Revolving Fund Program; Announcement of Grant and Loan Application Deadlines and Funding Levels, 14439-14443 [05-5582]
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Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 54 / Tuesday, March 22, 2005 / Notices
In addition, $50 million was
appropriated under the Commodity
Assistance Program heading of the
Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2005,
as administrative funds. However,
0.80% of this amount, or $400,000, was
rescinded as the result of an across the
board reduction in discretionary
spending, leaving $49.6 million to be
allocated to the States for administrative
funds. State agencies have the option of
requesting that the Department use any
or all of their ‘‘fair shares’’ of this $49.6
million to purchase additional
commodities for them.
For FY 2005, the Department
anticipates purchasing the following
commodities for distribution through
TEFAP: Dehydrated potatoes, corn
syrup, egg mix, blackeye beans, great
northern beans, kidney beans, lima
beans, pinto beans, dried plums, raisins,
bakery mix, lowfat bakery mix, egg
noodles, white and yellow corn grits,
macaroni, oats, peanut butter, rice,
spaghetti, vegetable oil, rice cereal, corn
flakes, corn squares, oat cereal, bran
flakes, frozen ground beef, frozen
chicken, frozen ham, frozen turkey
roast, and the following canned items:
Green beans, refried beans, vegetarian
beans, carrots, cream corn, whole kernel
corn, sliced potatoes, spaghetti sauce,
tomatoes, tomato sauce, tomato soup,
vegetarian soup, apple juice, cranapple
juice, grapefruit juice, orange juice,
pineapple juice, tomato juice, apricots,
peaches, pineapples, applesauce, pears,
plums, beef, beef stew, chicken, pork,
tuna, turkey and roasted peanuts. The
amounts of each item purchased will
depend on the prices the Department
must pay, as well as the quantity of each
item requested by the States. Changes in
agricultural market conditions may
result in the availability of additional
types of commodities or the nonavailability of one or more types listed
above.
Dated: March 11, 2005.
Roberto Salazar,
Administrator.
[FR Doc. 05–5557 Filed 3–21–05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3410–30–P
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Forest Service
Notice of Lincoln County Resource
Advisory Committee Meeting
Forest Service, USDA.
Notice of meeting.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
SUMMARY: Pursuant to the authorities in
the Federal Advisory Committee Act
(Pub. L. 92–463) and under the Secure
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14439
Rural Schools and Community SelfDetermination Act of 2000 (Pub. L. 106–
393) the Kootenai National Forest’s
Lincoln County Resource Advisory
Committee will meet on Wednesday
April 6, 2005 at 6 p.m. at the
Supervisor’s Office in Libby, Montana
for a business meeting. The meeting is
open to the public.
DATES: April 6, 2005.
ADDRESSES: Kootenai National Forest,
Supervisor’s Office, 1101 U.S. Hwy 2
West, Libby, Montana.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Barbara Edgmon, Committee
Coordinator, Kootenai National Forest at
(406) 293–6211, or e-mail
bedgmon@fs.fed.us.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Agenda
topics include presentation on road
storage, status of approved projects, and
receiving public comment. If the
meeting date or location is changed,
notice will be posted in the local
newspapers, including the Daily
Interlake based in Kalispell, Montana.
program from the RUS Water and
Environmental Programs (WEP) Web
site: https://www.usda.gov/rus/Water.
You may also request application guides
and materials from RUS by contacting
the WEP at (202) 720–9586.
Submit completed paper applications
for RFP grant to the Rural Utilities
Service, U.S. Department of Agriculture,
1400 Independence Ave., SW., Room
2233, STOP 1570, Washington, DC
20250–1570. Applications should be
marked ‘‘Attention: Assistant
Administrator, Water and
Environmental Programs.’’
Submit electronic grant applications
at https://www.grants.gov (Grants.gov),
following the instructions you find on
that Web site.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Stephen S. Saulnier, Loan Specialist,
Water Program Division, Rural Utilities
Service, U.S. Department of Agriculture,
telephone: (202) 690–2526, fax: (202)
690–0649.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Dated: March 16, 2005.
Bob Castaneda,
Forest Supervisor.
[FR Doc. 05–5570 Filed 3–21–05; 8:45 am]
Overview
Federal Agency: Rural Utilities
Service (RUS).
Funding Opportunity Title: Grant
Program To Establish a Fund for
Financing Water and Wastewater
Projects (Revolving Fund Program
(RFP)).
Announcement Type: Funding Level
Announcement, and Solicitation of
Applications.
Catalog of Federal Domestic
Assistance (CFDA) Number: 10.864.
Dates: You may submit a completed
application for a RFP grant on or before
May 23, 2005.
Reminder of Competitive Grant
Application Deadline: Applications
must be mailed, shipped or submitted
electronically through Grants.gov no
later than May 23, 2005, to be eligible
for FY 2005 grant funding.
BILLING CODE 3410–11–M
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Rural Utilities Service
Revolving Fund Program;
Announcement of Grant and Loan
Application Deadlines and Funding
Levels
Rural Utilities Service, USDA.
Notice of funding availability
and solicitation of applications.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
SUMMARY: The Rural Utilities Service
(RUS) announces that it is accepting
grant applications for its Revolving
Fund Program (RFP) for fiscal year (FY)
2005. FY 2005 available funding for the
RFP grant program is $496,000.
DATES: You may submit completed RFP
grant applications on paper or
electronically according to the following
deadlines:
• Paper applications must be
postmarked and mailed, shipped, or
sent overnight no later than May 23,
2005, to be eligible for FY 2005 grant
funding. Late applications are not
eligible for FY 2005 grant funding.
• Electronic applications must be
submitted through Grants.gov no later
than May 23, 2005, to be eligible for FY
2005 grant funding.
ADDRESSES: You may obtain application
guides and materials for the RFP
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Items in Supplementary Information
I. Funding Opportunity: Brief
introduction to the RFP.
II. Award Information: Available
funds, maximum amounts.
III. Eligibility Information: Who is
eligible, what kinds of projects are
eligible, what criteria determine basic
eligibility.
IV. Application and Submission
Information: Where to get application
materials, what constitutes a completed
application, how and where to submit
applications, deadlines, items that are
eligible.
V. Application Review Information:
Considerations and preferences, scoring
criteria, review standards, selection
information.
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VI. Award Administration
Information: Award notice information,
award recipient reporting requirements.
VII. Agency Contacts: Web, phone,
fax, email, contact name.
I. Funding Opportunity
Drinking water systems are basic and
vital to health and economic
development. With dependable water
facilities, rural communities can attract
families and businesses that will invest
in the community and improve the
quality of life for all residents. Without
dependable water facilities, the
communities cannot sustain economic
development.
The Rural Utilities Service (RUS)
supports the sound development of
rural communities and the growth of
our economy without endangering the
environment. RUS provides financial
and technical assistance to help
communities bring safe drinking water
and sanitary, environmentally sound
waste disposal facilities to rural
Americans in greatest need.
The Revolving Fund (RFP) Grant
Program has been established to assist
communities with water or wastewater
systems. Qualified private non-profit
organizations will receive RFP grant
funds to establish a lending program for
eligible entities. Eligible entities for the
revolving loan fund will be the same
entities eligible to obtain a loan, loan
guarantee, or grant from the Rural
Utilities Service Water and Waste
Disposal and Wastewater loan and grant
programs. As grant recipients, the nonprofit organizations will set up a
revolving loan fund to provide loans to
finance predevelopment costs of water
or wastewater projects, or short-term
small capital projects not part of the
regular operation and maintenance of
current water and wastewater systems.
The amount of financing to an eligible
entity shall not exceed $100,000.00 and
shall be repaid in a term not to exceed
10 years. The rate shall be determined
in the approved grant work plan.
II. Award Information
FY 2005 funding for the RFP Grant
Program is $496,000.
III. Eligibility Information
A. What Are the Basic Eligibility
Requirements for Applying?
1. Is a private, non-profit organization
that has tax-exempt status from the
United States Internal Revenue Service
(IRS);
2. Is legally established and located
within one of the following:
a. A state within the United States.
b. The District of Columbia.
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c. The Commonwealth of Puerto Rico.
d. A United States territory.
e. Has the legal capacity and authority
to carry out the grant purpose;
f. Has a proven record of successfully
operating a revolving loan fund to rural
areas;
g. Has capitalization acceptable to the
Agency, and is composed of at least 51
percent of the outstanding interest or
membership being citizens of the United
States or individuals who reside in the
United States after being legally
admitted for permanent residence;
h. Has no delinquent debt to the
Federal Government or no outstanding
judgments to repay a Federal debt; and
i. Demonstrates that it possesses the
financial, technical, and managerial
capability to comply with Federal and
State laws and requirements.
B. What Are the Basic Eligibility
Requirements for a Project?
1. The following activities are
authorized under the RFP statute:
a. Grant funds must be used to
capitalize a revolving fund program for
the purpose of providing direct loan
financing to Ultimate Recipients for predevelopment costs associated with
proposed or with existing water and
wastewater systems; or
b. Short-term costs incurred for
equipment replacement, small-scale
extension of services, or other small
capital projects that are not part of the
regular operations and maintenance
activities of existing water and
wastewater systems.
2. Grant funds may not be used to pay
any of the following:
a. Payment of the Intermediary’s
administrative costs or expenses, and
b. Delinquent debt owed to the
Federal Government.
IV. Application and Submission
Information
A. Where To Get Application
Information
The application guide, copies of
necessary forms, the RFP regulation,
and samples are available from these
sources:
1. The RFP of RUS Web site: https://
www.usda.gov/rus/water, or https://
www.grants.gov.
2. Telephone the RFP of RUS for
paper copies: (202) 720–9586.
B. You May File an Application in
Either Paper or Electronic Format
1. Applications submitted on paper:
a. Send or deliver paper applications
by the U.S. Postal Service (USPS) or
courier delivery services to: Assistant
Administrator, Water and
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Environmental Programs, Rural Utilities
Service, 1400 Independence Avenue,
SW., STOP 1548, Room 5145 South,
Washington, DC 20250–1548. RUS will
not accept applications by fax or e-mail.
b. Submit the original paper
application (no stamped, photocopied,
or initialed signatures) and two copies
on or before the deadline date. The
application and any materials sent with
it become Federal records by law and
cannot be returned to you.
2. Electronically submitted
applications:
a. Applications will not be accepted
by RUS via facsimile machine or
electronic mail.
b. Electronic applications for grants
will be accepted if submitted through
the Federal Government’s Grant.gov
Web site: https://www.grants.gov.
c. How to register with Grants.gov:
You must be registered with Grants.gov
before you can submit a grant
application. If you have not used
Grants.gov before, you will need to
register with the Central Contractor
Registry (CCR) and the Credential
Provider. You will also need a DUNS
number to access or register for these
services. The registration processes may
take several business days to complete.
Follow the instructions at Grants.gov for
registering and submitting an electronic
application. RUS may request original
signatures on electronically submitted
documents later.
d. The CCR registers your
organization, housing your
organizational information and allowing
Grants.gov to use it to verify your
identity. You may register for the CCR
by calling the CCR Assistance Center at
1–888–227–2423 or you may register
online at: https://www.ccr.gov.
e. The Credential Provider gives you
or your representative a username and
password, as part of the Federal
Government’s e-Authentication to
ensure a secure transaction. You will
need the username and password when
you register with Grants.gov or use
Grants.gov to submit your application.
You must register with the Central
Provider through Grants.gov: https://
apply.grants.gov/OrcRegister.
f. DUNS number. As required by
OMB, a Dun and Bradstreet Data
Universal Numbering System (DUNS)
number (DUNS) number is required for
paper and electronically submitted grant
applications. The Standard Form 424
(SF–424), ‘‘Application for Federal
Assistance’’ contains a field for you to
use when supplying your DUNS
number. Obtaining a DUNS number
costs nothing and requires a brief
telephone call to Dun and Bradstreet. To
verify that your organization has a
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DUNS number or to receive one, call the
dedicated toll-free request line at 1–
866–705–5711. The following
information is required when requesting
a DUNS number:
(i) Legal Name.
(ii) Headquarters name and address of
the organization
(iii) Doing business as (dba) or other
name by which the organization is
commonly recognized.
(iv) Physical address.
(v) Mailing address (if separate from
headquarters and/or physical address).
(vi) Telephone number.
(vii) Contact name and title.
(viii) Number of employees at the
physical location.
For more information, please visit
Grants.gov and the Dun and Bradstreet
Web site: https://
www.dunandbradstreet.com.
C. What Constitutes a Completed
Application?
1. To be considered for a RFP grant
award, you must be an eligible entity
and must submit a complete application
on or before May 23, 2005. You should
consult the cost principles and general
administrative requirements for grants
pertaining to their organizational type in
order to prepare the budget and
complete other parts of the application.
You also must demonstrate compliance
(or intent to comply), through
certification or other means, with a
number of public policy requirements.
2. Applicants must complete and
submit the following forms to apply for
a RFP grant:
a. Standard Form 424, ‘‘Application
for Federal Assistance.’’
b. Standard Form 424A, ‘‘Budget
Information—Non-Construction
Programs.’’
c. Standard Form 424B,
‘‘Assurances—Non-Construction
Programs.’’
d. Standard Form LLL, ‘‘Disclosure of
Lobbying Activity.’’
e. Form RD 400–1, ‘‘Equal
Opportunity Agreement.’’
f. Form RD 400–4, ‘‘Assurance
Agreement (Under Title VI, Civil Rights
Act of 1964.)’’
3. The project proposal should outline
the project in sufficient detail to provide
a reader with a complete understanding
of how the loan program will work.
Explain what you will accomplish by
lending funds to eligible entities.
Demonstrate the feasibility of the
proposed loan program in meeting the
objectives of this grant program. The
proposal should cover the following
elements:
a. Present a brief project overview.
Explain the purpose of the project, how
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it relates to RUS’s purposes, how you
will carry out the project, what the
project will produce, and who will
direct it.
b. Describe why the project is
necessary. Demonstrate that eligible
entities need loan funds. Quantify the
number of prospective borrowers or
provide statistical or narrative evidence
that a sufficient number of borrowers
will exist to justify the grant award.
Describe the service area. Address
community needs.
c. Clearly state your project goals.
Your objectives should clearly describe
the goals and be concrete and specific
enough to be quantitative or observable.
They should also be feasible and relate
to the purpose of the loan program.
d. The narrative should cover in more
detail the items briefly described in the
Project Summary. It should establish the
basis for any claims that you have
substantial expertise in promoting the
safe and productive use of Revolving
Funds. In describing what the project
will achieve, you should tell the reader
if it also will have broader influence.
The narrative should address the
following points:
(i) Document your ability to
administer and service a revolving fund
in accordance with the provisions of 7
CFR Part 1783.
(ii) Document that, to establish the
revolving fund, you can commit
financial resources your organization
controls. This documentation should
describe the sources of funds other than
the RFP grant that will be used to pay
your operational costs and provide
financial assistance for projects.
(iii) Demonstrate that you have
secured commitments of significant
financial support from other funding
sources, if appropriate.
(iii) List the fees and charges that
borrowers will be assessed.
e. The work plan must describe the
tasks and activities that will be
accomplished with available resources
during the grant period. It must show
the work you plan to do to achieve the
anticipated outcomes, goals, and
objectives set out for the RFP Program.
The plan must:
(i) Describe the work to be performed
by each person.
(ii) Give a schedule or timetable of
work to be done.
(iii) Show evidence of previous
experience with the techniques to be
used or their successful use by others.
(iv) Outline the loan program to
include the following: Specific loan
purposes, a loan application process;
priorities, borrower eligibility criteria,
limitations, fees, interest rates, terms,
and collateral requirements.
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14441
(v) Provide a marketing plan.
(vi) Explain the mechanics of how
you will transfer loan funds to the
borrowers.
(vii) Describe follow-up or continuing
activities that should occur after project
completion such as monitoring and
reporting borrowers’ accomplishments.
(viii) Project Evaluation. It should
describe how the results will be
evaluated, in line with the project
objectives.
(ix) Personnel. The applicant should
list all personnel responsible for
administering this program along with a
statement of their qualifications and
experience.
f. The written justification for
projected costs should explain how
budget figures were determined for each
category. It should indicate which costs
are to be covered by grant funds and
which costs will be met by your
organization or other organizations. The
justification should account for all
expenditures discussed in the narrative.
It should reflect appropriate costsharing contributions. The budget
justification should explain the budget
and accounting system proposed or in
place. The administrative costs for
operating the budget should be
expressed as a percentage of the overall
budget. The budget justification should
provide specific budget figures,
rounding off figures to the nearest
dollar. Applicants should consult OMB
Circular A–122: ‘‘Cost Principles for
Non-Profit Organizations’’ for
information about appropriate costs for
each budget category.
g. In addition to completing the
standard application forms, you must
submit supplementary materials.
h. Demonstrate that your organization
is legally recognized under state and
Federal law. Satisfactory documentation
includes, but is not limited to,
certificates from the Secretary of State,
or copies of state statutes or laws
establishing your organization. Letters
from the IRS awarding tax-exempt status
are not considered adequate evidence.
i. Submit a certified list of directors
and officers with their respective terms.
j. Submit evidence of tax exempt
status from the Internal Revenue
Service.
k. You must disclose debarment and
suspension information required in
accordance with 7 CFR, Part 3017,
subpart 3017.335, if it applies. The
section heading is ‘‘What information
must I provide before entering into a
covered transaction with the
Department of Agriculture?’’ It is part of
the Department of Agriculture’s rules on
Government-wide Debarment and
Suspension.
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l. Submit the most recent audit of
your organization.
m. Submit the following financial
statements:
(i) A pro forma balance sheet at startup and for at least three additional
years; Balance sheets, income
statements, and cash flow statements for
the last three years. If your organization
has been formed less than three years,
the financial statements should be
submitted for the periods from
inception to the present.
(ii) Projected income and cash flow
statements for at least three years
supported by a list of assumptions
showing the basis for the projections.
(iii) The projected income statement
and balance sheet must include one set
of projections that shows the revolving
loan fund only and a separate set of
projections that shows your
organization’s total operations.
n. You may present additional
information to support and describe
your plan for achieving the grant
objectives. The information may be
regarded as essential for understanding
and evaluating the project such as
letters of support, resolutions, policies,
etc. The supplements may be presented
in appendices to the proposal.
4. You must identify all of your
organization’s known workplaces by
including the actual address of
buildings (or parts of buildings) or other
sites where work under the award takes
place. Workplace identification is
required under the drug-free workplace
requirements in accordance with 7 CFR,
Part 3021, subpart 3021.230. The section
heading is ‘‘How and when must I
identify workplaces?’’ This is part of the
Department of Agriculture’s rules on
Government-wide Requirements for
Drug-Free Workplace (Financial
Assistance).
V. Application Review Information
A. Criteria
1. Receipt Acknowledgment by letter
sent within 30 days of receiving your
application, RUS will acknowledge the
application’s receipt. Your application
will be reviewed for completeness to
determine if you included all of the
items required. If your application is
incomplete or ineligible, RUS will
return it to you with an explanation.
2. A review team, composed of at least
two members, will evaluate all
applications and proposals. They will
make overall recommendations based
on factors such as eligibility, application
completeness, and conformity to
application requirements. They will
score the applications based on criteria
in the next section.
3. All applications that are complete
and eligible will be ranked
competitively based on the following
scoring criteria:
Scoring criteria
Points
1. Degree of expertise and successful experience in Up to 30 making and servicing commercial loans, with a points successful record.
2. Percentage of applicant contributions. Points allowed under this paragraph will be based on written evidence of the
availability of funds from sources other than the proceeds of a RFP grant to pay part of the cost of a loan recipient’s
project. In-kind contributions will not be considered. Funds from other sources as a percentage of the RFP grant and
points corresponding to such percentages are as follows:
Less than 20 percent— ......................................................................................................................................................
At least 20 percent but not more than 49 percent of 10 points the total project costs .....................................................
At least 50 percent of the total project costs .....................................................................................................................
3. Extent to which the work plan clearly articulates a well thought out approach to accomplishing objectives; points clearly
defines who will be served by the project or program; and includes all components listed in 1783.37(b)(14).
4. Description of the service area, particularly the range of the area:
State ....................................................................................................................................................................................
Regional ..............................................................................................................................................................................
National ...............................................................................................................................................................................
5. Extent to which the problem or issue being addressed in the Needs Assessment is defined clearly and points supported by data.
6. Extent to which the goals and objectives are clearly defined, tied to the need as defined in the Needs points Assessment, and are measurable.
7. Extent to which the evaluation methods are specific to the program, clearly defined, measurable, with points expected
program outcomes.
8. Administrator’s discretion, taking into consideration such factors as: Creative outreach ideas for marketing RFP loans;
Amount of funds requested in relation to the amount of needs demonstrated in the proposal; Excellent utilization of a
previous revolving loan fund; and (d) Optimizing the use of agency resources.
VI. Award Review Process
A. RUS Will Rank All Qualifying
Applications by Their Final Score
Applications will be selected for
funding, based on the highest scores and
the availability of funding for RFP
grants. Each applicant will be notified
in writing of the score its application
receives.
B. Application Determinations
In making its decision about your
application, RUS may determine that
your application is:
1. Eligible and selected for funding,
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2. Eligible but offered fewer funds
than requested,
3. Eligible but not selected for
funding; or,
4. Ineligible for the grant.
C. Appeals
In accordance with 7 CFR part 1900,
subpart B, you generally have the right
to appeal adverse decisions. Some
adverse decisions cannot be appealed.
For example, if you are denied RUS
funding due to a lack of funds available
for the grant program, this decision
cannot be appealed. However, you may
make a request to the National Appeals
Division (NAD) to review the accuracy
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Up to 30 points.
Ineligible.
10 points.
20 points.
Up to 40 points.
10 points.
15 points.
20 points.
Up to 15 points.
Up to 15 points.
Up to 20 points.
Up to 10 points.
of our finding that the decision cannot
be appealed. The appeal must be in
writing and filed at the appropriate
Regional Office, which can be found at
https://www.nad.usda.gov/offices.htm or
by calling (703) 305–1166.
VII. Award Administration Information
A. Terms and Conditions of Grant
Award
Applicants selected for funding will
complete a grant agreement which
outlines the terms and conditions of the
grant award.
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B. Grantee Reimbursement
1. SF–270, ‘‘Request for Advance or
Reimbursement,’’ will be completed by
the grantee and submitted to either the
State or National Office not more
frequently than monthly.
2. Upon receipt of a properly
completed SF–270, the funds will be
requested through the field office
terminal system. Ordinarily, payment
will be made within 30 days after
receipt of a proper request for
reimbursement.
3. Grantees are encouraged to use
women- and minority-owned banks
(a bank which is owned at least 50
percent by women or minority group
members) for the deposit and
disbursement of funds.
C. Post-Award Project Changes
Any change in the scope of the
project, budget adjustments of more
than 10 percent of the total budget, or
any other significant change in the
project must be reported to and
approved by the approval official by
written amendment to RUS Guide 1775–
1. Any change not approved may be
cause for termination of the grant.
D. Project Reporting
1. Grantees shall constantly monitor
performance to ensure that time
schedules are being met, projected work
by time periods is being accomplished,
and other performance objectives are
being achieved.
2. SF–269, ‘‘Financial Status Report
(short form),’’ and a project performance
activity report will be required of all
grantees on a quarterly basis, due 30
days after the end of each quarter.
3. A final project performance report
will be required with the last SF–269
due 90 days after the end of the last
quarter in which the project is
completed. The final report may serve
as the last quarterly report.
4. All multi-State grantees are to
submit an original of each report to the
National Office. Grantees serving only
one State are to submit an original of
each report to the State Office. The
project performance reports should
detail, preferably in a narrative format,
activities that have transpired for the
specific time period.
5. The grantee will provide an audit
report or financial statements as follows:
a. Grantees expending $500,000 or
more Federal funds per fiscal year will
submit an audit conducted in
accordance with OMB Circular A–133.
The audit will be submitted within 9
months after the grantee’s fiscal year.
Additional audits may be required if the
project period covers more than one
fiscal year.
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b. Grantees expending less than
$500,000 will provide annual financial
statements covering the grant period,
consisting of the organization’s
statement of income and expense and
balance sheet signed by an appropriate
official of the organization. Financial
statements will be submitted within 90
days after the grantee’s fiscal year.
VII. Agency Contacts
A. Web site: https://www.usda.gov/rus/
water. The RUS’ Web site maintains upto-date resources and contact
information for RFP programs.
B. Telephone: 202–720–9586.
C. Fax: 202–690–0649.
D. E-mail: stephen.saulnier@usda.gov.
E. Main point of contact: Stephen
Saulnier, Loan Specialist, Water and
Environmental Programs, Water
Programs Division, Rural Utilities
Service, U.S. Department of Agriculture.
Dated: March 3, 2005.
Curtis M. Anderson,
Acting Administrator, Rural Utilities Service.
[FR Doc. 05–5582 Filed 3–21–05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3410–15–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
Foreign-Trade Zones Board
[Docket 15–2005]
Foreign-Trade Zone 22—Chicago, IL;
Application for Subzone, Michelin
North America (Tire Distribution),
Monee, IL
An application has been submitted to
the Foreign-Trade Zones Board (the
Board) by the Illinois International Port
District, grantee of FTZ 22, requesting
special-purpose subzone status for the
tire and tire accessory warehousing/
distribution facility of Michelin North
America (MNA), in Monee, Illinois. The
application was submitted pursuant to
the provisions of the Foreign-Trade
Zones Act, as amended (19 U.S.C. 81a–
81u), and the regulations of the Board
(15 CFR part 400). It was formally filed
on March 14, 2005.
The MNA facility (1 building, 721,761
sq. ft. on 34.9 acres) is located at 25850
S. Ridgeland Avenue, within the Bailly
Ridge Corporate Center, Monee, Illinois
(Will County). The facility (80
employees) may be used under FTZ
procedures for warehousing, inspection,
labeling, packaging, scrapping, and
distribution of tires and tire accessories
(including tire flaps, inner tubes and
gaskets). Some 50 to 80 percent of the
tires at the facility are sourced abroad.
About 25–30 percent of the tires at the
facility are currently re-exported.
PO 00000
Frm 00008
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
14443
Zone procedures would exempt MNA
from Customs duty payments on foreign
products that are re-exported. On
domestic sales, the company would be
able to defer payments until
merchandise is shipped from the plant.
MNA would be able to avoid duty on
foreign products which become scrap/
waste, estimated at 1–3 percent of total
inventory. FTZ designation would
further allow MNA to realize significant
logistical/procedural benefits. The
application indicates that the savings
from zone procedures will help improve
the facility’s international
competitiveness.
In accordance with the Board’s
regulations, a member of the FTZ Staff
has been designated examiner to
investigate the application and report to
the Board.
Public comment is invited from
interested parties. Submissions (original
and 3 copies) shall be addressed to the
Board’s Executive Secretary at one of
the following addresses:
1. Submissions Via Express/Package
Delivery Services: Foreign-Trade-Zones
Board, U.S. Department of Commerce,
Franklin Court Building—Suite 4100W,
1099 14th St., NW., Washington, DC
20005; or
2. Submissions Via the U.S. Postal
Service: Foreign-Trade-Zones Board,
U.S. Department of Commerce, FCB—
Suite 4100W, 1401 Constitution Ave.,
NW., Washington, DC 20230.
The closing period for their receipt is
May 23, 2005. Rebuttal comments in
response to material submitted during
the foregoing period may be submitted
during the subsequent 15-day period (to
June 6, 2005).
A copy of the application and
accompanying exhibits will be available
for public inspection at the Office of the
Foreign-Trade Zones Board’s Executive
Secretary at address Number 1 listed
above, and at the U.S. Department of
Commerce Export Assistance Center,
200 West Adams Street, Suite 2450,
Chicago, IL 60606.
Dated: March 15, 2005.
Dennis Puccinelli,
Executive Secretary.
[FR Doc. 05–5623 Filed 3–21–05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–DS–P
E:\FR\FM\22MRN1.SGM
22MRN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 70, Number 54 (Tuesday, March 22, 2005)]
[Notices]
[Pages 14439-14443]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 05-5582]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Rural Utilities Service
Revolving Fund Program; Announcement of Grant and Loan
Application Deadlines and Funding Levels
AGENCY: Rural Utilities Service, USDA.
ACTION: Notice of funding availability and solicitation of
applications.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Rural Utilities Service (RUS) announces that it is
accepting grant applications for its Revolving Fund Program (RFP) for
fiscal year (FY) 2005. FY 2005 available funding for the RFP grant
program is $496,000.
DATES: You may submit completed RFP grant applications on paper or
electronically according to the following deadlines:
Paper applications must be postmarked and mailed, shipped,
or sent overnight no later than May 23, 2005, to be eligible for FY
2005 grant funding. Late applications are not eligible for FY 2005
grant funding.
Electronic applications must be submitted through
Grants.gov no later than May 23, 2005, to be eligible for FY 2005 grant
funding.
ADDRESSES: You may obtain application guides and materials for the RFP
program from the RUS Water and Environmental Programs (WEP) Web site:
https://www.usda.gov/rus/Water. You may also request application guides
and materials from RUS by contacting the WEP at (202) 720-9586.
Submit completed paper applications for RFP grant to the Rural
Utilities Service, U.S. Department of Agriculture, 1400 Independence
Ave., SW., Room 2233, STOP 1570, Washington, DC 20250-1570.
Applications should be marked ``Attention: Assistant Administrator,
Water and Environmental Programs.''
Submit electronic grant applications at https://www.grants.gov
(Grants.gov), following the instructions you find on that Web site.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Stephen S. Saulnier, Loan Specialist,
Water Program Division, Rural Utilities Service, U.S. Department of
Agriculture, telephone: (202) 690-2526, fax: (202) 690-0649.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Overview
Federal Agency: Rural Utilities Service (RUS).
Funding Opportunity Title: Grant Program To Establish a Fund for
Financing Water and Wastewater Projects (Revolving Fund Program (RFP)).
Announcement Type: Funding Level Announcement, and Solicitation of
Applications.
Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance (CFDA) Number: 10.864.
Dates: You may submit a completed application for a RFP grant on or
before May 23, 2005.
Reminder of Competitive Grant Application Deadline: Applications
must be mailed, shipped or submitted electronically through Grants.gov
no later than May 23, 2005, to be eligible for FY 2005 grant funding.
Items in Supplementary Information
I. Funding Opportunity: Brief introduction to the RFP.
II. Award Information: Available funds, maximum amounts.
III. Eligibility Information: Who is eligible, what kinds of
projects are eligible, what criteria determine basic eligibility.
IV. Application and Submission Information: Where to get
application materials, what constitutes a completed application, how
and where to submit applications, deadlines, items that are eligible.
V. Application Review Information: Considerations and preferences,
scoring criteria, review standards, selection information.
[[Page 14440]]
VI. Award Administration Information: Award notice information,
award recipient reporting requirements.
VII. Agency Contacts: Web, phone, fax, email, contact name.
I. Funding Opportunity
Drinking water systems are basic and vital to health and economic
development. With dependable water facilities, rural communities can
attract families and businesses that will invest in the community and
improve the quality of life for all residents. Without dependable water
facilities, the communities cannot sustain economic development.
The Rural Utilities Service (RUS) supports the sound development of
rural communities and the growth of our economy without endangering the
environment. RUS provides financial and technical assistance to help
communities bring safe drinking water and sanitary, environmentally
sound waste disposal facilities to rural Americans in greatest need.
The Revolving Fund (RFP) Grant Program has been established to
assist communities with water or wastewater systems. Qualified private
non-profit organizations will receive RFP grant funds to establish a
lending program for eligible entities. Eligible entities for the
revolving loan fund will be the same entities eligible to obtain a
loan, loan guarantee, or grant from the Rural Utilities Service Water
and Waste Disposal and Wastewater loan and grant programs. As grant
recipients, the non-profit organizations will set up a revolving loan
fund to provide loans to finance predevelopment costs of water or
wastewater projects, or short-term small capital projects not part of
the regular operation and maintenance of current water and wastewater
systems. The amount of financing to an eligible entity shall not exceed
$100,000.00 and shall be repaid in a term not to exceed 10 years. The
rate shall be determined in the approved grant work plan.
II. Award Information
FY 2005 funding for the RFP Grant Program is $496,000.
III. Eligibility Information
A. What Are the Basic Eligibility Requirements for Applying?
1. Is a private, non-profit organization that has tax-exempt status
from the United States Internal Revenue Service (IRS);
2. Is legally established and located within one of the following:
a. A state within the United States.
b. The District of Columbia.
c. The Commonwealth of Puerto Rico.
d. A United States territory.
e. Has the legal capacity and authority to carry out the grant
purpose;
f. Has a proven record of successfully operating a revolving loan
fund to rural areas;
g. Has capitalization acceptable to the Agency, and is composed of
at least 51 percent of the outstanding interest or membership being
citizens of the United States or individuals who reside in the United
States after being legally admitted for permanent residence;
h. Has no delinquent debt to the Federal Government or no
outstanding judgments to repay a Federal debt; and
i. Demonstrates that it possesses the financial, technical, and
managerial capability to comply with Federal and State laws and
requirements.
B. What Are the Basic Eligibility Requirements for a Project?
1. The following activities are authorized under the RFP statute:
a. Grant funds must be used to capitalize a revolving fund program
for the purpose of providing direct loan financing to Ultimate
Recipients for pre-development costs associated with proposed or with
existing water and wastewater systems; or
b. Short-term costs incurred for equipment replacement, small-scale
extension of services, or other small capital projects that are not
part of the regular operations and maintenance activities of existing
water and wastewater systems.
2. Grant funds may not be used to pay any of the following:
a. Payment of the Intermediary's administrative costs or expenses,
and
b. Delinquent debt owed to the Federal Government.
IV. Application and Submission Information
A. Where To Get Application Information
The application guide, copies of necessary forms, the RFP
regulation, and samples are available from these sources:
1. The RFP of RUS Web site: https://www.usda.gov/rus/water, or
https://www.grants.gov.
2. Telephone the RFP of RUS for paper copies: (202) 720-9586.
B. You May File an Application in Either Paper or Electronic Format
1. Applications submitted on paper:
a. Send or deliver paper applications by the U.S. Postal Service
(USPS) or courier delivery services to: Assistant Administrator, Water
and Environmental Programs, Rural Utilities Service, 1400 Independence
Avenue, SW., STOP 1548, Room 5145 South, Washington, DC 20250-1548. RUS
will not accept applications by fax or e-mail.
b. Submit the original paper application (no stamped, photocopied,
or initialed signatures) and two copies on or before the deadline date.
The application and any materials sent with it become Federal records
by law and cannot be returned to you.
2. Electronically submitted applications:
a. Applications will not be accepted by RUS via facsimile machine
or electronic mail.
b. Electronic applications for grants will be accepted if submitted
through the Federal Government's Grant.gov Web site: https://
www.grants.gov.
c. How to register with Grants.gov: You must be registered with
Grants.gov before you can submit a grant application. If you have not
used Grants.gov before, you will need to register with the Central
Contractor Registry (CCR) and the Credential Provider. You will also
need a DUNS number to access or register for these services. The
registration processes may take several business days to complete.
Follow the instructions at Grants.gov for registering and submitting an
electronic application. RUS may request original signatures on
electronically submitted documents later.
d. The CCR registers your organization, housing your organizational
information and allowing Grants.gov to use it to verify your identity.
You may register for the CCR by calling the CCR Assistance Center at 1-
888-227-2423 or you may register online at: https://www.ccr.gov.
e. The Credential Provider gives you or your representative a
username and password, as part of the Federal Government's e-
Authentication to ensure a secure transaction. You will need the
username and password when you register with Grants.gov or use
Grants.gov to submit your application. You must register with the
Central Provider through Grants.gov: https://apply.grants.gov/
OrcRegister.
f. DUNS number. As required by OMB, a Dun and Bradstreet Data
Universal Numbering System (DUNS) number (DUNS) number is required for
paper and electronically submitted grant applications. The Standard
Form 424 (SF-424), ``Application for Federal Assistance'' contains a
field for you to use when supplying your DUNS number. Obtaining a DUNS
number costs nothing and requires a brief telephone call to Dun and
Bradstreet. To verify that your organization has a
[[Page 14441]]
DUNS number or to receive one, call the dedicated toll-free request
line at 1-866-705-5711. The following information is required when
requesting a DUNS number:
(i) Legal Name.
(ii) Headquarters name and address of the organization
(iii) Doing business as (dba) or other name by which the
organization is commonly recognized.
(iv) Physical address.
(v) Mailing address (if separate from headquarters and/or physical
address).
(vi) Telephone number.
(vii) Contact name and title.
(viii) Number of employees at the physical location.
For more information, please visit Grants.gov and the Dun and
Bradstreet Web site: https://www.dunandbradstreet.com.
C. What Constitutes a Completed Application?
1. To be considered for a RFP grant award, you must be an eligible
entity and must submit a complete application on or before May 23,
2005. You should consult the cost principles and general administrative
requirements for grants pertaining to their organizational type in
order to prepare the budget and complete other parts of the
application. You also must demonstrate compliance (or intent to
comply), through certification or other means, with a number of public
policy requirements.
2. Applicants must complete and submit the following forms to apply
for a RFP grant:
a. Standard Form 424, ``Application for Federal Assistance.''
b. Standard Form 424A, ``Budget Information--Non-Construction
Programs.''
c. Standard Form 424B, ``Assurances--Non-Construction Programs.''
d. Standard Form LLL, ``Disclosure of Lobbying Activity.''
e. Form RD 400-1, ``Equal Opportunity Agreement.''
f. Form RD 400-4, ``Assurance Agreement (Under Title VI, Civil
Rights Act of 1964.)''
3. The project proposal should outline the project in sufficient
detail to provide a reader with a complete understanding of how the
loan program will work. Explain what you will accomplish by lending
funds to eligible entities. Demonstrate the feasibility of the proposed
loan program in meeting the objectives of this grant program. The
proposal should cover the following elements:
a. Present a brief project overview. Explain the purpose of the
project, how it relates to RUS's purposes, how you will carry out the
project, what the project will produce, and who will direct it.
b. Describe why the project is necessary. Demonstrate that eligible
entities need loan funds. Quantify the number of prospective borrowers
or provide statistical or narrative evidence that a sufficient number
of borrowers will exist to justify the grant award. Describe the
service area. Address community needs.
c. Clearly state your project goals. Your objectives should clearly
describe the goals and be concrete and specific enough to be
quantitative or observable. They should also be feasible and relate to
the purpose of the loan program.
d. The narrative should cover in more detail the items briefly
described in the Project Summary. It should establish the basis for any
claims that you have substantial expertise in promoting the safe and
productive use of Revolving Funds. In describing what the project will
achieve, you should tell the reader if it also will have broader
influence. The narrative should address the following points:
(i) Document your ability to administer and service a revolving
fund in accordance with the provisions of 7 CFR Part 1783.
(ii) Document that, to establish the revolving fund, you can commit
financial resources your organization controls. This documentation
should describe the sources of funds other than the RFP grant that will
be used to pay your operational costs and provide financial assistance
for projects.
(iii) Demonstrate that you have secured commitments of significant
financial support from other funding sources, if appropriate.
(iii) List the fees and charges that borrowers will be assessed.
e. The work plan must describe the tasks and activities that will
be accomplished with available resources during the grant period. It
must show the work you plan to do to achieve the anticipated outcomes,
goals, and objectives set out for the RFP Program. The plan must:
(i) Describe the work to be performed by each person.
(ii) Give a schedule or timetable of work to be done.
(iii) Show evidence of previous experience with the techniques to
be used or their successful use by others.
(iv) Outline the loan program to include the following: Specific
loan purposes, a loan application process; priorities, borrower
eligibility criteria, limitations, fees, interest rates, terms, and
collateral requirements.
(v) Provide a marketing plan.
(vi) Explain the mechanics of how you will transfer loan funds to
the borrowers.
(vii) Describe follow-up or continuing activities that should occur
after project completion such as monitoring and reporting borrowers'
accomplishments.
(viii) Project Evaluation. It should describe how the results will
be evaluated, in line with the project objectives.
(ix) Personnel. The applicant should list all personnel responsible
for administering this program along with a statement of their
qualifications and experience.
f. The written justification for projected costs should explain how
budget figures were determined for each category. It should indicate
which costs are to be covered by grant funds and which costs will be
met by your organization or other organizations. The justification
should account for all expenditures discussed in the narrative. It
should reflect appropriate cost-sharing contributions. The budget
justification should explain the budget and accounting system proposed
or in place. The administrative costs for operating the budget should
be expressed as a percentage of the overall budget. The budget
justification should provide specific budget figures, rounding off
figures to the nearest dollar. Applicants should consult OMB Circular
A-122: ``Cost Principles for Non-Profit Organizations'' for information
about appropriate costs for each budget category.
g. In addition to completing the standard application forms, you
must submit supplementary materials.
h. Demonstrate that your organization is legally recognized under
state and Federal law. Satisfactory documentation includes, but is not
limited to, certificates from the Secretary of State, or copies of
state statutes or laws establishing your organization. Letters from the
IRS awarding tax-exempt status are not considered adequate evidence.
i. Submit a certified list of directors and officers with their
respective terms.
j. Submit evidence of tax exempt status from the Internal Revenue
Service.
k. You must disclose debarment and suspension information required
in accordance with 7 CFR, Part 3017, subpart 3017.335, if it applies.
The section heading is ``What information must I provide before
entering into a covered transaction with the Department of
Agriculture?'' It is part of the Department of Agriculture's rules on
Government-wide Debarment and Suspension.
[[Page 14442]]
l. Submit the most recent audit of your organization.
m. Submit the following financial statements:
(i) A pro forma balance sheet at start-up and for at least three
additional years; Balance sheets, income statements, and cash flow
statements for the last three years. If your organization has been
formed less than three years, the financial statements should be
submitted for the periods from inception to the present.
(ii) Projected income and cash flow statements for at least three
years supported by a list of assumptions showing the basis for the
projections.
(iii) The projected income statement and balance sheet must include
one set of projections that shows the revolving loan fund only and a
separate set of projections that shows your organization's total
operations.
n. You may present additional information to support and describe
your plan for achieving the grant objectives. The information may be
regarded as essential for understanding and evaluating the project such
as letters of support, resolutions, policies, etc. The supplements may
be presented in appendices to the proposal.
4. You must identify all of your organization's known workplaces by
including the actual address of buildings (or parts of buildings) or
other sites where work under the award takes place. Workplace
identification is required under the drug-free workplace requirements
in accordance with 7 CFR, Part 3021, subpart 3021.230. The section
heading is ``How and when must I identify workplaces?'' This is part of
the Department of Agriculture's rules on Government-wide Requirements
for Drug-Free Workplace (Financial Assistance).
V. Application Review Information
A. Criteria
1. Receipt Acknowledgment by letter sent within 30 days of
receiving your application, RUS will acknowledge the application's
receipt. Your application will be reviewed for completeness to
determine if you included all of the items required. If your
application is incomplete or ineligible, RUS will return it to you with
an explanation.
2. A review team, composed of at least two members, will evaluate
all applications and proposals. They will make overall recommendations
based on factors such as eligibility, application completeness, and
conformity to application requirements. They will score the
applications based on criteria in the next section.
3. All applications that are complete and eligible will be ranked
competitively based on the following scoring criteria:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Scoring criteria Points
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1. Degree of expertise and successful Up to 30 points.
experience in Up to 30 making and
servicing commercial loans, with a points
successful record.
2. Percentage of applicant contributions.
Points allowed under this paragraph will
be based on written evidence of the
availability of funds from sources other
than the proceeds of a RFP grant to pay
part of the cost of a loan recipient's
project. In-kind contributions will not be
considered. Funds from other sources as a
percentage of the RFP grant and points
corresponding to such percentages are as
follows:
Less than 20 percent--................. Ineligible.
At least 20 percent but not more than 10 points.
49 percent of 10 points the total
project costs.
At least 50 percent of the total 20 points.
project costs.
3. Extent to which the work plan clearly Up to 40 points.
articulates a well thought out approach to
accomplishing objectives; points clearly
defines who will be served by the project
or program; and includes all components
listed in 1783.37(b)(14).
4. Description of the service area,
particularly the range of the area:
State.................................. 10 points.
Regional............................... 15 points.
National............................... 20 points.
5. Extent to which the problem or issue Up to 15 points.
being addressed in the Needs Assessment is
defined clearly and points supported by
data.
6. Extent to which the goals and objectives Up to 15 points.
are clearly defined, tied to the need as
defined in the Needs points Assessment,
and are measurable.
7. Extent to which the evaluation methods Up to 20 points.
are specific to the program, clearly
defined, measurable, with points expected
program outcomes.
8. Administrator's discretion, taking into Up to 10 points.
consideration such factors as: Creative
outreach ideas for marketing RFP loans;
Amount of funds requested in relation to
the amount of needs demonstrated in the
proposal; Excellent utilization of a
previous revolving loan fund; and (d)
Optimizing the use of agency resources.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
VI. Award Review Process
A. RUS Will Rank All Qualifying Applications by Their Final Score
Applications will be selected for funding, based on the highest
scores and the availability of funding for RFP grants. Each applicant
will be notified in writing of the score its application receives.
B. Application Determinations
In making its decision about your application, RUS may determine
that your application is:
1. Eligible and selected for funding,
2. Eligible but offered fewer funds than requested,
3. Eligible but not selected for funding; or,
4. Ineligible for the grant.
C. Appeals
In accordance with 7 CFR part 1900, subpart B, you generally have
the right to appeal adverse decisions. Some adverse decisions cannot be
appealed. For example, if you are denied RUS funding due to a lack of
funds available for the grant program, this decision cannot be
appealed. However, you may make a request to the National Appeals
Division (NAD) to review the accuracy of our finding that the decision
cannot be appealed. The appeal must be in writing and filed at the
appropriate Regional Office, which can be found at https://
www.nad.usda.gov/offices.htm or by calling (703) 305-1166.
VII. Award Administration Information
A. Terms and Conditions of Grant Award
Applicants selected for funding will complete a grant agreement
which outlines the terms and conditions of the grant award.
[[Page 14443]]
B. Grantee Reimbursement
1. SF-270, ``Request for Advance or Reimbursement,'' will be
completed by the grantee and submitted to either the State or National
Office not more frequently than monthly.
2. Upon receipt of a properly completed SF-270, the funds will be
requested through the field office terminal system. Ordinarily, payment
will be made within 30 days after receipt of a proper request for
reimbursement.
3. Grantees are encouraged to use women- and minority-owned banks
(a bank which is owned at least 50 percent by women or minority group
members) for the deposit and disbursement of funds.
C. Post-Award Project Changes
Any change in the scope of the project, budget adjustments of more
than 10 percent of the total budget, or any other significant change in
the project must be reported to and approved by the approval official
by written amendment to RUS Guide 1775-1. Any change not approved may
be cause for termination of the grant.
D. Project Reporting
1. Grantees shall constantly monitor performance to ensure that
time schedules are being met, projected work by time periods is being
accomplished, and other performance objectives are being achieved.
2. SF-269, ``Financial Status Report (short form),'' and a project
performance activity report will be required of all grantees on a
quarterly basis, due 30 days after the end of each quarter.
3. A final project performance report will be required with the
last SF-269 due 90 days after the end of the last quarter in which the
project is completed. The final report may serve as the last quarterly
report.
4. All multi-State grantees are to submit an original of each
report to the National Office. Grantees serving only one State are to
submit an original of each report to the State Office. The project
performance reports should detail, preferably in a narrative format,
activities that have transpired for the specific time period.
5. The grantee will provide an audit report or financial statements
as follows:
a. Grantees expending $500,000 or more Federal funds per fiscal
year will submit an audit conducted in accordance with OMB Circular A-
133. The audit will be submitted within 9 months after the grantee's
fiscal year. Additional audits may be required if the project period
covers more than one fiscal year.
b. Grantees expending less than $500,000 will provide annual
financial statements covering the grant period, consisting of the
organization's statement of income and expense and balance sheet signed
by an appropriate official of the organization. Financial statements
will be submitted within 90 days after the grantee's fiscal year.
VII. Agency Contacts
A. Web site: https://www.usda.gov/rus/water. The RUS' Web site
maintains up-to-date resources and contact information for RFP
programs.
B. Telephone: 202-720-9586.
C. Fax: 202-690-0649.
D. E-mail: stephen.saulnier@usda.gov.
E. Main point of contact: Stephen Saulnier, Loan Specialist, Water
and Environmental Programs, Water Programs Division, Rural Utilities
Service, U.S. Department of Agriculture.
Dated: March 3, 2005.
Curtis M. Anderson,
Acting Administrator, Rural Utilities Service.
[FR Doc. 05-5582 Filed 3-21-05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3410-15-P