Household Water Well System Grant Program Announcement of Application Deadlines and Funding, 7404-7411 [2015-02680]
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independently or in cooperation with
States, to carry out operations or
measures to detect, eradicate, suppress,
control, prevent, or retard the spread of
plant pests, such as citrus canker, citrus
greening, and Asian citrus psyllid, that
are new to or not widely distributed
within the United States. The USDA’s
Animal and Plant Health Inspection
Service (APHIS) is the delegated
authority to carry out this mission.
Citrus canker is a plant disease that
affects plant and plant parts, including
fresh fruit of citrus and citrus relatives
(family Rutaceae). Citrus canker can
cause defoliation and other serious
damage to the leaves and twigs of
susceptible plants. It can also cause
lesions on the fruit of infected plants
and cause infected fruit to drop from
trees before reaching maturity. The
aggressive A (Asiatic) strain of citrus
canker can infect susceptible plants
rapidly and lead to extensive economic
losses in commercial citrus-producing
areas.
Citrus greening, also known as
Huanglongbing disease of citrus, is
considered to be one of the most serious
citrus diseases in the world. Citrus
greening is a bacterial disease that
attacks the vascular system of host
plants. This bacterial pathogen can be
transmitted by grafting and under
laboratory conditions, by parasitic
plants. The pathogen can also be
transmitted by two insect vectors in the
family Psyllidae; Diaphorina citri
Kuwayama, the Asian citrus psyllid
(ACP), and Trioza erytreae (del
Guercio), the African citrus psyllid. ACP
can also cause economic damage to
citrus in groves and nurseries by direct
feeding. Both adults and nymphs feed
on young foliage, depleting the sap and
causing galling or curling of leaves.
High populations feeding on a citrus
shoot can kill the growing tip.
APHIS regulations to prevent the
interstate spread of citrus canker are
contained in ‘‘Subpart—Citrus Canker’’
(7 CFR 301.75–1 through 301.75–17),
and the regulations to prevent the
interstate spread of citrus greening and
Asian citrus psyllid are contained in
‘‘Subpart—Citrus Greening and Asian
Citrus Psyllid’’ (7 CFR 301.76 through
301.76–11). These regulations restrict
the interstate movement of regulated
articles from and through areas
quarantined for the pest and diseases
and provide, among other things,
conditions under which regulated
nursery stock may be moved interstate.
The interstate movement of regulated
nursery stock from these quarantined
areas involves information collection
activities, including the application of
tags, records of inspections and
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treatments, compliance agreements,
Federal certificates, and limited permits.
Since the last extension of approval
for these information collection
activities, APHIS has added several
States and territories, as well as
additional businesses, to the number of
respondents, resulting in an increase
over the initial program estimates. As a
result, each of the burden estimates has
increased. Most significantly, APHIS
has increased the estimated annual
number of responses from 13,182 to
7,882,984, and the estimated total
annual burden on respondents has
increased from 1,900 hours to 2,411,271
hours.
We are asking the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) to
approve our use of these information
collection activities for an additional 3
years.
The purpose of this notice is to solicit
comments from the public (as well as
affected agencies) concerning our
information collection. These comments
will help us:
(1) Evaluate whether the collection of
information is necessary for the proper
performance of the functions of the
Agency, including whether the
information will have practical utility;
(2) Evaluate the accuracy of our
estimate of the burden of the collection
of information, including the validity of
the methodology and assumptions used;
(3) Enhance the quality, utility, and
clarity of the information to be
collected; and
(4) Minimize the burden of the
collection of information on those who
are to respond, through use, as
appropriate, of automated, electronic,
mechanical, and other collection
technologies; e.g., permitting electronic
submission of responses.
Estimate of burden: The public
reporting burden for this collection of
information is estimated to average
0.3058 hours per response.
Respondents: Nursery stock owners.
Estimated annual number of
respondents: 1,909.
Estimated annual number of
responses per respondent: 4,129.
Estimated annual number of
responses: 7,882,984.
Estimated total annual burden on
respondents: 2,411,271 hours. (Due to
averaging, the total annual burden hours
may not equal the product of the annual
number of responses multiplied by the
reporting burden per response.)
All responses to this notice will be
summarized and included in the request
for OMB approval. All comments will
also become a matter of public record.
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Done in Washington, DC, this 4th day of
February 2015.
Kevin Shea,
Administrator, Animal and Plant Health
Inspection Service.
[FR Doc. 2015–02678 Filed 2–9–15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3410–34–P
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Rural Utilities Service
Household Water Well System Grant
Program Announcement of Application
Deadlines and Funding
Rural Utilities Service, USDA.
Notice of solicitation of
applications (NOSA).
AGENCY:
ACTION:
The Rural Utilities Service
(RUS) announces its Household Water
Well System Grant Program (HWWS)
application window for Fiscal Year (FY)
2015. RUS will make grants to qualified
private non-profit organizations to
establish lending programs for
homeowners to borrow up to $11,000 to
construct or repair household water
wells for an existing home. The HWWS
Grant Program is authorized under 7
U.S.C. 1926e. Regulations may be found
at 7 CFR part 1776. Of particular note
this year, the RUS will assign
administrative discretion points to
applications that:
1. Direct loans to rural areas where
according to the American Community
Survey data by census tracts show that
at least 20 percent of the population is
living in poverty. This emphasis will
support Rural Development’s goal of
providing 20 percent of its funding by
2016 to these areas of need.
2. Direct loans to areas which lack
running water, flush toilets, and modern
sewage disposal systems, and areas
which have open sewers and high rates
of disease caused by poor sanitation, in
particular, colonias or Substantially
Underserved Trust Areas.
3. Direct loans to areas stricken by
drought.
RUS will publish on its Web site at
https://www.rurdev.usda.gov/UWPindividualwellsystems.htm the amount
of funding received in the final FY2015
Appropriations Act. Successful
applications will be selected by the
Agency for funding and subsequently
awarded to the extent that funding may
ultimately be made available to the
Agency through appropriations.
DATES: The deadline for completed
applications for a HWWS grant is April
13, 2015. Applications in either paper or
electronic format must be postmarked or
time-stamped electronically on or before
SUMMARY:
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the deadline. Late applications will be
ineligible for grant consideration.
ADDRESSES: Submit applications to the
following addresses:
1. Electronic applications: https://
www.grants.gov (Grants.gov). Submit
electronic applications through
Grants.gov, following the instructions
on that Web site.
2. Paper applications: Water Programs
Division, Rural Utilities Service, STOP:
1570, Room 2233–S, 1400 Independence
Avenue SW., Washington, DC 20250–
1570.
Obtain application guides and
materials for the HWWS Grant Program
electronically or in paper format from
the following addresses:
1. Electronic copies: https://
www.rurdev.usda.gov/UWPindividualwellsystems.htm.
2. Paper copies: Write Water Programs
Division, Rural Utilities Service, STOP:
1570, Room 2233–S, 1400 Independence
Avenue SW., Washington, DC 20250–
1570 or call (202) 720–9589.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Joyce M. Taylor, Community Programs
Specialist, Water Programs Division,
Water and Environmental Programs.
Telephone: (202) 720–9589, fax: (202)
690–0649, email: JoyceM.Taylor@
wdc.usda.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Overview
Federal Agency: Rural Utilities
Service.
Funding Opportunity Title: HWWS
Grant Program.
Announcement Type: Solicitation of
Applications.
Catalog of Federal Domestic
Assistance (CFDA) Number: 10.862.
Due Date for Applications: April 13,
2015.
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Items in Supplementary Information
I. Funding Opportunity: Description of the
HWWS Grant Program.
II. Award Information: To be determined.
III. Eligibility Information: Who is eligible,
what kinds of projects are eligible, what
criteria determine basic eligibility.
IV. Application and Submission Information:
Where to get application materials, what
constitutes a completed application, how
and where to submit applications,
deadlines, items that are eligible.
V. Application Review Information:
Considerations and preferences, scoring
criteria, review standards, selection
information.
VI. Award Administration Information:
Award notice information, award
recipient reporting requirements.
VII. Agency Contacts: Web, phone, fax, email,
contact name.
VIII. Non-discrimination Statement: USDA
non-discrimination statement, how to
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file a complaint, persons with
disabilities.
I. Funding Opportunity
A. Program Description
The HWWS Grant Program has been
established to help individuals with low
to moderate incomes finance the costs of
household water wells that they own or
will own. The HWWS Grant Program is
authorized under Section 306E of the
Consolidated Farm and Rural
Development Act (CONACT), 7 U.S.C.
1926e. The CONACT authorizes the
RUS to make grants to qualified private
non-profit organizations to establish
lending programs for household water
wells.
As the grant recipients, private nonprofit organizations will receive HWWS
grants to establish lending programs that
will provide water well loans to
individuals. The individuals, as loan
recipients, may use the loans to
construct, refurbish, and service their
household well systems. A loan may not
exceed $11,000 and will have a term up
to 20 years at a one percent annual
interest rate.
B. Background
The RUS supports the sound
development of rural communities and
the growth of our economy without
endangering the environment. The RUS
provides financial and technical
assistance to help communities bring
safe drinking water and sanitary,
environmentally sound waste disposal
facilities to Rural Americans in greatest
need.
Central water systems may not be the
only or best solution to drinking water
problems. Distance or physical barriers
make public central water systems
costly to deploy in remote areas. A
significant number of geographically
isolated households without water
service might require individual wells
rather than connections to new or
existing community systems. The goal
of the RUS is not only to make funds
available to those communities most in
need of potable water but also to ensure
that facilities used to deliver drinking
water are safe and affordable. There is
a role for private wells in reaching this
goal.
C. Purpose
The purpose of the HWWS Grant
Program is to provide funds to private
non-profit organizations to assist them
in establishing loan programs from
which individuals may borrow money
for HWWS. Faith-based organizations
are eligible and encouraged to apply for
this program. Applicants must show
that the project will provide technical
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and financial assistance to eligible
individuals to remedy household well
problems.
Due to the limited amount of funds
available under the HWWS Grant
Program in previous fiscal years, the
RUS expects that 10 applications may
be funded from FY 2015 funds.
Applications from existing HWWS grant
recipients are acceptable and will be
evaluated as new applications.
II. Award Information
Funding Instrument Type: Grant.
Available funds: To be determined.
This Notice is being issued prior to
passage of a final appropriations act to
allow potential applicants time to
submit proposals and give the Agency
time to process applications within the
current fiscal year. RUS will publish on
its Web site at https://
www.rurdev.usda.gov/UWPindividualwellsystems.htm the amount
of funding received in the final FY2015
Appropriations Act.
Anticipated Number of Awards: 10.
Length of Project Periods: 12-month
project.
Assistance Instrument: Grant
Agreement with successful applicants
before any grant funds are disbursed.
III. Eligibility Information
A. Who is eligible for grants?
1. An organization is eligible to
receive a HWWS grant if it:
a. Has an active registration with
current information in the System for
Award Management (SAM) (formerly
Central Contractor Registry, (CCR)) and
has a Dun and Bradstreet (D&B) Data
Universal Numbering System (DUNS)
number.
b. Is a private, non-profit organization.
c. Is legally established and located
within one of the following:
(1) A state within the United States
(2) The District of Columbia
(3) The Commonwealth of Puerto Rico
(4) A United States territory.
d. Has the legal capacity and authority
to carry out the grant purpose.
e. Has sufficient expertise and
experience in lending activities.
f. Has sufficient expertise and
experience in promoting the safe and
productive use of individually-owned
HWWS and ground water.
g. Has no delinquent debt to the
Federal Government or no outstanding
judgments to repay a Federal debt.
h. Demonstrates that it possesses the
financial, technical, and managerial
capability to comply with Federal and
State laws and requirements, and
i. Is not a corporation that has been
convicted of a felony (or had an officer
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or agent acting on behalf of the
corporation convicted of a felony)
within the past 24 months. Any
Corporation that has 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 is not eligible.
2. An individual is ineligible to
receive a Household Water Well grant.
An individual may receive a loan from
an organization receiving a grant award.
B. What are the basic eligibility
requirements for a project?
1. Project Eligibility. To be eligible for
a grant, the project must:
a. Be a revolving loan fund created to
provide loans to eligible individuals to
construct, refurbish, and service
individually-owned HWWS (see 7 CFR
1776.11 and 1776.12). Loans may not be
provided for home sewer or septic
system projects.
b. Be established and maintained by
a private, non-profit organization.
c. Be located in a rural area. Rural
area is defined as locations other than
cities or towns of more than 50,000
people and the contiguous and adjacent
urbanized area of such towns and cities.
2. Required Matching Contributions.
Grant applicants must provide written
evidence of a matching contribution of
at least 10 percent from sources other
than the proceeds of a HWWS grant. Inkind contributions will not be
considered for the matching
requirement. Please see 7 CFR 1776.9
for the requirement.
3. Other—Requirements.
a. DUNS Number. The applicant for a
grant must supply a Dun and Bradstreet
Data Universal Numbering System
(DUNS) number as part of an
application. The Standard Form 424
(SF–424) contains a field for the DUNS
number. The applicant can obtain the
DUNS number free of charge by calling
Dun and Bradstreet. Please see https://
fedgov.dnb.com/webform for more
information on how to obtain a DUNS
number or how to verify your
organization’s number.
b. Prior to submitting an application,
the applicant must register in the
System for Award Management (SAM)
(formerly Central Contractor Registry,
(CCR)).
(1) Applicants may register for the
SAM at https://www.sam.gov/portal/
public/SAM/.
(2) The SAM registration must remain
active with current information at all
times while RUS is considering an
application or while a Federal Grant
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Award or loan is active. To maintain the
registration in the SAM database the
applicant must review and update the
information in the SAM database
annually from date of initial registration
or from the date of the last update. The
applicant must ensure that the
information in the database is current,
accurate, and complete.
c. Eligibility to receive a HWWS loan
will be based on the following criteria:
(1) An individual must be a member
of a household of which the combined
household income of all members does
not exceed 100 percent of the median
non-metropolitan household income for
the State or territory in which the
individual resides. Household income is
the total income from all sources
received by each adult household
member for the most recent 12-month
period for which the information is
available. It does not include income
earned or received by dependent
children under 18 years old or other
benefits that are excluded by Federal
law. The non-metropolitan household
income must be based on the most
recent decennial census of the United
States.
RUS publishes a list of income
exclusions in 7 CFR 3550.54(b). Also,
the Department of Housing and Urban
Development published a list of income
exclusions in the Federal Register on
May 20, 2014, at 79 FR 28938 (See
‘‘Federally Mandated Exclusions’’).
(2) The loan recipient must own and
occupy the home being improved with
the proceeds of the Household Water
Well loan or be purchasing the home to
occupy under a legally enforceable land
purchase contract which is not in
default by either the seller or the
purchaser.
(3) The home being improved with
the water well system must be located
in a rural area.
(4) The loan for a water well system
must not be associated with the
construction of a new dwelling.
(5) The loan must not be used to
substitute a water well system for water
service available from collective water
systems. (For example, a loan may not
be used to restore an old well
abandoned when a dwelling was
connected to a water district’s water
line.)
(6) The loan recipient must not be
suspended or debarred from
participation in Federal programs.
IV. Application and Submission
Information
A. Where To Get Application
Information
The Household Water Well System
Grant Application Guide (Application
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Guide), copies of necessary forms and
samples, and the HWWS Grant Program
regulation are available from these
sources:
1. Internet for electronic copies:
https://www.grants.gov or https://
www.rurdev.usda.gov/UWPindividualwellsystems.htm;
2. Water and Environmental Programs
for paper copies: RUS, Water Programs
Division, STOP 1570, Room 2233–S,
1400 Independence Ave. SW.,
Washington, DC 20250–1570,
Telephone: (202) 720–9589, Fax: (202)
690–0649.
B. Content and Form of Application
Submission
1. Rules and Guidelines
a. Detailed information on each item
required can be found in the HWWS
Grant Program regulation (7 CFR part
1776) and the Application Guide.
Applicants are strongly encouraged to
read and apply both the regulation and
the Application Guide. This Notice does
not change the requirements for a
completed application for any form of
HWWS financial assistance specified in
the regulation. The regulation and
Application Guide provide specific
guidance on each of the items listed.
b. Applications should be prepared in
conformance with the provisions in 7
CFR part 1776, subpart B, and
departmental and other applicable
regulations including 2 CFR parts 180,
182, 417, 421, 7 CFR parts 3015, 3018,
3019, and 3052 or any successor
regulations. Applicants should use the
Application Guide which contains
instructions and other important
information in preparing their
application. Completed applications
must include the items found in the
checklist in the next paragraph.
2. Checklist of Items in Completed
Application Packages
a. DUNS Number. The applicant for a
grant must supply a Dun and Bradstreet
Data Universal Numbering System
(DUNS) number as part of an
application. The Standard Form 424
(SF–424) contains a field for the DUNS
number. The applicant can obtain the
DUNS number free of charge by calling
Dun and Bradstreet. Please see https://
fedgov.dnb.com/webform for more
information on how to obtain a DUNS
number or how to verify your
organization’s number.
b. Prior to submitting an application,
the applicant must register in the
System for Award Management (SAM)
(formerly Central Contractor Registry
(CCR).
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(1) Applicants may register for the
SAM at: https://www.sam.gov/portal/
public/SAM/.
(2) The SAM registration must remain
active with current information at all
times while RUS is considering an
application or while a Federal Grant
Award or loan is active. To maintain the
registration in the SAM database the
applicant must review and update the
information in the SAM database
annually from date of initial registration
or from the date of the last update. The
applicant must ensure that the
information in the database is current,
accurate, and complete.
(3) Your organization must be listed
in the SAM. If you have not used
Grants.gov before, you will need to
register with the SAM and the
Credential Provider. New registrations
can take 3–5 business days to process.
Updating or renewing an active
registration has a shorter turnaround, 24
hours. Registrations in SAM are active
for one year. The SAM registers your
organization, housing your
organizational information and allowing
Grants.gov to use the information to
verify your identity. The DUNS number,
Taxpayer Identification Number (TIN),
and name and address of the applicant
organization must match SAM data
files.
c. The electronic and paper
application process requires forms with
the prefixes RD and SF as well as
supporting documents and
certifications.
Application Items
(1) SF–424, ‘‘Application for Federal
Assistance’’.
(2) SF–424A, ‘‘Budget Information—
Non-Construction Programs’’.
(3) SF–424B, ‘‘Assurances—NonConstruction Programs’’.
(4) SF–LLL, ‘‘Disclosure of Lobbying
Activity’’.
(5) Form RD 400–1, ‘‘Equal
Opportunity Agreement’’.
(6) Form RD 400–4, ‘‘Assurance
Agreement (Under Title VI, Civil Rights
Act of 1964).
(7) Project Proposal, Project Summary,
Needs Assessment, Project Goals and
Objectives, Project Narrative.
(8) Work Plan.
(9) Budget and Budget Justification.
(10) Evidence of Legal Authority and
Existence.
(11) Documentation of private nonprofit status and Internal Revenue
Service (IRS). Tax Exempt Status.
(12) List of Directors and Officers.
(13) Financial information and
sustainability (narrative).
(14) Assurances and Certifications of
Compliance with Other Federal
Statutes.
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The forms in items 1 through 6 must
be completed and signed where
appropriate by an official of your
organization who has authority to
obligate the organization legally. RD
forms are used by programs under the
Rural Development mission area.
Standard forms (SF) are used
Government-wide. In addition to the
sources listed in section A, the forms
may be accessed electronically through
the Rural Development Web site at
https://www.rurdev.usda.gov/
FormsAndPublications.html.
See section V, ‘‘Application Review
Information,’’ for instructions and
guidelines on preparing Items 7 through
13.
3. Compliance with Other Federal
Statutes. The applicant must provide
evidence of compliance with other
Federal statutes and regulations,
including, but not limited to the
following:
a. 7 CFR part 15, subpart A—
Nondiscrimination in Federally
Assisted Programs of the Department of
Agriculture—Effectuation of Title VI of
the Civil Rights Act of 1964.
b. 2 CFR part 417—Governmentwide
Debarment and Suspension (Nonprocurement), or any successor
regulations.
c. 7 CFR part 3052—Audits of States,
Local Governments, and Non-profit
Organizations, or any successor
regulations.
d. Subpart B of 2 CFR part 421, which
adopts the Government wide
implementation (2 CFR part 182) of the
Drug-Free Workplace Act.
e. Executive Order 13166, ‘‘Improving
Access to Services for Persons with
Limited English Proficiency. ’’ For
information on limited English
proficiency and agency-specific
guidance, go to https://www.LEP.gov.
f. Federal Obligation Certification on
Delinquent Debt.
C. How many copies of an application
are required?
1. Applications Submitted on Paper.
Submit one signed original and two
additional copies. The original and each
of the two copies must include all
required forms, certifications,
assurances, and appendices, be signed
by an authorized representative, and
have original signatures. Do not include
organizational brochures or promotional
materials.
2. Applications Submitted
Electronically. Additional paper copies
are unnecessary if the application is
submitted electronically through https://
www.grants.gov.
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D. How and Where To Submit an
Application
1. Submitting Paper Applications
a. For paper applications, mail or
ensure delivery of an original paper
application (no stamped, photocopied,
or initialed signatures) and two copies
by the deadline date to: RUS, Water
Programs Division, STOP 1570, Room
2233–S, 1400 Independence Avenue
SW., Washington, DC 20250–1570,
Telephone: (202) 720–9589.
Submit paper applications marked
‘‘Attention: Water and Environmental
Programs.’’
b. Applications must show proof of
mailing or shipping by one of the
following:
(1) A legibly dated U.S. Postal Service
(USPS) postmark;
(2) A legible mail receipt with the
date of mailing stamped by the USPS;
or,
(3) A dated shipping label, invoice, or
receipt from a commercial carrier.
c. If a deadline date falls on a
weekend, it will be extended to the
following Monday. If the date falls on a
Federal holiday, it will be extended to
the next business day.
d. Due to screening procedures at the
Department of Agriculture, packages
arriving via the USPS are irradiated,
which can damage the contents and
delay delivery. RUS encourages
applicants to consider the impact of this
procedure in selecting an application
delivery method.
2. Submitting Electronic Applications
a. Applications will not be accepted
by fax or electronic mail.
b. Electronic applications for grants
will be accepted if submitted through
Grants.gov at https://www.grants.gov.
c. Applicants must preregister
successfully with Grants.gov to use the
electronic applications option.
Application information may be
downloaded from Grants.gov without
preregistration.
d. Applicants who apply through
Grants.gov should submit their
electronic applications before the
deadline.
e. Grants.gov contains full
instructions on all required passwords,
credentialing, and software. Follow the
instructions at Grants.gov for registering
and submitting an electronic
application.
f. Grants.gov has two preregistration
requirements: A DUNS number and an
active registration in SAM. See the
‘‘Checklist of Items in Completed
Application Packages’’ for instructions
on obtaining a DUNS number and
registering in the SAM.
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g. You must be registered with
Grants.gov before you can submit an
electronic grant application.
(1) You must register at https://
www.grants.gov/applicants/get_
registered.jsp.
(2) Organization registration user
guides and checklists are available at
https://www.grants.gov/applicants/get_
registered.jsp.
(3) Grants.gov requires some
credentialing and online authentication
procedures. When an applicant
organization is registered with SAM, the
organization designates a point of
contract who receives a password
authorizing the person to designate staff
members who are allowed to submit
applications electronically through
Grants.gov. These authorized
organization representatives must be
registered with Grants.gov to receive a
username and password to submit
applications. These procedures may
take several business days to complete.
(4) Some or all of the SAM and
Grants.gov registration, credentialing
and authorizations require updates. If
you have previously registered at
Grants.gov to submit applications
electronically, please ensure that your
registration, credentialing and
authorizations are up to date well in
advance of the grant application
deadline.
h. To use Grants.gov:
(1) Follow the instructions on the
Web site to find grant information.
(2) Download a copy of an application
package.
(3) Complete the package off-line.
(4) Upload and submit the application
via the Grants.gov Web site.
(5) If a system problem or technical
difficulty occurs with an electronic
application, please use the customer
support resources available at the
Grants.gov Web site.
(6) Again, RUS encourages applicants
to take early action to complete the signup, credentialing and authorization
procedures at https://www.grants.gov
before submitting an application at the
Web site.
E. Deadlines
The deadline for paper and electronic
submissions is April 13, 2015. Paper
applications must be postmarked and
mailed, shipped, or sent overnight no
later than the closing date to be
considered for FY 2015 grant funding.
Electronic applications must have an
electronic date and time stamp by
midnight of April 13, 2015 to be
considered on time. RUS will not accept
applications by fax or email.
Applications that do not meet the
criteria above will be considered late
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applications and will not be considered.
RUS will notify each late applicant that
its application will not be considered.
F. Funding Restrictions
1. Eligible Grant Purposes
a. Grant funds must be used to
establish and maintain a revolving loan
fund to provide loans to eligible
individuals for household water well
systems.
b. Individuals may use the loans to
construct, refurbish, rehabilitate, or
replace household water well systems
up to the point of entry of a home. Point
of entry for the well system is the
junction where water enters into a home
water delivery system after being
pumped from a well.
c. Grant funds may be used to pay
administrative expenses associated with
providing Household Water Well loans.
2. Ineligible Grant Purposes
a. Administrative expenses incurred
in any calendar year that exceed 10
percent of the household water well
loans made during the same period do
not qualify for reimbursement.
b. Administrative expenses incurred
before RUS executes a grant agreement
with the recipient do not qualify for
reimbursement.
c. Delinquent debt owed to the
Federal Government does not qualify for
reimbursement.
d. Grant funds may not be used to
provide loans for household sewer or
septic systems.
e. Household Water Well loans may
not be used to pay the costs of water
well systems for the construction of a
new house.
f. Household Water Well loans may
not be used to pay the costs of a home
plumbing system.
V. Application Review Information
A. Criteria
This section contains instructions and
guidelines on preparing the project
proposal, work plan, and budget
sections of the application. Also,
guidelines are provided on the
additional information required for RUS
to determine eligibility and financial
feasibility.
1. Project Proposal. The project
proposal should outline the project in
sufficient detail to provide a reader with
a complete understanding of the loan
program. Explain what will be
accomplished by lending funds to
individual well owners. Demonstrate
the feasibility of the proposed loan
program in meeting the objectives of
this grant program. The proposal should
include the following elements:
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a. Project Summary. Present a brief
project overview. Explain the purpose of
the project, how it relates to RUS’
purposes, how the project will be
executed, what the project will produce,
and who will direct it.
b. Needs Assessment. To show why
the project is necessary, clearly identify
the economic, social, financial, or other
problems that require solutions.
Demonstrate the well owners’ need for
financial and technical assistance.
Quantify the number of prospective
borrowers or provide statistical or
narrative evidence that a sufficient
number of borrowers will exist to justify
the grant award. Describe the service
area. Provide information on the
household income of the area and other
demographical information. Address
community needs.
c. Project Goals and Objectives.
Clearly state the project goals. The
objectives should clearly describe the
goals and be concrete and specific
enough to be quantitative or observable.
They should also be feasible and relate
to the purpose of the grant and loan
program.
d. Project Narrative. The narrative
should cover in more detail the items
briefly described in the Project
Summary. Demonstrate the grant
applicant’s experience and expertise in
promoting the safe and productive use
of individually-owned household water
well systems. The narrative should
address the following points:
(1) Document the grant applicant’s
ability to manage and service a
revolving fund. The narrative may
describe the systems that are in place for
the full life cycle of a loan from loan
origination through servicing. If a
servicing contractor will service the
loan portfolio, the arrangement and
services provided must be discussed.
(2) Show evidence of the availability
of funds from sources other than the
HWWS grant. Describe the contributions
the project will receive from your
organization, state agencies, local
government, other federal agencies, nongovernment organizations, private
industry, and individuals. The
documentation should describe how the
contributions will be used to pay your
operational costs and provide financial
assistance for projects.
(3) Demonstrate that the organization
has secured commitments of significant
financial support from other funding
sources.
(4) List the fees and charges that
borrowers will be assessed.
2. Work Plan. The work plan or scope
of work must describe the tasks and
activities that will be accomplished
with available resources during the
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grant period. It must include who will
carry out the activities and services to
be performed and specific timeframes
for completion. Describe any unusual or
unique features of the project such as
innovations, reductions in cost or time,
or extraordinary community
involvement.
3. Budget and Budget Justification.
Use the Form SF–424A, Budget
Information—Non-Construction
Programs, to show your budget cost
elements. The form summarizes
resources as Federal and non-Federal
funds and costs. ‘‘Federal’’ refers only to
the HWWS Grant Program for which
you are applying. ‘‘Non-Federal’’ refers
to resources from your organization,
state agencies, local government, other
Federal agencies, non-government
organizations, private industry, and
individuals. Both Federal and nonFederal resources shall be detailed and
justified in the budget and narrative
justification.
a. Provide a budget with line item
detail and detailed calculations for each
budget object class identified in section
B of the Budget Information form (SF–
424A). Detailed calculations must
include estimation methods, quantities,
unit costs, and other similar quantitative
detail sufficient for the calculation to be
duplicated. Also include a breakout by
the funding sources identified in Block
15 of the SF–424.
b. Provide a narrative budget
justification that describes how the
categorical costs are derived for all
capital and administrative expenditures,
the matching contribution, and other
sources of funds necessary to complete
the project. Discuss the necessity,
reasonableness, and allocability of the
proposed costs. Consult OMB Circular
A–122: ‘‘Cost Principles for Non-Profit
Organizations’’, and any successor OMB
guidance for information about
appropriate costs for each budget
category.
c. If the grant applicant will use a
servicing contractor, the fees may be
reimbursed as an administrative
expense as provided in 7 CFR 1776.13.
These fees must be discussed in the
budget narrative. If the grant applicant
will hire a servicing contractor, it must
demonstrate that all procurement
transactions will be conducted in a
manner to provide, to the maximum
extent practical, open and free
competition. Recipients must justify any
anticipated procurement action that is
expected to be awarded without
competition and exceed the simplified
acquisition threshold fixed at 41 U.S.C.
134 (currently set at $100,000).
d. The indirect cost category should
be used only when the grant applicant
currently has an indirect cost rate
approved by the Department of
Agriculture or another cognizant
Federal agency. A grant applicant that
will charge indirect costs to the grant
must enclose a copy of the current rate
agreement. If the grant applicant is in
the process of initially developing or
renegotiating a rate, the grant applicant
shall submit its indirect cost proposal to
the cognizant agency immediately after
the applicant is advised that an award
will be made. In no event, shall the
indirect cost proposal be submitted later
than three months after the effective
date of the award. Consult OMB
Circular A–122 and any successor OMB
guidance for information about indirect
costs.
4. Evidence of Legal Authority and
Existence. The applicant must provide
satisfactory documentation that it is
legally recognized under state or Tribal
and Federal law as a private non-profit
organization. The documentation also
must show that it has the authority to
enter into a grant agreement with the
RUS and to perform the activities
proposed under the grant application.
Satisfactory documentation includes,
but is not limited to, certificates from
the Secretary of State, copies of state/
Tribal statutes or laws establishing your
organization, and copies of your
organization’s articles of incorporation
and bylaws. Letters from IRS awarding
tax-exempt status are not considered
adequate evidence.
5. List of Directors and Officers. The
applicant must submit a certified list of
directors and officers with their
respective terms.
6. IRS Tax Exempt Status. The
applicant must submit evidence of tax
exempt status from the Internal Revenue
Service.
7. Financial Information and
Sustainability. The applicant must
submit pro forma balance sheets,
income statements, and cash flow
statements for the last three years and
projections for three years. Additionally,
the most recent audit of the applicant’s
organization must be submitted.
B. Evaluation Criteria
Grant applications that are complete
and eligible will be scored
competitively based on the following
scoring criteria:
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Scoring criteria
Points
Degree of expertise and experience in promoting the safe and productive use of individually-owned household water
well systems and ground water.
Degree of expertise and successful experience in making and servicing loans to individuals .........................................
Percentage of applicant contributions. Points allowed under this paragraph will be based on written evidence of the
availability of funds from sources other than the proceeds of a HWWS grant to pay part of the cost of a loan recipient’s project. In-kind contributions will not be considered. Funds from other sources as a percentage of the HWWS
grant and points corresponding to such percentages are as follows:
0 to 9 percent ...............................................................................................................................................................
10 to 25 percent ...........................................................................................................................................................
26 to 30 percent ...........................................................................................................................................................
31 to 50 percent ...........................................................................................................................................................
51 percent or more ......................................................................................................................................................
Extent to which the work plan demonstrates a well thought out, comprehensive approach to accomplishing the objectives of this part, clearly defines who will be served by the project, and appears likely to be sustainable.
Extent to which the goals and objectives are clearly defined, tied to the work plan, and measurable .............................
Lowest ratio of projected administrative expenses to loans advanced ..............................................................................
Administrator’s discretion, considering such factors as:
Creative outreach ideas for marketing HWWS loans to rural residents; factors include: ...........................................
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Up to 30 points.
Up to 20 points.
ineligible.
5 points.
10 points.
15 points.
20 points.
Up to 20 points.
Up to 10 points.
Up to 10 points.
Up to 10 points.
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Scoring criteria
Points
1. Directs loans to rural areas where according to the American Community Survey data by census tracts
show that at least 20 percent of the population is living in poverty. This emphasis will support Rural Development’s goal of providing 20 percent of its funding by 2016 to these areas of need.
2. Directs loans to areas that lack running water, flush toilets, and modern sewage disposal systems, and
areas that have open sewers and high rates of disease caused by poor sanitation, in particular, colonias
or Substantially Underserved Trust Areas.
3. Directs loans to areas stricken by drought.
C. Review Standards
1. Incomplete applications as of the
deadline for submission will not be
considered. If an application is
determined to be incomplete, the
applicant will be notified in writing and
the application will be returned with no
further action.
2. Ineligible applications will be
returned to the applicant with an
explanation.
3. Complete, eligible applications will
be evaluated competitively by a review
team, composed of at least two RUS
employees selected from the Water
Programs Division. They will make
overall recommendations based on the
program elements found in 7 CFR part
1776 and the review criteria presented
in this notice. They will award points as
described in the scoring criteria in 7
CFR 1776.9 and this notice. Each
application will receive a score based on
the averages of the reviewers’ scores and
discretionary points awarded by the
RUS Administrator.
4. Applications will be ranked and
grants awarded in rank order until all
grant funds are expended.
5. Regardless of the score an
application receives, if RUS determines
that the project is technically infeasible,
RUS will notify the applicant, in
writing, and the application will be
returned with no further action.
VI. Award Administration Information
A. Award Notices
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RUS will notify a successful applicant
by an award letter accompanied by a
grant agreement. The grant agreement
will contain the terms and conditions
for the grant. The applicant must
execute and return the grant agreement,
accompanied by any additional items
required by the award letter or grant
agreement.
B. Administrative and National Policy
Requirements
1. This notice, the 7 CFR part 1776,
and the Application Guide implement
the appropriate administrative and
national policy requirements.
2. Direct Federal grants, sub-award
funds, or contracts under the HWWS
Grant Program shall not be used to fund
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inherently religious activities, such as
worship, religious instruction, or
proselytization. Therefore, organizations
that receive direct assistance should
take steps to separate, in time or
location, their inherently religious
activities from the services funded
under the HWWS Grant Program.
Regulations for the Equal Treatment for
Faith-based Organizations are contained
in 7 CFR part 16, which includes the
prohibition against Federal funding of
inherently religious activities.
C. Reporting
1. Performance Reporting. All
recipients of HWWS Grant Program
financial assistance must provide
quarterly performance activity reports to
RUS until the project is complete and
the funds are expended. A final
performance report is also required. The
final report may serve as the last annual
report. The final report must include an
evaluation of the success of the project.
2. Financial Reporting. All recipients
of HWWS Grant Program financial
assistance must provide an annual
audit, beginning with the first year a
portion of the financial assistance is
expended. The grantee will provide an
audit report or financial statements as
follows:
a. Grantees expending $500,000 or
more Federal funds per fiscal year will
submit an audit conducted in
accordance with OMB Circular A–133
or any successor OMB guidance. The
audit will be submitted within 9 months
after the grantee’s fiscal year. Additional
audits may be required if the project
period covers more than one fiscal year.
b. Grantees expending less than
$500,000 will provide annual financial
statements covering the grant period,
consisting of the organization’s
statement of income and expense and
balance sheet signed by an appropriate
official of the organization. Financial
statements will be submitted within 90
days after the grantee’s fiscal year.
3. Recipient and Subrecipient
Reporting. The applicant must have the
necessary processes and systems in
place to comply with the reporting
requirements for first-tier sub-awards
and executive compensation under the
Federal Funding Accountability and
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Transparency Act of 2006 in the event
the applicant receives funding unless
such applicant is exempt from such
reporting requirements pursuant to 2
CFR part 170 Section 170.110(b). The
reporting requirements under the
Transparency Act pursuant to 2 CFR
part 170 are as follows:
a. First Tier Sub-Awards of $25,000 or
more in non-Recovery Act funds (unless
they are exempt under 2 CFR part 170)
must be reported by the Recipient to
https://www.fsrs.gov no later than the
end of the month following the month
the obligation was made.
b. The Total Compensation of the
Recipient’s Executives (5 most highly
compensated executives) must be
reported by the Recipient (if the
Recipient meets the criteria under 2 CFR
part 170) to https://www.sam.gov/
portal/public/SAM/ by the end of the
month following the month in which
the award was made.
c. The Total Compensation of the
Subrecipient’s Executives (5 most
highly compensated executives) must be
reported by the Subrecipient (if the
Subrecipient meets the criteria under 2
CFR part 170) to the Recipient by the
end of the month following the month
in which the subaward was made.
VII. Agency Contacts
A. Web site: https://
www.rurdev.usda.gov/UWPindividualwellsystems.htm.
B. Phone: 202–720–0499.
C. Fax: 202–690–0649.
D. Email: JoyceM.Taylor@
wdc.usda.gov.
E. Main point of contact: Joyce M.
Taylor, Community Programs Specialist,
Water Programs Division, Water and
Environmental Programs, RUS, U.S.
Department of Agriculture.
VIII. Non-Discrimination Statement
USDA Non-Discrimination Statement
The U.S. Department of Agriculture
(USDA) prohibits discrimination against
its customers, employees, and
applicants for employment on the bases
of race, color, national origin, age,
disability, sex, gender identity, religion,
reprisal, and where applicable, political
beliefs, marital status, familial or
parental status, sexual orientation, or all
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Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 27 / Tuesday, February 10, 2015 / Notices
or part of an individual’s income is
derived from any public assistance
program, or protected genetic
information in employment or in any
program or activity conducted or funded
by the Department. (Not all prohibited
bases will apply to all programs and/or
employment activities.)
How To File a Complaint
If you wish to file an employment
complaint, you must contact your
agency’s EEO Counselor within 45 days
of the date of the alleged discriminatory
act, event, or in the case of a personnel
action. Additional information can be
found online at https://
www.ascr.usda.gov/complaint_filing_
file.html.
If you wish to file a Civil Rights
program complaint of discrimination,
complete the USDA Program
Discrimination Complaint Form (PDF),
found online at https://
www.ascr.usda.gov/complaint_filing_
cust.html, or at any USDA office, or call
(866) 632–9992 to request the form. You
may also write a letter containing all of
the information requested in the form.
Send your completed complaint form or
letter to us by mail at U.S. Department
of Agriculture, Director, Office of
Adjudication, 1400 Independence
Avenue SW., Washington, DC 20250–
9410, by fax (202) 690–7442 or email at
program.intake@usda.gov.
Persons With Disabilities
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Individuals who are deaf, hard of
hearing or have speech disabilities and
you wish to file either an EEO or
program complaint please contact
USDA through the Federal Relay
Service at (800) 877–8339 or (800) 845–
6136 (in Spanish).
Persons with disabilities who wish to
file a program complaint, please see
information above on how to contact us
by mail directly or by email. If you
require alternative means of
communication for program information
(e.g., Braille, large print, audiotape, etc.)
please contact USDA’s TARGET Center
at (202) 720–2600 (voice and TDD).
Dated: January 6, 2015.
Jasper Schneider,
Acting Administrator, Rural Utilities Service.
[FR Doc. 2015–02680 Filed 2–9–15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE P
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DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
Census Bureau
Proposed Information Collection;
Comment Request; Annual Survey of
Business Owners
U.S. Census Bureau,
Commerce.
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
The Department of
Commerce, as part of its continuing
effort to reduce paperwork and
respondent burden, invites the general
public and other Federal agencies to
take this opportunity to comment on
proposed and/or continuing information
collections, as required by the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995.
DATES: To ensure consideration, written
comments must be submitted on or
before April 13, 2015.
ADDRESSES: Direct all written comments
to Jennifer Jessup, Departmental
Paperwork Clearance Officer,
Department of Commerce, Room 6616,
14th and Constitution Avenue NW.,
Washington, DC 20230 (or via the
Internet at jjessup@doc.gov).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Requests for additional information or
copies of the information collection
instrument(s) and instructions should
be directed to Patrice Norman, U.S.
Census Bureau, EWD, 6K071,
Washington, DC 20233–6600, (301) 763–
7198, Patrice.C.Norman@census.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
SUMMARY:
I. Abstract
The Census Bureau plans to conduct
the Annual Survey of Business Owners
(ASBO) for employer businesses. In the
ASBO, respondents will be asked
questions about their businesses as well
as several questions about the gender,
ethnicity, race, and veteran status of the
principal owner(s). This survey will be
the first annual collection of
information on the characteristics of
U.S. businesses by ownership
categories, i.e., by gender, ethnicity,
race, and veteran status. The survey will
be conducted as a joint project with the
Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, a
Missouri nonprofit corporation and a
private foundation exempt from taxes
under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal
Revenue Code. The ASBO will
supplement the five-year Survey of
Business Owners program and provide
more timely updates on the status,
nature, and scope of women-,
minority-, and veteran-owned
businesses. The ASBO statistics will be
used by government program officials,
industry organization leaders, economic
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7411
and social analysts, and business
entrepreneurs. Examples of data uses
include:
• To assess business assistance needs
and allocate available program
resources.
• To establish and evaluate contract
procurement practices affecting small
and disadvantaged businesses.
• To create a framework for planning,
directing, and assessing programs that
promote the activities of disadvantaged
groups.
• To assess minority-owned
businesses by industry and area and to
educate industry associations,
corporations, and government entities.
• To analyze economic and
demographic shifts and differences in
ownership and performance among
geographic areas.
• To analyze business operations in
comparison to similar firms, compute
market share, and assess business
growth and future prospects.
The ASBO will be based on the
quinquennial 2012 Survey of Business
Owners long form (SBO–1) with 19
additional questions, including a set of
questions on the sources of capital used
for expansion, which will be asked each
year, and a rotating panel of questions
that will be determined prior to data
collection each year. Each year the new
panel of questions will be submitted to
the Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) as a revision to the current data
collection’s OMB approval. The
following changes will be made to the
2012 SBO:
• An additional question on where
the business’s customers are located in
relation to the business.
• An additional question on the
reasons for owning the business.
• An additional question on whether
the business had profits, losses, or broke
even.
• An additional question on where
the owner would like the company to be
in five years.
• An additional question on issues
that have negatively impacted the
profitability of the business.
• The question on what sources of
capital were used for expansion or
capital improvements to the business
during the reference year has been
expanded into seven questions. The
new questions ask:
Æ The total amount of money put into
the business in 2014.
Æ The total amount of money that the
owner personally put into the business.
Æ The total amount of money
received from family, friends, and
employees that was put into the
business.
Æ The total amount of money
received from any formal debit
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 80, Number 27 (Tuesday, February 10, 2015)]
[Notices]
[Pages 7404-7411]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2015-02680]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Rural Utilities Service
Household Water Well System Grant Program Announcement of
Application Deadlines and Funding
AGENCY: Rural Utilities Service, USDA.
ACTION: Notice of solicitation of applications (NOSA).
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Rural Utilities Service (RUS) announces its Household
Water Well System Grant Program (HWWS) application window for Fiscal
Year (FY) 2015. RUS will make grants to qualified private non-profit
organizations to establish lending programs for homeowners to borrow up
to $11,000 to construct or repair household water wells for an existing
home. The HWWS Grant Program is authorized under 7 U.S.C. 1926e.
Regulations may be found at 7 CFR part 1776. Of particular note this
year, the RUS will assign administrative discretion points to
applications that:
1. Direct loans to rural areas where according to the American
Community Survey data by census tracts show that at least 20 percent of
the population is living in poverty. This emphasis will support Rural
Development's goal of providing 20 percent of its funding by 2016 to
these areas of need.
2. Direct loans to areas which lack running water, flush toilets,
and modern sewage disposal systems, and areas which have open sewers
and high rates of disease caused by poor sanitation, in particular,
colonias or Substantially Underserved Trust Areas.
3. Direct loans to areas stricken by drought.
RUS will publish on its Web site at https://www.rurdev.usda.gov/UWP-individualwellsystems.htm the amount of funding received in the final
FY2015 Appropriations Act. Successful applications will be selected by
the Agency for funding and subsequently awarded to the extent that
funding may ultimately be made available to the Agency through
appropriations.
DATES: The deadline for completed applications for a HWWS grant is
April 13, 2015. Applications in either paper or electronic format must
be postmarked or time-stamped electronically on or before
[[Page 7405]]
the deadline. Late applications will be ineligible for grant
consideration.
ADDRESSES: Submit applications to the following addresses:
1. Electronic applications: https://www.grants.gov (Grants.gov).
Submit electronic applications through Grants.gov, following the
instructions on that Web site.
2. Paper applications: Water Programs Division, Rural Utilities
Service, STOP: 1570, Room 2233-S, 1400 Independence Avenue SW.,
Washington, DC 20250-1570.
Obtain application guides and materials for the HWWS Grant Program
electronically or in paper format from the following addresses:
1. Electronic copies: https://www.rurdev.usda.gov/UWP-individualwellsystems.htm.
2. Paper copies: Write Water Programs Division, Rural Utilities
Service, STOP: 1570, Room 2233-S, 1400 Independence Avenue SW.,
Washington, DC 20250-1570 or call (202) 720-9589.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Joyce M. Taylor, Community Programs
Specialist, Water Programs Division, Water and Environmental Programs.
Telephone: (202) 720-9589, fax: (202) 690-0649, email:
JoyceM.Taylor@wdc.usda.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Overview
Federal Agency: Rural Utilities Service.
Funding Opportunity Title: HWWS Grant Program.
Announcement Type: Solicitation of Applications.
Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance (CFDA) Number: 10.862.
Due Date for Applications: April 13, 2015.
Items in Supplementary Information
I. Funding Opportunity: Description of the HWWS Grant Program.
II. Award Information: To be determined.
III. Eligibility Information: Who is eligible, what kinds of
projects are eligible, what criteria determine basic eligibility.
IV. Application and Submission Information: Where to get application
materials, what constitutes a completed application, how and where
to submit applications, deadlines, items that are eligible.
V. Application Review Information: Considerations and preferences,
scoring criteria, review standards, selection information.
VI. Award Administration Information: Award notice information,
award recipient reporting requirements.
VII. Agency Contacts: Web, phone, fax, email, contact name.
VIII. Non-discrimination Statement: USDA non-discrimination
statement, how to file a complaint, persons with disabilities.
I. Funding Opportunity
A. Program Description
The HWWS Grant Program has been established to help individuals
with low to moderate incomes finance the costs of household water wells
that they own or will own. The HWWS Grant Program is authorized under
Section 306E of the Consolidated Farm and Rural Development Act
(CONACT), 7 U.S.C. 1926e. The CONACT authorizes the RUS to make grants
to qualified private non-profit organizations to establish lending
programs for household water wells.
As the grant recipients, private non-profit organizations will
receive HWWS grants to establish lending programs that will provide
water well loans to individuals. The individuals, as loan recipients,
may use the loans to construct, refurbish, and service their household
well systems. A loan may not exceed $11,000 and will have a term up to
20 years at a one percent annual interest rate.
B. Background
The RUS supports the sound development of rural communities and the
growth of our economy without endangering the environment. The RUS
provides financial and technical assistance to help communities bring
safe drinking water and sanitary, environmentally sound waste disposal
facilities to Rural Americans in greatest need.
Central water systems may not be the only or best solution to
drinking water problems. Distance or physical barriers make public
central water systems costly to deploy in remote areas. A significant
number of geographically isolated households without water service
might require individual wells rather than connections to new or
existing community systems. The goal of the RUS is not only to make
funds available to those communities most in need of potable water but
also to ensure that facilities used to deliver drinking water are safe
and affordable. There is a role for private wells in reaching this
goal.
C. Purpose
The purpose of the HWWS Grant Program is to provide funds to
private non-profit organizations to assist them in establishing loan
programs from which individuals may borrow money for HWWS. Faith-based
organizations are eligible and encouraged to apply for this program.
Applicants must show that the project will provide technical and
financial assistance to eligible individuals to remedy household well
problems.
Due to the limited amount of funds available under the HWWS Grant
Program in previous fiscal years, the RUS expects that 10 applications
may be funded from FY 2015 funds. Applications from existing HWWS grant
recipients are acceptable and will be evaluated as new applications.
II. Award Information
Funding Instrument Type: Grant.
Available funds: To be determined. This Notice is being issued
prior to passage of a final appropriations act to allow potential
applicants time to submit proposals and give the Agency time to process
applications within the current fiscal year. RUS will publish on its
Web site at https://www.rurdev.usda.gov/UWP-individualwellsystems.htm
the amount of funding received in the final FY2015 Appropriations Act.
Anticipated Number of Awards: 10.
Length of Project Periods: 12-month project.
Assistance Instrument: Grant Agreement with successful applicants
before any grant funds are disbursed.
III. Eligibility Information
A. Who is eligible for grants?
1. An organization is eligible to receive a HWWS grant if it:
a. Has an active registration with current information in the
System for Award Management (SAM) (formerly Central Contractor
Registry, (CCR)) and has a Dun and Bradstreet (D&B) Data Universal
Numbering System (DUNS) number.
b. Is a private, non-profit organization.
c. Is legally established and located within one of the following:
(1) A state within the United States
(2) The District of Columbia
(3) The Commonwealth of Puerto Rico
(4) A United States territory.
d. Has the legal capacity and authority to carry out the grant
purpose.
e. Has sufficient expertise and experience in lending activities.
f. Has sufficient expertise and experience in promoting the safe
and productive use of individually-owned HWWS and ground water.
g. Has no delinquent debt to the Federal Government or no
outstanding judgments to repay a Federal debt.
h. Demonstrates that it possesses the financial, technical, and
managerial capability to comply with Federal and State laws and
requirements, and
i. Is not a corporation that has been convicted of a felony (or had
an officer
[[Page 7406]]
or agent acting on behalf of the corporation convicted of a felony)
within the past 24 months. Any Corporation that has 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 is not eligible.
2. An individual is ineligible to receive a Household Water Well
grant. An individual may receive a loan from an organization receiving
a grant award.
B. What are the basic eligibility requirements for a project?
1. Project Eligibility. To be eligible for a grant, the project
must:
a. Be a revolving loan fund created to provide loans to eligible
individuals to construct, refurbish, and service individually-owned
HWWS (see 7 CFR 1776.11 and 1776.12). Loans may not be provided for
home sewer or septic system projects.
b. Be established and maintained by a private, non-profit
organization.
c. Be located in a rural area. Rural area is defined as locations
other than cities or towns of more than 50,000 people and the
contiguous and adjacent urbanized area of such towns and cities.
2. Required Matching Contributions. Grant applicants must provide
written evidence of a matching contribution of at least 10 percent from
sources other than the proceeds of a HWWS grant. In-kind contributions
will not be considered for the matching requirement. Please see 7 CFR
1776.9 for the requirement.
3. Other--Requirements.
a. DUNS Number. The applicant for a grant must supply a Dun and
Bradstreet Data Universal Numbering System (DUNS) number as part of an
application. The Standard Form 424 (SF-424) contains a field for the
DUNS number. The applicant can obtain the DUNS number free of charge by
calling Dun and Bradstreet. Please see https://fedgov.dnb.com/webform
for more information on how to obtain a DUNS number or how to verify
your organization's number.
b. Prior to submitting an application, the applicant must register
in the System for Award Management (SAM) (formerly Central Contractor
Registry, (CCR)).
(1) Applicants may register for the SAM at https://www.sam.gov/portal/public/SAM/.
(2) The SAM registration must remain active with current
information at all times while RUS is considering an application or
while a Federal Grant Award or loan is active. To maintain the
registration in the SAM database the applicant must review and update
the information in the SAM database annually from date of initial
registration or from the date of the last update. The applicant must
ensure that the information in the database is current, accurate, and
complete.
c. Eligibility to receive a HWWS loan will be based on the
following criteria:
(1) An individual must be a member of a household of which the
combined household income of all members does not exceed 100 percent of
the median non-metropolitan household income for the State or territory
in which the individual resides. Household income is the total income
from all sources received by each adult household member for the most
recent 12-month period for which the information is available. It does
not include income earned or received by dependent children under 18
years old or other benefits that are excluded by Federal law. The non-
metropolitan household income must be based on the most recent
decennial census of the United States.
RUS publishes a list of income exclusions in 7 CFR 3550.54(b).
Also, the Department of Housing and Urban Development published a list
of income exclusions in the Federal Register on May 20, 2014, at 79 FR
28938 (See ``Federally Mandated Exclusions'').
(2) The loan recipient must own and occupy the home being improved
with the proceeds of the Household Water Well loan or be purchasing the
home to occupy under a legally enforceable land purchase contract which
is not in default by either the seller or the purchaser.
(3) The home being improved with the water well system must be
located in a rural area.
(4) The loan for a water well system must not be associated with
the construction of a new dwelling.
(5) The loan must not be used to substitute a water well system for
water service available from collective water systems. (For example, a
loan may not be used to restore an old well abandoned when a dwelling
was connected to a water district's water line.)
(6) The loan recipient must not be suspended or debarred from
participation in Federal programs.
IV. Application and Submission Information
A. Where To Get Application Information
The Household Water Well System Grant Application Guide
(Application Guide), copies of necessary forms and samples, and the
HWWS Grant Program regulation are available from these sources:
1. Internet for electronic copies: https://www.grants.gov or https://www.rurdev.usda.gov/UWP-individualwellsystems.htm;
2. Water and Environmental Programs for paper copies: RUS, Water
Programs Division, STOP 1570, Room 2233-S, 1400 Independence Ave. SW.,
Washington, DC 20250-1570, Telephone: (202) 720-9589, Fax: (202) 690-
0649.
B. Content and Form of Application Submission
1. Rules and Guidelines
a. Detailed information on each item required can be found in the
HWWS Grant Program regulation (7 CFR part 1776) and the Application
Guide. Applicants are strongly encouraged to read and apply both the
regulation and the Application Guide. This Notice does not change the
requirements for a completed application for any form of HWWS financial
assistance specified in the regulation. The regulation and Application
Guide provide specific guidance on each of the items listed.
b. Applications should be prepared in conformance with the
provisions in 7 CFR part 1776, subpart B, and departmental and other
applicable regulations including 2 CFR parts 180, 182, 417, 421, 7 CFR
parts 3015, 3018, 3019, and 3052 or any successor regulations.
Applicants should use the Application Guide which contains instructions
and other important information in preparing their application.
Completed applications must include the items found in the checklist in
the next paragraph.
2. Checklist of Items in Completed Application Packages
a. DUNS Number. The applicant for a grant must supply a Dun and
Bradstreet Data Universal Numbering System (DUNS) number as part of an
application. The Standard Form 424 (SF-424) contains a field for the
DUNS number. The applicant can obtain the DUNS number free of charge by
calling Dun and Bradstreet. Please see https://fedgov.dnb.com/webform
for more information on how to obtain a DUNS number or how to verify
your organization's number.
b. Prior to submitting an application, the applicant must register
in the System for Award Management (SAM) (formerly Central Contractor
Registry (CCR).
[[Page 7407]]
(1) Applicants may register for the SAM at: https://www.sam.gov/portal/public/SAM/.
(2) The SAM registration must remain active with current
information at all times while RUS is considering an application or
while a Federal Grant Award or loan is active. To maintain the
registration in the SAM database the applicant must review and update
the information in the SAM database annually from date of initial
registration or from the date of the last update. The applicant must
ensure that the information in the database is current, accurate, and
complete.
(3) Your organization must be listed in the SAM. If you have not
used Grants.gov before, you will need to register with the SAM and the
Credential Provider. New registrations can take 3-5 business days to
process. Updating or renewing an active registration has a shorter
turnaround, 24 hours. Registrations in SAM are active for one year. The
SAM registers your organization, housing your organizational
information and allowing Grants.gov to use the information to verify
your identity. The DUNS number, Taxpayer Identification Number (TIN),
and name and address of the applicant organization must match SAM data
files.
c. The electronic and paper application process requires forms with
the prefixes RD and SF as well as supporting documents and
certifications.
Application Items
(1) SF-424, ``Application for Federal Assistance''.
(2) SF-424A, ``Budget Information--Non-Construction Programs''.
(3) SF-424B, ``Assurances--Non-Construction Programs''.
(4) SF-LLL, ``Disclosure of Lobbying Activity''.
(5) Form RD 400-1, ``Equal Opportunity Agreement''.
(6) Form RD 400-4, ``Assurance Agreement (Under Title VI, Civil
Rights Act of 1964).
(7) Project Proposal, Project Summary, Needs Assessment, Project
Goals and Objectives, Project Narrative.
(8) Work Plan.
(9) Budget and Budget Justification.
(10) Evidence of Legal Authority and Existence.
(11) Documentation of private non-profit status and Internal
Revenue Service (IRS). Tax Exempt Status.
(12) List of Directors and Officers.
(13) Financial information and sustainability (narrative).
(14) Assurances and Certifications of Compliance with Other Federal
Statutes.
The forms in items 1 through 6 must be completed and signed where
appropriate by an official of your organization who has authority to
obligate the organization legally. RD forms are used by programs under
the Rural Development mission area. Standard forms (SF) are used
Government-wide. In addition to the sources listed in section A, the
forms may be accessed electronically through the Rural Development Web
site at https://www.rurdev.usda.gov/FormsAndPublications.html.
See section V, ``Application Review Information,'' for instructions
and guidelines on preparing Items 7 through 13.
3. Compliance with Other Federal Statutes. The applicant must
provide evidence of compliance with other Federal statutes and
regulations, including, but not limited to the following:
a. 7 CFR part 15, subpart A--Nondiscrimination in Federally
Assisted Programs of the Department of Agriculture--Effectuation of
Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964.
b. 2 CFR part 417--Governmentwide Debarment and Suspension (Non-
procurement), or any successor regulations.
c. 7 CFR part 3052--Audits of States, Local Governments, and Non-
profit Organizations, or any successor regulations.
d. Subpart B of 2 CFR part 421, which adopts the Government wide
implementation (2 CFR part 182) of the Drug-Free Workplace Act.
e. Executive Order 13166, ``Improving Access to Services for
Persons with Limited English Proficiency. '' For information on limited
English proficiency and agency-specific guidance, go to https://www.LEP.gov.
f. Federal Obligation Certification on Delinquent Debt.
C. How many copies of an application are required?
1. Applications Submitted on Paper. Submit one signed original and
two additional copies. The original and each of the two copies must
include all required forms, certifications, assurances, and appendices,
be signed by an authorized representative, and have original
signatures. Do not include organizational brochures or promotional
materials.
2. Applications Submitted Electronically. Additional paper copies
are unnecessary if the application is submitted electronically through
https://www.grants.gov.
D. How and Where To Submit an Application
1. Submitting Paper Applications
a. For paper applications, mail or ensure delivery of an original
paper application (no stamped, photocopied, or initialed signatures)
and two copies by the deadline date to: RUS, Water Programs Division,
STOP 1570, Room 2233-S, 1400 Independence Avenue SW., Washington, DC
20250-1570, Telephone: (202) 720-9589.
Submit paper applications marked ``Attention: Water and
Environmental Programs.''
b. Applications must show proof of mailing or shipping by one of
the following:
(1) A legibly dated U.S. Postal Service (USPS) postmark;
(2) A legible mail receipt with the date of mailing stamped by the
USPS; or,
(3) A dated shipping label, invoice, or receipt from a commercial
carrier.
c. If a deadline date falls on a weekend, it will be extended to
the following Monday. If the date falls on a Federal holiday, it will
be extended to the next business day.
d. Due to screening procedures at the Department of Agriculture,
packages arriving via the USPS are irradiated, which can damage the
contents and delay delivery. RUS encourages applicants to consider the
impact of this procedure in selecting an application delivery method.
2. Submitting Electronic Applications
a. Applications will not be accepted by fax or electronic mail.
b. Electronic applications for grants will be accepted if submitted
through Grants.gov at https://www.grants.gov.
c. Applicants must preregister successfully with Grants.gov to use
the electronic applications option. Application information may be
downloaded from Grants.gov without preregistration.
d. Applicants who apply through Grants.gov should submit their
electronic applications before the deadline.
e. Grants.gov contains full instructions on all required passwords,
credentialing, and software. Follow the instructions at Grants.gov for
registering and submitting an electronic application.
f. Grants.gov has two preregistration requirements: A DUNS number
and an active registration in SAM. See the ``Checklist of Items in
Completed Application Packages'' for instructions on obtaining a DUNS
number and registering in the SAM.
[[Page 7408]]
g. You must be registered with Grants.gov before you can submit an
electronic grant application.
(1) You must register at https://www.grants.gov/applicants/get_registered.jsp.
(2) Organization registration user guides and checklists are
available at https://www.grants.gov/applicants/get_registered.jsp.
(3) Grants.gov requires some credentialing and online
authentication procedures. When an applicant organization is registered
with SAM, the organization designates a point of contract who receives
a password authorizing the person to designate staff members who are
allowed to submit applications electronically through Grants.gov. These
authorized organization representatives must be registered with
Grants.gov to receive a username and password to submit applications.
These procedures may take several business days to complete.
(4) Some or all of the SAM and Grants.gov registration,
credentialing and authorizations require updates. If you have
previously registered at Grants.gov to submit applications
electronically, please ensure that your registration, credentialing and
authorizations are up to date well in advance of the grant application
deadline.
h. To use Grants.gov:
(1) Follow the instructions on the Web site to find grant
information.
(2) Download a copy of an application package.
(3) Complete the package off-line.
(4) Upload and submit the application via the Grants.gov Web site.
(5) If a system problem or technical difficulty occurs with an
electronic application, please use the customer support resources
available at the Grants.gov Web site.
(6) Again, RUS encourages applicants to take early action to
complete the sign-up, credentialing and authorization procedures at
https://www.grants.gov before submitting an application at the Web site.
E. Deadlines
The deadline for paper and electronic submissions is April 13,
2015. Paper applications must be postmarked and mailed, shipped, or
sent overnight no later than the closing date to be considered for FY
2015 grant funding. Electronic applications must have an electronic
date and time stamp by midnight of April 13, 2015 to be considered on
time. RUS will not accept applications by fax or email. Applications
that do not meet the criteria above will be considered late
applications and will not be considered. RUS will notify each late
applicant that its application will not be considered.
F. Funding Restrictions
1. Eligible Grant Purposes
a. Grant funds must be used to establish and maintain a revolving
loan fund to provide loans to eligible individuals for household water
well systems.
b. Individuals may use the loans to construct, refurbish,
rehabilitate, or replace household water well systems up to the point
of entry of a home. Point of entry for the well system is the junction
where water enters into a home water delivery system after being pumped
from a well.
c. Grant funds may be used to pay administrative expenses
associated with providing Household Water Well loans.
2. Ineligible Grant Purposes
a. Administrative expenses incurred in any calendar year that
exceed 10 percent of the household water well loans made during the
same period do not qualify for reimbursement.
b. Administrative expenses incurred before RUS executes a grant
agreement with the recipient do not qualify for reimbursement.
c. Delinquent debt owed to the Federal Government does not qualify
for reimbursement.
d. Grant funds may not be used to provide loans for household sewer
or septic systems.
e. Household Water Well loans may not be used to pay the costs of
water well systems for the construction of a new house.
f. Household Water Well loans may not be used to pay the costs of a
home plumbing system.
V. Application Review Information
A. Criteria
This section contains instructions and guidelines on preparing the
project proposal, work plan, and budget sections of the application.
Also, guidelines are provided on the additional information required
for RUS to determine eligibility and financial feasibility.
1. Project Proposal. The project proposal should outline the
project in sufficient detail to provide a reader with a complete
understanding of the loan program. Explain what will be accomplished by
lending funds to individual well owners. Demonstrate the feasibility of
the proposed loan program in meeting the objectives of this grant
program. The proposal should include the following elements:
a. Project Summary. Present a brief project overview. Explain the
purpose of the project, how it relates to RUS' purposes, how the
project will be executed, what the project will produce, and who will
direct it.
b. Needs Assessment. To show why the project is necessary, clearly
identify the economic, social, financial, or other problems that
require solutions. Demonstrate the well owners' need for financial and
technical assistance. Quantify the number of prospective borrowers or
provide statistical or narrative evidence that a sufficient number of
borrowers will exist to justify the grant award. Describe the service
area. Provide information on the household income of the area and other
demographical information. Address community needs.
c. Project Goals and Objectives. Clearly state the project goals.
The objectives should clearly describe the goals and be concrete and
specific enough to be quantitative or observable. They should also be
feasible and relate to the purpose of the grant and loan program.
d. Project Narrative. The narrative should cover in more detail the
items briefly described in the Project Summary. Demonstrate the grant
applicant's experience and expertise in promoting the safe and
productive use of individually-owned household water well systems. The
narrative should address the following points:
(1) Document the grant applicant's ability to manage and service a
revolving fund. The narrative may describe the systems that are in
place for the full life cycle of a loan from loan origination through
servicing. If a servicing contractor will service the loan portfolio,
the arrangement and services provided must be discussed.
(2) Show evidence of the availability of funds from sources other
than the HWWS grant. Describe the contributions the project will
receive from your organization, state agencies, local government, other
federal agencies, non-government organizations, private industry, and
individuals. The documentation should describe how the contributions
will be used to pay your operational costs and provide financial
assistance for projects.
(3) Demonstrate that the organization has secured commitments of
significant financial support from other funding sources.
(4) List the fees and charges that borrowers will be assessed.
2. Work Plan. The work plan or scope of work must describe the
tasks and activities that will be accomplished with available resources
during the
[[Page 7409]]
grant period. It must include who will carry out the activities and
services to be performed and specific timeframes for completion.
Describe any unusual or unique features of the project such as
innovations, reductions in cost or time, or extraordinary community
involvement.
3. Budget and Budget Justification. Use the Form SF-424A, Budget
Information--Non-Construction Programs, to show your budget cost
elements. The form summarizes resources as Federal and non-Federal
funds and costs. ``Federal'' refers only to the HWWS Grant Program for
which you are applying. ``Non-Federal'' refers to resources from your
organization, state agencies, local government, other Federal agencies,
non-government organizations, private industry, and individuals. Both
Federal and non-Federal resources shall be detailed and justified in
the budget and narrative justification.
a. Provide a budget with line item detail and detailed calculations
for each budget object class identified in section B of the Budget
Information form (SF-424A). Detailed calculations must include
estimation methods, quantities, unit costs, and other similar
quantitative detail sufficient for the calculation to be duplicated.
Also include a breakout by the funding sources identified in Block 15
of the SF-424.
b. Provide a narrative budget justification that describes how the
categorical costs are derived for all capital and administrative
expenditures, the matching contribution, and other sources of funds
necessary to complete the project. Discuss the necessity,
reasonableness, and allocability of the proposed costs. Consult OMB
Circular A-122: ``Cost Principles for Non-Profit Organizations'', and
any successor OMB guidance for information about appropriate costs for
each budget category.
c. If the grant applicant will use a servicing contractor, the fees
may be reimbursed as an administrative expense as provided in 7 CFR
1776.13. These fees must be discussed in the budget narrative. If the
grant applicant will hire a servicing contractor, it must demonstrate
that all procurement transactions will be conducted in a manner to
provide, to the maximum extent practical, open and free competition.
Recipients must justify any anticipated procurement action that is
expected to be awarded without competition and exceed the simplified
acquisition threshold fixed at 41 U.S.C. 134 (currently set at
$100,000).
d. The indirect cost category should be used only when the grant
applicant currently has an indirect cost rate approved by the
Department of Agriculture or another cognizant Federal agency. A grant
applicant that will charge indirect costs to the grant must enclose a
copy of the current rate agreement. If the grant applicant is in the
process of initially developing or renegotiating a rate, the grant
applicant shall submit its indirect cost proposal to the cognizant
agency immediately after the applicant is advised that an award will be
made. In no event, shall the indirect cost proposal be submitted later
than three months after the effective date of the award. Consult OMB
Circular A-122 and any successor OMB guidance for information about
indirect costs.
4. Evidence of Legal Authority and Existence. The applicant must
provide satisfactory documentation that it is legally recognized under
state or Tribal and Federal law as a private non-profit organization.
The documentation also must show that it has the authority to enter
into a grant agreement with the RUS and to perform the activities
proposed under the grant application. Satisfactory documentation
includes, but is not limited to, certificates from the Secretary of
State, copies of state/Tribal statutes or laws establishing your
organization, and copies of your organization's articles of
incorporation and bylaws. Letters from IRS awarding tax-exempt status
are not considered adequate evidence.
5. List of Directors and Officers. The applicant must submit a
certified list of directors and officers with their respective terms.
6. IRS Tax Exempt Status. The applicant must submit evidence of tax
exempt status from the Internal Revenue Service.
7. Financial Information and Sustainability. The applicant must
submit pro forma balance sheets, income statements, and cash flow
statements for the last three years and projections for three years.
Additionally, the most recent audit of the applicant's organization
must be submitted.
B. Evaluation Criteria
Grant applications that are complete and eligible will be scored
competitively based on the following scoring criteria:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Scoring criteria Points
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Degree of expertise and experience Up to 30 points.
in promoting the safe and
productive use of individually-
owned household water well systems
and ground water.
Degree of expertise and successful Up to 20 points.
experience in making and servicing
loans to individuals.
Percentage of applicant
contributions. Points allowed
under this paragraph will be based
on written evidence of the
availability of funds from sources
other than the proceeds of a HWWS
grant to pay part of the cost of a
loan recipient's project. In-kind
contributions will not be
considered. Funds from other
sources as a percentage of the
HWWS grant and points
corresponding to such percentages
are as follows:
0 to 9 percent................. ineligible.
10 to 25 percent............... 5 points.
26 to 30 percent............... 10 points.
31 to 50 percent............... 15 points.
51 percent or more............. 20 points.
Extent to which the work plan Up to 20 points.
demonstrates a well thought out,
comprehensive approach to
accomplishing the objectives of
this part, clearly defines who
will be served by the project, and
appears likely to be sustainable.
Extent to which the goals and Up to 10 points.
objectives are clearly defined,
tied to the work plan, and
measurable.
Lowest ratio of projected Up to 10 points.
administrative expenses to loans
advanced.
Administrator's discretion,
considering such factors as:
Creative outreach ideas for Up to 10 points.
marketing HWWS loans to rural
residents; factors include:.
[[Page 7410]]
1. Directs loans to rural
areas where according to
the American Community
Survey data by census
tracts show that at least
20 percent of the
population is living in
poverty. This emphasis
will support Rural
Development's goal of
providing 20 percent of
its funding by 2016 to
these areas of need.
2. Directs loans to areas
that lack running water,
flush toilets, and modern
sewage disposal systems,
and areas that have open
sewers and high rates of
disease caused by poor
sanitation, in particular,
colonias or Substantially
Underserved Trust Areas.
3. Directs loans to areas
stricken by drought.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
C. Review Standards
1. Incomplete applications as of the deadline for submission will
not be considered. If an application is determined to be incomplete,
the applicant will be notified in writing and the application will be
returned with no further action.
2. Ineligible applications will be returned to the applicant with
an explanation.
3. Complete, eligible applications will be evaluated competitively
by a review team, composed of at least two RUS employees selected from
the Water Programs Division. They will make overall recommendations
based on the program elements found in 7 CFR part 1776 and the review
criteria presented in this notice. They will award points as described
in the scoring criteria in 7 CFR 1776.9 and this notice. Each
application will receive a score based on the averages of the
reviewers' scores and discretionary points awarded by the RUS
Administrator.
4. Applications will be ranked and grants awarded in rank order
until all grant funds are expended.
5. Regardless of the score an application receives, if RUS
determines that the project is technically infeasible, RUS will notify
the applicant, in writing, and the application will be returned with no
further action.
VI. Award Administration Information
A. Award Notices
RUS will notify a successful applicant by an award letter
accompanied by a grant agreement. The grant agreement will contain the
terms and conditions for the grant. The applicant must execute and
return the grant agreement, accompanied by any additional items
required by the award letter or grant agreement.
B. Administrative and National Policy Requirements
1. This notice, the 7 CFR part 1776, and the Application Guide
implement the appropriate administrative and national policy
requirements.
2. Direct Federal grants, sub-award funds, or contracts under the
HWWS Grant Program shall not be used to fund inherently religious
activities, such as worship, religious instruction, or proselytization.
Therefore, organizations that receive direct assistance should take
steps to separate, in time or location, their inherently religious
activities from the services funded under the HWWS Grant Program.
Regulations for the Equal Treatment for Faith-based Organizations are
contained in 7 CFR part 16, which includes the prohibition against
Federal funding of inherently religious activities.
C. Reporting
1. Performance Reporting. All recipients of HWWS Grant Program
financial assistance must provide quarterly performance activity
reports to RUS until the project is complete and the funds are
expended. A final performance report is also required. The final report
may serve as the last annual report. The final report must include an
evaluation of the success of the project.
2. Financial Reporting. All recipients of HWWS Grant Program
financial assistance must provide an annual audit, beginning with the
first year a portion of the financial assistance is expended. The
grantee will provide an audit report or financial statements as
follows:
a. Grantees expending $500,000 or more Federal funds per fiscal
year will submit an audit conducted in accordance with OMB Circular A-
133 or any successor OMB guidance. The audit will be submitted within 9
months after the grantee's fiscal year. Additional audits may be
required if the project period covers more than one fiscal year.
b. Grantees expending less than $500,000 will provide annual
financial statements covering the grant period, consisting of the
organization's statement of income and expense and balance sheet signed
by an appropriate official of the organization. Financial statements
will be submitted within 90 days after the grantee's fiscal year.
3. Recipient and Subrecipient Reporting. The applicant must have
the necessary processes and systems in place to comply with the
reporting requirements for first-tier sub-awards and executive
compensation under the Federal Funding Accountability and Transparency
Act of 2006 in the event the applicant receives funding unless such
applicant is exempt from such reporting requirements pursuant to 2 CFR
part 170 Section 170.110(b). The reporting requirements under the
Transparency Act pursuant to 2 CFR part 170 are as follows:
a. First Tier Sub-Awards of $25,000 or more in non-Recovery Act
funds (unless they are exempt under 2 CFR part 170) must be reported by
the Recipient to https://www.fsrs.gov no later than the end of the month
following the month the obligation was made.
b. The Total Compensation of the Recipient's Executives (5 most
highly compensated executives) must be reported by the Recipient (if
the Recipient meets the criteria under 2 CFR part 170) to https://www.sam.gov/portal/public/SAM/ by the end of the month following the
month in which the award was made.
c. The Total Compensation of the Subrecipient's Executives (5 most
highly compensated executives) must be reported by the Subrecipient (if
the Subrecipient meets the criteria under 2 CFR part 170) to the
Recipient by the end of the month following the month in which the
subaward was made.
VII. Agency Contacts
A. Web site: https://www.rurdev.usda.gov/UWP-individualwellsystems.htm.
B. Phone: 202-720-0499.
C. Fax: 202-690-0649.
D. Email: JoyceM.Taylor@wdc.usda.gov.
E. Main point of contact: Joyce M. Taylor, Community Programs
Specialist, Water Programs Division, Water and Environmental Programs,
RUS, U.S. Department of Agriculture.
VIII. Non-Discrimination Statement
USDA Non-Discrimination Statement
The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) prohibits discrimination
against its customers, employees, and applicants for employment on the
bases of race, color, national origin, age, disability, sex, gender
identity, religion, reprisal, and where applicable, political beliefs,
marital status, familial or parental status, sexual orientation, or all
[[Page 7411]]
or part of an individual's income is derived from any public assistance
program, or protected genetic information in employment or in any
program or activity conducted or funded by the Department. (Not all
prohibited bases will apply to all programs and/or employment
activities.)
How To File a Complaint
If you wish to file an employment complaint, you must contact your
agency's EEO Counselor within 45 days of the date of the alleged
discriminatory act, event, or in the case of a personnel action.
Additional information can be found online at https://www.ascr.usda.gov/complaint_filing_file.html.
If you wish to file a Civil Rights program complaint of
discrimination, complete the USDA Program Discrimination Complaint Form
(PDF), found online at https://www.ascr.usda.gov/complaint_filing_cust.html, or at any USDA office, or call (866) 632-
9992 to request the form. You may also write a letter containing all of
the information requested in the form. Send your completed complaint
form or letter to us by mail at U.S. Department of Agriculture,
Director, Office of Adjudication, 1400 Independence Avenue SW.,
Washington, DC 20250-9410, by fax (202) 690-7442 or email at
program.intake@usda.gov.
Persons With Disabilities
Individuals who are deaf, hard of hearing or have speech
disabilities and you wish to file either an EEO or program complaint
please contact USDA through the Federal Relay Service at (800) 877-8339
or (800) 845-6136 (in Spanish).
Persons with disabilities who wish to file a program complaint,
please see information above on how to contact us by mail directly or
by email. If you require alternative means of communication for program
information (e.g., Braille, large print, audiotape, etc.) please
contact USDA's TARGET Center at (202) 720-2600 (voice and TDD).
Dated: January 6, 2015.
Jasper Schneider,
Acting Administrator, Rural Utilities Service.
[FR Doc. 2015-02680 Filed 2-9-15; 8:45 am]
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