National Institutes of Health Loan Repayment Programs, 10455-10461 [2012-3900]
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Comments must be received on
or before April 23, 2012 in order to
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the comments in preparing the final
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DATES:
Dated: February 14, 2012.
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[FR Doc. 2012–4087 Filed 2–21–12; 8:45 am]
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
National Institutes of Health
42 CFR Part 68
[Docket No. NIH–2008–0003]
RIN 0905–AA43
National Institutes of Health Loan
Repayment Programs
National Institutes of Health,
HHS.
ACTION:
Notice of proposed rulemaking.
The National Institutes of
Health (NIH) proposes to rescind the
current regulations governing two of its
eight loan repayment programs and
issue in their place a new consolidated
set of regulations governing all of the
NIH Loan Repayment Programs (LRPs).
There are currently eight programs,
including three for researchers
employed by the NIH (Intramural LRPs)
and five for non-NIH scientists
(Extramural LRPs). The Intramural LRPs
include the Loan Repayment Program
for Research with Respect to Acquired
Immune Deficiency Syndrome (or AIDS
Research LRP); Loan Repayment
Program for General Research (or
General Research LRP), which includes
a program for the Accreditation Council
for Graduate Medical Education
(ACGME) Fellows; and Loan Repayment
Program for Clinical Researchers from
Disadvantaged Backgrounds (or Clinical
Research LRP for Individuals from
Disadvantaged Backgrounds). The
Extramural LRPs include the Loan
Repayment Program for Contraception
and Infertility Research (or
Contraception and Infertility Research
LRP); Loan Repayment Program for
Clinical Researchers from
Disadvantaged Backgrounds (or Clinical
Research LRP for Individuals from
Disadvantaged Backgrounds); Loan
Repayment Program for Clinical
Research (or Clinical Research LRP);
Loan Repayment Program for Pediatric
Research (or Pediatric Research LRP);
and Loan Repayment Program for
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SUMMARY:
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Persons and organizations
interested in submitting comments,
identified by RIN 0925–AA43 and
Docket Number NIH–2008–0003, may
do so by any of the following methods:
Electronic Submissions: You may
submit electronic comments in the
following way:
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: Follow
the instructions for submitting
comments.
To ensure timelier processing of
comments, NIH is no longer accepting
comments submitted to the agency by
email. The NIH encourages you to
continue to submit electronic comments
by using the Federal eRulemaking
Portal: https://www.regulations.gov.
Written Submissions: You may submit
written comments in the following
ways:
• Fax: 301–402–0169.
• Mail: Attention Jerry Moore, NIH
Regulations Officer, Office of
Management Assessment, NIH, 6011
Executive Boulevard, Suite 601, MSC
7669, Rockville, MD 20852–7669.
• Hand delivery/courier (for paper,
disk, or CD–ROM submissions):
Attention: Jerry Moore, 6011 Executive
Boulevard, Suite 601, Rockville, MD
20852–7669.
Docket: For access to the docket to
read background documents or
comments received, go to the
eRulemaking Portal and insert the
docket number provided in brackets in
the heading on page one of this
document into the ‘‘Search’’ box and
follow the prompts.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Jerry
Moore, NIH Regulations Officer, Office
of Management Assessment, NIH, 6011
Executive Boulevard, Room 601, MSC
7669, Rockville, MD 20892; by email
MooreJ@mail.nih.gov; by fax 301–402–
0169; or mailto:MooreJ@mail.nih.gov.
mailto:(jm40z@nih.gov) by telephone
301–496–4607 (not a toll-free number)
for information about the rulemaking
process. For program information
contact: the NIH Division of Loan
Repayment by email lrp@nih.gov or
telephone 866–849–4047. Information
regarding the requirements, application
deadline dates, and an online
application for the NIH Loan Repayment
Programs may be obtained from the NIH
ADDRESSES:
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
AGENCY:
Health Disparities Research (or Health
Disparities Research LRP). This rule
compliments efforts afforded by EO
13563.
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Loan Repayment Program Web site,
www.lrp.nih.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: On
November 4, 1988, Congress enacted the
Health Omnibus Programs Extension of
1988, Public Law (Pub. L.) 100–607,
Title VI of which amended the Public
Health Service (PHS) Act by adding
section 487A (42 U.S.C. 288–1) entitled
Loan Repayment Program for Research
with Respect to Acquired Immune
Deficiency Syndrome. Subsequently, in
the NIH Revitalization Act of 1993 (Pub.
L. 103–43), Congress enacted the Loan
Repayment Program for Research with
Respect to Contraception and Infertility
(section 487B; 42 U.S.C. 288–2); the
Loan Repayment Program for Research
Generally (section 487C; 42 U.S.C. 288–
3); and the Loan Repayment Program for
Clinical Researchers from
Disadvantaged Backgrounds (section
487E; 42 U.S.C. 288–5). The Children’s
Health Act of 2000 (Pub. L. 106–310),
which was enacted on October 17, 2000,
added the Pediatric Research Loan
Repayment Program (section 487F; 1 42
U.S.C. 288–6). On November 13, 2000,
the Clinical Research Enhancement Act,
contained in the Public Health
Improvement Act of 2000 (Pub. L. 106–
505), enacted the Loan Repayment
Program for Clinical Research (section
487F; 2 42 U.S.C. 288–5a). On November
22, 2000, the Minority Health and
Health Disparities Research and
Education Act of 2000 (Pub. L. 106–525)
enacted the Loan Repayment Program
for Health Disparities Research (section
485G, redesignated 464z–5; 3 42 U.S.C.
285t–2).
Sections 487A, 487B, 487C, 487E, and
487F of the PHS Act authorize the
Secretary of Health and Human
Services, and section 464z–5 authorizes
the Director, National Institute on
Minority Health and Health Disparities
(NIMHD), to enter into contracts with
qualified health professionals under
which such professionals agree to
conduct research in consideration of the
Federal Government agreeing to repay,
for each year of such service, not more
than $35,000 of the principal and
1 So in law. There are two sections 487F. Section
1002(b) of Public Law 106–310 (114 Stat. 1129),
inserted section 487F above. Subsequently, section
205 of Public Law 106–505 (114 Stat. 2329), which
relates to the Loan Repayment Program for Clinical
Researchers, inserted a section 487F after section
487E.
2 So in law. There are two sections 487F. Section
205 of Public Law 106–505 (114 Stat. 2329),
inserted section 487F after section 487E. Previously,
section 1002(b) of Public Law 106–310 (114 Stat.
1129), which relates to the Pediatric Research Loan
Repayment Program, inserted section 487F after
section 487E.
3 Section 485G of the PHS Act, enacted by Public
Law 106–525, was redesignated section 464z–5 by
P.L. 111–148.
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interest of the qualified educational
loans of such professionals. In return for
these loan repayments, applicants must
agree to participate in qualifying
research for an initial period of not less
than two years (or a minimum of three
years for the General Research LRP) as
one of the following:
(a) An NIH employee (for Intramural
LRPs), or
(b) A health professional engaged in
qualifying research supported by a
domestic nonprofit foundation,
nonprofit professional association, or
other nonprofit institution (e.g.,
university), or a U.S. or other
government agency (Federal, State or
local).
The purpose of the LRP programs is
to recruit and retain highly qualified
health professionals as biomedical and
behavioral researchers. LRP programs
offer educational loan repayment for
participants who agree, by written
contract, to engage in qualifying
domestic nonprofit-supported research
at a qualifying non-NIH institution, or as
an NIH employee, for a minimum of two
years (or three years for the Intramural
General Research LRP).
Currently, the Clinical Research LRP
for Individuals from Disadvantaged
Backgrounds and the Contraception and
Infertility Research LRP are governed by
their own individual regulations while
the other LRPs are without regulations.
We propose to consolidate the
regulations into a single set of
regulations governing all the LRPs.
More specifically, we propose to
rescind the current regulations codified
at 42 CFR Part 68a, entitled, National
Institutes of Health Clinical Research
Loan Repayment Program for
Individuals from Disadvantaged
Backgrounds (CR–LRP), and 42 CFR Part
68c, entitled, National Institute of Child
Health and Human Development
Contraception and Infertility Research
Loan Repayment Program, and issue a
new consolidated set of regulations at
42 CFR part 68, entitled, National
Institutes of Health Loan Repayment
Programs (LRPs), to govern each of the
eight individual NIH Loan Repayment
Programs, the three that are for
researchers employed by the NIH
(Intramural LRPs) and the five that are
for non-NIH scientists (Extramural
LRPs). The three Intramural LRPs
include the AIDS Research LRP, General
Research LRP, and Clinical Research
LRP for Individuals from Disadvantaged
Backgrounds. The five Extramural LRPs
include the Contraception and Infertility
Research LRP, Clinical Research LRP for
Individuals from Disadvantaged
Backgrounds, Clinical Research LRP,
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Pediatric Research LRP, and Health
Disparities Research LRP.
The purpose of this Notice of
Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) is to
invite public comment on the proposed
actions. We provide the following as
public information.
Regulatory Impact Analysis
We have examined the impacts of this
rule as required by Executive Order
12866, Regulatory Planning and Review
(September 30, 1993), Executive Order
13563, Improving Regulation and
Regulatory Review (January 18, 2011),
the Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
(September 19, 1980, Pub. L. 96–354),
section 202 of the Unfunded Mandates
Reform Act of 1995 (Pub. L. 104–4), and
Executive Order 13132 on Federalism
(August 4, 1999).
Executive Order 12866
Executive Order 12866, Regulatory
Planning and Review, directs agencies
to assess all costs and benefits of
available regulatory alternatives and, if
regulation is necessary, to select
regulatory approaches that maximize
net benefits (including potential
economic, environmental, public health
and safety and other advantages,
distributive impacts, and equity). A
regulatory impact analysis (RIA) must
be prepared for major rules with
economically significant effects ($100
million or more in any one year). Based
on our analysis, we believe that the
proposed rulemaking does not
constitute an economically significant
regulatory action.
The Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act
requires agencies to analyze regulatory
options that would minimize any
significant impact of the rule on small
entities. For the purpose of this analysis,
small entities include small business
concerns as defined by the Small
Business Administration (SBA), usually
businesses with fewer than 500
employees. Applicants who are eligible
to apply for the loan repayment awards
are individuals, not small entities. The
Secretary certifies that this rule will not
have a significant impact on a
significant number of small entities.
Section 202(a) of the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act of 1995
Section 202(a) of the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act of 1995 requires
that agencies prepare a written
statement that includes an assessment of
anticipated costs and benefits before
proposing ‘‘any rule that includes any
Federal mandate that may result in the
expenditure by State, local, and tribal
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organizations, in the aggregate, or by the
private sector, of ‘‘$100,000,000 or more
(adjusted annually for inflation with
base year of 1995) in any one year.’’ The
current inflation-adjusted threshold is
approximately $145.5 million. The
Secretary certifies that this rule does not
mandate any spending by State, local or
tribal government in the aggregate or by
the private sector. Participation in the
NIH loan repayment programs is
voluntary and not mandated.
Executive Order 13132
Executive Order 13132, Federalism,
requires that Federal agencies consult
with State and local government
officials in the development of
regulatory policies with federalism
implications. We reviewed the rule as
required under the Order, and
determined that it does not have
‘‘federalism implications’’ because it
will not have substantial direct effect on
the States, the relationship between the
National Government and the States, or
on the distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various
levels of government. Accordingly,
under E.O. 13132, no further Agency
action or analysis is required.
Paperwork Reduction Act
This proposed rule does not contain
any new information collection
requirements that are subject to Office of
Management and Budget (OMB)
approval under the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C.
chapter 35). More specifically, § 68.6 is
a reporting requirement, but the
specifics of the burden are determined
in the approved application forms used
by the NIH Loan Repayment Programs
and have been approved under OMB
No. 0925–0361, Expiration Date: June
30, 2014. Additionally, § 68.3(c),
§ 68.3(e), § 68.11(c), § 68.14(c),
§ 68.14(d), and § 68.16(a) are reporting
requirements and/or recordkeeping
requirements, but they are also covered
under OMB No. 0925–0361.
Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance
The Catalog of Federal Domestic
Assistance numbered programs affected
by the proposed regulations are:
93.209—Contraception and Infertility
Research Loan Repayment Program
93.220—Clinical Research Loan
Repayment Program for Individuals
from Disadvantaged Backgrounds
93.232—Loan Repayment Program for
General Research
93.280—NIH Loan Repayment Program
for Clinical Researchers
93.285—NIH Pediatric Research Loan
Repayment Program
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93.307—Minority Health and Health
Disparities Research
93.308—Extramural Loan Repayment
for Individuals From Disadvantaged
Backgrounds Conducting Clinical
Research
93.936—NIH Acquired
Immunodeficiency Syndrome
Research Loan Repayment Program
List of Subjects in 42 CFR Part 68
Health professions, Loan repayment
programs—health, Medical research.
For reasons presented in the
preamble, it is proposed to amend title
42 of the Code of Federal Regulations by
rescinding the current regulations at
parts 68a and 68c, and adding Part 68
that encompasses all NIH Loan
Repayment Programs, as set forth below.
PART 68—NATIONAL INSTITUTES OF
HEALTH (NIH) LOAN REPAYMENT
PROGRAMS (LRPs)
Sec.
68.1
What is the scope and purpose of the
NIH LRPs?
68.2 Definitions.
68.3 Who is eligible to apply?
68.4 Who is eligible to participate?
68.5 Who is ineligible to participate?
68.6 How do individuals apply to
participate in the NIH LRPs?
68.7 How are applicants selected to
participate in the NIH LRPs?
68.8 What do the NIH LRPs provide to
participants?
68.9 What loans qualify for repayment?
68.10 What loans are ineligible for
repayment?
68.11 What does an individual have to do
in return for loan repayments received
under the NIH LRPs?
68.12 How does an individual receive loan
repayments beyond the initial applicable
contract period?
68.13 What will happen if an individual
does not comply with the terms and
conditions of participation in the NIH
LRPs?
68.14 Under what circumstances can the
service or payment obligation be
canceled, waived, or suspended?
68.15 When can an NIH LRP payment
obligation be discharged in bankruptcy?
68.16 Additional conditions.
68.17 What other regulations and statutes
apply?
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Authority: 42 U.S.C. 254o, 42 U.S.C. 288–
1, 42 U.S.C. 288–2, 42 U.S.C. 288–3, 42
U.S.C. 288–5, 42 U.S.C. 288–5a, 42 U.S.C.
288–6, 42 U.S.C. 285t–2.
§ 68.1 What are the scope and purpose of
the NIH LRPs?
The regulations of this part apply to
the award of educational loan payments
authorized by sections 487A, 487B,
487C, 487E, 487F,1 and 464z–5 of the
1 There are two sections 487F. Section 1002(b) of
Public Law 106–310 added section 487F, 42 U.S.C.
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Public Health Service Act (42 U.S.C.
288–1, 42 U.S.C. 288–2, 42 U.S.C. 288–
3, 42 U.S.C. 288–5, 42 U.S.C. 288–5a, 42
U.S.C. 288–6, 42 U.S.C. 285t–2). The
purpose of these programs is to address
the need for biomedical and behavioral
researchers by providing an economic
incentive to appropriately qualified
health professionals who are engaged in
qualifying research supported by
domestic nonprofit funding, or as
employees of NIH. The NIH Loan
Repayment Programs include eight
separate programs, three that are
Intramural (for NIH researchers) and
five that are Extramural (for non-NIH
researchers).
(a) The Intramural LRPs include:
(1) Loan Repayment Program for
Research With Respect to Acquired
Immune Deficiency Syndrome (or AIDS
Research LRP);
(2) Loan Repayment Program for
General Research (or General Research
LRP), including a program for
Accreditation Council for Graduate
Medical Education (ACGME) Fellows;
and
(3) Loan Repayment Program for
Clinical Researchers from
Disadvantaged Backgrounds (or Clinical
Research LRP for Individuals From
Disadvantaged Backgrounds). [This
program is also included as a separate
program under the Extramural LRPs.]
(b) The Extramural LRPs include:
(1) Loan Repayment Program for
Contraception and Infertility Research
(or Contraception and Infertility
Research LRP);
(2) Loan Repayment Program for
Clinical Researchers From
Disadvantaged Backgrounds (or Clinical
Research LRP for Individuals From
Disadvantaged Backgrounds);
(3) Loan Repayment Program for
Clinical Researchers (or Clinical
Research LRP);
(4) Loan Repayment Program for
Pediatric Research (or Pediatric
Research LRP); and
(5) Loan Repayment Program for
Health Disparities Research (or Health
Disparities Research LRP).
§ 68.2
Definitions.
As used in this part:
Act: Means the Public Health Service
Act, as amended (42 U.S.C. 201 et seq.).
AIDS Research: Means research
activities related to the Acquired
Immunodeficiency Syndrome that
qualify for inclusion in the AIDS
Research LRP.
288–6, the Pediatric Research Loan Repayment
Program. Subsequently, section 205 of Public Law
106–505 also added section 487F, 42 U.S.C. 288–
5a, enacting the Loan Repayment Program for
Clinical Researchers.
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Applicant: Means an individual who
applies to and meets the eligibility
criteria for the NIH LRPs.
Breach of Contract: Results when a
participant fails to complete the
research service or other obligation(s)
required under the contract and may be
subject to assessment of monetary
damages and penalties as defined by
statute.
Clinical Research: Is patient-oriented
clinical research conducted with human
subjects, or research on the causes and
consequences of disease in human
populations involving material of
human origin (such as tissue specimens
and cognitive phenomena) for which an
investigator or colleague directly
interacts with human subjects in an
outpatient or inpatient setting to clarify
a problem in human physiology,
pathophysiology or disease, or
epidemiologic or behavioral studies,
outcomes research or health services
research, or developing new
technologies, therapeutic interventions,
or clinical trials.
Commercial Loans: Means loans made
for educational purposes by banks,
credit unions, savings and loan
associations, not-for-profit
organizations, insurance companies,
schools, and other financial or credit
institutions that are subject to
examination and supervision in their
capacity as lending institutions by an
agency of the United States or of the
State in which the lender has its
principal place of business.
Contraception Research: Is defined as
research with the ultimate goal of
providing new or improved methods of
preventing pregnancy.
Current Payment Status: Means that a
qualified educational loan is not past
due in its payment schedule, as
determined by the lending institution.
Debt Threshold: Means the minimum
amount of qualified educational debt an
individual must have, on their program
eligibility date, in order to be eligible for
LRP benefits, as established by the
Secretary.
Director: Means the Director of the
National Institute on Minority Health
and Health Disparities (NIMHD) or
designee.
Educational Expenses: Means the cost
of the health professional’s
undergraduate, graduate, and health
professional school’s education,
including the tuition expenses and other
educational expenses such as living
expenses, fees, books, supplies,
educational equipment and materials,
and laboratory expenses.
Extramural LRPs: Refers to those
programs for which health
professionals, who are not NIH
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employees and have program-specified
degrees and domestic nonprofit support,
are eligible to apply. The Extramural
LRPs include the (1) Contraception and
Infertility Research LRP, (2) Clinical
Research LRP for Individuals from
Disadvantaged Backgrounds, (3) Clinical
Research LRP, (4) Pediatric Research
LRP, and (5) Health Disparities Research
LRP.
General Research: Pertains to research
that falls within the basic science or
clinical research parameters and is not
targeted toward a specific area (e.g.,
AIDS) or type of research (e.g., clinical
research). The focus is on biomedical
and behavioral research studies and
investigations across a variety of
scientific disciplines within the mission
of NIH.
Government Loans: Means
educational loans made by U.S. Federal,
State, county, or city agencies that are
authorized by law to make such loans.
Health Disparities Population: A
population is a health disparity
population if, as determined by the
Director after consultation with the
Director of the Agency for Healthcare
Research and Quality, there is a
significant disparity in the overall rate
of disease incidence, prevalence,
morbidity, mortality, or survival rates in
the population as compared to the
health status of the general population.
Individual From Disadvantaged
Background:
(1) Comes from an environment that
inhibited the individual from obtaining
the knowledge, skill and ability required
to enroll in and graduate from a health
professions school; or
(2) Comes from a family with an
annual income below a level based on
low-income thresholds according to
family size published by the U.S.
Bureau of the Census, adjusted annually
for changes in the Consumer Price
Index, and adjusted by the Secretary for
use in HHS programs. The Secretary
periodically publishes these income
levels in the Federal Register.
Infertility Research: Is defined as
research with the long-range objective of
evaluating, treating or ameliorating
conditions that result in the failure of
couples to either conceive or bear
young.
Institute or Center (IC): Means an
Institute or Center of the National
Institutes of Health (NIH).
Intramural LRPs: Refers to those
programs for which applicants must be
employed by NIH. The intramural LRPs
include the (1) AIDS Research LRP, (2)
General Research LRP, and (3) Clinical
Research LRP for Individuals from
Disadvantaged Backgrounds.
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Institutional Base Salary or Salary: Is
the annual income or compensation that
the organization pays for the applicant’s
appointment, whether the time is spent
on research, teaching, patient care, or
other activities.
Living Expenses: Means the
reasonable cost of room and board,
transportation and commuting costs,
and other reasonable costs incurred
during an individual’s attendance at an
educational institution and is part of the
educational loan.
Loan Repayment Programs (LRPs):
Refers to the NIH Loan Repayment
Programs including those authorized by
sections 487A, 487B, 487C, 487E, 487F,
and 464z–5 of the Act, as amended.
Loan Repayment Program Contract:
Refers to the agreement signed by an
applicant and the Secretary or Director
(for the following extramural LRPs:
Health Disparities Research LRP and
Clinical Research LRP for Individuals
from Disadvantaged Backgrounds only).
Under such an agreement, an Intramural
LRP applicant agrees to conduct
qualified research as an NIH employee,
and an Extramural LRP applicant agrees
to conduct qualified research supported
by domestic nonprofit funding, in
exchange for repayment of the
applicant’s qualified educational loan(s)
for a prescribed period.
NIH: Refers to the National Institutes
of Health.
Nonprofit Funding/Support:
Applicants must conduct qualifying
research supported by a domestic
nonprofit foundation, nonprofit
professional association, or other
nonprofit institution (e.g., university), or
a U.S. or other government agency
(Federal, State or local). A domestic
foundation, professional association, or
institution is considered to be nonprofit
if exempt from Federal tax under the
provisions of Section 501 of the Internal
Revenue Code (26 U.S.C. 501).
Participant: Means an individual
whose application to any of the NIH
LRPs has been approved and whose
Program contract has been executed by
the Secretary or the Director.
Pediatric Research: Is defined as
research directly related to diseases,
disorders, and other conditions in
children, including pediatric
pharmacology.
Program: Refers to the NIH Loan
Repayment Program, or LRP.
Program eligibility date: Means the
date on which an individual’s LRP
contract is executed by the Secretary or
the Director.
Qualified Educational Loans and
Interest/Debt: (See Educational
Expenses) as established by the
Secretary, include Government and
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commercial educational loans and
interest for (1) undergraduate, graduate,
and health professional school tuition
expenses; (2) other reasonable
educational expenses required by the
school(s) attended, including fees,
books, supplies, educational equipment
and materials, and laboratory expenses;
and (3) reasonable living expenses,
including the cost of room and board,
transportation and commuting costs,
and other reasonable living expenses
incurred.
Reasonable Educational and Living
Expenses: Means those educational and
living expenses that are equal to or less
than the sum of the school’s estimated
standard student budget for educational
and living expenses for the degree
program and for the year(s) during
which the participant was enrolled in
school. If there is no standard budget
available from the school, or if the
participant requests repayment for
educational and living expenses that
exceed the standard student budget,
reasonableness of educational and living
expenses incurred must be substantiated
by additional contemporaneous
documentation, as determined by the
Secretary.
Repayable debt: Means the
proportion, as established by the
Secretary, of an individual’s total
qualified educational debt that can be
paid by an NIH LRP.
Salary: Has the same meaning as
‘‘institutional base salary.’’
School: Means undergraduate,
graduate, and health professions schools
that are accredited by a body or bodies
recognized for accreditation purposes by
the U.S. Secretary of Education.
Secretary: Means the Secretary of
Health and Human Services or designee.
Service: Means the Public Health
Service.
State: Means one of the fifty States,
the District of Columbia, the
Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the
Northern Mariana Islands, the U.S.
Virgin Islands, Guam, American Samoa,
and the Federated States of Micronesia,
the Republic of the Marshall Islands,
and the Republic of Palau.
Waiver: Means a waiver of the service
obligation granted by the Secretary
when compliance by the participant is
impossible or would involve extreme
hardship, or where enforcement with
respect to the individual would be
unconscionable. (See ‘‘Breach of
Contract.’’)
Withdrawal: Means a request by a
participant, prior to the Program making
payments on his or her behalf, for
withdrawal from Program participation.
A withdrawal is without penalty to the
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§ 68.5
participant and without obligation to
the Program.
§ 68.3
Who is eligible to apply?
To be eligible for consideration for the
NIH LRPs, applicants must meet the
following criteria:
(a) Be citizens, nationals, or
permanent residents of the United
States;
(b) Have the necessary degree from an
accredited institution as determined by
the NIH to be consistent with the needs
of the LRP;
(c)(1) For Intramural LRPs only:
Applicants must be employed by the
NIH and engage in qualified full-time
research as specified by the LRP and be
recommended by the employing IC or
have a firm commitment of employment
from an authorized official of the NIH;
(2) For Extramural LRPs only:
Applicants must be conducting
qualified research for an average of at
least 20 hours per week that is
supported by a domestic nonprofit
foundation, nonprofit professional
association, or other nonprofit
institution (e.g., university), or a U.S. or
other government agency (Federal, State
or local);
(d) Have total qualifying educational
loan debt as determined on the program
eligibility date;
(e) The NIH or the employing
institution must provide an assurance
that the applicant will be employed/
appointed and provided research
support for the applicable term of the
LRP contract; and
(f) Recipients of LRP awards must
conduct their research in accordance
with applicable Federal, State, and local
law (e.g., applicable human subject
protection regulations).
(g) For Clinical Research for
Individuals from Disadvantaged
Background only: Individual must be
from a disadvantaged background. (See
§ 68.2, Definitions, Individual from
Disadvantaged Background.)
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§ 68.4
Who is eligible to participate?
To be eligible to participate in the
NIH LRPs, individuals must:
(a) Meet the eligibility requirements
specified in § 68.3;
(b) Not be ineligible for participation
as specified in § 68.5;
(c) Engage in qualified research for the
contractual period;
(d) Engage in such research for the
percentage of time specified for the
particular LRP; and
(e) Comply with all other terms and
conditions of the applicable Loan
Repayment Program.
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Who is ineligible to participate?
The following individuals are
ineligible for NIH LRP participation:
(a) Persons who do not meet the
eligibility requirements as specified
under § 68.3;
(b) Any individual who has or had a
Federal judgment lien against his/her
property arising from Federal debt;
(c) Persons who owe an obligation of
health professional service to the
Federal Government, a State, or other
entity, unless deferrals or extensions are
granted for the length of the service of
their LRP contract. The following are
examples of programs that have a
service obligation:
(1) Armed Forces (Army, Navy, or Air
Force) Professions Scholarship Program,
(2) Exceptional Financial Need (EFN)
Scholarship Program,
(3) Financial Assistance for
Disadvantaged Health Professions
Students (FADHPS),
(4) Indian Health Service (IHS)
Scholarship Program,
(5) National Health Service Corps
(NHSC) Scholarship Program,
(6) National Research Service Award
(NRSA) Program,
(7) NIH Undergraduate Scholarship
Program (UGSP),
(8) Physicians Shortage Area
Scholarship Program,
(9) Primary Care Loan (PCL) Program,
and
(10) Public Health Service
Scholarship (PHS) Program;
(d) For extramural LRPs only:
Individuals who receive any research
funding support or salary from a forprofit institution or organization, or
Federal Government employees working
more than 20 hours per week;
(e) Current recipients of NIH
intramural training awards, e.g., NIH
Intramural Research Training Awards
(IRTA) or Cancer Research Training
Awards (CRTA);
(f) Individuals conducting research for
which funding is precluded by Federal
law, regulation, or HHS/NIH policy or
that does not comply with applicable
Federal, State, and local law regarding
the conduct of the research (e.g.,
applicable human subject protection
regulations);
(g) Individuals with only ineligible
loans or loans that are not educational;
and
(h) Individuals who do not have
sufficient qualifying educational debt to
meet the debt threshold.
§ 68.6 How do individuals apply to
participate in the NIH LRPs?
An application for participation in an
NIH LRP shall be submitted to the NIH,
which is responsible for the Program’s
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administration, in such form and
manner as the Secretary prescribes.
§ 68.7 How are applicants selected to
participate in the NIH LRPs?
The NIH LRP awards are competitive.
To be selected for participation in an
NIH LRP, applicants must satisfy the
following requirements:
(a) Applicants must meet the
eligibility requirements specified in
§ 68.3 and § 68.4.
(b) Applicants must not be ineligible
for participation as specified in § 68.5.
(c) Upon receipt, applications for any
of the NIH LRPs will be reviewed for
eligibility and completeness by the NIH
Division of Loan Repayment.
Incomplete or ineligible applications
will not be processed or reviewed
further.
(d)(1) Applications for the Intramural
LRPs that are deemed eligible and
complete are submitted to the Loan
Repayment Committee (LRC), which
reviews, ranks, and approves/
disapproves LRP awards. The LRC is
composed of senior intramural
scientists, including basic (bench) and
clinical researchers and science policy
administrators. Since LRP participation
in the Intramural programs is contingent
upon NIH employment, applicants must
be recommended by the employing IC of
the NIH to be considered by the LRC.
(2) Applications for the Extramural
LRPs that are deemed eligible and
complete will be referred by the NIH
Center for Scientific Review (CSR) to an
appropriate NIH IC for peer review. In
evaluating the application, reviewers are
directed to consider the following
components and how they relate to the
likelihood that the applicant will
continue in a research career:
(i) Applicant’s potential to pursue a
career in research as defined by the
appropriate LRP:
(A) Appropriateness of the applicant’s
previous training and experience to
prepare for a research career.
(B) Appropriateness of the proposed
research activities during the LRP
contract to foster a career in research.
(C) Commitment to a research career,
as reflected by the personal statement of
long-term career goals and plan to
achieve those goals.
(D) Strength of the letters of
recommendations attesting to the
applicant’s potential for a successful
career in research.
(ii) Quality of the overall environment
to prepare the applicant for a research
career:
(A) Quality and availability of
appropriate scientific mentors and
colleagues to help achieve or enhance
the applicant’s research independence,
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including the mentors’ record in
mentoring researchers, funding history,
and research productivity.
(B) Quality and appropriateness of
institutional resources and facilities.
(iii) For the Health Disparities
Research LRP, at least 50 percent of the
contracts are required by statute to be
for appropriately qualified health
professionals who are members of a
health disparity population.
§ 68.8 What do the NIH LRPs provide to
participants?
(a) Loan Repayments: For each year of
the applicable service period the
individual agrees to serve, the NIH may
pay up to $35,000 per year of a
participant’s repayable debt.
(b) Payments are made directly to a
participant’s lender(s). If there is more
than one outstanding qualified
educational loan, the NIH will repay the
loans in the following order, unless the
NIH determines significant savings
would result from paying loans in a
different order of priority:
(1) Loans guaranteed by the U.S.
Department of Health and Human
Services;
(2) Loans guaranteed by the U.S.
Department of Education;
(3) Loans made or guaranteed by a
State;
(4) Loans made by a school; and
(5) Loans made by other entities.
(c) Tax Liability Payments: In
addition to the loan repayments, the
NIH shall make tax payments in an
amount equal to 39 percent of the total
annual loan repayment to the Internal
Revenue Service on the participant’s
behalf. The NIH may make additional
payments to those participants who
show increased Federal, State, and/or
local taxes as a result of loan
repayments.
(d) Under § 68.8(a), (b), and (c), the
NIH will make loan and tax liability
payments to the extent appropriated
funds are available for these purposes.
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§ 68.9
What loans qualify for repayment?
The NIH LRPs will repay participants’
lenders the principal, interest, and
related expenses of qualified U.S.
Government and commercial
educational loans obtained by
participants for the following:
(a) Undergraduate, graduate, and
health professional school tuition
expenses;
(b) Other reasonable educational
expenses required by the school(s)
attended, including fees, books,
supplies, educational equipment and
materials, and laboratory expenses; and
(c) Reasonable living expenses,
including the cost of room and board,
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transportation and commuting costs,
and other living expenses, as
determined by the NIH.
§ 68.10 What loans are ineligible for
repayment?
The following loans are ineligible for
repayment under the NIH LRPs:
(a) Loans not obtained from a bank,
credit union, savings and loan
association, not-for-profit organization,
insurance company, school, and other
financial or credit institution that is
subject to examination and supervision
in its capacity as a lending institution
by an agency of the United States or of
the State in which the lender has its
principal place of business;
(b) Loans for which supporting
documentation is not available;
(c) Loans that have been consolidated
with loans of other individuals, such as
spouses or children;
(d) Loans or portions of loans
obtained for educational or living
expenses that exceed the standard of
reasonableness as determined by the
participant’s standard school budget for
the year in which the loan was made
and are not determined by the NIH to
be reasonable based on additional
documentation provided by the
individual;
(e) Loans, financial debts, or service
obligations incurred under the following
programs, or similar programs, which
provide loans, scholarships, loan
repayments, or other awards in
exchange for a future service obligation:
(1) Armed Forces (Army, Navy, or Air
Force) Professions Scholarship Program,
(2) Exceptional Financial Need (EFN)
Scholarship Program,
(3) Financial Assistance for
Disadvantaged Health Professions
Students (FADHPS),
(4) Indian Health Service Scholarship
Program,
(5) National Health Service Corps
Scholarship Program,
(6) National Institutes of Health
Undergraduate Scholarship Program
(UGSP),
(7) National Research Service Award
(NRSA) Program,
(8) Physicians Shortage Area
Scholarship Program,
(9) Primary Care Loans (PCL), and
(10) Public Health Service
Scholarship Program;
(f) Any loan in default, delinquent, or
not in a current payment status;
(g) Any Federal educational loan
debt—including debt arising from the
conversion of a service obligation to a
loan—that has been in default or written
off as uncollectible is ineligible for
repayment under the Program, even if
currently considered to be in good
standing;
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(h) Loan amounts that participants
were due to have been paid prior to the
LRP contract start date;
(i) Parents PLUS loans (except the
Graduate PLUS loans for students);
(j) Loans for which promissory notes
have been signed after the LRP contract
start date (with the exception of
qualifying student loan consolidations);
and
(k) Home equity loans or other
noneducational loans.
§ 68.11 What does an individual have to do
in return for loan repayments received
under the NIH LRPs?
Individuals must agree to:
(a) Engage in qualified research for the
applicable contract service period;
(b)(1) For Intramural LRPs: Engage in
such research full-time as employees of
NIH, or; (2) For Extramural LRPs:
Engage in such research for an average
of 20 hours per week supported by a
domestic nonprofit foundation,
nonprofit professional association, or
other nonprofit institution (e.g.,
university), or a U.S. or other
government agency (Federal, State or
local);
(c) Keep all loan accounts in good
standing, provide timely documentation
as needed, including payment
verification, service verification, change
of research, change of institution, etc.
Failure to provide such documentation
may result in early termination, and the
individual may be subject to statutory
financial penalties; and
(d) Satisfy all of the other terms and
conditions of the LRP and the LRP
Contract (e.g., Obligations of the
Participant). Failure to adhere to the
terms and conditions of the LRP
contract may result in early termination,
and the individual may be subject to
statutory financial penalties.
§ 68.12 How does an individual receive
loan repayments beyond the initial
applicable contract period?
An individual may apply for a
competitive extension contract for at
least a one-year period if the individual
is engaged in qualifying research and
satisfies the eligibility requirements
specified under § 68.3 and § 68.4 for the
extension period and has remaining
repayable debt as established by the
Secretary.
§ 68.13 What will happen if an individual
does not comply with the terms and
conditions of participation in the NIH LRPs?
Program participants who breach their
Loan Repayment Program Contracts will
be subject to the applicable monetary
payment provisions set forth at section
338E of the Act (42 U.S.C. 254o).
Payment of any amount owed under
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section 338E of the Act shall be made
within one year of the date the
participant breached his or her Loan
Repayment Program Contract, unless the
NIH specifically authorizes a longer
period. Terminations will not be
considered a breach of contract in cases
where such terminations are beyond the
control of the participant as follows:
(a) Terminations for convenience of
the Government will not be considered
a breach of contract and monetary
damages will not be assessed.
(b) Occasionally, a participant’s
research assignment or funding may
evolve and change to the extent that the
individual is no longer engaged in
approved research. Similarly, the
research needs and priorities of the IC
and/or the NIH may change to the extent
that a determination is made that a
health professional’s skills may be better
utilized in a nonresearch assignment.
Normally, job changes of this nature
will not be considered a breach of
contract on the part of either the NIH or
the participant. Under these
circumstances, the following will apply:
(1) Program participation will cease as
of the date an individual is no longer
engaged in approved research;
(2) Based on the approval of the NIH,
the participant will be released from the
remainder of his or her service
obligation without assessment of
damages or monetary penalties. The
participant in this case will be
permitted to retain all Program benefits
made or owed by the NIH on his/her
behalf up to the date the individual is
no longer engaged in research, less the
pro rata portion of any benefits
advanced beyond the period of
completed service.
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§ 68.14 Under what circumstances can the
service or payment obligation be canceled,
waived, or suspended?
(a) Any obligation of a participant for
service or payment will be canceled
upon the death of the participant.
(b) The NIH may waive or suspend
any service or payment obligation
incurred by the participant upon request
whenever compliance by the
participant: (1) Is impossible, (2) would
involve extreme hardship to the
participant, or (3) if enforcement of the
service or payment obligation would be
unconscionable. The NIH may approve
a request for a suspension of the service
or payment obligations for a period of
up to one (1) year.
(c) Compliance by a participant with
a service or payment obligation will be
considered impossible if the NIH
determines, on the basis of information
and documentation as may be required,
that the participant suffers from a
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permanent physical or mental disability
resulting in the inability of the
participant to perform the service or
other activities that would be necessary
to comply with the obligation.
(d) In determining whether to waive
or suspend any or all of the service or
payment obligations of a participant as
imposing an undue hardship and being
against good conscience, the NIH, on the
basis of such information and
documentation as may be required, will
consider: (1) The participant’s present
financial resources and obligations; (2)
the participant’s estimated future
financial resources and obligations; and
(3) the extent to which the participant
has problems of a personal nature, such
as a physical or mental disability or
terminal illness in the immediate
family, which so intrude on the
participant’s present and future ability
to perform as to raise a presumption that
the individual will be unable to perform
the obligation incurred.
§ 68.15 When can an NIH LRP payment
obligation be discharged in bankruptcy?
Any payment obligation incurred
under § 68.13 may be discharged in
bankruptcy under Title 11 of the United
States Code only if such discharge is
granted after the expiration of the sevenyear period beginning on the first date
that payment is required and only if the
bankruptcy court finds that a
nondischarge of the obligation would be
unconscionable.
§ 68.16
Additional conditions.
(a) When a shortage of funds exists,
participants may be funded only
partially, as determined by the NIH.
However, once an NIH LRP contract has
been signed by both parties, the NIH
will obligate such funds as necessary to
ensure that sufficient funds will be
available to pay benefits for the duration
of the period of obligated service unless,
by mutual written agreement, the parties
specify otherwise.
(b) Additional conditions may be
imposed as deemed necessary.
§ 68.17 What other regulations and
statutes apply?
Several other regulations and statutes
apply to this part. These include, but are
not necessarily limited to:
Debt Collection Act of 1982 (31 U.S.C.
3701 note);
Fair Credit Reporting Act (15 U.S.C.
1681 et seq.);
Federal Debt Collection Procedures
Act of 1990 (28 U.S.C. 176); and Privacy
Act of 1974 (5 U.S.C. 552a).
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10461
Dated: September 28, 2011.
Francis S. Collins,
Director, NIH, National Institutes of Health.
Approved: February 7, 2012.
Kathleen Sebelius,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2012–3900 Filed 2–21–12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4140–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE
GENERAL SERVICES
ADMINISTRATION
NATIONAL AERONAUTICS AND
SPACE ADMINISTRATION
48 CFR Parts 31 and 52
[FAR Case 2011–011; Docket 2011–0011;
Sequence 1]
RIN 9000–AM13
Federal Acquisition Regulation;
Unallowability of Costs Associated
With Foreign Contractor Excise Tax
Department of Defense (DoD),
General Services Administration (GSA),
and National Aeronautics and Space
Administration (NASA).
ACTION: Proposed rule.
AGENCIES:
DoD, GSA, and NASA are
proposing to amend the Federal
Acquisition Regulation (FAR) to
implement the requirements of the
James Zadroga 9/11 Health and
Compensation Act of 2010 regarding the
imposition of a 2 percent tax on certain
foreign procurements.
DATES: Interested parties should submit
written comments to the Regulatory
Secretariat at one of the addressees
shown below on or before April 23,
2012 to be considered in the formation
of the final rule.
ADDRESSES: Submit comments in
response to FAR case 2011–011 by any
of the following methods:
• Regulations.gov: https://
www.regulations.gov. Submit comments
via the Federal eRulemaking portal by
inputting ‘‘FAR Case 2011–011’’ under
the heading ‘‘Enter Keyword or ID’’ and
selecting ‘‘Search.’’ Select the link
‘‘Submit a Comment’’ that corresponds
with ‘‘FAR Case 2011–011.’’ Follow the
instructions provided at the ‘‘Submit a
Comment’’ screen. Please include your
name, company name (if any), and
‘‘FAR Case 2011–011’’ on your attached
document.
• Fax: (202) 501–4067.
• Mail: General Services
Administration, Regulatory Secretariat
(MVCB), Attn: Hada Flowers, 1275 First
SUMMARY:
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 77, Number 35 (Wednesday, February 22, 2012)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 10455-10461]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2012-3900]
=======================================================================
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DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
National Institutes of Health
42 CFR Part 68
[Docket No. NIH-2008-0003]
RIN 0905-AA43
National Institutes of Health Loan Repayment Programs
AGENCY: National Institutes of Health, HHS.
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The National Institutes of Health (NIH) proposes to rescind
the current regulations governing two of its eight loan repayment
programs and issue in their place a new consolidated set of regulations
governing all of the NIH Loan Repayment Programs (LRPs). There are
currently eight programs, including three for researchers employed by
the NIH (Intramural LRPs) and five for non-NIH scientists (Extramural
LRPs). The Intramural LRPs include the Loan Repayment Program for
Research with Respect to Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome (or AIDS
Research LRP); Loan Repayment Program for General Research (or General
Research LRP), which includes a program for the Accreditation Council
for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) Fellows; and Loan Repayment
Program for Clinical Researchers from Disadvantaged Backgrounds (or
Clinical Research LRP for Individuals from Disadvantaged Backgrounds).
The Extramural LRPs include the Loan Repayment Program for
Contraception and Infertility Research (or Contraception and
Infertility Research LRP); Loan Repayment Program for Clinical
Researchers from Disadvantaged Backgrounds (or Clinical Research LRP
for Individuals from Disadvantaged Backgrounds); Loan Repayment Program
for Clinical Research (or Clinical Research LRP); Loan Repayment
Program for Pediatric Research (or Pediatric Research LRP); and Loan
Repayment Program for Health Disparities Research (or Health
Disparities Research LRP). This rule compliments efforts afforded by EO
13563.
DATES: Comments must be received on or before April 23, 2012 in order
to ensure that NIH will be able to consider the comments in preparing
the final rule.
ADDRESSES: Persons and organizations interested in submitting comments,
identified by RIN 0925-AA43 and Docket Number NIH-2008-0003, may do so
by any of the following methods:
Electronic Submissions: You may submit electronic comments in the
following way:
Federal eRulemaking Portal: Follow the instructions for
submitting comments.
To ensure timelier processing of comments, NIH is no longer accepting
comments submitted to the agency by email. The NIH encourages you to
continue to submit electronic comments by using the Federal eRulemaking
Portal: https://www.regulations.gov.
Written Submissions: You may submit written comments in the
following ways:
Fax: 301-402-0169.
Mail: Attention Jerry Moore, NIH Regulations Officer,
Office of Management Assessment, NIH, 6011 Executive Boulevard, Suite
601, MSC 7669, Rockville, MD 20852-7669.
Hand delivery/courier (for paper, disk, or CD-ROM
submissions): Attention: Jerry Moore, 6011 Executive Boulevard, Suite
601, Rockville, MD 20852-7669.
Docket: For access to the docket to read background documents or
comments received, go to the eRulemaking Portal and insert the docket
number provided in brackets in the heading on page one of this document
into the ``Search'' box and follow the prompts.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Jerry Moore, NIH Regulations Officer,
Office of Management Assessment, NIH, 6011 Executive Boulevard, Room
601, MSC 7669, Rockville, MD 20892; by email MooreJ@mail.nih.gov; by
fax 301-402-0169; or mailto:MooreJ@mail.nih.gov.mailto:(jm40z@nih.gov)
by telephone 301-496-4607 (not a toll-free number) for information
about the rulemaking process. For program information contact: the NIH
Division of Loan Repayment by email lrp@nih.gov or telephone 866-849-
4047. Information regarding the requirements, application deadline
dates, and an online application for the NIH Loan Repayment Programs
may be obtained from the NIH Loan Repayment Program Web site,
www.lrp.nih.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: On November 4, 1988, Congress enacted the
Health Omnibus Programs Extension of 1988, Public Law (Pub. L.) 100-
607, Title VI of which amended the Public Health Service (PHS) Act by
adding section 487A (42 U.S.C. 288-1) entitled Loan Repayment Program
for Research with Respect to Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome.
Subsequently, in the NIH Revitalization Act of 1993 (Pub. L. 103-43),
Congress enacted the Loan Repayment Program for Research with Respect
to Contraception and Infertility (section 487B; 42 U.S.C. 288-2); the
Loan Repayment Program for Research Generally (section 487C; 42 U.S.C.
288-3); and the Loan Repayment Program for Clinical Researchers from
Disadvantaged Backgrounds (section 487E; 42 U.S.C. 288-5). The
Children's Health Act of 2000 (Pub. L. 106-310), which was enacted on
October 17, 2000, added the Pediatric Research Loan Repayment Program
(section 487F; \1\ 42 U.S.C. 288-6). On November 13, 2000, the Clinical
Research Enhancement Act, contained in the Public Health Improvement
Act of 2000 (Pub. L. 106-505), enacted the Loan Repayment Program for
Clinical Research (section 487F; \2\ 42 U.S.C. 288-5a). On November 22,
2000, the Minority Health and Health Disparities Research and Education
Act of 2000 (Pub. L. 106-525) enacted the Loan Repayment Program for
Health Disparities Research (section 485G, redesignated 464z-5; \3\ 42
U.S.C. 285t-2).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ So in law. There are two sections 487F. Section 1002(b) of
Public Law 106-310 (114 Stat. 1129), inserted section 487F above.
Subsequently, section 205 of Public Law 106-505 (114 Stat. 2329),
which relates to the Loan Repayment Program for Clinical
Researchers, inserted a section 487F after section 487E.
\2\ So in law. There are two sections 487F. Section 205 of
Public Law 106-505 (114 Stat. 2329), inserted section 487F after
section 487E. Previously, section 1002(b) of Public Law 106-310 (114
Stat. 1129), which relates to the Pediatric Research Loan Repayment
Program, inserted section 487F after section 487E.
\3\ Section 485G of the PHS Act, enacted by Public Law 106-525,
was redesignated section 464z-5 by P.L. 111-148.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sections 487A, 487B, 487C, 487E, and 487F of the PHS Act authorize
the Secretary of Health and Human Services, and section 464z-5
authorizes the Director, National Institute on Minority Health and
Health Disparities (NIMHD), to enter into contracts with qualified
health professionals under which such professionals agree to conduct
research in consideration of the Federal Government agreeing to repay,
for each year of such service, not more than $35,000 of the principal
and
[[Page 10456]]
interest of the qualified educational loans of such professionals. In
return for these loan repayments, applicants must agree to participate
in qualifying research for an initial period of not less than two years
(or a minimum of three years for the General Research LRP) as one of
the following:
(a) An NIH employee (for Intramural LRPs), or
(b) A health professional engaged in qualifying research supported
by a domestic nonprofit foundation, nonprofit professional association,
or other nonprofit institution (e.g., university), or a U.S. or other
government agency (Federal, State or local).
The purpose of the LRP programs is to recruit and retain highly
qualified health professionals as biomedical and behavioral
researchers. LRP programs offer educational loan repayment for
participants who agree, by written contract, to engage in qualifying
domestic nonprofit-supported research at a qualifying non-NIH
institution, or as an NIH employee, for a minimum of two years (or
three years for the Intramural General Research LRP).
Currently, the Clinical Research LRP for Individuals from
Disadvantaged Backgrounds and the Contraception and Infertility
Research LRP are governed by their own individual regulations while the
other LRPs are without regulations. We propose to consolidate the
regulations into a single set of regulations governing all the LRPs.
More specifically, we propose to rescind the current regulations
codified at 42 CFR Part 68a, entitled, National Institutes of Health
Clinical Research Loan Repayment Program for Individuals from
Disadvantaged Backgrounds (CR-LRP), and 42 CFR Part 68c, entitled,
National Institute of Child Health and Human Development Contraception
and Infertility Research Loan Repayment Program, and issue a new
consolidated set of regulations at 42 CFR part 68, entitled, National
Institutes of Health Loan Repayment Programs (LRPs), to govern each of
the eight individual NIH Loan Repayment Programs, the three that are
for researchers employed by the NIH (Intramural LRPs) and the five that
are for non-NIH scientists (Extramural LRPs). The three Intramural LRPs
include the AIDS Research LRP, General Research LRP, and Clinical
Research LRP for Individuals from Disadvantaged Backgrounds. The five
Extramural LRPs include the Contraception and Infertility Research LRP,
Clinical Research LRP for Individuals from Disadvantaged Backgrounds,
Clinical Research LRP, Pediatric Research LRP, and Health Disparities
Research LRP.
The purpose of this Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) is to
invite public comment on the proposed actions. We provide the following
as public information.
Regulatory Impact Analysis
We have examined the impacts of this rule as required by Executive
Order 12866, Regulatory Planning and Review (September 30, 1993),
Executive Order 13563, Improving Regulation and Regulatory Review
(January 18, 2011), the Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA) (September 19,
1980, Pub. L. 96-354), section 202 of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
of 1995 (Pub. L. 104-4), and Executive Order 13132 on Federalism
(August 4, 1999).
Executive Order 12866
Executive Order 12866, Regulatory Planning and Review, directs
agencies to assess all costs and benefits of available regulatory
alternatives and, if regulation is necessary, to select regulatory
approaches that maximize net benefits (including potential economic,
environmental, public health and safety and other advantages,
distributive impacts, and equity). A regulatory impact analysis (RIA)
must be prepared for major rules with economically significant effects
($100 million or more in any one year). Based on our analysis, we
believe that the proposed rulemaking does not constitute an
economically significant regulatory action.
The Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act requires agencies to analyze
regulatory options that would minimize any significant impact of the
rule on small entities. For the purpose of this analysis, small
entities include small business concerns as defined by the Small
Business Administration (SBA), usually businesses with fewer than 500
employees. Applicants who are eligible to apply for the loan repayment
awards are individuals, not small entities. The Secretary certifies
that this rule will not have a significant impact on a significant
number of small entities.
Section 202(a) of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995
Section 202(a) of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 requires
that agencies prepare a written statement that includes an assessment
of anticipated costs and benefits before proposing ``any rule that
includes any Federal mandate that may result in the expenditure by
State, local, and tribal organizations, in the aggregate, or by the
private sector, of ``$100,000,000 or more (adjusted annually for
inflation with base year of 1995) in any one year.'' The current
inflation-adjusted threshold is approximately $145.5 million. The
Secretary certifies that this rule does not mandate any spending by
State, local or tribal government in the aggregate or by the private
sector. Participation in the NIH loan repayment programs is voluntary
and not mandated.
Executive Order 13132
Executive Order 13132, Federalism, requires that Federal agencies
consult with State and local government officials in the development of
regulatory policies with federalism implications. We reviewed the rule
as required under the Order, and determined that it does not have
``federalism implications'' because it will not have substantial direct
effect on the States, the relationship between the National Government
and the States, or on the distribution of power and responsibilities
among the various levels of government. Accordingly, under E.O. 13132,
no further Agency action or analysis is required.
Paperwork Reduction Act
This proposed rule does not contain any new information collection
requirements that are subject to Office of Management and Budget (OMB)
approval under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. chapter
35). More specifically, Sec. 68.6 is a reporting requirement, but the
specifics of the burden are determined in the approved application
forms used by the NIH Loan Repayment Programs and have been approved
under OMB No. 0925-0361, Expiration Date: June 30, 2014. Additionally,
Sec. 68.3(c), Sec. 68.3(e), Sec. 68.11(c), Sec. 68.14(c), Sec.
68.14(d), and Sec. 68.16(a) are reporting requirements and/or
recordkeeping requirements, but they are also covered under OMB No.
0925-0361.
Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance
The Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance numbered programs
affected by the proposed regulations are:
93.209--Contraception and Infertility Research Loan Repayment Program
93.220--Clinical Research Loan Repayment Program for Individuals from
Disadvantaged Backgrounds
93.232--Loan Repayment Program for General Research
93.280--NIH Loan Repayment Program for Clinical Researchers
93.285--NIH Pediatric Research Loan Repayment Program
[[Page 10457]]
93.307--Minority Health and Health Disparities Research
93.308--Extramural Loan Repayment for Individuals From Disadvantaged
Backgrounds Conducting Clinical Research
93.936--NIH Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome Research Loan Repayment
Program
List of Subjects in 42 CFR Part 68
Health professions, Loan repayment programs--health, Medical
research.
For reasons presented in the preamble, it is proposed to amend
title 42 of the Code of Federal Regulations by rescinding the current
regulations at parts 68a and 68c, and adding Part 68 that encompasses
all NIH Loan Repayment Programs, as set forth below.
PART 68--NATIONAL INSTITUTES OF HEALTH (NIH) LOAN REPAYMENT
PROGRAMS (LRPs)
Sec.
68.1 What is the scope and purpose of the NIH LRPs?
68.2 Definitions.
68.3 Who is eligible to apply?
68.4 Who is eligible to participate?
68.5 Who is ineligible to participate?
68.6 How do individuals apply to participate in the NIH LRPs?
68.7 How are applicants selected to participate in the NIH LRPs?
68.8 What do the NIH LRPs provide to participants?
68.9 What loans qualify for repayment?
68.10 What loans are ineligible for repayment?
68.11 What does an individual have to do in return for loan
repayments received under the NIH LRPs?
68.12 How does an individual receive loan repayments beyond the
initial applicable contract period?
68.13 What will happen if an individual does not comply with the
terms and conditions of participation in the NIH LRPs?
68.14 Under what circumstances can the service or payment obligation
be canceled, waived, or suspended?
68.15 When can an NIH LRP payment obligation be discharged in
bankruptcy?
68.16 Additional conditions.
68.17 What other regulations and statutes apply?
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 254o, 42 U.S.C. 288-1, 42 U.S.C. 288-2, 42
U.S.C. 288-3, 42 U.S.C. 288-5, 42 U.S.C. 288-5a, 42 U.S.C. 288-6, 42
U.S.C. 285t-2.
Sec. 68.1 What are the scope and purpose of the NIH LRPs?
The regulations of this part apply to the award of educational loan
payments authorized by sections 487A, 487B, 487C, 487E, 487F,\1\ and
464z-5 of the Public Health Service Act (42 U.S.C. 288-1, 42 U.S.C.
288-2, 42 U.S.C. 288-3, 42 U.S.C. 288-5, 42 U.S.C. 288-5a, 42 U.S.C.
288-6, 42 U.S.C. 285t-2). The purpose of these programs is to address
the need for biomedical and behavioral researchers by providing an
economic incentive to appropriately qualified health professionals who
are engaged in qualifying research supported by domestic nonprofit
funding, or as employees of NIH. The NIH Loan Repayment Programs
include eight separate programs, three that are Intramural (for NIH
researchers) and five that are Extramural (for non-NIH researchers).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ There are two sections 487F. Section 1002(b) of Public Law
106-310 added section 487F, 42 U.S.C. 288-6, the Pediatric Research
Loan Repayment Program. Subsequently, section 205 of Public Law 106-
505 also added section 487F, 42 U.S.C. 288-5a, enacting the Loan
Repayment Program for Clinical Researchers.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
(a) The Intramural LRPs include:
(1) Loan Repayment Program for Research With Respect to Acquired
Immune Deficiency Syndrome (or AIDS Research LRP);
(2) Loan Repayment Program for General Research (or General
Research LRP), including a program for Accreditation Council for
Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) Fellows; and
(3) Loan Repayment Program for Clinical Researchers from
Disadvantaged Backgrounds (or Clinical Research LRP for Individuals
From Disadvantaged Backgrounds). [This program is also included as a
separate program under the Extramural LRPs.]
(b) The Extramural LRPs include:
(1) Loan Repayment Program for Contraception and Infertility
Research (or Contraception and Infertility Research LRP);
(2) Loan Repayment Program for Clinical Researchers From
Disadvantaged Backgrounds (or Clinical Research LRP for Individuals
From Disadvantaged Backgrounds);
(3) Loan Repayment Program for Clinical Researchers (or Clinical
Research LRP);
(4) Loan Repayment Program for Pediatric Research (or Pediatric
Research LRP); and
(5) Loan Repayment Program for Health Disparities Research (or
Health Disparities Research LRP).
Sec. 68.2 Definitions.
As used in this part:
Act: Means the Public Health Service Act, as amended (42 U.S.C. 201
et seq.).
AIDS Research: Means research activities related to the Acquired
Immunodeficiency Syndrome that qualify for inclusion in the AIDS
Research LRP.
Applicant: Means an individual who applies to and meets the
eligibility criteria for the NIH LRPs.
Breach of Contract: Results when a participant fails to complete
the research service or other obligation(s) required under the contract
and may be subject to assessment of monetary damages and penalties as
defined by statute.
Clinical Research: Is patient-oriented clinical research conducted
with human subjects, or research on the causes and consequences of
disease in human populations involving material of human origin (such
as tissue specimens and cognitive phenomena) for which an investigator
or colleague directly interacts with human subjects in an outpatient or
inpatient setting to clarify a problem in human physiology,
pathophysiology or disease, or epidemiologic or behavioral studies,
outcomes research or health services research, or developing new
technologies, therapeutic interventions, or clinical trials.
Commercial Loans: Means loans made for educational purposes by
banks, credit unions, savings and loan associations, not-for-profit
organizations, insurance companies, schools, and other financial or
credit institutions that are subject to examination and supervision in
their capacity as lending institutions by an agency of the United
States or of the State in which the lender has its principal place of
business.
Contraception Research: Is defined as research with the ultimate
goal of providing new or improved methods of preventing pregnancy.
Current Payment Status: Means that a qualified educational loan is
not past due in its payment schedule, as determined by the lending
institution.
Debt Threshold: Means the minimum amount of qualified educational
debt an individual must have, on their program eligibility date, in
order to be eligible for LRP benefits, as established by the Secretary.
Director: Means the Director of the National Institute on Minority
Health and Health Disparities (NIMHD) or designee.
Educational Expenses: Means the cost of the health professional's
undergraduate, graduate, and health professional school's education,
including the tuition expenses and other educational expenses such as
living expenses, fees, books, supplies, educational equipment and
materials, and laboratory expenses.
Extramural LRPs: Refers to those programs for which health
professionals, who are not NIH
[[Page 10458]]
employees and have program-specified degrees and domestic nonprofit
support, are eligible to apply. The Extramural LRPs include the (1)
Contraception and Infertility Research LRP, (2) Clinical Research LRP
for Individuals from Disadvantaged Backgrounds, (3) Clinical Research
LRP, (4) Pediatric Research LRP, and (5) Health Disparities Research
LRP.
General Research: Pertains to research that falls within the basic
science or clinical research parameters and is not targeted toward a
specific area (e.g., AIDS) or type of research (e.g., clinical
research). The focus is on biomedical and behavioral research studies
and investigations across a variety of scientific disciplines within
the mission of NIH.
Government Loans: Means educational loans made by U.S. Federal,
State, county, or city agencies that are authorized by law to make such
loans.
Health Disparities Population: A population is a health disparity
population if, as determined by the Director after consultation with
the Director of the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, there
is a significant disparity in the overall rate of disease incidence,
prevalence, morbidity, mortality, or survival rates in the population
as compared to the health status of the general population.
Individual From Disadvantaged Background:
(1) Comes from an environment that inhibited the individual from
obtaining the knowledge, skill and ability required to enroll in and
graduate from a health professions school; or
(2) Comes from a family with an annual income below a level based
on low-income thresholds according to family size published by the U.S.
Bureau of the Census, adjusted annually for changes in the Consumer
Price Index, and adjusted by the Secretary for use in HHS programs. The
Secretary periodically publishes these income levels in the Federal
Register.
Infertility Research: Is defined as research with the long-range
objective of evaluating, treating or ameliorating conditions that
result in the failure of couples to either conceive or bear young.
Institute or Center (IC): Means an Institute or Center of the
National Institutes of Health (NIH).
Intramural LRPs: Refers to those programs for which applicants must
be employed by NIH. The intramural LRPs include the (1) AIDS Research
LRP, (2) General Research LRP, and (3) Clinical Research LRP for
Individuals from Disadvantaged Backgrounds.
Institutional Base Salary or Salary: Is the annual income or
compensation that the organization pays for the applicant's
appointment, whether the time is spent on research, teaching, patient
care, or other activities.
Living Expenses: Means the reasonable cost of room and board,
transportation and commuting costs, and other reasonable costs incurred
during an individual's attendance at an educational institution and is
part of the educational loan.
Loan Repayment Programs (LRPs): Refers to the NIH Loan Repayment
Programs including those authorized by sections 487A, 487B, 487C, 487E,
487F, and 464z-5 of the Act, as amended.
Loan Repayment Program Contract: Refers to the agreement signed by
an applicant and the Secretary or Director (for the following
extramural LRPs: Health Disparities Research LRP and Clinical Research
LRP for Individuals from Disadvantaged Backgrounds only). Under such an
agreement, an Intramural LRP applicant agrees to conduct qualified
research as an NIH employee, and an Extramural LRP applicant agrees to
conduct qualified research supported by domestic nonprofit funding, in
exchange for repayment of the applicant's qualified educational loan(s)
for a prescribed period.
NIH: Refers to the National Institutes of Health.
Nonprofit Funding/Support: Applicants must conduct qualifying
research supported by a domestic nonprofit foundation, nonprofit
professional association, or other nonprofit institution (e.g.,
university), or a U.S. or other government agency (Federal, State or
local). A domestic foundation, professional association, or institution
is considered to be nonprofit if exempt from Federal tax under the
provisions of Section 501 of the Internal Revenue Code (26 U.S.C. 501).
Participant: Means an individual whose application to any of the
NIH LRPs has been approved and whose Program contract has been executed
by the Secretary or the Director.
Pediatric Research: Is defined as research directly related to
diseases, disorders, and other conditions in children, including
pediatric pharmacology.
Program: Refers to the NIH Loan Repayment Program, or LRP.
Program eligibility date: Means the date on which an individual's
LRP contract is executed by the Secretary or the Director.
Qualified Educational Loans and Interest/Debt: (See Educational
Expenses) as established by the Secretary, include Government and
commercial educational loans and interest for (1) undergraduate,
graduate, and health professional school tuition expenses; (2) other
reasonable educational expenses required by the school(s) attended,
including fees, books, supplies, educational equipment and materials,
and laboratory expenses; and (3) reasonable living expenses, including
the cost of room and board, transportation and commuting costs, and
other reasonable living expenses incurred.
Reasonable Educational and Living Expenses: Means those educational
and living expenses that are equal to or less than the sum of the
school's estimated standard student budget for educational and living
expenses for the degree program and for the year(s) during which the
participant was enrolled in school. If there is no standard budget
available from the school, or if the participant requests repayment for
educational and living expenses that exceed the standard student
budget, reasonableness of educational and living expenses incurred must
be substantiated by additional contemporaneous documentation, as
determined by the Secretary.
Repayable debt: Means the proportion, as established by the
Secretary, of an individual's total qualified educational debt that can
be paid by an NIH LRP.
Salary: Has the same meaning as ``institutional base salary.''
School: Means undergraduate, graduate, and health professions
schools that are accredited by a body or bodies recognized for
accreditation purposes by the U.S. Secretary of Education.
Secretary: Means the Secretary of Health and Human Services or
designee.
Service: Means the Public Health Service.
State: Means one of the fifty States, the District of Columbia, the
Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the Northern Mariana Islands, the U.S.
Virgin Islands, Guam, American Samoa, and the Federated States of
Micronesia, the Republic of the Marshall Islands, and the Republic of
Palau.
Waiver: Means a waiver of the service obligation granted by the
Secretary when compliance by the participant is impossible or would
involve extreme hardship, or where enforcement with respect to the
individual would be unconscionable. (See ``Breach of Contract.'')
Withdrawal: Means a request by a participant, prior to the Program
making payments on his or her behalf, for withdrawal from Program
participation. A withdrawal is without penalty to the
[[Page 10459]]
participant and without obligation to the Program.
Sec. 68.3 Who is eligible to apply?
To be eligible for consideration for the NIH LRPs, applicants must
meet the following criteria:
(a) Be citizens, nationals, or permanent residents of the United
States;
(b) Have the necessary degree from an accredited institution as
determined by the NIH to be consistent with the needs of the LRP;
(c)(1) For Intramural LRPs only: Applicants must be employed by the
NIH and engage in qualified full-time research as specified by the LRP
and be recommended by the employing IC or have a firm commitment of
employment from an authorized official of the NIH;
(2) For Extramural LRPs only: Applicants must be conducting
qualified research for an average of at least 20 hours per week that is
supported by a domestic nonprofit foundation, nonprofit professional
association, or other nonprofit institution (e.g., university), or a
U.S. or other government agency (Federal, State or local);
(d) Have total qualifying educational loan debt as determined on
the program eligibility date;
(e) The NIH or the employing institution must provide an assurance
that the applicant will be employed/appointed and provided research
support for the applicable term of the LRP contract; and
(f) Recipients of LRP awards must conduct their research in
accordance with applicable Federal, State, and local law (e.g.,
applicable human subject protection regulations).
(g) For Clinical Research for Individuals from Disadvantaged
Background only: Individual must be from a disadvantaged background.
(See Sec. 68.2, Definitions, Individual from Disadvantaged
Background.)
Sec. 68.4 Who is eligible to participate?
To be eligible to participate in the NIH LRPs, individuals must:
(a) Meet the eligibility requirements specified in Sec. 68.3;
(b) Not be ineligible for participation as specified in Sec. 68.5;
(c) Engage in qualified research for the contractual period;
(d) Engage in such research for the percentage of time specified
for the particular LRP; and
(e) Comply with all other terms and conditions of the applicable
Loan Repayment Program.
Sec. 68.5 Who is ineligible to participate?
The following individuals are ineligible for NIH LRP participation:
(a) Persons who do not meet the eligibility requirements as
specified under Sec. 68.3;
(b) Any individual who has or had a Federal judgment lien against
his/her property arising from Federal debt;
(c) Persons who owe an obligation of health professional service to
the Federal Government, a State, or other entity, unless deferrals or
extensions are granted for the length of the service of their LRP
contract. The following are examples of programs that have a service
obligation:
(1) Armed Forces (Army, Navy, or Air Force) Professions Scholarship
Program,
(2) Exceptional Financial Need (EFN) Scholarship Program,
(3) Financial Assistance for Disadvantaged Health Professions
Students (FADHPS),
(4) Indian Health Service (IHS) Scholarship Program,
(5) National Health Service Corps (NHSC) Scholarship Program,
(6) National Research Service Award (NRSA) Program,
(7) NIH Undergraduate Scholarship Program (UGSP),
(8) Physicians Shortage Area Scholarship Program,
(9) Primary Care Loan (PCL) Program, and
(10) Public Health Service Scholarship (PHS) Program;
(d) For extramural LRPs only: Individuals who receive any research
funding support or salary from a for-profit institution or
organization, or Federal Government employees working more than 20
hours per week;
(e) Current recipients of NIH intramural training awards, e.g., NIH
Intramural Research Training Awards (IRTA) or Cancer Research Training
Awards (CRTA);
(f) Individuals conducting research for which funding is precluded
by Federal law, regulation, or HHS/NIH policy or that does not comply
with applicable Federal, State, and local law regarding the conduct of
the research (e.g., applicable human subject protection regulations);
(g) Individuals with only ineligible loans or loans that are not
educational; and
(h) Individuals who do not have sufficient qualifying educational
debt to meet the debt threshold.
Sec. 68.6 How do individuals apply to participate in the NIH LRPs?
An application for participation in an NIH LRP shall be submitted
to the NIH, which is responsible for the Program's administration, in
such form and manner as the Secretary prescribes.
Sec. 68.7 How are applicants selected to participate in the NIH LRPs?
The NIH LRP awards are competitive. To be selected for
participation in an NIH LRP, applicants must satisfy the following
requirements:
(a) Applicants must meet the eligibility requirements specified in
Sec. 68.3 and Sec. 68.4.
(b) Applicants must not be ineligible for participation as
specified in Sec. 68.5.
(c) Upon receipt, applications for any of the NIH LRPs will be
reviewed for eligibility and completeness by the NIH Division of Loan
Repayment. Incomplete or ineligible applications will not be processed
or reviewed further.
(d)(1) Applications for the Intramural LRPs that are deemed
eligible and complete are submitted to the Loan Repayment Committee
(LRC), which reviews, ranks, and approves/disapproves LRP awards. The
LRC is composed of senior intramural scientists, including basic
(bench) and clinical researchers and science policy administrators.
Since LRP participation in the Intramural programs is contingent upon
NIH employment, applicants must be recommended by the employing IC of
the NIH to be considered by the LRC.
(2) Applications for the Extramural LRPs that are deemed eligible
and complete will be referred by the NIH Center for Scientific Review
(CSR) to an appropriate NIH IC for peer review. In evaluating the
application, reviewers are directed to consider the following
components and how they relate to the likelihood that the applicant
will continue in a research career:
(i) Applicant's potential to pursue a career in research as defined
by the appropriate LRP:
(A) Appropriateness of the applicant's previous training and
experience to prepare for a research career.
(B) Appropriateness of the proposed research activities during the
LRP contract to foster a career in research.
(C) Commitment to a research career, as reflected by the personal
statement of long-term career goals and plan to achieve those goals.
(D) Strength of the letters of recommendations attesting to the
applicant's potential for a successful career in research.
(ii) Quality of the overall environment to prepare the applicant
for a research career:
(A) Quality and availability of appropriate scientific mentors and
colleagues to help achieve or enhance the applicant's research
independence,
[[Page 10460]]
including the mentors' record in mentoring researchers, funding
history, and research productivity.
(B) Quality and appropriateness of institutional resources and
facilities.
(iii) For the Health Disparities Research LRP, at least 50 percent
of the contracts are required by statute to be for appropriately
qualified health professionals who are members of a health disparity
population.
Sec. 68.8 What do the NIH LRPs provide to participants?
(a) Loan Repayments: For each year of the applicable service period
the individual agrees to serve, the NIH may pay up to $35,000 per year
of a participant's repayable debt.
(b) Payments are made directly to a participant's lender(s). If
there is more than one outstanding qualified educational loan, the NIH
will repay the loans in the following order, unless the NIH determines
significant savings would result from paying loans in a different order
of priority:
(1) Loans guaranteed by the U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services;
(2) Loans guaranteed by the U.S. Department of Education;
(3) Loans made or guaranteed by a State;
(4) Loans made by a school; and
(5) Loans made by other entities.
(c) Tax Liability Payments: In addition to the loan repayments, the
NIH shall make tax payments in an amount equal to 39 percent of the
total annual loan repayment to the Internal Revenue Service on the
participant's behalf. The NIH may make additional payments to those
participants who show increased Federal, State, and/or local taxes as a
result of loan repayments.
(d) Under Sec. 68.8(a), (b), and (c), the NIH will make loan and
tax liability payments to the extent appropriated funds are available
for these purposes.
Sec. 68.9 What loans qualify for repayment?
The NIH LRPs will repay participants' lenders the principal,
interest, and related expenses of qualified U.S. Government and
commercial educational loans obtained by participants for the
following:
(a) Undergraduate, graduate, and health professional school tuition
expenses;
(b) Other reasonable educational expenses required by the school(s)
attended, including fees, books, supplies, educational equipment and
materials, and laboratory expenses; and
(c) Reasonable living expenses, including the cost of room and
board, transportation and commuting costs, and other living expenses,
as determined by the NIH.
Sec. 68.10 What loans are ineligible for repayment?
The following loans are ineligible for repayment under the NIH
LRPs:
(a) Loans not obtained from a bank, credit union, savings and loan
association, not-for-profit organization, insurance company, school,
and other financial or credit institution that is subject to
examination and supervision in its capacity as a lending institution by
an agency of the United States or of the State in which the lender has
its principal place of business;
(b) Loans for which supporting documentation is not available;
(c) Loans that have been consolidated with loans of other
individuals, such as spouses or children;
(d) Loans or portions of loans obtained for educational or living
expenses that exceed the standard of reasonableness as determined by
the participant's standard school budget for the year in which the loan
was made and are not determined by the NIH to be reasonable based on
additional documentation provided by the individual;
(e) Loans, financial debts, or service obligations incurred under
the following programs, or similar programs, which provide loans,
scholarships, loan repayments, or other awards in exchange for a future
service obligation:
(1) Armed Forces (Army, Navy, or Air Force) Professions Scholarship
Program,
(2) Exceptional Financial Need (EFN) Scholarship Program,
(3) Financial Assistance for Disadvantaged Health Professions
Students (FADHPS),
(4) Indian Health Service Scholarship Program,
(5) National Health Service Corps Scholarship Program,
(6) National Institutes of Health Undergraduate Scholarship Program
(UGSP),
(7) National Research Service Award (NRSA) Program,
(8) Physicians Shortage Area Scholarship Program,
(9) Primary Care Loans (PCL), and
(10) Public Health Service Scholarship Program;
(f) Any loan in default, delinquent, or not in a current payment
status;
(g) Any Federal educational loan debt--including debt arising from
the conversion of a service obligation to a loan--that has been in
default or written off as uncollectible is ineligible for repayment
under the Program, even if currently considered to be in good standing;
(h) Loan amounts that participants were due to have been paid prior
to the LRP contract start date;
(i) Parents PLUS loans (except the Graduate PLUS loans for
students);
(j) Loans for which promissory notes have been signed after the LRP
contract start date (with the exception of qualifying student loan
consolidations); and
(k) Home equity loans or other noneducational loans.
Sec. 68.11 What does an individual have to do in return for loan
repayments received under the NIH LRPs?
Individuals must agree to:
(a) Engage in qualified research for the applicable contract
service period;
(b)(1) For Intramural LRPs: Engage in such research full-time as
employees of NIH, or; (2) For Extramural LRPs: Engage in such research
for an average of 20 hours per week supported by a domestic nonprofit
foundation, nonprofit professional association, or other nonprofit
institution (e.g., university), or a U.S. or other government agency
(Federal, State or local);
(c) Keep all loan accounts in good standing, provide timely
documentation as needed, including payment verification, service
verification, change of research, change of institution, etc. Failure
to provide such documentation may result in early termination, and the
individual may be subject to statutory financial penalties; and
(d) Satisfy all of the other terms and conditions of the LRP and
the LRP Contract (e.g., Obligations of the Participant). Failure to
adhere to the terms and conditions of the LRP contract may result in
early termination, and the individual may be subject to statutory
financial penalties.
Sec. 68.12 How does an individual receive loan repayments beyond the
initial applicable contract period?
An individual may apply for a competitive extension contract for at
least a one-year period if the individual is engaged in qualifying
research and satisfies the eligibility requirements specified under
Sec. 68.3 and Sec. 68.4 for the extension period and has remaining
repayable debt as established by the Secretary.
Sec. 68.13 What will happen if an individual does not comply with the
terms and conditions of participation in the NIH LRPs?
Program participants who breach their Loan Repayment Program
Contracts will be subject to the applicable monetary payment provisions
set forth at section 338E of the Act (42 U.S.C. 254o). Payment of any
amount owed under
[[Page 10461]]
section 338E of the Act shall be made within one year of the date the
participant breached his or her Loan Repayment Program Contract, unless
the NIH specifically authorizes a longer period. Terminations will not
be considered a breach of contract in cases where such terminations are
beyond the control of the participant as follows:
(a) Terminations for convenience of the Government will not be
considered a breach of contract and monetary damages will not be
assessed.
(b) Occasionally, a participant's research assignment or funding
may evolve and change to the extent that the individual is no longer
engaged in approved research. Similarly, the research needs and
priorities of the IC and/or the NIH may change to the extent that a
determination is made that a health professional's skills may be better
utilized in a nonresearch assignment. Normally, job changes of this
nature will not be considered a breach of contract on the part of
either the NIH or the participant. Under these circumstances, the
following will apply:
(1) Program participation will cease as of the date an individual
is no longer engaged in approved research;
(2) Based on the approval of the NIH, the participant will be
released from the remainder of his or her service obligation without
assessment of damages or monetary penalties. The participant in this
case will be permitted to retain all Program benefits made or owed by
the NIH on his/her behalf up to the date the individual is no longer
engaged in research, less the pro rata portion of any benefits advanced
beyond the period of completed service.
Sec. 68.14 Under what circumstances can the service or payment
obligation be canceled, waived, or suspended?
(a) Any obligation of a participant for service or payment will be
canceled upon the death of the participant.
(b) The NIH may waive or suspend any service or payment obligation
incurred by the participant upon request whenever compliance by the
participant: (1) Is impossible, (2) would involve extreme hardship to
the participant, or (3) if enforcement of the service or payment
obligation would be unconscionable. The NIH may approve a request for a
suspension of the service or payment obligations for a period of up to
one (1) year.
(c) Compliance by a participant with a service or payment
obligation will be considered impossible if the NIH determines, on the
basis of information and documentation as may be required, that the
participant suffers from a permanent physical or mental disability
resulting in the inability of the participant to perform the service or
other activities that would be necessary to comply with the obligation.
(d) In determining whether to waive or suspend any or all of the
service or payment obligations of a participant as imposing an undue
hardship and being against good conscience, the NIH, on the basis of
such information and documentation as may be required, will consider:
(1) The participant's present financial resources and obligations; (2)
the participant's estimated future financial resources and obligations;
and (3) the extent to which the participant has problems of a personal
nature, such as a physical or mental disability or terminal illness in
the immediate family, which so intrude on the participant's present and
future ability to perform as to raise a presumption that the individual
will be unable to perform the obligation incurred.
Sec. 68.15 When can an NIH LRP payment obligation be discharged in
bankruptcy?
Any payment obligation incurred under Sec. 68.13 may be discharged
in bankruptcy under Title 11 of the United States Code only if such
discharge is granted after the expiration of the seven-year period
beginning on the first date that payment is required and only if the
bankruptcy court finds that a nondischarge of the obligation would be
unconscionable.
Sec. 68.16 Additional conditions.
(a) When a shortage of funds exists, participants may be funded
only partially, as determined by the NIH. However, once an NIH LRP
contract has been signed by both parties, the NIH will obligate such
funds as necessary to ensure that sufficient funds will be available to
pay benefits for the duration of the period of obligated service
unless, by mutual written agreement, the parties specify otherwise.
(b) Additional conditions may be imposed as deemed necessary.
Sec. 68.17 What other regulations and statutes apply?
Several other regulations and statutes apply to this part. These
include, but are not necessarily limited to:
Debt Collection Act of 1982 (31 U.S.C. 3701 note);
Fair Credit Reporting Act (15 U.S.C. 1681 et seq.);
Federal Debt Collection Procedures Act of 1990 (28 U.S.C. 176); and
Privacy Act of 1974 (5 U.S.C. 552a).
Dated: September 28, 2011.
Francis S. Collins,
Director, NIH, National Institutes of Health.
Approved: February 7, 2012.
Kathleen Sebelius,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2012-3900 Filed 2-21-12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4140-01-P