83_FR_40471 83 FR 40314 - Allocations, Common Application, Waivers, and Alternative Requirements for Community Development Block Grant Disaster Recovery Grantees

83 FR 40314 - Allocations, Common Application, Waivers, and Alternative Requirements for Community Development Block Grant Disaster Recovery Grantees

DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT

Federal Register Volume 83, Issue 157 (August 14, 2018)

Page Range40314-40325
FR Document2018-17365

On April 10, 2018, HUD allocated nearly $28 billion in Community Development Block Grant disaster recovery (CDBG-DR) funds appropriated by the Further Additional Supplemental Appropriations for Disaster Relief Requirements Act, 2018. HUD allocated $10.03 billion for the purpose of assisting in addressing unmet needs from disasters that occurred in 2017; $2 billion for improved electrical power systems in areas impacted by Hurricane Maria; and $15.9 billion for mitigation activities. This notice applies only to the $10.03 billion allocated for long-term recovery from disasters that occurred in 2017. A future notice will specify the requirements and process for the electrical power systems funding and the mitigation funds. This $10.03 billion allocation for addressing unmet recovery needs supplements the $7.4 billion in CDBG-DR funds appropriated by the Supplemental Appropriations for Disaster Relief Requirements Act, 2017, which allocated funds to Texas, Florida, Puerto Rico, and the U.S. Virgin Islands in response to qualifying disasters in 2017. In HUD's Federal Register notice published on February 9, 2018 (the ``Prior Notice''), HUD described those allocations, applicable waivers and alternative requirements, relevant statutory and regulatory requirements, the grant award process, criteria for action plan approval, and eligible disaster recovery activities.

Federal Register, Volume 83 Issue 157 (Tuesday, August 14, 2018)
[Federal Register Volume 83, Number 157 (Tuesday, August 14, 2018)]
[Notices]
[Pages 40314-40325]
From the Federal Register Online  [www.thefederalregister.org]
[FR Doc No: 2018-17365]


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DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT

[Docket No. FR-6109-N-01]


Allocations, Common Application, Waivers, and Alternative 
Requirements for Community Development Block Grant Disaster Recovery 
Grantees

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

ACTION: Notice.

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SUMMARY: On April 10, 2018, HUD allocated nearly $28 billion in 
Community Development Block Grant disaster recovery (CDBG-DR) funds 
appropriated by the Further Additional Supplemental Appropriations for 
Disaster Relief Requirements Act, 2018. HUD allocated $10.03 billion 
for the purpose of assisting in addressing unmet needs from disasters 
that occurred in 2017; $2 billion for improved electrical power systems 
in areas impacted by Hurricane Maria; and $15.9 billion for mitigation 
activities. This notice applies only to the $10.03 billion allocated 
for long-term recovery from disasters that occurred in 2017. A future 
notice will specify the requirements and process for the electrical 
power systems funding and the mitigation funds.
    This $10.03 billion allocation for addressing unmet recovery needs 
supplements the $7.4 billion in CDBG-DR funds appropriated by the 
Supplemental Appropriations for Disaster Relief Requirements Act, 2017, 
which allocated funds to Texas, Florida, Puerto Rico, and the U.S. 
Virgin Islands in response to qualifying disasters in 2017. In HUD's 
Federal Register notice published on February 9, 2018 (the ``Prior 
Notice''), HUD described those allocations, applicable waivers and 
alternative requirements, relevant statutory and regulatory 
requirements, the grant award process, criteria for action plan 
approval, and eligible disaster recovery activities.

DATES: Applicability Date: August 20, 2018.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Jessie Handforth Kome, Acting 
Director, Office of Block Grant Assistance, Department of Housing and 
Urban Development, 451 7th Street SW, Room 10166, Washington, DC 20410, 
telephone number 202-708-3587. Persons with hearing or speech 
impairments may access this number via TTY by calling the Federal Relay 
Service at 800-877-8339. Facsimile inquiries may be sent to Ms. Kome at 
202-708-0033. (Except for the ``800'' number, these telephone numbers 
are not toll-free.) Email inquiries may be sent to 
[email protected].

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: 

Table of Contents

I. Allocations
II. Use of Funds
III. Overview of Grant Process
    A. Appropriations Act (Pub. L. 115-123) Initial Action Plan 
Process
    B. Prior Appropriation (Pub. L. 115-56) Substantial Action Plan 
Amendment Process
IV. Applicable Rules, Statutes, Waivers, and Alternative 
Requirements
    A. Grant Administration
    B. Housing
    C. Infrastructure
    D. Economic Revitalization
V. Duration of Funding
VI. Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance
VII. Finding of No Significant Impact
Appendix A: Allocation Methodology

I. Allocations

    The Further Additional Supplemental Appropriations for Disaster 
Relief Requirements Act, 2018 (Division B, Subdivision 1 of the 
Bipartisan Budget Act of 2018), approved February 9, 2018 (Pub. L. 115-
123) (the ``Appropriations Act''), appropriated nearly $28 billion in 
CDBG-DR funds. Of this amount, up to $16 billion is available to 
address unmet disaster recovery needs through activities authorized 
under title I of the Housing and Community Development Act of 1974 (42 
U.S.C. 5301 et seq.) (HCD Act) related to disaster relief, long-term 
recovery, restoration of infrastructure and housing, economic 
revitalization, and mitigation in the ``most impacted and distressed'' 
areas (identified by HUD using the best available data) resulting from 
a major declared disaster that occurred in 2017. Amounts allocated for 
these purposes supplement $7.4 billion in CDBG-DR funds appropriated on 
September 8, 2017, by the Supplemental Appropriations for Disaster 
Relief Requirements, 2017 (Pub. L. 115-56) (the ``Prior 
Appropriation''). HUD allocated the first $7.4 billion in the Prior 
Notice (83 FR 5844, February 9, 2018). This notice amends the Prior 
Notice to ensure consistency across allocations for the same qualifying 
disasters, and to give effect to requirements of the Appropriations 
Act, including that funds allocated under the Prior Notice are subject 
to the terms and conditions applicable to CDBG-DR funds under the 
Appropriations Act.
    Based on the remaining unmet needs allocation methodology outlined 
in Appendix A, this notice allocates $10,030,484,000 for unmet disaster 
recovery needs under the Appropriations Act. The allocation amounts for 
unmet recovery needs included in Table 1 exclude the $2 billion set-
aside for Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands for electrical system 
improvements. The Appropriations Act further provided that of the 
nearly $28 billion, HUD must allocate not less than $12 billion for 
mitigation activities undertaken by grantees receiving an allocation of 
CDBG-DR funds for recovery from 2015, 2016, or 2017 disasters. On April 
10, 2018, HUD announced that after addressing remaining 2017 unmet 
needs, HUD would allocate an additional $3.9 billion for mitigation, 
bringing the amount designated for mitigation to $15.9 billion. A 
subsequent notice will govern the allocations for mitigation and the 
allocations for electrical power system enhancements and improvements.
    In accordance with the Appropriations Act, $10,000,000 of the total 
amounts appropriated under the Act will be transferred to the 
Department's Office of Community Planning and Development (CPD), 
Program Office Salaries and Expenses, for necessary costs of 
administering and overseeing CDBG-DR funds made available under the 
Appropriations Act and $15,000,000 is to be transferred to the CPD 
office to provide necessary capacity building and technical assistance 
to grantees. The Appropriations Act also provides $10,000,000 to the 
Department's Office of the Inspector General for oversight of the 
appropriated CDBG-DR funds.
    Although the Prior Notice requires each grantee to primarily 
consider and address its unmet housing recovery needs, grantees under 
this notice and the Prior Notice may also propose an allocation of 
funds that includes unmet economic revitalization and infrastructure 
needs that are unrelated to unmet housing needs after the grantee 
demonstrates in its needs assessment that there is no remaining unmet

[[Page 40315]]

housing need or that the remaining unmet housing need will be addressed 
by other sources of funds. The law provides that grants shall be 
awarded directly to a State, local government, or Indian tribe at the 
discretion of the Secretary. To comply with statutory direction that 
funds be used for disaster-related expenses in the most impacted and 
distressed areas, HUD allocates funds using the best available data 
that cover all eligible affected areas.
    Pursuant to the Appropriations Act, HUD has identified the most 
impacted and distressed areas based on the best available data for all 
eligible affected areas. A detailed explanation of HUD's allocation 
methodology is provided in Appendix A of this notice. For Puerto Rico 
and the U.S. Virgin Islands, all components of each territory are 
considered most impacted and distressed as defined in Table 1. For all 
other grantees, at least 80 percent of all allocations provided to the 
grantee under the Prior Notice and this notice must address unmet 
disaster needs within the HUD-identified most impacted and distressed 
areas, as identified in the last column of Table 1. These grantees may 
determine where to use the remaining 20 percent of their allocation, 
but that portion of the allocation may only be used to address unmet 
disaster needs in those areas that the grantee determines are ``most 
impacted and distressed'' and that received a presidential major 
disaster declaration pursuant to the disaster numbers listed in Table 
1.
    Based on further review of the impacts from the eligible disasters, 
and estimates of unmet need, Table 1 shows the areas and the minimum 
amount of funds from the combined allocations under the Appropriations 
Act and the Prior Appropriation that must be expended in the HUD-
identified most impacted and distressed areas. For some grantees funded 
under the Prior Appropriation, updated data and methodology led to 
additional areas being defined as most impacted and distressed. 
Therefore, the most impacted and distressed areas identified in Table 1 
of this notice amend the Prior Notice to replace the most impacted and 
distressed areas identified in Table 1 of the Prior Notice. The areas 
are listed alphabetically by county/municipio/island and numerically by 
Zip Code and govern all CDBG-DR funds allocated for unmet needs from 
the 2017 disasters identified in Table 1.

                                        Table 1--Allocations for Unmet Needs Under Public Laws 115-56 and 115-123
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                          Allocation
                                                                         under Public     Unmet needs      Combined       Minimum combined amount from
                                                                          Law 115-56      allocation    allocation for  Public Law 115-56 and Public Law
               Disaster No.                          Grantee              (covered by    under Public     unmet needs     115-123 that must be expended
                                                                           previous       Law 115-123    (Pub. L. 115-   for unmet needs recovery in the
                                                                         Notice 83 FR     (covered by   56 and Pub. L.   HUD-identified ``most impacted
                                                                             5844)      this Notice) *    115-123) *      and distressed'' areas listed
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------herein-------------
4344 and 4353............................  State of California........              $0    $124,155,000    $124,155,000  (No less than $99,324,000)
                                                                                                                         Sonoma and Ventura counties;
                                                                                                                         93108, 94558, 95422, 95470, and
                                                                                                                         95901 Zip Codes.
4337 and 4341............................  State of Florida...........     615,922,000     157,676,000     773,598,000  (No less than $618,878,400)
                                                                                                                         Brevard, Broward, Clay,
                                                                                                                         Collier, Duval, Hillsborough,
                                                                                                                         Lee, Miami-Dade, Monroe,
                                                                                                                         Orange, Osceola, Palm Beach,
                                                                                                                         Polk, St. Lucie, and Volusia
                                                                                                                         counties; 32084, 32091, 32136,
                                                                                                                         32145, 32771, 33440, 33523,
                                                                                                                         33825, 33870, 33935, and 34266
                                                                                                                         Zip Codes.
4294, 4297, and 4338.....................  State of Georgia...........               0      37,943,000      37,943,000  (No less than $30,354,400)
                                                                                                                         31520, 31548, and 31705 Zip
                                                                                                                         Codes.
4317.....................................  State of Missouri..........               0      58,535,000      58,535,000  (No less than $46,828,000)
                                                                                                                         63935, 63965, 64850, 65616, and
                                                                                                                         65775 Zip Codes.
4336 and 4339............................  Commonwealth of Puerto Rico   1,507,179,000   8,220,783,000   9,727,962,000  ($9,727,962,000) All components
                                                                                                                         of Puerto Rico.***
4332.....................................  State of Texas **..........   5,024,215,000     652,175,000   5,676,390,000  (No less than $4,541,112,000)
                                                                                                                         Aransas, Brazoria, Chambers,
                                                                                                                         Fayette, Fort Bend, Galveston,
                                                                                                                         Hardin, Harris, Jasper,
                                                                                                                         Jefferson, Liberty, Montgomery,
                                                                                                                         Newton, Nueces, Orange,
                                                                                                                         Refugio, San Jacinto, San
                                                                                                                         Patricio, Victoria, and Wharton
                                                                                                                         counties; 75979, 77320, 77335,
                                                                                                                         77351, 77414, 77423, 77482,
                                                                                                                         77493, 77979, and 78934 Zip
                                                                                                                         Codes.
4335 and 4340............................  U.S. Virgin Islands........     242,684,000     779,217,000   1,021,901,000  ($1,021,901,000) All components
                                                                                                                         of the U.S. Virgin Islands.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* The $2 billion required for electric grid enhancements and improvements are considered unmet needs for allocation purposes, but the allocation and use
  of the funds will be governed by a forthcoming notice and thus are not included in this table.
** State of Texas has also received $57.8 million for disaster recovery in respect to Hurricane Harvey from Public Law 115-31 that is not reflected
  here.
*** The areas defined as most impacted in HUD's formula calculation include more than 68 of Puerto Rico's 78 municipios as Most Impacted Counties and
  all 10 municipios that are non-Most Impacted Counties do each have a Most Impacted Zip Code. This results in nearly 100% coverage of Puerto Rico both
  in terms of geography and population, so for program implementation purposes, HUD has determined to include all areas of Puerto Rico as Most Impacted.

    Grantees may use up to 5 percent of the total combined grant award 
for grant administration. Therefore, for grantees other than Puerto 
Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands, HUD will include 80 percent of a 
grantee's expenditures for grant administration in its determination 
that 80 percent of the total award has been expended in the most 
impacted and distressed areas identified in Table 1. Additionally, for 
grantees other than Puerto Rico and U.S. Virgin Islands, expenditures 
for planning activities may be counted towards a grantee's 80 percent

[[Page 40316]]

expenditure requirement, provided that the grantee describes in its 
action plan how those planning activities benefit the HUD-identified 
most impacted and distressed areas.

II. Use of Funds

    Unless otherwise indicated, funds allocated under this notice and 
under the Prior Notice are subject to the requirements of this notice 
and the Prior Notice (as amended). This notice outlines additional 
requirements imposed by Public Laws 115-141 and 115-123 that apply to 
funds allocated under this notice and the Prior Notice. These 
requirements are outlined in section IV.A.1 and 2 of this notice.
    The Appropriations Act requires that prior to the obligation of 
CDBG-DR funds by the Secretary, a grantee shall submit a plan to HUD 
for approval detailing the proposed use of all funds. The plan must 
include the criteria for eligibility, and how the use of these funds 
will address long-term recovery and restoration of infrastructure and 
housing, and economic revitalization in the most impacted and 
distressed areas. This notice requires the grantee to submit an action 
plan that addresses unmet recovery needs related to the applicable 
disasters. Therefore, the action plan submitted in response to this 
notice must describe uses and activities that: (1) Are authorized under 
title I of the Housing and Community Development Act of 1974 (HCD Act) 
or allowed by a waiver or alternative requirement (see section IV 
below); and (2) respond to disaster-related impacts to infrastructure, 
housing, and economic revitalization in the most impacted and 
distressed areas. Additionally, grantees may include disaster related 
preparedness and mitigation measures as part of assisted activities as 
authorized pursuant to paragraph A.2.c.(4) of section VI of the Prior 
Notice. Grantees must conduct an assessment of community impacts and 
unmet needs to inform the plan and guide the development and 
prioritization of planned recovery activities, pursuant to paragraph 
A.2.a. in section VI of the Prior Notice, as amended in this notice.
    An alternative requirement established by the Prior Notice 
authorized the U.S. Virgin Islands to administer a CDBG-DR allocation 
in accordance with the regulatory and statutory provisions governing 
the State CDBG program, as modified by applicable waivers and 
alternative requirements. Therefore, all references to States and State 
grantees in this notice and the Prior Notice include the U.S. Virgin 
Islands.

III. Overview Grant Process

A. Appropriations Act (Pub. L. 115-123) Initial Action Plan Process

    Grantees receiving an initial allocation under this notice for 
disasters occurring in 2017 (California, Georgia, and Missouri) must 
submit an action plan per the requirements in section VI.A.2. of the 
Prior Notice not later than 120 days after the applicability date of 
this notice. All requirements of the Prior Notice related to the action 
plan submission apply except the public comment period, which has been 
extended to no less than 30 calendar days under this notice. Grantees 
must publish the action plan in a manner that affords citizens, 
affected local governments, and other interested parties a reasonable 
opportunity to examine the contents and provide feedback. The manner of 
publication must include, at a minimum, prominent posting on the 
grantee's official website for not less than 30 calendar days for 
public comment. These grantees must also submit the Financial 
Management and Grant Compliance submissions and the Pre-Award 
Implementation Plan per section VI.A.1 of the Prior Notice within 60 
days of the applicability date of this notice.

B. Prior Appropriation (Pub. L. 115-56) Substantial Amendment Process 
To Incorporate Additional Funds

    Each grantee that received an allocation pursuant to the Prior 
Appropriation (Texas, Florida, Puerto Rico, and U.S. Virgin Islands) is 
required to submit a substantial amendment amending the initial action 
plan that was submitted in response to the Prior Notice. The 
substantial amendment must be submitted not later than 90 days after 
the initial action plan is approved in whole or in part by HUD or not 
later than 90 days after the applicability date of this notice, 
whichever comes later. The substantial amendment must include the 
additional allocation of funds and address the requirements of this 
notice. For the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the substantial amendment 
must be reviewed for consistency with the Commonwealth's 12- and 24-
month economic and disaster recovery plan required by Section 21210 of 
Public Law 115-123, the Commonwealth's fiscal plan, and CDBG-DR 
eligibility. The certification of financial controls and procurement 
processes and the Department's determination of the adequacy of the 
grantee's implementation and capacity assessment pursuant to the Prior 
Notice, shall remain in effect for this allocation. Provided, however, 
that grantees shall be required to update the Financial Management and 
Grant Compliance submissions and the Pre-Award Implementation Plan per 
section VI.A.1 of the Prior Notice to reflect any material changes in 
the submissions.
    Additionally, each grantee that received an allocation under the 
Prior Notice must meet the following requirements to amend the initial 
action plan. These steps are only applicable to the substantial 
amendment process to add the additional allocation under this notice.
     Grantee must consult with affected citizens, stakeholders, 
local governments, and public housing authorities to determine updates 
to its needs assessment;
     Grantee must amend its initial action plan to update its 
impact and needs assessment, modify or create new activities, or 
reprogram funds. Each amendment must be highlighted, or otherwise 
identified within the context of the entire action plan. The beginning 
of every substantial amendment must include a: (1) Section that 
identifies exactly what content is being added, deleted, or changed; 
(2) chart or table that clearly illustrates where funds are coming from 
and where they are moving to; and (3) a revised budget allocation table 
that reflects all funds;
     Grantee must publish the substantial amendment to its 
previously approved action plan for disaster recovery in a manner that 
affords citizens, affected local governments, and other interested 
parties a reasonable opportunity to examine the amendment's contents 
and provide feedback. The manner of publication must include, at a 
minimum, prominent posting on the grantee's official website for not 
less than 30 calendar days for public comment (see section VI.A.4.e of 
the Prior Notice for details about the website requirements);
     Grantee must respond to public comment and submit its 
substantial amendment to HUD no later than 90 days after the grantee's 
initial action plan is approved in whole or in part by HUD or not later 
than 90 days after the applicability date of this notice, whichever 
comes later. The substantial amendment submitted to HUD must also be 
prominently posted on the grantee's official website;
     HUD will review the substantial amendment within 45 days 
from date of receipt and determine whether to approve the substantial 
amendment per criteria identified in this notice and the Prior Notice;
     HUD will send a substantial amendment approval letter, 
revised

[[Page 40317]]

grant conditions, and an amended unsigned grant agreement to the 
grantee. If the substantial amendment is not approved, a letter will be 
sent identifying its deficiencies; the grantee must then re-submit the 
substantial amendment within 45 days of the notification letter;
     Grantee must ensure that the HUD-approved substantial 
amendment and initial HUD-approved action plan are posted prominently 
on its official website. Each grantee's current version of its entire 
action plan must be accessible for viewing as a single document at any 
given point in time, rather than the public or HUD having to view and 
cross-reference changes among multiple amendments;
     Grantee must enter the activities from its published 
substantial amendment into the Disaster Recovery Grant Reporting (DRGR) 
system and submit the updated DRGR action plan (revised to reflect the 
substantial amendment) to HUD within the DRGR system;
     Grantee must sign and return the grant agreement to HUD;
     HUD will sign the grant agreement and revise the grantee's 
CDBG-DR line of credit amount to reflect the total amount of available 
funds;
     Grantee may draw down CDBG-DR funds from its line of 
credit after the Responsible Entity completes applicable environmental 
review(s) pursuant to 24 CFR part 58, or adopts another Federal 
agency's environmental review as authorized under the Appropriations 
Act and the Prior Appropriation, and, as applicable, receives from HUD 
the Authority to Use Grant Funds (AUGF) form and certification;
     Grantee must amend and submit its projection of CDBG-DR 
expenditures and performance outcomes with the substantial amendment.

IV. Applicable Rules, Statutes, Waivers, and Alternative Requirements

    This section of the notice describes rules, statutes, waivers, and 
alternative requirements that apply to allocations under this notice or 
the Prior Notice. The Secretary has determined that good cause exists 
for each waiver and alternative requirement established in this notice, 
and for the extension of waivers and alternative requirements in the 
Prior Notice to allocations made under this notice, and that the 
waivers and alternative requirements are not inconsistent with the 
overall purpose of the HCD Act.
    Grantees may request additional waivers and alternative 
requirements from the Department as needed to address specific needs 
related to their recovery activities. Waivers and alternative 
requirements are effective five (5) days after they are published in 
the Federal Register.

A. Grant Administration

    1. Applicability of waivers, alternative requirements, and other 
requirements. All funds allocated under the Prior Notice and this 
notice are subject to the requirements of this notice and the Prior 
Notice. The waivers, alternative requirements, and other provisions of 
the Prior Notice, as amended, are also incorporated and made applicable 
to funds allocated under this notice. The waivers and alternative 
requirements provide additional flexibility in program design and 
implementation to support full and swift recovery following the 
disasters, while also ensuring that statutory requirements under the 
Appropriations Act, the Prior Appropriation, as well as requirements in 
Public Laws 115-141 and 115-72, made applicable by the terms of the 
Appropriations Act and the Prior Appropriation, are met.
    2. Additional requirements and modifications of requirements in the 
Prior Notice. The following clarifications or modifications apply to 
all grantees in receipt of an allocation under this notice and to funds 
allocated under the Prior Notice:
    a. Substantial amendments for grantees receiving an allocation of 
funds under the Prior Notice. Grantees that received an allocation 
under the Prior Notice (Texas, Florida, Puerto Rico, and U.S. Virgin 
Islands) must submit a substantial amendment, including an updated 
needs assessment, per the requirements outlined in this notice, in 
addition to meeting the requirements for substantial amendments under 
the Prior Notice.
    b. Action plan and other submission requirements for grantees 
receiving an initial allocation under this notice. Grantees that did 
not receive an allocation under the Prior Notice (California, Georgia, 
and Missouri) shall be subject to deadlines for the submission of 
financial controls and procurement processes, implementation plans, and 
action plans, as established in the Prior Notice, which shall be based 
upon the applicability date of this notice. Grantees that did not 
receive an allocation under the Prior Notice must submit an action plan 
not later than 120 days after the applicability date of this notice.
    c. Cost or price analysis. References in the Prior Notice to ``an 
evaluation of the cost and price of a product or service'' and to the 
``evaluation of the cost or price of a product or service'' shall be 
read to require ``an evaluation of the cost or price of a product or 
service.''
    d. Additional requirements for the comprehensive disaster recovery 
website. The Prior Notice requires all grantees to maintain a 
comprehensive disaster recovery website. The Appropriations Act 
requires that certain content be included on a CDBG-DR grantee's 
website. These requirements apply to funds allocated under this notice 
and the Prior Notice. Each grantee must maintain on its comprehensive 
disaster recovery website information containing common reporting 
criteria established by the Department that permits individuals and 
entities awaiting assistance and the general public to see how all 
grant funds are used, including copies of all relevant procurement 
documents, grantee administrative contracts, and details of ongoing 
procurement processes, as determined by the Secretary. HUD will post 
guidance related to this requirement on the HUD exchange website.
    e. Working capital to aid in recovery. The Appropriations Act 
provides that grantees may establish grant programs to assist small 
businesses for working capital purposes to aid in recovery with funds 
allocated under this notice or the Prior Notice. This proviso does not 
establish a new eligible activity. All funds to assist small businesses 
for working capital must be expended for eligible CDBG activities that 
meet a national objective and the other requirements applicable to the 
use of funds.
    f. Underwriting. Notwithstanding section 105(e)(1) of the HCD Act, 
no funds allocated under this notice or the Prior Notice may be 
provided to a for-profit entity for an economic development project 
under section 105(a)(17) unless such project has been evaluated and 
selected in accordance with guidelines developed by HUD pursuant to 
section 105(e)(2) for evaluating and selecting economic development 
projects. States and their subrecipients are required to comply with 
the underwriting guidelines in Appendix A to 24 CFR part 570 if they 
are using grant funds to provide assistance to a for-profit entity for 
an economic development project under section 105(a)(17) of the HCDA. 
The underwriting guidelines are found at Appendix A of Part 570. 
https://www.ecfr.gov/cgi-bin/text-idx?SID=88dced3d630ad9fd8ab91268dd829f1e&mc=true&node=ap24.3.570_1913.a&rgn=div9.
    g. Limitation on use of funds for eminent domain. No funds 
allocated under this notice or the Prior Notice

[[Page 40318]]

may be used to support any Federal, State, or local projects that seek 
to use the power of eminent domain, unless eminent domain is employed 
only for a public use. For purposes of this paragraph, public use shall 
not be construed to include economic development that primarily 
benefits private entities. Any use of funds for mass transit, railroad, 
airport, seaport or highway projects, as well as utility projects which 
benefit or serve the general public (including energy-related, 
communication-related, water-related, and wastewater-related 
infrastructure), other structures designated for use by the general 
public or which have other common-carrier or public-utility functions 
that serve the general public and are subject to regulation and 
oversight by the government, and projects for the removal of an 
immediate threat to public health and safety or brownfields as defined 
in the Small Business Liability Relief and Brownfields Revitalization 
Act (Pub. L. 107-118) shall be considered a public use for purposes of 
eminent domain.
    3. Citizen participation waiver and alternative requirement. 
Section VI.A.4 of the Prior Notice established citizen participation 
requirements for input on grantee action plans and substantial 
amendments. To ensure adequate citizen participation and access to 
action plans and substantial amendments, the Department is deleting and 
replacing the first paragraph in section VI.A.4 and the entirety of 
section VI.A.4.a of the Prior Notice with the following to extend the 
minimum amount of time grantees are required to publish action plans 
and substantial amendments for public comment from 14 calendar days to 
at least 30 calendar days. These paragraphs shall apply to initial 
action plans and all substantial amendments submitted pursuant to this 
notice.
    ``4. Citizen participation waiver and alternative requirement. To 
permit a more streamlined process and ensure disaster recovery grants 
are awarded in a timely manner, provisions of 42 U.S.C. 5304(a)(2) and 
(3), 42 U.S.C. 12707, 24 CFR 570.486, 24 CFR 1003.604, and 24 CFR 
91.115(b) and (c), with respect to citizen participation requirements, 
are waived and replaced by the requirements below. The streamlined 
requirements do not mandate public hearings but do require the grantee 
to provide a reasonable opportunity (at least 30 days) for citizen 
comment and ongoing citizen access to information about the use of 
grant funds. The streamlined citizen participation requirements for a 
grant under this notice are:
    a. Publication of the action plan, opportunity for public comment, 
and substantial amendment criteria. Before the grantee adopts the 
action plan for this grant or any substantial amendment to the action 
plan, the grantee will publish the proposed plan or amendment. The 
manner of publication must include prominent posting on the grantee's 
official website and must afford citizens, affected local governments, 
and other interested parties a reasonable opportunity to examine the 
plan or amendment's contents. The topic of disaster recovery should be 
navigable by citizens from the grantee's (or relevant agency's) 
homepage. Grantees are also encouraged to notify affected citizens 
through electronic mailings, press releases, statements by public 
officials, media advertisements, public service announcements, and/or 
contacts with neighborhood organizations. Plan publication efforts must 
meet the effective communications requirements of 24 CFR 8.6 and other 
fair housing and civil rights requirements, such as the effective 
communication requirements under the Americans with Disabilities Act.
    Grantees are responsible for ensuring that all citizens have equal 
access to information about the programs, including persons with 
disabilities and limited English proficiency (LEP). Each grantee must 
ensure that program information is available in the appropriate 
languages for the geographic areas to be served and take appropriate 
steps to ensure effective communications with persons with disabilities 
pursuant to 24 CFR 8.6 and other fair housing and civil rights 
requirements, such as the effective communication requirements under 
the Americans with Disabilities Act. Since State grantees under this 
notice may make grants throughout the State, including to entitlement 
communities, States should carefully evaluate the needs of persons with 
disabilities and those with limited English proficiency. For assistance 
in ensuring that this information is available to LEP populations, 
recipients should consult the Final Guidance to Federal Financial 
Assistance Recipients Regarding Title VI, Prohibition Against National 
Origin Discrimination Affecting Limited English Proficient Persons, 
published on January 22, 2007, in the Federal Register (72 FR 2732) and 
at: https://www.lep.gov/guidance/HUD_guidance_Jan07.pdf
    Subsequent to publication of the action plan, the grantee must 
provide a reasonable time frame (again, no less than 30 days) and 
method(s) (including electronic submission) for receiving comments on 
the plan or substantial amendment. In its action plan, each grantee 
must specify criteria for determining what changes in the grantee's 
plan constitute a substantial amendment to the plan. At a minimum, the 
following modifications will constitute a substantial amendment: A 
change in program benefit or eligibility criteria; the addition or 
deletion of an activity; or the allocation or reallocation of a 
monetary threshold specified by the grantee in its action plan. The 
grantee may substantially amend the action plan if it follows the same 
procedures required in this notice for the preparation and submission 
of an action plan for disaster recovery.''
    4. Cost Verification. Section VI.A.2.a of the Prior Notice 
established the requirements for contents of action plans submitted in 
response to the Prior Notice and this notice. To further strengthen the 
ability of grantees to demonstrate that project costs funded with CDBG-
DR are necessary and reasonable, section VI.A.2.a of the Prior Notice 
is amended by adding a new paragraph (14) to read as follows. This 
requirement shall apply to the substantial amendment submitted by 
Puerto Rico, Texas, Florida, and the U.S. Virgin Islands pursuant to 
section IV.A.2.a of this notice:
    ``14. A description of the grantee's controls for assuring that 
construction costs are reasonable and consistent with market costs at 
the time and place of construction. The method and degree of analysis 
may vary dependent upon the circumstances surrounding a particular 
project (e.g., project type, risk, costs), but the description must 
address controls for housing projects involving eight or more units 
(whether new construction, rehabilitation, or reconstruction), economic 
revitalization projects (involving, construction, rehabilitation or 
reconstruction), and infrastructure projects. HUD may issue guidance to 
grantees and may require a grantee to verify cost reasonableness from 
an independent and qualified third-party architect, civil engineer, or 
construction manager.''
    5. Additional Specific Criteria and Conditions to Mitigate Risk. 
HUD is required to design an internal control plan for disaster relief 
funding based on standard guidance issued by the Director of the Office 
of Management and Budget on March 30, 2018, to address known internal 
control risks related to disaster funding provided under the 
Appropriations Act and the Prior Appropriation. Both the

[[Page 40319]]

Appropriations Act and the Prior Appropriation also require the 
Secretary to certify in advance of signing a grant agreement, that the 
grantee has proficient financial controls and procurement processes, 
and has established adequate procedures to prevent any duplication of 
benefits as defined by section 312 of the Robert T. Stafford Disaster 
Relief and Emergency Assistance Act (42 U.S.C. 5155), ensure timely 
expenditure of funds, maintain comprehensive websites regarding all 
disaster recovery activities assisted with these funds, and detect and 
prevent waste, fraud, and abuse of funds. Additionally, 2 CFR 200.205 
requires the Department to assess the risk of each grantee and 2 CFR 
200.207(a) provides that specific conditions may be placed on the grant 
award based upon that assessment of risk. To ensure the effective 
implementation of the internal controls discussed above, the Department 
is adding a new paragraph VI.A.32 to the Prior Notice. This paragraph 
will also apply to funds provided under this notice as well as the 
Prior Notice:
    ``32. Additional Criteria and Specific Conditions to Mitigate Risk. 
To ensure the effective implementation of the internal control plan 
required under the Appropriations Act and grantee implementation of the 
financial controls, procurement processes, and other procedures that 
are the subject of the certification by the Secretary, the Department 
has and may continue to establish specific criteria and conditions for 
each grant award as provided for at 2 CFR 200.205 and 200.207(a), 
respectively, to mitigate the risk of the grant. The Secretary shall 
specify any such criteria and the resulting conditions in the grant 
conditions governing the award. These criteria may include, but need 
not be limited to, a consideration of the internal control framework 
established by the grantee to ensure compliant implementation of its 
financial controls, procurement processes and payment of funds to 
eligible entities, as well as the grantee's risk management strategy 
for information technology systems established to implement CDBG-DR 
funded programs. Additionally, the Secretary may amend the grant 
conditions to mitigate risk of a grant award at any point at which the 
Secretary determines a condition to be required to protect the Federal 
financial interest or to advance recovery.''
    6. Clarification of Waiver of Section 414 of the Robert T. Stafford 
Disaster Relief and Emergency Assistance Act (42 U.S.C. 5121 et seq.). 
The Prior Notice established a waiver associated with Section 414 of 
the Stafford Act for homeowner occupants and tenants displaced because 
of the disaster. The waiver is applicable to ``CDBG-DR funded projects 
commencing more than one year after the date of the Presidentially 
declared disaster.'' The Department is amending this provision to 
clarify the point at which a project is determined to have 
``commenced,'' by amending paragraph VI.A.23.f of the Prior Notice by 
replacing it in its entirety with the following:
    ``f. Waiver of Section 414 of the Stafford Act. Section 414 of the 
Stafford Act (42 U.S.C. 5181) provides that ``Notwithstanding any other 
provision of law, no person otherwise eligible for any kind of 
replacement housing payment under the Uniform Relocation Assistance and 
Real Property Acquisition Policies Act of 1970 (Pub. L. 91-646) [42 
U.S.C. 4601 et seq.] [``URA''] shall be denied such eligibility as a 
result of his being unable, because of a major disaster as determined 
by the President, to meet the occupancy requirements set by [the 
URA].'' Accordingly, homeowner occupants and tenants displaced from 
their homes as a result of the identified disasters and who would have 
otherwise been displaced as a direct result of any acquisition, 
rehabilitation, or demolition of real property for a federally funded 
program or project may become eligible for a replacement housing 
payment notwithstanding their inability to meet occupancy requirements 
prescribed in the URA. Section 414 of the Stafford Act (including its 
implementing regulation at 49 CFR 24.403(d)(1)), is waived to the 
extent that it would apply to real property acquisition, rehabilitation 
or demolition of real property for a CDBG- DR funded project commencing 
more than one year after the date of the latest applicable 
Presidentially declared disaster undertaken by the grantees, or 
subrecipients, provided that the project was not planned, approved, or 
otherwise underway prior to the disaster. For purposes of this 
paragraph, a CDBG-DR funded project shall be determined to have 
commenced on the earliest of: (1) The date of an approved Request for 
Release of Funds and certification, or (2) the date of completion of 
the site-specific review when a program utilizes Tiering, or (3) the 
date of sign-off by the approving official when a project converts to 
exempt under 24 CFR 58.34(a)(12). The Department has surveyed other 
Federal agencies' interpretation and implementation of Section 414 and 
found varying views and strategies for long-term, post-disaster 
projects involving the acquisition, rehabilitation, or demolition of 
disaster-damaged housing. The Secretary has the authority to waive 
provisions of the Stafford Act and its implementing regulations that 
the Secretary administers in connection with the obligation of funds 
made available by this notice, or the grantees' use of these funds. The 
Department has determined that good cause exists for a waiver and that 
such waiver is not inconsistent with the overall purposes of title I of 
the HCD Act.
    (1) The waiver will simplify the administration of the disaster 
recovery process and reduce the administrative burden associated with 
the implementation of Stafford Act Section 414 requirements for 
projects commencing more than one year after the date of the 
Presidentially declared disaster considering most of such persons 
displaced by the disaster will have returned to their dwellings or 
found another place of permanent residence.
    (2) This waiver does not apply with respect to persons that meet 
the occupancy requirements to receive a replacement housing payment 
under the URA nor does it apply to persons displaced or relocated 
temporarily by other HUD-funded programs or projects. Such persons' 
eligibility for relocation assistance and payments under the URA is not 
impacted by this waiver.''
    7. Clarification of the Environmental Review requirements. The 
Prior Notice provided guidance on the adoption of another Federal 
agency's environmental review for CDBG-DR projects as permitted by the 
Prior Appropriation. The Appropriations Act goes beyond the Prior 
Appropriation and authorizes recipients of CDBG-DR funds under the 
Appropriations Act that use such funds to supplement Federal assistance 
provided under section 408(c)(4) of the Stafford Act to adopt, without 
review or public comment, any environmental review, approval, or permit 
performed by a Federal agency to satisfy responsibilities with respect 
to environmental review, approval or permit. Accordingly, the 
Department is amending paragraph VI.A.24.b of the Prior Notice by 
replacing it in its entirety with the following:
    ``b. Adoption of another agency's environmental review. In 
accordance with the Appropriations Act, grant recipients of Federal 
funds that use such funds to supplement Federal assistance provided 
under section 408(c)(4) as well as sections 402, 403, 404, 406, 407 or 
502 of the Stafford Act may adopt, without review or public comment, 
any environmental review, approval, or

[[Page 40320]]

permit performed by a Federal agency, and such adoption shall satisfy 
the responsibilities of the recipient with respect to such 
environmental review, approval, or permit that is required by the HCD 
Act. The grant recipient must notify HUD in writing of its decision to 
adopt another agency's environmental review. The grant recipient must 
retain a copy of the review in the grantee's environmental records.''
    8. Low- and moderate-income national objective standard 
(Commonwealth of Puerto Rico only). Section 102(a)(20) of the HCD Act 
defines ``persons of low and moderate income'' and ``low- and moderate 
income persons.'' Subparagraph (B) of this definition authorizes the 
Secretary to establish for any area percentages of median income that 
are higher or lower than the percentages defined as ``low- and 
moderate-income'' under 102(a)(20)(A), if the Secretary finds such 
variations to be necessary because of unusually high or low family 
incomes in such areas. Due to the unusually low incomes in Puerto Rico, 
residents that meet the CDBG program definition of ``low- and moderate-
income'' by having incomes of 80 percent AMI or less, also remain below 
the Federal poverty level. Therefore, the Department is increasing the 
income limits for low- and moderate-income persons in Puerto Rico, 
which will be listed in income tables posted on the HUD Exchange 
website. Under this adjustment, Puerto Rico may use these alternative 
income limits when determining that activities undertaken with CDBG-DR 
funds meet the low- and moderate-income benefit CDBG national objective 
criteria. These income limits apply only to the use of CDBG-DR funds 
under this notice and the Prior Notice.

B. Housing

    9. Modification of Affordability Periods. The Prior Notice imposed 
a twenty-year (20-year) affordability period for all rental properties 
assisted with CDBG-DR funds under the Prior Appropriation. The 
Department, however, is amending this requirement to apply the 
affordability requirements to rental projects as defined below. The 
Department is amending paragraph VI.B.34 of the Prior Notice by 
replacing it in its entirety with the following:
    ``34. Addressing Unmet Affordable Rental Housing Needs. The grantee 
must identify in its action plan how it will address the 
rehabilitation, reconstruction, replacement, and new construction of 
rental housing that is affordable to low- and moderate-income 
households in the most impacted and distressed areas and ensure that 
adequate funding from all available sources, including CDBG-DR grant 
funds, are dedicated to addressing the unmet needs identified in its 
action plan pursuant to paragraph A.2.a.(3) of section VI of this 
notice. To meet the low- and moderate-income housing national 
objective, affordable rental housing funded under this notice must be 
rented to a low- and moderate-income person at affordable rents. This 
notice requires grantees to impose the following minimum affordability 
periods enforced with recorded use restrictions, covenants, deed 
restrictions, or other mechanisms to ensure that rental housing remains 
affordable for the required period of time:

------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                              Minimum
                                                             period of
                 Rental housing activity                   affordability
                                                              (years)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Rehabilitation or reconstruction of multi-family rental               15
 projects with eight or more units......................
New construction multi-family rental projects with five               20
 or more units..........................................
------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The action plan must, at a minimum, provide (1) a definition of 
``affordable rents''; (2) the income limits for tenants of rental 
housing that is rehabilitated, reconstructed or constructed with CDBG-
DR funds; and (3) a minimum affordability period of fifteen (15) years 
for the rehabilitation or reconstruction of multi-family rental 
projects with eight or more units, and a minimum affordability period 
of twenty (20) years for the new construction of multi-family rental 
units with five or more units. If a rental project that requires 
rehabilitation or reconstruction is subject to existing affordability 
requirements associated with other funding sources, grantees may 
provide in their action plan that the 15-year affordability period 
required under this notice may run concurrently (or overlap) with the 
affordability requirements associated with such other funding.
    10. Affordability Period for New Construction of Single-Family LMI 
Homeowner Housing. Grantees receiving funds under this notice are 
required to implement a minimum five-year affordability period on all 
newly constructed single-family housing that is to be made available 
for low- and moderate-income homeownership. This requirement for an 
affordability period does not apply to the rehabilitation or 
reconstruction of single-family housing. This notice requires grantees 
to develop and impose affordability (i.e., resale and recapture) 
restrictions for single-family housing newly constructed with CDBG-DR 
funds and made available for affordable homeownership to low- and 
moderate-income persons, and to enforce those restrictions through 
recorded deed restrictions, covenants, or other similar mechanisms, for 
a period not less than five years. Grantees shall establish resale or 
recapture requirements for housing funded pursuant to this paragraph 
and shall outline those requirements in the action plan or substantial 
amendment in which the activity is proposed. The resale and recapture 
provisions must clearly describe the terms of the resale and recapture 
provisions, the specific circumstances under which these provisions 
will be used, and how the provisions will be enforced.
    11. CDBG-DR Housing Assistance and FEMA's Permanent and Semi-
Permanent Housing Programs. The Prior Appropriation and the 
Appropriations Act prohibit the use of CDBG-DR funds for activities 
that are reimbursable by FEMA and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. In 
addition, paragraph VI.A.25 of the Prior Notice requires grantees to 
ensure that CDBG-DR funds are not used to duplicate funding provided by 
these agencies or any other potential sources of assistance. As with 
all sources of FEMA assistance, grantees are reminded that in 
jurisdictions in which FEMA has implemented its Permanent or Semi-
Permanent Housing program, grantees must ensure that CDBG-DR funds are 
not used in violation of the above two prohibitions. Grantees must also 
establish policies and procedures to provide for the repayment of a 
CDBG-DR award when assistance is subsequently provided for that same 
purpose from FEMA or other sources.

[[Page 40321]]

    12. Rehabilitation and Reconstruction Cost-Effectiveness. In its 
Federal Register notice allocating additional CDBG-DR funds for 
Louisiana floods and 2016 disasters (82 FR 5591), the Department 
required grantees receiving funds under that notice to consider cost-
effectiveness of residential rehabilitation or reconstruction projects 
relative to other alternatives. In this notice, the Department is 
similarly requiring each grantee to establish policies and procedures 
to assess the cost-effectiveness of each proposed project undertaken to 
assist a household under any residential rehabilitation or 
reconstruction program funded under this notice or the Prior Notice. 
The policies and procedures must address criteria for determining when 
the cost of the rehabilitation or reconstruction of the unit will not 
be cost-effective relative to other means of assisting the property-
owner, such as buyout or acquisition of the property, or the 
construction of area-wide protective infrastructure, rather than 
individual building mitigation solutions designed to protect individual 
structures (such as elevating an existing structure). For example, as 
the grantee in designing its program, it might choose as comparison 
criteria the rehabilitation costs derived from the RS Means Residential 
Cost Data and costs to buyout or acquire the property as a means of 
determining whether to fund a rehabilitation project. A grantee may 
also consider offering different housing alternatives, as appropriate, 
such as manufactured housing options. A grantee may find it necessary 
to provide exceptions on a case-by-case basis to the maximum amount of 
assistance or cost effectiveness criteria and must describe the process 
it will use to make such exceptions in its policies and procedures. 
Each grantee must adopt policies and procedures that communicate how it 
will analyze the circumstances under which an exception is needed, how 
it will demonstrate that the amount of assistance is necessary and 
reasonable, and how the grantee will make reasonable accommodations to 
provide accessibility features necessary to accommodate an occupant 
with a disability. All CDBG-DR expenditures remain subject to the cost 
principles in 2 CFR part 200, subpart E--Cost Principles, including the 
requirement that costs be necessary and reasonable for the performance 
of the grantee's CDBG-DR grant.

C. Infrastructure

    13. Infrastructure planning and design. CDBG-DR allocations 
provided for under this notice are informed in part by the Department's 
assessment of unmet infrastructure needs and accordingly, the 
Department is establishing infrastructure planning and design 
requirements for grantees subject to the provisions of this notice and 
the Prior Notice. For funds allocated pursuant to the Prior Notice and 
this notice, the Department is requiring grantees to address long-term 
recovery and hazard mitigation planning in the action plan or 
substantial amendment, whichever is applicable under this notice. Each 
grantee must include a description of how the grantee plans to:
    a. Promote sound, sustainable long-term recovery planning informed 
by a post-disaster evaluation of hazard risk, especially land-use 
decisions that reflect responsible flood plain management and take into 
account future possible extreme weather events and other natural 
hazards and long-term risks;
    b. Adhere to the elevation requirements established in paragraph 
B.32.e of section VI of the Prior Notice;
    c. Coordinate with local and regional planning efforts to ensure 
consistency, including how the grantee will promote community-level 
and/or regional (e.g., multiple local jurisdictions) post-disaster 
recovery and mitigation planning;
    d. For infrastructure allocations, the grantee must also describe:
    i. How mitigation measures will be integrated into rebuilding 
activities and the extent to which infrastructure activities funded 
through this grant will achieve objectives outlined in regionally or 
locally established plans and policies that are designed to reduce 
future risk to the jurisdiction;
    ii. How infrastructure activities will be informed by a 
consideration of the costs and benefits of the project;
    iii. How the grantee will seek to ensure that infrastructure 
activities will avoid disproportionate impact on vulnerable populations 
as referenced in paragraph A.2.a(4) of section VI in the Prior Notice 
and create opportunities to address economic inequities facing local 
communities;
    iv. How the grantee will align investments with other planned state 
or local capital improvements and infrastructure development efforts, 
and will work to foster the potential for additional infrastructure 
funding from multiple sources, including existing state and local 
capital improvement projects in planning, and the potential for private 
investment; and
    v. The extent to which the grantee will employ adaptable and 
reliable technologies to guard against premature obsolescence of 
infrastructure.

Grantees are encouraged to review the additional guidance on 
predevelopment principles are described in the Federal Resource Guide 
for Infrastructure Planning and Design: (http://portal.hud.gov/hudportal/documents/huddoc?id=BAInfraResGuideMay2015.pdf)
    14. Discipline and Accountability in the Environmental Review and 
Permitting of Infrastructure Projects. Executive Order 13807, signed by 
the President on August 15, 2017, establishes a coordinated, 
predictable, and transparent process for the review and permitting of 
infrastructure projects. In addition, the Federal Permitting 
Improvement Steering Council has issued a standard operating procedure 
to coordinate Federal agency reporting on the environmental review and 
permitting of covered projects pursuant to the Fixing America's Surface 
Transportation Act (FAST-41) (Pub. L. 114-94). Under FAST-41, a covered 
project is defined as any activity in the United States that requires 
authorization or environmental review by a Federal agency involving 
construction of infrastructure for renewable or conventional energy 
production, electricity transmission, surface transportation, aviation, 
ports and waterways, water resource projects, broadband, pipelines, 
manufacturing, or any other sector as determined by a majority vote of 
the Council that (1) is subject to National Environmental Policy Act of 
1969 (NEPA); is likely to require a total investment of more than 
$200,000,000; and does not qualify for abbreviated authorization or 
environmental review processes under any applicable law; or (2) is 
subject to NEPA and the size and complexity of which, in the opinion of 
the Council, make the project likely to benefit from enhanced oversight 
and coordination, including a project likely to require authorization 
from or environmental review involving more than two Federal agencies; 
or the preparation of an environmental impact statement under NEPA. 
CDBG-DR grantees may choose to participate in reporting on their 
environmental review and permitting of covered projects under FAST-41.
    15. CDBG-DR Funds as Match for FEMA 428 Public Assistance Projects. 
In response to a disaster, FEMA may implement, and grantees may elect 
to follow alternative procedures for FEMA's Public Assistance Program, 
as authorized pursuant to Section 428 of the Stafford Act. Grantees may 
use CDBG-DR funds as a matching requirement, share, or contribution for 
Public Assistance Projects financed pursuant to Section 428, but as in 
other instances in which grantee use CDBG-

[[Page 40322]]

DR funds to meet local matching requirements, grantees must document 
that CDBG-DR funds have been used for the actual costs incurred for the 
assisted project and for costs that are eligible, meet a national 
objective, and meet other applicable CDBG requirements.

D. Economic Revitalization

    16. Waiver to permit tourism marketing (U.S. Virgin Islands only). 
The U.S. Virgin Islands has requested a waiver to allow the Territory 
to use up to $5,000,000 in CDBG-DR funds to promote travel to disaster-
impacted areas. Tourism is the primary economic contributor to the U.S. 
Virgin Island's economy, estimated to account for between 30 and 80 
percent of the Territory's economy. The U.S. Virgin Islands indicated 
that for several weeks following the disasters, airports and seaports 
remained closed and due to damage to hotels and a perception that the 
islands have been completely decimated, tourism has remained low. The 
Territory indicates that many of its largest hotels will not reopen 
until late 2019 or 2020, with weekly accommodation capacity dropping 
from 23,000 in February 2017 to 13,000 in February 2018. The 
Territory's request also notes that the decline in tourism has had a 
particularly adverse impact on low- and moderate-income residents that 
depend on the industry for employment.
    The Territory has documented a sharp decline in visitors to the 
islands, with a corresponding decline in visitor spending and Territory 
revenues. Prior to the disasters, the Territory reported total monthly 
visitor expenditures of $84.8 million in October 2016, contrasted to 
total tourist spending of $49.8 million and lost excursionist spending 
of $71.1 million in October 2017, after the storms. The Territory 
estimates that total tourism-related losses caused by the 2017 
disasters are expected to approach $1 billion in the 12 months 
following the storms, amounting to almost 70% of the total revenue 
generated by tourism in 2016.
    Tourism industry support, such as a national and international 
consumer awareness advertising campaign for an area in general, is 
ineligible for CDBG assistance. However, HUD recognizes that such 
support can be a useful recovery tool in a damaged regional economy 
that depends on tourism for most of its jobs and tax revenues. In the 
past, HUD has granted tourism waivers for several CDBG-DR disaster 
recovery efforts. As the U.S. Virgin Islands is proposing advertising 
and marketing activities rather than direct assistance to tourism-
dependent businesses, and because the measures of long-term benefit 
from the proposed activities must be derived using indirect means, 42 
U.S.C. 5305(a) is waived only to the extent necessary to make eligible 
use of no more than $5,000,000 for assistance to promote the Territory 
in general or specific components of the islands. Additionally, no 
elected officials shall appear in tourism marketing materials financed 
with CDBG-DR funds. Given the importance of tourism to the overall 
economy, HUD is authorizing this use of funds without regard to unmet 
housing need. This waiver will expire two years after the Territory 
first draws CDBG-DR funds under the allocation provided in the Prior 
Notice. In providing similar waivers for other CDBG-DR grantees, the 
Department has often identified issues in the procurement of tourism 
marketing services, with grantees adding CDBG-DR funds to existing 
tourism marketing contracts procured with other sources of funds. In 
providing this waiver, HUD advises the Territory to ensure that 
contracts funded pursuant to this waiver with CDBG-DR funds comply with 
applicable procurement requirements. The grantee must also develop 
metrics to demonstrate the impact of CDBG-DR expenditures on the 
tourism sector of the economy and shall identify those metrics in the 
initial substantial amendment submitted pursuant to this notice.
    17. Waiver to permit tourism and business marketing (Commonwealth 
of Puerto Rico only). The Commonwealth of Puerto Rico has requested a 
waiver to allow the Commonwealth to use up to $15,000,000 in CDBG-DR 
funds to promote travel and to attract new businesses to disaster-
impacted areas. Puerto Rico's request indicated that prior to the 
storms, tourism accounted for 8 percent of the economy. One month after 
the disasters, however, one third of the island's hotels remained 
shuttered and beaches remained closed for swimming due to possible 
water contamination. The Commonwealth's request notes that insular 
areas of the island have been particularly slow to recover to historic 
levels of tourism activity. Puerto Rico anticipates the addition of 
over 2,000 tourist accommodations this year and accordingly, seeks to 
use CDBG-DR funds to target outreach efforts through a marketing 
campaign to reach potential visitors that may not be aware of the pace 
of recovery in the island's tourist areas.
    The Commonwealth's waiver request includes the proposed use of 
CDBG-DR funds to also market the island to new businesses. Puerto Rico 
notes that its declining economic conditions prior to the storms, as 
reflected through the largest-ever federal bankruptcy by a local 
government, were exacerbated by the disasters. The top five economic 
sectors with reported losses to the U.S. Small Business Administration 
as result of the storms include real estate, accommodations and food 
services, health care, retail trade, and manufacturing. Unemployment in 
February 2016 was reported at 10.6%, with a decline in jobs in non-farm 
industries from 871,200 jobs in September 2017 to 848,300 jobs in 
February 2018. The Commonwealth's request notes that the unprecedented 
federal investment in the island's damaged housing stock and 
infrastructure also presents an opportunity to introduce and re-
introduce businesses across the nation and around the world to Puerto 
Rico as an attractive location for new business investment.
    Tourism and business advertising campaigns for an area in general, 
are ineligible for CDBG-DR assistance. However, HUD recognizes that 
such support can be a useful recovery tool in a damaged regional 
economy that depends on tourism and seeks to attract new business 
investment to generate new jobs and tax revenues. HUD has previously 
granted similar waivers for several CDBG-DR disaster recovery efforts. 
As the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico is proposing advertising and 
marketing activities rather than direct assistance to tourism-dependent 
and other businesses, and because the measures of long-term benefit 
from the proposed activities must be derived using indirect means, 42 
U.S.C. 5305(a) is waived only to the extent necessary to make eligible 
use of no more than $15,000,000 for assistance to promote the 
Commonwealth in general or specific communities. No elected officials 
shall appear in tourism or business marketing materials financed with 
CDBG-DR funds. Given the importance of tourism to the overall economy, 
HUD is authorizing this use of funds without regard to unmet housing 
need. This waiver will expire two years after the Commonwealth first 
draws CDBG-DR funds under the allocation provided in the Prior Notice. 
In providing similar waivers for other CDBG-DR grantees, the Department 
has often identified issues in the procurement of tourism and business 
marketing services, with grantees adding CDBG-DR funds to existing 
tourism and business marketing contracts procured with other sources of 
funds. In providing this waiver, HUD

[[Page 40323]]

advises the Commonwealth to ensure that contracts funded pursuant to 
this waiver with CDBG-DR funds comply with applicable procurement 
requirements. The grantee must also develop metrics to demonstrate the 
impact of CDBG-DR expenditures on the tourism and other sectors of the 
economy and shall identify those metrics in the initial substantial 
amendment submitted pursuant to this notice.

V. Duration of Funding

    The law, as amended, requires that funds provided under the 
Appropriations Act and Prior Appropriation be expended within two years 
of the date that HUD obligates funds to a grantee, but also authorizes 
the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) to provide a waiver of this 
requirement. OMB has waived this requirement for a combined total of 
$35,390,000,000 of CDBG-DR funds appropriated under the Prior 
Appropriation and the Appropriations Act. Notwithstanding the OMB 
waiver, however, the provision of the Prior Notice that requires each 
grantee to expend 100 percent of its total allocation of CDBG-DR funds 
on eligible activities within six years of HUD's initial obligation of 
funds remains in effect. For grantees receiving an allocation of funds 
under the Prior Notice, the six-year expenditure deadline commences 
with initial obligation of funds provided under the Prior Notice. For 
grantees receiving an initial allocation of funds under this Notice, 
the six-year expenditure deadline commences with the initial obligation 
of funds provided under this notice. Further, consistent with 31 U.S.C. 
1555 and OMB Circular No. A-11, if the Secretary or the President 
determines that the purposes for which the appropriation has been made 
have been carried out and no disbursements have been made against the 
appropriation for two consecutive fiscal years, any remaining 
unobligated balance will be made unavailable for obligation or 
expenditure.

VI. Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance

    The Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance numbers for the disaster 
recovery grants under this notice are as follows: 14.228 for State CDBG 
grantees.

VII. Finding of No Significant Impact

    A Finding of No Significant Impact (FONSI) with respect to the 
environment has been made in accordance with HUD regulations at 24 CFR 
part 50, which implement section 102(2)(C) of the National 
Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (42 U.S.C. 4332(2)(C)). The FONSI is 
available for public inspection between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. weekdays in 
the Regulations Division, Office of General Counsel, Department of 
Housing and Urban Development, 451 7th Street SW, Room 10276, 
Washington, DC 20410-0500. Due to security measures at the HUD 
Headquarters building, an advance appointment to review the docket file 
must be scheduled by calling the Regulations Division at 202-708-3055 
(this is not a toll-free number). Hearing- or speech-impaired 
individuals may access this number through TTY by calling the Federal 
Relay Service at 800-877-8339 (this is a toll-free number).

    Dated: August 8, 2018.
Neal J. Rackleff,
Assistant Secretary.

Appendix A--Detailed Methodology (for Federal Notice Appendix)

Allocation of CDBG-DR Funds to Most Impacted and Distressed Areas Due 
to 2017 Federally Declared Disasters and Allocation of Mitigation Funds 
for 2015, 2016, and 2017 Federally Declared Disasters

Background

    The Bipartisan Budget Act of 2018, Public Law 115-123, enacted 
on February 9, 2018, appropriated $28,000,000,000 through the 
Community Development Block Grant disaster recovery (CDBG-DR) 
program. The statutory text related to the allocation is as follows:

    For an additional amount for ``Community Development Fund'', 
$28,000,000,000, to remain available until expended, for necessary 
expenses for activities authorized under title I of the Housing and 
Community Development Act of 1974 (42 U.S.C. 5301 et seq.) related 
to disaster relief, long-term recovery, restoration of 
infrastructure and housing, economic revitalization, and mitigation 
in the most impacted and distressed areas resulting from a major 
declared disaster that occurred in 2017 (except as otherwise 
provided under this heading) pursuant to the Robert T. Stafford 
Disaster Relief and Emergency Assistance Act (42 U.S.C. 5121 et 
seq.): Provided, That funds shall be awarded directly to the State, 
unit of general local government, or Indian tribe (as such term is 
defined in section 102 of the Housing and Community Development Act 
of 1974) at the discretion of the Secretary: Provided further, That 
of the amounts made available under this heading, up to 
$16,000,000,000 shall be allocated to meet unmet needs for grantees 
that have received or will receive allocations under this heading 
for major declared disasters that occurred in 2017 or under the same 
heading of Division B of Public Law 115-56, except that, of the 
amounts made available under this proviso, no less than 
$11,000,000,000 shall be allocated to the States and units of local 
government affected by Hurricane Maria, and of such amounts 
allocated to such grantees affected by Hurricane Maria, 
$2,000,000,000 shall be used to provide enhanced or improved 
electrical power systems: Provided further, That to the extent 
amounts under the previous proviso are insufficient to meet all 
unmet needs, the allocation amounts related to infrastructure shall 
be reduced proportionally based on the total infrastructure needs of 
all grantees: Provided further, That of the amounts made available 
under this heading, no less than $12,000,000,000 shall be allocated 
for mitigation activities to all grantees of funding provided under 
this heading, section 420 of division L of Public Law 114-113, 
section 145 of division C of Public Law 114-223, section 192 of 
division C of Public Law 114-223 (as added by section 101(3) of 
division A of Public Law 114-254), section 421 of division K of 
Public Law 115-31, and the same heading in division B of Public Law 
115-56, and that such mitigation activities shall be subject to the 
same terms and conditions under this subdivision, as determined by 
the Secretary: Provided further, That all such grantees shall 
receive an allocation of funds under the preceding proviso in the 
same proportion that the amount of funds each grantee received or 
will receive under the second proviso of this heading or the 
headings and sections specified in the previous proviso bears to the 
amount of all funds provided to all grantees specified in the 
previous proviso: Provided further, That of the amounts made 
available under the second and fourth provisos of this heading, the 
Secretary shall allocate to all such grantees an aggregate amount 
not less than 33 percent of each such amounts of funds provided 
under this heading within 60 days after the enactment of this 
subdivision based on the best available data (especially with 
respect to data for all such grantees affected by Hurricanes Harvey, 
Irma, and Maria), and shall allocate no less than 100 percent of the 
funds provided under this heading by no later than December 1, 2018:
    . . . Provided further, That of the amounts made available under 
this heading, up to $15,000,000 shall be made available for capacity 
building and technical assistance, including assistance on 
contracting and procurement processes, to support States, units of 
general local government, or Indian tribes (and their subrecipients) 
that receive allocations pursuant to this heading, received disaster 
recovery allocations under the same heading in Public Law 115-56, or 
may receive similar allocations for disaster recovery in future 
appropriations Acts: Provided further, That of the amounts made 
available under this heading, up to $10,000,000 shall be 
transferred, in aggregate, to ``Department of Housing and Urban 
Development--Program Office Salaries and Expenses--Community 
Planning and Development'' for necessary costs, including 
information technology costs, of administering and overseeing the 
obligation and expenditure of amounts under this heading:

    Further, under the General Provisions of the Act in Section 
21102:

    Any funds made available under the heading ``Community 
Development Fund''

[[Page 40324]]

under this subdivision that remain available, after the other funds 
under such heading have been allocated for necessary expenses for 
activities authorized under such heading, shall be used for 
additional mitigation activities in the most impacted and distressed 
areas resulting from a major declared disaster that occurred in 
2014, 2015, 2016 or 2017: Provided, That such remaining funds shall 
be awarded to grantees of funding provided for disaster relief under 
the heading ``Community Development Fund'' in this subdivision, 
section 420 of division L of Public Law 114-113, section 145 of 
division C of Public Law 114-223, section 192 of division C of 
Public Law 114-223 (as added by section 101(3) of division A of 
Public Law 114-254), section 421 of division K of Public Law 115-31, 
and the same heading in division B of Public Law 115-56 subject to 
the same terms and conditions under this subdivision and such Acts 
respectively: Provided further, That each such grantee shall receive 
an allocation from such remaining funds in the same proportion that 
the amount of funds such grantee received under this subdivision and 
under the Acts specified in the previous proviso bears to the amount 
of all funds provided to all grantees specified in the previous 
proviso.

    The methodology for allocating these funds has two core parts:

 Unmet Needs: Up to $16 billion for the remaining unmet 
needs of communities most impacted by a disaster in 2017. After 
factoring in the $35 million set-aside for HUD expenses, up to 
$15.965 billion is available for unmet needs, of which no less than 
$11 billion is provided to communities impacted by Hurricane Maria, 
specifically the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico and United States 
Virgin Islands. These funds are allocated based on a calculation of 
unmet needs as described below after taking into account the $7.458 
billion of CDBG-DR previously allocated for 2017 disasters.
 Mitigation: No less than $12 billion for mitigation 
activities for grantees who have received CDBG-DR funding under this 
appropriation or earlier appropriations covering disasters in 2015, 
2016, and 2017. This allocation is based on each grantee's 
proportional share of total funds allocated for all of the eligible 
disasters.

Allocating for remaining unmet needs of 2017

Most impacted and distressed areas

    As with prior CDBG-DR appropriations, HUD is not obligated to 
allocate funds for all major disasters declared in 2017. HUD is 
directed to use the funds ``in the most impacted and distressed 
areas.'' HUD has implemented this directive by limiting CDBG-DR 
formula allocations to jurisdictions with major disasters that meet 
three standards:

(1) Individual Assistance/IHP designation. HUD has limited 
allocations to those disasters where FEMA had determined the damage 
was sufficient to declare the disaster as eligible to receive 
Individual and Households Program (IHP) funding.
(2) Concentrated damage. HUD has limited its estimate of serious 
unmet housing need to counties and Zip Codes with high levels of 
damage, collectively referred to as ``most impacted areas''. For 
this allocation, HUD is defining most impacted areas as either most 
impacted counties--counties exceeding $10 million in serious unmet 
housing needs--and most impacted Zip Codes--Zip Codes with $2 
million or more of serious unmet housing needs. The calculation of 
serious unmet housing needs is described below.
(3) Disasters meeting the most impacted threshold. Only 2017 
disasters that meet this requirement for most impacted damage are 
funded:
    a. One or more most impacted county
    b. An aggregate of most impacted Zip Codes of $10 million or 
greater

    For disasters that meet the most impacted threshold described 
above, the unmet need allocations are based on the following factors 
summed together less previous CDBG-DR allocations for the 2017 
disasters unmet needs:

(1) Repair estimates for seriously damaged owner-occupied units 
without insurance (with some exceptions) in most impacted areas 
after FEMA and SBA repair grants or loans;
(2) Repair estimates for seriously damaged rental units occupied by 
renters with income less than 50 percent of Area Median Income in 
most impacted areas;
(3) Repair and content loss estimates for small businesses with 
serious damage denied by SBA;
(4) The estimated local cost share for Public Assistance Category C 
to G projects;
(5) $2 billion for Maria-impacted disasters for improvements to the 
electric grid; and
(6) An amount to ensure that Maria impacted disasters do not receive 
less than $11 billion from Public Law 115-123, with the split 
between the eligible disasters in Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands 
based on their relative share of needs as calculated under number 1 
to 5 above.

Methods for estimating unmet needs for housing

    The data HUD staff have identified as being available to 
calculate unmet needs for qualifying disasters come from the FEMA 
Individual Assistance program data on housing-unit damage as of 
February 22, 2018.
    The core data on housing damage for both the unmet housing needs 
calculation and the concentrated damage are based on home inspection 
data for FEMA's Individual Assistance program. HUD calculates 
``unmet housing needs'' as the number of housing units with unmet 
needs times the estimated cost to repair those units less repair 
funds already provided by FEMA and SBA. Puerto Rico and the Virgin 
Island owner damage is calculated based on both real property and 
personal property inspections based on findings by HUD that this 
likely is a more accurate estimate of serious homeowner damage in 
those areas. For the continental U.S., HUD finds its traditional 
approach of just using real property damage assessments for owner-
occupied units continues to be effective.
    Each of the FEMA inspected owner units are categorized by HUD 
into one of five categories:

 Minor-Low: Less than $3,000 of FEMA inspected real property 
damage.
 Minor-High: $3,000 to $7,999 of FEMA inspected real 
property damage.
 Major-Low: $8,000 to $14,999 of FEMA inspected real 
property damage and/or 1 to 4 feet of flooding on the first floor.
 Major-High: $15,000 to $28,800 of FEMA inspected real 
property damage and/or 4 to 6 feet of flooding on the first floor.
 Severe: Greater than $28,800 of FEMA inspected real 
property damage or determined destroyed and/or 6 or more feet of 
flooding on the first floor.

    For the Virgin Islands and Puerto Rico, the damage grouping 
would be the higher damage categorization based on the calculation 
above or:

 Minor-Low: Less than $2,500 of FEMA inspected personal 
property damage.
 Minor-High: $2,500 to $3,499 of FEMA inspected personal 
property damage.
 Major-Low: $3,500 to $4,999 of FEMA inspected personal 
property damage or 1 to 4 feet of flooding on the first floor.
 Major-High: $5,000 to $8,999 of FEMA inspected personal 
property damage or 4 to 6 feet of flooding on the first floor.
 Severe: Greater than $9,000 of FEMA inspected personal 
property damage or determined destroyed and/or 6 or more feet of 
flooding on the first floor.

    To meet the statutory requirement of ``most impacted'' in this 
legislative language, homes are determined to have a high level of 
damage if they have damage of ``major-low'' or higher. That is, they 
have a real property FEMA inspected damage of $8,000 or flooding 
over 1 foot.
    Furthermore, a homeowner is determined to have unmet needs if 
they reported damage and no insurance to cover that damage and was 
outside the 1% risk flood hazard area; for homeowners inside the 
flood hazard area, only homeowners without insurance below 120% of 
Area Median Income are determined to have unmet needs. Homeowners 
without hazard insurance with non-flood damage with incomes below 
the greater of national median or 120% of Area Median Income are 
included as having unmet needs.
    FEMA does not inspect rental units for real property damage so 
personal property damage is used as a proxy for unit damage. Each of 
the FEMA inspected renter units are categorized by HUD into one of 
five categories:

 Minor-Low: Less than $1,000 of FEMA inspected personal 
property damage.
 Minor-High: $1,000 to $1,999 of FEMA inspected personal 
property damage.
 Major-Low: $2,000 to $3,499 of FEMA inspected personal 
property damage or 1 to 4 feet of flooding on the first floor.
 Major-High: $3,500 to $7,499 of FEMA inspected personal 
property damage or 4 to 6 feet of flooding on the first floor.

[[Page 40325]]

 Severe: Greater than $7,500 of FEMA inspected personal 
property damage or determined destroyed and/or 6 or more feet of 
flooding on the first floor.

    For rental properties, to meet the statutory requirement of 
``most impacted'' in this legislative language, homes are determined 
to have a high level of damage if they have damage of ``major-low'' 
or higher. That is, they have a FEMA personal property damage 
assessment of $2,000 or greater or flooding over 1 foot.
    Furthermore, landlords are presumed to have adequate insurance 
coverage unless the unit is occupied by a renter with income less 
than the greater of the Federal poverty level or 50 percent of Area 
Median Income. Units occupied by a tenant with income less than the 
greater of the Federal poverty level or 50 percent of Area Median 
Income are used to calculate likely unmet needs for affordable 
rental housing.
    The average cost to fully repair a home for a specific disaster 
to code within each of the damage categories noted above is 
calculated using the median real property damage repair costs 
determined by the Small Business Administration for its disaster 
loan program for the subset of homes inspected by both SBA and FEMA 
for each eligible disaster. Because SBA is inspecting for full 
repair costs, it is presumed to reflect the full cost to repair the 
home, which is generally more than the FEMA estimates on the cost to 
make the home habitable.
    For each household determined to have unmet housing needs (as 
described above), their estimated average unmet housing need less 
assistance from FEMA and SBA provided for repair to homes with 
serious unmet needs. No unmet housing need cost multiplier can be 
less than the 25th percentile estimate across all disasters of 2017. 
Those minimum cost multipliers are: $40,323 for major damage (low); 
$55,812 for major damage (high); and $77,252 for severe damage. The 
multipliers used for each disaster is shown below.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                      Serious Unmet Housing Need Multipliers
                                                                 -----------------------------------------------
                                                                     Major-Low      Major-High        Severe
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
California......................................................         $40,323         $55,812        $124,481
Florida.........................................................         $42,837         $56,113         $79,096
Georgia.........................................................         $40,323         $55,812         $77,252
Missouri........................................................         $40,323         $66,545        $100,947
Puerto Rico.....................................................         $40,323         $55,812         $77,252
Texas...........................................................         $56,342         $75,414        $101,390
Virgin Islands..................................................         $80,142         $97,672        $116,351
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Methods for estimating unmet economic revitalization needs

    Based on SBA disaster loans to businesses as of 3-22-2018, HUD 
calculates the median real estate and content loss by the following 
damage categories for each state:

 Category 1: real estate + content loss = below 12,000
 Category 2: real estate + content loss = 12,000-30,000
 Category 3: real estate + content loss = 30,000-65,000
 Category 4: real estate + content loss = 65,000-150,000
 Category 5: real estate + content loss = above 150,000

    For properties with real estate and content loss of $30,000 or 
more, HUD calculates the estimated amount of unmet needs for small 
businesses by multiplying the median damage estimates for the 
categories above by the number of small businesses denied an SBA 
loan, including those denied a loan prior to inspection due to 
inadequate credit or income (or a decision had not been made), under 
the assumption that damage among those denied at pre-inspection have 
the same distribution of damage as those denied after inspection.

Methods for estimating unmet infrastructure needs

    To calculate unmet needs for infrastructure projects, HUD is 
using data obtained from FEMA as of March 30, 2018, showing the 
amount FEMA estimates will be needed to repair the permanent public 
infrastructure (Categories C to G) to their pre-storm condition. HUD 
uses these data to calculate two infrastructure unmet needs:

 The estimated local cost share for Public Assistance 
Category C to G projects.
 An allocation of $2 billion for Maria affected disasters 
(Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands) for ``enhanced or improved 
electrical power systems.'' This is allocated between Puerto Rico 
and the Virgin Islands based on their relative share of total 
estimated Category F Public Assistance cost to repair public 
utilities.

Allocation Calculation

    Once eligible entities are identified using the above criteria, 
the allocation to individual grantees represents their proportional 
share of the estimated unmet needs. For the formula allocation, HUD 
calculates total serious unmet recovery needs as the aggregate of:

 Serious unmet housing needs in most impacted counties less 
amounts of CDBG-DR previously allocated for serious unmet housing 
needs
 Serious unmet business needs less amounts of CDBG-DR 
previously allocated for serious business needs
 FEMA Public Assistance Category C to G local cost share and 
the $2 billion additional amount for enhanced or improved electrical 
power systems in Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands

    Prior allocations for 2017 disasters are subtracted from this 
amount. Because this results in less than $11 billion being 
allocated to Maria affected disasters (Puerto Rico and the Virgin 
Islands) from Public Law 115-123, an additional amount is added to 
those two grantees to reach $11 billion based on their relative 
share of needs as calculated under the three bullets above.
    This results in an estimate of unmet needs to be allocated from 
Public Law 115-123 of $12.031 billion, allowing $3.935 billion to be 
allocated to mitigation.

Allocating for mitigation

    The allocation of $15.935 billion in mitigation funds (the $12 
billion appropriated for mitigation plus the $3.935 billion 
remaining after allocation of 100% of unmet needs) is allocated 
proportionally based on each grantee's relative share of the $22.425 
billion of CDBG-DR funds allocated for unmet needs to disasters 
occurring in 2015, 2016, and 2017. For example, the combination of 
all grants to Puerto Rico for unmet needs represents 52 percent of 
the $22.425 billion allocated for unmet needs. As a result, Puerto 
Rico receives 52 percent of the $15.935 billion made available for 
mitigation funding.

[FR Doc. 2018-17365 Filed 8-13-18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4210-67-P



                                              40314                        Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 157 / Tuesday, August 14, 2018 / Notices

                                              the use of appropriate automated                        action plan approval, and eligible                    (the ‘‘Prior Appropriation’’). HUD
                                              collection techniques or other forms of                 disaster recovery activities.                         allocated the first $7.4 billion in the
                                              information technology, e.g., permitting                DATES: Applicability Date: August 20,                 Prior Notice (83 FR 5844, February 9,
                                              electronic submission of responses.                     2018.                                                 2018). This notice amends the Prior
                                                HUD encourages interested parties to                                                                        Notice to ensure consistency across
                                                                                                      FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
                                              submit comment in response to these                                                                           allocations for the same qualifying
                                                                                                      Jessie Handforth Kome, Acting Director,
                                              questions.                                                                                                    disasters, and to give effect to
                                                                                                      Office of Block Grant Assistance,
                                                Authority: Section 3507 of the Paperwork                                                                    requirements of the Appropriations Act,
                                                                                                      Department of Housing and Urban
                                              Reduction Act of 1995, 44 U.S.C. Chapter 35.                                                                  including that funds allocated under the
                                                                                                      Development, 451 7th Street SW, Room
                                                                                                                                                            Prior Notice are subject to the terms and
                                                Dated: August 8, 2018.                                10166, Washington, DC 20410,
                                                                                                                                                            conditions applicable to CDBG–DR
                                              Inez C. Downs,                                          telephone number 202–708–3587.                        funds under the Appropriations Act.
                                              Department Reports Management Officer,                  Persons with hearing or speech                           Based on the remaining unmet needs
                                              Office of the Chief Information Officer.                impairments may access this number                    allocation methodology outlined in
                                              [FR Doc. 2018–17445 Filed 8–13–18; 8:45 am]             via TTY by calling the Federal Relay                  Appendix A, this notice allocates
                                              BILLING CODE 4210–67–P
                                                                                                      Service at 800–877–8339. Facsimile                    $10,030,484,000 for unmet disaster
                                                                                                      inquiries may be sent to Ms. Kome at                  recovery needs under the
                                                                                                      202–708–0033. (Except for the ‘‘800’’                 Appropriations Act. The allocation
                                              DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND                               number, these telephone numbers are                   amounts for unmet recovery needs
                                              URBAN DEVELOPMENT                                       not toll-free.) Email inquiries may be                included in Table 1 exclude the $2
                                                                                                      sent to disaster_recovery@hud.gov.                    billion set-aside for Puerto Rico and the
                                              [Docket No. FR–6109–N–01]
                                                                                                      SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:                            Virgin Islands for electrical system
                                              Allocations, Common Application,                        Table of Contents                                     improvements. The Appropriations Act
                                              Waivers, and Alternative Requirements                                                                         further provided that of the nearly $28
                                                                                                      I. Allocations                                        billion, HUD must allocate not less than
                                              for Community Development Block
                                                                                                      II. Use of Funds                                      $12 billion for mitigation activities
                                              Grant Disaster Recovery Grantees                        III. Overview of Grant Process
                                                                                                         A. Appropriations Act (Pub. L. 115–123)            undertaken by grantees receiving an
                                              AGENCY:  Office of the Assistant                                                                              allocation of CDBG–DR funds for
                                                                                                            Initial Action Plan Process
                                              Secretary for Community Planning and                       B. Prior Appropriation (Pub. L. 115–56)            recovery from 2015, 2016, or 2017
                                              Development, HUD.                                             Substantial Action Plan Amendment               disasters. On April 10, 2018, HUD
                                              ACTION: Notice.                                               Process                                         announced that after addressing
                                                                                                      IV. Applicable Rules, Statutes, Waivers, and          remaining 2017 unmet needs, HUD
                                              SUMMARY:   On April 10, 2018, HUD                             Alternative Requirements                        would allocate an additional $3.9
                                              allocated nearly $28 billion in                            A. Grant Administration                            billion for mitigation, bringing the
                                              Community Development Block Grant                          B. Housing
                                                                                                         C. Infrastructure                                  amount designated for mitigation to
                                              disaster recovery (CDBG–DR) funds                                                                             $15.9 billion. A subsequent notice will
                                              appropriated by the Further Additional                     D. Economic Revitalization
                                                                                                      V. Duration of Funding                                govern the allocations for mitigation and
                                              Supplemental Appropriations for                         VI. Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance            the allocations for electrical power
                                              Disaster Relief Requirements Act, 2018.                 VII. Finding of No Significant Impact                 system enhancements and
                                              HUD allocated $10.03 billion for the                    Appendix A: Allocation Methodology                    improvements.
                                              purpose of assisting in addressing                                                                               In accordance with the
                                              unmet needs from disasters that                         I. Allocations
                                                                                                                                                            Appropriations Act, $10,000,000 of the
                                              occurred in 2017; $2 billion for                           The Further Additional Supplemental                total amounts appropriated under the
                                              improved electrical power systems in                    Appropriations for Disaster Relief                    Act will be transferred to the
                                              areas impacted by Hurricane Maria; and                  Requirements Act, 2018 (Division B,                   Department’s Office of Community
                                              $15.9 billion for mitigation activities.                Subdivision 1 of the Bipartisan Budget                Planning and Development (CPD),
                                              This notice applies only to the $10.03                  Act of 2018), approved February 9, 2018               Program Office Salaries and Expenses,
                                              billion allocated for long-term recovery                (Pub. L. 115–123) (the ‘‘Appropriations               for necessary costs of administering and
                                              from disasters that occurred in 2017. A                 Act’’), appropriated nearly $28 billion in            overseeing CDBG–DR funds made
                                              future notice will specify the                          CDBG–DR funds. Of this amount, up to                  available under the Appropriations Act
                                              requirements and process for the                        $16 billion is available to address unmet             and $15,000,000 is to be transferred to
                                              electrical power systems funding and                    disaster recovery needs through                       the CPD office to provide necessary
                                              the mitigation funds.                                   activities authorized under title I of the            capacity building and technical
                                                 This $10.03 billion allocation for                   Housing and Community Development                     assistance to grantees. The
                                              addressing unmet recovery needs                         Act of 1974 (42 U.S.C. 5301 et seq.)                  Appropriations Act also provides
                                              supplements the $7.4 billion in CDBG–                   (HCD Act) related to disaster relief,                 $10,000,000 to the Department’s Office
                                              DR funds appropriated by the                            long-term recovery, restoration of                    of the Inspector General for oversight of
                                              Supplemental Appropriations for                         infrastructure and housing, economic                  the appropriated CDBG–DR funds.
                                              Disaster Relief Requirements Act, 2017,                 revitalization, and mitigation in the                    Although the Prior Notice requires
                                              which allocated funds to Texas, Florida,                ‘‘most impacted and distressed’’ areas                each grantee to primarily consider and
                                              Puerto Rico, and the U.S. Virgin Islands                (identified by HUD using the best                     address its unmet housing recovery
                                              in response to qualifying disasters in                  available data) resulting from a major                needs, grantees under this notice and
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with NOTICES1




                                              2017. In HUD’s Federal Register notice                  declared disaster that occurred in 2017.              the Prior Notice may also propose an
                                              published on February 9, 2018 (the                      Amounts allocated for these purposes                  allocation of funds that includes unmet
                                              ‘‘Prior Notice’’), HUD described those                  supplement $7.4 billion in CDBG–DR                    economic revitalization and
                                              allocations, applicable waivers and                     funds appropriated on September 8,                    infrastructure needs that are unrelated
                                              alternative requirements, relevant                      2017, by the Supplemental                             to unmet housing needs after the grantee
                                              statutory and regulatory requirements,                  Appropriations for Disaster Relief                    demonstrates in its needs assessment
                                              the grant award process, criteria for                   Requirements, 2017 (Pub. L. 115–56)                   that there is no remaining unmet


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                                                                                Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 157 / Tuesday, August 14, 2018 / Notices                                                 40315

                                              housing need or that the remaining                          distressed as defined in Table 1. For all                funds from the combined allocations
                                              unmet housing need will be addressed                        other grantees, at least 80 percent of all               under the Appropriations Act and the
                                              by other sources of funds. The law                          allocations provided to the grantee                      Prior Appropriation that must be
                                              provides that grants shall be awarded                       under the Prior Notice and this notice                   expended in the HUD-identified most
                                              directly to a State, local government, or                   must address unmet disaster needs                        impacted and distressed areas. For some
                                              Indian tribe at the discretion of the                       within the HUD-identified most                           grantees funded under the Prior
                                              Secretary. To comply with statutory                         impacted and distressed areas, as                        Appropriation, updated data and
                                              direction that funds be used for disaster-                  identified in the last column of Table 1.                methodology led to additional areas
                                              related expenses in the most impacted                       These grantees may determine where to                    being defined as most impacted and
                                              and distressed areas, HUD allocates                         use the remaining 20 percent of their
                                                                                                                                                                   distressed. Therefore, the most impacted
                                              funds using the best available data that                    allocation, but that portion of the
                                                                                                                                                                   and distressed areas identified in Table
                                              cover all eligible affected areas.                          allocation may only be used to address
                                                 Pursuant to the Appropriations Act,                      unmet disaster needs in those areas that                 1 of this notice amend the Prior Notice
                                              HUD has identified the most impacted                        the grantee determines are ‘‘most                        to replace the most impacted and
                                              and distressed areas based on the best                      impacted and distressed’’ and that                       distressed areas identified in Table 1 of
                                              available data for all eligible affected                    received a presidential major disaster                   the Prior Notice. The areas are listed
                                              areas. A detailed explanation of HUD’s                      declaration pursuant to the disaster                     alphabetically by county/municipio/
                                              allocation methodology is provided in                       numbers listed in Table 1.                               island and numerically by Zip Code and
                                              Appendix A of this notice. For Puerto                          Based on further review of the                        govern all CDBG–DR funds allocated for
                                              Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands, all                       impacts from the eligible disasters, and                 unmet needs from the 2017 disasters
                                              components of each territory are                            estimates of unmet need, Table 1 shows                   identified in Table 1.
                                              considered most impacted and                                the areas and the minimum amount of

                                                                        TABLE 1—ALLOCATIONS FOR UNMET NEEDS UNDER PUBLIC LAWS 115–56 AND 115–123
                                                                                                       Allocation       Unmet needs            Combined
                                                                                                      under Public                                                 Minimum combined amount from Public Law
                                                                                                                          allocation          allocation for
                                                                                                      Law 115–56                                                  115–56 and Public Law 115–123 that must be
                                                                                                                        under Public          unmet needs
                                                   Disaster No.                   Grantee             (covered by                                                expended for unmet needs recovery in the HUD-
                                                                                                                        Law 115–123          (Pub. L. 115–
                                                                                                        previous                                                 identified ‘‘most impacted and distressed’’ areas
                                                                                                                         (covered by         56 and Pub. L.
                                                                                                      Notice 83 FR                                                                   listed herein
                                                                                                                        this Notice) *         115–123) *
                                                                                                          5844)

                                              4344 and 4353 ......          State of California                   $0        $124,155,000      $124,155,000       (No less than $99,324,000) Sonoma and Ven-
                                                                                                                                                                   tura counties; 93108, 94558, 95422, 95470,
                                                                                                                                                                   and 95901 Zip Codes.
                                              4337 and 4341 ......          State of Florida .....     615,922,000           157,676,000       773,598,000       (No less than $618,878,400) Brevard, Broward,
                                                                                                                                                                   Clay, Collier, Duval, Hillsborough, Lee, Miami-
                                                                                                                                                                   Dade, Monroe, Orange, Osceola, Palm Beach,
                                                                                                                                                                   Polk, St. Lucie, and Volusia counties; 32084,
                                                                                                                                                                   32091, 32136, 32145, 32771, 33440, 33523,
                                                                                                                                                                   33825, 33870, 33935, and 34266 Zip Codes.
                                              4294, 4297, and               State of Georgia ....                   0         37,943,000            37,943,000   (No less than $30,354,400) 31520, 31548, and
                                                4338.                                                                                                              31705 Zip Codes.
                                              4317 ......................   State of Missouri ...                   0         58,535,000            58,535,000   (No less than $46,828,000) 63935, 63965,
                                                                                                                                                                   64850, 65616, and 65775 Zip Codes.
                                              4336 and 4339 ......          Commonwealth of           1,507,179,000     8,220,783,000        9,727,962,000       ($9,727,962,000) All components of Puerto
                                                                              Puerto Rico.                                                                         Rico.***
                                              4332 ......................   State of Texas ** ...     5,024,215,000          652,175,000     5,676,390,000       (No less than $4,541,112,000) Aransas,
                                                                                                                                                                   Brazoria, Chambers, Fayette, Fort Bend, Gal-
                                                                                                                                                                   veston, Hardin, Harris, Jasper, Jefferson, Lib-
                                                                                                                                                                   erty, Montgomery, Newton, Nueces, Orange,
                                                                                                                                                                   Refugio, San Jacinto, San Patricio, Victoria,
                                                                                                                                                                   and Wharton counties; 75979, 77320, 77335,
                                                                                                                                                                   77351, 77414, 77423, 77482, 77493, 77979,
                                                                                                                                                                   and 78934 Zip Codes.
                                              4335 and 4340 ......          U.S. Virgin Islands        242,684,000           779,217,000     1,021,901,000       ($1,021,901,000) All components of the U.S. Vir-
                                                                                                                                                                   gin Islands.
                                                 * The $2 billion required for electric grid enhancements and improvements are considered unmet needs for allocation purposes, but the alloca-
                                              tion and use of the funds will be governed by a forthcoming notice and thus are not included in this table.
                                                 ** State of Texas has also received $57.8 million for disaster recovery in respect to Hurricane Harvey from Public Law 115–31 that is not re-
                                              flected here.
                                                 *** The areas defined as most impacted in HUD’s formula calculation include more than 68 of Puerto Rico’s 78 municipios as Most Impacted
                                              Counties and all 10 municipios that are non-Most Impacted Counties do each have a Most Impacted Zip Code. This results in nearly 100% cov-
                                              erage of Puerto Rico both in terms of geography and population, so for program implementation purposes, HUD has determined to include all
                                              areas of Puerto Rico as Most Impacted.
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                                                Grantees may use up to 5 percent of                       percent of a grantee’s expenditures for                  identified in Table 1. Additionally, for
                                              the total combined grant award for grant                    grant administration in its                              grantees other than Puerto Rico and U.S.
                                              administration. Therefore, for grantees                     determination that 80 percent of the                     Virgin Islands, expenditures for
                                              other than Puerto Rico and the U.S.                         total award has been expended in the                     planning activities may be counted
                                              Virgin Islands, HUD will include 80                         most impacted and distressed areas                       towards a grantee’s 80 percent



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                                              40316                        Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 157 / Tuesday, August 14, 2018 / Notices

                                              expenditure requirement, provided that                  III. Overview Grant Process                           Provided, however, that grantees shall
                                              the grantee describes in its action plan                                                                      be required to update the Financial
                                                                                                      A. Appropriations Act (Pub. L. 115–123)
                                              how those planning activities benefit                                                                         Management and Grant Compliance
                                                                                                      Initial Action Plan Process
                                              the HUD-identified most impacted and                                                                          submissions and the Pre-Award
                                              distressed areas.                                          Grantees receiving an initial                      Implementation Plan per section VI.A.1
                                                                                                      allocation under this notice for disasters            of the Prior Notice to reflect any
                                              II. Use of Funds                                        occurring in 2017 (California, Georgia,               material changes in the submissions.
                                                 Unless otherwise indicated, funds                    and Missouri) must submit an action                      Additionally, each grantee that
                                              allocated under this notice and under                   plan per the requirements in section                  received an allocation under the Prior
                                              the Prior Notice are subject to the                     VI.A.2. of the Prior Notice not later than            Notice must meet the following
                                              requirements of this notice and the Prior               120 days after the applicability date of              requirements to amend the initial action
                                              Notice (as amended). This notice                        this notice. All requirements of the Prior            plan. These steps are only applicable to
                                              outlines additional requirements                        Notice related to the action plan                     the substantial amendment process to
                                              imposed by Public Laws 115–141 and                      submission apply except the public                    add the additional allocation under this
                                              115–123 that apply to funds allocated                   comment period, which has been                        notice.
                                              under this notice and the Prior Notice.                 extended to no less than 30 calendar                     • Grantee must consult with affected
                                              These requirements are outlined in                      days under this notice. Grantees must                 citizens, stakeholders, local
                                              section IV.A.1 and 2 of this notice.                    publish the action plan in a manner that              governments, and public housing
                                                 The Appropriations Act requires that                 affords citizens, affected local                      authorities to determine updates to its
                                              prior to the obligation of CDBG–DR                      governments, and other interested                     needs assessment;
                                              funds by the Secretary, a grantee shall                 parties a reasonable opportunity to                      • Grantee must amend its initial
                                              submit a plan to HUD for approval                       examine the contents and provide                      action plan to update its impact and
                                              detailing the proposed use of all funds.                feedback. The manner of publication                   needs assessment, modify or create new
                                              The plan must include the criteria for                  must include, at a minimum, prominent                 activities, or reprogram funds. Each
                                              eligibility, and how the use of these                   posting on the grantee’s official website             amendment must be highlighted, or
                                              funds will address long-term recovery                   for not less than 30 calendar days for                otherwise identified within the context
                                              and restoration of infrastructure and                   public comment. These grantees must                   of the entire action plan. The beginning
                                              housing, and economic revitalization in                 also submit the Financial Management                  of every substantial amendment must
                                              the most impacted and distressed areas.                 and Grant Compliance submissions and                  include a: (1) Section that identifies
                                              This notice requires the grantee to                     the Pre-Award Implementation Plan per                 exactly what content is being added,
                                              submit an action plan that addresses                    section VI.A.1 of the Prior Notice within             deleted, or changed; (2) chart or table
                                              unmet recovery needs related to the                     60 days of the applicability date of this             that clearly illustrates where funds are
                                              applicable disasters. Therefore, the                    notice.                                               coming from and where they are moving
                                              action plan submitted in response to                                                                          to; and (3) a revised budget allocation
                                              this notice must describe uses and                      B. Prior Appropriation (Pub. L. 115–56)
                                                                                                                                                            table that reflects all funds;
                                                                                                      Substantial Amendment Process To
                                              activities that: (1) Are authorized under                                                                        • Grantee must publish the
                                              title I of the Housing and Community                    Incorporate Additional Funds
                                                                                                                                                            substantial amendment to its previously
                                              Development Act of 1974 (HCD Act) or                       Each grantee that received an                      approved action plan for disaster
                                              allowed by a waiver or alternative                      allocation pursuant to the Prior                      recovery in a manner that affords
                                              requirement (see section IV below); and                 Appropriation (Texas, Florida, Puerto                 citizens, affected local governments, and
                                              (2) respond to disaster-related impacts                 Rico, and U.S. Virgin Islands) is                     other interested parties a reasonable
                                              to infrastructure, housing, and economic                required to submit a substantial                      opportunity to examine the
                                              revitalization in the most impacted and                 amendment amending the initial action                 amendment’s contents and provide
                                              distressed areas. Additionally, grantees                plan that was submitted in response to                feedback. The manner of publication
                                              may include disaster related                            the Prior Notice. The substantial                     must include, at a minimum, prominent
                                              preparedness and mitigation measures                    amendment must be submitted not later                 posting on the grantee’s official website
                                              as part of assisted activities as                       than 90 days after the initial action plan            for not less than 30 calendar days for
                                              authorized pursuant to paragraph                        is approved in whole or in part by HUD                public comment (see section VI.A.4.e of
                                              A.2.c.(4) of section VI of the Prior                    or not later than 90 days after the                   the Prior Notice for details about the
                                              Notice. Grantees must conduct an                        applicability date of this notice,                    website requirements);
                                              assessment of community impacts and                     whichever comes later. The substantial                   • Grantee must respond to public
                                              unmet needs to inform the plan and                      amendment must include the additional                 comment and submit its substantial
                                              guide the development and                               allocation of funds and address the                   amendment to HUD no later than 90
                                              prioritization of planned recovery                      requirements of this notice. For the                  days after the grantee’s initial action
                                              activities, pursuant to paragraph A.2.a.                Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the                      plan is approved in whole or in part by
                                              in section VI of the Prior Notice, as                   substantial amendment must be                         HUD or not later than 90 days after the
                                              amended in this notice.                                 reviewed for consistency with the                     applicability date of this notice,
                                                 An alternative requirement                           Commonwealth’s 12- and 24-month                       whichever comes later. The substantial
                                              established by the Prior Notice                         economic and disaster recovery plan                   amendment submitted to HUD must
                                              authorized the U.S. Virgin Islands to                   required by Section 21210 of Public Law               also be prominently posted on the
                                              administer a CDBG–DR allocation in                      115–123, the Commonwealth’s fiscal                    grantee’s official website;
                                              accordance with the regulatory and                      plan, and CDBG–DR eligibility. The                       • HUD will review the substantial
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                                              statutory provisions governing the State                certification of financial controls and               amendment within 45 days from date of
                                              CDBG program, as modified by                            procurement processes and the                         receipt and determine whether to
                                              applicable waivers and alternative                      Department’s determination of the                     approve the substantial amendment per
                                              requirements. Therefore, all references                 adequacy of the grantee’s                             criteria identified in this notice and the
                                              to States and State grantees in this                    implementation and capacity                           Prior Notice;
                                              notice and the Prior Notice include the                 assessment pursuant to the Prior Notice,                 • HUD will send a substantial
                                              U.S. Virgin Islands.                                    shall remain in effect for this allocation.           amendment approval letter, revised


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                                                                           Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 157 / Tuesday, August 14, 2018 / Notices                                           40317

                                              grant conditions, and an amended                        recovery activities. Waivers and                      read to require ‘‘an evaluation of the
                                              unsigned grant agreement to the grantee.                alternative requirements are effective                cost or price of a product or service.’’
                                              If the substantial amendment is not                     five (5) days after they are published in                d. Additional requirements for the
                                              approved, a letter will be sent                         the Federal Register.                                 comprehensive disaster recovery
                                              identifying its deficiencies; the grantee                                                                     website. The Prior Notice requires all
                                                                                                      A. Grant Administration                               grantees to maintain a comprehensive
                                              must then re-submit the substantial
                                              amendment within 45 days of the                            1. Applicability of waivers, alternative           disaster recovery website. The
                                              notification letter;                                    requirements, and other requirements.                 Appropriations Act requires that certain
                                                 • Grantee must ensure that the HUD-                  All funds allocated under the Prior                   content be included on a CDBG–DR
                                              approved substantial amendment and                      Notice and this notice are subject to the             grantee’s website. These requirements
                                              initial HUD-approved action plan are                    requirements of this notice and the Prior             apply to funds allocated under this
                                              posted prominently on its official                      Notice. The waivers, alternative                      notice and the Prior Notice. Each
                                              website. Each grantee’s current version                 requirements, and other provisions of                 grantee must maintain on its
                                              of its entire action plan must be                       the Prior Notice, as amended, are also                comprehensive disaster recovery
                                              accessible for viewing as a single                      incorporated and made applicable to                   website information containing common
                                              document at any given point in time,                    funds allocated under this notice. The                reporting criteria established by the
                                              rather than the public or HUD having to                 waivers and alternative requirements                  Department that permits individuals
                                              view and cross-reference changes among                  provide additional flexibility in program             and entities awaiting assistance and the
                                              multiple amendments;                                    design and implementation to support                  general public to see how all grant funds
                                                 • Grantee must enter the activities                  full and swift recovery following the                 are used, including copies of all relevant
                                              from its published substantial                          disasters, while also ensuring that                   procurement documents, grantee
                                              amendment into the Disaster Recovery                    statutory requirements under the                      administrative contracts, and details of
                                              Grant Reporting (DRGR) system and                       Appropriations Act, the Prior                         ongoing procurement processes, as
                                              submit the updated DRGR action plan                     Appropriation, as well as requirements                determined by the Secretary. HUD will
                                              (revised to reflect the substantial                     in Public Laws 115–141 and 115–72,                    post guidance related to this
                                              amendment) to HUD within the DRGR                       made applicable by the terms of the                   requirement on the HUD exchange
                                              system;                                                 Appropriations Act and the Prior                      website.
                                                 • Grantee must sign and return the                   Appropriation, are met.                                  e. Working capital to aid in recovery.
                                              grant agreement to HUD;                                    2. Additional requirements and                     The Appropriations Act provides that
                                                 • HUD will sign the grant agreement                  modifications of requirements in the                  grantees may establish grant programs to
                                              and revise the grantee’s CDBG–DR line                   Prior Notice. The following                           assist small businesses for working
                                              of credit amount to reflect the total                   clarifications or modifications apply to              capital purposes to aid in recovery with
                                              amount of available funds;                              all grantees in receipt of an allocation              funds allocated under this notice or the
                                                 • Grantee may draw down CDBG–DR                      under this notice and to funds allocated              Prior Notice. This proviso does not
                                              funds from its line of credit after the                 under the Prior Notice:                               establish a new eligible activity. All
                                              Responsible Entity completes applicable                    a. Substantial amendments for                      funds to assist small businesses for
                                              environmental review(s) pursuant to 24                  grantees receiving an allocation of funds             working capital must be expended for
                                              CFR part 58, or adopts another Federal                  under the Prior Notice. Grantees that                 eligible CDBG activities that meet a
                                              agency’s environmental review as                        received an allocation under the Prior                national objective and the other
                                              authorized under the Appropriations                     Notice (Texas, Florida, Puerto Rico, and              requirements applicable to the use of
                                              Act and the Prior Appropriation, and, as                U.S. Virgin Islands) must submit a                    funds.
                                              applicable, receives from HUD the                       substantial amendment, including an                      f. Underwriting. Notwithstanding
                                              Authority to Use Grant Funds (AUGF)                     updated needs assessment, per the                     section 105(e)(1) of the HCD Act, no
                                              form and certification;                                 requirements outlined in this notice, in              funds allocated under this notice or the
                                                 • Grantee must amend and submit its                  addition to meeting the requirements for              Prior Notice may be provided to a for-
                                              projection of CDBG–DR expenditures                      substantial amendments under the Prior                profit entity for an economic
                                              and performance outcomes with the                       Notice.                                               development project under section
                                              substantial amendment.                                     b. Action plan and other submission                105(a)(17) unless such project has been
                                                                                                      requirements for grantees receiving an                evaluated and selected in accordance
                                              IV. Applicable Rules, Statutes, Waivers,                initial allocation under this notice.                 with guidelines developed by HUD
                                              and Alternative Requirements                            Grantees that did not receive an                      pursuant to section 105(e)(2) for
                                                 This section of the notice describes                 allocation under the Prior Notice                     evaluating and selecting economic
                                              rules, statutes, waivers, and alternative               (California, Georgia, and Missouri) shall             development projects. States and their
                                              requirements that apply to allocations                  be subject to deadlines for the                       subrecipients are required to comply
                                              under this notice or the Prior Notice.                  submission of financial controls and                  with the underwriting guidelines in
                                              The Secretary has determined that good                  procurement processes, implementation                 Appendix A to 24 CFR part 570 if they
                                              cause exists for each waiver and                        plans, and action plans, as established               are using grant funds to provide
                                              alternative requirement established in                  in the Prior Notice, which shall be based             assistance to a for-profit entity for an
                                              this notice, and for the extension of                   upon the applicability date of this                   economic development project under
                                              waivers and alternative requirements in                 notice. Grantees that did not receive an              section 105(a)(17) of the HCDA. The
                                              the Prior Notice to allocations made                    allocation under the Prior Notice must                underwriting guidelines are found at
                                              under this notice, and that the waivers                 submit an action plan not later than 120              Appendix A of Part 570. https://www.
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                                              and alternative requirements are not                    days after the applicability date of this             ecfr.gov/cgi-bin/text-idx?SID=88dced
                                              inconsistent with the overall purpose of                notice.                                               3d630ad9fd8ab91268dd829f1e&mc=
                                              the HCD Act.                                               c. Cost or price analysis. References in           true&node=ap24.3.570_1913.a&rgn=
                                                 Grantees may request additional                      the Prior Notice to ‘‘an evaluation of the            div9.
                                              waivers and alternative requirements                    cost and price of a product or service’’                 g. Limitation on use of funds for
                                              from the Department as needed to                        and to the ‘‘evaluation of the cost or                eminent domain. No funds allocated
                                              address specific needs related to their                 price of a product or service’’ shall be              under this notice or the Prior Notice


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                                              40318                        Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 157 / Tuesday, August 14, 2018 / Notices

                                              may be used to support any Federal,                     requirements for a grant under this                   reasonable time frame (again, no less
                                              State, or local projects that seek to use               notice are:                                           than 30 days) and method(s) (including
                                              the power of eminent domain, unless                        a. Publication of the action plan,                 electronic submission) for receiving
                                              eminent domain is employed only for a                   opportunity for public comment, and                   comments on the plan or substantial
                                              public use. For purposes of this                        substantial amendment criteria. Before                amendment. In its action plan, each
                                              paragraph, public use shall not be                      the grantee adopts the action plan for                grantee must specify criteria for
                                              construed to include economic                           this grant or any substantial amendment               determining what changes in the
                                              development that primarily benefits                     to the action plan, the grantee will                  grantee’s plan constitute a substantial
                                              private entities. Any use of funds for                  publish the proposed plan or                          amendment to the plan. At a minimum,
                                              mass transit, railroad, airport, seaport or             amendment. The manner of publication                  the following modifications will
                                              highway projects, as well as utility                    must include prominent posting on the                 constitute a substantial amendment: A
                                              projects which benefit or serve the                     grantee’s official website and must                   change in program benefit or eligibility
                                              general public (including energy-                       afford citizens, affected local                       criteria; the addition or deletion of an
                                              related, communication-related, water-                  governments, and other interested                     activity; or the allocation or reallocation
                                              related, and wastewater-related                         parties a reasonable opportunity to                   of a monetary threshold specified by the
                                              infrastructure), other structures                       examine the plan or amendment’s                       grantee in its action plan. The grantee
                                              designated for use by the general public                contents. The topic of disaster recovery              may substantially amend the action plan
                                              or which have other common-carrier or                   should be navigable by citizens from the              if it follows the same procedures
                                              public-utility functions that serve the                 grantee’s (or relevant agency’s)                      required in this notice for the
                                              general public and are subject to                       homepage. Grantees are also encouraged                preparation and submission of an action
                                              regulation and oversight by the                         to notify affected citizens through                   plan for disaster recovery.’’
                                              government, and projects for the                        electronic mailings, press releases,                     4. Cost Verification. Section VI.A.2.a
                                              removal of an immediate threat to                       statements by public officials, media                 of the Prior Notice established the
                                              public health and safety or brownfields                 advertisements, public service                        requirements for contents of action
                                              as defined in the Small Business                        announcements, and/or contacts with                   plans submitted in response to the Prior
                                              Liability Relief and Brownfields                        neighborhood organizations. Plan                      Notice and this notice. To further
                                              Revitalization Act (Pub. L. 107–118)                    publication efforts must meet the                     strengthen the ability of grantees to
                                              shall be considered a public use for                    effective communications requirements                 demonstrate that project costs funded
                                              purposes of eminent domain.                             of 24 CFR 8.6 and other fair housing and              with CDBG–DR are necessary and
                                                                                                      civil rights requirements, such as the                reasonable, section VI.A.2.a of the Prior
                                                 3. Citizen participation waiver and
                                                                                                      effective communication requirements                  Notice is amended by adding a new
                                              alternative requirement. Section VI.A.4
                                                                                                      under the Americans with Disabilities                 paragraph (14) to read as follows. This
                                              of the Prior Notice established citizen
                                                                                                      Act.                                                  requirement shall apply to the
                                              participation requirements for input on                    Grantees are responsible for ensuring              substantial amendment submitted by
                                              grantee action plans and substantial                    that all citizens have equal access to                Puerto Rico, Texas, Florida, and the U.S.
                                              amendments. To ensure adequate                          information about the programs,                       Virgin Islands pursuant to section
                                              citizen participation and access to                     including persons with disabilities and               IV.A.2.a of this notice:
                                              action plans and substantial                            limited English proficiency (LEP). Each                  ‘‘14. A description of the grantee’s
                                              amendments, the Department is deleting                  grantee must ensure that program                      controls for assuring that construction
                                              and replacing the first paragraph in                    information is available in the                       costs are reasonable and consistent with
                                              section VI.A.4 and the entirety of                      appropriate languages for the geographic              market costs at the time and place of
                                              section VI.A.4.a of the Prior Notice with               areas to be served and take appropriate               construction. The method and degree of
                                              the following to extend the minimum                     steps to ensure effective                             analysis may vary dependent upon the
                                              amount of time grantees are required to                 communications with persons with                      circumstances surrounding a particular
                                              publish action plans and substantial                    disabilities pursuant to 24 CFR 8.6 and               project (e.g., project type, risk, costs),
                                              amendments for public comment from                      other fair housing and civil rights                   but the description must address
                                              14 calendar days to at least 30 calendar                requirements, such as the effective                   controls for housing projects involving
                                              days. These paragraphs shall apply to                   communication requirements under the                  eight or more units (whether new
                                              initial action plans and all substantial                Americans with Disabilities Act. Since                construction, rehabilitation, or
                                              amendments submitted pursuant to this                   State grantees under this notice may                  reconstruction), economic revitalization
                                              notice.                                                 make grants throughout the State,                     projects (involving, construction,
                                                 ‘‘4. Citizen participation waiver and                including to entitlement communities,                 rehabilitation or reconstruction), and
                                              alternative requirement. To permit a                    States should carefully evaluate the                  infrastructure projects. HUD may issue
                                              more streamlined process and ensure                     needs of persons with disabilities and                guidance to grantees and may require a
                                              disaster recovery grants are awarded in                 those with limited English proficiency.               grantee to verify cost reasonableness
                                              a timely manner, provisions of 42 U.S.C.                For assistance in ensuring that this                  from an independent and qualified
                                              5304(a)(2) and (3), 42 U.S.C. 12707, 24                 information is available to LEP                       third-party architect, civil engineer, or
                                              CFR 570.486, 24 CFR 1003.604, and 24                    populations, recipients should consult                construction manager.’’
                                              CFR 91.115(b) and (c), with respect to                  the Final Guidance to Federal Financial                  5. Additional Specific Criteria and
                                              citizen participation requirements, are                 Assistance Recipients Regarding Title                 Conditions to Mitigate Risk. HUD is
                                              waived and replaced by the                              VI, Prohibition Against National Origin               required to design an internal control
                                              requirements below. The streamlined                     Discrimination Affecting Limited                      plan for disaster relief funding based on
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                                              requirements do not mandate public                      English Proficient Persons, published on              standard guidance issued by the
                                              hearings but do require the grantee to                  January 22, 2007, in the Federal                      Director of the Office of Management
                                              provide a reasonable opportunity (at                    Register (72 FR 2732) and at: https://                and Budget on March 30, 2018, to
                                              least 30 days) for citizen comment and                  www.lep.gov/guidance/HUD_guidance_                    address known internal control risks
                                              ongoing citizen access to information                   Jan07.pdf                                             related to disaster funding provided
                                              about the use of grant funds. The                          Subsequent to publication of the                   under the Appropriations Act and the
                                              streamlined citizen participation                       action plan, the grantee must provide a               Prior Appropriation. Both the


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                                                                           Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 157 / Tuesday, August 14, 2018 / Notices                                           40319

                                              Appropriations Act and the Prior                        with Section 414 of the Stafford Act for              long-term, post-disaster projects
                                              Appropriation also require the Secretary                homeowner occupants and tenants                       involving the acquisition, rehabilitation,
                                              to certify in advance of signing a grant                displaced because of the disaster. The                or demolition of disaster-damaged
                                              agreement, that the grantee has                         waiver is applicable to ‘‘CDBG–DR                     housing. The Secretary has the authority
                                              proficient financial controls and                       funded projects commencing more than                  to waive provisions of the Stafford Act
                                              procurement processes, and has                          one year after the date of the                        and its implementing regulations that
                                              established adequate procedures to                      Presidentially declared disaster.’’ The               the Secretary administers in connection
                                              prevent any duplication of benefits as                  Department is amending this provision                 with the obligation of funds made
                                              defined by section 312 of the Robert T.                 to clarify the point at which a project is            available by this notice, or the grantees’
                                              Stafford Disaster Relief and Emergency                  determined to have ‘‘commenced,’’ by                  use of these funds. The Department has
                                              Assistance Act (42 U.S.C. 5155), ensure                 amending paragraph VI.A.23.f of the                   determined that good cause exists for a
                                              timely expenditure of funds, maintain                   Prior Notice by replacing it in its                   waiver and that such waiver is not
                                              comprehensive websites regarding all                    entirety with the following:                          inconsistent with the overall purposes
                                              disaster recovery activities assisted with                 ‘‘f. Waiver of Section 414 of the                  of title I of the HCD Act.
                                              these funds, and detect and prevent                     Stafford Act. Section 414 of the Stafford                (1) The waiver will simplify the
                                              waste, fraud, and abuse of funds.                       Act (42 U.S.C. 5181) provides that                    administration of the disaster recovery
                                              Additionally, 2 CFR 200.205 requires                    ‘‘Notwithstanding any other provision                 process and reduce the administrative
                                              the Department to assess the risk of each               of law, no person otherwise eligible for              burden associated with the
                                              grantee and 2 CFR 200.207(a) provides                                                                         implementation of Stafford Act Section
                                                                                                      any kind of replacement housing
                                              that specific conditions may be placed                                                                        414 requirements for projects
                                                                                                      payment under the Uniform Relocation
                                              on the grant award based upon that                                                                            commencing more than one year after
                                                                                                      Assistance and Real Property
                                              assessment of risk. To ensure the                                                                             the date of the Presidentially declared
                                                                                                      Acquisition Policies Act of 1970 (Pub. L.
                                              effective implementation of the internal                                                                      disaster considering most of such
                                                                                                      91–646) [42 U.S.C. 4601 et seq.]
                                              controls discussed above, the                                                                                 persons displaced by the disaster will
                                                                                                      [‘‘URA’’] shall be denied such eligibility
                                              Department is adding a new paragraph                                                                          have returned to their dwellings or
                                                                                                      as a result of his being unable, because
                                              VI.A.32 to the Prior Notice. This                                                                             found another place of permanent
                                                                                                      of a major disaster as determined by the
                                              paragraph will also apply to funds                                                                            residence.
                                                                                                      President, to meet the occupancy                         (2) This waiver does not apply with
                                              provided under this notice as well as
                                                                                                      requirements set by [the URA].’’                      respect to persons that meet the
                                              the Prior Notice:
                                                 ‘‘32. Additional Criteria and Specific               Accordingly, homeowner occupants and                  occupancy requirements to receive a
                                              Conditions to Mitigate Risk. To ensure                  tenants displaced from their homes as a               replacement housing payment under the
                                              the effective implementation of the                     result of the identified disasters and                URA nor does it apply to persons
                                              internal control plan required under the                who would have otherwise been                         displaced or relocated temporarily by
                                              Appropriations Act and grantee                          displaced as a direct result of any                   other HUD-funded programs or projects.
                                              implementation of the financial                         acquisition, rehabilitation, or                       Such persons’ eligibility for relocation
                                              controls, procurement processes, and                    demolition of real property for a                     assistance and payments under the URA
                                              other procedures that are the subject of                federally funded program or project may               is not impacted by this waiver.’’
                                              the certification by the Secretary, the                 become eligible for a replacement                        7. Clarification of the Environmental
                                              Department has and may continue to                      housing payment notwithstanding their                 Review requirements. The Prior Notice
                                              establish specific criteria and conditions              inability to meet occupancy                           provided guidance on the adoption of
                                              for each grant award as provided for at                 requirements prescribed in the URA.                   another Federal agency’s environmental
                                              2 CFR 200.205 and 200.207(a),                           Section 414 of the Stafford Act                       review for CDBG–DR projects as
                                              respectively, to mitigate the risk of the               (including its implementing regulation                permitted by the Prior Appropriation.
                                              grant. The Secretary shall specify any                  at 49 CFR 24.403(d)(1)), is waived to the             The Appropriations Act goes beyond the
                                              such criteria and the resulting                         extent that it would apply to real                    Prior Appropriation and authorizes
                                              conditions in the grant conditions                      property acquisition, rehabilitation or               recipients of CDBG–DR funds under the
                                              governing the award. These criteria may                 demolition of real property for a CDBG–               Appropriations Act that use such funds
                                              include, but need not be limited to, a                  DR funded project commencing more                     to supplement Federal assistance
                                              consideration of the internal control                   than one year after the date of the latest            provided under section 408(c)(4) of the
                                              framework established by the grantee to                 applicable Presidentially declared                    Stafford Act to adopt, without review or
                                              ensure compliant implementation of its                  disaster undertaken by the grantees, or               public comment, any environmental
                                              financial controls, procurement                         subrecipients, provided that the project              review, approval, or permit performed
                                              processes and payment of funds to                       was not planned, approved, or                         by a Federal agency to satisfy
                                              eligible entities, as well as the grantee’s             otherwise underway prior to the                       responsibilities with respect to
                                              risk management strategy for                            disaster. For purposes of this paragraph,             environmental review, approval or
                                              information technology systems                          a CDBG–DR funded project shall be                     permit. Accordingly, the Department is
                                              established to implement CDBG–DR                        determined to have commenced on the                   amending paragraph VI.A.24.b of the
                                              funded programs. Additionally, the                      earliest of: (1) The date of an approved              Prior Notice by replacing it in its
                                              Secretary may amend the grant                           Request for Release of Funds and                      entirety with the following:
                                              conditions to mitigate risk of a grant                  certification, or (2) the date of                        ‘‘b. Adoption of another agency’s
                                              award at any point at which the                         completion of the site-specific review                environmental review. In accordance
                                              Secretary determines a condition to be                  when a program utilizes Tiering, or (3)               with the Appropriations Act, grant
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                                              required to protect the Federal financial               the date of sign-off by the approving                 recipients of Federal funds that use such
                                              interest or to advance recovery.’’                      official when a project converts to                   funds to supplement Federal assistance
                                                 6. Clarification of Waiver of Section                exempt under 24 CFR 58.34(a)(12). The                 provided under section 408(c)(4) as well
                                              414 of the Robert T. Stafford Disaster                  Department has surveyed other Federal                 as sections 402, 403, 404, 406, 407 or
                                              Relief and Emergency Assistance Act                     agencies’ interpretation and                          502 of the Stafford Act may adopt,
                                              (42 U.S.C. 5121 et seq.). The Prior                     implementation of Section 414 and                     without review or public comment, any
                                              Notice established a waiver associated                  found varying views and strategies for                environmental review, approval, or


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                                              40320                             Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 157 / Tuesday, August 14, 2018 / Notices

                                              permit performed by a Federal agency,                           incomes of 80 percent AMI or less, also                            ‘‘34. Addressing Unmet Affordable
                                              and such adoption shall satisfy the                             remain below the Federal poverty level.                         Rental Housing Needs. The grantee must
                                              responsibilities of the recipient with                          Therefore, the Department is increasing                         identify in its action plan how it will
                                              respect to such environmental review,                           the income limits for low- and                                  address the rehabilitation,
                                              approval, or permit that is required by                         moderate-income persons in Puerto                               reconstruction, replacement, and new
                                              the HCD Act. The grant recipient must                           Rico, which will be listed in income                            construction of rental housing that is
                                              notify HUD in writing of its decision to                        tables posted on the HUD Exchange                               affordable to low- and moderate-income
                                              adopt another agency’s environmental                            website. Under this adjustment, Puerto                          households in the most impacted and
                                              review. The grant recipient must retain                         Rico may use these alternative income                           distressed areas and ensure that
                                              a copy of the review in the grantee’s                           limits when determining that activities                         adequate funding from all available
                                              environmental records.’’                                        undertaken with CDBG–DR funds meet
                                                 8. Low- and moderate-income                                                                                                  sources, including CDBG–DR grant
                                                                                                              the low- and moderate-income benefit
                                              national objective standard                                                                                                     funds, are dedicated to addressing the
                                                                                                              CDBG national objective criteria. These
                                              (Commonwealth of Puerto Rico only).                             income limits apply only to the use of                          unmet needs identified in its action
                                              Section 102(a)(20) of the HCD Act                               CDBG–DR funds under this notice and                             plan pursuant to paragraph A.2.a.(3) of
                                              defines ‘‘persons of low and moderate                           the Prior Notice.                                               section VI of this notice. To meet the
                                              income’’ and ‘‘low- and moderate                                                                                                low- and moderate-income housing
                                              income persons.’’ Subparagraph (B) of                           B. Housing                                                      national objective, affordable rental
                                              this definition authorizes the Secretary                           9. Modification of Affordability                             housing funded under this notice must
                                              to establish for any area percentages of                        Periods. The Prior Notice imposed a                             be rented to a low- and moderate-
                                              median income that are higher or lower                          twenty-year (20-year) affordability                             income person at affordable rents. This
                                              than the percentages defined as ‘‘low-                          period for all rental properties assisted                       notice requires grantees to impose the
                                              and moderate-income’’ under                                     with CDBG–DR funds under the Prior                              following minimum affordability
                                              102(a)(20)(A), if the Secretary finds such                      Appropriation. The Department,                                  periods enforced with recorded use
                                              variations to be necessary because of                           however, is amending this requirement                           restrictions, covenants, deed
                                              unusually high or low family incomes                            to apply the affordability requirements                         restrictions, or other mechanisms to
                                              in such areas. Due to the unusually low                         to rental projects as defined below. The                        ensure that rental housing remains
                                              incomes in Puerto Rico, residents that                          Department is amending paragraph                                affordable for the required period of
                                              meet the CDBG program definition of                             VI.B.34 of the Prior Notice by replacing                        time:
                                              ‘‘low- and moderate-income’’ by having                          it in its entirety with the following:

                                                                                                                                                                                                                         Minimum
                                                                                                                                                                                                                         period of
                                                                                                                  Rental housing activity                                                                               affordability
                                                                                                                                                                                                                           (years)

                                              Rehabilitation or reconstruction of multi-family rental projects with eight or more units ....................................................................                        15
                                              New construction multi-family rental projects with five or more units .................................................................................................               20



                                                 The action plan must, at a minimum,                          affordability period on all newly                               provisions will be used, and how the
                                              provide (1) a definition of ‘‘affordable                        constructed single-family housing that                          provisions will be enforced.
                                              rents’’; (2) the income limits for tenants                      is to be made available for low- and                               11. CDBG–DR Housing Assistance and
                                              of rental housing that is rehabilitated,                        moderate-income homeownership. This                             FEMA’s Permanent and Semi-
                                              reconstructed or constructed with                               requirement for an affordability period                         Permanent Housing Programs. The Prior
                                              CDBG–DR funds; and (3) a minimum                                does not apply to the rehabilitation or                         Appropriation and the Appropriations
                                              affordability period of fifteen (15) years                      reconstruction of single-family housing.                        Act prohibit the use of CDBG–DR funds
                                              for the rehabilitation or reconstruction                        This notice requires grantees to develop
                                              of multi-family rental projects with                                                                                            for activities that are reimbursable by
                                                                                                              and impose affordability (i.e., resale and                      FEMA and the U.S. Army Corps of
                                              eight or more units, and a minimum                              recapture) restrictions for single-family
                                              affordability period of twenty (20) years                                                                                       Engineers. In addition, paragraph
                                                                                                              housing newly constructed with CDBG–                            VI.A.25 of the Prior Notice requires
                                              for the new construction of multi-family                        DR funds and made available for
                                              rental units with five or more units. If                                                                                        grantees to ensure that CDBG–DR funds
                                                                                                              affordable homeownership to low- and                            are not used to duplicate funding
                                              a rental project that requires
                                                                                                              moderate-income persons, and to                                 provided by these agencies or any other
                                              rehabilitation or reconstruction is
                                              subject to existing affordability                               enforce those restrictions through                              potential sources of assistance. As with
                                              requirements associated with other                              recorded deed restrictions, covenants, or                       all sources of FEMA assistance, grantees
                                              funding sources, grantees may provide                           other similar mechanisms, for a period                          are reminded that in jurisdictions in
                                              in their action plan that the 15-year                           not less than five years. Grantees shall                        which FEMA has implemented its
                                              affordability period required under this                        establish resale or recapture                                   Permanent or Semi-Permanent Housing
                                              notice may run concurrently (or                                 requirements for housing funded                                 program, grantees must ensure that
                                              overlap) with the affordability                                 pursuant to this paragraph and shall                            CDBG–DR funds are not used in
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                                              requirements associated with such other                         outline those requirements in the action                        violation of the above two prohibitions.
                                              funding.                                                        plan or substantial amendment in which                          Grantees must also establish policies
                                                 10. Affordability Period for New                             the activity is proposed. The resale and                        and procedures to provide for the
                                              Construction of Single-Family LMI                               recapture provisions must clearly                               repayment of a CDBG–DR award when
                                              Homeowner Housing. Grantees receiving                           describe the terms of the resale and                            assistance is subsequently provided for
                                              funds under this notice are required to                         recapture provisions, the specific                              that same purpose from FEMA or other
                                              implement a minimum five-year                                   circumstances under which these                                 sources.


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                                                                           Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 157 / Tuesday, August 14, 2018 / Notices                                         40321

                                                 12. Rehabilitation and Reconstruction                for under this notice are informed in                 Grantees are encouraged to review the
                                              Cost-Effectiveness. In its Federal                      part by the Department’s assessment of                additional guidance on predevelopment
                                              Register notice allocating additional                   unmet infrastructure needs and                        principles are described in the Federal
                                              CDBG–DR funds for Louisiana floods                      accordingly, the Department is                        Resource Guide for Infrastructure
                                              and 2016 disasters (82 FR 5591), the                    establishing infrastructure planning and              Planning and Design: (http://portal.hud.
                                              Department required grantees receiving                  design requirements for grantees subject              gov/hudportal/documents/huddoc?id=
                                              funds under that notice to consider cost-               to the provisions of this notice and the              BAInfraResGuideMay2015.pdf)
                                              effectiveness of residential                            Prior Notice. For funds allocated                       14. Discipline and Accountability in
                                              rehabilitation or reconstruction projects               pursuant to the Prior Notice and this                 the Environmental Review and
                                              relative to other alternatives. In this                 notice, the Department is requiring                   Permitting of Infrastructure Projects.
                                              notice, the Department is similarly                     grantees to address long-term recovery                Executive Order 13807, signed by the
                                              requiring each grantee to establish                     and hazard mitigation planning in the                 President on August 15, 2017,
                                              policies and procedures to assess the                   action plan or substantial amendment,                 establishes a coordinated, predictable,
                                              cost-effectiveness of each proposed                     whichever is applicable under this                    and transparent process for the review
                                              project undertaken to assist a household                notice. Each grantee must include a                   and permitting of infrastructure
                                              under any residential rehabilitation or                 description of how the grantee plans to:              projects. In addition, the Federal
                                              reconstruction program funded under                       a. Promote sound, sustainable long-                 Permitting Improvement Steering
                                              this notice or the Prior Notice. The                    term recovery planning informed by a                  Council has issued a standard operating
                                              policies and procedures must address                    post-disaster evaluation of hazard risk,              procedure to coordinate Federal agency
                                              criteria for determining when the cost of               especially land-use decisions that reflect            reporting on the environmental review
                                              the rehabilitation or reconstruction of                 responsible flood plain management                    and permitting of covered projects
                                              the unit will not be cost-effective                     and take into account future possible                 pursuant to the Fixing America’s
                                              relative to other means of assisting the                extreme weather events and other                      Surface Transportation Act (FAST–41)
                                              property-owner, such as buyout or                       natural hazards and long-term risks;                  (Pub. L. 114–94). Under FAST–41, a
                                              acquisition of the property, or the                       b. Adhere to the elevation                          covered project is defined as any
                                              construction of area-wide protective                    requirements established in paragraph                 activity in the United States that
                                              infrastructure, rather than individual                  B.32.e of section VI of the Prior Notice;             requires authorization or environmental
                                              building mitigation solutions designed                    c. Coordinate with local and regional               review by a Federal agency involving
                                              to protect individual structures (such as               planning efforts to ensure consistency,               construction of infrastructure for
                                              elevating an existing structure). For                   including how the grantee will promote                renewable or conventional energy
                                              example, as the grantee in designing its                community-level and/or regional (e.g.,                production, electricity transmission,
                                              program, it might choose as comparison                  multiple local jurisdictions) post-                   surface transportation, aviation, ports
                                              criteria the rehabilitation costs derived               disaster recovery and mitigation                      and waterways, water resource projects,
                                              from the RS Means Residential Cost                      planning;                                             broadband, pipelines, manufacturing, or
                                              Data and costs to buyout or acquire the                   d. For infrastructure allocations, the              any other sector as determined by a
                                              property as a means of determining                      grantee must also describe:                           majority vote of the Council that (1) is
                                              whether to fund a rehabilitation project.                 i. How mitigation measures will be                  subject to National Environmental
                                              A grantee may also consider offering                    integrated into rebuilding activities and             Policy Act of 1969 (NEPA); is likely to
                                              different housing alternatives, as                      the extent to which infrastructure                    require a total investment of more than
                                              appropriate, such as manufactured                       activities funded through this grant will             $200,000,000; and does not qualify for
                                              housing options. A grantee may find it                  achieve objectives outlined in regionally             abbreviated authorization or
                                              necessary to provide exceptions on a                    or locally established plans and policies             environmental review processes under
                                              case-by-case basis to the maximum                       that are designed to reduce future risk               any applicable law; or (2) is subject to
                                              amount of assistance or cost                            to the jurisdiction;                                  NEPA and the size and complexity of
                                              effectiveness criteria and must describe                  ii. How infrastructure activities will              which, in the opinion of the Council,
                                              the process it will use to make such                    be informed by a consideration of the                 make the project likely to benefit from
                                              exceptions in its policies and                          costs and benefits of the project;                    enhanced oversight and coordination,
                                              procedures. Each grantee must adopt                       iii. How the grantee will seek to                   including a project likely to require
                                              policies and procedures that                            ensure that infrastructure activities will            authorization from or environmental
                                              communicate how it will analyze the                     avoid disproportionate impact on                      review involving more than two Federal
                                              circumstances under which an                            vulnerable populations as referenced in               agencies; or the preparation of an
                                              exception is needed, how it will                        paragraph A.2.a(4) of section VI in the               environmental impact statement under
                                              demonstrate that the amount of                          Prior Notice and create opportunities to              NEPA. CDBG–DR grantees may choose
                                              assistance is necessary and reasonable,                 address economic inequities facing local              to participate in reporting on their
                                              and how the grantee will make                           communities;                                          environmental review and permitting of
                                              reasonable accommodations to provide                      iv. How the grantee will align                      covered projects under FAST–41.
                                              accessibility features necessary to                     investments with other planned state or                 15. CDBG–DR Funds as Match for
                                              accommodate an occupant with a                          local capital improvements and                        FEMA 428 Public Assistance Projects. In
                                              disability. All CDBG–DR expenditures                    infrastructure development efforts, and               response to a disaster, FEMA may
                                              remain subject to the cost principles in                will work to foster the potential for                 implement, and grantees may elect to
                                              2 CFR part 200, subpart E—Cost                          additional infrastructure funding from                follow alternative procedures for
                                              Principles, including the requirement                   multiple sources, including existing                  FEMA’s Public Assistance Program, as
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                                              that costs be necessary and reasonable                  state and local capital improvement                   authorized pursuant to Section 428 of
                                              for the performance of the grantee’s                    projects in planning, and the potential               the Stafford Act. Grantees may use
                                              CDBG–DR grant.                                          for private investment; and                           CDBG–DR funds as a matching
                                                                                                        v. The extent to which the grantee                  requirement, share, or contribution for
                                              C. Infrastructure                                       will employ adaptable and reliable                    Public Assistance Projects financed
                                                13. Infrastructure planning and                       technologies to guard against premature               pursuant to Section 428, but as in other
                                              design. CDBG–DR allocations provided                    obsolescence of infrastructure.                       instances in which grantee use CDBG–


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                                              40322                        Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 157 / Tuesday, August 14, 2018 / Notices

                                              DR funds to meet local matching                         because the measures of long-term                     declining economic conditions prior to
                                              requirements, grantees must document                    benefit from the proposed activities                  the storms, as reflected through the
                                              that CDBG–DR funds have been used for                   must be derived using indirect means,                 largest-ever federal bankruptcy by a
                                              the actual costs incurred for the assisted              42 U.S.C. 5305(a) is waived only to the               local government, were exacerbated by
                                              project and for costs that are eligible,                extent necessary to make eligible use of              the disasters. The top five economic
                                              meet a national objective, and meet                     no more than $5,000,000 for assistance                sectors with reported losses to the U.S.
                                              other applicable CDBG requirements.                     to promote the Territory in general or                Small Business Administration as result
                                                                                                      specific components of the islands.                   of the storms include real estate,
                                              D. Economic Revitalization
                                                                                                      Additionally, no elected officials shall              accommodations and food services,
                                                 16. Waiver to permit tourism                         appear in tourism marketing materials                 health care, retail trade, and
                                              marketing (U.S. Virgin Islands only).                   financed with CDBG–DR funds. Given                    manufacturing. Unemployment in
                                              The U.S. Virgin Islands has requested a                 the importance of tourism to the overall              February 2016 was reported at 10.6%,
                                              waiver to allow the Territory to use up                 economy, HUD is authorizing this use of               with a decline in jobs in non-farm
                                              to $5,000,000 in CDBG–DR funds to                       funds without regard to unmet housing                 industries from 871,200 jobs in
                                              promote travel to disaster-impacted                     need. This waiver will expire two years               September 2017 to 848,300 jobs in
                                              areas. Tourism is the primary economic                  after the Territory first draws CDBG–DR               February 2018. The Commonwealth’s
                                              contributor to the U.S. Virgin Island’s                 funds under the allocation provided in                request notes that the unprecedented
                                              economy, estimated to account for                       the Prior Notice. In providing similar                federal investment in the island’s
                                              between 30 and 80 percent of the                        waivers for other CDBG–DR grantees,                   damaged housing stock and
                                              Territory’s economy. The U.S. Virgin                    the Department has often identified                   infrastructure also presents an
                                              Islands indicated that for several weeks                issues in the procurement of tourism                  opportunity to introduce and re-
                                              following the disasters, airports and                   marketing services, with grantees                     introduce businesses across the nation
                                              seaports remained closed and due to                     adding CDBG–DR funds to existing                      and around the world to Puerto Rico as
                                              damage to hotels and a perception that                  tourism marketing contracts procured                  an attractive location for new business
                                              the islands have been completely                        with other sources of funds. In                       investment.
                                              decimated, tourism has remained low.                    providing this waiver, HUD advises the
                                              The Territory indicates that many of its                                                                         Tourism and business advertising
                                                                                                      Territory to ensure that contracts funded
                                              largest hotels will not reopen until late                                                                     campaigns for an area in general, are
                                                                                                      pursuant to this waiver with CDBG–DR
                                              2019 or 2020, with weekly                                                                                     ineligible for CDBG–DR assistance.
                                                                                                      funds comply with applicable
                                              accommodation capacity dropping from                                                                          However, HUD recognizes that such
                                                                                                      procurement requirements. The grantee
                                              23,000 in February 2017 to 13,000 in                                                                          support can be a useful recovery tool in
                                                                                                      must also develop metrics to
                                              February 2018. The Territory’s request                                                                        a damaged regional economy that
                                                                                                      demonstrate the impact of CDBG–DR
                                              also notes that the decline in tourism                                                                        depends on tourism and seeks to attract
                                                                                                      expenditures on the tourism sector of
                                              has had a particularly adverse impact on                                                                      new business investment to generate
                                                                                                      the economy and shall identify those
                                              low- and moderate-income residents                                                                            new jobs and tax revenues. HUD has
                                                                                                      metrics in the initial substantial
                                              that depend on the industry for                                                                               previously granted similar waivers for
                                                                                                      amendment submitted pursuant to this
                                              employment.                                             notice.                                               several CDBG–DR disaster recovery
                                                 The Territory has documented a sharp                    17. Waiver to permit tourism and                   efforts. As the Commonwealth of Puerto
                                              decline in visitors to the islands, with                business marketing (Commonwealth of                   Rico is proposing advertising and
                                              a corresponding decline in visitor                      Puerto Rico only). The Commonwealth                   marketing activities rather than direct
                                              spending and Territory revenues. Prior                  of Puerto Rico has requested a waiver to              assistance to tourism-dependent and
                                              to the disasters, the Territory reported                allow the Commonwealth to use up to                   other businesses, and because the
                                              total monthly visitor expenditures of                   $15,000,000 in CDBG–DR funds to                       measures of long-term benefit from the
                                              $84.8 million in October 2016,                          promote travel and to attract new                     proposed activities must be derived
                                              contrasted to total tourist spending of                 businesses to disaster-impacted areas.                using indirect means, 42 U.S.C. 5305(a)
                                              $49.8 million and lost excursionist                     Puerto Rico’s request indicated that                  is waived only to the extent necessary
                                              spending of $71.1 million in October                    prior to the storms, tourism accounted                to make eligible use of no more than
                                              2017, after the storms. The Territory                   for 8 percent of the economy. One                     $15,000,000 for assistance to promote
                                              estimates that total tourism-related                    month after the disasters, however, one               the Commonwealth in general or
                                              losses caused by the 2017 disasters are                 third of the island’s hotels remained                 specific communities. No elected
                                              expected to approach $1 billion in the                  shuttered and beaches remained closed                 officials shall appear in tourism or
                                              12 months following the storms,                         for swimming due to possible water                    business marketing materials financed
                                              amounting to almost 70% of the total                    contamination. The Commonwealth’s                     with CDBG–DR funds. Given the
                                              revenue generated by tourism in 2016.                   request notes that insular areas of the               importance of tourism to the overall
                                                 Tourism industry support, such as a                  island have been particularly slow to                 economy, HUD is authorizing this use of
                                              national and international consumer                     recover to historic levels of tourism                 funds without regard to unmet housing
                                              awareness advertising campaign for an                   activity. Puerto Rico anticipates the                 need. This waiver will expire two years
                                              area in general, is ineligible for CDBG                 addition of over 2,000 tourist                        after the Commonwealth first draws
                                              assistance. However, HUD recognizes                     accommodations this year and                          CDBG–DR funds under the allocation
                                              that such support can be a useful                       accordingly, seeks to use CDBG–DR                     provided in the Prior Notice. In
                                              recovery tool in a damaged regional                     funds to target outreach efforts through              providing similar waivers for other
                                              economy that depends on tourism for                     a marketing campaign to reach potential               CDBG–DR grantees, the Department has
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                                              most of its jobs and tax revenues. In the               visitors that may not be aware of the                 often identified issues in the
                                              past, HUD has granted tourism waivers                   pace of recovery in the island’s tourist              procurement of tourism and business
                                              for several CDBG–DR disaster recovery                   areas.                                                marketing services, with grantees
                                              efforts. As the U.S. Virgin Islands is                     The Commonwealth’s waiver request                  adding CDBG–DR funds to existing
                                              proposing advertising and marketing                     includes the proposed use of CDBG–DR                  tourism and business marketing
                                              activities rather than direct assistance to             funds to also market the island to new                contracts procured with other sources of
                                              tourism-dependent businesses, and                       businesses. Puerto Rico notes that its                funds. In providing this waiver, HUD


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                                                                           Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 157 / Tuesday, August 14, 2018 / Notices                                                40323

                                              advises the Commonwealth to ensure                      102(2)(C) of the National Environmental               affected by Hurricane Maria, $2,000,000,000
                                              that contracts funded pursuant to this                  Policy Act of 1969 (42 U.S.C.                         shall be used to provide enhanced or
                                              waiver with CDBG–DR funds comply                        4332(2)(C)). The FONSI is available for               improved electrical power systems: Provided
                                                                                                                                                            further, That to the extent amounts under the
                                              with applicable procurement                             public inspection between 8 a.m. and 5
                                                                                                                                                            previous proviso are insufficient to meet all
                                              requirements. The grantee must also                     p.m. weekdays in the Regulations                      unmet needs, the allocation amounts related
                                              develop metrics to demonstrate the                      Division, Office of General Counsel,                  to infrastructure shall be reduced
                                              impact of CDBG–DR expenditures on                       Department of Housing and Urban                       proportionally based on the total
                                              the tourism and other sectors of the                    Development, 451 7th Street SW, Room                  infrastructure needs of all grantees: Provided
                                              economy and shall identify those                        10276, Washington, DC 20410–0500.                     further, That of the amounts made available
                                              metrics in the initial substantial                      Due to security measures at the HUD                   under this heading, no less than
                                              amendment submitted pursuant to this                    Headquarters building, an advance                     $12,000,000,000 shall be allocated for
                                              notice.                                                                                                       mitigation activities to all grantees of funding
                                                                                                      appointment to review the docket file
                                                                                                                                                            provided under this heading, section 420 of
                                              V. Duration of Funding                                  must be scheduled by calling the                      division L of Public Law 114–113, section
                                                                                                      Regulations Division at 202–708–3055                  145 of division C of Public Law 114–223,
                                                 The law, as amended, requires that                   (this is not a toll-free number). Hearing-            section 192 of division C of Public Law 114–
                                              funds provided under the                                or speech-impaired individuals may                    223 (as added by section 101(3) of division
                                              Appropriations Act and Prior                            access this number through TTY by                     A of Public Law 114–254), section 421 of
                                              Appropriation be expended within two                    calling the Federal Relay Service at 800–             division K of Public Law 115–31, and the
                                              years of the date that HUD obligates                    877–8339 (this is a toll-free number).                same heading in division B of Public Law
                                              funds to a grantee, but also authorizes                                                                       115–56, and that such mitigation activities
                                              the Office of Management and Budget                       Dated: August 8, 2018.                              shall be subject to the same terms and
                                              (OMB) to provide a waiver of this                       Neal J. Rackleff,                                     conditions under this subdivision, as
                                              requirement. OMB has waived this                        Assistant Secretary.                                  determined by the Secretary: Provided
                                              requirement for a combined total of                                                                           further, That all such grantees shall receive
                                                                                                      Appendix A—Detailed Methodology                       an allocation of funds under the preceding
                                              $35,390,000,000 of CDBG–DR funds                        (for Federal Notice Appendix)                         proviso in the same proportion that the
                                              appropriated under the Prior                                                                                  amount of funds each grantee received or
                                              Appropriation and the Appropriations                    Allocation of CDBG–DR Funds to Most
                                                                                                      Impacted and Distressed Areas Due to 2017             will receive under the second proviso of this
                                              Act. Notwithstanding the OMB waiver,                                                                          heading or the headings and sections
                                                                                                      Federally Declared Disasters and Allocation
                                              however, the provision of the Prior                     of Mitigation Funds for 2015, 2016, and 2017          specified in the previous proviso bears to the
                                              Notice that requires each grantee to                    Federally Declared Disasters                          amount of all funds provided to all grantees
                                              expend 100 percent of its total                                                                               specified in the previous proviso: Provided
                                              allocation of CDBG–DR funds on                          Background                                            further, That of the amounts made available
                                              eligible activities within six years of                   The Bipartisan Budget Act of 2018, Public           under the second and fourth provisos of this
                                                                                                      Law 115–123, enacted on February 9, 2018,             heading, the Secretary shall allocate to all
                                              HUD’s initial obligation of funds
                                                                                                      appropriated $28,000,000,000 through the              such grantees an aggregate amount not less
                                              remains in effect. For grantees receiving                                                                     than 33 percent of each such amounts of
                                                                                                      Community Development Block Grant
                                              an allocation of funds under the Prior                  disaster recovery (CDBG–DR) program. The              funds provided under this heading within 60
                                              Notice, the six-year expenditure                        statutory text related to the allocation is as        days after the enactment of this subdivision
                                              deadline commences with initial                         follows:                                              based on the best available data (especially
                                              obligation of funds provided under the                     For an additional amount for ‘‘Community
                                                                                                                                                            with respect to data for all such grantees
                                              Prior Notice. For grantees receiving an                                                                       affected by Hurricanes Harvey, Irma, and
                                                                                                      Development Fund’’, $28,000,000,000, to
                                              initial allocation of funds under this                  remain available until expended, for                  Maria), and shall allocate no less than 100
                                              Notice, the six-year expenditure                        necessary expenses for activities authorized          percent of the funds provided under this
                                                                                                                                                            heading by no later than December 1, 2018:
                                              deadline commences with the initial                     under title I of the Housing and Community
                                                                                                      Development Act of 1974 (42 U.S.C. 5301 et               . . . Provided further, That of the amounts
                                              obligation of funds provided under this                                                                       made available under this heading, up to
                                              notice. Further, consistent with 31                     seq.) related to disaster relief, long-term
                                                                                                      recovery, restoration of infrastructure and           $15,000,000 shall be made available for
                                              U.S.C. 1555 and OMB Circular No. A–                                                                           capacity building and technical assistance,
                                                                                                      housing, economic revitalization, and
                                              11, if the Secretary or the President                   mitigation in the most impacted and                   including assistance on contracting and
                                              determines that the purposes for which                  distressed areas resulting from a major               procurement processes, to support States,
                                              the appropriation has been made have                    declared disaster that occurred in 2017               units of general local government, or Indian
                                              been carried out and no disbursements                   (except as otherwise provided under this              tribes (and their subrecipients) that receive
                                              have been made against the                              heading) pursuant to the Robert T. Stafford           allocations pursuant to this heading, received
                                                                                                      Disaster Relief and Emergency Assistance Act          disaster recovery allocations under the same
                                              appropriation for two consecutive fiscal
                                                                                                      (42 U.S.C. 5121 et seq.): Provided, That funds        heading in Public Law 115–56, or may
                                              years, any remaining unobligated                                                                              receive similar allocations for disaster
                                                                                                      shall be awarded directly to the State, unit
                                              balance will be made unavailable for                    of general local government, or Indian tribe          recovery in future appropriations Acts:
                                              obligation or expenditure.                              (as such term is defined in section 102 of the        Provided further, That of the amounts made
                                              VI. Catalog of Federal Domestic                         Housing and Community Development Act of              available under this heading, up to
                                                                                                      1974) at the discretion of the Secretary:             $10,000,000 shall be transferred, in aggregate,
                                              Assistance                                              Provided further, That of the amounts made            to ‘‘Department of Housing and Urban
                                                The Catalog of Federal Domestic                       available under this heading, up to                   Development—Program Office Salaries and
                                              Assistance numbers for the disaster                     $16,000,000,000 shall be allocated to meet            Expenses—Community Planning and
                                              recovery grants under this notice are as                unmet needs for grantees that have received           Development’’ for necessary costs, including
                                              follows: 14.228 for State CDBG grantees.                or will receive allocations under this heading        information technology costs, of
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                                                                                                      for major declared disasters that occurred in         administering and overseeing the obligation
                                              VII. Finding of No Significant Impact                   2017 or under the same heading of Division            and expenditure of amounts under this
                                                                                                      B of Public Law 115–56, except that, of the           heading:
                                                A Finding of No Significant Impact                    amounts made available under this proviso,
                                              (FONSI) with respect to the                                                                                     Further, under the General Provisions of
                                                                                                      no less than $11,000,000,000 shall be
                                              environment has been made in                                                                                  the Act in Section 21102:
                                                                                                      allocated to the States and units of local
                                              accordance with HUD regulations at 24                   government affected by Hurricane Maria, and             Any funds made available under the
                                              CFR part 50, which implement section                    of such amounts allocated to such grantees            heading ‘‘Community Development Fund’’



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                                              40324                        Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 157 / Tuesday, August 14, 2018 / Notices

                                              under this subdivision that remain available,                disaster as eligible to receive Individual       U.S., HUD finds its traditional approach of
                                              after the other funds under such heading                     and Households Program (IHP) funding.            just using real property damage assessments
                                              have been allocated for necessary expenses              (2) Concentrated damage. HUD has limited              for owner-occupied units continues to be
                                              for activities authorized under such heading,                its estimate of serious unmet housing            effective.
                                              shall be used for additional mitigation                      need to counties and Zip Codes with                 Each of the FEMA inspected owner units
                                              activities in the most impacted and                          high levels of damage, collectively              are categorized by HUD into one of five
                                              distressed areas resulting from a major                      referred to as ‘‘most impacted areas’’. For      categories:
                                              declared disaster that occurred in 2014, 2015,               this allocation, HUD is defining most            • Minor-Low: Less than $3,000 of FEMA
                                              2016 or 2017: Provided, That such remaining                  impacted areas as either most impacted               inspected real property damage.
                                              funds shall be awarded to grantees of funding                counties—counties exceeding $10                  • Minor-High: $3,000 to $7,999 of FEMA
                                              provided for disaster relief under the heading               million in serious unmet housing                     inspected real property damage.
                                              ‘‘Community Development Fund’’ in this                       needs—and most impacted Zip Codes—               • Major-Low: $8,000 to $14,999 of FEMA
                                              subdivision, section 420 of division L of                    Zip Codes with $2 million or more of                 inspected real property damage and/or 1
                                              Public Law 114–113, section 145 of division                  serious unmet housing needs. The                     to 4 feet of flooding on the first floor.
                                              C of Public Law 114–223, section 192 of                      calculation of serious unmet housing             • Major-High: $15,000 to $28,800 of FEMA
                                              division C of Public Law 114–223 (as added                   needs is described below.                            inspected real property damage and/or 4
                                              by section 101(3) of division A of Public Law           (3) Disasters meeting the most impacted                   to 6 feet of flooding on the first floor.
                                              114–254), section 421 of division K of Public                threshold. Only 2017 disasters that meet         • Severe: Greater than $28,800 of FEMA
                                              Law 115–31, and the same heading in                          this requirement for most impacted                   inspected real property damage or
                                              division B of Public Law 115–56 subject to                   damage are funded:                                   determined destroyed and/or 6 or more
                                              the same terms and conditions under this                  a. One or more most impacted county                     feet of flooding on the first floor.
                                              subdivision and such Acts respectively:                   b. An aggregate of most impacted Zip
                                              Provided further, That each such grantee                     Codes of $10 million or greater                    For the Virgin Islands and Puerto Rico, the
                                              shall receive an allocation from such                                                                         damage grouping would be the higher
                                                                                                         For disasters that meet the most impacted          damage categorization based on the
                                              remaining funds in the same proportion that
                                                                                                      threshold described above, the unmet need             calculation above or:
                                              the amount of funds such grantee received
                                                                                                      allocations are based on the following factors
                                              under this subdivision and under the Acts
                                                                                                      summed together less previous CDBG–DR                 • Minor-Low: Less than $2,500 of FEMA
                                              specified in the previous proviso bears to the                                                                    inspected personal property damage.
                                                                                                      allocations for the 2017 disasters unmet
                                              amount of all funds provided to all grantees
                                                                                                      needs:                                                • Minor-High: $2,500 to $3,499 of FEMA
                                              specified in the previous proviso.                                                                                inspected personal property damage.
                                                                                                      (1) Repair estimates for seriously damaged            • Major-Low: $3,500 to $4,999 of FEMA
                                                The methodology for allocating these funds
                                                                                                           owner-occupied units without insurance               inspected personal property damage or 1
                                              has two core parts:
                                                                                                           (with some exceptions) in most impacted              to 4 feet of flooding on the first floor.
                                              • Unmet Needs: Up to $16 billion for the                     areas after FEMA and SBA repair grants           • Major-High: $5,000 to $8,999 of FEMA
                                                 remaining unmet needs of communities                      or loans;                                            inspected personal property damage or 4
                                                 most impacted by a disaster in 2017.                 (2) Repair estimates for seriously damaged                to 6 feet of flooding on the first floor.
                                                 After factoring in the $35 million set-                   rental units occupied by renters with            • Severe: Greater than $9,000 of FEMA
                                                 aside for HUD expenses, up to $15.965                     income less than 50 percent of Area                  inspected personal property damage or
                                                 billion is available for unmet needs, of                  Median Income in most impacted areas;                determined destroyed and/or 6 or more
                                                 which no less than $11 billion is                    (3) Repair and content loss estimates for                 feet of flooding on the first floor.
                                                 provided to communities impacted by                       small businesses with serious damage                To meet the statutory requirement of ‘‘most
                                                 Hurricane Maria, specifically the                         denied by SBA;                                   impacted’’ in this legislative language, homes
                                                 Commonwealth of Puerto Rico and                      (4) The estimated local cost share for Public         are determined to have a high level of
                                                 United States Virgin Islands. These                       Assistance Category C to G projects;             damage if they have damage of ‘‘major-low’’
                                                 funds are allocated based on a                       (5) $2 billion for Maria-impacted disasters for       or higher. That is, they have a real property
                                                 calculation of unmet needs as described                   improvements to the electric grid; and           FEMA inspected damage of $8,000 or
                                                 below after taking into account the                  (6) An amount to ensure that Maria impacted           flooding over 1 foot.
                                                 $7.458 billion of CDBG–DR previously                      disasters do not receive less than $11              Furthermore, a homeowner is determined
                                                 allocated for 2017 disasters.                             billion from Public Law 115–123, with            to have unmet needs if they reported damage
                                              • Mitigation: No less than $12 billion for                   the split between the eligible disasters in      and no insurance to cover that damage and
                                                 mitigation activities for grantees who                    Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands based         was outside the 1% risk flood hazard area;
                                                 have received CDBG–DR funding under                       on their relative share of needs as              for homeowners inside the flood hazard area,
                                                 this appropriation or earlier                             calculated under number 1 to 5 above.            only homeowners without insurance below
                                                 appropriations covering disasters in                                                                       120% of Area Median Income are determined
                                                 2015, 2016, and 2017. This allocation is             Methods for estimating unmet needs for
                                                                                                      housing                                               to have unmet needs. Homeowners without
                                                 based on each grantee’s proportional                                                                       hazard insurance with non-flood damage
                                                 share of total funds allocated for all of               The data HUD staff have identified as being
                                                                                                                                                            with incomes below the greater of national
                                                 the eligible disasters.                              available to calculate unmet needs for
                                                                                                                                                            median or 120% of Area Median Income are
                                                                                                      qualifying disasters come from the FEMA
                                              Allocating for remaining unmet needs of                                                                       included as having unmet needs.
                                                                                                      Individual Assistance program data on
                                              2017                                                                                                             FEMA does not inspect rental units for real
                                                                                                      housing-unit damage as of February 22, 2018.
                                                                                                                                                            property damage so personal property
                                              Most impacted and distressed areas                         The core data on housing damage for both
                                                                                                                                                            damage is used as a proxy for unit damage.
                                                                                                      the unmet housing needs calculation and the
                                                As with prior CDBG–DR appropriations,                                                                       Each of the FEMA inspected renter units are
                                                                                                      concentrated damage are based on home
                                              HUD is not obligated to allocate funds for all                                                                categorized by HUD into one of five
                                                                                                      inspection data for FEMA’s Individual
                                              major disasters declared in 2017. HUD is                                                                      categories:
                                                                                                      Assistance program. HUD calculates ‘‘unmet
                                              directed to use the funds ‘‘in the most                                                                       • Minor-Low: Less than $1,000 of FEMA
                                                                                                      housing needs’’ as the number of housing
                                              impacted and distressed areas.’’ HUD has                                                                         inspected personal property damage.
                                                                                                      units with unmet needs times the estimated
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                                              implemented this directive by limiting                                                                        • Minor-High: $1,000 to $1,999 of FEMA
                                                                                                      cost to repair those units less repair funds
                                              CDBG–DR formula allocations to                                                                                   inspected personal property damage.
                                                                                                      already provided by FEMA and SBA. Puerto
                                              jurisdictions with major disasters that meet                                                                  • Major-Low: $2,000 to $3,499 of FEMA
                                                                                                      Rico and the Virgin Island owner damage is
                                              three standards:                                                                                                 inspected personal property damage or 1
                                                                                                      calculated based on both real property and
                                              (1) Individual Assistance/IHP designation.              personal property inspections based on                   to 4 feet of flooding on the first floor.
                                                   HUD has limited allocations to those               findings by HUD that this likely is a more            • Major-High: $3,500 to $7,499 of FEMA
                                                   disasters where FEMA had determined                accurate estimate of serious homeowner                   inspected personal property damage or 4
                                                   the damage was sufficient to declare the           damage in those areas. For the continental               to 6 feet of flooding on the first floor.



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                                                                                      Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 157 / Tuesday, August 14, 2018 / Notices                                                                             40325

                                              • Severe: Greater than $7,500 of FEMA                                       or 50 percent of Area Median Income. Units                               to repair the home, which is generally more
                                                  inspected personal property damage or                                   occupied by a tenant with income less than                               than the FEMA estimates on the cost to make
                                                  determined destroyed and/or 6 or more                                   the greater of the Federal poverty level or 50                           the home habitable.
                                                  feet of flooding on the first floor.                                    percent of Area Median Income are used to                                  For each household determined to have
                                                For rental properties, to meet the statutory                              calculate likely unmet needs for affordable                              unmet housing needs (as described above),
                                              requirement of ‘‘most impacted’’ in this                                    rental housing.                                                          their estimated average unmet housing need
                                              legislative language, homes are determined to                                  The average cost to fully repair a home for                           less assistance from FEMA and SBA
                                              have a high level of damage if they have                                    a specific disaster to code within each of the                           provided for repair to homes with serious
                                              damage of ‘‘major-low’’ or higher. That is,                                 damage categories noted above is calculated                              unmet needs. No unmet housing need cost
                                              they have a FEMA personal property damage                                   using the median real property damage repair                             multiplier can be less than the 25th
                                              assessment of $2,000 or greater or flooding                                 costs determined by the Small Business                                   percentile estimate across all disasters of
                                              over 1 foot.                                                                Administration for its disaster loan program                             2017. Those minimum cost multipliers are:
                                                Furthermore, landlords are presumed to                                    for the subset of homes inspected by both                                $40,323 for major damage (low); $55,812 for
                                              have adequate insurance coverage unless the                                 SBA and FEMA for each eligible disaster.                                 major damage (high); and $77,252 for severe
                                              unit is occupied by a renter with income less                               Because SBA is inspecting for full repair                                damage. The multipliers used for each
                                              than the greater of the Federal poverty level                               costs, it is presumed to reflect the full cost                           disaster is shown below.

                                                                                                                                                                                                    Serious Unmet Housing Need Multipliers

                                                                                                                                                                                                   Major-Low        Major-High          Severe

                                              California ......................................................................................................................................        $40,323           $55,812          $124,481
                                              Florida ..........................................................................................................................................       $42,837           $56,113           $79,096
                                              Georgia ........................................................................................................................................         $40,323           $55,812           $77,252
                                              Missouri ........................................................................................................................................        $40,323           $66,545          $100,947
                                              Puerto Rico ..................................................................................................................................           $40,323           $55,812           $77,252
                                              Texas ...........................................................................................................................................        $56,342           $75,414          $101,390
                                              Virgin Islands ...............................................................................................................................           $80,142           $97,672          $116,351



                                              Methods for estimating unmet economic                                           Virgin Islands) for ‘‘enhanced or improved                           billion remaining after allocation of 100% of
                                              revitalization needs                                                            electrical power systems.’’ This is allocated                        unmet needs) is allocated proportionally
                                                Based on SBA disaster loans to businesses                                     between Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands                           based on each grantee’s relative share of the
                                              as of 3–22–2018, HUD calculates the median                                      based on their relative share of total                               $22.425 billion of CDBG–DR funds allocated
                                              real estate and content loss by the following                                   estimated Category F Public Assistance                               for unmet needs to disasters occurring in
                                              damage categories for each state:                                               cost to repair public utilities.                                     2015, 2016, and 2017. For example, the
                                                                                                                                                                                                   combination of all grants to Puerto Rico for
                                              • Category 1: real estate + content loss =                                  Allocation Calculation
                                                                                                                                                                                                   unmet needs represents 52 percent of the
                                                below 12,000                                                                Once eligible entities are identified using                            $22.425 billion allocated for unmet needs. As
                                              • Category 2: real estate + content loss =                                  the above criteria, the allocation to                                    a result, Puerto Rico receives 52 percent of
                                                12,000–30,000                                                             individual grantees represents their                                     the $15.935 billion made available for
                                              • Category 3: real estate + content loss =                                  proportional share of the estimated unmet                                mitigation funding.
                                                30,000–65,000                                                             needs. For the formula allocation, HUD
                                              • Category 4: real estate + content loss =                                  calculates total serious unmet recovery needs                            [FR Doc. 2018–17365 Filed 8–13–18; 8:45 am]
                                                65,000–150,000                                                            as the aggregate of:                                                     BILLING CODE 4210–67–P
                                              • Category 5: real estate + content loss =
                                                                                                                          • Serious unmet housing needs in most
                                                above 150,000
                                                                                                                            impacted counties less amounts of CDBG–
                                                For properties with real estate and content                                 DR previously allocated for serious unmet                              DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
                                              loss of $30,000 or more, HUD calculates the                                   housing needs
                                              estimated amount of unmet needs for small                                   • Serious unmet business needs less                                      Fish and Wildlife Service
                                              businesses by multiplying the median                                          amounts of CDBG–DR previously allocated
                                              damage estimates for the categories above by                                                                                                         [FWS–R3–ES–2018–N044;
                                                                                                                            for serious business needs
                                                                                                                                                                                                   FXES11130300000–189–FF03E00000]
                                              the number of small businesses denied an                                    • FEMA Public Assistance Category C to G
                                              SBA loan, including those denied a loan                                       local cost share and the $2 billion
                                              prior to inspection due to inadequate credit                                  additional amount for enhanced or                                      Draft Environmental Assessment and
                                              or income (or a decision had not been made),                                  improved electrical power systems in                                   Draft Habitat Conservation Plan;
                                              under the assumption that damage among                                        Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands                                     Receipt of an Application for an
                                              those denied at pre-inspection have the same                                                                                                         Incidental Take Permit, Headwaters
                                                                                                                             Prior allocations for 2017 disasters are
                                              distribution of damage as those denied after                                                                                                         Wind Farm, Randolph County, Indiana
                                                                                                                          subtracted from this amount. Because this
                                              inspection.
                                                                                                                          results in less than $11 billion being                                   AGENCY:   Fish and Wildlife Service,
                                              Methods for estimating unmet infrastructure                                 allocated to Maria affected disasters (Puerto
                                                                                                                          Rico and the Virgin Islands) from Public Law
                                                                                                                                                                                                   Interior.
                                              needs
                                                                                                                          115–123, an additional amount is added to                                ACTION: Notice of availability; request
                                                To calculate unmet needs for infrastructure
                                              projects, HUD is using data obtained from                                   those two grantees to reach $11 billion based                            for comments.
                                              FEMA as of March 30, 2018, showing the                                      on their relative share of needs as calculated
                                              amount FEMA estimates will be needed to                                     under the three bullets above.                                           SUMMARY:   We, the U.S. Fish and
                                                                                                                             This results in an estimate of unmet needs                            Wildlife Service (Service), have received
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                                              repair the permanent public infrastructure
                                              (Categories C to G) to their pre-storm                                      to be allocated from Public Law 115–123 of                               an application from Headwaters Wind
                                              condition. HUD uses these data to calculate                                 $12.031 billion, allowing $3.935 billion to be                           Farm LLC (applicant), for an incidental
                                              two infrastructure unmet needs:                                             allocated to mitigation.                                                 take permit (ITP) under the Endangered
                                              • The estimated local cost share for Public                                 Allocating for mitigation                                                Species Act of 1973, as amended (ESA),
                                                Assistance Category C to G projects.                                        The allocation of $15.935 billion in                                   for its Headwaters Wind Farm
                                              • An allocation of $2 billion for Maria                                     mitigation funds (the $12 billion                                        (Headwaters) (project). If approved, the
                                                affected disasters (Puerto Rico and the                                   appropriated for mitigation plus the $3.935                              ITP would be for a 27-year period and


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Document Created: 2018-08-14 02:19:49
Document Modified: 2018-08-14 02:19:49
CategoryRegulatory Information
CollectionFederal Register
sudoc ClassAE 2.7:
GS 4.107:
AE 2.106:
PublisherOffice of the Federal Register, National Archives and Records Administration
SectionNotices
ActionNotice.
DatesApplicability Date: August 20, 2018.
ContactJessie Handforth Kome, Acting Director, Office of Block Grant Assistance, Department of Housing and Urban Development, 451 7th Street SW, Room 10166, Washington, DC 20410, telephone number 202-708-3587. Persons with hearing or speech impairments may access this number via TTY by calling the Federal Relay Service at 800-877-8339. Facsimile inquiries may be sent to Ms. Kome at 202-708-0033. (Except for the ``800'' number, these telephone numbers are not toll-free.) Email inquiries may be sent to [email protected]
FR Citation83 FR 40314 

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