Creating Economic Opportunities for Low- and Very Low-Income Persons and Eligible Businesses Through Strengthened “Section 3” Requirements, 16519-16545 [2015-06544]
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Vol. 80
Friday,
No. 59
March 27, 2015
Part II
Department of Housing and Urban
Development
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24 CFR Part 135
Creating Economic Opportunities for Low- and Very Low-Income Persons
and Eligible Businesses Through Strengthened ‘‘Section 3’’ Requirements;
Proposed Rule
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Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 59 / Friday, March 27, 2015 / Proposed Rules
DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND
URBAN DEVELOPMENT
24 CFR Part 135
[Docket No. FR–4893–P–01]
RIN 2529–AA91
Creating Economic Opportunities for
Low- and Very Low-Income Persons
and Eligible Businesses Through
Strengthened ‘‘Section 3’’
Requirements
Office of the Assistant
Secretary for Fair Housing and Equal
Opportunity, HUD.
ACTION: Proposed rule.
AGENCY:
Section 3 of the Housing and
Urban Development Act of 1968, as
amended by the Housing and
Community Development Act of 1992
(Section 3), contributes to the
establishment of stronger, more
sustainable communities by ensuring
that employment and other economic
opportunities generated by Federal
financial assistance for housing and
community development programs are,
to the greatest extent feasible, directed
toward low- and very low-income
persons, particularly those who are
recipients of government assistance for
housing. HUD is statutorily charged
with the authority and responsibility to
implement and enforce Section 3.
HUD’s regulations implementing the
requirements of Section 3 have not been
updated since 1994. This proposed rule
would update HUD’s Section 3
regulations to address new programs
established since 1994 that are subject
to the Section 3 requirements and
promote compliance with the
requirements of Section 3 by recipients
of Section 3 covered financial
assistance, while also recognizing
barriers to compliance that may exist,
and strengthening HUD’s oversight of
Section 3.
DATES: Comment Due Date: May 26,
2015.
ADDRESSES: Interested persons are
invited to submit comments regarding
this rule to the Regulations Division,
Office of General Counsel, Department
of Housing and Urban Development,
451 7th Street SW., Room 10276,
Washington, DC 20410–0500.
Communications must refer to the above
docket number and title. There are two
methods for submitting public
comments. All submissions must refer
to the above docket number and title.
1. Submission of Comments by Mail.
Comments may be submitted by mail to
the Regulations Division, Office of
General Counsel, Department of
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SUMMARY:
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Housing and Urban Development, 451
7th Street SW., Room 10276,
Washington, DC 20410–0500.
2. Electronic Submission of
Comments. Interested persons may
submit comments electronically through
the Federal eRulemaking Portal at
www.regulations.gov. HUD strongly
encourages commenters to submit
comments electronically. Electronic
submission of comments allows the
commenter maximum time to prepare
and submit a comment, ensures timely
receipt by HUD, and enables HUD to
make them immediately available to the
public. Comments submitted
electronically through the
www.regulations.gov Web site can be
viewed by other commenters and
interested members of the public.
Commenters should follow the
instructions provided on that site to
submit comments electronically.
Note: To receive consideration as public
comments, comments must be submitted
through one of the two methods specified
above. Again, all submissions must refer to
the docket number and title of the rule.
No Facsimile Comments. Facsimile
(fax) comments are not acceptable.
Public Inspection of Public
Comments. All properly submitted
comments and communications
submitted to HUD will be available for
public inspection and copying between
8 a.m. and 5 p.m., weekdays, at the
above address. Due to security measures
at the HUD Headquarters building, an
appointment to review the public
comments must be scheduled in
advance by calling the Regulations
Division at 202–708–3055 (this is not a
toll-free number). Individuals with
speech or hearing impairments may
access this number via TTY by calling
the Federal Relay Service at 800–877–
8339. Copies of all comments submitted
are available for inspection and
downloading at www.regulations.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Staci Gilliam, Director, Economic
Opportunity Division, Office of Fair
Housing and Equal Opportunity,
Department of Housing and Urban
Development, 451 7th Street SW., Room
5236, Washington, DC 20410; telephone
202–402–3468 (voice/TDD) (this is not a
toll-free number). Persons with hearing
or speech impairments may access this
number through TTY by calling the
Federal Relay Service, at toll-free, 800–
877–8339. General email inquiries
regarding Section 3 may be sent to:
section3@hud.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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Executive Summary
Purpose of Regulatory Action
This proposed rule would update the
regulations implementing Section 3.
The purpose of Section 3 is to ensure
that employment, training, contracting,
and other economic opportunities
generated by certain HUD financial
assistance shall, to the greatest extent
feasible, and consistent with existing
Federal, State and local laws and
regulations, be directed to low- and very
low-income persons, particularly those
who are recipients of government
assistance for housing, and to
businesses that provide economic
opportunities to low- and very lowincome persons. As noted in the
summary of this preamble, the
regulations for Section 3 have not been
updated in over 20 years. Since the
regulations were last issued in 1994,
new HUD programs have been
established to which Section 3 applies.
HUD’s experience in administering
Section 3 over the past 20 years has
identified where HUD could improve
the effectiveness of its regulations
implementing Section 3. Recent efforts
by HUD to improve Section 3 oversight
without resorting to regulatory change
(e.g., increased reporting compliance
through grant competitions and
establishment of a business registry)
have not been as successful as HUD
hoped. HUD concluded that regulatory
changes are needed to more effectively
strengthen Section 3 oversight and more
effectively help recipients of HUD funds
achieve the purposes of the Section 3
statute.
Summary of the Major Provisions of
This Regulatory Action
The following provides an overview
of the more significant provisions of this
proposed rule.
Standard for Demonstrating
Compliance ‘‘To the Greatest Extent
Feasible.’’ The proposed rule strives to
achieve uniformity with the statutory
standard to undertake ‘‘best efforts’’ to
provide economic opportunities to
Section 3 residents and businesses, and
the statutory standard to ensure ‘‘to the
greatest extent feasible’’ that
opportunities for training, employment,
and contracting are provided to Section
3 residents and businesses. HUD views
these standards as essentially the same,
and would remove the distinction in the
existing codified regulations. HUD
would only use the ‘‘to the greatest
extent feasible’’ standard.
The proposed rule clarifies that
recipients of HUD funds are required to
demonstrate compliance, to the greatest
extent feasible, by: (1) Establishing and
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implementing policies and procedures
designed to achieve compliance with
the goals of Section 3 as reflected in
HUD’s regulations; (2) fulfilling the
recipient responsibilities set forth at
§ 135.11 of the Section 3 regulations;
and (3) either reaching or exceeding the
minimum numerical goals for
employment and contracting, or
providing a written explanation as to
why the goals were not met (for
example, identifying barriers
encountered that prevented the
recipient from achieving targeted goals
and actions that will be taken to
overcome such barriers). HUD believes
that this approach will provide
recipients of HUD funds with more
flexibility in planning how to meet their
Section 3 obligations while holding
them accountable when their actions do
not result in compliance.
Revised Definition of ‘‘New Hire.’’ The
current Section 3 regulations establish a
goal for 30 percent of new hires to be
Section 3 residents, regardless of the
length of time that the Section 3
resident is employed. As a result, the
Section 3 regulations create a loophole,
so to speak, by allowing contractors to
hire Section 3 residents for relatively
short periods of time and this short-term
employment would meet the new hire
requirement. This proposed rule would
close this loophole by redefining a
Section 3 new hire for contractors or
subcontractors as a person who works a
minimum of 50 percent of the average
staff hours worked for the job category
for which the person was hired
throughout the duration of time that the
work is performed on the covered
project. For example, if a Section 3
resident is hired as a painter, and
painters typically work 40 hours each
week, the Section 3 resident must work
a minimum of 20 hours each week
during their employment on the project
in order to be counted towards the
recipient’s minimum numerical goal for
employment. HUD believes that this
new definition will result in more
meaningful employment opportunities
for Section 3 residents and prevent
contractors from making nominal efforts
to comply with Section 3.
New Definition of ‘‘Section 3
Business.’’ Currently, a ‘‘Section 3
Business’’ must meet one of the
following three definitions: (a) The
business is 51 percent or more owned
by Section 3 residents; (b) the business
employs at least 30 percent of the
permanent, full-time employees who are
Section 3 residents; (c) the business
provides evidence of a commitment to
subcontract 25 percent or more of the
dollar amount of all subcontracts to
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businesses that meet definitions (a) or
(b).
This proposed rule would remove the
third category, paragraph (c) of the
current definition of a Section 3
Business in response to a pattern of
misuse by contractors that initially
indicated that they would award 25
percent of subcontracts to Section 3
businesses, in order to receive
preference for contracts, but never
provided contracts to them.
The proposed rule would add to
categories (a) and (b) of the current
definition of Section 3 Business the
following categories in an effort to
increase contracting opportunities for
businesses that are owned by residents
of public housing and to incentivize
contractors to sponsor Section 3
residents to attend Department of Labor
(DOL) or DOL-recognized registered
apprenticeship programs. HUD would
add the following categories to the
definition of a Section 3 business: (1)
The business meets the definition of a
resident-owned business, as set forth in
HUD’s regulations at 24 CFR 963.5; and
(2) the business demonstrates that at
least 20 percent of its permanent fulltime employees are Section 3 residents
and the business either: (i) Sponsored a
minimum of 10 percent of its current
Section 3 employees to attend a DOL or
DOL-recognized, State Apprenticeship
Agency-approved, registered
apprenticeship or pre-apprenticeship
training program that meets the
requirements outlined in DOL’s
Employment Training Administration
(ETA) Training and Employment Notice
13–12 1; or (ii) 10 percent of the
employees of the business are
participants or graduates of a DOL
YouthBuild program.2
Removal of Minimum Numerical Goal
for Nonconstruction. Currently, the
Section 3 regulations establish a
minimum numerical goal that 3 percent
of the total dollar amount of
nonconstruction contracts shall be
awarded to Section 3 businesses. Since
there is no statutory basis for making a
distinction between construction and
nonconstruction contracts, and the
interpretation of the nonconstruction
goal has been problematic for recipients,
HUD believes that a numerical goal of
10 percent of the total dollar amount of
all covered contracts to Section 3
businesses, regardless of the type of
contract or its dollar amount, will create
more contracting opportunities for
them.
1 See https://wdr.doleta.gov/directives/corr_
doc.cfm?DOCN=5842.
2 See https://www.doleta.gov/youth_services/
youthbuild.cfm.
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Introduction of New Term ‘‘Section 3
Local Area’’. The definitions of ‘‘Section
3 resident’’ and ‘‘Section 3 business
concern’’ in the current Section 3
regulation do not limit eligibility to
residents and businesses, respectively,
residing or located in proximity to
Section 3 covered projects or activities.
As a result, a public housing resident or
a Section 3 business from anywhere in
the U.S. can receive preference whether
or not they live or operate in the specific
metropolitan area where the HUDfunded work is being carried out. To be
more consistent with the Section 3
statute and congressional intent, this
proposed rule clarifies that Section 3
residents and businesses must reside or
be located, as applicable, in the Section
3 local area, which is defined as: (1) The
primary statistical area where the
Section 3 covered project or activity
takes place, or (2) the nonmetropolitan
county where the Section 3 covered
project or activity takes place.
Section 3 Resident and Business
Verification Procedures. The current
Section 3 regulations do not require
recipients to verify that a Section 3
resident or Section 3 business meets the
applicable definitions in the regulations.
Instead, residents and businesses are
merely required to comply with
whatever procedures recipients put in
place, if such procedures exist. This
proposed rule would continue to allow
recipients to use their discretion for
developing verification procedures.
However, the proposed rule explicitly
allows recipients to accept selfcertifications from residents or
businesses, or presume that residents
residing in or businesses located in
disadvantaged census tracts are eligible
to receive the preference in hiring and
contracting. To prevent ineligible
persons or businesses from receiving
Section 3 benefits, this proposed rule
would require recipients that implement
self-certification or presumed benefit
procedures to verify that such selfcertification or presumption policy is an
acceptable approach by undertaking a
sample of residents or businesses in the
disadvantaged census tract or in areas
which HUD funds are being expended
for covered projects and activities.
Monitoring Payroll Data of Developers
and Contractors. This proposed rule
recognizes that the most successful
recipients monitor payroll data to track
new hires. In an effort to formalize a
long-standing best practice, this
proposed rule would require recipients
that are administering projects that are
subject to both Section 3- and Davis
Bacon-covered requirements to monitor
a contractor’s payroll for changes in
employment (i.e., terminations,
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retirements, transfers, and other new job
vacancies) to proactively identify
instances when Section 3 obligations are
triggered. This practice should increase
monitoring and oversight by recipients
and improve contractor accountability.
Further, since the Davis-Bacon
regulation requires recipients
administering covered projects to
monitor payroll data for compliance
with prevailing wage laws, adding this
Section 3 requirement should result in
minimal administrative burden.
Amending Agreements with Labor
Unions. Recipients that are located in
jurisdictions that are governed by
bargaining agreements with labor
unions typically have low rates of
compliance with the minimum
numerical goals for contracting because
unions operate outside of Section 3
obligations. In fact, a review of project
labor agreements in Chicago and New
York City revealed that these documents
do not make any reference to HUD
requirements, including Section 3. This
proposed rule would require recipients
to amend all existing agreements with
labor unions to ensure that Section 3
obligations are included and to prevent
labor unions from obstructing the
recipients’ ability to achieve
compliance.
Sanctions for Delinquent Section 3
Annual Reports. Achieving full
compliance with Section 3 reporting
requirements has been a challenge for
many years. While recent efforts to
enhance reporting rates have resulted in
increased reporting by 60 percentage
points, there has been minimal
imposition of penalties on recipients
that are delinquent with the current
regulatory reporting requirements. A
2013 HUD Office of Inspector General
(OIG) audit report of Section 3 found
that HUD was not fully enforcing the
Section 3 reporting requirements for
public housing agencies (PHAs).3 The
final audit report recommended that
HUD’s Office of Fair Housing and Equal
Opportunity (FHEO) refer PHAs to
HUD’s Office of Public and Indian
Housing (PIH) for the imposition of
penalties for delinquent reporting. This
proposed rule would extend this policy
to all covered recipients and inform
recipients that continuing failure to
submit Section 3 annual reports may
result in HUD denying or withholding
subsequent funds.
Funding Threshold for Recipients of
Section-3 Covered Housing and
Community Development Financial
Assistance. Another weakness with the
3 See https://www.hudoig.gov/reportspublications/audit-reports/hud-did-not-enforcereporting-requirements-of-section-3-of.
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current Section 3 regulations is found in
the interpretation that has been given to
the funding threshold for recipients of
housing and community development
assistance (i.e., funds allocated or
awarded under the Community
Development Block Grants (CDBG)
program, HOME Investment
Partnerships program (HOME program),
Housing Opportunities for Persons With
AIDS (HOPWA), Lead Hazard Control
program, Sections 202 and 811
Supportive Housing programs, ProjectBased Section 8, etc.). The existing
threshold is based on the receipt of
more than $200,000 in covered funding.
This proposed rule would establish a
new threshold that is based on the
expenditure of covered financial
assistance.
Under this proposed rule, Section 3
requirements would apply to recipients
of housing and community development
financial assistance that plan to obligate
or commit an aggregate amount of
$400,000 or more in Section 3 covered
financial assistance to projects involving
housing rehabilitation, housing
construction, demolition, or other
public construction during a given
annual reporting period. HUD arrived at
the $400,000 threshold after analyzing
2013 data for recipients of CDBG
assistance from the Integrated
Disbursement and Information System
(IDIS) to determine the expenditure
dollar amounts on projects involving
construction and rehabilitation that
produced the greatest amount of
economic opportunities for Section 3
residents and businesses. The data
revealed that grantees that spent less
than $400,000 on construction and
rehabilitation received less than 5
percent of total covered program
funding and therefore generated an
insignificant amount of subsequent jobs
and contracts. The proposed threshold
would exempt 37 percent of recipients
of financial assistance awarded under
programs administered by HUD’s Office
of Community Planning and
Development (CPD) (i.e., CDBG, HOME,
and HOWPA programs, etc.). Currently
just over 3 percent of these recipients
are exempt under the existing threshold.
As set forth above, HUD considered a
number of alternate thresholds before
selecting the proposed threshold of
$400,000. The new threshold is
considered to be more effective because
it would enable HUD to focus on those
recipients that produce the majority of
economic opportunities and for which
there is a direct correlation between
their expenditure of covered financial
assistance and opportunities created for
Section 3 residents and businesses.
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Order of Priority Consideration for
Recipients of Section 3 covered Housing
and Community Development
Assistance. To promote long-term hiring
and create training positions for Section
3 residents, this proposed rule would
give highest priority consideration for
projects financed with housing and
community development financial
assistance to Section 3 businesses that
will: (1) Retain a minimum of 75
percent of previously hired Section 3
residents and (2) provide a minimum of
50 percent of on-the-job training or
registered apprenticeship opportunities
to Section 3 residents.
Costs and Benefits
With respect to the costs and benefits
of this rule, HUD has prepared a
Regulatory Impact Assessment (RIA).
The RIA assesses the likely costs and
benefits of the proposed rule. The
purpose of Section 3 is to provide jobs,
including apprenticeship opportunities,
to public housing residents and other
eligible low- and very low-income
residents of a local area, and contracting
opportunities for businesses that
substantially employ these persons.
However, the Section 3 requirement
itself does not create additional jobs or
contracts. Instead, Section 3 redirects
local jobs and contracts created as a
result of the expenditure of HUD funds
to Section 3 residents and businesses
residing and operating in the area in
which the HUD funds are expended. A
reasonable estimate of the impact would
be an additional 1,400 jobs provided to
Section 3 residents, annually, and more
than $172 million in contracts to
Section 3 businesses, as a result of
increased oversight and clarification of
program standards. In addition, with
respect to incomes for tenants of public
housing, the Federal rental subsidies
provided to those tenants are expected
to be reduced as a result of the creation
of job opportunities resulting from the
expenditure of Federal funds. Such a
reduction of Federal subsidies could
result in a reduction of $19 million,
annually.
If implemented as proposed, this
proposed rule would result in a
reporting and recordkeeping burden of
226,640 hours or $7.3 million 4 the first
year and a reduction of administrative
burden by ¥10,000 hours or $320,000
in succeeding years. This rule will not
have any impact on the level of funding
for covered HUD programs. Funding is
determined independently by
congressional appropriations, and
4 Average total compensation of all workers, BLS,
March 2014. See https://www.bls.gov/news.release/
ecec.t01.htm.
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authorizing statutes that may impose
such requirements as minimum or
maximum grants. This proposed rule is
not an economically significant rule as
defined in Executive Order 12866
(Regulatory Planning and Review).5
I. Background
Section 3 of the Housing and Urban
Development Act of 1968 (Pub. L. 90–
448, approved August 1, 1968) (Section
3) was enacted for the purpose of
bringing economic opportunities,
generated by the expenditure of certain
HUD financial assistance, to the greatest
extent feasible, to low- and very lowincome persons residing in
communities where the financial
assistance is expended. Section 3
recognizes that HUD funds are often one
of the largest sources of funds expended
in low-income communities and, where
such funds are spent on activities such
as construction and rehabilitation of
housing and other public facilities, the
expenditure results in economic
opportunities. By directing HUD-funded
economic opportunities to residents and
businesses in the community where the
funds are expended, the expenditure
can have the double benefit of creating
new or rehabilitated housing and other
facilities while creating jobs for the
residents of these communities. Section
3 was amended by the Housing and
Community Development Act of 1992
(Pub. L. 102–550, approved October 28,
1992), which required the Secretary of
HUD to promulgate regulations to
implement Section 3, codified at 12
U.S.C. 1701u. HUD’s Section 3
regulations were promulgated through
an interim rule published on June 30,
1994, at 59 FR 33880, and the
regulations are codified in 24 CFR part
135.
In the 20 years that have lapsed since
HUD promulgated the current set of
Section 3 regulations, significant
legislation has been enacted that affects
HUD programs that are subject to the
Recommendation #:
requirements of Section 3 and that are
not adequately addressed in the current
Section 3 regulations. This legislation
includes, but is not limited to the
following: reforms made to HUD’s
Indian housing programs by the Native
American Housing Assistance and SelfDetermination Act of 1996 (NAHASDA)
(Pub. L. 104–330, approved October 26,
1996); public housing reforms made by
the Quality Housing and Work
Responsibility Act of 1998 (QHWRA)
(Pub. L. 105–276, approved October 21,
1998); reforms made to HUD’s
supportive housing programs by the
Section 202 Supportive Housing for the
Elderly Act of 2010 (Pub. L. 111–372,
approved January 4, 2011), and the
Frank Melville Supportive Housing
Investment Act of 2010 (Pub. L. 111–
347, approved January 4, 2011), and,
more recently, reforms made to HUD’s
public housing by the Rental Assistance
Demonstration program authorized by
the act appropriating 2012 funding for
HUD, the Consolidated and Further
Continuing Appropriations Act, 2012
(Pub. L. 112–55, approved November
18, 2011).
HUD has sought to strengthen
compliance with Section 3 by
concentrating on oversight, outreach,
and technical assistance. As part of this
assistance, HUD has issued guidance
related to applicability, recipient
thresholds, and administrative
procedures.6 These steps increased
recipient reporting from 20 percent to
over 80 percent. The increase in
reporting led to a corresponding
increase in reported jobs for Section 3
residents to 21,600 (50 percent of all
new hires) and an increase in reported
contracts awarded Section 3 businesses
to $675 million.7
While these efforts have facilitated
increased compliance with Section 3,
they have not resulted in full
compliance with Section 3, nor do such
efforts relieve HUD of its good
governance responsibility to update its
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Section 3 regulations, now 20 years old,
to ensure that the regulations capture
new funded programs and current
funding policies and practices.
In August 2010, HUD hosted a Section
3 Listening Forum 8 that brought
together recipients of HUD Section 3
covered financial assistance, advocates,
Section 3 residents and businesses, and
other stakeholders to highlight ‘‘best
practices’’ and to discuss barriers to
implementation across the country. The
forum offered recipients of Section 3
covered financial assistance the
opportunity to identify challenges they
were facing with their efforts to comply
with Section 3. Forum participants
stated that the existing Section 3
regulations are not sufficiently explicit
about specific actions that could be
undertaken to achieve compliance; that
the existing regulations do not clearly
describe the extent to which recipients
may require subrecipients, contractors,
and subcontractors to comply with
Section 3; and actions that recipients
may take to impose meaningful
sanctions for noncompliance by their
subrecipients, contractors, and
subcontractors.
As noted earlier, in 2013, HUD’s OIG
conducted an audit to assess HUD’s
oversight of Section 3, in response to
concerns about economic opportunities
that were provided (or should have been
provided) by the expenditure of
financial assistance under the American
Reinvestment and Recovery Act
(Recovery Act) (Pub. L. 111–5, approved
February 17, 2009). The audit found that
HUD was not fully enforcing the
reporting requirements of Section 3 for
recipients of Fiscal Year 2009 Recovery
Act Public Housing Capital funds from
HUD.9 HUD’s OIG made several
recommendations to address its
findings. The following chart lists HUD
OIG’s recommendations for HUD and
describes whether each
recommendation is addressed by this
proposed rule.
Addressed in Proposed Rule
1A. ...............
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Recommendation
Implement the new HUD–60002 [Section 3 Summary Report]
submission and tracking system that has been in development, as well as the planned system enhancements.
1B. ...............
Establish procedures to follow up on missing and inaccurate information on HUD–60002 submissions.
This recommendation will provide FHEO the vehicle to impose
the proposed sanctions for delinquent reporting described in
§ 135.23(f) and to address concerns with the reliability of
data previously submitted by recipients.
See Recommendation 1C.
5 See https://www.archives.gov/federal-register/
executive-orders/pdf/12866.pdf.
6 See https://portal.hud.gov/hudportal/HUD?src=/
program_offices/fair_housing_equal_opp/section3/
section3.
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7 Source: 2010 Section 3 annual summary report
data (Form HUD 60002).
8 See https://nhlp.org/files/09%20Section%203%
20Barriers%20and%20best%20practices%208%
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attachment.pdf.
9 See: https://www.hudoig.gov/reportspublications/audit-reports/hud-did-not-enforcereporting-requirements-of-section-3-of.
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Recommendation #:
Recommendation
Addressed in Proposed Rule
1C. ..............
Establish procedures regarding when to refer to Public and Indian Housing (PIH) any public housing authorities (PHAs)
that fail to make required submissions or corrections.
1D. ..............
Resolve issues with CPD and complete the process to publish
final regulations for 24 CFR Part 135.
Require the six housing authorities in this finding that reported
Section 3 noncompliance to provide justification or support
that they met the [minimum numerical] goals. If they cannot
show compliance, enter into a voluntary compliance agreement to bring their Section 3 programs into compliance, or
refer them to PIH for repayment of the $26 million that
should have been used for Section 3.
FHEO has developed procedures for reviewing HUD–60002
submissions and established the steps that will be taken to
refer PHAs to PIH when Section 3 reports are inaccurate or
delinquent. Pursuant to this proposed rule, FHEO will expand
the implementation of these procedures to all recipients of
Section 3 covered financial assistance and make subsequent
referrals for appropriate action to all HUD program offices.
This regulatory action represents FHEO’s efforts to comply with
this recommendation.
FHEO has incorporated this recommendation into its enforcement actions at § 135.99 and the sanctions for noncompliance at § 135.27.
1E. ...............
For the reasons set forth above,
through this rule, HUD proposes to
revise its Section 3 regulations at 24
CFR part 135 in a manner designed to
better fulfill the goal of Section 3.
II. This Proposed Rule
In order to provide better parameters
for achieving the goals of Section 3, this
proposed rule: communicates how
recipients may meet minimum
numerical goals for employment and
contracting opportunities; provides
other direction to recipients of Section
3 covered financial assistance and their
contractors in order that they may more
effectively comply with Section 3; vests
more discretion and responsibility with
recipients on how to verify the
eligibility of Section 3 residents and
businesses for employment and
contracting opportunities; and
articulates procedures for complaint
processing. This rule organizes the
regulations of 24 CFR part 135 into five
subparts: Subpart A—General
Provisions; Subpart B—Additional
Provisions for Public Housing Financial
Assistance; Subpart C—Additional
Provisions for Housing and Community
Development Financial Assistance;
Subpart D—Additional Provisions for
Recipients of Competitively Awarded
Section 3 Financial Assistance; and
Subpart E—Enforcement.
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General Provisions—Subpart A
Subpart A—General Provisions
contains those provisions applicable to
all Section 3 covered financial
assistance, whether public housing
financial assistance, housing and
community development financial
assistance, or competitively awarded
financial assistance, including the
following: definitions of terms
applicable to compliance with Section 3
(§ 135.5); demonstration compliance
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with the ‘‘greatest extent feasible’’
requirement (§ 135.7); description of
official Section 3 policies and
procedures to be developed and
implemented by recipients (§ 135.9);
recipient responsibilities under Section
3 (§ 135.11); a general description of
minimum numerical goals for
employment and contracting
opportunities (§ 135.13); the procedures
for verifying the eligibility of Section 3
residents and Section 3 businesses
(§ 135.15); descriptions of written
agreements and contractors that must be
entered into by the recipient and its
subrecipients, contracts, or
subcontractors before the disbursement
of any Section 3 covered financial
assistance (§ 135.17 and § 135.19); an
overview of certifications of compliance
with this part (§ 135.21); description of
annual reporting requirements
(§ 135.23); a summary of recordkeeping
responsibilities and HUD’s authority to
have access to records demonstrating
compliance with this part (§ 135.25); an
outline of sanctions that may be
imposed for noncompliance with this
part (§ 135.27); and communication of
other Federal requirements that may
apply during the administration of
Section 3 covered projects and activities
(§ 135.29).
Section 135.3 of the existing
regulations, which addresses the scope
of applicability of the requirements of
Section 3, would be removed by this
proposed rule. The applicability of
Section 3 would now be addressed by
the following: (1) The definitions of
‘‘housing and community development
financial assistance’’ and ‘‘public
housing financial assistance’’ in § 135.5;
(2) the individual applicability sections
for public housing financial assistance
and housing and community
development financial assistance, in
§ 135.31 and § 135.51, respectively; and
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(3) the thresholds that trigger
applicability of Section 3, which are
addressed in § 135.33, and § 135.53.
HUD believes that placing this
information in the subparts associated
with each type of Section 3 covered
financial assistance will prevent
recipients from inadvertently referring
to the wrong requirements.
Section 135.3 of the proposed rule
describes the Secretary’s delegation of
authority to the Assistant Secretary for
Fair Housing and Equal Opportunity
(FHEO) to implement and oversee
compliance with the requirements of
Section 3. This delegation of authority
is unchanged from § 135.7 of the
existing regulations. While FHEO has
the overall authority for carrying out
Section 3 obligations within HUD,
monitoring and oversight takes place in
coordination with various HUD program
offices, such as PIH, CPD, Healthy
Homes and Lead Hazard Control
(HHLHC), Housing, etc.
Section 135.5 of the proposed rule
provides the definitions of terminology
used throughout the regulation (as it is
in the existing regulations), introduces
new definitions, revises definitions
contained in the existing regulations,
and removes definitions that are no
longer applicable. Some of the newly
defined terms include: ‘‘construction,’’
‘‘contracting opportunities,’’ ‘‘numerical
goals,’’ ‘‘priority consideration,’’
‘‘professional services,’’ ‘‘project-based
rental assistance,’’ ‘‘public housing
financial assistance,’’ ‘‘rehabilitation,’’
‘‘routine maintenance,’’ ‘‘service area,’’
and ‘‘Section 3 local area.’’ The terms
‘‘housing and community development
financial assistance,’’ ‘‘new hires,’’
‘‘Section 3 business (formerly Section 3
business concern),’’ ‘‘Section 3 covered
financial assistance,’’ and ‘‘Section 3
resident’’ have been revised with the
objective of improving the
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understanding of their meanings. The
following existing defined terms are
proposed to be removed: ‘‘annual
contributions contract,’’ ‘‘HUD
YouthBuild programs,’’ ‘‘Job Training
Partnership Act.’’
Section 135.7 of the proposed rule
addresses how recipients may
demonstrate compliance to the greatest
extent feasible. The 1968 statute
established two standards for achieving
compliance with the requirements of
Section 3. PHAs and their contractors
and subcontractors were required to
make their ‘‘best effort,’’ consistent with
existing Federal, State, and local laws
and regulations to provide economic
opportunities to Section 3 residents and
businesses. On the other hand, programs
that receive housing and community
development assistance are required to
ensure that, to the greatest extent
feasible, and consistent with existing
Federal, State, and local laws and
regulations, opportunities for training
and employment arising in connection
with housing rehabilitation, housing
construction, or other public
construction are given to Section 3
residents and businesses. HUD’s 1994
interim rule, published on June 30,
1994, at 59 FR 33880, established HUD’s
position that there is very little
difference in the common meaning of
these statutory standards. Further, the
Section 3 statute requires every
recipient and contractor that generates
economic opportunities from the
expenditure of Section 3 financial
assistance, regardless of the HUD
program from which the assistance is
derived, to provide these economic
opportunities to low- and very lowincome persons and the businesses that
employ them. Accordingly, this rule
maintains one standard for achieving
compliance. Recipients, as defined in
§ 135.5, are required, to the greatest
extent feasible, to target low- and very
low-income persons for employment
and training opportunities funded with
Section 3 financial assistance, and
businesses that are either owned by or
substantially employ such persons.
Section 135.7 provides that while
reaching the minimum numerical goals
is one way to demonstrate compliance
with the statute’s ‘‘greatest extent
feasible’’ requirement, compliance to
the greatest extent feasible is
demonstrated by the recipient, first and
foremost, establishing and
implementing procedures and strategies
by which the recipient and, where
applicable, its subrecipients, contractors
and subcontractors will comply with the
requirements set forth in § 135.11. This
section also provides that where a
recipient is unable to reach the
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minimum numerical goals set forth in
the subpart associated with the type of
financial assistance provided, (§ 135.35
and § 135.55, respectively) such
inability does not necessarily mean that
the recipient did not undertake efforts to
meet these goals. Accordingly, a
recipient that does not reach the
minimum numerical goals will be
required to provide a written
justification explaining: (1) Why it was
unable to meet these goals; (2) the
impediments the recipient encountered;
and (3) the actions the recipient will
take to address identified impediments
in the future. For instance, if a recipient
held a job fair to hire Section 3 residents
for jobs in specific building trades (e.g.,
plumbers, electricians, welders, etc.) for
an upcoming construction project, HUD
may consider the recipient to be in
compliance with Section 3 even if none
of the participants of the job fair had the
requisite job qualifications for the
positions to be filled. HUD will take
such justifications into consideration
when making final compliance
determinations. Written justifications
that do not contain a valid explanation
for why the recipient did not reach the
minimum numerical goal may result in
a finding of noncompliance.
Section 135.9 of the proposed rule
presents a new means of strengthening
Section 3 compliance. This section
would require the recipient to develop
and adopt official policies and
procedures to implement the
requirements of Section 3, as a means of
demonstrating compliance with the
‘‘greatest extent feasible’’ requirement,
as provided in § 135.7. This section
provides that official policies and
procedures must include at a minimum,
steps that the recipient will take to:
inform subrecipients and contractors
about Section 3 obligations; evaluate
potential bidders for Section 3
compliance during contract selection;
notify Section 3 residents and
businesses about economic
opportunities; implement verification
and/or certification procedures for
residents and businesses; provide
priority consideration to qualified
Section 3 residents and businesses;
monitor subrecipients and contractors
for compliance; establish consequences
for noncompliance; and utilize local
community resources to meet its Section
3 requirements. The preceding list
presents the minimum steps that the
recipients’ policies and procedures
should address, but recipients should
include in official policies and
procedures any additional steps tailored
to their funding practices and
operations that would increase
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compliance with Section 3. Section 135.
9 provides that updates to official
policies and procedures shall discuss
the relative success of the immediate
past policies and procedures and how
any changes are aimed to better promote
compliance with Section 3.
This section further requires that to
the extent a recipient must prepare a
strategic plan, action plan, or other such
plan in accordance with HUD program
regulations, such plans must include a
general description of the recipient’s
official Section 3 policies and
procedures. This section provides that if
a recipient is not required to submit
official plans to HUD—such as public
housing plans, strategic or annual action
plans, or other similar plans—the
recipient’s official Section 3 policies
and procedures shall be developed as an
independent document at the time that
Section 3 covered financial assistance is
awarded and updated every 5 years
thereafter.
Section 135.11 describes steps that all
recipients must take to implement the
requirements of Section 3, and describes
steps that would be unique to recipients
of public housing financial assistance
and housing and community
development financial assistance.
Section 135.13 of the proposed rule
addresses the minimum numerical
goals, generally, and provides that the
goals apply to the aggregate number of
employment and contracting
opportunities generated by the
expenditure of the Section 3 covered
financial assistance. Specific minimum
numerical goals are set forth in the
subpart associated with the type of
financial assistance provided; i.e.,
§ 135.35 and § 135.55, respectively. This
section removes the current requirement
that 3 percent of the total dollar amount
of nonconstruction contracts shall be
awarded to Section 3 businesses since
there was no statutory reason to make a
distinction between construction and
nonconstruction contracts. HUD
believes that requiring recipients to
award 10 percent of the total dollar
amount of all covered contracts to
Section 3 businesses regardless of the
type or dollar amount of the contract
will result in more potential contracting
opportunities for Section 3 businesses.
Section 135.11 of the proposed rule
describes the responsibilities of the
recipient for complying with the
requirements of Section 3 and ensuring
the compliance of their subrecipients,
contractors, or subcontractors, who have
the same responsibilities as the direct
recipient. This section responds to
requests that HUD more clearly identify
specific actions that a recipient is to
undertake to demonstrate compliance
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with Section 3. These responsibilities
reflect best practices that are being
implemented by successful recipients,
and will result in a reduction of an
estimated 10,000 hours of
administrative burden annually. The
actions listed in this section would
replace the list of examples of efforts
that recipients may undertake to
demonstrate compliance with Section 3,
which are found in Appendix A to the
existing regulations.
As provided in § 135.11, the listed
responsibilities apply to all recipients
and have been expanded to ensure that:
(1) Section 3 residents and businesses
are notified about economic
opportunities, (2) payroll data is
monitored for new hires on projects that
are subject to wage rates determined
under the Davis Bacon Act (40 U.S.C.
3141 et seq.), (3) labor unions are
notified about Section 3 obligations, (4)
existing collective bargaining or project
labor agreements with labor unions are
amended to acknowledge HUD and
Section 3 obligations, (5) procedures are
developed by public housing agencies to
comply with the earned income
disregard and resident-owned business
provisions set forth at 24 CFR part 963,
and (6) contractor selection procedures
employ Section 3 compliance measures.
Section 135.13 of the proposed rule
addresses the minimum numerical
goals, generally, and provides that the
goals apply to the aggregate number of
employment and contracting
opportunities generated by the
expenditure of the Section 3 covered
financial assistance. Specific minimum
numerical goals are set forth in the
subparts associated with the type of
financial assistance provided (§ 135.35
and § 135.55). This section removes the
current requirement that 3 percent of
the total dollar amount of
nonconstruction contracts shall be
awarded to Section 3 businesses since
there was no statutory reason to make a
distinction between construction and
nonconstruction contracts. As noted
earlier in this preamble, HUD believes
that requiring recipients to award 10
percent of the total dollar amount of all
covered contracts to Section 3
businesses regardless of the type or
dollar amount of the contract will result
in more potential contracting
opportunities for Section 3 businesses.
Section 135.15 of the proposed rule
would require a recipient to verify that
residents and businesses seeking
employment and contracting
opportunities generated by the
expenditure of Section 3 covered
financial assistance are in fact Section 3
residents and businesses as defined in
§ 135.5. This section does not dictate the
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manner of verification of the eligibility
of Section 3 residents and businesses,
but instead allows the recipient to
decide how verification should be
undertaken. HUD is aware that verifying
Section 3 eligibility for residents and
businesses often requires recipients to
review and maintain confidential and
sensitive personal information. In order
to address concerns that have emerged
regarding the secure handling of
confidential information, this section of
the proposed rule provides that a
recipient may allow residents and
businesses to self-certify their eligibility,
and to presume that residents or
businesses that are located in, or
provide economic opportunities to
persons that reside in a neighborhood,
census tract, or area designated by HUD
are eligible to receive Section 3 priority
consideration absent evidence to the
contrary. Both of these practices may be
used if the recipient conducts
procedures to verify that a sample of
self-certified or Section 3 presumed
benefit residents and businesses meet
one of the regulatory definitions.
Descriptions of procedures for verifying
a sample of self-certified or Section 3
presumed benefit residents and
businesses will be provided in guidance
materials after the publication of the
final rule. This guidance will assist
recipients with determining sample
size, selecting self-certified beneficiaries
for verification, identifying the type of
evidence that may be requested, and
steps that may be taken in the event that
false certifications are discovered.
Section 135.17 of the proposed rule
stipulates that a written agreement must
be executed by the recipient and any of
its subrecipients, contractors, or
subcontractors before the recipient
disburses any Section 3 covered
financial assistance to them. The
purpose of this section is to both
emphasize the responsibilities that
subrecipients, contractors, and
subcontractors have in complying with
Section 3 and to assist the recipient in
ensuring the compliance of these
entities.
Section 135.19 of the proposed rule
contains provisions to be included in
contracts with developers, contractors,
and subcontractors and the Section 3
clause language that is currently found
in § 135.38 of the existing regulations.
Section 135.21 of the proposed rule
addresses certifications of compliance.
This section would require a recipient
to annually submit to HUD a
certification documenting compliance
with Section 3, including the
compliance of any subrecipients,
contractors, or subcontractors. This
section provides that, where applicable,
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certifications may be submitted as part
of a submission of annual strategic
plans, consolidated plans, or public
housing plans, or as part of a
submission of an application for a
competitively awarded grant,
cooperative agreement, or other
submissions.
Sections 135.23 and 135.25 of the
proposed rule contain reporting and
recordkeeping requirements, now found
in § 135.90 and § 135.92 of the existing
regulations. Section 135.23 continues to
require the submission of Section 3
annual reports, and clarifies that, going
forward, the time frame applicable for
Section 3 reports should coincide with
the recipient’s local program or fiscal
year. If the recipient does not have a
local program or fiscal year, the Section
3 report shall follow the federal fiscal
year (i.e., October 1 through September
30). Since the timely submission of
Section 3 reports continues to be an
issue, the proposed rule would provide
procedures for HUD to sanction
recipients for delinquent or missing
reports. Any sanction imposed would be
in accordance with the requirements of
the Section 3 regulations or a notice of
funding availability (NOFA) governing
the program under which the Section 3
covered financial assistance is provided.
Section 135.23 of the proposed rule also
specifically requires a State or county
recipient to submit to HUD an annual
report regarding compliance with
Section 3 in its own operations and in
those of its subrecipients, contractors,
and subcontractors. Section 135.25 of
the proposed rule contains the
requirement in existing § 135.92 that
HUD shall have access to records,
reports, and other documents recipients
maintain to demonstrate compliance
with Section 3, and it adds examples of
such records.
Section 135.27 of the proposed rule
describes sanctions for noncompliance
with the requirements of Section 3, and
provides that these sanctions may
include requiring additional
certifications or assurances of
compliance; repayment of Section 3
covered financial assistance;
ineligibility for future HUD financial
assistance; withholding HUD financial
assistance; or suspension, debarment, or
limited denial of participation in HUD
programs pursuant to 2 CFR part 2424,
where appropriate.
Section 135.29 of the proposed rule
clarifies that neither the Section 3
statute nor the Section 3 regulations
supersede the employment and wage
provisions of the Davis-Bacon Act or
requirements of bona fide Federal or
State apprentice or training programs.
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Additional Provisions for Public
Housing Financial Assistance—Subpart
B
Subpart B addresses demonstration of
compliance that would be unique to
recipients of public housing financial
assistance or PHAs.
Section 135.31 of the proposed rule
provides that PHAs that receive public
housing financial assistance, as defined
in § 135.5, are subject to the provisions
in subpart B in addition to those in
subpart A. This section also provides
that the requirements in subpart B apply
to all new internal and external
employment and training opportunities
resulting from the expenditure of public
housing financial assistance (i.e., those
within the PHA and with its
subrecipients, contractors, or
subcontractors). Further, this section
clarifies that the requirements of Section
3 apply to the entire project or activity
that is funded with public housing
financial assistance regardless of
whether the activity is fully- or
partially-funded with Section 3 covered
financial assistance.
Section 135.33 of the proposed rule
would continue to maintain HUD’s
position that a monetary or unit
threshold in public and Indian housing
programs is not consistent with the
Section 3 statute. Section 3 applies to
public and Indian housing operating
assistance, development assistance and
modernization assistance, which covers
virtually all PHA projects and activities.
Additionally, the Section 3 statute is
very specific about the residents and
businesses to which PHAs and their
contractors and subcontractors must
give preference. These residents and
businesses are tied to the housing
development for which the assistance is
expended, or another development
managed by the PHA. HUD believes that
the statute’s expansive coverage of
public and Indian housing projects and
activities indicates that any attempt to
diminish the coverage would be
inconsistent with the statute.
Notwithstanding, HUD will make efforts
to implement measures to reduce
administrative burden for PHAs whose
expenditure of covered financial
assistance did not trigger Section 3
obligations, but who still are required to
submit annual reports, by only requiring
the submission of an electronic
certification.
Section 135.35 would maintain the
minimum numerical hiring goals for
public housing financial assistance.
PHAs, as well as any subrecipients,
contractors, or subcontractors, would be
required to employ, to the greatest
extent feasible, Section 3 residents as 30
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percent of new hires, both within the
agency and with its contractors. HUD
chose to maintain this minimum
numerical goal even though a review of
recent national aggregated data
indicated that recipients are exceeding
the employment goal by 10 to 20
percentage points. HUD OIG’s 2013
Section 3 Audit report advises that
concerns exist regarding the reliability
and accuracy of the data previously
submitted into the Section 3 Summary
Reporting System. In light of such
information, HUD is not changing at this
time the current minimum numerical
goals based on the previously reported
data. The reliability of subsequent data
submitted will be addressed when HUD
implements its new Section 3 Summary
Reporting System in FY 2015.
The rule would establish that for a
Section 3 resident to be considered a
new hire by a contractor or
subcontractor, the Section 3 resident
must work, during the resident’s
employment with a contractor or
subcontractor, a minimum of 50 percent
of the average staff hours worked for the
category of work for which they were
hired throughout the duration of time
that the category of work is performed
on the covered project. For instance, if
electricians employed on a particular
Section 3 covered project work an
average of 40 hours each week, Section
3 new hires in this category must work
a minimum of 20 hours each week
throughout the duration of time that the
category of work is performed on the
covered project to be counted towards
the recipient’s minimum numerical goal
for employment.
Section 135.35 would also establish
the minimum numerical contracting
goals for public housing financial
assistance. Under this section, PHAs, as
well as any subrecipients, contractors,
or subcontractors, would be required to
award, to the greatest extent feasible, at
least 10 percent of the total dollar
amount of all subsequent contracting or
subcontracting opportunities to Section
3 businesses. This proposed rule would
remove the current 3 percent minimum
numerical goal for contracts that do not
involve construction or rehabilitation.
Instead, this proposed rule seeks to
ensure that 10 percent of the total dollar
amount of all covered contracts
(including contracts for professional
services) will be awarded to Section 3
businesses. Since there is no statutory
basis for making a distinction between
construction and nonconstruction
contracts, and the interpretation of the
nonconstruction goal has been
problematic for recipients, HUD
believes that requiring recipients to
award 10 percent of the total dollar
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amount of all covered contracts to
Section 3 businesses regardless of the
type is easier to administer and will
result in more opportunities for Section
3 residents and businesses. In
establishing this minimum numerical
goal, HUD reviewed aggregated data
submitted by recipients, which
indicated that only 13.3 percent of
recipients are meeting both of the
current minimum numerical goals for
contracting. However, 17.4 percent of
recipients would meet the proposed
numerical goal for all covered contracts.
HUD is not changing the minimum
numerical contracting goal for the same
reasons that HUD is not changing the
minimum numerical hiring goal.
Section 135.37 of the proposed rule
would revise the priority consideration
given when hiring Section 3 residents
and in awarding contracts to Section 3
businesses. The proposed rule provides
that PHAs must give priority
consideration to a Section 3 resident or
business when equally qualified for the
work under consideration. Priority
consideration may be given to Section 3
residents or businesses when they are
minimally qualified.
Additional Provisions for Housing and
Community Development Financial
Assistance—Subpart C
Section 135.51 of the proposed rule
provides that recipients of housing and
community development assistance, as
defined in § 135.5, are subject to the
provisions in subpart C in addition to
those in subpart A. Section 135.51 of the
proposed rule addresses the
applicability of Section 3 to housing and
community development financial
assistance. This section provides that
Section 3 only applies to economic
opportunities that arise from the
expenditure of housing and community
development financial assistance
involving the demolition, rehabilitation,
or construction of housing, public
buildings, facilities, infrastructure, or
other public construction or
rehabilitation-related projects and
activities. While HUD always
considered demolition projects to be a
part of rehabilitation activities, this
proposed rule makes the applicability of
Section 3 to demolition explicit. This
section also clarifies that professional
service contracts are subject to the
requirements of this part, provided that
the work to be performed arises in
connection with a Section 3 covered
project (i.e., housing rehabilitation,
housing construction, or other public
construction project).
Consistent with the Section 3 statute,
§ 135.51 exempts housing and
community development financial
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assistance that is used for acquisition,
routine maintenance, operations,
administrative costs, and project rental
assistance contracts (PRAC) from
compliance with Section 3 because
these are not considered construction or
rehabilitation activities. This section
also exempts Indian tribes and tribally
designated housing entities from
complying with Section 3 requirements
if the Indian tribe has adopted, and is
complying with, tribal employment and
contract preference laws (including
regulations and tribal ordinances) in
accordance with section 101(k) of the
Native American Housing Assistance
and Self-Determination Act
(NAHASDA) and 24 CFR 1000.42. This
section also exempts Indian tribes and
other tribal entities from Section 3
requirements if they are subject to
Indian preference requirements under
section 7(b) of the Indian SelfDetermination and Education
Assistance Act. HUD recognizes that
both tribal preference and Indian
preference requirements already often
require Indian tribes, tribally designated
housing entities, and other tribal
entities, to apply local preferences in
employment and contracting in projects
receiving assistance under NAHASDA
and other grant programs for the benefit
of Indians, such as the Indian CDBG
program. This exemption reduces
administrative burden for tribal grantees
that have expressed concerns to HUD
about the difficulty of complying with
Section 3 requirements while also
complying with Indian and tribal
preference requirements.
Section 135.53 of the proposed rule
replaces the current threshold for
recipients that administer housing and
community development assistance.
HUD has reassessed the policy behind
the existing threshold and has decided
to propose a new threshold requirement
that is based on the total expenditures
(rather than receipt or per-project). This
change recognizes that it is the
expenditure of covered financial
assistance (not the receipt) that
produces economic opportunities for
Section 3 residents and businesses.
Under this proposal, the threshold
would be based on the aggregate
expenditure of $400,000 of housing and
community development financial
assistance on construction related
activities. In the section of this preamble
entitled ‘‘Summary of Major Provisions
of this Regulatory Action,’’ HUD
described in detail the basis for
selection of the $400,000 threshold.
Section 135.55 of the proposed rule
establishes the minimum numerical
hiring goals that recipients of housing
and community development financial
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21:54 Mar 26, 2015
Jkt 235001
assistance must meet to demonstrate
compliance, to the greatest extent
feasible, with the Section 3 statute and
Section 3 regulations. Similar to the
numerical goals established for public
housing financial assistance, this
section provides that recipients of
housing and community development
financial assistance must, to the greatest
extent feasible, have its contractors and
subcontractors employ Section 3
residents as 30 percent of direct new
hires. This section also provides, similar
to § 135.35, that in order for a Section
3 resident to be considered a new hire
by contractors and subcontractors, the
Section 3 resident must work, during
the resident’s employment with a
contractor or subcontractor, a minimum
of 50 percent of the average staff hours
worked for the category of work for
which they were hired, throughout the
duration of time that the category of
work is performed on the covered
project. For instance, if brick masons
employed on a particular Section 3
covered project work an average of 40
hours each week, Section 3 new hires in
this category must work a minimum of
20 hours each week to be counted
towards the recipient’s minimum
numerical goal for employment.
With respect to contracting
opportunities, this section provides that
recipients of housing and community
development financial assistance, as
well as their subrecipients, contractors,
and subcontractors, must, to the greatest
extent feasible, award at least 10 percent
of the total dollar amount of all
contracts to Section 3 businesses,
similar to § 135.35. This proposed rule
removes the requirement that 3 percent
of the total dollar amount of
nonconstruction contracts will be
awarded to Section 3 businesses in an
attempt to reduce administrative
burden. Instead, this proposed rule
seeks to ensure that 10 percent of the
total dollar amount of all covered
contracts (including contracts for
professional services) will be awarded
to Section 3 businesses. HUD makes this
change in § 135.55 for the same reasons
presented for the identical change in
§ 135.35.
Section 135.57 of the proposed rule
establishes the orders of priority
consideration for employment and
contracting opportunities for housing
and community development financial
assistance and adds additional
categories for priority consideration for
businesses that promote job retention
and training opportunities.
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Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
Additional Provisions for Recipients of
HUD Competitive Grant Financial
Assistance—Subpart D
Subpart D of this proposed rule,
clarifies the scope of applicability of
Section 3 to HUD NOFAs. This section
would replace the existing regulatory
section, § 135.9.
As provided in proposed new
§ 135.71, Section 3 applies to
competitively awarded (1) public
housing financial assistance, and (2)
housing and community development
financial assistance that is anticipated to
generate significant economic
opportunities.
Section 135.73 provides that each
NOFA that is subject to the
requirements of Section 3 shall describe
the selection criteria and points to be
awarded.
Section 135.75 requires recipients of
competitive Section 3 covered financial
assistance to sign assurances of
compliance with Section 3, and
provides that applicants that are
awarded competitive funds will be
monitored on their compliance with
Section 3, and their progress in carrying
out the strategies described in the
narrative statements submitted with
their application package. Section
135.77, prohibits any recipient with
outstanding findings of noncompliance
with Section 3 from receiving additional
competitively awarded financial
assistance.
Enforcement—Subpart E
Subpart E of this proposed rule
contains the complaint and compliance
review provisions currently found in
subpart D of the existing part 135
regulations. This subpart also clarifies
that voluntary compliance agreements
that are drafted to address findings of
noncompliance shall seek to protect the
public interest, provide denied
economic opportunities to Section 3
residents and businesses, and may
include the provision of damages and
other relief for those injured by the
recipient’s noncompliance.
III. Specific Questions for Comment
While HUD welcomes comments on
all aspects of this proposed rule, HUD
specifically requests comments on the
following:
1. To address a loophole in the
current regulation that does not limit
jobs, training, and contracting
opportunities to Section 3 residents
residing and Section 3 businesses
located within the proximity of the
covered project or activity, this
proposed rule introduces a new term
‘‘Section 3 local area’’ to clarify that in
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order for Section 3 residents and
businesses to receive priority
consideration they must be residing or
located within the metropolitan area or
nonmetropolitan county where the
Section 3 covered financial assistance is
expended. HUD seeks comment on
whether this clarification may adversely
impact Section 3 residents and
businesses located in neighboring
jurisdictions, particularly when no
Section 3 businesses are located in the
Section 3 local area, and in rural
communities where Section 3 residents
in adjacent counties may be the most
qualified job applicant. See § 135.5.
2. The proposed rule revises the
definition of a Section 3 business to
remove the third category of the existing
definition, which refers to businesses
that can provide evidence of a
commitment to subcontract in excess of
25 percent of the dollar award of all
subcontracts to other Section 3
businesses. This revision is made in
response to complaints that the
commitment presented an easy loophole
for some businesses, and did not equate
to a legal obligation. HUD solicits
comment on the removal of this third
category. See § 135.5.
3. The proposed rule seeks to provide
incentives to contractors that retain
Section 3 residents who were hired to
work on previous projects, and to
provide apprenticeship opportunities to
Section 3 residents by adding two new
categories to the orders of priority
Expenditure level
consideration for projects that are
financed with housing and community
development assistance at § 135.57.
HUD solicits comment on the proposed
orders of priority consideration.
4. For the reasons presented in the
preamble, HUD is maintaining the
existing minimum numerical goals for
employment and construction contracts.
HUD seeks comments on whether other
proposed minimum numerical goals for
employment and contracting would be
more appropriate.
5. The proposed rule would replace
the 3 percent minimum goal for the total
dollar amount of all building trades and
professional service contracts associated
with construction (formerly referred to,
respectively, as construction and
nonconstruction contracts) with a goal
of 10 percent. HUD seeks comment on
whether the proposed goal that applies
to building trades and professional
services would result in any unintended
consequences. See § 135.37 and
§ 135.57.
6. For the reasons presented in this
preamble, under the ‘‘Summary of the
Major Provisions of this Regulatory
Action,’’ the proposed rule would
change the threshold for recipients of
housing and community development
financial assistance to cover recipients
that plan to obligate or commit $400,000
or more of annual expenditures of
covered funds on construction or
construction related projects. As
discussed, the current threshold is
based on the receipt of covered funds,
$250K
Agencies Below .......................................
% of those below .....................................
Agencies Above .......................................
% of those above .....................................
% change # of agencies ..........................
% of covered funding ...............................
265
22.3%
924
77.7%
4.2%
98.3%
Threshold level
$300K
329
27.7%
860
72.3%
5.4%
97.5%
asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
7. In order for a Section 3 resident to
be counted as a new hire, the proposed
rule would require a resident to work,
during employment as a new hire, a
minimum of 50 percent of the average
staff hours worked for the job category
for which the resident was hired,
throughout the duration of time that the
category of work is performed on the
covered project. HUD seeks comment on
21:54 Mar 26, 2015
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Frm 00011
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
$750
542
45.6%
647
54.4%
8.6%
93.6%
$1M
703
59.1%
486
40.9%
13.5%
89.0%
Agencies excluded
$35,622,322.04
53,260,584.53
91,850,709.06
137,962,427.28
237,242,870.83
335,799,935.66
whether this proposed change
effectively addresses concerns that were
raised about contractors that hired
Section 3 residents for short time frames
for purposes of circumventing
meaningful compliance with Section 3.
See § 135.35 and § 135.55.
8. HUD seeks comment on the specific
challenges for State CDBG grantees with
meeting Section 3 goals and how HUD
PO 00000
$500K
440
37.0%
749
63.0%
9.3%
95.7%
Expenditure excluded
$250K+ ..............................................................................
$300K+ ..............................................................................
$400K+ ..............................................................................
$500K+ ..............................................................................
$750K+ ..............................................................................
$1M+ ..................................................................................
VerDate Sep<11>2014
$400K
not its expenditure. HUD believes that
the expenditure of funds is a better
indicator of the type and amount of
economic opportunities that HUD funds
create. The proposed threshold applies
Section 3 to all construction and
construction related projects (regardless
of the dollar amount invested into
individual projects) if a grantee plans to
spend $400,000, or more, of covered
HUD funding during the reporting
period. HUD seeks comment on whether
an alternate threshold would be more
appropriate or equally effective to the
proposed $400,000 threshold. In the
table below, HUD sets out alternative
expenditure thresholds and the
percentage of funding that would be
covered. While HUD believes that the
proposed expenditure threshold of
$400,000 is the appropriate threshold
and would best enable the Department
to focus on those recipients that
produce the majority of economic
opportunities, HUD would consider a
different threshold but no lower than
$400,000. HUD would consider a high
threshold but no higher than $1 million.
Although the $1 million threshold
would capture almost 85 percent of the
funding, which HUD finds reasonable
and acceptable, HUD believes the
$400,000 threshold, which would cover
more than 95 percent of the funding, 10
percentage points higher than a $1
million threshold, presents the better
approach, but HUD welcomes comment
on the thresholds.
265
329
440
542
703
816
816
68.6%
373
31.4%
9.5%
84.4%
% Covered
98.3
97.5
95.7
93.6
89.0
84.4
can assist in addressing these challenges
in this proposed rule.
9. HUD solicits comments from Indian
tribes, tribally designated housing
entities, and other tribal entities on its
proposal to exempt them from Section
3 compliance when they adopt, and are
complying with, tribal employment and
contract preference laws (including
regulations and tribal ordinances) in
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accordance with section 101(k) of
NAHASDA (25 U.S.C. 4111(k)), or are
subject to Indian preference
requirements under section 7(b) of the
Indian Self-Determination and
Education Assistance Act. See
§ 135.519(b)(3).
10. HUD seeks comment on ways that
recipients can demonstrate compliance
with Section 3 in communities that are
governed by agreements that prohibit
work by non-labor union workers.
11. HUD seeks comment on
requirements or goals that should apply
to contractors whose expenditure of
covered financial assistance will only
enable them to sustain their current
workforce and will not result in new
employment, training, or subcontracting
opportunities.
12. HUD solicits comment on goals or
strategies for training opportunities that
the proposed rule should address.
13. HUD seeks comment on whether
the proposal to require recipients to
incorporate compliance with Section 3
into procurement procedures for
responsive and responsible bidders
creates an undue burden on recipients?
See § 135.37(a)(3), § 135.57(a)(4), and
§ 135.11(b)(9).
14. In 2012, HUD implemented a
Section 3 Business Registry Pilot
Program in five metropolitan areas as a
potential resource to help recipients
meet, or exceed, the minimum
numerical goals for contracting and
reduce administrative burden in
identifying section 3 businesses. Under
the pilot program, businesses that met
one of the definitions of a ‘‘Section 3
Business’’ self-certified their status with
HUD, and were placed into a database
to be used by recipients, developers,
contractors, and others to notify these
businesses about the availability of
Section 3 contracting opportunities. See
www.hud.gov/sec3biz. In 2014, HUD
expanded the Section 3 Business
Registry nationally. HUD seeks
comments about this registry and ways
that HUD should incorporate its usage
into the Section 3 requirements.
IV. Findings and Certifications
asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
Regulatory Review—Executive Orders
12866 and 13563
Under Executive Order 12866
(Regulatory Planning and Review), a
determination must be made whether a
regulatory action is significant and,
therefore, subject to review by the Office
of Management and Budget (OMB) in
accordance with the requirements of the
order. Executive Order 13563
(Improving Regulations and Regulatory
Review) directs executive agencies to
analyze regulations that are ‘‘outmoded,
VerDate Sep<11>2014
21:54 Mar 26, 2015
Jkt 235001
ineffective, insufficient, or excessively
burdensome, and to modify, streamline,
expand, or repeal them in accordance
with what has been learned. Executive
Order 13563 also directs that, where
relevant, feasible, and consistent with
regulatory objectives, and to the extent
permitted by law, agencies are to
identify and consider regulatory
approaches that reduce burdens and
maintain flexibility and freedom of
choice for the public.
This rule was determined to be a
‘‘significant regulatory action’’ as
defined in Section 3(f) of the order
(although not an economically
significant regulatory action under the
order). Consistent with Executive Order
13563, this rule revises the existing part
135 regulations that have not been
revised or updated since 1994, with the
intention to make them less
burdensome, and more effective and,
therefore, help to contribute to job
creation for low-income persons. As
noted earlier in this preamble, HUD has
prepared an initial RIA that addresses
the costs and benefits of the proposed
rule. HUD’s RIA is part of the docket file
for this rule.
The docket file is available for public
inspection in the Regulations Division,
Office of the General Counsel, Room
10276, 451 7th Street SW., Washington,
DC 20410–0500. Due to security
measures at the HUD Headquarters
building, please schedule an
appointment to review the docket file by
calling the Regulations Division at 202–
402–3055 (this is not a toll-free
number). Individuals with speech or
hearing impairments may access this
number via TTY by calling the Federal
Relay Service at toll-free 800–877–8339.
Environmental Impact
This proposed rule is a policy
document that sets out regulatory
requirements and standards for
complying with Section 3 of the
Housing and Urban Development Act of
1968 (12 U.S.C. 1701u). Accordingly,
under 24 CFR 50.19(c)(3), this proposed
rule is categorically excluded from
environmental review under the
National Environmental Policy Act of
1969 (42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.).
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
The Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
of 1995 (2 U.S.C. 1531–1538) (UMRA)
establishes requirements for Federal
agencies to assess the effects of their
regulatory actions on State, local, and
tribal governments and on the private
sector. This proposed rule does not
impose a Federal mandate on any state,
local, or tribal government, or on the
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Frm 00012
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
private sector, within the meaning of
UMRA.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (5
U.S.C. 601 et seq.) generally requires an
agency to conduct a regulatory
flexibility analysis of any rule subject to
notice and comment rulemaking
requirements, unless the agency certifies
that the rule will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities. As has been
discussed in this preamble, this rule
proposes to update HUD’s Section 3
regulations in 24 CFR part 135, for
which the objective is to increase
employment opportunities for lowincome persons and businesses that are
owned by or employ such persons, by
requiring that they be considered for
employment, including training
positions, and contracting opportunities
that are generated by the expenditure of
certain HUD financial assistance. These
entities generally are small and
therefore strengthening the
requirements of Section 3 should benefit
small businesses that are Section 3
businesses.
As more fully discussed in the
accompanying RIA, the number of
economic opportunities generated for
Section 3 residents and businesses will
not increase to the degree that this rule
would have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small
entities. In addition, for those small
entities that are recipients of Section 3
covered financial assistance and must
comply with this proposed rule, the
changes made by this proposed rule are
designed to reduce burden on them, as
well as all recipients. For these reasons,
HUD has determined that this rule
would not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small
entities. In fact, streamlined procedures
in the proposed rule and HUD’s recent
implementation of a national Section 3
Business Registry will reduce the
current administrative burden for
grantees by a net ¥10,000 hours or
$320,000 annually.10
Notwithstanding HUD’s
determination that this rule will not
have a significant effect on a substantial
number of small entities, HUD
specifically invites comments regarding
any less burdensome alternatives to this
rule that will meet HUD’s objectives as
described in this preamble.
10 Average total compensation of all workers,
BLS, March 2014. See https://www.bls.gov/
news.release/ecec.t01.htm.
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Executive Order 13132, Federalism
Executive Order 13132 (entitled
‘‘Federalism’’) prohibits an agency from
publishing any rule that has federalism
implications if the rule either: (1)
Imposes substantial direct compliance
costs on State and local governments
and is not required by statute, or (2)
preempts State law, unless the agency
meets the consultation and funding
requirements of Section 6 of the
Executive Order. This proposed rule
does not have federalism implications
and does not impose substantial direct
compliance costs on State and local
governments nor preempt state law
within the meaning of the Executive
Order.
Paperwork Reduction Act
The information collection
requirements contained in this proposed
rule have been submitted to OMB under
the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(44 U.S.C. 3501–3520). In accordance
with the Paperwork Reduction Act, an
agency may not conduct or sponsor, and
a person is not required to respond to,
a collection of information unless the
collection displays a currently valid
OMB control number. HUD anticipates
only marginal additional impact of this
rule on document preparation time.
Recipients are required already to
provide HUD with reports documenting
Section 3 activities under the existing
interim regulations. The additional time
to submit the new proposed information
required by the rule is minimal. The
burden of information collection in this
proposed rule is estimated as follows:
REPORTING AND RECORDKEEPING BURDEN EXISTING REGULATION VERSUS THIS PROPOSED RULE
Section 3 resident and business verification
(§ 135.15) ...................................................
Maintain lists of eligible Section 3 residents
and businesses (§ 135.11) ........................
Notify Section 3 residents and businesses
about the availability of economic opportunities (§ 135.11) .........................................
Post signs or notices at job sites (§ 135.11)
Ensure that bid solicitations acknowledge
Section 3 obligations (§ 135.11) ................
Monitor the payroll data of developers and
contractors (§ 135.11) ................................
Incorporate Section 3 factors into contractor
selection procedures (§ 135.11) ................
Amend and renegotiate existing collective
bargaining agreements, PLAs, etc., as appropriate (§ 135.11) ...................................
Coordinate with DOL, Youth Build, etc.
(§ 135.11) ...................................................
Draft written subrecipient agreements
(§ 135.17) ...................................................
Include the Section 3 Clause in covered
contracts (§ 135.19) ...................................
Develop official Section 3 policies and procedures (§ 135.9) .......................................
Annual
Certifications
of
compliance
(§ 135.21) ...................................................
Provide priority consideration to Section 3
residents and businesses (§ 135.37 and
§ 135.57) ....................................................
NOFA
certification
of
compliance
(§ 135.71(d)) ..............................................
Reporting requirements (§ 135.23) ...............
Recordkeeping requirements (§ 135.25) .......
Complaint investigations (§ 135.95 and
(§ 135.97) ...................................................
Right to review letter of findings (§ 135.99(c)
asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
Total Burden ..........................................
One-time
burden not
reoccurring
annually
(in hours)
One-time
burden—not
reoccurring
annually
Incremental
burden
1
80
160,000
0
11¥80,000
0
2,000
2
40
160,000
0
12¥80,000
0
2,000
2,000
2
10
20
1
80,000
20,000
0
0
13¥20,000
0
0
0
2,000
1
0.5
0
1,000
0
0
2,000
1
40
N/A
N/A
80,000
0
2,000
1
40
N/A
N/A
0
80,000
500
1
40
N/A
N/A
0
20,000
1,000
1
40
N/A
N/A
40,000
0
1,110
1
24
N/A
N/A
0
26,640
2,000
1
0.5
1,000
0
0
0
5,000
1
40
0
200,000
0
100,000
5,000
1
0.5
2,500
0
0
0
1,000
2
10
20,000
0
0
0
500
5,000
5,000
1
5
1
0.5
10
40
250
250,000
200,000
0
0
0
0
0
50,000
0
0
0
30
5
1
1
80
8
2,400
40
0
0
0
0
0
0
........................
........................
........................
896,190
201,000
¥10,000
226,640
11 Due to the recent expansion of the national
Section 3 Business Registry, HUD estimates a
decrease in the original 80 hours that it estimated
for this activity. As such, administrative burden for
covered recipients is reduced.
12 See footnote 1.
13 See footnote 11.
21:54 Mar 26, 2015
Total
estimated
annual burden
Proposed rule
(hours)
2,000
In accordance with 5 CFR
1320.8(d)(1), HUD is soliciting
comments from members of the public
and affected agencies concerning the
VerDate Sep<11>2014
Number of
responses per
respondent
Number of
parties
Section reference in proposed rule
Existing regulation
(hours)
Estimated
average time
for
requirement
(in hours)
Jkt 235001
information collection requirements in
the proposed rule regarding:
(1) Whether the proposed collection
of information is necessary for the
proper performance of the functions of
the agency, including whether the
information will have practical utility;
(2) The accuracy of the agency’s
estimate of the burden of the proposed
collection of information;
(3) Whether the proposed collection
of information enhances the quality,
PO 00000
Frm 00013
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
utility, and clarity of the information to
be collected; and
(4) Whether the proposed information
collection minimizes the burden of the
collection of information on those who
are to respond; including through the
use of appropriate automated collection
techniques or other forms of information
technology (e.g., permitting electronic
submission of responses).
Interested persons are invited to
submit comments regarding the
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information collection requirements in
this rule. Under the provisions of 5 CFR
part 1320, OMB is required to make a
decision concerning this collection of
information between 30 and 60 days
after the publication date. Therefore, a
comment on the information collection
requirements is best assured of having
its full effect if OMB receives the
comment within 30 days of the
publication. This time frame does not
affect the deadline for comments to the
agency on the proposed rule, however.
Comments must refer to the proposed
rule by name and docket number (FR–
4893) and must be sent to:
HUD Desk Officer, Office of
Management and Budget, New
Executive Office Building,
Washington, DC 20503, Fax number:
202–395–6947
and
Colette Pollard, HUD Reports Liaison
Officer, Department of Housing and
Urban Development, 451 7th Street
SW., Room 2204, Washington, DC
20410.
Interested persons may submit
comments regarding the information
collection requirements electronically
through the Federal eRulemaking Portal
at https://www.regulations.gov. HUD
strongly encourages commenters to
submit comments electronically.
Electronic submission of comments
allows the commenter maximum time to
prepare and submit a comment, ensures
timely receipt by HUD, and enables
HUD to make them immediately
available to the public. Comments
submitted electronically through the
https://www.regulations.gov Web site can
be viewed by other commenters and
interested members of the public.
Commenters should follow the
instructions provided on that site to
submit comments electronically.
asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
List of Subjects in 24 CFR Part 135
21:54 Mar 26, 2015
Jkt 235001
Sec.
135.1 Purpose.
135.3 Delegation of authority.
135.5 Definitions.
135.7 Compliance to the greatest extent
feasible.
135.9 Official Section 3 policies and
procedures.
135.11 Recipient responsibilities.
135.13 General minimum numerical goals.
135.15 Verification of Section 3 resident
and Section 3 business status.
135.17 Written agreements.
135.19 Contracts and Section 3 clause.
135.21 Certifications of compliance.
135.23 Reporting requirements.
135.25 Recordkeeping and access to
records.
135.27 Sanctions for noncompliance.
135.29 Other Federal requirements.
Subpart B—Additional Provisions for Public
Housing Financial Assistance
135.31 Applicability.
135.33 Public housing agency unit
thresholds.
135.35 Minimum numerical goals.
135.37 Orders of priority consideration for
employment and contracting
opportunities.
Subpart C—Additional Provisions for
Housing and Community Development
Financial Assistance
135.51 Applicability.
135.53 Funding thresholds that trigger
Section 3 compliance.
135.55 Minimum numerical goals.
135.57 Orders of priority consideration for
employment and contracting
opportunities.
Subpart D—Additional Provisions for
Recipients of Competitively Awarded
Financial Assistance
135.71 Applicability.
135.73 Applicant selection criteria.
135.75 Section 3 compliance for NOFA
grantees.
135.77 Resolution of outstanding Section 3
matters.
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1701u; 42 U.S.C.
3535(d).
PART 135—ECONOMIC
OPPORTUNITIES FOR LOW- AND
VERY LOW-INCOME PERSONS
Accordingly, for the reasons described
in the preamble, and under the
authority of 42 U.S.C. 3535(d), HUD
proposes to revise 24 CFR part 135 to
read as follows:
VerDate Sep<11>2014
Subpart A—General Provisions
Subpart E—Enforcement
135.91 Cooperation in achieving
compliance.
135.93 Conduct of investigations
Administrative practice and
procedure, Community development,
Equal employment opportunity,
Government contracts, Grant
programs—housing and community
development, Housing, Loan
programs—housing and community
development, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements, Small
businesses.
■
PART 135—ECONOMIC
OPPORTUNITIES FOR LOW- AND
VERY LOW-INCOME PERSONS
Subpart A—General Provisions
§ 135.1
Purpose.
(a) Section 3. The purpose of Section
3 of the Housing and Urban
Development Act of 1968 (12 U.S.C.
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1701u) (Section 3) is to direct, to the
greatest extent feasible, and consistent
with existing Federal, State, and local
laws and regulations, training,
employment, contracting, and other
economic opportunities generated by
the expenditure of certain HUD
financial assistance to:
(1) Low- and very low-income
residents of the neighborhood or
neighborhoods where the Section 3
covered financial assistance is
expended, particularly those that
receive assistance from the Federal
government for housing; and
(2) The businesses that are owned by,
or substantially employ, low- or very
low-income residents of the
neighborhood or neighborhoods where
the Section 3 covered financial
assistance is expended.
(b) Part 135. The purpose of this
subpart is to establish the standards and
procedures by which all recipients of
Section 3 covered financial assistance
and their subrecipients, contractors, and
subcontractors that may be
administering Section 3 covered
financial assistance on behalf of the
recipient may meet the requirements of
Section 3.
§ 135.3
Delegation of authority.
Except as may be otherwise provided
in this part, the functions and
responsibilities of the Secretary of the
Department of Housing and Urban
Development, pursuant to Section 3,
and described in this part, are delegated
to HUD’s Assistant Secretary for Fair
Housing and Equal Opportunity. The
Assistant Secretary for Fair Housing and
Equal Opportunity is further authorized
to redelegate functions and
responsibilities in this part to other
employees of HUD. However, the
authority to issue or waive regulations
of this part may not be redelegated by
the Assistant Secretary. Monitoring and
enforcement may be carried out in
coordination with the HUD program
office that provided Section 3 covered
financial assistance to recipients, and
the imposition of sanctions shall be in
accordance with the requirements of the
regulation or NOFA governing the
program under which the Section 3
covered financial assistance is provided,
as set forth at § 135.27.
§ 135.5
Definitions.
For purposes of this part, the terms in
this section have the meanings provided
in this section. The terms Department,
HUD, Public housing agency (PHA), and
Secretary are defined in 24 CFR part 5.
Applicant means any entity which
makes an application to HUD for
Section 3 covered financial assistance,
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and includes but is not limited to, any
State, unit of local government, PHA,
public housing commission, Indian
tribe, tribally designated housing entity,
or other public agency, public or private
nonprofit organization, private agency
or institution, mortgagor, developer,
limited dividend sponsor, builder,
property owner, property manager,
resident management corporation,
resident council, or cooperative
association.
Assistant Secretary means the
Assistant Secretary for Fair Housing and
Equal Opportunity (FHEO).
Business means a business entity
formed in accordance with State law,
and licensed as appropriate under State,
county or municipal law to engage in
the type of business activity for which
it was formed.
Awarding Agency means the recipient
or subrecipient that awards Section 3
contracting opportunities.
Complainant means the party that
files a complaint with the Assistant
Secretary alleging that a recipient has
failed or refused to comply with the
regulations of this part.
Complaint means an allegation of
noncompliance with the requirements
of this part as provided in subpart E.
Construction, unless inconsistent
with or otherwise defined in the
regulation or NOFA governing the
program under which the Section 3
financial assistance is provided, means
the act or process of building houses,
roads, public buildings, infrastructure,
and other structures.
Contract. See the definition of
‘‘contracting opportunities’’ in this
section.
Contracting opportunities subject to
the requirements of Section 3 means
contracts or subcontracts for work
awarded in connection with Section 3
covered projects and activities.
Contracting opportunities include, but
are not limited to: Demolition,
rehabilitation, housing construction,
other public construction, architectural
design, legal representation, or other
services directly related to construction
and rehabilitation activities. In addition,
for public housing financial assistance,
contracting opportunities include, but
are not limited to, facilities
maintenance, landscaping, painting,
professional services, police and
security, equipment servicing, janitorial
services, and extermination. This term
does not include material-only
contracts; i.e., contracts that are
awarded for supplies without
installation, demolition, rehabilitation,
or other construction activities.
Contractor means any entity that
enters into a contract or agreement to
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perform work generated by the
expenditure of Section 3 covered
financial assistance for a recipient,
subrecipient, or another contractor, or
for work in connection with Section 3
covered projects or activities, including
contracts for services, but excluding
contracts for supplies or materials that
do not involve installation,
rehabilitation, or construction.
Department of Labor or DOL refers to
the U.S. Department of Labor.
Department of Labor YouthBuild
program is a nonresidential,
community-based alternative education
program that provides classroom
instruction and occupational skills
training to at-risk individuals ages 16 to
24. The classroom training leads to a
high school diploma or a general
education development or other staterecognized equivalency diploma. The
occupational skills training component
provides YouthBuild participants with
industry-recognized certifications in
construction or other occupations. The
construction skills training component
teaches skills through a program to
build or rehabilitate housing for lowincome or homeless individuals and
families in their communities.
Economic Opportunities Generated by
Section 3 Covered Financial Assistance
Means
(1) Training, employment, or other
opportunities generated by the
expenditure of Section 3 covered
financial assistance as such term is
defined in this section. Examples of
economic opportunities may include,
but are not limited to: Jobs (including
training positions or on-the-job training
opportunities), skills development (e.g.,
computer classes, secretarial courses,
etc.), registered apprenticeships, and
business development; or
(2) Other training opportunities; and
contracting opportunities for building
trades, professional services, and other
activities directly associated with
demolition, rehabilitation, or
construction.
Housing and community development
financial assistance subject to the
requirements of Section 3 means
Section 3 covered financial assistance,
provided in the form of a grant, loan,
cooperative agreement, or contract,
expended for housing demolition,
rehabilitation, or construction, or the
construction or rehabilitation of public
facilities, infrastructure, or buildings
and provided, or otherwise made
available, from such HUD financial
assistance. HUD housing or community
development programs subject to the
requirements of Section 3 include, but
are not limited to, the following
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16533
programs: The Community
Development Block Grants (CDBG)
program, authorized by title I of the
Housing and Community Development
Act of 1974 (42 U.S.C. 5301 et seq.); the
HOME Investment Partnerships
program, authorized by the HOME
Investment Partnerships Act (42 U.S.C.
12701 note); the HUD homeless
assistance programs authorized under
title IV of the McKinney-Vento
Homeless Assistance Act (42 U.S.C.
11360 et seq.); the Housing
Opportunities for Persons With AIDS
(HOPWA) program, authorized by the
AIDS Housing Opportunity Act, subtitle
D of title VII of the Cranston-Gonzalez
National Affordable Housing Act (42
U.S.C. 12901 note); disaster recovery
grants (DRG), as authorized by
appropriations acts; the Supportive
Housing for the Elderly program,
authorized by Section 202 of the
Housing Act of 1959 (12 U.S.C. 1701q);
the Supportive Housing for Persons
with Disabilities program, authorized by
Section 811, subtitle B of title VIII of the
Cranston Gonzalez National Affordable
Housing Act (42 U.S.C. 8013); the
Project-Based Rental Assistance
programs authorized by Section 811,
subtitle B of title VIII of the CranstonGonzalez National Affordable Housing
Act (42 U.S.C. 8013); the Healthy Homes
and Lead Hazard Control programs, as
authorized by the Lead-Based Paint
Poisoning Prevention Act (42 U.S.C
4801 et seq.) and Residential LeadBased Paint Hazard Reduction Act of
1992 (42 U.S.C. 4851 et seq.); and any
housing and community development
programs that HUD designates as
covered by Section 3 and announced by
HUD as such through a Federal Register
notice, notice of funding availability, or
announcement posted on HUD’s Section
3 Web site(s). Housing and community
development financial assistance does
not include financial assistance
provided for mortgage insurance.
Indian tribe means a tribe that is a
federally recognized tribe or a State
recognized tribe as defined in 25 U.S.C.
4103(13).
Low-income person means a person as
defined in section 3(b)(2) of the United
States Housing Act of 1937 (42 U.S.C.
1437(b)(2)), or a person whose median
household income does not exceed 80
percent of the median household
income within the metropolitan area or
nonmetropolitan county where the
Section 3 covered project or activity is
located.
Metropolitan area means the primary
metropolitan statistical area (PMSA), as
established by the Office of Management
and Budget (OMB).
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Neighborhood, unless otherwise
defined in the regulation or NOFA
governing the program under which the
Section 3 financial assistance is
provided, means Zip codes or other
geographical locations within the
jurisdiction of a unit of general local
government (but not the entire
jurisdiction) designated in ordinances,
or other local documents as a
neighborhood, village, or similar
geographical designation;
New hires mean full- or part-time
employees for permanent, temporary, or
seasonal employment opportunities.
This term refers to any employee who:
(1) Was not on the payroll of the
recipient, subrecipient, contractor, or
subcontractor administering Section 3
covered financial assistance funds on
behalf of the recipient at the beginning
of the award of Section 3 covered
financial assistance; or
(2) Any person hired by an entity on
a per-project basis as a result of a
Section 3 covered project or activity.
NOFA means a notice of funding
availability issued by HUD for
discretionary grant funding that is
awarded competitively to eligible
applicants.
Nonmetropolitan county means rural
counties or any other county outside of
a metropolitan area.
Numerical goals means minimum
numerical targets that recipients,
subrecipients, contractors, or
subcontractors that may be
administering Section 3 covered
financial assistance on behalf of the
recipient reach, or exceed, in order to
demonstrate compliance with this part.
These goals are not construed as quotas,
set-asides, or a cap on the provision of
economic opportunities, and may be
exceeded.
Other HUD programs subject to the
requirements of Section 3 means HUD
programs, other than HUD programs
providing public housing financial
assistance, that provide covered housing
and community development financial
assistance, as defined in this section.
Priority consideration means that
recipients, subrecipients, contractors, or
subcontractors that may be
administering Section 3 covered
financial assistance on behalf of the
recipient must give, to the greatest
extent feasible, training, employment, or
contracting opportunities to Section 3
residents or Section 3 businesses as
defined in this section in accordance
with the appropriate orders of priority
consideration related to the Section 3
covered financial assistance, as
provided in § 135.37 and § 135.57.
Priority consideration should not be
construed to be a quota or set-aside
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program, or an entitlement to economic
opportunities such as a particular
position or contract.
Professional services means nonbuilding trade services that are
performed in connection with
construction and rehabilitation
activities, including but not limited to:
architecture, professional engineering,
structural engineering, land surveying,
mapping, project management,
planning, design, accounting, and other
related services, which are required to
be performed or approved by a person
licensed, registered, or certified to
provide such services.
Project-based rental housing
assistance means rental assistance
contracts provided under section 8(b)(1)
of the U.S. Housing Act of 1937 or
section 8(b)(2) of U.S. Housing Act of
1937 as it existed immediately prior to
October 1, 1983.
Public housing has the meaning that
this term is given in 24 CFR 5.100 or 24
CFR 963.5.
Public housing financial assistance
subject to the requirements of Section 3
means any HUD financial assistance,
subject to minimum unit thresholds
specified in § 135.33, that is provided
through the following HUD assistance:
(1) Annual contributions for low
income housing projects provided
pursuant to Section 5 of the U.S.
Housing Act of 1937 (42 U.S.C. 1437c);
(2) Capital fund project assistance
provided pursuant to Section 9 of the
U.S. Housing Act of 1937 (42 U.S.C,
1473g);
(3) Operating subsidy provided
pursuant to Section 9 of the U.S.
Housing Act of 1937 (42 U.S.C, 1473g);
(4) Competitively awarded HUD
public housing financial assistance for
activities that will result in new
employment, training, or contracting
opportunities, under such programs as
the Family-Supportive Service
Coordinator (FSS), or Resident
Opportunity Supportive Service (ROSS)
grant funding;
(5) Emergency funds, for example,
authorized for emergency capital repair
of public housing or public housing
facilities;
(6) Financial assistance made
available under an appropriations act
such as financial assistance provided for
the Choice Neighborhoods program; and
(7) Such other financial assistance
designated by HUD as public housing
financial assistance covered by Section
3 as announced through a Federal
Register notice, NOFA, or
announcement on HUD’s Section 3 Web
site.
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Public housing project has the
meaning given this term in 3(b)(1) of the
United States Housing Act of 1937.
Public housing resident has the
meaning given this term in 24 CFR
963.5.
Recipient means:
(1) Any entity that receives Section 3
covered financial assistance directly
from HUD, including but not limited to:
Any State, unit of local government,
public housing agency (PHA), public
housing commission, Indian tribe,
tribally designated housing entity, or
other public agency, public or private
nonprofit organization, private agency
or institution, mortgagor, developer,
limited dividend sponsor, builder,
property owner, property manager,
community housing development
organization (CHDO), resident
management corporation, resident
council, or cooperative association. The
term ‘‘recipient’’ also includes any
subrecipients, successor, assignee, or
transferee of such entity.
(2) ‘‘Recipient’’ does not include any
ultimate beneficiary under a HUD
program to which Section 3 applies (for
example an individual or family
receiving a housing rehabilitation grant
financed with HOME assistance) and
does not include contractors and
subcontractors, but as provided in this
part, contractors and subcontractors are
subject to compliance with this part.
Rehabilitation, for the purposes of
this regulation, means improvements or
interventions taken to improve or
restore the structural condition,
architectural components, energy
performance, or environmental quality
of an existing building, dwelling, unit,
or structure that are taken to improve its
safety, aesthetics, or suitability for use.
For project-based rental assistance
contracts, including project-based
Section 8, Section 202, and Section 811
properties, this definition shall apply
when performed as part of a
recapitalization event where Reserve for
Replacement funds are utilized.
Examples include replacement of
roofing, gutters, electrical, plumbing,
heating systems, flooring, windows,
doors and concrete.
Routine maintenance, for the
purposes of this regulation, means
activities that do not materially add to
the value of the building, appreciably
prolong its useful life, or adapt it to new
uses. Examples include: Painting,
caulking, sealing, repairing minor
components, including work required to
prepare units for new tenants upon
turnover, or other activities planned and
performed at regular intervals normally
established by manufacturers or
associations. In the case of project-based
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rental assistance contracts these
planned activities include the work
described in the required Project Capital
Needs Assessment (PCNA).
Section 3 means Section 3 of the
Housing and Urban Development Act of
1968 (12 U.S.C. 1701u).
Section 3 business means a business
that is located in the Section 3 local area
as defined in this section and that is
able to demonstrate one of the
following:
(1) Meets the definition of ‘‘residentowned’’ business in 24 CFR 963.5;
(2) The business is 51 percent or more
owned by Section 3 residents;
(3) The permanent, full-time
employees of the business include
persons, at least 30 percent of whom are
Section 3 residents; or
(4) The business demonstrates that at
least 20 percent of its permanent fulltime employees are Section 3 residents
and the business either: sponsored a
minimum of 10 percent of its current
Section 3 employees to attend a DOL or
DOL recognized State-Apprenticeship
Agency approved, registered
apprenticeship, or a pre-apprenticeship
training program that meets the
requirements in outlined DOL/ETA
Training and Employment Notice 13–12
; or that 10 percent of its employees are
participants or graduates of a DOL
YouthBuild program. For the purposes
of determining Section 3 business
eligibility only, Section 3 residents
include persons who:
(i) Met the definition of Section 3
resident, provided in this section, at the
time the resident was hired or became
an owner, or met such definition within
the 3 years before the business sought
certification; or
(ii) Graduated from a DOL, State
approved, or YouthBuild training
program within the 3 years before the
business sought certification; and
(iii) Eligibility as a Section 3 business
only applies as long as the businesses’
employees continue to meet the
definition of a Section 3 resident set
forth in this part.
Section 3 clause means the contract
provisions set forth in § 135.17.
Section 3 covered financial assistance
means HUD loans, grants, or other
financial assistance provided under:
(1) Public housing financial assistance
as defined in this section; and
(2) Housing and community
development financial assistance as
defined in this section.
Section 3 covered project or activity
means any project or activity that is
funded by Section 3 covered financial
assistance.
Section 3 local area is the:
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(1) Primary metropolitan statistical
area where the Section 3 covered project
or activity takes place; or
(2) Nonmetropolitan county where the
Section 3 covered project or activity
takes place.
Section 3 resident means an
individual residing in the Section 3
local area who can document that he/
she is:
(1) A public housing resident;
(2) A participant in a DOL YouthBuild
program;
(3) A member of a family that receives
federal housing assistance; or
(4) An individual who meets the HUD
income limits for determining the
eligibility of low- and very low-income
persons for HUD assisted housing
programs within the metropolitan area
or nonmetropolitan county.
Service Area, unless defined in the
regulation or NOFA governing the
program under which the Section 3
covered financial assistance is provided,
means the area to be served by a Section
3 covered project or activity.
Subcontractor means any entity (other
than a person who is an employee of the
contractor) that has a contract with a
contractor to undertake a portion of the
contractor’s obligation to perform work
generated by the expenditure of Section
3 covered financial assistance, or arising
in connection with a Section 3 covered
project or activity.
Subrecipient means
(1) An entity that receives Section 3
covered financial assistance from a
recipient or other subrecipient of
Section 3 covered financial assistance to
carry out a Section 3 covered project or
activity on the recipient’s or other
subrecipient’s behalf. This term
includes, but is not limited to: any unit
of State, county or local government,
public housing agency (PHA), public
housing commission, Indian tribe,
tribally designated housing entity, or
other public agency, public or private
nonprofit organization, private agency,
institution, mortgagor, developer,
limited dividend sponsor, builder,
property owner, property manager,
community housing development
organization (CHDO), resident
management corporation, resident
council, or cooperative association.
Subrecipients also include any
successor, assignee, or transferee of any
such entity.
(2) ‘‘Subrecipient’’ does not include
any ultimate beneficiary under a HUD
program to which Section 3 applies (for
example an individual or family
receiving a housing voucher) and does
not include contractors or
subcontractors, but as provided in this
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part, contractors and subcontractors are
subject to compliance with this part.
Tribally designated housing entities
have the meaning this term is given in
25 U.S.C. 4103(22).
Very low-income person means the
definition for this term set forth in
Section 3(b)(2) of the U.S. Housing Act
of 1937 (42 U.S.C. 1437a(b)(2)), or
persons whose household income does
not exceed 50 percent of the median
household income within the
metropolitan area or nonmetropolitan
county where the Section 3 covered
project or activity is located.
§ 135.7 Compliance to the greatest extent
feasible.
(a) General. In accordance with the
findings of Congress, as stated in section
3 of the Housing and Urban
Development Act of 1968, economic
opportunities offer an effective means of
empowering low- and very low-income
persons residing in the metropolitan
area where HUD financial assistance is
expended. Recipients, as defined in
§ 135.5, are required, to the greatest
extent feasible, to ensure that
employment and training opportunities
funded with Section 3 covered financial
assistance be provided to low-and very
low-income persons, and that contracts
are awarded to businesses that are either
owned by, or substantially employ such
persons.
(b) Demonstrating compliance to the
greatest extent feasible. Absent evidence
to the contrary, recipients of housing
and community development assistance
that meets the funding threshold set at
§ 135.53 and PHAs shall demonstrate
compliance with Section 3 and the
requirements of this part by:
(1) Establishing policies and
procedures to achieve compliance with
Section 3, as provided in § 135.9;
(2) Fulfilling its responsibilities, as
specified in § 135.11; and either
(3) Reaching or exceeding each
minimum numerical goal for
employment and contracting
opportunities, as provided in § 135.13
and either § 135.35 or § 135.55; or
(4) If the minimum numerical goals
for employment and contracting are not
met, providing written justification
explaining the extent of efforts taken to
meet the minimum numerical goals and
the impediments confronted in trying to
meet the minimum numerical goals.
Such justifications must include, at a
minimum, a summary of: impediments
encountered; actions taken to address
the identified impediments; and an
identification of steps that may be
successful in overcoming impediments
in the future. Justifications provided by
recipients will be taken into
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consideration by HUD when making
compliance determinations.
(c) Compliance monitoring and
enforcement. (1) When determining if
efforts taken by recipients demonstrate
compliance with Section 3, to the
greatest extent feasible, HUD shall
review:
(i) Policies and procedures, as
specified in § 135.9 developed by the
recipient to ascertain the extent to
which they present measures for
achieving compliance with Section 3;
and
(ii) The extent to which the recipient
fulfilled its responsibilities, as specified
in § 135.11; and either:
(A) Whether the minimum goals at
§ 135.35 or § 135.55 were met; or
(B) Whether written justifications for
not meeting the minimum goals explain
the extent of efforts taken to achieve the
goals of Section 3, identify the
impediments encountered, the actions
taken to address the identified
impediments, and steps that may be
successful in overcoming impediments
in the future. Justifications provided by
recipients will be taken into
consideration by HUD when making
compliance determinations.
(2) Recipients that fail to comply with
the requirements of this part are subject
to sanctions for noncompliance in
accordance with the requirements of the
regulation or NOFA governing the
program under which the Section 3
covered financial assistance is provided,
as set forth at § 135.27.
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§ 135.9 Official Section 3 policies and
procedures.
(a) Official Section 3 policies and
procedures. (1) All recipients that plan
to undertake Section 3 covered activities
must develop and adopt official policies
or procedures to implement the
requirements of this part in accordance
with the ‘‘to the greatest extent feasible’’
requirement as set forth at § 135.7.
Official policies and procedures shall be
updated as appropriate.
(2) Official policies and procedures
must include, at a minimum, steps that
the recipient will take to: inform
subrecipients and contractors about
Section 3 obligations; evaluate potential
bidders for Section 3 compliance during
contract selection; notify Section 3
residents and businesses about
economic opportunities; implement
verification and/or certification
procedures for residents and businesses;
provide priority consideration to
qualified Section 3 residents and
businesses; monitor subrecipients and
contractors for compliance; establish
consequences for noncompliance; and
utilize local community resources to
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meet its Section 3 requirements. The
preceding list is not inclusive of all
elements that recipients should include
in official policies and procedures.
Updates to official policies and
procedures shall discuss the relative
success of the immediate past policies
and procedures and how any changes
are aimed to better promote compliance
with Section 3.
(3) Section 3 official policies and
procedures shall be incorporated into
any strategic and annual plans required
of recipients of HUD covered assistance
by HUD program regulations.
(i) Recipients of Section 3 covered
funding shall include a general
description of their Section 3 official
policies and procedures in required
recipient plans, such as public housing
plans required by HUD regulation in 24
CFR part 903, strategic and annual
action plans required by HUD
regulations in 24 CFR parts 91 and 570,
or other similar plans that may be
required under other covered HUD
programs.
(ii) If a recipient is not required to
submit official plans to HUD such as
public housing plans required by
regulations in 24 CFR part 903, strategic
or annual action plans required by
regulations in 24 CFR parts 91 or 570,
or other similar plans, the recipients’
official section 3 policies and
procedures shall be developed as an
independent document at the time that
Section 3 covered financial assistance is
awarded and updated every 5 years
thereafter.
(4) Official policies and procedures
shall be available for review by HUD,
Section 3 residents and businesses, and
the general public upon request.
§ 135.11
Recipient responsibilities.
(a) General. Recipients have the
responsibility for monitoring and
ensuring compliance with this part in
their own operations, and ensuring
compliance in the operations of their
subrecipients, contractors, or
subcontractors. The use of
subrecipients, contractors, or
subcontractors does not relieve a
recipient of its responsibility. Recipients
are also responsible for determining the
adequacy of performance under
subrecipient agreements or procurement
contracts, and for taking appropriate
action when performance problems
arise.
(b) Specific responsibilities for all
recipients. Recipients shall comply with
the following requirements:
(1) Develop and implement official
Section 3 policies and procedures in
accordance with § 135.9.
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(2) Maintain lists of eligible Section 3
residents and businesses that have
asked to receive priority consideration
for training, employment, contracting,
or other economic opportunities.
(3) Notify Section 3 residents and
businesses that have asked to receive
priority consideration about the
availability of new employment,
training, contracting, or other economic
opportunities created as a result of the
expenditure of Section 3 covered
financial assistance.
(i) Recipients must ensure that all
communications are provided in a
manner that is effective for persons with
hearing, visual, and other
communications-related disabilities
consistent with section 504 of the
Rehabilitation Act of 1973 and, as
applicable, the Americans with
Disabilities Act.
(ii) Notifications shall be made in
accordance with ‘‘HUD’s Final
Guidance to Federal Financial
Assistance Regarding Title VI
Prohibition Against National Origin
Discrimination Affecting Limited
English Proficient Persons’’ published
in the Federal Register on January 22,
2007 at 72 FR 2732 (or other subsequent
updated guidance).
(4) Ensure that priority consideration
is provided to Section 3 residents and
businesses in accordance with the
orders of priority consideration set forth
at §§ 135.37 and 135.57.
(5) Monitor the payroll data of
developers, contractors, and
subcontractors throughout the project or
activity, to ensure that new employment
opportunities are made available
consistent with the requirements of this
part. This requirement only applies to
projects or activities that are subject to
wage rates determined under the Davis
Bacon Act (40 U.S.C. 3141 et seq.).
(6) Ensure that all bid solicitations
associated with Section 3 covered
projects or activities acknowledge the
applicability of Section 3 to the project
or activity and communicate the
selected contractor’s obligation to
comply with the requirements of this
part to prospective bidders. Some
examples include: notifying prospective
contractors about Section 3 applicability
during pre-bid meetings or conferences;
requiring bidders to certify that they
have received a copy of the recipient’s
Section 3 policies/procedures; etc.
(7) Ensure that subrecipients,
contractors, or subcontractors enter into
written agreements consistent with
§ 135.17, and include the Section 3
clause at § 135.19, as appropriate.
(8) Ensure that notices or signs
acknowledging Section 3 obligations
and advertising vacant employment,
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training, contracting, or subcontracting
opportunities are posted in places
where they can be clearly seen by both
current employees and prospective
applicants for economic opportunities.
(i) At a minimum, such notices shall
include the following: anticipated dates
that work will begin and end;
anticipated number and type of job
vacancies available; anticipated number
and type of registered apprenticeship or
training opportunities offered;
anticipated dollar amount and type of
subcontracting opportunities;
application and bidding procedures;
required employment and
subcontracting qualifications; and the
name and contact information for the
person(s) accepting applications.
(ii) Notifications shall be in
accordance with ‘‘HUD’s Final
Guidance to Federal Financial
Assistance Regarding Title VI
Prohibition Against National Origin
Discrimination Affecting Limited
English Proficient Persons’’ published
in the Federal Register on January 22,
2007 at 72 FR 2732 (or other subsequent
updated guidance).
(9) If applicable, ensure that new or
existing subrecipient or contractor
selection procedures, including those
developed in accordance with 24 CFR
part 85; assess the responsible bidder’s
previous compliance and ability to:
(i) Retain Section 3 hires for
employment opportunities;
(ii) Comply with Section 3
requirements; and
(iii) Provide training opportunities for
Section 3 residents.
(10) If applicable, ensure that labor
unions are notified about recipient’s and
contractor’s obligations to comply with
the requirements of this part. Collective
bargaining agreements, project labor
agreements or other agreements between
labor unions and recipients, or
subrecipients that are established, or
revised, after [EFFECTIVE DATE OF
FINAL RULE], shall ensure that projects
generated from the expenditure of
Section 3 covered financial assistance
provide employment, registered
apprenticeship, training, contracting, or
other economic opportunities to Section
3 residents and businesses in a manner
that is consistent with this part
(11) Coordinate with local DOL
Workforce Investment Boards,
YouthBuild grantees, or other State or
Federal training programs to ensure that
Section 3 residents and businesses are
notified about the availability of federal
training opportunities.
(12) Document actions taken to
comply with the requirements of this
part; the results of actions taken;
sanctions imposed upon subrecipients,
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contractors, subcontractors, or
subcontractors; impediments
encountered; actions taken to address
the identified impediments; and steps
that may be successful in overcoming
impediments in the future.
(c) Responsibilities specific to PHAs.
In addition to the responsibilities set
forth in paragraph (b) of this section,
PHAs must comply with the following
additional requirements:
(1) PHAs are required to monitor
successful bidders for compliance with
descriptions provided in qualified bid
proposals.
(2) Develop appropriate procedures to
comply with the earned income
disregard requirements; and
(3) Develop procedures to set-aside
eligible contracting opportunities for
public housing resident-owned
businesses that are consistent with 24
CFR part 963, as appropriate.
(d) Responsibilities specific to
recipients of housing and community
development financial assistance. In
addition to the responsibilities set forth
in paragraph (b) of this section,
recipients of housing and community
development financial assistance must
comply with the following additional
requirements:
(1) Where practicable, recipients are
required to monitor successful bidders
for compliance with descriptions
provided in qualified bid proposals.
(2) Recipients must ensure that
qualified local Section 3 businesses are
included on lists of preferred or
recommended contractors when such
lists are provided to homeowners for
rehabilitation loan or grant programs.
The recipient or subrecipient may count
any Section 3 businesses that are
selected by homeowners towards their
minimum numerical goals annually.
The recipient is not required to count
any non-Section 3 businesses that are
selected by homeowners toward the
total amount of contracts awarded to
Section 3 businesses annually.
§ 135.13
goals.
General minimum numerical
(a) Calculation of goals. The
minimum numerical goals established
in this part apply to the aggregate
number of employment and contracting
opportunities generated by Section 3
covered financial assistance during each
annual reporting period as defined at
§ 135.23(b).
(b) Minimum numerical goals. (1)
Recipients of public housing financial
assistance shall, to the greatest extent
feasible, reach the minimum numerical
goals set forth at § 135.35.
(2) Recipients of housing and
community development financial
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16537
assistance shall, to the greatest extent
feasible, reach the minimum numerical
goals set forth at § 135.55.
(3) Recipients of competitively
awarded Section 3 covered financial
assistance shall, to the greatest extent
feasible, reach the minimum numerical
goals set forth in the subpart associated
with the type of financial assistance
provided, §§ 135.35 and 135.55,
respectively.
(c) Inability or failure to meet goals.
Recipients that are unable or fail to meet
minimum numerical goals must provide
to HUD a written justification as to why
the goals were not met, as provided in
§ 135.7(b)(4). Justifications provided by
recipients will be taken into
consideration by HUD when making
compliance determinations.
§ 135.15 Verification of Section 3 resident
and Section 3 business status.
(a) General. Recipients of Section 3
covered financial assistance are required
to verify that residents and businesses
seeking the employment and contracting
opportunities offered by the recipient
meet the definitions of Section 3
residents and Section 3 businesses at
§ 135.5 prior to providing priority
consideration for employment, training,
contracting, or other economic
opportunities. Unless otherwise
directed by HUD, recipients may use
their own discretion for developing
specific verification procedures for
Section 3 residents and Section 3
businesses.
(b) Section 3 residents. (1) A recipient
may allow persons to self-certify that
they are a Section 3 resident as defined
in § 135.5 provided that the recipient
conducts procedures to verify a sample
of self-certified Section 3 residents.
(2) A recipient may presume a person
that can provide evidence that they
reside within a neighborhood, zip code,
census tract, etc. that has officially been
identified by HUD is eligible to receive
priority consideration as a Section 3
resident absent evidence to the contrary.
(3) A recipient may require
information verifying that a person
meets the definition of a Section 3
resident. Examples of evidence of
eligibility include but are not limited to:
evidence of receipt of Federal housing
assistance; evidence of receipt of other
Federal subsidies or Federal assistance
programs; Federal tax returns; proof of
residence in a neighborhood, zip code,
census tract, or other area that has
officially been identified by HUD.
(4) A recipient shall impose sanctions
upon individuals who make false claims
or representations regarding their
income eligibility, residence, or other
factors in order to be determined a
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specifies the minimum provisions that
must be included in written agreements
and contracts.
(c) [Reserved].
(d) [Reserved].
(e) Subrecipient agreements.
Agreements between the recipient and
the subrecipient must:
(1) Describe the subrecipient’s plan
for implementing Section 3 and meeting
the numerical hiring and contracting
goals; ensuring eligibility of Section 3
residents and businesses; and
monitoring contractor compliance. This
description must provide enough detail
to provide a sound basis for the
recipient to monitor performance under
the agreement;
(2) Specify the duties set forth in this
part that the subrecipient will
undertake;
(3) State that the subrecipient will
incorporate the Section 3 clause, as
provided in § 135.19, into all contracts
or subcontracts, memoranda of
understanding, cooperative agreements,
or similar legally binding arrangements,
ensure that contractors and
subcontractors certify their compliance
at the time of contract award, and
monitor parties for compliance, as
appropriate;
(4) Specify other responsibilities as
needed to ensure that the subrecipient
or contractor complies with all
requirements at §§ 135.23 and 135.25;
(5) Specify the particular records that
must be maintained and the information
or reports that must be submitted in
order to assist the recipient in meeting
its recordkeeping and reporting
requirements for Section 3; and
(6) Provide for a means of
enforcement and describe the sanctions
for failure to comply with this part.
§ 135.17
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Section 3 resident. In addition, the
recipient will refer such individuals to
the HUD Office of Inspector General.
(c) Section 3 businesses. (1) A
recipient may allow a business to selfcertify that they are a Section 3 business
as defined in § 135.5, provided that the
recipient conducts procedures to verify
a sample of self-certified Section 3
businesses.
(2) A recipient may presume that a
business meets the eligibility criteria if
the business provides evidence that it is
located within a neighborhood, zip
code, or census tract that has been
identified by HUD; or if the business is
able to provide evidence that it
substantially employs residents from
neighborhoods, zip codes, or census
tracts identified by HUD, absent
evidence to the contrary.
(3) A recipient may require
information verifying that a business
meets the definition of a Section 3
business. Examples of evidence of
eligibility for priority consideration as a
Section 3 business may include: Federal
tax returns for workers, owners, or
businesses; payroll data; employee-selfcertification statements; articles of
business ownership; evidence that
owners or employees received housing
or other Federal subsidies within 3
years from the date that the business
sought designation as a Section 3
business.
(4) A recipient shall impose
appropriate sanctions upon businesses
that make false claims or
representations regarding their
eligibility, business location, eligible
employees, or other factors in order to
be determined a Section 3 business. In
addition, the recipient will refer such
individuals to the HUD Office of
Inspector General.
§ 135.19
Written agreements.
(a) General. Before disbursing any
Section 3 covered financial assistance to
subrecipients that may administer all or
a part of Section 3 covered financial
assistance on- behalf of a recipient, the
recipient must ensure that the parties
enter into a written agreement to
facilitate compliance with the
requirements of this part.
(b) Provisions in written agreements.
The contents of the agreement may vary
depending upon the role the
subrecipient is asked to assume on
behalf of the recipient, the type of
Section 3 covered project or activity that
is to be undertaken, or the dollar
amount of the contract. Recipients are
responsible for enforcing the provisions
of written agreements, including
imposing sanctions upon subrecipients
for noncompliance. This section
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Contracts and Section 3 clause.
(a) General. Before disbursing any
Section 3 covered financial assistance to
contractors or subcontractors that may
administer all or a part of Section 3
covered financial assistance on- behalf
of a recipient, the recipient must ensure
that the parties enter into a contract to
facilitate compliance with the
requirements of this part.
(b) Provisions in contracts. The
contents of the contract may vary
depending upon the dollar amount of
the contract. Recipients are responsible
for enforcing the provisions of contracts,
including imposing sanctions upon
contractors or subcontractors for
noncompliance. This section specifies
the minimum provisions that must be
included in contracts.
(c) Contracts of $200,000 or above.
Contracts of $200,000 or more shall
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include the Section 3 clause at § 135.19
in its entirety.
(d) Contracts less than $200,000.
Contracts of less than $200,000 shall
include provisions A, B, C, F, H, and M
of the Section 3 clause at § 135.19.
(e) Where required, the following
Section 3 clause shall be included in
contracts:
Section 3 Clause
A. The work to be performed under this
contract, subcontract, memorandum of
understanding, cooperative agreement or
similar legally binding agreement, is subject
to the requirements of section 3 of the
Housing and Urban Development Act of 1968
(Section 3). The purpose of Section 3 is to
ensure, to the greatest extent feasible, that
training, employment, contracting, and other
economic opportunities generated by Section
3 covered financial assistance shall be
directed to low- and very low-income
residents of the neighborhood where the
financial assistance is spent, particularly to
those who are recipients of government
assistance for housing, and to businesses that
are either owned by low- or very low-income
residents of the neighborhood where the
financial assistance is spent, or substantially
employ these persons.
B. The parties to this contract, subcontract,
memorandum of understanding, cooperative
agreement, or similar legally binding
agreement agree to comply with HUD’s
regulations in 24 CFR part 135, which
implement Section 3. As evidenced by their
execution of this contract or subcontract
memorandum of understanding, cooperative
agreement or similar legally binding
agreement the parties certify that they are
under no contractual or other impediment
that would prevent them from complying
with the requirements of 24 CFR part 135.
C. The contractor agrees to identify current
employees on its payroll when the contract
or subcontract was awarded who will be
working on the Section 3 covered project or
activity and certify that any vacant
employment opportunities, including
training positions, that are filled:
1. After the contractor is selected; and
2. With persons other than those that meet
the definition of a Section 3 resident, were
not filled to circumvent the contractor’s
Section 3 obligations.
D. The contractor agrees to maintain
records documenting Section 3 residents that
were hired to work on previous Section 3
covered projects or activities that were
retained by the contractor for subsequent
Section 3 covered projects or activities.
E. The contractor agrees to post signs
advertising new employment, training, or
subcontracting opportunities that will be
available as a result of the Section 3 covered
projects and activities in conspicuous places
at the work site where potential applicants
can review them.
F. The contractor agrees to hire, to the
greatest extent feasible, Section 3 residents as
30 percent of new hires, or provide written
justification to the recipient that is consistent
with § 135.7(b)(4), describing why it was
unable to meet minimum numerical hiring
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goals, despite its efforts to comply with the
provisions of this clause.
G. The contractor agrees that in order for
a Section 3 resident to be counted as a new
hire, the resident must work a minimum of
50 percent of the average staff hours worked
for the category of work for which they were
hired throughout the duration of time that
the category of work is performed on the
covered project.
H. The contractor agrees to award, to the
greatest extent feasible, 10 percent of the total
dollar amount of subsequent subcontracts
awarded in connection with the Section 3
covered project or activity to Section 3
businesses, or provide written justification
that is consistent with § 135.7(b)(4)
describing why it was unable to meet that
goal, despite their efforts to comply with the
provisions of this clause.
I. The contractor agrees to notify Section 3
residents and businesses about the
availability of new employment, training, or
contracting opportunities created as a result
of the receipt of Section 3 covered financial
assistance, as stipulated by the awarding
agency.
J. The contractor agrees to verify the
eligibility of prospective Section 3 residents
and businesses for employment, training, or
subcontracting opportunities, in accordance
with the recipient’s policies and procedures.
K. The contractor agrees to provide priority
consideration to eligible residents and
businesses in accordance with 24 CFR 135.37
or 24 CFR 135.57, as applicable.
L. The contractor agrees to notify potential
bidders on subcontracts that are associated
with Section 3 covered projects and activities
about the requirements of Section 3, and
include this Section 3 clause in its entirety
into every subcontract awarded.
M. The contractor agrees to impose
sanctions upon any subcontractor that has
violated the requirements of this clause in
accordance with the awarding agency’s
Section 3 policies and procedures.
N. The contractor agrees to comply with all
monitoring, reporting, recordkeeping, and
other procedures specified by the awarding
agency.
O. If applicable, the contractor agrees to
notify each labor organization or
representative of workers with which the
recipient, subrecipient, or contractor has a
collective bargaining or similar labor
agreement or other understanding, if any,
about its obligation to comply with the
requirements of Section 3 and ensure that
new collective bargaining or similar labor
agreements provide employment, registered
apprenticeship, training, subcontracting, or
other economic opportunities to Section 3
residents and businesses, and to post notices
in conspicuous places at the work site
advising the labor union, organization, or
workers’ representative of the contractor’s
commitments under this part.
P. Failure to comply with this clause shall
result in the imposition of sanctions.
Appropriate sanctions for noncompliance
may include: Requiring additional
certifications or assurances of compliance;
termination or cancelation of the contract,
subcontract, memorandum of understanding,
cooperative agreement, or similar legally
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binding arrangement for default; refraining
from entering into subsequent contracts,
subcontracts, memoranda of understanding,
cooperative agreements, or similar legally
binding arrangement; repayment of funds,
and withholding a portion of contract
awards, subcontracts, memoranda of
understanding, cooperative agreements, or
similar legally binding arrangements.
§ 135.21
Certifications of compliance.
(a) Annual certifications.—(1)
Recipient certifications. (i) A recipient
shall submit annual certifications to
HUD documenting its acknowledgement
of obligations to comply with the
requirements of this part in its own
operations and those of its
subrecipients, contractors,
subcontractors, and others that may be
administering Section 3 covered
financial assistance on behalf of the
recipient. Certifications shall be
submitted in accordance with the
requirements of the regulation or NOFA
governing the program under which the
Section 3 covered financial assistance is
provided.
(ii) HUD may require recipients to
provide additional documentation or
assurances as evidence of compliance
with the requirements of this part prior
to the acceptance of annual
certifications. HUD may refuse to accept
any certification when there are
reasonable grounds to believe that the
recipient is not in compliance with the
requirements of this part.
(2) Subrecipients, contractors and
subcontractors. (i) Subrecipients,
contractors, and subcontractors shall
certify their compliance by entering into
a written agreement with the recipient,
as specified at § 135.17 or contract that
contains the Section 3 clause provided
at § 135.19.
(ii) [Reserved]
(b) [Reserved]
§ 135.23
Reporting requirements.
(a) Recipient reporting requirements.
(1) Each recipient shall submit to HUD
an annual report documenting the
recipient’s compliance with Section 3 in
such form and with such information as
HUD may request. The purpose of the
report is to summarize efforts
undertaken by the recipient and
accomplishments (or lack thereof)
towards meeting the employment and
contracting goals set forth at § 135.11.
(i) The report will include an
accounting of all new hires, as defined
at § 135.5, and Section 3 new hires
employed as a result of the expenditure
of Section 3 covered financial assistance
in a manner that allows HUD to
determine if the minimum numerical
goal for employment was met during the
reporting period.
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16539
(ii) The report will also account for
the total dollar amount of contracts
awarded as a result of the expenditure
of Section 3 covered financial assistance
during the reporting period, and the
dollar amount of those contracts that
were awarded to Section 3 businesses in
a manner that allows HUD to determine
if the minimum numerical goal for
contracting was met.
(iii) The report must include a written
justification consistent with
§ 135.7(b)(4) if a recipient failed to meet
the minimum numerical goals during
the reporting period.
(2) Only recipients are required to
submit Section 3 annual reports to HUD.
HUD will not accept reports from
subrecipients, contractors, or
subcontractors administering Section 3
covered financial assistance on behalf of
a recipient.
(b) Reporting periods. Unless
otherwise indicated, a recipient’s
reporting period shall coincide with
their local program of fiscal year.
(c) Report due dates. (1) Unless
otherwise indicated, all Section 3
annual reports shall be submitted to
HUD’s Office of Fair Housing and Equal
Opportunity. Where the program
providing the Section 3 covered
assistance requires submission of an
annual performance report, the Section
3 report will be submitted with that
annual performance report. If the
program providing the Section 3
covered assistance does not require an
annual performance report, the Section
3 report is to be submitted by January
10 of each year or within 10 days of
project completion, whichever is earlier.
(2) HUD may grant an extension of the
due date for a Section 3 annual report
for good reason based on a recipient’s
demonstration of the inability, through
no fault of its own, to meet the reporting
due date.
(d) Electronic submission. Unless
otherwise specified, Section 3 annual
reports shall be submitted electronically
through online reporting systems as
specified by HUD.
(e) Data collection. Data presented in
a Section 3 annual report shall be used
to make determinations regarding the
recipient’s efforts to ensure compliance
with the requirements of Section 3 in its
own operations, and those of its
subrecipients, contractors, or
subcontractors that may be
administering Section 3 covered
financial assistance on behalf of the
recipient. Data from Section 3 annual
reports may be used to produce reports
for the Secretary, for the Executive
Branch, Congress, housing
professionals, the general public, and
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others that may benefit from the
information provided in such reports.
(f) Sanctions for delinquent reports.
(1) Recipients that fail to submit Section
3 annual reports by the reporting due
date may be sanctioned in accordance
with the requirements of the regulation
or NOFA governing the program under
which the Section 3 covered financial
assistance is provided.
(2) Continuing failure to submit
Section 3 annual reports may result in
HUD denying or withholding HUD
financial assistance.
(g) Subrecipient reporting. A state or
county recipient that distributes Section
3 covered financial assistance to
subrecipients shall compile data
regarding compliance with the
requirements of this regulation in its
own operations, and in the operations of
its subrecipients, contractors, and
subcontractors into one annual report to
HUD in a manner that allows HUD to
make an accurate determination
regarding the State or county recipient’s
efforts to ensure compliance during the
reporting period. Subrecipients are not
required to submit annual reports
directly to HUD.
(h) Availability of Section 3 reports.
All Section 3 annual reports submitted
to HUD in accordance with the
requirements of this part will be made
available to the public upon request.
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§ 135.25 Recordkeeping and access to
records.
HUD shall have access to all records,
reports, documents, contracts, or other
items that are maintained by a recipient
to demonstrate compliance with the
requirements of this part, in the
recipient’s own operations or those of
its subrecipients, contractors, or
subcontractors. These records include,
but are not limited to: Section 3
policies, procedures, and other guidance
materials; lists of Section 3 residents
and businesses; evidence of efforts to
notify Section 3 residents and
businesses about the availability of
employment training, contracting, or
other economic opportunities; payroll
data or other similar documentation
verifying new hires; copies of Section 3
contracts, clauses, and assurances;
evidence of efforts taken by contractors
or subcontractors to comply with the
terms of the Section 3 clause and efforts
taken to reach the minimum numerical
goals; and other data, evidence or
materials deemed by HUD as
demonstrating compliance with the
requirements of this part.
§ 135.27
Sanctions for noncompliance.
Sanctions imposed on recipients that
fail to comply with any of the
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requirements of this part shall be in
accordance with the requirements and
procedures concerning the imposition of
sanctions or resolutions set forth in the
regulations governing the program
under which the Section 3 financial
assistance is provided. Appropriate
sanctions for noncompliance may,
depending on the regulation governing
the program under which the Section 3
financial assistance was provided,
include: requiring additional
certifications or assurances of
compliance; repayment of HUD
financial assistance; ineligibility for
HUD financial assistance; withholding
HUD financial assistance; or
suspension, debarment, or limited
denial of participation in HUD programs
pursuant to 2 CFR part 2424 where
appropriate.
§ 135.29
Other Federal requirements.
Compliance with Section 3 and the
regulations of this part does not
supersede other Federal requirements
that may be applicable to the execution
of HUD programs.
(a) Federal labor standards
provisions. Certain construction
contracts are subject to compliance with
the requirement to pay prevailing wages
determined under the Davis-Bacon Act
and with implementing DOL
regulations, including those at 29 CFR
parts 1, 3 and 5. Additionally,
maintenance activities on public
housing developments are subject to
compliance with the requirement to pay
prevailing wage rates, as determined or
adopted by HUD, for maintenance
laborers and mechanics engaged in this
work.
(b) Use of apprentices. Apprentices
and trainees will be permitted to work
at less than the predetermined rate for
the work they perform when they are
employed pursuant to a bona fide
apprenticeship program registered with
the DOL Office of Apprenticeship, or a
state apprenticeship agency recognized
by that Office, or pursuant to a trainee
program approved by the DOL
Employment and Training
Administration, under the conditions
specified in DOL regulations at 29 CFR
5.5(a)(4). Apprentices and trainees may
be utilized only to the extent permitted
under either DOL regulations or, for
work subject to HUD-determined or
adopted prevailing wage rates consistent
with HUD policies and guidelines. The
allowable use of apprentices and
trainees includes adherence to the wage
rates and ratios of apprentices or
trainees to journeymen set out in the
approved program.
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Subpart B—Additional Provisions for
Public Housing Financial Assistance
§ 135.31
Applicability.
(a) General. The requirements of
Section 3 apply to training,
employment, contracting and other
economic opportunities arising from the
expenditure of public housing financial
assistance, as defined in § 135.5. This
subpart communicates provisions to be
implemented by PHAs in addition to
those set forth in subpart A.
(b) Scope of applicability. (1) The
requirements of this subpart apply to all
new employment and training
opportunities that are generated as a
result of the expenditure of public
housing financial assistance.
(2) The requirements of this subpart
apply to all contracting opportunities
(including contracts for professional
services) that are funded with Section 3
public housing financial assistance,
regardless of whether the Section 3
project is fully- or partially-funded with
Section 3 covered financial assistance.
Accordingly, if any amount of Section 3
covered financial assistance is invested
into Section 3 covered projects or
activities, the requirements of this
subpart apply to the entire project.
§ 135.33 Public housing agency
thresholds.
There are no thresholds for Section 3
public housing financial assistance. The
requirements of this subpart apply to
Section 3 public housing assistance
provided to recipients, notwithstanding
the amount of the assistance provided to
the recipient. The requirements of this
subpart apply to all subrecipients,
contractors, or subcontractors
performing work in connection with
projects and activities funded by public
housing Section 3 covered financial
assistance, regardless of the dollar
amount of the contract or subcontract.
§ 135.35
Minimum numerical goals.
(a) Employment opportunities. (1)
PHAs must employ, to the greatest
extent feasible, Section 3 residents as 30
percent of direct new hires within the
public housing agency (PHA).
Employment opportunities are not
limited to those related to construction
and rehabilitation and may include, but
are not limited, to the following
employment opportunities:
management, administrative,
accounting, food services, case
management, information technology,
facilities maintenance, janitorial,
daycare, construction, etc.
(2) PHAs must direct their
subrecipients, contractors,
subcontractors, and others that may be
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administering Section 3 covered
financial assistance on the PHA’s behalf
to employ, to the greatest extent
feasible, Section 3 residents as 30
percent of its direct new hires.
(3) For a Section 3 resident to be
considered a new hire by a contractor or
subcontractor, the Section 3 resident
must work, during its employment with
the contractor or subcontractor, a
minimum of 50 percent of the average
staff hours worked for the category of
work for which they were hired
throughout the duration of time that the
category of work is performed on the
covered project.
(b) Contracting opportunities. (1)
PHAs must award, to the greatest extent
feasible, to Section 3 businesses at least
10 percent of the total dollar amount of
all contracting opportunities generated
from the expenditure of Section 3
covered financial assistance.
(2) PHAs must direct their
subrecipients, contractors,
subcontractors, and others that may be
administering Section 3 covered
financial assistance on the PHA’s behalf
to award, to the greatest extent feasible,
to Section 3 businesses at least 10
percent of the total dollar amount of all
subsequent contracting or
subcontracting opportunities.
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§ 135.37 Orders of priority consideration
for employment and contracting
opportunities.
(a) General. (1) Priority consideration
should not be construed to be a quota
or set-aside program, or an entitlement
to economic opportunities such as a
particular position or contract.
(2) Section 3 residents must possess
the same job qualifications, skills,
eligibility criteria, and capacity as other
applicants for employment and training
opportunities being sought.
(3) Section 3 businesses must be
selected in accordance with the
procurement standards of 24 CFR 85.36,
including price, ability and willingness
to comply with this part, and other
factors, to be considered lowest
responsible bidders on contracting
opportunities being sought.
(4) A PHA may give priority
consideration to a Section 3 resident or
business if such resident or business is
qualified for the respective employment
or contracting opportunity.
(5) A PHA must give priority
consideration to a Section 3 resident or
business when that Section 3 resident or
business is equally qualified with other
individuals or businesses to which the
PHA would offer employment or
contracting opportunities.
(b) Order of priority consideration for
Section 3 residents in employment and
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training opportunities. A PHA, its
subrecipients, contractors, and
subcontractors shall direct their efforts
to provide employment and training
opportunities generated from the
expenditure of Section 3 covered
financial assistance to Section 3
residents in the following order of
priority consideration:
(1) Residents of the public housing
project or projects where the Section 3
covered financial assistance is
expended.
(2) Residents of other public housing
projects managed by the PHA that is
spending Section 3 covered financial
assistance.
(3) Section 3 residents participating in
DOL YouthBuild programs.
(4) Other Section 3 residents in the
Section 3 local area, including
individuals and families receiving
Section 8 housing choice vouchers.
(c) Order of priority consideration for
Section 3 businesses in contracting
opportunities. A PHA, its subrecipients,
contractors, and others shall direct their
efforts to award contracting and
subcontracting opportunities to Section
3 businesses in the following order of
priority consideration:
(1) Section 3 businesses that are 51
percent or more owned by residents of
the public housing project(s) where the
Section 3 covered financial assistance is
expended; or whose full-time,
permanent workforce is comprised of 30
percent or more of residents of the
public housing project(s) where the
Section 3 covered financial assistance is
expended.
(2) Section 3 businesses that are 51
percent or more owned by residents of
any public housing projects
administered by the PHA; or whose fulltime, permanent, workforce is
comprised of 30 percent or more of
residents of any public housing projects
managed by the PHA.
(3) Grantees selected to carry out DOL
YouthBuild programs.
(4) Any other Section 3 business in
the Section 3 local area.
Subpart C—Additional Provisions for
Housing and Community Development
Financial Assistance
§ 135.51
Applicability.
(a) General. This subpart
communicates provisions that must be
implemented by recipients of Section 3
housing and community development
financial assistance in addition to those
set forth in subpart A. Section 3 applies
to training, employment, contracting
(including contracts for professional
services), and other economic
opportunities arising in connection with
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the expenditure of housing and
community development financial
assistance that is used for projects
involving:
(1) Housing rehabilitation (including
demolition);
(2) Housing construction; or
(3) Other public construction
(including the demolition, rehabilitation
or construction of other public
buildings, facilities, or infrastructure).
(b) Exemptions. (1) The following is a
list of some activities and projects that
are exempt from the requirements of
this subpart. This is not intended to be
an all-inclusive list of activities that
may be exempt from the requirements of
this subpart.
(2) Covered housing and community
financial assistance used for acquisition,
routine maintenance, operations,
administrative costs, and project rental
assistance contracts (PRAC) is exempt
from the requirements of this subpart.
(3) Indian tribes and tribally
designated housing entities shall
comply with the responsibilities set
forth in subpart A and in this subpart.
However, Indian tribes and tribally
designated housing entities that adopt,
and are complying with, tribal
employment and contract preference
laws (including regulations and tribal
ordinances) in accordance with Section
101(k) of Native American Housing
Assistance and Self-Determination Act
of 1996 (NAHASDA) (25 U.S.C. 4111(k))
shall also be deemed to be in
compliance with this subpart. Indian
tribes, tribally designated housing
entities, and other tribal entities that are
subject to the Indian preference
requirements of Section 7(b) of the
Indian Self-Determination and
Education Assistance Act (25 U.S.C.
450e) shall also be deemed to be in
compliance with this subpart. The
requirements of this subpart apply to
Indian tribes that have not adopted
tribal preference laws for employment
and contracting in accordance with
Section 101(k) of NAHASDA, and
Indian tribes, tribally designated
housing entities, and tribal entities that
are not subject to Indian preference
requirements of Section 7(b) of the
Indian Self-Determination and
Education Assistance Act, in the same
manner as other recipients of housing
and community development financial
assistance set forth in subpart C of this
part.
§ 135.53 Funding thresholds that trigger
Section 3 compliance.
(a) Funding thresholds for recipients
and subrecipients. (1) The requirements
of this subpart apply to recipients of
housing and community development
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financial assistance that plan to obligate
or commit an aggregate amount of
$400,000 or more in Section 3 covered
financial assistance on projects
involving demolition, housing
rehabilitation, housing construction, or
other public construction during an
annual reporting period.
(2) The $400,000 funding threshold is
comprised of the combined expenditure
of all sources of housing and
community development financial
assistance set forth in § 135.5.
(b) Applicability of Section 3
requirements to individual projects. (1)
Where the thresholds set forth in
paragraph (a) of this section are met, the
requirements of this subpart apply to all
Section 3 projects and activities that are
funded with housing and community
development financial assistance,
regardless of the specific dollar amount
invested into the Section 3 covered
project or activity.
(2) The requirements of this subpart
apply to the entire project that is funded
with Section 3 covered financial
assistance, regardless of whether the
Section 3 project is fully- or partiallyfunded with housing and community
development financial assistance.
Accordingly, if any amount of Section 3
covered financial assistance is invested
into a project involving housing
demolition, rehabilitation or
construction, or the rehabilitation or
construction of public buildings,
facilities, or infrastructure, the
requirements of this subpart apply to
the entire project, both HUD and nonHUD funded portions.
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§ 135.55
Minimum numerical goals.
(a) Employment opportunities. (1)
Recipients of housing and community
development financial assistance must
direct its contractors and subcontractors
employ, to the greatest extent feasible,
Section 3 residents as 30 percent of
direct new hires. For a Section 3
resident to be considered a new hire, the
Section 3 resident must work, during
the resident’s employment with the
contractor or subcontractor, a minimum
of 50 percent of the average staff hours
worked for the category of work for
which they were hired throughout the
duration of time that the category of
work is performed on the covered
project.
(2) Recipients of housing and
community development financial
assistance must ensure, to the greatest
extent feasible, that 30 percent of any
new hires within the agency that will
primarily work on HUD-funded projects
or activities involving demolition;
housing rehabilitation; housing
construction; demolition, rehabilitation,
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or construction of other public
buildings, facilities, or infrastructure; or
construction and rehabilitation-related
(professional service) projects and
activities are Section 3 residents. For
example, these positions may include
electricians, plumbers, construction
managers, general laborers, consultants,
accountants, and architects.
(c) Contracting opportunities. (1)
Recipients of housing and community
development financial assistance must
award, to the greatest extent feasible, at
least 10 percent of the total dollar
amount of all contracts to Section 3
businesses.
(2) Recipients of housing and
community development financial
assistance must, to the greatest extent
feasible, have its subrecipients,
contractors, and subcontractors that
receive contracts for Section 3 covered
projects and activities award at least 10
percent of the total dollar amount of all
subsequent contracting and
subcontracting opportunities to Section
3 businesses.
§ 135.57 Orders of priority consideration
for employment and contracting
opportunities.
(a) General. (1) Recipients of housing
and community development financial
assistance and their subrecipients, and
contractors shall provide priority
consideration to Section 3 residents and
Section 3 businesses for new training,
employment, and contracting
opportunities generated as a result of
the expenditure of Section 3 covered
financial assistance.
(2) Priority consideration should not
be construed to be a quota or set-aside
program, or as an entitlement to
economic opportunities such as a
particular job or contract.
(3) Section 3 residents must possess
the same job qualifications, skills,
eligibility criteria, and capacity as other
applicants for employment and training
opportunities being sought.
(4) Section 3 businesses must be
selected in accordance with the
procurement standards of 24 CFR 85.36
or 24 CFR 84.40, as appropriate,
including price, ability and willingness
to comply with this part, and other
factors, to be considered lowest
responsible bidders on contracting
opportunities being sought.
(5) Recipients of housing and
community development financial
assistance and their subrecipients, and
contractors may give priority
consideration to a Section 3 resident or
business if such resident or business is
qualified for the respective employment
or contracting opportunities
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(6) Recipients of housing and
community development and their
subrecipients, and contractors must give
priority consideration to a Section 3
resident or business when that Section
3 resident or business is equally
qualified with other individuals or
businesses that would be offered
employment or contracting
opportunities.
(b) Orders of priority consideration for
employment and training opportunities.
(1) Recipients of housing and
community development financial
assistance that meet the funding
thresholds set forth at § 135.53 shall
direct their efforts to provide training
and employment opportunities
generated from the expenditure of
Section 3 housing and community
development financial assistance, to
Section 3 residents in the following
order of priority consideration:
(i) Section 3 residents residing in the
neighborhood or service area where the
housing and community development
financial assistance is spent;
(ii) Section 3 residents participating
in DOL YouthBuild programs;
(iii) Section 3 residents residing in a
neighborhood or service area within the
Section 3 local area that has been
officially identified by HUD;
(iv) Other Section 3 residents located
in the Section 3 local area.
(2) Recipients of housing and
community development financial
assistance may, at their own discretion,
provide priority consideration
specifically to residents of public
housing or recipients of other Federal
assistance for housing, including
individuals or families receiving Section
8 housing choice vouchers within the
neighborhood where work on the
Section 3 covered project or activity is
located.
(c) Orders of priority consideration for
Section 3 businesses in contracting
opportunities. (1) Recipients of housing
and community development financial
assistance and their subrecipients, and
contractors shall direct their efforts to
provide contracting or subcontracting
opportunities generated from the
expenditure of housing and community
development financial assistance to
Section 3 businesses in the following
order of priority consideration:
(i) Section 3 businesses that can
provide evidence, to the satisfaction of
the awarding agency, that a minimum of
75 percent of previously hired Section
3 residents residing in the service area
of the project or neighborhood will be
retained for the project.
(ii) Section 3 businesses that can
provide evidence to the satisfaction of
the awarding agency that a minimum of
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Subpart D—Additional Provisions for
Recipients of Competitively Awarded
Section 3 Financial Assistance
obligate or commit Section 3 covered
financial assistance that exceeds the
thresholds set forth at § 135.53, the
grantee is required to ensure that
employment, training, contracting
(including contracts for professional
services), or other economic
opportunities generated as a result of
the provision of Section 3 covered
financial assistance that is competitively
awarded be directed, to the greatest
extent feasible, and consistent with
existing Federal, State, and local laws
and regulations, to Section 3 residents
and businesses.
(3) Exemption. HUD NOFA
competitions that primarily use
volunteer labor, sweat equity,
homeowners, or other beneficiaries to
carryout construction or rehabilitation
projects or activities are exempt from
complying with the requirements of this
subpart.
(b) [Reserved]
§ 135.71
§ 135.73
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50 percent of on-the-job training or
registered apprenticeship opportunities
will be provided to Section 3 residents
in the neighborhood or area to be served
by the Section 3 project or activity.
(iii) Section 3 businesses that are
located in the neighborhood or service
area where the Section 3 covered project
or activity is located, and a minimum of
30 percent of its permanent full-time
workforce is comprised of Section 3
residents residing in the neighborhood
or service area where the Section 3
covered project or activity is located.
(iv) Grantees selected to carry DOL
YouthBuild programs.
(5) All other businesses that are
located in the Section 3 local area that
meet the definition of Section 3
business in § 135.5.
Applicability.
(a) General.—(1) Competitively
awarded assistance. The requirements
of this subpart apply to Section 3
covered financial assistance
competitively awarded by HUD.
(2) HUD Notices of Funding
Availability (NOFAs). (i) All HUD
NOFAs announcing the availability of
Section 3 covered financial assistance
will provide notification of the
requirements of Section 3.
(ii) For competitively awarded public
housing financial assistance involving
activities that are anticipated to generate
significant employment, training,
contracting, or other economic
opportunities, regardless of the source
or amount of the public housing
financial assistance, HUD’s NOFA will
include a statement advising that
successful applicants shall, to the
greatest extent feasible, and consistent
with existing Federal, State, and local
laws and regulations, ensure that
employment, training, contracting, or
other economic opportunities created as
a result of the provision of financial
assistance be directed to Section 3
residents and businesses consistent with
the orders of priority consideration set
forth at § 135.37.
(iii) For competitively awarded
housing and community development
financial assistance involving housing
demolition, rehabilitation, or
construction, or the demolition,
rehabilitation or construction of other
public buildings, facilities or
infrastructure, HUD’s NOFA will
include a statement acknowledging that
if the award of competitive financial
assistance will result in the successful
applicant receiving and planning to
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Applicant selection criteria.
Where not otherwise precluded by
statute, and where applicable, in the
evaluation of applications for the award
of assistance, consideration shall be
given to the extent to which an
applicant has described in their
applications their plans to train and
employ Section 3 residents and contract
with Section 3 business concerns in
furtherance of the proposed activities.
The program NOFAs for which Section
3 is applicable will include information
regarding how Section 3 activities will
be considered in rating the application.
§ 135.75 Section 3 compliance for NOFA
grantees.
(a) Certifications of compliance with
this part. Successful applicants must
certify that they will comply with the
requirements set forth in this part. A
HUD office that awards Section 3
covered financial assistance may require
execution of a certification that reflects
the requirements and goals of the
Section 3 covered financial assistance.
The Assistant Secretary for the program
office will accept an applicant’s
certification absent evidence to the
contrary.
(b) Monitoring and compliance.
Successful applicants shall be held
accountable for complying with the
requirements of this subpart;
implementing strategies described in
narrative statements; meeting annual
reporting requirements; and will be
subject to monitoring at the discretion of
HUD.
§ 135.77 Resolution of outstanding
Section 3 matters.
Applicants that have received a letter
of finding from HUD identifying
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16543
noncompliance with Section 3 or that
have received a sanction from HUD for
noncompliance with Section 3, which
has not been resolved to HUD’s
satisfaction before the application
deadline, are ineligible to apply for
competitive HUD funding. HUD will
determine if actions taken to resolve the
letter of findings or sanction taken
before the deadline are sufficient to
resolve the matter.
Subpart E—Enforcement
§ 135.91 Cooperation in achieving
compliance.
(a) General. HUD recognizes that the
success of ensuring that Section 3
residents and Section 3 businesses have
the opportunity to benefit from
employment, training, contracting, and
other economic opportunities generated
from Section 3 covered financial
assistance depends on the cooperation
and assistance of recipients and their
subrecipients, contractors, and
subcontractors. Accordingly, all
recipients shall fully and promptly
cooperate with monitoring reviews,
compliance reviews, or complaint
investigations undertaken by HUD.
(b) Records of compliance. Each
recipient shall maintain adequate
records demonstrating compliance with
Section 3 in its own operations and
those of its subrecipients, contractors,
and subcontractors, consistent with
§ 135.25. Recipients shall submit to
HUD timely, complete and accurate data
at such times, in specified formats, and
containing information determined by
HUD to be necessary to ascertain
whether the recipient has complied
with this subpart.
§ 135.93
Conduct of investigations.
(a) Periodic compliance reviews. The
Assistant Secretary or designee may
periodically review the practices of
recipients to determine whether they are
complying with this part and where he
or she has a reasonable basis to do so
may conduct on-site or remote reviews.
Such basis may include any evidence
that a problem exists or that
programmatic matters exist that justify
investigation in selected circumstances.
The Assistant Secretary or designee
shall initiate compliance reviews by
sending to the recipient a letter advising
the recipient of the practices to be
reviewed; the programs affected by the
review; and the opportunity, at any time
prior to receipt of a final determination,
to make a documentary or other
submission that explains, validates, or
otherwise addresses the practices under
review. In addition, normal program
compliance reviews and monitoring
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procedures shall identify appropriate
actions to review and monitor
compliance with general or specific
program requirements designed to
effectuate the requirements of this part.
(b) Interdepartmental coordination.
Monitoring and enforcement may be
carried out in coordination with the
HUD program office that provided
Section 3 covered financial assistance to
the recipient being reviewed for
compliance with Section 3.
(c) Investigations. The Assistant
Secretary may conduct an investigation
whenever a compliance or monitoring
review, Section 3 annual report,
complaint or any other information
indicates a possible failure by a
recipient to comply with this part, or
that a recipient failed to ensure
compliance with this part by its
subrecipients, contractors, or
subcontractors that may be
administering Section 3 covered
financial assistance on behalf of the
recipient.
(d) Who may file a complaint. The
following individuals and businesses
may file a complaint alleging
noncompliance of the requirements of
Section 3 with the Assistant Secretary,
personally or through an authorized
representative:
(1) Any Section 3 resident on behalf
of himself or herself, or as a
representative of persons similarly
situated, seeking employment, training
or other economic opportunities
generated from the expenditure of
Section 3 covered financial assistance
by a recipient, subrecipient, or
contractor, or by a representative who is
not a Section 3 resident but who
represents one or more Section 3
residents;
(2) Any Section 3 business on behalf
of itself, or as a representative of other
Section 3 businesses similarly situated,
seeking contract opportunities generated
from the expenditure of Section 3
covered financial assistance from a
recipient, subrecipient, or contractor, or
by an individual representative of
Section 3 businesses.
(3) The Assistant Secretary or
designee shall hold in confidence the
identity of any person submitting a
complaint, unless the person submits
written authorization otherwise, and
except to the extent necessary to carry
out the purposes of this part, including
the conduct of any investigation,
hearing, or proceeding under this part.
(e) When to file. Complaints shall be
filed within 180 days of the last
occurrence of the alleged violation,
unless the time for filing is extended by
the Assistant Secretary for good cause
shown. For purposes of determining
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when a complaint is filed under this
paragraph (c) of this section, a
complaint mailed to HUD shall be
deemed filed on the date it is
postmarked. Any other complaint shall
be deemed filed on the date it is
received by HUD.
(f) Where to file a complaint. A
complaint must be filed with the Office
of Fair Housing and Equal Opportunity,
U.S. Department of Housing and Urban
Development, 451 7th Street SW.,
Washington, DC, 20410, or any FHEO
Regional or Field Office, as stipulated
by HUD.
(g) Contents of complaint. Each
complaint must contain the
complainant’s name and address, the
name and address of the recipient
alleged to have violated this part, and a
description of the recipient’s alleged
violation in sufficient detail to inform
HUD of the nature and date of the
alleged violation of this part. HUD may
provide assistance in drafting a
complaint based on information
received.
(h) Amendment of complaints.
Complaints may be reasonably and
fairly amended at any time.
Amendments to complaints, such as a
clarification and amplification of
allegations in a complaint, or the
addition of other recipients may be
made at any time during the pendency
of the complaint and any amendment
shall be deemed to be made as of the
original filing date.
(i) Notification. The Assistant
Secretary will notify the complainant
and the recipient of the agency’s receipt
of the complaint within 10 calendar
days.
(j) Preliminary investigation. (1)
Within 30 calendar days of
acknowledgement of the complaint, the
Assistant Secretary will review the
complaint for acceptance, rejection, or
referral to the appropriate Federal
agency.
(2) If the complaint is accepted, the
Assistant Secretary will notify the
complainant and the applicable HUD
program office. The Assistant Secretary
will also notify the recipient of the
allegations and provide them an
opportunity to make a written
submission responding to, rebutting, or
denying the allegations presented in the
complaint.
(3) The recipient may send the
Assistant Secretary a response to the
notice of complaint within 30 calendar
days of receipt. With the agreement of
the Assistant Secretary, an answer may
be amended at any time. The Assistant
Secretary will permit answers to be
amended for good cause shown.
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(k) Dismissal of complaint. If the
investigation reveals no violation of this
part, the Assistant Secretary or designee
will dismiss the complaint and notify
the complainant and recipient.
(l) Letter of finding. If no informal
resolution of the complaint or
compliance review is reached, and the
facts disclosed during a compliance
review or an investigation indicate a
failure by the recipient or its
subrecipients or contractors to comply
with the requirements of this part in its
own operations or to ensure the
compliance of subrecipients,
contractors, or subcontractors that may
be administering Section 3 covered
financial assistance on behalf of the
recipient, the Assistant Secretary will
issue a letter of findings within 180
calendar days of receipt of the
complaint or culmination of a
compliance review. The letter of
findings shall contain the following:
(1) Preliminary findings of fact and
preliminary finding of noncompliance;
(2) The actions that must be taken to
address the areas of noncompliance
within a specified timeframe;
(3) A notice that a copy of the Final
Investigative Report of HUD will be
made available, upon request, to the
recipient; and
(4) Provide complainants or recipients
30 days to respond to HUD’s findings
and resolve or remedy findings of
noncompliance identified during the
compliance review or investigation.
(m) Right to review of the letter of
findings. (1) A complainant or recipient
may request that a complete review be
made of the letter of findings within 30
calendar days of receipt, by mailing or
delivering to the Assistant Secretary,
Office of Fair Housing and Equal
Opportunity, U.S. Department of
Housing and Urban Development, 451
7th Street SW., Washington, DC 20410,
a written statement of the reasons why
the letter of findings should be modified
in light of supplementary information.
(2) The Assistant Secretary will send
by certified mail, return receipt
requested, or other similar mail services,
a copy of the request for review to the
other party, if any. Such other party
shall have 30 calendar days to respond
to the request for review.
(3) The Assistant Secretary will either
sustain or modify the letter of findings
within 60 calendar days of the request
for review. The Assistant Secretary’s
decision shall constitute the formal
determination.
(4) If neither party requests that the
letter of findings be reviewed, the
Assistant Secretary shall send a formal
written determination of noncompliance
to the recipient and the appropriate
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HUD program office that administers the
Section 3 financial assistance provided
within 14 calendar days of the
expiration of the time period provided
in paragraph (c)(1) of this section.
(n) Voluntary compliance time limits.
If it has been determined that the matter
cannot be resolved by voluntary means
within 30 days HUD may proceed with
sanctions as described at § 135.27.
(l) Informal resolution of complaint
investigations and compliance reviews.
(1) General. It is the policy of HUD to
encourage the informal resolution of
matters. The Assistant Secretary may
attempt to resolve a matter through
informal means at any stage of a
complaint investigation or compliance
review.
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(2) Objectives of informal resolution/
voluntary compliance. In attempting
informal resolution, the Assistant
Secretary will attempt to achieve a just
resolution of the matter and will take
such action as will assure the
elimination of any violation of this part
or the prevention of the occurrence of
such violation in the future.
(3) The terms of such an informal
resolution shall be reduced to a written
voluntary compliance agreement and
signed by the recipient and the
Assistant Secretary. Such voluntary
compliance agreements shall seek to
protect the public interest, provide
denied economic opportunities to
Section 3 residents and businesses, and
may include the provision of relief for
PO 00000
Frm 00027
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 9990
16545
those injured by the recipient’s
noncompliance.
(o) Intimidatory or retaliatory acts
prohibited. No recipient or other person
shall intimidate, threaten, coerce, or
discriminate against any person for the
purpose of interfering with any right or
privilege secured by this part, or
because he or she has made a complaint,
testified, assisted, or participated in any
manner in an compliance review,
investigation or hearing under this part.
Dated: March 2, 2015.
Gustavo Velasquez,
Assistant Secretary for Fair Housing and
Equal Opportunity.
[FR Doc. 2015–06544 Filed 3–26–15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4210–67–P
E:\FR\FM\27MRP2.SGM
27MRP2
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 80, Number 59 (Friday, March 27, 2015)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 16519-16545]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2015-06544]
[[Page 16519]]
Vol. 80
Friday,
No. 59
March 27, 2015
Part II
Department of Housing and Urban Development
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24 CFR Part 135
Creating Economic Opportunities for Low- and Very Low-Income Persons
and Eligible Businesses Through Strengthened ``Section 3''
Requirements; Proposed Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 80 , No. 59 / Friday, March 27, 2015 /
Proposed Rules
[[Page 16520]]
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DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT
24 CFR Part 135
[Docket No. FR-4893-P-01]
RIN 2529-AA91
Creating Economic Opportunities for Low- and Very Low-Income
Persons and Eligible Businesses Through Strengthened ``Section 3''
Requirements
AGENCY: Office of the Assistant Secretary for Fair Housing and Equal
Opportunity, HUD.
ACTION: Proposed rule.
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SUMMARY: Section 3 of the Housing and Urban Development Act of 1968, as
amended by the Housing and Community Development Act of 1992 (Section
3), contributes to the establishment of stronger, more sustainable
communities by ensuring that employment and other economic
opportunities generated by Federal financial assistance for housing and
community development programs are, to the greatest extent feasible,
directed toward low- and very low-income persons, particularly those
who are recipients of government assistance for housing. HUD is
statutorily charged with the authority and responsibility to implement
and enforce Section 3. HUD's regulations implementing the requirements
of Section 3 have not been updated since 1994. This proposed rule would
update HUD's Section 3 regulations to address new programs established
since 1994 that are subject to the Section 3 requirements and promote
compliance with the requirements of Section 3 by recipients of Section
3 covered financial assistance, while also recognizing barriers to
compliance that may exist, and strengthening HUD's oversight of Section
3.
DATES: Comment Due Date: May 26, 2015.
ADDRESSES: Interested persons are invited to submit comments regarding
this rule to the Regulations Division, Office of General Counsel,
Department of Housing and Urban Development, 451 7th Street SW., Room
10276, Washington, DC 20410-0500. Communications must refer to the
above docket number and title. There are two methods for submitting
public comments. All submissions must refer to the above docket number
and title.
1. Submission of Comments by Mail. Comments may be submitted by
mail to the Regulations Division, Office of General Counsel, Department
of Housing and Urban Development, 451 7th Street SW., Room 10276,
Washington, DC 20410-0500.
2. Electronic Submission of Comments. Interested persons may submit
comments electronically through the Federal eRulemaking Portal at
www.regulations.gov. HUD strongly encourages commenters to submit
comments electronically. Electronic submission of comments allows the
commenter maximum time to prepare and submit a comment, ensures timely
receipt by HUD, and enables HUD to make them immediately available to
the public. Comments submitted electronically through the
www.regulations.gov Web site can be viewed by other commenters and
interested members of the public. Commenters should follow the
instructions provided on that site to submit comments electronically.
Note: To receive consideration as public comments, comments must
be submitted through one of the two methods specified above. Again,
all submissions must refer to the docket number and title of the
rule.
No Facsimile Comments. Facsimile (fax) comments are not acceptable.
Public Inspection of Public Comments. All properly submitted
comments and communications submitted to HUD will be available for
public inspection and copying between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m., weekdays, at
the above address. Due to security measures at the HUD Headquarters
building, an appointment to review the public comments must be
scheduled in advance by calling the Regulations Division at 202-708-
3055 (this is not a toll-free number). Individuals with speech or
hearing impairments may access this number via TTY by calling the
Federal Relay Service at 800-877-8339. Copies of all comments submitted
are available for inspection and downloading at www.regulations.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Staci Gilliam, Director, Economic
Opportunity Division, Office of Fair Housing and Equal Opportunity,
Department of Housing and Urban Development, 451 7th Street SW., Room
5236, Washington, DC 20410; telephone 202-402-3468 (voice/TDD) (this is
not a toll-free number). Persons with hearing or speech impairments may
access this number through TTY by calling the Federal Relay Service, at
toll-free, 800-877-8339. General email inquiries regarding Section 3
may be sent to: section3@hud.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Executive Summary
Purpose of Regulatory Action
This proposed rule would update the regulations implementing
Section 3. The purpose of Section 3 is to ensure that employment,
training, contracting, and other economic opportunities generated by
certain HUD financial assistance shall, to the greatest extent
feasible, and consistent with existing Federal, State and local laws
and regulations, be directed to low- and very low-income persons,
particularly those who are recipients of government assistance for
housing, and to businesses that provide economic opportunities to low-
and very low-income persons. As noted in the summary of this preamble,
the regulations for Section 3 have not been updated in over 20 years.
Since the regulations were last issued in 1994, new HUD programs have
been established to which Section 3 applies. HUD's experience in
administering Section 3 over the past 20 years has identified where HUD
could improve the effectiveness of its regulations implementing Section
3. Recent efforts by HUD to improve Section 3 oversight without
resorting to regulatory change (e.g., increased reporting compliance
through grant competitions and establishment of a business registry)
have not been as successful as HUD hoped. HUD concluded that regulatory
changes are needed to more effectively strengthen Section 3 oversight
and more effectively help recipients of HUD funds achieve the purposes
of the Section 3 statute.
Summary of the Major Provisions of This Regulatory Action
The following provides an overview of the more significant
provisions of this proposed rule.
Standard for Demonstrating Compliance ``To the Greatest Extent
Feasible.'' The proposed rule strives to achieve uniformity with the
statutory standard to undertake ``best efforts'' to provide economic
opportunities to Section 3 residents and businesses, and the statutory
standard to ensure ``to the greatest extent feasible'' that
opportunities for training, employment, and contracting are provided to
Section 3 residents and businesses. HUD views these standards as
essentially the same, and would remove the distinction in the existing
codified regulations. HUD would only use the ``to the greatest extent
feasible'' standard.
The proposed rule clarifies that recipients of HUD funds are
required to demonstrate compliance, to the greatest extent feasible,
by: (1) Establishing and
[[Page 16521]]
implementing policies and procedures designed to achieve compliance
with the goals of Section 3 as reflected in HUD's regulations; (2)
fulfilling the recipient responsibilities set forth at Sec. 135.11 of
the Section 3 regulations; and (3) either reaching or exceeding the
minimum numerical goals for employment and contracting, or providing a
written explanation as to why the goals were not met (for example,
identifying barriers encountered that prevented the recipient from
achieving targeted goals and actions that will be taken to overcome
such barriers). HUD believes that this approach will provide recipients
of HUD funds with more flexibility in planning how to meet their
Section 3 obligations while holding them accountable when their actions
do not result in compliance.
Revised Definition of ``New Hire.'' The current Section 3
regulations establish a goal for 30 percent of new hires to be Section
3 residents, regardless of the length of time that the Section 3
resident is employed. As a result, the Section 3 regulations create a
loophole, so to speak, by allowing contractors to hire Section 3
residents for relatively short periods of time and this short-term
employment would meet the new hire requirement. This proposed rule
would close this loophole by redefining a Section 3 new hire for
contractors or subcontractors as a person who works a minimum of 50
percent of the average staff hours worked for the job category for
which the person was hired throughout the duration of time that the
work is performed on the covered project. For example, if a Section 3
resident is hired as a painter, and painters typically work 40 hours
each week, the Section 3 resident must work a minimum of 20 hours each
week during their employment on the project in order to be counted
towards the recipient's minimum numerical goal for employment. HUD
believes that this new definition will result in more meaningful
employment opportunities for Section 3 residents and prevent
contractors from making nominal efforts to comply with Section 3.
New Definition of ``Section 3 Business.'' Currently, a ``Section 3
Business'' must meet one of the following three definitions: (a) The
business is 51 percent or more owned by Section 3 residents; (b) the
business employs at least 30 percent of the permanent, full-time
employees who are Section 3 residents; (c) the business provides
evidence of a commitment to subcontract 25 percent or more of the
dollar amount of all subcontracts to businesses that meet definitions
(a) or (b).
This proposed rule would remove the third category, paragraph (c)
of the current definition of a Section 3 Business in response to a
pattern of misuse by contractors that initially indicated that they
would award 25 percent of subcontracts to Section 3 businesses, in
order to receive preference for contracts, but never provided contracts
to them.
The proposed rule would add to categories (a) and (b) of the
current definition of Section 3 Business the following categories in an
effort to increase contracting opportunities for businesses that are
owned by residents of public housing and to incentivize contractors to
sponsor Section 3 residents to attend Department of Labor (DOL) or DOL-
recognized registered apprenticeship programs. HUD would add the
following categories to the definition of a Section 3 business: (1) The
business meets the definition of a resident-owned business, as set
forth in HUD's regulations at 24 CFR 963.5; and (2) the business
demonstrates that at least 20 percent of its permanent full-time
employees are Section 3 residents and the business either: (i)
Sponsored a minimum of 10 percent of its current Section 3 employees to
attend a DOL or DOL-recognized, State Apprenticeship Agency-approved,
registered apprenticeship or pre-apprenticeship training program that
meets the requirements outlined in DOL's Employment Training
Administration (ETA) Training and Employment Notice 13-12 \1\; or (ii)
10 percent of the employees of the business are participants or
graduates of a DOL YouthBuild program.\2\
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\1\ See https://wdr.doleta.gov/directives/corr_doc.cfm?DOCN=5842.
\2\ See https://www.doleta.gov/youth_services/youthbuild.cfm.
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Removal of Minimum Numerical Goal for Nonconstruction. Currently,
the Section 3 regulations establish a minimum numerical goal that 3
percent of the total dollar amount of nonconstruction contracts shall
be awarded to Section 3 businesses. Since there is no statutory basis
for making a distinction between construction and nonconstruction
contracts, and the interpretation of the nonconstruction goal has been
problematic for recipients, HUD believes that a numerical goal of 10
percent of the total dollar amount of all covered contracts to Section
3 businesses, regardless of the type of contract or its dollar amount,
will create more contracting opportunities for them.
Introduction of New Term ``Section 3 Local Area''. The definitions
of ``Section 3 resident'' and ``Section 3 business concern'' in the
current Section 3 regulation do not limit eligibility to residents and
businesses, respectively, residing or located in proximity to Section 3
covered projects or activities. As a result, a public housing resident
or a Section 3 business from anywhere in the U.S. can receive
preference whether or not they live or operate in the specific
metropolitan area where the HUD-funded work is being carried out. To be
more consistent with the Section 3 statute and congressional intent,
this proposed rule clarifies that Section 3 residents and businesses
must reside or be located, as applicable, in the Section 3 local area,
which is defined as: (1) The primary statistical area where the Section
3 covered project or activity takes place, or (2) the nonmetropolitan
county where the Section 3 covered project or activity takes place.
Section 3 Resident and Business Verification Procedures. The
current Section 3 regulations do not require recipients to verify that
a Section 3 resident or Section 3 business meets the applicable
definitions in the regulations. Instead, residents and businesses are
merely required to comply with whatever procedures recipients put in
place, if such procedures exist. This proposed rule would continue to
allow recipients to use their discretion for developing verification
procedures. However, the proposed rule explicitly allows recipients to
accept self-certifications from residents or businesses, or presume
that residents residing in or businesses located in disadvantaged
census tracts are eligible to receive the preference in hiring and
contracting. To prevent ineligible persons or businesses from receiving
Section 3 benefits, this proposed rule would require recipients that
implement self-certification or presumed benefit procedures to verify
that such self-certification or presumption policy is an acceptable
approach by undertaking a sample of residents or businesses in the
disadvantaged census tract or in areas which HUD funds are being
expended for covered projects and activities.
Monitoring Payroll Data of Developers and Contractors. This
proposed rule recognizes that the most successful recipients monitor
payroll data to track new hires. In an effort to formalize a long-
standing best practice, this proposed rule would require recipients
that are administering projects that are subject to both Section 3- and
Davis Bacon-covered requirements to monitor a contractor's payroll for
changes in employment (i.e., terminations,
[[Page 16522]]
retirements, transfers, and other new job vacancies) to proactively
identify instances when Section 3 obligations are triggered. This
practice should increase monitoring and oversight by recipients and
improve contractor accountability. Further, since the Davis-Bacon
regulation requires recipients administering covered projects to
monitor payroll data for compliance with prevailing wage laws, adding
this Section 3 requirement should result in minimal administrative
burden.
Amending Agreements with Labor Unions. Recipients that are located
in jurisdictions that are governed by bargaining agreements with labor
unions typically have low rates of compliance with the minimum
numerical goals for contracting because unions operate outside of
Section 3 obligations. In fact, a review of project labor agreements in
Chicago and New York City revealed that these documents do not make any
reference to HUD requirements, including Section 3. This proposed rule
would require recipients to amend all existing agreements with labor
unions to ensure that Section 3 obligations are included and to prevent
labor unions from obstructing the recipients' ability to achieve
compliance.
Sanctions for Delinquent Section 3 Annual Reports. Achieving full
compliance with Section 3 reporting requirements has been a challenge
for many years. While recent efforts to enhance reporting rates have
resulted in increased reporting by 60 percentage points, there has been
minimal imposition of penalties on recipients that are delinquent with
the current regulatory reporting requirements. A 2013 HUD Office of
Inspector General (OIG) audit report of Section 3 found that HUD was
not fully enforcing the Section 3 reporting requirements for public
housing agencies (PHAs).\3\ The final audit report recommended that
HUD's Office of Fair Housing and Equal Opportunity (FHEO) refer PHAs to
HUD's Office of Public and Indian Housing (PIH) for the imposition of
penalties for delinquent reporting. This proposed rule would extend
this policy to all covered recipients and inform recipients that
continuing failure to submit Section 3 annual reports may result in HUD
denying or withholding subsequent funds.
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\3\ See https://www.hudoig.gov/reports-publications/audit-reports/hud-did-not-enforce-reporting-requirements-of-section-3-of.
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Funding Threshold for Recipients of Section-3 Covered Housing and
Community Development Financial Assistance. Another weakness with the
current Section 3 regulations is found in the interpretation that has
been given to the funding threshold for recipients of housing and
community development assistance (i.e., funds allocated or awarded
under the Community Development Block Grants (CDBG) program, HOME
Investment Partnerships program (HOME program), Housing Opportunities
for Persons With AIDS (HOPWA), Lead Hazard Control program, Sections
202 and 811 Supportive Housing programs, Project-Based Section 8,
etc.). The existing threshold is based on the receipt of more than
$200,000 in covered funding. This proposed rule would establish a new
threshold that is based on the expenditure of covered financial
assistance.
Under this proposed rule, Section 3 requirements would apply to
recipients of housing and community development financial assistance
that plan to obligate or commit an aggregate amount of $400,000 or more
in Section 3 covered financial assistance to projects involving housing
rehabilitation, housing construction, demolition, or other public
construction during a given annual reporting period. HUD arrived at the
$400,000 threshold after analyzing 2013 data for recipients of CDBG
assistance from the Integrated Disbursement and Information System
(IDIS) to determine the expenditure dollar amounts on projects
involving construction and rehabilitation that produced the greatest
amount of economic opportunities for Section 3 residents and
businesses. The data revealed that grantees that spent less than
$400,000 on construction and rehabilitation received less than 5
percent of total covered program funding and therefore generated an
insignificant amount of subsequent jobs and contracts. The proposed
threshold would exempt 37 percent of recipients of financial assistance
awarded under programs administered by HUD's Office of Community
Planning and Development (CPD) (i.e., CDBG, HOME, and HOWPA programs,
etc.). Currently just over 3 percent of these recipients are exempt
under the existing threshold. As set forth above, HUD considered a
number of alternate thresholds before selecting the proposed threshold
of $400,000. The new threshold is considered to be more effective
because it would enable HUD to focus on those recipients that produce
the majority of economic opportunities and for which there is a direct
correlation between their expenditure of covered financial assistance
and opportunities created for Section 3 residents and businesses.
Order of Priority Consideration for Recipients of Section 3 covered
Housing and Community Development Assistance. To promote long-term
hiring and create training positions for Section 3 residents, this
proposed rule would give highest priority consideration for projects
financed with housing and community development financial assistance to
Section 3 businesses that will: (1) Retain a minimum of 75 percent of
previously hired Section 3 residents and (2) provide a minimum of 50
percent of on-the-job training or registered apprenticeship
opportunities to Section 3 residents.
Costs and Benefits
With respect to the costs and benefits of this rule, HUD has
prepared a Regulatory Impact Assessment (RIA). The RIA assesses the
likely costs and benefits of the proposed rule. The purpose of Section
3 is to provide jobs, including apprenticeship opportunities, to public
housing residents and other eligible low- and very low-income residents
of a local area, and contracting opportunities for businesses that
substantially employ these persons. However, the Section 3 requirement
itself does not create additional jobs or contracts. Instead, Section 3
redirects local jobs and contracts created as a result of the
expenditure of HUD funds to Section 3 residents and businesses residing
and operating in the area in which the HUD funds are expended. A
reasonable estimate of the impact would be an additional 1,400 jobs
provided to Section 3 residents, annually, and more than $172 million
in contracts to Section 3 businesses, as a result of increased
oversight and clarification of program standards. In addition, with
respect to incomes for tenants of public housing, the Federal rental
subsidies provided to those tenants are expected to be reduced as a
result of the creation of job opportunities resulting from the
expenditure of Federal funds. Such a reduction of Federal subsidies
could result in a reduction of $19 million, annually.
If implemented as proposed, this proposed rule would result in a
reporting and recordkeeping burden of 226,640 hours or $7.3 million \4\
the first year and a reduction of administrative burden by -10,000
hours or $320,000 in succeeding years. This rule will not have any
impact on the level of funding for covered HUD programs. Funding is
determined independently by congressional appropriations, and
[[Page 16523]]
authorizing statutes that may impose such requirements as minimum or
maximum grants. This proposed rule is not an economically significant
rule as defined in Executive Order 12866 (Regulatory Planning and
Review).\5\
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\4\ Average total compensation of all workers, BLS, March 2014.
See https://www.bls.gov/news.release/ecec.t01.htm.
\5\ See https://www.archives.gov/federal-register/executive-orders/pdf/12866.pdf.
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I. Background
Section 3 of the Housing and Urban Development Act of 1968 (Pub. L.
90-448, approved August 1, 1968) (Section 3) was enacted for the
purpose of bringing economic opportunities, generated by the
expenditure of certain HUD financial assistance, to the greatest extent
feasible, to low- and very low-income persons residing in communities
where the financial assistance is expended. Section 3 recognizes that
HUD funds are often one of the largest sources of funds expended in
low-income communities and, where such funds are spent on activities
such as construction and rehabilitation of housing and other public
facilities, the expenditure results in economic opportunities. By
directing HUD-funded economic opportunities to residents and businesses
in the community where the funds are expended, the expenditure can have
the double benefit of creating new or rehabilitated housing and other
facilities while creating jobs for the residents of these communities.
Section 3 was amended by the Housing and Community Development Act of
1992 (Pub. L. 102-550, approved October 28, 1992), which required the
Secretary of HUD to promulgate regulations to implement Section 3,
codified at 12 U.S.C. 1701u. HUD's Section 3 regulations were
promulgated through an interim rule published on June 30, 1994, at 59
FR 33880, and the regulations are codified in 24 CFR part 135.
In the 20 years that have lapsed since HUD promulgated the current
set of Section 3 regulations, significant legislation has been enacted
that affects HUD programs that are subject to the requirements of
Section 3 and that are not adequately addressed in the current Section
3 regulations. This legislation includes, but is not limited to the
following: reforms made to HUD's Indian housing programs by the Native
American Housing Assistance and Self-Determination Act of 1996
(NAHASDA) (Pub. L. 104-330, approved October 26, 1996); public housing
reforms made by the Quality Housing and Work Responsibility Act of 1998
(QHWRA) (Pub. L. 105-276, approved October 21, 1998); reforms made to
HUD's supportive housing programs by the Section 202 Supportive Housing
for the Elderly Act of 2010 (Pub. L. 111-372, approved January 4,
2011), and the Frank Melville Supportive Housing Investment Act of 2010
(Pub. L. 111-347, approved January 4, 2011), and, more recently,
reforms made to HUD's public housing by the Rental Assistance
Demonstration program authorized by the act appropriating 2012 funding
for HUD, the Consolidated and Further Continuing Appropriations Act,
2012 (Pub. L. 112-55, approved November 18, 2011).
HUD has sought to strengthen compliance with Section 3 by
concentrating on oversight, outreach, and technical assistance. As part
of this assistance, HUD has issued guidance related to applicability,
recipient thresholds, and administrative procedures.\6\ These steps
increased recipient reporting from 20 percent to over 80 percent. The
increase in reporting led to a corresponding increase in reported jobs
for Section 3 residents to 21,600 (50 percent of all new hires) and an
increase in reported contracts awarded Section 3 businesses to $675
million.\7\
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\6\ See https://portal.hud.gov/hudportal/HUD?src=/program_offices/fair_housing_equal_opp/section3/section3.
\7\ Source: 2010 Section 3 annual summary report data (Form HUD
60002).
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While these efforts have facilitated increased compliance with
Section 3, they have not resulted in full compliance with Section 3,
nor do such efforts relieve HUD of its good governance responsibility
to update its Section 3 regulations, now 20 years old, to ensure that
the regulations capture new funded programs and current funding
policies and practices.
In August 2010, HUD hosted a Section 3 Listening Forum \8\ that
brought together recipients of HUD Section 3 covered financial
assistance, advocates, Section 3 residents and businesses, and other
stakeholders to highlight ``best practices'' and to discuss barriers to
implementation across the country. The forum offered recipients of
Section 3 covered financial assistance the opportunity to identify
challenges they were facing with their efforts to comply with Section
3. Forum participants stated that the existing Section 3 regulations
are not sufficiently explicit about specific actions that could be
undertaken to achieve compliance; that the existing regulations do not
clearly describe the extent to which recipients may require
subrecipients, contractors, and subcontractors to comply with Section
3; and actions that recipients may take to impose meaningful sanctions
for noncompliance by their subrecipients, contractors, and
subcontractors.
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\8\ See https://nhlp.org/files/09%20Section%203%20Barriers%20and%20best%20practices%208%2024%20d10%20Final%20with%20attachment.pdf.
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As noted earlier, in 2013, HUD's OIG conducted an audit to assess
HUD's oversight of Section 3, in response to concerns about economic
opportunities that were provided (or should have been provided) by the
expenditure of financial assistance under the American Reinvestment and
Recovery Act (Recovery Act) (Pub. L. 111-5, approved February 17,
2009). The audit found that HUD was not fully enforcing the reporting
requirements of Section 3 for recipients of Fiscal Year 2009 Recovery
Act Public Housing Capital funds from HUD.\9\ HUD's OIG made several
recommendations to address its findings. The following chart lists HUD
OIG's recommendations for HUD and describes whether each recommendation
is addressed by this proposed rule.
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\9\ See: https://www.hudoig.gov/reports-publications/audit-reports/hud-did-not-enforce-reporting-requirements-of-section-3-of.
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Recommendation #: Recommendation Addressed in Proposed Rule
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1A................................. Implement the new HUD-60002 [Section This recommendation will provide
3 Summary Report] submission and FHEO the vehicle to impose the
tracking system that has been in proposed sanctions for delinquent
development, as well as the planned reporting described in Sec.
system enhancements. 135.23(f) and to address concerns
with the reliability of data
previously submitted by recipients.
1B................................. Establish procedures to follow up on See Recommendation 1C.
missing and inaccurate information
on HUD-60002 submissions.
[[Page 16524]]
1C................................. Establish procedures regarding when FHEO has developed procedures for
to refer to Public and Indian reviewing HUD-60002 submissions and
Housing (PIH) any public housing established the steps that will be
authorities (PHAs) that fail to make taken to refer PHAs to PIH when
required submissions or corrections. Section 3 reports are inaccurate or
delinquent. Pursuant to this
proposed rule, FHEO will expand the
implementation of these procedures
to all recipients of Section 3
covered financial assistance and
make subsequent referrals for
appropriate action to all HUD
program offices.
1D................................. Resolve issues with CPD and complete This regulatory action represents
the process to publish final FHEO's efforts to comply with this
regulations for 24 CFR Part 135. recommendation.
1E................................. Require the six housing authorities FHEO has incorporated this
in this finding that reported recommendation into its enforcement
Section 3 noncompliance to provide actions at Sec. 135.99 and the
justification or support that they sanctions for noncompliance at Sec.
met the [minimum numerical] goals. 135.27.
If they cannot show compliance,
enter into a voluntary compliance
agreement to bring their Section 3
programs into compliance, or refer
them to PIH for repayment of the $26
million that should have been used
for Section 3.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
For the reasons set forth above, through this rule, HUD proposes to
revise its Section 3 regulations at 24 CFR part 135 in a manner
designed to better fulfill the goal of Section 3.
II. This Proposed Rule
In order to provide better parameters for achieving the goals of
Section 3, this proposed rule: communicates how recipients may meet
minimum numerical goals for employment and contracting opportunities;
provides other direction to recipients of Section 3 covered financial
assistance and their contractors in order that they may more
effectively comply with Section 3; vests more discretion and
responsibility with recipients on how to verify the eligibility of
Section 3 residents and businesses for employment and contracting
opportunities; and articulates procedures for complaint processing.
This rule organizes the regulations of 24 CFR part 135 into five
subparts: Subpart A--General Provisions; Subpart B--Additional
Provisions for Public Housing Financial Assistance; Subpart C--
Additional Provisions for Housing and Community Development Financial
Assistance; Subpart D--Additional Provisions for Recipients of
Competitively Awarded Section 3 Financial Assistance; and Subpart E--
Enforcement.
General Provisions--Subpart A
Subpart A--General Provisions contains those provisions applicable
to all Section 3 covered financial assistance, whether public housing
financial assistance, housing and community development financial
assistance, or competitively awarded financial assistance, including
the following: definitions of terms applicable to compliance with
Section 3 (Sec. 135.5); demonstration compliance with the ``greatest
extent feasible'' requirement (Sec. 135.7); description of official
Section 3 policies and procedures to be developed and implemented by
recipients (Sec. 135.9); recipient responsibilities under Section 3
(Sec. 135.11); a general description of minimum numerical goals for
employment and contracting opportunities (Sec. 135.13); the procedures
for verifying the eligibility of Section 3 residents and Section 3
businesses (Sec. 135.15); descriptions of written agreements and
contractors that must be entered into by the recipient and its
subrecipients, contracts, or subcontractors before the disbursement of
any Section 3 covered financial assistance (Sec. 135.17 and Sec.
135.19); an overview of certifications of compliance with this part
(Sec. 135.21); description of annual reporting requirements (Sec.
135.23); a summary of recordkeeping responsibilities and HUD's
authority to have access to records demonstrating compliance with this
part (Sec. 135.25); an outline of sanctions that may be imposed for
noncompliance with this part (Sec. 135.27); and communication of other
Federal requirements that may apply during the administration of
Section 3 covered projects and activities (Sec. 135.29).
Section 135.3 of the existing regulations, which addresses the
scope of applicability of the requirements of Section 3, would be
removed by this proposed rule. The applicability of Section 3 would now
be addressed by the following: (1) The definitions of ``housing and
community development financial assistance'' and ``public housing
financial assistance'' in Sec. 135.5; (2) the individual applicability
sections for public housing financial assistance and housing and
community development financial assistance, in Sec. 135.31 and Sec.
135.51, respectively; and (3) the thresholds that trigger applicability
of Section 3, which are addressed in Sec. 135.33, and Sec. 135.53.
HUD believes that placing this information in the subparts associated
with each type of Section 3 covered financial assistance will prevent
recipients from inadvertently referring to the wrong requirements.
Section 135.3 of the proposed rule describes the Secretary's
delegation of authority to the Assistant Secretary for Fair Housing and
Equal Opportunity (FHEO) to implement and oversee compliance with the
requirements of Section 3. This delegation of authority is unchanged
from Sec. 135.7 of the existing regulations. While FHEO has the
overall authority for carrying out Section 3 obligations within HUD,
monitoring and oversight takes place in coordination with various HUD
program offices, such as PIH, CPD, Healthy Homes and Lead Hazard
Control (HHLHC), Housing, etc.
Section 135.5 of the proposed rule provides the definitions of
terminology used throughout the regulation (as it is in the existing
regulations), introduces new definitions, revises definitions contained
in the existing regulations, and removes definitions that are no longer
applicable. Some of the newly defined terms include: ``construction,''
``contracting opportunities,'' ``numerical goals,'' ``priority
consideration,'' ``professional services,'' ``project-based rental
assistance,'' ``public housing financial assistance,''
``rehabilitation,'' ``routine maintenance,'' ``service area,'' and
``Section 3 local area.'' The terms ``housing and community development
financial assistance,'' ``new hires,'' ``Section 3 business (formerly
Section 3 business concern),'' ``Section 3 covered financial
assistance,'' and ``Section 3 resident'' have been revised with the
objective of improving the
[[Page 16525]]
understanding of their meanings. The following existing defined terms
are proposed to be removed: ``annual contributions contract,'' ``HUD
YouthBuild programs,'' ``Job Training Partnership Act.''
Section 135.7 of the proposed rule addresses how recipients may
demonstrate compliance to the greatest extent feasible. The 1968
statute established two standards for achieving compliance with the
requirements of Section 3. PHAs and their contractors and
subcontractors were required to make their ``best effort,'' consistent
with existing Federal, State, and local laws and regulations to provide
economic opportunities to Section 3 residents and businesses. On the
other hand, programs that receive housing and community development
assistance are required to ensure that, to the greatest extent
feasible, and consistent with existing Federal, State, and local laws
and regulations, opportunities for training and employment arising in
connection with housing rehabilitation, housing construction, or other
public construction are given to Section 3 residents and businesses.
HUD's 1994 interim rule, published on June 30, 1994, at 59 FR 33880,
established HUD's position that there is very little difference in the
common meaning of these statutory standards. Further, the Section 3
statute requires every recipient and contractor that generates economic
opportunities from the expenditure of Section 3 financial assistance,
regardless of the HUD program from which the assistance is derived, to
provide these economic opportunities to low- and very low-income
persons and the businesses that employ them. Accordingly, this rule
maintains one standard for achieving compliance. Recipients, as defined
in Sec. 135.5, are required, to the greatest extent feasible, to
target low- and very low-income persons for employment and training
opportunities funded with Section 3 financial assistance, and
businesses that are either owned by or substantially employ such
persons.
Section 135.7 provides that while reaching the minimum numerical
goals is one way to demonstrate compliance with the statute's
``greatest extent feasible'' requirement, compliance to the greatest
extent feasible is demonstrated by the recipient, first and foremost,
establishing and implementing procedures and strategies by which the
recipient and, where applicable, its subrecipients, contractors and
subcontractors will comply with the requirements set forth in Sec.
135.11. This section also provides that where a recipient is unable to
reach the minimum numerical goals set forth in the subpart associated
with the type of financial assistance provided, (Sec. 135.35 and Sec.
135.55, respectively) such inability does not necessarily mean that the
recipient did not undertake efforts to meet these goals. Accordingly, a
recipient that does not reach the minimum numerical goals will be
required to provide a written justification explaining: (1) Why it was
unable to meet these goals; (2) the impediments the recipient
encountered; and (3) the actions the recipient will take to address
identified impediments in the future. For instance, if a recipient held
a job fair to hire Section 3 residents for jobs in specific building
trades (e.g., plumbers, electricians, welders, etc.) for an upcoming
construction project, HUD may consider the recipient to be in
compliance with Section 3 even if none of the participants of the job
fair had the requisite job qualifications for the positions to be
filled. HUD will take such justifications into consideration when
making final compliance determinations. Written justifications that do
not contain a valid explanation for why the recipient did not reach the
minimum numerical goal may result in a finding of noncompliance.
Section 135.9 of the proposed rule presents a new means of
strengthening Section 3 compliance. This section would require the
recipient to develop and adopt official policies and procedures to
implement the requirements of Section 3, as a means of demonstrating
compliance with the ``greatest extent feasible'' requirement, as
provided in Sec. 135.7. This section provides that official policies
and procedures must include at a minimum, steps that the recipient will
take to: inform subrecipients and contractors about Section 3
obligations; evaluate potential bidders for Section 3 compliance during
contract selection; notify Section 3 residents and businesses about
economic opportunities; implement verification and/or certification
procedures for residents and businesses; provide priority consideration
to qualified Section 3 residents and businesses; monitor subrecipients
and contractors for compliance; establish consequences for
noncompliance; and utilize local community resources to meet its
Section 3 requirements. The preceding list presents the minimum steps
that the recipients' policies and procedures should address, but
recipients should include in official policies and procedures any
additional steps tailored to their funding practices and operations
that would increase compliance with Section 3. Section 135. 9 provides
that updates to official policies and procedures shall discuss the
relative success of the immediate past policies and procedures and how
any changes are aimed to better promote compliance with Section 3.
This section further requires that to the extent a recipient must
prepare a strategic plan, action plan, or other such plan in accordance
with HUD program regulations, such plans must include a general
description of the recipient's official Section 3 policies and
procedures. This section provides that if a recipient is not required
to submit official plans to HUD--such as public housing plans,
strategic or annual action plans, or other similar plans--the
recipient's official Section 3 policies and procedures shall be
developed as an independent document at the time that Section 3 covered
financial assistance is awarded and updated every 5 years thereafter.
Section 135.11 describes steps that all recipients must take to
implement the requirements of Section 3, and describes steps that would
be unique to recipients of public housing financial assistance and
housing and community development financial assistance.
Section 135.13 of the proposed rule addresses the minimum numerical
goals, generally, and provides that the goals apply to the aggregate
number of employment and contracting opportunities generated by the
expenditure of the Section 3 covered financial assistance. Specific
minimum numerical goals are set forth in the subpart associated with
the type of financial assistance provided; i.e., Sec. 135.35 and Sec.
135.55, respectively. This section removes the current requirement that
3 percent of the total dollar amount of nonconstruction contracts shall
be awarded to Section 3 businesses since there was no statutory reason
to make a distinction between construction and nonconstruction
contracts. HUD believes that requiring recipients to award 10 percent
of the total dollar amount of all covered contracts to Section 3
businesses regardless of the type or dollar amount of the contract will
result in more potential contracting opportunities for Section 3
businesses.
Section 135.11 of the proposed rule describes the responsibilities
of the recipient for complying with the requirements of Section 3 and
ensuring the compliance of their subrecipients, contractors, or
subcontractors, who have the same responsibilities as the direct
recipient. This section responds to requests that HUD more clearly
identify specific actions that a recipient is to undertake to
demonstrate compliance
[[Page 16526]]
with Section 3. These responsibilities reflect best practices that are
being implemented by successful recipients, and will result in a
reduction of an estimated 10,000 hours of administrative burden
annually. The actions listed in this section would replace the list of
examples of efforts that recipients may undertake to demonstrate
compliance with Section 3, which are found in Appendix A to the
existing regulations.
As provided in Sec. 135.11, the listed responsibilities apply to
all recipients and have been expanded to ensure that: (1) Section 3
residents and businesses are notified about economic opportunities, (2)
payroll data is monitored for new hires on projects that are subject to
wage rates determined under the Davis Bacon Act (40 U.S.C. 3141 et
seq.), (3) labor unions are notified about Section 3 obligations, (4)
existing collective bargaining or project labor agreements with labor
unions are amended to acknowledge HUD and Section 3 obligations, (5)
procedures are developed by public housing agencies to comply with the
earned income disregard and resident-owned business provisions set
forth at 24 CFR part 963, and (6) contractor selection procedures
employ Section 3 compliance measures.
Section 135.13 of the proposed rule addresses the minimum numerical
goals, generally, and provides that the goals apply to the aggregate
number of employment and contracting opportunities generated by the
expenditure of the Section 3 covered financial assistance. Specific
minimum numerical goals are set forth in the subparts associated with
the type of financial assistance provided (Sec. 135.35 and Sec.
135.55). This section removes the current requirement that 3 percent of
the total dollar amount of nonconstruction contracts shall be awarded
to Section 3 businesses since there was no statutory reason to make a
distinction between construction and nonconstruction contracts. As
noted earlier in this preamble, HUD believes that requiring recipients
to award 10 percent of the total dollar amount of all covered contracts
to Section 3 businesses regardless of the type or dollar amount of the
contract will result in more potential contracting opportunities for
Section 3 businesses.
Section 135.15 of the proposed rule would require a recipient to
verify that residents and businesses seeking employment and contracting
opportunities generated by the expenditure of Section 3 covered
financial assistance are in fact Section 3 residents and businesses as
defined in Sec. 135.5. This section does not dictate the manner of
verification of the eligibility of Section 3 residents and businesses,
but instead allows the recipient to decide how verification should be
undertaken. HUD is aware that verifying Section 3 eligibility for
residents and businesses often requires recipients to review and
maintain confidential and sensitive personal information. In order to
address concerns that have emerged regarding the secure handling of
confidential information, this section of the proposed rule provides
that a recipient may allow residents and businesses to self-certify
their eligibility, and to presume that residents or businesses that are
located in, or provide economic opportunities to persons that reside in
a neighborhood, census tract, or area designated by HUD are eligible to
receive Section 3 priority consideration absent evidence to the
contrary. Both of these practices may be used if the recipient conducts
procedures to verify that a sample of self-certified or Section 3
presumed benefit residents and businesses meet one of the regulatory
definitions. Descriptions of procedures for verifying a sample of self-
certified or Section 3 presumed benefit residents and businesses will
be provided in guidance materials after the publication of the final
rule. This guidance will assist recipients with determining sample
size, selecting self-certified beneficiaries for verification,
identifying the type of evidence that may be requested, and steps that
may be taken in the event that false certifications are discovered.
Section 135.17 of the proposed rule stipulates that a written
agreement must be executed by the recipient and any of its
subrecipients, contractors, or subcontractors before the recipient
disburses any Section 3 covered financial assistance to them. The
purpose of this section is to both emphasize the responsibilities that
subrecipients, contractors, and subcontractors have in complying with
Section 3 and to assist the recipient in ensuring the compliance of
these entities.
Section 135.19 of the proposed rule contains provisions to be
included in contracts with developers, contractors, and subcontractors
and the Section 3 clause language that is currently found in Sec.
135.38 of the existing regulations.
Section 135.21 of the proposed rule addresses certifications of
compliance. This section would require a recipient to annually submit
to HUD a certification documenting compliance with Section 3, including
the compliance of any subrecipients, contractors, or subcontractors.
This section provides that, where applicable, certifications may be
submitted as part of a submission of annual strategic plans,
consolidated plans, or public housing plans, or as part of a submission
of an application for a competitively awarded grant, cooperative
agreement, or other submissions.
Sections 135.23 and 135.25 of the proposed rule contain reporting
and recordkeeping requirements, now found in Sec. 135.90 and Sec.
135.92 of the existing regulations. Section 135.23 continues to require
the submission of Section 3 annual reports, and clarifies that, going
forward, the time frame applicable for Section 3 reports should
coincide with the recipient's local program or fiscal year. If the
recipient does not have a local program or fiscal year, the Section 3
report shall follow the federal fiscal year (i.e., October 1 through
September 30). Since the timely submission of Section 3 reports
continues to be an issue, the proposed rule would provide procedures
for HUD to sanction recipients for delinquent or missing reports. Any
sanction imposed would be in accordance with the requirements of the
Section 3 regulations or a notice of funding availability (NOFA)
governing the program under which the Section 3 covered financial
assistance is provided. Section 135.23 of the proposed rule also
specifically requires a State or county recipient to submit to HUD an
annual report regarding compliance with Section 3 in its own operations
and in those of its subrecipients, contractors, and subcontractors.
Section 135.25 of the proposed rule contains the requirement in
existing Sec. 135.92 that HUD shall have access to records, reports,
and other documents recipients maintain to demonstrate compliance with
Section 3, and it adds examples of such records.
Section 135.27 of the proposed rule describes sanctions for
noncompliance with the requirements of Section 3, and provides that
these sanctions may include requiring additional certifications or
assurances of compliance; repayment of Section 3 covered financial
assistance; ineligibility for future HUD financial assistance;
withholding HUD financial assistance; or suspension, debarment, or
limited denial of participation in HUD programs pursuant to 2 CFR part
2424, where appropriate.
Section 135.29 of the proposed rule clarifies that neither the
Section 3 statute nor the Section 3 regulations supersede the
employment and wage provisions of the Davis-Bacon Act or requirements
of bona fide Federal or State apprentice or training programs.
[[Page 16527]]
Additional Provisions for Public Housing Financial Assistance--Subpart
B
Subpart B addresses demonstration of compliance that would be
unique to recipients of public housing financial assistance or PHAs.
Section 135.31 of the proposed rule provides that PHAs that receive
public housing financial assistance, as defined in Sec. 135.5, are
subject to the provisions in subpart B in addition to those in subpart
A. This section also provides that the requirements in subpart B apply
to all new internal and external employment and training opportunities
resulting from the expenditure of public housing financial assistance
(i.e., those within the PHA and with its subrecipients, contractors, or
subcontractors). Further, this section clarifies that the requirements
of Section 3 apply to the entire project or activity that is funded
with public housing financial assistance regardless of whether the
activity is fully- or partially-funded with Section 3 covered financial
assistance.
Section 135.33 of the proposed rule would continue to maintain
HUD's position that a monetary or unit threshold in public and Indian
housing programs is not consistent with the Section 3 statute. Section
3 applies to public and Indian housing operating assistance,
development assistance and modernization assistance, which covers
virtually all PHA projects and activities. Additionally, the Section 3
statute is very specific about the residents and businesses to which
PHAs and their contractors and subcontractors must give preference.
These residents and businesses are tied to the housing development for
which the assistance is expended, or another development managed by the
PHA. HUD believes that the statute's expansive coverage of public and
Indian housing projects and activities indicates that any attempt to
diminish the coverage would be inconsistent with the statute.
Notwithstanding, HUD will make efforts to implement measures to reduce
administrative burden for PHAs whose expenditure of covered financial
assistance did not trigger Section 3 obligations, but who still are
required to submit annual reports, by only requiring the submission of
an electronic certification.
Section 135.35 would maintain the minimum numerical hiring goals
for public housing financial assistance. PHAs, as well as any
subrecipients, contractors, or subcontractors, would be required to
employ, to the greatest extent feasible, Section 3 residents as 30
percent of new hires, both within the agency and with its contractors.
HUD chose to maintain this minimum numerical goal even though a review
of recent national aggregated data indicated that recipients are
exceeding the employment goal by 10 to 20 percentage points. HUD OIG's
2013 Section 3 Audit report advises that concerns exist regarding the
reliability and accuracy of the data previously submitted into the
Section 3 Summary Reporting System. In light of such information, HUD
is not changing at this time the current minimum numerical goals based
on the previously reported data. The reliability of subsequent data
submitted will be addressed when HUD implements its new Section 3
Summary Reporting System in FY 2015.
The rule would establish that for a Section 3 resident to be
considered a new hire by a contractor or subcontractor, the Section 3
resident must work, during the resident's employment with a contractor
or subcontractor, a minimum of 50 percent of the average staff hours
worked for the category of work for which they were hired throughout
the duration of time that the category of work is performed on the
covered project. For instance, if electricians employed on a particular
Section 3 covered project work an average of 40 hours each week,
Section 3 new hires in this category must work a minimum of 20 hours
each week throughout the duration of time that the category of work is
performed on the covered project to be counted towards the recipient's
minimum numerical goal for employment.
Section 135.35 would also establish the minimum numerical
contracting goals for public housing financial assistance. Under this
section, PHAs, as well as any subrecipients, contractors, or
subcontractors, would be required to award, to the greatest extent
feasible, at least 10 percent of the total dollar amount of all
subsequent contracting or subcontracting opportunities to Section 3
businesses. This proposed rule would remove the current 3 percent
minimum numerical goal for contracts that do not involve construction
or rehabilitation. Instead, this proposed rule seeks to ensure that 10
percent of the total dollar amount of all covered contracts (including
contracts for professional services) will be awarded to Section 3
businesses. Since there is no statutory basis for making a distinction
between construction and nonconstruction contracts, and the
interpretation of the nonconstruction goal has been problematic for
recipients, HUD believes that requiring recipients to award 10 percent
of the total dollar amount of all covered contracts to Section 3
businesses regardless of the type is easier to administer and will
result in more opportunities for Section 3 residents and businesses. In
establishing this minimum numerical goal, HUD reviewed aggregated data
submitted by recipients, which indicated that only 13.3 percent of
recipients are meeting both of the current minimum numerical goals for
contracting. However, 17.4 percent of recipients would meet the
proposed numerical goal for all covered contracts. HUD is not changing
the minimum numerical contracting goal for the same reasons that HUD is
not changing the minimum numerical hiring goal.
Section 135.37 of the proposed rule would revise the priority
consideration given when hiring Section 3 residents and in awarding
contracts to Section 3 businesses. The proposed rule provides that PHAs
must give priority consideration to a Section 3 resident or business
when equally qualified for the work under consideration. Priority
consideration may be given to Section 3 residents or businesses when
they are minimally qualified.
Additional Provisions for Housing and Community Development Financial
Assistance--Subpart C
Section 135.51 of the proposed rule provides that recipients of
housing and community development assistance, as defined in Sec.
135.5, are subject to the provisions in subpart C in addition to those
in subpart A. Section 135.51 of the proposed rule addresses the
applicability of Section 3 to housing and community development
financial assistance. This section provides that Section 3 only applies
to economic opportunities that arise from the expenditure of housing
and community development financial assistance involving the
demolition, rehabilitation, or construction of housing, public
buildings, facilities, infrastructure, or other public construction or
rehabilitation-related projects and activities. While HUD always
considered demolition projects to be a part of rehabilitation
activities, this proposed rule makes the applicability of Section 3 to
demolition explicit. This section also clarifies that professional
service contracts are subject to the requirements of this part,
provided that the work to be performed arises in connection with a
Section 3 covered project (i.e., housing rehabilitation, housing
construction, or other public construction project).
Consistent with the Section 3 statute, Sec. 135.51 exempts housing
and community development financial
[[Page 16528]]
assistance that is used for acquisition, routine maintenance,
operations, administrative costs, and project rental assistance
contracts (PRAC) from compliance with Section 3 because these are not
considered construction or rehabilitation activities. This section also
exempts Indian tribes and tribally designated housing entities from
complying with Section 3 requirements if the Indian tribe has adopted,
and is complying with, tribal employment and contract preference laws
(including regulations and tribal ordinances) in accordance with
section 101(k) of the Native American Housing Assistance and Self-
Determination Act (NAHASDA) and 24 CFR 1000.42. This section also
exempts Indian tribes and other tribal entities from Section 3
requirements if they are subject to Indian preference requirements
under section 7(b) of the Indian Self-Determination and Education
Assistance Act. HUD recognizes that both tribal preference and Indian
preference requirements already often require Indian tribes, tribally
designated housing entities, and other tribal entities, to apply local
preferences in employment and contracting in projects receiving
assistance under NAHASDA and other grant programs for the benefit of
Indians, such as the Indian CDBG program. This exemption reduces
administrative burden for tribal grantees that have expressed concerns
to HUD about the difficulty of complying with Section 3 requirements
while also complying with Indian and tribal preference requirements.
Section 135.53 of the proposed rule replaces the current threshold
for recipients that administer housing and community development
assistance. HUD has reassessed the policy behind the existing threshold
and has decided to propose a new threshold requirement that is based on
the total expenditures (rather than receipt or per-project). This
change recognizes that it is the expenditure of covered financial
assistance (not the receipt) that produces economic opportunities for
Section 3 residents and businesses. Under this proposal, the threshold
would be based on the aggregate expenditure of $400,000 of housing and
community development financial assistance on construction related
activities. In the section of this preamble entitled ``Summary of Major
Provisions of this Regulatory Action,'' HUD described in detail the
basis for selection of the $400,000 threshold.
Section 135.55 of the proposed rule establishes the minimum
numerical hiring goals that recipients of housing and community
development financial assistance must meet to demonstrate compliance,
to the greatest extent feasible, with the Section 3 statute and Section
3 regulations. Similar to the numerical goals established for public
housing financial assistance, this section provides that recipients of
housing and community development financial assistance must, to the
greatest extent feasible, have its contractors and subcontractors
employ Section 3 residents as 30 percent of direct new hires. This
section also provides, similar to Sec. 135.35, that in order for a
Section 3 resident to be considered a new hire by contractors and
subcontractors, the Section 3 resident must work, during the resident's
employment with a contractor or subcontractor, a minimum of 50 percent
of the average staff hours worked for the category of work for which
they were hired, throughout the duration of time that the category of
work is performed on the covered project. For instance, if brick masons
employed on a particular Section 3 covered project work an average of
40 hours each week, Section 3 new hires in this category must work a
minimum of 20 hours each week to be counted towards the recipient's
minimum numerical goal for employment.
With respect to contracting opportunities, this section provides
that recipients of housing and community development financial
assistance, as well as their subrecipients, contractors, and
subcontractors, must, to the greatest extent feasible, award at least
10 percent of the total dollar amount of all contracts to Section 3
businesses, similar to Sec. 135.35. This proposed rule removes the
requirement that 3 percent of the total dollar amount of
nonconstruction contracts will be awarded to Section 3 businesses in an
attempt to reduce administrative burden. Instead, this proposed rule
seeks to ensure that 10 percent of the total dollar amount of all
covered contracts (including contracts for professional services) will
be awarded to Section 3 businesses. HUD makes this change in Sec.
135.55 for the same reasons presented for the identical change in Sec.
135.35.
Section 135.57 of the proposed rule establishes the orders of
priority consideration for employment and contracting opportunities for
housing and community development financial assistance and adds
additional categories for priority consideration for businesses that
promote job retention and training opportunities.
Additional Provisions for Recipients of HUD Competitive Grant Financial
Assistance--Subpart D
Subpart D of this proposed rule, clarifies the scope of
applicability of Section 3 to HUD NOFAs. This section would replace the
existing regulatory section, Sec. 135.9.
As provided in proposed new Sec. 135.71, Section 3 applies to
competitively awarded (1) public housing financial assistance, and (2)
housing and community development financial assistance that is
anticipated to generate significant economic opportunities.
Section 135.73 provides that each NOFA that is subject to the
requirements of Section 3 shall describe the selection criteria and
points to be awarded.
Section 135.75 requires recipients of competitive Section 3 covered
financial assistance to sign assurances of compliance with Section 3,
and provides that applicants that are awarded competitive funds will be
monitored on their compliance with Section 3, and their progress in
carrying out the strategies described in the narrative statements
submitted with their application package. Section 135.77, prohibits any
recipient with outstanding findings of noncompliance with Section 3
from receiving additional competitively awarded financial assistance.
Enforcement--Subpart E
Subpart E of this proposed rule contains the complaint and
compliance review provisions currently found in subpart D of the
existing part 135 regulations. This subpart also clarifies that
voluntary compliance agreements that are drafted to address findings of
noncompliance shall seek to protect the public interest, provide denied
economic opportunities to Section 3 residents and businesses, and may
include the provision of damages and other relief for those injured by
the recipient's noncompliance.
III. Specific Questions for Comment
While HUD welcomes comments on all aspects of this proposed rule,
HUD specifically requests comments on the following:
1. To address a loophole in the current regulation that does not
limit jobs, training, and contracting opportunities to Section 3
residents residing and Section 3 businesses located within the
proximity of the covered project or activity, this proposed rule
introduces a new term ``Section 3 local area'' to clarify that in
[[Page 16529]]
order for Section 3 residents and businesses to receive priority
consideration they must be residing or located within the metropolitan
area or nonmetropolitan county where the Section 3 covered financial
assistance is expended. HUD seeks comment on whether this clarification
may adversely impact Section 3 residents and businesses located in
neighboring jurisdictions, particularly when no Section 3 businesses
are located in the Section 3 local area, and in rural communities where
Section 3 residents in adjacent counties may be the most qualified job
applicant. See Sec. 135.5.
2. The proposed rule revises the definition of a Section 3 business
to remove the third category of the existing definition, which refers
to businesses that can provide evidence of a commitment to subcontract
in excess of 25 percent of the dollar award of all subcontracts to
other Section 3 businesses. This revision is made in response to
complaints that the commitment presented an easy loophole for some
businesses, and did not equate to a legal obligation. HUD solicits
comment on the removal of this third category. See Sec. 135.5.
3. The proposed rule seeks to provide incentives to contractors
that retain Section 3 residents who were hired to work on previous
projects, and to provide apprenticeship opportunities to Section 3
residents by adding two new categories to the orders of priority
consideration for projects that are financed with housing and community
development assistance at Sec. 135.57. HUD solicits comment on the
proposed orders of priority consideration.
4. For the reasons presented in the preamble, HUD is maintaining
the existing minimum numerical goals for employment and construction
contracts. HUD seeks comments on whether other proposed minimum
numerical goals for employment and contracting would be more
appropriate.
5. The proposed rule would replace the 3 percent minimum goal for
the total dollar amount of all building trades and professional service
contracts associated with construction (formerly referred to,
respectively, as construction and nonconstruction contracts) with a
goal of 10 percent. HUD seeks comment on whether the proposed goal that
applies to building trades and professional services would result in
any unintended consequences. See Sec. 135.37 and Sec. 135.57.
6. For the reasons presented in this preamble, under the ``Summary
of the Major Provisions of this Regulatory Action,'' the proposed rule
would change the threshold for recipients of housing and community
development financial assistance to cover recipients that plan to
obligate or commit $400,000 or more of annual expenditures of covered
funds on construction or construction related projects. As discussed,
the current threshold is based on the receipt of covered funds, not its
expenditure. HUD believes that the expenditure of funds is a better
indicator of the type and amount of economic opportunities that HUD
funds create. The proposed threshold applies Section 3 to all
construction and construction related projects (regardless of the
dollar amount invested into individual projects) if a grantee plans to
spend $400,000, or more, of covered HUD funding during the reporting
period. HUD seeks comment on whether an alternate threshold would be
more appropriate or equally effective to the proposed $400,000
threshold. In the table below, HUD sets out alternative expenditure
thresholds and the percentage of funding that would be covered. While
HUD believes that the proposed expenditure threshold of $400,000 is the
appropriate threshold and would best enable the Department to focus on
those recipients that produce the majority of economic opportunities,
HUD would consider a different threshold but no lower than $400,000.
HUD would consider a high threshold but no higher than $1 million.
Although the $1 million threshold would capture almost 85 percent of
the funding, which HUD finds reasonable and acceptable, HUD believes
the $400,000 threshold, which would cover more than 95 percent of the
funding, 10 percentage points higher than a $1 million threshold,
presents the better approach, but HUD welcomes comment on the
thresholds.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Expenditure level $250K $300K $400K $500K $750 $1M
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Agencies Below.......................................... 265 329 440 542 703 816
% of those below........................................ 22.3% 27.7% 37.0% 45.6% 59.1% 68.6%
Agencies Above.......................................... 924 860 749 647 486 373
% of those above........................................ 77.7% 72.3% 63.0% 54.4% 40.9% 31.4%
% change # of agencies.................................. 4.2% 5.4% 9.3% 8.6% 13.5% 9.5%
% of covered funding.................................... 98.3% 97.5% 95.7% 93.6% 89.0% 84.4%
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Threshold level Expenditure excluded Agencies excluded % Covered
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
$250K+.......................... $35,622,322.04 265 98.3
$300K+.......................... 53,260,584.53 329 97.5
$400K+.......................... 91,850,709.06 440 95.7
$500K+.......................... 137,962,427.28 542 93.6
$750K+.......................... 237,242,870.83 703 89.0
$1M+............................ 335,799,935.66 816 84.4
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
7. In order for a Section 3 resident to be counted as a new hire,
the proposed rule would require a resident to work, during employment
as a new hire, a minimum of 50 percent of the average staff hours
worked for the job category for which the resident was hired,
throughout the duration of time that the category of work is performed
on the covered project. HUD seeks comment on whether this proposed
change effectively addresses concerns that were raised about
contractors that hired Section 3 residents for short time frames for
purposes of circumventing meaningful compliance with Section 3. See
Sec. 135.35 and Sec. 135.55.
8. HUD seeks comment on the specific challenges for State CDBG
grantees with meeting Section 3 goals and how HUD can assist in
addressing these challenges in this proposed rule.
9. HUD solicits comments from Indian tribes, tribally designated
housing entities, and other tribal entities on its proposal to exempt
them from Section 3 compliance when they adopt, and are complying with,
tribal employment and contract preference laws (including regulations
and tribal ordinances) in
[[Page 16530]]
accordance with section 101(k) of NAHASDA (25 U.S.C. 4111(k)), or are
subject to Indian preference requirements under section 7(b) of the
Indian Self-Determination and Education Assistance Act. See Sec.
135.519(b)(3).
10. HUD seeks comment on ways that recipients can demonstrate
compliance with Section 3 in communities that are governed by
agreements that prohibit work by non-labor union workers.
11. HUD seeks comment on requirements or goals that should apply to
contractors whose expenditure of covered financial assistance will only
enable them to sustain their current workforce and will not result in
new employment, training, or subcontracting opportunities.
12. HUD solicits comment on goals or strategies for training
opportunities that the proposed rule should address.
13. HUD seeks comment on whether the proposal to require recipients
to incorporate compliance with Section 3 into procurement procedures
for responsive and responsible bidders creates an undue burden on
recipients? See Sec. 135.37(a)(3), Sec. 135.57(a)(4), and Sec.
135.11(b)(9).
14. In 2012, HUD implemented a Section 3 Business Registry Pilot
Program in five metropolitan areas as a potential resource to help
recipients meet, or exceed, the minimum numerical goals for contracting
and reduce administrative burden in identifying section 3 businesses.
Under the pilot program, businesses that met one of the definitions of
a ``Section 3 Business'' self-certified their status with HUD, and were
placed into a database to be used by recipients, developers,
contractors, and others to notify these businesses about the
availability of Section 3 contracting opportunities. See www.hud.gov/sec3biz. In 2014, HUD expanded the Section 3 Business Registry
nationally. HUD seeks comments about this registry and ways that HUD
should incorporate its usage into the Section 3 requirements.
IV. Findings and Certifications
Regulatory Review--Executive Orders 12866 and 13563
Under Executive Order 12866 (Regulatory Planning and Review), a
determination must be made whether a regulatory action is significant
and, therefore, subject to review by the Office of Management and
Budget (OMB) in accordance with the requirements of the order.
Executive Order 13563 (Improving Regulations and Regulatory Review)
directs executive agencies to analyze regulations that are ``outmoded,
ineffective, insufficient, or excessively burdensome, and to modify,
streamline, expand, or repeal them in accordance with what has been
learned. Executive Order 13563 also directs that, where relevant,
feasible, and consistent with regulatory objectives, and to the extent
permitted by law, agencies are to identify and consider regulatory
approaches that reduce burdens and maintain flexibility and freedom of
choice for the public.
This rule was determined to be a ``significant regulatory action''
as defined in Section 3(f) of the order (although not an economically
significant regulatory action under the order). Consistent with
Executive Order 13563, this rule revises the existing part 135
regulations that have not been revised or updated since 1994, with the
intention to make them less burdensome, and more effective and,
therefore, help to contribute to job creation for low-income persons.
As noted earlier in this preamble, HUD has prepared an initial RIA that
addresses the costs and benefits of the proposed rule. HUD's RIA is
part of the docket file for this rule.
The docket file is available for public inspection in the
Regulations Division, Office of the General Counsel, Room 10276, 451
7th Street SW., Washington, DC 20410-0500. Due to security measures at
the HUD Headquarters building, please schedule an appointment to review
the docket file by calling the Regulations Division at 202-402-3055
(this is not a toll-free number). Individuals with speech or hearing
impairments may access this number via TTY by calling the Federal Relay
Service at toll-free 800-877-8339.
Environmental Impact
This proposed rule is a policy document that sets out regulatory
requirements and standards for complying with Section 3 of the Housing
and Urban Development Act of 1968 (12 U.S.C. 1701u). Accordingly, under
24 CFR 50.19(c)(3), this proposed rule is categorically excluded from
environmental review under the National Environmental Policy Act of
1969 (42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.).
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
The Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (2 U.S.C. 1531-1538)
(UMRA) establishes requirements for Federal agencies to assess the
effects of their regulatory actions on State, local, and tribal
governments and on the private sector. This proposed rule does not
impose a Federal mandate on any state, local, or tribal government, or
on the private sector, within the meaning of UMRA.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.) generally
requires an agency to conduct a regulatory flexibility analysis of any
rule subject to notice and comment rulemaking requirements, unless the
agency certifies that the rule will not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small entities. As has been discussed
in this preamble, this rule proposes to update HUD's Section 3
regulations in 24 CFR part 135, for which the objective is to increase
employment opportunities for low-income persons and businesses that are
owned by or employ such persons, by requiring that they be considered
for employment, including training positions, and contracting
opportunities that are generated by the expenditure of certain HUD
financial assistance. These entities generally are small and therefore
strengthening the requirements of Section 3 should benefit small
businesses that are Section 3 businesses.
As more fully discussed in the accompanying RIA, the number of
economic opportunities generated for Section 3 residents and businesses
will not increase to the degree that this rule would have a significant
economic impact on a substantial number of small entities. In addition,
for those small entities that are recipients of Section 3 covered
financial assistance and must comply with this proposed rule, the
changes made by this proposed rule are designed to reduce burden on
them, as well as all recipients. For these reasons, HUD has determined
that this rule would not have a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities. In fact, streamlined procedures
in the proposed rule and HUD's recent implementation of a national
Section 3 Business Registry will reduce the current administrative
burden for grantees by a net -10,000 hours or $320,000 annually.\10\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\10\ Average total compensation of all workers, BLS, March 2014.
See https://www.bls.gov/news.release/ecec.t01.htm.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Notwithstanding HUD's determination that this rule will not have a
significant effect on a substantial number of small entities, HUD
specifically invites comments regarding any less burdensome
alternatives to this rule that will meet HUD's objectives as described
in this preamble.
[[Page 16531]]
Executive Order 13132, Federalism
Executive Order 13132 (entitled ``Federalism'') prohibits an agency
from publishing any rule that has federalism implications if the rule
either: (1) Imposes substantial direct compliance costs on State and
local governments and is not required by statute, or (2) preempts State
law, unless the agency meets the consultation and funding requirements
of Section 6 of the Executive Order. This proposed rule does not have
federalism implications and does not impose substantial direct
compliance costs on State and local governments nor preempt state law
within the meaning of the Executive Order.
Paperwork Reduction Act
The information collection requirements contained in this proposed
rule have been submitted to OMB under the Paperwork Reduction Act of
1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501-3520). In accordance with the Paperwork Reduction
Act, an agency may not conduct or sponsor, and a person is not required
to respond to, a collection of information unless the collection
displays a currently valid OMB control number. HUD anticipates only
marginal additional impact of this rule on document preparation time.
Recipients are required already to provide HUD with reports documenting
Section 3 activities under the existing interim regulations. The
additional time to submit the new proposed information required by the
rule is minimal. The burden of information collection in this proposed
rule is estimated as follows:
Reporting and Recordkeeping Burden Existing Regulation Versus This Proposed Rule
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Existing regulation (hours) Proposed rule (hours)
Estimated ---------------------------------------------------------------
Number of average time One-time
Section reference in proposed rule Number of responses per for Total burden not One-time
parties respondent requirement estimated reoccurring Incremental burden--not
(in hours) annual burden annually (in burden reoccurring
hours) annually
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Section 3 resident and business 2,000 1 80 160,000 0 \11\-80,000 0
verification (Sec. 135.15)...........
Maintain lists of eligible Section 3 2,000 2 40 160,000 0 \12\-80,000 0
residents and businesses (Sec.
135.11)................................
Notify Section 3 residents and 2,000 2 20 80,000 0 \13\-20,000 0
businesses about the availability of
economic opportunities (Sec. 135.11).
Post signs or notices at job sites (Sec. 2,000 10 1 20,000 0 0 0
135.11)..............................
Ensure that bid solicitations 2,000 1 0.5 0 1,000 0 0
acknowledge Section 3 obligations (Sec.
135.11)..............................
Monitor the payroll data of developers 2,000 1 40 N/A N/A 80,000 0
and contractors (Sec. 135.11)........
Incorporate Section 3 factors into 2,000 1 40 N/A N/A 0 80,000
contractor selection procedures (Sec.
135.11)................................
Amend and renegotiate existing 500 1 40 N/A N/A 0 20,000
collective bargaining agreements, PLAs,
etc., as appropriate (Sec. 135.11)...
Coordinate with DOL, Youth Build, etc. 1,000 1 40 N/A N/A 40,000 0
(Sec. 135.11)........................
Draft written subrecipient agreements 1,110 1 24 N/A N/A 0 26,640
(Sec. 135.17)........................
Include the Section 3 Clause in covered 2,000 1 0.5 1,000 0 0 0
contracts (Sec. 135.19)..............
Develop official Section 3 policies and 5,000 1 40 0 200,000 0 100,000
procedures (Sec. 135.9)..............
Annual Certifications of compliance 5,000 1 0.5 2,500 0 0 0
(Sec. 135.21)........................
Provide priority consideration to 1,000 2 10 20,000 0 0 0
Section 3 residents and businesses
(Sec. 135.37 and Sec. 135.57)......
NOFA certification of compliance (Sec. 500 1 0.5 250 0 0 0
135.71(d)).............................
Reporting requirements (Sec. 135.23).. 5,000 5 10 250,000 0 0 0
Recordkeeping requirements (Sec. 5,000 1 40 200,000 0 50,000 0
135.25)................................
Complaint investigations (Sec. 135.95 30 1 80 2,400 0 0 0
and (Sec. 135.97)....................
Right to review letter of findings (Sec. 5 1 8 40 0 0 0
135.99(c)............................
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total Burden........................ .............. .............. .............. 896,190 201,000 -10,000 226,640
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
In accordance with 5 CFR 1320.8(d)(1), HUD is soliciting comments
from members of the public and affected agencies concerning the
information collection requirements in the proposed rule regarding:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\11\ Due to the recent expansion of the national Section 3
Business Registry, HUD estimates a decrease in the original 80 hours
that it estimated for this activity. As such, administrative burden
for covered recipients is reduced.
\12\ See footnote 1.
\13\ See footnote 11.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
(1) Whether the proposed collection of information is necessary for
the proper performance of the functions of the agency, including
whether the information will have practical utility;
(2) The accuracy of the agency's estimate of the burden of the
proposed collection of information;
(3) Whether the proposed collection of information enhances the
quality, utility, and clarity of the information to be collected; and
(4) Whether the proposed information collection minimizes the
burden of the collection of information on those who are to respond;
including through the use of appropriate automated collection
techniques or other forms of information technology (e.g., permitting
electronic submission of responses).
Interested persons are invited to submit comments regarding the
[[Page 16532]]
information collection requirements in this rule. Under the provisions
of 5 CFR part 1320, OMB is required to make a decision concerning this
collection of information between 30 and 60 days after the publication
date. Therefore, a comment on the information collection requirements
is best assured of having its full effect if OMB receives the comment
within 30 days of the publication. This time frame does not affect the
deadline for comments to the agency on the proposed rule, however.
Comments must refer to the proposed rule by name and docket number (FR-
4893) and must be sent to:
HUD Desk Officer, Office of Management and Budget, New Executive Office
Building, Washington, DC 20503, Fax number: 202-395-6947
and
Colette Pollard, HUD Reports Liaison Officer, Department of Housing and
Urban Development, 451 7th Street SW., Room 2204, Washington, DC 20410.
Interested persons may submit comments regarding the information
collection requirements electronically through the Federal eRulemaking
Portal at https://www.regulations.gov. HUD strongly encourages
commenters to submit comments electronically. Electronic submission of
comments allows the commenter maximum time to prepare and submit a
comment, ensures timely receipt by HUD, and enables HUD to make them
immediately available to the public. Comments submitted electronically
through the https://www.regulations.gov Web site can be viewed by other
commenters and interested members of the public. Commenters should
follow the instructions provided on that site to submit comments
electronically.
List of Subjects in 24 CFR Part 135
Administrative practice and procedure, Community development, Equal
employment opportunity, Government contracts, Grant programs--housing
and community development, Housing, Loan programs--housing and
community development, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Small
businesses.
0
Accordingly, for the reasons described in the preamble, and under the
authority of 42 U.S.C. 3535(d), HUD proposes to revise 24 CFR part 135
to read as follows:
PART 135--ECONOMIC OPPORTUNITIES FOR LOW- AND VERY LOW-INCOME
PERSONS
Subpart A--General Provisions
Sec.
135.1 Purpose.
135.3 Delegation of authority.
135.5 Definitions.
135.7 Compliance to the greatest extent feasible.
135.9 Official Section 3 policies and procedures.
135.11 Recipient responsibilities.
135.13 General minimum numerical goals.
135.15 Verification of Section 3 resident and Section 3 business
status.
135.17 Written agreements.
135.19 Contracts and Section 3 clause.
135.21 Certifications of compliance.
135.23 Reporting requirements.
135.25 Recordkeeping and access to records.
135.27 Sanctions for noncompliance.
135.29 Other Federal requirements.
Subpart B--Additional Provisions for Public Housing Financial
Assistance
135.31 Applicability.
135.33 Public housing agency unit thresholds.
135.35 Minimum numerical goals.
135.37 Orders of priority consideration for employment and
contracting opportunities.
Subpart C--Additional Provisions for Housing and Community Development
Financial Assistance
135.51 Applicability.
135.53 Funding thresholds that trigger Section 3 compliance.
135.55 Minimum numerical goals.
135.57 Orders of priority consideration for employment and
contracting opportunities.
Subpart D--Additional Provisions for Recipients of Competitively
Awarded Financial Assistance
135.71 Applicability.
135.73 Applicant selection criteria.
135.75 Section 3 compliance for NOFA grantees.
135.77 Resolution of outstanding Section 3 matters.
Subpart E--Enforcement
135.91 Cooperation in achieving compliance.
135.93 Conduct of investigations
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1701u; 42 U.S.C. 3535(d).
PART 135--ECONOMIC OPPORTUNITIES FOR LOW- AND VERY LOW-INCOME
PERSONS
Subpart A--General Provisions
Sec. 135.1 Purpose.
(a) Section 3. The purpose of Section 3 of the Housing and Urban
Development Act of 1968 (12 U.S.C. 1701u) (Section 3) is to direct, to
the greatest extent feasible, and consistent with existing Federal,
State, and local laws and regulations, training, employment,
contracting, and other economic opportunities generated by the
expenditure of certain HUD financial assistance to:
(1) Low- and very low-income residents of the neighborhood or
neighborhoods where the Section 3 covered financial assistance is
expended, particularly those that receive assistance from the Federal
government for housing; and
(2) The businesses that are owned by, or substantially employ, low-
or very low-income residents of the neighborhood or neighborhoods where
the Section 3 covered financial assistance is expended.
(b) Part 135. The purpose of this subpart is to establish the
standards and procedures by which all recipients of Section 3 covered
financial assistance and their subrecipients, contractors, and
subcontractors that may be administering Section 3 covered financial
assistance on behalf of the recipient may meet the requirements of
Section 3.
Sec. 135.3 Delegation of authority.
Except as may be otherwise provided in this part, the functions and
responsibilities of the Secretary of the Department of Housing and
Urban Development, pursuant to Section 3, and described in this part,
are delegated to HUD's Assistant Secretary for Fair Housing and Equal
Opportunity. The Assistant Secretary for Fair Housing and Equal
Opportunity is further authorized to redelegate functions and
responsibilities in this part to other employees of HUD. However, the
authority to issue or waive regulations of this part may not be
redelegated by the Assistant Secretary. Monitoring and enforcement may
be carried out in coordination with the HUD program office that
provided Section 3 covered financial assistance to recipients, and the
imposition of sanctions shall be in accordance with the requirements of
the regulation or NOFA governing the program under which the Section 3
covered financial assistance is provided, as set forth at Sec. 135.27.
Sec. 135.5 Definitions.
For purposes of this part, the terms in this section have the
meanings provided in this section. The terms Department, HUD, Public
housing agency (PHA), and Secretary are defined in 24 CFR part 5.
Applicant means any entity which makes an application to HUD for
Section 3 covered financial assistance,
[[Page 16533]]
and includes but is not limited to, any State, unit of local
government, PHA, public housing commission, Indian tribe, tribally
designated housing entity, or other public agency, public or private
nonprofit organization, private agency or institution, mortgagor,
developer, limited dividend sponsor, builder, property owner, property
manager, resident management corporation, resident council, or
cooperative association.
Assistant Secretary means the Assistant Secretary for Fair Housing
and Equal Opportunity (FHEO).
Business means a business entity formed in accordance with State
law, and licensed as appropriate under State, county or municipal law
to engage in the type of business activity for which it was formed.
Awarding Agency means the recipient or subrecipient that awards
Section 3 contracting opportunities.
Complainant means the party that files a complaint with the
Assistant Secretary alleging that a recipient has failed or refused to
comply with the regulations of this part.
Complaint means an allegation of noncompliance with the
requirements of this part as provided in subpart E.
Construction, unless inconsistent with or otherwise defined in the
regulation or NOFA governing the program under which the Section 3
financial assistance is provided, means the act or process of building
houses, roads, public buildings, infrastructure, and other structures.
Contract. See the definition of ``contracting opportunities'' in
this section.
Contracting opportunities subject to the requirements of Section 3
means contracts or subcontracts for work awarded in connection with
Section 3 covered projects and activities. Contracting opportunities
include, but are not limited to: Demolition, rehabilitation, housing
construction, other public construction, architectural design, legal
representation, or other services directly related to construction and
rehabilitation activities. In addition, for public housing financial
assistance, contracting opportunities include, but are not limited to,
facilities maintenance, landscaping, painting, professional services,
police and security, equipment servicing, janitorial services, and
extermination. This term does not include material-only contracts;
i.e., contracts that are awarded for supplies without installation,
demolition, rehabilitation, or other construction activities.
Contractor means any entity that enters into a contract or
agreement to perform work generated by the expenditure of Section 3
covered financial assistance for a recipient, subrecipient, or another
contractor, or for work in connection with Section 3 covered projects
or activities, including contracts for services, but excluding
contracts for supplies or materials that do not involve installation,
rehabilitation, or construction.
Department of Labor or DOL refers to the U.S. Department of Labor.
Department of Labor YouthBuild program is a nonresidential,
community-based alternative education program that provides classroom
instruction and occupational skills training to at-risk individuals
ages 16 to 24. The classroom training leads to a high school diploma or
a general education development or other state-recognized equivalency
diploma. The occupational skills training component provides YouthBuild
participants with industry-recognized certifications in construction or
other occupations. The construction skills training component teaches
skills through a program to build or rehabilitate housing for low-
income or homeless individuals and families in their communities.
Economic Opportunities Generated by Section 3 Covered Financial
Assistance Means
(1) Training, employment, or other opportunities generated by the
expenditure of Section 3 covered financial assistance as such term is
defined in this section. Examples of economic opportunities may
include, but are not limited to: Jobs (including training positions or
on-the-job training opportunities), skills development (e.g., computer
classes, secretarial courses, etc.), registered apprenticeships, and
business development; or
(2) Other training opportunities; and contracting opportunities for
building trades, professional services, and other activities directly
associated with demolition, rehabilitation, or construction.
Housing and community development financial assistance subject to
the requirements of Section 3 means Section 3 covered financial
assistance, provided in the form of a grant, loan, cooperative
agreement, or contract, expended for housing demolition,
rehabilitation, or construction, or the construction or rehabilitation
of public facilities, infrastructure, or buildings and provided, or
otherwise made available, from such HUD financial assistance. HUD
housing or community development programs subject to the requirements
of Section 3 include, but are not limited to, the following programs:
The Community Development Block Grants (CDBG) program, authorized by
title I of the Housing and Community Development Act of 1974 (42 U.S.C.
5301 et seq.); the HOME Investment Partnerships program, authorized by
the HOME Investment Partnerships Act (42 U.S.C. 12701 note); the HUD
homeless assistance programs authorized under title IV of the McKinney-
Vento Homeless Assistance Act (42 U.S.C. 11360 et seq.); the Housing
Opportunities for Persons With AIDS (HOPWA) program, authorized by the
AIDS Housing Opportunity Act, subtitle D of title VII of the Cranston-
Gonzalez National Affordable Housing Act (42 U.S.C. 12901 note);
disaster recovery grants (DRG), as authorized by appropriations acts;
the Supportive Housing for the Elderly program, authorized by Section
202 of the Housing Act of 1959 (12 U.S.C. 1701q); the Supportive
Housing for Persons with Disabilities program, authorized by Section
811, subtitle B of title VIII of the Cranston Gonzalez National
Affordable Housing Act (42 U.S.C. 8013); the Project-Based Rental
Assistance programs authorized by Section 811, subtitle B of title VIII
of the Cranston-Gonzalez National Affordable Housing Act (42 U.S.C.
8013); the Healthy Homes and Lead Hazard Control programs, as
authorized by the Lead-Based Paint Poisoning Prevention Act (42 U.S.C
4801 et seq.) and Residential Lead-Based Paint Hazard Reduction Act of
1992 (42 U.S.C. 4851 et seq.); and any housing and community
development programs that HUD designates as covered by Section 3 and
announced by HUD as such through a Federal Register notice, notice of
funding availability, or announcement posted on HUD's Section 3 Web
site(s). Housing and community development financial assistance does
not include financial assistance provided for mortgage insurance.
Indian tribe means a tribe that is a federally recognized tribe or
a State recognized tribe as defined in 25 U.S.C. 4103(13).
Low-income person means a person as defined in section 3(b)(2) of
the United States Housing Act of 1937 (42 U.S.C. 1437(b)(2)), or a
person whose median household income does not exceed 80 percent of the
median household income within the metropolitan area or nonmetropolitan
county where the Section 3 covered project or activity is located.
Metropolitan area means the primary metropolitan statistical area
(PMSA), as established by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB).
[[Page 16534]]
Neighborhood, unless otherwise defined in the regulation or NOFA
governing the program under which the Section 3 financial assistance is
provided, means Zip codes or other geographical locations within the
jurisdiction of a unit of general local government (but not the entire
jurisdiction) designated in ordinances, or other local documents as a
neighborhood, village, or similar geographical designation;
New hires mean full- or part-time employees for permanent,
temporary, or seasonal employment opportunities. This term refers to
any employee who:
(1) Was not on the payroll of the recipient, subrecipient,
contractor, or subcontractor administering Section 3 covered financial
assistance funds on behalf of the recipient at the beginning of the
award of Section 3 covered financial assistance; or
(2) Any person hired by an entity on a per-project basis as a
result of a Section 3 covered project or activity.
NOFA means a notice of funding availability issued by HUD for
discretionary grant funding that is awarded competitively to eligible
applicants.
Nonmetropolitan county means rural counties or any other county
outside of a metropolitan area.
Numerical goals means minimum numerical targets that recipients,
subrecipients, contractors, or subcontractors that may be administering
Section 3 covered financial assistance on behalf of the recipient
reach, or exceed, in order to demonstrate compliance with this part.
These goals are not construed as quotas, set-asides, or a cap on the
provision of economic opportunities, and may be exceeded.
Other HUD programs subject to the requirements of Section 3 means
HUD programs, other than HUD programs providing public housing
financial assistance, that provide covered housing and community
development financial assistance, as defined in this section.
Priority consideration means that recipients, subrecipients,
contractors, or subcontractors that may be administering Section 3
covered financial assistance on behalf of the recipient must give, to
the greatest extent feasible, training, employment, or contracting
opportunities to Section 3 residents or Section 3 businesses as defined
in this section in accordance with the appropriate orders of priority
consideration related to the Section 3 covered financial assistance, as
provided in Sec. 135.37 and Sec. 135.57. Priority consideration
should not be construed to be a quota or set-aside program, or an
entitlement to economic opportunities such as a particular position or
contract.
Professional services means non-building trade services that are
performed in connection with construction and rehabilitation
activities, including but not limited to: architecture, professional
engineering, structural engineering, land surveying, mapping, project
management, planning, design, accounting, and other related services,
which are required to be performed or approved by a person licensed,
registered, or certified to provide such services.
Project-based rental housing assistance means rental assistance
contracts provided under section 8(b)(1) of the U.S. Housing Act of
1937 or section 8(b)(2) of U.S. Housing Act of 1937 as it existed
immediately prior to October 1, 1983.
Public housing has the meaning that this term is given in 24 CFR
5.100 or 24 CFR 963.5.
Public housing financial assistance subject to the requirements of
Section 3 means any HUD financial assistance, subject to minimum unit
thresholds specified in Sec. 135.33, that is provided through the
following HUD assistance:
(1) Annual contributions for low income housing projects provided
pursuant to Section 5 of the U.S. Housing Act of 1937 (42 U.S.C.
1437c);
(2) Capital fund project assistance provided pursuant to Section 9
of the U.S. Housing Act of 1937 (42 U.S.C, 1473g);
(3) Operating subsidy provided pursuant to Section 9 of the U.S.
Housing Act of 1937 (42 U.S.C, 1473g);
(4) Competitively awarded HUD public housing financial assistance
for activities that will result in new employment, training, or
contracting opportunities, under such programs as the Family-Supportive
Service Coordinator (FSS), or Resident Opportunity Supportive Service
(ROSS) grant funding;
(5) Emergency funds, for example, authorized for emergency capital
repair of public housing or public housing facilities;
(6) Financial assistance made available under an appropriations act
such as financial assistance provided for the Choice Neighborhoods
program; and
(7) Such other financial assistance designated by HUD as public
housing financial assistance covered by Section 3 as announced through
a Federal Register notice, NOFA, or announcement on HUD's Section 3 Web
site.
Public housing project has the meaning given this term in 3(b)(1)
of the United States Housing Act of 1937.
Public housing resident has the meaning given this term in 24 CFR
963.5.
Recipient means:
(1) Any entity that receives Section 3 covered financial assistance
directly from HUD, including but not limited to: Any State, unit of
local government, public housing agency (PHA), public housing
commission, Indian tribe, tribally designated housing entity, or other
public agency, public or private nonprofit organization, private agency
or institution, mortgagor, developer, limited dividend sponsor,
builder, property owner, property manager, community housing
development organization (CHDO), resident management corporation,
resident council, or cooperative association. The term ``recipient''
also includes any subrecipients, successor, assignee, or transferee of
such entity.
(2) ``Recipient'' does not include any ultimate beneficiary under a
HUD program to which Section 3 applies (for example an individual or
family receiving a housing rehabilitation grant financed with HOME
assistance) and does not include contractors and subcontractors, but as
provided in this part, contractors and subcontractors are subject to
compliance with this part.
Rehabilitation, for the purposes of this regulation, means
improvements or interventions taken to improve or restore the
structural condition, architectural components, energy performance, or
environmental quality of an existing building, dwelling, unit, or
structure that are taken to improve its safety, aesthetics, or
suitability for use. For project-based rental assistance contracts,
including project-based Section 8, Section 202, and Section 811
properties, this definition shall apply when performed as part of a
recapitalization event where Reserve for Replacement funds are
utilized. Examples include replacement of roofing, gutters, electrical,
plumbing, heating systems, flooring, windows, doors and concrete.
Routine maintenance, for the purposes of this regulation, means
activities that do not materially add to the value of the building,
appreciably prolong its useful life, or adapt it to new uses. Examples
include: Painting, caulking, sealing, repairing minor components,
including work required to prepare units for new tenants upon turnover,
or other activities planned and performed at regular intervals normally
established by manufacturers or associations. In the case of project-
based
[[Page 16535]]
rental assistance contracts these planned activities include the work
described in the required Project Capital Needs Assessment (PCNA).
Section 3 means Section 3 of the Housing and Urban Development Act
of 1968 (12 U.S.C. 1701u).
Section 3 business means a business that is located in the Section
3 local area as defined in this section and that is able to demonstrate
one of the following:
(1) Meets the definition of ``resident-owned'' business in 24 CFR
963.5;
(2) The business is 51 percent or more owned by Section 3
residents;
(3) The permanent, full-time employees of the business include
persons, at least 30 percent of whom are Section 3 residents; or
(4) The business demonstrates that at least 20 percent of its
permanent full-time employees are Section 3 residents and the business
either: sponsored a minimum of 10 percent of its current Section 3
employees to attend a DOL or DOL recognized State-Apprenticeship Agency
approved, registered apprenticeship, or a pre-apprenticeship training
program that meets the requirements in outlined DOL/ETA Training and
Employment Notice 13-12 ; or that 10 percent of its employees are
participants or graduates of a DOL YouthBuild program. For the purposes
of determining Section 3 business eligibility only, Section 3 residents
include persons who:
(i) Met the definition of Section 3 resident, provided in this
section, at the time the resident was hired or became an owner, or met
such definition within the 3 years before the business sought
certification; or
(ii) Graduated from a DOL, State approved, or YouthBuild training
program within the 3 years before the business sought certification;
and
(iii) Eligibility as a Section 3 business only applies as long as
the businesses' employees continue to meet the definition of a Section
3 resident set forth in this part.
Section 3 clause means the contract provisions set forth in Sec.
135.17.
Section 3 covered financial assistance means HUD loans, grants, or
other financial assistance provided under:
(1) Public housing financial assistance as defined in this section;
and
(2) Housing and community development financial assistance as
defined in this section.
Section 3 covered project or activity means any project or activity
that is funded by Section 3 covered financial assistance.
Section 3 local area is the:
(1) Primary metropolitan statistical area where the Section 3
covered project or activity takes place; or
(2) Nonmetropolitan county where the Section 3 covered project or
activity takes place.
Section 3 resident means an individual residing in the Section 3
local area who can document that he/she is:
(1) A public housing resident;
(2) A participant in a DOL YouthBuild program;
(3) A member of a family that receives federal housing assistance;
or
(4) An individual who meets the HUD income limits for determining
the eligibility of low- and very low-income persons for HUD assisted
housing programs within the metropolitan area or nonmetropolitan
county.
Service Area, unless defined in the regulation or NOFA governing
the program under which the Section 3 covered financial assistance is
provided, means the area to be served by a Section 3 covered project or
activity.
Subcontractor means any entity (other than a person who is an
employee of the contractor) that has a contract with a contractor to
undertake a portion of the contractor's obligation to perform work
generated by the expenditure of Section 3 covered financial assistance,
or arising in connection with a Section 3 covered project or activity.
Subrecipient means
(1) An entity that receives Section 3 covered financial assistance
from a recipient or other subrecipient of Section 3 covered financial
assistance to carry out a Section 3 covered project or activity on the
recipient's or other subrecipient's behalf. This term includes, but is
not limited to: any unit of State, county or local government, public
housing agency (PHA), public housing commission, Indian tribe, tribally
designated housing entity, or other public agency, public or private
nonprofit organization, private agency, institution, mortgagor,
developer, limited dividend sponsor, builder, property owner, property
manager, community housing development organization (CHDO), resident
management corporation, resident council, or cooperative association.
Subrecipients also include any successor, assignee, or transferee of
any such entity.
(2) ``Subrecipient'' does not include any ultimate beneficiary
under a HUD program to which Section 3 applies (for example an
individual or family receiving a housing voucher) and does not include
contractors or subcontractors, but as provided in this part,
contractors and subcontractors are subject to compliance with this
part.
Tribally designated housing entities have the meaning this term is
given in 25 U.S.C. 4103(22).
Very low-income person means the definition for this term set forth
in Section 3(b)(2) of the U.S. Housing Act of 1937 (42 U.S.C.
1437a(b)(2)), or persons whose household income does not exceed 50
percent of the median household income within the metropolitan area or
nonmetropolitan county where the Section 3 covered project or activity
is located.
Sec. 135.7 Compliance to the greatest extent feasible.
(a) General. In accordance with the findings of Congress, as stated
in section 3 of the Housing and Urban Development Act of 1968, economic
opportunities offer an effective means of empowering low- and very low-
income persons residing in the metropolitan area where HUD financial
assistance is expended. Recipients, as defined in Sec. 135.5, are
required, to the greatest extent feasible, to ensure that employment
and training opportunities funded with Section 3 covered financial
assistance be provided to low-and very low-income persons, and that
contracts are awarded to businesses that are either owned by, or
substantially employ such persons.
(b) Demonstrating compliance to the greatest extent feasible.
Absent evidence to the contrary, recipients of housing and community
development assistance that meets the funding threshold set at Sec.
135.53 and PHAs shall demonstrate compliance with Section 3 and the
requirements of this part by:
(1) Establishing policies and procedures to achieve compliance with
Section 3, as provided in Sec. 135.9;
(2) Fulfilling its responsibilities, as specified in Sec. 135.11;
and either
(3) Reaching or exceeding each minimum numerical goal for
employment and contracting opportunities, as provided in Sec. 135.13
and either Sec. 135.35 or Sec. 135.55; or
(4) If the minimum numerical goals for employment and contracting
are not met, providing written justification explaining the extent of
efforts taken to meet the minimum numerical goals and the impediments
confronted in trying to meet the minimum numerical goals. Such
justifications must include, at a minimum, a summary of: impediments
encountered; actions taken to address the identified impediments; and
an identification of steps that may be successful in overcoming
impediments in the future. Justifications provided by recipients will
be taken into
[[Page 16536]]
consideration by HUD when making compliance determinations.
(c) Compliance monitoring and enforcement. (1) When determining if
efforts taken by recipients demonstrate compliance with Section 3, to
the greatest extent feasible, HUD shall review:
(i) Policies and procedures, as specified in Sec. 135.9 developed
by the recipient to ascertain the extent to which they present measures
for achieving compliance with Section 3; and
(ii) The extent to which the recipient fulfilled its
responsibilities, as specified in Sec. 135.11; and either:
(A) Whether the minimum goals at Sec. 135.35 or Sec. 135.55 were
met; or
(B) Whether written justifications for not meeting the minimum
goals explain the extent of efforts taken to achieve the goals of
Section 3, identify the impediments encountered, the actions taken to
address the identified impediments, and steps that may be successful in
overcoming impediments in the future. Justifications provided by
recipients will be taken into consideration by HUD when making
compliance determinations.
(2) Recipients that fail to comply with the requirements of this
part are subject to sanctions for noncompliance in accordance with the
requirements of the regulation or NOFA governing the program under
which the Section 3 covered financial assistance is provided, as set
forth at Sec. 135.27.
Sec. 135.9 Official Section 3 policies and procedures.
(a) Official Section 3 policies and procedures. (1) All recipients
that plan to undertake Section 3 covered activities must develop and
adopt official policies or procedures to implement the requirements of
this part in accordance with the ``to the greatest extent feasible''
requirement as set forth at Sec. 135.7. Official policies and
procedures shall be updated as appropriate.
(2) Official policies and procedures must include, at a minimum,
steps that the recipient will take to: inform subrecipients and
contractors about Section 3 obligations; evaluate potential bidders for
Section 3 compliance during contract selection; notify Section 3
residents and businesses about economic opportunities; implement
verification and/or certification procedures for residents and
businesses; provide priority consideration to qualified Section 3
residents and businesses; monitor subrecipients and contractors for
compliance; establish consequences for noncompliance; and utilize local
community resources to meet its Section 3 requirements. The preceding
list is not inclusive of all elements that recipients should include in
official policies and procedures. Updates to official policies and
procedures shall discuss the relative success of the immediate past
policies and procedures and how any changes are aimed to better promote
compliance with Section 3.
(3) Section 3 official policies and procedures shall be
incorporated into any strategic and annual plans required of recipients
of HUD covered assistance by HUD program regulations.
(i) Recipients of Section 3 covered funding shall include a general
description of their Section 3 official policies and procedures in
required recipient plans, such as public housing plans required by HUD
regulation in 24 CFR part 903, strategic and annual action plans
required by HUD regulations in 24 CFR parts 91 and 570, or other
similar plans that may be required under other covered HUD programs.
(ii) If a recipient is not required to submit official plans to HUD
such as public housing plans required by regulations in 24 CFR part
903, strategic or annual action plans required by regulations in 24 CFR
parts 91 or 570, or other similar plans, the recipients' official
section 3 policies and procedures shall be developed as an independent
document at the time that Section 3 covered financial assistance is
awarded and updated every 5 years thereafter.
(4) Official policies and procedures shall be available for review
by HUD, Section 3 residents and businesses, and the general public upon
request.
Sec. 135.11 Recipient responsibilities.
(a) General. Recipients have the responsibility for monitoring and
ensuring compliance with this part in their own operations, and
ensuring compliance in the operations of their subrecipients,
contractors, or subcontractors. The use of subrecipients, contractors,
or subcontractors does not relieve a recipient of its responsibility.
Recipients are also responsible for determining the adequacy of
performance under subrecipient agreements or procurement contracts, and
for taking appropriate action when performance problems arise.
(b) Specific responsibilities for all recipients. Recipients shall
comply with the following requirements:
(1) Develop and implement official Section 3 policies and
procedures in accordance with Sec. 135.9.
(2) Maintain lists of eligible Section 3 residents and businesses
that have asked to receive priority consideration for training,
employment, contracting, or other economic opportunities.
(3) Notify Section 3 residents and businesses that have asked to
receive priority consideration about the availability of new
employment, training, contracting, or other economic opportunities
created as a result of the expenditure of Section 3 covered financial
assistance.
(i) Recipients must ensure that all communications are provided in
a manner that is effective for persons with hearing, visual, and other
communications-related disabilities consistent with section 504 of the
Rehabilitation Act of 1973 and, as applicable, the Americans with
Disabilities Act.
(ii) Notifications shall be made in accordance with ``HUD's Final
Guidance to Federal Financial Assistance Regarding Title VI Prohibition
Against National Origin Discrimination Affecting Limited English
Proficient Persons'' published in the Federal Register on January 22,
2007 at 72 FR 2732 (or other subsequent updated guidance).
(4) Ensure that priority consideration is provided to Section 3
residents and businesses in accordance with the orders of priority
consideration set forth at Sec. Sec. 135.37 and 135.57.
(5) Monitor the payroll data of developers, contractors, and
subcontractors throughout the project or activity, to ensure that new
employment opportunities are made available consistent with the
requirements of this part. This requirement only applies to projects or
activities that are subject to wage rates determined under the Davis
Bacon Act (40 U.S.C. 3141 et seq.).
(6) Ensure that all bid solicitations associated with Section 3
covered projects or activities acknowledge the applicability of Section
3 to the project or activity and communicate the selected contractor's
obligation to comply with the requirements of this part to prospective
bidders. Some examples include: notifying prospective contractors about
Section 3 applicability during pre-bid meetings or conferences;
requiring bidders to certify that they have received a copy of the
recipient's Section 3 policies/procedures; etc.
(7) Ensure that subrecipients, contractors, or subcontractors enter
into written agreements consistent with Sec. 135.17, and include the
Section 3 clause at Sec. 135.19, as appropriate.
(8) Ensure that notices or signs acknowledging Section 3
obligations and advertising vacant employment,
[[Page 16537]]
training, contracting, or subcontracting opportunities are posted in
places where they can be clearly seen by both current employees and
prospective applicants for economic opportunities.
(i) At a minimum, such notices shall include the following:
anticipated dates that work will begin and end; anticipated number and
type of job vacancies available; anticipated number and type of
registered apprenticeship or training opportunities offered;
anticipated dollar amount and type of subcontracting opportunities;
application and bidding procedures; required employment and
subcontracting qualifications; and the name and contact information for
the person(s) accepting applications.
(ii) Notifications shall be in accordance with ``HUD's Final
Guidance to Federal Financial Assistance Regarding Title VI Prohibition
Against National Origin Discrimination Affecting Limited English
Proficient Persons'' published in the Federal Register on January 22,
2007 at 72 FR 2732 (or other subsequent updated guidance).
(9) If applicable, ensure that new or existing subrecipient or
contractor selection procedures, including those developed in
accordance with 24 CFR part 85; assess the responsible bidder's
previous compliance and ability to:
(i) Retain Section 3 hires for employment opportunities;
(ii) Comply with Section 3 requirements; and
(iii) Provide training opportunities for Section 3 residents.
(10) If applicable, ensure that labor unions are notified about
recipient's and contractor's obligations to comply with the
requirements of this part. Collective bargaining agreements, project
labor agreements or other agreements between labor unions and
recipients, or subrecipients that are established, or revised, after
[EFFECTIVE DATE OF FINAL RULE], shall ensure that projects generated
from the expenditure of Section 3 covered financial assistance provide
employment, registered apprenticeship, training, contracting, or other
economic opportunities to Section 3 residents and businesses in a
manner that is consistent with this part
(11) Coordinate with local DOL Workforce Investment Boards,
YouthBuild grantees, or other State or Federal training programs to
ensure that Section 3 residents and businesses are notified about the
availability of federal training opportunities.
(12) Document actions taken to comply with the requirements of this
part; the results of actions taken; sanctions imposed upon
subrecipients, contractors, subcontractors, or subcontractors;
impediments encountered; actions taken to address the identified
impediments; and steps that may be successful in overcoming impediments
in the future.
(c) Responsibilities specific to PHAs. In addition to the
responsibilities set forth in paragraph (b) of this section, PHAs must
comply with the following additional requirements:
(1) PHAs are required to monitor successful bidders for compliance
with descriptions provided in qualified bid proposals.
(2) Develop appropriate procedures to comply with the earned income
disregard requirements; and
(3) Develop procedures to set-aside eligible contracting
opportunities for public housing resident-owned businesses that are
consistent with 24 CFR part 963, as appropriate.
(d) Responsibilities specific to recipients of housing and
community development financial assistance. In addition to the
responsibilities set forth in paragraph (b) of this section, recipients
of housing and community development financial assistance must comply
with the following additional requirements:
(1) Where practicable, recipients are required to monitor
successful bidders for compliance with descriptions provided in
qualified bid proposals.
(2) Recipients must ensure that qualified local Section 3
businesses are included on lists of preferred or recommended
contractors when such lists are provided to homeowners for
rehabilitation loan or grant programs. The recipient or subrecipient
may count any Section 3 businesses that are selected by homeowners
towards their minimum numerical goals annually. The recipient is not
required to count any non-Section 3 businesses that are selected by
homeowners toward the total amount of contracts awarded to Section 3
businesses annually.
Sec. 135.13 General minimum numerical goals.
(a) Calculation of goals. The minimum numerical goals established
in this part apply to the aggregate number of employment and
contracting opportunities generated by Section 3 covered financial
assistance during each annual reporting period as defined at Sec.
135.23(b).
(b) Minimum numerical goals. (1) Recipients of public housing
financial assistance shall, to the greatest extent feasible, reach the
minimum numerical goals set forth at Sec. 135.35.
(2) Recipients of housing and community development financial
assistance shall, to the greatest extent feasible, reach the minimum
numerical goals set forth at Sec. 135.55.
(3) Recipients of competitively awarded Section 3 covered financial
assistance shall, to the greatest extent feasible, reach the minimum
numerical goals set forth in the subpart associated with the type of
financial assistance provided, Sec. Sec. 135.35 and 135.55,
respectively.
(c) Inability or failure to meet goals. Recipients that are unable
or fail to meet minimum numerical goals must provide to HUD a written
justification as to why the goals were not met, as provided in Sec.
135.7(b)(4). Justifications provided by recipients will be taken into
consideration by HUD when making compliance determinations.
Sec. 135.15 Verification of Section 3 resident and Section 3 business
status.
(a) General. Recipients of Section 3 covered financial assistance
are required to verify that residents and businesses seeking the
employment and contracting opportunities offered by the recipient meet
the definitions of Section 3 residents and Section 3 businesses at
Sec. 135.5 prior to providing priority consideration for employment,
training, contracting, or other economic opportunities. Unless
otherwise directed by HUD, recipients may use their own discretion for
developing specific verification procedures for Section 3 residents and
Section 3 businesses.
(b) Section 3 residents. (1) A recipient may allow persons to self-
certify that they are a Section 3 resident as defined in Sec. 135.5
provided that the recipient conducts procedures to verify a sample of
self-certified Section 3 residents.
(2) A recipient may presume a person that can provide evidence that
they reside within a neighborhood, zip code, census tract, etc. that
has officially been identified by HUD is eligible to receive priority
consideration as a Section 3 resident absent evidence to the contrary.
(3) A recipient may require information verifying that a person
meets the definition of a Section 3 resident. Examples of evidence of
eligibility include but are not limited to: evidence of receipt of
Federal housing assistance; evidence of receipt of other Federal
subsidies or Federal assistance programs; Federal tax returns; proof of
residence in a neighborhood, zip code, census tract, or other area that
has officially been identified by HUD.
(4) A recipient shall impose sanctions upon individuals who make
false claims or representations regarding their income eligibility,
residence, or other factors in order to be determined a
[[Page 16538]]
Section 3 resident. In addition, the recipient will refer such
individuals to the HUD Office of Inspector General.
(c) Section 3 businesses. (1) A recipient may allow a business to
self-certify that they are a Section 3 business as defined in Sec.
135.5, provided that the recipient conducts procedures to verify a
sample of self-certified Section 3 businesses.
(2) A recipient may presume that a business meets the eligibility
criteria if the business provides evidence that it is located within a
neighborhood, zip code, or census tract that has been identified by
HUD; or if the business is able to provide evidence that it
substantially employs residents from neighborhoods, zip codes, or
census tracts identified by HUD, absent evidence to the contrary.
(3) A recipient may require information verifying that a business
meets the definition of a Section 3 business. Examples of evidence of
eligibility for priority consideration as a Section 3 business may
include: Federal tax returns for workers, owners, or businesses;
payroll data; employee-self-certification statements; articles of
business ownership; evidence that owners or employees received housing
or other Federal subsidies within 3 years from the date that the
business sought designation as a Section 3 business.
(4) A recipient shall impose appropriate sanctions upon businesses
that make false claims or representations regarding their eligibility,
business location, eligible employees, or other factors in order to be
determined a Section 3 business. In addition, the recipient will refer
such individuals to the HUD Office of Inspector General.
Sec. 135.17 Written agreements.
(a) General. Before disbursing any Section 3 covered financial
assistance to subrecipients that may administer all or a part of
Section 3 covered financial assistance on- behalf of a recipient, the
recipient must ensure that the parties enter into a written agreement
to facilitate compliance with the requirements of this part.
(b) Provisions in written agreements. The contents of the agreement
may vary depending upon the role the subrecipient is asked to assume on
behalf of the recipient, the type of Section 3 covered project or
activity that is to be undertaken, or the dollar amount of the
contract. Recipients are responsible for enforcing the provisions of
written agreements, including imposing sanctions upon subrecipients for
noncompliance. This section specifies the minimum provisions that must
be included in written agreements and contracts.
(c) [Reserved].
(d) [Reserved].
(e) Subrecipient agreements. Agreements between the recipient and
the subrecipient must:
(1) Describe the subrecipient's plan for implementing Section 3 and
meeting the numerical hiring and contracting goals; ensuring
eligibility of Section 3 residents and businesses; and monitoring
contractor compliance. This description must provide enough detail to
provide a sound basis for the recipient to monitor performance under
the agreement;
(2) Specify the duties set forth in this part that the subrecipient
will undertake;
(3) State that the subrecipient will incorporate the Section 3
clause, as provided in Sec. 135.19, into all contracts or
subcontracts, memoranda of understanding, cooperative agreements, or
similar legally binding arrangements, ensure that contractors and
subcontractors certify their compliance at the time of contract award,
and monitor parties for compliance, as appropriate;
(4) Specify other responsibilities as needed to ensure that the
subrecipient or contractor complies with all requirements at Sec. Sec.
135.23 and 135.25;
(5) Specify the particular records that must be maintained and the
information or reports that must be submitted in order to assist the
recipient in meeting its recordkeeping and reporting requirements for
Section 3; and
(6) Provide for a means of enforcement and describe the sanctions
for failure to comply with this part.
Sec. 135.19 Contracts and Section 3 clause.
(a) General. Before disbursing any Section 3 covered financial
assistance to contractors or subcontractors that may administer all or
a part of Section 3 covered financial assistance on- behalf of a
recipient, the recipient must ensure that the parties enter into a
contract to facilitate compliance with the requirements of this part.
(b) Provisions in contracts. The contents of the contract may vary
depending upon the dollar amount of the contract. Recipients are
responsible for enforcing the provisions of contracts, including
imposing sanctions upon contractors or subcontractors for
noncompliance. This section specifies the minimum provisions that must
be included in contracts.
(c) Contracts of $200,000 or above. Contracts of $200,000 or more
shall include the Section 3 clause at Sec. 135.19 in its entirety.
(d) Contracts less than $200,000. Contracts of less than $200,000
shall include provisions A, B, C, F, H, and M of the Section 3 clause
at Sec. 135.19.
(e) Where required, the following Section 3 clause shall be
included in contracts:
Section 3 Clause
A. The work to be performed under this contract, subcontract,
memorandum of understanding, cooperative agreement or similar
legally binding agreement, is subject to the requirements of section
3 of the Housing and Urban Development Act of 1968 (Section 3). The
purpose of Section 3 is to ensure, to the greatest extent feasible,
that training, employment, contracting, and other economic
opportunities generated by Section 3 covered financial assistance
shall be directed to low- and very low-income residents of the
neighborhood where the financial assistance is spent, particularly
to those who are recipients of government assistance for housing,
and to businesses that are either owned by low- or very low-income
residents of the neighborhood where the financial assistance is
spent, or substantially employ these persons.
B. The parties to this contract, subcontract, memorandum of
understanding, cooperative agreement, or similar legally binding
agreement agree to comply with HUD's regulations in 24 CFR part 135,
which implement Section 3. As evidenced by their execution of this
contract or subcontract memorandum of understanding, cooperative
agreement or similar legally binding agreement the parties certify
that they are under no contractual or other impediment that would
prevent them from complying with the requirements of 24 CFR part
135.
C. The contractor agrees to identify current employees on its
payroll when the contract or subcontract was awarded who will be
working on the Section 3 covered project or activity and certify
that any vacant employment opportunities, including training
positions, that are filled:
1. After the contractor is selected; and
2. With persons other than those that meet the definition of a
Section 3 resident, were not filled to circumvent the contractor's
Section 3 obligations.
D. The contractor agrees to maintain records documenting Section
3 residents that were hired to work on previous Section 3 covered
projects or activities that were retained by the contractor for
subsequent Section 3 covered projects or activities.
E. The contractor agrees to post signs advertising new
employment, training, or subcontracting opportunities that will be
available as a result of the Section 3 covered projects and
activities in conspicuous places at the work site where potential
applicants can review them.
F. The contractor agrees to hire, to the greatest extent
feasible, Section 3 residents as 30 percent of new hires, or provide
written justification to the recipient that is consistent with Sec.
135.7(b)(4), describing why it was unable to meet minimum numerical
hiring
[[Page 16539]]
goals, despite its efforts to comply with the provisions of this
clause.
G. The contractor agrees that in order for a Section 3 resident
to be counted as a new hire, the resident must work a minimum of 50
percent of the average staff hours worked for the category of work
for which they were hired throughout the duration of time that the
category of work is performed on the covered project.
H. The contractor agrees to award, to the greatest extent
feasible, 10 percent of the total dollar amount of subsequent
subcontracts awarded in connection with the Section 3 covered
project or activity to Section 3 businesses, or provide written
justification that is consistent with Sec. 135.7(b)(4) describing
why it was unable to meet that goal, despite their efforts to comply
with the provisions of this clause.
I. The contractor agrees to notify Section 3 residents and
businesses about the availability of new employment, training, or
contracting opportunities created as a result of the receipt of
Section 3 covered financial assistance, as stipulated by the
awarding agency.
J. The contractor agrees to verify the eligibility of
prospective Section 3 residents and businesses for employment,
training, or subcontracting opportunities, in accordance with the
recipient's policies and procedures.
K. The contractor agrees to provide priority consideration to
eligible residents and businesses in accordance with 24 CFR 135.37
or 24 CFR 135.57, as applicable.
L. The contractor agrees to notify potential bidders on
subcontracts that are associated with Section 3 covered projects and
activities about the requirements of Section 3, and include this
Section 3 clause in its entirety into every subcontract awarded.
M. The contractor agrees to impose sanctions upon any
subcontractor that has violated the requirements of this clause in
accordance with the awarding agency's Section 3 policies and
procedures.
N. The contractor agrees to comply with all monitoring,
reporting, recordkeeping, and other procedures specified by the
awarding agency.
O. If applicable, the contractor agrees to notify each labor
organization or representative of workers with which the recipient,
subrecipient, or contractor has a collective bargaining or similar
labor agreement or other understanding, if any, about its obligation
to comply with the requirements of Section 3 and ensure that new
collective bargaining or similar labor agreements provide
employment, registered apprenticeship, training, subcontracting, or
other economic opportunities to Section 3 residents and businesses,
and to post notices in conspicuous places at the work site advising
the labor union, organization, or workers' representative of the
contractor's commitments under this part.
P. Failure to comply with this clause shall result in the
imposition of sanctions. Appropriate sanctions for noncompliance may
include: Requiring additional certifications or assurances of
compliance; termination or cancelation of the contract, subcontract,
memorandum of understanding, cooperative agreement, or similar
legally binding arrangement for default; refraining from entering
into subsequent contracts, subcontracts, memoranda of understanding,
cooperative agreements, or similar legally binding arrangement;
repayment of funds, and withholding a portion of contract awards,
subcontracts, memoranda of understanding, cooperative agreements, or
similar legally binding arrangements.
Sec. 135.21 Certifications of compliance.
(a) Annual certifications.--(1) Recipient certifications. (i) A
recipient shall submit annual certifications to HUD documenting its
acknowledgement of obligations to comply with the requirements of this
part in its own operations and those of its subrecipients, contractors,
subcontractors, and others that may be administering Section 3 covered
financial assistance on behalf of the recipient. Certifications shall
be submitted in accordance with the requirements of the regulation or
NOFA governing the program under which the Section 3 covered financial
assistance is provided.
(ii) HUD may require recipients to provide additional documentation
or assurances as evidence of compliance with the requirements of this
part prior to the acceptance of annual certifications. HUD may refuse
to accept any certification when there are reasonable grounds to
believe that the recipient is not in compliance with the requirements
of this part.
(2) Subrecipients, contractors and subcontractors. (i)
Subrecipients, contractors, and subcontractors shall certify their
compliance by entering into a written agreement with the recipient, as
specified at Sec. 135.17 or contract that contains the Section 3
clause provided at Sec. 135.19.
(ii) [Reserved]
(b) [Reserved]
Sec. 135.23 Reporting requirements.
(a) Recipient reporting requirements. (1) Each recipient shall
submit to HUD an annual report documenting the recipient's compliance
with Section 3 in such form and with such information as HUD may
request. The purpose of the report is to summarize efforts undertaken
by the recipient and accomplishments (or lack thereof) towards meeting
the employment and contracting goals set forth at Sec. 135.11.
(i) The report will include an accounting of all new hires, as
defined at Sec. 135.5, and Section 3 new hires employed as a result of
the expenditure of Section 3 covered financial assistance in a manner
that allows HUD to determine if the minimum numerical goal for
employment was met during the reporting period.
(ii) The report will also account for the total dollar amount of
contracts awarded as a result of the expenditure of Section 3 covered
financial assistance during the reporting period, and the dollar amount
of those contracts that were awarded to Section 3 businesses in a
manner that allows HUD to determine if the minimum numerical goal for
contracting was met.
(iii) The report must include a written justification consistent
with Sec. 135.7(b)(4) if a recipient failed to meet the minimum
numerical goals during the reporting period.
(2) Only recipients are required to submit Section 3 annual reports
to HUD. HUD will not accept reports from subrecipients, contractors, or
subcontractors administering Section 3 covered financial assistance on
behalf of a recipient.
(b) Reporting periods. Unless otherwise indicated, a recipient's
reporting period shall coincide with their local program of fiscal
year.
(c) Report due dates. (1) Unless otherwise indicated, all Section 3
annual reports shall be submitted to HUD's Office of Fair Housing and
Equal Opportunity. Where the program providing the Section 3 covered
assistance requires submission of an annual performance report, the
Section 3 report will be submitted with that annual performance report.
If the program providing the Section 3 covered assistance does not
require an annual performance report, the Section 3 report is to be
submitted by January 10 of each year or within 10 days of project
completion, whichever is earlier.
(2) HUD may grant an extension of the due date for a Section 3
annual report for good reason based on a recipient's demonstration of
the inability, through no fault of its own, to meet the reporting due
date.
(d) Electronic submission. Unless otherwise specified, Section 3
annual reports shall be submitted electronically through online
reporting systems as specified by HUD.
(e) Data collection. Data presented in a Section 3 annual report
shall be used to make determinations regarding the recipient's efforts
to ensure compliance with the requirements of Section 3 in its own
operations, and those of its subrecipients, contractors, or
subcontractors that may be administering Section 3 covered financial
assistance on behalf of the recipient. Data from Section 3 annual
reports may be used to produce reports for the Secretary, for the
Executive Branch, Congress, housing professionals, the general public,
and
[[Page 16540]]
others that may benefit from the information provided in such reports.
(f) Sanctions for delinquent reports. (1) Recipients that fail to
submit Section 3 annual reports by the reporting due date may be
sanctioned in accordance with the requirements of the regulation or
NOFA governing the program under which the Section 3 covered financial
assistance is provided.
(2) Continuing failure to submit Section 3 annual reports may
result in HUD denying or withholding HUD financial assistance.
(g) Subrecipient reporting. A state or county recipient that
distributes Section 3 covered financial assistance to subrecipients
shall compile data regarding compliance with the requirements of this
regulation in its own operations, and in the operations of its
subrecipients, contractors, and subcontractors into one annual report
to HUD in a manner that allows HUD to make an accurate determination
regarding the State or county recipient's efforts to ensure compliance
during the reporting period. Subrecipients are not required to submit
annual reports directly to HUD.
(h) Availability of Section 3 reports. All Section 3 annual reports
submitted to HUD in accordance with the requirements of this part will
be made available to the public upon request.
Sec. 135.25 Recordkeeping and access to records.
HUD shall have access to all records, reports, documents,
contracts, or other items that are maintained by a recipient to
demonstrate compliance with the requirements of this part, in the
recipient's own operations or those of its subrecipients, contractors,
or subcontractors. These records include, but are not limited to:
Section 3 policies, procedures, and other guidance materials; lists of
Section 3 residents and businesses; evidence of efforts to notify
Section 3 residents and businesses about the availability of employment
training, contracting, or other economic opportunities; payroll data or
other similar documentation verifying new hires; copies of Section 3
contracts, clauses, and assurances; evidence of efforts taken by
contractors or subcontractors to comply with the terms of the Section 3
clause and efforts taken to reach the minimum numerical goals; and
other data, evidence or materials deemed by HUD as demonstrating
compliance with the requirements of this part.
Sec. 135.27 Sanctions for noncompliance.
Sanctions imposed on recipients that fail to comply with any of the
requirements of this part shall be in accordance with the requirements
and procedures concerning the imposition of sanctions or resolutions
set forth in the regulations governing the program under which the
Section 3 financial assistance is provided. Appropriate sanctions for
noncompliance may, depending on the regulation governing the program
under which the Section 3 financial assistance was provided, include:
requiring additional certifications or assurances of compliance;
repayment of HUD financial assistance; ineligibility for HUD financial
assistance; withholding HUD financial assistance; or suspension,
debarment, or limited denial of participation in HUD programs pursuant
to 2 CFR part 2424 where appropriate.
Sec. 135.29 Other Federal requirements.
Compliance with Section 3 and the regulations of this part does not
supersede other Federal requirements that may be applicable to the
execution of HUD programs.
(a) Federal labor standards provisions. Certain construction
contracts are subject to compliance with the requirement to pay
prevailing wages determined under the Davis-Bacon Act and with
implementing DOL regulations, including those at 29 CFR parts 1, 3 and
5. Additionally, maintenance activities on public housing developments
are subject to compliance with the requirement to pay prevailing wage
rates, as determined or adopted by HUD, for maintenance laborers and
mechanics engaged in this work.
(b) Use of apprentices. Apprentices and trainees will be permitted
to work at less than the predetermined rate for the work they perform
when they are employed pursuant to a bona fide apprenticeship program
registered with the DOL Office of Apprenticeship, or a state
apprenticeship agency recognized by that Office, or pursuant to a
trainee program approved by the DOL Employment and Training
Administration, under the conditions specified in DOL regulations at 29
CFR 5.5(a)(4). Apprentices and trainees may be utilized only to the
extent permitted under either DOL regulations or, for work subject to
HUD-determined or adopted prevailing wage rates consistent with HUD
policies and guidelines. The allowable use of apprentices and trainees
includes adherence to the wage rates and ratios of apprentices or
trainees to journeymen set out in the approved program.
Subpart B--Additional Provisions for Public Housing Financial
Assistance
Sec. 135.31 Applicability.
(a) General. The requirements of Section 3 apply to training,
employment, contracting and other economic opportunities arising from
the expenditure of public housing financial assistance, as defined in
Sec. 135.5. This subpart communicates provisions to be implemented by
PHAs in addition to those set forth in subpart A.
(b) Scope of applicability. (1) The requirements of this subpart
apply to all new employment and training opportunities that are
generated as a result of the expenditure of public housing financial
assistance.
(2) The requirements of this subpart apply to all contracting
opportunities (including contracts for professional services) that are
funded with Section 3 public housing financial assistance, regardless
of whether the Section 3 project is fully- or partially-funded with
Section 3 covered financial assistance. Accordingly, if any amount of
Section 3 covered financial assistance is invested into Section 3
covered projects or activities, the requirements of this subpart apply
to the entire project.
Sec. 135.33 Public housing agency thresholds.
There are no thresholds for Section 3 public housing financial
assistance. The requirements of this subpart apply to Section 3 public
housing assistance provided to recipients, notwithstanding the amount
of the assistance provided to the recipient. The requirements of this
subpart apply to all subrecipients, contractors, or subcontractors
performing work in connection with projects and activities funded by
public housing Section 3 covered financial assistance, regardless of
the dollar amount of the contract or subcontract.
Sec. 135.35 Minimum numerical goals.
(a) Employment opportunities. (1) PHAs must employ, to the greatest
extent feasible, Section 3 residents as 30 percent of direct new hires
within the public housing agency (PHA). Employment opportunities are
not limited to those related to construction and rehabilitation and may
include, but are not limited, to the following employment
opportunities: management, administrative, accounting, food services,
case management, information technology, facilities maintenance,
janitorial, daycare, construction, etc.
(2) PHAs must direct their subrecipients, contractors,
subcontractors, and others that may be
[[Page 16541]]
administering Section 3 covered financial assistance on the PHA's
behalf to employ, to the greatest extent feasible, Section 3 residents
as 30 percent of its direct new hires.
(3) For a Section 3 resident to be considered a new hire by a
contractor or subcontractor, the Section 3 resident must work, during
its employment with the contractor or subcontractor, a minimum of 50
percent of the average staff hours worked for the category of work for
which they were hired throughout the duration of time that the category
of work is performed on the covered project.
(b) Contracting opportunities. (1) PHAs must award, to the greatest
extent feasible, to Section 3 businesses at least 10 percent of the
total dollar amount of all contracting opportunities generated from the
expenditure of Section 3 covered financial assistance.
(2) PHAs must direct their subrecipients, contractors,
subcontractors, and others that may be administering Section 3 covered
financial assistance on the PHA's behalf to award, to the greatest
extent feasible, to Section 3 businesses at least 10 percent of the
total dollar amount of all subsequent contracting or subcontracting
opportunities.
Sec. 135.37 Orders of priority consideration for employment and
contracting opportunities.
(a) General. (1) Priority consideration should not be construed to
be a quota or set-aside program, or an entitlement to economic
opportunities such as a particular position or contract.
(2) Section 3 residents must possess the same job qualifications,
skills, eligibility criteria, and capacity as other applicants for
employment and training opportunities being sought.
(3) Section 3 businesses must be selected in accordance with the
procurement standards of 24 CFR 85.36, including price, ability and
willingness to comply with this part, and other factors, to be
considered lowest responsible bidders on contracting opportunities
being sought.
(4) A PHA may give priority consideration to a Section 3 resident
or business if such resident or business is qualified for the
respective employment or contracting opportunity.
(5) A PHA must give priority consideration to a Section 3 resident
or business when that Section 3 resident or business is equally
qualified with other individuals or businesses to which the PHA would
offer employment or contracting opportunities.
(b) Order of priority consideration for Section 3 residents in
employment and training opportunities. A PHA, its subrecipients,
contractors, and subcontractors shall direct their efforts to provide
employment and training opportunities generated from the expenditure of
Section 3 covered financial assistance to Section 3 residents in the
following order of priority consideration:
(1) Residents of the public housing project or projects where the
Section 3 covered financial assistance is expended.
(2) Residents of other public housing projects managed by the PHA
that is spending Section 3 covered financial assistance.
(3) Section 3 residents participating in DOL YouthBuild programs.
(4) Other Section 3 residents in the Section 3 local area,
including individuals and families receiving Section 8 housing choice
vouchers.
(c) Order of priority consideration for Section 3 businesses in
contracting opportunities. A PHA, its subrecipients, contractors, and
others shall direct their efforts to award contracting and
subcontracting opportunities to Section 3 businesses in the following
order of priority consideration:
(1) Section 3 businesses that are 51 percent or more owned by
residents of the public housing project(s) where the Section 3 covered
financial assistance is expended; or whose full-time, permanent
workforce is comprised of 30 percent or more of residents of the public
housing project(s) where the Section 3 covered financial assistance is
expended.
(2) Section 3 businesses that are 51 percent or more owned by
residents of any public housing projects administered by the PHA; or
whose full-time, permanent, workforce is comprised of 30 percent or
more of residents of any public housing projects managed by the PHA.
(3) Grantees selected to carry out DOL YouthBuild programs.
(4) Any other Section 3 business in the Section 3 local area.
Subpart C--Additional Provisions for Housing and Community
Development Financial Assistance
Sec. 135.51 Applicability.
(a) General. This subpart communicates provisions that must be
implemented by recipients of Section 3 housing and community
development financial assistance in addition to those set forth in
subpart A. Section 3 applies to training, employment, contracting
(including contracts for professional services), and other economic
opportunities arising in connection with the expenditure of housing and
community development financial assistance that is used for projects
involving:
(1) Housing rehabilitation (including demolition);
(2) Housing construction; or
(3) Other public construction (including the demolition,
rehabilitation or construction of other public buildings, facilities,
or infrastructure).
(b) Exemptions. (1) The following is a list of some activities and
projects that are exempt from the requirements of this subpart. This is
not intended to be an all-inclusive list of activities that may be
exempt from the requirements of this subpart.
(2) Covered housing and community financial assistance used for
acquisition, routine maintenance, operations, administrative costs, and
project rental assistance contracts (PRAC) is exempt from the
requirements of this subpart.
(3) Indian tribes and tribally designated housing entities shall
comply with the responsibilities set forth in subpart A and in this
subpart. However, Indian tribes and tribally designated housing
entities that adopt, and are complying with, tribal employment and
contract preference laws (including regulations and tribal ordinances)
in accordance with Section 101(k) of Native American Housing Assistance
and Self-Determination Act of 1996 (NAHASDA) (25 U.S.C. 4111(k)) shall
also be deemed to be in compliance with this subpart. Indian tribes,
tribally designated housing entities, and other tribal entities that
are subject to the Indian preference requirements of Section 7(b) of
the Indian Self-Determination and Education Assistance Act (25 U.S.C.
450e) shall also be deemed to be in compliance with this subpart. The
requirements of this subpart apply to Indian tribes that have not
adopted tribal preference laws for employment and contracting in
accordance with Section 101(k) of NAHASDA, and Indian tribes, tribally
designated housing entities, and tribal entities that are not subject
to Indian preference requirements of Section 7(b) of the Indian Self-
Determination and Education Assistance Act, in the same manner as other
recipients of housing and community development financial assistance
set forth in subpart C of this part.
Sec. 135.53 Funding thresholds that trigger Section 3 compliance.
(a) Funding thresholds for recipients and subrecipients. (1) The
requirements of this subpart apply to recipients of housing and
community development
[[Page 16542]]
financial assistance that plan to obligate or commit an aggregate
amount of $400,000 or more in Section 3 covered financial assistance on
projects involving demolition, housing rehabilitation, housing
construction, or other public construction during an annual reporting
period.
(2) The $400,000 funding threshold is comprised of the combined
expenditure of all sources of housing and community development
financial assistance set forth in Sec. 135.5.
(b) Applicability of Section 3 requirements to individual projects.
(1) Where the thresholds set forth in paragraph (a) of this section are
met, the requirements of this subpart apply to all Section 3 projects
and activities that are funded with housing and community development
financial assistance, regardless of the specific dollar amount invested
into the Section 3 covered project or activity.
(2) The requirements of this subpart apply to the entire project
that is funded with Section 3 covered financial assistance, regardless
of whether the Section 3 project is fully- or partially-funded with
housing and community development financial assistance. Accordingly, if
any amount of Section 3 covered financial assistance is invested into a
project involving housing demolition, rehabilitation or construction,
or the rehabilitation or construction of public buildings, facilities,
or infrastructure, the requirements of this subpart apply to the entire
project, both HUD and non-HUD funded portions.
Sec. 135.55 Minimum numerical goals.
(a) Employment opportunities. (1) Recipients of housing and
community development financial assistance must direct its contractors
and subcontractors employ, to the greatest extent feasible, Section 3
residents as 30 percent of direct new hires. For a Section 3 resident
to be considered a new hire, the Section 3 resident must work, during
the resident's employment with the contractor or subcontractor, a
minimum of 50 percent of the average staff hours worked for the
category of work for which they were hired throughout the duration of
time that the category of work is performed on the covered project.
(2) Recipients of housing and community development financial
assistance must ensure, to the greatest extent feasible, that 30
percent of any new hires within the agency that will primarily work on
HUD-funded projects or activities involving demolition; housing
rehabilitation; housing construction; demolition, rehabilitation, or
construction of other public buildings, facilities, or infrastructure;
or construction and rehabilitation-related (professional service)
projects and activities are Section 3 residents. For example, these
positions may include electricians, plumbers, construction managers,
general laborers, consultants, accountants, and architects.
(c) Contracting opportunities. (1) Recipients of housing and
community development financial assistance must award, to the greatest
extent feasible, at least 10 percent of the total dollar amount of all
contracts to Section 3 businesses.
(2) Recipients of housing and community development financial
assistance must, to the greatest extent feasible, have its
subrecipients, contractors, and subcontractors that receive contracts
for Section 3 covered projects and activities award at least 10 percent
of the total dollar amount of all subsequent contracting and
subcontracting opportunities to Section 3 businesses.
Sec. 135.57 Orders of priority consideration for employment and
contracting opportunities.
(a) General. (1) Recipients of housing and community development
financial assistance and their subrecipients, and contractors shall
provide priority consideration to Section 3 residents and Section 3
businesses for new training, employment, and contracting opportunities
generated as a result of the expenditure of Section 3 covered financial
assistance.
(2) Priority consideration should not be construed to be a quota or
set-aside program, or as an entitlement to economic opportunities such
as a particular job or contract.
(3) Section 3 residents must possess the same job qualifications,
skills, eligibility criteria, and capacity as other applicants for
employment and training opportunities being sought.
(4) Section 3 businesses must be selected in accordance with the
procurement standards of 24 CFR 85.36 or 24 CFR 84.40, as appropriate,
including price, ability and willingness to comply with this part, and
other factors, to be considered lowest responsible bidders on
contracting opportunities being sought.
(5) Recipients of housing and community development financial
assistance and their subrecipients, and contractors may give priority
consideration to a Section 3 resident or business if such resident or
business is qualified for the respective employment or contracting
opportunities
(6) Recipients of housing and community development and their
subrecipients, and contractors must give priority consideration to a
Section 3 resident or business when that Section 3 resident or business
is equally qualified with other individuals or businesses that would be
offered employment or contracting opportunities.
(b) Orders of priority consideration for employment and training
opportunities. (1) Recipients of housing and community development
financial assistance that meet the funding thresholds set forth at
Sec. 135.53 shall direct their efforts to provide training and
employment opportunities generated from the expenditure of Section 3
housing and community development financial assistance, to Section 3
residents in the following order of priority consideration:
(i) Section 3 residents residing in the neighborhood or service
area where the housing and community development financial assistance
is spent;
(ii) Section 3 residents participating in DOL YouthBuild programs;
(iii) Section 3 residents residing in a neighborhood or service
area within the Section 3 local area that has been officially
identified by HUD;
(iv) Other Section 3 residents located in the Section 3 local area.
(2) Recipients of housing and community development financial
assistance may, at their own discretion, provide priority consideration
specifically to residents of public housing or recipients of other
Federal assistance for housing, including individuals or families
receiving Section 8 housing choice vouchers within the neighborhood
where work on the Section 3 covered project or activity is located.
(c) Orders of priority consideration for Section 3 businesses in
contracting opportunities. (1) Recipients of housing and community
development financial assistance and their subrecipients, and
contractors shall direct their efforts to provide contracting or
subcontracting opportunities generated from the expenditure of housing
and community development financial assistance to Section 3 businesses
in the following order of priority consideration:
(i) Section 3 businesses that can provide evidence, to the
satisfaction of the awarding agency, that a minimum of 75 percent of
previously hired Section 3 residents residing in the service area of
the project or neighborhood will be retained for the project.
(ii) Section 3 businesses that can provide evidence to the
satisfaction of the awarding agency that a minimum of
[[Page 16543]]
50 percent of on-the-job training or registered apprenticeship
opportunities will be provided to Section 3 residents in the
neighborhood or area to be served by the Section 3 project or activity.
(iii) Section 3 businesses that are located in the neighborhood or
service area where the Section 3 covered project or activity is
located, and a minimum of 30 percent of its permanent full-time
workforce is comprised of Section 3 residents residing in the
neighborhood or service area where the Section 3 covered project or
activity is located.
(iv) Grantees selected to carry DOL YouthBuild programs.
(5) All other businesses that are located in the Section 3 local
area that meet the definition of Section 3 business in Sec. 135.5.
Subpart D--Additional Provisions for Recipients of Competitively
Awarded Section 3 Financial Assistance
Sec. 135.71 Applicability.
(a) General.--(1) Competitively awarded assistance. The
requirements of this subpart apply to Section 3 covered financial
assistance competitively awarded by HUD.
(2) HUD Notices of Funding Availability (NOFAs). (i) All HUD NOFAs
announcing the availability of Section 3 covered financial assistance
will provide notification of the requirements of Section 3.
(ii) For competitively awarded public housing financial assistance
involving activities that are anticipated to generate significant
employment, training, contracting, or other economic opportunities,
regardless of the source or amount of the public housing financial
assistance, HUD's NOFA will include a statement advising that
successful applicants shall, to the greatest extent feasible, and
consistent with existing Federal, State, and local laws and
regulations, ensure that employment, training, contracting, or other
economic opportunities created as a result of the provision of
financial assistance be directed to Section 3 residents and businesses
consistent with the orders of priority consideration set forth at Sec.
135.37.
(iii) For competitively awarded housing and community development
financial assistance involving housing demolition, rehabilitation, or
construction, or the demolition, rehabilitation or construction of
other public buildings, facilities or infrastructure, HUD's NOFA will
include a statement acknowledging that if the award of competitive
financial assistance will result in the successful applicant receiving
and planning to obligate or commit Section 3 covered financial
assistance that exceeds the thresholds set forth at Sec. 135.53, the
grantee is required to ensure that employment, training, contracting
(including contracts for professional services), or other economic
opportunities generated as a result of the provision of Section 3
covered financial assistance that is competitively awarded be directed,
to the greatest extent feasible, and consistent with existing Federal,
State, and local laws and regulations, to Section 3 residents and
businesses.
(3) Exemption. HUD NOFA competitions that primarily use volunteer
labor, sweat equity, homeowners, or other beneficiaries to carryout
construction or rehabilitation projects or activities are exempt from
complying with the requirements of this subpart.
(b) [Reserved]
Sec. 135.73 Applicant selection criteria.
Where not otherwise precluded by statute, and where applicable, in
the evaluation of applications for the award of assistance,
consideration shall be given to the extent to which an applicant has
described in their applications their plans to train and employ Section
3 residents and contract with Section 3 business concerns in
furtherance of the proposed activities. The program NOFAs for which
Section 3 is applicable will include information regarding how Section
3 activities will be considered in rating the application.
Sec. 135.75 Section 3 compliance for NOFA grantees.
(a) Certifications of compliance with this part. Successful
applicants must certify that they will comply with the requirements set
forth in this part. A HUD office that awards Section 3 covered
financial assistance may require execution of a certification that
reflects the requirements and goals of the Section 3 covered financial
assistance. The Assistant Secretary for the program office will accept
an applicant's certification absent evidence to the contrary.
(b) Monitoring and compliance. Successful applicants shall be held
accountable for complying with the requirements of this subpart;
implementing strategies described in narrative statements; meeting
annual reporting requirements; and will be subject to monitoring at the
discretion of HUD.
Sec. 135.77 Resolution of outstanding Section 3 matters.
Applicants that have received a letter of finding from HUD
identifying noncompliance with Section 3 or that have received a
sanction from HUD for noncompliance with Section 3, which has not been
resolved to HUD's satisfaction before the application deadline, are
ineligible to apply for competitive HUD funding. HUD will determine if
actions taken to resolve the letter of findings or sanction taken
before the deadline are sufficient to resolve the matter.
Subpart E--Enforcement
Sec. 135.91 Cooperation in achieving compliance.
(a) General. HUD recognizes that the success of ensuring that
Section 3 residents and Section 3 businesses have the opportunity to
benefit from employment, training, contracting, and other economic
opportunities generated from Section 3 covered financial assistance
depends on the cooperation and assistance of recipients and their
subrecipients, contractors, and subcontractors. Accordingly, all
recipients shall fully and promptly cooperate with monitoring reviews,
compliance reviews, or complaint investigations undertaken by HUD.
(b) Records of compliance. Each recipient shall maintain adequate
records demonstrating compliance with Section 3 in its own operations
and those of its subrecipients, contractors, and subcontractors,
consistent with Sec. 135.25. Recipients shall submit to HUD timely,
complete and accurate data at such times, in specified formats, and
containing information determined by HUD to be necessary to ascertain
whether the recipient has complied with this subpart.
Sec. 135.93 Conduct of investigations.
(a) Periodic compliance reviews. The Assistant Secretary or
designee may periodically review the practices of recipients to
determine whether they are complying with this part and where he or she
has a reasonable basis to do so may conduct on-site or remote reviews.
Such basis may include any evidence that a problem exists or that
programmatic matters exist that justify investigation in selected
circumstances. The Assistant Secretary or designee shall initiate
compliance reviews by sending to the recipient a letter advising the
recipient of the practices to be reviewed; the programs affected by the
review; and the opportunity, at any time prior to receipt of a final
determination, to make a documentary or other submission that explains,
validates, or otherwise addresses the practices under review. In
addition, normal program compliance reviews and monitoring
[[Page 16544]]
procedures shall identify appropriate actions to review and monitor
compliance with general or specific program requirements designed to
effectuate the requirements of this part.
(b) Interdepartmental coordination. Monitoring and enforcement may
be carried out in coordination with the HUD program office that
provided Section 3 covered financial assistance to the recipient being
reviewed for compliance with Section 3.
(c) Investigations. The Assistant Secretary may conduct an
investigation whenever a compliance or monitoring review, Section 3
annual report, complaint or any other information indicates a possible
failure by a recipient to comply with this part, or that a recipient
failed to ensure compliance with this part by its subrecipients,
contractors, or subcontractors that may be administering Section 3
covered financial assistance on behalf of the recipient.
(d) Who may file a complaint. The following individuals and
businesses may file a complaint alleging noncompliance of the
requirements of Section 3 with the Assistant Secretary, personally or
through an authorized representative:
(1) Any Section 3 resident on behalf of himself or herself, or as a
representative of persons similarly situated, seeking employment,
training or other economic opportunities generated from the expenditure
of Section 3 covered financial assistance by a recipient, subrecipient,
or contractor, or by a representative who is not a Section 3 resident
but who represents one or more Section 3 residents;
(2) Any Section 3 business on behalf of itself, or as a
representative of other Section 3 businesses similarly situated,
seeking contract opportunities generated from the expenditure of
Section 3 covered financial assistance from a recipient, subrecipient,
or contractor, or by an individual representative of Section 3
businesses.
(3) The Assistant Secretary or designee shall hold in confidence
the identity of any person submitting a complaint, unless the person
submits written authorization otherwise, and except to the extent
necessary to carry out the purposes of this part, including the conduct
of any investigation, hearing, or proceeding under this part.
(e) When to file. Complaints shall be filed within 180 days of the
last occurrence of the alleged violation, unless the time for filing is
extended by the Assistant Secretary for good cause shown. For purposes
of determining when a complaint is filed under this paragraph (c) of
this section, a complaint mailed to HUD shall be deemed filed on the
date it is postmarked. Any other complaint shall be deemed filed on the
date it is received by HUD.
(f) Where to file a complaint. A complaint must be filed with the
Office of Fair Housing and Equal Opportunity, U.S. Department of
Housing and Urban Development, 451 7th Street SW., Washington, DC,
20410, or any FHEO Regional or Field Office, as stipulated by HUD.
(g) Contents of complaint. Each complaint must contain the
complainant's name and address, the name and address of the recipient
alleged to have violated this part, and a description of the
recipient's alleged violation in sufficient detail to inform HUD of the
nature and date of the alleged violation of this part. HUD may provide
assistance in drafting a complaint based on information received.
(h) Amendment of complaints. Complaints may be reasonably and
fairly amended at any time. Amendments to complaints, such as a
clarification and amplification of allegations in a complaint, or the
addition of other recipients may be made at any time during the
pendency of the complaint and any amendment shall be deemed to be made
as of the original filing date.
(i) Notification. The Assistant Secretary will notify the
complainant and the recipient of the agency's receipt of the complaint
within 10 calendar days.
(j) Preliminary investigation. (1) Within 30 calendar days of
acknowledgement of the complaint, the Assistant Secretary will review
the complaint for acceptance, rejection, or referral to the appropriate
Federal agency.
(2) If the complaint is accepted, the Assistant Secretary will
notify the complainant and the applicable HUD program office. The
Assistant Secretary will also notify the recipient of the allegations
and provide them an opportunity to make a written submission responding
to, rebutting, or denying the allegations presented in the complaint.
(3) The recipient may send the Assistant Secretary a response to
the notice of complaint within 30 calendar days of receipt. With the
agreement of the Assistant Secretary, an answer may be amended at any
time. The Assistant Secretary will permit answers to be amended for
good cause shown.
(k) Dismissal of complaint. If the investigation reveals no
violation of this part, the Assistant Secretary or designee will
dismiss the complaint and notify the complainant and recipient.
(l) Letter of finding. If no informal resolution of the complaint
or compliance review is reached, and the facts disclosed during a
compliance review or an investigation indicate a failure by the
recipient or its subrecipients or contractors to comply with the
requirements of this part in its own operations or to ensure the
compliance of subrecipients, contractors, or subcontractors that may be
administering Section 3 covered financial assistance on behalf of the
recipient, the Assistant Secretary will issue a letter of findings
within 180 calendar days of receipt of the complaint or culmination of
a compliance review. The letter of findings shall contain the
following:
(1) Preliminary findings of fact and preliminary finding of
noncompliance;
(2) The actions that must be taken to address the areas of
noncompliance within a specified timeframe;
(3) A notice that a copy of the Final Investigative Report of HUD
will be made available, upon request, to the recipient; and
(4) Provide complainants or recipients 30 days to respond to HUD's
findings and resolve or remedy findings of noncompliance identified
during the compliance review or investigation.
(m) Right to review of the letter of findings. (1) A complainant or
recipient may request that a complete review be made of the letter of
findings within 30 calendar days of receipt, by mailing or delivering
to the Assistant Secretary, Office of Fair Housing and Equal
Opportunity, U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, 451 7th
Street SW., Washington, DC 20410, a written statement of the reasons
why the letter of findings should be modified in light of supplementary
information.
(2) The Assistant Secretary will send by certified mail, return
receipt requested, or other similar mail services, a copy of the
request for review to the other party, if any. Such other party shall
have 30 calendar days to respond to the request for review.
(3) The Assistant Secretary will either sustain or modify the
letter of findings within 60 calendar days of the request for review.
The Assistant Secretary's decision shall constitute the formal
determination.
(4) If neither party requests that the letter of findings be
reviewed, the Assistant Secretary shall send a formal written
determination of noncompliance to the recipient and the appropriate
[[Page 16545]]
HUD program office that administers the Section 3 financial assistance
provided within 14 calendar days of the expiration of the time period
provided in paragraph (c)(1) of this section.
(n) Voluntary compliance time limits. If it has been determined
that the matter cannot be resolved by voluntary means within 30 days
HUD may proceed with sanctions as described at Sec. 135.27.
(l) Informal resolution of complaint investigations and compliance
reviews. (1) General. It is the policy of HUD to encourage the informal
resolution of matters. The Assistant Secretary may attempt to resolve a
matter through informal means at any stage of a complaint investigation
or compliance review.
(2) Objectives of informal resolution/voluntary compliance. In
attempting informal resolution, the Assistant Secretary will attempt to
achieve a just resolution of the matter and will take such action as
will assure the elimination of any violation of this part or the
prevention of the occurrence of such violation in the future.
(3) The terms of such an informal resolution shall be reduced to a
written voluntary compliance agreement and signed by the recipient and
the Assistant Secretary. Such voluntary compliance agreements shall
seek to protect the public interest, provide denied economic
opportunities to Section 3 residents and businesses, and may include
the provision of relief for those injured by the recipient's
noncompliance.
(o) Intimidatory or retaliatory acts prohibited. No recipient or
other person shall intimidate, threaten, coerce, or discriminate
against any person for the purpose of interfering with any right or
privilege secured by this part, or because he or she has made a
complaint, testified, assisted, or participated in any manner in an
compliance review, investigation or hearing under this part.
Dated: March 2, 2015.
Gustavo Velasquez,
Assistant Secretary for Fair Housing and Equal Opportunity.
[FR Doc. 2015-06544 Filed 3-26-15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4210-67-P