Rural Economic Development Loan and Grant Programs, 29841-29851 [07-2636]
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Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 103 / Wednesday, May 30, 2007 / Rules and Regulations
regulations that are in conflict with this
rule will be preempted; (2) no
retroactive effect will be given this rule;
and (3) administrative proceedings in
accordance with the regulations of the
Department of Agriculture National
Appeals Division (7 CFR part 11) must
be exhausted before bringing suit in
court challenging action taken under
this rule unless those regulations
specifically allow bringing suit at an
earlier time.
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Rural Utilities Service
7 CFR Part 1703
Rural Business-Cooperative Service
Rural Utilities Service
7 CFR Part 4280
RIN 0570–AA19
Rural Economic Development Loan
and Grant Programs
Rural Business-Cooperative
Service and Rural Utilities Service,
USDA.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCIES:
SUMMARY: This action modifies the
regulations for the Rural Economic
Development Loan and Grant Programs.
This revised regulation is written in a
format that is simpler in design and
should improve ease of use by the
public and program beneficiaries.
EFFECTIVE DATE: June 29, 2007.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Jody
Raskind, Director, Specialty Lenders
Division, Rural Business-Cooperative
Service, U.S. Department of Agriculture,
STOP 3225, 1400 Independence Ave.,
SW., Washington, DC 20250–3225,
Telephone (202) 720–1400.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Classification
This final rule has been determined to
be significant and has been reviewed by
the Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) under Executive Order 12866.
Programs Affected
The Catalog of Federal Domestic
Assistance number for the programs
impacted by this action is 10.854, Rural
Economic Development Loans and Grants.
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Intergovernmental Review
Rural Economic Development Loans
and Grants are subject to the provisions
of Executive Order 12372, which
requires intergovernmental consultation
with State and local officials. RBS has
conducted intergovernmental
consultation in the manner delineated
in RD Instruction 1940–J,
‘‘Intergovernmental Review of Farmers
Home Administration Programs and
Activities,’’ and in 7 CFR part 3015,
subpart V.
Civil Justice Reform
This final rule has been reviewed
under Executive Order 12988, Civil
Justice Reform. In accordance with this
rule: (1) All State and local laws and
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Environmental Impact Statement
This document has been reviewed in
accordance with 7 CFR part 1940,
subpart G, ‘‘Environmental Program.’’
RBS has determined that this action
does not constitute a major Federal
action significantly affecting the quality
of the human environment, and in
accordance with the National
Environmental Policy Act of 1969, 42
U.S.C. 4321–4374, an Environmental
Impact Statement is not required.
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
Title II of the Unfunded Mandates
Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA), Pub. L.
104–4, establishes requirements for
Federal agencies to assess the effects of
their regulatory actions on State, local,
and tribal governments and the private
sector. Under Section 202 of the UMRA,
RBS must prepare a written statement,
including a cost-benefit analysis, for
proposed and final rules with ‘‘Federal
mandates’’ that may result in
expenditures to State, local or tribal
governments, in the aggregate, or to the
private sector, of $100 million or more
in any 1 year. When such a statement
is needed for a rule, section 205 of
UMRA generally requires RBS to
identify and consider a reasonable
number of regulatory alternatives and
adopt the least costly, more cost
effective or least burdensome alternative
that achieves the objectives of the rule.
This rule contains no Federal
mandates (under the regulatory
provisions of title II of the UMRA) for
State, local, and tribal governments or
the private sector. Thus, this rule is not
subject to the requirements of sections
202 and 205 of UMRA.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
In compliance with the Regulatory
Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601–602), the
Agency has determined that this action
would not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small
entities. This regulation only impacts
those who choose to participate in the
loan or grant program. Small entity
applicants will not be impacted to a
greater extent than large entity
applicants.
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29841
Executive Order 13132
It has been determined under
Executive Order 13132, Federalism, that
this rule does not have sufficient
implications to warrant the preparation
of a Federalism Assessment. The
provisions contained in this rule will
not have a substantial direct effect on
states or their political subdivisions or
on the distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various
levels of Government.
Paperwork Reduction Act
The information collection and
recordkeeping requirements contained
in this regulation have been approved
by the Office of Management and
Budget (OMB) under the provisions of
44 U.S.C. chapter 35 and were assigned
OMB control number 0570–0035, in
accordance with the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995. Under the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, no
person is required to respond to a
collection of information unless it
displays a valid OMB control number.
The revisions in this rulemaking, for 7
CFR part 4280, required an amendment
to the burden package and this
modification has been approved by
OMB.
E-Government Act Compliance
The Rural Business-Cooperative
Service is committed to complying with
the E-Government Act, to promote the
use of the Internet and other
information technologies to provide
increased opportunities for citizen
access to Government information and
services, and for other purposes.
Background
The proposed rule for the Rural
Economic Development Loan and Grant
(REDLG) programs was published on
December 15, 1999, in the Federal
Register, in Vol. 64, No. 240, pages
69937–69946, as 7 CFR part 4280. The
proposed rule was originally structured
in a format consisting of questions and
answers. To provide for an easier
understanding of these programs,
inasmuch as it includes the
participation of three distinct parties
(the Federal Government, the
intermediary, and the third-party
ultimate recipient), this final rule has
been restructured in the standardized
format utilized by the Agency in its
other regulations. Consequently, several
section numbers and headings of the
final rule have been modified due to the
change in format.
The existing regulations for the
REDLG programs are found at 7 CFR
part 1703, subpart B, and will be
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removed from Part 1703 upon
publication of this final rule.
The REDLG programs were originally
implemented in 1989 as part of the rural
economic development program of the
Rural Electrification Administration,
predecessor to the Rural Utilities
Service (RUS). As a result of the United
States Department of Agriculture
reorganization, responsibility for these
programs was transferred to Business
Programs under the Rural BusinessCooperative Service (RBS), which
provides financing for rural areas. These
programs are administered at the State
level through the Department of
Agriculture’s Rural Development State
Offices.
Since its inception in 1989, these
programs have had a substantial impact
on economic development in rural
areas. As of September 30, 2005, the
REDLG programs have provided $217.5
million in loans and $92.7 million in
grants, leveraged over $2.5 billion, and
directly created an estimated 35,000
new jobs for rural areas.
Under these programs, loans or grants
are provided to eligible electric and
telecommunications utilities. The
purpose of the programs is to encourage
these utilities to promote rural
economic development and job creation
projects. The utility, previously referred
to as the ‘‘RUS Borrower’’ now referred
to as the ‘‘intermediary’’ can receive
loans to help finance projects such as
business start-up costs, business
expansion, community development,
and business incubator projects. The
intermediary must use program loan
funds to make a pass-through loan to an
ultimate recipient such as a business.
The intermediary is responsible for fully
repaying its loan to the Government
even if the ultimate recipient does not
repay its loan.
The intermediary must use program
grant funds, along with its required
contribution, to create a revolving loan
fund that the intermediary utility will
operate and administer. Loans to the
ultimate recipient are made from the
revolving loan fund for a variety of
projects.
Comments and Responses on the
Proposed Rule
A total of 22 organizations responded
within the official 30-day comment
period. In addition to the comments
solicited from the general public
through the rulemaking process, RBS
held a public meeting on August 2,
2000, to hear oral presentations on the
proposed rule. Four public
organizations made presentations. All
comments, both written and oral, were
considered and some revisions in the
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final rule are in response to those
comments. Some of these revisions
include clarifications to better explain
the programs. The majority of the
comments centered on the selection
factors established in § 4280.42(b) for
Agency use in evaluating and scoring
the applications. Other comments
pertained to the elimination of a
previously eligible purpose and to
supplemental funds use. The comments
have been grouped into 8 categories and
are discussed below based on the
applicable section number of the final
rule.
Comment. Some comments indicated
that intermediaries do not want their
supplemental contribution applied to
the same project as funded by the
Agency grant, but wanted their
contribution available to lend to a
separate project.
Response. The Agency is aware that
intermediaries have experienced
difficulty in full utilization of
supplemental funds. RBS has
considered these comments and has
amended the final rule to give the
intermediary the option to use its
supplemental contribution for the same
project the Agency is financing or to
fund another eligible project. If the
intermediary chooses to finance a
separate eligible project, the matching
funds must be used within 3 years from
the date of the grant agreement or the
grant will be terminated. Subsequent
use of revolved funds will be managed
in accordance with the Agency—
approved revolving loan fund plan and
the interest rates on those loans will be
at the discretion of the intermediary as
shown in the plan, but not to exceed the
prevailing prime rate.
Comment. Some comments opposed
the proposed exclusion of agricultural
production as an eligible purpose. The
commenting entities believe that
agriculture is a vital business
component of their state economy and
providing for both value-added
agriculture and priority markets for
farmers is very important.
Response. Historically, funding under
the REDLG program has not been
heavily applied for or utilized by
agricultural production projects. The
Agency has decided to allow
agricultural production as an eligible
purpose only where the project benefits
farmer-owned cooperatives or a similar
farmer-owned organization through
which benefits are passed directly to the
farmer members.
Comment. Some comments stated that
applications for advanced
telecommunications or computer
networks to facilitate medical,
educational, or job training projects
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should not be eligible for priority points
under two separate sections of the
regulation, that is, § 4280.42(b)(1)(iii)
and 4280.43(d). The comments stated
that this type of project should be a
priority of the programs since one of the
ways rural America can be more
competitive is to have advanced
telecommunications systems for health
care, job training, and business use.
They believe, however, that there are
other infrastructure and business
assistance needs that must also be met.
Response. RBS agrees that advanced
telecommunications and computer
network projects should be a priority.
To address this, RBS had initially added
five points to those projects in addition
to those added under
§ 4280.42(b)(1)(iii). RBS now agrees that
there are other program priorities that
must be met and Advanced
Telecommunications and computer
network projects should not receive two
sets of priority points. Accordingly,
§ 4280.43(d) will be removed.
Comment. Some comments stated that
using a selection factor that measures
job creation per $100,000 of project
costs is too limiting. Another comment
supported the existing regulation that
awards points for job creation under a
subjective factor.
Response. RBS disagrees that a
measure of jobs per $100,000 is too
limiting. We agree that a broader
approach to job creation is helpful.
Therefore, we have maintained the
selection factor of jobs per $100,000, but
have expanded the definitions to
include ‘‘direct’’, ‘‘indirect’’, ‘‘fulltime’’, ‘‘part-time’’, and ‘‘seasonal’’ jobs
as well as a formula for determining
full-time job equivalents. These
definitions clarify formulaic
requirements for correct calculation of
program job creation statistics in
accordance with Agency requirements.
To calculate full-time equivalent jobs,
two part-time jobs are counted as one
full-time job or three seasonal jobs as
one full-time job. If the total number of
part-time and seasonal jobs adds up to
a fraction, round up to the next whole
number after combining same.
Comment. Some comments supported
the proposed elimination of the rural
restrictions pointing out the positive
regional aspects that projects in larger
communities have over the rural
economy. Other comments urged the
Agency to retain these restrictions,
pointing out that the Agency should
give priority to very rural locations.
Response. The Agency has revised its
definition of rural to allow projects to be
funded in areas with a population of
50,000 or less which is the statutory
limit. However, the Agency will retain
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its historical practice to allow priority
points to projects in rural areas with a
population of less than 2,500.
Comment. The majority of comments
opposed awarding points based on the
award being an initial one for the
intermediary or the county rather than
focusing funding on the best possible
projects.
Response. RBS has taken into
consideration the fact that the majority
of intermediaries that are active
participants in the REDLG project are
concentrated in a few states and these
intermediaries have received the highest
number of REDLG awards. The
intermediaries in these states have
access to affiliated economic
development organizations that assist
the intermediaries in seeking
prospective business clients, providing
technical assistance in promoting rural
development, and in packaging
applications. Not all intermediaries
throughout the country have such
technical expertise available. This
discourages their participation in the
REDLG program. To ensure that the
greatest number of intermediaries has
access to the benefits of the program,
RBS will award priority points if the
application is a first-time award for a
new intermediary or if it is an award to
an existing intermediary that will fund
a project in a county not previously
served.
Comment. Some comments stated that
the requirement for a financial plan that
covers the term of the loan was
excessive.
Response. RBS has changed this
section to require a 3-year financial plan
from the ultimate recipient.
Comment. One comment stated that
the selection of awards should be based
on points, regardless of the number of
previous awards given to the
intermediary in a fiscal year.
Response. To ensure that the greatest
numbers of intermediaries have access
to the benefits of the programs, the
Agency will retain the proposed
provision that the Agency may limit an
intermediary to one selected grant
application and two selected loan
applications in a fiscal year, depending
upon availability of funds.
Other Clarifications to Final Rule
Section 4280.2: the reference to
‘‘loan’’ was changed to ‘‘REDG ZeroInterest Loan’’ and ‘‘REDL Zero-Interest
Loan’’ to better reflect that REDLG
encompasses two separate and distinct
programs; the definition for ‘‘project’’
was revised to add ‘‘ultimate recipient
activity’’ for clarification purposes; the
nomenclature ‘‘RUS Borrower’’ was
eliminated replaced with
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‘‘intermediary.’’ A definition was
provided for ‘‘intermediary’’ to meet the
requirements of the programs. The
definition indicates that RUS remains
the final determinant of an
intermediary’s eligibility for
participation in the programs; a
definition of ‘‘rural area’’ was added;
and the definition for an ‘‘ultimate
recipient’’ was revised to list all eligible
entities.
Sections 4280.3 and 4280.15(a), are
revised to clarify the definition of ‘‘startup venture costs.’’
Section 4280.15(g), clarifies that zerointerest loans are allowable for REDG
projects in accordance with § 4280.21.
Section 4280.17, clarifies that
payments on zero-interest loans are due
in monthly installments; and provides
guidance regarding disposition of partial
loan payments made by ultimate
recipients.
Sections 4280.19 and 4280.50, state
that administration and termination of
grants will be subject, where applicable,
to 7 CFR parts 3015 and 3019.
Section 4280.21, a reference to
Federally-recognized Indian tribes was
inserted to clarify the definition of
eligible ultimate recipients in
connection with § 4280.3.
Section 4280.23:, clarifies the
intended use of the Intermediary’s
contribution to the revolving loan fund
and the reasons that will result in
termination of the fund.
Provisions previously stated under
Section 4280.24 have been combined
with Section 4280.23 to maintain
consistency in subject matter. The
nomenclature ‘‘Non-Federal Funds’’ has
been changed to ‘‘Revolved Funds’’ for
clarification of the true nature of the
funding. Section 4280.24 now clarifies
‘‘Revolved Funds.’’
Section 4280.27, clarifies that
program funds cannot be used to
refinance existing indebtedness of the
ultimate recipient project; and cites
those instances where program funds
may be eligible for agricultural
production purposes.
Section 4280.29, reflects that either
the intermediary or the ultimate
recipient may provide the 20 percent
supplemental financing required for the
Ultimate Recipient Project.
Section 4280.36: clarifies Equal
Employment Opportunity,
nondiscrimination and civil rights
requirements; clarifies that loans made
from the revolving loan fund, when
funds are derived from repayments or
interest earnings, and not directly from
the Government, are not subject to the
Agency’s environmental clearance
process; clarifies the need to comply
with flood hazard insurance
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requirements; and provides audit
requirements for assistance under this
program.
Section 4280.42(b)(5), the economic
factor used has been changed to per
capita personal income rather than
median household income. Per capita
personal income is a more appropriate
indicator of current wages and
economic wealth of the county where
the project is located and has
historically been used in the REDLG
programs.
List of Subjects
7 CFR Part 1703
Community development, Grant
programs—housing and community
development, loan programs—housing
and community development, Reporting
and recordkeeping requirements, Rural
areas.
7 CFR Part 4280
Business and industry, Community
development, Economic development,
Grant programs—housing and
community development, loan
programs—housing and community
programs, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Rural areas.
Therefore, chapters XVII and XLII,
title 7, Code of Federal Regulations, are
amended as follows:
I
CHAPTER XVII—RURAL UTILITIES
SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF
AGRICULTURE
PART 1703—RURAL DEVELOPMENT
1. The authority citation for part 1703
continues to read as follows:
I
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 901, et seq. and 950aaa,
et seq.
Subpart B—[Removed]
2. Subpart B of part 1703 is removed
and reserved.
I
CHAPTER XLII—RURAL BUSINESS—
COOPERATIVE SERVICE AND RURAL
UTILITIES SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF
AGRICULTURE
PART 4280—LOANS AND GRANTS
3. Subpart A (§§ 4280.1 through
4280.100), is added to part 4280 to read
as follows:
I
Subpart A—Rural Economic
Development Loan and Grant
Programs
Sec.
4280.1 Purpose.
4280.2 Policy.
4280.3 Definitions.
4280.4–4280.12 [Reserved]
4280.13 Applicant eligibility.
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4280.14 [Reserved]
4280.15 Ultimate Recipient Projects eligible
for Rural Economic Development Loan
funding.
4280.16 REDL and REDG Loan terms.
4280.17 Additional REDL terms.
4280.18 [Reserved]
4280.19 REDG Grants.
4280.20 [Reserved]
4280.21. Eligible REDG initial Ultimate
Recipients and Projects.
4280.22 [Reserved]
4280.23 Requirements for lending from
Revolving Loan Fund.
4280.24 Revolved funds.
4280.25 Revolving Loan Fund Plan.
4280.26 Administration and operation of
the Revolving Loan Fund.
4280.27 Ineligible purposes.
4280.28 [Reserved]
4280.29 Supplemental financing required
for the Ultimate Recipient Project.
4280.30 Restrictions on the use of REDL or
REDG funds.
4280.31–4280.35 [Reserved]
4280.36 Other laws that contain compliance
requirements for these Programs.
4280.37 Application forms and filing dates.
4280.38 Maximum amount of loans and
Grants.
4280.39 Contents of an application.
4280.40 [Reserved]
4280.41 Environmental review of the
application.
4280.42 Application evaluation and
selection.
4280.43 Discretionary points.
4280.44 Limitation on the number of loans
or Grants to an Intermediary.
4280.45–4280.46 [Reserved]
4280.47 Non-selection of applications.
4280.48 Post-selection period.
4280.49 [Reserved]
4280.50 Disbursement of Zero-Interest Loan
funds.
4280.51–4280.52 [Reserved]
4280.53 Loan payments.
4280.54 Construction procurement
requirements.
4280.55 Monitoring responsibilities.
4280.56 Submission of reports and audits.
4280.57–4280.61 [Reserved]
4280.62 Appeals.
4280.63 Exception authority.
4280.64–4280.99 [Reserved]
4280.100 OMB control number.
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 301: 7 U.S.C. 940c.
Subpart A—Rural Economic
Development Loan and Grant
Programs
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§ 4280.1
Purpose.
The Rural Economic Development
Loan (REDL) and Grant (REDG)
Programs provide financing to eligible
Rural Utilities Service (RUS) electric or
telecommunications borrowers
(Intermediaries) to promote rural
economic development and job creation
projects.
§ 4280.2
Policy.
(a) REDL Program. REDL Zero-Interest
Loans are made to Intermediaries, to
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relend, at a zero-interest rate, to
Ultimate Recipients. Ultimate
Recipients are responsible for
repayment to the Intermediary. The
Intermediary must transmit Ultimate
Recipient loan repayments to Rural
Development.
(b) REDG Program. Grants are made to
Intermediaries to establish Revolving
Loan Funds. REDG Zero-Interest Loans
are made by the Intermediary from the
Revolving Loan Fund to Ultimate
Recipients for the purpose of financing
specific, approved Projects. Ultimate
Recipients are responsible for
repayment to the Intermediary. The
Ultimate Recipient’s loan repayments
are to be retained in the Revolving Loan
Fund, which is maintained by the
Intermediary, to finance other rural
economic development Projects. Only
the initial loan made by the
Intermediary from the Revolving Loan
Fund has to be at zero interest.
§ 4280.3
Definitions.
The following definitions are
applicable to this subpart:
Advanced Telecommunications.
Using communications equipment for
purposes, such as the simultaneous
transmission of images and voice or the
electronic transmission of data between
multiple sites that do not consist
primarily of providing local exchange
voice or other routine communications.
Agricultural Production. The
cultivation, production, growing,
raising, feeding, housing, breeding,
hatching, or managing of crops, plants,
animals, fish, or birds, either for fiber,
food for human consumption, or
livestock feed.
Business Incubator. A facility in
which small businesses can share
premises, support staff, computers,
software or hardware,
telecommunications terminal
equipment, machinery, janitorial
services, utilities, or other overhead
expenses, and where such businesses
can receive Technical Assistance,
financial advice, business planning
services or other support.
Community Facilities Project. An
eligible community facility under the
Community Facility Direct or
Guaranteed programs.
Cushion of Credit. The amount
contributed by the Intermediary
pursuant to 7 U.S.C. 940c.
Direct Job. A job that is created or
saved by an Ultimate Recipient
employer as a result of funding received
from these Programs.
Established Operation. An entity that
has engaged in the nature of the Project
for more than one year.
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Full-Time Job. A job for which a
worker is scheduled to work 35 hours
per week, or more, on a regular basis.
Grant. For the REDG Program only; a
transfer of monies other than a loan,
from Rural Development to an
Intermediary for specific use in funding
a Revolving Loan Fund from which
loans are made to Ultimate Recipients.
Grant funds must be repaid by the
Intermediary to Rural Development in
the event the Fund is unused for more
than one year, misused, no longer
needed for its intended purposes, or the
Grant is terminated.
Independent Provider. An entity or
individual, other than the Intermediary
or the Ultimate Recipient that is not
owned by a subsidiary or an affiliate of
the Intermediary or Ultimate Recipient
or would otherwise have an interest in
the Intermediary or Ultimate Recipient
that would be a conflict of interest or
have the appearance of a conflict of
interest.
Indirect Job. A job that is created or
saved as a result of a funded Project, but
is not with the Ultimate Recipient.
Infrastructure. Facilities required to
support private sector economic activity
such as: Highways, streets, roads, and
bridges; public transit; water supply;
wastewater treatment; water resources;
solid waste; and hazardous waste
services.
Intermediary. An entity that is
identified by RUS as an eligible
borrower under the Rural Electrification
Act and obtains a REDG Grant or a
REDL Loan.
Part-Time Job. A job for which a
worker is scheduled to work less than
35 hours per week, on a regular basis.
Programs. The Rural Economic
Development Loan (REDL) and the
Rural Economic Development Grant
(REDG) Programs.
Project. The facility, equipment, or
activity of the Ultimate Recipient that is
funded under one of the Programs.
REDG. The Rural Economic
Development Grant Program.
REDL. The Rural Economic
Development Loan Program.
Revolving Loan Fund (or Fund). A
revolving loan fund that is created with
Grant funds and the Intermediary’s
supplemental contribution under the
REDG Program that makes loans and
uses the loan repayments and interest
earnings to make subsequent loans until
the Fund is terminated.
Revolving Loan Fund Plan. A plan
developed by the Intermediary and
approved by Rural Development that
governs the use of the Revolving Loan
Fund. The plan must at least include a
detailed explanation of the
Intermediary’s Fund administration
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policies and procedures and planned
Fund use after the funds in the
Revolving Loan Fund have revolved.
Fund administration policies and
procedures must at least include
information regarding the review and
approval of loans from the Fund.
Rural Area. This information will be
taken from the most recent census data.
Any area other than:
(1) A city or town that has a
population of greater than 50,000
inhabitants; and
(2) The urbanized area contiguous and
adjacent to such a city or town.
Rural Business-Cooperative Service
(RBS). The Rural Business-Cooperative
Service, an agency within the Rural
Development mission area of the USDA.
Rural Development. For purposes of
this regulation, The Rural BusinessCooperative Service (RBS), an Agency of
the United States Department of
Agriculture, or a successor Agency, will
be referred to as Rural Development.
Rural Utilities Service (RUS). The
Rural Utilities Service, an Agency
within the Rural Development mission
area of the USDA.
Seasonal Job. A job whether PartTime or Full-Time that begins and ends
in accordance with a specified time
period of less than a year and generally
within a range less than four months.
Start-Up Venture(s). An entity that
has engaged in the nature of the Project
for less than one year. An entity that has
operated in excess of one year, but
which is about to enter into a new line
of business, would be considered a
Start-Up Venture.
State. Any of the 50 States, the
District of Columbia, the
Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the
United States Virgin Islands, Guam,
American Samoa, the Commonwealth of
the Northern Marianas Islands, the
Republic of Palau, the Federated States
of Micronesia, and the Republic of the
Marshall Islands.
Technical Assistance. Managerial,
financial and operational analysis and
consultation by Independent Providers
to assist Project owners in identifying
and evaluating problems or potential
problems and to provide training that
enables Project owners to successfully
implement, manage, operate and
maintain viable Projects.
Ultimate Recipient. An entity or
individual that receives a loan from an
Intermediary. The Ultimate Recipient
may be a for profit or not-for-profit
entity such as, but not limited to, a sole
proprietorship, a corporation, a
cooperative, a partnership, or a Limited
Liability Company. The Ultimate
Recipient may also be a public body,
such as, but not limited to, a political
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subdivision of a State or locality, or a
Federally-recognized Indian tribe.
Uniform Act. The Uniform Relocation
Assistance and Real Property
Acquisition Act of 1970 (42 U.S.C.
4601–4655).
USDA. The United States Department
of Agriculture.
Zero-Interest Loan. A loan made by
the Intermediary to the Ultimate
Recipient with no interest and which
will be repaid to the Intermediary by the
Ultimate Recipient.
§§ 4280.4–4280.12
§ 4280.13
[Reserved]
Applicants that are not delinquent on
any Federal debt or otherwise
disqualified from participation in these
Programs are eligible to apply. An
applicant must be eligible under 7
U.S.C. 940c.
§ 4280.14
[Reserved]
§ 4280.15 Ultimate Recipient Projects
eligible for Rural Economic Development
Loan funding.
An Intermediary may receive REDL
funds only when it has a pre-approved
Ultimate Recipient and Project that have
an immediate need for the Zero-Interest
Loan. REDL funds may only be used by
the Intermediary to make a Zero-Interest
Loan to the Ultimate Recipient to
finance financially viable economic
development or job creation Projects in
a Rural Area. Funds may only be used
to provide the following assistance:
(a) Start-Up Venture costs, including,
but not limited to financing fixed assets
such as real estate, buildings (new or
existing), equipment, or working capital;
(b) Business expansion;
(c) Business Incubators;
(d) Technical Assistance;
(e) Project feasibility studies;
(f) Advanced Telecommunications
services and computer networks for
medical, educational, and job training
services;
(g) Other Projects eligible under
§ 4280.21; or
(h) Community Facilities Projects.
§ 4280.16
REDL and REDG Loan terms.
REDL and REDG loans made by the
Intermediary are governed by the
following terms:
(a) The maximum term of a loan is 10
years, including any principal
deferment period. The Intermediary
may choose a shorter term if desired.
(b) Deferments on Zero-Interest Loans
will automatically be granted by Rural
Development upon request of the
Intermediary as follows:
(1) A deferral for up to 1 year for
Projects involving an Established
Operation; or
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(2) A deferral for up to 2 years for
Projects involving a Start-Up venture or
a Community Facilities Project whether
or not such Project also receives funding
under USDA Community Facilities
funding programs.
(c) The Intermediary must provide the
Ultimate Recipient with the same loan
terms as the Intermediary receives from
Rural Development.
(d) The Intermediary is solely
responsible for the financial approval of
Fund loans and all other Fund decisions
and actions.
§ 4280.17
Applicant eligibility.
29845
Additional REDL terms.
(a) The Intermediary is responsible for
fully repaying the Zero-Interest Loan to
RBS even if the Ultimate Recipient does
not repay the Intermediary.
(b) The Intermediary is responsible for
remitting any partial or full payment to
RBS at the time the Ultimate Recipient
pays the Intermediary.
(c) Unless deferred pursuant to
§ 4280.16(b) of this subpart, loan
payments to Rural Development under
the REDL Program are due monthly.
(d) If the Intermediary does not have
an outstanding loan with RUS, the
Intermediary must immediately provide,
as security for any REDL loan it
receives, a Rural Development-approved
irrevocable letter of credit that remains
in effect until the loan is repaid.
§ 4280.18
[Reserved]
§ 4280.19
REDG Grants.
Intermediaries receiving Grants must
partially finance a Revolving Loan Fund
that the Intermediary will operate and
administer, by providing supplemental
funds of at least 20 percent of the Grant.
Grants are subject to 7 CFR parts 3015,
3019, and 3052, as applicable.
§ 4280.20
[Reserved]
§ 4280.21 Eligible REDG Ultimate
Recipients and Projects.
The Intermediary may only make
loans from the Revolving Loan Fund to
entities located in a Rural area of a
State. Eligible entities are as follows:
(a) Non-profit entities, public bodies,
or Federally-recognized Indian tribes
Ultimate Recipients for:
(1) Community development or
Community Facility Projects that:
(i) will create or save employment;
and
(ii) are open to and serve all Rural
residents, and are owned by the
Ultimate Recipient;
(2) Business Incubators;
(3) Facilities and equipment to
provide education and training to
residents of Rural Areas that will
facilitate economic development;
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(4) Facilities and equipment to
provide medical care to residents of
Rural Areas. Equipment and facilities
may be funded to enable eligible entities
to provide medical training and related
professional health care skills to rural
health care providers;
(5) Projects that utilize Advanced
Telecommunications or computer
networks to facilitate medical or
educational services or job training; or
(6) Project feasibility studies and
Technical Assistance. A qualified
Independent Provider must perform
feasibility studies or Technical
Assistance.
(b) For-profit Ultimate Recipients for
Projects under paragraphs (a)(3), (4), (5),
or (6) of this section.
§ 4280.22
[Reserved]
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§ 4280.23 Requirements for lending from
Revolving Loan Fund.
(a) Supplemental contribution. The
Intermediary must establish a Revolving
Loan Fund and contribute an amount
equal to at least 20 percent of the Grant.
The supplemental contribution must
come from Intermediary’s funds which
may not be from other Federal Grants,
unless permitted by law.
(b) Use of supplemental contribution.
The Intermediary’s contribution will
only be used to make REDG loans and
not other investment purposes. The
Intermediary’s contribution must
remain a permanent part of the
Revolving Loan Fund until the Fund is
terminated.
(c) REDG Zero-Interest Loan
Requirements. The Fund is made up of
Rural Development and Intermediary
contributions and must be loaned in
accordance with one of the following 2
options:
(1) The contribution may be used to
fund the same Project that Rural
Development is funding. The interest
rate on that portion of the financing
using Rural Development funds will be
at zero percent. The interest rate on that
portion of the financing using the
Intermediary’s contribution may be
greater than zero percent but must be
less than, or equal to, the prevailing
prime rate. Using this option, loan
security and recovery of loan losses
must provide for the pro rata recovery
and distribution between the
Intermediary and Rural Development
based on the respective amounts of each
contribution to the total loan amount for
the Project.
(2) The Intermediary’s contribution
may be used to fund Projects separate
from the Project financed with Rural
Development funds, provided that the
Project is eligible in accordance with
§ 4280.21.
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(3) Whether the Intermediary chooses
the option under paragraph (c)(1) or
paragraph (c)(2) of this section, its
contribution must be used to fund an
eligible Project within 3 years from the
date of the Grant agreement. If the
Intermediary fails to use its contribution
within this 3-year period, Rural
Development will terminate the Grant.
(d) Intermediary’s supplemental
funds. Once revolved, monies from the
Fund may be loaned at an interest rate
called for in the Revolving Loan Fund
Plan, not to exceed the prevailing prime
rate.
(e) Eligible purposes only. Until the
total amount in the Fund has been
loaned, all loans must be made for
eligible purposes as stated in § 4280.21.
After the Fund has been loaned, in
accordance with § 4280.21 of this
subpart, the Intermediary shall make
loans to finance rural economic
development purposes in accordance
with the Revolving Loan Fund Plan. All
loan repayments, including interest
earned, must be deposited into the
Fund.
(f) Termination for cause. Rural
Development will terminate the Fund
and require repayment of the Grant
funds in accordance with 7 CFR parts
3015 and 3019 if Rural Development
determines that the Fund is not being
operated according to the approved
Revolving Loan Fund Plan, this subpart,
or for other good cause determined by
Rural Development, such as
questionable prepayment of initial
loans.
(g) All REDG Loans must be made to
Rural Ultimate Recipients.
§ 4280.24
Revolving Loan Fund Plan.
Each REDG Intermediary must adopt
a Rural Development-approved plan
that specifies that:
(a) The initial loan made from the
Fund will be at zero percent interest and
have a maximum term of 10 years;
(b) Loans made from loan repayments
may carry an interest rate less than, or
equal to, the prevailing prime rate. The
Intermediary determines repayment
terms and security arrangements on
these loans.
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§ 4280.26 Administration and operation of
the Revolving Loan Fund.
(a) The Intermediary will operate and
administer the Revolving Loan Fund.
The Intermediary may contract with a
third party for administrative services
regarding the Fund. However, the
Intermediary must permanently retain
all Project review, approval, and
monitoring authority and responsibility.
This authority and responsibility cannot
be delegated to any other person or
entity.
(b) Up to 10 percent of Rural
Development Grant funds may be
applied toward operating expenses over
the life of the Fund. Operating expenses
include the costs of administering the
Fund and Technical Assistance
provided to Project owners by
Independent Providers.
(c) In cases where the Intermediary
uses its supplemental contribution to
the Revolving Loan Fund for a Project
other than the Project that resulted in
the Intermediary being awarded the
Grant, the loan terms must not exceed
10 years and the interest rate must be
less than, or equal to, the prevailing
prime rate.
§ 4280.27
Revolved funds.
Rural Development and the
Intermediary’s supplemental funds will
be considered revolved after they have
been loaned to Ultimate Recipients and
subsequently repaid. Loans made from
revolved funds will not require prior
approval of Rural Development for
creditworthiness or environmental
clearance purposes. All other Federal
compliance requirements, including
those in this subpart, remain in effect.
§ 4280.25
(c) Loans made from repayments of
REDG loans must be for eligible Program
purposes;
(d) The Intermediary is solely
responsible for the financial approval of
Fund loans and all other Fund decisions
and actions; and
(e) No changes will be made to a Rural
Development-approved Revolving Loan
Fund Plan without the prior written
approval of Rural Development.
Ineligible purposes.
Zero-Interest Loans may not be used:
(a) For activities that would adversely
affect the environment, or activities that
limit the choice of reasonable
alternatives prior to satisfying Rural
Development environmental
requirements;
(b) To pay off or refinance any
existing indebtedness or costs of the
Project that were incurred prior to Rural
Development receipt of the
Intermediary’s completed application;
(c) For any electric or
telecommunications purpose or for the
Intermediary’s electric or
telecommunications operations, for
affiliated operations of the Intermediary,
or for the benefit of other Intermediaries
or their affiliated operations, except
those purposes contained in
§ 4280.15(f);
(d) To pay the salaries of any
employee or owner of the Intermediary,
its subsidiaries, or affiliates, except for
salaries incurred in administering a
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Revolving Loan Fund established under
the REDG Program;
(e) For community antenna or cable
television systems or facilities;
(f) For residential purposes such as
residential dwellings and land sites;
facilities to provide entertainment
television; to transfer property between
owners without making improvements
that will promote or sustain economic
development in Rural Areas; or for
personal, non-business related vehicles;
(g) Where there is directly or
indirectly a conflict of interest or the
appearance of a conflict of interest in
the Project; for Intermediaries this
would include a situation in which the
Intermediary, its officers, managers,
Board of Directors, employees, their
spouses, children, or close relatives,
have a financial or ownership interest in
the Project being funded, including its
construction or development;
(h) For any purpose when receipt of
loan funds is conditioned upon the
requirement that the Ultimate Recipient
acquire electric or telecommunications
service from the Intermediary or its
affiliates;
(i) For any gambling activity;
(j) For a Project that would result in
the transfer of existing employment or
business activity more than 25 miles
from its existing location;
(k) For proposed Projects located in
areas covered by the Coastal Barrier
Resources Act (16 U.S.C. 3501–3510);
(l) For any illegal activity or any
activity involving prostitution;
(m) For Agricultural Production,
except where the Project is a farmerowned cooperative or similar
organization where the benefits of the
Project are passed on to the farmerowners, and the Agricultural Production
is part of an integrated business that
processes the agricultural products, and
the Agricultural Production portion of
the loan will not exceed 50% of the loan
amount;
(n) For any pass-through Grant
funding activity (a Grant by the
Intermediary to the Ultimate Recipient);
(o) Provision of only local exchange
voice telephone service; or
(p) for any other purpose announced
in a notice by Rural Development. This
will not affect Grants that have already
been awarded.
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§ 4280.28
[Reserved]
§ 4280.29 Supplemental financing required
for the Ultimate Recipient Project.
(a) For REDL loans, either the
Ultimate Recipient or the Intermediary
must provide supplemental funds for
the Project equal to at least 20 percent
of the loan to the Intermediary. For
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REDG grants, the Intermediary must
provide supplemental funds, to
capitalize the Revolving Loan Fund,
equal to at least 20 percent of the Grant
to the Intermediary.
(b) Funds provided by the Ultimate
Recipient must be:
(1) Cash or its equivalent;
(2) Provided after Rural Development
receives the completed application; and
(3) Disbursed for an eligible Project
within a three year period that begins on
the day the Intermediary signs the Grant
agreement.
(c) Satisfactory evidence of the
Ultimate Recipient’s funds must be
provided to Rural Development before it
will advance any funds to the
Intermediary.
§ 4280.30 Restrictions on the use of REDL
or REDG funds.
(a) Conflict of interest. The
Intermediary must not own or manage
any Ultimate Recipient Project, unless
the Project is acquired as a result of
servicing a loan made from the
Revolving Loan Fund. Conflicts of
interest and all appearances of a conflict
of interest are not permitted.
(b) Fees. The Intermediary may charge
reasonable loan servicing fees, which
are limited to one percent per year of
the principal amount outstanding on the
loan; reasonable professional service
fees that are customary for the service
being provided and in accordance with
any standard fee schedules that have
been established for the service; and
reasonable expenses the Intermediary
has incurred from Independent
Providers.
(c) Interest earnings. Any interest
earned by the Intermediary on advances
of Rural Development REDG or REDL
funds prior to the disbursement for the
Project, must be returned to Rural
Development.
§§ 4280.31–4280.35
[Reserved]
§ 4280.36 Other laws that contain
compliance requirements for these
Programs.
(a) Equal employment opportunity.
For all construction contracts and
Grants in excess of $10,000, the
contractor must comply with Executive
Order 11246, as amended by Executive
Order 11375, and as supplemented by
applicable Department of Labor
regulations (41 CFR part 60). The
applicant is responsible for ensuring
that the contractor complies with these
requirements.
(b) Equal opportunity and
nondiscrimination. Rural Development
will ensure that equal opportunity and
nondiscriminatory requirements are met
in accordance with the Equal Credit
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29847
Opportunity Act and 7 CFR part 15d,
conducted by USDA. Rural
Development will not discriminate
against applicants on the bases of race,
color, religion, national origin, sex,
marital status, or age (provided that the
applicant has the capacity to contract);
to the fact that all or part of the
applicant’s income derives from public
assistance program; or to the fact that
the applicant has in good faith exercised
any right under the Consumer Credit
Protection Act.
(c) Civil rights compliance. Recipients
of Grants must comply with the
Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990,
Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964,
and Section 504 of the Rehabilitation
Act of 1973. This includes collection
and maintenance of data on the race,
sex, and national origin of the
recipient’s membership/ownership and
employees. These data must be available
to conduct compliance reviews in
accordance with 7 CFR part 1901
subpart E, § 1901.204. Initial
compliance reviews will be conducted
with the Intermediary when Form RD
400–4, ‘‘Assurance Agreement,’’ is
signed. For each loan or Grant an
Intermediary receives, a new Form RD
400–4 must be completed. Each
Ultimate Recipient must go through the
same pre-award compliance review
process and must also sign Form RD
400–4. For loans and Grants, a preaward review is required before loan or
Grant approval or any disbursement of
funds. For Intermediaries, a post-award
compliance review is required 90 days
after closing the loan or Grant. This
review is not required for Ultimate
Recipients. Subsequent compliance
reviews will be conducted 3 years from
the date the post-award compliance
review is completed for Intermediaries
and 3 years from the date the pre-award
compliance review is completed for
Ultimate Recipients. Where Grant funds
are used for a Revolving Loan Fund,
compliance reviews are required for the
Intermediaries for as long as the Fund
is in operation. For Ultimate Recipients,
compliance reviews are conducted until
the loan is repaid to the Fund.
(d) Architectural barriers. All
facilities financed with Zero-Interest
Loans that are open to the public or in
which persons may be employed or
reside must be designed, constructed, or
altered to be readily accessible to and
usable by disabled persons. Standards
for these facilities must comply with the
Architectural Barriers Act of 1968 (42
U.S.C. 4151–4157) and the ‘‘Uniform
Federal Accessibility Standards’’, (41
CFR part 101–19.6, Appendix A).
(e) Uniform relocation assistance.
Relocations in connection with these
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Programs are subject to 49 CFR part 24
as referenced by 7 CFR part 21 except
that the provisions in title III of the
Uniform Act do not apply to these
Programs.
(f) Drug-free workplace. Grants made
under these Programs are subject to the
requirements contained in 7 CFR part
3021 which implements the Drug-Free
Workplace Act of 1988 (41 U.S.C. 701–
706). An Intermediary requesting a
REDG Grant will be required to certify
that it will establish and make a good
faith effort to maintain a drug-free
workplace program.
(g) Debarment and suspension. The
requirements of 7 CFR part 3017 are
applicable to these Programs.
(h) Intergovernmental review of
Federal programs. These Programs are
subject to the requirements of Executive
Order 12372 (3 CFR 1982 Comp., p. 197)
and 7 CFR part 3015, subpart V which
implements Executive Order 12372.
Proposed Projects are subject to the
State and local government review
process contained in 7 CFR part 3015.
(i) Restrictions on lobbying. The
restrictions and requirements imposed
by 31 U.S.C. 1352, and 7 CFR part 3018,
are applicable to these Programs.
(j) Earthquake hazards. These
Programs are subject to the seismic
requirements of the Earthquake Hazards
Reduction Act of 1977 (42 U.S.C. 7701–
7706).
(k) Environmental requirements. The
requirements of 7 CFR part 1940,
subpart G, are applicable to these
Programs and to the loans made from
the Revolving Loan Fund using Rural
Development funds. Financial
assistance from the Revolving Loan
Fund, when funds are derived from
repayments by third parties, is not
considered Federal assistance for
purposes of meeting the compliance
requirements of 7 CFR part 1940,
subpart G.
(l) Affirmative fair housing. If
applicable, the Intermediary will be
required to comply with the Affirmative
Fair Housing Act (42 U.S.C. 3601–3631).
(m) Flood hazard insurance. These
Programs are subject to the National
Flood Insurance Act of 1968 and the
Flood Disaster Protection Act of 1973, as
amended by 42 U.S.C. 4001–4129.
(n) Audits. These Programs are subject
to 7 CFR part 3052.
cprice-sewell on PRODPC61 with RULES
§ 4280.37
dates.
Application forms and filing
(a) The Intermediary may obtain
forms that supplement the written
narrative sections of its application from
the Rural Development State Office for
the State where the Intermediary is
located.
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(b) An original copy only of the
application is to be filed with the Rural
Development State Office. No other
copies are required.
§ 4280.38
Grants.
Maximum amount of loans or
During any given fiscal year, Rural
Development will publish an
announcement of available loan and
Grant funds and will indicate the
maximum loan and Grant amounts for
which an Intermediary or prospective
Intermediary may apply. This
announcement will also include contact
information and application deadlines.
All pending applications on file at RBS,
including both loan and Grant
applications, from the same
Intermediary or prospective
Intermediary for the same Project will
be considered to be one application in
determining that the maximum size of
the application is in accordance with
this section.
§ 4280.39
Contents of an application.
An application for a loan or a Grant
must contain the following:
(a) Required forms and certifications:
(1) Standard Form 424, ‘‘Application
for Federal Assistance,’’ signed by an
authorized representative of the
Intermediary.
(2) A Resolution of the Board of
Directors signed by the directors and
certified by the Intermediary’s board
secretary. The board resolution must
indicate whether the Intermediary is
requesting a loan or Grant, agree to the
provisions of this subpart and the loan
or Grant agreement including the
Intermediary’s 20 percent Fund
contribution, and state that the
Intermediary has the legal authority to
enter into a loan or Grant agreement
under these Programs;
(3) Form AD 1047, ‘‘Certification
Regarding Debarment, Suspension, and
other Responsibility Matters—Primary
Covered Transactions,’’ and Form AD–
1048, ‘‘Certification Regarding
Debarment, Suspension, Ineligibility
and Voluntary Exclusion—Lower Tier
Transactions.’’
(4) Assurance statement for the
Uniform Act signed by the Ultimate
Recipient. This statement provides
Rural Development with the required
assurance statement that any relocations
of persons or acquisitions of real
property, as part of completing the
Ultimate Recipient Project, will be
handled in accordance with this statute.
(5) RD Instruction 1940–Q, Exhibit A–
1, applies if the loan is greater than
$150,000 or the Grant is greater than
$100,000;
(6) SF LLL, ‘‘Disclosure of Lobbying
Activities,’’ (if the Intermediary or the
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Ultimate Recipient engages in lobbying
activities);
(7) Form AD 1049, ‘‘Certification
Regarding Drug-Free Workplace
Requirements,’’ for Grants only;
(8) Seismic certification if
construction of a building is proposed.
The Project owner certifies that any
building constructed will comply with
standards that reduce the damage
caused by earthquakes;
(9) Form RD 1940–20, ‘‘Request for
Environmental Information’’; and
(10) RUS Form 7, ‘‘Financial and
Statistical Report’’ and RUS Form 7a
‘‘Investments, Loan Guarantees, and
Loans,’’ or similar information.
(b) A written narrative section must
be provided. This section consists of the
following:
(1) A Project description, including
details of the work to be performed with
Rural Development funds, and a
business plan, including a discussion of
management and prior experience of the
Ultimate Recipient.
(2) A discussion of how the Project
meets each selection factor in
§ 4280.42(b).
(3) A Revolving Loan Fund Plan is
required if the Intermediary is applying
for a Grant to establish a Revolving Loan
Fund.
§ 4280.40
[Reserved]
§ 4280.41 Environmental review of the
application.
(a) Rural Development will conduct a
review for the potential of any
environmental impacts resulting from
the proposed Project identified in the
application and inform the Intermediary
of any additional information Rural
Development needs and any subsequent
environmental requirements necessary
for Rural Development to make a
finding.
(b) Rural Development will conduct
all necessary environmental reviews as
prescribed in 7 CFR part 1940, subpart
G. These reviews must be completed
before the application can be considered
for approval.
§ 4280.42 Application evaluation and
selection.
(a) Rural Development will evaluate
the application and score it based on the
selection factors in this section. All
applications will be ranked on a
nationwide basis, based on the total
points scored.
(b) The application will be evaluated
and scored using the information
provided in accordance with
§ 4280.39(b)(2) of this subpart.
(1) Nature of the Project. Rural
Development will award up to 60 points
based on whether the Project:
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(i) Is a for-profit business, Business
Incubator, industrial building or park, or
an infrastructure connection project
(such as streets or utilities)—20 points;
(ii) Provides Technical Assistance to
rural businesses or rural residents, or
educates or provides medical care to
rural residents—20 points;
(iii) Will enhance rural economic
development by providing Advanced
Telecommunications services and
computer networks for medical,
educational, and job training services.
This review will be based on the
application’s telecommunications
design—20 points.
(2) Number of direct full-time
equivalent jobs created or saved within
a 3-year period. To calculate full-time
equivalent Direct-Jobs, count two parttime jobs as one full-time job or three
part-time or seasonal jobs as one fulltime job. If the total numbers of parttime and seasonal jobs add up to a
fraction, round up to the next whole
number after combining same. IndirectJobs or non-Rural jobs cannot be used
for this calculation.
If the number of Rural full-time equivalent direct-jobs jobs created or saved per $100,000 of total, Project cost is:
(i) Greater than five ...............................................................................................................................................................................
(ii) From one to five ...............................................................................................................................................................................
(3) Supplemental funds for the
Project. Points will be based on a
calculation of the amount of
supplemental funds to be provided to
the Project. All supplemental funds
used in the following calculation must
be disbursed to the Project between the
date of Rural Development receipt of the
(i) Greater than 200% ...........................................................................................................................................................................
(ii) From 100% to 200% ........................................................................................................................................................................
(iii) From 50% to less than 100% .........................................................................................................................................................
will compare the current unemployment
rate(s) in the county(ies) to the State and
national unemployment rates, and, if
Then Rural
Development
will award:
cprice-sewell on PRODPC61 with RULES
(i) Less than or equal to 90% of the national level ..............................................................................................................................
(ii) Between 90 and 100% of the national level ....................................................................................................................................
(iii) Less than or equal to 90% of the State level .................................................................................................................................
(iv) Between 90 and 100% of the State level .......................................................................................................................................
VerDate Aug<31>2005
15:13 May 29, 2007
Jkt 211001
population of 1,250 to 2500, Rural
Development will award 10 points.
(7) Decline in population for the
county where the Project is physically
located. If there has been a decline in
population in the county where the
Project will be located over the time
period covered by the two most recent
decennial censuses of the United States
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Fmt 4700
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15 points.
5 points.
10 points.
5 points.
under the following categories,
whichever is greater:
If the per capita personal income level in the county(ies) is:
(6) Rural Area location. (i) If the
Project is physically located in an
incorporated city or town or equivalent
having a population of 1,249 or less, or
if it is physically located in an
unincorporated area, Rural
Development will award 20 points.
(ii) If the Project is physically located
in an incorporated area having a
20 points.
10 points.
5 points.
Then Rural
Development
will award:
(i) Exceeds the national unemployment rate by 30% or more .............................................................................................................
(ii) Is greater than the national unemployment rate, but exceeds it by less than 30% .......................................................................
(iii) Exceeds the State unemployment rate by 30% or more ...............................................................................................................
(iv) Is greater than the State unemployment rate but exceeds it by less than 30% ............................................................................
income in the county(ies) where the
Project will be located to the national
and State per capita personal income
levels, and, if applicable, award points
Then Rural
Development
will award:
applicable, award points under the
following categories, whichever is
greater:
If the unemployment rate(s) in the county(ies) where the Project will be located:
(5) Per capita personal income for the
county(ies) where the Project is
physically located. Rural Development
will compare the per capita personal
25 points.
15 points.
application and 1 year after the first
advance of funds by Rural Development:
If supplemental funds as a percentage of the Rural Development loan or grant to be provided to the Project are:
(4) Unemployment rate for the
county(ies) where the Project is
physically located. Rural Development
Then Rural
Development
will award:
15 points.
5 points.
10 points.
5 points.
to the present, Rural Development will
award 10 points.
(8) Cushion of Credit Payments. Rural
Development will determine the level of
Cushion of Credit Payments on deposit
by the Intermediary, as follows:
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29850
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 103 / Wednesday, May 30, 2007 / Rules and Regulations
Then Rural
Development
will award:
If the Intermediary’s Cushion of Credit account level is:
(i) In excess of $300,000, or a dollar amount in excess of 3 percent of the Intermediary’s total assets, whichever is less ..............
(ii) Within the range of $100,000 to $299,999.99, or a dollar amount that is within the range of one percent to 2.99 percent of
Intermediary’s total assets, whichever is less.
(iii) Within the range of $10,000 to $99,999.99, or a dollar amount that is within the range of 0.5 percent to .99 percent of
Intermediary’s total assets, whichever is less.
(9) Initial loan and Grant. If the loan
or Grant application will result in the
first award to an Intermediary under
these Programs, Rural Development will
award 10 points.
(10) County participation. If the
Project will be the first REDLG Project
financed in a county Rural Development
will award 10 points.
(11) The business plan for the
Applicant’s Ultimate Recipient will be
evaluated by Rural Development and
must include:
(i) A description of the business or
Project plans, its management, and, if
applicable, its products and operating
plans. (The business plan evaluated by
Rural Development for Advanced
Telecommunications will be its
telecommunications and engineering
design)—up to 15 points; and
(ii) An appropriate financial plan,
including actual balance sheets and
income statements covering the most
recent 3-year period (for applicants who
have been in business this long), and
projected balance sheets, income
statements, and cash flow statements for
the ensuing 3-year period, supported by
assumptions showing the basis for the
projections—up to 20 points.
cprice-sewell on PRODPC61 with RULES
§ 4280.43
The RBS Administrator has the
discretion to designate up to 25 points
(no more than 5 points for each of the
following elements) based on whether
the Project:
(a) Is located in a Rural Empowerment
Zone, Rural Economic Area Partnership
Zone, Rural Enterprise Community, or
Champion Community;
(b) Is located in a county that has
experienced the loss, removal, or
closing of a major source or sources of
employment in the last 3 years which
causes an increase of 2 percentage
points or more in the county’s most
recent unemployment rate compared
with the same period immediately
before the dislocation;
(c) Is located in a county that has
experienced chronic or long-term
economic deterioration;
(d) Is located in a county that was
designated a disaster area by the
President of the United States that
significantly affected rural economic
15:13 May 29, 2007
Jkt 211001
§ 4280.44 Limitation on number of loans or
Grants to an Intermediary.
Depending on the amount of funds
available, Rural Development may
publish an announcement limiting an
Intermediary to one selected Grant
application and two selected loan
applications in a fiscal year.
§§ 4280.45–4280.46
§ 4280.47
[Reserved]
Non-selection of applications.
Provided the application
requirements have not changed, an
application not selected will be
reconsidered in 3 subsequent funding
competitions for a total of four funding
competitions. If an application is
withdrawn, it can be resubmitted and
will be evaluated as a new application.
§ 4280.48
Discretionary points.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
development and job creation. The
county must have been designated
within 3 years prior to filing of the
completed application with Rural
Development; or
(e) Is consistent with the Rural
Development State Office’s approved
strategic plan and mission area
objectives and is identified as a priority
area for assistance in the States’ plan.
Post selection period.
Rural Development will notify the
Intermediary in writing if the
application is selected. The documents
to be executed by the Intermediary will
include:
(a) For a loan:
(1) A Letter of Conditions with
Project-specific terms and conditions;
(2) A loan agreement with general
terms and conditions;
(3) A note covering the repayment
terms of the loan; and
(4) A legal opinion concerning the
authority of the Intermediary to engage
in the Project.
(b) For a Grant:
(1) A Letter of Conditions with
Project-specific terms and conditions;
(2) A Grant agreement with general
terms and conditions; and
(3) A legal opinion concerning the
authority of the Intermediary to
participate in the Revolving Loan Fund
and to engage in the Project.
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Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
§ 4280.49
15 points.
10 points.
5 points.
[Reserved]
§ 4280.50 Disbursement of Zero-Interest
Loan funds.
(a) For a REDL loan, Rural
Development will disburse Zero-Interest
Loan funds to the Intermediary in
accordance with the terms of the
executed loan agreement. All loan funds
will be disbursed either as an advance
to the Intermediary, in multiple
advances, or as a reimbursement for
eligible project costs, once the
Intermediary has complied with Rural
Development requirements.
(b) The Intermediary must provide to
the Ultimate Recipient all loan funds
that the Intermediary receives from
Rural Development within one year of
receiving them. If the Intermediary does
not re-lend Rural Development funds
within one year, the loan funds, and all
interest earned on the loan funds, must
be returned to the Agency.
(c) For a REDG loan, Rural
Development will disburse Grant funds
to the Intermediary in accordance with
7 CFR parts 3015 and 3019, as
applicable. Specifically, Rural
Development will disburse the Grant
funds in advance if the following
requirements are met:
(1) The Intermediary has established
written procedures that will minimize
the time elapsing between the transfer of
funds from Rural Development and their
disbursement to the Ultimate Recipient;
(2) The management system of the
Intermediary meets the requirements of
7 CFR parts 3015 and 3019, as
applicable;
(3) All necessary supplemental funds
for the Project have been obligated or
committed to the Revolving Loan Fund;
and
(4) The requests for cash advances
made by the Intermediary are limited to
the minimum amounts needed and
timed to be in accordance with the
actual immediate cash needs of the
Ultimate Recipient for carrying out the
Project.
§§ 4280.51–4280.52
§ 4280.53
[Reserved]
Loan payments.
The Intermediary must make all REDL
payments to Rural Development by
E:\FR\FM\30MYR1.SGM
30MYR1
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 103 / Wednesday, May 30, 2007 / Rules and Regulations
electronic funds transfer or other means
as specified in the loan documents.
§ 4280.54 Construction procurement
requirements.
Construction, including bidding and
awarding of contracts, must be
conducted in a manner that provides
maximum open and free competition.
§ 4280.55
Monitoring responsibilities.
(a) The Intermediary must monitor the
Project to ensure that:
(1) Funds are used only for the
approved purposes as specified in the
legal documents;
(2) Disbursements and expenditures
of funds are properly supported with
certifications, invoices, contracts, bills
of sale, or other forms of evidence,
which are maintained on the premises
of the Intermediary;
(3) Project time schedules are being
met, projected work by time periods is
being accomplished, and other
performance objectives are being
achieved; and
(4) The Project is in compliance with
all applicable regulations.
(b) Rural Development may inspect
and copy records and documents that
pertain to the Project. The Intermediary
must retain these records for the term of
the Project loan plus 2 years. In
addition, Rural Development may also
perform Project site visits and reviews
of the use of loan or Grant proceeds.
(c) Rural Development will review
and monitor Grants in accordance with
7 CFR parts 3015, 3017, 3018, 3019,
3021, and 3052.
cprice-sewell on PRODPC61 with RULES
§ 4280.56
audits.
Submission of reports and
(a) In addition to any reports required
by 7 CFR parts 3015 and 3019, the
Intermediary must submit the following
monitoring reports to Rural
Development:
(1) Loan. The Intermediary must
submit Form RD 4280–1 ‘‘Survey of
Recipients of Rural Economic
Development Loan and Grant Program’’
to Rural Development on an annual
basis until it no longer owes money to
USDA under the REDLG Program.
(2) Grant (Revolving Loan Fund). The
Intermediary must submit the Form RD
4280–1 to Rural Development on an
annual basis until all projects financed
with Rural Development Grant proceeds
have been repaid or are otherwise
retired, whichever occurs last.
Thereafter, on a triennial basis until the
fund is terminated, the Intermediary
will submit to Rural Development the
Form RD 4280–1, reporting on the
activity of all loans made from the
Revolving Loan Fund.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
15:13 May 29, 2007
Jkt 211001
(b) If the Intermediary does not have
an existing loan with RUS, the
Intermediary will submit a copy of its
annual audit to Rural Development
within 90 days of its completion. All
REDL audits must be conducted in
accordance with Generally Accepted
Government Auditing Standards or
Generally Accepted Accounting
Principles and REDG audits in
accordance with 7 CFR part 3052.
(c) Rural Development may require
Ultimate Recipients that receive loans
financed with Grant funds provided
under the REDG Program to submit
annual audits to comply with Federal
audit regulations. In accordance with 7
CFR part 3052, Ultimate Recipients that
are nonprofit entities, or a State or local
government, may be required to submit
an audit subject to the threshold
established in OMB Circular No. A–133.
§§ 4280.57–4280.61
§ 4280.62
[Reserved]
Appeals.
An Intermediary may appeal any
appealable adverse decision made by
Rural Development that affects the
Intermediary in accordance with 7 CFR
part 11.
§ 4280.63
Exception authority.
Except as specified in paragraphs (a)
through (c) of this section, the RBS
Administrator may, on a case-by-case
basis, make exceptions to any
requirement or provision of this subpart,
if such exception is necessary to
implement the intent of the authorizing
statute in a time of national emergency
or in accordance with a Presidentiallydeclared disaster, or when such an
exception is in the best interests of the
Federal Government and is otherwise
not in conflict with applicable law.
(a) Applicant eligibility. No exception
to applicant eligibility can be made.
(b) Project eligibility. No exception to
project eligibility can be made.
(c) Rural area definition. No
exception to the definition of rural area,
as defined, can be made.
§§ 4280.64–4280.99
§ 4280.100
[Reserved]
OMB control number.
The information collection
requirements contained in this
regulation have been approved by the
Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) and have been assigned OMB
control number 0575–0035. A person is
not required to respond to this
collection of information unless it
displays a currently valid OMB control
number.
PO 00000
Frm 00015
Fmt 4700
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29851
Dated: May 17, 2007.
Douglas L. Faulkner,
Deputy Under Secretary, Rural Development.
[FR Doc. 07–2636 Filed 5–29–07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3410–XY–U
DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND
SECURITY
8 CFR Part 103
[Docket No. USCIS–2006–0044; CIS No.
2393–06]
RIN 1615–AB53
Adjustment of the Immigration and
Naturalization Benefit Application and
Petition Fee Schedule
United States Citizenship and
Immigration Services, DHS.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: This rule adjusts the fee
schedule for U.S. Citizenship and
Immigration Services (USCIS)
immigration and naturalization benefit
applications and petitions, including
nonimmigrant applications and visa
petitions. These fees fund the cost of
processing applications and petitions
for immigration benefits and services,
and USCIS’ associated operating costs.
USCIS is revising these fees because the
current fee schedule does not
adequately reflect current USCIS
processes or recover the full costs of
services provided by USCIS. Without an
immediate adjustment of the fee
schedule, USCIS cannot provide
adequate capacity to process all
applications and petitions in a timely
and efficient manner. In addition, the
revised fees will eliminate USCIS’
dependency on revenue from interim
benefits, temporary programs, and
premium processing fees. This rule also
merges fees for certain applications and
petitions so applicants and petitioners
will only have to pay a single fee. In
addition, the rule expands the classes of
aliens that will be exempt from paying
filing fees for certain immigration
benefits, and modifies the criteria for
waiving the filing fee due to an
individual’s inability to pay. Based on
comments received by USCIS during the
public comment period, this rule
changes the fees for adjustment of status
applications, and the fee waiver and
exemption eligibility criteria for several
immigration benefits. This final rule
will provide sufficient funding for
USCIS to meet national security,
customer service, and processing time
goals, and to sustain and improve
service delivery.
E:\FR\FM\30MYR1.SGM
30MYR1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 72, Number 103 (Wednesday, May 30, 2007)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 29841-29851]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 07-2636]
[[Page 29841]]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Rural Utilities Service
7 CFR Part 1703
Rural Business-Cooperative Service
Rural Utilities Service
7 CFR Part 4280
RIN 0570-AA19
Rural Economic Development Loan and Grant Programs
AGENCIES: Rural Business-Cooperative Service and Rural Utilities
Service, USDA.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This action modifies the regulations for the Rural Economic
Development Loan and Grant Programs. This revised regulation is written
in a format that is simpler in design and should improve ease of use by
the public and program beneficiaries.
EFFECTIVE DATE: June 29, 2007.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Jody Raskind, Director, Specialty
Lenders Division, Rural Business-Cooperative Service, U.S. Department
of Agriculture, STOP 3225, 1400 Independence Ave., SW., Washington, DC
20250-3225, Telephone (202) 720-1400.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Classification
This final rule has been determined to be significant and has been
reviewed by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) under Executive
Order 12866.
Programs Affected
The Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance number for the
programs impacted by this action is 10.854, Rural Economic
Development Loans and Grants.
Intergovernmental Review
Rural Economic Development Loans and Grants are subject to the
provisions of Executive Order 12372, which requires intergovernmental
consultation with State and local officials. RBS has conducted
intergovernmental consultation in the manner delineated in RD
Instruction 1940-J, ``Intergovernmental Review of Farmers Home
Administration Programs and Activities,'' and in 7 CFR part 3015,
subpart V.
Civil Justice Reform
This final rule has been reviewed under Executive Order 12988,
Civil Justice Reform. In accordance with this rule: (1) All State and
local laws and regulations that are in conflict with this rule will be
preempted; (2) no retroactive effect will be given this rule; and (3)
administrative proceedings in accordance with the regulations of the
Department of Agriculture National Appeals Division (7 CFR part 11)
must be exhausted before bringing suit in court challenging action
taken under this rule unless those regulations specifically allow
bringing suit at an earlier time.
Environmental Impact Statement
This document has been reviewed in accordance with 7 CFR part 1940,
subpart G, ``Environmental Program.'' RBS has determined that this
action does not constitute a major Federal action significantly
affecting the quality of the human environment, and in accordance with
the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969, 42 U.S.C. 4321-4374, an
Environmental Impact Statement is not required.
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
Title II of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA), Pub.
L. 104-4, establishes requirements for Federal agencies to assess the
effects of their regulatory actions on State, local, and tribal
governments and the private sector. Under Section 202 of the UMRA, RBS
must prepare a written statement, including a cost-benefit analysis,
for proposed and final rules with ``Federal mandates'' that may result
in expenditures to State, local or tribal governments, in the
aggregate, or to the private sector, of $100 million or more in any 1
year. When such a statement is needed for a rule, section 205 of UMRA
generally requires RBS to identify and consider a reasonable number of
regulatory alternatives and adopt the least costly, more cost effective
or least burdensome alternative that achieves the objectives of the
rule.
This rule contains no Federal mandates (under the regulatory
provisions of title II of the UMRA) for State, local, and tribal
governments or the private sector. Thus, this rule is not subject to
the requirements of sections 202 and 205 of UMRA.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
In compliance with the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601-
602), the Agency has determined that this action would not have a
significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.
This regulation only impacts those who choose to participate in the
loan or grant program. Small entity applicants will not be impacted to
a greater extent than large entity applicants.
Executive Order 13132
It has been determined under Executive Order 13132, Federalism,
that this rule does not have sufficient implications to warrant the
preparation of a Federalism Assessment. The provisions contained in
this rule will not have a substantial direct effect on states or their
political subdivisions or on the distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various levels of Government.
Paperwork Reduction Act
The information collection and recordkeeping requirements contained
in this regulation have been approved by the Office of Management and
Budget (OMB) under the provisions of 44 U.S.C. chapter 35 and were
assigned OMB control number 0570-0035, in accordance with the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995. Under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, no
person is required to respond to a collection of information unless it
displays a valid OMB control number. The revisions in this rulemaking,
for 7 CFR part 4280, required an amendment to the burden package and
this modification has been approved by OMB.
E-Government Act Compliance
The Rural Business-Cooperative Service is committed to complying
with the E-Government Act, to promote the use of the Internet and other
information technologies to provide increased opportunities for citizen
access to Government information and services, and for other purposes.
Background
The proposed rule for the Rural Economic Development Loan and Grant
(REDLG) programs was published on December 15, 1999, in the Federal
Register, in Vol. 64, No. 240, pages 69937-69946, as 7 CFR part 4280.
The proposed rule was originally structured in a format consisting of
questions and answers. To provide for an easier understanding of these
programs, inasmuch as it includes the participation of three distinct
parties (the Federal Government, the intermediary, and the third-party
ultimate recipient), this final rule has been restructured in the
standardized format utilized by the Agency in its other regulations.
Consequently, several section numbers and headings of the final rule
have been modified due to the change in format.
The existing regulations for the REDLG programs are found at 7 CFR
part 1703, subpart B, and will be
[[Page 29842]]
removed from Part 1703 upon publication of this final rule.
The REDLG programs were originally implemented in 1989 as part of
the rural economic development program of the Rural Electrification
Administration, predecessor to the Rural Utilities Service (RUS). As a
result of the United States Department of Agriculture reorganization,
responsibility for these programs was transferred to Business Programs
under the Rural Business-Cooperative Service (RBS), which provides
financing for rural areas. These programs are administered at the State
level through the Department of Agriculture's Rural Development State
Offices.
Since its inception in 1989, these programs have had a substantial
impact on economic development in rural areas. As of September 30,
2005, the REDLG programs have provided $217.5 million in loans and
$92.7 million in grants, leveraged over $2.5 billion, and directly
created an estimated 35,000 new jobs for rural areas.
Under these programs, loans or grants are provided to eligible
electric and telecommunications utilities. The purpose of the programs
is to encourage these utilities to promote rural economic development
and job creation projects. The utility, previously referred to as the
``RUS Borrower'' now referred to as the ``intermediary'' can receive
loans to help finance projects such as business start-up costs,
business expansion, community development, and business incubator
projects. The intermediary must use program loan funds to make a pass-
through loan to an ultimate recipient such as a business. The
intermediary is responsible for fully repaying its loan to the
Government even if the ultimate recipient does not repay its loan.
The intermediary must use program grant funds, along with its
required contribution, to create a revolving loan fund that the
intermediary utility will operate and administer. Loans to the ultimate
recipient are made from the revolving loan fund for a variety of
projects.
Comments and Responses on the Proposed Rule
A total of 22 organizations responded within the official 30-day
comment period. In addition to the comments solicited from the general
public through the rulemaking process, RBS held a public meeting on
August 2, 2000, to hear oral presentations on the proposed rule. Four
public organizations made presentations. All comments, both written and
oral, were considered and some revisions in the final rule are in
response to those comments. Some of these revisions include
clarifications to better explain the programs. The majority of the
comments centered on the selection factors established in Sec.
4280.42(b) for Agency use in evaluating and scoring the applications.
Other comments pertained to the elimination of a previously eligible
purpose and to supplemental funds use. The comments have been grouped
into 8 categories and are discussed below based on the applicable
section number of the final rule.
Comment. Some comments indicated that intermediaries do not want
their supplemental contribution applied to the same project as funded
by the Agency grant, but wanted their contribution available to lend to
a separate project.
Response. The Agency is aware that intermediaries have experienced
difficulty in full utilization of supplemental funds. RBS has
considered these comments and has amended the final rule to give the
intermediary the option to use its supplemental contribution for the
same project the Agency is financing or to fund another eligible
project. If the intermediary chooses to finance a separate eligible
project, the matching funds must be used within 3 years from the date
of the grant agreement or the grant will be terminated. Subsequent use
of revolved funds will be managed in accordance with the Agency--
approved revolving loan fund plan and the interest rates on those loans
will be at the discretion of the intermediary as shown in the plan, but
not to exceed the prevailing prime rate.
Comment. Some comments opposed the proposed exclusion of
agricultural production as an eligible purpose. The commenting entities
believe that agriculture is a vital business component of their state
economy and providing for both value-added agriculture and priority
markets for farmers is very important.
Response. Historically, funding under the REDLG program has not
been heavily applied for or utilized by agricultural production
projects. The Agency has decided to allow agricultural production as an
eligible purpose only where the project benefits farmer-owned
cooperatives or a similar farmer-owned organization through which
benefits are passed directly to the farmer members.
Comment. Some comments stated that applications for advanced
telecommunications or computer networks to facilitate medical,
educational, or job training projects should not be eligible for
priority points under two separate sections of the regulation, that is,
Sec. 4280.42(b)(1)(iii) and 4280.43(d). The comments stated that this
type of project should be a priority of the programs since one of the
ways rural America can be more competitive is to have advanced
telecommunications systems for health care, job training, and business
use. They believe, however, that there are other infrastructure and
business assistance needs that must also be met.
Response. RBS agrees that advanced telecommunications and computer
network projects should be a priority. To address this, RBS had
initially added five points to those projects in addition to those
added under Sec. 4280.42(b)(1)(iii). RBS now agrees that there are
other program priorities that must be met and Advanced
Telecommunications and computer network projects should not receive two
sets of priority points. Accordingly, Sec. 4280.43(d) will be removed.
Comment. Some comments stated that using a selection factor that
measures job creation per $100,000 of project costs is too limiting.
Another comment supported the existing regulation that awards points
for job creation under a subjective factor.
Response. RBS disagrees that a measure of jobs per $100,000 is too
limiting. We agree that a broader approach to job creation is helpful.
Therefore, we have maintained the selection factor of jobs per
$100,000, but have expanded the definitions to include ``direct'',
``indirect'', ``full-time'', ``part-time'', and ``seasonal'' jobs as
well as a formula for determining full-time job equivalents. These
definitions clarify formulaic requirements for correct calculation of
program job creation statistics in accordance with Agency requirements.
To calculate full-time equivalent jobs, two part-time jobs are counted
as one full-time job or three seasonal jobs as one full-time job. If
the total number of part-time and seasonal jobs adds up to a fraction,
round up to the next whole number after combining same.
Comment. Some comments supported the proposed elimination of the
rural restrictions pointing out the positive regional aspects that
projects in larger communities have over the rural economy. Other
comments urged the Agency to retain these restrictions, pointing out
that the Agency should give priority to very rural locations.
Response. The Agency has revised its definition of rural to allow
projects to be funded in areas with a population of 50,000 or less
which is the statutory limit. However, the Agency will retain
[[Page 29843]]
its historical practice to allow priority points to projects in rural
areas with a population of less than 2,500.
Comment. The majority of comments opposed awarding points based on
the award being an initial one for the intermediary or the county
rather than focusing funding on the best possible projects.
Response. RBS has taken into consideration the fact that the
majority of intermediaries that are active participants in the REDLG
project are concentrated in a few states and these intermediaries have
received the highest number of REDLG awards. The intermediaries in
these states have access to affiliated economic development
organizations that assist the intermediaries in seeking prospective
business clients, providing technical assistance in promoting rural
development, and in packaging applications. Not all intermediaries
throughout the country have such technical expertise available. This
discourages their participation in the REDLG program. To ensure that
the greatest number of intermediaries has access to the benefits of the
program, RBS will award priority points if the application is a first-
time award for a new intermediary or if it is an award to an existing
intermediary that will fund a project in a county not previously
served.
Comment. Some comments stated that the requirement for a financial
plan that covers the term of the loan was excessive.
Response. RBS has changed this section to require a 3-year
financial plan from the ultimate recipient.
Comment. One comment stated that the selection of awards should be
based on points, regardless of the number of previous awards given to
the intermediary in a fiscal year.
Response. To ensure that the greatest numbers of intermediaries
have access to the benefits of the programs, the Agency will retain the
proposed provision that the Agency may limit an intermediary to one
selected grant application and two selected loan applications in a
fiscal year, depending upon availability of funds.
Other Clarifications to Final Rule
Section 4280.2: the reference to ``loan'' was changed to ``REDG
Zero-Interest Loan'' and ``REDL Zero-Interest Loan'' to better reflect
that REDLG encompasses two separate and distinct programs; the
definition for ``project'' was revised to add ``ultimate recipient
activity'' for clarification purposes; the nomenclature ``RUS
Borrower'' was eliminated replaced with ``intermediary.'' A definition
was provided for ``intermediary'' to meet the requirements of the
programs. The definition indicates that RUS remains the final
determinant of an intermediary's eligibility for participation in the
programs; a definition of ``rural area'' was added; and the definition
for an ``ultimate recipient'' was revised to list all eligible
entities.
Sections 4280.3 and 4280.15(a), are revised to clarify the
definition of ``start-up venture costs.''
Section 4280.15(g), clarifies that zero-interest loans are
allowable for REDG projects in accordance with Sec. 4280.21.
Section 4280.17, clarifies that payments on zero-interest loans are
due in monthly installments; and provides guidance regarding
disposition of partial loan payments made by ultimate recipients.
Sections 4280.19 and 4280.50, state that administration and
termination of grants will be subject, where applicable, to 7 CFR parts
3015 and 3019.
Section 4280.21, a reference to Federally-recognized Indian tribes
was inserted to clarify the definition of eligible ultimate recipients
in connection with Sec. 4280.3.
Section 4280.23:, clarifies the intended use of the Intermediary's
contribution to the revolving loan fund and the reasons that will
result in termination of the fund.
Provisions previously stated under Section 4280.24 have been
combined with Section 4280.23 to maintain consistency in subject
matter. The nomenclature ``Non-Federal Funds'' has been changed to
``Revolved Funds'' for clarification of the true nature of the funding.
Section 4280.24 now clarifies ``Revolved Funds.''
Section 4280.27, clarifies that program funds cannot be used to
refinance existing indebtedness of the ultimate recipient project; and
cites those instances where program funds may be eligible for
agricultural production purposes.
Section 4280.29, reflects that either the intermediary or the
ultimate recipient may provide the 20 percent supplemental financing
required for the Ultimate Recipient Project.
Section 4280.36: clarifies Equal Employment Opportunity,
nondiscrimination and civil rights requirements; clarifies that loans
made from the revolving loan fund, when funds are derived from
repayments or interest earnings, and not directly from the Government,
are not subject to the Agency's environmental clearance process;
clarifies the need to comply with flood hazard insurance requirements;
and provides audit requirements for assistance under this program.
Section 4280.42(b)(5), the economic factor used has been changed to
per capita personal income rather than median household income. Per
capita personal income is a more appropriate indicator of current wages
and economic wealth of the county where the project is located and has
historically been used in the REDLG programs.
List of Subjects
7 CFR Part 1703
Community development, Grant programs--housing and community
development, loan programs--housing and community development,
Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Rural areas.
7 CFR Part 4280
Business and industry, Community development, Economic development,
Grant programs--housing and community development, loan programs--
housing and community programs, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Rural areas.
0
Therefore, chapters XVII and XLII, title 7, Code of Federal
Regulations, are amended as follows:
CHAPTER XVII--RURAL UTILITIES SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
PART 1703--RURAL DEVELOPMENT
0
1. The authority citation for part 1703 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 901, et seq. and 950aaa, et seq.
Subpart B--[Removed]
0
2. Subpart B of part 1703 is removed and reserved.
CHAPTER XLII--RURAL BUSINESS--COOPERATIVE SERVICE AND RURAL UTILITIES
SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
PART 4280--LOANS AND GRANTS
0
3. Subpart A (Sec. Sec. 4280.1 through 4280.100), is added to part
4280 to read as follows:
Subpart A--Rural Economic Development Loan and Grant Programs
Sec.
4280.1 Purpose.
4280.2 Policy.
4280.3 Definitions.
4280.4-4280.12 [Reserved]
4280.13 Applicant eligibility.
[[Page 29844]]
4280.14 [Reserved]
4280.15 Ultimate Recipient Projects eligible for Rural Economic
Development Loan funding.
4280.16 REDL and REDG Loan terms.
4280.17 Additional REDL terms.
4280.18 [Reserved]
4280.19 REDG Grants.
4280.20 [Reserved]
4280.21. Eligible REDG initial Ultimate Recipients and Projects.
4280.22 [Reserved]
4280.23 Requirements for lending from Revolving Loan Fund.
4280.24 Revolved funds.
4280.25 Revolving Loan Fund Plan.
4280.26 Administration and operation of the Revolving Loan Fund.
4280.27 Ineligible purposes.
4280.28 [Reserved]
4280.29 Supplemental financing required for the Ultimate Recipient
Project.
4280.30 Restrictions on the use of REDL or REDG funds.
4280.31-4280.35 [Reserved]
4280.36 Other laws that contain compliance requirements for these
Programs.
4280.37 Application forms and filing dates.
4280.38 Maximum amount of loans and Grants.
4280.39 Contents of an application.
4280.40 [Reserved]
4280.41 Environmental review of the application.
4280.42 Application evaluation and selection.
4280.43 Discretionary points.
4280.44 Limitation on the number of loans or Grants to an
Intermediary.
4280.45-4280.46 [Reserved]
4280.47 Non-selection of applications.
4280.48 Post-selection period.
4280.49 [Reserved]
4280.50 Disbursement of Zero-Interest Loan funds.
4280.51-4280.52 [Reserved]
4280.53 Loan payments.
4280.54 Construction procurement requirements.
4280.55 Monitoring responsibilities.
4280.56 Submission of reports and audits.
4280.57-4280.61 [Reserved]
4280.62 Appeals.
4280.63 Exception authority.
4280.64-4280.99 [Reserved]
4280.100 OMB control number.
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 301: 7 U.S.C. 940c.
Subpart A--Rural Economic Development Loan and Grant Programs
Sec. 4280.1 Purpose.
The Rural Economic Development Loan (REDL) and Grant (REDG)
Programs provide financing to eligible Rural Utilities Service (RUS)
electric or telecommunications borrowers (Intermediaries) to promote
rural economic development and job creation projects.
Sec. 4280.2 Policy.
(a) REDL Program. REDL Zero-Interest Loans are made to
Intermediaries, to relend, at a zero-interest rate, to Ultimate
Recipients. Ultimate Recipients are responsible for repayment to the
Intermediary. The Intermediary must transmit Ultimate Recipient loan
repayments to Rural Development.
(b) REDG Program. Grants are made to Intermediaries to establish
Revolving Loan Funds. REDG Zero-Interest Loans are made by the
Intermediary from the Revolving Loan Fund to Ultimate Recipients for
the purpose of financing specific, approved Projects. Ultimate
Recipients are responsible for repayment to the Intermediary. The
Ultimate Recipient's loan repayments are to be retained in the
Revolving Loan Fund, which is maintained by the Intermediary, to
finance other rural economic development Projects. Only the initial
loan made by the Intermediary from the Revolving Loan Fund has to be at
zero interest.
Sec. 4280.3 Definitions.
The following definitions are applicable to this subpart:
Advanced Telecommunications. Using communications equipment for
purposes, such as the simultaneous transmission of images and voice or
the electronic transmission of data between multiple sites that do not
consist primarily of providing local exchange voice or other routine
communications.
Agricultural Production. The cultivation, production, growing,
raising, feeding, housing, breeding, hatching, or managing of crops,
plants, animals, fish, or birds, either for fiber, food for human
consumption, or livestock feed.
Business Incubator. A facility in which small businesses can share
premises, support staff, computers, software or hardware,
telecommunications terminal equipment, machinery, janitorial services,
utilities, or other overhead expenses, and where such businesses can
receive Technical Assistance, financial advice, business planning
services or other support.
Community Facilities Project. An eligible community facility under
the Community Facility Direct or Guaranteed programs.
Cushion of Credit. The amount contributed by the Intermediary
pursuant to 7 U.S.C. 940c.
Direct Job. A job that is created or saved by an Ultimate Recipient
employer as a result of funding received from these Programs.
Established Operation. An entity that has engaged in the nature of
the Project for more than one year.
Full-Time Job. A job for which a worker is scheduled to work 35
hours per week, or more, on a regular basis.
Grant. For the REDG Program only; a transfer of monies other than a
loan, from Rural Development to an Intermediary for specific use in
funding a Revolving Loan Fund from which loans are made to Ultimate
Recipients. Grant funds must be repaid by the Intermediary to Rural
Development in the event the Fund is unused for more than one year,
misused, no longer needed for its intended purposes, or the Grant is
terminated.
Independent Provider. An entity or individual, other than the
Intermediary or the Ultimate Recipient that is not owned by a
subsidiary or an affiliate of the Intermediary or Ultimate Recipient or
would otherwise have an interest in the Intermediary or Ultimate
Recipient that would be a conflict of interest or have the appearance
of a conflict of interest.
Indirect Job. A job that is created or saved as a result of a
funded Project, but is not with the Ultimate Recipient.
Infrastructure. Facilities required to support private sector
economic activity such as: Highways, streets, roads, and bridges;
public transit; water supply; wastewater treatment; water resources;
solid waste; and hazardous waste services.
Intermediary. An entity that is identified by RUS as an eligible
borrower under the Rural Electrification Act and obtains a REDG Grant
or a REDL Loan.
Part-Time Job. A job for which a worker is scheduled to work less
than 35 hours per week, on a regular basis.
Programs. The Rural Economic Development Loan (REDL) and the Rural
Economic Development Grant (REDG) Programs.
Project. The facility, equipment, or activity of the Ultimate
Recipient that is funded under one of the Programs.
REDG. The Rural Economic Development Grant Program.
REDL. The Rural Economic Development Loan Program.
Revolving Loan Fund (or Fund). A revolving loan fund that is
created with Grant funds and the Intermediary's supplemental
contribution under the REDG Program that makes loans and uses the loan
repayments and interest earnings to make subsequent loans until the
Fund is terminated.
Revolving Loan Fund Plan. A plan developed by the Intermediary and
approved by Rural Development that governs the use of the Revolving
Loan Fund. The plan must at least include a detailed explanation of the
Intermediary's Fund administration
[[Page 29845]]
policies and procedures and planned Fund use after the funds in the
Revolving Loan Fund have revolved. Fund administration policies and
procedures must at least include information regarding the review and
approval of loans from the Fund.
Rural Area. This information will be taken from the most recent
census data. Any area other than:
(1) A city or town that has a population of greater than 50,000
inhabitants; and
(2) The urbanized area contiguous and adjacent to such a city or
town.
Rural Business-Cooperative Service (RBS). The Rural Business-
Cooperative Service, an agency within the Rural Development mission
area of the USDA.
Rural Development. For purposes of this regulation, The Rural
Business-Cooperative Service (RBS), an Agency of the United States
Department of Agriculture, or a successor Agency, will be referred to
as Rural Development.
Rural Utilities Service (RUS). The Rural Utilities Service, an
Agency within the Rural Development mission area of the USDA.
Seasonal Job. A job whether Part-Time or Full-Time that begins and
ends in accordance with a specified time period of less than a year and
generally within a range less than four months.
Start-Up Venture(s). An entity that has engaged in the nature of
the Project for less than one year. An entity that has operated in
excess of one year, but which is about to enter into a new line of
business, would be considered a Start-Up Venture.
State. Any of the 50 States, the District of Columbia, the
Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the United States Virgin Islands, Guam,
American Samoa, the Commonwealth of the Northern Marianas Islands, the
Republic of Palau, the Federated States of Micronesia, and the Republic
of the Marshall Islands.
Technical Assistance. Managerial, financial and operational
analysis and consultation by Independent Providers to assist Project
owners in identifying and evaluating problems or potential problems and
to provide training that enables Project owners to successfully
implement, manage, operate and maintain viable Projects.
Ultimate Recipient. An entity or individual that receives a loan
from an Intermediary. The Ultimate Recipient may be a for profit or
not-for-profit entity such as, but not limited to, a sole
proprietorship, a corporation, a cooperative, a partnership, or a
Limited Liability Company. The Ultimate Recipient may also be a public
body, such as, but not limited to, a political subdivision of a State
or locality, or a Federally-recognized Indian tribe.
Uniform Act. The Uniform Relocation Assistance and Real Property
Acquisition Act of 1970 (42 U.S.C. 4601-4655).
USDA. The United States Department of Agriculture.
Zero-Interest Loan. A loan made by the Intermediary to the Ultimate
Recipient with no interest and which will be repaid to the Intermediary
by the Ultimate Recipient.
Sec. Sec. 4280.4-4280.12 [Reserved]
Sec. 4280.13 Applicant eligibility.
Applicants that are not delinquent on any Federal debt or otherwise
disqualified from participation in these Programs are eligible to
apply. An applicant must be eligible under 7 U.S.C. 940c.
Sec. 4280.14 [Reserved]
Sec. 4280.15 Ultimate Recipient Projects eligible for Rural Economic
Development Loan funding.
An Intermediary may receive REDL funds only when it has a pre-
approved Ultimate Recipient and Project that have an immediate need for
the Zero-Interest Loan. REDL funds may only be used by the Intermediary
to make a Zero-Interest Loan to the Ultimate Recipient to finance
financially viable economic development or job creation Projects in a
Rural Area. Funds may only be used to provide the following assistance:
(a) Start-Up Venture costs, including, but not limited to financing
fixed assets such as real estate, buildings (new or existing),
equipment, or working capital;
(b) Business expansion;
(c) Business Incubators;
(d) Technical Assistance;
(e) Project feasibility studies;
(f) Advanced Telecommunications services and computer networks for
medical, educational, and job training services;
(g) Other Projects eligible under Sec. 4280.21; or
(h) Community Facilities Projects.
Sec. 4280.16 REDL and REDG Loan terms.
REDL and REDG loans made by the Intermediary are governed by the
following terms:
(a) The maximum term of a loan is 10 years, including any principal
deferment period. The Intermediary may choose a shorter term if
desired.
(b) Deferments on Zero-Interest Loans will automatically be granted
by Rural Development upon request of the Intermediary as follows:
(1) A deferral for up to 1 year for Projects involving an
Established Operation; or
(2) A deferral for up to 2 years for Projects involving a Start-Up
venture or a Community Facilities Project whether or not such Project
also receives funding under USDA Community Facilities funding programs.
(c) The Intermediary must provide the Ultimate Recipient with the
same loan terms as the Intermediary receives from Rural Development.
(d) The Intermediary is solely responsible for the financial
approval of Fund loans and all other Fund decisions and actions.
Sec. 4280.17 Additional REDL terms.
(a) The Intermediary is responsible for fully repaying the Zero-
Interest Loan to RBS even if the Ultimate Recipient does not repay the
Intermediary.
(b) The Intermediary is responsible for remitting any partial or
full payment to RBS at the time the Ultimate Recipient pays the
Intermediary.
(c) Unless deferred pursuant to Sec. 4280.16(b) of this subpart,
loan payments to Rural Development under the REDL Program are due
monthly.
(d) If the Intermediary does not have an outstanding loan with RUS,
the Intermediary must immediately provide, as security for any REDL
loan it receives, a Rural Development-approved irrevocable letter of
credit that remains in effect until the loan is repaid.
Sec. 4280.18 [Reserved]
Sec. 4280.19 REDG Grants.
Intermediaries receiving Grants must partially finance a Revolving
Loan Fund that the Intermediary will operate and administer, by
providing supplemental funds of at least 20 percent of the Grant.
Grants are subject to 7 CFR parts 3015, 3019, and 3052, as applicable.
Sec. 4280.20 [Reserved]
Sec. 4280.21 Eligible REDG Ultimate Recipients and Projects.
The Intermediary may only make loans from the Revolving Loan Fund
to entities located in a Rural area of a State. Eligible entities are
as follows:
(a) Non-profit entities, public bodies, or Federally-recognized
Indian tribes Ultimate Recipients for:
(1) Community development or Community Facility Projects that:
(i) will create or save employment; and
(ii) are open to and serve all Rural residents, and are owned by
the Ultimate Recipient;
(2) Business Incubators;
(3) Facilities and equipment to provide education and training to
residents of Rural Areas that will facilitate economic development;
[[Page 29846]]
(4) Facilities and equipment to provide medical care to residents
of Rural Areas. Equipment and facilities may be funded to enable
eligible entities to provide medical training and related professional
health care skills to rural health care providers;
(5) Projects that utilize Advanced Telecommunications or computer
networks to facilitate medical or educational services or job training;
or
(6) Project feasibility studies and Technical Assistance. A
qualified Independent Provider must perform feasibility studies or
Technical Assistance.
(b) For-profit Ultimate Recipients for Projects under paragraphs
(a)(3), (4), (5), or (6) of this section.
Sec. 4280.22 [Reserved]
Sec. 4280.23 Requirements for lending from Revolving Loan Fund.
(a) Supplemental contribution. The Intermediary must establish a
Revolving Loan Fund and contribute an amount equal to at least 20
percent of the Grant. The supplemental contribution must come from
Intermediary's funds which may not be from other Federal Grants, unless
permitted by law.
(b) Use of supplemental contribution. The Intermediary's
contribution will only be used to make REDG loans and not other
investment purposes. The Intermediary's contribution must remain a
permanent part of the Revolving Loan Fund until the Fund is terminated.
(c) REDG Zero-Interest Loan Requirements. The Fund is made up of
Rural Development and Intermediary contributions and must be loaned in
accordance with one of the following 2 options:
(1) The contribution may be used to fund the same Project that
Rural Development is funding. The interest rate on that portion of the
financing using Rural Development funds will be at zero percent. The
interest rate on that portion of the financing using the Intermediary's
contribution may be greater than zero percent but must be less than, or
equal to, the prevailing prime rate. Using this option, loan security
and recovery of loan losses must provide for the pro rata recovery and
distribution between the Intermediary and Rural Development based on
the respective amounts of each contribution to the total loan amount
for the Project.
(2) The Intermediary's contribution may be used to fund Projects
separate from the Project financed with Rural Development funds,
provided that the Project is eligible in accordance with Sec. 4280.21.
(3) Whether the Intermediary chooses the option under paragraph
(c)(1) or paragraph (c)(2) of this section, its contribution must be
used to fund an eligible Project within 3 years from the date of the
Grant agreement. If the Intermediary fails to use its contribution
within this 3-year period, Rural Development will terminate the Grant.
(d) Intermediary's supplemental funds. Once revolved, monies from
the Fund may be loaned at an interest rate called for in the Revolving
Loan Fund Plan, not to exceed the prevailing prime rate.
(e) Eligible purposes only. Until the total amount in the Fund has
been loaned, all loans must be made for eligible purposes as stated in
Sec. 4280.21. After the Fund has been loaned, in accordance with Sec.
4280.21 of this subpart, the Intermediary shall make loans to finance
rural economic development purposes in accordance with the Revolving
Loan Fund Plan. All loan repayments, including interest earned, must be
deposited into the Fund.
(f) Termination for cause. Rural Development will terminate the
Fund and require repayment of the Grant funds in accordance with 7 CFR
parts 3015 and 3019 if Rural Development determines that the Fund is
not being operated according to the approved Revolving Loan Fund Plan,
this subpart, or for other good cause determined by Rural Development,
such as questionable prepayment of initial loans.
(g) All REDG Loans must be made to Rural Ultimate Recipients.
Sec. 4280.24 Revolved funds.
Rural Development and the Intermediary's supplemental funds will be
considered revolved after they have been loaned to Ultimate Recipients
and subsequently repaid. Loans made from revolved funds will not
require prior approval of Rural Development for creditworthiness or
environmental clearance purposes. All other Federal compliance
requirements, including those in this subpart, remain in effect.
Sec. 4280.25 Revolving Loan Fund Plan.
Each REDG Intermediary must adopt a Rural Development-approved plan
that specifies that:
(a) The initial loan made from the Fund will be at zero percent
interest and have a maximum term of 10 years;
(b) Loans made from loan repayments may carry an interest rate less
than, or equal to, the prevailing prime rate. The Intermediary
determines repayment terms and security arrangements on these loans.
(c) Loans made from repayments of REDG loans must be for eligible
Program purposes;
(d) The Intermediary is solely responsible for the financial
approval of Fund loans and all other Fund decisions and actions; and
(e) No changes will be made to a Rural Development-approved
Revolving Loan Fund Plan without the prior written approval of Rural
Development.
Sec. 4280.26 Administration and operation of the Revolving Loan Fund.
(a) The Intermediary will operate and administer the Revolving Loan
Fund. The Intermediary may contract with a third party for
administrative services regarding the Fund. However, the Intermediary
must permanently retain all Project review, approval, and monitoring
authority and responsibility. This authority and responsibility cannot
be delegated to any other person or entity.
(b) Up to 10 percent of Rural Development Grant funds may be
applied toward operating expenses over the life of the Fund. Operating
expenses include the costs of administering the Fund and Technical
Assistance provided to Project owners by Independent Providers.
(c) In cases where the Intermediary uses its supplemental
contribution to the Revolving Loan Fund for a Project other than the
Project that resulted in the Intermediary being awarded the Grant, the
loan terms must not exceed 10 years and the interest rate must be less
than, or equal to, the prevailing prime rate.
Sec. 4280.27 Ineligible purposes.
Zero-Interest Loans may not be used:
(a) For activities that would adversely affect the environment, or
activities that limit the choice of reasonable alternatives prior to
satisfying Rural Development environmental requirements;
(b) To pay off or refinance any existing indebtedness or costs of
the Project that were incurred prior to Rural Development receipt of
the Intermediary's completed application;
(c) For any electric or telecommunications purpose or for the
Intermediary's electric or telecommunications operations, for
affiliated operations of the Intermediary, or for the benefit of other
Intermediaries or their affiliated operations, except those purposes
contained in Sec. 4280.15(f);
(d) To pay the salaries of any employee or owner of the
Intermediary, its subsidiaries, or affiliates, except for salaries
incurred in administering a
[[Page 29847]]
Revolving Loan Fund established under the REDG Program;
(e) For community antenna or cable television systems or
facilities;
(f) For residential purposes such as residential dwellings and land
sites; facilities to provide entertainment television; to transfer
property between owners without making improvements that will promote
or sustain economic development in Rural Areas; or for personal, non-
business related vehicles;
(g) Where there is directly or indirectly a conflict of interest or
the appearance of a conflict of interest in the Project; for
Intermediaries this would include a situation in which the
Intermediary, its officers, managers, Board of Directors, employees,
their spouses, children, or close relatives, have a financial or
ownership interest in the Project being funded, including its
construction or development;
(h) For any purpose when receipt of loan funds is conditioned upon
the requirement that the Ultimate Recipient acquire electric or
telecommunications service from the Intermediary or its affiliates;
(i) For any gambling activity;
(j) For a Project that would result in the transfer of existing
employment or business activity more than 25 miles from its existing
location;
(k) For proposed Projects located in areas covered by the Coastal
Barrier Resources Act (16 U.S.C. 3501-3510);
(l) For any illegal activity or any activity involving
prostitution;
(m) For Agricultural Production, except where the Project is a
farmer-owned cooperative or similar organization where the benefits of
the Project are passed on to the farmer-owners, and the Agricultural
Production is part of an integrated business that processes the
agricultural products, and the Agricultural Production portion of the
loan will not exceed 50% of the loan amount;
(n) For any pass-through Grant funding activity (a Grant by the
Intermediary to the Ultimate Recipient);
(o) Provision of only local exchange voice telephone service; or
(p) for any other purpose announced in a notice by Rural
Development. This will not affect Grants that have already been
awarded.
Sec. 4280.28 [Reserved]
Sec. 4280.29 Supplemental financing required for the Ultimate
Recipient Project.
(a) For REDL loans, either the Ultimate Recipient or the
Intermediary must provide supplemental funds for the Project equal to
at least 20 percent of the loan to the Intermediary. For REDG grants,
the Intermediary must provide supplemental funds, to capitalize the
Revolving Loan Fund, equal to at least 20 percent of the Grant to the
Intermediary.
(b) Funds provided by the Ultimate Recipient must be:
(1) Cash or its equivalent;
(2) Provided after Rural Development receives the completed
application; and
(3) Disbursed for an eligible Project within a three year period
that begins on the day the Intermediary signs the Grant agreement.
(c) Satisfactory evidence of the Ultimate Recipient's funds must be
provided to Rural Development before it will advance any funds to the
Intermediary.
Sec. 4280.30 Restrictions on the use of REDL or REDG funds.
(a) Conflict of interest. The Intermediary must not own or manage
any Ultimate Recipient Project, unless the Project is acquired as a
result of servicing a loan made from the Revolving Loan Fund. Conflicts
of interest and all appearances of a conflict of interest are not
permitted.
(b) Fees. The Intermediary may charge reasonable loan servicing
fees, which are limited to one percent per year of the principal amount
outstanding on the loan; reasonable professional service fees that are
customary for the service being provided and in accordance with any
standard fee schedules that have been established for the service; and
reasonable expenses the Intermediary has incurred from Independent
Providers.
(c) Interest earnings. Any interest earned by the Intermediary on
advances of Rural Development REDG or REDL funds prior to the
disbursement for the Project, must be returned to Rural Development.
Sec. Sec. 4280.31-4280.35 [Reserved]
Sec. 4280.36 Other laws that contain compliance requirements for
these Programs.
(a) Equal employment opportunity. For all construction contracts
and Grants in excess of $10,000, the contractor must comply with
Executive Order 11246, as amended by Executive Order 11375, and as
supplemented by applicable Department of Labor regulations (41 CFR part
60). The applicant is responsible for ensuring that the contractor
complies with these requirements.
(b) Equal opportunity and nondiscrimination. Rural Development will
ensure that equal opportunity and nondiscriminatory requirements are
met in accordance with the Equal Credit Opportunity Act and 7 CFR part
15d, conducted by USDA. Rural Development will not discriminate against
applicants on the bases of race, color, religion, national origin, sex,
marital status, or age (provided that the applicant has the capacity to
contract); to the fact that all or part of the applicant's income
derives from public assistance program; or to the fact that the
applicant has in good faith exercised any right under the Consumer
Credit Protection Act.
(c) Civil rights compliance. Recipients of Grants must comply with
the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990, Title VI of the Civil
Rights Act of 1964, and Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973.
This includes collection and maintenance of data on the race, sex, and
national origin of the recipient's membership/ownership and employees.
These data must be available to conduct compliance reviews in
accordance with 7 CFR part 1901 subpart E, Sec. 1901.204. Initial
compliance reviews will be conducted with the Intermediary when Form RD
400-4, ``Assurance Agreement,'' is signed. For each loan or Grant an
Intermediary receives, a new Form RD 400-4 must be completed. Each
Ultimate Recipient must go through the same pre-award compliance review
process and must also sign Form RD 400-4. For loans and Grants, a pre-
award review is required before loan or Grant approval or any
disbursement of funds. For Intermediaries, a post-award compliance
review is required 90 days after closing the loan or Grant. This review
is not required for Ultimate Recipients. Subsequent compliance reviews
will be conducted 3 years from the date the post-award compliance
review is completed for Intermediaries and 3 years from the date the
pre-award compliance review is completed for Ultimate Recipients. Where
Grant funds are used for a Revolving Loan Fund, compliance reviews are
required for the Intermediaries for as long as the Fund is in
operation. For Ultimate Recipients, compliance reviews are conducted
until the loan is repaid to the Fund.
(d) Architectural barriers. All facilities financed with Zero-
Interest Loans that are open to the public or in which persons may be
employed or reside must be designed, constructed, or altered to be
readily accessible to and usable by disabled persons. Standards for
these facilities must comply with the Architectural Barriers Act of
1968 (42 U.S.C. 4151-4157) and the ``Uniform Federal Accessibility
Standards'', (41 CFR part 101-19.6, Appendix A).
(e) Uniform relocation assistance. Relocations in connection with
these
[[Page 29848]]
Programs are subject to 49 CFR part 24 as referenced by 7 CFR part 21
except that the provisions in title III of the Uniform Act do not apply
to these Programs.
(f) Drug-free workplace. Grants made under these Programs are
subject to the requirements contained in 7 CFR part 3021 which
implements the Drug-Free Workplace Act of 1988 (41 U.S.C. 701-706). An
Intermediary requesting a REDG Grant will be required to certify that
it will establish and make a good faith effort to maintain a drug-free
workplace program.
(g) Debarment and suspension. The requirements of 7 CFR part 3017
are applicable to these Programs.
(h) Intergovernmental review of Federal programs. These Programs
are subject to the requirements of Executive Order 12372 (3 CFR 1982
Comp., p. 197) and 7 CFR part 3015, subpart V which implements
Executive Order 12372. Proposed Projects are subject to the State and
local government review process contained in 7 CFR part 3015.
(i) Restrictions on lobbying. The restrictions and requirements
imposed by 31 U.S.C. 1352, and 7 CFR part 3018, are applicable to these
Programs.
(j) Earthquake hazards. These Programs are subject to the seismic
requirements of the Earthquake Hazards Reduction Act of 1977 (42 U.S.C.
7701-7706).
(k) Environmental requirements. The requirements of 7 CFR part
1940, subpart G, are applicable to these Programs and to the loans made
from the Revolving Loan Fund using Rural Development funds. Financial
assistance from the Revolving Loan Fund, when funds are derived from
repayments by third parties, is not considered Federal assistance for
purposes of meeting the compliance requirements of 7 CFR part 1940,
subpart G.
(l) Affirmative fair housing. If applicable, the Intermediary will
be required to comply with the Affirmative Fair Housing Act (42 U.S.C.
3601-3631).
(m) Flood hazard insurance. These Programs are subject to the
National Flood Insurance Act of 1968 and the Flood Disaster Protection
Act of 1973, as amended by 42 U.S.C. 4001-4129.
(n) Audits. These Programs are subject to 7 CFR part 3052.
Sec. 4280.37 Application forms and filing dates.
(a) The Intermediary may obtain forms that supplement the written
narrative sections of its application from the Rural Development State
Office for the State where the Intermediary is located.
(b) An original copy only of the application is to be filed with
the Rural Development State Office. No other copies are required.
Sec. 4280.38 Maximum amount of loans or Grants.
During any given fiscal year, Rural Development will publish an
announcement of available loan and Grant funds and will indicate the
maximum loan and Grant amounts for which an Intermediary or prospective
Intermediary may apply. This announcement will also include contact
information and application deadlines. All pending applications on file
at RBS, including both loan and Grant applications, from the same
Intermediary or prospective Intermediary for the same Project will be
considered to be one application in determining that the maximum size
of the application is in accordance with this section.
Sec. 4280.39 Contents of an application.
An application for a loan or a Grant must contain the following:
(a) Required forms and certifications:
(1) Standard Form 424, ``Application for Federal Assistance,''
signed by an authorized representative of the Intermediary.
(2) A Resolution of the Board of Directors signed by the directors
and certified by the Intermediary's board secretary. The board
resolution must indicate whether the Intermediary is requesting a loan
or Grant, agree to the provisions of this subpart and the loan or Grant
agreement including the Intermediary's 20 percent Fund contribution,
and state that the Intermediary has the legal authority to enter into a
loan or Grant agreement under these Programs;
(3) Form AD 1047, ``Certification Regarding Debarment, Suspension,
and other Responsibility Matters--Primary Covered Transactions,'' and
Form AD-1048, ``Certification Regarding Debarment, Suspension,
Ineligibility and Voluntary Exclusion--Lower Tier Transactions.''
(4) Assurance statement for the Uniform Act signed by the Ultimate
Recipient. This statement provides Rural Development with the required
assurance statement that any relocations of persons or acquisitions of
real property, as part of completing the Ultimate Recipient Project,
will be handled in accordance with this statute.
(5) RD Instruction 1940-Q, Exhibit A-1, applies if the loan is
greater than $150,000 or the Grant is greater than $100,000;
(6) SF LLL, ``Disclosure of Lobbying Activities,'' (if the
Intermediary or the Ultimate Recipient engages in lobbying activities);
(7) Form AD 1049, ``Certification Regarding Drug-Free Workplace
Requirements,'' for Grants only;
(8) Seismic certification if construction of a building is
proposed. The Project owner certifies that any building constructed
will comply with standards that reduce the damage caused by
earthquakes;
(9) Form RD 1940-20, ``Request for Environmental Information''; and
(10) RUS Form 7, ``Financial and Statistical Report'' and RUS Form
7a ``Investments, Loan Guarantees, and Loans,'' or similar information.
(b) A written narrative section must be provided. This section
consists of the following:
(1) A Project description, including details of the work to be
performed with Rural Development funds, and a business plan, including
a discussion of management and prior experience of the Ultimate
Recipient.
(2) A discussion of how the Project meets each selection factor in
Sec. 4280.42(b).
(3) A Revolving Loan Fund Plan is required if the Intermediary is
applying for a Grant to establish a Revolving Loan Fund.
Sec. 4280.40 [Reserved]
Sec. 4280.41 Environmental review of the application.
(a) Rural Development will conduct a review for the potential of
any environmental impacts resulting from the proposed Project
identified in the application and inform the Intermediary of any
additional information Rural Development needs and any subsequent
environmental requirements necessary for Rural Development to make a
finding.
(b) Rural Development will conduct all necessary environmental
reviews as prescribed in 7 CFR part 1940, subpart G. These reviews must
be completed before the application can be considered for approval.
Sec. 4280.42 Application evaluation and selection.
(a) Rural Development will evaluate the application and score it
based on the selection factors in this section. All applications will
be ranked on a nationwide basis, based on the total points scored.
(b) The application will be evaluated and scored using the
information provided in accordance with Sec. 4280.39(b)(2) of this
subpart.
(1) Nature of the Project. Rural Development will award up to 60
points based on whether the Project:
[[Page 29849]]
(i) Is a for-profit business, Business Incubator, industrial
building or park, or an infrastructure connection project (such as
streets or utilities)--20 points;
(ii) Provides Technical Assistance to rural businesses or rural
residents, or educates or provides medical care to rural residents--20
points;
(iii) Will enhance rural economic development by providing Advanced
Telecommunications services and computer networks for medical,
educational, and job training services. This review will be based on
the application's telecommunications design--20 points.
(2) Number of direct full-time equivalent jobs created or saved
within a 3-year period. To calculate full-time equivalent Direct-Jobs,
count two part-time jobs as one full-time job or three part-time or
seasonal jobs as one full-time job. If the total numbers of part-time
and seasonal jobs add up to a fraction, round up to the next whole
number after combining same. Indirect-Jobs or non-Rural jobs cannot be
used for this calculation.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
If the number of Rural full-time
equivalent direct-jobs jobs created or Then Rural Development will
saved per $100,000 of total, Project cost award:
is:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(i) Greater than five.................... 25 points.
(ii) From one to five.................... 15 points.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(3) Supplemental funds for the Project. Points will be based on a
calculation of the amount of supplemental funds to be provided to the
Project. All supplemental funds used in the following calculation must
be disbursed to the Project between the date of Rural Development
receipt of the application and 1 year after the first advance of funds
by Rural Development:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
If supplemental funds as a percentage of
the Rural Development loan or grant to be Then Rural Development will
provided to the Project are: award:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(i) Greater than 200%.................... 20 points.
(ii) From 100% to 200%................... 10 points.
(iii) From 50% to less than 100%......... 5 points.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(4) Unemployment rate for the county(ies) where the Project is
physically located. Rural Development will compare the current
unemployment rate(s) in the county(ies) to the State and national
unemployment rates, and, if applicable, award points under the
following categories, whichever is greater:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
If the unemployment rate(s) in the
county(ies) where the Project will be Then Rural Development will
located: award:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(i) Exceeds the national unemployment 15 points.
rate by 30% or more.
(ii) Is greater than the national 5 points.
unemployment rate, but exceeds it by
less than 30%.
(iii) Exceeds the State unemployment rate 10 points.
by 30% or more.
(iv) Is greater than the State 5 points.
unemployment rate but exceeds it by less
than 30%.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(5) Per capita personal income for the county(ies) where the
Project is physically located. Rural Development will compare the per
capita personal income in the county(ies) where the Project will be
located to the national and State per capita personal income levels,
and, if applicable, award points under the following categories,
whichever is greater:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
If the per capita personal income level Then Rural Development will
in the county(ies) is: award:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(i) Less than or equal to 90% of the 15 points.
national level.
(ii) Between 90 and 100% of the national 5 points.
level.
(iii) Less than or equal to 90% of the 10 points.
State level.
(iv) Between 90 and 100% of the State 5 points.
level.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(6) Rural Area location. (i) If the Project is physically located
in an incorporated city or town or equivalent having a population of
1,249 or less, or if it is physically located in an unincorporated
area, Rural Development will award 20 points.
(ii) If the Project is physically located in an incorporated area
having a population of 1,250 to 2500, Rural Development will award 10
points.
(7) Decline in population for the county where the Project is
physically located. If there has been a decline in population in the
county where the Project will be located over the time period covered
by the two most recent decennial censuses of the United States to the
present, Rural Development will award 10 points.
(8) Cushion of Credit Payments. Rural Development will determine
the level of Cushion of Credit Payments on deposit by the Intermediary,
as follows:
[[Page 29850]]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
If the Intermediary's Cushion of Credit Then Rural Development will
account level is: award:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(i) In excess of $300,000, or a dollar 15 points.
amount in excess of 3 percent of the
Intermediary's total assets, whichever
is less.
(ii) Within the range of $100,000 to 10 points.
$299,999.99, or a dollar amount that is
within the range of one percent to 2.99
percent of Intermediary's total assets,
whichever is less.
(iii) Within the range of $10,000 to 5 points.
$99,999.99, or a dollar amount that is
within the range of 0.5 percent to .99
percent of Intermediary's total assets,
whichever is less.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(9) Initial loan and Grant. If the loan or Grant application will
result in the first award to an Intermediary under these Programs,
Rural Development will award 10 points.
(10) County participation. If the Project will be the first REDLG
Project financed in a county Rural Development will award 10 points.
(11) The business plan for the Applicant's Ultimate Recipient will
be evaluated by Rural Development and must include:
(i) A description of the business or Project plans, its management,
and, if applicable, its products and operating plans. (The business
plan evaluated by Rural Development for Advanced Telecommunications
will be its telecommunications and engineering design)--up to 15
points; and
(ii) An appropriate financial plan, including actual balance sheets
and income statements covering the most recent 3-year period (for
applicants who have been in business this long), and projected balance
sheets, income statements, and cash flow statements for the ensuing 3-
year period, supported by assumptions showing the basis for the
projections--up to 20 points.
Sec. 4280.43 Discretionary points.
The RBS Administrator has the discretion to designate up to 25
points (no more than 5 points for each of the following elements) based
on whether the Project:
(a) Is located in a Rural Empowerment Zone, Rural Economic Area
Partnership Zone, Rural Enterprise Community, or Champion Community;
(b) Is located in a county that has experienced the loss, removal,
or closing of a major source or sources of employment in the last 3
years which causes an increase of 2 percentage points or more in the
county's most recent unemployment rate compared with the same period
immediately before the dislocation;
(c) Is located in a county that has experienced chronic or long-
term economic deterioration;
(d) Is located in a county that was designated a disaster area by
the President of the United States that significantly affected rural
economic development and job creation. The county must have been
designated within 3 years prior to filing of the completed application
with Rural Development; or
(e) Is consistent with the Rural Development State Office's
approved strategic plan and mission area objectives and is identified
as a priority area for assistance in the States' plan.
Sec. 4280.44 Limitation on number of loans or Grants to an
Intermediary.
Depending on the amount of funds available, Rural Development may
publish an announcement limiting an Intermediary to one selected Grant
application a