Notice of Funds Availability for the Section 533 Housing Preservation Grants for Fiscal Year 2005, 12564-12568 [05-4775]
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Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 48 / Monday, March 14, 2005 / Notices
Richmond, VA 23229
(804) 287–1596
TDD (804) 287–1753
CJ Michels
Washington State Office
1835 Black Lake Blvd., Suite B
Olympia, WA 98512
(360) 704–7730
TDD (360) 704–7760
Robert Lund
Western Pacific Territories
Served by Hawaii State Office
West Virginia State Office
Federal Building
75 High Street, Room 320
Morgantown, WV 26505–7500
(304) 284–4889
TDD (304) 284–4836
Craig St. Clair
Wisconsin State Office
4949 Kirschling Court
Stevens Point, WI 54481
(715) 345–7608 (ext. 7145)
TDD (715) 345–7614
Peter Kohnen
Wyoming State Office
PO Box 11005
Casper, WY 82602–5006
(307) 233–6715
TDD (307) 233–6733
Jack Hyde
state or federal funds. A minimum of
ten percent leveraged assistance is
required to earn points; however, if the
total percentage of leveraged assistance
is less than ten percent and the proposal
includes donated land, two points will
be awarded for the donated land. To
count as leveraged funds for purposes of
the selection criteria, a commitment of
funds must be provided with the
preapplication. Points will be awarded
in accordance with the following table.
(0 to 20 points)
Percentage
75 or more ......................................
60–74 ..............................................
50–59 ..............................................
40–49 ..............................................
30–39 ..............................................
20–29 ..............................................
10–19 ..............................................
0–9 ..................................................
V. Application Review Information
All applications for sections 514 and
516 funds must be filed with the
appropriate Rural Development State
Office and must meet the requirements
of this Notice. Incomplete applications
will not be reviewed and will be
returned to the applicant. No
application will be accepted after 5
p.m., local time for each Rural
Development State Office on May 13,
2005, unless date and time is extended
by another Notice published in the
Federal Register. The Rural
Development State Office will base its
determination of completeness of the
application and the eligibility of each
applicant on the information provided
in the application.
Selection Criteria
Section 514 loan funds and section
516 grant funds will be distributed to
States based on a national competition,
as follows:
(1) States will accept, review, and
score requests in accordance with the
Notice. The scoring factors are:
(a) The presence and extent of
leveraged assistance, including donated
land, for the units that will serve
program-eligible tenants, calculated as a
percentage of the RHS total
development cost (TDC). RHS TDC
excludes non-RHS eligible costs such as
a developer’s fee. Leveraged assistance
includes, but is not limited to, funds for
hard construction costs, section 8 or
other non-RHS tenant subsidies, and
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Points
20
18
16
12
10
8
5
0
Donated land in proposals with less
than ten percent total leveraged
Assistance: 2
(b) Percent of units for seasonal,
temporary, migrant housing. (5 points
for up to and including 50 percent of the
units; 10 points for 51 percent or more.)
(c) The selection criteria includes one
optional criteria set by the National
Office. The National Office initiative
will be used in the selection criteria as
follows: Up to 10 points will be
awarded based on the presence of and
extent to which a tenant services plan
exists that clearly outlines services that
will be provided to the residents of the
proposed project. These services may
include, but are not limited to,
transportation related services, on-site
English as a Second Language (ESL)
classes, move-in funds, emergency
assistance funds, homeownership
counseling, food pantries, after school
tutoring, and computer learning centers.
Two points will be awarded for each
resident service included in the tenant
services plan up to a maximum of 10
points. Plans must detail how the
services are to be administered, who
will administer them, and where they
will be administered. All tenant service
plans must include letters of intent that
clearly state the service that will be
provided at the project for the benefit of
the residents from any party
administering each service, including
the applicant. (0 to 10 points)
(2) States will conduct the
preliminary eligibility review, score the
applications, and forward them to the
National Office.
(3) The National Office will rank all
requests nationwide and distribute
funds to States in rank order, within
funding and RA limits. A lottery in
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accordance with 7 CFR 3560.56(c)(2)
will be used for applications with tied
point scores when they all cannot be
funded. If insufficient funds or RA
remain for the next ranked proposal,
that applicant will be given a chance to
modify their application to bring it
within remaining funding levels. This
will be repeated for each next ranked
eligible proposal until an award can be
made or the list is exhausted.
Dated: March 3, 2005.
Russell T. Davis,
Administrator, Rural Housing Service.
[FR Doc. 05–4774 Filed 3–11–05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3410–XV–P
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Rural Housing Service
Notice of Funds Availability for the
Section 533 Housing Preservation
Grants for Fiscal Year 2005
Announcement Type: Initial Notice
inviting applications from qualified
applicants for Fiscal Year 2005.
Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance
Numbers (CFDA): 10.433.
SUMMARY: The Rural Housing Service
(RHS) announces that it is soliciting
competitive applications under its
Housing Preservation Grant (HPG)
program. The HPG program is a grant
program which provides qualified
public agencies, private nonprofit
organizations, and other eligible entities
grant funds to assist very low- and lowincome homeowners in repairing and
rehabilitating their homes in rural areas.
In addition, the HPG program assists
rental property owners and cooperative
housing complexes in repairing and
rehabilitating their units if they agree to
make such units available to low- and
very low-income persons. This action is
taken to comply with Agency
regulations found in 7 CFR part 1944,
subpart N, which require the Agency to
announce the opening and closing dates
for receipt of pre-applications for HPG
funds from eligible applicants. The
intended effect of this Notice is to
provide eligible organizations notice of
these dates.
DATES: The closing deadline for receipt
of all applications in response to this
Notice is 5 p.m., local time for each
Rural Development State Office on May
13, 2005. The application closing
deadline is firm as to date and hour.
RHS will not consider any application
that is received after the closing
deadline. Applicants intending to mail
applications must provide sufficient
time to permit delivery on or before the
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closing deadline date and time.
Acceptance by the United States Postal
Service or private mailer does not
constitute delivery. Facsimile (FAX) and
postage due applications will not be
accepted.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Paperwork Reduction Act
The reporting requirements contained
in this Notice have been approved by
the Office of Management and Budget
under Control Number 0575–0115.
Program Administration
I. Funding Opportunities Description
The funding instrument for the HPG
Program will be a grant agreement. The
term of the grant cannot exceed 1 year
without Agency consent. Applicants
should contact the Rural Development
State Office to determine the allocation
and the State maximum grant level, if
any.
II. Award Information
For Fiscal Year 2005, $8,810,944 is
available for the HPG Program. A set
aside of $892,800 has been established
for grants located in Empowerment
Zones, Enterprise Communities, and
REAP Zones and other funds will be
distributed under a formula allocation
to States pursuant to 7 CFR part 1940,
subpart L, ‘‘Methodology and Formulas
for Allocation of Loan and Grant
Program Funds.’’ Decisions on funding
will be based on pre-applications.
III. Eligibility Information
7 CFR part 1944, subpart N provides
details on what information must be
contained in the pre-application
package. Contact the Rural Development
State office to receive further
information on the State allocation of
funds and copies of the pre-application
package. Eligible entities for these
competitively awarded grants include
State and local governments, nonprofit
corporations, federally recognized
Indian tribes, and consortia of eligible
entities.
As part of the application, all
applicants must also provide a Dun and
Bradstreet Data Universal Numbering
System (DUNS) number. As required by
the Office of Management and Budget
(OMB), all grant applicants must
provide a DUNS number when applying
for Federal grants, on or after October 1,
2003. Organizations can receive a DUNS
number at no cost by calling the
dedicated toll-free DUNS number
request line at 1–866–705–5711.
Additional information concerning this
requirement is provided in a policy
directive issued by OMB and published
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in the Federal Register on June 27, 2003
(68 FR 38402–38405).
IV. Application and Submission
Information
Applicants wishing to apply for
assistance must make its statement of
activities available to the public for
comment. The applicant(s) must
announce the availability of its
statement of activities for review in a
newspaper of general circulation in the
project area and allow at least 15 days
for public comment. The start of this 15day period must occur no later than 16
days prior to the last day for acceptance
of pre-applications by RHS.
Applicants must also contact the
Rural Development State Office, serving
the place in which they desire to submit
an application to receive further
information and copies of the
application package. Rural Development
will date and time stamp incoming
applications to evidence timely receipt,
and, upon request, will provide the
applicant with a written
acknowledgment of receipt. A listing of
Rural Development State Offices, their
addresses, telephone numbers, and
person to contact follows:
Note: Telephone numbers listed are not
toll-free.
Alabama State Office
Suite 601 Sterling Centre
4121 Carmichael Road
Montgomery, AL 36106–3683
(334) 279–3400
TDD (334) 279–3495
James B. Harris
Alaska State Office
800 West Evergreen, Suite 201
Palmer, AK 99645
(907) 761–7740
TDD (907) 761–8905
Debbie Andrys
Arizona State Office
Phoenix Courthouse and Federal Building
230 North First Ave., Suite 206
Phoenix, AZ 85003–1706
(602) 280–8765
TDD (602) 280–8706
Johnna Vargas
Arkansas State Office
700 W. Capitol Ave., Rm. 3416
Little Rock, AR 72201–3225
(501) 301–3258
TDD (501) 301–3063
Clinton King
California State Office
430 G Street, #4169
Davis, CA 95616–4169
(530) 934–4614 ext. 123
TDD (530) 792–5848
Linda Eveland
Colorado State Office
655 Parfet Street, Room E100
Lakewood, CO 80215
(720) 544–2923
TDD (800) 659–2656
Mary Summerfield
PO 00000
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Connecticut
Served by Massachusetts State Office
Delaware and Maryland State Office
4607 South Dupont Highway
PO Box 400
Camden, DE 19934–9998
(302) 697–4353
TDD (302) 697–4303
Pat Baker
Florida & Virgin Islands State Office
4440 N.W. 25th Place
Gainesville, FL 32606–6563
(352) 338–3465
TDD (352) 338–3499
Elizabeth M. Whitaker
Georgia State Office
Stephens Federal Building
355 E. Hancock Avenue
Athens, GA 30601–2768
(706) 546–2164
TDD (706) 546–2034
Wayne Rogers
Hawaii State Office
(Services all Hawaii, American Samoa,
Guam, and Western Pacific)
Room 311, Federal Building
154 Waianuenue Avenue
Hilo, HI 96720
(808) 933–8305
TDD (808) 933–8321
Jack Mahan
Idaho State Office
Suite A1
9173 West Barnes Dr.
Boise, ID 83709
(208) 378–5628
TDD (208) 378–5644
LaDonn McElligott
Illinois State Office
2118 West Park Court, Suite A
Champaign, IL 61821–2986
(217) 403–6222
TDD (217) 403–6240
Barry L. Ramsey
Indiana State Office
5975 Lakeside Boulevard
Indianapolis, IN 46278
(317) 290–3100 (ext. 423)
TDD (317) 290–3343
John Young
Iowa State Office
210 Walnut Street Room 873
Des Moines, IA 50309
(515) 284–4493
TDD (515) 284–4858
Sue Wilhite
Kansas State Office
1303 SW First American Place, Suite 100
Topeka, KS 66604–4040
(785) 271–2721
TDD (785) 271–2767
Virginia M. Hammersmith
Kentucky State Office
771 Corporate Drive, Suite 200
Lexington, KY 40503
(859) 224–7325
TDD (859) 224–7422
Beth Moore
Louisiana State Office
3727 Government Street
Alexandria, LA 71302
(318) 473–7962
TDD (318) 473–7655
Yvonne R. Emerson
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Maine State Office
967 Illinois Ave., Suite 4
PO Box 405
Bangor, ME 04402–0405
(207) 990–9110
TDD (207) 942–7331
Bob Nadeau
Maryland
Served by Delaware State Office
Massachusetts, Connecticut, & Rhode Island
State Office
451 West Street Suite 2
Amherst, MA 01002
(413) 253–4315
TDD (413) 253–4590
Paul Geoffroy
Michigan State Office
3001 Coolidge Road, Suite 200
East Lansing, MI 48823
(517) 324–5192
TDD (517) 337–6795
Ghulam R. Simbal
Minnesota State Office
375 Jackson Street Building, Suite 410
St. Paul, MN 55125
(651) 602–7804
TDD (651) 602–7830
Thomas Osborne
Mississippi State Office
Federal Building, Suite 831
100 W. Capitol Street
Jackson, MS 39269
(601) 965–4325
TDD (601) 965–5850
Darnella Smith-Murray
Missouri State Office
601 Business Loop 70 West
Parkade Center, Suite 235
Columbia, MO 65203
(573) 876–9303
TDD (573) 876–9480
Becky Eftink
Montana State Office
900 Technology Blvd, Suite B
Bozeman, MT 59771
(406) 585–2515
TDD (406) 585–2562
Deborah Chorlton
Nebraska State Office
Federal Building, Room 152
100 Centennial Mall N
Lincoln, NE 68508
(402) 437–5035
TDD (402) 437–5093
Sharon Kluck
Nevada State Office
1390 South Curry Street
Carson City, NV 89703–9910
(775) 887–1222 (ext. 25)
TDD (775) 885–0633
Angilla Denton
New Hampshire State Office
Concord Center
Suite 218, Box 317
10 Ferry Street
Concord, NH 03301–5004
(603) 223–6046
TDD (603) 229–0536
Jim Fowler
New Jersey State Office
5th Floor North, Suite 500
8000 Midlantic Drive
Mt. Laurel, NJ 08054
(856) 787–7740
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TDD (856) 787–7784
George Hyatt, Jr.
New Mexico State Office
6200 Jefferson St., NE, Room 255
Albuquerque, NM 87109
(505) 761–4944
TDD (505) 761–4938
Carmen N. Lopez
New York State Office
The Galleries of Syracuse
441 S. Salina Street, Suite 357 5th Floor
Syracuse, NY 13202
(315) 477–6404
TDD (315) 477–6447
Tia Baker
North Carolina State Office
4405 Bland Road, Suite 260
Raleigh, NC 27609
(919) 873–2066
TDD (919) 873–2003
William A. Hobbs
North Dakota State Office
Federal Building, Room 208
220 East Rosser
PO Box 1737
Bismarck, ND 58502
(701) 530–2046
TDD (701) 530–2113
Barry Borstad
Ohio State Office
Federal Building, Room 507
200 North High Street
Columbus, OH 43215–2477
(614) 255–2418
TDD (614) 255–2554
Melodie Taylor-Ward
Oklahoma State Office
100 USDA, Suite 108
Stillwater, OK 74074–2654
(405) 742–1070
TDD (405) 742–1007
Ivan Graves
Oregon State Office
101 SW Main, Suite 1410
Portland, OR 97204–3222
(503) 414–3351
TDD (503) 414–3387
Diana Chappell
Pennsylvania State Office
One Credit Union Place, Suite 330
Harrisburg, PA 17110–2996
(717) 237–2282
TDD (717) 237–2261
Martha E. Hanson
Puerto Rico State Office
IBM Building, Suite 601
Munoz Rivera Ave. #654
San Juan, PR 00918
(787) 766–5095 (ext. 249)
TDD (787) 766–5332
Lourdes Colon
Rhode Island
Served by Massachusetts State Office
South Carolina State Office
Strom Thurmond Federal Building
1835 Assembly Street, Room 1007
Columbia, SC 29201
(803) 253–3432
TDD (803) 765–5697
Larry D. Floyd
South Dakota State Office
Federal Building, Room 210
200 Fourth Street, SW
Huron, SD 57350
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(605) 352–1132
TDD (605) 352–1147
Roger Hazuka or Pam Reilly
Tennessee State Office
Suite 300
3322 West End Avenue
Nashville, TN 37203–1084
(615) 783–1375
TDD (615) 783–1397
Larry Kennedy
Texas State Office
Federal Building, Suite 102
101 South Main
Temple, TX 76501
(254) 742–9758
TDD (254) 742–9712
Julie Hayes
Utah State Office
Wallace F. Bennett Federal Building
125 S. State Street, Room 4311
Salt Lake City, UT 84138
(801) 524–4325
TDD (801) 524–3309
Janice Kocher
Vermont State Office
City Center, 3rd Floor
89 Main Street
Montpelier, VT 05602
(802) 828–6021
TDD (802) 223–6365
Heidi Setien
Virgin Islands
Served by Florida State Office
Virginia State Office
Culpeper Building, Suite 238
1606 Santa Rosa Road
Richmond, VA 23229
(804) 287–1596
TDD (804) 287–1753
CJ Michels
Washington State Office
1835 Black Lake Blvd., Suite B
Olympia, WA 98512
(360) 704–7730
TDD (360) 704–7742
Robert L. Lund
Western Pacific Territories
Served by Hawaii State Office
West Virginia State Office
Federal Building
75 High Street, Room 320
Morgantown, WV 26505–7500
(304) 284–4889
TDD (304) 284–4836
Craig St. Clair
Wisconsin State Office
4949 Kirschling Court
Stevens Point, WI 54481
(715) 345–7608 (ext.151)
TDD (715) 345–7614
Peter Kohnen
Wyoming State Office
PO Box 82601
Casper, WY 82602–5006
(307) 233–6715
TDD (307) 233–6733
Jack Hyde
For
general information, applicants may
contact Bonnie Edwards-Jackson, Senior
Loan Specialist, Multi-Family Housing
Processing Division, Rural Housing
Service, United States Department of
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
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Agriculture, Stop 0781, 1400
Independence Avenue, SW.,
Washington, DC 20250–0781, telephone
(202) 690–0759 (voice) (this is not a toll
free number) or (800) 877–8339 (TDD–
Federal Information Relay Service).
V. Application Review Information
All applications for Section 533 funds
must be filed with the appropriate Rural
Development State Office and must
meet the requirements of this Notice.
Pre-applications determined not eligible
and/or not meeting the selection criteria
will be notified by the Rural
Development State Office.
All applicants will file an original and
two copies of Standard Form (SF) 424,
‘‘Application For Federal Assistance,’’
and supporting information with the
appropriate Rural Development State
Office. A pre-application package,
including SF–424, is available in any
Rural Development State Office.
All pre-applications shall be
accompanied by the following
information which Rural Development
will use to determine the applicant’s
eligibility to undertake the HPG
program and to evaluate the preapplication under the project selection
criteria of § 1944.679 of 7 CFR part
1944, subpart N.
(a) A statement of activities proposed
by the applicant for its HPG program as
appropriate to the type of assistance the
applicant is proposing, including:
(1) A complete discussion of the type
of and conditions for financial
assistance for housing preservation,
including whether the request for
assistance is for a homeowner assistance
program, a rental property assistance
program, or a cooperative assistance
program;
(2) The process for selecting
recipients for HPG assistance,
determining housing preservation needs
of the dwelling, performing the
necessary work, and monitoring/
inspecting work performed;
(3) A description of the process for
identifying potential environmental
impacts in accordance with § 1944.672
of 7 part CFR 1944, subpart N, and the
provisions for compliance with
Stipulation I, A–G of the Programmatic
Memorandum of Agreement, also
known as PMOA, (RD Instruction 2000–
FF, available in any Rural Development
State Office) in accordance with
§ 1944.673(b) of 7 part CFR 1944,
subpart N;
(4) The development standard(s) the
applicant will use for the housing
preservation work; and, if not the Rural
Development standards for existing
dwellings, the evidence of its
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acceptance by the jurisdiction where the
grant will be implemented;
(5) The time schedule for completing
the program;
(6) The staffing required to complete
the program;
(7) The estimated number of very lowand low-income minority and
nonminority persons the grantee will
assist with HPG funds; and, if a rental
property or cooperative assistance
program, the number of units and the
term of restrictive covenants on their
use for very low- and low-income;
(8) The geographical area(s) to be
served by the HPG program;
(9) The annual estimated budget for
the program period based on the
financial needs to accomplish the
objectives outlined in the proposal. The
budget should include proposed direct
and indirect administrative costs, such
as personnel, fringe benefits, travel,
equipment, supplies, contracts, and
other cost categories, detailing those
costs for which the grantee proposes to
use the HPG grant separately from nonHPG resources, if any. The applicant
budget should also include a schedule
(with amounts) of how the applicant
proposes to draw HPG grant funds, i.e.,
monthly, quarterly, lump sum for
program activities, etc.;
(10) A copy of a indirect cost proposal
as required in 7 CFR parts 3015 and
3016, when the applicant has another
source of federal funding in addition to
the Rural Development HPG program;
(11) A brief description of the
accounting system to be used;
(12) The method of evaluation to be
used by the applicant to determine the
effectiveness of its program which
encompasses the requirements for
quarterly reports to Rural Development
in accordance with § 1944.683(b) of 7
part CFR 1944, subpart N and the
monitoring plan for rental properties
and cooperatives (when applicable)
according to § 1944.689 of 7 part CFR
1944, subpart N;
(13) The source and estimated amount
of other financial resources to be
obtained and used by the applicant for
both HPG activities and housing
development and/or supporting
activities;
(14) The use of program income, if
any, and the tracking system used for
monitoring same;
(15) The applicant’s plan for
disposition of any security instruments
held by them as a result of its HPG
activities in the event of its loss of legal
status;
(16) Any other information necessary
to explain the proposed HPG program;
and
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(17) The outreach efforts outlined in
§ 1944.671(b) of 7 CFR part 1944,
subpart N.
(b) Complete information about the
applicant’s experience and capacity to
carry out the objectives of the proposed
HPG program.
(c) Evidence of the applicant’s legal
existence, including, in the case of a
private nonprofit organization, a copy
of, an accurate reference to, the specific
provisions of State law under which the
applicant is organized; a certified copy
of the applicant’s Articles of
Incorporation and Bylaws or other
evidence of corporate existence;
certificate of incorporation for other
than public bodies; evidence of good
standing from the State when the
corporation has been in existence 1 year
or more; and the names and addresses
of the applicant’s members, directors
and officers. If other organizations are
members of the applicant-organization,
or the applicant is a consortium, preapplications should be accompanied by
the names, addresses, and principal
purpose of the other organizations. If the
applicant is a consortium,
documentation showing compliance
with § 1944.656(4)(ii) of 7 CFR part
1944, subpart N will also be included.
(d) For a private nonprofit entity, the
most recent audited statement and a
current financial statement dated and
signed by an authorized officer of the
entity showing the amounts and specific
nature of assets and liabilities together
with information on the repayment
schedule and status of any debt(s) owed
by the applicant.
(e) A brief narrative statement which
includes information about the area to
be served and the need for improved
housing (including both percentage and
the actual number of both low-income
and low-income minority households
and substandard housing), the need for
the type of housing preservation
assistance being proposed, the
anticipated use of HPG resources for
historic properties, the method of
evaluation to be used by the applicant
in determining the effectiveness of its
efforts.
(f) Applicant must submit an original
and one copy of Form RD 1940–20
prepared in accordance with Exhibit F–
1 of 7 part CFR 1944, subpart N.
(g) Applicant must also submit a
description of its process for:
(1) Identifying and rehabilitating
properties listed on or eligible for listing
on the National Register of Historic
Places;
(2) Identifying properties that are
located in a floodplain or wetland;
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(3) Identifying properties located
within the Coastal Barrier Resources
System; and
(4) Coordinating with other public
and private organizations and programs
that provide assistance in the
rehabilitation of historic properties
(Stipulation I, D, of the PMOA, RD
Instruction 2000–FF, available in any
Rural Development State Office).
(h) The applicant must also submit
evidence of the State Historic
Preservation Office’s, also known as
SHPO, concurrence in the proposal, or
in the event of nonconcurrence, a copy
of SHPO’s comments together with
evidence that the applicant has sought
the Advisory Council on Historic
Preservation’s advice as to how the
disagreement might be resolved, and a
copy of any advice provided by the
Council.
(i) The applicant must submit written
statements and related correspondence
reflecting compliance with § 1944.674(a)
and (c) of 7 CFR part 1944, subpart N
regarding consultation with local
government leaders in the preparation
of its program and the consultation with
local and state government pursuant to
the provisions of Executive Order
12372.
(j) The applicant is to make its
statement of activities available to the
public for comment prior to submission
to Rural Development pursuant to
§ 1944.674(b) of 7 CFR part 1944,
subpart N. The application must contain
a description of how the comments (if
any were received) were addressed.
(k) The applicant must submit an
original and one copy of Form RD 400–
1, ‘‘Equal Opportunity Agreement,’’ and
Form 400–4, ‘‘Assurance Agreement
Funds,’’ in accordance with § 1944.676
of 7 CFR part 1944, subpart N.
Applicants should review 7 CFR part
1944, subpart N for a comprehensive list
of all application requirements.
Selection Criteria
The Rural Development State Offices
will utilize the following project
selection criteria for applicants in
accordance with § 1944.679 of 7 CFR
part 1944, subpart N:
(a) Providing a financially feasible
program of housing preservation
assistance. Financially feasible is
defined as proposed assistance which
will be affordable to the intended
recipient or result in affordable housing
for very low- and low-income persons.
(b) Serving eligible rural areas with a
concentration of substandard housing
for households with very low- and lowincome.
VerDate jul<14>2003
15:35 Mar 11, 2005
Jkt 205001
(c) Being an eligible applicant as
defined in § 1944.658 of 7 CFR part
1944, subpart N.
(d) Meeting the requirements of
consultation and public comment in
accordance with § 1944.674 of 7 CFR
part 1944, subpart N.
(e) Submitting a complete preapplication as outlined in § 1944.676 of
7 CFR part 1944, subpart N.
For applicants meeting all of the
requirements listed above, the Rural
Development State Offices will use
weighted criteria as selection for the
grant recipients. Each pre-application
and its accompanying statement of
activities will be evaluated and, based
solely on the information contained in
the pre-application, the applicant’s
proposal will be numerically rated on
each criteria within the range provided.
The highest-ranking applicant(s) will be
selected based on allocation of funds
available to the state.
(a) Points are awarded based on the
percentage of very low-income persons
that the applicant proposes to assist,
using the following scale:
Points
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
More than 80% .......................
61% to 80% ............................
41% to 60% ............................
20% to 40% ............................
Less than 20% ........................
20
15
10
5
0
(b) The applicant’s proposal may be
expected to result in the following
percentage of HPG fund use (excluding
administrative costs) to total cost of unit
preservation. This percentage reflects
maximum repair or rehabilitation with
the least possible HPG funds due to
leveraging, innovative financial
assistance, owner’s contribution or other
specified approaches. Points are
awarded based on the following
percentage of HPG funds (excluding
administrative costs) to total funds:
(2) The organization or a member of
its staff has 2 or more years experience
successfully managing and operating a
program assisting very low- and lowincome persons obtain housing
assistance: 10 points.
(3) If the organization has
administered grant programs, there are
no outstanding or unresolved audit or
investigative findings which might
impair carrying out the proposal: 10
points.
(d) The proposed program will be
undertaken entirely in rural areas
outside Metropolitan Statistical Areas,
also known as MSAs, identified by
Rural Development as having
populations below 10,000 or in remote
parts of other rural areas (i.e., rural areas
contained in MSAs with less than 5,000
population) as defined in § 1944.656 of
7 CFR part 1944, subpart N: 10 points.
(e) The program will use less than 20
percent of HPG funds for administration
purposes:
Points
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
(7)
More than 20% ...............
20% .................................
19% .................................
18% .................................
17% .................................
16% .................................
15% or less .....................
......................
0
1
2
3
4
5
* Not eligible
(f) The proposed program contains a
component for alleviating overcrowding
as defined in § 1944.656 of 7 CFR part
1944, subpart N: 5 points.
In the event more than one preapplication receives the same amount of
points, those pre-applications will then
be ranked based on the actual
percentage figure used for determining
the points. Further, in the event that
pre-applications are still tied, then those
pre-applications still tied will be ranked
based on the percentage figures used for
Points
administration purposes (low to high).
(1) 50% or less .............................
20 Further, for applications where
(2) 51% to 65% ............................
15 assistance to rental properties or
(3) 66% to 80% ............................
10 cooperatives is proposed, those still tied
(4) 81% to 95% ............................
5 will be further ranked based on the
(5) 96% to 100% ..........................
0 number of years the units are available
for occupancy under the program (a
(c) The applicant has demonstrated its minimum of 5 years is required). For
administrative capacity in assisting very this part, ranking will be based from
low- and low-income persons to obtain
most to least number of years. Finally,
adequate housing based on the
if there is still a tie, then a lottery system
following:
will be used.
(1) The organization or a member of
Dated: March 3, 2005.
its staff has 2 or more years experience
Russell T. Davis,
successfully managing and operating a
Administrator, Rural Housing Service.
rehabilitation or weatherization type
[FR Doc. 05–4775 Filed 3–11–05; 8:45 am]
program, including Rural
Development’s HPG Program: 10 points. BILLING CODE 3410–XV–P
PO 00000
Frm 00028
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4703
E:\FR\FM\14MRN2.SGM
14MRN2
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 70, Number 48 (Monday, March 14, 2005)]
[Notices]
[Pages 12564-12568]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 05-4775]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Rural Housing Service
Notice of Funds Availability for the Section 533 Housing
Preservation Grants for Fiscal Year 2005
Announcement Type: Initial Notice inviting applications from
qualified applicants for Fiscal Year 2005.
Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance Numbers (CFDA): 10.433.
SUMMARY: The Rural Housing Service (RHS) announces that it is
soliciting competitive applications under its Housing Preservation
Grant (HPG) program. The HPG program is a grant program which provides
qualified public agencies, private nonprofit organizations, and other
eligible entities grant funds to assist very low- and low-income
homeowners in repairing and rehabilitating their homes in rural areas.
In addition, the HPG program assists rental property owners and
cooperative housing complexes in repairing and rehabilitating their
units if they agree to make such units available to low- and very low-
income persons. This action is taken to comply with Agency regulations
found in 7 CFR part 1944, subpart N, which require the Agency to
announce the opening and closing dates for receipt of pre-applications
for HPG funds from eligible applicants. The intended effect of this
Notice is to provide eligible organizations notice of these dates.
DATES: The closing deadline for receipt of all applications in response
to this Notice is 5 p.m., local time for each Rural Development State
Office on May 13, 2005. The application closing deadline is firm as to
date and hour. RHS will not consider any application that is received
after the closing deadline. Applicants intending to mail applications
must provide sufficient time to permit delivery on or before the
[[Page 12565]]
closing deadline date and time. Acceptance by the United States Postal
Service or private mailer does not constitute delivery. Facsimile (FAX)
and postage due applications will not be accepted.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Paperwork Reduction Act
The reporting requirements contained in this Notice have been
approved by the Office of Management and Budget under Control Number
0575-0115.
Program Administration
I. Funding Opportunities Description
The funding instrument for the HPG Program will be a grant
agreement. The term of the grant cannot exceed 1 year without Agency
consent. Applicants should contact the Rural Development State Office
to determine the allocation and the State maximum grant level, if any.
II. Award Information
For Fiscal Year 2005, $8,810,944 is available for the HPG Program.
A set aside of $892,800 has been established for grants located in
Empowerment Zones, Enterprise Communities, and REAP Zones and other
funds will be distributed under a formula allocation to States pursuant
to 7 CFR part 1940, subpart L, ``Methodology and Formulas for
Allocation of Loan and Grant Program Funds.'' Decisions on funding will
be based on pre-applications.
III. Eligibility Information
7 CFR part 1944, subpart N provides details on what information
must be contained in the pre-application package. Contact the Rural
Development State office to receive further information on the State
allocation of funds and copies of the pre-application package. Eligible
entities for these competitively awarded grants include State and local
governments, nonprofit corporations, federally recognized Indian
tribes, and consortia of eligible entities.
As part of the application, all applicants must also provide a Dun
and Bradstreet Data Universal Numbering System (DUNS) number. As
required by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB), all grant
applicants must provide a DUNS number when applying for Federal grants,
on or after October 1, 2003. Organizations can receive a DUNS number at
no cost by calling the dedicated toll-free DUNS number request line at
1-866-705-5711. Additional information concerning this requirement is
provided in a policy directive issued by OMB and published in the
Federal Register on June 27, 2003 (68 FR 38402-38405).
IV. Application and Submission Information
Applicants wishing to apply for assistance must make its statement
of activities available to the public for comment. The applicant(s)
must announce the availability of its statement of activities for
review in a newspaper of general circulation in the project area and
allow at least 15 days for public comment. The start of this 15-day
period must occur no later than 16 days prior to the last day for
acceptance of pre-applications by RHS.
Applicants must also contact the Rural Development State Office,
serving the place in which they desire to submit an application to
receive further information and copies of the application package.
Rural Development will date and time stamp incoming applications to
evidence timely receipt, and, upon request, will provide the applicant
with a written acknowledgment of receipt. A listing of Rural
Development State Offices, their addresses, telephone numbers, and
person to contact follows:
Note: Telephone numbers listed are not toll-free.
Alabama State Office
Suite 601 Sterling Centre
4121 Carmichael Road
Montgomery, AL 36106-3683
(334) 279-3400
TDD (334) 279-3495
James B. Harris
Alaska State Office
800 West Evergreen, Suite 201
Palmer, AK 99645
(907) 761-7740
TDD (907) 761-8905
Debbie Andrys
Arizona State Office
Phoenix Courthouse and Federal Building
230 North First Ave., Suite 206
Phoenix, AZ 85003-1706
(602) 280-8765
TDD (602) 280-8706
Johnna Vargas
Arkansas State Office
700 W. Capitol Ave., Rm. 3416
Little Rock, AR 72201-3225
(501) 301-3258
TDD (501) 301-3063
Clinton King
California State Office
430 G Street, 4169
Davis, CA 95616-4169
(530) 934-4614 ext. 123
TDD (530) 792-5848
Linda Eveland
Colorado State Office
655 Parfet Street, Room E100
Lakewood, CO 80215
(720) 544-2923
TDD (800) 659-2656
Mary Summerfield
Connecticut
Served by Massachusetts State Office
Delaware and Maryland State Office
4607 South Dupont Highway
PO Box 400
Camden, DE 19934-9998
(302) 697-4353
TDD (302) 697-4303
Pat Baker
Florida & Virgin Islands State Office
4440 N.W. 25th Place
Gainesville, FL 32606-6563
(352) 338-3465
TDD (352) 338-3499
Elizabeth M. Whitaker
Georgia State Office
Stephens Federal Building
355 E. Hancock Avenue
Athens, GA 30601-2768
(706) 546-2164
TDD (706) 546-2034
Wayne Rogers
Hawaii State Office
(Services all Hawaii, American Samoa, Guam, and Western Pacific)
Room 311, Federal Building
154 Waianuenue Avenue
Hilo, HI 96720
(808) 933-8305
TDD (808) 933-8321
Jack Mahan
Idaho State Office
Suite A1
9173 West Barnes Dr.
Boise, ID 83709
(208) 378-5628
TDD (208) 378-5644
LaDonn McElligott
Illinois State Office
2118 West Park Court, Suite A
Champaign, IL 61821-2986
(217) 403-6222
TDD (217) 403-6240
Barry L. Ramsey
Indiana State Office
5975 Lakeside Boulevard
Indianapolis, IN 46278
(317) 290-3100 (ext. 423)
TDD (317) 290-3343
John Young
Iowa State Office
210 Walnut Street Room 873
Des Moines, IA 50309
(515) 284-4493
TDD (515) 284-4858
Sue Wilhite
Kansas State Office
1303 SW First American Place, Suite 100
Topeka, KS 66604-4040
(785) 271-2721
TDD (785) 271-2767
Virginia M. Hammersmith
Kentucky State Office
771 Corporate Drive, Suite 200
Lexington, KY 40503
(859) 224-7325
TDD (859) 224-7422
Beth Moore
Louisiana State Office
3727 Government Street
Alexandria, LA 71302
(318) 473-7962
TDD (318) 473-7655
Yvonne R. Emerson
[[Page 12566]]
Maine State Office
967 Illinois Ave., Suite 4
PO Box 405
Bangor, ME 04402-0405
(207) 990-9110
TDD (207) 942-7331
Bob Nadeau
Maryland
Served by Delaware State Office
Massachusetts, Connecticut, & Rhode Island State Office
451 West Street Suite 2
Amherst, MA 01002
(413) 253-4315
TDD (413) 253-4590
Paul Geoffroy
Michigan State Office
3001 Coolidge Road, Suite 200
East Lansing, MI 48823
(517) 324-5192
TDD (517) 337-6795
Ghulam R. Simbal
Minnesota State Office
375 Jackson Street Building, Suite 410
St. Paul, MN 55125
(651) 602-7804
TDD (651) 602-7830
Thomas Osborne
Mississippi State Office
Federal Building, Suite 831
100 W. Capitol Street
Jackson, MS 39269
(601) 965-4325
TDD (601) 965-5850
Darnella Smith-Murray
Missouri State Office
601 Business Loop 70 West
Parkade Center, Suite 235
Columbia, MO 65203
(573) 876-9303
TDD (573) 876-9480
Becky Eftink
Montana State Office
900 Technology Blvd, Suite B
Bozeman, MT 59771
(406) 585-2515
TDD (406) 585-2562
Deborah Chorlton
Nebraska State Office
Federal Building, Room 152
100 Centennial Mall N
Lincoln, NE 68508
(402) 437-5035
TDD (402) 437-5093
Sharon Kluck
Nevada State Office
1390 South Curry Street
Carson City, NV 89703-9910
(775) 887-1222 (ext. 25)
TDD (775) 885-0633
Angilla Denton
New Hampshire State Office
Concord Center
Suite 218, Box 317
10 Ferry Street
Concord, NH 03301-5004
(603) 223-6046
TDD (603) 229-0536
Jim Fowler
New Jersey State Office
5th Floor North, Suite 500
8000 Midlantic Drive
Mt. Laurel, NJ 08054
(856) 787-7740
TDD (856) 787-7784
George Hyatt, Jr.
New Mexico State Office
6200 Jefferson St., NE, Room 255
Albuquerque, NM 87109
(505) 761-4944
TDD (505) 761-4938
Carmen N. Lopez
New York State Office
The Galleries of Syracuse
441 S. Salina Street, Suite 357 5th Floor
Syracuse, NY 13202
(315) 477-6404
TDD (315) 477-6447
Tia Baker
North Carolina State Office
4405 Bland Road, Suite 260
Raleigh, NC 27609
(919) 873-2066
TDD (919) 873-2003
William A. Hobbs
North Dakota State Office
Federal Building, Room 208
220 East Rosser
PO Box 1737
Bismarck, ND 58502
(701) 530-2046
TDD (701) 530-2113
Barry Borstad
Ohio State Office
Federal Building, Room 507
200 North High Street
Columbus, OH 43215-2477
(614) 255-2418
TDD (614) 255-2554
Melodie Taylor-Ward
Oklahoma State Office
100 USDA, Suite 108
Stillwater, OK 74074-2654
(405) 742-1070
TDD (405) 742-1007
Ivan Graves
Oregon State Office
101 SW Main, Suite 1410
Portland, OR 97204-3222
(503) 414-3351
TDD (503) 414-3387
Diana Chappell
Pennsylvania State Office
One Credit Union Place, Suite 330
Harrisburg, PA 17110-2996
(717) 237-2282
TDD (717) 237-2261
Martha E. Hanson
Puerto Rico State Office
IBM Building, Suite 601
Munoz Rivera Ave. 654
San Juan, PR 00918
(787) 766-5095 (ext. 249)
TDD (787) 766-5332
Lourdes Colon
Rhode Island
Served by Massachusetts State Office
South Carolina State Office
Strom Thurmond Federal Building
1835 Assembly Street, Room 1007
Columbia, SC 29201
(803) 253-3432
TDD (803) 765-5697
Larry D. Floyd
South Dakota State Office
Federal Building, Room 210
200 Fourth Street, SW
Huron, SD 57350
(605) 352-1132
TDD (605) 352-1147
Roger Hazuka or Pam Reilly
Tennessee State Office
Suite 300
3322 West End Avenue
Nashville, TN 37203-1084
(615) 783-1375
TDD (615) 783-1397
Larry Kennedy
Texas State Office
Federal Building, Suite 102
101 South Main
Temple, TX 76501
(254) 742-9758
TDD (254) 742-9712
Julie Hayes
Utah State Office
Wallace F. Bennett Federal Building
125 S. State Street, Room 4311
Salt Lake City, UT 84138
(801) 524-4325
TDD (801) 524-3309
Janice Kocher
Vermont State Office
City Center, 3rd Floor
89 Main Street
Montpelier, VT 05602
(802) 828-6021
TDD (802) 223-6365
Heidi Setien
Virgin Islands
Served by Florida State Office
Virginia State Office
Culpeper Building, Suite 238
1606 Santa Rosa Road
Richmond, VA 23229
(804) 287-1596
TDD (804) 287-1753
CJ Michels
Washington State Office
1835 Black Lake Blvd., Suite B
Olympia, WA 98512
(360) 704-7730
TDD (360) 704-7742
Robert L. Lund
Western Pacific Territories
Served by Hawaii State Office
West Virginia State Office
Federal Building
75 High Street, Room 320
Morgantown, WV 26505-7500
(304) 284-4889
TDD (304) 284-4836
Craig St. Clair
Wisconsin State Office
4949 Kirschling Court
Stevens Point, WI 54481
(715) 345-7608 (ext.151)
TDD (715) 345-7614
Peter Kohnen
Wyoming State Office
PO Box 82601
Casper, WY 82602-5006
(307) 233-6715
TDD (307) 233-6733
Jack Hyde
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For general information, applicants
may contact Bonnie Edwards-Jackson, Senior Loan Specialist, Multi-
Family Housing Processing Division, Rural Housing Service, United
States Department of
[[Page 12567]]
Agriculture, Stop 0781, 1400 Independence Avenue, SW., Washington, DC
20250-0781, telephone (202) 690-0759 (voice) (this is not a toll free
number) or (800) 877-8339 (TDD-Federal Information Relay Service).
V. Application Review Information
All applications for Section 533 funds must be filed with the
appropriate Rural Development State Office and must meet the
requirements of this Notice. Pre-applications determined not eligible
and/or not meeting the selection criteria will be notified by the Rural
Development State Office.
All applicants will file an original and two copies of Standard
Form (SF) 424, ``Application For Federal Assistance,'' and supporting
information with the appropriate Rural Development State Office. A pre-
application package, including SF-424, is available in any Rural
Development State Office.
All pre-applications shall be accompanied by the following
information which Rural Development will use to determine the
applicant's eligibility to undertake the HPG program and to evaluate
the pre-application under the project selection criteria of Sec.
1944.679 of 7 CFR part 1944, subpart N.
(a) A statement of activities proposed by the applicant for its HPG
program as appropriate to the type of assistance the applicant is
proposing, including:
(1) A complete discussion of the type of and conditions for
financial assistance for housing preservation, including whether the
request for assistance is for a homeowner assistance program, a rental
property assistance program, or a cooperative assistance program;
(2) The process for selecting recipients for HPG assistance,
determining housing preservation needs of the dwelling, performing the
necessary work, and monitoring/inspecting work performed;
(3) A description of the process for identifying potential
environmental impacts in accordance with Sec. 1944.672 of 7 part CFR
1944, subpart N, and the provisions for compliance with Stipulation I,
A-G of the Programmatic Memorandum of Agreement, also known as PMOA,
(RD Instruction 2000-FF, available in any Rural Development State
Office) in accordance with Sec. 1944.673(b) of 7 part CFR 1944,
subpart N;
(4) The development standard(s) the applicant will use for the
housing preservation work; and, if not the Rural Development standards
for existing dwellings, the evidence of its acceptance by the
jurisdiction where the grant will be implemented;
(5) The time schedule for completing the program;
(6) The staffing required to complete the program;
(7) The estimated number of very low- and low-income minority and
nonminority persons the grantee will assist with HPG funds; and, if a
rental property or cooperative assistance program, the number of units
and the term of restrictive covenants on their use for very low- and
low-income;
(8) The geographical area(s) to be served by the HPG program;
(9) The annual estimated budget for the program period based on the
financial needs to accomplish the objectives outlined in the proposal.
The budget should include proposed direct and indirect administrative
costs, such as personnel, fringe benefits, travel, equipment, supplies,
contracts, and other cost categories, detailing those costs for which
the grantee proposes to use the HPG grant separately from non-HPG
resources, if any. The applicant budget should also include a schedule
(with amounts) of how the applicant proposes to draw HPG grant funds,
i.e., monthly, quarterly, lump sum for program activities, etc.;
(10) A copy of a indirect cost proposal as required in 7 CFR parts
3015 and 3016, when the applicant has another source of federal funding
in addition to the Rural Development HPG program;
(11) A brief description of the accounting system to be used;
(12) The method of evaluation to be used by the applicant to
determine the effectiveness of its program which encompasses the
requirements for quarterly reports to Rural Development in accordance
with Sec. 1944.683(b) of 7 part CFR 1944, subpart N and the monitoring
plan for rental properties and cooperatives (when applicable) according
to Sec. 1944.689 of 7 part CFR 1944, subpart N;
(13) The source and estimated amount of other financial resources
to be obtained and used by the applicant for both HPG activities and
housing development and/or supporting activities;
(14) The use of program income, if any, and the tracking system
used for monitoring same;
(15) The applicant's plan for disposition of any security
instruments held by them as a result of its HPG activities in the event
of its loss of legal status;
(16) Any other information necessary to explain the proposed HPG
program; and
(17) The outreach efforts outlined in Sec. 1944.671(b) of 7 CFR
part 1944, subpart N.
(b) Complete information about the applicant's experience and
capacity to carry out the objectives of the proposed HPG program.
(c) Evidence of the applicant's legal existence, including, in the
case of a private nonprofit organization, a copy of, an accurate
reference to, the specific provisions of State law under which the
applicant is organized; a certified copy of the applicant's Articles of
Incorporation and Bylaws or other evidence of corporate existence;
certificate of incorporation for other than public bodies; evidence of
good standing from the State when the corporation has been in existence
1 year or more; and the names and addresses of the applicant's members,
directors and officers. If other organizations are members of the
applicant-organization, or the applicant is a consortium, pre-
applications should be accompanied by the names, addresses, and
principal purpose of the other organizations. If the applicant is a
consortium, documentation showing compliance with Sec. 1944.656(4)(ii)
of 7 CFR part 1944, subpart N will also be included.
(d) For a private nonprofit entity, the most recent audited
statement and a current financial statement dated and signed by an
authorized officer of the entity showing the amounts and specific
nature of assets and liabilities together with information on the
repayment schedule and status of any debt(s) owed by the applicant.
(e) A brief narrative statement which includes information about
the area to be served and the need for improved housing (including both
percentage and the actual number of both low-income and low-income
minority households and substandard housing), the need for the type of
housing preservation assistance being proposed, the anticipated use of
HPG resources for historic properties, the method of evaluation to be
used by the applicant in determining the effectiveness of its efforts.
(f) Applicant must submit an original and one copy of Form RD 1940-
20 prepared in accordance with Exhibit F-1 of 7 part CFR 1944, subpart
N.
(g) Applicant must also submit a description of its process for:
(1) Identifying and rehabilitating properties listed on or eligible
for listing on the National Register of Historic Places;
(2) Identifying properties that are located in a floodplain or
wetland;
[[Page 12568]]
(3) Identifying properties located within the Coastal Barrier
Resources System; and
(4) Coordinating with other public and private organizations and
programs that provide assistance in the rehabilitation of historic
properties (Stipulation I, D, of the PMOA, RD Instruction 2000-FF,
available in any Rural Development State Office).
(h) The applicant must also submit evidence of the State Historic
Preservation Office's, also known as SHPO, concurrence in the proposal,
or in the event of nonconcurrence, a copy of SHPO's comments together
with evidence that the applicant has sought the Advisory Council on
Historic Preservation's advice as to how the disagreement might be
resolved, and a copy of any advice provided by the Council.
(i) The applicant must submit written statements and related
correspondence reflecting compliance with Sec. 1944.674(a) and (c) of
7 CFR part 1944, subpart N regarding consultation with local government
leaders in the preparation of its program and the consultation with
local and state government pursuant to the provisions of Executive
Order 12372.
(j) The applicant is to make its statement of activities available
to the public for comment prior to submission to Rural Development
pursuant to Sec. 1944.674(b) of 7 CFR part 1944, subpart N. The
application must contain a description of how the comments (if any were
received) were addressed.
(k) The applicant must submit an original and one copy of Form RD
400-1, ``Equal Opportunity Agreement,'' and Form 400-4, ``Assurance
Agreement Funds,'' in accordance with Sec. 1944.676 of 7 CFR part
1944, subpart N. Applicants should review 7 CFR part 1944, subpart N
for a comprehensive list of all application requirements.
Selection Criteria
The Rural Development State Offices will utilize the following
project selection criteria for applicants in accordance with Sec.
1944.679 of 7 CFR part 1944, subpart N:
(a) Providing a financially feasible program of housing
preservation assistance. Financially feasible is defined as proposed
assistance which will be affordable to the intended recipient or result
in affordable housing for very low- and low-income persons.
(b) Serving eligible rural areas with a concentration of
substandard housing for households with very low- and low-income.
(c) Being an eligible applicant as defined in Sec. 1944.658 of 7
CFR part 1944, subpart N.
(d) Meeting the requirements of consultation and public comment in
accordance with Sec. 1944.674 of 7 CFR part 1944, subpart N.
(e) Submitting a complete pre-application as outlined in Sec.
1944.676 of 7 CFR part 1944, subpart N.
For applicants meeting all of the requirements listed above, the
Rural Development State Offices will use weighted criteria as selection
for the grant recipients. Each pre-application and its accompanying
statement of activities will be evaluated and, based solely on the
information contained in the pre-application, the applicant's proposal
will be numerically rated on each criteria within the range provided.
The highest-ranking applicant(s) will be selected based on allocation
of funds available to the state.
(a) Points are awarded based on the percentage of very low-income
persons that the applicant proposes to assist, using the following
scale:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Points
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(1) More than 80%............................................. 20
(2) 61% to 80%................................................ 15
(3) 41% to 60%................................................ 10
(4) 20% to 40%................................................ 5
(5) Less than 20%............................................. 0
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(b) The applicant's proposal may be expected to result in the
following percentage of HPG fund use (excluding administrative costs)
to total cost of unit preservation. This percentage reflects maximum
repair or rehabilitation with the least possible HPG funds due to
leveraging, innovative financial assistance, owner's contribution or
other specified approaches. Points are awarded based on the following
percentage of HPG funds (excluding administrative costs) to total
funds:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Points
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(1) 50% or less............................................... 20
(2) 51% to 65%................................................ 15
(3) 66% to 80%................................................ 10
(4) 81% to 95%................................................ 5
(5) 96% to 100%............................................... 0
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(c) The applicant has demonstrated its administrative capacity in
assisting very low- and low-income persons to obtain adequate housing
based on the following:
(1) The organization or a member of its staff has 2 or more years
experience successfully managing and operating a rehabilitation or
weatherization type program, including Rural Development's HPG Program:
10 points.
(2) The organization or a member of its staff has 2 or more years
experience successfully managing and operating a program assisting very
low- and low-income persons obtain housing assistance: 10 points.
(3) If the organization has administered grant programs, there are
no outstanding or unresolved audit or investigative findings which
might impair carrying out the proposal: 10 points.
(d) The proposed program will be undertaken entirely in rural areas
outside Metropolitan Statistical Areas, also known as MSAs, identified
by Rural Development as having populations below 10,000 or in remote
parts of other rural areas (i.e., rural areas contained in MSAs with
less than 5,000 population) as defined in Sec. 1944.656 of 7 CFR part
1944, subpart N: 10 points.
(e) The program will use less than 20 percent of HPG funds for
administration purposes:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Points
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(1) More than 20%......................................... ............
(2) 20%................................................... 0
(3) 19%................................................... 1
(4) 18%................................................... 2
(5) 17%................................................... 3
(6) 16%................................................... 4
(7) 15% or less........................................... 5
------------------------------------------------------------------------
* Not eligible
(f) The proposed program contains a component for alleviating
overcrowding as defined in Sec. 1944.656 of 7 CFR part 1944, subpart
N: 5 points.
In the event more than one pre-application receives the same amount
of points, those pre-applications will then be ranked based on the
actual percentage figure used for determining the points. Further, in
the event that pre-applications are still tied, then those pre-
applications still tied will be ranked based on the percentage figures
used for administration purposes (low to high). Further, for
applications where assistance to rental properties or cooperatives is
proposed, those still tied will be further ranked based on the number
of years the units are available for occupancy under the program (a
minimum of 5 years is required). For this part, ranking will be based
from most to least number of years. Finally, if there is still a tie,
then a lottery system will be used.
Dated: March 3, 2005.
Russell T. Davis,
Administrator, Rural Housing Service.
[FR Doc. 05-4775 Filed 3-11-05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3410-XV-P