Inviting Applications for Value-Added Producer Grants, 48951-48959 [2012-20082]
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Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 158 / Wednesday, August 15, 2012 / Notices
The meeting will be held at
the Alpine Early Learning Center, 100
Foothill Road, Markleeville, CA.
Written comments may be submitted
as described under Supplementary
Information. All comments, including
names and addresses when provided,
are placed in the record and are
available for public inspection and
copying. The public may inspect
comments received at the Carson Ranger
District, 1536 S. Carson St, Carson City,
NV. Please call ahead to 775–884–8140
to facilitate entry into the building to
view comments.
ADDRESSES:
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Daniel Morris, RAC Coordinator, Carson
Ranger District, 775–884–8140,
danielmorris@fs.fed.us.
Individuals who use
telecommunication devices for the deaf
(TDD) may call the Federal Information
Relay Service (FIRS) at 1–800–877–8339
between 8 a.m. and 8 p.m., Eastern
Standard Time, Monday through Friday.
The
following business will be conducted:
(1) Review and recommend funding
allocation for proposed projects for 2012
funding (2) Public Comment. Anyone
who would like to bring related matters
to the attention of the committee may
file written statements with the
committee staff before or after the
meeting. Written comments and
requests for time for oral comments
must be sent to 1536 S. Carson St.,
Carson City, NV. 89701, or by email to
danielmorris@fs.fed.us, or via facsimile
to 775–884–8199. A summary of the
meeting will be posted at https://
fsplaces.fs.fed.us/fsfiles/unit/wo/
secure_rural_schools.nsf within 21 days
of the meeting.
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in the section titled FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT. All reasonable
accommodation requests are managed
on a case by case basis.
srobinson on DSK4SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Dated: August 9, 2012.
David M. Palmer,
Acting District Ranger.
[FR Doc. 2012–20015 Filed 8–14–12; 8:45 am]
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DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Rural Business-Cooperative Service
Inviting Applications for Value-Added
Producer Grants
Rural Business-Cooperative
Service, USDA.
ACTION: Notice of Funding Availability
(NOFA).
AGENCY:
USDA announces the
availability of grants through the ValueAdded Producer Grant (VAPG) program
for Fiscal Year 2012. Approximately $14
million in competitive grant funds for
FY 2012 is available to help agricultural
producers enter into value-added
activities. At the discretion of the
Secretary, additional funds may be
made available to qualified ranking
applications that respond to this
announcement from prior year carryover funds.
Awards may be made for either
economic planning or working capital
activities related to the processing and/
or marketing of valued-added
agricultural products. The maximum
grant amount for a planning grant is
$100,000 and the maximum grant
amount for a working capital grant is
$300,000.
There is a matching funds
requirement of at least $1 for every $1
in grant funds provided by the Agency
(matching funds plus grant funds must
equal proposed total project costs).
Matching funds may be in the form of
cash or eligible in-kind contributions
and may be used only for eligible
project purposes. Matching funds must
be available at time of application and
must be certified and verified as
described in 7 CFR 4284.931(b)(3) and
(4). See 7 CFR 4284.923 and 7 CFR
4284.924 for examples of eligible and
ineligible uses of matching funds.
Ten percent of available funds are
reserved to fund applications submitted
by Beginning Farmers or Ranchers and
Socially Disadvantaged Farmers or
Ranchers, and an additional 10 percent
of available funds are reserved to fund
applications from farmers or ranchers
that propose development of Mid-Tier
Value Chain projects (both collectively
referred to as ‘‘reserved funds’’). See 7
CFR 4284.925 and 7 U.S.C. 1632(a).
DATES: You must submit your
application by October 15, 2012 or it
will not be considered for funding
announced in this Notice. Paper
applications must be postmarked and
mailed, shipped or sent overnight by
this date. Electronic applications are
permitted via www.grants.gov only, and
SUMMARY:
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must be received before midnight on
this date.
ADDRESSES: You should contact your
USDA Rural Development State Office if
you have questions about eligibility or
submission requirements. You are
encouraged to contact your State Office
well in advance of the application
deadline to discuss your project and to
ask any questions about the application
process. You may request technical
assistance from your State Office up to
14 days prior to the application
deadline. Application materials are
available at https://
www.rurdev.usda.gov/BCP_VAPG.html.
If you want to submit an electronic
application, follow the instructions for
the VAPG funding announcement on
https://www.grants.gov. If you want to
submit a paper application, send it to
the State Office located in the State
where your project will primarily take
place. You can find State Office Contact
information at https://
www.rurdev.usda.gov/recd_map.html or
see the following list:
Alabama
USDA Rural Development State Office,
Sterling Centre, Suite 601, 4121
Carmichael Road, Montgomery, AL 36106–
3683, (334) 279–3400/TDD (334) 279–3495.
Alaska
USDA Rural Development State Office, 800
West Evergreen, Suite 201, Palmer, AK
99645–6539, (907) 761–7705/TDD (907)
761–8905.
American Samoa (see Hawaii)
Arizona
USDA Rural Development State Office, 230
N. 1st Ave., Suite 206, Phoenix, AZ 85003,
(602) 280–8701/TDD (602) 280–8705.
Arkansas
USDA Rural Development State Office, 700
West Capitol Avenue, Room 3416, Little
Rock, AR 72201–3225, (501) 301–3200/
TDD (501) 301–3279.
California
USDA Rural Development State Office, 430 G
Street, # 4169, Davis, CA 95616–4169,
(530) 792–5800/TDD (530) 792–5848.
Colorado
USDA Rural Development State Office,
Denver Federal Center, Building 56, Room
2300, PO Box 25426, Denver, CO 80225–
0426, (720) 544–2903.
Commonwealth of the Northern Marianas
Islands-CNMI (see Hawaii)
Connecticut (see Massachusetts)
Delaware-Maryland
USDA Rural Development State Office, 1221
College Park Drive, Suite 200, Dover, DE
19904, (302) 857–3580/TDD (302) 857–
3585.
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58502–1737, (701) 530–2037/TDD (701)
530–2113.
Federated States of Micronesia (see Hawaii)
Marshall Islands (see Hawaii)
Florida/Virgin Islands
Maryland (see Delaware)
USDA Rural Development State Office, 4440
NW 25th Place, P.O. Box 147010,
Gainesville, FL 32614–7010, (352) 338–
3400/TDD (352) 338–3499.
Massachusetts/Rhode Island/Connecticut
Georgia
Michigan
USDA Rural Development State Office,
Stephens Federal Building, 355 E. Hancock
Avenue, Athens, GA 30601–2768, (706)
546–2162/TDD (706) 546–2034.
USDA Rural Development State Office, 3001
Coolidge Road, Suite 200, East Lansing, MI
48823, (517) 324–5190/TDD (517) 324–
5169.
Guam (see Hawaii)
Minnesota
USDA Rural Development State Office, 375
Jackson Street, Suite 410, St. Paul, MN
55101–1853, (651) 602–7800/TDD (651)
602–3799.
Hawaii/Guam/Republic of Palau/Federated
States of Micronesia/Republic of the
Marshall Islands/American Samoa/
Commonwealth of the Northern Marianas
Islands—CNMI
USDA Rural Development State Office,
Federal Building, Room 311, 154
Waianuenue Avenue, Hilo, HI 96720, (808)
933–8380/TDD (808) 933–8321.
Idaho
USDA Rural Development State Office, 9173
West Barnes Drive, Suite A1, Boise, ID
83709, (208) 378–5600/TDD (208) 378–
5644.
Illinois
USDA Rural Development State Office, 2118
West Park Court, Suite A, Champaign, IL
61821, (217) 403–6200/TDD (217) 403–
6240.
Indiana
USDA Rural Development State Office, 5975
Lakeside Boulevard, Indianapolis, IN
46278, (317) 290–3100/TDD (317) 290–
3343.
Iowa
USDA Rural Development State Office,
Federal Building, Room 873, 210 Walnut
Street, Des Moines, IA 50309, (515) 284–
4663/TDD (515) 284–4858.
Kansas
USDA Rural Development State Office, 1303
S.W. First American Place, Suite 100,
Topeka, KS 66604–4040, (785) 271–2700/
TDD (785) 271–2767.
Kentucky
USDA Rural Development State Office, 771
Corporate Drive, Suite 200, Lexington, KY
40503, (859) 224–7300/TDD (859) 224–
7422.
Mississippi
USDA Rural Development State Office,
Federal Building, Suite 831, 100 West
Capitol Street, Jackson, MS 39269, (601)
965–4316/TDD (601) 965–5850.
Missouri
USDA Rural Development State Office, 601
Business Loop 70 West, Parkade Center,
Suite 235, Columbia, MO 65203, (573)
876–0976/TDD (573) 876–9480.
Montana
USDA Rural Development State Office, 2229
Boot Hill Court, Bozeman, MT 59715–
7914, (406) 585–2580/TDD (406) 585–2562.
Nebraska
USDA Rural Development State Office,
Federal Building, Room 152, 100
Centennial Mall North, Lincoln, NE 68508,
(402) 437–5551/TDD (402) 437–5093.
Nevada
USDA Rural Development State Office, 1390
South Curry Street, Carson City, NV
89703–5146, (775) 887–1222/TDD 7–1–1.
New Hampshire (see Vermont)
New Jersey
USDA Rural Development State Office, 8000
Midlantic Drive, 5th Floor North, Suite
500, Mt. Laurel, NJ 08054, (856) 787–7700/
TDD (856) 787–7784.
New Mexico
USDA Rural Development State Office, 6200
Jefferson Street NE, Room 255,
Albuquerque, NM 87109, (505) 761–4950/
TDD (505) 761–4938.
Ohio
USDA Rural Development State Office,
Federal Building, Room 507, 200 North
High Street, Columbus, OH 43215–2418,
(614) 255–2400/TDD (614) 255–2554.
Oklahoma
USDA Rural Development State Office, 100
USDA, Suite 108, Stillwater, OK 74074–
2654, (405) 742–1000/TDD (405) 742–1007.
Oregon
USDA Rural Development State Office, 1201
NE Lloyd Blvd., Suite 801, Portland, OR
97232, (503) 414–3300/TDD (503) 414–
3387.
Palau (see Hawaii)
Pennsylvania
USDA Rural Development State Office, One
Credit Union Place, Suite 330, Harrisburg,
PA 17110–2996, (717) 237–2299/TDD (717)
237–2261.
Puerto Rico
USDA Rural Development State Office, IBM
Building, Suite 601, 654 Munos Rivera
Avenue, San Juan, PR 00918–6106, (787)
766–5095/TDD (787) 766–5332.
Rhode Island (see Massachusetts)
South Carolina
USDA Rural Development State Office, Strom
Thurmond Federal Building, 1835
Assembly Street, Room 1007, Columbia, SC
29201, (803) 765–5163/TDD (803) 765–
5697.
South Dakota
USDA Rural Development State Office,
Federal Building, Room 210, 200 Fourth
Street SW., Huron, SD 57350, (605) 352–
1100/TDD (605) 352–1147.
Tennessee
USDA Rural Development State Office, 3322
West End Avenue, Suite 300, Nashville,
TN 37203–1084, (615) 783–1300
Texas
USDA Rural Development State Office,
Federal Building, Suite 102, 101 South
Main, Temple, TX 76501, (254) 742–9700/
TDD (254) 742–9712.
New York
USDA Rural Development State Office, The
Galleries of Syracuse, 441 South Salina
Street, Suite 357, Syracuse, NY 13202–
2541, (315) 477–6400/TDD (315) 477–6447.
Utah
USDA Rural Development State Office,
Wallace F. Bennett Federal Building, 125
South State Street, Room 4311, Salt Lake
City, UT 84138, (801) 524–4321/TDD (801)
524–3309.
Maine
North Carolina
USDA Rural Development State Office, 4405
Bland Road, Suite 260, Raleigh, NC 27609,
(919) 873–2000/TDD (919) 873–2003.
USDA Rural Development State Office, 967
Illinois Avenue, Suite 4, P.O. Box 405,
Bangor, ME 04402–0405, (207) 990–9160/
TDD (207) 942–7331.
North Dakota
USDA Rural Development State Office,
Federal Building, Room 208, 220 East
Rosser, P.O. Box 1737, Bismarck, ND
Vermont/New Hampshire
USDA Rural Development State Office, City
Center, 3rd Floor, 89 Main Street,
Montpelier, VT 05602, (802) 828–6080/
TDD (802) 223–6365.
Virginia
USDA Rural Development State Office, 1606
Santa Rosa Road, Suite 238, Richmond, VA
Louisiana
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USDA Rural Development State Office, 451
West Street, Suite 2, Amherst, MA 01002–
2999, (413) 253–4300/TDD (413) 253–4590.
Northern Mariana Islands (see Hawaii)
USDA Rural Development State Office, 3727
Government Street, Alexandria, LA 71302,
(318) 473–7921/TDD (318) 473–7655.
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23229–5014, (804) 287–1550/TDD (804)
287–1753.
Virgin Islands (see Florida)
Washington
USDA Rural Development State Office, 1835
Black Lake Boulevard SW., Suite B,
Olympia, WA 98512–5715, (360) 704–
7740/TDD (360) 704–7760.
West Virginia
USDA Rural Development State Office, 1550
Earl Core Road, Suite 101, Morgantown,
WV 26505, (304) 284–4860/TDD (304) 284–
4836.
Western Pacific (see Hawaii)
Wisconsin
USDA Rural Development State Office, 4949
Kirschling Court, Stevens Point, WI 54481,
(715) 345–7600/TDD (715) 345–7614.
Wyoming
USDA Rural Development State Office, 100
East B, Federal Building, Room 1005, P.O.
Box 11005, Casper, WY 82602–5006, (307)
233–6700/TDD (307) 233–6733.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Office of the Deputy Administrator,
Cooperative Programs, Rural BusinessCooperative Service, United States
Department of Agriculture, 1400
Independence Avenue SW., MS–3250,
Room 4016–South, Washington, DC
20250–3250, (202) 720–8460.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Paperwork Reduction Act
In accordance with the Paperwork
Reduction Act, the paperwork burden
associated with this Notice has been
approved by the Office of Management
and Budget (OMB) under OMB Control
Number 0570–0039.
Overview
Federal Agency Name: Rural
Business-Cooperative Service.
Funding Opportunity Title: ValueAdded Producer Grants.
Announcement Type: Funding
Announcement.
Catalog of Federal Domestic
Assistance Number: 10.352.
srobinson on DSK4SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
I. Funding Opportunity Description
A. Purpose of the Program
The primary objective of this grant
program is to help Independent
Producers of agricultural commodities,
Agriculture Producer Groups, Farmer
and Rancher Cooperatives, and
Majority-Controlled Producer-Based
Business Ventures enter into valueadded activities related to the
processing and/or marketing of biobased value-added agricultural
products. Grants will be awarded
competitively for either planning or
working capital projects directly related
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to the processing and/or marketing of
value-added products. Generating new
products, creating and expanding
marketing opportunities, and increasing
producer income are the end goals.
Applications that support aspects of
regional strategic planning, cooperative
development, sustainable farming, and
local and regional food systems are
encouraged. Proposals must
demonstrate economic viability and
sustainability in order to compete for
funding.
As part of this funding initiative,
funding priority will be available to
Beginning Farmers and Ranchers,
Socially-Disadvantaged Farmers and
Ranchers, Operators of Small and
Medium-Sized Farms and Ranches that
are structured as a Family Farm, Farmer
or Rancher Cooperatives, and projects
proposing to develop a Mid-Tier Value
Chain. See 7 CFR 4284.922(c) for
Reserved Funding and 7 CFR
4284.922(d) for Priority Point categories
and requirements.
The VAPG Program is authorized
under section 231 of the Agriculture
Risk Protection Act of 2000 (Pub. L.
106–224), as amended by section 6202
of the Food, Conservation, and Energy
Act of 2008 (Pub. L. 110–246) (see 7
U.S.C. 1632a). Applicants must adhere
to the program requirements contained
in the program regulation, 7 CFR 4284,
subpart J, which is incorporated by
reference in this Notice.
B. Definition of Terms
The terms you need to understand are
defined in 7 CFR 4284.902. In addition,
there has been some confusion on the
Agency’s meaning of the terms
‘‘Harvester,’’ and ‘‘Steering Committee,’’
because these terms are only referenced
as part of the Independent Producer
definition and are not specifically
defined in the regulation used for the
program. Therefore, these terms are
defined below and should be
understood as follows.
Harvester: Harvesters are individuals
or entities that demonstrate their legal
right to access and harvest a primary
agricultural commodity; and are not
individuals or entities that merely glean,
gather or collect residual commodities
that result from an initial harvesting or
production of a primary agricultural
commodity. Examples of Harvesters
may include, but are not limited to, a
logger who has a legal right to access
and harvest logs from the forest that are
then converted into boards; a fisherman
that has the legal right to access and
harvest fish from the ocean or river that
are then smoked. For clarification, it is
the Agency’s position that Harvesters
may only apply as an Independent
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48953
Producer applicant type because
harvester operations do not meet
Agency definition requirements for a
Farm or Ranch. Harvester applicants
will not be eligible to receive Reserve
Funds for a Beginning Farmer or
Rancher or a Socially Disadvantaged
Farmer or Rancher; and will not be
eligible to receive Priority Points for a
Beginning Farmer or Rancher, a Socially
Disadvantaged Farmer or Rancher,
Operator of a Small or Medium-sized
Farm or Ranch structured as a Family
Farm, or a Farmer or Rancher
Cooperative. However, Harvesters may
request Reserve Funds and/or Priority
Points for a qualifying Mid-Tier Value
Chain project if eligibility is
documented in the application.
Steering Committee: A Steering
Committee is an unincorporated group
of specifically identified Agricultural
Producers that lacks a legal structure or
identity and is in the process of
organizing one of the four program
eligible entity types that will operate a
value-added venture and will supply
the majority of the agricultural
commodity for the value-added project.
For clarification, it is the Agency’s
position that a Steering Committee may
only apply as an Independent Producer
applicant type and must be 100 percent
comprised of Independent Producers at
time of application submission. If
selected for award of funds, and before
the grant agreement will be approved by
the Agency, the Steering Committee
members must form a legally authorized
organization that meets requirements for
one of the four program eligible
applicant types and provide the
necessary documentation for approval
by the Agency.
Finally, in support of the ValueAdded Agricultural Product definition
requirements in 7 CFR 4284.902, the
Agency directs that applicants
demonstrate expansion of customer base
for the agricultural commodity by
including a baseline of current
customers for the commodity, and an
estimated target number of customers
that will result from the project; and
demonstrate the estimated amount of
the increased portion of the revenue
derived from the marketing, processing
or physical segregation of the
agricultural commodity that will be
available to the applicant’s producers of
the agricultural commodity, by
including a baseline of current revenues
from the sale of the agricultural
commodity and an estimated target
number of increased revenues that will
result from the project.
II. Award Information
Type of Instrument: Grant.
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Fiscal Year Funds: FY 2012.
Approximate Number of Awards: 120.
Available Total Funding:
Approximately $14 million.
Minimum Award Amount: Not
restricted for planning or working
capital. In FY 2011, 49 percent of
awards were $50,000 or less.
Maximum Award Amount:
Planning—$100,000; Working Capital—
$300,000.
Anticipated Award Date: January 18,
2013.
Grant Period Length: The maximum
grant period is 3 years from date of
award. Proposed grant periods should
be scaled to the complexity of the
objectives of the project.
III. Eligibility Information
srobinson on DSK4SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
A. Eligible Applicants
You must be an Independent
Producer, Agricultural Producer Group,
Farmer or Rancher Cooperative, or a
Majority Controlled Produced-Based
Business to apply to this program; and
you must meet all related requirements
for Emerging Market (as applicable),
Citizenship, Legal Authority and
Responsibility, Multiple Grants and
Active Grants. In addition, you must
meet Departmental requirements related
to debarment, suspension and exclusion
from participation in Federal assistance
programs, as well as requirements
related to outstanding Federal income
taxes, judgments and delinquencies. For
detailed requirements, see 7 CFR
4284.920 and 7 CFR 4284.921.
As a special emphasis, Rural
Development encourages applications
from Federally Recognized Tribal
Groups and corporations and
subdivisions of Tribal Groups
undertaking or planning to undertake
eligible value-added projects. For
further tribal eligibility questions,
please contact your local Rural
Development office.
As part of applicant eligibility, it is
important to clarify that all four
applicant types must meet the
Independent Producer and Agricultural
Producer definition requirements in 7
CFR 4284.902, including, but not
limited to, production and ownership of
the majority of the raw agricultural
commodity that will be transformed into
the proposed value-added product for
the project. All applicants must
maintain ownership of the raw
agricultural commodity through the
production and marketing of the valueadded product, with one partial
exception for Mid-Tier Value Chain
projects noted in its definition in 7 CFR
4284.902. Businesses that contract out
the production of an agricultural
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commodity are not considered
Independent Producers, and businesses
that produce the agricultural commodity
under contract for another business and
do not own the raw commodity or
value-added product produced are not
considered Independent Producers.
Finally, all applicants for working
capital funds must document the
quantity of the agricultural commodity
that will be used for the value-added
product, expressed in an appropriate
unit of measure (acres, pounds, bushels,
etc.) to demonstrate the scale of the
applicant’s project. This quantification
must include an estimated total quantity
of the agricultural commodity needed
for the project, the quantity that will be
provided (produced and owned) by the
agricultural producers of the applicant
organization, and the quantity that will
be purchased or donated from thirdparty sources. The application must
demonstrate that the amount of
applicant commodity contributed to the
project is the majority of the total
agricultural commodity needed for the
value-added project.
B. Project Eligibility
Your project must meet (1) Product
Eligibility requirements related to the
definition of Value-Added Agricultural
Product, including value-added
methodologies, expansion of customer
base for the agricultural commodity, and
increased revenues returning to the
applicant’s producers of the agricultural
commodity as a result of the project; (2)
Purpose Eligibility requirements related
to maximum grant amounts,
certification and verification of
matching funds, eligible and ineligible
uses of grant and matching funds for
planning or working capital activities,
including requirements related to
conflicts of interest and ineligible
expenses in excess of 10 percent of total
project costs, a substantive work plan
and budget, independent feasibility
study and/or business plan
requirements for working capital
projects (subject to Agency concurrence
of financial feasibility, as defined in 7
CFR 4284.902), including demonstration
of readiness to implement the working
capital activities, and identification of
the number of jobs expected to be
created or saved as a result of the
project; (3) Reserved Funds Eligibility
requirements if you choose to compete
for Reserved Funds as a Beginning
Farmer or Rancher, a Socially
Disadvantaged Farmer or Rancher, or if
you propose to develop a Mid-Tier
Value Chain; and (4) Priority Status
Eligibility requirements if you request
priority points in the competition for a
project that contributes to increasing
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opportunities for Beginning Farmers or
Ranchers, Socially Disadvantaged
Farmers or Ranchers, or if you are an
Operator of a Small or Medium-sized
farm or ranch that is structured as a
Family Farm, propose a Mid-Tier Value
Chain project, or are a Farmer or
Rancher Cooperative. For detailed
requirements, see 7 CFR 4284.922, 7
CFR 4284.923 and 7 CFR 4284.924.
Note: If you are applying for a working
capital grant that requires a project-specific
independent feasibility study and/or
business plan, you must submit those
documents with your application. In
addition, you must summarize relevant
results of the feasibility study and business
plan in response to the scoring criteria, as
applicable, because reviewers will not
receive copies of your feasibility study or
business plan when scoring your application.
Based on the information presented in the
application, including a feasibility study
and/or business plan where required, the
applicant must demonstrate that the project
is financially feasible and can achieve the
income, credit and cash flows to sustain the
venture over the long term. Applications
with inadequate information or projects
deemed not financially feasible by the
Agency will be deemed not eligible to
compete for grant funding. See 7 CFR
4284.922(b)(6).
Note: If you request Reserve Funds, you
must document eligibility for the
requirements stated in 7 CFR 4284.922(c).
Ten percent of available funds are reserved
to fund applications submitted by Beginning
Farmers or Ranchers and Socially
Disadvantaged Farmers or Ranchers, as
defined in 7 CFR 4284.902. An additional 10
percent of available funds are reserved to
fund Mid-Tier Value Chain projects. If your
application is eligible, but does not receive
Reserve Funding, it will automatically be
considered for general funds in that same
fiscal year, as funding levels permit and in
accord with project ranking. As previously
noted, Harvester operations are not
considered a Farm or Ranch and are not
eligible for Reserve Funds for a Beginning
Farmer or Rancher or a Socially
Disadvantaged Farmer or Rancher; however,
Harvester operations may request Reserve
Funds for a qualifying Mid-Tier Value Chain
project, as applicable.
C. Other Eligibility Requirements
1. Grant Period Eligibility
Your project timeframe or grant
period can be a maximum of 36 months
in length from the date of award. Your
proposed grant period should begin no
earlier than the anticipated award
announcement date herein, January 18,
2013, and should end no later than 36
months following that date. If you
receive an award, your grant period will
be revised to begin on the actual date of
award—the date the grant agreement is
executed by the Agency—and your grant
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period end date will be adjusted
accordingly. Your project activities must
begin within 90 days of that date of
award. If you request funds for a time
period beginning before January 18,
2013, and/or ending later than 36
months from that date, your application
will be ineligible. The length of your
grant period should be based on your
project’s complexity, as indicated in
your application work plan. For
example, it is expected that most
planning grants can be completed
within 12 months. If you cannot finish
your project during the approved
timeframe, you may request an
extension of up to 1 year from your local
Rural Development office. Extensions
will be considered only if unavoidable
or unforeseen circumstances prevent
you from finishing your project.
Extensions beyond 3 years from the
actual date of award will not be
considered.
2. Ineligible Expenses
Applications with ineligible expenses
of more than 10 percent of total project
costs will be ineligible to compete for
funds. Eligible applications that are
selected for award but contain ineligible
expenses of 10 percent or less of total
project costs must remove those
ineligible expenses from the final
project budget that is subject to approval
by the Agency. See 7 CFR 4284.923 for
examples of eligible planning and
working capital use of funds, and see 7
CFR 4284.924 for examples of ineligible
use of funds.
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3. Completeness
If your application is incomplete, it is
ineligible to compete for funds.
4. Registrations
(i) Please note that grant applicants
must obtain a Dun and Bradstreet Data
Universal Numbering System (DUNS)
number pursuant to 2 CFR 25.200(b).
You must provide your DUNS number
in the application, or it will be ineligible
for funding. A DUNS number can be
obtained at no cost via a toll-free request
line at (866) 705–5711 or online at
https://www.dnb.com.
(ii) Please note also that pursuant to
2 CFR 25.200(b) grant applicants must
register in the Central Contractor
Registration (CCR) database, or its
successor database known as the System
for Award Management (SAM), prior to
submitting an application; unless you
are exempt under 2 CFR 25.110. Grant
applicants must maintain an active
CCR/SAM registration with current
information at all times during which
you have an active Federal award or an
application under consideration by the
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Agency. An active CCR/SAM
Registration Cage Code and expiration
date must be included in your
application or it will not be eligible for
funding.
To register in the database, visit
https://www.sam.gov/ or call the Federal
Service Desk for assistance by dialing 1–
(866) 606–8220 and press ‘1’ (See 2 CFR
part 25). Since there are no specific
fields for a Registration Cage Code and
expiration date, please enter them in
field 5(a) ‘‘Federal Entity Identifier’’ on
Form SF 424.
(iii) Similarly, all recipients of Federal
financial assistance are required to
report information about first-tier subawards and executive compensation in
accordance with 2 CFR part 170. So long
as an entity applicant does not have
exception under 2 CFR 170.110(b), the
applicant must have the necessary
processes and systems in place to
comply with the reporting requirements
should the applicant receive funding.
See 2 CFR 170.200(b).
IV. Fiscal Year 2012 Application and
Submission Information
A. Address To Request Applications
The application guide, government
forms, regulation, and official program
notifications for this funding
opportunity can be obtained online at
https://www.rurdev.usda.gov/BCP_
VAPG.html. Or, you can contact your
USDA Rural Development State Office
by visiting https://www.rurdev.usda.gov/
recd_map.html.
B. Form of Submission
You may submit your application in
paper form or electronically through
Grants.gov. Your application must
contain all required information.
To submit an application
electronically, you must follow the
instructions for this funding
announcement at https://
www.grants.gov. Please note that we
cannot accept emailed or faxed
applications. You can locate the
Grants.gov downloadable application
package for this program by using a
keyword, the program name, or the
Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance
Number for this program. When you
enter the Grants.gov Web site, you will
find information about submitting an
application electronically through the
site, as well as the hours of operation.
We strongly recommend that you do not
wait until the application deadline date
to begin the application process through
Grants.gov. You must submit all of your
application documents electronically
through Grants.gov. After electronically
submitting an application through
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48955
Grants.gov, you will receive an
automatic acknowledgement from
Grants.gov that contains a Grants.gov
tracking number.
If you want to submit a paper
application, send it to the State Office
located in the State where your project
will primarily take place. You can find
State Office Contact information at
https://www.rurdev.usda.gov/recd_map.
html or see the list of State Offices at the
beginning of this Notice. An optionaluse Agency application template is
available online at https://www.rurdev.
usda.gov/BCP_VAPG.html.
C. Application Contents
Your application must contain all of
the required forms and proposal
elements described in 7 CFR 4284.931,
unless otherwise clarified in this notice.
Specifically, your application must
include (1) the required forms as
described in 7 CFR 4284.931(a), except
(i) you do not need to submit Form RD
1940–20, ‘‘Request for Environmental
Information,’’ because planning and
working capital requests in this program
are generally excluded from the
environmental review process, and (ii)
corporate applicants must also complete
Form AD–3030, ‘‘Representations
Regarding Felony Conviction and Tax
Delinquent Status for Corporate
Applicants’’; and (2) the required
proposal elements as described in 7 CFR
4284.931(b). Further clarification of
application requirements is as follows:
In addition, you must include a onepage Executive Summary containing the
following information: legal name of
applicant entity, application type
(planning or working capital), applicant
type, amount of grant request, a
summary of your project, whether you
are submitting a simplified application,
and whether you are competing for
reserve funds.
Further, certifications for the
following, among others specified
elsewhere, must be included in the
application:
1. Awards made under this Notice are
subject to the provisions contained in
the Agriculture, Rural Development,
Food and Drug Administration, and
Related Agencies Appropriations Act,
2012, Public Law 112–55, Division A
sections 738 and 739 regarding
corporate felony convictions and
corporate federal tax delinquencies. To
comply with these provisions, all
applicants must complete paragraph (A)
of this representation, and all corporate
applicants also must complete
paragraphs (B) and (C) of this
representation:
(A) Applicant, [insert applicant name], __
is __ is not (check one) an entity that has
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filed articles of incorporation in one of the
fifty states, the District of Columbia, or the
various territories of the United States
including American Samoa, Federated States
of Micronesia, Guam, Midway Islands,
Northern Mariana Islands, Puerto Rico,
Republic of Palau, Republic of the Marshall
Islands, U.S. Virgin Islands.
(B) Applicant, [insert applicant name], __
has __ has not (check one) been convicted of
a felony criminal violation under Federal or
state law in the 24 months preceding the date
of application. Applicant __ has __ has not
(check one) had any officer or agent of the
Applicant convicted of a felony criminal
violation for actions taken on behalf of the
Applicant under Federal or State law in the
24 months preceding the date of the signature
on the application.
(C) Applicant, [insert applicant name], __
has __ does not have (check one) any unpaid
Federal tax liability that has been assessed,
for which all judicial and administrative
remedies have been exhausted or have
lapsed, and that is not being paid in a timely
manner pursuant to an agreement with the
authority responsible for collecting the tax
liability.
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2. You must certify that there are no
current outstanding Federal judgments
against your property and that you will
not use grant funds to pay for any
judgment obtained by the United States.
To satisfy this certification requirement,
you should include this statement in
your application: ‘‘[INSERT NAME OF
APPLICANT] certifies that the United
States has not obtained an unsatisfied
judgment against its property and will
not use grant funds to pay any
judgments obtained by the United
States.’’ A separate signature is not
required.
D. Simplified Applications
If you are requesting less than $50,000
in working capital grant funds, you may
submit a simplified application. See 7
CFR 4284.932. You are not required to
provide an independent feasibility
study or business plan. You are required
to provide information to show the
increases in customer base and revenues
expected to be derived from the project
that will benefit the producer applicants
supplying the majority of the
agricultural commodity for the project.
References to information from thirdparty sources that support your
conclusions will enhance your
application and improve scoring. Also
see 7 CFR 4284.922(b)(6)(ii).
If you are an Independent Producer
applicant type applying for a working
capital grant of $50,000 or more, and
your project is for market expansion of
an existing value-added product(s) that
you have successfully produced and
marketed for at least 2 years prior to the
submission of the application, and is a
value-added product that you have
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produced from more than 50 percent of
your own agricultural commodity, you
must submit a business or marketing
plan for the project, but are not required
to submit a feasibility study. Your
application must contain adequate
information to demonstrate the
increases in customer base and revenues
expected to be derived from the project
that will benefit the applicant producers
supplying the majority of the
agricultural commodity for the project.
References to information from thirdparty sources that support your
conclusions will enhance your
application and improve scoring. See 7
CFR 4284.922(b)(6)(i).
E. Funding Restrictions
Funding limitations and reservations
found in the program regulation will
apply. See 7 CFR 4284.925.
1. Use of Funds
Grant funds may be used to pay up to
50 percent of the total eligible project
costs, subject to the limitations
established for maximum total grant
amount. Grant and matching funds may
only be used for eligible purposes (see
7 CFR 4284.923) and may not be used
for ineligible purposes (see 7 CFR
4284.924). If Program Income is earned
during the grant period as a result of the
project activities, it is subject to the
requirements in 7 CFR 3019.24, and
must be managed and reported
accordingly.
2. Majority Controlled Producer-Based
Business
The aggregate amount of awards to
Majority Controlled Producer-Based
Businesses in response to this
announcement shall not exceed 10
percent of the total funds obligated for
the program during the fiscal year.
3. Reserved Funds
In response to this announcement, 10
percent of total funding available will be
used to fund projects that benefit
Beginning Farmers or Ranchers, or
Socially-Disadvantaged Farmers or
Ranchers. In addition, 10 percent of
total funding available will be used to
fund projects that propose development
of Mid-Tier Value Chains as part of a
Local or Regional Supply Chain
Network. See related definitions in 7
CFR 4284.902.
4. Disposition of Reserved Funds Not
Obligated
For this announcement, any Reserved
Funds that have not been obligated by
June 30, 2012, will be available to the
Secretary to make VAPG grants from the
fund categories addressed at 7 CFR
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4284.922 (c). After awards have been
selected from each Reserved Fund, any
excess unobligated funds will revert to
general funds.
F. Intergovernmental Review
Executive Order (EO) 12372,
‘‘Intergovernmental Review of Federal
Programs,’’ applies to this program. This
EO requires that Federal agencies
provide opportunities for consultation
on proposed assistance with State and
local governments that have chosen to
participate in that process. Those states
have established a Single Point of
Contact (SPOC) to facilitate this
consultation. For a list of states that
maintain an SPOC, please see the White
House Web site: https://www.
whitehouse.gov/omb/grants_spoc. If
your state has an SPOC, you must
submit a copy of the application directly
for review. Any comments obtained
through the SPOC must be provided to
your State Office for consideration as
part of your application.
V. Application Review Information
Applications will be reviewed and
processed as described at 7 CFR
4284.940.
A. Application Eligibility and
Notifications
The Agency will conduct a review of
your application to determine if it is
complete and eligible. If the Agency
determines that your application is
ineligible at any time, then you will be
notified in writing as to the reasons it
was determined ineligible and you will
be informed of any review or appeal
rights.
If, at any time after you have
submitted your application, you decide
that you no longer want to request grant
funding, you must notify the Agency in
writing. Upon receipt of your
notification, the Agency will rescind the
award or withdraw the application, as
applicable.
B. Application Scoring
The Agency will only score
applications in which the applicant and
project are eligible, which are complete
and sufficiently responsive to program
requirements, and in which the Agency
agrees on the likelihood of financial
feasibility for working capital requests.
We will score your application
according to the procedures and criteria
specified in 7 CFR 4284.942, and with
tiered scoring thresholds as specified
below.
For each criterion, you must show
how the project has merit and why it is
likely to be successful. If you do not
address all parts of the criterion, or do
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not sufficiently communicate relevant
project information, you will receive
lower scores. The maximum number of
points that can be awarded to your
application is 100. For this
announcement, there is no minimum
score requirement for funding. Note: If
you are submitting a working capital
application that requires a feasibility
study and/or business plan, you must
submit those documents along with
your application. In addition, you must
summarize within your application
relevant results of the feasibility study/
business plan in response to the scoring
criteria, as applicable, because
reviewers will not receive copies of your
feasibility study/business plan when
evaluating your proposal and assigning
scores. The Agency application package
provides additional instruction to help
you to respond to the criteria below.
1. Nature of the Proposed Venture
(Graduated Score 0–30 Points)
For both planning and working
capital grants, you should discuss the
technological feasibility of the project,
as well as the operational efficiency,
profitability, and overall economic
sustainability resulting from the project.
In addition, demonstrate the potential
for expanding the customer base for the
agricultural commodity or value-added
product, and the expected increase in
revenue returns to the producer-owners
providing the majority of the raw
agricultural commodity to the project.
You should reference third-party
information that specifically supports
your value-added project; discuss the
value-added process you are proposing;
potential markets and distribution
channels; the value to be added to the
raw commodity through the valueadded process; cost and availability of
inputs, your experience in marketing
the proposed or similar product;
business financial statements; and any
other relevant information that supports
the viability of your project. Working
capital applicants should demonstrate
these concepts that will result from the
project. Planning grant applicants
should describe the expected results,
and the reasons supporting those
expectations.
Points will be awarded as follows:
(i) 0 points will be awarded if you do
not substantively address this criterion.
(ii) 10 points will be awarded if the
criterion is poorly addressed.
(iii) 20 points will be awarded if the
criterion is partially addressed.
(iv) 30 points will be awarded if you
clearly articulate the rationale for the
project and show a high likelihood of
success based on technological
feasibility and economic sustainability.
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2. Qualifications of Project Personnel
(Graduated Score 0–20 Points)
4. Work Plan and Budget (Graduated
Score 0–20 Points)
You should identify and describe the
qualifications of each person
responsible for leading or managing the
total project, as well as the people
responsible for actually conducting the
individual tasks in the work plan. You
should discuss the credentials,
education, capabilities, experience,
availability and commitment of each
person working on the project. If staff or
consultants have not been selected at
the time of application, you should
describe the qualifications required for
the positions to be filled. Points will be
awarded as follows:
(i) 0 points will be awarded if you do
not substantively address this criterion.
(ii) 10 points will be awarded if at
least one of the identified staff or
consultants demonstrates 5 or more
years of relevant experience; or, if no
project personnel have been identified
but necessary qualifications for the
positions to be filled are clearly
described.
(iii) 20 points will be awarded if all
of the identified staff demonstrates
relevant qualifications and experience.
You must submit a comprehensive
work plan and budget (for full details,
see 7 CFR 4284.922(b)(5)). Your work
plan must provide specific and detailed
descriptions of the tasks and the key
project personnel that will accomplish
the project’s goals. The budget must
present a detailed breakdown of all
estimated costs of project activities and
allocate those costs among the listed
tasks. You must show the source and
use of both grant and matching funds for
all tasks. Matching funds must be spent
at a rate equal to, or in advance of, grant
funds. An eligible start and end date for
the project and for individual project
tasks must be clearly shown and may
not exceed Agency specified timeframes
for the grant period. Working Capital
applications must include an estimate of
Program Income expected to be earned
during the grant period (see 7 CFR
3019.24).
(i) 0 points will be awarded if the
work plan and budget do not
substantively address this criterion.
(ii) 10 points will be awarded if the
work plan and budget only partially
address this criterion.
(iii) 20 points will be awarded if a
detailed, comprehensive work plan and
budget is provided.
3. Commitments and Support
(Graduated Score 0–10 Points)
Your application must show that the
project has strong direct financial,
technical and logistical support from
agricultural producers, end-users, and
other third party contributors who are
necessary for the successful completion
of the project. All cash or in-kind
contributions from producers, end
users, or other contributors should be
discussed. End-user commitments may
include contracts or letters of intent or
interest in purchasing the value-added
product. Third-party commitments may
include evidence of critical
partnerships, logistical, or technical
support necessary for the project to
succeed. Points will be awarded as
follows:
(i) 0 points will be awarded if you do
not show that you have quality
commitments or support from
producers, end-users or other critical
third party contributors.
(ii) 5 points will be awarded if you
partially show real, high quality direct
support or commitments from at least
one producer, end user, or other third
party contributor.
(iii) 10 points will be awarded if you
show real, high quality direct support or
commitments from multiple producers,
end-users and critical third-party
contributors.
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5. Priority Points (Lump Sum Score 0 or
10 Points)
Priority points may be awarded in
both the general funds competition, as
well as the Reserve Funds competitions.
You may request priority points if you
meet the requirements for one of the
following categories and provide the
documentation described in 7 CFR
4284.922(d), as applicable:
Beginning Farmer or Rancher, or
Socially Disadvantaged Farmer or
Rancher, or
Operator of a Small or Medium-sized
farm or ranch that is structured as a
Family Farm, or
Farmer or Rancher Cooperative, or
Mid-Tier Value Chain project.
It is recommended that you use the
Agency application package when
applying for priority points and refer to
the documentation requirements
specified in 7 CFR 4284.922(d).
Harvester operations are not considered
a Farm or Ranch and are not eligible for
priority points for a Beginning Farmer
or Rancher, a Socially Disadvantaged
Farmer or Rancher, an Operator of a
Small or Medium-sized farm or ranch
that is structured as a Family Farm, or
a Farmer or Rancher Cooperative;
however, Harvester operations may
request priority points for a qualifying
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Mid-Tier Value Chain project, as
applicable. All qualifying applicants
will receive 10 points. If you do not
provide sufficient documentation you
will receive 0 points.
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6. Administrator Priority Categories
(Graduated Score 0–10 Points)
The Administrator of USDA Rural
Development Business-Cooperative
Service (RBS) may choose to award up
to 10 points to an application to
improve the geographic diversity of
awardees in a fiscal year.
C. Selection of Applications
The Agency will select applications
for award under this Notice in
accordance with the provisions
specified in 7 CFR 4284.950(a).
We will first review your application
for eligibility and to determine if it is
complete and sufficiently responsive to
the requirements of the program to
allow for an informed review (see 7 CFR
4284.940).
If your application is eligible and
complete, it will be scored by two
reviewers based on criteria specified in
section V.B. of this Notice. One of these
reviewers will be a Rural Development
employee from your servicing State
Office and the other reviewer will be a
non-Federal, independent reviewer. The
State Office may enlist the support of
technical experts, qualified as described
below and approved by the State
Director, to assist the State Office
scoring process. All reviewers must
meet the following qualifications.
Reviewers must have at least a
bachelor’s degree in one or more of the
following fields: agri-business, business,
economics, finance, or marketing. They
must also have a minimum of 3 years of
experience in an agriculture-related
field (e.g. farming, marketing,
consulting, university professor,
research, officer for trade association,
government employee for an
agricultural program). If the reviewer
does not have a degree in one of those
fields, he/she must have at least 5 years
of working experience in an agriculturerelated field.
Both reviewers will score evaluation
criteria 1 through 4 and the totals for
each reviewer will be added together
and averaged. The Rural Development
reviewer will also assign priority points
based on criterion 5 in section V.B. of
this Notice. These will be added to the
average score. The sum of these scores
will be ranked high to low and this will
comprise the initial ranking.
The Administrator of RBS may choose
to award up to 10 Administrator priority
points based on criterion 6 in section
V.B. of this Notice. These points will be
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added to the cumulative score for a total
possible score of 100.
A final ranking will be obtained based
solely on the scores received for criteria
1 through 6. Applications for reserved
funding will be funded in rank order
until funds are depleted. Unfunded
reserve category applications will be
returned to the general funds category
where applications will be funded in
rank order until the funds are depleted.
Funding for Majority Controlled
Producer-Based Business Ventures
(MAJ) is limited to 10 percent of total
grant funds expected to be obligated as
a result of this Notice. MAJ applications
will be funded in rank order until the
funding limitation has been reached.
Grants to MAJ applicants from reserved
funds will count against this funding
limitation.
If your application is ranked, but not
funded, it will not be carried forward
into the next competition. We will
notify you in writing if your application
is not selected for funding and inform
you of any appeal rights. You may
submit an updated application for
consideration during the next round of
funding.
3. Compliance With Other Laws and
Regulations
VI. Award Administrative Information
7. Grant Close-Out and Related
Activities
A. Award Notices
If your application is successful, you
will receive notification regarding
funding from the State Office where
your application is submitted or where
the project will primarily take place if
you submit your application via
Grants.gov. You must comply with all
applicable statutes, regulations, and
notice requirements before the grant
award will be approved. See 7 CFR
4284.951. If your application is not
successful, you will receive notification,
including review, mediation procedures
and appeal rights, by mail. See 7 CFR
part 11.
B. Administrative and National Policy
Requirements
1. Review or Appeal Rights
A person may seek a review of an
Agency decision or appeal to the
National Appeals Division in
accordance with 7 CFR part 11.
2. Transparency Act Requirements
All recipients of Federal financial
assistance are required to report
information about first-tier sub-awards
and executive compensation (see 2 CFR
part 170). You will be required to have
the necessary processes and systems in
place to comply with the Transparency
Act reporting requirements (see 2 CFR
170.200(b), unless you are exempt under
2 CFR 170.110(b)).
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The provisions of 7 CFR 4284.905
applies to this Notice, which includes
requiring applicants to be in compliance
with other applicable Federal laws.
4. Monitoring and Reporting Program
Performance
The provisions of 7 CFR 4284.960
applies to this Notice.
5. Grant Servicing
All grants awarded under this Notice
shall be serviced in accordance with 7
CFR part 1951, subparts E and O as
applicable, and the Departmental
Regulations (7 CFR parts 3000–3099),
with the exception that delegation of the
post-award servicing of the program
does not require the prior approval of
the Administrator.
6. Transfer of Obligations
Any transfer of funds obligated under
this Notice from an applicant to a
different applicant must comply with
the requirements specified in 7 CFR
4284.962.
The provisions of 7 CFR 4284.963
applies to this Notice.
8. Exception Authority
The provisions of 7 CFR 4284.904
applies to this Notice.
9. Departmental Regulations
Unless specifically stated otherwise in
this Notice or in 7 CFR part 4284,
subpart J, this Notice incorporates by
reference the regulations of the
Department of Agriculture’s Office of
Chief Financial Officer (or successor
office) as codified in 7 CFR parts 3000
through 3099, including, but not
necessarily limited to, 7 CFR parts 3015
through 3019, 7 CFR part 3021, 7 CFR
part 3052, and 2 CFR parts 25, 170 and
417; and successor regulations to these
parts.
10. Cost Principles
This Notice incorporates by reference
the cost principles found in 2 CFR part
230 and in 48 CFR 31.2.
D. Environmental Review
All recipients under this Notice are
subject to the requirements of 7 CFR
part 1940, subpart G and any successor
regulations. However, 7 CFR 1940.333,
7 CFR 1940.310(c)(1) and 7 CFR
1940.317(g)(2) generally exclude
applications for both planning and
working capital grants.
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VII. Agency Contacts
If you have questions about this
Notice, please contact the State Office as
identified in the ADDRESSES section of
this Notice. You are also encouraged to
visit the application Web site for
application tools, including an
application guide and templates. The
web address is: https://
www.rurdev.usda.gov/BCP_VAPG.html.
VIII. Nondiscrimination Statement
USDA prohibits discrimination in all
its programs and activities on the basis
of race, color, national origin, age,
disability, and where applicable, sex,
marital status, familial status, parental
status, religion, sexual orientation,
genetic information, political beliefs,
reprisal, or because all or part of an
individual’s income is derived from any
public assistance program. Not all
prohibited bases apply to all programs.
Persons with disabilities who require
alternative means for communication of
program information (Braille, large
print, audiotape, etc.) should contact
USDA’s TARGET Center at (202) 720–
2600 (voice and TDD).
To file a complaint of discrimination
write to USDA, Director, Office of
Adjudication and Compliance, 1400
Independence Avenue SW.,
Washington, DC 20250–9410 or call
(800) 795–3272 (voice) or (202) 720–
6382 (TDD). USDA is an equal
opportunity provider, employer, and
lender.
Dated: August 8, 2012.
Curtis A. Wiley,
Acting Administrator, Rural Business—
Cooperative Service.
[FR Doc. 2012–20082 Filed 8–14–12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3410–XY–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
srobinson on DSK4SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
Submission for OMB Review;
Comment Request
The Department of Commerce will
submit to the Office of Management and
Budget (OMB) for clearance the
following proposal for collection of
information under the provisions of the
Paperwork Reduction Act (44 U.S.C.
Chapter 35).
Agency: National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).
Title: Evaluation of Interpretative
Signs Located Along the California
Coastline Part of the California Signage
Plan Initiative.
OMB Control Number: None.
Form Number(s): NA.
Type of Request: Regular submission
(request for a new information
collection).
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:49 Aug 14, 2012
Jkt 226001
Number of Respondents: 400.
Average Hours per Response: 7 to 8
minutes.
Burden Hours: 50.
Needs and Uses: This request is for a
new information collection.
The California Signage Plan is an
organized and systematic way to
develop and install graphic signs along
the California coastline and inland that
interpret the natural and cultural
resources of a particular location and its
connection to the sanctuaries located
within California. To date, a strategic
approach to evaluating interpretive
signs produced by the Office of National
Marine Sanctuaries has not been
developed; therefore, we do not know if
the messages we are trying to convey to
our audiences are effective. We are
proposing to conduct an online and
onsite survey of approximately 400
visitors to the locations where signs are
currently installed. The questions
outlined in the survey examine the
public’s use of the signs, understanding
of the signs’ content, understanding and
awareness of protected areas/zones and
how those messages are portrayed in
regulatory signs, demographics of the
target audience, interest in alternate
sources of interpretive content,
perception of the National Marine
Sanctuaries identity, and awareness of
the national marine sanctuary system.
Affected Public: Individuals or
households.
Frequency: One-time only.
Respondent’s Obligation: Voluntary.
OMB Desk Officer:
OIRA_Submission@omb.eop.gov.
Copies of the above information
collection proposal can be obtained by
calling or writing Jennifer Jessup,
Departmental Paperwork Clearance
Officer, (202) 482–0336, Department of
Commerce, Room 6616, 14th and
Constitution Avenue NW., Washington,
DC 20230 (or via the Internet at
JJessup@doc.gov).
Written comments and
recommendations for the proposed
information collection should be sent
within 30 days of publication of this
notice to
OIRA_Submission@omb.eop.gov.
Dated: August 9, 2012.
Gwellnar Banks,
Management Analyst, Office of the Chief
Information Officer.
[FR Doc. 2012–19967 Filed 8–14–12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–22–P
PO 00000
Frm 00012
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
48959
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
Foreign-Trade Zones Board
[B–63–2012]
Foreign-Trade Zone 133—Quad-Cities,
Iowa/Illinois Application for
Reorganization Under Alternative Site
Framework
An application has been submitted to
the Foreign-Trade Zones (FTZ) Board
(the Board) by the Quad-City ForeignTrade Zone, Inc., grantee of FTZ 133,
requesting authority to reorganize the
zone under the alternative site
framework (ASF) adopted by the Board
(15 CFR 400.2(c)). The ASF is an option
for grantees for the establishment or
reorganization of zones and can permit
significantly greater flexibility in the
designation of new subzones or ‘‘usagedriven’’ FTZ sites for operators/users
located within a grantee’s ‘‘service area’’
in the context of the Board’s standard
2,000-acre activation limit for a zone.
The application was submitted pursuant
to the Foreign-Trade Zones Act, as
amended (19 U.S.C. 81a–81u), and the
regulations of the Board (15 CFR part
400). It was formally filed on August 8,
2012.
FTZ 133 was approved by the Board
on October 29, 1986 (Board Order 338,
51 FR 40238, 11–5–1986) and expanded
on March 31, 2011 (Board Order 1749,
76 FR 19746, 4–8–2011).
The current zone includes the
following sites: Site 1 (223 acres)—River
Cities Industrial Center, 200 East 90th
Street, Davenport, Iowa; Site 2 (33
acres)—Rock Island Arsenal, 1775 East
Street, Rock Island, Illinois; Site 3 (55
acres)—Modern Warehousing, 801 1st
Street East, Milan, Illinois; Site 4 (200
acres)—Eastern Iowa Industrial Center,
Northeast of I–80 and Highway 130,
Davenport, Iowa; and, Site 5 (187
acres)—Iowa Research Commerce &
Technology Park, Northwest of I–80 and
Highway 61, Davenport, Iowa.
The grantee’s proposed service area
under the ASF would be Henderson,
Henry, Mercer, Rock Island and Warren
Counties, Illinois as well as Cedar,
Clinton, Des Moines, Dubuque, Henry,
Jackson, Johnson, Jones, Lee, Louisa,
Muscatine, Scott and Washington
Counties, Iowa, as described in the
application. If approved, the grantee
would be able to serve sites throughout
the service area based on companies’
needs for FTZ designation. The
proposed service area is within and
adjacent to the Davenport, Iowa-Moline
and Rock Island, Illinois Customs and
Border Protection port of entry.
The applicant is requesting authority
to reorganize its existing zone project to
E:\FR\FM\15AUN1.SGM
15AUN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 77, Number 158 (Wednesday, August 15, 2012)]
[Notices]
[Pages 48951-48959]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2012-20082]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Rural Business-Cooperative Service
Inviting Applications for Value-Added Producer Grants
AGENCY: Rural Business-Cooperative Service, USDA.
ACTION: Notice of Funding Availability (NOFA).
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: USDA announces the availability of grants through the Value-
Added Producer Grant (VAPG) program for Fiscal Year 2012. Approximately
$14 million in competitive grant funds for FY 2012 is available to help
agricultural producers enter into value-added activities. At the
discretion of the Secretary, additional funds may be made available to
qualified ranking applications that respond to this announcement from
prior year carry-over funds.
Awards may be made for either economic planning or working capital
activities related to the processing and/or marketing of valued-added
agricultural products. The maximum grant amount for a planning grant is
$100,000 and the maximum grant amount for a working capital grant is
$300,000.
There is a matching funds requirement of at least $1 for every $1
in grant funds provided by the Agency (matching funds plus grant funds
must equal proposed total project costs). Matching funds may be in the
form of cash or eligible in-kind contributions and may be used only for
eligible project purposes. Matching funds must be available at time of
application and must be certified and verified as described in 7 CFR
4284.931(b)(3) and (4). See 7 CFR 4284.923 and 7 CFR 4284.924 for
examples of eligible and ineligible uses of matching funds.
Ten percent of available funds are reserved to fund applications
submitted by Beginning Farmers or Ranchers and Socially Disadvantaged
Farmers or Ranchers, and an additional 10 percent of available funds
are reserved to fund applications from farmers or ranchers that propose
development of Mid-Tier Value Chain projects (both collectively
referred to as ``reserved funds''). See 7 CFR 4284.925 and 7 U.S.C.
1632(a).
DATES: You must submit your application by October 15, 2012 or it will
not be considered for funding announced in this Notice. Paper
applications must be postmarked and mailed, shipped or sent overnight
by this date. Electronic applications are permitted via www.grants.gov
only, and must be received before midnight on this date.
ADDRESSES: You should contact your USDA Rural Development State Office
if you have questions about eligibility or submission requirements. You
are encouraged to contact your State Office well in advance of the
application deadline to discuss your project and to ask any questions
about the application process. You may request technical assistance
from your State Office up to 14 days prior to the application deadline.
Application materials are available at https://www.rurdev.usda.gov/BCP_VAPG.html.
If you want to submit an electronic application, follow the
instructions for the VAPG funding announcement on https://www.grants.gov. If you want to submit a paper application, send it to
the State Office located in the State where your project will primarily
take place. You can find State Office Contact information at https://www.rurdev.usda.gov/recd_map.html or see the following list:
Alabama
USDA Rural Development State Office, Sterling Centre, Suite 601,
4121 Carmichael Road, Montgomery, AL 36106-3683, (334) 279-3400/TDD
(334) 279-3495.
Alaska
USDA Rural Development State Office, 800 West Evergreen, Suite 201,
Palmer, AK 99645-6539, (907) 761-7705/TDD (907) 761-8905.
American Samoa (see Hawaii)
Arizona
USDA Rural Development State Office, 230 N. 1st Ave., Suite 206,
Phoenix, AZ 85003, (602) 280-8701/TDD (602) 280-8705.
Arkansas
USDA Rural Development State Office, 700 West Capitol Avenue, Room
3416, Little Rock, AR 72201-3225, (501) 301-3200/TDD (501) 301-3279.
California
USDA Rural Development State Office, 430 G Street, 4169,
Davis, CA 95616-4169, (530) 792-5800/TDD (530) 792-5848.
Colorado
USDA Rural Development State Office, Denver Federal Center, Building
56, Room 2300, PO Box 25426, Denver, CO 80225-0426, (720) 544-2903.
Commonwealth of the Northern Marianas Islands-CNMI (see Hawaii)
Connecticut (see Massachusetts)
Delaware-Maryland
USDA Rural Development State Office, 1221 College Park Drive, Suite
200, Dover, DE 19904, (302) 857-3580/TDD (302) 857-3585.
[[Page 48952]]
Federated States of Micronesia (see Hawaii)
Florida/Virgin Islands
USDA Rural Development State Office, 4440 NW 25th Place, P.O. Box
147010, Gainesville, FL 32614-7010, (352) 338-3400/TDD (352) 338-
3499.
Georgia
USDA Rural Development State Office, Stephens Federal Building, 355
E. Hancock Avenue, Athens, GA 30601-2768, (706) 546-2162/TDD (706)
546-2034.
Guam (see Hawaii)
Hawaii/Guam/Republic of Palau/Federated States of Micronesia/Republic
of the Marshall Islands/American Samoa/Commonwealth of the Northern
Marianas Islands--CNMI
USDA Rural Development State Office, Federal Building, Room 311, 154
Waianuenue Avenue, Hilo, HI 96720, (808) 933-8380/TDD (808) 933-
8321.
Idaho
USDA Rural Development State Office, 9173 West Barnes Drive, Suite
A1, Boise, ID 83709, (208) 378-5600/TDD (208) 378-5644.
Illinois
USDA Rural Development State Office, 2118 West Park Court, Suite A,
Champaign, IL 61821, (217) 403-6200/TDD (217) 403-6240.
Indiana
USDA Rural Development State Office, 5975 Lakeside Boulevard,
Indianapolis, IN 46278, (317) 290-3100/TDD (317) 290-3343.
Iowa
USDA Rural Development State Office, Federal Building, Room 873, 210
Walnut Street, Des Moines, IA 50309, (515) 284-4663/TDD (515) 284-
4858.
Kansas
USDA Rural Development State Office, 1303 S.W. First American Place,
Suite 100, Topeka, KS 66604-4040, (785) 271-2700/TDD (785) 271-2767.
Kentucky
USDA Rural Development State Office, 771 Corporate Drive, Suite 200,
Lexington, KY 40503, (859) 224-7300/TDD (859) 224-7422.
Louisiana
USDA Rural Development State Office, 3727 Government Street,
Alexandria, LA 71302, (318) 473-7921/TDD (318) 473-7655.
Maine
USDA Rural Development State Office, 967 Illinois Avenue, Suite 4,
P.O. Box 405, Bangor, ME 04402-0405, (207) 990-9160/TDD (207) 942-
7331.
Marshall Islands (see Hawaii)
Maryland (see Delaware)
Massachusetts/Rhode Island/Connecticut
USDA Rural Development State Office, 451 West Street, Suite 2,
Amherst, MA 01002-2999, (413) 253-4300/TDD (413) 253-4590.
Michigan
USDA Rural Development State Office, 3001 Coolidge Road, Suite 200,
East Lansing, MI 48823, (517) 324-5190/TDD (517) 324-5169.
Minnesota
USDA Rural Development State Office, 375 Jackson Street, Suite 410,
St. Paul, MN 55101-1853, (651) 602-7800/TDD (651) 602-3799.
Mississippi
USDA Rural Development State Office, Federal Building, Suite 831,
100 West Capitol Street, Jackson, MS 39269, (601) 965-4316/TDD (601)
965-5850.
Missouri
USDA Rural Development State Office, 601 Business Loop 70 West,
Parkade Center, Suite 235, Columbia, MO 65203, (573) 876-0976/TDD
(573) 876-9480.
Montana
USDA Rural Development State Office, 2229 Boot Hill Court, Bozeman,
MT 59715-7914, (406) 585-2580/TDD (406) 585-2562.
Nebraska
USDA Rural Development State Office, Federal Building, Room 152, 100
Centennial Mall North, Lincoln, NE 68508, (402) 437-5551/TDD (402)
437-5093.
Nevada
USDA Rural Development State Office, 1390 South Curry Street, Carson
City, NV 89703-5146, (775) 887-1222/TDD 7-1-1.
New Hampshire (see Vermont)
New Jersey
USDA Rural Development State Office, 8000 Midlantic Drive, 5th Floor
North, Suite 500, Mt. Laurel, NJ 08054, (856) 787-7700/TDD (856)
787-7784.
New Mexico
USDA Rural Development State Office, 6200 Jefferson Street NE, Room
255, Albuquerque, NM 87109, (505) 761-4950/TDD (505) 761-4938.
New York
USDA Rural Development State Office, The Galleries of Syracuse, 441
South Salina Street, Suite 357, Syracuse, NY 13202-2541, (315) 477-
6400/TDD (315) 477-6447.
North Carolina
USDA Rural Development State Office, 4405 Bland Road, Suite 260,
Raleigh, NC 27609, (919) 873-2000/TDD (919) 873-2003.
North Dakota
USDA Rural Development State Office, Federal Building, Room 208, 220
East Rosser, P.O. Box 1737, Bismarck, ND 58502-1737, (701) 530-2037/
TDD (701) 530-2113.
Northern Mariana Islands (see Hawaii)
Ohio
USDA Rural Development State Office, Federal Building, Room 507, 200
North High Street, Columbus, OH 43215-2418, (614) 255-2400/TDD (614)
255-2554.
Oklahoma
USDA Rural Development State Office, 100 USDA, Suite 108,
Stillwater, OK 74074-2654, (405) 742-1000/TDD (405) 742-1007.
Oregon
USDA Rural Development State Office, 1201 NE Lloyd Blvd., Suite 801,
Portland, OR 97232, (503) 414-3300/TDD (503) 414-3387.
Palau (see Hawaii)
Pennsylvania
USDA Rural Development State Office, One Credit Union Place, Suite
330, Harrisburg, PA 17110-2996, (717) 237-2299/TDD (717) 237-2261.
Puerto Rico
USDA Rural Development State Office, IBM Building, Suite 601, 654
Munos Rivera Avenue, San Juan, PR 00918-6106, (787) 766-5095/TDD
(787) 766-5332.
Rhode Island (see Massachusetts)
South Carolina
USDA Rural Development State Office, Strom Thurmond Federal
Building, 1835 Assembly Street, Room 1007, Columbia, SC 29201, (803)
765-5163/TDD (803) 765-5697.
South Dakota
USDA Rural Development State Office, Federal Building, Room 210, 200
Fourth Street SW., Huron, SD 57350, (605) 352-1100/TDD (605) 352-
1147.
Tennessee
USDA Rural Development State Office, 3322 West End Avenue, Suite
300, Nashville, TN 37203-1084, (615) 783-1300
Texas
USDA Rural Development State Office, Federal Building, Suite 102,
101 South Main, Temple, TX 76501, (254) 742-9700/TDD (254) 742-9712.
Utah
USDA Rural Development State Office, Wallace F. Bennett Federal
Building, 125 South State Street, Room 4311, Salt Lake City, UT
84138, (801) 524-4321/TDD (801) 524-3309.
Vermont/New Hampshire
USDA Rural Development State Office, City Center, 3rd Floor, 89 Main
Street, Montpelier, VT 05602, (802) 828-6080/TDD (802) 223-6365.
Virginia
USDA Rural Development State Office, 1606 Santa Rosa Road, Suite
238, Richmond, VA
[[Page 48953]]
23229-5014, (804) 287-1550/TDD (804) 287-1753.
Virgin Islands (see Florida)
Washington
USDA Rural Development State Office, 1835 Black Lake Boulevard SW.,
Suite B, Olympia, WA 98512-5715, (360) 704-7740/TDD (360) 704-7760.
West Virginia
USDA Rural Development State Office, 1550 Earl Core Road, Suite 101,
Morgantown, WV 26505, (304) 284-4860/TDD (304) 284-4836.
Western Pacific (see Hawaii)
Wisconsin
USDA Rural Development State Office, 4949 Kirschling Court, Stevens
Point, WI 54481, (715) 345-7600/TDD (715) 345-7614.
Wyoming
USDA Rural Development State Office, 100 East B, Federal Building,
Room 1005, P.O. Box 11005, Casper, WY 82602-5006, (307) 233-6700/TDD
(307) 233-6733.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Office of the Deputy Administrator,
Cooperative Programs, Rural Business-Cooperative Service, United States
Department of Agriculture, 1400 Independence Avenue SW., MS-3250, Room
4016-South, Washington, DC 20250-3250, (202) 720-8460.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Paperwork Reduction Act
In accordance with the Paperwork Reduction Act, the paperwork
burden associated with this Notice has been approved by the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) under OMB Control Number 0570-0039.
Overview
Federal Agency Name: Rural Business-Cooperative Service.
Funding Opportunity Title: Value-Added Producer Grants.
Announcement Type: Funding Announcement.
Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance Number: 10.352.
I. Funding Opportunity Description
A. Purpose of the Program
The primary objective of this grant program is to help Independent
Producers of agricultural commodities, Agriculture Producer Groups,
Farmer and Rancher Cooperatives, and Majority-Controlled Producer-Based
Business Ventures enter into value-added activities related to the
processing and/or marketing of bio-based value-added agricultural
products. Grants will be awarded competitively for either planning or
working capital projects directly related to the processing and/or
marketing of value-added products. Generating new products, creating
and expanding marketing opportunities, and increasing producer income
are the end goals. Applications that support aspects of regional
strategic planning, cooperative development, sustainable farming, and
local and regional food systems are encouraged. Proposals must
demonstrate economic viability and sustainability in order to compete
for funding.
As part of this funding initiative, funding priority will be
available to Beginning Farmers and Ranchers, Socially-Disadvantaged
Farmers and Ranchers, Operators of Small and Medium-Sized Farms and
Ranches that are structured as a Family Farm, Farmer or Rancher
Cooperatives, and projects proposing to develop a Mid-Tier Value Chain.
See 7 CFR 4284.922(c) for Reserved Funding and 7 CFR 4284.922(d) for
Priority Point categories and requirements.
The VAPG Program is authorized under section 231 of the Agriculture
Risk Protection Act of 2000 (Pub. L. 106-224), as amended by section
6202 of the Food, Conservation, and Energy Act of 2008 (Pub. L. 110-
246) (see 7 U.S.C. 1632a). Applicants must adhere to the program
requirements contained in the program regulation, 7 CFR 4284, subpart
J, which is incorporated by reference in this Notice.
B. Definition of Terms
The terms you need to understand are defined in 7 CFR 4284.902. In
addition, there has been some confusion on the Agency's meaning of the
terms ``Harvester,'' and ``Steering Committee,'' because these terms
are only referenced as part of the Independent Producer definition and
are not specifically defined in the regulation used for the program.
Therefore, these terms are defined below and should be understood as
follows.
Harvester: Harvesters are individuals or entities that demonstrate
their legal right to access and harvest a primary agricultural
commodity; and are not individuals or entities that merely glean,
gather or collect residual commodities that result from an initial
harvesting or production of a primary agricultural commodity. Examples
of Harvesters may include, but are not limited to, a logger who has a
legal right to access and harvest logs from the forest that are then
converted into boards; a fisherman that has the legal right to access
and harvest fish from the ocean or river that are then smoked. For
clarification, it is the Agency's position that Harvesters may only
apply as an Independent Producer applicant type because harvester
operations do not meet Agency definition requirements for a Farm or
Ranch. Harvester applicants will not be eligible to receive Reserve
Funds for a Beginning Farmer or Rancher or a Socially Disadvantaged
Farmer or Rancher; and will not be eligible to receive Priority Points
for a Beginning Farmer or Rancher, a Socially Disadvantaged Farmer or
Rancher, Operator of a Small or Medium-sized Farm or Ranch structured
as a Family Farm, or a Farmer or Rancher Cooperative. However,
Harvesters may request Reserve Funds and/or Priority Points for a
qualifying Mid-Tier Value Chain project if eligibility is documented in
the application.
Steering Committee: A Steering Committee is an unincorporated group
of specifically identified Agricultural Producers that lacks a legal
structure or identity and is in the process of organizing one of the
four program eligible entity types that will operate a value-added
venture and will supply the majority of the agricultural commodity for
the value-added project. For clarification, it is the Agency's position
that a Steering Committee may only apply as an Independent Producer
applicant type and must be 100 percent comprised of Independent
Producers at time of application submission. If selected for award of
funds, and before the grant agreement will be approved by the Agency,
the Steering Committee members must form a legally authorized
organization that meets requirements for one of the four program
eligible applicant types and provide the necessary documentation for
approval by the Agency.
Finally, in support of the Value-Added Agricultural Product
definition requirements in 7 CFR 4284.902, the Agency directs that
applicants demonstrate expansion of customer base for the agricultural
commodity by including a baseline of current customers for the
commodity, and an estimated target number of customers that will result
from the project; and demonstrate the estimated amount of the increased
portion of the revenue derived from the marketing, processing or
physical segregation of the agricultural commodity that will be
available to the applicant's producers of the agricultural commodity,
by including a baseline of current revenues from the sale of the
agricultural commodity and an estimated target number of increased
revenues that will result from the project.
II. Award Information
Type of Instrument: Grant.
[[Page 48954]]
Fiscal Year Funds: FY 2012.
Approximate Number of Awards: 120.
Available Total Funding: Approximately $14 million.
Minimum Award Amount: Not restricted for planning or working
capital. In FY 2011, 49 percent of awards were $50,000 or less.
Maximum Award Amount: Planning--$100,000; Working Capital--
$300,000.
Anticipated Award Date: January 18, 2013.
Grant Period Length: The maximum grant period is 3 years from date
of award. Proposed grant periods should be scaled to the complexity of
the objectives of the project.
III. Eligibility Information
A. Eligible Applicants
You must be an Independent Producer, Agricultural Producer Group,
Farmer or Rancher Cooperative, or a Majority Controlled Produced-Based
Business to apply to this program; and you must meet all related
requirements for Emerging Market (as applicable), Citizenship, Legal
Authority and Responsibility, Multiple Grants and Active Grants. In
addition, you must meet Departmental requirements related to debarment,
suspension and exclusion from participation in Federal assistance
programs, as well as requirements related to outstanding Federal income
taxes, judgments and delinquencies. For detailed requirements, see 7
CFR 4284.920 and 7 CFR 4284.921.
As a special emphasis, Rural Development encourages applications
from Federally Recognized Tribal Groups and corporations and
subdivisions of Tribal Groups undertaking or planning to undertake
eligible value-added projects. For further tribal eligibility
questions, please contact your local Rural Development office.
As part of applicant eligibility, it is important to clarify that
all four applicant types must meet the Independent Producer and
Agricultural Producer definition requirements in 7 CFR 4284.902,
including, but not limited to, production and ownership of the majority
of the raw agricultural commodity that will be transformed into the
proposed value-added product for the project. All applicants must
maintain ownership of the raw agricultural commodity through the
production and marketing of the value-added product, with one partial
exception for Mid-Tier Value Chain projects noted in its definition in
7 CFR 4284.902. Businesses that contract out the production of an
agricultural commodity are not considered Independent Producers, and
businesses that produce the agricultural commodity under contract for
another business and do not own the raw commodity or value-added
product produced are not considered Independent Producers.
Finally, all applicants for working capital funds must document the
quantity of the agricultural commodity that will be used for the value-
added product, expressed in an appropriate unit of measure (acres,
pounds, bushels, etc.) to demonstrate the scale of the applicant's
project. This quantification must include an estimated total quantity
of the agricultural commodity needed for the project, the quantity that
will be provided (produced and owned) by the agricultural producers of
the applicant organization, and the quantity that will be purchased or
donated from third-party sources. The application must demonstrate that
the amount of applicant commodity contributed to the project is the
majority of the total agricultural commodity needed for the value-added
project.
B. Project Eligibility
Your project must meet (1) Product Eligibility requirements related
to the definition of Value-Added Agricultural Product, including value-
added methodologies, expansion of customer base for the agricultural
commodity, and increased revenues returning to the applicant's
producers of the agricultural commodity as a result of the project; (2)
Purpose Eligibility requirements related to maximum grant amounts,
certification and verification of matching funds, eligible and
ineligible uses of grant and matching funds for planning or working
capital activities, including requirements related to conflicts of
interest and ineligible expenses in excess of 10 percent of total
project costs, a substantive work plan and budget, independent
feasibility study and/or business plan requirements for working capital
projects (subject to Agency concurrence of financial feasibility, as
defined in 7 CFR 4284.902), including demonstration of readiness to
implement the working capital activities, and identification of the
number of jobs expected to be created or saved as a result of the
project; (3) Reserved Funds Eligibility requirements if you choose to
compete for Reserved Funds as a Beginning Farmer or Rancher, a Socially
Disadvantaged Farmer or Rancher, or if you propose to develop a Mid-
Tier Value Chain; and (4) Priority Status Eligibility requirements if
you request priority points in the competition for a project that
contributes to increasing opportunities for Beginning Farmers or
Ranchers, Socially Disadvantaged Farmers or Ranchers, or if you are an
Operator of a Small or Medium-sized farm or ranch that is structured as
a Family Farm, propose a Mid-Tier Value Chain project, or are a Farmer
or Rancher Cooperative. For detailed requirements, see 7 CFR 4284.922,
7 CFR 4284.923 and 7 CFR 4284.924.
Note: If you are applying for a working capital grant that
requires a project-specific independent feasibility study and/or
business plan, you must submit those documents with your
application. In addition, you must summarize relevant results of the
feasibility study and business plan in response to the scoring
criteria, as applicable, because reviewers will not receive copies
of your feasibility study or business plan when scoring your
application. Based on the information presented in the application,
including a feasibility study and/or business plan where required,
the applicant must demonstrate that the project is financially
feasible and can achieve the income, credit and cash flows to
sustain the venture over the long term. Applications with inadequate
information or projects deemed not financially feasible by the
Agency will be deemed not eligible to compete for grant funding. See
7 CFR 4284.922(b)(6).
Note: If you request Reserve Funds, you must document
eligibility for the requirements stated in 7 CFR 4284.922(c). Ten
percent of available funds are reserved to fund applications
submitted by Beginning Farmers or Ranchers and Socially
Disadvantaged Farmers or Ranchers, as defined in 7 CFR 4284.902. An
additional 10 percent of available funds are reserved to fund Mid-
Tier Value Chain projects. If your application is eligible, but does
not receive Reserve Funding, it will automatically be considered for
general funds in that same fiscal year, as funding levels permit and
in accord with project ranking. As previously noted, Harvester
operations are not considered a Farm or Ranch and are not eligible
for Reserve Funds for a Beginning Farmer or Rancher or a Socially
Disadvantaged Farmer or Rancher; however, Harvester operations may
request Reserve Funds for a qualifying Mid-Tier Value Chain project,
as applicable.
C. Other Eligibility Requirements
1. Grant Period Eligibility
Your project timeframe or grant period can be a maximum of 36
months in length from the date of award. Your proposed grant period
should begin no earlier than the anticipated award announcement date
herein, January 18, 2013, and should end no later than 36 months
following that date. If you receive an award, your grant period will be
revised to begin on the actual date of award--the date the grant
agreement is executed by the Agency--and your grant
[[Page 48955]]
period end date will be adjusted accordingly. Your project activities
must begin within 90 days of that date of award. If you request funds
for a time period beginning before January 18, 2013, and/or ending
later than 36 months from that date, your application will be
ineligible. The length of your grant period should be based on your
project's complexity, as indicated in your application work plan. For
example, it is expected that most planning grants can be completed
within 12 months. If you cannot finish your project during the approved
timeframe, you may request an extension of up to 1 year from your local
Rural Development office. Extensions will be considered only if
unavoidable or unforeseen circumstances prevent you from finishing your
project. Extensions beyond 3 years from the actual date of award will
not be considered.
2. Ineligible Expenses
Applications with ineligible expenses of more than 10 percent of
total project costs will be ineligible to compete for funds. Eligible
applications that are selected for award but contain ineligible
expenses of 10 percent or less of total project costs must remove those
ineligible expenses from the final project budget that is subject to
approval by the Agency. See 7 CFR 4284.923 for examples of eligible
planning and working capital use of funds, and see 7 CFR 4284.924 for
examples of ineligible use of funds.
3. Completeness
If your application is incomplete, it is ineligible to compete for
funds.
4. Registrations
(i) Please note that grant applicants must obtain a Dun and
Bradstreet Data Universal Numbering System (DUNS) number pursuant to 2
CFR 25.200(b). You must provide your DUNS number in the application, or
it will be ineligible for funding. A DUNS number can be obtained at no
cost via a toll-free request line at (866) 705-5711 or online at https://www.dnb.com.
(ii) Please note also that pursuant to 2 CFR 25.200(b) grant
applicants must register in the Central Contractor Registration (CCR)
database, or its successor database known as the System for Award
Management (SAM), prior to submitting an application; unless you are
exempt under 2 CFR 25.110. Grant applicants must maintain an active
CCR/SAM registration with current information at all times during which
you have an active Federal award or an application under consideration
by the Agency. An active CCR/SAM Registration Cage Code and expiration
date must be included in your application or it will not be eligible
for funding.
To register in the database, visit https://www.sam.gov/ or call the
Federal Service Desk for assistance by dialing 1-(866) 606-8220 and
press `1' (See 2 CFR part 25). Since there are no specific fields for a
Registration Cage Code and expiration date, please enter them in field
5(a) ``Federal Entity Identifier'' on Form SF 424.
(iii) Similarly, all recipients of Federal financial assistance are
required to report information about first-tier sub-awards and
executive compensation in accordance with 2 CFR part 170. So long as an
entity applicant does not have exception under 2 CFR 170.110(b), the
applicant must have the necessary processes and systems in place to
comply with the reporting requirements should the applicant receive
funding. See 2 CFR 170.200(b).
IV. Fiscal Year 2012 Application and Submission Information
A. Address To Request Applications
The application guide, government forms, regulation, and official
program notifications for this funding opportunity can be obtained
online at https://www.rurdev.usda.gov/BCP_VAPG.html. Or, you can
contact your USDA Rural Development State Office by visiting https://www.rurdev.usda.gov/recd_map.html.
B. Form of Submission
You may submit your application in paper form or electronically
through Grants.gov. Your application must contain all required
information.
To submit an application electronically, you must follow the
instructions for this funding announcement at https://www.grants.gov.
Please note that we cannot accept emailed or faxed applications. You
can locate the Grants.gov downloadable application package for this
program by using a keyword, the program name, or the Catalog of Federal
Domestic Assistance Number for this program. When you enter the
Grants.gov Web site, you will find information about submitting an
application electronically through the site, as well as the hours of
operation. We strongly recommend that you do not wait until the
application deadline date to begin the application process through
Grants.gov. You must submit all of your application documents
electronically through Grants.gov. After electronically submitting an
application through Grants.gov, you will receive an automatic
acknowledgement from Grants.gov that contains a Grants.gov tracking
number.
If you want to submit a paper application, send it to the State
Office located in the State where your project will primarily take
place. You can find State Office Contact information at https://www.rurdev.usda.gov/recd_map.html or see the list of State Offices at
the beginning of this Notice. An optional-use Agency application
template is available online at https://www.rurdev.usda.gov/BCP_VAPG.html.
C. Application Contents
Your application must contain all of the required forms and
proposal elements described in 7 CFR 4284.931, unless otherwise
clarified in this notice. Specifically, your application must include
(1) the required forms as described in 7 CFR 4284.931(a), except (i)
you do not need to submit Form RD 1940-20, ``Request for Environmental
Information,'' because planning and working capital requests in this
program are generally excluded from the environmental review process,
and (ii) corporate applicants must also complete Form AD-3030,
``Representations Regarding Felony Conviction and Tax Delinquent Status
for Corporate Applicants''; and (2) the required proposal elements as
described in 7 CFR 4284.931(b). Further clarification of application
requirements is as follows:
In addition, you must include a one-page Executive Summary
containing the following information: legal name of applicant entity,
application type (planning or working capital), applicant type, amount
of grant request, a summary of your project, whether you are submitting
a simplified application, and whether you are competing for reserve
funds.
Further, certifications for the following, among others specified
elsewhere, must be included in the application:
1. Awards made under this Notice are subject to the provisions
contained in the Agriculture, Rural Development, Food and Drug
Administration, and Related Agencies Appropriations Act, 2012, Public
Law 112-55, Division A sections 738 and 739 regarding corporate felony
convictions and corporate federal tax delinquencies. To comply with
these provisions, all applicants must complete paragraph (A) of this
representation, and all corporate applicants also must complete
paragraphs (B) and (C) of this representation:
(A) Applicant, [insert applicant name], ---- is ---- is not
(check one) an entity that has
[[Page 48956]]
filed articles of incorporation in one of the fifty states, the
District of Columbia, or the various territories of the United
States including American Samoa, Federated States of Micronesia,
Guam, Midway Islands, Northern Mariana Islands, Puerto Rico,
Republic of Palau, Republic of the Marshall Islands, U.S. Virgin
Islands.
(B) Applicant, [insert applicant name], ---- has ---- has not
(check one) been convicted of a felony criminal violation under
Federal or state law in the 24 months preceding the date of
application. Applicant ---- has ---- has not (check one) had any
officer or agent of the Applicant convicted of a felony criminal
violation for actions taken on behalf of the Applicant under Federal
or State law in the 24 months preceding the date of the signature on
the application.
(C) Applicant, [insert applicant name], ---- has ---- does not
have (check one) any unpaid Federal tax liability that has been
assessed, for which all judicial and administrative remedies have
been exhausted or have lapsed, and that is not being paid in a
timely manner pursuant to an agreement with the authority
responsible for collecting the tax liability.
2. You must certify that there are no current outstanding Federal
judgments against your property and that you will not use grant funds
to pay for any judgment obtained by the United States. To satisfy this
certification requirement, you should include this statement in your
application: ``[INSERT NAME OF APPLICANT] certifies that the United
States has not obtained an unsatisfied judgment against its property
and will not use grant funds to pay any judgments obtained by the
United States.'' A separate signature is not required.
D. Simplified Applications
If you are requesting less than $50,000 in working capital grant
funds, you may submit a simplified application. See 7 CFR 4284.932. You
are not required to provide an independent feasibility study or
business plan. You are required to provide information to show the
increases in customer base and revenues expected to be derived from the
project that will benefit the producer applicants supplying the
majority of the agricultural commodity for the project. References to
information from third-party sources that support your conclusions will
enhance your application and improve scoring. Also see 7 CFR
4284.922(b)(6)(ii).
If you are an Independent Producer applicant type applying for a
working capital grant of $50,000 or more, and your project is for
market expansion of an existing value-added product(s) that you have
successfully produced and marketed for at least 2 years prior to the
submission of the application, and is a value-added product that you
have produced from more than 50 percent of your own agricultural
commodity, you must submit a business or marketing plan for the
project, but are not required to submit a feasibility study. Your
application must contain adequate information to demonstrate the
increases in customer base and revenues expected to be derived from the
project that will benefit the applicant producers supplying the
majority of the agricultural commodity for the project. References to
information from third-party sources that support your conclusions will
enhance your application and improve scoring. See 7 CFR
4284.922(b)(6)(i).
E. Funding Restrictions
Funding limitations and reservations found in the program
regulation will apply. See 7 CFR 4284.925.
1. Use of Funds
Grant funds may be used to pay up to 50 percent of the total
eligible project costs, subject to the limitations established for
maximum total grant amount. Grant and matching funds may only be used
for eligible purposes (see 7 CFR 4284.923) and may not be used for
ineligible purposes (see 7 CFR 4284.924). If Program Income is earned
during the grant period as a result of the project activities, it is
subject to the requirements in 7 CFR 3019.24, and must be managed and
reported accordingly.
2. Majority Controlled Producer-Based Business
The aggregate amount of awards to Majority Controlled Producer-
Based Businesses in response to this announcement shall not exceed 10
percent of the total funds obligated for the program during the fiscal
year.
3. Reserved Funds
In response to this announcement, 10 percent of total funding
available will be used to fund projects that benefit Beginning Farmers
or Ranchers, or Socially-Disadvantaged Farmers or Ranchers. In
addition, 10 percent of total funding available will be used to fund
projects that propose development of Mid-Tier Value Chains as part of a
Local or Regional Supply Chain Network. See related definitions in 7
CFR 4284.902.
4. Disposition of Reserved Funds Not Obligated
For this announcement, any Reserved Funds that have not been
obligated by June 30, 2012, will be available to the Secretary to make
VAPG grants from the fund categories addressed at 7 CFR 4284.922 (c).
After awards have been selected from each Reserved Fund, any excess
unobligated funds will revert to general funds.
F. Intergovernmental Review
Executive Order (EO) 12372, ``Intergovernmental Review of Federal
Programs,'' applies to this program. This EO requires that Federal
agencies provide opportunities for consultation on proposed assistance
with State and local governments that have chosen to participate in
that process. Those states have established a Single Point of Contact
(SPOC) to facilitate this consultation. For a list of states that
maintain an SPOC, please see the White House Web site: https://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/grants_spoc. If your state has an SPOC, you
must submit a copy of the application directly for review. Any comments
obtained through the SPOC must be provided to your State Office for
consideration as part of your application.
V. Application Review Information
Applications will be reviewed and processed as described at 7 CFR
4284.940.
A. Application Eligibility and Notifications
The Agency will conduct a review of your application to determine
if it is complete and eligible. If the Agency determines that your
application is ineligible at any time, then you will be notified in
writing as to the reasons it was determined ineligible and you will be
informed of any review or appeal rights.
If, at any time after you have submitted your application, you
decide that you no longer want to request grant funding, you must
notify the Agency in writing. Upon receipt of your notification, the
Agency will rescind the award or withdraw the application, as
applicable.
B. Application Scoring
The Agency will only score applications in which the applicant and
project are eligible, which are complete and sufficiently responsive to
program requirements, and in which the Agency agrees on the likelihood
of financial feasibility for working capital requests. We will score
your application according to the procedures and criteria specified in
7 CFR 4284.942, and with tiered scoring thresholds as specified below.
For each criterion, you must show how the project has merit and why
it is likely to be successful. If you do not address all parts of the
criterion, or do
[[Page 48957]]
not sufficiently communicate relevant project information, you will
receive lower scores. The maximum number of points that can be awarded
to your application is 100. For this announcement, there is no minimum
score requirement for funding. Note: If you are submitting a working
capital application that requires a feasibility study and/or business
plan, you must submit those documents along with your application. In
addition, you must summarize within your application relevant results
of the feasibility study/business plan in response to the scoring
criteria, as applicable, because reviewers will not receive copies of
your feasibility study/business plan when evaluating your proposal and
assigning scores. The Agency application package provides additional
instruction to help you to respond to the criteria below.
1. Nature of the Proposed Venture (Graduated Score 0-30 Points)
For both planning and working capital grants, you should discuss
the technological feasibility of the project, as well as the
operational efficiency, profitability, and overall economic
sustainability resulting from the project. In addition, demonstrate the
potential for expanding the customer base for the agricultural
commodity or value-added product, and the expected increase in revenue
returns to the producer-owners providing the majority of the raw
agricultural commodity to the project. You should reference third-party
information that specifically supports your value-added project;
discuss the value-added process you are proposing; potential markets
and distribution channels; the value to be added to the raw commodity
through the value-added process; cost and availability of inputs, your
experience in marketing the proposed or similar product; business
financial statements; and any other relevant information that supports
the viability of your project. Working capital applicants should
demonstrate these concepts that will result from the project. Planning
grant applicants should describe the expected results, and the reasons
supporting those expectations.
Points will be awarded as follows:
(i) 0 points will be awarded if you do not substantively address
this criterion.
(ii) 10 points will be awarded if the criterion is poorly
addressed.
(iii) 20 points will be awarded if the criterion is partially
addressed.
(iv) 30 points will be awarded if you clearly articulate the
rationale for the project and show a high likelihood of success based
on technological feasibility and economic sustainability.
2. Qualifications of Project Personnel (Graduated Score 0-20 Points)
You should identify and describe the qualifications of each person
responsible for leading or managing the total project, as well as the
people responsible for actually conducting the individual tasks in the
work plan. You should discuss the credentials, education, capabilities,
experience, availability and commitment of each person working on the
project. If staff or consultants have not been selected at the time of
application, you should describe the qualifications required for the
positions to be filled. Points will be awarded as follows:
(i) 0 points will be awarded if you do not substantively address
this criterion.
(ii) 10 points will be awarded if at least one of the identified
staff or consultants demonstrates 5 or more years of relevant
experience; or, if no project personnel have been identified but
necessary qualifications for the positions to be filled are clearly
described.
(iii) 20 points will be awarded if all of the identified staff
demonstrates relevant qualifications and experience.
3. Commitments and Support (Graduated Score 0-10 Points)
Your application must show that the project has strong direct
financial, technical and logistical support from agricultural
producers, end-users, and other third party contributors who are
necessary for the successful completion of the project. All cash or in-
kind contributions from producers, end users, or other contributors
should be discussed. End-user commitments may include contracts or
letters of intent or interest in purchasing the value-added product.
Third-party commitments may include evidence of critical partnerships,
logistical, or technical support necessary for the project to succeed.
Points will be awarded as follows:
(i) 0 points will be awarded if you do not show that you have
quality commitments or support from producers, end-users or other
critical third party contributors.
(ii) 5 points will be awarded if you partially show real, high
quality direct support or commitments from at least one producer, end
user, or other third party contributor.
(iii) 10 points will be awarded if you show real, high quality
direct support or commitments from multiple producers, end-users and
critical third-party contributors.
4. Work Plan and Budget (Graduated Score 0-20 Points)
You must submit a comprehensive work plan and budget (for full
details, see 7 CFR 4284.922(b)(5)). Your work plan must provide
specific and detailed descriptions of the tasks and the key project
personnel that will accomplish the project's goals. The budget must
present a detailed breakdown of all estimated costs of project
activities and allocate those costs among the listed tasks. You must
show the source and use of both grant and matching funds for all tasks.
Matching funds must be spent at a rate equal to, or in advance of,
grant funds. An eligible start and end date for the project and for
individual project tasks must be clearly shown and may not exceed
Agency specified timeframes for the grant period. Working Capital
applications must include an estimate of Program Income expected to be
earned during the grant period (see 7 CFR 3019.24).
(i) 0 points will be awarded if the work plan and budget do not
substantively address this criterion.
(ii) 10 points will be awarded if the work plan and budget only
partially address this criterion.
(iii) 20 points will be awarded if a detailed, comprehensive work
plan and budget is provided.
5. Priority Points (Lump Sum Score 0 or 10 Points)
Priority points may be awarded in both the general funds
competition, as well as the Reserve Funds competitions. You may request
priority points if you meet the requirements for one of the following
categories and provide the documentation described in 7 CFR
4284.922(d), as applicable:
Beginning Farmer or Rancher, or
Socially Disadvantaged Farmer or Rancher, or
Operator of a Small or Medium-sized farm or ranch that is
structured as a Family Farm, or
Farmer or Rancher Cooperative, or
Mid-Tier Value Chain project.
It is recommended that you use the Agency application package when
applying for priority points and refer to the documentation
requirements specified in 7 CFR 4284.922(d). Harvester operations are
not considered a Farm or Ranch and are not eligible for priority points
for a Beginning Farmer or Rancher, a Socially Disadvantaged Farmer or
Rancher, an Operator of a Small or Medium-sized farm or ranch that is
structured as a Family Farm, or a Farmer or Rancher Cooperative;
however, Harvester operations may request priority points for a
qualifying
[[Page 48958]]
Mid-Tier Value Chain project, as applicable. All qualifying applicants
will receive 10 points. If you do not provide sufficient documentation
you will receive 0 points.
6. Administrator Priority Categories (Graduated Score 0-10 Points)
The Administrator of USDA Rural Development Business-Cooperative
Service (RBS) may choose to award up to 10 points to an application to
improve the geographic diversity of awardees in a fiscal year.
C. Selection of Applications
The Agency will select applications for award under this Notice in
accordance with the provisions specified in 7 CFR 4284.950(a).
We will first review your application for eligibility and to
determine if it is complete and sufficiently responsive to the
requirements of the program to allow for an informed review (see 7 CFR
4284.940).
If your application is eligible and complete, it will be scored by
two reviewers based on criteria specified in section V.B. of this
Notice. One of these reviewers will be a Rural Development employee
from your servicing State Office and the other reviewer will be a non-
Federal, independent reviewer. The State Office may enlist the support
of technical experts, qualified as described below and approved by the
State Director, to assist the State Office scoring process. All
reviewers must meet the following qualifications. Reviewers must have
at least a bachelor's degree in one or more of the following fields:
agri-business, business, economics, finance, or marketing. They must
also have a minimum of 3 years of experience in an agriculture-related
field (e.g. farming, marketing, consulting, university professor,
research, officer for trade association, government employee for an
agricultural program). If the reviewer does not have a degree in one of
those fields, he/she must have at least 5 years of working experience
in an agriculture-related field.
Both reviewers will score evaluation criteria 1 through 4 and the
totals for each reviewer will be added together and averaged. The Rural
Development reviewer will also assign priority points based on
criterion 5 in section V.B. of this Notice. These will be added to the
average score. The sum of these scores will be ranked high to low and
this will comprise the initial ranking.
The Administrator of RBS may choose to award up to 10 Administrator
priority points based on criterion 6 in section V.B. of this Notice.
These points will be added to the cumulative score for a total possible
score of 100.
A final ranking will be obtained based solely on the scores
received for criteria 1 through 6. Applications for reserved funding
will be funded in rank order until funds are depleted. Unfunded reserve
category applications will be returned to the general funds category
where applications will be funded in rank order until the funds are
depleted. Funding for Majority Controlled Producer-Based Business
Ventures (MAJ) is limited to 10 percent of total grant funds expected
to be obligated as a result of this Notice. MAJ applications will be
funded in rank order until the funding limitation has been reached.
Grants to MAJ applicants from reserved funds will count against this
funding limitation.
If your application is ranked, but not funded, it will not be
carried forward into the next competition. We will notify you in
writing if your application is not selected for funding and inform you
of any appeal rights. You may submit an updated application for
consideration during the next round of funding.
VI. Award Administrative Information
A. Award Notices
If your application is successful, you will receive notification
regarding funding from the State Office where your application is
submitted or where the project will primarily take place if you submit
your application via Grants.gov. You must comply with all applicable
statutes, regulations, and notice requirements before the grant award
will be approved. See 7 CFR 4284.951. If your application is not
successful, you will receive notification, including review, mediation
procedures and appeal rights, by mail. See 7 CFR part 11.
B. Administrative and National Policy Requirements
1. Review or Appeal Rights
A person may seek a review of an Agency decision or appeal to the
National Appeals Division in accordance with 7 CFR part 11.
2. Transparency Act Requirements
All recipients of Federal financial assistance are required to
report information about first-tier sub-awards and executive
compensation (see 2 CFR part 170). You will be required to have the
necessary processes and systems in place to comply with the
Transparency Act reporting requirements (see 2 CFR 170.200(b), unless
you are exempt under 2 CFR 170.110(b)).
3. Compliance With Other Laws and Regulations
The provisions of 7 CFR 4284.905 applies to this Notice, which
includes requiring applicants to be in compliance with other applicable
Federal laws.
4. Monitoring and Reporting Program Performance
The provisions of 7 CFR 4284.960 applies to this Notice.
5. Grant Servicing
All grants awarded under this Notice shall be serviced in
accordance with 7 CFR part 1951, subparts E and O as applicable, and
the Departmental Regulations (7 CFR parts 3000-3099), with the
exception that delegation of the post-award servicing of the program
does not require the prior approval of the Administrator.
6. Transfer of Obligations
Any transfer of funds obligated under this Notice from an applicant
to a different applicant must comply with the requirements specified in
7 CFR 4284.962.
7. Grant Close-Out and Related Activities
The provisions of 7 CFR 4284.963 applies to this Notice.
8. Exception Authority
The provisions of 7 CFR 4284.904 applies to this Notice.
9. Departmental Regulations
Unless specifically stated otherwise in this Notice or in 7 CFR
part 4284, subpart J, this Notice incorporates by reference the
regulations of the Department of Agriculture's Office of Chief
Financial Officer (or successor office) as codified in 7 CFR parts 3000
through 3099, including, but not necessarily limited to, 7 CFR parts
3015 through 3019, 7 CFR part 3021, 7 CFR part 3052, and 2 CFR parts
25, 170 and 417; and successor regulations to these parts.
10. Cost Principles
This Notice incorporates by reference the cost principles found in
2 CFR part 230 and in 48 CFR 31.2.
D. Environmental Review
All recipients under this Notice are subject to the requirements of
7 CFR part 1940, subpart G and any successor regulations. However, 7
CFR 1940.333, 7 CFR 1940.310(c)(1) and 7 CFR 1940.317(g)(2) generally
exclude applications for both planning and working capital grants.
[[Page 48959]]
VII. Agency Contacts
If you have questions about this Notice, please contact the State
Office as identified in the ADDRESSES section of this Notice. You are
also encouraged to visit the application Web site for application
tools, including an application guide and templates. The web address
is: https://www.rurdev.usda.gov/BCP_VAPG.html.
VIII. Nondiscrimination Statement
USDA prohibits discrimination in all its programs and activities on
the basis of race, color, national origin, age, disability, and where
applicable, sex, marital status, familial status, parental status,
religion, sexual orientation, genetic information, political beliefs,
reprisal, or because all or part of an individual's income is derived
from any public assistance program. Not all prohibited bases apply to
all programs. Persons with disabilities who require alternative means
for communication of program information (Braille, large print,
audiotape, etc.) should contact USDA's TARGET Center at (202) 720-2600
(voice and TDD).
To file a complaint of discrimination write to USDA, Director,
Office of Adjudication and Compliance, 1400 Independence Avenue SW.,
Washington, DC 20250-9410 or call (800) 795-3272 (voice) or (202) 720-
6382 (TDD). USDA is an equal opportunity provider, employer, and
lender.
Dated: August 8, 2012.
Curtis A. Wiley,
Acting Administrator, Rural Business--Cooperative Service.
[FR Doc. 2012-20082 Filed 8-14-12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3410-XY-P