83_FR_5872 83 FR 5844 - Allocations, Common Application, Waivers, and Alternative Requirements for 2017 Disaster Community Development Block Grant Disaster Recovery Grantees

83 FR 5844 - Allocations, Common Application, Waivers, and Alternative Requirements for 2017 Disaster Community Development Block Grant Disaster Recovery Grantees

DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT

Federal Register Volume 83, Issue 28 (February 9, 2018)

Page Range5844-5869
FR Document2018-02693

This notice allocates $7.39 billion in Community Development Block Grant disaster recovery (CDBG-DR) funds appropriated by the Supplemental Appropriations for Disaster Relief Requirements, 2017, for the purpose of assisting in long-term recovery from 2017 disasters. This notice describes applicable waivers and alternative requirements, relevant statutory provisions for grants provided under this notice, the grant award process, criteria for action plan approval, and eligible disaster recovery activities. Given the extent of damage to housing in the eligible disaster areas and the very limited data at present regarding unmet infrastructure and economic revitalization needs, this notice requires each grantee to primarily consider and address its unmet housing recovery needs.

Federal Register, Volume 83 Issue 28 (Friday, February 9, 2018)
[Federal Register Volume 83, Number 28 (Friday, February 9, 2018)]
[Notices]
[Pages 5844-5869]
From the Federal Register Online  [www.thefederalregister.org]
[FR Doc No: 2018-02693]



[[Page 5843]]

Vol. 83

Friday,

No. 28

February 9, 2018

Part II





Department of Housing and Urban Development





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Allocations, Common Application, Waivers, and Alternative Requirements 
for 2017 Disaster Community Development Block Grant Disaster Recovery 
Grantees; Notice

Federal Register / Vol. 83 , No. 28 / Friday, February 9, 2018 / 
Notices

[[Page 5844]]


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DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT

[Docket No. FR-6066-N-01]


Allocations, Common Application, Waivers, and Alternative 
Requirements for 2017 Disaster 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: This notice allocates $7.39 billion in Community Development 
Block Grant disaster recovery (CDBG-DR) funds appropriated by the 
Supplemental Appropriations for Disaster Relief Requirements, 2017, for 
the purpose of assisting in long-term recovery from 2017 disasters. 
This notice describes applicable waivers and alternative requirements, 
relevant statutory provisions for grants provided under this notice, 
the grant award process, criteria for action plan approval, and 
eligible disaster recovery activities. Given the extent of damage to 
housing in the eligible disaster areas and the very limited data at 
present regarding unmet infrastructure and economic revitalization 
needs, this notice requires each grantee to primarily consider and 
address its unmet housing recovery needs.

DATES: Applicability Date: February 14, 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 
202-401-2044. (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. Management and Oversight of Funds
IV. Authority To Grant Waivers
V. Overview of Grant Process
VI. Applicable Rules, Statutes, Waivers, and Alternative 
Requirements
    A. Grant Administration
    B. Housing and Related Floodplain Issues
    C. Infrastructure
    D. Economic Revitalization
    E. Certifications and Collection of Information
VII. Duration of Funding
VIII. Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance
IX. Finding of No Significant Impact
Appendix A--Allocation of CDBG-DR Funds to Most Impacted and 
Distressed Areas Due to 2017 Federally Declared Disasters

I. Allocations

    The Supplemental Appropriations for Disaster Relief Requirements, 
2017 (Pub. L. 115-56), approved September 8, 2017 (Appropriations Act) 
makes available $7.4 billion in Community Development Block Grant 
disaster recovery (CDBG-DR) funds 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.) (HCD Act) related to disaster relief, 
long-term recovery, restoration of infrastructure and housing, and 
economic revitalization in the ``most impacted and distressed'' areas 
(identified by HUD using the best available data) resulting from a 
major disaster declared in 2017. This notice allocates $7,390,000,000 
in CDBG-DR funds to assist in long-term recovery from 2017 disasters. 
In addition to the funds allocated in this notice, and in accordance 
with the Appropriations Act, $10,000,000 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. This notice requires each grantee to primarily 
consider and address its unmet housing recovery needs. A grantee may 
also allocate funds to address unmet economic revitalization and 
infrastructure needs, but in doing so, the grantee must identify how 
unmet housing needs will be addressed or how its economic 
revitalization or infrastructure activities will contribute to the 
long-term recovery and restoration of housing in the most impacted and 
distressed areas. The law provides that grants shall be awarded 
directly to a State, local government, or Indian tribe at the 
discretion of the Secretary.\1\ Any award of funds provided pursuant to 
the Appropriations Act to Indian tribes will be provided pursuant to 
the requirements of the Indian Community Development Block Grant 
program. 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 of the 
eligible affected areas.
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    \1\ Section 306(a) of division A, title III of the Additional 
Supplemental Appropriations for Disaster Relief Requirements Act, 
2017 (Pub. L. 115-72, approved October 26, 2017) amended the 
Appropriations Act to permit the Secretary to award grants directly 
to a State, unit of general local government, or Indian tribe.
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    Based on further review of the impacts from the eligible disasters, 
and estimates of unmet need, HUD is making the following allocations:

              Table 1--Allocations Under Public Law 115-56
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                                                          Minimum amount
                                                           that must be
                                                           expended for
                                                         recovery in the
     Disaster No.          Grantee         Allocation     HUD-identified
                                                         ``most impacted
                                                               and
                                                           distressed''
                                                              areas
------------------------------------------------------------------------
4332.................  State of Texas.   $5,024,215,000  ($4,019,372,000
                                                          ) Harris,
                                                          Jefferson,
                                                          Orange,
                                                          Galveston,
                                                          Fort Bend,
                                                          Brazoria,
                                                          Montgomery,
                                                          Liberty,
                                                          Hardin,
                                                          Chambers,
                                                          Aransas,
                                                          Wharton, San
                                                          Patricio, San
                                                          Jacinto,
                                                          Nueces, and
                                                          Victoria
                                                          Counties;
                                                          78945, 77423,
                                                          77612, 78934,
                                                          75956, 77632,
                                                          75979, 77414,
                                                          77335, 78377,
                                                          and 77979 Zip
                                                          Codes.
4337.................  State of             615,922,000  ($492,737,600)
                        Florida.                          Monroe, Miami-
                                                          Dade, Duval,
                                                          Lee, Polk,
                                                          Collier,
                                                          Brevard,
                                                          Broward,
                                                          Orange, and
                                                          Volusia
                                                          counties;
                                                          32068, 34266,
                                                          32136, and
                                                          32091 Zip
                                                          Codes.

[[Page 5845]]

 
4336, 4339...........  Commonwealth of    1,507,179,000  ($1,205,743,200
                        Puerto Rico.                      ) Toa Baja,
                                                          Canovanas, San
                                                          Juan, Arecibo,
                                                          Ponce,
                                                          Bayamon,
                                                          Caguas,
                                                          Humacao, Vega
                                                          Baja,
                                                          Mayaguez,
                                                          Corozal,
                                                          Anasco, Toa
                                                          Alta, Guayama,
                                                          Naranjito,
                                                          Juana Diaz,
                                                          Salinas,
                                                          Morovis,
                                                          Carolina,
                                                          Aguada,
                                                          Yabucoa,
                                                          Barranquitas,
                                                          Rio Grande,
                                                          Dorado, Cayey,
                                                          Guaynabo, Vega
                                                          Alta, Comerio,
                                                          Loiza, Manati,
                                                          Ciales,
                                                          Aibonito,
                                                          Aguadilla,
                                                          Santa Isabel,
                                                          Orocovis,
                                                          Coamo, Cidra,
                                                          Juncos,
                                                          Utuado,
                                                          Naguabo,
                                                          Trujillo Alto,
                                                          Barceloneta,
                                                          Las Piedras,
                                                          Hatillo,
                                                          Patillas,
                                                          Gurabo,
                                                          Catano, San
                                                          Sebastian, San
                                                          Lorenzo, Aguas
                                                          Buenas, Moca,
                                                          Villalba,
                                                          Isabela,
                                                          Arroyo,
                                                          Adjuntas,
                                                          Camuy,
                                                          Fajardo,
                                                          Maunabo,
                                                          Yauco, Lares
                                                          Municipios;
                                                          00650, 00624,
                                                          00765, 00656,
                                                          00664, 00678,
                                                          00773, 00677,
                                                          00735, 00623,
                                                          00670, 00660,
                                                          00667, 00683,
                                                          00606, 00653
                                                          Zip Codes.
4335, 4340...........  United States        242,684,000  ($242,684,000)
                        Virgin Islands.                   St. Thomas,
                                                          St. Croix, and
                                                          St. John
                                                          Islands.
                                       -----------------
    Total *..........  ...............    7,390,000,000  ...............
------------------------------------------------------------------------
* Of the $7,400,000,000 appropriated, $10 million is provided for HUD
  administrative costs.

    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. Other than the 
United States Virgin Islands, at least 80 percent of the total funds 
provided to the grantees under this notice must address unmet disaster 
needs within the HUD-identified most impacted and distressed areas, as 
identified in the last column in Table 1. The United States Virgin 
Islands must use 100 percent of the total funds provided under this 
notice to address unmet disaster needs within the HUD-identified most 
impacted and distressed areas identified in the last column in Table 1. 
Grantees, other than the United States Virgin Islands, may determine 
where to use the remaining 20 percent of the allocation, but that 
portion of the allocation may only be used to address unmet disaster 
needs in those areas that the State determines are ``most impacted and 
distressed'' and received a presidential major disaster declaration 
pursuant to the disaster numbers listed in Table 1.
    Grantees may use up to 5 percent of the total grant award for grant 
administration. Therefore, other than for the United States 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, other than the United States 
Virgin Islands, expenditures for planning activities may be counted 
towards a grantee's 80 percent expenditure requirement, provided that 
the grantee describes in its action plan how those planning activities 
benefit the HUD-identified most impacted and distressed areas.
    Grantees that received an allocation pursuant to Public Law 114-
113, 114-223, 114-254, or 115-31 (``Prior Appropriations'') must submit 
an action plan for disaster recovery not later than 90 days after the 
effective date of this notice. All other grantees receiving an 
allocation under this notice must submit an action plan not later than 
120 days after the effective date of this notice. HUD will only approve 
action plans that meet the specific requirements identified in this 
notice under section VI, ``Applicable Rules, Statutes, Waivers, and 
Alternative Requirements.

II. Use of Funds

    Grants under the Appropriations Act are only available for 
activities authorized under title I of the HCD Act related to disaster 
relief, long-term recovery, restoration of infrastructure and housing, 
and economic revitalization in the most impacted and distressed areas 
resulting from an eligible disaster. The Appropriations Act requires 
that prior to the obligation of CDBG-DR funds a grantee shall submit a 
plan detailing the proposed use of all funds, including 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. Therefore, 
grantees may only use funds for activities included in the action plan 
that are approved by the Secretary for disaster recovery that: (1) Are 
authorized under title I of the HCD Act or allowed by a waiver or 
alternative requirement published in this notice; and (2) respond to a 
disaster-related impact to infrastructure, housing, or economic 
revitalization in the most impacted and distressed areas. To inform the 
plan, grantees must conduct an assessment of community impacts and 
unmet needs to guide the development and prioritization of planned 
recovery activities, pursuant to paragraph A.2.a. in section VI below.
    Grantees are advised that pursuant to this notice, CDBG-DR funds 
may not be used for activities reimbursable by or for which funds are 
made available by the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) or the 
US Army Corps of Engineers (USACE). As such, the grantee must verify 
whether FEMA or USACE funds are available prior to awarding CDBG-DR 
funds to specific activities or beneficiaries.
    Consistent with the policy framework of the Robert T. Stafford 
Disaster Relief and Emergency Assistance Act (Stafford Act), HUD is 
underscoring that disaster recovery is a partnership between Federal, 
state and local government, and reminding CDBG-DR grantees they should 
invest in their own recovery. In developing this Notice, HUD evaluated 
options to promote policies that require state and local financial 
participation to ensure their shared commitment and responsibility for 
long-term recovery and future disaster risk reduction. This Notice does 
not limit, except as required by Public Law 105-276, the use of CDBG-DR 
funds toward the state or local contribution for other Federal programs 
(e.g., FEMA Public Assistance). However, HUD expects grantees to 
financially contribute to their recovery through the use of reserve or 
``rainy day'' funds, borrowing authority, or retargeting of existing 
financial resources. The Administration aims to rebalance Federal, 
state, and local government roles and responsibilities not only for 
long-term recovery but across the broader

[[Page 5846]]

landscape of Federal programs that provide financial assistance to 
state and local governments.

III. Management and Oversight of Funds

    The Appropriations Act requires the Secretary to certify, in 
advance of signing a grant agreement, that the grantee has in place 
proficient financial controls and procurement processes, and adequate 
procedures for proper grant management as detailed in paragraph A.1.a 
of section VI. If HUD recently certified for a grantee that received a 
CDBG-DR grant pursuant to Prior Appropriations, the grantee may request 
that HUD rely on its previous certification and supporting 
documentation for purposes of this allocation, as modified by any 
updates provided by the grantee. To submit such a request, the grantee 
should follow the instructions under paragraph A.1.a of section VI of 
this notice. Until grant closeout, all grantees shall adhere to the 
controls, processes, and procedures described in the grantee's 
financial controls and procurement processes documentation submitted in 
response to paragraph A.1.a. of section VI (including any previous 
documentation the grantee requests HUD to rely on), unless amended with 
HUD's approval.
    Additionally, in advance of signing a grant agreement and 
consistent with 2 CFR 200.205 of the Uniform Administrative 
Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal 
Awards (Uniform Requirements), HUD will evaluate each grantee's 
capacity to effectively manage the funds through a review of the 
grantee's implementation plan and capacity assessment detailed in 
paragraph A.1.b of section VI. The grant terms and specific conditions 
of the award will reflect HUD's risk assessment of the grantee based 
upon its submission and the grantee shall adhere to the description of 
its implementation plan and capacity assessment documentation until 
grant closeout, unless amended with HUD's approval. For all grantees 
receiving an allocation of funds pursuant to this notice, HUD will 
undertake an annual risk analysis as well as on-site monitoring of 
grantee management to further guide oversight of these funds.

IV. Authority To Grant Waivers

    The Appropriations Act authorizes the Secretary to waive or specify 
alternative requirements for any provision of any statute or regulation 
that the Secretary administers in connection with the obligation by the 
Secretary, or use by the recipient, of these funds, except for 
requirements related to fair housing, nondiscrimination, labor 
standards, and the environment. Waivers and alternative requirements 
are based upon a determination by the Secretary that good cause exists 
and that the waiver or alternative requirement is not inconsistent with 
the overall purposes of title I of the HCD Act. HUD also has regulatory 
waiver authority under 24 CFR 5.110, 91.600, and 570.5. Grantees may 
request waivers as described in section VI of this notice.
    The Appropriations Act provides that the Secretary ``may waive, or 
specify alternative requirements for, any provision of any statute or 
regulation that the Secretary administers in connection with the 
obligation by the Secretary or the use by the recipient of these funds 
(except for requirements related to fair housing, nondiscrimination, 
labor standards, and the environment).'' Accordingly, grantees are 
reminded that all fair housing and nondiscrimination requirements 
continue to apply in administering the funds described in this notice.

V. Overview of Grant Process

    To begin expending of CDBG-DR funds, the following expedited steps 
are necessary:
     Grantee follows citizen participation plan for disaster 
recovery in accordance with the requirements in paragraph A.4 of 
section VI of this notice.
     Grantee consults with stakeholders, including required 
consultation with affected local governments, Indian Tribes, and public 
housing authorities (as identified in paragraph A.7 of section VI of 
this notice).
     Within 60 days of the effective date of this notice (or 
when the grantee submits its action plan, whichever is earlier), the 
grantee submits documentation for the certification of financial 
controls and procurement processes, and adequate procedures for grant 
management in accordance with the requirements in paragraph A.1.a of 
section VI. A grantee that previously received a certification of its 
financial controls and procurement processes pursuant to a Prior 
Appropriation may request that HUD rely on that certification for 
purposes of this allocation, with updates provided by the grantee as 
appropriate.
     Within 60 days of the effective date of this notice (or 
when the grantee submits its action plan, whichever is earlier) the 
grantee submits its implementation plan and capacity assessment 
submissions, in accordance with the requirements in paragraph A.1.b of 
section VI.A grantee that previously received a certification of its 
financial controls and procurement processes pursuant to a Prior 
Appropriation may request that HUD rely on that certification for 
purposes of this allocation, with updates provided by the grantee as 
appropriate.
     Grantee publishes its action plan for disaster recovery on 
the grantee's required disaster recovery website for no less than 14 
calendar days to solicit public comment.
     Grantee responds to public comment and submits its action 
plan and projection of expenditures and outcomes (which includes 
Standard Form 424 (SF-424) and certifications) to HUD.
     Grantee requests and receives Disaster Recovery Grant 
Reporting (DRGR) system access (if the grantee does not already have 
DRGR access) and may enter activities into the DRGR system before or 
after submission of the action plan to HUD.
     HUD expedites review (allotted 45 days from date of 
receipt) and approves the action plan according to criteria identified 
in this notice.
     HUD sends an action plan approval letter and grant 
agreement to the grantee. If the action plan is not approved, HUD will 
notify the grantee of the deficiencies. The grantee must then resubmit 
the action plan within 45 days of the notification.
     Grantee signs and returns the grant agreement to HUD.
     Grantee ensures that the final HUD-approved action plan is 
posted on its official website.
     HUD establishes the grantee's line of credit.
     Grantee enters the activities from its approved action 
plan into the DRGR system if it has not previously done so and submits 
its DRGR action plan to HUD (funds can be drawn from the line of credit 
only for activities that are established in the DRGR system).
     Grantee must draft and publish (on their website) policies 
and procedures for programs and key recovery operations implemented by 
the grantee with CDBG-DR funds.
     The grantee may draw down funds from the line of credit 
after the Responsible Entity completes applicable environmental 
review(s) pursuant to 24 CFR part 58 or as authorized by the 
Appropriations Act and, as applicable, receives from HUD the Authority 
to Use Grant Funds (AUGF) form and certification.
     The grantee should begin to draw down funds from DRGR no 
later than 180 days after the effective date of this

[[Page 5847]]

notice. Additionally, the Appropriations Act requires all funds to be 
expended within two years of the date of obligation as described in 
paragraph A.28 of section VI of this notice.

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

    This section of the notice describes requirements imposed by the 
Appropriations Act, as well as applicable waivers and alternative 
requirements. For each waiver and alternative requirement, the 
Secretary has determined that good cause exists and the waiver or 
alternative requirement is not inconsistent with the overall purpose of 
the HCD Act. The waivers and alternative requirements provide 
flexibility in program design and implementation to support full and 
swift recovery following eligible disasters, while ensuring that 
statutory requirements are met. The following requirements apply only 
to the CDBG-DR funds appropriated in the Appropriations Act, and not to 
funds provided under the annual formula State or Entitlement CDBG 
programs, the Indian Community Development Block Grant program, or 
those provided under any other component of the CDBG program, such as 
the Section 108 Loan Guarantee Program, or any prior CDBG-DR 
appropriation.
    Grantees may request additional waivers and alternative 
requirements from the Department as needed to address specific needs 
related to their recovery activities, accompanied by data to support 
the request. Grantees should work with the assigned CPD representative 
to request any additional waivers or alternative requirements from HUD 
headquarters. Except where noted, waivers and alternative requirements 
described below apply to all grantees under this notice. Under the 
requirements of the Appropriations Act, waivers and alternative 
requirements are effective five days after they are published in the 
Federal Register.
    Except as described in this notice, statutory and regulatory 
provisions governing the State CDBG program shall apply to State 
grantees receiving an allocation under this notice. Pursuant to an 
alternative requirement established by this notice, all references to 
states and State grantees shall include the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico 
and the U.S. Virgin Islands. Applicable statutory provisions (title I 
of the HCD Act) can be found at 42 U.S.C. 5301 et seq. Applicable State 
and Entitlement CDBG regulations can be found at 24 CFR part 570. 
References to the action plan in these regulations shall refer to the 
action plan required by this notice. All references in this notice 
pertaining to timelines and/or deadlines are in terms of calendar days 
unless otherwise noted. The date of this notice shall mean the 
effective date of this notice unless otherwise noted.

A. Grant Administration

    1. Preaward Evaluation of Management and Oversight of Funds
    a. Certification of financial controls and procurement processes, 
and adequate procedures for proper grant management. The Appropriations 
Act requires that the Secretary certify, in advance of signing a grant 
agreement, that the grantee has in place proficient financial controls 
and procurement processes and has established adequate procedures to 
prevent any duplication of benefits as defined by section 312 of the 
Stafford Act, 42 U.S.C. 5155, to ensure timely expenditure of funds, 
maintain a comprehensive website regarding all disaster recovery 
activities assisted with these funds, and detect and prevent waste, 
fraud, and abuse of funds. To enable the Secretary to make this 
certification, each grantee must submit to HUD the certification 
documentation listed below. This information must be submitted within 
60 days of the effective date of this notice, or with the grantee's 
submission of its action plan, whichever date is earlier. Grant 
agreements will not be executed until HUD has approved the grantee's 
certifications. For each of the items (1) through (6) below, the 
grantee must also provide a table that clearly indicates which unit and 
personnel are responsible for each task along with contact information.
    In the alternative, if HUD recently certified the controls, 
processes, and procedures for a grantee that received an allocation of 
CDBG-DR funds pursuant to Prior Appropriations, the grantee may request 
that HUD rely on its previous certification(s) and supporting 
documentation required by (1) through (6) below for purposes of 
allocations under this notice, as modified by any updates provided by 
the grantee. To submit the request, a grantee must indicate in the P.L. 
115-56 Financial Management and Grant Compliance Certification that the 
past submissions pursuant to Prior Appropriations remain unchanged 
(except where updates are specified and supported with revised 
submissions), and that the submissions on which HUD based its previous 
certification, or new submissions as appropriate, will apply to the 
grantee's CDBG-DR grant under this notice. In either case, the grantee 
must certify to the accuracy of its documentation as required by 
paragraph E.51 of section VI of this notice. Additionally, the grantee 
must submit with its action plan the certifications in paragraph E.51 
of section VI of this notice.
    (1) Proficient Financial Management Controls. A grantee has 
proficient financial management controls if each of the following 
criteria is satisfied:
    (a) The grantee submits its most recent single audit and 
consolidated annual financial report (CAFR), which in HUD's 
determination indicates that the grantee has no material weaknesses, 
deficiencies, or concerns that HUD considers to be relevant to the 
financial management of the CDBG program. If the single audit or CAFR 
identified weaknesses or deficiencies, the grantee must provide 
documentation satisfactory to HUD showing how those weaknesses have 
been removed or are being addressed; and
    (b) The grantee has assessed its financial standards and has 
submitted the completed Public Law 115-56 Financial Management and 
Grant Compliance Certification (Compliance Certification) available on 
the HUD Exchange website at https://www.hudexchange.info/cdbg-dr/cdbg-dr-laws-regulations-and-federal-register-notices/, together with all 
documentation required in the Compliance Certification. The grantee's 
standards must comply with the requirements and standards of the 
Compliance Certification to be proficient, and the grantee must 
continue to maintain these standards until grant closeout. The grantee 
must identify which sections of its financial standards address 
applicable questions in the document.
    (2) Procurement. Each grantee must provide HUD its procurement 
process/standards for review, so HUD may evaluate the overall effect of 
the grantee's procurement process/standards to determine that they 
uphold the principles of full and open competition and include an 
evaluation of the cost or price of the product or service. The grantee 
must also provide a legal opinion that it has proficient procurement 
policies and procedures.
    A State grantee (including the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico and the 
U.S. Virgin Islands) has proficient procurement policies and processes 
if HUD determines that its procurement processes uphold the principles 
of full and open competition and include an evaluation of the cost and 
price of the product or service, and if its procurement processes 
reflect that it: (a) Adopted 2 CFR 200.318 through 200.326; or (b) 
follows its own

[[Page 5848]]

procurement policies and procedures and establishes requirements for 
procurement policies and procedures for local governments and 
subrecipients based on full and open competition pursuant to 24 CFR 
570.489(g), and the requirements applicable to the state, its local 
governments, and subrecipients include evaluation of the cost or price 
of the product or service; or (c) adopted 2 CFR 200.317, meaning that 
it will follow its own State procurement policies and procedures and 
evaluate the cost or price of the product or service, but impose 2 CFR 
200.318 through 200.326 on its subgrantees and subrecipients. A grantee 
must demonstrate that its procurement policies and procedures will 
allow the grantee to comply with the procurement requirements at 
paragraph A.26 of Section VI of this notice.
    (3) Duplication of benefits. A grantee has adequate procedures to 
prevent the duplication of benefits if the grantee submits uniform 
processes that reflect the requirements of paragraph A.25 in section VI 
of this notice, including: (a) Verifying all sources of disaster 
assistance received by the grantee or applicant prior to the award of 
CDBG-DR funds to the applicant, as applicable; (b) determining a 
grantee's or an applicant's unmet need(s) before committing funds or 
awarding assistance; and (c) ensuring beneficiaries agree to repay any 
duplicative assistance if they later receive other disaster assistance 
for the same purpose. Grantee procedures shall provide that prior to 
the award of assistance, the grantee will use the best, most recent 
available data from FEMA, the Small Business Administration (SBA), 
insurers, and any other sources of funding to prevent the duplication 
of benefits.
    (4) Timely expenditures. A grantee has adequate procedures to 
determine timely expenditures if it submits procedures that indicate to 
HUD how the grantee will track expenditures each month; how it will 
monitor expenditures of its subrecipients; how it will account for and 
manage program income; how it will reprogram funds in a timely manner 
for activities that are stalled; and how it will project expenditures 
to provide for the expenditure of all CDBG-DR funds within the period 
provided for in paragraph A.28 of section VI of this notice.
    (5) Comprehensive disaster recovery website. A grantee has adequate 
procedures to maintain a comprehensive website regarding all disaster 
recovery activities if it submits procedures that indicate that the 
grantee will have a separate page dedicated to its disaster recovery 
activities assisted with CDBG-DR funds provided under this notice that 
includes the information described at paragraph A.27 of section VI of 
this notice. The procedures should also indicate the frequency of 
website updates. At minimum, grantees must update their website 
monthly.
    (6) Procedures to detect and prevent fraud, waste and abuse. A 
grantee has adequate procedures to detect and prevent fraud, waste, and 
abuse if it submits procedures that indicate how the grantee will 
verify the accuracy of information provided by applicants; if it 
provides a monitoring policy indicating how and why monitoring is 
conducted, the frequency of monitoring, and which items are monitored; 
if it demonstrates that it has an internal auditor that provides both 
programmatic and financial oversight of grantee activities; and 
includes a document signed by the internal auditor that describes his 
or her role in detecting fraud, waste, and abuse. Instances of fraud, 
waste, and abuse should be referred to the HUD OIG Fraud Hotline 
(phone: 1-800-347-3735 or email: [email protected]).
    To address any potential duplication, beneficiaries must enter a 
signed agreement to repay any assistance later received for the same 
purpose as the CDBG-DR funds. The grantee must identify a method to 
monitor compliance with the agreement for a reasonable period, and 
should articulate this method in its written administrative procedures. 
This agreement must also include the following language: ``Warning: Any 
person who knowingly makes a false claim or statement to HUD may be 
subject to civil or criminal penalties under 18 U.S.C. 287, 1001 and 31 
U.S.C. 3729.''
    b. Implementation Plan and Capacity Assessment. Before signing a 
grant agreement, HUD is requiring each grantee to demonstrate that it 
has sufficient capacity to manage these funds and the associated risks.
    Evidence of grantee management capacity will be provided through 
the grantee's implementation plan and capacity assessment submissions. 
These submissions must meet the criteria in (1) and (2) below, and must 
be submitted within 60 days of the effective date of this notice or 
with the grantee's submission of its action plan, whichever date is 
earlier.
    A grantee has sufficient management capacity if it submits 
documentation showing that each of the following criteria is satisfied:
    (1) Timely information on application status. A grantee has 
adequate procedures to enable applicants to determine the status of 
their applications for recovery assistance, at all phases, if its 
procedures indicate methods for communication (i.e., website, 
telephone, case managers, letters, etc.), ensure the accessibility and 
privacy of individualized information for all applicants, indicate the 
frequency of applicant status updates, and identify which personnel or 
unit is responsible for informing applicants of the status of recovery 
applications.
    (2) Implementation Plan. To enable HUD to assess risk as described 
in 2 CFR 200.205(c), the grantee will submit an implementation plan to 
the Department. The plan must describe the grantee's capacity to carry 
out the recovery and how it will address any capacity gaps. HUD will 
determine a plan is adequate to reduce risk if, at a minimum it 
addresses (a) through (e) below:
    (a) Capacity Assessment. The grantee has conducted an assessment of 
its capacity to carry out CDBG-DR recovery efforts and has developed a 
timeline with milestones describing when and how the grantee will 
address all capacity gaps that are identified. The assessment must 
include a list of any open CDBG-DR findings and an update on the 
corrective actions undertaken to address each finding. HUD may include 
additional requirements in the grantee's grant terms and conditions in 
order to prevent similar findings for this grant.
    (b) Staffing. The plan shows that the grantee has assessed staff 
capacity and identified personnel for the purpose of case management in 
proportion to the applicant population; program managers who will be 
assigned responsibility for each primary recovery area (housing, 
economic revitalization, and infrastructure); staff who have 
demonstrated experience in housing, economic revitalization, and 
infrastructure (as applicable); and staff responsible for procurement/
contract management, compliance with the regulations implementing 
Section 3 of the Housing and Urban Development Act of 1968 (24 CFR part 
135) (Section 3), fair housing compliance, and environmental 
compliance; as well as staff responsible for monitoring and quality 
assurance, and financial management. An adequate plan will also provide 
for an internal audit function with responsible audit staff reporting 
independently to the chief elected official or executive officer or 
board of the governing body of any designated administering entity.
    (c) Internal and Interagency Coordination. The grantee's plan 
describes how it will ensure effective communication between different

[[Page 5849]]

departments and divisions within the grantee's organizational structure 
that are involved in CDBG-DR-funded recovery efforts; between its lead 
agency and subrecipients responsible for implementing the grantee's 
action plan; and with other local and regional planning efforts to 
ensure consistency.
    (d) Technical Assistance. The grantee's implementation plan 
describes how it will procure and provide technical assistance for any 
personnel that the grantee does not employ at the time of action plan 
submission, and to fill gaps in knowledge or technical expertise 
required for successful and timely recovery implementation where 
identified in the capacity assessment.
    (e) Accountability. The grantee's plan identifies the lead agency 
responsible for implementation of the CDBG-DR award and indicates that 
the head of that agency will report directly to the chief executive 
officer of the jurisdiction.
    2. Action Plan for Disaster Recovery waiver and alternative 
requirement. Requirements for CDBG actions plans, located at 42 U.S.C. 
5304(a)(1), 42 U.S.C. 5304(m), 42 U.S.C. 5306(d)(2)(C)(iii), 42 U.S.C. 
5306(a)(1), 42 U.S.C. 12705(a)(2), and 24 CFR 91.320, are waived for 
these disaster recovery grants. Instead, grantees must submit to HUD an 
action plan for disaster recovery which will describe disaster recovery 
programs that conform to applicable requirements as specified in this 
notice. The Secretary may disapprove an action plan as substantially 
incomplete if it is determined that the plan does not satisfy all the 
required elements identified in this notice. During the course of the 
grant, HUD will monitor the grantee's actions and use of funds for 
consistency with the plan, as well as meeting the performance and 
timeliness objectives therein.
    a. Action Plan. The action plan must identify the proposed use of 
all funds, including criteria for eligibility, and how the uses address 
necessary expenses related to disaster relief, long-term recovery, 
restoration of infrastructure and housing, and economic revitalization 
in the most impacted and distressed areas resulting from a major 
disaster declared in 2017. Funds dedicated for uses not described in 
accordance with paragraphs b. or c. under this section will not be 
obligated until the grantee submits, and HUD approves, an action plan 
amendment programming the use of those funds, at the necessary level of 
detail.
    The action plan must contain:
    (1) An impact and unmet needs assessment. Each grantee must develop 
a needs assessment to understand the type and location of community 
needs and to target limited resources to those areas with the greatest 
need. Grantees receiving an allocation under this notice must conduct a 
needs assessment to inform the use of CDBG-DR funds. Grantees must cite 
data sources. Grantees may use HUD's AFFH mapping tool (https://egis.hud.gov/affht/) or the CPD Mapping tool (https://egis.hud.gov/cpdmaps/) to inform their analysis. At a minimum, the needs assessment 
must:
     Evaluate all aspects of recovery including housing 
(interim and permanent, owner and rental, single-family and 
multifamily, affordable and market rate, and housing to meet the needs 
of persons who were homeless pre-disaster), infrastructure, and 
economic revitalization;
     Estimate unmet needs to ensure CDBG-DR funds meet needs 
that are not likely to be addressed by other sources of funds by 
accounting for the various forms of assistance available to, or likely 
to be available to, affected communities (e.g., projected FEMA funds) 
and individuals (e.g., estimated insurance) and use the most recent 
available data to estimate the portion of need unlikely to be addressed 
by insurance proceeds, other Federal assistance, or any other funding 
sources (thus producing an estimate of unmet need);
     Assess whether public services (e.g., housing counseling, 
legal counseling, job training, mental health, and general health 
services) are necessary to complement activities intended to address 
housing, infrastructure, and economic revitalization and how those 
services are to be made accessible to individuals having wide-ranging 
disabilities including mobility, sensory, developmental, emotional, and 
other impairments;
     Describe the extent to which expenditures for planning 
activities will benefit the HUD-identified most impacted and distressed 
areas;
     Describe impacts geographically by type at the lowest 
level practicable (e.g., county level, zip code, neighborhood, or 
census tract); and
     Take into account the costs of incorporating mitigation 
and resilience measures to protect against the anticipated effects of 
future extreme weather events and other natural hazards and long-term 
risks.
    CDBG-DR funds may be used to reimburse planning and administration 
costs for developing the action plan, including the needs assessment, 
environmental review, and citizen participation requirements. HUD has 
developed a Disaster Impact and Unmet Needs Assessment Kit to guide 
CDBG-DR grantees through a process for identifying and prioritizing 
critical unmet needs for long-term community recovery. The Kit is 
available on the HUD Exchange website at: https://www.hudexchange.info/resources/documents/Disaster_Recovery_Disaster_Impact_Needs_Assessment_Kit.pdf.
    Disaster recovery needs evolve over time and therefore grantees are 
expected to amend the needs assessment and action plan as conditions 
change, additional needs are identified, and additional resources 
become available.
    (2) A description of the connection between identified unmet needs 
and the allocation of CDBG-DR resources. Grantees must propose an 
allocation of CDBG-DR funds that primarily considers and addresses 
unmet housing needs. Grantees may also allocate funds for economic 
revitalization and infrastructure activities, but in doing so, must 
identify how any remaining unmet housing needs will be addressed or how 
its economic revitalization and infrastructure activities will 
contribute to the long-term recovery and restoration of housing in the 
most impacted and distressed areas. Grantee action plans may provide 
for the allocation of funds for administration and planning activities 
and for public service activities, subject to the caps on such 
activities as described below.
    (3) Each grantee must include a description of how it will identify 
and address the rehabilitation, reconstruction, replacement, and new 
construction of housing and shelters in the areas affected by the 
disaster. This includes any rental housing that is affordable to low- 
or moderate-income households as provided for in B.34 of section VI of 
this notice; public housing as provided for in B.33 of Section VI of 
this notice; emergency shelters and housing for the homeless; private 
market units receiving project-based assistance or with tenants that 
participate in the Section 8 Housing Choice Voucher Program; and any 
other housing that is assisted under a HUD program.
    (4) A description of how the grantee's programs will promote 
housing for vulnerable populations, including a description of 
activities it plans to address: (a) The transitional housing, permanent 
supportive housing, and permanent housing needs of individuals and 
families (including subpopulations) that are homeless and at-risk of 
homelessness; (b) the prevention of low-income individuals and families 
with children (especially those with incomes below 30 percent of the 
area median)

[[Page 5850]]

from becoming homeless; and (c) the special needs of persons who are 
not homeless but require supportive housing (e.g., elderly, persons 
with disabilities, persons with alcohol or other drug addiction, 
persons with HIV/AIDS and their families, and public housing residents. 
Grantees must also assess how planning decisions may affect members of 
protected classes, racially and ethnically concentrated areas, as well 
as concentrated areas of poverty; will promote the availability of 
affordable housing in low-poverty, nonminority areas where appropriate; 
and will respond to natural hazard-related impacts. Grantees are 
reminded that the use of recovery funds must meet accessibility 
standards, provide reasonable accommodations to persons with 
disabilities, and take into consideration the functional needs of 
persons with disabilities in the relocation process. Guidance on 
relocation considerations for persons with disabilities may be found in 
Chapter 3 of HUD's Relocation Handbook 1378.0 (available on the HUD 
Exchange website at: https://www.hud.gov/program_offices/administration/hudclips/handbooks/cpd/13780). A checklist of 
accessibility requirements under the Uniform Federal Accessibility 
Standards (UFAS) is available at: http://www.hudexchange.info/resources/796/ufas-accessibility-checklist/. The HUD Deeming Notice.79 
FR 29671 (May 23, 2014) explains when HUD recipients can use 2010 ADA 
Standards with exceptions, as an alternative to UFAS to comply with 
Section 504.
    (5) A description of how the grantee plans to minimize displacement 
of persons or entities, and assist any persons or entities displaced.
    (6) A description of the maximum amount of assistance available to 
a beneficiary under each of the grantee's disaster recovery programs. A 
grantee may find it necessary to provide exceptions on a case-by-case 
basis to the maximum amount of assistance and must describe the process 
it will use to make such exceptions in its action plan. At minimum, 
each grantee must adopt policies and procedures that communicate how it 
will analyze the circumstances under which an exception is needed and 
how it will demonstrate that the amount of assistance is necessary and 
reasonable.
    (7) A description of how the grantee plans to: Promote sound, 
sustainable long-term recovery planning informed by a post-disaster 
evaluation of hazard risk, especially construction standards and land-
use decisions that reflect responsible floodplain and wetland 
management and take into account continued sea level rise, if 
applicable; and coordinate with other local and regional planning 
efforts to ensure consistency. This information should be based on the 
history of FEMA flood mitigation efforts and take into account 
projected increase in sea level (if applicable) and the frequency and 
intensity of precipitation events.
    (8) A description of how the grantee plans to adhere to the 
advanced elevation requirements established in paragraph B.32.e of 
section VI of this notice. Grantee decisions to elevate structures in a 
particular neighborhood or local government must be cost reasonable 
relative to other alternatives strategies, such as demolition of 
substantially-damaged structures with reconstruction of an elevated 
structure on the same site, property buyouts, or infrastructure 
improvements to prevent loss of life and mitigate future property 
damage.
    The action plan should include an estimate of the average costs 
associated with elevating structures (updated as additional information 
becomes available through subsequent action plan amendments) and 
provide a description of how it will document on a neighborhood or 
local government level that elevation, as opposed to alternative 
strategies, is cost reasonable to promote a community's long-term 
recovery.
    (9) A description of how the grantee will: (a) Design and implement 
programs or activities with the goal of protecting people and property 
from harm; (b) emphasize high quality, durability, energy efficiency, 
sustainability, and mold resistance; (c) support adoption and 
enforcement of modern and/or resilient building codes and mitigation of 
hazard risk, including possible sea level rise, high winds, storm 
surge, and flooding, where appropriate; and (d) implement and ensure 
compliance with the Green Building standards required in paragraph 
B.32.a of section VI of this notice. All rehabilitation, 
reconstruction, and new construction should be designed to incorporate 
principles of sustainability, including water and energy efficiency, 
resilience, and mitigating the impact of future disasters. Whenever 
feasible, grantees should follow best practices such as those provided 
by the U.S. Department of Energy's Guidelines for Home Energy 
Professionals--Professional Certifications and Standard Work 
Specifications found at https://energy.gov/eere/wipo/guidelines-home-energy-professionals-standards-work-specifications. HUD also encourages 
grantees to implement green infrastructure policies to the extent 
practicable.
    (10) Additionally, a grantee using grant funds for infrastructure 
must include a description of how the proposed infrastructure 
activities will advance long-term resilience to natural hazards and how 
the grantee intends to align these investments with other planned State 
or local capital improvements. Grantees should describe how 
preparedness and mitigation measures will be integrated into rebuilding 
activities and how the grantee will promote community-level and/or 
regional (e.g. multiple local jurisdictions) post-disaster recovery and 
mitigation planning.
    Grantees must also describe how they will address the construction 
or rehabilitation of storm water management systems in flood impacted 
areas. State grantees must work with local governments in the most 
impacted and distressed areas to identify the unmet needs and 
associated costs of needed storm water infrastructure improvements.
    (11) A description of the grantee's proposed use of CDBG-DR funds 
to develop a disaster recovery and response plan that addresses long-
term recovery and pre- and post-disaster hazard mitigation, if one does 
not currently exist.
    (12) A description of how the grantee will leverage CDBG-DR funds 
with funding provided by other Federal, State, local, private, and 
nonprofit sources to generate a more effective and comprehensive 
recovery. Examples of other Federal sources are those provided by HUD, 
FEMA (specifically the Public Assistance Program, Individual Assistance 
Program, Permanent Housing Construction Repair, where applicable, and 
Hazard Mitigation Grant Program), SBA (specifically the Disaster Loans 
program), Economic Development Administration, USACE, and the U.S. 
Department of Agriculture. The grantee should seek to maximize the 
outcomes of investments and the degree to which CDBG funds are 
leveraged. Grantees shall identify leveraged funds for each activity, 
as applicable, in the DRGR system.
    (13) A description of the standards to be established for 
construction contractors performing work in the jurisdiction and a 
mechanism for homeowners and small business owners to challenge 
construction work that does not meet these standards. HUD strongly 
encourages the grantee to require a warranty period post-construction, 
which includes a formal notification that is provided to homeowners on 
a

[[Page 5851]]

periodic basis (e.g., 6 months and one month prior to expiration date 
of the warranty).
    b. Funds Awarded Directly to a State. For State grantees, the 
action plan shall describe the method of distribution of funds to local 
governments and Indian tribes and/or descriptions of specific programs 
or activities the grantee will carry out directly. The description must 
include:
    (1) How the needs assessment informed grantee funding 
determinations, including the rationale behind the decision(s) to 
provide funds to areas that were identified by the grantee as being 
most impacted and distressed, if applicable (i.e., how the grantee 
determined that these areas are most impacted and distressed). All 
grant funds shall be expended in areas that received a presidential 
disaster declaration pursuant to the disaster numbers specified in 
Table 1 of this notice.
    (2) The threshold factors and recipient or beneficiary grant size 
limits that are to be applied.
    (3) The projected uses for the CDBG-DR funds, by responsible 
organization, activity, and geographic area, when the grantee carries 
out an activity directly.
    (4) For each proposed program and/or activity carried out directly, 
its respective CDBG activity eligibility category (or categories), 
national objective(s), and specific aspects of disaster recovery as 
described in subparagraph d. of this paragraph.
    (5) How the method of distribution to local governments and Indian 
tribes or programs/activities carried out directly will result in long-
term recovery from specific impacts of the disaster.
    (6) When funds are subgranted to local governments or Indian 
tribes, all criteria used to distribute funds to local governments or 
Indian tribes including the relative importance of each criterion.
    (7) When applications are solicited for programs carried out 
directly, all criteria used to select applications for funding, 
including the relative importance of each criterion.
    c. Clarification of disaster-related activities. All CDBG-DR funded 
activities must clearly address an impact of the disaster for which 
funding was allocated. Given standard CDBG requirements, this means 
each activity must: (1) Be a CDBG-eligible activity (or be eligible 
under a waiver or alternative requirement in this notice); (2) meet a 
national objective; and (3) address a direct or indirect impact from 
the major disaster in a Presidentially-declared county. A disaster-
related impact can be addressed through any eligible CDBG-DR activity. 
Additional details on disaster-related activities are provided under 
section VI, parts B through D. Additionally, HUD has developed a series 
of CDBG-DR toolkits that guide grantees through specific grant 
implementation activities. These can be found on the HUD Exchange 
website at https://www.hudexchange.info/programs/cdbg-dr/toolkits/.
    (1) Housing. Typical housing activities include new construction 
and rehabilitation of single-family or multifamily units. Most often, 
grantees use CDBG-DR funds to rehabilitate damaged homes and rental 
units. However, grantees may also fund new construction (see paragraph 
B.32 of section VI of this notice) or rehabilitate units not damaged by 
the disaster if the activity clearly addresses a disaster-related 
impact and is located in a disaster-affected area. This impact can be 
demonstrated by the disaster's overall effect on the quality, quantity, 
and affordability of the housing stock and the resulting inability of 
that stock to meet post-disaster needs and population demands.
    Grantees are also required to coordinate with HUD-certified housing 
counseling organizations to ensure that information and services are 
made available to both renters and homeowners. Additional information 
for each grantee is available here: https://apps.hud.gov/offices/hsg/sfh/hcc/hcs.cfm?weblistaction=summary.
    (2) Economic Revitalization. The attraction, retention and return 
of businesses and jobs to a disaster-impacted area is critical to long 
term recovery. Accordingly, for CDBG-DR purposes, economic 
revitalization may include any CDBG-DR eligible activity that 
demonstrably restores and improves some aspect of the local economy 
through the attraction, retention and return of businesses and jobs. 
The activity may address job losses, or negative impacts to tax 
revenues or businesses. Examples of eligible activities include 
providing loans and grants to businesses to carry out eligible economic 
development activities, funding job training, making improvements to 
commercial/retail districts, and financing other efforts that attract/
retain workers in devastated communities.
    All economic revitalization activities must address an economic 
impact(s) caused by the disaster (e.g., loss of jobs, loss of public 
revenue). Through its needs assessment and action plan, the grantee 
must clearly identify the economic loss or need resulting from the 
disaster, and how the proposed activities will address that loss or 
need. In proposing the use of CDBG-DR funds for economic revitalization 
under this notice, a grantee must identify how any remaining unmet 
housing needs will be addressed or how its economic development 
activities will contribute to the long-term recovery and restoration of 
housing in the most impacted and distressed areas.
    (3) Infrastructure. Typical infrastructure activities include the 
rehabilitation, replacement, or relocation of damaged public facilities 
and improvements including, but not limited to, bridges, water 
treatment facilities, roads, sewer and water lines, and storm water 
management systems. In proposing an allocation of CDBG-DR funds under 
this notice for infrastructure, a grantee must identify how any 
remaining unmet housing needs will be addressed or how its 
infrastructure activities will contribute to the long-term recovery and 
restoration of housing in the most impacted and distressed areas.
    (4) Preparedness and Mitigation. To ensure that CDBG-DR funds are 
used for authorized disaster recovery purposes, all assisted activities 
must respond to the impacts of the declared disaster identified in 
Table 1. HUD encourages grantees to incorporate preparedness and 
mitigation measures into CDBG-DR assisted activities to rebuild 
communities that are more resilient to future disasters. Mitigation 
measures that are not incorporated into those rebuilding activities 
must be a necessary expense related to disaster relief or long-term 
recovery that responds to the eligible disaster.
    (5) Connection to the Disaster. Grantees must maintain records 
about each activity funded, as described in paragraph A.16 of section 
VI of this notice. In regard to physical losses, damage or rebuilding 
estimates are often the most effective tools for demonstrating the 
connection to the disaster. For housing market, economic, and/or 
nonphysical losses, post-disaster analyses or assessments may best 
document the relationship between the loss and the disaster.
    d. Clarity of Action Plan. All grantees must include sufficient 
information so that all interested parties will be able to understand 
and comment on the action plan and, if applicable, be able to prepare 
responsive applications to the grantee. The action plan (and subsequent 
amendments) must include a single chart or table that illustrates, at 
the most practical level, how all funds are budgeted (e.g., by program, 
subrecipient, grantee-administered activity, or other category).

[[Page 5852]]

    e. Review and Approval of Action Plan. The action plan (including 
SF-424 and certifications) must be submitted to HUD for review and 
approval. Grantees that received an allocation pursuant to a Prior 
Appropriation must submit an action plan within 90 days of the 
effective date of this notice. All other grantees receiving an 
allocation under this notice must submit an action plan within 120 days 
of the effective date of this notice. HUD will review each action plan 
within 45 days from the date of receipt. The Secretary may disapprove 
an action plan as substantially incomplete if it is determined that the 
action plan does not meet the requirements of this notice.
    f. Obligation and expenditure of funds. Once HUD makes the required 
certifications and approves the action plan, it will then sign a grant 
agreement obligating allocated funds to the grantee. In addition, HUD 
will establish the line of credit and the grantee will receive DRGR 
system access (if it does not already have DRGR system access). The 
grantee must also enter its action plan activities into the DRGR system 
in order to draw funds for those activities. Each activity must meet 
the applicable environmental requirements prior to the use of funds. 
After the Responsible Entity (usually the grantee) completes 
environmental review(s) pursuant to 24 CFR part 58 (as applicable) or 
adopts the environmental review performed by another federal agency, as 
authorized by the Appropriations Act, and receives from HUD or the 
State an approved Request for Release of Funds and certification (as 
applicable), the grantee may draw down funds from the line of credit 
for an activity. The disbursement of grant funds should begin no later 
than 180 days after the effective date of this notice. Failure to draw 
funds within 180 days of the effective date of this notice will result 
in the Department's review of the grantee's certification of its 
financial controls, procurement processes and capacity, and may result 
in a recommended corrective actions deemed appropriate by the 
Department pursuant to 24 CFR 570.495, 24 CFR 570.910, or 24 CFR 
1003.701.
    g. Amending the Action Plan. The grantee must amend its action plan 
to update its needs assessment, modify or create new activities, or 
reprogram funds, as necessary. Each amendment must be highlighted, or 
otherwise identified, within the context of the entire action plan. The 
beginning of every action plan 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) revised budget 
allocation table that reflects the entirety of all funds, as amended. A 
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.
    h. Projection of expenditures and outcomes. Each grantee must 
submit projected expenditures and outcomes with the action plan. The 
projections must be based on each quarter's expected performance--
beginning with the quarter funds are available to the grantee and 
continuing each quarter until all funds are expended. The projections 
will enable HUD, the public, and the grantee to track proposed versus 
actual performance. The published action plan must be amended for any 
subsequent changes, updates or revision of the projections. Guidance on 
the preparation of projections is available on the HUD website.
    3. HUD performance review authorities and grantee reporting 
requirements in the Disaster Recovery Grant Reporting (DRGR) System.
    a. Performance review authorities. 42 U.S.C. 5304(e) requires that 
the Secretary shall, at least on an annual basis, make such reviews and 
audits as may be necessary or appropriate to determine whether the 
grantee has carried out its activities in a timely manner, whether the 
grantee's activities and certifications are carried out in accordance 
with the requirements and the primary objectives of the HCD Act and 
other applicable laws, and whether the grantee has the continuing 
capacity to carry out those activities in a timely manner.
    This notice waives the requirements for submission of a performance 
report pursuant to 42 U.S.C. 12708(a), 24 CFR 91.520, and 24 CFR 
1003.506. Alternatively, HUD is requiring that grantees enter 
information in the DRGR system in sufficient detail to permit the 
Department's review of grantee performance on a quarterly basis through 
the Quarterly Performance Report (QPR) and to enable remote review of 
grantee data to allow HUD to assess compliance and risk. HUD-issued 
general and appropriation-specific guidance for DRGR reporting 
requirements can be found on the HUD exchange at: https://www.hudexchange.info/programs/drgr/.
    b. DRGR Action Plan. Each grantee must enter its action plan for 
disaster recovery, including performance measures, into HUD's DRGR 
system. As more detailed information about uses of funds is identified 
by the grantee, it must be entered into the DRGR system at a level of 
detail that is sufficient to serve as the basis for acceptable 
performance reports and permits HUD review of compliance requirements.
    The action plan must also be entered into the DRGR system so that 
the grantee is able to draw its CDBG-DR funds. The grantee may enter 
activities into the DRGR system before or after submission of the 
written action plan to HUD, but will not be able to budget grant funds 
to these activities until after the grant agreement has been executed. 
To enter an activity into the DRGR system, the grantee must know the 
activity type, national objective, and the organization that will be 
responsible for the activity.
    Grantees will gain access to its line of credit upon review and 
approval of the initial DRGR action plan. Each activity entered into 
the DRGR system must also be categorized under a ``project.'' 
Typically, projects are based on groups of activities that accomplish a 
similar, broad purpose (e.g., housing, infrastructure, or economic 
revitalization) or are based on an area of service (e.g., Community A). 
If a grantee describes just one program within a broader category 
(e.g., single family rehabilitation), that program is entered as a 
project in the DRGR system. Further, the budget of the program would be 
identified as the project's budget. If a grantee has only identified 
the Method of Distribution (MOD) upon HUD's approval of the published 
action plan, the MOD categories typically serve as the projects in the 
DRGR system, rather than activity groupings. Activities are added to 
MOD projects as specific CDBG-DR programs and projects are identified 
for funding.
    c. Tracking oversight activities in the DRGR system; use of DRGR 
data for HUD review and dissemination. Each grantee must also enter 
into the DRGR system summary information on monitoring visits and 
reports, audits, and technical assistance it conducts as part of its 
oversight of its disaster recovery programs. The grantee's Quarterly 
Performance Report (QPR) will include a summary indicating the number 
of grantee oversight visits and reports (see subparagraph e. for more 
information on the QPR). HUD will use data entered into the DRGR action 
plan and the QPR, transactional data from the DRGR system, and other 
information provided by the grantee, to provide reports to Congress and 
the public, as well as to: (1) Monitor for anomalies or performance 
problems that suggest fraud, abuse of funds, and duplication of 
benefits; (2) reconcile budgets,

[[Page 5853]]

obligations, funding draws, and expenditures; (3) calculate 
expenditures to determine compliance with administrative and public 
service caps and the overall percentage of funds that benefit low- and 
moderate-income persons; and (4) analyze the risk of grantee programs 
to determine priorities for the Department's monitoring. Any instances 
of fraud, waste, or abuse identified should be referred to the HUD OIG 
Fraud Hotline (phone: 1-800-347-3735 or email: [email protected]). No 
personally identifiable information shall be reported in DRGR.
    d. Tracking program income in the DRGR system. Grantees must use 
the DRGR system to draw grant funds for each activity. Grantees must 
also use the DRGR system to track program income receipts, 
disbursements, revolving loan funds, and leveraged funds (if 
applicable). If a State permits local governments to retain program 
income, or a State permits subrecipients to retain program income prior 
to grant closeout, the grantee must establish program income accounts 
in the DRGR system. The DRGR system requires grantees to use program 
income before drawing additional grant funds, and ensures that program 
income retained by one organization will not affect grant draw requests 
for other organizations.
    e. DRGR system Quarterly Performance Report (QPR). Each grantee 
must submit a QPR through the DRGR system no later than 30 days 
following the end of each calendar quarter. Within 3 days of submission 
to HUD, each QPR must be posted on the grantee's official website. In 
the event the QPR is rejected by HUD, the grantee must post the revised 
version, as approved by HUD, within 3 days of HUD approval. The 
grantee's first QPR is due after the first full calendar year quarter 
after HUD signs the grant agreement. For example, a grant agreement 
signed in April requires a QPR to be submitted by October 30. QPRs must 
be submitted on a quarterly basis until all funds have been expended 
and all expenditures and accomplishments have been reported. If a 
satisfactory report is not submitted in a timely manner, HUD may 
suspend access to CDBG-DR funds until a satisfactory report is 
submitted, or may withdraw and reallocate funding if HUD determines, 
after notice and opportunity for a hearing, that the jurisdiction did 
not submit a satisfactory report.
    Each QPR will include information about the uses of funds in 
activities identified in the DRGR action plan during the applicable 
quarter. This includes, but is not limited to, the project name, 
activity, location, and national objective; funds budgeted, obligated, 
drawn down, and expended; the funding source and total amount of any 
non-CDBG-DR funds to be expended on each activity; beginning and actual 
completion dates of completed activities; achieved performance 
outcomes, such as number of housing units completed or number of low- 
and moderate-income persons served; and the race and ethnicity of 
persons assisted under direct-benefit activities. For all housing and 
economic development activities, the address of each CDBG-DR assisted 
property must be recorded in the QPR. Grantees must not include such 
addresses in its public QPR; when entering addresses in the QPR, 
grantees must select ``Not Visible on PDF'' to exclude them from the 
report required to be posted on its website. The DRGR system will 
automatically display the amount of program income receipted, the 
amount of program income reported as disbursed, and the amount of grant 
funds disbursed in the QPR. Grantees must include a description of 
actions taken in that quarter to affirmatively further fair housing, 
within the section titled ``Overall Progress Narrative'' in the DRGR 
system.
    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 14 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 14 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

[[Page 5854]]

preparation and submission of an action plan for disaster recovery.
    b. Nonsubstantial amendment. The grantee must notify HUD, but is 
not required to seek public comment, when it makes any plan amendment 
that is not substantial. HUD must be notified at least 5 business days 
before the amendment becomes effective. However, every amendment to the 
action plan (substantial and nonsubstantial) must be numbered 
sequentially and posted on the grantee's website. The Department will 
acknowledge receipt of the notification of nonsubstantial amendments 
via email within 5 business days.
    c. Consideration of public comments. The grantee must consider all 
comments, received orally or in writing, on the action plan or any 
substantial amendment. A summary of these comments or views, and the 
grantee's response to each must be submitted to HUD with the action 
plan or substantial amendment.
    d. Availability and accessibility of the Action Plan. The grantee 
must make the action plan, any substantial amendments, and all 
performance reports available to the public on its website and on 
request. In addition, the grantee must make these documents available 
in a form accessible to persons with disabilities and those with 
limited English proficiency. During the term of the grant, the grantee 
will provide citizens, affected local governments, and other interested 
parties with reasonable and timely access to information and records 
relating to the action plan and to the grantee's use of grant funds.
    e. Public website. The grantee must maintain a public website that 
provides information accounting for how all grant funds are used and 
managed/administered, including links to all action plans, action plan 
amendments, CDBG-DR program policies and procedures, performance 
reports, citizen participation requirements, and activity/program 
information for activities described in its action plan, including 
details of all contracts and ongoing procurement policies. To meet this 
requirement, each grantee must have a separate page dedicated to 
disaster recovery that includes the information described at paragraph 
A.27 of section VI of this notice.
    f. Application status. The grantee must provide multiple methods of 
communication, such as websites, toll-free numbers, or other means that 
provide applicants for recovery assistance with timely information to 
determine the status of their application, as provided for in paragraph 
A.1.b in section VI of this notice.
    g. Citizen complaints. The grantee will provide a timely written 
response to every citizen complaint. The response must be provided 
within 15 working days of the receipt of the complaint. Complaints 
regarding fraud, waste, or abuse of government funds should be 
forwarded to the HUD OIG Fraud Hotline (phone: 1-800-347-3735 or email: 
[email protected]).
    5. Direct grant administration and means of carrying out eligible 
activities--applicable to State grantees only. Requirements at 42 
U.S.C. 5306(d) are waived to the extent necessary to allow a State to 
use its disaster recovery grant allocation directly to carry out State-
administered activities eligible under this notice, rather than 
distribute all funds to local governments. Pursuant to this waiver, the 
standard at 24 CFR 570.480(c) and the provisions at 42 U.S.C. 
5304(e)(2) will also include activities that the State carries out 
directly. Activities eligible under this notice may be carried out by 
the State, subject to State law and consistent with the requirement of 
24 CFR 570.200(f), through its employees, through procurement 
contracts, or through assistance provided under agreements with 
subrecipients. State grantees continue to be responsible for civil 
rights, labor standards, and environmental protection requirements, for 
compliance with 24 CFR 570.489(g) and (h) relating to conflicts of 
interest and for compliance with 24 CFR 570.489(m) relating to 
monitoring and management of subrecipients.
    A State grantee may also carry out activities in tribal areas. The 
State should coordinate with the Indian tribe with jurisdiction over 
the tribal area when providing CDBG-DR assistance to beneficiaries in 
tribal areas. State grantees carrying out projects in tribal areas, 
either directly or through its employees, through procurement 
contracts, or through assistance provided under agreements with 
subrecipients, must obtain the consent of the Indian tribe with 
jurisdiction over the tribal area to allow the State to carry out or to 
fund CDBG-DR projects in the area. Indian tribes that receive CDBG-DR 
funding from a State grantee must comply with the Title II of the Civil 
Rights Act of 1968 (25 U.S.C. 1301 et seq.) (Indian Civil Rights Act).
    For activities carried out by entities eligible under section 
105(a)(15) of the HCD Act, such entities will be subject to the 
description of a nonprofit under that section rather than the 
description located in 24 CFR 570.204, even in a case in which the 
entity is receiving assistance through a local government that is an 
entitlement grantee.
    6. Consolidated Plan waiver. HUD is temporarily waiving the 
requirement for consistency with the consolidated plan (requirements at 
42 U.S.C. 12706, 24 CFR 91.325(a)(5) and 91.225(a)(5)), because the 
effects of a major disaster alter a grantee's priorities for meeting 
housing, employment, and infrastructure needs. In conjunction, 42 
U.S.C. 5304(e), to the extent that it would require HUD to annually 
review grantee performance under the consistency criteria, is also 
waived. However, this waiver applies only until the grantee submits its 
next full (3-5 year) consolidated plan, or for 24 months after the 
effective date of this notice, whichever is sooner. If the grantee is 
not scheduled to submit a new 3-5 year consolidated plan within the 
next 2 years, HUD expects each grantee to update its existing 3-5 year 
consolidated plan to reflect disaster-related needs no later than 24 
months after the effective date of this notice. Additionally, grantees 
are encouraged to incorporate disaster-recovery needs into their 
consolidated plan updates as soon as practicable, but any unmet 
disaster-related needs and associated priorities must be incorporated 
into the grantee's next consolidated plan update no later than its 
Fiscal Year 2020 update. HUD has issued guidance for incorporating 
CDBG-DR funds into consolidated plans via HUD's eCon Planning Suite. 
This guidance is on the HUD Exchange at: https://www.hudexchange.info/resource/4400/updating-the-consolidated-plan-to-reflect-disaster-recovery-needs-and-associated-priorities/. This waiver does not affect 
the current applicability of HUD's July 16, 2015, final rule on 
Affirmatively Furthering Fair Housing (80 FR 42272) to grantees.
    7. Requirement for consultation during plan preparation. Currently, 
the HCD Act and regulations require State grantees to consult with 
affected local governments in nonentitlement areas of the State in 
determining the State's proposed method of distribution. HUD is waiving 
42 U.S.C. 5306(d)(2)(C)(iv), 42 U.S.C. 5306(d)(2)(D), 24 CFR 
91.325(b)(2), and 24 CFR 91.110, and instituting the alternative 
requirement that States receiving an allocation under this notice 
consult with all disaster-affected local governments (including any 
CDBG entitlement grantees), Indian tribes, and any local public housing 
authorities in determining the use of funds. This ensures that State 
grantees sufficiently assess the recovery needs of all areas affected 
by the disaster. Additional guidance on consultation

[[Page 5855]]

with local stakeholders can be found in the National Disaster Recovery 
Framework and its discussion of pre- and post-disaster planning, at: 
https://www.fema.gov/national-disaster-recovery-framework.
    Grantees must consult with States, Indian tribes, local 
governments, Federal partners, nongovernmental organizations, the 
private sector, and other stakeholders and affected parties in the 
surrounding geographic area to ensure consistency of the action plan 
with applicable regional redevelopment plans. Grantees are encouraged 
to establish a recovery task force with representative members of each 
sector to advise on how recovery activities can best contribute towards 
the goals of regional redevelopment plans.
    8. Overall benefit requirement. The primary objective of the HCD 
Act is the ``development of viable urban communities, by providing 
decent housing and a suitable living environment and expanding economic 
opportunities, principally for persons of low and moderate income'' (42 
U.S.C. 5301(c)). To carry out this objective, the statute requires that 
not less than 70 percent of the aggregate of CDBG program funds be used 
to support activities benefitting low- and moderate-income persons. The 
70 percent overall benefit requirement shall remain in effect for this 
allocation, unless waived pursuant to a request by an individual 
grantee to authorize a lower overall benefit for its CDBG-DR grant 
based on a determination by HUD of compelling need for the reduction.
    A grantee may seek to reduce the overall benefit requirement below 
70 percent of the total grant, but must submit a justification that, at 
a minimum: (a) Identifies the planned activities that meet the needs of 
its low- and moderate-income population; (b) describes proposed 
activity(ies) and/or program(s) that will be affected by the 
alternative requirement, including their proposed location(s) and 
role(s) in the grantee's long-term disaster recovery plan; (c) 
describes how the activities/programs identified in (b) prevent the 
grantee from meeting the 70 percent requirement; and (d) demonstrates 
that low- and moderate-income persons' disaster-related needs have been 
sufficiently met and that the needs of non- low- and moderate-income 
persons or areas are disproportionately greater, and that the 
jurisdiction lacks other resources to serve them.
    9. Use of the ``upper quartile'' or ``exception criteria'' for low- 
and moderate-income area benefit activities. Section 101(c) of the HCD 
Act requires each funded activity to meet a national objective of the 
CDBG program, including the national objective of benefiting low- and 
moderate-income persons. Grantees may meet this national objective on 
an area basis, through an activity which is available to benefit all 
the residents of an area where at least 51 percent of the residents are 
low- and moderate income. In some cases, HUD permits an exception to 
the low- and moderate-income area benefit requirement that an area 
contain at least 51 percent low- and moderate-income residents. This 
exception applies to entitlement communities that have few, if any, 
areas within their jurisdiction that have 51 percent or more low- and 
moderate-income residents. These communities are allowed to use a 
percentage less than 51 percent to qualify activities under the low- 
and moderate-income area benefit category. This exception is referred 
to as the ``exception criteria'' or the ``upper quartile.'' A grantee 
qualifies for this exception when fewer than one quarter of the 
populated-block groups in its jurisdictions contain 51 percent or more 
low- and moderate-income persons. In such a community, activities must 
serve an area that contains a percentage of low- and moderate-income 
residents that is within the upper quartile of all census-block groups 
within its jurisdiction in terms of the degree of concentration of low- 
and moderate-income residents. HUD assesses each grantee's census-block 
groups to determine whether a grantee qualifies to use this exception 
and identifies the alternative percentage the grantee may use instead 
of 51 percent for the purpose of qualifying activities under the low- 
and moderate-income area benefit. HUD determines the lowest proportion 
a grantee may use to qualify an area for this purpose and advises the 
grantee, accordingly. Disaster recovery grantees are required to use 
the most recent data available in implementing the exception criteria 
(https://www.hudexchange.info/programs/acs-low-mod-summary-data/acs-low-mod-summary-data-exception-grantees/). The ``exception criteria'' 
apply to disaster recovery activities funded pursuant to this notice in 
jurisdictions covered by such criteria, including jurisdictions that 
receive disaster recovery funds from a State.
    10. Grant administration responsibilities and general 
administration cap.
    a. Grantee responsibilities. Each grantee shall administer its 
award in compliance with all applicable laws and regulations and shall 
be financially accountable for the use of all funds provided in this 
notice.
    b. General administration cap. For all grantees under this notice, 
the CDBG program administration requirements must be modified to be 
consistent with the Appropriations Act. Accordingly, 5 percent of the 
grant (plus program income) may be used for administrative costs by the 
grantee, units of general local government, or by subrecipients. Thus, 
the total of all costs classified as administrative for any grantee 
under this notice must be less than or equal to the 5 percent cap.
    (1) Combined technical assistance and administrative expenditures 
cap for States only. The provisions of 42 U.S.C. 5306(d) and 24 CFR 
570.489(a)(1)(i) and (iii) will not apply to the extent that they cap 
administration and technical assistance expenditures, limit a State's 
ability to charge a nominal application fee for grant applications for 
activities the State carries out directly, and require a dollar-for-
dollar match of State funds for administrative costs exceeding 
$100,000. 42 U.S.C. 5306(d)(5) and (6) are waived and replaced with the 
alternative requirement that the aggregate total for administrative and 
technical assistance expenditures must not exceed 5 percent of the 
grant plus program income. Under this alternative requirement, a State 
is limited to spending a maximum of 15 percent of its total grant 
amount on planning costs. Planning costs subject to the 15 percent cap 
are those defined in 42 U.S.C. 5305(a)(12).
    11. Planning-only activities-applicable to State grantees only. The 
State CDBG program requires that local government grant subrecipients 
for planning-only grants must document that the use of funds meets a 
national objective. In the State CDBG program, these planning grants 
are typically used for individual project plans. By contrast, planning 
activities carried out by entitlement communities are more likely to 
include non-project-specific plans such as functional land-use plans, 
master plans, historic preservation plans, comprehensive plans, 
community recovery plans, development of housing codes, zoning 
ordinances, and neighborhood plans. These plans may guide long-term 
community development efforts comprising multiple activities funded by 
multiple sources. In the CDBG Entitlement program, these more general 
planning activities are presumed to meet a national objective under the 
requirements at 24 CFR 570.208(d)(4).
    The Department notes that almost all effective recoveries in the 
past have relied on some form of area-wide or comprehensive planning 
activity to guide overall redevelopment

[[Page 5856]]

independent of the ultimate source of implementation funds. To assist 
State grantees, the Department is waiving the requirements at 24 CFR 
570.483(b)(5) or (c)(3), which limit the circumstances under which the 
planning activity can meet a low- and moderate-income or slum-and-
blight national objective. Instead, States must comply with 24 CFR 
570.208(d)(4) when funding disaster recovery-assisted, planning-only 
grants, or directly administering planning activities that guide 
recovery in accordance with the Appropriations Act. In addition, the 
types of planning activities that States may fund or undertake are 
expanded to be consistent with those of entitlement communities 
identified at 24 CFR 570.205. Plans should include an assessment of 
natural hazard risks, including anticipated effects of future extreme 
weather events and other hazards. Additional resources to assist in 
this process are available on the HUD exchange website: https://www.hudexchange.info/programs/cdbg-dr/resources/#natural-hazard-risk-and-resilience-tools.
    12. Use of the urgent need national objective. The CDBG 
certification requirements for documentation of urgent need, located at 
24 CFR 570.483(d), are waived for the grants under this notice and 
replaced with the following alternative requirement. In the context of 
disaster recovery, the standard urgent need certification requirements 
may impede recovery. Since the Department only provides CDBG-DR awards 
to grantees with documented disaster-related impacts and each grantee 
is limited to spending funds only for the benefit of areas that 
received a presidential disaster declaration as identified in Table 1 
of this notice, the following streamlined alternative requirement 
recognizes the urgency in addressing serious threats to community 
welfare following a major disaster.
    A grantee need not issue formal certification statements to qualify 
an activity as meeting the urgent need national objective. Instead, it 
must document how each program and/or activity funded under the urgent 
need national objective responds to a disaster-related impact. For each 
activity that will meet an urgent need national objective, the grantee 
must reference in its action plan needs assessment the type, scale, and 
location of the disaster-related impacts that each program and/or 
activity is addressing over the course of the applicable deadline for 
the expenditure of obligated grant funds. Grantees are advised to use 
the low- and moderate-income benefit national objective for all 
activities that qualify under the criteria for that national objective. 
At least 70 percent of the entire CDBG-DR grant must be used for 
activities that benefit low- and moderate-income persons.
    13. Waiver and alternative requirement for distribution to CDBG 
metropolitan cities and urban counties- applicable to State grantees 
only. 42 U.S.C. 5302(a)(7) (definition of ``nonentitlement area'') and 
provisions of 24 CFR part 570, including 24 CFR 570.480, are waived to 
permit a State to distribute CDBG-DR funds to units of local government 
and Indian tribes.
    14. Use of subrecipients--applicable to State grantees only. The 
State CDBG program rule does not make specific provision for the 
treatment of entities that the CDBG Entitlement program calls 
``subrecipients.'' The waiver allowing the State to directly carry out 
activities creates a situation in which the State may use subrecipients 
to carry out activities in a manner similar to an entitlement 
community. Therefore, for States taking advantage of the waiver to 
carry out activities directly, the requirements at 24 CFR 570.502, 
570.503, and 570.500(c) apply.
    15. Waiver and alternative requirement for the U.S. Virgin Islands 
to administer CDBG-DR funds pursuant to the regulatory and statutory 
requirements of the State CDBG program. The provisions of 24 CFR part 
570 subpart F are waived to authorize 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 
this notice. This includes the requirement that the aggregate total for 
administrative and technical assistance expenditures by the U.S. Virgin 
Islands must not exceed 5 percent of any CDBG-DR grant made pursuant to 
the Appropriations Act, plus program income.
    16. Recordkeeping. When a State carries out activities directly, 24 
CFR 570.490(b) is waived and the following alternative provision shall 
apply: the State shall establish and maintain such records as may be 
necessary to facilitate review and audit by HUD of the State's 
administration of CDBG-DR funds, under 24 CFR 570.493. Consistent with 
applicable statutes, regulations, waivers and alternative requirements, 
and other Federal requirements, the content of records maintained by 
the State shall be sufficient to: (1) Enable HUD to make the applicable 
determinations described at 24 CFR 570.493; (2) make compliance 
determinations for activities carried out directly by the State; and 
(3) show how activities funded are consistent with the descriptions of 
activities proposed for funding in the action plan and/or DRGR system. 
For fair housing and equal opportunity (FHEO) purposes, as applicable, 
such records shall include data on the racial, ethnic, and gender 
characteristics of persons who are applicants for, participants in, or 
beneficiaries of the program. All grantees must report FHEO data in the 
DRGR system at the activity level.
    17. Change of use of real property-applicable to State grantees 
only. This alternative requirement conforms the change of use of real 
property rule to the waiver allowing a State to carry out activities 
directly. For purposes of this program, all references to ``unit of 
general local government'' in 24 CFR 570.489(j), shall be read as 
``State, unit of general local government (UGLG) or State 
subrecipient.''
    18. Responsibility for review and handling of noncompliance-
applicable to State grantees only. This change is in conformance with 
the waiver allowing the State to carry out activities directly. 24 CFR 
570.492 is waived and the following alternative requirement applies for 
any State receiving a direct award under this notice: The State shall 
make reviews and audits, including on-site reviews of any 
subrecipients, designated public agencies, and local governments, as 
may be necessary or appropriate to meet the requirements of section 
104(e)(2) of the HCD Act, as amended, as modified by this notice. In 
the case of noncompliance with these requirements, the State shall take 
such actions as may be appropriate to prevent a continuance of the 
deficiency, mitigate any adverse effects or consequences, and prevent a 
recurrence. The State shall establish remedies for noncompliance by any 
designated subrecipients, public agencies, or local governments. The 
State shall attend and require subrecipients to attend fraud related 
training provided by HUD OIG to assist in the proper management of 
CDBG-DR grant funds. Additional information about this training will be 
posted on the HUD website.
    19. Program income alternative requirement. The Department is 
waiving applicable program income rules at 42 U.S.C. 5304(j) and 24 CFR 
570.489(e), 570.500 and 570.504 only to the extent necessary to provide 
additional flexibility to State and local government as described 
below. The alternative requirements provide guidance regarding the use 
of program income received before and after grant close out and address 
revolving loan funds.
    a. Definition of program income.
    (1) For purposes of this notice, ``program income'' is defined as 
gross income generated from the use of

[[Page 5857]]

CDBG-DR funds, except as provided in subparagraph (d) of this 
paragraph, and received by a State or a subrecipient of a State. When 
income is generated by an activity that is only partially assisted with 
CDBG-DR funds, the income shall be prorated to reflect the percentage 
of CDBG-DR funds used (e.g., a single loan supported by CDBG-DR funds 
and other funds; a single parcel of land purchased with CDBG funds and 
other funds). Program income includes, but is not limited to, the 
following:
    (a) Proceeds from the disposition by sale or long-term lease of 
real property purchased or improved with CDBG-DR funds.
    (b) Proceeds from the disposition of equipment purchased with CDBG-
DR funds.
    (c) Gross income from the use or rental of real or personal 
property acquired by a State, local government, or subrecipient thereof 
with CDBG-DR funds, less costs incidental to generation of the income 
(i.e., net income).
    (d) Net income from the use or rental of real property owned by a 
State, local government, or subrecipient thereof, that was constructed 
or improved with CDBG-DR funds.
    (e) Payments of principal and interest on loans made using CDBG-DR 
funds.
    (f) Proceeds from the sale of loans made with CDBG-DR funds.
    (g) Proceeds from the sale of obligations secured by loans made 
with CDBG-DR funds.
    (h) Interest earned on program income pending disposition of the 
income, including interest earned on funds held in a revolving fund 
account.
    (i) Funds collected through special assessments made against 
nonresidential properties and properties owned and occupied by 
households not low- and moderate-income, where the special assessments 
are used to recover all or part of the CDBG-DR portion of a public 
improvement.
    (j) Gross income paid to a State, local government, or a 
subrecipient thereof, from the ownership interest in a for-profit 
entity in which the income is in return for the provision of CDBG-DR 
assistance.
    (2) ``Program income'' does not include the following:
    (a) The total amount of funds that is less than $35,000 received in 
a single year and retained by a State, local government, or a 
subrecipient thereof.
    (b) Amounts generated by activities eligible under section 
105(a)(15) of the HCD Act and carried out by an entity under the 
authority of section 105(a)(15) of the HCD Act.
    b. Retention of program income. State grantees may permit a local 
government or Indian tribe that receives or will receive program income 
to retain the program income, but are not required to do so.
    c. Program income--use, close out, and transfer.
    (1) Program income received (and retained, if applicable) before or 
after close out of the grant that generated the program income, and 
used to continue disaster recovery activities, is treated as additional 
CDBG-DR funds subject to the requirements of this notice and must be 
used in accordance with the grantee's action plan for disaster 
recovery. To the maximum extent feasible, program income shall be used 
or distributed before additional withdrawals from the U.S. Treasury are 
made, except as provided in subparagraph d. of this paragraph.
    (2) In addition to the regulations addressing program income found 
at 24 CFR 570.489(e) and 570.504, the following rules apply: A State 
grantee may transfer program income to its annual CDBG program before 
close out of the grant that generated the program income. In addition, 
a State grantee may transfer program income before close out to any 
annual CDBG-funded activities carried out by a local government within 
the State. Program income received by a grantee after close out of the 
grant that generated the program income, may also be transferred to a 
grantee's annual CDBG award. In all cases, any program income received 
that is not used to continue the disaster recovery activity will not be 
subject to the waivers and alternative requirements of this notice. 
Rather, those funds will be subject to the State grantee's regular CDBG 
program rules.
    d. Revolving loan funds. State grantees and local governments may 
establish revolving funds to carry out specific, identified activities. 
A revolving fund, for this purpose, is a separate fund (with a set of 
accounts that are independent of other program accounts) established to 
carry out specific activities. These activities generate payments used 
to support similar activities going forward. These payments to the 
revolving fund are program income and must be substantially disbursed 
from the revolving fund before additional grant funds are drawn from 
the U.S. Treasury for payments that could be funded from the revolving 
fund. Such program income is not required to be disbursed for 
nonrevolving fund activities.
    State grantees may also establish a revolving fund to distribute 
funds to local governments to carry out specific, identified 
activities. The same requirements, outlined above, apply to this type 
of revolving loan fund. Note that no revolving fund established per 
this notice shall be directly funded or capitalized with CDBG-DR grant 
funds, pursuant to 24 CFR 570.489(f)(3).
    20. Reimbursement of disaster recovery expenses. The provisions of 
24 CFR 570.489(b) are applied to permit a State grantee to charge to 
the grant otherwise allowable costs incurred by itself, its recipients 
or subrecipients (including public housing authorities (PHAs)) on or 
after the incident date of the covered disaster. A local government 
grantee is subject to the provisions of 24 CFR 570.200(h) but may 
reimburse itself or its subrecipients for otherwise allowable costs 
incurred on or after the incident date of the covered disaster. Section 
570.200(h)(1)(i) will not apply to the extent that it requires pre-
agreement activities to be included in a consolidated plan. The 
Department expects a grantee to include all pre-agreement activities in 
its action plans.
    21. Reimbursement of pre-application costs of homeowners, 
businesses, and other qualifying entities. A grantee is permitted to 
charge to grants the preaward and preapplication costs of homeowners, 
businesses, and other qualifying entities for eligible costs it has 
incurred in response to an eligible disaster covered under this notice. 
However, a grantee may not charge such preaward or preapplication costs 
to grants if the preaward or preapplication action results in an 
adverse impact to the environment. Grantees receiving an allocation 
under this notice are also subject to HUD's guidance on preaward 
expenses published in CPD Notice 2015-07, ``Guidance for Charging Pre-
Application Costs of Homeowners, Businesses, and Other Qualifying 
Entities to CDBG Disaster Recovery Grants,'' as amended (https://www.hud.gov/sites/documents/15-07CPDN.PDF). Grantees are required to 
consult with the State Historic Preservation Officer, Fish and Wildlife 
Service, and National Marine Fisheries Service, to obtain formal 
agreements for compliance with section 106 of the National Historic 
Preservation Act (54 U.S.C. 306108) and section 7 of the Endangered 
Species Act of 1973 (16 U.S.C. 1536) when designing a reimbursement 
program. Grantees may not use CDBG-DR funds to provide compensation to 
beneficiaries meaning that funds may not be provided to a beneficiary 
based on the estimated or actual amount of loss from the declared 
disaster. Grantees may, however, reimburse beneficiaries for pre-
application costs incurred by the beneficiary for completing an 
eligible

[[Page 5858]]

activity, not for the amount of loss incurred by the beneficiary.
    22. Prohibition on forced mortgage payoff. In some instances, a 
homeowner with an outstanding mortgage balance is required, under the 
terms of their loan agreement, to repay the balance of the mortgage 
loan prior to using assistance to rehabilitate or reconstruct their 
home. CDBG-DR funds, however, may not be used for a forced mortgage 
payoff. The ineligibility of a forced mortgage payoff with CDBG-DR 
funds does not affect HUD's longstanding guidance that when other non-
CDBG disaster assistance is taken by lenders for a forced mortgage 
payoff, those funds are not considered to be available to the homeowner 
and do not constitute a duplication of benefits for the purpose of 
housing rehabilitation or reconstruction.
    23. One-for-One Replacement Housing, Relocation, and Real Property 
Acquisition Requirements. Activities and projects undertaken with CDBG-
DR funds are subject to the Uniform Relocation Assistance and Real 
Property Acquisition Policies Act of 1970, as amended, (42 U.S.C. 4601 
et seq.) (``URA'') and section 104(d) of the HCD Act (42 U.S.C. 
5304(d))(Section 104(d)). The implementing regulations for the URA are 
at 49 CFR part 24. The regulations for section 104(d) are at 24 CFR 
part 42, subpart C. For the purpose of promoting the availability of 
decent, safe, and sanitary housing, HUD is waiving the following URA 
and section 104(d) requirements with respect to the use of CDBG-DR 
funds allocated under this notice:
    a. Section 104(d) one for one replacement. One-for-one replacement 
requirements at section 104(d)(2)(A)(i) and (ii) and (d)(3) of the HCD 
Act and 24 CFR 42.375 are waived in connection with funds allocated 
under this notice for lower-income dwelling units that are damaged by 
the disaster and not suitable for rehabilitation. The section 104(d) 
one-for-one replacement requirements generally apply to demolished or 
converted occupied and vacant occupiable lower-income dwelling units. 
This waiver exempts disaster-damaged units that meet the grantee's 
definition of ``not suitable for rehabilitation'' from the one-for-one 
replacement requirements. Before carrying out activities that may be 
subject to the one-for-one replacement requirements, the grantee must 
define ``not suitable for rehabilitation'' in its action plan or in 
policies/procedures governing these activities. A grantee with 
questions about the one-for-one replacement requirements is encouraged 
to contact the HUD regional relocation specialist responsible for its 
jurisdiction.
    HUD is waiving the section 104(d) one-for-one replacement 
requirement for lower-income dwelling units that are damaged by the 
disaster and not suitable for rehabilitation because it does not 
account for the large, sudden changes that a major disaster may cause 
to the local housing stock, population, or economy. Further, the 
requirement may discourage grantees from converting or demolishing 
disaster-damaged housing when excessive costs would result from 
replacing all such units. Disaster-damaged housing structures that are 
not suitable for rehabilitation can pose a threat to public health and 
safety and to economic revitalization. Grantees should reassess post-
disaster population and housing needs to determine the appropriate type 
and amount of lower-income dwelling units to rehabilitate and/or 
rebuild. Grantees should note that the demolition and/or disposition of 
PHA-owned public housing units is covered by section 18 of the United 
States Housing Act of 1937, as amended, and 24 CFR part 970.
    b. Relocation assistance. The relocation assistance requirements at 
section 104(d)(2)(A) of the HCD Act and 24 CFR 42.350 are waived to the 
extent that they differ from the requirements of the URA and 
implementing regulations at 49 CFR part 24, as modified by this notice, 
for activities related to disaster recovery. Without this waiver, 
disparities exist in relocation assistance associated with activities 
typically funded by HUD and FEMA (e.g., buyouts and relocation). Both 
FEMA and CDBG funds are subject to the requirements of the URA; 
however, CDBG funds are subject to section 104(d), while FEMA funds are 
not. The URA provides at 49 CFR 24.402(b) that a displaced person is 
eligible to receive a rental assistance payment that is calculated to 
cover a period of 42 months. By contrast, section 104(d) allows a 
lower-income displaced person to choose between the URA rental 
assistance payment and a rental assistance payment calculated over a 
period of 60 months. This waiver of the section 104(d) relocation 
assistance requirements assures uniform and equitable treatment by 
setting the URA and its implementing regulations as the sole standard 
for relocation assistance under this notice.
    c. Tenant-based rental assistance. The requirements of sections 204 
and 205 of the URA, and 49 CFR 24.2(a)(6)(vii), 24.2(a)(6)(ix), and 
24.402(b) are waived to the extent necessary to permit a grantee to 
meet all or a portion of a grantee's replacement housing payment 
obligation to a displaced tenant by offering rental housing through a 
tenant-based rental assistance (TBRA) housing program subsidy (e.g., 
Section 8 rental voucher or certificate), provided that comparable 
replacement dwellings are made available to the tenant in accordance 
with 49 CFR 24.204(a) where the owner is willing to participate in the 
TBRA program, and the period of authorized assistance is at least 42 
months. Failure to grant this waiver would impede disaster recovery 
whenever TBRA program subsidies are available but funds for cash 
replacement housing payments are limited and such payments are required 
by the URA to be based on a 42-month term.
    d. Arm's length voluntary purchase. The requirements at 49 CFR 
24.101(b)(2)(i) and (ii) are waived to the extent that they apply to an 
arm's length voluntary purchase carried out by a person who uses funds 
allocated under this notice and does not have the power of eminent 
domain, in connection with the purchase and occupancy of a principal 
residence by that person. Given the often large-scale acquisition needs 
of grantees, this waiver is necessary to reduce burdensome 
administrative requirements following a disaster. Grantees are reminded 
that tenants occupying real property acquired through voluntary 
purchase may be eligible for relocation assistance.
    e. Optional relocation policies. The regulation at 24 CFR 
570.606(d) is waived to the extent that it requires optional relocation 
policies to be established at the grantee level. Unlike the regular 
CDBG program, States may carry out disaster recovery activities 
directly or through subrecipients, but 24 CFR 570.606(d) does not 
account for this distinction. This waiver makes clear that grantees 
receiving CDBG-DR funds under this notice may establish optional 
relocation policies or permit their subrecipients to establish separate 
optional relocation policies. This waiver is intended to provide States 
with maximum flexibility in developing optional relocation policies 
with CDBG-DR funds.
    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

[[Page 5859]]

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 disaster 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 Presidentially declared disaster 
undertaken by the grantees, or subrecipients, provided that the project 
was not planned, approved, or otherwise underway prior to the disaster. 
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 the majority 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.
    24. Environmental requirements.
    a. Clarifying note on the process for environmental release of 
funds when a State carries out activities directly. Usually, a State 
distributes CDBG funds to local governments and takes on HUD's role in 
receiving environmental certifications from the grant recipients and 
approving releases of funds. For this grant, HUD will allow a State 
grantee to also carry out activities directly, in addition to 
distributing funds to subrecipients. Thus, per 24 CFR 58.4, when a 
State carries out activities directly, the State must submit the 
Certification and Request for Release of Funds to HUD for approval.
    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 sections 
402, 403, 404, 406, 407, or 502 of the Stafford Act may adopt, without 
review or public comment, any environmental review, approval, or 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.
    c. Unified Federal Review. Section 1106 or the Sandy Recovery 
Improvement Act (Div. B of Pub. L. 113-2, enacted January 29, 3013) 
directed the Administration to ``establish an expedited and unified 
interagency review process to ensure compliance with environmental and 
historic requirements under Federal law relating to disaster recovery 
projects, in order to expedite the recovery process, consistent with 
applicable law.'' The process aims to coordinate environmental and 
historic preservation reviews to expedite planning and decision-making 
for disaster recovery projects. This can improve the Federal 
Government's assistance to States, local, and tribal governments; 
communities; families; and individual citizens as they recover from 
future Presidentially declared disasters. Grantees receiving an 
allocation of funds under this notice are encouraged to participate in 
this process as one means of expediting recovery. Tools for the unified 
interagency review process (UFR) process can be found here: http://www.fema.gov/unified-federal-environmental-and-historic-preservation-review-presidentially-declared-disasters.
    d. Release of funds. In accordance with the Appropriations Act, and 
notwithstanding 42 U.S.C. 5304(g)(2), the Secretary may, upon receipt 
of a Request for Release of Funds and Certification, immediately 
approve the release of funds for an activity or project assisted with 
allocations under this notice if the recipient has adopted an 
environmental review, approval, or permit under subparagraph b. above, 
or the activity or project is categorically excluded from review under 
the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.).
    e. Historic preservation reviews. To facilitate expedited historic 
preservation reviews under section 106 of the National Historic 
Preservation Act of 1966 (54 U.S.C. Section 306108), HUD strongly 
encourages grantees to allocate general administration funds to retain 
a qualified historic preservation professional, and support the 
capacity of the State Historic Preservation Officer/Tribal Historic 
Preservation Officer to review CDBG-DR projects. For more information 
on qualified historic preservation professional qualifications 
standards see https://www.nps.gov/history/local-law/arch_stnds_9.htm.
    f. Tiered environmental reviews. HUD strongly encourages grantees 
as Responsible Entities to develop a Tiered approach to streamline the 
environmental review process for single family housing programs. 
Tiering, as defined in 40 CFR 1508.28, is a means of making the 
environmental review process more efficient by allowing parties to 
``eliminate repetitive discussions of the same issues and to focus on 
the actual issues ripe for decision at each level of environmental 
review'' (40 CFR 1502.20). Tiering is appropriate when a Responsible 
Entity is evaluating a single-family housing program with similar 
activities within a defined local geographic area and timeframe (e.g., 
rehabilitating single-family homes within a city district or county 
over the course of 1 to 5 years) but where the specific sites and 
activities are not yet known.
    A tiered review consists of two stages: A broad-level review and 
subsequent site-specific reviews. The broad-level review should 
identify and evaluate the issues that can be fully addressed and 
resolved, notwithstanding possible limited knowledge of the project. In 
addition, it must establish the standards, constraints, and processes 
to be followed in the site-specific reviews. An 8-Step Decision Making 
Process for Floodplains and Wetlands, including early and final public 
notices can be completed on a county-wide basis for single-family 
housing programs funded through CDBG-DR. As individual sites are 
selected for review, the site-specific

[[Page 5860]]

reviews evaluate the remaining issues based on the policies established 
in the broad-level review. Together, the broad-level review and all 
site-specific reviews will collectively comprise a complete 
environmental review addressing all required elements. Public notice 
and the Request for Release of Funds (HUD-Form 7015.15) are processed 
at the broad-level, eliminating the need for publication at the site-
specific level. However, funds cannot be spent or committed on a 
specific site or activity until the site-specific review have been 
completed for the site.
    25. Duplication of benefits. Section 312 of the Stafford Act, as 
amended, generally prohibits any person, business concern, or other 
entity from receiving financial assistance with respect to any part of 
a loss resulting from a major disaster for which such person, business 
concern, or other entity has received financial assistance under any 
other program or from insurance or any other source. To comply with 
Section 312, each grantee must ensure that each activity provides 
assistance to a person or entity only to the extent that the person or 
entity has a disaster recovery need that has not been fully met. 
Grantees are subject to the requirements of a separate notice 
explaining the duplication of benefit requirements, entitled 
``Clarification of Duplication of Benefits Requirements Under the 
Stafford Act for Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) Disaster 
Recovery Grantees'' (76 FR 71060, published November 16, 2011).
    26. Procurement. State grantees must comply with the procurement 
requirements at 24 CFR 570.489(g) and evaluate the cost or price of the 
product or service. State grantees shall establish requirements for 
procurement policies and procedures for local governments and 
subrecipients based on full and open competition consistent with the 
requirements of 24 CFR 570.489(g), and shall require an evaluation of 
the cost or price of the product or service. Additionally, if the State 
agency designated as the administering agency chooses to provide 
funding to another State agency, the administering agency may specify 
in its procurement policies and procedures whether the agency 
implementing the program must follow the procurement policies and 
procedures that the administering agency is subject to, or whether the 
agency must follow the same policies and procedures to which other 
local governments and subrecipients are subject.
    HUD may request periodic updates from any grantee that uses 
contractors. A contractor is a third-party person or organization from 
which the grantee acquires good or services through a procurement 
process, consistent with the procurement requirements in the CDBG 
program regulations. HUD is establishing an additional alternative 
requirement for all contracts with contractors used to provide discrete 
services or deliverables only, as follows:
    a. The grantee (or procuring entity) is required to clearly state 
the period of performance or date of completion in all contracts;
    b. The grantee (or procuring entity) must incorporate performance 
requirements and liquidated damages into each procured contract. 
Contracts that describe work performed by general management consulting 
services need not adhere to this requirement; and
    c. The grantee (or procuring entity) may contract for 
administrative support but may not delegate or contract to any other 
party any inherently governmental responsibilities related to 
management of the grant, such as oversight, policy development, 
monitoring, internal auditing, and financial management. Technical 
assistance resources for procurement are available to grantees either 
through HUD staff or through technical assistance providers engaged by 
HUD or a grantee.
    27. Public website. HUD is requiring each grantee to maintain a 
public website that provides information accounting for how all grant 
funds are used and managed/administered. The creation and maintenance 
of the public website is one component of the Department's 
certification of a grantee's proficient financial controls and 
procurement processes and adequate procedures for proper grants 
management as provided in paragraph A.1.a of section VI. of this 
notice. To meet this requirement, each grantee must make the following 
items available on its website: The action plan (including all 
amendments); the current approved DRGR action plan; each QPR (as 
created using the DRGR system); citizen participation requirements; 
procurement policies and procedures; description of services or goods 
currently being procured by the grantee; a copy of contracts the 
grantee has procured directly; and a summary of all procured contracts, 
including those procured by the grantee, recipients, or subrecipients 
(e.g., a summary list of procurements, the phase of the procurement, 
requirements for proposals, and any liquidation of damages associated 
with a contractor's failure or inability to implement the contract, 
etc.). The grantee should post only contracts as defined in 2 CFR 
200.22. To assist grantees in preparing the procurement summary, HUD 
has developed a template (the Contract Reporting Template). The 
template can be accessed at: https://www.hudexchange.info/cdbg-dr/cdbg-dr-laws-regulations-and-federal-register-notices/. Each grantee is 
required to use this template and attach an updated version to the DRGR 
system each quarter as part of its QPR submissions. Updated summaries 
must also be posted monthly on each grantee's website.
    28. Timely distribution of funds. The Appropriations Act, as 
amended, requires that funds provided under the Act be expended within 
two years of the date that HUD obligates funds to a grantee and 
authorizes the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) to provide a 
waiver of this requirement. In the absence of a waiver for this 
requirement, each grantee is required to expend all obligated funds 
within two years of HUD's execution of the grant agreement or amended 
grant agreement that obligates those funds. In addition, the provisions 
at 24 CFR 570.494 and 24 CFR 570.902 regarding timely distribution and 
expenditure of funds are waived and an alternative requirement 
established, providing that each grantee must also expend 100 percent 
of its allocation of CDBG-DR funds on eligible activities within 6 
years of HUD's execution of the initial grant agreement.
    29. Review of continuing capacity to carry out CDBG-funded 
activities in a timely manner. If HUD determines that the grantee has 
not carried out its CDBG-DR activities and certifications in accordance 
with the requirements in this notice, HUD will undertake a further 
review to determine whether or not the grantee has the continuing 
capacity to carry out its activities in a timely manner. In making the 
determination, the Department will consider the nature and extent of 
the recipient's performance deficiencies, types of corrective actions 
the recipient has undertaken, and the success or likely success of such 
actions, and apply the corrective and remedial actions specified in 
paragraph A.30 (below) of section VI of this notice.
    30. Corrective and remedial actions. To ensure compliance with the 
requirements of the Appropriations Act and to effectively administer 
the CDBG-DR program in a manner that facilitates recovery, particularly 
the alternative requirements permitting States to act directly to carry 
out eligible activities, HUD is waiving 42 U.S.C. 5304(e) to the extent 
necessary to establish the following alternative requirement: HUD may 
undertake corrective and remedial actions for States in accordance with 
the

[[Page 5861]]

authorities applicable to entitlement grantees in subpart O (including 
corrective and remedial actions in 24 CFR 570.910, 570.911, and 
570.913) or under subpart I of the CDBG regulations at 24 CFR part 570. 
In response to a deficiency, HUD may issue a warning letter followed by 
a corrective action plan that may include a management plan which 
assigns responsibility for further administration of the grant to 
specific entities or persons. Failure to comply with a corrective 
action may result in the termination, reduction or limitation of 
payments to grantees receiving funds under this notice.
    31. Reduction, withdrawal, or adjustment of a grant, or other 
appropriate action. Prior to a reduction, withdrawal, or adjustment of 
a CDBG-DR grant, or other actions taken pursuant to this section, the 
recipient shall be notified of the proposed action and be given an 
opportunity for an informal consultation. Consistent with the 
procedures described in this notice, the Department may adjust, reduce, 
or withdraw the CDBG-DR grant or take other actions as appropriate, 
except for funds that have been expended for eligible, approved 
activities.

B. Housing and Related Floodplain Issues

    32. Housing-related eligibility waivers. The broadening of eligible 
activities under the HCD Act is necessary following major disasters in 
which large numbers of affordable housing units have been damaged or 
destroyed, as is the case of the disasters eligible under this notice.
    Therefore, 42 U.S.C. 5305(a)(24)(A) and (D) is waived to the extent 
necessary to allow: (1) Homeownership assistance for households earning 
up to 120 percent of the area median income; and (2) down payment 
assistance for up to 100 percent of the down payment. While 
homeownership assistance may be provided to households earning up to 
120 percent of the area median income, only those funds used for 
households with up to 80 percent of the area median income may qualify 
as meeting the low- and moderate-income person benefit national 
objective.
    In addition, 42 U.S.C. 5305(a) and 24 CFR 570.207(b)(3) is waived 
and alternative requirements adopted to the extent necessary to permit 
new housing construction, and to require the following construction 
standards on structures constructed or rehabilitated with CDBG-DR funds 
as part of activities eligible under 42 U.S.C. 5305(a). All references 
to ``substantial damage'' and ``substantial improvement'' shall be as 
defined in 44 CFR 59.1 unless otherwise noted.
    a. Green Building Standard for Replacement and New Construction of 
Residential Housing. Grantees must meet the Green Building Standard in 
this subparagraph for: (i) All new construction of residential 
buildings and (ii) all replacement of substantially damaged residential 
buildings. Replacement of residential buildings may include 
reconstruction (i.e., demolishing and rebuilding a housing unit on the 
same lot in substantially the same manner) and may include changes to 
structural elements such as flooring systems, columns, or load bearing 
interior or exterior walls.
    b. Meaning of Green Building Standard. For purposes of this notice, 
the Green Building Standard means the grantee will require that all 
construction covered by subparagraph a, above, meet an industry-
recognized standard that has achieved certification under at least one 
of the following programs: (i) ENERGY STAR (Certified Homes or 
Multifamily High-Rise), (ii) Enterprise Green Communities, (iii) LEED 
(New Construction, Homes, Midrise, Existing Buildings Operations and 
Maintenance, or Neighborhood Development), (iv) ICC-700 National Green 
Building Standard, (v) EPA Indoor AirPlus (ENERGY STAR a prerequisite), 
or (vi) any other equivalent comprehensive green building program 
acceptable to HUD. Grantees must identify which Green Building Standard 
will be used in the program policies and procedures.
    c. Standards for rehabilitation of nonsubstantially damaged 
residential buildings. For rehabilitation other than that described in 
subparagraph a, above, grantees must follow the guidelines specified in 
the HUD CPD Green Building Retrofit Checklist, available at https://www.hudexchange.info/resource/3684/guidance-on-the-cpd-green-building-checklist/. Grantees must apply these guidelines to the extent 
applicable to the rehabilitation work undertaken, including the use of 
mold resistant products when replacing surfaces such as drywall. When 
older or obsolete products are replaced as part of the rehabilitation 
work, rehabilitation is required to use ENERGY STAR-labeled, 
WaterSense-labeled, or Federal Energy Management Program (FEMP)-
designated products and appliances. For example, if the furnace, air 
conditioner, windows, and appliances are replaced, the replacements 
must be ENERGY STAR-labeled or FEMP-designated products; WaterSense-
labeled products (e.g., faucets, toilets, showerheads) must be used 
when water products are replaced. Rehabilitated housing may also 
implement measures recommended in a Physical Condition Assessment (PCA) 
or Green Physical Needs Assessment (GPNA).
    d. Implementation of green building standards. (i) For construction 
projects completed, underway, or under contract prior to the date that 
assistance is approved for the project, the grantee is encouraged to 
apply the applicable standards to the extent feasible, but the Green 
Building Standard is not required. (ii) For specific required equipment 
or materials for which an ENERGY STAR- or WaterSense-labeled or FEMP-
designated product does not exist, the requirement to use such products 
does not apply.
    e. Elevation standards for new construction, repair of substantial 
damage, or substantial improvement. The following elevation standards 
apply to new construction, repair of substantial damage, or substantial 
improvement of structures located in an area delineated as a flood 
hazard area or equivalent in FEMA's data source identified in 24 CFR 
55.2(b)(1). All structures, defined at 44 CFR 59.1, designed 
principally for residential use and located in the 100-year (or 1 
percent annual chance) floodplain that receive assistance for new 
construction, repair of substantial damage, or substantial improvement, 
as defined at 24 CFR 55.2(b)(10), must be elevated with the lowest 
floor, including the basement, at least two feet above the base flood 
elevation. Mixed-use structures with no dwelling units and no residents 
below two feet above base flood elevation, must be elevated or 
floodproofed, in accordance with FEMA floodproofing standards at 44 CFR 
60.3(c)(3)(ii) or successor standard, up to at least two feet above 
base flood elevation. Please note that grantees should review the UFAS 
accessibility checklist available at https://www.hudexchange.info/resource/796/ufas-accessibility-checklist/ and the HUD Deeming Notice, 
79 FR 29671 (May 23, 2014) to ensure that these structures comply with 
accessibility requirements.
    All Critical Actions, as defined at 24 CFR 55.2(b)(3), within the 
500-year (or 0.2 percent annual chance) floodplain must be elevated or 
floodproofed (in accordance with the FEMA standards) to the higher of 
the 500-year floodplain elevation or three feet above the 100-year 
floodplain elevation. If the 500-year floodplain is unavailable, and 
the Critical Action is in the 100-year floodplain, then the structure 
must be elevated or floodproofed at least three feet above the 100-year 
floodplain elevation. Critical Actions are defined as an ``activity for 
which even a slight

[[Page 5862]]

chance of flooding would be too great, because such flooding might 
result in loss of life, injury to persons or damage to property.'' For 
example, Critical Actions include hospitals, nursing homes, police 
stations, fire stations and principal utility lines.
    Applicable State, local, and tribal codes and standards for 
floodplain management that exceed these requirements, including 
elevation, setbacks, and cumulative substantial damage requirements, 
must be followed.
    f. Broadband infrastructure in housing. Any substantial 
rehabilitation, as defined by 24 CFR 5.100, or new construction of a 
building with more than four rental units must include installation of 
broadband infrastructure, except where the grantee documents that: (a) 
The location of the new construction or substantial rehabilitation 
makes installation of broadband infrastructure infeasible; (b) the cost 
of installing broadband infrastructure would result in a fundamental 
alteration in the nature of its program or activity or in an undue 
financial burden; or (c) the structure of the housing to be 
substantially rehabilitated makes installation of broadband 
infrastructure infeasible.
    g. Resilient Home Construction Standard. Grantees are strongly 
encouraged to incorporate a Resilient Home Construction Standard, 
meaning that all construction covered by subparagraph (a) meet an 
industry-recognized standard such as those set by the FORTIFIED 
HomeTM Gold level for new construction of single-family, 
detached homes; and FORTIFIED HomeTM Silver level for 
reconstruction of the roof, windows and doors; or FORTIFIED 
HomeTM Bronze level for repair or reconstruction of the 
roof; or any other equivalent comprehensive resilient or disaster 
resistant building program. Further, grantees are strongly encouraged 
to meet the FORTIFIED HomeTM Bronze level standard for roof 
repair or reconstruction, for all construction covered under 
subparagraph B.32.c. FORTIFIED HomeTM is a risk-reduction 
program providing construction standards for new homes and retrofit 
standards for existing homes, which will increase a home's resilience 
to natural hazards, including high wind, hail, and tropical storms. 
Insurers can provide discounts for homeowner's insurance for properties 
certified as FORTIFIED. Grantees should advise property owners to 
contact their insurance agent for current information on what discounts 
may be available. More information is also available at: https://disastersafety.org/fortified/fortified-home/.
    33. Addressing Unmet Public Housing Needs. The grantee must 
identify in its action plan how it will address the rehabilitation, 
mitigation, and new construction needs of each disaster-impacted PHA 
within its jurisdiction, if applicable. The grantee must work directly 
with impacted PHAs in identifying necessary and reasonable costs and 
ensure that adequate funding from all available sources, including 
CDBG-DR grant funds, are dedicated to addressing the unmet needs of 
damaged public housing (e.g., FEMA, insurance, and funds available from 
programs administered by HUD's Office of Public and Indian Housing). In 
the rehabilitation, reconstruction and replacement of public housing 
provided for in the action plan pursuant to paragraph A.2.a.3 of 
section VI of this notice, each grantee must identify funding to 
specifically address the unmet needs described in this subparagraph.
    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 
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-moderate housing national objective, affordable rental 
housing funded under this notice must be rented to a low- and moderate-
income person at affordable rents. The grantee must impose a minimum 
affordability period of twenty (20) years enforced with recorded use 
restrictions or other mechanisms to ensure that rental housing remains 
affordable for the required period of time. The action plan must, at a 
minimum, provide (1) a definition of ``affordable rents''; (2) the 
income limits for tenants of rental housing; (3) and minimum 
affordability period of twenty (20) years.
    35. Housing incentives in disaster-affected communities. Incentive 
payments are generally offered in addition to other programs or funding 
(such as insurance), to encourage households to relocate in a suitable 
housing development or an area promoted by the community's 
comprehensive recovery plan. For example, a grantee may offer an 
incentive payment (possibly in addition to a buyout payment) for 
households that volunteer to relocate outside of floodplain or to a 
lower-risk area.
    Therefore, 42 U.S.C. 5305(a) and associated regulations are waived 
to the extent necessary to allow the provision of housing incentives. 
These grantees must maintain documentation, at least at a programmatic 
level, describing how the amount of assistance was determined to be 
necessary and reasonable, and the incentives must be in accordance with 
the grantee's approved action plan and published program design(s). 
This waiver does not permit a compensation program. Additionally, a 
grantee may require the housing incentive to be used for a particular 
purpose by the household receiving the assistance.
    In undertaking a larger scale migration or relocation recovery 
effort that is intended to move households out of high-risk areas, the 
grantee should consider how it can protect and sustain the impacted 
community and its assets. Grantees must also weigh the benefits and 
costs, including anticipated insurance costs, of redeveloping high-risk 
areas that were impacted by a disaster. Accordingly, grantees are 
prohibited from offering incentives to return households to disaster-
impacted floodplains, unless the grantee can demonstrate to HUD how it 
will resettle such areas in a way that mitigates the risks of future 
disasters and increasing insurance costs resulting from continued 
occupation of high-risk areas, through mechanisms that can reduce risks 
and insurance costs, such as new land use development plans, building 
codes or construction requirements, protective infrastructure 
development, or through restrictions on future disaster assistance to 
such properties.
    When undertaking housing incentive activities, to demonstrate that 
an incentive meets the low- and moderate-income housing national 
objective, grantees must meet all requirements of the HCD Act and the 
criteria for the Low/Mod Housing Incentive (LMHI) national objectives 
for the use of housing incentives as described in paragraph B.38 of 
section VI.
    36. Limitation on emergency grant payments--interim mortgage 
assistance. 42 U.S.C. 5305(a)(8), 24 CFR 570.207(b)(4), and 24 CFR 
1003.207(b)(4) are modified to the extent necessary to extend interim 
mortgage assistance to qualified individuals from 3 months to up to 20 
months. Interim mortgage assistance is typically used in conjunction 
with a buyout program, or when the rehabilitation or reconstruction of 
single-family housing extends beyond 3

[[Page 5863]]

months, during which mortgage payments may be due but the home is 
uninhabitable. Thus, this interim assistance will be critical for many 
households facing financial hardship during this period. Grantees may 
use interim housing mortgage assistance payments along with 
rehabilitation/reconstruction assistance to expedite recovery 
assistance to homeowners, but must establish performance milestones for 
the rehabilitation/reconstruction that are to be met by the homeowner 
in order to receive the interim mortgage assistance payments. A grantee 
using this alternative requirement must document, in its policies and 
procedures, how it will determine the amount of assistance to be 
provided is necessary and reasonable.
    37. Acquisition of real property; flood and other buyouts. Grantees 
under this notice are able to carry out property acquisition for a 
variety of purposes. However, the term ``buyouts'' as referenced in 
this notice refers to acquisition of properties located in a floodway 
or floodplain that is intended to reduce risk from future flooding or 
the acquisition of properties in Disaster Risk Reduction Areas as 
designated by the grantee and defined below. HUD is providing 
alternative requirements for consistency with the application of other 
Federal resources commonly used for this type of activity.
    Grantees are encouraged to use buyouts strategically, as a means of 
acquiring contiguous parcels of land for uses compatible with open 
space, recreational, natural floodplain functions, other ecosystem 
restoration, or wetlands management practices. To the maximum extent 
practicable, grantees should avoid circumstances in which parcels that 
could not be acquired through a buyout remain alongside parcels that 
have been acquired through the grantee's buyout program. Grantees are 
reminded that real property acquisition with CDBG-DR funding, including 
buyout, is subject to the URA, including the real property acquisitions 
requirements at 49 CFR part 24, subpart B, as modified at paragraph 
A.23 of section VI of this notice.
    a. Clarification of ``Buyout'' and ``Real Property Acquisition'' 
activities. Grantees that choose to undertake a buyout program have the 
discretion to determine the appropriate valuation method, including 
paying either pre-disaster or post-disaster fair market value (FMV). In 
most cases, a program that provides pre-disaster FMV to buyout 
applicants provides compensation at an amount greater than the post-
disaster FMV. When the purchase price exceeds the current FMV, any 
CDBG-DR funds in excess of the FMV are considered assistance to the 
seller, thus making the seller a beneficiary of CDBG-DR assistance. If 
the seller receives assistance as part of the purchase price, this may 
have implications for duplication of benefits calculations or for 
demonstrating national objective criteria, as discussed below. However, 
a program that provides post-disaster FMV to buyout applicants merely 
provides the actual value of the property; thus, the seller is not 
considered a beneficiary of CDBG-DR assistance.
    Regardless of purchase price, all buyout activities are a type of 
acquisition of real property (as permitted by 42 U.S.C. 5305(a)(1)). 
However, only acquisitions that meet the definition of a ``buyout'' are 
subject to the post-acquisition land use restrictions imposed by this 
notice (subparagraph b. below). The key factor in determining whether 
the acquisition is a buyout is whether the intent of the purchase is to 
reduce risk of property damage in a floodplain or a Disaster Risk 
Reduction Area. To conduct a buyout in a Disaster Risk Reduction Area, 
the grantee must establish criteria in its policies and procedures to 
designate the area subject to the buyout, pursuant to the following 
requirements: (1) The hazard must have been caused or exacerbated by 
the Presidentially declared disaster for which the grantee received its 
CDBG-DR allocation; (2) the hazard must be a predictable environmental 
threat to the safety and well-being of program beneficiaries, as 
evidenced by the best available data (e.g. FEMA Repetitive Loss Data) 
and science; and (3) the Disaster Risk Reduction Area must be clearly 
delineated so that HUD and the public may easily determine which 
properties are located within the designated area.
    The distinction between buyouts and other types of acquisitions is 
important, because grantees may only redevelop an acquired property if 
the property is not acquired through a buyout program (i.e., the 
purpose of acquisition was something other than risk reduction). When 
acquisitions are not acquired through a buyout program, the purchase 
price must be consistent with applicable uniform cost principles (and 
the pre-disaster FMV may not be used).
    b. Buyout requirements:
    (1) Any property acquired, accepted, or from which a structure will 
be removed pursuant to the project will be dedicated and maintained in 
perpetuity for a use that is compatible with open space, recreational, 
or floodplain and wetlands management practices.
    (2) No new structure will be erected on property acquired, 
accepted, or from which a structure was removed under the acquisition 
or relocation program other than: (a) A public facility that is open on 
all sides and functionally related to a designated open space (e.g., a 
park, campground, or outdoor recreation area); (b) a rest room; or (c) 
a flood control structure, provided that structure does not reduce 
valley storage, increase erosive velocities, or increase flood heights 
on the opposite bank, upstream, or downstream and that the local 
floodplain manager approves, in writing, before the commencement of the 
construction of the structure.
    (3) After receipt of the assistance, with respect to any property 
acquired, accepted, or from which a structure was removed under the 
acquisition or relocation program, no subsequent application for 
additional disaster assistance for any purpose or to repair damage or 
make improvements of any sort will be made by the owner of the buyout 
property (including subsequent owners) to any Federal entity in 
perpetuity.
    The entity acquiring the property may lease it to adjacent property 
owners or other parties for compatible uses in return for a maintenance 
agreement. Although Federal policy encourages leasing rather than 
selling such property, the property may also be sold.
    In all cases, a deed restriction or covenant running with the 
property must require that the buyout property be dedicated and 
maintained for compatible uses in perpetuity.
    (4) Grantees have the discretion to determine an appropriate 
valuation method (including the use of pre-flood value or post-flood 
value as a basis for property value). However, in using CDBG-DR funds 
for buyouts, the grantee must uniformly apply whichever valuation 
method it chooses.
    (5) All buyout activities must be classified using the ``buyout'' 
activity type in the DRGR system.
    (6) Any State grantee implementing a buyout program or activity 
must consult with affected local governments.
    (7) When undertaking buyout activities, to demonstrate that a 
buyout meets the low- and moderate-income housing national objective, 
grantees must meet all requirements of the HCD Act and applicable 
regulatory criteria described below. Grantees are encouraged to consult 
with HUD prior to undertaking a buyout program with the intent of using 
the low- and moderate-income housing (LMH) national objective. 42 
U.S.C. 5305(c)(3) provides that any assisted activity that involves the 
acquisition or

[[Page 5864]]

rehabilitation of property to provide housing shall be considered to 
benefit persons of low- and moderate-income only to the extent such 
housing will, upon completion, be occupied by such persons. In 
addition, the State CDBG regulations at 24 CFR 570.483(b)(3), 
entitlement CDBG regulations at 24 CFR 570.208(a)(3), and Indian CDBG 
regulations at 24 CFR 1003.208(c) apply the LMH national objective to 
an eligible activity carried out for the purpose of providing or 
improving permanent residential structures that, upon completion, will 
be occupied by low- and moderate-income households. Therefore, a buyout 
program that merely pays homeowners to leave their existing homes does 
not result in a low- and moderate-income household occupying a 
residential structure and, thus, cannot meet the requirements of the 
LMH national objective. Buyout programs that assist low- and moderate-
income persons can be structured in one of the following ways:
    (a) The buyout program combines the acquisition of properties with 
another direct benefit--Low- and Moderate-Income housing activity, such 
as down payment assistance--that results in occupancy and otherwise 
meets the applicable LMH national objective criteria;
    (b) The program meets the low- and moderate-income area benefit 
criteria as defined in this notice, to demonstrate national objective 
compliance, provided that the grantee can document that the properties 
acquired through buyouts will be used in a way that benefits all of the 
residents in a particular area where at least 51 percent of the 
residents are low- and moderate-income persons. When using the area 
benefit approach, grantees must define the service area based on the 
end use of the buyout properties; or
    (c) The program meets the criteria for the low- and moderate-income 
limited clientele national objective, including the prohibition on the 
use of the limited clientele national objective when an activity's 
benefits are available to all residents of the area. A buyout program 
could meet the national objective criteria for the limited clientele 
national objective if it restricts buyout program eligibility to 
exclusively low- and moderate-income persons, and the buyout provides 
an actual benefit to the low- and moderate-income sellers by providing 
pre-disaster valuation uniformly to those who participate in the 
program.
    (d) The program meets the criteria for the Low/Mod Buyout (LMB) or 
Low/Mod Housing Incentive (LMHI) national objectives for buyouts and 
the use of housing incentives as authorized in the Department's August 
7, 2017 Federal Register notice at 82 FR 36825 and described in 
paragraph B.38 of section VI in this notice.
    c. Redevelopment of acquired properties.
    (1) Grantees may redevelop an acquired property if the property is 
not acquired through a buyout program and the purchase price is based 
on the property's post-disaster value, consistent with applicable cost 
principles (the pre-disaster value may not be used). In addition to the 
purchase price, grantees may opt to provide relocation assistance or 
housing incentives to the owner of a property that will be redeveloped 
if the property is purchased by the grantee or subrecipient through 
voluntary acquisition, and the owner's need for additional assistance 
is documented.
    (2) In carrying out acquisition activities, grantees must ensure 
they are in compliance with their long-term redevelopment plans.
    38. Additional LMI National Objective Criteria for Buyouts and 
Housing Incentives. In this notice, HUD is establishing an alternative 
requirement to clarify the criteria under which buyout activities and 
housing incentives can meet an LMI national objective. Grantees 
authorized to use housing incentives in this notice must follow 
guidelines outlined in paragraph 35 of section VI of this notice. The 
CDBG regulations limit activities that meet the LMI national objective 
to only the activities meeting the four established criteria in 24 CFR 
570.208(a)(1) through (4) and 570.483(b)(1) through (4). Prior Federal 
Register notices have advised grantees of the criteria under which a 
buyout activity can meet a LMI housing (LMH) national objective (80 FR 
72102). Notwithstanding that guidance, however, HUD has determined that 
providing CDBG-DR grantees with an additional method to demonstrate how 
buyouts and housing incentives can assist LMI households, beyond those 
described in the previous notices, will ensure that grantees and HUD 
can account for and assess the benefit that CDBG-DR assistance may have 
on LMI households when buyouts and housing incentives are used in long 
term recovery. Given the primary objective of the HCD Act to assist 
low- and moderate income persons, the Secretary has determined that 
there is good cause to establish an alternative requirement under which 
CDBG-DR grantees are authorized to qualify the assistance provided to 
LMI persons through buyout and housing incentive programs, due to the 
benefits received by the individuals that receive buyout and housing 
incentive awards that allow them to move from areas that are likely to 
be affected by future disasters.
    In addition to the existing criteria at 24 CFR 570.208(a)(1)-(4) 
and 570.483(b)(1)-(4), HUD is establishing an alternative requirement 
to include the two new LMI national objective criteria for buyouts 
(LMB) and housing incentives (LMHI) that benefit LMI households that 
use CDBG-DR funding provided pursuant to this notice.
    For a buyout award or housing incentive to meet the new LMB and 
LMHI national objectives, grantees must demonstrate the following:
    (1) The CDBG-DR funds have been provided for an eligible activity 
that benefits LMI households supporting their move from high risk 
areas. The following activities shall qualify under this criterion, and 
must also meet the eligibility criteria of the notices governing the 
use of the CDBG-DR funds:
    (a) Low/Mod Buyout (LMB). When CDBG-DR funds are used for a buyout 
award to acquire housing owned by a qualifying LMI household, where the 
award amount (including optional relocation assistance) is greater than 
the post-disaster (current) fair market value of that property.
    (b) Low/Mod Housing Incentive (LMHI). When CDBG-DR funds are used 
for a housing incentive award, tied to the voluntary buyout or other 
voluntary acquisition of housing owned by a qualifying LMI household, 
for which the housing incentive is for the purpose of moving outside of 
the affected floodplain or to a lower-risk area; or when the housing 
incentive is for the purpose of providing or improving residential 
structures that, upon completion, will be occupied by an LMI household.
    (2) Activities that meet the above criteria will be considered to 
benefit low and moderate-income persons unless there is substantial 
evidence to the contrary. Any activities that meet the newly 
established national objective criteria described above will count 
towards the calculation of a CDBG-DR grantee's overall LMI benefit.
    39. Alternative requirement for housing rehabilitation--assistance 
for second homes. The Department is instituting an alternative 
requirement to the rehabilitation provisions at 42 U.S.C. 5305(a)(4) as 
follows: Properties that served as second homes at the time of the 
disaster, or following the disaster, are not eligible for 
rehabilitation assistance or housing incentives. A second home is 
defined under this notice as a home that is not the primary

[[Page 5865]]

residence of the owner, a tenant, or any occupant at the time of the 
storm or at the time of application for assistance. Grantees may adopt 
policies and procedures that provide for limited exceptions to 
providing assistance to a second home in order to meet specific 
disaster recovery needs (e.g., adding affordable housing capacity); 
provided however that such exceptions are developed in consultation 
with and approved by HUD prior to implementation. Grantees can verify a 
primary residence using a variety of documentation including, but not 
limited to, voter registration cards, tax returns, homestead 
exemptions, driver's licenses and rental agreements.
    40. Flood insurance. Grantees, recipients, and subrecipients must 
implement procedures and mechanisms to ensure that assisted property 
owners comply with all flood insurance requirements, including the 
purchase and notification requirements described below, prior to 
providing assistance. For additional information, please consult with 
the field environmental officer in the local HUD field office or review 
the guidance on flood insurance requirements on HUD's website.
    a. Flood insurance purchase requirements. HUD does not prohibit the 
use of CDBG-DR funds for existing residential buildings in a Special 
Flood Hazard Area (or 100-year floodplain). However, Federal, State, 
local, and tribal laws and regulations related to both flood insurance 
and floodplain management must be followed, as applicable. With respect 
to flood insurance, a HUD-assisted homeowner of a property located in a 
Special Flood Hazard Area must obtain and maintain flood insurance in 
the amount and duration prescribed by FEMA's National Flood Insurance 
Program. Section 102(a) of the Flood Disaster Protection Act of 1973 
(42 U.S.C. 4012a) mandates the purchase of flood insurance protection 
for any HUD-assisted property within a Special Flood Hazard Area. HUD 
strongly recommends the purchase of flood insurance outside of a 
Special Flood Hazard Area for properties that have been damaged by a 
flood, to better protect property owners from the economic risks of 
future floods and reduce dependence on Federal disaster assistance in 
the future, but this is not a requirement.
    b. Federal assistance to owners remaining in a floodplain.
    (1) Section 582 of the National Flood Insurance Reform Act of 1994, 
as amended, (42 U.S.C. 5154a) prohibits flood disaster assistance in 
certain circumstances. In general, it provides that no Federal disaster 
relief assistance made available in a flood disaster area may be used 
to make a payment (including any loan assistance payment) to a person 
for ``repair, replacement, or restoration'' for damage to any personal, 
residential, or commercial property if that person at any time has 
received Federal flood disaster assistance that was conditioned on the 
person first having obtained flood insurance under applicable Federal 
law and the person has subsequently failed to obtain and maintain flood 
insurance as required under applicable Federal law on such property. 
This means that a grantee may not provide disaster assistance for the 
repair, replacement, or restoration of a property to a person who has 
failed to meet this requirement and must implement a process to check 
and monitor for compliance.
    (2) The Department is instituting an alternative requirement to 42 
U.S.C. 5305(a)(4) as follows: Grantees receiving funds under this 
notice are prohibited from providing CDBG-DR assistance for the 
rehabilitation/reconstruction of a house, if (a) the combined household 
income is greater than 120% AMI or the national median, (b) the 
property was located in a floodplain at the time of the disaster, and 
(c) the property owner did not maintain flood insurance on the damaged 
property, even when the property owner was not required to obtain and 
maintain such insurance. When a homeowner located in the floodplain 
allows their flood insurance policy to lapse, it is assumed that the 
homeowner is unable to afford insurance and/or is accepting 
responsibility for future flood damage to the home. HUD is establishing 
this alternative requirement to ensure that adequate recovery resources 
are available to assist lower income homeowners who reside in a 
floodplain but who are unlikely to be able to afford flood insurance. 
Higher income homeowners who reside in a floodplain, but who failed to 
secure or decided to not maintain their flood insurance, should not be 
assisted at the expense of those lower income households. Therefore, a 
grantee may only provide assistance for the rehabilitation/
reconstruction of a house located in a floodplain if: (a) The homeowner 
had flood insurance at the time of the qualifying disaster and still 
has unmet recovery needs; or (b) the household earns less than the 
greater of 120% AMI or the national median and has unmet recovery 
needs.
    (3) Section 582 also imposes a responsibility on a grantee that 
receives CDBG-DR funds or that designates annually appropriated CDBG 
funds for disaster recovery. That responsibility is to inform property 
owners receiving disaster assistance that triggers the flood insurance 
purchase requirement that they have a statutory responsibility to 
notify any transferee of the requirement to obtain and maintain flood 
insurance in writing and to maintain such written notification in the 
documents evidencing the transfer of the property, and that the 
transferring owner may be liable if he or she fails to do so. These 
requirements are enumerated at http://uscode.house.gov/view.xhtml?req=granuleid:USC-prelim-title42-section5154a&num=0&edition=prelim.

C. Infrastructure (Public Facilities, Public Improvements)

    41. Elevation of Nonresidential Structures. Nonresidential 
structures must be elevated to the standards described in this 
paragraph or floodproofed, in accordance with FEMA floodproofing 
standards at 44 CFR 60.3(c)(3)(ii) or successor standard, up to at 
least two feet above the 100-year (or 1 percent annual chance) 
floodplain. All Critical Actions, as defined at 24 CFR 55.2(b)(3), 
within the 500-year (or 0.2 percent annual chance) floodplain must be 
elevated or floodproofed (in accordance with the FEMA standards) to the 
higher of the 500-year floodplain elevation or three feet above the 
100-year floodplain elevation. If the 500-year floodplain or elevation 
is unavailable, and the Critical Action is in the 100-year floodplain, 
then the structure must be elevated or floodproofed at least three feet 
above the 100-year floodplain elevation. Critical Actions are defined 
as an ``activity for which even a slight chance of flooding would be 
too great, because such flooding might result in loss of life, injury 
to persons or damage to property.'' For example, Critical Actions 
include hospitals, nursing homes, police stations, fire stations and 
principal utility lines.
    Applicable State, local, and tribal codes and standards for 
floodplain management that exceed these requirements, including 
elevation, setbacks, and cumulative substantial damage requirements, 
will be followed.
    42. Use of CDBG-DR as Match. As provided by the HCD Act, funds may 
be used as a matching requirement, share, or contribution for any other 
Federal program when used to carry out an eligible CDBG-DR activity. 
This includes programs or activities administered by the FEMA or USACE. 
By law, (codified in the HCD Act as a note to 105(a)), the amount of 
CDBG-DR funds that may be contributed to a USACE project is $250,000 or 
less. Note that the Appropriations Act prohibits the use of CDBG-DR 
funds for any

[[Page 5866]]

activity reimbursable by, or for which funds are also made available by 
FEMA or USACE.
    43. Requirements for flood control structures. Grantees that use 
CDBG-DR funds to assist flood control structures (i.e., dams and 
levees) are prohibited from using CDBG-DR funds to enlarge a dam or 
levee beyond the original footprint of the structure that existed prior 
to the disaster event. Grantees that use CDBG-DR funds for levees and 
dams are required to: (1) Register and maintain entries regarding such 
structures with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers National Levee 
Database or National Inventory of Dams; (2) ensure that the structure 
is admitted in the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers PL 84-99 Rehabilitation 
Program (Rehabilitation Assistance for Non-Federal Flood Control 
Projects); (3) ensure the structure is accredited under the FEMA 
National Flood Insurance Program; (4) enter into DRGR system the exact 
location of the structure and the area served and protected by the 
structure; and (5) maintain file documentation demonstrating that the 
grantee has conducted a risk assessment prior to funding the flood 
control structure and documentation that the investment includes risk 
reduction measures.

D. Economic Revitalization

    44. National Objective Documentation for Economic Development 
Activities. 24 CFR 570.483(b)(4)(i), 24 CFR 570.506(b)(5), and 24 CFR 
1003.208(d) are waived to allow the grantees under this notice to 
identify the low- and moderate-income jobs benefit by documenting, for 
each person employed, the name of the business, type of job, and the 
annual wages or salary of the job. HUD will consider the person income-
qualified if the annual wages or salary of the job is at or under the 
HUD-established income limit for a one-person family. This method 
replaces the standard CDBG requirement--in which grantees must review 
the annual wages or salary of a job in comparison to the person's total 
household income and size (i.e., the number of persons). Thus, it 
streamlines the documentation process because it allows the collection 
of wage data for each position created or retained from the assisted 
businesses, rather than from each individual household.
    45. Public benefit for certain Economic Development activities. The 
public benefit provisions set standards for individual economic 
development activities (such as a single loan to a business) and for 
economic development activities in the aggregate. Currently, public 
benefit standards limit the amount of CDBG assistance per job retained 
or created, or the amount of CDBG assistance per low- and moderate-
income person to which goods or services are provided by the activity. 
These dollar thresholds were set two decades ago and can impede 
recovery by limiting the amount of assistance the grantee may provide 
to a critical activity.
    This notice waives the public benefit standards at 42 U.S.C. 
5305(e)(3), 24 CFR 570.482(f), 24 CFR 570.209(b) and (d), and 24 CFR 
1003.302(c) for only those economic development activities designed to 
create or retain jobs or businesses (including, but not limited to, 
long-term, short-term, and infrastructure projects). However, grantees 
shall collect and maintain documentation in the project file on the 
creation and retention of total jobs; the number of jobs within certain 
salary ranges; the average amount of assistance provided per job, by 
activity or program; and the types of jobs. Additionally, grantees 
shall report the total number of jobs created and retained and the 
applicable national objective in the DRGR system. Paragraph (g) of 24 
CFR 570.482 is also waived to the extent these provisions are related 
to public benefit.
    46. Clarifying note on Section 3 resident eligibility and 
documentation requirements. The definition of ``low-income persons'' in 
12 U.S.C. 1701u and 24 CFR 135.5 is the basis for eligibility as a 
section 3 resident. A section 3 resident means: (1) A public housing 
resident; or (2) an individual who resides in the metropolitan area or 
nonmetropolitan county in which the section 3 covered assistance is 
expended, and who is: (i) A low-income person or (ii) a very-low-income 
person. This notice authorizes grantees to determine that an individual 
is eligible to be considered a section 3 resident if the annual wages 
or salary of the person are at, or under, the HUD-established income 
limit for a one-person family for the jurisdiction. This authority does 
not impact other section 3 resident eligibility requirements in 24 CFR 
135.5. All direct recipients of CDBG-DR funding must submit form HUD-
60002 annually through the Section 3 Performance Evaluation and 
Registry System (SPEARS) which can be found on HUD's website: https://www.hud.gov/program_offices/fair_housing_equal_opp/section3/section3/spears.
    47. Waiver and modification of the job relocation clause to permit 
assistance to help a business return. CDBG requirements prevent program 
participants from providing assistance to a business to relocate from 
one labor market area to another if the relocation is likely to result 
in a significant loss of jobs in the labor market from which the 
business moved. This prohibition can be a critical barrier to 
reestablishing and rebuilding a displaced employment base after a major 
disaster. Therefore, 42 U.S.C. 5305(h), 24 CFR 570.210, 24 CFR 570.482, 
and 24 CFR 1003.209 are waived to allow a grantee to provide assistance 
to any business that was operating in the disaster-declared labor 
market area before the incident date of the applicable disaster and has 
since moved, in whole or in part, from the affected area to another 
State or to a labor market area within the same State to continue 
business.
    48. Prioritizing small businesses. To target assistance to small 
businesses, the Department is instituting an alternative requirement to 
the provisions at 42 U.S.C. 5305(a) to require grantees to prioritize 
assisting businesses that meet the definition of a small business as 
defined by SBA at 13 CFR part 121 or, for businesses engaged in 
``farming operations'' as defined at 7 CFR 1400.3, and that meet the 
United States Department of Agriculture Farm Service Agency (FSA), 
criteria that are described at 7 CFR 1400.500, which are used by the 
FSA to determine eligibility for certain assistance programs. With 
regard to assistance to businesses engaged in ``farming operations,'' 
grantees are advised that in its allocation methodology HUD does not 
account for crop loss and other agricultural losses in its 
determination of unmet economic need. Accordingly, HUD advises grantees 
to pursue sources of assistance other than CDBG-DR funds in order to 
address needs arising from crop loss or other agricultural losses 
attributable to the disaster.
    49. Clarifying note on the provision of ``working capital'' grants 
and loans to businesses. Grantees may provide many forms of assistance 
to businesses under the provisions of 105(a)(17) of the HCD Act, 
including ``working capital.'' In past recovery efforts, grantees have 
inquired as to how a business's working capital needs should be 
calculated. Working capital is one facet of a business's need after a 
disaster; it is not, however, the vehicle by which to fund all of a 
business's unmet needs. In its simplest form, working capital is 
defined as ``Current Assets minus Current Liabilities'' on the 
business's balance sheet. In other words, working capital is the amount 
of cash needed to fund one year's worth of liabilities (i.e., one 
year's worth of mortgage payments and other debt, tax and utilities, 
yearly wages, and accounts payable) after

[[Page 5867]]

subtracting other current assets such as inventory and accounts 
receivable. Working capital does not include any expense for any form 
of construction or expansion of existing facilities, whether ``hard'' 
or ``soft'' costs. Therefore, grantees should not include expenses for 
construction or expansion of existing facilities in any calculation 
involving working capital, unless the grantee intends to provide a 
comprehensive assistance package that is subject to the environmental 
review requirements of 24 CFR part 58. The provision of working capital 
constitutes an economic development activity under 24 CFR 58.35(b)(4) 
and may provide operating costs under 24 CFR 58.35(b)(3) and therefore, 
per 24 CFR 55.12(c)(1), are not subject to Part 55 unless it includes 
expenses for construction or expansion of existing facilities. A 
grantee's environmental review record must document the determination 
of this exclusion from environmental review.
    50. Prohibiting assistance to private utilities. Funds made 
available under this notice may not be used to assist a privately-owned 
utility for any purpose.

E. Certifications and Collection of Information

    51. Certifications waiver and alternative requirement. 24 CFR 
91.225 and 91.325 are waived. Each grantee receiving a direct 
allocation under this notice must make the following certifications 
with its action plan:
    a. The grantee certifies that it has in effect and is following a 
residential anti-displacement and relocation assistance plan in 
connection with any activity assisted with funding under the CDBG 
program.
    b. The grantee certifies its compliance with restrictions on 
lobbying required by 24 CFR part 87, together with disclosure forms, if 
required by part 87.
    c. The grantee certifies that the action plan for disaster recovery 
is authorized under State and local law (as applicable) and that the 
grantee, and any entity or entities designated by the grantee, and any 
contractor, subrecipient, or designated public agency carrying out an 
activity with CDBG-DR funds, possess(es) the legal authority to carry 
out the program for which it is seeking funding, in accordance with 
applicable HUD regulations and this notice. The grantee certifies that 
activities to be undertaken with funds under this notice are consistent 
with its action plan.
    d. The grantee certifies that it will comply with the acquisition 
and relocation requirements of the URA, as amended, and implementing 
regulations at 49 CFR part 24, except where waivers or alternative 
requirements are provided for in this notice.
    e. The grantee certifies that it will comply with section 3 of the 
Housing and Urban Development Act of 1968 (12 U.S.C. 1701u), and 
implementing regulations at 24 CFR part 135.
    f. The grantee certifies that it is following a detailed citizen 
participation plan that satisfies the requirements of 24 CFR 91.115 or 
91.105 (except as provided for in notices providing waivers and 
alternative requirements for this grant). Also, each local government 
receiving assistance from a State grantee must follow a detailed 
citizen participation plan that satisfies the requirements of 24 CFR 
570.486 (except as provided for in notices providing waivers and 
alternative requirements for this grant).
    g. State grantee certifies that it has consulted with affected 
local governments in counties designated in covered major disaster 
declarations in the non-entitlement, entitlement, and tribal areas of 
the State in determining the uses of funds, including the method of 
distribution of funding, or activities carried out directly by the 
State.
    h. The grantee certifies that it is complying with each of the 
following criteria:
    (1) Funds will be used solely for necessary expenses related to 
disaster relief, long-term recovery, restoration of infrastructure and 
housing and economic revitalization in the most impacted and distressed 
areas for which the President declared a major disaster in 2016 
pursuant to the Robert T. Stafford Disaster Relief and Emergency 
Assistance Act of 1974 (42 U.S.C. 5121 et seq.).
    (2) With respect to activities expected to be assisted with CDBG-DR 
funds, the action plan has been developed so as to give the maximum 
feasible priority to activities that will benefit low- and moderate-
income families.
    (3) The aggregate use of CDBG-DR funds shall principally benefit 
low- and moderate-income families in a manner that ensures that at 
least 70 percent (or another percentage permitted by HUD in a waiver 
published in an applicable Federal Register notice) of the grant amount 
is expended for activities that benefit such persons.
    (4) The grantee will not attempt to recover any capital costs of 
public improvements assisted with CDBG-DR grant funds, by assessing any 
amount against properties owned and occupied by persons of low- and 
moderate-income, including any fee charged or assessment made as a 
condition of obtaining access to such public improvements, unless: (a) 
Disaster recovery grant funds are used to pay the proportion of such 
fee or assessment that relates to the capital costs of such public 
improvements that are financed from revenue sources other than under 
this title; or (b) for purposes of assessing any amount against 
properties owned and occupied by persons of moderate income, the 
grantee certifies to the Secretary that it lacks sufficient CDBG funds 
(in any form) to comply with the requirements of clause (a).
    i. The grantee certifies that the grant will be conducted and 
administered in conformity with title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 
1964 (42 U.S.C. 2000d), the Fair Housing Act (42 U.S.C. 3601-3619), and 
implementing regulations, and that it will affirmatively further fair 
housing.
    j. The grantee certifies that it has adopted and is enforcing the 
following policies, and, in addition, must certify that they will 
require local governments that receive grant funds to certify that they 
have adopted and are enforcing:
    (1) A policy prohibiting the use of excessive force by law 
enforcement agencies within its jurisdiction against any individuals 
engaged in nonviolent civil rights demonstrations; and
    (2) A policy of enforcing applicable State and local laws against 
physically barring entrance to or exit from a facility or location that 
is the subject of such nonviolent civil rights demonstrations within 
its jurisdiction.
    k. The grantee certifies that it (and any subrecipient or 
administering entity) currently has or will develop and maintain the 
capacity to carry out disaster recovery activities in a timely manner 
and that the grantee has reviewed the requirements of this notice. The 
grantee certifies to the accuracy of its Public Law 115-56 Financial 
Management and Grant Compliance certification checklist, or other 
recent certification submission, if approved by HUD, and related 
supporting documentation referenced at A.1.a. under section VI and its 
Implementation Plan and Capacity Assessment and related submissions to 
HUD referenced at A.1.b. under section VI.
    l. The grantee certifies that it will not use CDBG-DR funds for any 
activity in an area identified as flood prone for land use or hazard 
mitigation planning purposes by the State, local, or tribal government 
or delineated as a Special Flood Hazard Area (or 100-year floodplain) 
in FEMA's most current flood advisory maps, unless it also ensures that 
the action is designed or modified to minimize harm to or within the 
floodplain, in accordance with Executive Order 11988 and 24 CFR part

[[Page 5868]]

55. The relevant data source for this provision is the State, local, 
and tribal government land use regulations and hazard mitigation plans 
and the latest-issued FEMA data or guidance, which includes advisory 
data (such as Advisory Base Flood Elevations) or preliminary and final 
Flood Insurance Rate Maps.
    m. The grantee certifies that its activities concerning lead-based 
paint will comply with the requirements of 24 CFR part 35, subparts A, 
B, J, K, and R.
    n. The grantee certifies that it will comply with environmental 
requirements at 24 CFR part 58.
    o. The grantee certifies that it will comply with applicable laws.
    Warning: Any person who knowingly makes a false claim or statement 
to HUD may be subject to civil or criminal penalties under 18 U.S.C. 
287, 1001 and 31 U.S.C. 3729.

VII. Duration of Funding

    The Appropriations Act, as amended, requires that funds provided 
under the Act be expended within two years of the date that HUD 
obligates funds to a grantee. The Act as amended further authorizes the 
Office of Management and Budget (OMB) to provide a waiver of this 
requirement. This notice also requires each grantee to expend 100 
percent of its allocation of CDBG-DR funds on eligible activities 
within 6 years of HUD's initial obligation of funds pursuant to an 
executed grant agreement. However, in accordance with 31 U.S.C. 1555, 
HUD shall close the appropriation account and cancel any remaining 
obligated or unobligated balance 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. In such case, the funds 
shall not be available for obligation or expenditure for any purpose 
after the account is closed.

VIII. 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.

IX. 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: February 2, 2018.
Neal J. Rackleff,
Assistant Secretary.

Appendix A--Allocation of CDBG-DR Funds to Most Impacted and Distressed 
Areas Due to 2017 Federally Declared Disasters

Background

    The Supplemental Appropriations for Disaster Relief 
Requirements, 2017 (Pub. L. 115-56) appropriated $7,400,000,000 
through the Community Development Block Grant disaster recovery 
(CDBG-DR) program for necessary expenses for authorized activities 
related to disaster relief, long-term recovery, restoration of 
infrastructure and housing, and economic revitalization in the most 
impacted and distressed areas resulting from a major disaster 
declared in 2017, specifically:

    For an additional amount for ``Community Development Fund'', 
$7,400,000,000, . . ., for necessary expenses . . . related to 
disaster relief, long-term recovery, restoration of infrastructure 
and housing, and economic revitalization in the most impacted and 
distressed areas resulting from a major disaster declared in 2017 
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 or unit of general local government 
at the discretion of the Secretary: . . . Provided further, That 
such funds may not be used for activities reimbursable by, or for 
which funds are made available by, the Federal Emergency Management 
Agency or the Army Corps of Engineers: . . .

    It should be noted that the language of Public Law 115-56 
permits HUD to deduct up to $10 million from the $7.4 billion for 
purposes of administration and oversight of the appropriation. HUD 
has opted to deduct the full $10 million, resulting in a total of 
$7.39 billion available for allocation.

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 
two 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 the allocations to 
counties and zip codes with high levels of damage, collectively 
referred to as ``most impacted areas''. For this allocation, HUD is 
using the amount of serious unmet housing need as its measure of 
concentrated damage and limits the data used for the allocation only 
to counties exceeding a ``natural break'' in the data for their 
total amount of serious unmet housing needs. For purposes of this 
allocation, the serious unmet housing needs break occurs at $16 
million at the county level and $3.5 million for Zip Codes for Texas 
and Florida and $10 million for counties and $2 million for Zip 
Codes for the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico (Puerto Rico) and the 
United States Virgin Islands (Virgin Islands). The calculation for 
serious unmet housing needs are described below.

    These allocations are thus based on the unmet costs to repair 
seriously damaged properties in most impacted areas. These do not 
capture expected resiliency costs, although grantees may choose to 
use the CDBG funds for resiliency expenses. The estimated damage is 
based on the following factors:

    (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% of Area Median Income in most 
impacted areas; and
    (3) Repair and content loss estimates for small businesses with 
serious damage denied by SBA.

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 
November 8, 2017 for Texas and Florida and as of December 22, 2017 
for Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands.
    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, and supplemented by 
SBA data from its Disaster Loan 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.
    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

[[Page 5869]]

 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 Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands, owner damage is 
calculated based on both real property and personal property on 
findings by HUD that this likely is a more accurate estimate of 
serious homeowner damage in those areas. For these owner-occupied 
units, 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 most impacted 
or serious level of damage if they have damage of ``major-low'' or 
higher.
    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 all disasters, for 
homeowners inside the flood hazard area, only homeowners without 
insurance below 120% of Area Median Income are included in the 
estimated 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
 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 50% of Area Median Income. Units are occupied by a tenant with 
income less than 50% of Area Median Income are used to calculate 
likely unmet needs for affordable rental housing. In Puerto Rico and 
the Virgin Islands, units are occupied by a tenant with income less 
than the greater of the Federal poverty level or 50% 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 average 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 
assumed assistance from FEMA and SBA was calculated for Texas as 
$58,956 for major damage (low); $72,961 for major damage (high); and 
$102,046 for severe damage. For Florida: $44,810 for major damage 
(low); $45,997 for major damage (high); and $67,799 for severe 
damage. For Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands: $38,249 for major 
damage (low); $41,595 for major damage (high); and $66,066 for 
severe damage.

Methods for Estimating Unmet Economic Revitalization Needs

    Based on SBA disaster loans to businesses, 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.

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 or 
county-equivalents
 Serious unmet business needs

    For Texas, HUD announced an allocation on November 17, 2017, 
that reflected the 100% calculation of serious unmet housing and 
business needs as calculated using the methods above less $57.8 
million allocated from an earlier appropriation. For Florida, HUD 
announced an allocation on November 28, 2017, that reflected a 100% 
calculation of serious unmet housing and business needs. Data were 
not available for Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands until late 
December 2017. The remaining funds ($1.7 billion of $7.4 billion 
appropriated) are significantly less than the calculated serious 
unmet housing and business needs, and thus the allocations are only 
57% of the estimated serious unmet housing and business needs for 
Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands.

[FR Doc. 2018-02693 Filed 2-7-18; 11:15 am]
 BILLING CODE 4210-67-P



                                                 5844                                Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 28 / Friday, February 9, 2018 / Notices

                                                 DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND                                     impairments may access this number                    disaster declared in 2017. This notice
                                                 URBAN DEVELOPMENT                                             via TTY by calling the Federal Relay                  allocates $7,390,000,000 in CDBG–DR
                                                                                                               Service at 800–877–8339. Facsimile                    funds to assist in long-term recovery
                                                 [Docket No. FR–6066–N–01]
                                                                                                               inquiries may be sent to Ms. Kome at                  from 2017 disasters. In addition to the
                                                 Allocations, Common Application,                              202–401–2044. (Except for the ‘‘800’’                 funds allocated in this notice, and in
                                                 Waivers, and Alternative Requirements                         number, these telephone numbers are                   accordance with the Appropriations
                                                 for 2017 Disaster Community                                   not toll-free.) Email inquiries may be                Act, $10,000,000 will be transferred to
                                                 Development Block Grant Disaster                              sent to disaster_recovery@hud.gov.                    the Department’s Office of Community
                                                 Recovery Grantees                                             SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:                            Planning and Development (CPD),
                                                                                                               Table of Contents                                     Program Office Salaries and Expenses,
                                                 AGENCY:  Office of the Assistant
                                                                                                                                                                     for necessary costs of administering and
                                                 Secretary for Community Planning and                          I. Allocations
                                                 Development, HUD.                                                                                                   overseeing CDBG–DR funds made
                                                                                                               II. Use of Funds
                                                                                                               III. Management and Oversight of Funds                available under the Appropriations Act.
                                                 ACTION: Notice.
                                                                                                               IV. Authority To Grant Waivers                        This notice requires each grantee to
                                                 SUMMARY:    This notice allocates $7.39                       V. Overview of Grant Process                          primarily consider and address its
                                                 billion in Community Development                              VI. Applicable Rules, Statutes, Waivers, and          unmet housing recovery needs. A
                                                 Block Grant disaster recovery (CDBG–                               Alternative Requirements                         grantee may also allocate funds to
                                                                                                                  A. Grant Administration
                                                 DR) funds appropriated by the                                                                                       address unmet economic revitalization
                                                                                                                  B. Housing and Related Floodplain Issues
                                                 Supplemental Appropriations for                                  C. Infrastructure                                  and infrastructure needs, but in doing
                                                 Disaster Relief Requirements, 2017, for                          D. Economic Revitalization                         so, the grantee must identify how unmet
                                                 the purpose of assisting in long-term                            E. Certifications and Collection of                housing needs will be addressed or how
                                                 recovery from 2017 disasters. This                                 Information                                      its economic revitalization or
                                                 notice describes applicable waivers and                       VII. Duration of Funding                              infrastructure activities will contribute
                                                 alternative requirements, relevant                            VIII. Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance
                                                                                                               IX. Finding of No Significant Impact
                                                                                                                                                                     to the long-term recovery and
                                                 statutory provisions for grants provided                                                                            restoration of housing in the most
                                                                                                               Appendix A—Allocation of CDBG–DR Funds
                                                 under this notice, the grant award                                                                                  impacted and distressed areas. The law
                                                                                                                    to Most Impacted and Distressed Areas
                                                 process, criteria for action plan                                  Due to 2017 Federally Declared Disasters         provides that grants shall be awarded
                                                 approval, and eligible disaster recovery                                                                            directly to a State, local government, or
                                                 activities. Given the extent of damage to                     I. Allocations
                                                                                                                                                                     Indian tribe at the discretion of the
                                                 housing in the eligible disaster areas                           The Supplemental Appropriations for                Secretary.1 Any award of funds
                                                 and the very limited data at present                          Disaster Relief Requirements, 2017 (Pub.
                                                 regarding unmet infrastructure and                                                                                  provided pursuant to the
                                                                                                               L. 115–56), approved September 8, 2017                Appropriations Act to Indian tribes will
                                                 economic revitalization needs, this                           (Appropriations Act) makes available
                                                 notice requires each grantee to primarily                                                                           be provided pursuant to the
                                                                                                               $7.4 billion in Community Development
                                                 consider and address its unmet housing                                                                              requirements of the Indian Community
                                                                                                               Block Grant disaster recovery (CDBG–
                                                 recovery needs.                                                                                                     Development Block Grant program. To
                                                                                                               DR) funds for necessary expenses for
                                                 DATES: Applicability Date: February 14,
                                                                                                                                                                     comply with statutory direction that
                                                                                                               activities authorized under title I of the
                                                 2018.                                                                                                               funds be used for disaster-related
                                                                                                               Housing and Community Development
                                                 FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:                              Act of 1974 (42 U.S.C. 5301 et seq.)                  expenses in the most impacted and
                                                 Jessie Handforth Kome, Acting Director,                       (HCD Act) related to disaster relief,                 distressed areas, HUD allocates funds
                                                 Office of Block Grant Assistance,                             long-term recovery, restoration of                    using the best available data that cover
                                                 Department of Housing and Urban                               infrastructure and housing, and                       all of the eligible affected areas.
                                                 Development, 451 7th Street SW, Room                          economic revitalization in the ‘‘most                    Based on further review of the
                                                 10166, Washington, DC 20410,                                  impacted and distressed’’ areas                       impacts from the eligible disasters, and
                                                 telephone number 202–708–3587.                                (identified by HUD using the best                     estimates of unmet need, HUD is
                                                 Persons with hearing or speech                                available data) resulting from a major                making the following allocations:
                                                                                                     TABLE 1—ALLOCATIONS UNDER PUBLIC LAW 115–56
                                                                                                                                    Minimum amount that must be expended for recovery in the HUD-identified
                                                    Disaster No.                      Grantee                    Allocation                         ‘‘most impacted and distressed’’ areas

                                                 4332 ..................   State of Texas .................    $5,024,215,000     ($4,019,372,000) Harris, Jefferson, Orange, Galveston, Fort Bend, Brazoria,
                                                                                                                                    Montgomery, Liberty, Hardin, Chambers, Aransas, Wharton, San Patricio,
                                                                                                                                    San Jacinto, Nueces, and Victoria Counties; 78945, 77423, 77612, 78934,
                                                                                                                                    75956, 77632, 75979, 77414, 77335, 78377, and 77979 Zip Codes.
                                                 4337 ..................   State of Florida ................     615,922,000      ($492,737,600) Monroe, Miami-Dade, Duval, Lee, Polk, Collier, Brevard,
                                                                                                                                    Broward, Orange, and Volusia counties; 32068, 34266, 32136, and 32091
                                                                                                                                    Zip Codes.
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with NOTICES2




                                                   1 Section 306(a) of division A, title III of the            115–72, approved October 26, 2017) amended the        grants directly to a State, unit of general local
                                                 Additional Supplemental Appropriations for                    Appropriations Act to permit the Secretary to award   government, or Indian tribe.
                                                 Disaster Relief Requirements Act, 2017 (Pub. L.



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                                                                                      Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 28 / Friday, February 9, 2018 / Notices                                                 5845

                                                                                               TABLE 1—ALLOCATIONS UNDER PUBLIC LAW 115–56—Continued
                                                                                                                                           Minimum amount that must be expended for recovery in the HUD-identified
                                                    Disaster No.                        Grantee                         Allocation                         ‘‘most impacted and distressed’’ areas

                                                 4336, 4339 ........      Commonwealth of Puerto                       1,507,179,000     ($1,205,743,200) Toa Baja, Canovanas, San Juan, Arecibo, Ponce, Bayamon,
                                                                            Rico.                                                          Caguas, Humacao, Vega Baja, Mayaguez, Corozal, Anasco, Toa Alta, Gua-
                                                                                                                                           yama, Naranjito, Juana Diaz, Salinas, Morovis, Carolina, Aguada, Yabucoa,
                                                                                                                                           Barranquitas, Rio Grande, Dorado, Cayey, Guaynabo, Vega Alta, Comerio,
                                                                                                                                           Loiza, Manati, Ciales, Aibonito, Aguadilla, Santa Isabel, Orocovis, Coamo,
                                                                                                                                           Cidra, Juncos, Utuado, Naguabo, Trujillo Alto, Barceloneta, Las Piedras,
                                                                                                                                           Hatillo, Patillas, Gurabo, Catano, San Sebastian, San Lorenzo, Aguas Bue-
                                                                                                                                           nas, Moca, Villalba, Isabela, Arroyo, Adjuntas, Camuy, Fajardo, Maunabo,
                                                                                                                                           Yauco, Lares Municipios; 00650, 00624, 00765, 00656, 00664, 00678,
                                                                                                                                           00773, 00677, 00735, 00623, 00670, 00660, 00667, 00683, 00606, 00653
                                                                                                                                           Zip Codes.
                                                 4335, 4340 ........      United States Virgin Is-                       242,684,000     ($242,684,000) St. Thomas, St. Croix, and St. John Islands.
                                                                            lands.

                                                      Total * .........   ..........................................   7,390,000,000
                                                    * Of the $7,400,000,000 appropriated, $10 million is provided for HUD administrative costs.


                                                    Pursuant to the Appropriations Act,                                identified most impacted and distressed             impacted and distressed areas. To
                                                 HUD has identified the most impacted                                  areas.                                              inform the plan, grantees must conduct
                                                 and distressed areas based on the best                                   Grantees that received an allocation             an assessment of community impacts
                                                 available data for all eligible affected                              pursuant to Public Law 114–113, 114–                and unmet needs to guide the
                                                 areas. A detailed explanation of HUD’s                                223, 114–254, or 115–31 (‘‘Prior                    development and prioritization of
                                                 allocation methodology is provided in                                 Appropriations’’) must submit an action             planned recovery activities, pursuant to
                                                 Appendix A of this notice. Other than                                 plan for disaster recovery not later than           paragraph A.2.a. in section VI below.
                                                 the United States Virgin Islands, at least                            90 days after the effective date of this               Grantees are advised that pursuant to
                                                 80 percent of the total funds provided                                notice. All other grantees receiving an             this notice, CDBG–DR funds may not be
                                                 to the grantees under this notice must                                allocation under this notice must submit            used for activities reimbursable by or for
                                                 address unmet disaster needs within the                               an action plan not later than 120 days              which funds are made available by the
                                                 HUD-identified most impacted and                                      after the effective date of this notice.            Federal Emergency Management Agency
                                                 distressed areas, as identified in the last                           HUD will only approve action plans that             (FEMA) or the US Army Corps of
                                                 column in Table 1. The United States                                  meet the specific requirements                      Engineers (USACE). As such, the
                                                 Virgin Islands must use 100 percent of                                identified in this notice under section             grantee must verify whether FEMA or
                                                 the total funds provided under this                                   VI, ‘‘Applicable Rules, Statutes,                   USACE funds are available prior to
                                                 notice to address unmet disaster needs                                Waivers, and Alternative Requirements.              awarding CDBG–DR funds to specific
                                                 within the HUD-identified most                                                                                            activities or beneficiaries.
                                                                                                                       II. Use of Funds                                       Consistent with the policy framework
                                                 impacted and distressed areas identified
                                                 in the last column in Table 1. Grantees,                                 Grants under the Appropriations Act              of the Robert T. Stafford Disaster Relief
                                                 other than the United States Virgin                                   are only available for activities                   and Emergency Assistance Act (Stafford
                                                 Islands, may determine where to use the                               authorized under title I of the HCD Act             Act), HUD is underscoring that disaster
                                                 remaining 20 percent of the allocation,                               related to disaster relief, long-term               recovery is a partnership between
                                                 but that portion of the allocation may                                recovery, restoration of infrastructure             Federal, state and local government, and
                                                 only be used to address unmet disaster                                and housing, and economic                           reminding CDBG–DR grantees they
                                                 needs in those areas that the State                                   revitalization in the most impacted and             should invest in their own recovery. In
                                                 determines are ‘‘most impacted and                                    distressed areas resulting from an                  developing this Notice, HUD evaluated
                                                 distressed’’ and received a presidential                              eligible disaster. The Appropriations               options to promote policies that require
                                                 major disaster declaration pursuant to                                Act requires that prior to the obligation           state and local financial participation to
                                                 the disaster numbers listed in Table 1.                               of CDBG–DR funds a grantee shall                    ensure their shared commitment and
                                                    Grantees may use up to 5 percent of                                submit a plan detailing the proposed                responsibility for long-term recovery
                                                 the total grant award for grant                                       use of all funds, including criteria for            and future disaster risk reduction. This
                                                 administration. Therefore, other than for                             eligibility, and how the use of these               Notice does not limit, except as required
                                                 the United States Virgin Islands, HUD                                 funds will address long-term recovery               by Public Law 105–276, the use of
                                                 will include 80 percent of a grantee’s                                and restoration of infrastructure and               CDBG–DR funds toward the state or
                                                 expenditures for grant administration in                              housing and economic revitalization in              local contribution for other Federal
                                                 its determination that 80 percent of the                              the most impacted and distressed areas.             programs (e.g., FEMA Public
                                                 total award has been expended in the                                  Therefore, grantees may only use funds              Assistance). However, HUD expects
                                                 most impacted and distressed areas                                    for activities included in the action plan          grantees to financially contribute to
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                                                 identified in Table 1. Additionally,                                  that are approved by the Secretary for              their recovery through the use of reserve
                                                 other than the United States Virgin                                   disaster recovery that: (1) Are                     or ‘‘rainy day’’ funds, borrowing
                                                 Islands, expenditures for planning                                    authorized under title I of the HCD Act             authority, or retargeting of existing
                                                 activities may be counted towards a                                   or allowed by a waiver or alternative               financial resources. The Administration
                                                 grantee’s 80 percent expenditure                                      requirement published in this notice;               aims to rebalance Federal, state, and
                                                 requirement, provided that the grantee                                and (2) respond to a disaster-related               local government roles and
                                                 describes in its action plan how those                                impact to infrastructure, housing, or               responsibilities not only for long-term
                                                 planning activities benefit the HUD-                                  economic revitalization in the most                 recovery but across the broader


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                                                 5846                           Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 28 / Friday, February 9, 2018 / Notices

                                                 landscape of Federal programs that                      these funds, except for requirements                  with the requirements in paragraph
                                                 provide financial assistance to state and               related to fair housing,                              A.1.b of section VI.A grantee that
                                                 local governments.                                      nondiscrimination, labor standards, and               previously received a certification of its
                                                                                                         the environment. Waivers and                          financial controls and procurement
                                                 III. Management and Oversight of
                                                                                                         alternative requirements are based upon               processes pursuant to a Prior
                                                 Funds
                                                                                                         a determination by the Secretary that                 Appropriation may request that HUD
                                                    The Appropriations Act requires the                  good cause exists and that the waiver or              rely on that certification for purposes of
                                                 Secretary to certify, in advance of                     alternative requirement is not                        this allocation, with updates provided
                                                 signing a grant agreement, that the                     inconsistent with the overall purposes                by the grantee as appropriate.
                                                 grantee has in place proficient financial               of title I of the HCD Act. HUD also has                  • Grantee publishes its action plan for
                                                 controls and procurement processes,                     regulatory waiver authority under 24                  disaster recovery on the grantee’s
                                                 and adequate procedures for proper                      CFR 5.110, 91.600, and 570.5. Grantees                required disaster recovery website for
                                                 grant management as detailed in                         may request waivers as described in                   no less than 14 calendar days to solicit
                                                 paragraph A.1.a of section VI. If HUD                   section VI of this notice.                            public comment.
                                                 recently certified for a grantee that                      The Appropriations Act provides that                  • Grantee responds to public
                                                 received a CDBG–DR grant pursuant to                    the Secretary ‘‘may waive, or specify                 comment and submits its action plan
                                                 Prior Appropriations, the grantee may                   alternative requirements for, any                     and projection of expenditures and
                                                 request that HUD rely on its previous                   provision of any statute or regulation                outcomes (which includes Standard
                                                 certification and supporting                            that the Secretary administers in                     Form 424 (SF–424) and certifications) to
                                                 documentation for purposes of this                      connection with the obligation by the                 HUD.
                                                 allocation, as modified by any updates                  Secretary or the use by the recipient of                 • Grantee requests and receives
                                                 provided by the grantee. To submit such                 these funds (except for requirements                  Disaster Recovery Grant Reporting
                                                 a request, the grantee should follow the                related to fair housing,                              (DRGR) system access (if the grantee
                                                 instructions under paragraph A.1.a of                   nondiscrimination, labor standards, and               does not already have DRGR access) and
                                                 section VI of this notice. Until grant                  the environment).’’ Accordingly,                      may enter activities into the DRGR
                                                 closeout, all grantees shall adhere to the              grantees are reminded that all fair                   system before or after submission of the
                                                 controls, processes, and procedures                     housing and nondiscrimination                         action plan to HUD.
                                                 described in the grantee’s financial                    requirements continue to apply in                        • HUD expedites review (allotted 45
                                                 controls and procurement processes                      administering the funds described in                  days from date of receipt) and approves
                                                 documentation submitted in response to                  this notice.                                          the action plan according to criteria
                                                 paragraph A.1.a. of section VI (including                                                                     identified in this notice.
                                                 any previous documentation the grantee                  V. Overview of Grant Process                             • HUD sends an action plan approval
                                                 requests HUD to rely on), unless                           To begin expending of CDBG–DR                      letter and grant agreement to the
                                                 amended with HUD’s approval.                            funds, the following expedited steps are              grantee. If the action plan is not
                                                    Additionally, in advance of signing a                necessary:                                            approved, HUD will notify the grantee
                                                 grant agreement and consistent with 2                      • Grantee follows citizen                          of the deficiencies. The grantee must
                                                 CFR 200.205 of the Uniform                              participation plan for disaster recovery              then resubmit the action plan within 45
                                                 Administrative Requirements, Cost                       in accordance with the requirements in                days of the notification.
                                                 Principles, and Audit Requirements for                  paragraph A.4 of section VI of this                      • Grantee signs and returns the grant
                                                 Federal Awards (Uniform                                 notice.                                               agreement to HUD.
                                                 Requirements), HUD will evaluate each                      • Grantee consults with stakeholders,                 • Grantee ensures that the final HUD-
                                                 grantee’s capacity to effectively manage                including required consultation with                  approved action plan is posted on its
                                                 the funds through a review of the                       affected local governments, Indian                    official website.
                                                 grantee’s implementation plan and                       Tribes, and public housing authorities                   • HUD establishes the grantee’s line
                                                 capacity assessment detailed in                         (as identified in paragraph A.7 of                    of credit.
                                                 paragraph A.1.b of section VI. The grant                section VI of this notice).                              • Grantee enters the activities from its
                                                 terms and specific conditions of the                       • Within 60 days of the effective date             approved action plan into the DRGR
                                                 award will reflect HUD’s risk                           of this notice (or when the grantee                   system if it has not previously done so
                                                 assessment of the grantee based upon its                submits its action plan, whichever is                 and submits its DRGR action plan to
                                                 submission and the grantee shall adhere                 earlier), the grantee submits                         HUD (funds can be drawn from the line
                                                 to the description of its implementation                documentation for the certification of                of credit only for activities that are
                                                 plan and capacity assessment                            financial controls and procurement                    established in the DRGR system).
                                                 documentation until grant closeout,                     processes, and adequate procedures for                   • Grantee must draft and publish (on
                                                 unless amended with HUD’s approval.                     grant management in accordance with                   their website) policies and procedures
                                                 For all grantees receiving an allocation                the requirements in paragraph A.1.a of                for programs and key recovery
                                                 of funds pursuant to this notice, HUD                   section VI. A grantee that previously                 operations implemented by the grantee
                                                 will undertake an annual risk analysis                  received a certification of its financial             with CDBG–DR funds.
                                                 as well as on-site monitoring of grantee                controls and procurement processes                       • The grantee may draw down funds
                                                 management to further guide oversight                   pursuant to a Prior Appropriation may                 from the line of credit after the
                                                 of these funds.                                         request that HUD rely on that                         Responsible Entity completes applicable
                                                                                                         certification for purposes of this                    environmental review(s) pursuant to 24
                                                 IV. Authority To Grant Waivers
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                                                                                                         allocation, with updates provided by the              CFR part 58 or as authorized by the
                                                    The Appropriations Act authorizes                    grantee as appropriate.                               Appropriations Act and, as applicable,
                                                 the Secretary to waive or specify                          • Within 60 days of the effective date             receives from HUD the Authority to Use
                                                 alternative requirements for any                        of this notice (or when the grantee                   Grant Funds (AUGF) form and
                                                 provision of any statute or regulation                  submits its action plan, whichever is                 certification.
                                                 that the Secretary administers in                       earlier) the grantee submits its                         • The grantee should begin to draw
                                                 connection with the obligation by the                   implementation plan and capacity                      down funds from DRGR no later than
                                                 Secretary, or use by the recipient, of                  assessment submissions, in accordance                 180 days after the effective date of this


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                                                                                Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 28 / Friday, February 9, 2018 / Notices                                           5847

                                                 notice. Additionally, the Appropriations                references in this notice pertaining to               of this notice. Additionally, the grantee
                                                 Act requires all funds to be expended                   timelines and/or deadlines are in terms               must submit with its action plan the
                                                 within two years of the date of                         of calendar days unless otherwise noted.              certifications in paragraph E.51 of
                                                 obligation as described in paragraph                    The date of this notice shall mean the                section VI of this notice.
                                                 A.28 of section VI of this notice.                      effective date of this notice unless                     (1) Proficient Financial Management
                                                                                                         otherwise noted.                                      Controls. A grantee has proficient
                                                 VI. Applicable Rules, Statutes, Waivers,
                                                 and Alternative Requirements                            A. Grant Administration                               financial management controls if each of
                                                                                                                                                               the following criteria is satisfied:
                                                    This section of the notice describes                    1. Preaward Evaluation of
                                                 requirements imposed by the                             Management and Oversight of Funds                        (a) The grantee submits its most
                                                 Appropriations Act, as well as                             a. Certification of financial controls             recent single audit and consolidated
                                                 applicable waivers and alternative                      and procurement processes, and                        annual financial report (CAFR), which
                                                 requirements. For each waiver and                       adequate procedures for proper grant                  in HUD’s determination indicates that
                                                 alternative requirement, the Secretary                  management. The Appropriations Act                    the grantee has no material weaknesses,
                                                 has determined that good cause exists                   requires that the Secretary certify, in               deficiencies, or concerns that HUD
                                                 and the waiver or alternative                           advance of signing a grant agreement,                 considers to be relevant to the financial
                                                 requirement is not inconsistent with the                that the grantee has in place proficient              management of the CDBG program. If
                                                 overall purpose of the HCD Act. The                     financial controls and procurement                    the single audit or CAFR identified
                                                 waivers and alternative requirements                    processes and has established adequate                weaknesses or deficiencies, the grantee
                                                 provide flexibility in program design                   procedures to prevent any duplication                 must provide documentation
                                                 and implementation to support full and                  of benefits as defined by section 312 of              satisfactory to HUD showing how those
                                                 swift recovery following eligible                       the Stafford Act, 42 U.S.C. 5155, to                  weaknesses have been removed or are
                                                 disasters, while ensuring that statutory                ensure timely expenditure of funds,                   being addressed; and
                                                 requirements are met. The following                     maintain a comprehensive website                         (b) The grantee has assessed its
                                                 requirements apply only to the CDBG–                    regarding all disaster recovery activities            financial standards and has submitted
                                                 DR funds appropriated in the                            assisted with these funds, and detect                 the completed Public Law 115–56
                                                 Appropriations Act, and not to funds                    and prevent waste, fraud, and abuse of                Financial Management and Grant
                                                 provided under the annual formula                       funds. To enable the Secretary to make                Compliance Certification (Compliance
                                                 State or Entitlement CDBG programs,                     this certification, each grantee must                 Certification) available on the HUD
                                                 the Indian Community Development                        submit to HUD the certification                       Exchange website at https://
                                                 Block Grant program, or those provided                  documentation listed below. This                      www.hudexchange.info/cdbg-dr/cdbg-
                                                 under any other component of the                        information must be submitted within                  dr-laws-regulations-and-federal-register-
                                                 CDBG program, such as the Section 108                   60 days of the effective date of this                 notices/, together with all
                                                 Loan Guarantee Program, or any prior                    notice, or with the grantee’s submission              documentation required in the
                                                 CDBG–DR appropriation.                                  of its action plan, whichever date is                 Compliance Certification. The grantee’s
                                                    Grantees may request additional                      earlier. Grant agreements will not be                 standards must comply with the
                                                 waivers and alternative requirements                    executed until HUD has approved the                   requirements and standards of the
                                                 from the Department as needed to                        grantee’s certifications. For each of the             Compliance Certification to be
                                                 address specific needs related to their                 items (1) through (6) below, the grantee              proficient, and the grantee must
                                                 recovery activities, accompanied by data                must also provide a table that clearly                continue to maintain these standards
                                                 to support the request. Grantees should                 indicates which unit and personnel are                until grant closeout. The grantee must
                                                 work with the assigned CPD                              responsible for each task along with                  identify which sections of its financial
                                                 representative to request any additional                contact information.                                  standards address applicable questions
                                                 waivers or alternative requirements                        In the alternative, if HUD recently
                                                                                                                                                               in the document.
                                                 from HUD headquarters. Except where                     certified the controls, processes, and
                                                 noted, waivers and alternative                          procedures for a grantee that received an                (2) Procurement. Each grantee must
                                                 requirements described below apply to                   allocation of CDBG–DR funds pursuant                  provide HUD its procurement process/
                                                 all grantees under this notice. Under the               to Prior Appropriations, the grantee may              standards for review, so HUD may
                                                 requirements of the Appropriations Act,                 request that HUD rely on its previous                 evaluate the overall effect of the
                                                 waivers and alternative requirements                    certification(s) and supporting                       grantee’s procurement process/
                                                 are effective five days after they are                  documentation required by (1) through                 standards to determine that they uphold
                                                 published in the Federal Register.                      (6) below for purposes of allocations                 the principles of full and open
                                                    Except as described in this notice,                  under this notice, as modified by any                 competition and include an evaluation
                                                 statutory and regulatory provisions                     updates provided by the grantee. To                   of the cost or price of the product or
                                                 governing the State CDBG program shall                  submit the request, a grantee must                    service. The grantee must also provide
                                                 apply to State grantees receiving an                    indicate in the P.L. 115–56 Financial                 a legal opinion that it has proficient
                                                 allocation under this notice. Pursuant to               Management and Grant Compliance                       procurement policies and procedures.
                                                 an alternative requirement established                  Certification that the past submissions                  A State grantee (including the
                                                 by this notice, all references to states                pursuant to Prior Appropriations remain               Commonwealth of Puerto Rico and the
                                                 and State grantees shall include the                    unchanged (except where updates are                   U.S. Virgin Islands) has proficient
                                                 Commonwealth of Puerto Rico and the                     specified and supported with revised                  procurement policies and processes if
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                                                 U.S. Virgin Islands. Applicable statutory               submissions), and that the submissions                HUD determines that its procurement
                                                 provisions (title I of the HCD Act) can                 on which HUD based its previous                       processes uphold the principles of full
                                                 be found at 42 U.S.C. 5301 et seq.                      certification, or new submissions as                  and open competition and include an
                                                 Applicable State and Entitlement CDBG                   appropriate, will apply to the grantee’s              evaluation of the cost and price of the
                                                 regulations can be found at 24 CFR part                 CDBG–DR grant under this notice. In                   product or service, and if its
                                                 570. References to the action plan in                   either case, the grantee must certify to              procurement processes reflect that it: (a)
                                                 these regulations shall refer to the action             the accuracy of its documentation as                  Adopted 2 CFR 200.318 through
                                                 plan required by this notice. All                       required by paragraph E.51 of section VI              200.326; or (b) follows its own


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                                                 5848                           Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 28 / Friday, February 9, 2018 / Notices

                                                 procurement policies and procedures                     will have a separate page dedicated to                determine the status of their
                                                 and establishes requirements for                        its disaster recovery activities assisted             applications for recovery assistance, at
                                                 procurement policies and procedures                     with CDBG–DR funds provided under                     all phases, if its procedures indicate
                                                 for local governments and subrecipients                 this notice that includes the information             methods for communication (i.e.,
                                                 based on full and open competition                      described at paragraph A.27 of section                website, telephone, case managers,
                                                 pursuant to 24 CFR 570.489(g), and the                  VI of this notice. The procedures should              letters, etc.), ensure the accessibility and
                                                 requirements applicable to the state, its               also indicate the frequency of website                privacy of individualized information
                                                 local governments, and subrecipients                    updates. At minimum, grantees must                    for all applicants, indicate the frequency
                                                 include evaluation of the cost or price                 update their website monthly.                         of applicant status updates, and identify
                                                 of the product or service; or (c) adopted                  (6) Procedures to detect and prevent               which personnel or unit is responsible
                                                 2 CFR 200.317, meaning that it will                     fraud, waste and abuse. A grantee has                 for informing applicants of the status of
                                                 follow its own State procurement                        adequate procedures to detect and                     recovery applications.
                                                 policies and procedures and evaluate                    prevent fraud, waste, and abuse if it                    (2) Implementation Plan. To enable
                                                 the cost or price of the product or                     submits procedures that indicate how                  HUD to assess risk as described in 2
                                                 service, but impose 2 CFR 200.318                       the grantee will verify the accuracy of               CFR 200.205(c), the grantee will submit
                                                 through 200.326 on its subgrantees and                  information provided by applicants; if it             an implementation plan to the
                                                 subrecipients. A grantee must                           provides a monitoring policy indicating               Department. The plan must describe the
                                                 demonstrate that its procurement                        how and why monitoring is conducted,                  grantee’s capacity to carry out the
                                                 policies and procedures will allow the                  the frequency of monitoring, and which                recovery and how it will address any
                                                 grantee to comply with the procurement                  items are monitored; if it demonstrates               capacity gaps. HUD will determine a
                                                 requirements at paragraph A.26 of                       that it has an internal auditor that                  plan is adequate to reduce risk if, at a
                                                 Section VI of this notice.                              provides both programmatic and                        minimum it addresses (a) through (e)
                                                    (3) Duplication of benefits. A grantee               financial oversight of grantee activities;            below:
                                                 has adequate procedures to prevent the                  and includes a document signed by the                    (a) Capacity Assessment. The grantee
                                                 duplication of benefits if the grantee                  internal auditor that describes his or her            has conducted an assessment of its
                                                 submits uniform processes that reflect                  role in detecting fraud, waste, and                   capacity to carry out CDBG–DR recovery
                                                 the requirements of paragraph A.25 in                   abuse. Instances of fraud, waste, and                 efforts and has developed a timeline
                                                 section VI of this notice, including: (a)               abuse should be referred to the HUD                   with milestones describing when and
                                                 Verifying all sources of disaster                       OIG Fraud Hotline (phone: 1–800–347–                  how the grantee will address all
                                                 assistance received by the grantee or                   3735 or email: hotline@hudoig.gov).                   capacity gaps that are identified. The
                                                 applicant prior to the award of CDBG–                      To address any potential duplication,              assessment must include a list of any
                                                 DR funds to the applicant, as applicable;               beneficiaries must enter a signed                     open CDBG–DR findings and an update
                                                 (b) determining a grantee’s or an                       agreement to repay any assistance later               on the corrective actions undertaken to
                                                 applicant’s unmet need(s) before                        received for the same purpose as the                  address each finding. HUD may include
                                                 committing funds or awarding                            CDBG–DR funds. The grantee must                       additional requirements in the grantee’s
                                                 assistance; and (c) ensuring                            identify a method to monitor                          grant terms and conditions in order to
                                                 beneficiaries agree to repay any                        compliance with the agreement for a                   prevent similar findings for this grant.
                                                 duplicative assistance if they later                    reasonable period, and should articulate                 (b) Staffing. The plan shows that the
                                                 receive other disaster assistance for the               this method in its written administrative             grantee has assessed staff capacity and
                                                 same purpose. Grantee procedures shall                  procedures. This agreement must also                  identified personnel for the purpose of
                                                 provide that prior to the award of                      include the following language:                       case management in proportion to the
                                                 assistance, the grantee will use the best,              ‘‘Warning: Any person who knowingly                   applicant population; program managers
                                                 most recent available data from FEMA,                   makes a false claim or statement to HUD               who will be assigned responsibility for
                                                 the Small Business Administration                       may be subject to civil or criminal                   each primary recovery area (housing,
                                                 (SBA), insurers, and any other sources                  penalties under 18 U.S.C. 287, 1001 and               economic revitalization, and
                                                 of funding to prevent the duplication of                31 U.S.C. 3729.’’                                     infrastructure); staff who have
                                                 benefits.                                                  b. Implementation Plan and Capacity                demonstrated experience in housing,
                                                    (4) Timely expenditures. A grantee                   Assessment. Before signing a grant                    economic revitalization, and
                                                 has adequate procedures to determine                    agreement, HUD is requiring each                      infrastructure (as applicable); and staff
                                                 timely expenditures if it submits                       grantee to demonstrate that it has                    responsible for procurement/contract
                                                 procedures that indicate to HUD how                     sufficient capacity to manage these                   management, compliance with the
                                                 the grantee will track expenditures each                funds and the associated risks.                       regulations implementing Section 3 of
                                                 month; how it will monitor                                 Evidence of grantee management                     the Housing and Urban Development
                                                 expenditures of its subrecipients; how it               capacity will be provided through the                 Act of 1968 (24 CFR part 135) (Section
                                                 will account for and manage program                     grantee’s implementation plan and                     3), fair housing compliance, and
                                                 income; how it will reprogram funds in                  capacity assessment submissions. These                environmental compliance; as well as
                                                 a timely manner for activities that are                 submissions must meet the criteria in                 staff responsible for monitoring and
                                                 stalled; and how it will project                        (1) and (2) below, and must be                        quality assurance, and financial
                                                 expenditures to provide for the                         submitted within 60 days of the                       management. An adequate plan will
                                                 expenditure of all CDBG–DR funds                        effective date of this notice or with the             also provide for an internal audit
                                                 within the period provided for in                       grantee’s submission of its action plan,              function with responsible audit staff
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                                                 paragraph A.28 of section VI of this                    whichever date is earlier.                            reporting independently to the chief
                                                 notice.                                                    A grantee has sufficient management                elected official or executive officer or
                                                    (5) Comprehensive disaster recovery                  capacity if it submits documentation                  board of the governing body of any
                                                 website. A grantee has adequate                         showing that each of the following                    designated administering entity.
                                                 procedures to maintain a                                criteria is satisfied:                                   (c) Internal and Interagency
                                                 comprehensive website regarding all                        (1) Timely information on application              Coordination. The grantee’s plan
                                                 disaster recovery activities if it submits              status. A grantee has adequate                        describes how it will ensure effective
                                                 procedures that indicate that the grantee               procedures to enable applicants to                    communication between different


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                                                                                Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 28 / Friday, February 9, 2018 / Notices                                             5849

                                                 departments and divisions within the                    a needs assessment to understand the                  developed a Disaster Impact and Unmet
                                                 grantee’s organizational structure that                 type and location of community needs                  Needs Assessment Kit to guide CDBG–
                                                 are involved in CDBG–DR–funded                          and to target limited resources to those              DR grantees through a process for
                                                 recovery efforts; between its lead agency               areas with the greatest need. Grantees                identifying and prioritizing critical
                                                 and subrecipients responsible for                       receiving an allocation under this notice             unmet needs for long-term community
                                                 implementing the grantee’s action plan;                 must conduct a needs assessment to                    recovery. The Kit is available on the
                                                 and with other local and regional                       inform the use of CDBG–DR funds.                      HUD Exchange website at: https://
                                                 planning efforts to ensure consistency.                 Grantees must cite data sources.                      www.hudexchange.info/resources/
                                                    (d) Technical Assistance. The                        Grantees may use HUD’s AFFH                           documents/Disaster_Recovery_Disaster_
                                                 grantee’s implementation plan describes                 mapping tool (https://egis.hud.gov/                   Impact_Needs_Assessment_Kit.pdf.
                                                 how it will procure and provide                         affht/) or the CPD Mapping tool (https://                Disaster recovery needs evolve over
                                                 technical assistance for any personnel                  egis.hud.gov/cpdmaps/) to inform their                time and therefore grantees are expected
                                                 that the grantee does not employ at the                 analysis. At a minimum, the needs                     to amend the needs assessment and
                                                 time of action plan submission, and to                  assessment must:                                      action plan as conditions change,
                                                 fill gaps in knowledge or technical                        • Evaluate all aspects of recovery                 additional needs are identified, and
                                                 expertise required for successful and                   including housing (interim and                        additional resources become available.
                                                 timely recovery implementation where                    permanent, owner and rental, single-                     (2) A description of the connection
                                                 identified in the capacity assessment.                  family and multifamily, affordable and                between identified unmet needs and the
                                                    (e) Accountability. The grantee’s plan               market rate, and housing to meet the                  allocation of CDBG–DR resources.
                                                 identifies the lead agency responsible                  needs of persons who were homeless                    Grantees must propose an allocation of
                                                 for implementation of the CDBG–DR                       pre-disaster), infrastructure, and                    CDBG–DR funds that primarily
                                                 award and indicates that the head of                    economic revitalization;                              considers and addresses unmet housing
                                                 that agency will report directly to the                    • Estimate unmet needs to ensure                   needs. Grantees may also allocate funds
                                                 chief executive officer of the                          CDBG–DR funds meet needs that are not                 for economic revitalization and
                                                 jurisdiction.                                           likely to be addressed by other sources               infrastructure activities, but in doing so,
                                                    2. Action Plan for Disaster Recovery                 of funds by accounting for the various                must identify how any remaining unmet
                                                 waiver and alternative requirement.                     forms of assistance available to, or likely           housing needs will be addressed or how
                                                 Requirements for CDBG actions plans,                    to be available to, affected communities              its economic revitalization and
                                                 located at 42 U.S.C. 5304(a)(1), 42                     (e.g., projected FEMA funds) and                      infrastructure activities will contribute
                                                 U.S.C. 5304(m), 42 U.S.C.                               individuals (e.g., estimated insurance)               to the long-term recovery and
                                                 5306(d)(2)(C)(iii), 42 U.S.C. 5306(a)(1),               and use the most recent available data                restoration of housing in the most
                                                 42 U.S.C. 12705(a)(2), and 24 CFR                       to estimate the portion of need unlikely              impacted and distressed areas. Grantee
                                                 91.320, are waived for these disaster                   to be addressed by insurance proceeds,                action plans may provide for the
                                                 recovery grants. Instead, grantees must                 other Federal assistance, or any other                allocation of funds for administration
                                                 submit to HUD an action plan for                        funding sources (thus producing an                    and planning activities and for public
                                                 disaster recovery which will describe                   estimate of unmet need);                              service activities, subject to the caps on
                                                 disaster recovery programs that conform                    • Assess whether public services                   such activities as described below.
                                                 to applicable requirements as specified                 (e.g., housing counseling, legal                         (3) Each grantee must include a
                                                 in this notice. The Secretary may                       counseling, job training, mental health,              description of how it will identify and
                                                 disapprove an action plan as                            and general health services) are                      address the rehabilitation,
                                                 substantially incomplete if it is                       necessary to complement activities                    reconstruction, replacement, and new
                                                 determined that the plan does not                       intended to address housing,                          construction of housing and shelters in
                                                 satisfy all the required elements                       infrastructure, and economic                          the areas affected by the disaster. This
                                                 identified in this notice. During the                   revitalization and how those services                 includes any rental housing that is
                                                 course of the grant, HUD will monitor                   are to be made accessible to individuals              affordable to low- or moderate-income
                                                 the grantee’s actions and use of funds                  having wide-ranging disabilities                      households as provided for in B.34 of
                                                 for consistency with the plan, as well as               including mobility, sensory,                          section VI of this notice; public housing
                                                 meeting the performance and timeliness                  developmental, emotional, and other                   as provided for in B.33 of Section VI of
                                                 objectives therein.                                     impairments;                                          this notice; emergency shelters and
                                                    a. Action Plan. The action plan must                    • Describe the extent to which                     housing for the homeless; private
                                                 identify the proposed use of all funds,                 expenditures for planning activities will             market units receiving project-based
                                                 including criteria for eligibility, and                 benefit the HUD-identified most                       assistance or with tenants that
                                                 how the uses address necessary                          impacted and distressed areas;                        participate in the Section 8 Housing
                                                 expenses related to disaster relief, long-                 • Describe impacts geographically by               Choice Voucher Program; and any other
                                                 term recovery, restoration of                           type at the lowest level practicable (e.g.,           housing that is assisted under a HUD
                                                 infrastructure and housing, and                         county level, zip code, neighborhood, or              program.
                                                 economic revitalization in the most                     census tract); and                                       (4) A description of how the grantee’s
                                                 impacted and distressed areas resulting                    • Take into account the costs of                   programs will promote housing for
                                                 from a major disaster declared in 2017.                 incorporating mitigation and resilience               vulnerable populations, including a
                                                 Funds dedicated for uses not described                  measures to protect against the                       description of activities it plans to
                                                 in accordance with paragraphs b. or c.                  anticipated effects of future extreme                 address: (a) The transitional housing,
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                                                 under this section will not be obligated                weather events and other natural                      permanent supportive housing, and
                                                 until the grantee submits, and HUD                      hazards and long-term risks.                          permanent housing needs of individuals
                                                 approves, an action plan amendment                         CDBG–DR funds may be used to                       and families (including subpopulations)
                                                 programming the use of those funds, at                  reimburse planning and administration                 that are homeless and at-risk of
                                                 the necessary level of detail.                          costs for developing the action plan,                 homelessness; (b) the prevention of low-
                                                    The action plan must contain:                        including the needs assessment,                       income individuals and families with
                                                    (1) An impact and unmet needs                        environmental review, and citizen                     children (especially those with incomes
                                                 assessment. Each grantee must develop                   participation requirements. HUD has                   below 30 percent of the area median)


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                                                 5850                           Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 28 / Friday, February 9, 2018 / Notices

                                                 from becoming homeless; and (c) the                     management and take into account                      grantees to implement green
                                                 special needs of persons who are not                    continued sea level rise, if applicable;              infrastructure policies to the extent
                                                 homeless but require supportive                         and coordinate with other local and                   practicable.
                                                 housing (e.g., elderly, persons with                    regional planning efforts to ensure                      (10) Additionally, a grantee using
                                                 disabilities, persons with alcohol or                   consistency. This information should be               grant funds for infrastructure must
                                                 other drug addiction, persons with HIV/                 based on the history of FEMA flood                    include a description of how the
                                                 AIDS and their families, and public                     mitigation efforts and take into account              proposed infrastructure activities will
                                                 housing residents. Grantees must also                   projected increase in sea level (if                   advance long-term resilience to natural
                                                 assess how planning decisions may                       applicable) and the frequency and                     hazards and how the grantee intends to
                                                 affect members of protected classes,                    intensity of precipitation events.                    align these investments with other
                                                 racially and ethnically concentrated                       (8) A description of how the grantee               planned State or local capital
                                                 areas, as well as concentrated areas of                 plans to adhere to the advanced                       improvements. Grantees should
                                                 poverty; will promote the availability of               elevation requirements established in                 describe how preparedness and
                                                 affordable housing in low-poverty,                      paragraph B.32.e of section VI of this                mitigation measures will be integrated
                                                 nonminority areas where appropriate;                    notice. Grantee decisions to elevate                  into rebuilding activities and how the
                                                 and will respond to natural hazard-                     structures in a particular neighborhood               grantee will promote community-level
                                                 related impacts. Grantees are reminded                  or local government must be cost                      and/or regional (e.g. multiple local
                                                 that the use of recovery funds must meet                reasonable relative to other alternatives             jurisdictions) post-disaster recovery and
                                                 accessibility standards, provide                        strategies, such as demolition of                     mitigation planning.
                                                 reasonable accommodations to persons                    substantially-damaged structures with                    Grantees must also describe how they
                                                 with disabilities, and take into                        reconstruction of an elevated structure               will address the construction or
                                                 consideration the functional needs of                   on the same site, property buyouts, or                rehabilitation of storm water
                                                 persons with disabilities in the                        infrastructure improvements to prevent                management systems in flood impacted
                                                 relocation process. Guidance on                         loss of life and mitigate future property             areas. State grantees must work with
                                                 relocation considerations for persons                   damage.                                               local governments in the most impacted
                                                 with disabilities may be found in                          The action plan should include an                  and distressed areas to identify the
                                                 Chapter 3 of HUD’s Relocation                           estimate of the average costs associated              unmet needs and associated costs of
                                                 Handbook 1378.0 (available on the HUD                   with elevating structures (updated as                 needed storm water infrastructure
                                                 Exchange website at: https://                           additional information becomes                        improvements.
                                                 www.hud.gov/program_offices/                            available through subsequent action                      (11) A description of the grantee’s
                                                 administration/hudclips/handbooks/                      plan amendments) and provide a                        proposed use of CDBG–DR funds to
                                                 cpd/13780). A checklist of accessibility                description of how it will document on                develop a disaster recovery and
                                                 requirements under the Uniform Federal                  a neighborhood or local government                    response plan that addresses long-term
                                                 Accessibility Standards (UFAS) is                       level that elevation, as opposed to                   recovery and pre- and post-disaster
                                                 available at: http://                                   alternative strategies, is cost reasonable            hazard mitigation, if one does not
                                                 www.hudexchange.info/resources/796/                     to promote a community’s long-term                    currently exist.
                                                 ufas-accessibility-checklist/. The HUD                  recovery.                                                (12) A description of how the grantee
                                                 Deeming Notice.79 FR 29671 (May 23,                        (9) A description of how the grantee               will leverage CDBG–DR funds with
                                                 2014) explains when HUD recipients                      will: (a) Design and implement                        funding provided by other Federal,
                                                 can use 2010 ADA Standards with                         programs or activities with the goal of               State, local, private, and nonprofit
                                                 exceptions, as an alternative to UFAS to                protecting people and property from                   sources to generate a more effective and
                                                 comply with Section 504.                                harm; (b) emphasize high quality,                     comprehensive recovery. Examples of
                                                    (5) A description of how the grantee                 durability, energy efficiency,                        other Federal sources are those provided
                                                 plans to minimize displacement of                       sustainability, and mold resistance; (c)              by HUD, FEMA (specifically the Public
                                                 persons or entities, and assist any                     support adoption and enforcement of                   Assistance Program, Individual
                                                 persons or entities displaced.                          modern and/or resilient building codes                Assistance Program, Permanent Housing
                                                    (6) A description of the maximum                     and mitigation of hazard risk, including              Construction Repair, where applicable,
                                                 amount of assistance available to a                     possible sea level rise, high winds,                  and Hazard Mitigation Grant Program),
                                                 beneficiary under each of the grantee’s                 storm surge, and flooding, where                      SBA (specifically the Disaster Loans
                                                 disaster recovery programs. A grantee                   appropriate; and (d) implement and                    program), Economic Development
                                                 may find it necessary to provide                        ensure compliance with the Green                      Administration, USACE, and the U.S.
                                                 exceptions on a case-by-case basis to the               Building standards required in                        Department of Agriculture. The grantee
                                                 maximum amount of assistance and                        paragraph B.32.a of section VI of this                should seek to maximize the outcomes
                                                 must describe the process it will use to                notice. All rehabilitation,                           of investments and the degree to which
                                                 make such exceptions in its action plan.                reconstruction, and new construction                  CDBG funds are leveraged. Grantees
                                                 At minimum, each grantee must adopt                     should be designed to incorporate                     shall identify leveraged funds for each
                                                 policies and procedures that                            principles of sustainability, including               activity, as applicable, in the DRGR
                                                 communicate how it will analyze the                     water and energy efficiency, resilience,              system.
                                                 circumstances under which an                            and mitigating the impact of future                      (13) A description of the standards to
                                                 exception is needed and how it will                     disasters. Whenever feasible, grantees                be established for construction
                                                 demonstrate that the amount of                          should follow best practices such as                  contractors performing work in the
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                                                 assistance is necessary and reasonable.                 those provided by the U.S. Department                 jurisdiction and a mechanism for
                                                    (7) A description of how the grantee                 of Energy’s Guidelines for Home Energy                homeowners and small business owners
                                                 plans to: Promote sound, sustainable                    Professionals—Professional                            to challenge construction work that does
                                                 long-term recovery planning informed                    Certifications and Standard Work                      not meet these standards. HUD strongly
                                                 by a post-disaster evaluation of hazard                 Specifications found at https://                      encourages the grantee to require a
                                                 risk, especially construction standards                 energy.gov/eere/wipo/guidelines-home-                 warranty period post-construction,
                                                 and land-use decisions that reflect                     energy-professionals-standards-work-                  which includes a formal notification
                                                 responsible floodplain and wetland                      specifications. HUD also encourages                   that is provided to homeowners on a


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                                                                                Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 28 / Friday, February 9, 2018 / Notices                                             5851

                                                 periodic basis (e.g., 6 months and one                  DR activity. Additional details on                    In proposing the use of CDBG–DR funds
                                                 month prior to expiration date of the                   disaster-related activities are provided              for economic revitalization under this
                                                 warranty).                                              under section VI, parts B through D.                  notice, a grantee must identify how any
                                                    b. Funds Awarded Directly to a State.                Additionally, HUD has developed a                     remaining unmet housing needs will be
                                                 For State grantees, the action plan shall               series of CDBG–DR toolkits that guide                 addressed or how its economic
                                                 describe the method of distribution of                  grantees through specific grant                       development activities will contribute
                                                 funds to local governments and Indian                   implementation activities. These can be               to the long-term recovery and
                                                 tribes and/or descriptions of specific                  found on the HUD Exchange website at                  restoration of housing in the most
                                                 programs or activities the grantee will                 https://www.hudexchange.info/                         impacted and distressed areas.
                                                 carry out directly. The description must                programs/cdbg-dr/toolkits/.                              (3) Infrastructure. Typical
                                                 include:                                                  (1) Housing. Typical housing                        infrastructure activities include the
                                                    (1) How the needs assessment                         activities include new construction and               rehabilitation, replacement, or
                                                 informed grantee funding                                rehabilitation of single-family or                    relocation of damaged public facilities
                                                 determinations, including the rationale                 multifamily units. Most often, grantees               and improvements including, but not
                                                 behind the decision(s) to provide funds                 use CDBG–DR funds to rehabilitate                     limited to, bridges, water treatment
                                                 to areas that were identified by the                    damaged homes and rental units.                       facilities, roads, sewer and water lines,
                                                 grantee as being most impacted and                      However, grantees may also fund new                   and storm water management systems.
                                                 distressed, if applicable (i.e., how the                construction (see paragraph B.32 of                   In proposing an allocation of CDBG–DR
                                                 grantee determined that these areas are                 section VI of this notice) or rehabilitate            funds under this notice for
                                                 most impacted and distressed). All grant                units not damaged by the disaster if the              infrastructure, a grantee must identify
                                                 funds shall be expended in areas that                   activity clearly addresses a disaster-                how any remaining unmet housing
                                                 received a presidential disaster                        related impact and is located in a                    needs will be addressed or how its
                                                 declaration pursuant to the disaster                    disaster-affected area. This impact can               infrastructure activities will contribute
                                                 numbers specified in Table 1 of this                    be demonstrated by the disaster’s                     to the long-term recovery and
                                                 notice.                                                 overall effect on the quality, quantity,              restoration of housing in the most
                                                    (2) The threshold factors and recipient              and affordability of the housing stock                impacted and distressed areas.
                                                 or beneficiary grant size limits that are               and the resulting inability of that stock                (4) Preparedness and Mitigation. To
                                                 to be applied.                                          to meet post-disaster needs and                       ensure that CDBG–DR funds are used for
                                                    (3) The projected uses for the CDBG–                 population demands.                                   authorized disaster recovery purposes,
                                                 DR funds, by responsible organization,                     Grantees are also required to
                                                                                                                                                               all assisted activities must respond to
                                                 activity, and geographic area, when the                 coordinate with HUD-certified housing
                                                                                                                                                               the impacts of the declared disaster
                                                 grantee carries out an activity directly.               counseling organizations to ensure that
                                                    (4) For each proposed program and/or                 information and services are made                     identified in Table 1. HUD encourages
                                                 activity carried out directly, its                      available to both renters and                         grantees to incorporate preparedness
                                                 respective CDBG activity eligibility                    homeowners. Additional information                    and mitigation measures into CDBG–DR
                                                 category (or categories), national                      for each grantee is available here:                   assisted activities to rebuild
                                                 objective(s), and specific aspects of                   https://apps.hud.gov/offices/hsg/sfh/                 communities that are more resilient to
                                                 disaster recovery as described in                       hcc/hcs.cfm?weblistaction=summary.                    future disasters. Mitigation measures
                                                 subparagraph d. of this paragraph.                         (2) Economic Revitalization. The                   that are not incorporated into those
                                                    (5) How the method of distribution to                attraction, retention and return of                   rebuilding activities must be a necessary
                                                 local governments and Indian tribes or                  businesses and jobs to a disaster-                    expense related to disaster relief or long-
                                                 programs/activities carried out directly                impacted area is critical to long term                term recovery that responds to the
                                                 will result in long-term recovery from                  recovery. Accordingly, for CDBG–DR                    eligible disaster.
                                                 specific impacts of the disaster.                       purposes, economic revitalization may                    (5) Connection to the Disaster.
                                                    (6) When funds are subgranted to                     include any CDBG–DR eligible activity                 Grantees must maintain records about
                                                 local governments or Indian tribes, all                 that demonstrably restores and                        each activity funded, as described in
                                                 criteria used to distribute funds to local              improves some aspect of the local                     paragraph A.16 of section VI of this
                                                 governments or Indian tribes including                  economy through the attraction,                       notice. In regard to physical losses,
                                                 the relative importance of each                         retention and return of businesses and                damage or rebuilding estimates are often
                                                 criterion.                                              jobs. The activity may address job                    the most effective tools for
                                                    (7) When applications are solicited for              losses, or negative impacts to tax                    demonstrating the connection to the
                                                 programs carried out directly, all criteria             revenues or businesses. Examples of                   disaster. For housing market, economic,
                                                 used to select applications for funding,                eligible activities include providing                 and/or nonphysical losses, post-disaster
                                                 including the relative importance of                    loans and grants to businesses to carry               analyses or assessments may best
                                                 each criterion.                                         out eligible economic development                     document the relationship between the
                                                    c. Clarification of disaster-related                 activities, funding job training, making              loss and the disaster.
                                                 activities. All CDBG–DR funded                          improvements to commercial/retail                        d. Clarity of Action Plan. All grantees
                                                 activities must clearly address an                      districts, and financing other efforts that           must include sufficient information so
                                                 impact of the disaster for which funding                attract/retain workers in devastated                  that all interested parties will be able to
                                                 was allocated. Given standard CDBG                      communities.                                          understand and comment on the action
                                                 requirements, this means each activity                     All economic revitalization activities             plan and, if applicable, be able to
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                                                 must: (1) Be a CDBG-eligible activity (or               must address an economic impact(s)                    prepare responsive applications to the
                                                 be eligible under a waiver or alternative               caused by the disaster (e.g., loss of jobs,           grantee. The action plan (and
                                                 requirement in this notice); (2) meet a                 loss of public revenue). Through its                  subsequent amendments) must include
                                                 national objective; and (3) address a                   needs assessment and action plan, the                 a single chart or table that illustrates, at
                                                 direct or indirect impact from the major                grantee must clearly identify the                     the most practical level, how all funds
                                                 disaster in a Presidentially-declared                   economic loss or need resulting from                  are budgeted (e.g., by program,
                                                 county. A disaster-related impact can be                the disaster, and how the proposed                    subrecipient, grantee-administered
                                                 addressed through any eligible CDBG–                    activities will address that loss or need.            activity, or other category).


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                                                 5852                           Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 28 / Friday, February 9, 2018 / Notices

                                                    e. Review and Approval of Action                     coming from and where they are moving                 funds is identified by the grantee, it
                                                 Plan. The action plan (including SF–424                 to; and (3) revised budget allocation                 must be entered into the DRGR system
                                                 and certifications) must be submitted to                table that reflects the entirety of all               at a level of detail that is sufficient to
                                                 HUD for review and approval. Grantees                   funds, as amended. A grantee’s current                serve as the basis for acceptable
                                                 that received an allocation pursuant to                 version of its entire action plan must be             performance reports and permits HUD
                                                 a Prior Appropriation must submit an                    accessible for viewing as a single                    review of compliance requirements.
                                                 action plan within 90 days of the                       document at any given point in time,                     The action plan must also be entered
                                                 effective date of this notice. All other                rather than the public or HUD having to               into the DRGR system so that the
                                                 grantees receiving an allocation under                  view and cross-reference changes among                grantee is able to draw its CDBG–DR
                                                 this notice must submit an action plan                  multiple amendments.                                  funds. The grantee may enter activities
                                                 within 120 days of the effective date of                  h. Projection of expenditures and                   into the DRGR system before or after
                                                 this notice. HUD will review each action                outcomes. Each grantee must submit                    submission of the written action plan to
                                                 plan within 45 days from the date of                    projected expenditures and outcomes                   HUD, but will not be able to budget
                                                 receipt. The Secretary may disapprove                   with the action plan. The projections                 grant funds to these activities until after
                                                 an action plan as substantially                         must be based on each quarter’s                       the grant agreement has been executed.
                                                 incomplete if it is determined that the                 expected performance—beginning with                   To enter an activity into the DRGR
                                                 action plan does not meet the                           the quarter funds are available to the                system, the grantee must know the
                                                 requirements of this notice.                            grantee and continuing each quarter                   activity type, national objective, and the
                                                    f. Obligation and expenditure of                     until all funds are expended. The                     organization that will be responsible for
                                                 funds. Once HUD makes the required                      projections will enable HUD, the public,              the activity.
                                                 certifications and approves the action                  and the grantee to track proposed versus                 Grantees will gain access to its line of
                                                 plan, it will then sign a grant agreement               actual performance. The published                     credit upon review and approval of the
                                                 obligating allocated funds to the grantee.              action plan must be amended for any                   initial DRGR action plan. Each activity
                                                 In addition, HUD will establish the line                subsequent changes, updates or revision               entered into the DRGR system must also
                                                 of credit and the grantee will receive                  of the projections. Guidance on the                   be categorized under a ‘‘project.’’
                                                 DRGR system access (if it does not                      preparation of projections is available               Typically, projects are based on groups
                                                 already have DRGR system access). The                   on the HUD website.                                   of activities that accomplish a similar,
                                                 grantee must also enter its action plan                   3. HUD performance review                           broad purpose (e.g., housing,
                                                 activities into the DRGR system in order                authorities and grantee reporting                     infrastructure, or economic
                                                 to draw funds for those activities. Each                requirements in the Disaster Recovery                 revitalization) or are based on an area of
                                                 activity must meet the applicable                       Grant Reporting (DRGR) System.                        service (e.g., Community A). If a grantee
                                                 environmental requirements prior to the                   a. Performance review authorities. 42               describes just one program within a
                                                 use of funds. After the Responsible                     U.S.C. 5304(e) requires that the                      broader category (e.g., single family
                                                 Entity (usually the grantee) completes                  Secretary shall, at least on an annual                rehabilitation), that program is entered
                                                 environmental review(s) pursuant to 24                  basis, make such reviews and audits as                as a project in the DRGR system.
                                                 CFR part 58 (as applicable) or adopts the               may be necessary or appropriate to                    Further, the budget of the program
                                                 environmental review performed by                       determine whether the grantee has                     would be identified as the project’s
                                                 another federal agency, as authorized by                carried out its activities in a timely                budget. If a grantee has only identified
                                                 the Appropriations Act, and receives                    manner, whether the grantee’s activities              the Method of Distribution (MOD) upon
                                                 from HUD or the State an approved                       and certifications are carried out in                 HUD’s approval of the published action
                                                 Request for Release of Funds and                        accordance with the requirements and                  plan, the MOD categories typically serve
                                                 certification (as applicable), the grantee              the primary objectives of the HCD Act                 as the projects in the DRGR system,
                                                 may draw down funds from the line of                    and other applicable laws, and whether                rather than activity groupings. Activities
                                                 credit for an activity. The disbursement                the grantee has the continuing capacity               are added to MOD projects as specific
                                                 of grant funds should begin no later                    to carry out those activities in a timely             CDBG–DR programs and projects are
                                                 than 180 days after the effective date of               manner.                                               identified for funding.
                                                 this notice. Failure to draw funds within                 This notice waives the requirements                    c. Tracking oversight activities in the
                                                 180 days of the effective date of this                  for submission of a performance report                DRGR system; use of DRGR data for
                                                 notice will result in the Department’s                  pursuant to 42 U.S.C. 12708(a), 24 CFR                HUD review and dissemination. Each
                                                 review of the grantee’s certification of                91.520, and 24 CFR 1003.506.                          grantee must also enter into the DRGR
                                                 its financial controls, procurement                     Alternatively, HUD is requiring that                  system summary information on
                                                 processes and capacity, and may result                  grantees enter information in the DRGR                monitoring visits and reports, audits,
                                                 in a recommended corrective actions                     system in sufficient detail to permit the             and technical assistance it conducts as
                                                 deemed appropriate by the Department                    Department’s review of grantee                        part of its oversight of its disaster
                                                 pursuant to 24 CFR 570.495, 24 CFR                      performance on a quarterly basis                      recovery programs. The grantee’s
                                                 570.910, or 24 CFR 1003.701.                            through the Quarterly Performance                     Quarterly Performance Report (QPR)
                                                    g. Amending the Action Plan. The                     Report (QPR) and to enable remote                     will include a summary indicating the
                                                 grantee must amend its action plan to                   review of grantee data to allow HUD to                number of grantee oversight visits and
                                                 update its needs assessment, modify or                  assess compliance and risk. HUD-issued                reports (see subparagraph e. for more
                                                 create new activities, or reprogram                     general and appropriation-specific                    information on the QPR). HUD will use
                                                 funds, as necessary. Each amendment                     guidance for DRGR reporting                           data entered into the DRGR action plan
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                                                 must be highlighted, or otherwise                       requirements can be found on the HUD                  and the QPR, transactional data from the
                                                 identified, within the context of the                   exchange at: https://www.hudexchange.                 DRGR system, and other information
                                                 entire action plan. The beginning of                    info/programs/drgr/.                                  provided by the grantee, to provide
                                                 every action plan amendment must                          b. DRGR Action Plan. Each grantee                   reports to Congress and the public, as
                                                 include a: (1) Section that identifies                  must enter its action plan for disaster               well as to: (1) Monitor for anomalies or
                                                 exactly what content is being added,                    recovery, including performance                       performance problems that suggest
                                                 deleted, or changed; (2) chart or table                 measures, into HUD’s DRGR system. As                  fraud, abuse of funds, and duplication
                                                 that clearly illustrates where funds are                more detailed information about uses of               of benefits; (2) reconcile budgets,


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                                                                                Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 28 / Friday, February 9, 2018 / Notices                                            5853

                                                 obligations, funding draws, and                         obligated, drawn down, and expended;                  to notify affected citizens through
                                                 expenditures; (3) calculate expenditures                the funding source and total amount of                electronic mailings, press releases,
                                                 to determine compliance with                            any non–CDBG–DR funds to be                           statements by public officials, media
                                                 administrative and public service caps                  expended on each activity; beginning                  advertisements, public service
                                                 and the overall percentage of funds that                and actual completion dates of                        announcements, and/or contacts with
                                                 benefit low- and moderate-income                        completed activities; achieved                        neighborhood organizations. Plan
                                                 persons; and (4) analyze the risk of                    performance outcomes, such as number                  publication efforts must meet the
                                                 grantee programs to determine priorities                of housing units completed or number                  effective communications requirements
                                                 for the Department’s monitoring. Any                    of low- and moderate-income persons                   of 24 CFR 8.6 and other fair housing and
                                                 instances of fraud, waste, or abuse                     served; and the race and ethnicity of                 civil rights requirements, such as the
                                                 identified should be referred to the HUD                persons assisted under direct-benefit                 effective communication requirements
                                                 OIG Fraud Hotline (phone: 1–800–347–                    activities. For all housing and economic              under the Americans with Disabilities
                                                 3735 or email: hotline@hudoig.gov). No                  development activities, the address of                Act.
                                                 personally identifiable information shall               each CDBG–DR assisted property must                      Grantees are responsible for ensuring
                                                 be reported in DRGR.                                    be recorded in the QPR. Grantees must                 that all citizens have equal access to
                                                    d. Tracking program income in the                    not include such addresses in its public              information about the programs,
                                                 DRGR system. Grantees must use the                      QPR; when entering addresses in the                   including persons with disabilities and
                                                 DRGR system to draw grant funds for                     QPR, grantees must select ‘‘Not Visible               limited English proficiency (LEP). Each
                                                 each activity. Grantees must also use the               on PDF’’ to exclude them from the                     grantee must ensure that program
                                                 DRGR system to track program income                     report required to be posted on its                   information is available in the
                                                 receipts, disbursements, revolving loan                 website. The DRGR system will                         appropriate languages for the geographic
                                                 funds, and leveraged funds (if                          automatically display the amount of                   areas to be served and take appropriate
                                                 applicable). If a State permits local                   program income receipted, the amount                  steps to ensure effective
                                                 governments to retain program income,                   of program income reported as                         communications with persons with
                                                 or a State permits subrecipients to retain              disbursed, and the amount of grant                    disabilities pursuant to 24 CFR 8.6 and
                                                 program income prior to grant closeout,                 funds disbursed in the QPR. Grantees                  other fair housing and civil rights
                                                 the grantee must establish program                      must include a description of actions                 requirements, such as the effective
                                                 income accounts in the DRGR system.                     taken in that quarter to affirmatively                communication requirements under the
                                                 The DRGR system requires grantees to                    further fair housing, within the section              Americans with Disabilities Act. Since
                                                 use program income before drawing                       titled ‘‘Overall Progress Narrative’’ in              State grantees under this notice may
                                                 additional grant funds, and ensures that                the DRGR system.                                      make grants throughout the State,
                                                 program income retained by one                             4. Citizen participation waiver and
                                                                                                                                                               including to entitlement communities,
                                                 organization will not affect grant draw                 alternative requirement. To permit a
                                                                                                                                                               States should carefully evaluate the
                                                 requests for other organizations.                       more streamlined process, and ensure
                                                    e. DRGR system Quarterly                                                                                   needs of persons with disabilities and
                                                                                                         disaster recovery grants are awarded in
                                                 Performance Report (QPR). Each grantee                                                                        those with limited English proficiency.
                                                                                                         a timely manner, provisions of 42 U.S.C.
                                                 must submit a QPR through the DRGR                                                                            For assistance in ensuring that this
                                                                                                         5304(a)(2) and (3), 42 U.S.C. 12707, 24
                                                 system no later than 30 days following                                                                        information is available to LEP
                                                                                                         CFR 570.486, 24 CFR 1003.604, and 24
                                                 the end of each calendar quarter. Within                                                                      populations, recipients should consult
                                                                                                         CFR 91.115(b) and (c), with respect to
                                                 3 days of submission to HUD, each QPR                   citizen participation requirements, are               the Final Guidance to Federal Financial
                                                 must be posted on the grantee’s official                waived and replaced by the                            Assistance Recipients Regarding Title
                                                 website. In the event the QPR is rejected               requirements below. The streamlined                   VI, Prohibition Against National Origin
                                                 by HUD, the grantee must post the                       requirements do not mandate public                    Discrimination Affecting Limited
                                                 revised version, as approved by HUD,                    hearings but do require the grantee to                English Proficient Persons, published on
                                                 within 3 days of HUD approval. The                      provide a reasonable opportunity (at                  January 22, 2007, in the Federal
                                                 grantee’s first QPR is due after the first              least 14 days) for citizen comment and                Register (72 FR 2732) and at: https://
                                                 full calendar year quarter after HUD                    ongoing citizen access to information                 www.lep.gov/guidance/HUD_guidance_
                                                 signs the grant agreement. For example,                 about the use of grant funds. The                     Jan07.pdf.
                                                 a grant agreement signed in April                       streamlined citizen participation                        Subsequent to publication of the
                                                 requires a QPR to be submitted by                       requirements for a grant under this                   action plan, the grantee must provide a
                                                 October 30. QPRs must be submitted on                   notice are:                                           reasonable time frame (again, no less
                                                 a quarterly basis until all funds have                     a. Publication of the action plan,                 than 14 days) and method(s) (including
                                                 been expended and all expenditures and                  opportunity for public comment, and                   electronic submission) for receiving
                                                 accomplishments have been reported. If                  substantial amendment criteria. Before                comments on the plan or substantial
                                                 a satisfactory report is not submitted in               the grantee adopts the action plan for                amendment. In its action plan, each
                                                 a timely manner, HUD may suspend                        this grant or any substantial amendment               grantee must specify criteria for
                                                 access to CDBG–DR funds until a                         to the action plan, the grantee will                  determining what changes in the
                                                 satisfactory report is submitted, or may                publish the proposed plan or                          grantee’s plan constitute a substantial
                                                 withdraw and reallocate funding if HUD                  amendment. The manner of publication                  amendment to the plan. At a minimum,
                                                 determines, after notice and opportunity                must include prominent posting on the                 the following modifications will
                                                 for a hearing, that the jurisdiction did                grantee’s official website and must                   constitute a substantial amendment: A
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                                                 not submit a satisfactory report.                       afford citizens, affected local                       change in program benefit or eligibility
                                                    Each QPR will include information                    governments, and other interested                     criteria; the addition or deletion of an
                                                 about the uses of funds in activities                   parties a reasonable opportunity to                   activity; or the allocation or reallocation
                                                 identified in the DRGR action plan                      examine the plan or amendment’s                       of a monetary threshold specified by the
                                                 during the applicable quarter. This                     contents. The topic of disaster recovery              grantee in its action plan. The grantee
                                                 includes, but is not limited to, the                    should be navigable by citizens from the              may substantially amend the action plan
                                                 project name, activity, location, and                   grantee’s (or relevant agency’s)                      if it follows the same procedures
                                                 national objective; funds budgeted,                     homepage. Grantees are also encouraged                required in this notice for the


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                                                 5854                           Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 28 / Friday, February 9, 2018 / Notices

                                                 preparation and submission of an action                 paragraph A.1.b in section VI of this                 assistance through a local government
                                                 plan for disaster recovery.                             notice.                                               that is an entitlement grantee.
                                                    b. Nonsubstantial amendment. The                        g. Citizen complaints. The grantee                    6. Consolidated Plan waiver. HUD is
                                                 grantee must notify HUD, but is not                     will provide a timely written response                temporarily waiving the requirement for
                                                 required to seek public comment, when                   to every citizen complaint. The response              consistency with the consolidated plan
                                                 it makes any plan amendment that is                     must be provided within 15 working                    (requirements at 42 U.S.C. 12706, 24
                                                 not substantial. HUD must be notified at                days of the receipt of the complaint.                 CFR 91.325(a)(5) and 91.225(a)(5)),
                                                 least 5 business days before the                        Complaints regarding fraud, waste, or                 because the effects of a major disaster
                                                 amendment becomes effective.                            abuse of government funds should be                   alter a grantee’s priorities for meeting
                                                 However, every amendment to the                         forwarded to the HUD OIG Fraud                        housing, employment, and
                                                 action plan (substantial and                            Hotline (phone: 1–800–347–3735 or                     infrastructure needs. In conjunction, 42
                                                 nonsubstantial) must be numbered                        email: hotline@hudoig.gov).                           U.S.C. 5304(e), to the extent that it
                                                 sequentially and posted on the grantee’s                   5. Direct grant administration and                 would require HUD to annually review
                                                 website. The Department will                            means of carrying out eligible                        grantee performance under the
                                                 acknowledge receipt of the notification                 activities—applicable to State grantees               consistency criteria, is also waived.
                                                 of nonsubstantial amendments via email                  only. Requirements at 42 U.S.C. 5306(d)               However, this waiver applies only until
                                                 within 5 business days.                                 are waived to the extent necessary to                 the grantee submits its next full (3–5
                                                    c. Consideration of public comments.                 allow a State to use its disaster recovery            year) consolidated plan, or for 24
                                                 The grantee must consider all                           grant allocation directly to carry out                months after the effective date of this
                                                 comments, received orally or in writing,                State-administered activities eligible                notice, whichever is sooner. If the
                                                 on the action plan or any substantial                   under this notice, rather than distribute             grantee is not scheduled to submit a
                                                 amendment. A summary of these                           all funds to local governments. Pursuant              new 3–5 year consolidated plan within
                                                 comments or views, and the grantee’s                    to this waiver, the standard at 24 CFR                the next 2 years, HUD expects each
                                                                                                         570.480(c) and the provisions at 42                   grantee to update its existing 3–5 year
                                                 response to each must be submitted to
                                                                                                         U.S.C. 5304(e)(2) will also include                   consolidated plan to reflect disaster-
                                                 HUD with the action plan or substantial
                                                                                                         activities that the State carries out                 related needs no later than 24 months
                                                 amendment.
                                                                                                         directly. Activities eligible under this              after the effective date of this notice.
                                                    d. Availability and accessibility of the
                                                                                                         notice may be carried out by the State,               Additionally, grantees are encouraged to
                                                 Action Plan. The grantee must make the
                                                                                                         subject to State law and consistent with              incorporate disaster-recovery needs into
                                                 action plan, any substantial                            the requirement of 24 CFR 570.200(f),                 their consolidated plan updates as soon
                                                 amendments, and all performance                         through its employees, through                        as practicable, but any unmet disaster-
                                                 reports available to the public on its                  procurement contracts, or through                     related needs and associated priorities
                                                 website and on request. In addition, the                assistance provided under agreements                  must be incorporated into the grantee’s
                                                 grantee must make these documents                       with subrecipients. State grantees                    next consolidated plan update no later
                                                 available in a form accessible to persons               continue to be responsible for civil                  than its Fiscal Year 2020 update. HUD
                                                 with disabilities and those with limited                rights, labor standards, and                          has issued guidance for incorporating
                                                 English proficiency. During the term of                 environmental protection requirements,                CDBG–DR funds into consolidated plans
                                                 the grant, the grantee will provide                     for compliance with 24 CFR 570.489(g)                 via HUD’s eCon Planning Suite. This
                                                 citizens, affected local governments, and               and (h) relating to conflicts of interest             guidance is on the HUD Exchange at:
                                                 other interested parties with reasonable                and for compliance with 24 CFR                        https://www.hudexchange.info/
                                                 and timely access to information and                    570.489(m) relating to monitoring and                 resource/4400/updating-the-
                                                 records relating to the action plan and                 management of subrecipients.                          consolidated-plan-to-reflect-disaster-
                                                 to the grantee’s use of grant funds.                       A State grantee may also carry out                 recovery-needs-and-associated-
                                                    e. Public website. The grantee must                  activities in tribal areas. The State                 priorities/. This waiver does not affect
                                                 maintain a public website that provides                 should coordinate with the Indian tribe               the current applicability of HUD’s July
                                                 information accounting for how all grant                with jurisdiction over the tribal area                16, 2015, final rule on Affirmatively
                                                 funds are used and managed/                             when providing CDBG–DR assistance to                  Furthering Fair Housing (80 FR 42272)
                                                 administered, including links to all                    beneficiaries in tribal areas. State                  to grantees.
                                                 action plans, action plan amendments,                   grantees carrying out projects in tribal                 7. Requirement for consultation
                                                 CDBG–DR program policies and                            areas, either directly or through its                 during plan preparation. Currently, the
                                                 procedures, performance reports, citizen                employees, through procurement                        HCD Act and regulations require State
                                                 participation requirements, and activity/               contracts, or through assistance                      grantees to consult with affected local
                                                 program information for activities                      provided under agreements with                        governments in nonentitlement areas of
                                                 described in its action plan, including                 subrecipients, must obtain the consent                the State in determining the State’s
                                                 details of all contracts and ongoing                    of the Indian tribe with jurisdiction over            proposed method of distribution. HUD
                                                 procurement policies. To meet this                      the tribal area to allow the State to carry           is waiving 42 U.S.C. 5306(d)(2)(C)(iv),
                                                 requirement, each grantee must have a                   out or to fund CDBG–DR projects in the                42 U.S.C. 5306(d)(2)(D), 24 CFR
                                                 separate page dedicated to disaster                     area. Indian tribes that receive CDBG–                91.325(b)(2), and 24 CFR 91.110, and
                                                 recovery that includes the information                  DR funding from a State grantee must                  instituting the alternative requirement
                                                 described at paragraph A.27 of section                  comply with the Title II of the Civil                 that States receiving an allocation under
                                                 VI of this notice.                                      Rights Act of 1968 (25 U.S.C. 1301 et                 this notice consult with all disaster-
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                                                    f. Application status. The grantee                   seq.) (Indian Civil Rights Act).                      affected local governments (including
                                                 must provide multiple methods of                           For activities carried out by entities             any CDBG entitlement grantees), Indian
                                                 communication, such as websites, toll-                  eligible under section 105(a)(15) of the              tribes, and any local public housing
                                                 free numbers, or other means that                       HCD Act, such entities will be subject                authorities in determining the use of
                                                 provide applicants for recovery                         to the description of a nonprofit under               funds. This ensures that State grantees
                                                 assistance with timely information to                   that section rather than the description              sufficiently assess the recovery needs of
                                                 determine the status of their                           located in 24 CFR 570.204, even in a                  all areas affected by the disaster.
                                                 application, as provided for in                         case in which the entity is receiving                 Additional guidance on consultation


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                                                                                Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 28 / Friday, February 9, 2018 / Notices                                           5855

                                                 with local stakeholders can be found in                 objective of the CDBG program,                           b. General administration cap. For all
                                                 the National Disaster Recovery                          including the national objective of                   grantees under this notice, the CDBG
                                                 Framework and its discussion of pre-                    benefiting low- and moderate-income                   program administration requirements
                                                 and post-disaster planning, at: https://                persons. Grantees may meet this                       must be modified to be consistent with
                                                 www.fema.gov/national-disaster-                         national objective on an area basis,                  the Appropriations Act. Accordingly, 5
                                                 recovery-framework.                                     through an activity which is available to             percent of the grant (plus program
                                                    Grantees must consult with States,                   benefit all the residents of an area where            income) may be used for administrative
                                                 Indian tribes, local governments,                       at least 51 percent of the residents are              costs by the grantee, units of general
                                                 Federal partners, nongovernmental                       low- and moderate income. In some                     local government, or by subrecipients.
                                                 organizations, the private sector, and                  cases, HUD permits an exception to the                Thus, the total of all costs classified as
                                                 other stakeholders and affected parties                 low- and moderate-income area benefit                 administrative for any grantee under
                                                 in the surrounding geographic area to                   requirement that an area contain at least             this notice must be less than or equal to
                                                 ensure consistency of the action plan                   51 percent low- and moderate-income                   the 5 percent cap.
                                                 with applicable regional redevelopment                  residents. This exception applies to                     (1) Combined technical assistance
                                                 plans. Grantees are encouraged to                       entitlement communities that have few,                and administrative expenditures cap for
                                                 establish a recovery task force with                    if any, areas within their jurisdiction               States only. The provisions of 42 U.S.C.
                                                 representative members of each sector to                that have 51 percent or more low- and                 5306(d) and 24 CFR 570.489(a)(1)(i) and
                                                 advise on how recovery activities can                   moderate-income residents. These                      (iii) will not apply to the extent that
                                                 best contribute towards the goals of                    communities are allowed to use a                      they cap administration and technical
                                                 regional redevelopment plans.                           percentage less than 51 percent to                    assistance expenditures, limit a State’s
                                                    8. Overall benefit requirement. The                  qualify activities under the low- and                 ability to charge a nominal application
                                                 primary objective of the HCD Act is the                 moderate-income area benefit category.                fee for grant applications for activities
                                                 ‘‘development of viable urban                           This exception is referred to as the                  the State carries out directly, and
                                                 communities, by providing decent                        ‘‘exception criteria’’ or the ‘‘upper                 require a dollar-for-dollar match of State
                                                 housing and a suitable living                           quartile.’’ A grantee qualifies for this              funds for administrative costs exceeding
                                                 environment and expanding economic                      exception when fewer than one quarter                 $100,000. 42 U.S.C. 5306(d)(5) and (6)
                                                 opportunities, principally for persons of               of the populated-block groups in its                  are waived and replaced with the
                                                 low and moderate income’’ (42 U.S.C.                    jurisdictions contain 51 percent or more              alternative requirement that the
                                                 5301(c)). To carry out this objective, the              low- and moderate-income persons. In                  aggregate total for administrative and
                                                 statute requires that not less than 70                  such a community, activities must serve               technical assistance expenditures must
                                                 percent of the aggregate of CDBG                        an area that contains a percentage of                 not exceed 5 percent of the grant plus
                                                 program funds be used to support                        low- and moderate-income residents                    program income. Under this alternative
                                                 activities benefitting low- and moderate-               that is within the upper quartile of all              requirement, a State is limited to
                                                 income persons. The 70 percent overall                  census-block groups within its                        spending a maximum of 15 percent of
                                                 benefit requirement shall remain in                     jurisdiction in terms of the degree of                its total grant amount on planning costs.
                                                 effect for this allocation, unless waived               concentration of low- and moderate-                   Planning costs subject to the 15 percent
                                                 pursuant to a request by an individual                  income residents. HUD assesses each                   cap are those defined in 42 U.S.C.
                                                 grantee to authorize a lower overall                    grantee’s census-block groups to                      5305(a)(12).
                                                 benefit for its CDBG–DR grant based on                  determine whether a grantee qualifies to                 11. Planning-only activities-
                                                 a determination by HUD of compelling                    use this exception and identifies the                 applicable to State grantees only. The
                                                 need for the reduction.                                 alternative percentage the grantee may                State CDBG program requires that local
                                                    A grantee may seek to reduce the                     use instead of 51 percent for the                     government grant subrecipients for
                                                 overall benefit requirement below 70                    purpose of qualifying activities under                planning-only grants must document
                                                 percent of the total grant, but must                    the low- and moderate-income area                     that the use of funds meets a national
                                                 submit a justification that, at a                       benefit. HUD determines the lowest                    objective. In the State CDBG program,
                                                 minimum: (a) Identifies the planned                     proportion a grantee may use to qualify               these planning grants are typically used
                                                 activities that meet the needs of its low-              an area for this purpose and advises the              for individual project plans. By contrast,
                                                 and moderate-income population; (b)                     grantee, accordingly. Disaster recovery               planning activities carried out by
                                                 describes proposed activity(ies) and/or                 grantees are required to use the most                 entitlement communities are more
                                                 program(s) that will be affected by the                 recent data available in implementing                 likely to include non-project-specific
                                                 alternative requirement, including their                the exception criteria (https://                      plans such as functional land-use plans,
                                                 proposed location(s) and role(s) in the                 www.hudexchange.info/programs/acs-                    master plans, historic preservation
                                                 grantee’s long-term disaster recovery                   low-mod-summary-data/acs-low-mod-                     plans, comprehensive plans, community
                                                 plan; (c) describes how the activities/                 summary-data-exception-grantees/).                    recovery plans, development of housing
                                                 programs identified in (b) prevent the                  The ‘‘exception criteria’’ apply to                   codes, zoning ordinances, and
                                                 grantee from meeting the 70 percent                     disaster recovery activities funded                   neighborhood plans. These plans may
                                                 requirement; and (d) demonstrates that                  pursuant to this notice in jurisdictions              guide long-term community
                                                 low- and moderate-income persons’                       covered by such criteria, including                   development efforts comprising
                                                 disaster-related needs have been                        jurisdictions that receive disaster                   multiple activities funded by multiple
                                                 sufficiently met and that the needs of                  recovery funds from a State.                          sources. In the CDBG Entitlement
                                                 non– low- and moderate-income                              10. Grant administration                           program, these more general planning
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                                                 persons or areas are disproportionately                 responsibilities and general                          activities are presumed to meet a
                                                 greater, and that the jurisdiction lacks                administration cap.                                   national objective under the
                                                 other resources to serve them.                             a. Grantee responsibilities. Each                  requirements at 24 CFR 570.208(d)(4).
                                                    9. Use of the ‘‘upper quartile’’ or                  grantee shall administer its award in                    The Department notes that almost all
                                                 ‘‘exception criteria’’ for low- and                     compliance with all applicable laws and               effective recoveries in the past have
                                                 moderate-income area benefit activities.                regulations and shall be financially                  relied on some form of area-wide or
                                                 Section 101(c) of the HCD Act requires                  accountable for the use of all funds                  comprehensive planning activity to
                                                 each funded activity to meet a national                 provided in this notice.                              guide overall redevelopment


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                                                 5856                           Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 28 / Friday, February 9, 2018 / Notices

                                                 independent of the ultimate source of                   activities that qualify under the criteria            funding in the action plan and/or DRGR
                                                 implementation funds. To assist State                   for that national objective. At least 70              system. For fair housing and equal
                                                 grantees, the Department is waiving the                 percent of the entire CDBG–DR grant                   opportunity (FHEO) purposes, as
                                                 requirements at 24 CFR 570.483(b)(5) or                 must be used for activities that benefit              applicable, such records shall include
                                                 (c)(3), which limit the circumstances                   low- and moderate-income persons.                     data on the racial, ethnic, and gender
                                                 under which the planning activity can                      13. Waiver and alternative                         characteristics of persons who are
                                                 meet a low- and moderate-income or                      requirement for distribution to CDBG                  applicants for, participants in, or
                                                 slum-and-blight national objective.                     metropolitan cities and urban counties-               beneficiaries of the program. All
                                                 Instead, States must comply with 24                     applicable to State grantees only. 42                 grantees must report FHEO data in the
                                                 CFR 570.208(d)(4) when funding                          U.S.C. 5302(a)(7) (definition of                      DRGR system at the activity level.
                                                 disaster recovery-assisted, planning-                   ‘‘nonentitlement area’’) and provisions                  17. Change of use of real property-
                                                 only grants, or directly administering                  of 24 CFR part 570, including 24 CFR                  applicable to State grantees only. This
                                                 planning activities that guide recovery                 570.480, are waived to permit a State to              alternative requirement conforms the
                                                 in accordance with the Appropriations                   distribute CDBG–DR funds to units of                  change of use of real property rule to the
                                                 Act. In addition, the types of planning                 local government and Indian tribes.                   waiver allowing a State to carry out
                                                 activities that States may fund or                         14. Use of subrecipients—applicable                activities directly. For purposes of this
                                                 undertake are expanded to be consistent                 to State grantees only. The State CDBG                program, all references to ‘‘unit of
                                                 with those of entitlement communities                   program rule does not make specific                   general local government’’ in 24 CFR
                                                 identified at 24 CFR 570.205. Plans                     provision for the treatment of entities               570.489(j), shall be read as ‘‘State, unit
                                                 should include an assessment of natural                 that the CDBG Entitlement program                     of general local government (UGLG) or
                                                 hazard risks, including anticipated                     calls ‘‘subrecipients.’’ The waiver                   State subrecipient.’’
                                                 effects of future extreme weather events                allowing the State to directly carry out                 18. Responsibility for review and
                                                 and other hazards. Additional resources                 activities creates a situation in which               handling of noncompliance-applicable
                                                 to assist in this process are available on              the State may use subrecipients to carry              to State grantees only. This change is in
                                                 the HUD exchange website: https://                      out activities in a manner similar to an              conformance with the waiver allowing
                                                 www.hudexchange.info/programs/cdbg-                     entitlement community. Therefore, for                 the State to carry out activities directly.
                                                 dr/resources/#natural-hazard-risk-and-                  States taking advantage of the waiver to              24 CFR 570.492 is waived and the
                                                 resilience-tools.                                       carry out activities directly, the                    following alternative requirement
                                                    12. Use of the urgent need national                  requirements at 24 CFR 570.502,                       applies for any State receiving a direct
                                                 objective. The CDBG certification                       570.503, and 570.500(c) apply.                        award under this notice: The State shall
                                                 requirements for documentation of                          15. Waiver and alternative                         make reviews and audits, including on-
                                                 urgent need, located at 24 CFR                          requirement for the U.S. Virgin Islands               site reviews of any subrecipients,
                                                 570.483(d), are waived for the grants                   to administer CDBG–DR funds pursuant                  designated public agencies, and local
                                                 under this notice and replaced with the                 to the regulatory and statutory                       governments, as may be necessary or
                                                 following alternative requirement. In the               requirements of the State CDBG                        appropriate to meet the requirements of
                                                 context of disaster recovery, the                       program. The provisions of 24 CFR part                section 104(e)(2) of the HCD Act, as
                                                 standard urgent need certification                      570 subpart F are waived to authorize                 amended, as modified by this notice. In
                                                 requirements may impede recovery.                       the U.S. Virgin Islands to administer a               the case of noncompliance with these
                                                 Since the Department only provides                      CDBG–DR allocation in accordance with                 requirements, the State shall take such
                                                 CDBG–DR awards to grantees with                         the regulatory and statutory provisions               actions as may be appropriate to prevent
                                                 documented disaster-related impacts                     governing the State CDBG program, as                  a continuance of the deficiency, mitigate
                                                 and each grantee is limited to spending                 modified by this notice. This includes                any adverse effects or consequences,
                                                 funds only for the benefit of areas that                the requirement that the aggregate total              and prevent a recurrence. The State
                                                 received a presidential disaster                        for administrative and technical                      shall establish remedies for
                                                 declaration as identified in Table 1 of                 assistance expenditures by the U.S.                   noncompliance by any designated
                                                 this notice, the following streamlined                  Virgin Islands must not exceed 5                      subrecipients, public agencies, or local
                                                 alternative requirement recognizes the                  percent of any CDBG–DR grant made                     governments. The State shall attend and
                                                 urgency in addressing serious threats to                pursuant to the Appropriations Act,                   require subrecipients to attend fraud
                                                 community welfare following a major                     plus program income.                                  related training provided by HUD OIG
                                                 disaster.                                                  16. Recordkeeping. When a State                    to assist in the proper management of
                                                    A grantee need not issue formal                      carries out activities directly, 24 CFR               CDBG–DR grant funds. Additional
                                                 certification statements to qualify an                  570.490(b) is waived and the following                information about this training will be
                                                 activity as meeting the urgent need                     alternative provision shall apply: the                posted on the HUD website.
                                                 national objective. Instead, it must                    State shall establish and maintain such                  19. Program income alternative
                                                 document how each program and/or                        records as may be necessary to facilitate             requirement. The Department is waiving
                                                 activity funded under the urgent need                   review and audit by HUD of the State’s                applicable program income rules at 42
                                                 national objective responds to a                        administration of CDBG–DR funds,                      U.S.C. 5304(j) and 24 CFR 570.489(e),
                                                 disaster-related impact. For each                       under 24 CFR 570.493. Consistent with                 570.500 and 570.504 only to the extent
                                                 activity that will meet an urgent need                  applicable statutes, regulations, waivers             necessary to provide additional
                                                 national objective, the grantee must                    and alternative requirements, and other               flexibility to State and local government
                                                 reference in its action plan needs                      Federal requirements, the content of                  as described below. The alternative
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                                                 assessment the type, scale, and location                records maintained by the State shall be              requirements provide guidance
                                                 of the disaster-related impacts that each               sufficient to: (1) Enable HUD to make                 regarding the use of program income
                                                 program and/or activity is addressing                   the applicable determinations described               received before and after grant close out
                                                 over the course of the applicable                       at 24 CFR 570.493; (2) make compliance                and address revolving loan funds.
                                                 deadline for the expenditure of                         determinations for activities carried out                a. Definition of program income.
                                                 obligated grant funds. Grantees are                     directly by the State; and (3) show how                  (1) For purposes of this notice,
                                                 advised to use the low- and moderate-                   activities funded are consistent with the             ‘‘program income’’ is defined as gross
                                                 income benefit national objective for all               descriptions of activities proposed for               income generated from the use of


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                                                                                Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 28 / Friday, February 9, 2018 / Notices                                           5857

                                                 CDBG–DR funds, except as provided in                    or Indian tribe that receives or will                 this type of revolving loan fund. Note
                                                 subparagraph (d) of this paragraph, and                 receive program income to retain the                  that no revolving fund established per
                                                 received by a State or a subrecipient of                program income, but are not required to               this notice shall be directly funded or
                                                 a State. When income is generated by an                 do so.                                                capitalized with CDBG–DR grant funds,
                                                 activity that is only partially assisted                   c. Program income—use, close out,                  pursuant to 24 CFR 570.489(f)(3).
                                                 with CDBG–DR funds, the income shall                    and transfer.                                            20. Reimbursement of disaster
                                                 be prorated to reflect the percentage of                   (1) Program income received (and                   recovery expenses. The provisions of 24
                                                 CDBG–DR funds used (e.g., a single loan                 retained, if applicable) before or after              CFR 570.489(b) are applied to permit a
                                                 supported by CDBG–DR funds and other                    close out of the grant that generated the             State grantee to charge to the grant
                                                 funds; a single parcel of land purchased                program income, and used to continue                  otherwise allowable costs incurred by
                                                 with CDBG funds and other funds).                       disaster recovery activities, is treated as           itself, its recipients or subrecipients
                                                 Program income includes, but is not                     additional CDBG–DR funds subject to                   (including public housing authorities
                                                 limited to, the following:                              the requirements of this notice and must              (PHAs)) on or after the incident date of
                                                    (a) Proceeds from the disposition by                 be used in accordance with the grantee’s              the covered disaster. A local
                                                 sale or long-term lease of real property                action plan for disaster recovery. To the             government grantee is subject to the
                                                 purchased or improved with CDBG–DR                      maximum extent feasible, program                      provisions of 24 CFR 570.200(h) but
                                                 funds.                                                  income shall be used or distributed                   may reimburse itself or its subrecipients
                                                    (b) Proceeds from the disposition of                 before additional withdrawals from the                for otherwise allowable costs incurred
                                                 equipment purchased with CDBG–DR                        U.S. Treasury are made, except as                     on or after the incident date of the
                                                 funds.                                                  provided in subparagraph d. of this                   covered disaster. Section
                                                    (c) Gross income from the use or                     paragraph.                                            570.200(h)(1)(i) will not apply to the
                                                 rental of real or personal property                        (2) In addition to the regulations                 extent that it requires pre-agreement
                                                 acquired by a State, local government,                  addressing program income found at 24                 activities to be included in a
                                                 or subrecipient thereof with CDBG–DR                    CFR 570.489(e) and 570.504, the                       consolidated plan. The Department
                                                 funds, less costs incidental to generation              following rules apply: A State grantee                expects a grantee to include all pre-
                                                 of the income (i.e., net income).                       may transfer program income to its                    agreement activities in its action plans.
                                                    (d) Net income from the use or rental                annual CDBG program before close out                     21. Reimbursement of pre-application
                                                 of real property owned by a State, local                of the grant that generated the program               costs of homeowners, businesses, and
                                                 government, or subrecipient thereof,                    income. In addition, a State grantee may              other qualifying entities. A grantee is
                                                 that was constructed or improved with                   transfer program income before close                  permitted to charge to grants the
                                                 CDBG–DR funds.                                          out to any annual CDBG-funded                         preaward and preapplication costs of
                                                    (e) Payments of principal and interest               activities carried out by a local                     homeowners, businesses, and other
                                                 on loans made using CDBG–DR funds.                      government within the State. Program                  qualifying entities for eligible costs it
                                                    (f) Proceeds from the sale of loans                  income received by a grantee after close              has incurred in response to an eligible
                                                 made with CDBG–DR funds.                                out of the grant that generated the                   disaster covered under this notice.
                                                    (g) Proceeds from the sale of                        program income, may also be                           However, a grantee may not charge such
                                                 obligations secured by loans made with                  transferred to a grantee’s annual CDBG                preaward or preapplication costs to
                                                 CDBG–DR funds.                                          award. In all cases, any program income               grants if the preaward or preapplication
                                                    (h) Interest earned on program income                received that is not used to continue the             action results in an adverse impact to
                                                 pending disposition of the income,                      disaster recovery activity will not be                the environment. Grantees receiving an
                                                 including interest earned on funds held                 subject to the waivers and alternative                allocation under this notice are also
                                                 in a revolving fund account.                            requirements of this notice. Rather,                  subject to HUD’s guidance on preaward
                                                    (i) Funds collected through special                  those funds will be subject to the State              expenses published in CPD Notice
                                                 assessments made against                                grantee’s regular CDBG program rules.                 2015–07, ‘‘Guidance for Charging Pre-
                                                 nonresidential properties and properties                   d. Revolving loan funds. State                     Application Costs of Homeowners,
                                                 owned and occupied by households not                    grantees and local governments may                    Businesses, and Other Qualifying
                                                 low- and moderate-income, where the                     establish revolving funds to carry out                Entities to CDBG Disaster Recovery
                                                 special assessments are used to recover                 specific, identified activities. A                    Grants,’’ as amended (https://
                                                 all or part of the CDBG–DR portion of                   revolving fund, for this purpose, is a                www.hud.gov/sites/documents/15-
                                                 a public improvement.                                   separate fund (with a set of accounts                 07CPDN.PDF). Grantees are required to
                                                    (j) Gross income paid to a State, local              that are independent of other program                 consult with the State Historic
                                                 government, or a subrecipient thereof,                  accounts) established to carry out                    Preservation Officer, Fish and Wildlife
                                                 from the ownership interest in a for-                   specific activities. These activities                 Service, and National Marine Fisheries
                                                 profit entity in which the income is in                 generate payments used to support                     Service, to obtain formal agreements for
                                                 return for the provision of CDBG–DR                     similar activities going forward. These               compliance with section 106 of the
                                                 assistance.                                             payments to the revolving fund are                    National Historic Preservation Act (54
                                                    (2) ‘‘Program income’’ does not                      program income and must be                            U.S.C. 306108) and section 7 of the
                                                 include the following:                                  substantially disbursed from the                      Endangered Species Act of 1973 (16
                                                    (a) The total amount of funds that is                revolving fund before additional grant                U.S.C. 1536) when designing a
                                                 less than $35,000 received in a single                  funds are drawn from the U.S. Treasury                reimbursement program. Grantees may
                                                 year and retained by a State, local                     for payments that could be funded from                not use CDBG–DR funds to provide
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                                                 government, or a subrecipient thereof.                  the revolving fund. Such program                      compensation to beneficiaries meaning
                                                    (b) Amounts generated by activities                  income is not required to be disbursed                that funds may not be provided to a
                                                 eligible under section 105(a)(15) of the                for nonrevolving fund activities.                     beneficiary based on the estimated or
                                                 HCD Act and carried out by an entity                       State grantees may also establish a                actual amount of loss from the declared
                                                 under the authority of section 105(a)(15)               revolving fund to distribute funds to                 disaster. Grantees may, however,
                                                 of the HCD Act.                                         local governments to carry out specific,              reimburse beneficiaries for pre-
                                                    b. Retention of program income. State                identified activities. The same                       application costs incurred by the
                                                 grantees may permit a local government                  requirements, outlined above, apply to                beneficiary for completing an eligible


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                                                 5858                           Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 28 / Friday, February 9, 2018 / Notices

                                                 activity, not for the amount of loss                    specialist responsible for its                        grantee’s replacement housing payment
                                                 incurred by the beneficiary.                            jurisdiction.                                         obligation to a displaced tenant by
                                                    22. Prohibition on forced mortgage                      HUD is waiving the section 104(d)                  offering rental housing through a tenant-
                                                 payoff. In some instances, a homeowner                  one-for-one replacement requirement for               based rental assistance (TBRA) housing
                                                 with an outstanding mortgage balance is                 lower-income dwelling units that are                  program subsidy (e.g., Section 8 rental
                                                 required, under the terms of their loan                 damaged by the disaster and not                       voucher or certificate), provided that
                                                 agreement, to repay the balance of the                  suitable for rehabilitation because it                comparable replacement dwellings are
                                                 mortgage loan prior to using assistance                 does not account for the large, sudden                made available to the tenant in
                                                 to rehabilitate or reconstruct their home.              changes that a major disaster may cause               accordance with 49 CFR 24.204(a)
                                                 CDBG–DR funds, however, may not be                      to the local housing stock, population,               where the owner is willing to
                                                 used for a forced mortgage payoff. The                  or economy. Further, the requirement                  participate in the TBRA program, and
                                                 ineligibility of a forced mortgage payoff               may discourage grantees from                          the period of authorized assistance is at
                                                 with CDBG–DR funds does not affect                      converting or demolishing disaster-                   least 42 months. Failure to grant this
                                                 HUD’s longstanding guidance that when                   damaged housing when excessive costs                  waiver would impede disaster recovery
                                                 other non-CDBG disaster assistance is                   would result from replacing all such                  whenever TBRA program subsidies are
                                                 taken by lenders for a forced mortgage                  units. Disaster-damaged housing                       available but funds for cash replacement
                                                 payoff, those funds are not considered                  structures that are not suitable for                  housing payments are limited and such
                                                 to be available to the homeowner and do                 rehabilitation can pose a threat to public            payments are required by the URA to be
                                                 not constitute a duplication of benefits                health and safety and to economic                     based on a 42-month term.
                                                 for the purpose of housing rehabilitation               revitalization. Grantees should reassess                 d. Arm’s length voluntary purchase.
                                                 or reconstruction.                                      post-disaster population and housing                  The requirements at 49 CFR
                                                    23. One-for-One Replacement                          needs to determine the appropriate type               24.101(b)(2)(i) and (ii) are waived to the
                                                 Housing, Relocation, and Real Property                  and amount of lower-income dwelling                   extent that they apply to an arm’s length
                                                 Acquisition Requirements. Activities                    units to rehabilitate and/or rebuild.                 voluntary purchase carried out by a
                                                                                                         Grantees should note that the                         person who uses funds allocated under
                                                 and projects undertaken with CDBG–DR
                                                                                                         demolition and/or disposition of PHA-                 this notice and does not have the power
                                                 funds are subject to the Uniform
                                                                                                         owned public housing units is covered                 of eminent domain, in connection with
                                                 Relocation Assistance and Real Property
                                                                                                         by section 18 of the United States                    the purchase and occupancy of a
                                                 Acquisition Policies Act of 1970, as
                                                                                                         Housing Act of 1937, as amended, and                  principal residence by that person.
                                                 amended, (42 U.S.C. 4601 et seq.)
                                                                                                         24 CFR part 970.                                      Given the often large-scale acquisition
                                                 (‘‘URA’’) and section 104(d) of the HCD                    b. Relocation assistance. The                      needs of grantees, this waiver is
                                                 Act (42 U.S.C. 5304(d))(Section 104(d)).                relocation assistance requirements at                 necessary to reduce burdensome
                                                 The implementing regulations for the                    section 104(d)(2)(A) of the HCD Act and               administrative requirements following a
                                                 URA are at 49 CFR part 24. The                          24 CFR 42.350 are waived to the extent                disaster. Grantees are reminded that
                                                 regulations for section 104(d) are at 24                that they differ from the requirements of             tenants occupying real property
                                                 CFR part 42, subpart C. For the purpose                 the URA and implementing regulations                  acquired through voluntary purchase
                                                 of promoting the availability of decent,                at 49 CFR part 24, as modified by this                may be eligible for relocation assistance.
                                                 safe, and sanitary housing, HUD is                      notice, for activities related to disaster               e. Optional relocation policies. The
                                                 waiving the following URA and section                   recovery. Without this waiver,                        regulation at 24 CFR 570.606(d) is
                                                 104(d) requirements with respect to the                 disparities exist in relocation assistance            waived to the extent that it requires
                                                 use of CDBG–DR funds allocated under                    associated with activities typically                  optional relocation policies to be
                                                 this notice:                                            funded by HUD and FEMA (e.g.,                         established at the grantee level. Unlike
                                                    a. Section 104(d) one for one                        buyouts and relocation). Both FEMA                    the regular CDBG program, States may
                                                 replacement. One-for-one replacement                    and CDBG funds are subject to the                     carry out disaster recovery activities
                                                 requirements at section 104(d)(2)(A)(i)                 requirements of the URA; however,                     directly or through subrecipients, but 24
                                                 and (ii) and (d)(3) of the HCD Act and                  CDBG funds are subject to section                     CFR 570.606(d) does not account for
                                                 24 CFR 42.375 are waived in connection                  104(d), while FEMA funds are not. The                 this distinction. This waiver makes clear
                                                 with funds allocated under this notice                  URA provides at 49 CFR 24.402(b) that                 that grantees receiving CDBG–DR funds
                                                 for lower-income dwelling units that are                a displaced person is eligible to receive             under this notice may establish optional
                                                 damaged by the disaster and not                         a rental assistance payment that is                   relocation policies or permit their
                                                 suitable for rehabilitation. The section                calculated to cover a period of 42                    subrecipients to establish separate
                                                 104(d) one-for-one replacement                          months. By contrast, section 104(d)                   optional relocation policies. This waiver
                                                 requirements generally apply to                         allows a lower-income displaced person                is intended to provide States with
                                                 demolished or converted occupied and                    to choose between the URA rental                      maximum flexibility in developing
                                                 vacant occupiable lower-income                          assistance payment and a rental                       optional relocation policies with CDBG–
                                                 dwelling units. This waiver exempts                     assistance payment calculated over a                  DR funds.
                                                 disaster-damaged units that meet the                    period of 60 months. This waiver of the                  f. Waiver of Section 414 of the
                                                 grantee’s definition of ‘‘not suitable for              section 104(d) relocation assistance                  Stafford Act. Section 414 of the Stafford
                                                 rehabilitation’’ from the one-for-one                   requirements assures uniform and                      Act (42 U.S.C. 5181) provides that
                                                 replacement requirements. Before                        equitable treatment by setting the URA                ‘‘Notwithstanding any other provision
                                                 carrying out activities that may be                     and its implementing regulations as the               of law, no person otherwise eligible for
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                                                 subject to the one-for-one replacement                  sole standard for relocation assistance               any kind of replacement housing
                                                 requirements, the grantee must define                   under this notice.                                    payment under the Uniform Relocation
                                                 ‘‘not suitable for rehabilitation’’ in its                 c. Tenant-based rental assistance. The             Assistance and Real Property
                                                 action plan or in policies/procedures                   requirements of sections 204 and 205 of               Acquisition Policies Act of 1970 (Pub. L.
                                                 governing these activities. A grantee                   the URA, and 49 CFR 24.2(a)(6)(vii),                  91–646) [42 U.S.C. 4601 et seq.]
                                                 with questions about the one-for-one                    24.2(a)(6)(ix), and 24.402(b) are waived              [‘‘URA’’] shall be denied such eligibility
                                                 replacement requirements is encouraged                  to the extent necessary to permit a                   as a result of his being unable, because
                                                 to contact the HUD regional relocation                  grantee to meet all or a portion of a                 of a major disaster as determined by the


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                                                                                Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 28 / Friday, February 9, 2018 / Notices                                            5859

                                                 President, to meet the occupancy                        State carries out activities directly.                the Secretary may, upon receipt of a
                                                 requirements set by [the URA]’’.                        Usually, a State distributes CDBG funds               Request for Release of Funds and
                                                 Accordingly, homeowner occupants and                    to local governments and takes on                     Certification, immediately approve the
                                                 tenants displaced from their homes as a                 HUD’s role in receiving environmental                 release of funds for an activity or project
                                                 result of the identified disaster and who               certifications from the grant recipients              assisted with allocations under this
                                                 would have otherwise been displaced as                  and approving releases of funds. For                  notice if the recipient has adopted an
                                                 a direct result of any acquisition,                     this grant, HUD will allow a State                    environmental review, approval, or
                                                 rehabilitation, or demolition of real                   grantee to also carry out activities                  permit under subparagraph b. above, or
                                                 property for a federally funded program                 directly, in addition to distributing                 the activity or project is categorically
                                                 or project may become eligible for a                    funds to subrecipients. Thus, per 24                  excluded from review under the
                                                 replacement housing payment                             CFR 58.4, when a State carries out                    National Environmental Policy Act of
                                                 notwithstanding their inability to meet                 activities directly, the State must submit            1969 (42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.).
                                                 occupancy requirements prescribed in                    the Certification and Request for Release                e. Historic preservation reviews. To
                                                 the URA. Section 414 of the Stafford Act                of Funds to HUD for approval.                         facilitate expedited historic preservation
                                                 (including its implementing regulation                     b. Adoption of another agency’s                    reviews under section 106 of the
                                                 at 49 CFR 24.403(d)(1)), is waived to the               environmental review. In accordance                   National Historic Preservation Act of
                                                 extent that it would apply to real                      with the Appropriations Act, grant                    1966 (54 U.S.C. Section 306108), HUD
                                                 property acquisition, rehabilitation or                 recipients of Federal funds that use such             strongly encourages grantees to allocate
                                                 demolition of real property for a CDBG–                 funds to supplement Federal assistance                general administration funds to retain a
                                                 DR funded project commencing more                       provided under sections 402, 403, 404,                qualified historic preservation
                                                 than one year after the Presidentially                  406, 407, or 502 of the Stafford Act may              professional, and support the capacity
                                                 declared disaster undertaken by the                     adopt, without review or public                       of the State Historic Preservation
                                                 grantees, or subrecipients, provided that               comment, any environmental review,                    Officer/Tribal Historic Preservation
                                                 the project was not planned, approved,                  approval, or permit performed by a                    Officer to review CDBG–DR projects.
                                                 or otherwise underway prior to the                      Federal agency, and such adoption shall               For more information on qualified
                                                 disaster. The Department has surveyed                   satisfy the responsibilities of the                   historic preservation professional
                                                 other federal agencies’ interpretation                  recipient with respect to such                        qualifications standards see https://
                                                 and implementation of Section 414 and                   environmental review, approval, or                    www.nps.gov/history/local-law/arch_
                                                 found varying views and strategies for                  permit that is required by the HCD Act.               stnds_9.htm.
                                                 long-term, post-disaster projects                       The grant recipient must notify HUD in                   f. Tiered environmental reviews. HUD
                                                 involving the acquisition, rehabilitation,              writing of its decision to adopt another              strongly encourages grantees as
                                                 or demolition of disaster-damaged                       agency’s environmental review. The                    Responsible Entities to develop a Tiered
                                                 housing. The Secretary has the authority                grant recipient must retain a copy of the             approach to streamline the
                                                 to waive provisions of the Stafford Act                 review in the grantee’s environmental                 environmental review process for single
                                                 and its implementing regulations that                   records.                                              family housing programs. Tiering, as
                                                 the Secretary administers in connection                    c. Unified Federal Review. Section                 defined in 40 CFR 1508.28, is a means
                                                 with the obligation of funds made                       1106 or the Sandy Recovery                            of making the environmental review
                                                 available by this notice, or the grantees’              Improvement Act (Div. B of Pub. L. 113–               process more efficient by allowing
                                                 use of these funds. The Department has                  2, enacted January 29, 3013) directed                 parties to ‘‘eliminate repetitive
                                                 determined that good cause exists for a                 the Administration to ‘‘establish an                  discussions of the same issues and to
                                                 waiver and that such waiver is not                      expedited and unified interagency                     focus on the actual issues ripe for
                                                 inconsistent with the overall purposes                  review process to ensure compliance                   decision at each level of environmental
                                                 of title I of the HCD Act.                              with environmental and historic                       review’’ (40 CFR 1502.20). Tiering is
                                                    (1) The waiver will simplify the                     requirements under Federal law relating               appropriate when a Responsible Entity
                                                 administration of the disaster recovery                 to disaster recovery projects, in order to            is evaluating a single-family housing
                                                 process and reduce the administrative                   expedite the recovery process,                        program with similar activities within a
                                                 burden associated with the                              consistent with applicable law.’’ The                 defined local geographic area and
                                                 implementation of Stafford Act Section                  process aims to coordinate                            timeframe (e.g., rehabilitating single-
                                                 414 requirements for projects                           environmental and historic preservation               family homes within a city district or
                                                 commencing more than one year after                     reviews to expedite planning and                      county over the course of 1 to 5 years)
                                                 the date of the Presidentially declared                 decision-making for disaster recovery                 but where the specific sites and
                                                 disaster considering the majority of such               projects. This can improve the Federal                activities are not yet known.
                                                 persons displaced by the disaster will                  Government’s assistance to States, local,                A tiered review consists of two stages:
                                                 have returned to their dwellings or                     and tribal governments; communities;                  A broad-level review and subsequent
                                                 found another place of permanent                        families; and individual citizens as they             site-specific reviews. The broad-level
                                                 residence.                                              recover from future Presidentially                    review should identify and evaluate the
                                                    (2) This waiver does not apply with                  declared disasters. Grantees receiving an             issues that can be fully addressed and
                                                 respect to persons that meet the                        allocation of funds under this notice are             resolved, notwithstanding possible
                                                 occupancy requirements to receive a                     encouraged to participate in this process             limited knowledge of the project. In
                                                 replacement housing payment under the                   as one means of expediting recovery.                  addition, it must establish the
                                                 URA nor does it apply to persons                        Tools for the unified interagency review              standards, constraints, and processes to
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                                                 displaced or relocated temporarily by                   process (UFR) process can be found                    be followed in the site-specific reviews.
                                                 other HUD-funded programs or projects.                  here: http://www.fema.gov/unified-                    An 8-Step Decision Making Process for
                                                 Such persons’ eligibility for relocation                federal-environmental-and-historic-                   Floodplains and Wetlands, including
                                                 assistance and payments under the URA                   preservation-review-presidentially-                   early and final public notices can be
                                                 is not impacted by this waiver.                         declared-disasters.                                   completed on a county-wide basis for
                                                    24. Environmental requirements.                         d. Release of funds. In accordance                 single-family housing programs funded
                                                    a. Clarifying note on the process for                with the Appropriations Act, and                      through CDBG–DR. As individual sites
                                                 environmental release of funds when a                   notwithstanding 42 U.S.C. 5304(g)(2),                 are selected for review, the site-specific


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                                                 5860                           Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 28 / Friday, February 9, 2018 / Notices

                                                 reviews evaluate the remaining issues                   organization from which the grantee                   the procurement summary, HUD has
                                                 based on the policies established in the                acquires good or services through a                   developed a template (the Contract
                                                 broad-level review. Together, the broad-                procurement process, consistent with                  Reporting Template). The template can
                                                 level review and all site-specific reviews              the procurement requirements in the                   be accessed at: https://
                                                 will collectively comprise a complete                   CDBG program regulations. HUD is                      www.hudexchange.info/cdbg-dr/cdbg-
                                                 environmental review addressing all                     establishing an additional alternative                dr-laws-regulations-and-federal-register-
                                                 required elements. Public notice and the                requirement for all contracts with                    notices/. Each grantee is required to use
                                                 Request for Release of Funds (HUD-                      contractors used to provide discrete                  this template and attach an updated
                                                 Form 7015.15) are processed at the                      services or deliverables only, as follows:            version to the DRGR system each
                                                 broad-level, eliminating the need for                      a. The grantee (or procuring entity) is            quarter as part of its QPR submissions.
                                                 publication at the site-specific level.                 required to clearly state the period of               Updated summaries must also be posted
                                                 However, funds cannot be spent or                       performance or date of completion in all              monthly on each grantee’s website.
                                                 committed on a specific site or activity                contracts;                                               28. Timely distribution of funds. The
                                                 until the site-specific review have been                   b. The grantee (or procuring entity)               Appropriations Act, as amended,
                                                 completed for the site.                                 must incorporate performance                          requires that funds provided under the
                                                    25. Duplication of benefits. Section                 requirements and liquidated damages                   Act be expended within two years of the
                                                 312 of the Stafford Act, as amended,                    into each procured contract. Contracts                date that HUD obligates funds to a
                                                 generally prohibits any person, business                that describe work performed by general               grantee and authorizes the Office of
                                                 concern, or other entity from receiving                 management consulting services need                   Management and Budget (OMB) to
                                                 financial assistance with respect to any                not adhere to this requirement; and                   provide a waiver of this requirement. In
                                                 part of a loss resulting from a major                      c. The grantee (or procuring entity)               the absence of a waiver for this
                                                 disaster for which such person, business                may contract for administrative support               requirement, each grantee is required to
                                                 concern, or other entity has received                   but may not delegate or contract to any               expend all obligated funds within two
                                                 financial assistance under any other                    other party any inherently governmental               years of HUD’s execution of the grant
                                                 program or from insurance or any other                  responsibilities related to management                agreement or amended grant agreement
                                                 source. To comply with Section 312,                     of the grant, such as oversight, policy               that obligates those funds. In addition,
                                                 each grantee must ensure that each                      development, monitoring, internal                     the provisions at 24 CFR 570.494 and 24
                                                 activity provides assistance to a person                auditing, and financial management.                   CFR 570.902 regarding timely
                                                 or entity only to the extent that the                   Technical assistance resources for                    distribution and expenditure of funds
                                                 person or entity has a disaster recovery                procurement are available to grantees                 are waived and an alternative
                                                 need that has not been fully met.                       either through HUD staff or through                   requirement established, providing that
                                                 Grantees are subject to the requirements                technical assistance providers engaged                each grantee must also expend 100
                                                 of a separate notice explaining the                     by HUD or a grantee.                                  percent of its allocation of CDBG–DR
                                                 duplication of benefit requirements,                       27. Public website. HUD is requiring               funds on eligible activities within 6
                                                 entitled ‘‘Clarification of Duplication of              each grantee to maintain a public                     years of HUD’s execution of the initial
                                                 Benefits Requirements Under the                         website that provides information                     grant agreement.
                                                 Stafford Act for Community                              accounting for how all grant funds are                   29. Review of continuing capacity to
                                                 Development Block Grant (CDBG)                          used and managed/administered. The                    carry out CDBG-funded activities in a
                                                 Disaster Recovery Grantees’’ (76 FR                     creation and maintenance of the public                timely manner. If HUD determines that
                                                 71060, published November 16, 2011).                    website is one component of the                       the grantee has not carried out its
                                                    26. Procurement. State grantees must                 Department’s certification of a grantee’s             CDBG–DR activities and certifications in
                                                 comply with the procurement                             proficient financial controls and                     accordance with the requirements in
                                                 requirements at 24 CFR 570.489(g) and                   procurement processes and adequate                    this notice, HUD will undertake a
                                                 evaluate the cost or price of the product               procedures for proper grants                          further review to determine whether or
                                                 or service. State grantees shall establish              management as provided in paragraph                   not the grantee has the continuing
                                                 requirements for procurement policies                   A.1.a of section VI. of this notice. To               capacity to carry out its activities in a
                                                 and procedures for local governments                    meet this requirement, each grantee                   timely manner. In making the
                                                 and subrecipients based on full and                     must make the following items available               determination, the Department will
                                                 open competition consistent with the                    on its website: The action plan                       consider the nature and extent of the
                                                 requirements of 24 CFR 570.489(g), and                  (including all amendments); the current               recipient’s performance deficiencies,
                                                 shall require an evaluation of the cost or              approved DRGR action plan; each QPR                   types of corrective actions the recipient
                                                 price of the product or service.                        (as created using the DRGR system);                   has undertaken, and the success or
                                                 Additionally, if the State agency                       citizen participation requirements;                   likely success of such actions, and apply
                                                 designated as the administering agency                  procurement policies and procedures;                  the corrective and remedial actions
                                                 chooses to provide funding to another                   description of services or goods                      specified in paragraph A.30 (below) of
                                                 State agency, the administering agency                  currently being procured by the grantee;              section VI of this notice.
                                                 may specify in its procurement policies                 a copy of contracts the grantee has                      30. Corrective and remedial actions.
                                                 and procedures whether the agency                       procured directly; and a summary of all               To ensure compliance with the
                                                 implementing the program must follow                    procured contracts, including those                   requirements of the Appropriations Act
                                                 the procurement policies and                            procured by the grantee, recipients, or               and to effectively administer the CDBG–
                                                 procedures that the administering                       subrecipients (e.g., a summary list of                DR program in a manner that facilitates
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                                                 agency is subject to, or whether the                    procurements, the phase of the                        recovery, particularly the alternative
                                                 agency must follow the same policies                    procurement, requirements for                         requirements permitting States to act
                                                 and procedures to which other local                     proposals, and any liquidation of                     directly to carry out eligible activities,
                                                 governments and subrecipients are                       damages associated with a contractor’s                HUD is waiving 42 U.S.C. 5304(e) to the
                                                 subject.                                                failure or inability to implement the                 extent necessary to establish the
                                                    HUD may request periodic updates                     contract, etc.). The grantee should post              following alternative requirement: HUD
                                                 from any grantee that uses contractors.                 only contracts as defined in 2 CFR                    may undertake corrective and remedial
                                                 A contractor is a third-party person or                 200.22. To assist grantees in preparing               actions for States in accordance with the


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                                                                                Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 28 / Friday, February 9, 2018 / Notices                                           5861

                                                 authorities applicable to entitlement                   improvement’’ shall be as defined in 44               also implement measures recommended
                                                 grantees in subpart O (including                        CFR 59.1 unless otherwise noted.                      in a Physical Condition Assessment
                                                 corrective and remedial actions in 24                      a. Green Building Standard for                     (PCA) or Green Physical Needs
                                                 CFR 570.910, 570.911, and 570.913) or                   Replacement and New Construction of                   Assessment (GPNA).
                                                 under subpart I of the CDBG regulations                 Residential Housing. Grantees must                       d. Implementation of green building
                                                 at 24 CFR part 570. In response to a                    meet the Green Building Standard in                   standards. (i) For construction projects
                                                 deficiency, HUD may issue a warning                     this subparagraph for: (i) All new                    completed, underway, or under contract
                                                 letter followed by a corrective action                  construction of residential buildings                 prior to the date that assistance is
                                                 plan that may include a management                      and (ii) all replacement of substantially             approved for the project, the grantee is
                                                 plan which assigns responsibility for                   damaged residential buildings.                        encouraged to apply the applicable
                                                 further administration of the grant to                  Replacement of residential buildings                  standards to the extent feasible, but the
                                                 specific entities or persons. Failure to                may include reconstruction (i.e.,                     Green Building Standard is not
                                                 comply with a corrective action may                     demolishing and rebuilding a housing                  required. (ii) For specific required
                                                 result in the termination, reduction or                 unit on the same lot in substantially the             equipment or materials for which an
                                                 limitation of payments to grantees                      same manner) and may include changes                  ENERGY STAR- or WaterSense-labeled
                                                 receiving funds under this notice.                      to structural elements such as flooring               or FEMP-designated product does not
                                                    31. Reduction, withdrawal, or                        systems, columns, or load bearing                     exist, the requirement to use such
                                                 adjustment of a grant, or other                         interior or exterior walls.                           products does not apply.
                                                 appropriate action. Prior to a reduction,                  b. Meaning of Green Building                          e. Elevation standards for new
                                                 withdrawal, or adjustment of a CDBG–                    Standard. For purposes of this notice,                construction, repair of substantial
                                                 DR grant, or other actions taken                        the Green Building Standard means the                 damage, or substantial improvement.
                                                 pursuant to this section, the recipient                 grantee will require that all construction            The following elevation standards apply
                                                 shall be notified of the proposed action                covered by subparagraph a, above, meet                to new construction, repair of
                                                                                                         an industry-recognized standard that                  substantial damage, or substantial
                                                 and be given an opportunity for an
                                                                                                         has achieved certification under at least             improvement of structures located in an
                                                 informal consultation. Consistent with
                                                                                                         one of the following programs: (i)                    area delineated as a flood hazard area or
                                                 the procedures described in this notice,
                                                                                                         ENERGY STAR (Certified Homes or                       equivalent in FEMA’s data source
                                                 the Department may adjust, reduce, or
                                                                                                         Multifamily High-Rise), (ii) Enterprise               identified in 24 CFR 55.2(b)(1). All
                                                 withdraw the CDBG–DR grant or take
                                                                                                         Green Communities, (iii) LEED (New                    structures, defined at 44 CFR 59.1,
                                                 other actions as appropriate, except for
                                                                                                         Construction, Homes, Midrise, Existing                designed principally for residential use
                                                 funds that have been expended for
                                                                                                         Buildings Operations and Maintenance,                 and located in the 100-year (or 1 percent
                                                 eligible, approved activities.
                                                                                                         or Neighborhood Development), (iv)                    annual chance) floodplain that receive
                                                 B. Housing and Related Floodplain                       ICC–700 National Green Building                       assistance for new construction, repair
                                                 Issues                                                  Standard, (v) EPA Indoor AirPlus                      of substantial damage, or substantial
                                                                                                         (ENERGY STAR a prerequisite), or (vi)                 improvement, as defined at 24 CFR
                                                    32. Housing-related eligibility waivers.             any other equivalent comprehensive                    55.2(b)(10), must be elevated with the
                                                 The broadening of eligible activities                   green building program acceptable to                  lowest floor, including the basement, at
                                                 under the HCD Act is necessary                          HUD. Grantees must identify which                     least two feet above the base flood
                                                 following major disasters in which large                Green Building Standard will be used in               elevation. Mixed-use structures with no
                                                 numbers of affordable housing units                     the program policies and procedures.                  dwelling units and no residents below
                                                 have been damaged or destroyed, as is                      c. Standards for rehabilitation of                 two feet above base flood elevation,
                                                 the case of the disasters eligible under                nonsubstantially damaged residential                  must be elevated or floodproofed, in
                                                 this notice.                                            buildings. For rehabilitation other than              accordance with FEMA floodproofing
                                                    Therefore, 42 U.S.C. 5305(a)(24)(A)                  that described in subparagraph a, above,              standards at 44 CFR 60.3(c)(3)(ii) or
                                                 and (D) is waived to the extent                         grantees must follow the guidelines                   successor standard, up to at least two
                                                 necessary to allow: (1) Homeownership                   specified in the HUD CPD Green                        feet above base flood elevation. Please
                                                 assistance for households earning up to                 Building Retrofit Checklist, available at             note that grantees should review the
                                                 120 percent of the area median income;                  https://www.hudexchange.info/                         UFAS accessibility checklist available at
                                                 and (2) down payment assistance for up                  resource/3684/guidance-on-the-cpd-                    https://www.hudexchange.info/
                                                 to 100 percent of the down payment.                     green-building-checklist/. Grantees must              resource/796/ufas-accessibility-
                                                 While homeownership assistance may                      apply these guidelines to the extent                  checklist/ and the HUD Deeming Notice,
                                                 be provided to households earning up to                 applicable to the rehabilitation work                 79 FR 29671 (May 23, 2014) to ensure
                                                 120 percent of the area median income,                  undertaken, including the use of mold                 that these structures comply with
                                                 only those funds used for households                    resistant products when replacing                     accessibility requirements.
                                                 with up to 80 percent of the area median                surfaces such as drywall. When older or                  All Critical Actions, as defined at 24
                                                 income may qualify as meeting the low-                  obsolete products are replaced as part of             CFR 55.2(b)(3), within the 500-year (or
                                                 and moderate-income person benefit                      the rehabilitation work, rehabilitation is            0.2 percent annual chance) floodplain
                                                 national objective.                                     required to use ENERGY STAR-labeled,                  must be elevated or floodproofed (in
                                                    In addition, 42 U.S.C. 5305(a) and 24                WaterSense-labeled, or Federal Energy                 accordance with the FEMA standards)
                                                 CFR 570.207(b)(3) is waived and                         Management Program (FEMP)-                            to the higher of the 500-year floodplain
                                                 alternative requirements adopted to the                 designated products and appliances. For               elevation or three feet above the 100-
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                                                 extent necessary to permit new housing                  example, if the furnace, air conditioner,             year floodplain elevation. If the 500-year
                                                 construction, and to require the                        windows, and appliances are replaced,                 floodplain is unavailable, and the
                                                 following construction standards on                     the replacements must be ENERGY                       Critical Action is in the 100-year
                                                 structures constructed or rehabilitated                 STAR-labeled or FEMP-designated                       floodplain, then the structure must be
                                                 with CDBG–DR funds as part of                           products; WaterSense-labeled products                 elevated or floodproofed at least three
                                                 activities eligible under 42 U.S.C.                     (e.g., faucets, toilets, showerheads) must            feet above the 100-year floodplain
                                                 5305(a). All references to ‘‘substantial                be used when water products are                       elevation. Critical Actions are defined as
                                                 damage’’ and ‘‘substantial                              replaced. Rehabilitated housing may                   an ‘‘activity for which even a slight


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                                                 5862                           Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 28 / Friday, February 9, 2018 / Notices

                                                 chance of flooding would be too great,                  disastersafety.org/fortified/fortified-               to a buyout payment) for households
                                                 because such flooding might result in                   home/.                                                that volunteer to relocate outside of
                                                 loss of life, injury to persons or damage                  33. Addressing Unmet Public Housing                floodplain or to a lower-risk area.
                                                 to property.’’ For example, Critical                    Needs. The grantee must identify in its                  Therefore, 42 U.S.C. 5305(a) and
                                                 Actions include hospitals, nursing                      action plan how it will address the                   associated regulations are waived to the
                                                 homes, police stations, fire stations and               rehabilitation, mitigation, and new                   extent necessary to allow the provision
                                                 principal utility lines.                                construction needs of each disaster-                  of housing incentives. These grantees
                                                    Applicable State, local, and tribal                  impacted PHA within its jurisdiction, if              must maintain documentation, at least
                                                 codes and standards for floodplain                      applicable. The grantee must work                     at a programmatic level, describing how
                                                 management that exceed these                            directly with impacted PHAs in                        the amount of assistance was
                                                 requirements, including elevation,                      identifying necessary and reasonable                  determined to be necessary and
                                                 setbacks, and cumulative substantial                    costs and ensure that adequate funding                reasonable, and the incentives must be
                                                 damage requirements, must be followed.                  from all available sources, including                 in accordance with the grantee’s
                                                    f. Broadband infrastructure in                       CDBG–DR grant funds, are dedicated to                 approved action plan and published
                                                 housing. Any substantial rehabilitation,                addressing the unmet needs of damaged                 program design(s). This waiver does not
                                                 as defined by 24 CFR 5.100, or new                      public housing (e.g., FEMA, insurance,                permit a compensation program.
                                                 construction of a building with more                    and funds available from programs                     Additionally, a grantee may require the
                                                 than four rental units must include                     administered by HUD’s Office of Public                housing incentive to be used for a
                                                 installation of broadband infrastructure,               and Indian Housing). In the                           particular purpose by the household
                                                 except where the grantee documents                      rehabilitation, reconstruction and                    receiving the assistance.
                                                                                                         replacement of public housing provided                   In undertaking a larger scale
                                                 that: (a) The location of the new
                                                                                                         for in the action plan pursuant to                    migration or relocation recovery effort
                                                 construction or substantial
                                                                                                         paragraph A.2.a.3 of section VI of this               that is intended to move households out
                                                 rehabilitation makes installation of
                                                                                                         notice, each grantee must identify                    of high-risk areas, the grantee should
                                                 broadband infrastructure infeasible; (b)
                                                                                                         funding to specifically address the                   consider how it can protect and sustain
                                                 the cost of installing broadband
                                                                                                         unmet needs described in this                         the impacted community and its assets.
                                                 infrastructure would result in a
                                                                                                         subparagraph.                                         Grantees must also weigh the benefits
                                                 fundamental alteration in the nature of                                                                       and costs, including anticipated
                                                                                                            34. Addressing Unmet Affordable
                                                 its program or activity or in an undue                  Rental Housing Needs. The grantee must                insurance costs, of redeveloping high-
                                                 financial burden; or (c) the structure of               identify in its action plan how it will               risk areas that were impacted by a
                                                 the housing to be substantially                         address the rehabilitation,                           disaster. Accordingly, grantees are
                                                 rehabilitated makes installation of                     reconstruction, replacement, and new                  prohibited from offering incentives to
                                                 broadband infrastructure infeasible.                    construction rental housing that is                   return households to disaster-impacted
                                                    g. Resilient Home Construction                       affordable to low- and moderate-income                floodplains, unless the grantee can
                                                 Standard. Grantees are strongly                         households in the most impacted and                   demonstrate to HUD how it will resettle
                                                 encouraged to incorporate a Resilient                   distressed areas and ensure that                      such areas in a way that mitigates the
                                                 Home Construction Standard, meaning                     adequate funding from all available                   risks of future disasters and increasing
                                                 that all construction covered by                        sources, including CDBG–DR grant                      insurance costs resulting from
                                                 subparagraph (a) meet an industry-                      funds, are dedicated to addressing the                continued occupation of high-risk areas,
                                                 recognized standard such as those set by                unmet needs identified in its action                  through mechanisms that can reduce
                                                 the FORTIFIED HomeTM Gold level for                     plan pursuant to paragraph A.2.a.3 of                 risks and insurance costs, such as new
                                                 new construction of single-family,                      section VI of this notice. To meet the                land use development plans, building
                                                 detached homes; and FORTIFIED                           low-moderate housing national                         codes or construction requirements,
                                                 HomeTM Silver level for reconstruction                  objective, affordable rental housing                  protective infrastructure development,
                                                 of the roof, windows and doors; or                      funded under this notice must be rented               or through restrictions on future disaster
                                                 FORTIFIED HomeTM Bronze level for                       to a low- and moderate-income person                  assistance to such properties.
                                                 repair or reconstruction of the roof; or                at affordable rents. The grantee must                    When undertaking housing incentive
                                                 any other equivalent comprehensive                      impose a minimum affordability period                 activities, to demonstrate that an
                                                 resilient or disaster resistant building                of twenty (20) years enforced with                    incentive meets the low- and moderate-
                                                 program. Further, grantees are strongly                 recorded use restrictions or other                    income housing national objective,
                                                 encouraged to meet the FORTIFIED                        mechanisms to ensure that rental                      grantees must meet all requirements of
                                                 HomeTM Bronze level standard for roof                   housing remains affordable for the                    the HCD Act and the criteria for the
                                                 repair or reconstruction, for all                       required period of time. The action plan              Low/Mod Housing Incentive (LMHI)
                                                 construction covered under                              must, at a minimum, provide (1) a                     national objectives for the use of
                                                 subparagraph B.32.c. FORTIFIED                          definition of ‘‘affordable rents’’; (2) the           housing incentives as described in
                                                 HomeTM is a risk-reduction program                      income limits for tenants of rental                   paragraph B.38 of section VI.
                                                 providing construction standards for                    housing; (3) and minimum affordability                   36. Limitation on emergency grant
                                                 new homes and retrofit standards for                    period of twenty (20) years.                          payments—interim mortgage assistance.
                                                 existing homes, which will increase a                      35. Housing incentives in disaster-                42 U.S.C. 5305(a)(8), 24 CFR
                                                 home’s resilience to natural hazards,                   affected communities. Incentive                       570.207(b)(4), and 24 CFR
                                                 including high wind, hail, and tropical                 payments are generally offered in                     1003.207(b)(4) are modified to the
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                                                 storms. Insurers can provide discounts                  addition to other programs or funding                 extent necessary to extend interim
                                                 for homeowner’s insurance for                           (such as insurance), to encourage                     mortgage assistance to qualified
                                                 properties certified as FORTIFIED.                      households to relocate in a suitable                  individuals from 3 months to up to 20
                                                 Grantees should advise property owners                  housing development or an area                        months. Interim mortgage assistance is
                                                 to contact their insurance agent for                    promoted by the community’s                           typically used in conjunction with a
                                                 current information on what discounts                   comprehensive recovery plan. For                      buyout program, or when the
                                                 may be available. More information is                   example, a grantee may offer an                       rehabilitation or reconstruction of
                                                 also available at: https://                             incentive payment (possibly in addition               single-family housing extends beyond 3


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                                                                                Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 28 / Friday, February 9, 2018 / Notices                                           5863

                                                 months, during which mortgage                           purchase price exceeds the current                       (2) No new structure will be erected
                                                 payments may be due but the home is                     FMV, any CDBG–DR funds in excess of                   on property acquired, accepted, or from
                                                 uninhabitable. Thus, this interim                       the FMV are considered assistance to                  which a structure was removed under
                                                 assistance will be critical for many                    the seller, thus making the seller a                  the acquisition or relocation program
                                                 households facing financial hardship                    beneficiary of CDBG–DR assistance. If                 other than: (a) A public facility that is
                                                 during this period. Grantees may use                    the seller receives assistance as part of             open on all sides and functionally
                                                 interim housing mortgage assistance                     the purchase price, this may have                     related to a designated open space (e.g.,
                                                 payments along with rehabilitation/                     implications for duplication of benefits              a park, campground, or outdoor
                                                 reconstruction assistance to expedite                   calculations or for demonstrating                     recreation area); (b) a rest room; or (c)
                                                 recovery assistance to homeowners, but                  national objective criteria, as discussed             a flood control structure, provided that
                                                 must establish performance milestones                   below. However, a program that                        structure does not reduce valley storage,
                                                 for the rehabilitation/reconstruction that              provides post-disaster FMV to buyout                  increase erosive velocities, or increase
                                                 are to be met by the homeowner in order                 applicants merely provides the actual                 flood heights on the opposite bank,
                                                 to receive the interim mortgage                         value of the property; thus, the seller is            upstream, or downstream and that the
                                                 assistance payments. A grantee using                    not considered a beneficiary of CDBG–                 local floodplain manager approves, in
                                                 this alternative requirement must                       DR assistance.                                        writing, before the commencement of
                                                 document, in its policies and                              Regardless of purchase price, all                  the construction of the structure.
                                                 procedures, how it will determine the                   buyout activities are a type of                          (3) After receipt of the assistance,
                                                 amount of assistance to be provided is                  acquisition of real property (as                      with respect to any property acquired,
                                                 necessary and reasonable.                               permitted by 42 U.S.C. 5305(a)(1)).                   accepted, or from which a structure was
                                                    37. Acquisition of real property; flood              However, only acquisitions that meet                  removed under the acquisition or
                                                 and other buyouts. Grantees under this                  the definition of a ‘‘buyout’’ are subject            relocation program, no subsequent
                                                 notice are able to carry out property                   to the post-acquisition land use                      application for additional disaster
                                                 acquisition for a variety of purposes.                  restrictions imposed by this notice                   assistance for any purpose or to repair
                                                 However, the term ‘‘buyouts’’ as                        (subparagraph b. below). The key factor               damage or make improvements of any
                                                 referenced in this notice refers to                     in determining whether the acquisition                sort will be made by the owner of the
                                                 acquisition of properties located in a                  is a buyout is whether the intent of the              buyout property (including subsequent
                                                 floodway or floodplain that is intended                 purchase is to reduce risk of property                owners) to any Federal entity in
                                                 to reduce risk from future flooding or                  damage in a floodplain or a Disaster                  perpetuity.
                                                 the acquisition of properties in Disaster               Risk Reduction Area. To conduct a                        The entity acquiring the property may
                                                 Risk Reduction Areas as designated by                   buyout in a Disaster Risk Reduction                   lease it to adjacent property owners or
                                                 the grantee and defined below. HUD is                   Area, the grantee must establish criteria             other parties for compatible uses in
                                                 providing alternative requirements for                  in its policies and procedures to                     return for a maintenance agreement.
                                                 consistency with the application of                     designate the area subject to the buyout,             Although Federal policy encourages
                                                 other Federal resources commonly used                   pursuant to the following requirements:               leasing rather than selling such
                                                 for this type of activity.                              (1) The hazard must have been caused                  property, the property may also be sold.
                                                    Grantees are encouraged to use                       or exacerbated by the Presidentially                     In all cases, a deed restriction or
                                                 buyouts strategically, as a means of                    declared disaster for which the grantee               covenant running with the property
                                                 acquiring contiguous parcels of land for                received its CDBG–DR allocation; (2) the              must require that the buyout property be
                                                 uses compatible with open space,                        hazard must be a predictable                          dedicated and maintained for
                                                 recreational, natural floodplain                        environmental threat to the safety and                compatible uses in perpetuity.
                                                 functions, other ecosystem restoration,                 well-being of program beneficiaries, as                  (4) Grantees have the discretion to
                                                 or wetlands management practices. To                    evidenced by the best available data                  determine an appropriate valuation
                                                 the maximum extent practicable,                         (e.g. FEMA Repetitive Loss Data) and                  method (including the use of pre-flood
                                                 grantees should avoid circumstances in                  science; and (3) the Disaster Risk                    value or post-flood value as a basis for
                                                 which parcels that could not be                         Reduction Area must be clearly                        property value). However, in using
                                                 acquired through a buyout remain                        delineated so that HUD and the public                 CDBG–DR funds for buyouts, the
                                                 alongside parcels that have been                        may easily determine which properties                 grantee must uniformly apply
                                                 acquired through the grantee’s buyout                   are located within the designated area.               whichever valuation method it chooses.
                                                 program. Grantees are reminded that                        The distinction between buyouts and                   (5) All buyout activities must be
                                                 real property acquisition with CDBG–                    other types of acquisitions is important,             classified using the ‘‘buyout’’ activity
                                                 DR funding, including buyout, is subject                because grantees may only redevelop an                type in the DRGR system.
                                                 to the URA, including the real property                 acquired property if the property is not                 (6) Any State grantee implementing a
                                                 acquisitions requirements at 49 CFR                     acquired through a buyout program (i.e.,              buyout program or activity must consult
                                                 part 24, subpart B, as modified at                      the purpose of acquisition was                        with affected local governments.
                                                 paragraph A.23 of section VI of this                    something other than risk reduction).                    (7) When undertaking buyout
                                                 notice.                                                 When acquisitions are not acquired                    activities, to demonstrate that a buyout
                                                    a. Clarification of ‘‘Buyout’’ and ‘‘Real            through a buyout program, the purchase                meets the low- and moderate-income
                                                 Property Acquisition’’ activities.                      price must be consistent with applicable              housing national objective, grantees
                                                 Grantees that choose to undertake a                     uniform cost principles (and the pre-                 must meet all requirements of the HCD
                                                 buyout program have the discretion to                   disaster FMV may not be used).                        Act and applicable regulatory criteria
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                                                 determine the appropriate valuation                        b. Buyout requirements:                            described below. Grantees are
                                                 method, including paying either pre-                       (1) Any property acquired, accepted,               encouraged to consult with HUD prior
                                                 disaster or post-disaster fair market                   or from which a structure will be                     to undertaking a buyout program with
                                                 value (FMV). In most cases, a program                   removed pursuant to the project will be               the intent of using the low- and
                                                 that provides pre-disaster FMV to                       dedicated and maintained in perpetuity                moderate-income housing (LMH)
                                                 buyout applicants provides                              for a use that is compatible with open                national objective. 42 U.S.C. 5305(c)(3)
                                                 compensation at an amount greater than                  space, recreational, or floodplain and                provides that any assisted activity that
                                                 the post-disaster FMV. When the                         wetlands management practices.                        involves the acquisition or


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                                                 5864                           Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 28 / Friday, February 9, 2018 / Notices

                                                 rehabilitation of property to provide                   housing incentives as authorized in the               individuals that receive buyout and
                                                 housing shall be considered to benefit                  Department’s August 7, 2017 Federal                   housing incentive awards that allow
                                                 persons of low- and moderate-income                     Register notice at 82 FR 36825 and                    them to move from areas that are likely
                                                 only to the extent such housing will,                   described in paragraph B.38 of section                to be affected by future disasters.
                                                 upon completion, be occupied by such                    VI in this notice.                                       In addition to the existing criteria at
                                                 persons. In addition, the State CDBG                       c. Redevelopment of acquired                       24 CFR 570.208(a)(1)–(4) and
                                                 regulations at 24 CFR 570.483(b)(3),                    properties.                                           570.483(b)(1)–(4), HUD is establishing
                                                 entitlement CDBG regulations at 24 CFR                     (1) Grantees may redevelop an                      an alternative requirement to include
                                                 570.208(a)(3), and Indian CDBG                          acquired property if the property is not              the two new LMI national objective
                                                 regulations at 24 CFR 1003.208(c) apply                 acquired through a buyout program and                 criteria for buyouts (LMB) and housing
                                                 the LMH national objective to an                        the purchase price is based on the                    incentives (LMHI) that benefit LMI
                                                 eligible activity carried out for the                   property’s post-disaster value,                       households that use CDBG–DR funding
                                                 purpose of providing or improving                       consistent with applicable cost                       provided pursuant to this notice.
                                                 permanent residential structures that,                  principles (the pre-disaster value may                   For a buyout award or housing
                                                 upon completion, will be occupied by                    not be used). In addition to the purchase             incentive to meet the new LMB and
                                                 low- and moderate-income households.                    price, grantees may opt to provide                    LMHI national objectives, grantees must
                                                 Therefore, a buyout program that merely                 relocation assistance or housing                      demonstrate the following:
                                                 pays homeowners to leave their existing                 incentives to the owner of a property                    (1) The CDBG–DR funds have been
                                                 homes does not result in a low- and                     that will be redeveloped if the property              provided for an eligible activity that
                                                 moderate-income household occupying                     is purchased by the grantee or                        benefits LMI households supporting
                                                 a residential structure and, thus, cannot               subrecipient through voluntary                        their move from high risk areas. The
                                                 meet the requirements of the LMH                        acquisition, and the owner’s need for                 following activities shall qualify under
                                                 national objective. Buyout programs that                additional assistance is documented.                  this criterion, and must also meet the
                                                 assist low- and moderate-income                            (2) In carrying out acquisition                    eligibility criteria of the notices
                                                 persons can be structured in one of the                 activities, grantees must ensure they are             governing the use of the CDBG–DR
                                                 following ways:                                         in compliance with their long-term                    funds:
                                                    (a) The buyout program combines the                  redevelopment plans.                                     (a) Low/Mod Buyout (LMB). When
                                                 acquisition of properties with another                     38. Additional LMI National Objective              CDBG–DR funds are used for a buyout
                                                 direct benefit—Low- and Moderate-                       Criteria for Buyouts and Housing                      award to acquire housing owned by a
                                                 Income housing activity, such as down                   Incentives. In this notice, HUD is                    qualifying LMI household, where the
                                                 payment assistance—that results in                      establishing an alternative requirement               award amount (including optional
                                                 occupancy and otherwise meets the                       to clarify the criteria under which                   relocation assistance) is greater than the
                                                 applicable LMH national objective                       buyout activities and housing incentives              post-disaster (current) fair market value
                                                 criteria;                                               can meet an LMI national objective.                   of that property.
                                                    (b) The program meets the low- and                   Grantees authorized to use housing                       (b) Low/Mod Housing Incentive
                                                 moderate-income area benefit criteria as                incentives in this notice must follow                 (LMHI). When CDBG–DR funds are used
                                                 defined in this notice, to demonstrate                  guidelines outlined in paragraph 35 of                for a housing incentive award, tied to
                                                 national objective compliance, provided                 section VI of this notice. The CDBG                   the voluntary buyout or other voluntary
                                                 that the grantee can document that the                  regulations limit activities that meet the            acquisition of housing owned by a
                                                 properties acquired through buyouts                     LMI national objective to only the                    qualifying LMI household, for which the
                                                 will be used in a way that benefits all                 activities meeting the four established               housing incentive is for the purpose of
                                                 of the residents in a particular area                   criteria in 24 CFR 570.208(a)(1) through              moving outside of the affected
                                                 where at least 51 percent of the                        (4) and 570.483(b)(1) through (4). Prior              floodplain or to a lower-risk area; or
                                                 residents are low- and moderate-income                  Federal Register notices have advised                 when the housing incentive is for the
                                                 persons. When using the area benefit                    grantees of the criteria under which a                purpose of providing or improving
                                                 approach, grantees must define the                      buyout activity can meet a LMI housing                residential structures that, upon
                                                 service area based on the end use of the                (LMH) national objective (80 FR 72102).               completion, will be occupied by an LMI
                                                 buyout properties; or                                   Notwithstanding that guidance,                        household.
                                                    (c) The program meets the criteria for               however, HUD has determined that                         (2) Activities that meet the above
                                                 the low- and moderate-income limited                    providing CDBG–DR grantees with an                    criteria will be considered to benefit low
                                                 clientele national objective, including                 additional method to demonstrate how                  and moderate-income persons unless
                                                 the prohibition on the use of the limited               buyouts and housing incentives can                    there is substantial evidence to the
                                                 clientele national objective when an                    assist LMI households, beyond those                   contrary. Any activities that meet the
                                                 activity’s benefits are available to all                described in the previous notices, will               newly established national objective
                                                 residents of the area. A buyout program                 ensure that grantees and HUD can                      criteria described above will count
                                                 could meet the national objective                       account for and assess the benefit that               towards the calculation of a CDBG–DR
                                                 criteria for the limited clientele national             CDBG–DR assistance may have on LMI                    grantee’s overall LMI benefit.
                                                 objective if it restricts buyout program                households when buyouts and housing                      39. Alternative requirement for
                                                 eligibility to exclusively low- and                     incentives are used in long term                      housing rehabilitation—assistance for
                                                 moderate-income persons, and the                        recovery. Given the primary objective of              second homes. The Department is
                                                 buyout provides an actual benefit to the                the HCD Act to assist low- and moderate               instituting an alternative requirement to
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                                                 low- and moderate-income sellers by                     income persons, the Secretary has                     the rehabilitation provisions at 42
                                                 providing pre-disaster valuation                        determined that there is good cause to                U.S.C. 5305(a)(4) as follows: Properties
                                                 uniformly to those who participate in                   establish an alternative requirement                  that served as second homes at the time
                                                 the program.                                            under which CDBG–DR grantees are                      of the disaster, or following the disaster,
                                                    (d) The program meets the criteria for               authorized to qualify the assistance                  are not eligible for rehabilitation
                                                 the Low/Mod Buyout (LMB) or Low/                        provided to LMI persons through                       assistance or housing incentives. A
                                                 Mod Housing Incentive (LMHI) national                   buyout and housing incentive programs,                second home is defined under this
                                                 objectives for buyouts and the use of                   due to the benefits received by the                   notice as a home that is not the primary


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                                                                                Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 28 / Friday, February 9, 2018 / Notices                                             5865

                                                 residence of the owner, a tenant, or any                made available in a flood disaster area               to inform property owners receiving
                                                 occupant at the time of the storm or at                 may be used to make a payment                         disaster assistance that triggers the flood
                                                 the time of application for assistance.                 (including any loan assistance payment)               insurance purchase requirement that
                                                 Grantees may adopt policies and                         to a person for ‘‘repair, replacement, or             they have a statutory responsibility to
                                                 procedures that provide for limited                     restoration’’ for damage to any personal,             notify any transferee of the requirement
                                                 exceptions to providing assistance to a                 residential, or commercial property if                to obtain and maintain flood insurance
                                                 second home in order to meet specific                   that person at any time has received                  in writing and to maintain such written
                                                 disaster recovery needs (e.g., adding                   Federal flood disaster assistance that                notification in the documents
                                                 affordable housing capacity); provided                  was conditioned on the person first                   evidencing the transfer of the property,
                                                 however that such exceptions are                        having obtained flood insurance under                 and that the transferring owner may be
                                                 developed in consultation with and                      applicable Federal law and the person                 liable if he or she fails to do so. These
                                                 approved by HUD prior to                                has subsequently failed to obtain and                 requirements are enumerated at http://
                                                 implementation. Grantees can verify a                   maintain flood insurance as required                  uscode.house.gov/view.xhtml?req=
                                                 primary residence using a variety of                    under applicable Federal law on such                  granuleid:USC-prelim-title42-
                                                 documentation including, but not                        property. This means that a grantee may               section5154a&num=0&edition=prelim.
                                                 limited to, voter registration cards, tax               not provide disaster assistance for the
                                                                                                                                                               C. Infrastructure (Public Facilities,
                                                 returns, homestead exemptions, driver’s                 repair, replacement, or restoration of a
                                                                                                                                                               Public Improvements)
                                                 licenses and rental agreements.                         property to a person who has failed to
                                                    40. Flood insurance. Grantees,                       meet this requirement and must                           41. Elevation of Nonresidential
                                                 recipients, and subrecipients must                      implement a process to check and                      Structures. Nonresidential structures
                                                 implement procedures and mechanisms                     monitor for compliance.                               must be elevated to the standards
                                                 to ensure that assisted property owners                    (2) The Department is instituting an               described in this paragraph or
                                                 comply with all flood insurance                         alternative requirement to 42 U.S.C.                  floodproofed, in accordance with FEMA
                                                 requirements, including the purchase                    5305(a)(4) as follows: Grantees receiving             floodproofing standards at 44 CFR
                                                 and notification requirements described                 funds under this notice are prohibited                60.3(c)(3)(ii) or successor standard, up
                                                 below, prior to providing assistance. For               from providing CDBG–DR assistance for                 to at least two feet above the 100-year
                                                 additional information, please consult                  the rehabilitation/reconstruction of a                (or 1 percent annual chance) floodplain.
                                                 with the field environmental officer in                 house, if (a) the combined household                  All Critical Actions, as defined at 24
                                                 the local HUD field office or review the                income is greater than 120% AMI or the                CFR 55.2(b)(3), within the 500-year (or
                                                 guidance on flood insurance                             national median, (b) the property was                 0.2 percent annual chance) floodplain
                                                 requirements on HUD’s website.                          located in a floodplain at the time of the            must be elevated or floodproofed (in
                                                    a. Flood insurance purchase                          disaster, and (c) the property owner did              accordance with the FEMA standards)
                                                 requirements. HUD does not prohibit                     not maintain flood insurance on the                   to the higher of the 500-year floodplain
                                                 the use of CDBG–DR funds for existing                   damaged property, even when the                       elevation or three feet above the 100-
                                                 residential buildings in a Special Flood                property owner was not required to                    year floodplain elevation. If the 500-year
                                                 Hazard Area (or 100-year floodplain).                   obtain and maintain such insurance.                   floodplain or elevation is unavailable,
                                                 However, Federal, State, local, and                     When a homeowner located in the                       and the Critical Action is in the 100-
                                                 tribal laws and regulations related to                  floodplain allows their flood insurance               year floodplain, then the structure must
                                                 both flood insurance and floodplain                     policy to lapse, it is assumed that the               be elevated or floodproofed at least
                                                 management must be followed, as                         homeowner is unable to afford                         three feet above the 100-year floodplain
                                                 applicable. With respect to flood                       insurance and/or is accepting                         elevation. Critical Actions are defined as
                                                 insurance, a HUD-assisted homeowner                     responsibility for future flood damage to             an ‘‘activity for which even a slight
                                                 of a property located in a Special Flood                the home. HUD is establishing this                    chance of flooding would be too great,
                                                 Hazard Area must obtain and maintain                    alternative requirement to ensure that                because such flooding might result in
                                                 flood insurance in the amount and                       adequate recovery resources are                       loss of life, injury to persons or damage
                                                 duration prescribed by FEMA’s National                  available to assist lower income                      to property.’’ For example, Critical
                                                 Flood Insurance Program. Section 102(a)                 homeowners who reside in a floodplain                 Actions include hospitals, nursing
                                                 of the Flood Disaster Protection Act of                 but who are unlikely to be able to afford             homes, police stations, fire stations and
                                                 1973 (42 U.S.C. 4012a) mandates the                     flood insurance. Higher income                        principal utility lines.
                                                 purchase of flood insurance protection                  homeowners who reside in a floodplain,                   Applicable State, local, and tribal
                                                 for any HUD-assisted property within a                  but who failed to secure or decided to                codes and standards for floodplain
                                                 Special Flood Hazard Area. HUD                          not maintain their flood insurance,                   management that exceed these
                                                 strongly recommends the purchase of                     should not be assisted at the expense of              requirements, including elevation,
                                                 flood insurance outside of a Special                    those lower income households.                        setbacks, and cumulative substantial
                                                 Flood Hazard Area for properties that                   Therefore, a grantee may only provide                 damage requirements, will be followed.
                                                 have been damaged by a flood, to better                 assistance for the rehabilitation/                       42. Use of CDBG–DR as Match. As
                                                 protect property owners from the                        reconstruction of a house located in a                provided by the HCD Act, funds may be
                                                 economic risks of future floods and                     floodplain if: (a) The homeowner had                  used as a matching requirement, share,
                                                 reduce dependence on Federal disaster                   flood insurance at the time of the                    or contribution for any other Federal
                                                 assistance in the future, but this is not               qualifying disaster and still has unmet               program when used to carry out an
                                                 a requirement.                                          recovery needs; or (b) the household                  eligible CDBG–DR activity. This
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                                                    b. Federal assistance to owners                      earns less than the greater of 120% AMI               includes programs or activities
                                                 remaining in a floodplain.                              or the national median and has unmet                  administered by the FEMA or USACE.
                                                    (1) Section 582 of the National Flood                recovery needs.                                       By law, (codified in the HCD Act as a
                                                 Insurance Reform Act of 1994, as                           (3) Section 582 also imposes a                     note to 105(a)), the amount of CDBG–DR
                                                 amended, (42 U.S.C. 5154a) prohibits                    responsibility on a grantee that receives             funds that may be contributed to a
                                                 flood disaster assistance in certain                    CDBG–DR funds or that designates                      USACE project is $250,000 or less. Note
                                                 circumstances. In general, it provides                  annually appropriated CDBG funds for                  that the Appropriations Act prohibits
                                                 that no Federal disaster relief assistance              disaster recovery. That responsibility is             the use of CDBG–DR funds for any


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                                                 5866                           Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 28 / Friday, February 9, 2018 / Notices

                                                 activity reimbursable by, or for which                  the amount of CDBG assistance per job                 to a business to relocate from one labor
                                                 funds are also made available by FEMA                   retained or created, or the amount of                 market area to another if the relocation
                                                 or USACE.                                               CDBG assistance per low- and moderate-                is likely to result in a significant loss of
                                                    43. Requirements for flood control                   income person to which goods or                       jobs in the labor market from which the
                                                 structures. Grantees that use CDBG–DR                   services are provided by the activity.                business moved. This prohibition can be
                                                 funds to assist flood control structures                These dollar thresholds were set two                  a critical barrier to reestablishing and
                                                 (i.e., dams and levees) are prohibited                  decades ago and can impede recovery                   rebuilding a displaced employment base
                                                 from using CDBG–DR funds to enlarge                     by limiting the amount of assistance the              after a major disaster. Therefore, 42
                                                 a dam or levee beyond the original                      grantee may provide to a critical                     U.S.C. 5305(h), 24 CFR 570.210, 24 CFR
                                                 footprint of the structure that existed                 activity.                                             570.482, and 24 CFR 1003.209 are
                                                 prior to the disaster event. Grantees that                 This notice waives the public benefit              waived to allow a grantee to provide
                                                 use CDBG–DR funds for levees and                        standards at 42 U.S.C. 5305(e)(3), 24                 assistance to any business that was
                                                 dams are required to: (1) Register and                  CFR 570.482(f), 24 CFR 570.209(b) and                 operating in the disaster-declared labor
                                                 maintain entries regarding such                         (d), and 24 CFR 1003.302(c) for only                  market area before the incident date of
                                                 structures with the U.S. Army Corps of                  those economic development activities                 the applicable disaster and has since
                                                 Engineers National Levee Database or                    designed to create or retain jobs or                  moved, in whole or in part, from the
                                                 National Inventory of Dams; (2) ensure                  businesses (including, but not limited                affected area to another State or to a
                                                 that the structure is admitted in the U.S.              to, long-term, short-term, and                        labor market area within the same State
                                                 Army Corps of Engineers PL 84–99                        infrastructure projects). However,                    to continue business.
                                                 Rehabilitation Program (Rehabilitation                  grantees shall collect and maintain                      48. Prioritizing small businesses. To
                                                 Assistance for Non-Federal Flood                        documentation in the project file on the              target assistance to small businesses, the
                                                 Control Projects); (3) ensure the                       creation and retention of total jobs; the             Department is instituting an alternative
                                                 structure is accredited under the FEMA                  number of jobs within certain salary                  requirement to the provisions at 42
                                                 National Flood Insurance Program; (4)                   ranges; the average amount of assistance              U.S.C. 5305(a) to require grantees to
                                                 enter into DRGR system the exact                        provided per job, by activity or program;             prioritize assisting businesses that meet
                                                 location of the structure and the area                  and the types of jobs. Additionally,                  the definition of a small business as
                                                 served and protected by the structure;                  grantees shall report the total number of             defined by SBA at 13 CFR part 121 or,
                                                 and (5) maintain file documentation                     jobs created and retained and the                     for businesses engaged in ‘‘farming
                                                 demonstrating that the grantee has                      applicable national objective in the                  operations’’ as defined at 7 CFR 1400.3,
                                                 conducted a risk assessment prior to                    DRGR system. Paragraph (g) of 24 CFR                  and that meet the United States
                                                 funding the flood control structure and                 570.482 is also waived to the extent                  Department of Agriculture Farm Service
                                                 documentation that the investment                       these provisions are related to public                Agency (FSA), criteria that are described
                                                 includes risk reduction measures.                       benefit.                                              at 7 CFR 1400.500, which are used by
                                                                                                            46. Clarifying note on Section 3                   the FSA to determine eligibility for
                                                 D. Economic Revitalization                              resident eligibility and documentation                certain assistance programs. With regard
                                                    44. National Objective Documentation                 requirements. The definition of ‘‘low-                to assistance to businesses engaged in
                                                 for Economic Development Activities.                    income persons’’ in 12 U.S.C. 1701u and               ‘‘farming operations,’’ grantees are
                                                 24 CFR 570.483(b)(4)(i), 24 CFR                         24 CFR 135.5 is the basis for eligibility             advised that in its allocation
                                                 570.506(b)(5), and 24 CFR 1003.208(d)                   as a section 3 resident. A section 3                  methodology HUD does not account for
                                                 are waived to allow the grantees under                  resident means: (1) A public housing                  crop loss and other agricultural losses in
                                                 this notice to identify the low- and                    resident; or (2) an individual who                    its determination of unmet economic
                                                 moderate-income jobs benefit by                         resides in the metropolitan area or                   need. Accordingly, HUD advises
                                                 documenting, for each person                            nonmetropolitan county in which the                   grantees to pursue sources of assistance
                                                 employed, the name of the business,                     section 3 covered assistance is                       other than CDBG–DR funds in order to
                                                 type of job, and the annual wages or                    expended, and who is: (i) A low-income                address needs arising from crop loss or
                                                 salary of the job. HUD will consider the                person or (ii) a very-low-income person.              other agricultural losses attributable to
                                                 person income-qualified if the annual                   This notice authorizes grantees to                    the disaster.
                                                 wages or salary of the job is at or under               determine that an individual is eligible                 49. Clarifying note on the provision of
                                                 the HUD-established income limit for a                  to be considered a section 3 resident if              ‘‘working capital’’ grants and loans to
                                                 one-person family. This method                          the annual wages or salary of the person              businesses. Grantees may provide many
                                                 replaces the standard CDBG                              are at, or under, the HUD-established                 forms of assistance to businesses under
                                                 requirement—in which grantees must                      income limit for a one-person family for              the provisions of 105(a)(17) of the HCD
                                                 review the annual wages or salary of a                  the jurisdiction. This authority does not             Act, including ‘‘working capital.’’ In
                                                 job in comparison to the person’s total                 impact other section 3 resident                       past recovery efforts, grantees have
                                                 household income and size (i.e., the                    eligibility requirements in 24 CFR 135.5.             inquired as to how a business’s working
                                                 number of persons). Thus, it streamlines                All direct recipients of CDBG–DR                      capital needs should be calculated.
                                                 the documentation process because it                    funding must submit form HUD–60002                    Working capital is one facet of a
                                                 allows the collection of wage data for                  annually through the Section 3                        business’s need after a disaster; it is not,
                                                 each position created or retained from                  Performance Evaluation and Registry                   however, the vehicle by which to fund
                                                 the assisted businesses, rather than from               System (SPEARS) which can be found                    all of a business’s unmet needs. In its
                                                 each individual household.                              on HUD’s website: https://                            simplest form, working capital is
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                                                    45. Public benefit for certain                       www.hud.gov/program_offices/fair_                     defined as ‘‘Current Assets minus
                                                 Economic Development activities. The                    housing_equal_opp/section3/section3/                  Current Liabilities’’ on the business’s
                                                 public benefit provisions set standards                 spears.                                               balance sheet. In other words, working
                                                 for individual economic development                        47. Waiver and modification of the job             capital is the amount of cash needed to
                                                 activities (such as a single loan to a                  relocation clause to permit assistance to             fund one year’s worth of liabilities (i.e.,
                                                 business) and for economic                              help a business return. CDBG                          one year’s worth of mortgage payments
                                                 development activities in the aggregate.                requirements prevent program                          and other debt, tax and utilities, yearly
                                                 Currently, public benefit standards limit               participants from providing assistance                wages, and accounts payable) after


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                                                                                Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 28 / Friday, February 9, 2018 / Notices                                             5867

                                                 subtracting other current assets such as                or alternative requirements are provided              recovery grant funds are used to pay the
                                                 inventory and accounts receivable.                      for in this notice.                                   proportion of such fee or assessment
                                                 Working capital does not include any                       e. The grantee certifies that it will              that relates to the capital costs of such
                                                 expense for any form of construction or                 comply with section 3 of the Housing                  public improvements that are financed
                                                 expansion of existing facilities, whether               and Urban Development Act of 1968 (12                 from revenue sources other than under
                                                 ‘‘hard’’ or ‘‘soft’’ costs. Therefore,                  U.S.C. 1701u), and implementing                       this title; or (b) for purposes of assessing
                                                 grantees should not include expenses                    regulations at 24 CFR part 135.                       any amount against properties owned
                                                 for construction or expansion of existing                  f. The grantee certifies that it is                and occupied by persons of moderate
                                                 facilities in any calculation involving                 following a detailed citizen                          income, the grantee certifies to the
                                                 working capital, unless the grantee                     participation plan that satisfies the                 Secretary that it lacks sufficient CDBG
                                                 intends to provide a comprehensive                      requirements of 24 CFR 91.115 or                      funds (in any form) to comply with the
                                                 assistance package that is subject to the               91.105 (except as provided for in notices             requirements of clause (a).
                                                 environmental review requirements of                    providing waivers and alternative                        i. The grantee certifies that the grant
                                                 24 CFR part 58. The provision of                        requirements for this grant). Also, each              will be conducted and administered in
                                                 working capital constitutes an economic                 local government receiving assistance                 conformity with title VI of the Civil
                                                 development activity under 24 CFR                       from a State grantee must follow a                    Rights Act of 1964 (42 U.S.C. 2000d),
                                                 58.35(b)(4) and may provide operating                   detailed citizen participation plan that              the Fair Housing Act (42 U.S.C. 3601–
                                                 costs under 24 CFR 58.35(b)(3) and                      satisfies the requirements of 24 CFR                  3619), and implementing regulations,
                                                 therefore, per 24 CFR 55.12(c)(1), are not              570.486 (except as provided for in                    and that it will affirmatively further fair
                                                 subject to Part 55 unless it includes                   notices providing waivers and                         housing.
                                                 expenses for construction or expansion                  alternative requirements for this grant).                j. The grantee certifies that it has
                                                 of existing facilities. A grantee’s                        g. State grantee certifies that it has             adopted and is enforcing the following
                                                 environmental review record must                        consulted with affected local                         policies, and, in addition, must certify
                                                 document the determination of this                      governments in counties designated in                 that they will require local governments
                                                 exclusion from environmental review.                    covered major disaster declarations in                that receive grant funds to certify that
                                                                                                         the non-entitlement, entitlement, and                 they have adopted and are enforcing:
                                                    50. Prohibiting assistance to private
                                                                                                         tribal areas of the State in determining                 (1) A policy prohibiting the use of
                                                 utilities. Funds made available under
                                                                                                         the uses of funds, including the method               excessive force by law enforcement
                                                 this notice may not be used to assist a
                                                                                                         of distribution of funding, or activities             agencies within its jurisdiction against
                                                 privately-owned utility for any purpose.                                                                      any individuals engaged in nonviolent
                                                                                                         carried out directly by the State.
                                                 E. Certifications and Collection of                        h. The grantee certifies that it is                civil rights demonstrations; and
                                                 Information                                             complying with each of the following                     (2) A policy of enforcing applicable
                                                                                                         criteria:                                             State and local laws against physically
                                                    51. Certifications waiver and                           (1) Funds will be used solely for                  barring entrance to or exit from a facility
                                                 alternative requirement. 24 CFR 91.225                  necessary expenses related to disaster                or location that is the subject of such
                                                 and 91.325 are waived. Each grantee                     relief, long-term recovery, restoration of            nonviolent civil rights demonstrations
                                                 receiving a direct allocation under this                infrastructure and housing and                        within its jurisdiction.
                                                 notice must make the following                          economic revitalization in the most                      k. The grantee certifies that it (and
                                                 certifications with its action plan:                    impacted and distressed areas for which               any subrecipient or administering
                                                    a. The grantee certifies that it has in              the President declared a major disaster               entity) currently has or will develop and
                                                 effect and is following a residential anti-             in 2016 pursuant to the Robert T.                     maintain the capacity to carry out
                                                 displacement and relocation assistance                  Stafford Disaster Relief and Emergency                disaster recovery activities in a timely
                                                 plan in connection with any activity                    Assistance Act of 1974 (42 U.S.C. 5121                manner and that the grantee has
                                                 assisted with funding under the CDBG                    et seq.).                                             reviewed the requirements of this
                                                 program.                                                   (2) With respect to activities expected            notice. The grantee certifies to the
                                                    b. The grantee certifies its compliance              to be assisted with CDBG–DR funds, the                accuracy of its Public Law 115–56
                                                 with restrictions on lobbying required                  action plan has been developed so as to               Financial Management and Grant
                                                 by 24 CFR part 87, together with                        give the maximum feasible priority to                 Compliance certification checklist, or
                                                 disclosure forms, if required by part 87.               activities that will benefit low- and                 other recent certification submission, if
                                                    c. The grantee certifies that the action             moderate-income families.                             approved by HUD, and related
                                                 plan for disaster recovery is authorized                   (3) The aggregate use of CDBG–DR                   supporting documentation referenced at
                                                 under State and local law (as applicable)               funds shall principally benefit low- and              A.1.a. under section VI and its
                                                 and that the grantee, and any entity or                 moderate-income families in a manner                  Implementation Plan and Capacity
                                                 entities designated by the grantee, and                 that ensures that at least 70 percent (or             Assessment and related submissions to
                                                 any contractor, subrecipient, or                        another percentage permitted by HUD in                HUD referenced at A.1.b. under section
                                                 designated public agency carrying out                   a waiver published in an applicable                   VI.
                                                 an activity with CDBG–DR funds,                         Federal Register notice) of the grant                    l. The grantee certifies that it will not
                                                 possess(es) the legal authority to carry                amount is expended for activities that                use CDBG–DR funds for any activity in
                                                 out the program for which it is seeking                 benefit such persons.                                 an area identified as flood prone for
                                                 funding, in accordance with applicable                     (4) The grantee will not attempt to                land use or hazard mitigation planning
                                                 HUD regulations and this notice. The                    recover any capital costs of public                   purposes by the State, local, or tribal
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                                                 grantee certifies that activities to be                 improvements assisted with CDBG–DR                    government or delineated as a Special
                                                 undertaken with funds under this notice                 grant funds, by assessing any amount                  Flood Hazard Area (or 100-year
                                                 are consistent with its action plan.                    against properties owned and occupied                 floodplain) in FEMA’s most current
                                                    d. The grantee certifies that it will                by persons of low- and moderate-                      flood advisory maps, unless it also
                                                 comply with the acquisition and                         income, including any fee charged or                  ensures that the action is designed or
                                                 relocation requirements of the URA, as                  assessment made as a condition of                     modified to minimize harm to or within
                                                 amended, and implementing regulations                   obtaining access to such public                       the floodplain, in accordance with
                                                 at 49 CFR part 24, except where waivers                 improvements, unless: (a) Disaster                    Executive Order 11988 and 24 CFR part


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                                                 5868                           Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 28 / Friday, February 9, 2018 / Notices

                                                 55. The relevant data source for this                   public inspection between 8 a.m. and 5                   (1) Individual Assistance/IHP designation.
                                                 provision is the State, local, and tribal               p.m. weekdays in the Regulations                      HUD has limited allocations to those
                                                 government land use regulations and                     Division, Office of General Counsel,                  disasters where FEMA had determined the
                                                                                                                                                               damage was sufficient to declare the disaster
                                                 hazard mitigation plans and the latest-                 Department of Housing and Urban                       as eligible to receive Individual and
                                                 issued FEMA data or guidance, which                     Development, 451 7th Street SW, Room                  Households Program (IHP) funding.
                                                 includes advisory data (such as                         10276, Washington, DC 20410–0500.                        (2) Concentrated damage. HUD has limited
                                                 Advisory Base Flood Elevations) or                      Due to security measures at the HUD                   the allocations to counties and zip codes
                                                 preliminary and final Flood Insurance                   Headquarters building, an advance                     with high levels of damage, collectively
                                                 Rate Maps.                                              appointment to review the docket file                 referred to as ‘‘most impacted areas’’. For this
                                                    m. The grantee certifies that its                    must be scheduled by calling the                      allocation, HUD is using the amount of
                                                 activities concerning lead-based paint                                                                        serious unmet housing need as its measure of
                                                                                                         Regulations Division at 202–708–3055
                                                                                                                                                               concentrated damage and limits the data
                                                 will comply with the requirements of 24                 (this is not a toll-free number). Hearing-            used for the allocation only to counties
                                                 CFR part 35, subparts A, B, J, K, and R.                or speech-impaired individuals may                    exceeding a ‘‘natural break’’ in the data for
                                                    n. The grantee certifies that it will                access this number through TTY by                     their total amount of serious unmet housing
                                                 comply with environmental                               calling the Federal Relay Service at 800–             needs. For purposes of this allocation, the
                                                 requirements at 24 CFR part 58.                         877–8339 (this is a toll-free number).                serious unmet housing needs break occurs at
                                                    o. The grantee certifies that it will                                                                      $16 million at the county level and $3.5
                                                                                                           Dated: February 2, 2018.                            million for Zip Codes for Texas and Florida
                                                 comply with applicable laws.
                                                    Warning: Any person who knowingly                    Neal J. Rackleff,                                     and $10 million for counties and $2 million
                                                 makes a false claim or statement to HUD                 Assistant Secretary.                                  for Zip Codes for the Commonwealth of
                                                                                                                                                               Puerto Rico (Puerto Rico) and the United
                                                 may be subject to civil or criminal                     Appendix A—Allocation of CDBG–DR                      States Virgin Islands (Virgin Islands). The
                                                 penalties under 18 U.S.C. 287, 1001 and                 Funds to Most Impacted and Distressed                 calculation for serious unmet housing needs
                                                 31 U.S.C. 3729.                                         Areas Due to 2017 Federally Declared                  are described below.
                                                 VII. Duration of Funding                                Disasters                                                These allocations are thus based on the
                                                                                                         Background                                            unmet costs to repair seriously damaged
                                                   The Appropriations Act, as amended,                                                                         properties in most impacted areas. These do
                                                 requires that funds provided under the                     The Supplemental Appropriations for                not capture expected resiliency costs,
                                                 Act be expended within two years of the                 Disaster Relief Requirements, 2017 (Pub. L.           although grantees may choose to use the
                                                 date that HUD obligates funds to a                      115–56) appropriated $7,400,000,000 through           CDBG funds for resiliency expenses. The
                                                 grantee. The Act as amended further                     the Community Development Block Grant                 estimated damage is based on the following
                                                                                                         disaster recovery (CDBG–DR) program for               factors:
                                                 authorizes the Office of Management
                                                                                                         necessary expenses for authorized activities             (1) Repair estimates for seriously damaged
                                                 and Budget (OMB) to provide a waiver                    related to disaster relief, long-term recovery,
                                                 of this requirement. This notice also                                                                         owner-occupied units without insurance
                                                                                                         restoration of infrastructure and housing, and        (with some exceptions) in most impacted
                                                 requires each grantee to expend 100                     economic revitalization in the most impacted          areas after FEMA and SBA repair grants or
                                                 percent of its allocation of CDBG–DR                    and distressed areas resulting from a major           loans;
                                                 funds on eligible activities within 6                   disaster declared in 2017, specifically:                 (2) Repair estimates for seriously damaged
                                                 years of HUD’s initial obligation of                       For an additional amount for ‘‘Community           rental units occupied by renters with income
                                                 funds pursuant to an executed grant                     Development Fund’’, $7,400,000,000, . . .,            less than 50% of Area Median Income in
                                                 agreement. However, in accordance                       for necessary expenses . . . related to               most impacted areas; and
                                                 with 31 U.S.C. 1555, HUD shall close                    disaster relief, long-term recovery, restoration         (3) Repair and content loss estimates for
                                                 the appropriation account and cancel                    of infrastructure and housing, and economic           small businesses with serious damage denied
                                                                                                         revitalization in the most impacted and               by SBA.
                                                 any remaining obligated or unobligated
                                                                                                         distressed areas resulting from a major
                                                 balance if the Secretary or the President               disaster declared in 2017 pursuant to the             Methods for Estimating Unmet Needs for
                                                 determines that the purposes for which                  Robert T. Stafford Disaster Relief and                Housing
                                                 the appropriation has been made have                    Emergency Assistance Act (42 U.S.C. 5121 et              The data HUD staff have identified as being
                                                 been carried out and no disbursements                   seq.): Provided, That funds shall be awarded          available to calculate unmet needs for
                                                 have been made against the                              directly to the State or unit of general local        qualifying disasters come from the FEMA
                                                 appropriation for two consecutive fiscal                government at the discretion of the Secretary:        Individual Assistance program data on
                                                 years. In such case, the funds shall not                . . . Provided further, That such funds may           housing-unit damage as of November 8, 2017
                                                 be available for obligation or                          not be used for activities reimbursable by, or        for Texas and Florida and as of December 22,
                                                                                                         for which funds are made available by, the            2017 for Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands.
                                                 expenditure for any purpose after the
                                                                                                         Federal Emergency Management Agency or                   The core data on housing damage for both
                                                 account is closed.                                      the Army Corps of Engineers: . . .                    the unmet housing needs calculation and the
                                                 VIII. Catalog of Federal Domestic                          It should be noted that the language of            concentrated damage are based on home
                                                 Assistance                                              Public Law 115–56 permits HUD to deduct               inspection data for FEMA’s Individual
                                                                                                         up to $10 million from the $7.4 billion for           Assistance program, and supplemented by
                                                   The Catalog of Federal Domestic                       purposes of administration and oversight of           SBA data from its Disaster Loan Program.
                                                 Assistance numbers for the disaster                     the appropriation. HUD has opted to deduct            HUD calculates ‘‘unmet housing needs’’ as
                                                 recovery grants under this notice are as                the full $10 million, resulting in a total of         the number of housing units with unmet
                                                 follows: 14.228 for State CDBG grantees.                $7.39 billion available for allocation.               needs times the estimated cost to repair those
                                                                                                                                                               units less repair funds already provided by
                                                 IX. Finding of No Significant Impact                    Most Impacted and Distressed Areas                    FEMA and SBA.
                                                                                                                                                                  For the continental U.S., HUD finds its
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                                                   A Finding of No Significant Impact                      As with prior CDBG–DR appropriations,
                                                                                                         HUD is not obligated to allocate funds for all        traditional approach of just using real
                                                 (FONSI) with respect to the                                                                                   property damage assessments for owner-
                                                 environment has been made in                            major disasters declared in 2017. HUD is
                                                                                                         directed to use the funds ‘‘in the most               occupied units continues to be effective.
                                                 accordance with HUD regulations at 24                   impacted and distressed areas.’’ HUD has              Each of the FEMA inspected owner units are
                                                 CFR part 50, which implement section                    implemented this directive by limiting                categorized by HUD into one of five
                                                 102(2)(C) of the National Environmental                 CDBG–DR formula allocations to                        categories:
                                                 Policy Act of 1969 (42 U.S.C.                           jurisdictions with major disasters that meet          • Minor-Low: Less than $3,000 of FEMA
                                                 4332(2)(C)). The FONSI is available for                 two standards:                                           inspected real property damage



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                                                                                Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 28 / Friday, February 9, 2018 / Notices                                                 5869

                                                 • Minor-High: $3,000 to $7,999 of FEMA                  • Major-Low: $2,000 to $3,499 of FEMA                 content loss by the following damage
                                                    inspected real property damage                          inspected personal property damage or 1 to         categories for each state:
                                                 • Major-Low: $8,000 to $14,999 of FEMA                     4 feet of flooding on the first floor              • Category 1: real estate + content loss =
                                                    inspected real property damage and/or 1 to           • Major-High: $3,500 to $7,499 of FEMA                  below 12,000
                                                    4 feet of flooding on the first floor                   inspected personal property damage or 4 to
                                                                                                                                                               • Category 2: real estate + content loss =
                                                 • Major-High: $15,000 to $28,800 of FEMA                   6 feet of flooding on the first floor
                                                                                                                                                                 12,000–30,000
                                                    inspected real property damage and/or 4 to           • Severe: Greater than $7,500 of FEMA
                                                                                                            inspected personal property damage or              • Category 3: real estate + content loss =
                                                    6 feet of flooding on the first floor                                                                        30,000–65,000
                                                 • Severe: Greater than $28,800 of FEMA                     determined destroyed and/or 6 or more feet
                                                                                                            of flooding on the first floor                     • Category 4: real estate + content loss =
                                                    inspected real property damage or                                                                            65,000–150,000
                                                                                                            For rental properties, to meet the statutory
                                                    determined destroyed and/or 6 or more feet                                                                 • Category 5: real estate + content loss =
                                                                                                         requirement of ‘‘most impacted’’ in this
                                                    of flooding on the first floor
                                                                                                         legislative language, homes are determined to           above 150,000
                                                    For Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands,              have a high level of damage if they have                For properties with real estate and content
                                                 owner damage is calculated based on both                damage of ‘‘major-low’’ or higher. That is,           loss of $30,000 or more, HUD calculates the
                                                 real property and personal property on                  they have a FEMA personal property damage             estimated amount of unmet needs for small
                                                 findings by HUD that this likely is a more              assessment of $2,000 or greater or flooding
                                                                                                                                                               businesses by multiplying the median
                                                 accurate estimate of serious homeowner                  over 1 foot.
                                                                                                                                                               damage estimates for the categories above by
                                                 damage in those areas. For these owner-                    Furthermore, landlords are presumed to
                                                 occupied units, the damage grouping would               have adequate insurance coverage unless the           the number of small businesses denied an
                                                 be the higher damage categorization based on            unit is occupied by a renter with income less         SBA loan, including those denied a loan
                                                 the calculation above or:                               than 50% of Area Median Income. Units are             prior to inspection due to inadequate credit
                                                                                                         occupied by a tenant with income less than            or income (or a decision had not been made),
                                                 • Minor-Low: Less than $2,500 of FEMA
                                                                                                         50% of Area Median Income are used to                 under the assumption that damage among
                                                    inspected personal property damage
                                                                                                         calculate likely unmet needs for affordable           those denied at pre-inspection have the same
                                                 • Minor-High: $2,500 to $3,499 of FEMA
                                                                                                         rental housing. In Puerto Rico and the Virgin         distribution of damage as those denied after
                                                    inspected personal property damage                   Islands, units are occupied by a tenant with          inspection.
                                                 • Major-Low: $3,500 to $4,999 of FEMA                   income less than the greater of the Federal
                                                    inspected personal property damage or 1 to           poverty level or 50% of Area Median Income            Allocation Calculation
                                                    4 feet of flooding on the first floor                are used to calculate likely unmet needs for             Once eligible entities are identified using
                                                 • Major-High: $5,000 to $8,999 of FEMA                  affordable rental housing.                            the above criteria, the allocation to
                                                    inspected personal property damage or 4 to              The average cost to fully repair a home for        individual grantees represents their
                                                    6 feet of flooding on the first floor                a specific disaster to code within each of the        proportional share of the estimated unmet
                                                 • Severe: Greater than $9,000 of FEMA                   damage categories noted above is calculated           needs. For the formula allocation, HUD
                                                    inspected personal property damage or                using the average real property damage repair
                                                    determined destroyed and/or 6 or more feet                                                                 calculates total serious unmet recovery needs
                                                                                                         costs determined by the Small Business
                                                    of flooding on the first floor                                                                             as the aggregate of:
                                                                                                         Administration for its disaster loan program
                                                    To meet the statutory requirement of ‘‘most          for the subset of homes inspected by both             • Serious unmet housing needs in most
                                                 impacted’’ in this legislative language, homes          SBA and FEMA for each eligible disaster.                 impacted counties or county-equivalents
                                                 are determined to have a most impacted or               Because SBA is inspecting for full repair             • Serious unmet business needs
                                                 serious level of damage if they have damage             costs, it is presumed to reflect the full cost           For Texas, HUD announced an allocation
                                                 of ‘‘major-low’’ or higher.                             to repair the home, which is generally more           on November 17, 2017, that reflected the
                                                    Furthermore, a homeowner is determined               than the FEMA estimates on the cost to make           100% calculation of serious unmet housing
                                                 to have unmet needs if they reported damage             the home habitable.
                                                                                                                                                               and business needs as calculated using the
                                                 and no insurance to cover that damage and                  For each household determined to have
                                                                                                                                                               methods above less $57.8 million allocated
                                                 was outside the 1% risk flood hazard area.              unmet housing needs (as described above),
                                                                                                         their estimated average unmet housing need            from an earlier appropriation. For Florida,
                                                 For all disasters, for homeowners inside the                                                                  HUD announced an allocation on November
                                                 flood hazard area, only homeowners without              less assumed assistance from FEMA and SBA
                                                                                                         was calculated for Texas as $58,956 for major         28, 2017, that reflected a 100% calculation of
                                                 insurance below 120% of Area Median
                                                                                                         damage (low); $72,961 for major damage                serious unmet housing and business needs.
                                                 Income are included in the estimated unmet
                                                                                                         (high); and $102,046 for severe damage. For           Data were not available for Puerto Rico and
                                                 needs.
                                                                                                         Florida: $44,810 for major damage (low);              the Virgin Islands until late December 2017.
                                                    FEMA does not inspect rental units for real
                                                                                                         $45,997 for major damage (high); and $67,799          The remaining funds ($1.7 billion of $7.4
                                                 property damage so personal property
                                                                                                         for severe damage. For Puerto Rico and the            billion appropriated) are significantly less
                                                 damage is used as a proxy for unit damage.
                                                                                                         Virgin Islands: $38,249 for major damage              than the calculated serious unmet housing
                                                 Each of the FEMA inspected renter units are             (low); $41,595 for major damage (high); and
                                                 categorized by HUD into one of five                                                                           and business needs, and thus the allocations
                                                                                                         $66,066 for severe damage.                            are only 57% of the estimated serious unmet
                                                 categories:
                                                                                                         Methods for Estimating Unmet Economic                 housing and business needs for Puerto Rico
                                                 • Minor-Low: Less than $1,000 of FEMA
                                                                                                         Revitalization Needs                                  and the Virgin Islands.
                                                    inspected personal property damage
                                                 • Minor-High: $1,000 to $1,999 of FEMA                    Based on SBA disaster loans to businesses,          [FR Doc. 2018–02693 Filed 2–7–18; 11:15 am]
                                                    inspected personal property damage                   HUD calculates the median real estate and             BILLING CODE 4210–67–P
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Document Created: 2018-02-09 00:11:50
Document Modified: 2018-02-09 00:11:50
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: February 14, 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 202-401-2044. (Except for the ``800'' number, these telephone numbers are not toll-free.) Email inquiries may be sent to [email protected]
FR Citation83 FR 5844 

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