Implementation of the Privacy Act of 1974, as Amended; New System of Records, Rent Reform Demonstration, 17769-17772 [2015-07613]
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Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 63 / Thursday, April 2, 2015 / Notices
shared or accessed by HUD. All hardcopy materials, including completed
forms and electronic records on
transportable media, will be kept in
locked cabinets when not in use. In
addition, data on transportable media
will be encrypted. Records with PII will
not be printed. Records and the file will
be destroyed by the Urban Institute at
the completion of the study.
RETRIEVABILITY:
Records within the contact database
will be retrieved by name, home
address, telephone number, and
personal email address.
RETENTION AND DISPOSAL:
The retention and disposal
procedures will be in keeping with
HUD’s records management statutory
obligations as described in 44 U.S.C.
3101 and 3303. Records will be
maintained for a period not to exceed
five years. All PII associated with the
project will be destroyed by Urban
Institute and their subcontractors or
otherwise rendered irrecoverable per
NIST Special Publication 800–88
‘‘Guidelines for Media Sanitization’’
(September 2006) at the end of the
contract.
At the end of the contract, paperbased records that do not need to be
retained will be shredded and the
remainder of the files will be shredded
after the three-year retention period
required in the contract.
SAFEGUARDS:
Access to any server, security, storage,
backup, and infrastructure equipment is
monitored, restricted to only those with
a need-to-have system access, including
being secured by administrative
password and authentication methods.
All system users are required to sign a
confidentiality pledge to abide by
corporate policies and by HUD policies.
There are no paper-based records
associated with this study.
SYSTEM MANAGER(S) AND ADDRESS:
Carol Star, Director, Division of
Program Evaluation, Office of Policy
Development and Research, Department
of Housing and Urban Development,
451 Seventh Street SW., Washington,
DC 20410, Telephone Number (202)
402–6139.
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NOTIFICATION AND RECORD ACCESS
PROCEDURES:
For information, assistance, or
inquiries about the existence of records,
contact Donna Robinson-Staton, Chief
Privacy Officer, U.S. Department of
Housing and Urban Development, 451
Seventh Street SW., Room 4156,
Washington, DC 20410 (Attention:
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Capitol View Building, 4th Floor),
telephone number: (202) 402–8073.
Verification of your identity must
include original signature and be
notarized. Written request must include
the full name, Social Security Number,
date of birth, current address, and
telephone number of the individual
making the request.
CONTESTING RECORD PROCEDURES:
The Department’s rules for contesting
contents of records and appealing initial
denials appear in 24 CFR, Part 16.
Additional assistance may be obtained
by contacting: Donna Robinson-Staton,
Chief Privacy Officer, U.S. Department
of Housing and Urban Development,
451 Seventh Street SW., Washington,
DC 20410 (Attention: Capitol View
Building, 4th Floor), telephone number:
(202) 402–8073; or the HUD
Departmental Privacy Appeals Officers,
Office of General Counsel, Department
of Housing and Urban Development,
451 Seventh Street SW., Washington DC
20410.
RECORD SOURCE CATEGORIES:
The individual study participants in
the surveys will be recruited through a
variety of neighborhood-level
organizations, requesting voluntary
participation. The data will be gathered
from and supplied by a limited number
of in-depth interviews of some members
of the testing group, and the study
participants: including recent movers
and current housing searchers in large
scale cognitive testing.
The varied methods, designed to
reach out to diverse populations,
include:
• Media and advertising—A display
of promotional posters about the study
on buses in District of Columbia, flyers,
emails, and Facebook posting.
• Online presence—Web page hosted
for the study that explains its purpose,
incentives, the organization
implementing the study, and that
provides instructions for participation.
• Community partnerships—A
partnership to be establish with a
variety of different private and nonprofit
organizations, including rental
assistance housing counseling agencies,
community organizations, and
businesses to help promote the study
among their constituents.
• Snowball sampling—Referrals of
respondents of cognitive testing who
may be eligible.
SYSTEMS EXEMPTED FROM CERTAIN PROVISIONS
OF THE ACT:
None.
[FR Doc. 2015–07610 Filed 4–1–15; 8:45 am]
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17769
DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND
URBAN DEVELOPMENT
[Docket No. FR–5843–N–05]
Implementation of the Privacy Act of
1974, as Amended; New System of
Records, Rent Reform Demonstration
Office of the Chief Information
Officer, HUD.
ACTION: New System of Records.
AGENCY:
The Department’s Office of
Policy Development and Research
(PD&R) is proposing to create a new
system of records (SORN), the ‘‘Rent
Reform Demonstration.’’ The
Department’s Office of PD&R is
responsible for maintaining current
information on housing needs, market
conditions and existing programs, as
well as conducting research on priority
housing and community development
issues. The Rent Reform Demonstration
is a randomized controlled experiment
designed to test, at the national level an
evaluation of alternative solutions
designed to improve the current rent
subsidy model. The demonstration is
being implemented at several ‘‘Moving
to Work’’ (MTW) public housing
agencies (PHAs) in different parts of the
country. Pursuant to the federal law
authorizing MTW, Congress gave local
public housing agencies the opportunity
to design and test innovative policies to
improve the current rent subsidy
system. All MTW public housing
agencies have the authority to institute
new policies system-wide. The Rent
Reform Demonstration gives
participating MTW public housing
agencies the opportunity to adopt new
policies on a trial basis and to learn
from a careful evaluation whether they
achieve benefits for tenants and the
housing agency.
The overall objective of the Rent
Reform Demonstration is to compare the
current rent structure of the Housing
Choice Voucher (HCV) program to the
alternate rent structure’s to examine the
impact on household employment,
earnings, hardship, health, and
homelessness; gain knowledge and
comprehension on the impact that the
alternative rent system has on HCV
program families; and to identify ways
to simplify and make less expensive the
PHA’s administrative processes. A more
detailed description of the new system
of records is outlined in the ‘‘Purpose’’
caption of this system of records notice.
DATES: Effective Date: The notice will be
effective May 4, 2015, unless comments
are received that would result in a
contrary determination.
Comments Due Date: May 4, 2015.
SUMMARY:
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Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 63 / Thursday, April 2, 2015 / Notices
Interested persons are
invited to submit comments regarding
this notice to the Rules Docket Clerk,
Office of the General Counsel,
Department of Housing and Urban
Development, 451 Seventh Street SW.,
Room 10276, Washington, DC 20410–
0500. Communication should refer to
the above docket number and title. A
copy of each communication submitted
will be available for public inspection
and copying between 8:00 a.m. and 5:00
p.m. weekdays at the above address.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Donna Robinson-Staton, Chief Privacy
Officer, 451 Seventh Street SW.,
Washington, DC 20410 (Attention:
Capitol View Building, 4th Floor),
telephone number: (202) 402–8073. [The
above telephone number is not a toll
free number.] A telecommunications
device for hearing-and speech-impaired
persons (TTY) is available by calling the
Federal Information Relay Service’s tollfree telephone number (800) 877–8339.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This
system of records will be operated by
HUD’s Office of PD&R and will include
personally identifiable information (PII)
pertaining to participants of the Rent
Reform Demonstration that will be
retrieved from the system by a name or
unique identifier. The new system of
records will encompass information on
program and services administered by
the Department. Publication of this
notice allows the Department to satisfy
its reporting requirement and keep an
up-to-date accounting of its system of
records publications. The new system of
records will incorporate Federal privacy
requirements and Department’s policy
requirements. The Privacy Act provides
individuals with certain safeguards
against an invasion of personal privacy
by requiring Federal agencies to protect
records contained in an agency system
of records from unauthorized
disclosure, by ensuring that information
is current and collected only for its
intended use, and by providing
adequate safeguards to prevent misuse
of such information. Additionally, this
notice demonstrates the Department’s
focus on industry best practices to
protect the personal privacy of the
individuals covered by this system of
records notice.
This notice states the name and
location of the record system, the
authority for and manner of its
operations, the categories of individuals
that it covers, the type of records that it
contains, the sources of the information
for the records, the routine uses made of
the records and the type of exemptions
in place for the records. In addition, this
notice includes the business addresses
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ADDRESSES:
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of Department officials’ who will inform
interested persons of the procedures
whereby they may gain access to and/
or request amendments to records
pertaining to them.
This publication does meet the SORN
threshold requirements pursuant to the
Privacy Act and OMB Circular A–130,
and a report was submitted to the Office
of Management and Budget (OMB), the
Senate Committee on Homeland
Security and Governmental Affairs, and
the House Committee on Government
Reform as instructed by Paragraph 4c of
Appendix l to OMB Circular No. A–130,
‘‘Federal Agencies Responsibilities for
Maintaining Records About
Individuals,’’ July 25, 1994 (59 FR
37914).
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 552a; 88 Stat. 1896; 42
U.S.C. 3535(d).
Dated: March 27, 2015.
Rafael C. Diaz,
Chief Information Officer.
SYSTEM OF RECORDS NO.:
PD&R/RRE.05
SYSTEM NAME:
Rent Reform Demonstration.
SYSTEM LOCATION:
The Department of Housing and
Urban Development, 451 Seventh Street
SW., Washington, DC 20140; MDRC, 16
East 34 Street, 19th Floor, New York,
NY 10016 and MDRC, 475 14th Street,
Suite 750, Oakland, CA 94612–1900;
eVault, 14944 Pony Express Road,
Bluffdale, Utah 84065; Branch
Associates, Inc., 1628 JFK Boulevard,
Suite 800, 8 Penn Center, Philadelphia,
PA 19103; Bronner Group, 120 N La
Salle Street, Room 1300, Chicago, IL
60602; Quadel Consulting Corporation,
1200 G Street NW., Suite 700,
Washington, DC 20005; Urban Institute,
2100 M Street NW., Washington, DC
20037; and Ingrid Gould Ellen, New
York University, Robert F. Wagner
Graduate School of Public Service, 295
Lafayette Street, New York, NY 10012.
The storage and archival facility for the
Rent Reform Demonstration data files is
located at Datacenter/Windstream, 15
Shattuck Road Andover, MA 01810.
CATEGORIES OF INDIVIDUALS COVERED BY THE
SYSTEM:
The categories of individuals covered
by this system will include all
household members enrolled in the
Rent Reform Demonstration.
CATEGORIES OF RECORDS IN THE SYSTEM:
The categories of records in the
system will include the participants
name, home address, telephone
numbers, personal email address, Social
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Security Number, date of birth, marital
status, citizenship status, rental housing
assistance status and history, date of
birth and relationship code for minors,
Supplemental Nutrition Assistance
Program (SNAP) status, Temporary
Assistance for Needy Families (TANF)
status, income, savings level, debt level,
educational attainment, employment
status, childcare costs, health insurance
status, and employment impediments.
AUTHORITY FOR MAINTENANCE OF THE SYSTEM:
The authority for the collection of
records, and the maintenance of this
system is authorized by Sections 501–
502 of the Housing and Urban
Development Act of 1970 (Pub. L. 91–
609), 12 U.S.C. 1701z–1, 1701z–2.
PURPOSE(S):
The purpose of the Rent Reform
Demonstration SORN is to allow the
Department to collect, track, and study
information gathered on HCV program
participants, and to analyze the overall
effectiveness of existing programs and
policies to examine the impact on HCV
program families. In order to study the
sample of up to 9,000 families
participating in the Demonstration, it is
necessary to collect their contact
information and other personal
identifying information with their
consent so that the Department can
match study participants with various
forms of administrative data for the
purpose of conducting statistical
analysis and presenting aggregate
analysis of impacts of the alternative
rent model on the study sample. In
addition, the records collected through
this evaluation represent HUD’s effort to
assess and report to Congress on the
performance and impact of this
Demonstration. The Department is
conducting this study under contract
with MDRC and its subcontractors
(Branch Associates, The Bronner Group,
Quadel Consulting Corporation, and the
Urban Institute). The intent of the
demonstration is to gain a
comprehensive understanding of the
impact that the alternative rent system
has on families, as well as understand
the administrative burden on Public
Housing Agencies (PHAs). The Rent
Reform Demonstration will rely on
multiple data sources. The evaluation
will include a careful assessment of the
implementation, impacts, and cost of
the new policy already developed by
four PHAs in different parts of the
country. The project is a random
assignment trial of an alternative rent
system. Families will be randomly
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assigned to either participate in the
new/alternative rent system or to
continue in the current system. PHAs
currently participating in the MTW
Demonstration are being recruited to
participate in this demonstration. Data
collection will include the study sample
of up to 9,000 families that are part of
the treatment and control groups. The
work covered under this information
request is for the baseline survey. The
Rent Reform demonstration is
structured around a two-group random
assignment study. Using this design, up
to 9,000 households will be recruited
and randomly allocated to the program
group or control group, each of which
will include up to 4,500 households.
Four PHAs have agreed to participate in
this demonstration project: (1)
Lexington Housing Authority,
Kentucky; (2) Louisville Metro Housing
Authority, Kentucky; (3) San Antonio
Housing Authority, Texas; and (4)
District of Columbia Housing Authority,
District of Columbia.
The fundamental goals of the
proposed study are:
1. Increase work effort and reported
earnings of families
2. Serve more families
Ideally, the alternative rent model
would yield at least as much income to
the PHAs as the current system and
would allow administrative savings as
well. This would allow them to serve at
least the same number of families and
continue to meet the goal of preventing
(or reducing) homelessness and
minimizing rent burden. In addition, the
incentive to underreport income would
be reduced significantly. In order to
measure the impact of the alternative
rent model the Department needs to be
able to track the study sample of up to
9,000 families to obtain data related to
employment, earnings, and hardship
outcomes.
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ROUTINE USES OF RECORDS MAINTAINED IN THE
SYSTEM, INCLUDING CATEGORIES OF USERS AND
THE PURPOSES OF SUCH USES:
In addition to those disclosures
generally permitted under 5 U.S.C.
Section 552a(b) of the Privacy Act, all or
a portion of the records or information
contained in this system may be
disclosed outside HUD as a routine use
pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 552a(b)(3) as
follows:
1. To appropriate agencies, entities,
and persons to the extent that such
disclosures are compatible with the
purpose for which the records in this
system were collected, as set forth by
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Appendix I 1—HUD’s Library of Routine
Uses published in the Federal Register
(July 17, 2012, at 77 FR 41996);
2. To researchers for the purpose of
producing a dataset to be used to
support the Rent Reform Demonstration
and Impact Evaluation of the Rent
Reform Demonstration. The data
collection will specifically provide data
of the household’s characteristics to
describe the sample and ensure that the
two study groups are random, and
provide information that allows for the
initial triennial calculations to be
verified; and
3. To appropriate agencies, entities,
and persons when: (a) HUD suspects or
has confirmed that the security or
confidentiality of information in a
system of records has been
compromised; (b) HUD has determined
that as a result of the suspected or
confirmed compromise, there is a risk of
harm to economic or property interests,
identity theft or fraud, or harm to the
security or integrity of systems or
programs (whether maintained by HUD
or another agency or entity) that rely
upon the compromised information; and
(c) the disclosure made to such
agencies, entities, and persons is
reasonably necessary to assist in
connection with HUD’s efforts to
respond to the suspected or confirmed
compromise and prevent, minimize, or
remedy such harm for purposes of
facilitating responses and remediation
efforts in the event of a data breach.
POLICIES AND PRACTICES FOR STORING,
RETRIEVING, ACCESSING, RETAINING, AND
DISPOSING OF RECORDS IN THE SYSTEM:
STORAGE:
All data collected will be input and
stored in a secure database. Hard-copy
materials containing respondent
identifying information will be locked
up when not in use. All hard-copy
materials, including completed forms
and electronic records on transportable
media, will be kept in locked cabinets
when not in use. In addition, data on
transportable media will be encrypted.
Records with PII will not be printed.
Records and the file will be destroyed
by MDRC at the completion of the
study.
RETRIEVABILITY:
Records will be retrieved by social
security number, entity ID and/or
unique study identifier. Data will be
retrieved from the initial data files using
social security number, entityID, and/or
unique study identifier. After receiving
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huddoc?id=append1.pdf.
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17771
all data, another unique household ID
will be assigned to each household
known by the research team only (called
the SampleID); records will be pulled by
SampleID when possible.
SAFEGUARDS:
Access protections: Access to any
server, security, storage, backup,
security and infrastructure equipment
requires an administrative password.
These passwords are only available to
senior IT staff and never shared. MDRC
workstation and laptop configuration:
MDRC employees use as a work station
a standard laptop that is configured by
authorized members of MDRC’s IT
Group. Laptops include a fingerprint
scanner and application. Network
access passwords system: MDRC uses a
strong password system to control
access to its secure data transfer. An
application associates each employee’s
fingerprint with his/her network
password. Wireless Access: No wireless
access will be available to files, folders
or servers involved with this project,
except within MDRC’s offices. Screen
locking: MDRC’s IT department has
configured all MDRC computers to lock
after 10 minutes without use and
require a password or fingerprint scan to
unlock. MDRC confidentiality pledge:
All MDRC staff must sign a
Confidentiality Pledge to abide by the
corporate policies on data security and
confidentiality.
RETENTION AND DISPOSAL:
The retention and disposal
procedures will be in keeping with
HUD’s records management statutory
obligations as described in 44 U.S.C.
3101 and 3303. Records will be
maintained for a period not to exceed
five years. All PII associated with the
project will be destroyed by MDRC and
their subcontractors or otherwise
rendered irrecoverable per NIST Special
Publication 800–88 ‘‘Guidelines for
Media Sanitization’’ (September 2006)
at the end of the contract. At the end of
the contract, MDRC will destroy all
electronic and paper-based records with
PII unless otherwise instructed by HUD.
All incoming files will be accounted for
at the end of the project—deleted or
permanently archived per agreement
with HUD and with data providers.
SYSTEM MANAGER(S) AND ADDRESS:
Carol Star, Director, Division of
Program Evaluation, Office of Policy
Development and Research, Department
of Housing and Urban Development,
451 Seventh Street SW., Washington,
DC 20410, Telephone Number (202)
402–6139.
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NOTIFICATION AND RECORD ACCESS
PROCEDURES:
DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND
URBAN DEVELOPMENT
For information, assistance, or
inquiries about the existence of records,
contact Donna Robinson-Staton, Chief
Privacy Officer, U.S. Department of
Housing and Urban Development, 451
Seventh Street SW., Room 4156,
Washington, DC 20410 (Attention:
Capitol View Building, 4th Floor),
telephone number: (202) 402–8073.
Verification of your identity must
include original signature and be
notarized. Written request must include
the full name, Social Security Number,
date of birth, current address, and
telephone number of the individual
making the request.
[Docket No. FR–5696–N–15]
CONTESTING RECORD PROCEDURES:
The Department’s rules for contesting
contents of records and appealing initial
denials appear in 24 CFR part 16.
Additional assistance may be obtained
by contacting: Donna Robinson-Staton,
Chief Privacy Officer, U.S. Department
of Housing and Urban Development,
451 Seventh Street SW., Room 4156,
Washington, DC 20410 (Attention:
Capitol View Building, 4th Floor),
telephone number: (202) 402–8073 or
the HUD Departmental Privacy Appeals
Officers, Office of General Counsel,
Department of Housing and Urban
Development, 451 Seventh Street SW.,
Washington DC 20410.
RECORD SOURCE CATEGORIES:
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Data for this evaluation will be
gathered through a variety of methods
including informational interviews,
direct observation, surveys, and analysis
of administrative records. PHAs will
provide program participants records, as
well as information obtained through an
interview of voucher holders that
includes: (1) Output of random
assignment process data, and (2)
Responses provided to baseline
information form. Administrative data
will come from the participating PHAs’
data systems and HUD’s Inventory
Management System, also known as the
Public and Indian Housing Information
Center (PIC). This information will be
entered into MDRC’s on-line system.
SYSTEMS EXEMPTED FROM CERTAIN PROVISIONS
OF THE ACT:
None.
[FR Doc. 2015–07613 Filed 4–1–15; 8:45 am]
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Additional Clarifying Guidance,
Waivers, and Alternative Requirements
for Grantees in Receipt of Community
Development Block Grant Disaster
Recovery Funds Under the Disaster
Relief Appropriations Act, 2013
Office of the Assistant
Secretary for Community Planning and
Development, HUD. ACTION: Notice.
SUMMARY: This Notice provides a waiver
and alternative requirement for the State
of New Jersey’s tenant-based rental
assistance program funded through its
Community Development Block Grant
disaster recovery (CDBG–DR) grant
pursuant to the Disaster Relief
Appropriations Act, 2013 (Pub. L. 113–
2) (the Appropriations Act). In addition,
this Notice provides an alternative
requirement for Major (Covered)
Infrastructure Projects funded by
grantees receiving an allocation for
disasters occurring in 2013 under the
Appropriations Act. This Notice also
modifies a requirement for Disaster
Recovery Grant Reporting System
(DRGR) reporting requirements for all
grantees receiving an allocation of
CDBG–DR grants pursuant to the
Appropriations Act.
DATES: Effective Date: April 7, 2015.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Stanley Gimont, Director, Office of
Block Grant Assistance, Department of
Housing and Urban Development, 451
7th Street SW., Room 7286, Washington,
DC 20410, telephone number 202–708–
3587. Persons with hearing or speech
impairments may access this number
via TTY by calling the Federal Relay
Service at 800–877–8339. Facsimile
inquiries may be sent to Mr. Gimont at
202–401–2044. (Except for the ‘‘800’’
number, these telephone numbers are
not toll-free.) Email inquiries may be
sent to disaster_recovery@hud.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
AGENCY:
Table of Contents
I. Background
II. Applicable Rules, Statutes, Waivers, and
Alternative Requirements
III. Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance
IV. Finding of No Significant Impact
I. Background
The Appropriations Act made
available $16 billion in Community
Development Block Grant disaster
recovery (CDBG–DR) funds for
necessary expenses related to disaster
relief, long-term recovery, restoration of
infrastructure and housing, and
economic revitalization in the most
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impacted and distressed areas resulting
from a major disaster declared pursuant
to the Robert T. Stafford Disaster Relief
and Emergency Assistance Act of 1974
(42 U.S.C. 5121 et seq.) (Stafford Act),
due to Hurricane Sandy and other
eligible events in calendar years 2011,
2012, and 2013. On March 1, 2013, the
President issued a sequestration order
pursuant to Section 251A of the
Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit
Control Act, as amended (2 U.S.C.
901a), and reduced the amount of
funding for CDBG–DR grants under the
Appropriations Act to $15.18 billion. To
date, a total of $15.18 billion has been
allocated or set aside: $13 billion in
response to Hurricane Sandy, $514
million in response to disasters
occurring in 2011 or 2012, $655 million
in response to 2013 disasters, and $1
billion set aside for the National
Disaster Resilience Competition.
This Notice specifies a waiver and
modifies requirements for grantees in
receipt of allocations under the
Appropriations Act, which are
described within the Federal Register
Notices published by the Department on
March 5, 2013 (78 FR 14329), April 19,
2013 (78 FR 23578), May 29, 2013 (78
FR 32262), August 2, 2013 (78 FR
46999), November 18, 2013 (78 FR
69104), December 16, 2013 (78 FR
76154), March 27, 2014 (79 FR 17173),
June 3, 2014 (79 FR 31964), July 11,
2014 (79 FR 40133), October 7, 2014 (79
FR 60490), October 16, 2014 (79 FR
62182), and January 8, 2015 (80 FR
1039), referred to collectively in this
Notice as the ‘‘Prior Notices.’’ The
requirements of the Prior Notices
continue to apply, except as modified
by this Notice.1
II. Applicable Rules, Statutes, Waivers,
and Alternative Requirements
The Appropriations Act authorizes
the Secretary to waive, or specify
alternative requirements for, any
provision of any statute or regulation
that the Secretary administers in
connection with HUD’s obligation or
use by the recipient of these funds
(except for requirements related to fair
housing, nondiscrimination, labor
standards, and the environment).
Waivers and alternative requirements
are based upon a determination by the
Secretary that good cause exists and that
the waiver or alternative requirement is
not inconsistent with the overall
purposes of Title I of the Housing and
1 Links to the Prior Notices, the text of the
Appropriations Act, and additional guidance
prepared by the Department for CDBG–DR grants,
are available on the HUD Exchange Web site:
https://www.hudexchange.info/cdbg-dr/cdbg-drlaws-regulations-and-federal-register-notices/.
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[Federal Register Volume 80, Number 63 (Thursday, April 2, 2015)]
[Notices]
[Pages 17769-17772]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2015-07613]
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DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT
[Docket No. FR-5843-N-05]
Implementation of the Privacy Act of 1974, as Amended; New System
of Records, Rent Reform Demonstration
AGENCY: Office of the Chief Information Officer, HUD.
ACTION: New System of Records.
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SUMMARY: The Department's Office of Policy Development and Research
(PD&R) is proposing to create a new system of records (SORN), the
``Rent Reform Demonstration.'' The Department's Office of PD&R is
responsible for maintaining current information on housing needs,
market conditions and existing programs, as well as conducting research
on priority housing and community development issues. The Rent Reform
Demonstration is a randomized controlled experiment designed to test,
at the national level an evaluation of alternative solutions designed
to improve the current rent subsidy model. The demonstration is being
implemented at several ``Moving to Work'' (MTW) public housing agencies
(PHAs) in different parts of the country. Pursuant to the federal law
authorizing MTW, Congress gave local public housing agencies the
opportunity to design and test innovative policies to improve the
current rent subsidy system. All MTW public housing agencies have the
authority to institute new policies system-wide. The Rent Reform
Demonstration gives participating MTW public housing agencies the
opportunity to adopt new policies on a trial basis and to learn from a
careful evaluation whether they achieve benefits for tenants and the
housing agency.
The overall objective of the Rent Reform Demonstration is to
compare the current rent structure of the Housing Choice Voucher (HCV)
program to the alternate rent structure's to examine the impact on
household employment, earnings, hardship, health, and homelessness;
gain knowledge and comprehension on the impact that the alternative
rent system has on HCV program families; and to identify ways to
simplify and make less expensive the PHA's administrative processes. A
more detailed description of the new system of records is outlined in
the ``Purpose'' caption of this system of records notice.
DATES: Effective Date: The notice will be effective May 4, 2015, unless
comments are received that would result in a contrary determination.
Comments Due Date: May 4, 2015.
[[Page 17770]]
ADDRESSES: Interested persons are invited to submit comments regarding
this notice to the Rules Docket Clerk, Office of the General Counsel,
Department of Housing and Urban Development, 451 Seventh Street SW.,
Room 10276, Washington, DC 20410-0500. Communication should refer to
the above docket number and title. A copy of each communication
submitted will be available for public inspection and copying between
8:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. weekdays at the above address.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Donna Robinson-Staton, Chief Privacy
Officer, 451 Seventh Street SW., Washington, DC 20410 (Attention:
Capitol View Building, 4th Floor), telephone number: (202) 402-8073.
[The above telephone number is not a toll free number.] A
telecommunications device for hearing-and speech-impaired persons (TTY)
is available by calling the Federal Information Relay Service's toll-
free telephone number (800) 877-8339.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This system of records will be operated by
HUD's Office of PD&R and will include personally identifiable
information (PII) pertaining to participants of the Rent Reform
Demonstration that will be retrieved from the system by a name or
unique identifier. The new system of records will encompass information
on program and services administered by the Department. Publication of
this notice allows the Department to satisfy its reporting requirement
and keep an up-to-date accounting of its system of records
publications. The new system of records will incorporate Federal
privacy requirements and Department's policy requirements. The Privacy
Act provides individuals with certain safeguards against an invasion of
personal privacy by requiring Federal agencies to protect records
contained in an agency system of records from unauthorized disclosure,
by ensuring that information is current and collected only for its
intended use, and by providing adequate safeguards to prevent misuse of
such information. Additionally, this notice demonstrates the
Department's focus on industry best practices to protect the personal
privacy of the individuals covered by this system of records notice.
This notice states the name and location of the record system, the
authority for and manner of its operations, the categories of
individuals that it covers, the type of records that it contains, the
sources of the information for the records, the routine uses made of
the records and the type of exemptions in place for the records. In
addition, this notice includes the business addresses of Department
officials' who will inform interested persons of the procedures whereby
they may gain access to and/or request amendments to records pertaining
to them.
This publication does meet the SORN threshold requirements pursuant
to the Privacy Act and OMB Circular A-130, and a report was submitted
to the Office of Management and Budget (OMB), the Senate Committee on
Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs, and the House Committee on
Government Reform as instructed by Paragraph 4c of Appendix l to OMB
Circular No. A-130, ``Federal Agencies Responsibilities for Maintaining
Records About Individuals,'' July 25, 1994 (59 FR 37914).
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 552a; 88 Stat. 1896; 42 U.S.C. 3535(d).
Dated: March 27, 2015.
Rafael C. Diaz,
Chief Information Officer.
SYSTEM OF RECORDS NO.:
PD&R/RRE.05
SYSTEM NAME:
Rent Reform Demonstration.
SYSTEM LOCATION:
The Department of Housing and Urban Development, 451 Seventh Street
SW., Washington, DC 20140; MDRC, 16 East 34 Street, 19th Floor, New
York, NY 10016 and MDRC, 475 14th Street, Suite 750, Oakland, CA 94612-
1900; eVault, 14944 Pony Express Road, Bluffdale, Utah 84065; Branch
Associates, Inc., 1628 JFK Boulevard, Suite 800, 8 Penn Center,
Philadelphia, PA 19103; Bronner Group, 120 N La Salle Street, Room
1300, Chicago, IL 60602; Quadel Consulting Corporation, 1200 G Street
NW., Suite 700, Washington, DC 20005; Urban Institute, 2100 M Street
NW., Washington, DC 20037; and Ingrid Gould Ellen, New York University,
Robert F. Wagner Graduate School of Public Service, 295 Lafayette
Street, New York, NY 10012. The storage and archival facility for the
Rent Reform Demonstration data files is located at Datacenter/
Windstream, 15 Shattuck Road Andover, MA 01810.
CATEGORIES OF INDIVIDUALS COVERED BY THE SYSTEM:
The categories of individuals covered by this system will include
all household members enrolled in the Rent Reform Demonstration.
CATEGORIES OF RECORDS IN THE SYSTEM:
The categories of records in the system will include the
participants name, home address, telephone numbers, personal email
address, Social Security Number, date of birth, marital status,
citizenship status, rental housing assistance status and history, date
of birth and relationship code for minors, Supplemental Nutrition
Assistance Program (SNAP) status, Temporary Assistance for Needy
Families (TANF) status, income, savings level, debt level, educational
attainment, employment status, childcare costs, health insurance
status, and employment impediments.
AUTHORITY FOR MAINTENANCE OF THE SYSTEM:
The authority for the collection of records, and the maintenance of
this system is authorized by Sections 501-502 of the Housing and Urban
Development Act of 1970 (Pub. L. 91-609), 12 U.S.C. 1701z-1, 1701z-2.
PURPOSE(S):
The purpose of the Rent Reform Demonstration SORN is to allow the
Department to collect, track, and study information gathered on HCV
program participants, and to analyze the overall effectiveness of
existing programs and policies to examine the impact on HCV program
families. In order to study the sample of up to 9,000 families
participating in the Demonstration, it is necessary to collect their
contact information and other personal identifying information with
their consent so that the Department can match study participants with
various forms of administrative data for the purpose of conducting
statistical analysis and presenting aggregate analysis of impacts of
the alternative rent model on the study sample. In addition, the
records collected through this evaluation represent HUD's effort to
assess and report to Congress on the performance and impact of this
Demonstration. The Department is conducting this study under contract
with MDRC and its subcontractors (Branch Associates, The Bronner Group,
Quadel Consulting Corporation, and the Urban Institute). The intent of
the demonstration is to gain a comprehensive understanding of the
impact that the alternative rent system has on families, as well as
understand the administrative burden on Public Housing Agencies (PHAs).
The Rent Reform Demonstration will rely on multiple data sources. The
evaluation will include a careful assessment of the implementation,
impacts, and cost of the new policy already developed by four PHAs in
different parts of the country. The project is a random assignment
trial of an alternative rent system. Families will be randomly
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assigned to either participate in the new/alternative rent system or to
continue in the current system. PHAs currently participating in the MTW
Demonstration are being recruited to participate in this demonstration.
Data collection will include the study sample of up to 9,000 families
that are part of the treatment and control groups. The work covered
under this information request is for the baseline survey. The Rent
Reform demonstration is structured around a two-group random assignment
study. Using this design, up to 9,000 households will be recruited and
randomly allocated to the program group or control group, each of which
will include up to 4,500 households. Four PHAs have agreed to
participate in this demonstration project: (1) Lexington Housing
Authority, Kentucky; (2) Louisville Metro Housing Authority, Kentucky;
(3) San Antonio Housing Authority, Texas; and (4) District of Columbia
Housing Authority, District of Columbia.
The fundamental goals of the proposed study are:
1. Increase work effort and reported earnings of families
2. Serve more families
Ideally, the alternative rent model would yield at least as much
income to the PHAs as the current system and would allow administrative
savings as well. This would allow them to serve at least the same
number of families and continue to meet the goal of preventing (or
reducing) homelessness and minimizing rent burden. In addition, the
incentive to underreport income would be reduced significantly. In
order to measure the impact of the alternative rent model the
Department needs to be able to track the study sample of up to 9,000
families to obtain data related to employment, earnings, and hardship
outcomes.
ROUTINE USES OF RECORDS MAINTAINED IN THE SYSTEM, INCLUDING CATEGORIES
OF USERS AND THE PURPOSES OF SUCH USES:
In addition to those disclosures generally permitted under 5 U.S.C.
Section 552a(b) of the Privacy Act, all or a portion of the records or
information contained in this system may be disclosed outside HUD as a
routine use pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 552a(b)(3) as follows:
1. To appropriate agencies, entities, and persons to the extent
that such disclosures are compatible with the purpose for which the
records in this system were collected, as set forth by Appendix I \1\--
HUD's Library of Routine Uses published in the Federal Register (July
17, 2012, at 77 FR 41996);
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\1\ https://portal.hud.gov/hudportal/documents/huddoc?id=append1.pdf.
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2. To researchers for the purpose of producing a dataset to be used
to support the Rent Reform Demonstration and Impact Evaluation of the
Rent Reform Demonstration. The data collection will specifically
provide data of the household's characteristics to describe the sample
and ensure that the two study groups are random, and provide
information that allows for the initial triennial calculations to be
verified; and
3. To appropriate agencies, entities, and persons when: (a) HUD
suspects or has confirmed that the security or confidentiality of
information in a system of records has been compromised; (b) HUD has
determined that as a result of the suspected or confirmed compromise,
there is a risk of harm to economic or property interests, identity
theft or fraud, or harm to the security or integrity of systems or
programs (whether maintained by HUD or another agency or entity) that
rely upon the compromised information; and (c) the disclosure made to
such agencies, entities, and persons is reasonably necessary to assist
in connection with HUD's efforts to respond to the suspected or
confirmed compromise and prevent, minimize, or remedy such harm for
purposes of facilitating responses and remediation efforts in the event
of a data breach.
POLICIES AND PRACTICES FOR STORING, RETRIEVING, ACCESSING, RETAINING,
AND DISPOSING OF RECORDS IN THE SYSTEM:
STORAGE:
All data collected will be input and stored in a secure database.
Hard-copy materials containing respondent identifying information will
be locked up when not in use. All hard-copy materials, including
completed forms and electronic records on transportable media, will be
kept in locked cabinets when not in use. In addition, data on
transportable media will be encrypted. Records with PII will not be
printed. Records and the file will be destroyed by MDRC at the
completion of the study.
RETRIEVABILITY:
Records will be retrieved by social security number, entity ID and/
or unique study identifier. Data will be retrieved from the initial
data files using social security number, entityID, and/or unique study
identifier. After receiving all data, another unique household ID will
be assigned to each household known by the research team only (called
the SampleID); records will be pulled by SampleID when possible.
SAFEGUARDS:
Access protections: Access to any server, security, storage,
backup, security and infrastructure equipment requires an
administrative password. These passwords are only available to senior
IT staff and never shared. MDRC workstation and laptop configuration:
MDRC employees use as a work station a standard laptop that is
configured by authorized members of MDRC's IT Group. Laptops include a
fingerprint scanner and application. Network access passwords system:
MDRC uses a strong password system to control access to its secure data
transfer. An application associates each employee's fingerprint with
his/her network password. Wireless Access: No wireless access will be
available to files, folders or servers involved with this project,
except within MDRC's offices. Screen locking: MDRC's IT department has
configured all MDRC computers to lock after 10 minutes without use and
require a password or fingerprint scan to unlock. MDRC confidentiality
pledge: All MDRC staff must sign a Confidentiality Pledge to abide by
the corporate policies on data security and confidentiality.
RETENTION AND DISPOSAL:
The retention and disposal procedures will be in keeping with HUD's
records management statutory obligations as described in 44 U.S.C. 3101
and 3303. Records will be maintained for a period not to exceed five
years. All PII associated with the project will be destroyed by MDRC
and their subcontractors or otherwise rendered irrecoverable per NIST
Special Publication 800-88 ``Guidelines for Media Sanitization''
(September 2006) at the end of the contract. At the end of the
contract, MDRC will destroy all electronic and paper-based records with
PII unless otherwise instructed by HUD. All incoming files will be
accounted for at the end of the project--deleted or permanently
archived per agreement with HUD and with data providers.
SYSTEM MANAGER(S) AND ADDRESS:
Carol Star, Director, Division of Program Evaluation, Office of
Policy Development and Research, Department of Housing and Urban
Development, 451 Seventh Street SW., Washington, DC 20410, Telephone
Number (202) 402-6139.
[[Page 17772]]
NOTIFICATION AND RECORD ACCESS PROCEDURES:
For information, assistance, or inquiries about the existence of
records, contact Donna Robinson-Staton, Chief Privacy Officer, U.S.
Department of Housing and Urban Development, 451 Seventh Street SW.,
Room 4156, Washington, DC 20410 (Attention: Capitol View Building, 4th
Floor), telephone number: (202) 402-8073. Verification of your identity
must include original signature and be notarized. Written request must
include the full name, Social Security Number, date of birth, current
address, and telephone number of the individual making the request.
CONTESTING RECORD PROCEDURES:
The Department's rules for contesting contents of records and
appealing initial denials appear in 24 CFR part 16. Additional
assistance may be obtained by contacting: Donna Robinson-Staton, Chief
Privacy Officer, U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, 451
Seventh Street SW., Room 4156, Washington, DC 20410 (Attention: Capitol
View Building, 4th Floor), telephone number: (202) 402-8073 or the HUD
Departmental Privacy Appeals Officers, Office of General Counsel,
Department of Housing and Urban Development, 451 Seventh Street SW.,
Washington DC 20410.
RECORD SOURCE CATEGORIES:
Data for this evaluation will be gathered through a variety of
methods including informational interviews, direct observation,
surveys, and analysis of administrative records. PHAs will provide
program participants records, as well as information obtained through
an interview of voucher holders that includes: (1) Output of random
assignment process data, and (2) Responses provided to baseline
information form. Administrative data will come from the participating
PHAs' data systems and HUD's Inventory Management System, also known as
the Public and Indian Housing Information Center (PIC). This
information will be entered into MDRC's on-line system.
SYSTEMS EXEMPTED FROM CERTAIN PROVISIONS OF THE ACT:
None.
[FR Doc. 2015-07613 Filed 4-1-15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE CODE 4210-67-P