 / Friday, December 4, 2015 / Rules and Regulations

                                           HUD the discretion to allow                             be prioritized for persons with the                   Beyond this clarification, creating a
                                           communities to define certain terms                     longest histories of homelessness and                 broader or less restrictive threshold for
                                           such as ‘‘not meant for human                           who are most likely to have the most                  unaccompanied youth or families with
                                           habitation’’ locally, HUD has                           severe service needs, which is                        children would undermine one of the
                                           determined that all Continuums of Care                  consistent with the requirements                      goals of the ‘‘chronically homeless’’
                                           must use the same standard when                         established in section 401 of the                     definition, which is to help ensure that
                                           determining whether or not an                           McKinney-Vento Act. The statute does                  resources are focused on individuals
                                           individual or family is chronically                     not support defining persons who are                  and families with the longest
                                           homeless. Using a universal standard                    ‘‘at risk of homelessness’’ (on a                     experiences of homelessness spent
                                           will also allow HUD to track progress,                  recurring basis or otherwise) as                      living in a place not meant for human
                                           nationally, on the goal of ending chronic               chronically homeless as these persons                 habitation, a safe haven, or in an
                                           homelessness.                                           do not meet the definition of homeless                emergency shelter. In addition, a
                                              Comment: Include individuals and                     or chronically homeless as set forth in               person’s status as part of a family may
                                           families who meet the McKinney-Vento                    the Act. HUD reminds stakeholders that                change and a youth may become an
                                           Homeless Assistance Education Act in                    individuals and families who meet the                 adult during his or her time living in an
                                           the definition of chronically homeless.                 definition of at risk of homelessness                 emergency shelter, safe haven, or place
                                           A commenter stated that individuals or                  might be eligible for homelessness                    not meant for human habitation.
                                           families who meet the McKinney-Vento                    prevention assistance under either the                Therefore, a single definition helps
                                           Homeless Education Act definition of                    Continuum of Care Program, if the                     ensure that an individual’s status does
                                           ‘‘homeless’’ should also be considered                  Continuum of Care is a High Performing                not change depending on whether he or
                                           chronically homeless.                                   Community, or the Emergency Solutions                 she is part of a family at the time of
                                              HUD Response: The definition of                      Grants program.                                       intake or turns 25. Therefore, in the
                                           ‘‘chronically homeless’’ included in this                  Comment: Provide for different                     final rule, HUD has maintained that the
                                           final rule reflects the statutory                       definitional criteria for ‘‘chronically               standard for qualifying as chronically
                                           definition in section 401 of the Act. The               homeless’’ for youth and families with                homeless is the same for all individuals,
                                           statutory definition provides specific                  children. Several commenters suggested                families with children, and
                                           minimum criteria that an individual or                  that the definition of ‘‘chronically                  unaccompanied youth. Families with
                                           family must meet in order to be defined                 homeless’’ should have different                      children and unaccompanied youth,
                                           as chronically homeless. Although HUD                   definitional criteria for families with               like single adults, who do not meet the
                                           has the discretion to make the definition               children and youth than for adult                     criteria of chronically homeless might
                                           of ‘‘chronically homeless’’ more narrow                 individuals. One commenter suggested                  still meet the definition of ‘‘homeless’’
                                           in the final rule, the definition must                  that there should be different                        and if they do they are eligible for
                                           include the minimum statutory                           cumulative time frames for individuals,               assistance under the Continuum of Care
                                           requirements. Further, it is HUD’s                      families, and youth. Specifically, the                Program and Emergency Solutions
                                           intention to ensure that the definition of              commenter proposed, ‘‘that the                        Grants program.
                                           ‘‘chronically homeless’’ targets those                  definition be changed so that a                          Comment: Define family in the
                                           persons with the longest histories of                   chronically homeless individual is                    definition of ‘‘chronically homeless.’’
                                           homelessness who have been living in                    defined as one who is homeless for at                 Several commenters sought clarification
                                           a place not meant for human habitation,                 least 1 year or for a cumulative total of             on how HUD defines ‘‘family’’ for the
                                           a safe haven, or in an emergency shelter.               180 days in the previous 3 years over                 purposes of defining ‘‘chronically
                                           Therefore, HUD has chosen to not                        multiple occasions, a chronically                     homeless.’’ One commenter asked that
                                           change the final rule to include all                    homeless family is defined as one that                HUD define the term ‘‘family’’ in a
                                           individuals and families who meet the                   is currently homeless and has moved                   manner consistent with how it is
                                           definition in section 725(2) of the                     multiple times in the previous 12                     defined in the Equal Access to Housing
                                           McKinney-Vento Act. HUD recognizes                      months, where an adult and/or child                   in HUD Program Regardless of Sexual
                                           that there are vulnerable populations                   family member is involved with more                   Orientation or Gender Identity final
                                           who are not included in this definition                 than one public service system, and a                 rule. Another commenter expressed
                                           of ‘‘chronically homeless.’’ The                        category is added for chronically                     confusion over whether a chronically
                                           definition of ‘‘chronically homeless’’ is               homeless youth, who would be                          homeless family must have a child
                                           not intended to include all vulnerable                  currently homeless individuals under                  under the age of 18. Another commenter
                                           populations.                                            the age of 25 who have moved multiple                 stated that the term family is ‘‘misused
                                              Comment: HUD should consider                         times in the previous 6 months, and this              to identify a demographic of a
                                           persons chronically at risk of                          pattern of housing instability can be                 household and that the term
                                           homelessness the same as chronically                    expected to continue.’’                               ‘‘household’’ should be defined
                                           homeless. A commenter suggested that                       HUD Response: The single statutory                 consistently with the proposed data
                                           HUD should treat ‘‘chronically                          definition of ‘‘chronically homeless’’ is             standards.’’
                                           homeless’’ and ‘‘chronically at risk of                 inclusive of individuals, families with                  HUD Response: The proposed
                                           homelessness’’ as the same so that those                children, and unaccompanied youth                     definition of ‘‘chronically homeless’’
                                           who have not been able to maintain                      and sets a minimum threshold that must                did not define the term ‘‘family.’’ The
                                           permanent supportive housing because                    be met for any person, regardless of age              Equal Access to Housing in HUD
                                           of a loss of income due to a disability                 or household composition. HUD strived                 Programs Regardless of Sexual
                                           and inability to attain a permanent                     to reasonably implement the statutory                 Orientation or Gender Identity final rule
                                           voucher are not penalized.                              definition by clarifying in the regulation            provides the following definition of
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                                              HUD Response: HUD recognizes that                    that, for family households, only the                 ‘‘family’’ in 24 CFR 5.403 which applies
                                           there are vulnerable populations who                    head of household must meet the                       to programs authorized under the Act.
                                           are not included in this definition of                  criteria for individuals who are defined              The definition ‘‘Family’’ includes, but is
                                           ‘‘chronically homeless’’; however,                      as chronically homeless. The definition               not limited to, the following, regardless
                                           defining chronically homeless more                      in the regulation also allows for changes             of actual or perceived sexual
                                           narrowly will allow limited resources to                to family composition over time.                      orientation, gender identity, or marital


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                                                             Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 233 / Friday, December 4, 2015 / Rules and Regulations                                        75799

                                           status: (1) A single person, who may be                 cannot be revised from the proposed                   homeless, but do not meet the criteria of
                                           an elderly person, displaced person,                    rule to allow for any household member                chronically homeless.
                                           disabled person, near-elderly person, or                besides the head of household to qualify                 Comment: Include a cumulative time
                                           any other single person; or, (2) A group                the family as chronically homeless; this              frame for the four or more occasions but
                                           of persons residing together, and such                  includes experiencing the occasion(s) of              make that time frame less than 1 year.
                                           group includes, but is not limited to, a                homelessness and being diagnosed with                 Many commenters disagreed with the
                                           family with or without children, an                     the disabling condition.                              proposed rule’s cumulative length of
                                           elderly family, a near-elderly family, a                   However, because it is the adult head              time the four or more occasions must
                                           disabled family, a displaced family, and                of household who qualifies a family as                total in order for an individual or family
                                           remaining members of a tenant family.                   chronically homeless, the whole family                to be considered chronically homeless.
                                              This definition of ‘‘family’’ applies in             is considered chronically homeless even               A few commenters proposed reducing
                                           both the Emergency Solutions Grants                     if the household composition changed                  the requirement from 1 year to 120 days.
                                           and Continuum of Care Program rules.                    during the course of the head of                      Several commenters suggested that the
                                           The McKinney-Vento Act distinguishes                    household’s homelessness. Language                    time frame should be reduced from 1
                                           individuals from families. Therefore,                   stating this was included in the                      year to 6 months or 180 days. One
                                           paragraph (1) of the definition of                      proposed definition of ‘‘chronically                  commenter proposed that this 6-month
                                           ‘‘family’’ under the Equal Access Rule is               homeless’’ and remains in the final                   time frame should apply to both
                                           considered an individual for the                        definition of ‘‘chronically homeless.’’               occasional and consecutive periods of
                                           purposes of the definition of                           For example, if an adult head of                      homelessness.
                                           ‘‘chronically homeless’’ included in this               household has a qualifying disability                    HUD Response: The statutory
                                           final rule. This means that a chronically               and has been homeless continuously for                definition of ‘‘chronically homeless’’
                                           homeless family is any group of persons                 12 months and has been accompanied                    requires individuals and families who
                                           presenting for assistance together, where               by another family member for only part                meet the definition through a
                                           the head of household meets all of the                  of that time frame, the whole household               continuous occasion to have been
                                           criteria established in this final rule,                                                                      homeless and living or residing in a
                                                                                                   meets the definition of a chronically
                                           regardless of marital status, actual or                                                                       place not meant for human habitation,
                                                                                                   homeless family.
                                           perceived sexual orientation, or gender                                                                       safe haven, or in an emergency shelter
                                                                                                      Comment: Eliminate the requirement                 for at least 1 year. The statute set a
                                           identity, with or without children and
                                                                                                   that to be chronically homeless an                    different standard for persons who
                                           irrespective of age or relationship. A
                                                                                                   individual or family must experience                  experience frequent occasions of
                                           child who is temporarily away from the
                                                                                                   four separate occasions of homelessness.              homelessness, requiring at least four
                                           home because of placement in foster
                                                                                                   Several commenters requested that HUD                 occasions over 3 years. The statute was
                                           care is considered a member of the
                                                                                                   eliminate the requirement for four                    silent on what qualified as an occasion
                                           family.
                                              Comment: Clarify that any family                     separate occasions of homelessness in                 of homelessness. HUD has determined
                                           member who meets the criteria of                        favor of considering anyone that has                  that requiring four or more occasions to
                                           chronically homeless can qualify the                    been homeless for a cumulative total of               total at least 12 months would set a
                                           family as chronically homeless. A few                   365 days over the past 3 years to be                  threshold of need comparable to the
                                           commenters requested that any member                    considered chronically homeless. One                  requirement for a continuous episode.
                                           of the family could make the entire                     commenter stated that occasions are                   This will help ensure that resources that
                                           family meet the definition of                           ‘‘too sloppy to define’’ and the concept              are dedicated to serving chronically
                                           ‘‘chronically homeless.’’ A commenter                   is of little value.                                   homeless persons are targeted to
                                           recommended that HUD consider                              HUD Response: HUD recognizes that                  individuals and families with the
                                           revising the definition of ‘‘chronically                the requirement for four or more                      longest experiences of homelessness
                                           homeless’’ specifically to allow for a                  separate occasions of homelessness over               regardless of whether they meet the
                                           minor child in a family to qualify the                  a 3-year period will not include                      threshold for chronic homelessness
                                           family household as chronically                         individuals or families who have                      through a continuous occasion or
                                           homeless. Another commenter                             experienced only two occasions of                     through multiple occasions.
                                           recommended only that the children,                     homelessness over a 3-year period                        Comment: For the cumulative time
                                           instead of the adult head of household,                 where the cumulative total is 12 months               frame for four or more occasions, count
                                           be able to have one of the listed                       or greater. However, the requirement of               the time in months as opposed to days.
                                           disabling conditions and qualify the                    four or more occasions is statutory and               One commenter proposed that the
                                           family as chronically homeless because                  included in the definition of                         definition be revised to count homeless
                                           the barriers a disability presents to an                ‘‘chronically homeless’’ in the                       occasions in terms of months and not
                                           individual are similar to the barriers                  McKinney-Vento Act and, therefore,                    days. Another commenter
                                           faced by a parent of a child with a                     cannot be changed without a change to                 recommended that the actual number of
                                           disability. Similarly, one commenter                    the statute. For this reason, HUD has                 days homeless need not be counted and
                                           proposed adding language to clarify that                provided maximum flexibility within                   a single encounter with a service
                                           the members of a family household all                   the statutory framework about what                    provider on a single day in one month
                                           qualify as chronically homeless based                   constitutes a break between occasions                 could count for homeless status for the
                                           on the head of household regardless of                  and how to document the period of                     entire month.
                                           changes within the household                            homelessness. In addition, HUD notes,                    HUD Response: The definition of
                                           composition.                                            for those stakeholders who submitted                  ‘‘chronically homeless’’ included in the
                                              HUD Response: The statutory                          this comment because of concerns about                proposed rule did not specify how the
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                                           definition of ‘‘chronically homeless’’                  these individuals and families not being              time frame should be counted and
                                           dictates that the adult head of                         eligible for needed resources, that the               instead just stated that the cumulative
                                           household (or minor head of household                   Continuum of Care and Emergency                       total of occasions must total at least 1
                                           if there is no adult in the family) must                Solutions Grants programs fund a                      year. HUD agrees with the comment that
                                           meet the criteria set forth in the                      variety of housing and services for                   changing 1 year to 12 months helps
                                           definition. Therefore, the final rule                   individuals and families who are                      provide clarification about how to count


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                                           75800             Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 233 / Friday, December 4, 2015 / Rules and Regulations

                                           an individual or family’s time spent in                 has been homeless and living as                          Comment: Need guidance on what
                                           places not meant for human habitation,                  described continuously for at least 12                constitutes as a break in homelessness.
                                           in a safe haven or in an emergency                      months or on at least 4 separate                      Many commenters requested guidance
                                           shelter. Furthermore, since HUD did not                 occasions in the last 3 years, as long as             on what constitutes as a break in
                                           include recordkeeping requirements in                   the combined occasions equal at least 12              homelessness in order to distinguish
                                           the proposed rule, it was not clear that                months and each break in homelessness                 between occasions. One commenter
                                           HUD does not intend to make homeless                    separating the occasions included at                  requested guidance on how to document
                                           service providers document every day of                 least 7 consecutive nights of not living              such breaks in Homeless Management
                                           homelessness spent living in a place not                in a place not meant for human                        Information System. Another
                                           meant for human habitation, a safe                      habitation. The definition further                    commenter suggested that temporary
                                           haven, or in an emergency shelter to                    provides that stays in institutional care             housing situations of less than 1 week
                                           equal 365 days, for either continuous or                facilities for fewer than 90 days will                not constitute as a break. Several
                                           occasional homelessness. HUD agrees                     generally not constitute as a break in                commenters suggested that periods of
                                           that counting in months instead of days                 homelessness, but rather such stays are               ‘‘couch surfing’’ should not constitute as
                                           is a more reasonable requirement for                    included in the 12-month total.                       a break in homelessness.
                                           documentation purposes. In addition,                       In addition, to clarify the                           HUD Response: HUD agrees that in
                                           HUD agrees with the comment that a                      recordkeeping requirements related to                 order to accurately document occasions
                                           single encounter with a homeless                        paragraph (1)(ii), § 578.103(a)(4) has                of homelessness, it is necessary to
                                           service provider on a single day within                 been revised to include language on                   understand and document the housing
                                           1 month would be sufficient to count                    how documenting a single encounter                    situation that ended the occasion;
                                           the individual or family as homeless for                within 1 month is sufficient                          therefore, HUD has clarified in the
                                           the entire month. HUD understands that                  documentation to count the individual                 recordkeeping requirements that a break
                                           there is not an Homeless Management                     or family as homeless for the entire                  in homelessness is any period of 7 or
                                           Information System record for every                     month.                                                more consecutive nights where the
                                           interaction or for every day in which a                                                                       individual or family is not residing in a
                                                                                                      Comment: Give discretion to
                                           person is homeless and did not want to                                                                        safe haven, or in an emergency shelter
                                                                                                   Continuums of Care to determine the
                                           create a recordkeeping requirement that                                                                       or is residing in a place meant for
                                                                                                   length of the occasions of homelessness.
                                           was overly burdensome. This                                                                                   human habitation. In addition, the final
                                                                                                   Several commenters suggested that
                                           requirement has been clarified in the                                                                         rule allows for stays in an institutional
                                                                                                   Continuums of Care should be provided
                                           recordkeeping requirements; however,                                                                          care facility where the individual has
                                                                                                   with the flexibility to determine when
                                           HUD has also added language stating                                                                           been residing for fewer than 90 days to
                                                                                                   an individual or family is chronically
                                           that this does not apply if the provider                                                                      not constitute as a break in
                                                                                                   homeless and whether they have been
                                           has evidence of a break, defined as 7 or                                                                      homelessness either. HUD provided this
                                                                                                   homeless at least four times over the
                                           more consecutive nights not living in a                                                                       clarification because of a comment
                                                                                                   past 3 years.                                         provided through the comment process
                                           safe haven or in an emergency shelter,                     HUD Response: In order to ensure that
                                           or living in a place meant for human                                                                          on the Continuum of Care Program
                                                                                                   Continuums of Care nationwide are                     interim rule recognizing that many
                                           habitation, during that month. Again,                   defining chronically homeless                         hard-to-serve chronically homeless
                                           this will help ensure that resources                    consistently for counting, eligibility,               individuals and families have an
                                           dedicated to persons experiencing                       and reporting purposes, it is necessary               opportunity to spend 1 or 2 nights on
                                           chronic homelessness are targeted to                    to have one uniform definition of                     someone’s couch, in a motel using all or
                                           individuals and families with the                       ‘‘chronically homeless’’ that applies                 most of the beneficiary’s monthly Social
                                           longest experiences of homelessness.                    nationwide. A uniform definition will                 Security Income or Social Security
                                           When considering how to determine a                     allow for data from each community to                 Disability Income check, in another
                                           break, HUD understands that people                      be compared nationally, and that                      location that allows them to briefly not
                                           often find themselves with a place to                   persons with the longest histories of                 sleep in a place not meant for human
                                           stay for a couple of nights (hotel, with                homelessness who have been living in                  habitation, in an emergency shelter, or
                                           a friend, etc.), however, their primary                 a place not meant for human habitation,               in a safe haven. HUD does not consider
                                           nighttime residence is still a place not                a safe haven, or in an emergency shelter              these periods of less than 7 nights a
                                           meant for human habitation, an                          and with the most severe service needs                break in homelessness. Instead, these
                                           emergency shelter, or a safe haven. HUD                 are prioritized for assistance in                     days would be counted towards a single
                                           determined that up to 7 nights is a                     permanent supportive housing. As more                 occasion of homelessness living in a
                                           reasonable period of time for an                        communities meet the Administration’s                 place not meant for human habitation,
                                           individual or family to stay for a few                  goal of ending chronic homelessness,                  a safe haven, or in an emergency shelter.
                                           nights in a place other than an                         HUD will use the annual Continuum of                  Only periods of 7 or more consecutive
                                           emergency shelter, a safe haven, or in a                Care Program Competition Notice of                    nights where the individual or family is
                                           place that is meant for human habitation                Funding Availability to reflect changes               not living in a place not meant for
                                           without considering it a break in their                 in priorities. However, the definition of             human habitation, in a safe haven, or in
                                           total length of time homeless for                       ‘‘chronically homeless’’ will not change,             an emergency shelter would qualify as
                                           purposes of determining chronically                     as it is meant to encompass those                     a break. Intake workers must follow the
                                           homeless status.                                        homeless persons with the longest                     general recordkeeping standards of
                                              Rule clarification. To clarify that, for             histories of living in places not meant               third-party evidence first, intake worker
                                           documentation purposes, the                             for human habitation, in a safe haven,                observation second, and self-
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                                           cumulative length of time of occasions                  or in emergency shelters and who have                 certification of the head of household
                                           must total 12 months instead of 365                     the most severe service needs, and to                 third, when documenting the break in
                                           days, the language in paragraph (1)(ii) of              the extent that there are persons that                homelessness.
                                           the definition of ‘‘chronically homeless’’              meet this criteria within a Continuum of                 Rule Clarification: Section 578.3 of
                                           has been revised to provide that the                    Care they should always be counted and                the final rule includes language in
                                           homeless individual with a disability                   be prioritized for assistance.                        paragraph (1)(ii) of the definition of


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                                                             Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 233 / Friday, December 4, 2015 / Rules and Regulations                                       75801

                                           ‘‘chronically homeless’’ that clarifies                 are initially housed in transitional                  paragraph (1)(iii) in the proposed rule’s
                                           that a break is considered to be 7 or                   housing.                                              definition of ‘‘chronically homeless,’’
                                           more consecutive nights where the                          HUD Response: HUD has interpreted                  which provides that a chronically
                                           individual or family is not living in a                 the criteria in paragraphs (1) and (2) of             homeless person is a person who can be
                                           place not meant for human habitation,                   the statutory definition by clarifying                diagnosed with one of the following
                                           in a safe haven or in an emergency                      that short-term stays in institutional                conditions: ‘‘substance use disorder,
                                           shelter.                                                care facilities do not count as breaks in             serious mental illness, developmental
                                              Comment: Stays in living situations                  homelessness. HUD believes this                       disability (as defined in section 102 of
                                           other than the streets, emergency                       clarification is supported by the                     the Developmental Disabilities
                                           shelters, or safe havens should be                      widespread and longstanding                           Assistance and Bill of Rights Act of
                                           included in places an individual or                     recognition that persons experiencing                 2000 (42 U.S.C. 15002)), post-traumatic
                                           family can reside and still meet the                    chronic homelessness frequently cycle                 stress disorder, cognitive impairments
                                           definition of ‘‘chronically homeless.’’                 between short-term stays in institutional             resulting from brain injury, or chronic
                                           Several commenters suggested that HUD                   care facilities and emergency shelters,               physical illness or disability.’’
                                           consider expanding the definition to                    safe havens, and places not meant for                    Commenters asked for clarification on
                                           allow for individuals and families in                   human habitation. HUD also believes                   what constitutes a ‘‘condition.’’ Other
                                           certain living situations to be                         this widespread and longstanding                      commenters asked about the specific list
                                           considered chronically homeless.                        recognition is implicit in paragraph (2)              of ‘‘conditions’’ included in the
                                           Numerous commenters suggested that                      of the statutory definition, which allows             definition. One commenter asked why
                                           individuals and families who have been                  certain individuals to qualify as                     the term ‘‘serious mental illness’’ is
                                           living in ‘‘doubled up’’ situations                     chronically homeless even if they                     used instead of ‘‘severe and persistent
                                           should qualify as being chronically                     currently live in an institutional care               mental illness,’’ while another
                                           homeless. One commenter stated that                     facility, as opposed to an emergency                  commenter asked why ‘‘post-traumatic
                                           periods spent ‘‘doubled up’’ should be                  shelter, safe haven, or place not meant               stress disorder’’ was included here but
                                           counted if the individual or family                     for human habitation. There is nothing                not in the definition of ‘‘disability’’
                                           moves two or more times within 60                       in the statutory definition to suggest that           included in the McKinney-Vento Act.
                                           days. Another commenter suggested that                  certain people should qualify as                      Other commenters referenced the
                                           in addition to periods of living in                     chronically homeless even if they are                 Homeless Management Information
                                                                                                   currently living in transitional housing              System Data Standards and
                                           ‘‘doubled up’’ situations, the definition
                                                                                                   or in ‘‘doubled up’’ locations as opposed             recommended that they be consistent.
                                           should also include those living in
                                                                                                   to emergency shelters, safe havens, or                   Another commenter suggested that
                                           unsuitable housing for long periods of                                                                        the language be revised to say that a
                                                                                                   places not meant for human habitation.
                                           time, such as old mobile homes or                                                                             chronically homeless person is a person
                                                                                                   Therefore, HUD has decided not to
                                           cabins without electricity and sewage.                                                                        who has been diagnosed with a
                                                                                                   expand the qualifying residences
                                           Another commenter suggested that the                                                                          condition as opposed to saying can be
                                                                                                   beyond the places explicitly mentioned
                                           definition include ‘‘a person or family                                                                       diagnosed, so that it is more definitive.
                                                                                                   in paragraphs (1) and (2) of the statute.
                                           who does not have a permanent                              Regarding HUD–VASH, specifically,                     Finally, one commenter said that the
                                           residence AND has moved two or more                     the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs               requirement to have a disability
                                           times in the past 60 days.’’                            (VA) determines chronic homeless                      determination for each of the identified
                                              Several commenters asked HUD to                      status at the initial intake to VA                    disabilities will cause an underreporting
                                           consider stays in transitional housing                  homeless services. Therefore, veterans                of disabilities, which will result in an
                                           towards a person’s homeless history                     who qualify as chronically homeless at                underreporting of chronic
                                           when determining an individual or                       initial intake will maintain that status              homelessness.
                                           family’s chronically homeless status.                   throughout the episode of care, even if                  HUD Response: The language
                                           The commenters had various                              they are served in a VA program that is               included in the proposed definition of
                                           suggestions about how such stays could                  characterized as transitional housing                 ‘‘chronically homeless’’ regarding the
                                           be incorporated. One commenter                          immediately prior to entry into HUD–                  types of conditions a person must have
                                           suggested that stays of 90 days or less                 VASH.                                                 in order to qualify as chronically
                                           in transitional housing should not                         Comment: Clarification of how the                  homeless comes from the statute. HUD
                                           constitute as a break. Similarly, another               word ‘‘continuously’’ is defined in the               analyzed the list of conditions included
                                           commenter asked HUD to consider                         phrase ‘‘continuously homeless for at                 in the statute in comparison with those
                                           including transitional housing programs                 least one year.’’ A commenter asked                   included under the definition of
                                           in the definition of ‘‘institutional care               how HUD is defining the word                          ‘‘homeless individual with a disability’’
                                           facility,’’ which would allow stays in                  ‘‘continuously’’ in the phrase                        under the Act and determined that each
                                           transitional housing for 90 days or less                ‘‘continuously homeless for at least one              of the ‘‘conditions’’ included under the
                                           to not constitute as a break in                         year’’ in the definition of ‘‘chronically             statutory definition of ‘‘chronically
                                           homelessness. Another commenter                         homeless.’’                                           homeless’’ are also included under the
                                           proposed that the definition be                            HUD Response: HUD has clarified                    definition of ‘‘homeless individual with
                                           expanded so that persons who have                       that a break in homelessness is defined               a disability.’’ Because an individual
                                           been living in transitional housing, for                as 7 or more consecutive nights in a                  with one or more of the ‘‘conditions’’
                                           any period of time, may also be                         place that does not qualify as a place not            included under the statutory definition
                                           considered chronically homeless.                        meant for human habitation, a safe                    of ‘‘chronically homeless’’ would
                                           Finally, one commenter was concerned                    haven, or an emergency shelter and,                   qualify as a ‘‘homeless individual with
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                                           that excluding time in transitional                     therefore, does not consider it to be                 a disability’’ under the Act, and because
                                           housing would disadvantage homeless                     necessary to define the word                          HUD wants to clarify that chronically
                                           veterans who would otherwise be                         ‘‘continuously.’’                                     homeless individuals and families are
                                           eligible for the HUD-Veterans Affairs                      Comment: Clarification is needed on                eligible for permanent supportive
                                           Supportive Housing (HUD–VASH)                           ‘‘conditions’’ versus ‘‘disability.’’                 housing, which under the Continuum of
                                           program because many of those veterans                  Several commenters wrote about                        Care Program interim rule means


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                                           75802             Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 233 / Friday, December 4, 2015 / Rules and Regulations

                                           ‘‘permanent housing in which                               HUD Response: HUD disagrees with                   ‘‘An individual who has been residing
                                           supportive services are provided to                     this recommendation. The statute does                 in an institutional care facility. . ..’’ to
                                           assist homeless persons with a disability               not include an income variable for                    ‘‘An individual who is residing in an
                                           to live independently,’’ HUD has                        either the definition of ‘‘homeless’’ or              institutional care facility. . .’’
                                           replaced the list of ‘‘conditions’’ found               ‘‘chronically homeless’’ and HUD does                    HUD Response: HUD disagrees that
                                           in the proposed rule with the                           not seek to expand either definition to               this rewording is necessary. The phrase
                                           requirement that an individual must                     include this component.                               ‘‘has been residing in an institutional
                                           meet the definition of ‘‘homeless                          Comment: Provide guidance on what                  care facility’’ encompasses both the
                                           individual with a disability’’ in the Act.              is meant by ‘‘institution.’’ One                      recent past and the current living
                                           In addition, HUD has added to the                       commenter stated that HUD should                      situation of the individual and describes
                                           Continuum of Care Program interim rule                  provide clear guidance on what                        persons who are currently living or
                                           recordkeeping requirements for                          constitutes an ‘‘institution.’’ Other                 residing in an institutional care facility
                                           documenting the disability, and has                     commenters suggested that HUD                         and whose total current stay in that
                                           created standards for collecting                        include foster care in the definition of              facility will be fewer than 90 days.
                                           information on disability in the                        an institution and clarify that temporary                Comment: Difficulty in documenting
                                           Homeless Management Information                         placement in child welfare systems and                periods of homelessness. Many
                                           System Data Standards that are                          foster care should constitute as a break              commenters expressed concern that it
                                           consistent with this definition.                        in homelessness.                                      would be difficult to document or verify
                                              Regarding the comment related to the                    HUD Response: HUD acknowledges                     the time period of homelessness
                                           phrase ‘‘can be diagnosed’’ found in the                that clarification of institutional care              required in the proposed definition of
                                           proposed rule, HUD decided to replace                   facility is necessary, however, rather                ‘‘chronically homeless.’’ Some
                                           the list of ‘‘conditions’’ found in the                 than establishing a fixed set of                      commenters stated that it would be
                                           proposed rule with the requirement that                 institutional care facilities in the final            difficult to verify where homeless
                                           an individual must meet the definition                  rule, HUD intends to issue guidance on                individuals or families have slept if the
                                           of ‘‘homeless individual with a                         the meaning of ‘‘institutional care                   individual or family had not had regular
                                           disability’’ in the Act. Therefore, the                 facility.’’                                           interaction with a homeless service
                                           phrase ‘‘can be diagnosed’’ is not found                   Comment: Consistently refer to stays               provider. Other commenters stated that
                                           in the final rule. It should be noted,                  in institutions that do not constitute as             chronically homeless individuals and
                                           however, that for the purposes of                       a break in homelessness for purposes of               families would not be able to remember
                                           recordkeeping, the final rule permits                   defining ‘‘chronically homeless’’ as                  or provide documentation for the exact
                                           evidence of a disability to be                          either ‘‘90 days or less’’ or ‘‘fewer than            period of time during which they had
                                           documented using an intake staff-                       90 days.’’ One commenter stated that                  been homeless. Several commenters
                                           recorded observation of disability that,                HUD should be consistent when                         suggested that self-certification by the
                                           no later than 45 days of the application                referencing institutional stays because               head of household of homeless status
                                           for assistance, is confirmed and                        ‘‘90 days or less’’ in paragraph (1)(ii) of           should be sufficient for documenting
                                           accompanied by evidence in 24 CFR                       the definition is not the same as ‘‘fewer             homeless status and history. Many
                                           578.103(a)(4)(i)(B)(1), (2), (3), or (5).               than 90 days’’ in paragraph (2) of this               commenters expressed concern that the
                                              Finally, regarding the last comment,                 definition.                                           requirement to track and verify
                                           there is no such ‘‘requirement to have a                   HUD Response: HUD agrees that the                  cumulative lengths of homelessness
                                           disability determination for each of the                language around stays in an institution               would place an undue burden on
                                           identified disabilities.’’ An adult head of             included in the proposed definition was               homeless service providers, particularly
                                           household is only required to meet the                  inconsistent. The definition in this rule             in rural areas where there are fewer
                                           definition of ‘‘homeless individual with                has been revised to clarify that an                   institutions or shelters. Commenters
                                           a disability’’ as defined in section 401(9)             individual can be considered                          also requested that the final rule include
                                           of the McKinney-Vento Act in order to                   chronically homeless if they are residing             specific guidance on how to document
                                           meet the definition of ‘‘chronically                    in or have a history of residing in an                homeless status and history, particularly
                                           homeless’’ and the recipient is only                    institution for fewer than 90 days,                   for persons that have been unsheltered.
                                           required to keep on file evidence of the                where the individual or family resided                Finally, several commenters expressed
                                           qualifying disabling condition as HUD                   in a place not meant for human                        concern that the definition would make
                                           has clarified in the recordkeeping                      habitation, in a safe haven, or in an                 counting chronically homeless persons
                                           requirements.                                           emergency shelter immediately prior to                in the Point-in-Time counts more
                                              Rule Clarification: To provide for a                 entering the institution.                             difficult because enumerators will not
                                           more uniform definition, this final rule                   Rule clarification: HUD has revised                have sufficient time to determine
                                           revised the language in paragraph (3) of                the definition of ‘‘chronically homeless’’            lengths of homelessness.
                                           the definition of ‘‘chronically homeless’’              to state that a homeless individual with                 HUD Response: After reviewing the
                                           to state that to be considered chronically              a disability may be considered to be                  public comments, HUD acknowledges
                                           homeless a family must have an adult                    chronically homeless if they live in an               the lack of recordkeeping requirements
                                           head of household (or a minor head of                   institutional care facility, as long as the           for chronically homeless status in the
                                           household if no adult is present in the                 individual has been living there for                  proposed rule caused confusion and
                                           household) who meets the criteria of                    fewer than 90 days and had been living                concern and HUD agrees it must provide
                                           ‘‘homeless individual with a disability’’               in a place not meant for human                        specific guidance on documentation
                                           as defined in section 401(9) of the                     habitation, a safe haven, or an                       requirements for projects that are
                                           McKinney-Vento Act.                                     emergency shelter prior to entering the               required to serve the chronically
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                                              Comment: The definition of                           institutional care facility.                          homeless. For this reason, the final rule
                                           ‘‘chronically homeless’’ should include                    Comment: Define residence in                       includes a section on recordkeeping
                                           an income variable. A commenter                         institutional care facility as present and            requirements. When creating the
                                           recommended that HUD add an income                      not past residence. A commenter                       recordkeeping requirements, HUD
                                           variable as an indicator of chronic                     suggested that HUD change the wording                 acknowledged many of the potential
                                           homelessness.                                           in paragraph (2) of the definition from               difficulties expressed by the


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                                                             Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 233 / Friday, December 4, 2015 / Rules and Regulations                                        75803

                                           commenters might occur if the burden-                   expressed concern that if there is no                 individual’s ‘‘chronically homeless’’
                                           of-proof is too high. Therefore, the                    penalty for lying by the program                      status, the additional burden of
                                           language in the recordkeeping section                   participants about the length of time                 obtaining these records will ensure that
                                           will allow for the period of                            homeless, there is likely to be fraud.                communities are appropriately targeting
                                           homelessness to be documented by a                        HUD Response: In general, HUD                       HUD funds to those with the greatest
                                           self-certification by the head of                       expects that all homeless service                     need.
                                           household seeking assistance on a                       providers will exercise due diligence                    The Office of Management and Budget
                                           limited basis. In rare instances where                  when documenting periods of                           (OMB) reviewed this rule under
                                           persons have been unsheltered and out                   homelessness. The final rule includes                 Executive Order 12866, ‘‘Regulatory
                                           of contact for long periods of time, the                recordkeeping requirements that will                  Planning and Review.’’ This rule was
                                           recordkeeping requirements provide                      require third-party documentation                     determined to be a ‘‘significant
                                           that up to the full period of                           where it is available, but allows for self-           regulatory action,’’ as defined in section
                                           homelessness could be documented by                     certification by the head of household                3(f) of the order (although not an
                                           a self-certification by the individual or               seeking assistance in certain instances.              economically significant regulatory
                                           head of household seeking assistance,                     Rule clarification: To clarify that HUD             action under the order). The docket file
                                           however, this accommodation is limited                  expects Continuum of Care Program                     is available for public inspection in the
                                           to no more than 25 percent of all                       recipients and subrecipients                          Regulations Division, Office of the
                                           chronically homeless individuals and                    documenting chronic homeless status to                General Counsel, 451 7th Street SW.,
                                           families assisted. HUD determined that                  obtain third-party documentation                      Room 10276, Washington, DC 20410–
                                           25 percent was a reasonable limit for                   whenever possible, HUD has established                0500. Due to security measures at the
                                           this accommodation as it is consistent                  § 578.103(a)(4) to incorporate                        HUD Headquarters building, please
                                           with a previous policy used by HUD                      recordkeeping requirements for the                    schedule an appointment to review the
                                           that limited the percentage of program                  definition of ‘‘chronically homeless’’                docket file by calling the Regulations
                                           participants in transitional housing                    and to provide that the order of priority             Division at 202–402–3055 (this is not a
                                           funded through the Supportive Housing                   for documenting chronically homeless                  toll-free number). Individuals with
                                           Program who could be assisted for                       status is third-party documentation first,            speech or hearing impairments may
                                           longer than 2 years. Further, the                       intake worker observations second, and                access this number via TTY by calling
                                           recordkeeping section clarifies that                    certification from the person seeking                 the Federal Relay Service at 800–877–
                                           homeless service providers are not                      assistance third. In addition, HUD has                8339 (this is a toll-free number).
                                           required to verify every day of                         clarified that, except for in limited
                                           homelessness in a given month but                                                                             Information Collection Requirements
                                                                                                   circumstances, at least 9 months of the
                                           instead, that a single encounter with a                 homeless occasion(s) must be                            The information collection
                                           homeless service provider in a given                    documented with third-party                           requirements contained in this final rule
                                           month would be sufficient third-party                   documentation.                                        have been submitted to OMB under the
                                           evidence that the individual or family                                                                        Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44
                                           has been homeless for the entire month,                 VI. Findings and Certifications                       U.S.C. 3501–3520) and assigned OMB
                                           unless there is evidence that the                       Regulatory Planning and Review                        control number 2506–0112. In
                                           individual or family had a break of at                                                                        accordance with the Paperwork
                                           least 7 consecutive nights in their                       This final rule establishes a regulatory            Reduction Act, an agency may not
                                           homeless occasion during that month                     definition for the term ‘‘chronically                 conduct or sponsor, and a person is not
                                           (e.g., was housed with a friend or family               homeless.’’ This rule focuses on persons              required to respond to, a collection of
                                           member). HUD does not expect                            with the longest histories of                         information, unless the collection
                                           Continuums of Care to document a                        homelessness to ensure that funds are                 displays a currently valid OMB control
                                           person’s chronically homeless status                    targeted to providing permanent                       number.
                                           when conducting the annual Point-in-                    supportive housing solutions for these
                                                                                                   individuals and families who are                      Environmental Impact
                                           Time count. HUD will provide
                                           clarification and guidance regarding                    chronically homeless, consistent with                    This rule does not direct, provide for
                                           how to enumerate persons experiencing                   the statutory definition of the term                  assistance or loan and mortgage
                                           chronic homelessness through notices                    established in the McKinney-Vento Act.                insurance for, or otherwise govern or
                                           and other guidance in advance of the                    This definition will also ensure that                 regulate, real property acquisition,
                                           Point-in-Time count.                                    communities are using the same criteria               disposition, leasing, rehabilitation,
                                              Rule clarification. To clarify the                   in determining whether a person is                    alteration, demolition, or new
                                           records HUD expects Continuum of Care                   chronically homeless, and that HUD                    construction, or establish, revise, or
                                           Program recipients and subrecipients to                 receives consistent and accurate                      provide for standards for construction or
                                           maintain when they are required to                      information nationwide.                               construction materials, manufactured
                                           serve chronically homeless individuals                    This new definition will use existing               housing, or occupancy. Accordingly,
                                           and families, HUD has revised                           recordkeeping requirements for the                    under 24 CFR 50.19(c)(1), this rule is
                                           § 578.103(a)(4) to incorporate                          Continuum of Care Program to                          categorically excluded from
                                           recordkeeping requirements for the                      document the homeless status of                       environmental review under the
                                           definition of ‘‘chronically homeless.’’ In              program participants, but adds that such              National Environmental Policy Act of
                                           addition, as a result of incorporating a                documentation covers a program                        1969 (42 U.S.C. 4321).
                                           new paragraph (4) in § 578.103(a), the                  participant’s homelessness status over a
                                           remainder of § 578.103(a) has been                      specific time period—at least 1 year or               Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
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                                           reordered and HUD has amended                           on at least 4 separate occasions in the                  The Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
                                           § 578.87(b)(4) to update the reference                  last 3 years—to document the                          of 1995 (2 U.S.C. 1531–1538) (UMRA)
                                           from § 578.103(a)(13) to                                chronically homeless status of program                establishes requirements for Federal
                                           § 578.103(a)(14).                                       participants. While in some instances                 agencies to assess the effects of their
                                              Comment: If there is no penalty for                  additional program participant records                regulatory actions on State, local, and
                                           lying there will be fraud. A commenter                  will need to be obtained to identify an               tribal governments and on the private


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                                           75804             Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 233 / Friday, December 4, 2015 / Rules and Regulations

                                           sector. This rule does not impose a                     PART 91—CONSOLIDATED                                    Authority: 42 U.S.C. 11371 et seq., 42
                                           Federal mandate on any State, local, or                 SUBMISSIONS FOR COMMUNITY                             U.S.C. 3535(d).
                                           tribal government, or on the private                    PLANNING AND DEVELOPMENT                              ■  4. In § 578.3, the definition of
                                           sector, within the meaning of UMRA.                     PROGRAMS                                              ‘‘Chronically homeless’’ is revised to
                                                                                                                                                         read as follows:
                                           Regulatory Flexibility Act                              ■ 1. The authority citation for 24 CFR
                                                                                                   part 91 continues to read as follows:                 § 578.3    Definitions.
                                              The Regulatory Flexibility Act (5                                                                          *       *    *     *     *
                                           U.S.C. 601 et seq.) generally requires an                 Authority: 42 U.S.C. 3535(d), 3601–3619,
                                                                                                   5301–5315, 11331–11388, 12701–12711,                     Chronically homeless means:
                                           agency to conduct a regulatory                                                                                   (1) A ‘‘homeless individual with a
                                                                                                   12741–12756, and 12901–12912.
                                           flexibility analysis of any rule subject to                                                                   disability,’’ as defined in section 401(9)
                                           notice and comment rulemaking                           ■  2. In § 91.5, the definition of                    of the McKinney-Vento Homeless
                                           requirements, unless the agency certifies               ‘‘Chronically homeless’’ is revised to                Assistance Act (42 U.S.C. 11360(9)),
                                           that the rule will not have a significant               read as follows:                                      who:
                                           economic impact on a substantial                        § 91.5   Definitions.
                                                                                                                                                            (i) Lives in a place not meant for
                                           number of small entities. This rule                                                                           human habitation, a safe haven, or in an
                                                                                                   *       *    *     *     *                            emergency shelter; and
                                           solely addresses the definition of
                                                                                                      Chronically homeless means:                           (ii) Has been homeless and living as
                                           ‘‘chronically homeless.’’ The purpose of
                                                                                                      (1) A ‘‘homeless individual with a                 described in paragraph (1)(i) of this
                                           this rule is to determine the universe of               disability,’’ as defined in section 401(9)
                                           individuals and families who qualify as                                                                       definition continuously for at least 12
                                                                                                   of the McKinney-Vento Homeless                        months or on at least 4 separate
                                           ‘‘chronically homeless’’ under the                      Assistance Act (42 U.S.C. 11360(9)),
                                           McKinney-Vento Act. Given the narrow                                                                          occasions in the last 3 years, as long as
                                                                                                   who:                                                  the combined occasions equal at least 12
                                           scope of this rule, HUD has determined                     (i) Lives in a place not meant for                 months and each break in homelessness
                                           that it would not have a significant                    human habitation, a safe haven, or in an              separating the occasions included at
                                           economic impact on a substantial                        emergency shelter; and                                least 7 consecutive nights of not living
                                           number of small entities.                                  (ii) Has been homeless and living as               as described in paragraph (1)(i). Stays in
                                           Executive Order 13132, Federalism                       described in paragraph (1)(i) of this                 institutional care facilities for fewer
                                                                                                   definition continuously for at least 12               than 90 days will not constitute as a
                                              Executive Order 13132 (entitled                      months or on at least 4 separate                      break in homelessness, but rather such
                                           ‘‘Federalism’’) prohibits an agency from                occasions in the last 3 years, as long as             stays are included in the 12-month total,
                                           publishing any rule that has federalism                 the combined occasions equal at least 12              as long as the individual was living or
                                           implications if the rule either imposes                 months and each break in homelessness                 residing in a place not meant for human
                                           substantial direct compliance costs on                  separating the occasions included at                  habitation, a safe haven, or an
                                           State and local governments and is not                  least 7 consecutive nights of not living              emergency shelter immediately before
                                           required by statute or the rule preempts                as described in paragraph (1)(i). Stays in            entering the institutional care facility;
                                           State law, unless the agency meets the                  institutional care facilities for fewer                  (2) An individual who has been
                                           consultation and funding requirements                   than 90 days will not constitute as a                 residing in an institutional care facility,
                                                                                                   break in homelessness, but rather such                including a jail, substance abuse or
                                           of section 6 of the Executive order. This
                                                                                                   stays are included in the 12-month total,             mental health treatment facility,
                                           final rule does not have federalism
                                                                                                   as long as the individual was living or               hospital, or other similar facility, for
                                           implications and does not impose
                                                                                                   residing in a place not meant for human               fewer than 90 days and met all of the
                                           substantial direct compliance costs on                  habitation, a safe haven, or an                       criteria in paragraph (1) of this
                                           State and local governments nor                         emergency shelter immediately before                  definition, before entering that facility;
                                           preempt State law within the meaning                    entering the institutional care facility;             or
                                           of the Executive order.                                    (2) An individual who has been                        (3) A family with an adult head of
                                           List of Subjects                                        residing in an institutional care facility,           household (or if there is no adult in the
                                                                                                   including a jail, substance abuse or                  family, a minor head of household) who
                                           24 CFR Part 91                                          mental health treatment facility,                     meets all of the criteria in paragraph (1)
                                                                                                   hospital, or other similar facility, for              or (2) of this definition, including a
                                             Aged, Grant programs—housing and                      fewer than 90 days and met all of the                 family whose composition has
                                           community development, Homeless,                        criteria in paragraph (1) of this                     fluctuated while the head of household
                                           Individuals with disabilities, Low- and                 definition, before entering that facility;            has been homeless.
                                           moderate-income housing, Reporting                      or                                                    *       *    *     *     *
                                           and recordkeeping requirements.                            (3) A family with an adult head of
                                                                                                   household (or if there is no adult in the             § 578.87    [Amended]
                                           24 CFR Part 578
                                                                                                   family, a minor head of household) who                ■  5. In § 578.87, paragraph (b)(4) is
                                             Community development,                                meets all of the criteria in paragraph (1)            amended by removing the reference
                                           Community facilities, Grant programs—                   or (2) of this definition, including a                ‘‘§ 578.103(a)(13)’’ and adding in its
                                           housing and community development,                      family whose composition has                          place ‘‘§ 578.103(a)(14)’’.
                                           Grant program—social programs,                          fluctuated while the head of household                ■ 6. In § 578.103, redesignate
                                           Homeless, Reporting and recordkeeping                   has been homeless.                                    paragraphs (a)(4) through (17) as
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                                           requirements.                                           *       *    *     *     *                            paragraphs (a)(5) through (18) and add
                                                                                                                                                         paragraph (a)(4) to read as follows:
                                             Accordingly, for the reasons described                PART 578—CONTINUUM OF CARE
                                           in the preamble, parts 91 and 578 of title              PROGRAM                                               § 578.103    Recordkeeping requirements.
                                           24 of the Code of Federal Regulations                                                                           (a) * * *
                                           are amended as follows:                                 ■ 3. The authority citation for 24 CFR                  (4) Chronically homeless status. The
                                                                                                   part 578 continues to read as follows:                recipient must maintain and follow


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                                                             Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 233 / Friday, December 4, 2015 / Rules and Regulations                                          75805

                                           written intake procedures to ensure                        (ii) For paragraph (1)(i) of the                   entering the institutional care facility;
                                           compliance with the chronically                         ‘‘Chronically homeless’’ definition in                and
                                           homeless definition in § 578.3. The                     § 578.3, evidence that the individual                    (D) For at least 75 percent of the
                                           procedures must require documentation                   lives in a place not meant for human                  chronically homeless individuals and
                                           at intake of the evidence relied upon to                habitation, a safe haven, or an                       families assisted by a recipient in a
                                           establish and verify chronically                        emergency shelter, which includes:                    project during an operating year, no
                                           homeless status. The procedures must                       (A) An HMIS record or record from a                more than 3 months of living or residing
                                           establish the order of priority for                     comparable database;                                  in a place not meant for human
                                           obtaining evidence as third-party                          (B) A written observation by an                    habitation, a safe haven, or an
                                           documentation first, intake worker                      outreach worker of the conditions where               emergency shelter may be documented
                                           observations second, and certification                  the individual was living;                            using the evidence in paragraph
                                           from the person seeking assistance                         (C) A written referral by another
                                                                                                                                                         (a)(4)(ii)(D) of this section for each
                                           third. Records contained in an HMIS, or                 housing or service provider; or
                                                                                                      (D) Where evidence in paragraphs                   assisted chronically homeless
                                           comparable database used by victim                                                                            individual or family. This limitation
                                           service or legal service providers, are                 (a)(4)(ii)(A) through (C) of this section
                                                                                                   cannot be obtained, a certification by                does not apply to documentation of
                                           acceptable evidence of third-party                                                                            breaks in homelessness between
                                           documentation and intake worker                         the individual seeking assistance, which
                                                                                                   must be accompanied by the intake                     separate occasions, which may be
                                           observations if the HMIS, or comparable                                                                       documented entirely based on a self-
                                                                                                   worker’s documentation of the living
                                           database, retains an auditable history of                                                                     report by the individual seeking
                                                                                                   situation of the individual or family
                                           all entries, including the person who                                                                         assistance.
                                                                                                   seeking assistance and the steps taken to
                                           entered the data, the date of entry, and                                                                         (iv) If an individual qualifies as
                                                                                                   obtain evidence in paragraphs
                                           the change made, and if the HMIS                                                                              chronically homeless under paragraph
                                                                                                   (a)(4)(ii)(A) through (C).
                                           prevents overrides or changes of the                       (iii) For paragraph (1)(ii) of the                 (2) of the ‘‘Chronically homeless’’
                                           dates on which entries are made.                        ‘‘Chronically homeless’’ definition in                definition in § 578.3 because he or she
                                              (i) For paragraph (1) of the                         § 578.3, evidence must include a                      has been residing in an institutional
                                           ‘‘Chronically homeless’’ definition in                  combination of the evidence described                 care facility for fewer than 90 days and
                                           § 578.3, evidence that the individual is                in paragraphs (a)(4)(ii)(A) through (D) of            met all of the criteria in paragraph (1)
                                           a ‘‘homeless individual with a                          this section, subject to the following                of the definition, before entering that
                                           disability’’ as defined in section 401(9)               conditions:                                           facility, evidence must include the
                                           of the McKinney-Vento Homeless                             (A) Third-party documentation of a                 following:
                                           Assistance Act (42 U.S.C. 11360(9))                     single encounter with a homeless                         (A) Discharge paperwork or a written
                                           must include:                                           service provider on a single day within               or oral referral from a social worker,
                                              (A) Evidence of homeless status as set               1 month is sufficient to consider an                  case manager, or other appropriate
                                           forth in paragraph (a)(3) of this section;              individual as homeless and living or                  official of the institutional care facility
                                           and                                                     residing in a place not meant for human               stating the beginning and end dates of
                                              (B) Evidence of a disability. In                     habitation, a safe haven, or an                       the time residing in the institutional
                                           addition to the documentation required                  emergency shelter for the entire                      care facility. All oral statements must be
                                           under paragraph (a)(4)(i)(A) of this                    calendar month (e.g., an encounter on                 recorded by the intake worker; or
                                           section, the procedures must require                    May 5, 2015, counts for May 1—May 31,
                                           documentation at intake of the evidence                                                                          (B) Where the evidence in paragraph
                                                                                                   2015), unless there is evidence that                  (a)(4)(iv)(A) of this section is not
                                           relied upon to establish and verify the                 there have been at least 7 consecutive
                                           disability of the person applying for                                                                         obtainable, a written record of the intake
                                                                                                   nights not living or residing in a place              worker’s due diligence in attempting to
                                           homeless assistance. The recipient must                 not meant for human habitation, a safe
                                           keep these records for 5 years after the                                                                      obtain the evidence described in
                                                                                                   haven, or an emergency shelter during                 paragraph (a)(4)(iv)(A) and a
                                           end of the grant term. Acceptable                       that month (e.g., evidence in HMIS of a
                                           evidence of the disability includes:                                                                          certification by the individual seeking
                                                                                                   stay in transitional housing);                        assistance that states that he or she is
                                              (1) Written verification of the                         (B) Each break in homelessness of at               exiting or has just exited an institutional
                                           disability from a professional licensed                 least 7 consecutive nights not living or              care facility where he or she resided for
                                           by the state to diagnose and treat the                  residing in a place not meant for human               fewer than 90 days; and
                                           disability and his or her certification                 habitation, a safe haven, or in an
                                           that the disability is expected to be long-             emergency shelter between separate                       (C) Evidence as set forth in paragraphs
                                           continuing or of indefinite duration and                occasions must be documented with the                 (a)(4)(i) through (iii) of this section that
                                           substantially impedes the individual’s                  evidence described in paragraphs                      the individual met the criteria in
                                           ability to live independently;                          (a)(4)(ii)(A) through (D) of this section;            paragraph (1) of the definition for
                                              (2) Written verification from the                       (C) Evidence of stays in institutional             ‘‘Chronically homeless’’ in § 578.3,
                                           Social Security Administration;                         care facilities fewer than 90 days                    immediately prior to entry into the
                                              (3) The receipt of a disability check                included in the total of at least 12                  institutional care facility.
                                           (e.g., Social Security Disability                       months of living or residing in a place                  (v) If a family qualifies as chronically
                                           Insurance check or Veteran Disability                   not meant for human habitation, a safe                homeless under paragraph (3) of the
                                           Compensation);                                          haven, or an emergency shelter must                   ‘‘Chronically homeless’’ definition in
                                              (4) Intake staff-recorded observation                include the evidence in paragraphs                    § 578.3, evidence must include the
                                           of disability that, no later than 45 days               (a)(4)(iv)(A) through (B) of this section             evidence as set forth in paragraphs
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                                           from the application for assistance, is                 and evidence described in paragraphs                  (a)(4)(i) through (iv) of this section that
                                           confirmed and accompanied by                            (a)(4)(ii)(A) through (D) of this section             the adult head of household (or if there
                                           evidence in paragraph (a)(4)(i)(B)(1), (2),             that the individual was living or                     is no adult in the family, a minor head
                                           (3), or (5) of this section; or                         residing in a place not meant for human               of household) met all of the criteria in
                                              (5) Other documentation approved by                  habitation, a safe haven, or an                       paragraph (1) or (2) of the definition.
                                           HUD.                                                    emergency shelter immediately prior to                *      *      *    *     *


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                                           75806             Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 233 / Friday, December 4, 2015 / Rules and Regulations

                                             Dated: November 13, 2015.                             are required under BSEE’s existing                     gas resources through vigorous
                                           Harriet Tregoning,                                      regulations. This information will help                regulatory oversight and enforcement.
                                           Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary for                BSEE to better estimate future                            This final rule completes the
                                           Community Planning and Development.                     decommissioning costs related to OCS                   rulemaking for one of the issues covered
                                             Dated: Approved on November 24, 2015.                 leases, rights-of-way, and rights of use               by the proposed rule that is now under
                                                                                                   and easement. The Bureau of Ocean                      BSEE’s authority. Specifically, this final
                                           Nani A. Coloretti,
                                                                                                   Energy Management (BOEM) may then                      rule addresses the proposed
                                           Deputy Secretary.                                                                                              requirement that lessees submit
                                                                                                   use BSEE’s future decommissioning cost
                                           [FR Doc. 2015–30473 Filed 12–3–15; 8:45 am]                                                                    information regarding actual
                                                                                                   estimates to set necessary financial
                                           BILLING CODE 4210–67–P                                  assurance levels to minimize or                        expenditures incurred for certain
                                                                                                   eliminate the possibility that the                     decommissioning activities required
                                                                                                   government will incur decommissioning                  under the existing regulations.
                                           DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR                              liability.                                                The other issues covered by the
                                                                                                      In a proposed rule published on May                 proposed rule now under BSEE’s
                                           Bureau of Safety and Environmental                      27, 2009, the Minerals Management                      authority include proposed
                                           Enforcement                                             Service (BSEE’s predecessor agency)                    consolidation of mechanisms for
                                                                                                   proposed to require lessees to submit                  maintaining and extending leases past
                                           30 CFR Part 250                                         information (including supporting                      their primary terms and a proposed
                                           [Docket ID: BSEE–2015–0012; 15XE1700DX                  documentation) regarding expenditures                  requirement for submittal of pipeline-
                                           EEEE500000 EX1SF0000.DAQ000]                            actually incurred for certain mandatory                related reports after approval of an
                                                                                                   decommissioning activities within 30                   assignment or change of designated
                                           RIN 1014–AA24                                                                                                  operator (see 74 FR 25177–25178). BSEE
                                                                                                   days of completion of each activity.
                                                                                                   Based on BSEE’s review of public                       may issue a final rule in the future
                                           Oil and Gas and Sulphur Operations in
                                                                                                   comments on the proposed rule, the                     regarding the proposed consolidation of
                                           the Outer Continental Shelf—                                                                                   mechanisms for extending and
                                           Decommissioning Costs                                   final rule generally requires only
                                                                                                   certified summaries of the actual                      maintaining leases beyond their primary
                                           AGENCY:  Bureau of Safety and                           expenditures (without other supporting                 terms. Similarly, BSEE will decide at a
                                           Environmental Enforcement, Interior.                    documentation) for those                               later date whether to finalize the
                                           ACTION: Final rule.                                     decommissioning activities and extends                 proposed pipeline report requirement or
                                                                                                   the time period for submission of such                 to address that issue again, potentially
                                           SUMMARY:   This rule amends the                         reports to 120 days after completion of                in a broader rulemaking under 30 CFR
                                           regulations to require lessees and                      each such activity. BSEE may, however,                 part 250, Subpart J—Pipelines and
                                           owners of operating rights to submit                                                                           Pipeline Rights-of-Way. Therefore, these
                                                                                                   require additional supporting
                                           summaries of actual decommissioning                                                                            two issues are not included in this final
                                                                                                   information for specific
                                           expenditures incurred after completion                                                                         rule. In addition, this final rule does not
                                                                                                   decommissioning costs on a case-by-
                                           of certain decommissioning activities                                                                          include sections of the proposed rule
                                                                                                   case basis.
                                           for oil and gas and sulphur operations                                                                         that now fall under BOEM’s authority.
                                           on the Outer Continental Shelf. This                    I. Background
                                                                                                                                                          II. What This Final Rule Covers
                                           information will help BSEE to better                      On May 27, 2009, the former Minerals
                                           estimate future decommissioning costs                                                                             This final rule revises portions of
                                                                                                   Management Service (MMS) published a                   BSEE’s regulations at 30 CFR part 250,
                                           related to OCS leases, rights-of-way, and               Notice of Proposed Rulemaking in the
                                           rights of use and easement.                                                                                    Subpart Q—Decommissioning
                                                                                                   Federal Register (Leasing of Sulphur or                Activities. Specifically, the final rule
                                           DATES: This final rule becomes effective                Oil and Gas and Bonding Requirements                   requires lessees to submit certified
                                           on January 4, 2016.                                     in the Outer Continental Shelf) in order               summaries of actual decommissioning
                                           FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:                        to update and streamline the existing                  expenditures incurred for certain
                                           Lakeisha Harrison, Chief, Regulations                   OCS leasing regulations under the Outer                decommissioning activities that are
                                           and Standards Branch,                                   Continental Shelf Lands Act (OCSLA)                    required under Subpart Q (i.e., plugging
                                           Lakeisha.Harrison@bsee.gov, (703) 787–                  and to clarify implementation of the                   and abandonment of wells, removal of
                                           1552.                                                   Federal Oil and Gas Royalty                            platforms and other facilities, and site
                                           SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:                              Simplification and Fairness Act of 1996                clearance) 2 within 120 days of
                                                                                                   (see 74 FR 25177). In 2010 and 2011, the               completion of each such activity. This
                                           Table of Contents                                       Secretary of the Interior (Secretary)                  information will help BSEE better
                                           Executive Summary                                       reorganized MMS into three bureaus:                    estimate future decommissioning costs
                                           I. Background                                           BSEE, BOEM, and the Office of Natural                  related to OCS leases, rights-of-way, and
                                           II. What This Final Rule Covers                         Resources Revenue. The Secretary then
                                           III. Differences Between Proposed Rule and                                                                     rights of use and easement. BSEE’s
                                                                                                   delegated to BSEE certain                              decommissioning cost estimates may
                                                 Final Rule                                        responsibilities under OCSLA that were
                                           IV. Comments and Responses                                                                                     then be used by BOEM to set financial
                                           V. Procedural Matters
                                                                                                   formerly held by MMS, including                        assurance levels necessary to minimize
                                                                                                   responsibilities for overseeing
                                           Executive Summary                                       decommissioning.1 BSEE’s primary                         2 For example, §§ 250.1710 and 250.1711 require

                                              This final rule requires lessees and                 purpose as an agency is to promote                     wells to be plugged within a year after termination
                                           owners of operating rights (collectively,               safety, protect the environment, and                   of a lease or when ordered by BSEE, respectively.
wgreen on DSK2VPTVN1PROD with RULES




                                                                                                   ensure responsible development and                     Section 250.1725 requires platforms and other
                                           ‘‘lessees’’) to submit to the Bureau of                                                                        facilities to be removed within a year of termination
                                           Safety and Environmental Enforcement                    conservation of offshore oil and natural               of a lease unless the lessee has received approval
                                           (BSEE) summaries of actual                                                                                     to maintain the facility to conduct other activities.
                                                                                                      1 For convenience, hereafter we use the term        Section 250.1740 requires verification that a site has
                                           expenditures for decommissioning of                     ‘‘BSEE’’ rather than ‘‘MMS’’ in this document,         been cleared of obstructions within 60 days after a
                                           wells, platforms and other facilities on                where appropriate, when referring to past actions of   well has been plugged or a platform or other facility
                                           the Outer Continental Shelf (OCS) that                  MMS.                                                   has been removed.



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Document Created: 2015-12-14 13:52:49
Document Modified: 2015-12-14 13:52:49
CategoryRegulatory Information
CollectionFederal Register
sudoc ClassAE 2.7:
GS 4.107:
AE 2.106:
PublisherOffice of the Federal Register, National Archives and Records Administration
SectionRules and Regulations
ActionFinal rule.
ContactNorm Suchar, Director, Office of Special Needs Assistance Programs, Office of Community Planning and Development, Department of Housing and Urban Development, 451 7th Street SW., Washington, DC 20410-7000; telephone number 202-708-4300 (this is not a toll-free number). Hearing- and speech-impaired persons can access this number through TTY by calling the Federal Relay Service at 800-877-8339 (this is a toll-free number).
FR Citation80 FR 75791 
RIN Number2506-AC37
CFR Citation24 CFR 578
24 CFR 91
CFR AssociatedCommunity Development; Community Facilities; Grant Program-Social Programs; Aged; Grant Programs-Housing and Community Development; Homeless; Individuals with Disabilities; Low- and Moderate-Income Housing and Reporting and Recordkeeping Requirements

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