Discretionary Bus and Bus Facilities Program, 23843-23847 [2010-10430]
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Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 4, 2010 / Notices
which the project is located, or his or
her designee, must certify that there is
reasonable assurance the project will be
located, designed, constructed, and
operated to comply with applicable air
and water quality standards.
Planning projects such as technical
and environmental studies normally
qualify for categorical exclusion under
NEPA and would not trigger the
requirements under 49 U.S.C. 70304 and
as set forth above. If, absent
consideration of section 70304, the
project normally qualifies for a
categorical exclusion from
environmental review, the grant
proposal should reference the relevant
paragraph in FAA Order 1050.1E,
Policies and Procedures for Considering
Environmental Impacts, and address
whether extraordinary circumstances
exist that warrant preparation of an
environmental assessment.
For more details about the
environmental review for commercial
space transportation activities see
Guidelines for Compliance with the
National Environmental Policy Act and
Related Environmental Review Statutes
for the Licensing of Commercial
Launches and Launch Sites. https://
www.faa.gov/about/office_org/
headquarters_offices/ast/
environmental/review.
Grant Award
The FAA Office of Commercial Space
Transportation intends to award
Commercial Space Transportation
Grants on or before August 31, 2010. An
FAA grant offer letter may contain
requirements for assurances to ensure
the grants are consistent with Chapter
703. These grant assurances are
currently in development and not
finalized at the date of this publication.
The FAA anticipates that the
Commercial Space Transportation Grant
Assurances will be similar in nature and
purpose to those required under the
Airport Improvement Program.
Issued in Washington, DC, on April 28,
2010.
George C. Nield,
Associate Administrator for Commercial
Space Transportation.
[FR Doc. 2010–10320 Filed 5–3–10; 8:45 am]
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BILLING CODE 4910–13–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Transit Administration
Discretionary Bus and Bus Facilities
Program
AGENCY: Federal Transit Administration
(FTA), DOT.
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ACTION: Notice of Availability of FTA
State of Good Repair Bus and Bus
Facilities Initiative Funds: Solicitation
of Project Proposals.
SUMMARY: The Federal Transit
Administration (FTA) announces the
availability of discretionary Section
5309 Bus and Bus Facilities grant funds
in support of its ‘‘State of Good Repair’’
initiative. The State of Good Repair
(SGR) Bus initiative will be funded with
up to $775 million in unallocated Fiscal
Year (FY) 2010 discretionary Bus and
Bus Facilities Program funds,
authorized by 49 USC 5309(b) of the
Safe, Accountable, Flexible, Efficient,
Transportation Equity Act: A Legacy For
Users (SAFETEA–LU), Public Law 109–
59, August 10, 2005. FTA may use
additional Bus and Bus Facilities
program funding that becomes available
in the future to further support this
initiative.
The SGR Bus initiative will make
funds available to public transit
providers to finance capital projects to
replace, rehabilitate, and purchase buses
and related equipment and to construct/
rehabilitate bus-related facilities,
including programs of bus and busrelated projects which may include
assistance to subrecipients that are
public agencies, private companies
engaged in public transportation, or
private non-profit organizations. This
Notice includes priorities established by
FTA for these discretionary funds, the
criteria FTA will use to identify
meritorious projects for funding, and
describes how to apply.
This announcement is available on
the FTA Web site at: https://
www.fta.dot.gov. FTA will announce
final selections on the Web site and in
the Federal Register. A synopsis of this
announcement will be posted in the
FIND module of the government-wide
electronic grants Web site at https://
www.grants.gov.
DATES: Complete proposals for the SGR
Bus initiative must be submitted by June
18, 2010. All proposals must be
submitted electronically through the
GRANTS.GOV APPLY function. In
order to apply through GRANTS.GOV,
proposers should initiate the process of
registering on the GRANTS.GOV site
immediately to ensure completion of
registration before the deadline for
submission. Proposers will receive two
confirmation e-mails. The first email
will confirm that the application was
received and a subsequent e-mail will
be sent indicating whether the
application was validated or rejected by
the system.
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FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Contact the appropriate FTA Regional
Administrator (see Appendix) for
proposal-specific information and
issues. For information on the SGR Bus
initiative, contact Darren Jaffe, Office of
Program Management, (202) 366–4008,
e-mail: darren.jaffe@dot.gov. A TDD is
available at 1–800–877–8339 (TDD/
FIRS).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents
I. Funding Opportunity Description
II. Award Information
III. Eligibility Information
IV. Proposal Submission Information
V. Proposal Review, Selection, and
Notification
VI. Award Administration
VII. Agency Contacts
Appendix FTA Regional Offices
I. Funding Opportunity Description
A. Authority
The bus and bus facilities program is
authorized under 49 U.S.C. 5309(b), as
amended by section 3011 of SAFETEA–
LU:
‘‘The Secretary may make grants under this
section to assist State and local governmental
authorities in financing capital projects
* * * to replace, rehabilitate, and purchase
buses and related equipment and to construct
bus-related facilities, including programs of
bus and bus-related projects for assistance to
subrecipients that are public agencies,
private companies engaged in public
transportation, or private non-profit
organizations.’’
B. Background
Maintaining the nation’s public
transportation fleet, infrastructure, and
equipment in a state of good repair is
essential to providing reliable, highquality, and safe transit services to the
tens of millions of Americans who
depend on it daily. Transit not only
provides mobility options for the
American public, but contributes to the
livability of our nation’s communities
and to environmental and energy
sustainability. However, given recent
limitations in State and local resources
and the need to meet projected growth
in demand for transit service, many
local transit agencies are finding it
difficult to meet their basic reinvestment needs. FTA’s April 2009
Rail Modernization Study estimated a
combined $50 billion repair and
replacement backlog in the bus and rail
systems of the seven oldest and largest
U.S. transit agencies.
The state of repair of transit
infrastructure is an important issue for
both large and small systems across the
country. According to the U.S.
Department of Transportation’s 2008
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Status of the Nation’s Highways,
Bridges, and Transit Conditions and
Performance Report to Congress, over 36
percent of urban bus maintenance
facilities were estimated to be in
marginal or poor condition in 2006, five
percent higher than in 2004. This report
also found that nearly 50 percent of the
nation’s bus facilities were over 20 years
old and that 18 percent of the nation’s
bus fleet was in need of replacement.
The average bus age and condition have
stabilized recently and are even
expected to improve due to the number
of vehicles purchased recently with
American Recovery and Reinvestment
Act funds. Buses are relatively shortlived assets, however, and some 8,000
must be replaced each year.
Preliminary FTA research indicates
that while most transit agencies employ
maintenance management systems and
have capital improvement plans, few
possess asset management plans and
systems that support prioritization of
asset replacement, as practiced by most
state highway agencies and other major
public infrastructure managers.
Indications are that potential
improvements in investment efficiency
from better asset management can
considerably outweigh the cost of
implementation.
Recognizing growing investment
needs and the large backlog of transit
assets needing repair or replacement,
the FTA proposed a $2.9 billion Bus and
Rail State of Good Repair formula
program in the President’s FY 2011
budget. In advance of the
implementation of this program, this
notice makes available up to $775
million in FY 2010 Section 5309 bus
and bus discretionary program resources
for a ‘‘State of Good Repair Bus’’ (SGR
Bus) grant initiative.
C. Program Purpose
Improving and maintaining America’s
buses and bus facilities so that the
nation’s public transportation systems
are in good physical condition and
successfully accomplish their
performance objectives is a key strategic
goal of the DOT and FTA. The SGR Bus
initiative is intended to contribute to the
improvement of the condition of transit
capital assets by providing financial
assistance for recapitalization of buses
and bus facilities. In addition, funding
under this SGR Bus initiative may be
used for the development and
implementation of new, or improvement
of existing, transit asset management
systems. Transportation asset
management is a strategic and
systematic process of operating,
maintaining, improving, and expanding
physical assets effectively throughout
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their life cycle. Successful systems focus
on good business and engineering
policy, practices and procedures for
resource allocation and utilization with
the objective of better decision-making
based upon quality information and
well defined objectives.
II. Award Information
Federal transit funds are available to
State or local governmental authorities
as recipients and other public
transportation providers as
subrecipients. There is no floor or upper
limit for any single grant under this
program; however, FTA intends to fund
as many meritorious projects as
possible. In addition, FTA will take into
consideration the geographic diversity
of its award decisions.
Consistent with 49 U.S.C. 5309(m)(8),
the Secretary shall consider the age and
condition of buses, bus fleets, busrelated facilities and equipment of
applicants in its award of State of Good
Repair Bus grants.
III. Eligibility Information
A. Eligible Proposers
Eligible proposers and eventual grant
applicants under this initiative are
Direct Recipients under the Section
5307 Urbanized Area Formula program,
States, and Indian Tribes. Proposals for
funding eligible projects in rural
(nonurbanized) areas must be submitted
as part of a consolidated State proposal
with the exception of nonurbanized
projects to Indian Tribes. Tribes, States,
and Direct Recipients may also submit
consolidated proposals for projects in
urbanized areas.
Proposals shall contain projects to be
implemented by the Recipient or its
subrecipients. Eligible subrecipients
include public agencies, private nonprofit organizations, and private
providers engaged in public
transportation.
B. Eligible Expenses
SAFETEA–LU grants authority to the
Secretary to make grants to assist State
and local governmental authorities in
financing capital projects to replace,
rehabilitate, and purchase buses and
related equipment and to construct or
rehabilitate bus-related facilities,
including programs of bus and busrelated projects for assistance to
subrecipients that are public agencies,
private companies engaged in public
transportation, or private non-profit
organizations.
Projects eligible for funding under the
SGR Bus initiative are capital projects
such as: purchase, replacement, or
rehabilitation of, buses and vans and
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related equipment (including Intelligent
Transportation Systems (ITS), fare
equipment, communication devices that
are FCC mandatory narrow-banding
compliant); replacement or the
modernization of bus maintenance and
revenue service (passenger) facilities;
and the development and
implementation of transit asset
management systems, that address the
objectives identified in the Program
Purpose subsection above.
C. Cost Sharing
Costs will be shared at the following
ratio: 80 percent FTA/20 percent local
contribution, unless the grantee requests
a lower Federal share. FTA will not
approve deferred local share requests
under this program.
The Federal share may exceed 80
percent for certain projects related to the
Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA)
and the Clean Air Act (CAA) as follows:
ADA—The Federal share is 90 percent
for the cost of vehicle-related equipment
or facilities attributable to compliance
with the ADA of 1990 (42 U.S.C. 12101
et seq); CAA—The Federal share is 90
percent for the cost of vehicle related
equipment or facilities (including cleanfuel or alternative-fuel vehicle related
equipment or facilities) attributable to
compliance with the CAA (42 U.S.C.
7401 et seq). For administrative
simplicity, FTA allows recipients to
compute the Federal share at 83 percent
for eligible ADA and CAA vehicle
purchases.
The FY 2010 Appropriations Act
allows a 90 percent Federal share for the
total cost of a biodiesel bus. The Act
also allows a 90 percent Federal share
for the net capital cost of factory
installed or retrofitted hybrid electric
propulsion systems and any equipment
related to such a system. For
administrative simplicity, FTA allows
recipients to compute the Federal share
at 83 percent for eligible vehicle
purchases.
IV. Proposal Submission Information
A. Proposal Submission Process
Project proposals must be submitted
electronically through https://
www.grants.gov. Mail and fax
submissions will not be accepted except
for supplemental information that
cannot be sent electronically.
B. Proposal Content
1. Proposal Information
Proposals should provide basic
sponsor identifying information,
including:
a. Proposer’s name and FTA recipient
ID number.
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b. Contact information for notification
of project selection (including contact
name, title, address, congressional
district, email, fax and phone number).
c. A general description of services
provided by the agency including
ridership, fleet size, areas served, etc.
d. A description of the agency’s
technical, legal, and financial capacity
to implement the proposed project.
Some of this information is included in
Standard Form 424 when applying
through GRANTS.GOV.
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2. Project Information
Every proposal must:
a. Describe concisely, but completely,
the project scope to be funded. As FTA
may elect to only partially fund some
project proposals (see below), the scope
should be ‘‘scalable’’ with specific
components of independent utility
clearly identified.
b. Address each of the evaluation
criteria separately, demonstrating how
the project responds to each criterion.
c. Provide a line-item budget for the
total project, with enough detail to
describe the various key components of
the project. As FTA may elect to only
partially fund some project proposals,
the budget should provide for the
minimum amount necessary to fund
specific project components of
independent utility.
d. Provide the Federal amount
requested.
e. Document the matching funds,
including amount and source of the
match, demonstrating strong local or
private sector financial participation in
the project.
f. Provide support documentation,
including audited financial statements,
bond-ratings, and documents supporting
the commitment of non-federal funding
to the project, or a timeframe upon
which those commitments would be
made.
g. Provide a project time-line,
including significant milestones such as
the date anticipated to issue a request
for proposals for vehicles, or contract for
purchase of vehicle(s), and actual or
expected delivery date of vehicles, or
notice of request for proposal and notice
to proceed for capital construction/
rehabilitation projects.
C. Submission Dates and Times
Complete proposals for the State of
Good Repair Bus initiative must be
submitted June 18, 2010 electronically
through the GRANTS.GOV Web site by
the same date. Proposers are encouraged
to begin the process of registration on
the GRANTS.GOV site well in advance
of the submission deadline. Registration
is a multi-step process, which may take
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several weeks to complete before a
proposal application can be submitted.
FTA will announce project selections
when the competitive selection process
is complete. Successful proposers must
then apply for a grant in FTA’s Webbased grant system, TEAM, for the scope
and amount approved.
D. Funding Restrictions
Only proposals from eligible
recipients for eligible activities will be
considered for funding (see Section III).
Due to funding limitations, proposers
that are selected for funding may receive
less than the amount originally
requested.
E. Other Submission Requirements
Proposers should submit three (3)
copies of any supplemental information
that cannot be submitted electronically
to the appropriate regional office.
Supplemental information submitted in
hardcopy must be postmarked by June
18, 2010.
V. Proposal Review, Selection, and
Notification
A. Project Evaluation Criteria
Projects will be evaluated by FTA
based on the proposals submitted
according to the following criteria. Each
proposer is encouraged to demonstrate
the responsiveness of a project to any
and all of the selection criteria with the
most relevant information that the
proposer can provide, regardless of
whether such information has been
specifically requested, or identified, in
this notice. FTA will assess the extent
to which a project addresses the
following criteria.
1. Planning and prioritization at the
local/regional level:
a. Project is consistent with the transit
priorities identified in the long range
plan and/or contingency/illustrative
projects. Proposer should note if project
could not be included in the financially
constrained Transportation
Improvement Program (TIP)/Statewide
Transportation Improvement Program
(STIP) due to lack of funding (if
selected, project must be in TIP before
grant award).
b. Local support is demonstrated by
availability of local match and letters of
support for project.
c. In an area with more than one
transit operator, the proposal
demonstrates coordination with, and
support of, other transit operators, or
other related projects within the
proposer’s MPO or the geographic
region within which the proposed
project will operate.
2. The project is ready to implement:
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a. Any required environmental work
has been initiated for construction
projects requiring an Environmental
Assessment (EA) or Environmental
Impact Statement (EIS).
b. Project implementation plans are
complete, including initial design of
facilities projects.
c. TIP/STIP can be amended
(evidenced by MPO/State endorsement).
d. Project funds can be obligated and
the project implemented quickly, if
selected.
3. Technical, legal, and financial
capacity to implement the particular
project proposed:
a. The proposer has the technical
capacity to administer the project.
b. There are no outstanding legal,
technical, or financial issues with the
grantee that would make this a high-risk
project to implement quickly.
c. Source of local match is identified
and is available for prompt project
implementation if selected (no deferred
local share will be allowed).
In addition, for each of the project
types below, the following criteria will
apply:
1. For bus projects:
a. The age of the asset to be replaced
or rehabilitated by the proposed project,
relative to its useful life.
b. The degree to which the proposed
project addresses a demonstrated and
verifiable backlog of deferred
maintenance.
c. Consistency with the proposer’s bus
fleet management plan.
d. Condition and performance of the
asset to be replaced by the proposed
project, as ascertained through field
inspections or otherwise, if available.
e. Demonstrated positive impact on
air quality.
f. The degree to which the proposed
project supports emerging or advanced
technologies for transit buses.
g. The project conforms to FTA’s
spare ratio guidelines.
2. For bus facility and equipment
projects:
a. The age of the asset to be
rehabilitated or replaced relative to its
useful life.
b. The degree to which proposed
project addresses a demonstrated and
verifiable backlog of deferred
maintenance.
c. Supports emerging or advanced
technologies for transit facilities and
equipment.
d. For facilities, evidence of proposed
project compliance with ‘‘Green
Building’’ certification.
3. For transit asset management
system projects:
If asset management system
development or upgrades are proposed,
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the proposal shall describe, as
applicable, the system element(s) the
proposer is seeking to improve;
including:
a. How asset management plans/
systems will be developed or upgraded.
b. How asset inventories will be
maintained physically and fiscally.
c. How assets initial condition will be
assessed.
d. How assets will be inspected and
monitored, and at what frequency.
e. How logistical decision support
tools (including options and tradeoff
analysis) will be used in the proposer’s
day-to-day operations.
f. Demonstrated long-term financial
and management commitment of the
proposer to using the asset management
system.
B. Review and Selection Process
Proposals will be evaluated by the
appropriate FTA regional office using
the criteria above. The FTA
Administrator will determine the final
selection and amount of funding for
each project. Selected projects will be
announced in September 2010. FTA
will publish the list of all selected
projects and funding levels in the
Federal Register. Regional offices will
also notify successful proposers and the
amount of funding to be awarded to the
project.
accordance with the Federal
requirements of the Section 5309 Bus
program. At the time the project
selections are announced, FTA will
extend pre-award authority for the
selected projects. There is no blanket
pre-award authority for these projects
before announcement.
B. Administrative and National Policy
Requirements
1. Grant Requirements
If selected, applicants will apply for a
grant through TEAM and adhere to the
customary FTA grant requirements of
the Section 5309 Bus and Bus Facilities
program, including those of FTA C
9300.1B Circular and C 5010.1D and S.
5333(b) labor protections. Discretionary
grants greater than $500,000 will be
subject to the Congressional Notification
and release process. Technical
assistance regarding these requirements
is available from each FTA regional
office.
A. Award Notices
2. Planning
Applicants are encouraged to notify
the appropriate State Departments of
Transportation and MPO in areas likely
to be served by the project funds made
available under this program.
Incorporation of funded projects in the
long-range plans and transportation
improvement programs of States and
metropolitan areas is required of all
funded projects.
FTA will award grants for the selected
projects to the proposer through the
FTA electronic grants management and
award system, TEAM, after receipt of a
complete application in TEAM. These
grants will be administered and
managed by the FTA regional offices in
3. Standard Assurances
The applicant assures that it will
comply with all applicable Federal
statutes, regulations, executive orders,
FTA circulars, and other Federal
administrative requirements in carrying
out any project supported by the FTA
VI. Award Administration
grant. The applicant acknowledges that
it is under a continuing obligation to
comply with the terms and conditions
of the grant agreement issued for its
project with FTA. The applicant
understands that Federal laws,
regulations, policies, and administrative
practices might be modified from time
to time and affect the implementation of
the project. The applicant agrees that
the most recent Federal requirements
will apply to the project, unless FTA
issues a written determination
otherwise. The applicant must submit
the Certifications and Assurances before
receiving a grant if it does not have
current certifications on file.
C. Reporting
Post-award reporting requirements
include submission of Financial Status
Reports and Milestone Reports in TEAM
on a quarterly basis for all projects.
Documentation is required for payment.
In addition, project sponsors receiving
grants for asset management systems
and innovative technologies may be
required to report on the performance of
these systems and technologies.
VII. Agency Contacts
Contact the appropriate FTA Regional
Administrator (Appendix A) for
proposal specific information and
issues. For information on the SGR Bus
and Bus Facilities Initiative, contact
Darren Jaffe, Office of Program
Management, (202) 366–4008, e-mail:
darren.jaffe@dot.gov. A TDD is available
at 1–800–877–8339 (TDD/FIRS).
Issued in Washington, DC this 29th day of
April, 2010.
Peter Rogoff,
Administrator.
APPENDIX A—FTA REGIONAL AND METROPOLITAN OFFICES
Robert C. Patrick, Regional Administrator, Region 6–Ft. Worth, 819
Taylor Street, Room 8A36, Ft. Worth, TX 76102, Tel. 817–978–0550.
Brigid Hynes-Cherin, Regional Administrator, Region 2–New York, One
Bowling Green, Room 429, New York, NY 10004–1415, Tel. 212–
668–2170
States served: New Jersey, New York
New York Metropolitan Office, Region 2–New York, One Bowling
Green, Room 428, New York, NY 10004–1415, Tel. 212–668–2202.
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Richard H. Doyle, Regional Administrator, Region 1–Boston, Kendall
Square, 55 Broadway, Suite 920, Cambridge, MA 02142–1093, Tel.
617–494–2055
States served: Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire,
Rhode Island, and Vermont
Mokhtee Ahmad, Regional Administrator, Region 7–Kansas City, MO,
901 Locust Street, Room 404, Kansas City, MO 64106, Tel. 816–
329–3920.
States served: Iowa, Kansas, Missouri, and Nebraska.
Letitia Thompson, Regional Administrator, Region 3–Philadelphia, 1760
Market Street, Suite 500, Philadelphia, PA 19103–4124, Tel. 215–
656–7100
States served: Delaware, Maryland, Pennsylvania, Virginia, West Virginia, and District of Columbia
Philadelphia Metropolitan Office, Region 3–Philadelphia, 1760 Market
Street, Suite 500, Philadelphia, PA 19103–4124, Tel. 215–656–7070
Washington, D.C. Metropolitan Office, 1990 K Street, NW., Room 510,
Washington, DC 20006, Tel. 202–219–3562
Terry Rosapep, Regional Administrator, Region 8–Denver, 12300 West
Dakota Ave., Suite 310, Lakewood, CO 80228–2583, Tel. 720–963–
3300.
States served: Colorado, Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, Utah,
and Wyoming.
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States served: Arkansas, Louisiana, Oklahoma, New Mexico and
Texas.
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23847
APPENDIX A—FTA REGIONAL AND METROPOLITAN OFFICES—Continued
Yvette Taylor, Regional Administrator, Region 4–Atlanta, 230 Peachtree Street, NW., Suite 800, Atlanta, GA 30303, Tel. 404–865–5600
States served: Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Mississippi, North
Carolina, Puerto Rico, South Carolina, Tennessee, and Virgin Islands
Marisol Simon, Regional Administrator, Region 5–Chicago, 200 West
Adams Street, Suite 320, Chicago, IL 60606, Tel. 312–353–2789
States served: Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio, and Wisconsin
Chicago Metropolitan Office, Region 5–Chicago, 200 West Adams
Street, Suite 320, Chicago, IL 60606, Tel. 312–353–2789
[FR Doc. 2010–10430 Filed 4–30–10; 11:15 am]
BILLING CODE P
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Office of Foreign Assets Control
Blocking of Specially Designated
National Pursuant to Executive Order
13413
AGENCY: Office of Foreign Assets
Control, Treasury.
ACTION: Notice.
SUMMARY: The Treasury Department’s
Office of Foreign Assets Control
(‘‘OFAC’’) is publishing the name of five
individuals whose property and
interests in property have been blocked
pursuant to Executive Order 13413 of
October 27, 2006, ‘‘Blocking Property of
Certain Persons Contributing to the
Conflict in the Democratic Republic of
Congo’’.
DATES: The designation by the Director
of OFAC of the five individuals
identified in this notice, pursuant to
Executive Order 13413 of October 27,
2006, is effective on April 28, 2010.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Assistant Director, Compliance
Outreach & Implementation, Office of
Foreign Assets Control, Department of
the Treasury, Washington, DC 20220,
tel.: 202/622–2490.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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Electronic and Facsimile Availability
This document and additional
information concerning OFAC are
available from OFAC’s Web site (https://
www.treas.gov/ofac) via facsimile
through a 24-hour fax-on demand
service, tel.: (202) 622–0077.
Background
On October 27, 2006, the President
signed Executive Order 13413 (the
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18:58 May 03, 2010
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Leslie T. Rogers, Regional Administrator, Region 9–San Francisco,
201 Mission Street, Room 1650, San Francisco, CA 94105–1926,
Tel. 415–744–3133.
States served: American Samoa, Arizona, California, Guam, Hawaii,
Nevada, and the Northern Mariana Islands.
Los Angeles Metropolitan Office, Region 9–Los Angeles, 888 S.
Figueroa Street, Suite 1850, Los Angeles, CA 90017–1850, Tel.
213–202–3952.
Rick Krochalis, Regional Administrator, Region 10–Seattle, Jackson
Federal Building, 915 Second Avenue, Suite 3142, Seattle, WA
98174–1002, Tel. 206–220–7954.
States served: Alaska, Idaho, Oregon, and Washington.
‘‘Order’’) pursuant to, inter alia, the
International Emergency Economic
Powers Act (50 U.S.C. 1701 et seq.)
(IEEPA), section 5 of the United Nations
Participation Act, as amended (22
U.S.C. 287c) (UNPA), and section 301 of
title 3, United States Code. In the Order,
the President found that the situation in
the Democratic Republic of the Congo
constitutes an unusual and
extraordinary threat. The President
identified seven individuals as subject
to the economic sanctions in the Annex
to the Order.
Section 1 of the Order blocks, with
certain exceptions, all property and
interests in property that are in, or
thereafter come within, the United
States, or within the possession or
control of United States persons, of the
persons listed in the Annex, as well as
those persons determined by the
Secretary of the Treasury, after
consultation with the Secretary of State,
to meet any of the criteria set forth in
subparagraphs (a)(i)–(a)(ii)(G) of Section
1.
On April 28, 2010, the Director of
OFAC exercised the Secretary of the
Treasury’s authority to designate,
pursuant to one or more of the criteria
set forth in Section 1 of the Order, the
individuals listed below, whose
property and interests in property are
blocked pursuant to E.O. 13413.
The listing of the blocked individuals
is as follows:
NTAGANDA, Bosco (a.k.a. BAGANDA,
Bosco; a.k.a. NTAGANDA, Jean
Bosco; a.k.a. NTAGENDA, Bosco;
a.k.a. NTANGANA, Bosco; a.k.a.
NTANGANDA, Bosco; a.k.a.
TAGANDA, Bosco; a.k.a.
TANGANDA, Bosco), Runyoni,
Rutshuru, North Kivu, Congo,
Democratic Republic of the; DOB
1973; POB Nord-Kivu, DRC; alt. POB
Rwanda; nationality Congo,
Democratic Republic of the
(individual) [DRCONGO]
PO 00000
Frm 00184
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
LUBANGA, Thomas (a.k.a. DYILO,
Thomas Lubanga); DOB 29 Dec 1960;
POB Djiba, Utcha Sector, Djugu
Territory, Ituri District, Orientale
Province, DRC; nationality Congo,
Democratic Republic of the
(individual) [DRCONGO]
KATANGA, Germain; DOB 28 Apr 1978;
POB Mambasa, Mambasa Territory,
Ituri District, DRC; nationality Congo,
Democratic Republic of the
(individual) [DRCONGO]
NGUDJOLO, Matthieu Cui (a.k.a. CUI
NGUDJOLO; a.k.a. NGUDJOLO CHUI,
Mathieu; a.k.a. NGUDJOLO, Cui Cui;
a.k.a. NGUDJOLO, Mathieu; a.k.a.
TCHUI, Mathieu Ngudjolo); DOB 8
Oct 1970; POB Bunia, Ituri District,
DRC; nationality Congo, Democratic
Republic of the (individual)
[DRCONGO]
MUTEBUTSI, Jules (a.k.a. COLONEL
MUTEBUTSI; a.k.a. MUTEBUSI,
Jules; a.k.a. MUTEBUZI, Jules),
Rwanda; DOB 6 Jul 1960; POB South
Kivu, DRC; nationality Congo,
Democratic Republic of the
(individual) [DRCONGO]
Dated: April 28, 2010.
Adam J. Szubin,
Director, Office of Foreign Assets Control.
[FR Doc. 2010–10298 Filed 5–3–10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4811–45–P
DEPARTMENT OF VETERANS
AFFAIRS
Joint Biomedical Laboratory Research
and Development and Clinical Science
Research and Development Services
Scientific Merit Review Board; Notice
of Meetings
The Department of Veterans Affairs
gives notice under Public Law 92–463
(Federal Advisory Committee Act), that
the panels of the Joint Biomedical
Laboratory Research and Development
and Clinical Science Research and
E:\FR\FM\04MYN1.SGM
04MYN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 75, Number 85 (Tuesday, May 4, 2010)]
[Notices]
[Pages 23843-23847]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2010-10430]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Transit Administration
Discretionary Bus and Bus Facilities Program
AGENCY: Federal Transit Administration (FTA), DOT.
ACTION: Notice of Availability of FTA State of Good Repair Bus and Bus
Facilities Initiative Funds: Solicitation of Project Proposals.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Federal Transit Administration (FTA) announces the
availability of discretionary Section 5309 Bus and Bus Facilities grant
funds in support of its ``State of Good Repair'' initiative. The State
of Good Repair (SGR) Bus initiative will be funded with up to $775
million in unallocated Fiscal Year (FY) 2010 discretionary Bus and Bus
Facilities Program funds, authorized by 49 USC 5309(b) of the Safe,
Accountable, Flexible, Efficient, Transportation Equity Act: A Legacy
For Users (SAFETEA-LU), Public Law 109-59, August 10, 2005. FTA may use
additional Bus and Bus Facilities program funding that becomes
available in the future to further support this initiative.
The SGR Bus initiative will make funds available to public transit
providers to finance capital projects to replace, rehabilitate, and
purchase buses and related equipment and to construct/rehabilitate bus-
related facilities, including programs of bus and bus-related projects
which may include assistance to subrecipients that are public agencies,
private companies engaged in public transportation, or private non-
profit organizations. This Notice includes priorities established by
FTA for these discretionary funds, the criteria FTA will use to
identify meritorious projects for funding, and describes how to apply.
This announcement is available on the FTA Web site at: https://www.fta.dot.gov. FTA will announce final selections on the Web site and
in the Federal Register. A synopsis of this announcement will be posted
in the FIND module of the government-wide electronic grants Web site at
https://www.grants.gov.
DATES: Complete proposals for the SGR Bus initiative must be submitted
by June 18, 2010. All proposals must be submitted electronically
through the GRANTS.GOV APPLY function. In order to apply through
GRANTS.GOV, proposers should initiate the process of registering on the
GRANTS.GOV site immediately to ensure completion of registration before
the deadline for submission. Proposers will receive two confirmation e-
mails. The first email will confirm that the application was received
and a subsequent e-mail will be sent indicating whether the application
was validated or rejected by the system.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Contact the appropriate FTA Regional
Administrator (see Appendix) for proposal-specific information and
issues. For information on the SGR Bus initiative, contact Darren
Jaffe, Office of Program Management, (202) 366-4008, e-mail:
darren.jaffe@dot.gov. A TDD is available at 1-800-877-8339 (TDD/FIRS).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents
I. Funding Opportunity Description
II. Award Information
III. Eligibility Information
IV. Proposal Submission Information
V. Proposal Review, Selection, and Notification
VI. Award Administration
VII. Agency Contacts
Appendix FTA Regional Offices
I. Funding Opportunity Description
A. Authority
The bus and bus facilities program is authorized under 49 U.S.C.
5309(b), as amended by section 3011 of SAFETEA-LU:
``The Secretary may make grants under this section to assist
State and local governmental authorities in financing capital
projects * * * to replace, rehabilitate, and purchase buses and
related equipment and to construct bus-related facilities, including
programs of bus and bus-related projects for assistance to
subrecipients that are public agencies, private companies engaged in
public transportation, or private non-profit organizations.''
B. Background
Maintaining the nation's public transportation fleet,
infrastructure, and equipment in a state of good repair is essential to
providing reliable, high-quality, and safe transit services to the tens
of millions of Americans who depend on it daily. Transit not only
provides mobility options for the American public, but contributes to
the livability of our nation's communities and to environmental and
energy sustainability. However, given recent limitations in State and
local resources and the need to meet projected growth in demand for
transit service, many local transit agencies are finding it difficult
to meet their basic re-investment needs. FTA's April 2009 Rail
Modernization Study estimated a combined $50 billion repair and
replacement backlog in the bus and rail systems of the seven oldest and
largest U.S. transit agencies.
The state of repair of transit infrastructure is an important issue
for both large and small systems across the country. According to the
U.S. Department of Transportation's 2008
[[Page 23844]]
Status of the Nation's Highways, Bridges, and Transit Conditions and
Performance Report to Congress, over 36 percent of urban bus
maintenance facilities were estimated to be in marginal or poor
condition in 2006, five percent higher than in 2004. This report also
found that nearly 50 percent of the nation's bus facilities were over
20 years old and that 18 percent of the nation's bus fleet was in need
of replacement. The average bus age and condition have stabilized
recently and are even expected to improve due to the number of vehicles
purchased recently with American Recovery and Reinvestment Act funds.
Buses are relatively short-lived assets, however, and some 8,000 must
be replaced each year.
Preliminary FTA research indicates that while most transit agencies
employ maintenance management systems and have capital improvement
plans, few possess asset management plans and systems that support
prioritization of asset replacement, as practiced by most state highway
agencies and other major public infrastructure managers. Indications
are that potential improvements in investment efficiency from better
asset management can considerably outweigh the cost of implementation.
Recognizing growing investment needs and the large backlog of
transit assets needing repair or replacement, the FTA proposed a $2.9
billion Bus and Rail State of Good Repair formula program in the
President's FY 2011 budget. In advance of the implementation of this
program, this notice makes available up to $775 million in FY 2010
Section 5309 bus and bus discretionary program resources for a ``State
of Good Repair Bus'' (SGR Bus) grant initiative.
C. Program Purpose
Improving and maintaining America's buses and bus facilities so
that the nation's public transportation systems are in good physical
condition and successfully accomplish their performance objectives is a
key strategic goal of the DOT and FTA. The SGR Bus initiative is
intended to contribute to the improvement of the condition of transit
capital assets by providing financial assistance for recapitalization
of buses and bus facilities. In addition, funding under this SGR Bus
initiative may be used for the development and implementation of new,
or improvement of existing, transit asset management systems.
Transportation asset management is a strategic and systematic process
of operating, maintaining, improving, and expanding physical assets
effectively throughout their life cycle. Successful systems focus on
good business and engineering policy, practices and procedures for
resource allocation and utilization with the objective of better
decision-making based upon quality information and well defined
objectives.
II. Award Information
Federal transit funds are available to State or local governmental
authorities as recipients and other public transportation providers as
subrecipients. There is no floor or upper limit for any single grant
under this program; however, FTA intends to fund as many meritorious
projects as possible. In addition, FTA will take into consideration the
geographic diversity of its award decisions.
Consistent with 49 U.S.C. 5309(m)(8), the Secretary shall consider
the age and condition of buses, bus fleets, bus-related facilities and
equipment of applicants in its award of State of Good Repair Bus
grants.
III. Eligibility Information
A. Eligible Proposers
Eligible proposers and eventual grant applicants under this
initiative are Direct Recipients under the Section 5307 Urbanized Area
Formula program, States, and Indian Tribes. Proposals for funding
eligible projects in rural (nonurbanized) areas must be submitted as
part of a consolidated State proposal with the exception of
nonurbanized projects to Indian Tribes. Tribes, States, and Direct
Recipients may also submit consolidated proposals for projects in
urbanized areas.
Proposals shall contain projects to be implemented by the Recipient
or its subrecipients. Eligible subrecipients include public agencies,
private non-profit organizations, and private providers engaged in
public transportation.
B. Eligible Expenses
SAFETEA-LU grants authority to the Secretary to make grants to
assist State and local governmental authorities in financing capital
projects to replace, rehabilitate, and purchase buses and related
equipment and to construct or rehabilitate bus-related facilities,
including programs of bus and bus-related projects for assistance to
subrecipients that are public agencies, private companies engaged in
public transportation, or private non-profit organizations.
Projects eligible for funding under the SGR Bus initiative are
capital projects such as: purchase, replacement, or rehabilitation of,
buses and vans and related equipment (including Intelligent
Transportation Systems (ITS), fare equipment, communication devices
that are FCC mandatory narrow-banding compliant); replacement or the
modernization of bus maintenance and revenue service (passenger)
facilities; and the development and implementation of transit asset
management systems, that address the objectives identified in the
Program Purpose subsection above.
C. Cost Sharing
Costs will be shared at the following ratio: 80 percent FTA/20
percent local contribution, unless the grantee requests a lower Federal
share. FTA will not approve deferred local share requests under this
program.
The Federal share may exceed 80 percent for certain projects
related to the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) and the Clean Air
Act (CAA) as follows: ADA--The Federal share is 90 percent for the cost
of vehicle-related equipment or facilities attributable to compliance
with the ADA of 1990 (42 U.S.C. 12101 et seq); CAA--The Federal share
is 90 percent for the cost of vehicle related equipment or facilities
(including clean-fuel or alternative-fuel vehicle related equipment or
facilities) attributable to compliance with the CAA (42 U.S.C. 7401 et
seq). For administrative simplicity, FTA allows recipients to compute
the Federal share at 83 percent for eligible ADA and CAA vehicle
purchases.
The FY 2010 Appropriations Act allows a 90 percent Federal share
for the total cost of a biodiesel bus. The Act also allows a 90 percent
Federal share for the net capital cost of factory installed or
retrofitted hybrid electric propulsion systems and any equipment
related to such a system. For administrative simplicity, FTA allows
recipients to compute the Federal share at 83 percent for eligible
vehicle purchases.
IV. Proposal Submission Information
A. Proposal Submission Process
Project proposals must be submitted electronically through https://www.grants.gov. Mail and fax submissions will not be accepted except
for supplemental information that cannot be sent electronically.
B. Proposal Content
1. Proposal Information
Proposals should provide basic sponsor identifying information,
including:
a. Proposer's name and FTA recipient ID number.
[[Page 23845]]
b. Contact information for notification of project selection
(including contact name, title, address, congressional district, email,
fax and phone number).
c. A general description of services provided by the agency
including ridership, fleet size, areas served, etc.
d. A description of the agency's technical, legal, and financial
capacity to implement the proposed project. Some of this information is
included in Standard Form 424 when applying through GRANTS.GOV.
2. Project Information
Every proposal must:
a. Describe concisely, but completely, the project scope to be
funded. As FTA may elect to only partially fund some project proposals
(see below), the scope should be ``scalable'' with specific components
of independent utility clearly identified.
b. Address each of the evaluation criteria separately,
demonstrating how the project responds to each criterion.
c. Provide a line-item budget for the total project, with enough
detail to describe the various key components of the project. As FTA
may elect to only partially fund some project proposals, the budget
should provide for the minimum amount necessary to fund specific
project components of independent utility.
d. Provide the Federal amount requested.
e. Document the matching funds, including amount and source of the
match, demonstrating strong local or private sector financial
participation in the project.
f. Provide support documentation, including audited financial
statements, bond-ratings, and documents supporting the commitment of
non-federal funding to the project, or a timeframe upon which those
commitments would be made.
g. Provide a project time-line, including significant milestones
such as the date anticipated to issue a request for proposals for
vehicles, or contract for purchase of vehicle(s), and actual or
expected delivery date of vehicles, or notice of request for proposal
and notice to proceed for capital construction/rehabilitation projects.
C. Submission Dates and Times
Complete proposals for the State of Good Repair Bus initiative must
be submitted June 18, 2010 electronically through the GRANTS.GOV Web
site by the same date. Proposers are encouraged to begin the process of
registration on the GRANTS.GOV site well in advance of the submission
deadline. Registration is a multi-step process, which may take several
weeks to complete before a proposal application can be submitted. FTA
will announce project selections when the competitive selection process
is complete. Successful proposers must then apply for a grant in FTA's
Web-based grant system, TEAM, for the scope and amount approved.
D. Funding Restrictions
Only proposals from eligible recipients for eligible activities
will be considered for funding (see Section III). Due to funding
limitations, proposers that are selected for funding may receive less
than the amount originally requested.
E. Other Submission Requirements
Proposers should submit three (3) copies of any supplemental
information that cannot be submitted electronically to the appropriate
regional office. Supplemental information submitted in hardcopy must be
postmarked by June 18, 2010.
V. Proposal Review, Selection, and Notification
A. Project Evaluation Criteria
Projects will be evaluated by FTA based on the proposals submitted
according to the following criteria. Each proposer is encouraged to
demonstrate the responsiveness of a project to any and all of the
selection criteria with the most relevant information that the proposer
can provide, regardless of whether such information has been
specifically requested, or identified, in this notice. FTA will assess
the extent to which a project addresses the following criteria.
1. Planning and prioritization at the local/regional level:
a. Project is consistent with the transit priorities identified in
the long range plan and/or contingency/illustrative projects. Proposer
should note if project could not be included in the financially
constrained Transportation Improvement Program (TIP)/Statewide
Transportation Improvement Program (STIP) due to lack of funding (if
selected, project must be in TIP before grant award).
b. Local support is demonstrated by availability of local match and
letters of support for project.
c. In an area with more than one transit operator, the proposal
demonstrates coordination with, and support of, other transit
operators, or other related projects within the proposer's MPO or the
geographic region within which the proposed project will operate.
2. The project is ready to implement:
a. Any required environmental work has been initiated for
construction projects requiring an Environmental Assessment (EA) or
Environmental Impact Statement (EIS).
b. Project implementation plans are complete, including initial
design of facilities projects.
c. TIP/STIP can be amended (evidenced by MPO/State endorsement).
d. Project funds can be obligated and the project implemented
quickly, if selected.
3. Technical, legal, and financial capacity to implement the
particular project proposed:
a. The proposer has the technical capacity to administer the
project.
b. There are no outstanding legal, technical, or financial issues
with the grantee that would make this a high-risk project to implement
quickly.
c. Source of local match is identified and is available for prompt
project implementation if selected (no deferred local share will be
allowed).
In addition, for each of the project types below, the following
criteria will apply:
1. For bus projects:
a. The age of the asset to be replaced or rehabilitated by the
proposed project, relative to its useful life.
b. The degree to which the proposed project addresses a
demonstrated and verifiable backlog of deferred maintenance.
c. Consistency with the proposer's bus fleet management plan.
d. Condition and performance of the asset to be replaced by the
proposed project, as ascertained through field inspections or
otherwise, if available.
e. Demonstrated positive impact on air quality.
f. The degree to which the proposed project supports emerging or
advanced technologies for transit buses.
g. The project conforms to FTA's spare ratio guidelines.
2. For bus facility and equipment projects:
a. The age of the asset to be rehabilitated or replaced relative to
its useful life.
b. The degree to which proposed project addresses a demonstrated
and verifiable backlog of deferred maintenance.
c. Supports emerging or advanced technologies for transit
facilities and equipment.
d. For facilities, evidence of proposed project compliance with
``Green Building'' certification.
3. For transit asset management system projects:
If asset management system development or upgrades are proposed,
[[Page 23846]]
the proposal shall describe, as applicable, the system element(s) the
proposer is seeking to improve; including:
a. How asset management plans/systems will be developed or
upgraded.
b. How asset inventories will be maintained physically and
fiscally.
c. How assets initial condition will be assessed.
d. How assets will be inspected and monitored, and at what
frequency.
e. How logistical decision support tools (including options and
tradeoff analysis) will be used in the proposer's day-to-day
operations.
f. Demonstrated long-term financial and management commitment of
the proposer to using the asset management system.
B. Review and Selection Process
Proposals will be evaluated by the appropriate FTA regional office
using the criteria above. The FTA Administrator will determine the
final selection and amount of funding for each project. Selected
projects will be announced in September 2010. FTA will publish the list
of all selected projects and funding levels in the Federal Register.
Regional offices will also notify successful proposers and the amount
of funding to be awarded to the project.
VI. Award Administration
A. Award Notices
FTA will award grants for the selected projects to the proposer
through the FTA electronic grants management and award system, TEAM,
after receipt of a complete application in TEAM. These grants will be
administered and managed by the FTA regional offices in accordance with
the Federal requirements of the Section 5309 Bus program. At the time
the project selections are announced, FTA will extend pre-award
authority for the selected projects. There is no blanket pre-award
authority for these projects before announcement.
B. Administrative and National Policy Requirements
1. Grant Requirements
If selected, applicants will apply for a grant through TEAM and
adhere to the customary FTA grant requirements of the Section 5309 Bus
and Bus Facilities program, including those of FTA C 9300.1B Circular
and C 5010.1D and S. 5333(b) labor protections. Discretionary grants
greater than $500,000 will be subject to the Congressional Notification
and release process. Technical assistance regarding these requirements
is available from each FTA regional office.
2. Planning
Applicants are encouraged to notify the appropriate State
Departments of Transportation and MPO in areas likely to be served by
the project funds made available under this program. Incorporation of
funded projects in the long-range plans and transportation improvement
programs of States and metropolitan areas is required of all funded
projects.
3. Standard Assurances
The applicant assures that it will comply with all applicable
Federal statutes, regulations, executive orders, FTA circulars, and
other Federal administrative requirements in carrying out any project
supported by the FTA grant. The applicant acknowledges that it is under
a continuing obligation to comply with the terms and conditions of the
grant agreement issued for its project with FTA. The applicant
understands that Federal laws, regulations, policies, and
administrative practices might be modified from time to time and affect
the implementation of the project. The applicant agrees that the most
recent Federal requirements will apply to the project, unless FTA
issues a written determination otherwise. The applicant must submit the
Certifications and Assurances before receiving a grant if it does not
have current certifications on file.
C. Reporting
Post-award reporting requirements include submission of Financial
Status Reports and Milestone Reports in TEAM on a quarterly basis for
all projects. Documentation is required for payment. In addition,
project sponsors receiving grants for asset management systems and
innovative technologies may be required to report on the performance of
these systems and technologies.
VII. Agency Contacts
Contact the appropriate FTA Regional Administrator (Appendix A) for
proposal specific information and issues. For information on the SGR
Bus and Bus Facilities Initiative, contact Darren Jaffe, Office of
Program Management, (202) 366-4008, e-mail: darren.jaffe@dot.gov. A TDD
is available at 1-800-877-8339 (TDD/FIRS).
Issued in Washington, DC this 29th day of April, 2010.
Peter Rogoff,
Administrator.
Appendix A--FTA Regional and Metropolitan Offices
------------------------------------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Richard H. Doyle, Regional Robert C. Patrick, Regional
Administrator, Region 1-Boston, Administrator, Region 6-Ft. Worth,
Kendall Square, 55 Broadway, Suite 819 Taylor Street, Room 8A36, Ft.
920, Cambridge, MA 02142-1093, Worth, TX 76102, Tel. 817-978-
Tel. 617-494-2055 0550.
States served: Connecticut, Maine, States served: Arkansas, Louisiana,
Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Oklahoma, New Mexico and Texas.
Rhode Island, and Vermont
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Brigid Hynes-Cherin, Regional Mokhtee Ahmad, Regional
Administrator, Region 2-New York, Administrator, Region 7-Kansas
One Bowling Green, Room 429, New City, MO, 901 Locust Street, Room
York, NY 10004-1415, Tel. 212-668- 404, Kansas City, MO 64106, Tel.
2170 816-329-3920.
States served: New Jersey, New York States served: Iowa, Kansas,
Missouri, and Nebraska.
New York Metropolitan Office,
Region 2-New York, One Bowling
Green, Room 428, New York, NY
10004-1415, Tel. 212-668-2202.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Letitia Thompson, Regional Terry Rosapep, Regional
Administrator, Region 3- Administrator, Region 8-Denver,
Philadelphia, 1760 Market Street, 12300 West Dakota Ave., Suite 310,
Suite 500, Philadelphia, PA 19103- Lakewood, CO 80228-2583, Tel. 720-
4124, Tel. 215-656-7100 963-3300.
States served: Delaware, Maryland, States served: Colorado, Montana,
Pennsylvania, Virginia, West North Dakota, South Dakota, Utah,
Virginia, and District of Columbia and Wyoming.
Philadelphia Metropolitan Office,
Region 3-Philadelphia, 1760 Market
Street, Suite 500, Philadelphia,
PA 19103-4124, Tel. 215-656-7070
Washington, D.C. Metropolitan
Office, 1990 K Street, NW., Room
510, Washington, DC 20006, Tel.
202-219-3562
------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 23847]]
Yvette Taylor, Regional Leslie T. Rogers, Regional
Administrator, Region 4-Atlanta, Administrator, Region 9-San
230 Peachtree Street, NW., Suite Francisco, 201 Mission Street,
800, Atlanta, GA 30303, Tel. 404- Room 1650, San Francisco, CA 94105-
865-5600 1926, Tel. 415-744-3133.
States served: Alabama, Florida, States served: American Samoa,
Georgia, Kentucky, Mississippi, Arizona, California, Guam, Hawaii,
North Carolina, Puerto Rico, South Nevada, and the Northern Mariana
Carolina, Tennessee, and Virgin Islands.
Islands
Los Angeles Metropolitan Office,
Region 9-Los Angeles, 888 S.
Figueroa Street, Suite 1850, Los
Angeles, CA 90017-1850, Tel. 213-
202-3952.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Marisol Simon, Regional Rick Krochalis, Regional
Administrator, Region 5-Chicago, Administrator, Region 10-Seattle,
200 West Adams Street, Suite 320, Jackson Federal Building, 915
Chicago, IL 60606, Tel. 312-353- Second Avenue, Suite 3142,
2789 Seattle, WA 98174-1002, Tel. 206-
220-7954.
States served: Illinois, Indiana, States served: Alaska, Idaho,
Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio, and Oregon, and Washington.
Wisconsin
Chicago Metropolitan Office, Region
5-Chicago, 200 West Adams Street,
Suite 320, Chicago, IL 60606, Tel.
312-353-2789
------------------------------------------------------------------------
[FR Doc. 2010-10430 Filed 4-30-10; 11:15 am]
BILLING CODE P