Value-Added Producer Grant Program, 26787-26811 [2015-10441]
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Vol. 80
Friday,
No. 89
May 8, 2015
Part IV
Department of Agriculture
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Rural Business-Cooperative Service
Rural Utilities Service
7 CFR Part 4284
Value-Added Producer Grant Program; Final Rule
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Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 89 / Friday, May 8, 2015 / Rules and Regulations
Rural Utilities Service
Effective Date: This final rule is
effective May 8, 2015.
Comments Due Date: Written
comments on this rule must be received
on or before July 7, 2015.
7 CFR Part 4284
ADDRESSES:
DATES:
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Rural Business-Cooperative Service
RIN 0570–AA79
Value-Added Producer Grant Program
Rural Business-Cooperative
Service and Rural Utilities Service,
USDA.
ACTION: Final rule; request for comment.
AGENCY:
The Rural BusinessCooperative Service (Agency) is
publishing this final rule for the ValueAdded Producer Grant (VAPG) program.
This final rule modifies the interim rule
for VAPG based on comments received
on the interim rule, which was
published on February 23, 2011, on the
Agricultural Act of 2014 (2014 Farm
Bill), and on a listening session, held on
April 25, 2014, on the VAPG provisions
in the 2014 Farm Bill.
Under the final rule, grants will be
made to help eligible producers of
agricultural commodities enter into or
expand value-added activities including
the development of feasibility studies,
business plans, and marketing
strategies. The program also provides
working capital for expenses such as
implementing an existing viable
marketing strategy.
The program provides a priority for
funding for applicants that are
Beginning Farmers and Ranchers,
Veteran Farmers and Ranchers, SociallyDisadvantaged Farmers and Ranchers,
operators of Small- and Medium-sized
Family Farms and Ranches, Farmer and
Rancher Cooperatives and applicants
that propose a Mid-Tier Value Chain
project. Additional priority points will
be given to Agricultural Producer
Groups, Farmer or Rancher
Cooperatives, and Majority-Controlled
Producer-Based Business Ventures
whose projects ‘‘best contribute’’ to
creating or increasing marketing
opportunities for Beginning Farmers
and Ranchers, Veteran Farmers and
Ranchers, Socially-Disadvantaged
Farmers and Ranchers, and operators of
Small- and Medium-sized Family Farms
and Ranches. Further, it creates two
reserved funds, each of which will
include 10 percent of program funds
each year, for applications that support
opportunities for Beginning and
Socially-Disadvantaged Farmers and
Ranchers and for proposed projects that
develop mid-tier value marketing
chains.
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SUMMARY:
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You may submit comments
on this final rule by any of the following
methods:
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
• Mail: Submit written comments via
the U.S. Postal Service to the Branch
Chief, Regulations and Paperwork
Management Branch, U.S. Department
of Agriculture, STOP 0742, 1400
Independence Avenue SW.,
Washington, DC 20250–0742.
• Hand Delivery/Courier: Submit
written comments via Federal Express
Mail or other courier service requiring a
street address to the Branch Chief,
Regulations and Paperwork
Management Branch, U.S. Department
of Agriculture, 300 7th Street SW., 7th
Floor, Washington, DC 20024.
All written comments will be
available for public inspection during
regular work hours at the 300 7th Street
SW., 7th Floor address listed above.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
USDA, Rural Development, Rural
Business-Cooperative Service, Room
4008, South Agriculture Building, Stop
3253, 1400 Independence Avenue SW.,
Washington, DC 20250–3253,
Telephone: (202) 690–1376, Email
CPGrants@wdc.usda.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Executive Summary
I. Purpose of the Regulatory Action
This action is needed in order to
implement the final rule for the ValueAdded Producer Grant (VAPG) program.
This final rule modifies the interim rule
for VAPG based on comments received
on the interim rule, which was
published on February 23, 2011 (76 FR
10122), on the Agricultural Act of 2014
(2014 Farm Bill), and on a listening
session, held on April 25, 2014, on the
VAPG provisions in the 2014 Farm Bill.
This action addresses these
modifications, as well as a number of
program clarifications, including but not
limited to, allowing seafood producers
to be able to apply under the locallyproduced value-added agricultural
product methodology and eligibility for
tribal entities. Finally, this action gives
the State Director discretion to award
priority points in the event that the
VAPG program is State-allocated in
accordance with 7 CFR 1940.593.
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II. Summary of the Major Provisions
1. Program. Section 6203 of
Agricultural Act of 2014, Public Law
113–79 provides priority for funding
applicants that are Veteran Farmers and
Ranchers. It further provides additional
priority points for Agricultural Producer
Groups, Farmer or Rancher
Cooperatives, and Majority-Controlled
Producer-Based Business Ventures
whose projects ‘‘best contribute’’ to
creating or increasing marketing
opportunities for Beginning Farmers
and Ranchers, Veteran Farmers and
Ranchers, Socially-Disadvantaged
Farmers and Ranchers, and operators of
Small- and Medium-sized Family Farms
and Ranches.
2. Applications. Applicants must
meet all program eligibility and
evaluation requirements to be
considered for funding. To be eligible to
compete for reserved funding and/or
receive priority points in the scoring
process, applicants must include
additional information in their grant
application for their respective priority
or reservation category (Beginning
Farmers and Ranchers, Veteran Farmers
and Ranchers, Socially-Disadvantaged
Farmers and Ranchers, operators of
Small- and Medium-sized Family Farms
and Ranches, Farmer and Rancher
Cooperatives, Mid-Tier Value Chain
projects, and projects that ‘best
contribute’ to new or expanded
marketing opportunities for Beginning
Farmers and Ranchers, SociallyDisadvantaged Farmers and Ranchers,
or operators of Small-and Medium-sized
Family Farms and Ranches) in
accordance with the VAPG program
regulation and any additional guidance
provided in the annual solicitation for
the program.
3. Scoring applications. The Agency
will score applications based upon the
VAPG program regulation and any
additional guidance provided in the
annual solicitation for the program.
Priority points will be awarded based on
the applicant’s qualification as one of
the identified priority categories.
Additional priority points will be
awarded to Agricultural Producer
Groups, Farmer or Rancher
Cooperatives, and Majority-Controlled
Producer-Based Business Ventures who
can demonstrate, based on their current
and projected composition of owners/
membership, how their project ‘‘best
contributes’’ to creating or increasing
marketing opportunities for Beginning
Farmers and Ranchers, Veteran Farmers
and Ranchers, Socially-Disadvantaged
Farmers and Ranchers, and operators of
Small- and Medium-sized Family Farms
and Ranches. Any reserve funds not
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obligated by June 30th will roll into the
general program fund. Applications will
be awarded in rank order until funds are
expended or the minimum score
threshold under the annual solicitation
is reached.
III. Costs and Benefits
The Agency estimates the cost to
complete an application to be
approximately $2,405, with changes
resulting from this action estimated to
amount to $70. The Agency has
identified potential offsetting benefits to
prospective program participants and
the Agency that are associated with this
action. The primary benefit of this
action is improving the availability of
funds to help agricultural producer
applicants in general, and priority
category applicants in particular, to
expand their customer base for the
products or commodities that they
produce.
Comments: While comments on the
interim rule have been considered, we
are issuing this final rule without
opportunity for prior notice and
comment on the changes made to
implement the 2014 Farm Bill. The
Administrative Procedure Act exempts
rules ‘‘relating to agency management or
personnel or to public property, loans,
grants, benefits, or contracts’’ from the
statutory requirement for prior notice
and opportunity for comment. 5 U.S.C.
553(a)(2). However, we invite you to
participate in this rulemaking by
submitting written comments, data, or
views before the noted deadline. We
will consider the comments we receive
and may conduct additional rulemaking
based on the comments.
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Executive Order 12866
This final rule has been reviewed
under Executive Order (EO) 12866 and
has been determined not significant by
the Office of Management and Budget
(OMB).
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
Title II of the Unfunded Mandates
Reform Act 1995 (UMRA), Public Law
104–4, establishes requirements for
Federal agencies to assess the effects of
their regulatory actions on State, local,
and tribal governments and the private
sector. Under section 202 of the UMRA,
Rural Development generally must
prepare a written statement, including a
cost-benefit analysis, for proposed and
final rules with ‘‘Federal mandates’’ that
may result in expenditures to State,
local, or tribal governments, in the
aggregate, or to the private sector of
$100 million or more in any one year.
When such a statement is needed for a
rule, section 205 of the UMRA generally
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requires Rural Development to identify
and consider a reasonable number of
regulatory alternatives and adopt the
least costly, more cost-effective, or least
burdensome alternative that achieves
the objectives of the rule.
This final rule contains no Federal
mandates (under the regulatory
provisions of Title II of the UMRA) for
State, local, and tribal governments or
the private sector. Thus, this rule is not
subject to the requirements of sections
202 and 205 of the UMRA.
Environmental Impact Statement
This final rule has been reviewed in
accordance with 7 CFR part 1940,
subpart G, ‘‘Environmental Program.’’
Rural Development has determined that
this action does not constitute a major
Federal action significantly affecting the
quality of the human environment, and
in accordance with NEPA of 1969, 42
U.S.C. 4321 et seq., an Environmental
Impact Statement is not required.
Executive Order 12988, Civil Justice
Reform
This final rule has been reviewed
under EO 12988, Civil Justice Reform. In
accordance with this rule: (1) All State
and local laws and regulations that are
in conflict with this rule will be
preempted; (2) no retroactive effect will
be given to this rule; and (3)
administrative proceedings in
accordance with the regulations of the
Department of Agriculture’s National
Appeals Division (7 CFR part 11) must
be exhausted before bringing suit in
court challenging action taken under
this rule unless those regulations
specifically allow bringing suit at an
earlier time.
Executive Order 13132, Federalism
It has been determined, under EO
13132, Federalism, that this final rule
does not have sufficient federalism
implications to warrant the preparation
of a Federalism Assessment. The
provisions contained in the rule will not
have a substantial direct effect on States
or their political subdivisions or on the
distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various
government levels.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (5
U.S.C. 601–612) (RFA) generally
requires an agency to prepare a
regulatory flexibility analysis of any rule
subject to notice and comment
rulemaking requirements under the
Administrative Procedure Act or any
other statute unless the Agency certifies
that the rule will not have an
economically significant impact on a
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substantial number of small entities.
Small entities include small businesses,
small organizations, and small
governmental jurisdictions.
Under section 605(b) of the
Regulatory Flexibility Act, 5 U.S.C.
605(b), the Agency certifies, that this
action, while mostly affecting small
entities, will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of these small entities for the
reasons discussed below. This
regulation only affects agricultural
producers that choose to participate in
the program. The Agency estimates that
approximately 75 percent of the
agricultural producers (operators of
Family Farms and beginning and
Socially-Disadvantaged applicants) that
utilize the program are considered small
entities, as defined by the Regulatory
Flexibility Act. Therefore, the Agency
has determined that this final rule will
have an impact on a substantial number
of small entities.
However, the economic impact of this
final rule on small entities will not be
significant. Many of the changes being
implemented in the rule are in response
to efforts to make the program more
accessible to applicants in general and
to smaller applicants in particular, as
well as to clarify and simplify program
requirements. In addition, a number of
changes are in response to comments
and concerns voiced by applicants and
other stakeholders during listening
sessions and public comment periods
for the proposed and interim rules. The
most significant changes in the rule that
affects small producers are the addition
of Veteran Farmer or Rancher applicants
as a priority category and the additional
priority points available for Agricultural
Producer Groups, Farmer or Rancher
Cooperatives, and Majority-Controlled
Producer-Based Business Ventures
whose projects meet the ‘‘best
contribute’’ provision from the 2014
Farm Bill. These changes do not have a
significant economic impact on small
entities because the cost to applicants as
estimated by the Agency in the
Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA) burden
package is approximately $70 per
applicant impacted by the changes. Of
these applicants, those addressing the
‘‘best contributes’’ priority are expected
to be comprised of larger entities. This
is based on determining which of the
estimated costs in the PRA burden
package would be incurred by the
applicants impacted by the
incorporation of the 2014 Farm Bill
provisions and the percentage of those
considered ‘‘small entities.
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Executive Order 13211, Actions
Concerning Regulations That
Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
Distribution, or Use
The regulatory impact analysis
conducted for this final rule meets the
requirements for EO 13211, which states
that an agency undertaking regulatory
actions related to energy supply,
distribution, or use is to prepare a
Statement of Energy Effects. This
analysis finds that this rule will not
have any adverse impacts on energy
supply, distribution, or use.
Executive Order 12372,
Intergovernmental Review of Federal
Programs
This program is subject to Executive
Order 12372, which requires
intergovernmental consultation with
State and local officials.
Intergovernmental consultation will
occur for the assistance to producers of
agricultural commodities in accordance
with the process and procedures
outlined in 7 CFR part 3015, subpart V.
Note that not all States have chosen to
participate in the intergovernmental
review process. A list of participating
States is available at the following Web
site: https://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/
grants/spoc.html.
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Executive Order 13175, Consultation
and Coordination With Indian Tribes
This rule has been reviewed in
accordance with the requirements of
Executive Order 13175, ‘‘Consultation
and Coordination with Indian Tribal
Governments.’’ Executive Order 13175
requires Rural Development to consult
and coordinate with tribes on a
government-to-government basis on
policies that have tribal implications,
including regulations, legislative
comments or proposed legislation, and
other policy statements or actions that
have substantial direct effects on one or
more Indian tribes, on the relationship
between the Federal Government and
Indian tribes or on the distribution of
power and responsibilities between the
Federal Government and Indian tribes.
In response to the 2008 Farm Bill
USDA participated in a series of formal
Tribal consultation sessions to gain
input by elected Tribal officials, or their
designees, concerning the impact of the
Interim rule on Tribal governments,
Tribal producers and Tribal members.
These sessions were intended to
establish a baseline of consultation for
future actions and informed USDA’s
policy development within the VAPG
program.
As a result of these consultations,
USDA developed and issued guidance
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on the eligibility of Tribes and Tribal
entities, incorporated this guidance into
application materials, and provided
updated guidance to USDA field staff,
Tribes and the general public on
required documentation.
As the 2014 Farm Bill contained no
additional requirements that had Tribal
implications or substantial direct effects
on one or more Indian tribes, on the
relationship between the Federal
Government and Indian tribes or on the
distribution of power and
responsibilities between the Federal
Government and Indian tribes, USDA
has determined that no further Tribal
consultation is necessary. However,
USDA will continue to work directly
with Tribes and Tribal applicants to
improve access to this program. The
policies contained in this rule do not
have Tribal implications that preempt
Tribal law. For further information on
USDA Rural Development’s Tribal
consultation efforts, please contact the
Agency’s Native American Coordinator
at aian@wdc.usda.gov or 720–544–2911.
Programs Affected
VAPG is listed in the Catalog of
Federal Domestic Assistance under
Number 10.352.
Paperwork Reduction Act
In accordance with the Paperwork
Reduction Act, the paperwork burden
associated with this Notice has been
approved by the Office of Management
and Budget (OMB) under the currently
approved OMB Control Number 0570–
0039. The Agency has determined that
changes contained in this regulatory
action do not substantially change
current data collection.
E-Government Act Compliance
The Agency is committed to
complying with the E-Government Act,
to promote the use of the Internet and
other information technologies to
provide increased opportunities for
citizen access to Government
information and services, and for other
purposes.
I. Background
On February 23, 2011 (76 FR 10090–
10122), the Agency published an
interim rule for the VAPG program. The
interim rule addressed comments that
the Agency received on the VAPG
proposed rule, which was published in
the Federal Register on May 28, 2010
(75 FR 29920), and clarified proposed
provisions. Changes were made
throughout the rule, with many of the
changes addressing definitions and how
awards are made, including assigning
priority. The interim rule became
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effective on March 25, 2011, and the
Agency provided a 60-day comment
period for the public to submit
comments on the interim rule.
On February 7, 2014, the Agricultural
Act of 2014 (referred to herein as the
2014 Farm Bill) was signed into law.
Among its many provisions were two
that affected the VAPG program. Section
6203 of the 2014 Farm Bill authorized
the Secretary of Agriculture to give
priority to:
• Veteran Farmers and Ranchers and
• Agricultural Producer Groups,
Farmer or Rancher Cooperatives, and
Majority-Controlled Producer-Based
Business Ventures whose projects best
contribute to creating or increasing
marketing opportunities for operators of
Small- and Medium-sized Farms and
Ranches that are structured as Family
Farms, Beginning Farmers and
Ranchers, Socially-Disadvantaged
Farmers and Ranchers, and Veteran
Farmers and Ranchers.
The Agency held a listening session
on April 25, 2014, to receive input from
interested stakeholders on how to best
implement these two provisions. There
were a total of two participants who
provided comments and suggestions.
All of the comments received on the
interim rule and during the listening
session are summarized in Section III of
this final rule. Most of the interim rule’s
provisions have been carried forward
into the final rule, although there have
been some additional changes. A
summary of major changes to the
interim rule are summarized below in
Section II.
II. Summary of Changes to the Final
Rule
This section presents the major
changes to the VAPG final rule. Most of
the changes were the result of the
Agency’s consideration of public
comments on the interim rule, during
the listening session (see Section III
below for specifics on comments
received), and on its own experience
with the program in order to improve
the implementation and administration.
The Agency is also making changes to
the rule due to statutory changes
resulting from the enactment of the 2014
Farm Bill (see Section IV below).
A. Definitions (§ 4284.902)
1. The following definitions have
been added:
• ‘‘Harvester’’ is defined to clarify
that Harvesters must be able to
document their legal right to access and
harvest the Agricultural Commodity that
is the subject of the value-added project.
It further conveys that individuals or
entities that merely glean, gather, or
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collect residual commodities that result
from an initial harvesting or production
of a primary Agricultural Commodity
are not considered Harvesters. This
clarification is necessary because the
definition in Interim Rule did not
contain sufficient information to guide
potential applicants in this category.
• ‘‘Steering committee’’—as a subset
of the Independent Producer
definition—is defined to clarify that
Steering Committees must be comprised
wholly of Independent Producers. This
clarification is necessary because there
was confusion among potential
applicants about the required structure
for this applicant type.
• ‘‘Veteran farmer or rancher’’ was
added to conform to the 2014 Farm Bill
definition that refers to 7 U.S.C. 2279(e).
2. The definitions of ‘‘financial
feasibility’’ and ‘‘branding’’ have been
removed because the terms are no
longer included in the regulation.
3. The following definitions have
been revised:
• ‘‘Agricultural food product’’ was
revised to include seafood products
customarily sold or consumed live, to
remedy the inadvertent exclusion of
producers of these products from
applying under the Locally-Produced
Value-Added Agricultural Product
methodology.
• ‘‘Agricultural producer’’ was
revised in response to public comments,
to clarify that individuals and entities
that may have ownership and/or
financial control without being engaged
in the day-to-day labor and management
will not be eligible for a value-added
producer grant. Agricultural Producer
was also revised to clarify that the
eligibility of Tribes and Tribal entities,
due to their unique structures, will be
determined by the Agency without
regard to day-to-day labor, management,
and field operation and right to harvest
status.
• ‘‘Agricultural producer group’’ was
revised to clarify that this type of
applicant must be a non-profit, to
alleviate on-going confusion about the
structure of this applicant type and to
conform to long-used examples.
• ‘‘Beginning farmer or rancher’’ was
revised to clarify the required
composition for reserved fund
applicants (100 percent of owner
members must be beginning farmers or
ranchers) and priority point applicants
(more than 50 percent must be
beginning farmers or ranchers).
• ‘‘Family farm’’ was revised to
remove the reference to the FSA
definition of family farm.
• ‘‘Farm- or Ranch-based renewable
energy’’ was revised to clarify how
generated energy must be utilized to
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meet the requirement to demonstrate
expanded customer base and increased
revenue returned to producers.
• ‘‘Feasibility study’’ was revised to
limit the definition to a description of
the document, rather than the means by
which the document is developed by
eliminating reference to qualified
consultant.
• ‘‘Independent producer’’ was
revised to clarify that a ‘‘majority’’ of
raw commodity owned by the applicant
is defined as more than 50 percent. The
definition was also revised to clarify
that Steering Committees must apply as
an Independent Producer and that a
program-eligible legal entity must be
established by the Steering Committee
prior to Agency approval of the grant
agreement. Further, it clarifies that
Harvesters must apply as an
Independent Producer and the
eligibility requirements for Harvesters
with regards to priority points and
reserved funding. Independent Producer
was also revised to clarify the eligibility
of Tribes and Tribal entities, with regard
to raw commodity ownership.
• ‘‘Marketing plan’’ was revised to
eliminate an unnecessary reference to
Qualified Consultant.
• ‘‘Medium-sized farm or ranch’’ was
revised to conform to the Economic
Research Service’s more commonly
used gross sales threshold of $1,000,000
for operators of medium-sized farms or
ranches.
• ‘‘Mid-tier value chain’’ was revised
in response to public comments to
include consumers as participants of an
eligible project.
• ‘‘Planning grant’’ was revised to
limit the definition to a description of
this type of grant, rather than the means
by which it is developed, by eliminating
reference to qualified consultant.
• ‘‘Product segregation’’ was revised
to ‘‘physical segregation’’ to be
consistent with the statutory language
within the value-added agricultural
product. In addition, an example of a
physical segregated product was
provided.
• ‘‘Small-sized farm or ranch’’ was
revised to conform to the Economic
Research Service’s more commonly
used gross sales threshold of $500,000
for operators of small-sized farms or
ranches.
• ‘‘Socially-disadvantaged farmer or
rancher’’ was revised to clarify
eligibility requirements for individuals
and entities in regards to priority points
and reserved funding as per the statute.
• ‘‘Value-added agricultural product’’
was revised to clarify that the
agricultural commodity (raw
commodity) must be produced in the
United States (including the Republic of
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Palau, the Federated States of
Micronesia, the Republic of the
Marshall Islands, or American Samoa).
B. Environmental Review (§ 4284.907)
The language of this section was
modified to indicate that working
capital awards are generally excluded
from the documentation requirements in
7 CFR part 1940, subpart G.
C. Applicant Eligibility (§ 4284.920)
1. Type of applicant. Since
information regarding the eligibility of
Tribes and Tribal entities had
previously been provided only in
Agency guidance through an
Administrative Notice, the Agency
added language indicating that Tribes
and Tribal entities may be eligible for
the program if they meet all
requirements. In addition, the
availability of additional guidance from
the Agency is noted.
2. Citizenship. Language providing an
exemption to the requirement that
applicants be comprised of at least 50
percent U.S. citizens or legally-admitted
permanent residents was deleted to
ensure that awards are not made to nonU.S. citizens or entities.
3. Multiple applications. Since
information regarding the limitation on
application submissions by affiliated
entities was previously included only in
the annual solicitation, the Agency
added language more specifically
defining ‘‘affiliated’’ entities and the
limitations on submission of multiple
applications.
D. Project Eligibility (§ 4284.922)
1. Purpose eligibility. While the
Interim Rule indicates that applications
containing ineligible costs totaling more
than 10 percent of Total Project Costs
will be deemed ineligible, it does not
discuss the status of applications
containing less than 10 percent
ineligible costs. Therefore, the Agency is
clarifying that applications containing
ineligible expenses totaling less than 10
percent of Total Project Costs must have
those expenses removed from the
project budget or replaced with eligible
expenses if selected for an award.
2. Working Capital. While the Interim
Rule provides requirements for working
capital grants, it does not include the
requirement of specific quantification of
the amount of commodity necessary for
the project. This information instead
was included in an Agency-developed
application template. The Agency,
therefore, is adding in this final rule the
requirement that applicants quantify
and document within their applications,
the amount of commodity required for
the project, as well as the amount they
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will produce, and the amount to be
procured from third-parties. This
change will assist the Agency in
determining whether applicants meet
the eligibility requirement to supply a
majority of the raw commodity needed
for the project.
E. Reserved Fund Eligibility (§ 4284.923)
1. A separate section was created for
Reserved fund eligibility to delineate
between it and Priority point eligibility,
and for ease in navigating the
requirements.
2. Clarification regarding the
eligibility of Independent Producer
Harvesters was included.
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F. Priority Point Scoring Eligibility
(§ 4284.924)
1. A separate section was created for
Priority point eligibility to delineate
between it and Reserved fund eligibility,
and for ease in navigating the
requirements.
2. Priority point eligibility status of
Harvesters was included.
3. Documentation requirements for
Veteran Farmers and Ranchers was
included.
4. The gross sales dollar threshold
was changed to conform to the
Economic Research Service’s more
commonly used definition.
5. Priority point eligibility was
changed to include a new Farm Bill
requirement providing points to
Agricultural Producer Groups, Farmer
or Rancher Cooperatives, and MajorityControlled Producer-Based Business
Ventures whose projects best contribute
to creating or increasing marketing
opportunities for operators of Smalland Medium-sized Farms and Ranches
that are structure as Family Farms,
Beginning Farmers and Ranchers,
Socially-Disadvantaged Farmers and
Ranchers, and Veteran Farmers and
Ranchers.
6. Administrator Priority Categories
was amended to give State Director
discretion to award priority points in
the event that the VAPG program is
State-allocated in accordance with 7
CFR 1940.593.
G. Ineligible Uses of Grant and Matching
Funds (§ 4284.926)
1. Use of funds for agricultural
production expenses. Based on
applications received and inquiries from
applicants, current language on the
prohibition of use of grant or matching
funds for expenses related to the
production of the raw commodity does
not include enough specific information
to fully inform prospective applicants.
Therefore, the Agency is adding
language to clarify that production
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planning, purchase of production
inputs, and delivery of raw commodity
is explicitly prohibited.
2. Use of funds to pay for applicantsupplied raw commodity. While the
Interim Rule is clear that applicants may
use grant funds to purchase raw
commodity (49 percent or less of the
total necessary) from third-parties, it
does not contain specific language
prohibiting the use of grant funds to
purchase commodity from the applicant
itself. It is the long-held position of the
Agency that applicants cannot use grant
funds to purchase raw commodities
from themselves. Thus, the Agency is
adding language to indicate that
applicants or applicant entities cannot
use grant funds to purchase raw
commodity from themselves, from
applicant-owned or affiliated entities, or
from member producers.
3. Use of funds to pay salaries for
applicant or applicant family member
was deleted from this section as it only
applied to use of grant funds. This
section refers to ineligible uses of both
grant AND matching funds. The
prohibition on use of grant funds for
this purpose and an explanation of the
allowability of use of applicant or
family member time as an in-kind
matching contribution is detailed in
§ 4284.925 and in § 4284.931.
H. Application Package (§ 4284.931)
1. System for Awards Management
(SAM) Registration. This registration
requirement became mandatory after
publication of the Interim Rule and the
Agency has only included it in the
annual solicitation. Therefore, language
is being added to clarify that all
applicants must be registered in SAM.
2. Use of Grant and Matching Funds.
The Interim Rule indicates that grant
funds and matching funds are subject to
the same use restrictions. However,
there are two exceptions in
§ 4284.925(a) and (b). For both planning
and working capital grants, grant funds
cannot be used to pay applicants or
family members for their time spent on
the project. But, appropriately-valued
applicant or family member time up to
a maximum of 25 percent of Total
Project Costs can be used as an in-kind
matching contribution. Similarly, for
working capital grants, grant funds
cannot be used to pay the applicant or
affiliated parties for raw commodity to
be used in project. However, the raw
commodity can be used as in-kind
match. Therefore the Agency has
revised this section to reflect this
change.
3. Performance Evaluation Criteria.
Required Performance evaluation
criteria were modified to respond to
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program metrics requirements in
Section 6209 of the 2014 Farm Bill and
also to ensure that data collected for
program outcome and evaluation
purposes is consistent, robust, and
relevant to both the stated program
purposes and ongoing evaluation efforts.
Corresponding changes were made to
§ 4284.960 (Monitoring and reporting
program performance) to specify that
performance reports would include
required data related to achieving
programmatic objectives and a
comparison of accomplishments with
the objectives stated in the application.
At a minimum, this would include
information on: (i) Expansion of
customer base as a result of the project;
(ii) Increased revenue returned to the
producer as a result of the project; (iii)
Jobs created or saved as a result of the
project; and (iv) Evidence of receipt of
matching funds, if included or provided
for in the project. The Agency also may
request any additional project and/or
performance data for the project for
which grant funds have been received,
for example, information that would
promote greater understanding of the
determinants of success of individual
projects, inform program administration
and evaluation, or that would enable the
use of data for program administration
or evaluation purposes.
Until such time as the Agency
determines that additional data may be
necessary to further inform program
performance, the Agency will continue
to utilize the data associated with the
current Office of Management and
Budget approved information collection
requirements for the program. If and
when the Agency determines that
additional data is necessary, it will
submit a new information collection
package to OMB for review and
approval prior to publication in the
Federal Register for public review and
input.
I. Filing Instructions (§ 4284.933)
Submission requirements provide
information on completeness of
applications, but do not explicitly state
that because the program is a nationallycompetitive program, no revisions or
additional information will be accepted
after the application deadline.
Therefore, the Agency is clarifying that
no revisions or additional information
will be accepted after the application
deadline.
J. Proposal Evaluation Criteria and
Scoring Applications (§ 4284.942)
The priority point criterion (Criterion
5) was reconfigured to accommodate
awarding of points to projects that ‘‘best
contribute’’ to the creation of or increase
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in marketing opportunities for members
of specified priority groups, per the
2014 Farm Bill language.
III. Summary of Comments and
Responses
The Interim Rule was published in
the Federal Register on February 23,
2011 (76 FR 10090), with a 60-day
comment period that ended April 25,
2011. The Agency also conducted a
listening session on April 25, 2014, to
receive comments on the VAPG
provisions in the 2014 Farm Bill.
Comments on the Interim Rule were
received from 11 commenters, and
comments on the VAPG provisions in
the 2014 Farm Bill were received from
2 commenters. Combined, these
commenters provided approximately 14
similar comments. Commenters
included industry and trade
associations and individuals. As a result
of some of the comments, the Agency
made changes in the rule. The Agency
sincerely appreciates the time and effort
of all commenters.
Responses to the comments on the
interim rule and those received during
the listening session are discussed
below. Comments are grouped by
category and rule section.
A. General
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Timing of Final Rule
Comment: Two commenters stated
that some of the shortfalls in the Interim
Rule are quite serious and deserve to be
addressed shortly after conclusion of the
2010/11 grant round. The commenters
urged the Agency not to leave this
Interim Rule in place for more than this
upcoming grant cycle and
recommended that the Agency issue a
second Interim Rule or a Final Rule by
the time the 2012 NOSA is issued.
Response: While the Agency
appreciates the fact that the commenters
are concerned about certain provisions
in the Interim Rule published in 2011,
the Agency has had to continue
implementing the VAPG program under
the Interim Rule until it had the
opportunity to consider fully all of the
comments received on the Interim Rule
and now to also be able to incorporate
new provisions associated with the 2014
Farm Bill. Hence, the Agency is
publishing this Final Rule to address all
of the comments received on the Interim
Rule.
Review Panels
Comment: One commenter stated that
they understand the Agency chose not
to put information in the Interim Rule
about who will do the review and
evaluation of project proposals. This
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information has instead appeared in the
annual NOSA. The commenter stated
that they can appreciate the Agency’s
hesitancy in placing this type of
information in the rule. The iterative
NOSA process allows for the evolution
of the program in a more flexible
manner. The commenter stated that they
believe the Agency should reflect on the
experience of the program over time,
especially with respect to the 2009 and
2010/11 process, and should include in
either a second Interim Rule or in the
Final Rule the broad outlines of the
review process which could then still be
adjusted within those broad parameters
on a year-by-year basis.
As part of the review, the commenter
strongly encourages the Agency to
explore the experiences of sister
agencies at USDA that also operate
review panels. The program would be
improved by insertion of a section in the
rule on review panels, provided that it
is not as specific and rigid as to not
allow positive program evolution over
time.
Response: The Agency disagrees with
the recommendation to incorporate into
the rule even a broad outline of the
review process because of the ensuing
loss of flexibility. The Agency also
disagrees with the suggestion to include
a section in the rule concerning review
panels. Compared to some programs
that use a review panel process, the
VAPG program has a much higher
volume of applications and applications
that are more diverse in nature. Because
of these two characteristics, a set review
panel process, in the Agency’s
estimation, does not offer any benefits
compared to the current process in
which applications are scored by both
Rural Development state office
personnel and assigned, qualified, nonfederal independent reviewers.
Therefore, the Agency has not
incorporated either of the commenter’s
suggestions in the Final Rule.
B. Purpose (§ 4284.901)
Comment: One commenter stated that
the ‘‘Purpose’’ section of the rule speaks
to the major activities of the program—
‘‘to develop businesses that produce and
market value-added agricultural
products’’—but does not actually
address the underlying purpose of the
program. The commenter recommended
the addition of language that speaks to
the purpose of the program, namely to
‘‘create expanded marketing
opportunities, increase producer
income, and enhance community
economic development.’’
Response: In consideration of this
comment, the Agency has included
reference to creating marketing
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opportunities for businesses in the
Purpose section.
C. Definitions (§ 4284.902)
Agricultural Producer
Comment: Two commenters noted
that the definition of ‘‘agricultural
producer’’ has been expanded from
individuals and entities actively
engaged in production to also include
those who maintain ownership and
financial control of an operation
without being actively engaged in labor
and management.
The commenters claimed that this
change could ‘‘open the floodgates’’ to
non-farm passive investors and
landlords to reap the benefits of a
program clearly intended to raise
incomes for producers. The commenters
urge USDA to amend the definition of
‘‘agricultural producer’’ to read as
follows:
‘‘Agricultural producer’’. An
individual or entity directly engaged in
the production of an agricultural
commodity, or that has the legal right to
harvest an agricultural commodity, that
is the subject of the value-added project.
Agricultural producers may ‘‘directly
engage’’ through substantially
participating in the labor, management,
and field operations.’’
Response: The Agency agrees with the
basic concerns expressed by the
commenters and has revised the
definition by removing reference to
agricultural producers who only
maintain ownership and financial
control of the agricultural operation.
Beginning Farmer or Rancher
Comment: Two commenters
expressed concern over the definition of
beginning farmer or rancher.
One of the commenters stated that a
citation for a very lengthy statutory
definition (4 pages) is provided in the
Interim Rule as part of this VAPG
program definition for ‘‘beginning
farmer or rancher,’’ even though the
majority of the requirements in the
statutory definition apply only to FSA
loan programs and do not appear
applicable to RD grant programs.
The commenter recommended that
the Agency drop the statutory citation in
the Interim Rule and simply specify the
eligibility requirements that are
applicable to beginning farmers and
ranchers. The other commenter stated
that the ‘‘beginning farmer or rancher’’
definition, as well as the related
language in § 4284.922(c)(1)(i), must be
fixed to make its meaning clear and
precise. According to the commenter,
the definition in the Interim Rule is
extremely convoluted, could be difficult
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for users, administrators, and review
panels to interpret in its current form,
and thus needs to be clearer and
cleaner.
Response: The Agency agrees with
both commenters that the definition
needs to be both simpler and clearer.
The Agency has removed the statutory
citation and added reference to
Independent Producer to address the
‘‘substantial participation’’ concern. In
addition, we have reformatted the
definition to make clearer the
definitional requirement to be eligible
for priority points and for the reserved
If the applicant is . . .
funding pool that includes beginning
farmers and ranchers. The following
table illustrates the application of the
definition for determining whether the
applicant qualifies as a beginning farmer
or rancher for priority points or the
above mentioned reserved funding pool.
Is the applicant a beginning farmer or rancher
eligible for . . .
and has the following characteristics
Priority
points?
An Independent Producer Individual ................................
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An eligible entity (agricultural producer, a farmer/rancher
cooperative, or an independent producer other than a
harvester).
Farm- or Ranch-Based Renewable
Energy
Comment: Two commenters stated
that USDA should clarify that an
accepted new added value of an
agricultural commodity is its use in
qualifying for a tradable carbon credit if
the production of renewable energy
destroys, reduces or mitigates the
production of green-house gases (GHG),
or possibly for a renewable energy
credit. If this new added value of an
agricultural commodity is accepted,
then the Agency needs to clarify in the
rule, where appropriate, that equipment
used to measure and monitor
greenhouse gases for trading purposes is
a legitimate expense covered by the
program.
Response: The Agency is not revising
the rule as suggested by the commenter
because the Agency is bound by the
authorizing statute to consider only the
following, whether the agricultural
product: (1) Has undergone a change in
physical state, (2) was produced in a
manner that enhances the value of the
agricultural commodity, (3) is
physically segregated in a manner that
results in the enhancement of the valueadded agricultural commodity, (4) is a
source of farm- or ranch-based
renewable energy, including E–85 fuel,
and (5) is aggregated and marketed as a
locally produced agricultural food
product.
Comment: One commenter stated that
this definition requires on-farm
generation of renewable energy by an
Independent Producer that produces the
agricultural commodity used to generate
the renewable energy on-farm as a
value-added product. The commenter
then stated that the Agency needs to
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• More than 10 years of experience ...............................
• 10 years or less of experience .....................................
• 50 percent or less of the members have 10 years or
less of experience.
• More than 50 percent of the members have 10 years
or less of experience.
• 100 percent of the members have 10 years or less of
experience.
clarify its policy regarding whether
these projects fulfill the statutory
eligibility requirement that all VAPG
projects demonstrate an increase in
customer base and an increase in
revenues returning to the producers as
a result of the VA project. Specifically,
the Agency needs to clarify whether onfarm energy savings that result from biobased net metering of electricity, or
utilizing methane for thermal energy, or
utilizing liquid fuels for farm machinery
operations will qualify (in other words,
whether a farmer can use his own valueadded products to reduce his own
operating costs to demonstrate increased
customer base and revenues).
Response: The Agency agrees with the
commenter that all VAPG projects must
demonstrate an increase in customer
base and an increase in revenues
returning to the producers as a result of
the value-added project. A farmer that
uses a value-added product to simply
reduce the farm’s operating costs does
not meet the intent of these two
conditions and would not qualify (see
Scenario 3 below). Thus, there is no
‘‘perk’’ as characterized by the
commenter and as such there is no
effect on the other product eligibility
categories to put them at a disadvantage.
The Agency acknowledges, however,
that there are situations where making
such determinations with regards to
renewable energy are not necessarily
clear. To help understand the
application of this definition with
regard to determining project eligibility,
consider the following scenarios.
Scenario 1. A farmer installs an
anaerobic digester to use cow manure to
produce electricity and sells that
electricity to the local utility. The
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Reserved
funding?
No
Yes
No
No
Yes
No
Yes
No
Yes
Yes
electricity generated by the digester
qualifies as renewable energy. The local
utility represents an increase in the
customer base and the farmer sees a
direct increase in revenues from the sale
of the electricity to the utility. Thus, this
project qualifies as a value-added
project eligible for consideration for a
grant.
Scenario 2. Same scenario as Scenario
1, except that, instead of selling the
electricity to the local utility, the farmer
uses it to generate heat and power for a
hydroponics facility on the farm from
which a value-added product is
produced. In this second example, the
renewable energy project also qualifies.
By producing the value-added product,
the farmer is expanding his customers to
those customers buying the value-added
product. The farmer is seeing an
increase in his revenue either directly as
the result of sales of the new valueadded product or indirectly as a
reduction in operating costs of the farm.
Thus, this project also qualifies as a
value-added project eligible for
consideration for a grant.
Scenario 3. Same scenario as Scenario
1, except under Scenario 3 the farmer
uses all of the electricity generated by
the anaerobic digester to replace
electricity purchased from the local
utility to help power current farm
operations. While the farmer sees an
indirect increase in revenues through a
reduction in operating costs (as in
Scenario 2), there is no increase in the
customer base for the farmer. Therefore,
both conditions are not met and the
project would not be eligible for a VAPG
grant.
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The Agency revised the subject
definition in order to clarify how the
definition is to be applied.
Comment: One commenter, as a
marketer of photovoltaic solar systems,
believes that the elimination of grants
for renewable energy systems is not a
step we can take if we want to move
forward as a nation.
Response: The definition for ‘‘Farmor Ranch-based renewable energy’’
states, in part, that on-farm generation of
energy from wind, solar, geothermal, or
hydro sources are not eligible. The
project eligibility category related to
renewable energy was set by the 2008
Farm Bill and states that a Value-Added
Agricultural Product is ‘‘a source of
farm- or ranch-based renewable energy,
including E–85 fuel.’’ Notwithstanding
the virtues of solar systems as described
by the commenter, it is the Agency’s
position that solar is not an agricultural
commodity or a Value-Added
agricultural product. The Agency notes
that agricultural producers and rural
small businesses may apply for grants
under the Rural Energy for America
Program for solar projects as described
by the applicant.
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Feasibility Study, Marketing Plan, and
Planning Grant
Comment: Two commenters
recommended adding a sentence crossreferencing the up to 25 percent in-kind
match option in § 4284.923(a) and (b), as
is already done for the ‘‘conflict of
interest’’ definition and the ‘‘matching
grant’’ definition. According to the
commenters, the addition of the cross
reference will remove confusion that is
otherwise created as to whether the
definitions override the exception.
One of the commenters stated that
another viable option with respect to the
feasibility study, marketing plan, and
planning grant definitions is to simply
describe the study, plan or grant,
without reference to the qualified
consultant as has been done in the case
of ‘‘business plan.’’ The commenter
further stated that they would support
either option.
Response: The Agency has decided to
adopt the second suggestion in order to
minimize the confusion identified by
the commenters and thus has revised
the three definitions by removing
reference to ‘‘qualified consultant.’’
Independent Producers
Comment: Three commenters were
concerned that the definition of
‘‘harvester’’ within the Independent
Producer definition needed
clarification.
Two of the commenters stated that
clarifications may be in order to ensure
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that third-party entities used to build,
manage and operate anaerobic digesters
are considered to be ‘‘harvesters of an
agricultural commodity’’ (e.g., animal
manure) and eligible for participation in
the VAPG Program as an ‘‘Independent
Producer.’’
The third commenter stated that the
Interim Rule lacks sufficient detail to
demonstrate ‘‘what and who’’ qualifies
as a ‘‘harvester.’’ Because the definition
is limited to an Independent Producer
Agricultural Producer who has the
‘‘legal right to harvest an agricultural
commodity,’’ it raises a potential, yet
unintended, conflict with the primary
program purpose that all Independent
Producers ‘‘currently own and produce
the agricultural commodity to which
value will be added.’’
This commenter recommended that
the Agency clarify ‘‘what and who’’
qualifies in the ‘‘harvester’’ category,
and specifically state whether or not a
simple collection or gathering of any
agricultural commodity suffices.
According to the commenter, simple
collection of an agricultural commodity
by a non-agricultural producer would
not meet the stated intention of the
program. The commenter provided the
following examples: (1) A logger who
has the legal right to harvest logs from
a land owner would be eligible, but a
non-logger wanting to simply collect
unwanted slash from the landing of a
land-owner or logger would not be
eligible, and (2) a non-agricultural
producer business simply wanting to
collect dairy manure from various
farming operations to convert it to
renewable energy would not be eligible.
The commenter stated that, for these
reasons, the Interim Rule needs to
clarify these eligibility distinctions.
Response: The Agency agrees with the
commenters that the meaning of
‘‘Harvester’’ needs to be clarified and
strengthened and has done so (including
adding a definition for Harvester).
The Agency disagrees, however, with
the two commenters that the third-party
entities collecting animal manure for
use in anaerobic digesters, as described
by the two commenters, are eligible for
the program. The Agency agrees with
the examples provided by the third
commenter as to which ‘‘Harvesters’’
would or would not be eligible to
participate in the VAPG program.
For the purposes of the VAPG
program, the Agency has determined
that entities and individuals, such as
those described by the commenter, that
merely glean, gather or collect residual
commodities that result from an initial
harvesting or production of a primary
agricultural commodity are not
considered ‘‘Harvesters’’ and are not
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26795
eligible for this program. For example,
see the 2014 NOFA for the program (78
FR 70261, November 25, 2013). In the
added definition, the Agency has
clarified that the entity’s (or
individual’s) harvest must be a
‘‘primary’’ agricultural commodity in
order to be eligible; a harvester cannot
merely glean, gather, or collect residual
commodities. So for example, a logger
who has a legal right to access and
harvest logs from the forest that are then
converted into boards would be an
eligible applicant, as would a fisherman
that has the legal right to access and
harvest fish from the ocean or river that
are then processed.
Comment: One commenter
recommended revising the definition of
‘‘Independent Producers’’ and
elsewhere as appropriate to clarify
whether ‘‘harvesters’’ are eligible for
priority points and reserved funds for
certain applicant types. Specifically,
one or more definitions need to clarify
whether ‘‘harvesters’’ are the equivalent
of ‘‘farmers’’ and, if so, the Interim Rule
needs to specify their eligibility for both
priority points and reserved funds in
applicable categories.
Response: As indicated by the
commenter, harvesters may only apply
as an Independent Producer applicant
type in order to be eligible for the VAPG
program. However, harvester operations
do not meet the definition requirements
for a Farm or Ranch and, as such,
harvesters are not equivalent to farmers
or ranchers. Harvester applicants,
therefore, are not eligible to receive
reserve funds for a Beginning Farmer or
Rancher or a Socially-Disadvantaged
Farmer or Rancher; and are not eligible
to receive Priority Points for a Beginning
Farmer or Rancher, a SociallyDisadvantaged Farmer or Rancher,
Operator of a Small or Medium-sized
Farm or Ranch structured as a Family
Farm, or a Farmer or Rancher
Cooperative.
However, if the harvester is proposing
a mid-tier value chain project, then the
harvester would be eligible for priority
points and for competing for mid-tier
value chain reserve funding. The
Agency has revised the rule to clarify
who is eligible for priority points (see
§ 4284.924) and who is eligible for
reserved funding (see § 4284.923).
Medium-Sized Farm
Comment: One commenter supported
the increase from $700,000 to $1 million
in the annual gross sales-based
definition of medium-sized farm or
ranch. The commenter believes this will
more adequately reflect commodity,
enterprise, and regional differences,
while ensuring program funds are
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targeted to the ‘‘disappearing middle’’ of
agriculture.
Response: The Agency thanks the
commenter for supporting the change
made to this definition in the Interim
Rule and has retained the $1 million
ceiling in the Final Rule.
Mid-Tier Value Chain
Comment: Four commenters
recommended expanding the definition
of a Mid-Tier to include direct sales to
consumers as well as to businesses and
cooperatives.
Response: The Agency agrees with the
recommendation and has added
reference to ‘‘consumers’’ to the
definition in the rule.
D. Applicant Eligibility (7 CFR
4284.920)
Comment: One commenter
recommended that, because many local
food initiatives have been created as
community based non-profits, nonprofit entities that are benefitting small
and medium producer or ranchers be
included as a fifth type of eligible
applicant type for the reserve funds for
the Mid-Tier Value Chain.
Response: The Agency has not revised
the rule as requested by the commenter
because the authorizing statute
identifies the applicant types that are
eligible for the VAPG program and the
Agency cannot add another applicant
type without statutory authority.
E. Project Eligibility (§ 4284.922)
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Branding
Comment: Three commenters oppose
the removal of limitations on branding
activity costs. One of the commenters
stated that the VAPG program should
not promote advertising as a primary
project function.
One of the commenters agreed that,
though branding is an essential part of
developing a new product, it should not
be the sole focus of a VAPG project.
Even a complete marketing plan (of
which branding is just one part) is only
a fraction of what’s needed for any good
VAPG project—one which helps farmers
develop new value-added products.
The commenter recommended that
the Final Rule stress § 4284.922(a)(1) in
stating that projects that are primarily
branding projects do not meet the
criteria of VAPG. The commenter
suggested that one way this could be
done is to include relevant language
from the past NOSAs. The 2009 NOFA
under the section titled ‘‘Other
Eligibility Requirements’’ and from the
Proposed Rule, under § 4284.922(c):
‘‘Applications that propose only
branding, packaging, or other similar
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means of product differentiation are not
eligible in any category. However,
applications may propose branding,
packaging, or other product
differentiation activities as a component
of a value-added strategy for products
otherwise eligible in one of the above
categories.’’
One of the commenters stated that, by
eliminating this section, the Agency
gives the impression that it is endorsing
projects that are 100 percent for
branding. This is in direct contradiction
to the requirement under
§ 4284.222(a)(1) that the project must
focus on adding value to a product in
one of five defined ways. The
commenter stated that, by permitting all
grant funds to be used for branding, the
Agency would be opening the floodgates
to becoming a program to support the
advertising and branding budgets as if it
were a domestic equivalent of the
Market Access Program.
Response: As stated in the response to
comments on branding in the Interim
Rule, the Agency recognizes that
branding and packaging are important
components of value-added marketing
strategies. The program’s authorizing
statute is clear that creation of
marketing opportunities is an important
component of the program. The use of
funds to develop plans and strategies to
create marketing opportunities
necessarily includes product
differentiation and promotional
activities, without which, there would
be no ability to accomplish two key
program requirements: Expansion of
customer base and increased revenue
returned to the producers of the valueadded product. All applicants,
including those with significant
branding or advertising components
must still meet all other program
eligibility requirements, including
meeting one of the five value-added
project methodology categories.
Therefore, no changes related to
branding have been made.
Purpose Eligibility
Comment: Two commenters noted
that, in § 4284.922(b)(6)(i) of the Interim
Rule, a new provision exempts
Independent Producers with existing
products from applying for working
capital grants of $50,000 or more from
providing feasibility studies. The
commenters stated that they recognize
that in theory this modification to the
rule could serve individual farmers in
need of marketing assistance for their
value-added products. However, the
commenters worry that, without
limitations, VAPG could easily become
a program for marketing rather than
predominantly for developing value-
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added products. One of the commenters
encouraged the Agency to
comprehensively track applications and
awards for this subset of the program
and to monitor the extent to which it
modifies the current success of VAPG.
The other commenter stated that this
new provision seems to open a loophole
for any old products that need a new
advertising campaign.
Response: The program’s authorizing
statute provides that only Agricultural
Producer Groups, Farmer or Rancher
Cooperatives, and Majority Controlled
Producer-Based Business Ventures are
subject to the ‘emerging market’
requirement. That leaves otherwise
qualified Independent Producer
applicants free to propose projects that
expand markets for existing value-added
products. As such, the Agency deems
the long-standing requirement of a
business or marketing plan in lieu of a
feasibility study as sufficient and plans
no changes in rule. In addition, as stated
in response to the comments above
regarding branding and advertising, it is
the Agencies position that the use of
grant funds to create marketing
opportunities through product
differentiation and promotional
campaigns are important components in
accomplishing program objectives.
Reserved Funds Eligibility
Comment: One commenter stated that
a problem occurs in § 4284.922(c)(1)(i)
(as found in the Interim Rule) in the last
sentence of that paragraph. According to
the commenter, the sentence appears to
mean that any independent farm, in
order to qualify for the beginning farmer
set-aside or priority, must be a farm in
which all owners are beginning farmers.
The way the sentence is stated,
however, it could also mean that any
applicant entity, made up of multiple
farms, must be entirely made up of
beginning farmers.
In support, the commenter pointed
out that § 4284.922(c)(1)(i) says ‘‘For
applicant entities with multiple owners,
all owners must be eligible beginning
farmers or ranchers’’ while (d)(1) says
‘‘For entities with multiple owners or
members, 51 percent of owners or
members must be eligible beginning
farmers or ranchers.’’ This is
contradictory and requires a simple
clarification of terms to distinguish
between eligible farms and eligible
entities under the beginning farmer
priority and set-aside.
Response: While the commenter is
correct in identifying the differences
between the paragraphs, the differences
are not in error. As stated earlier in
response to a comment on the definition
of ‘‘Beginning Farmer or Rancher,’’ there
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is an eligibility distinction with regard
to priority points versus reserved
funding. Specifically, to be eligible for
priority points, at least 51 percent of the
farmers in an entity composed of
multiple farmers must each have no
more than 10 years of experience. (Note:
In the Final Rule, ‘‘at least 51 percent’’
has been changed to ‘‘more than 50
percent’’.) However, to be eligible for
the reserved funding that includes
beginning farmers and ranchers, all of
the farmers (100 percent) in an entity
composed of multiple farmers must
have no more than 10 years of
experience. This is based on the
differences contained in the authorizing
language in the Food, Conservation, and
Energy Act of 2008 (2008 Farm Bill),
resulting in two separate priority
categories. The Food, Conservation, and
Energy Act of 2008 in section 6002(6)
stated that the Secretary shall give
priority to projects that ‘‘contribute to
opportunities’’ for beginning and
socially disadvantaged farmers and
ranchers, while subparagraph (7)(C)
stated that the Secretary shall reserve 10
percent of the amounts made available
for each fiscal year under this paragraph
to fund projects ‘‘that benefit: beginning
farmers or ranchers or sociallydisadvantaged farmers or ranchers.’’
While the Agricultural Act of 2014 does
not contain the ‘‘contribute to
opportunities’’ language, it still contains
separate language in paragraph (6) that
gives ‘‘priority’’ to beginning farmers or
ranchers and socially-disadvantaged
farmers or ranchers. The Agency has
revised the rule to clarify this.
Comment: Four commenters who
recommended that the definition of a
Mid-Tier be expanded to include direct
sales to consumers, recommended the
following change to § 4284.922(c)(2)(ii)
(as found in the Interim Rule): Describe
at least two alliances, linkages, or
partnerships within the value chain that
link independent producers with
businesses, cooperatives or consumers
directly that market value-added
agricultural commodities or value added
products in a manner that benefits small
or medium-sized farms and ranches that
are structured as a family farm,
including the names of the parties and
the nature of their collaboration.
Response: The Agency agrees with the
commenters and has revised the rule
accordingly.
Comment: Four commenters stated
that they recognize the requirements in
§ 4284.922(c)(2)(v) (as found in the
Interim Rule) and the critical
importance of the raw agricultural
product being utilized for the valueadded product comes from the project
participants. However, in the case of the
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Mid-Tier Value Chain, the commenters
feel that 50 percent ownership of the
product should not be required of the
applicant organization because this
organization is not an agricultural
producer. Rather, the benefiting
agricultural farmers and ranchers of the
applicant organization should be
required to adhere to this rule. The
commenters proposed the following
change to the Interim Rule for this
section: Demonstrate that the benefiting
small or medium sized farms or ranches
that are structured as a family farm of
the applicant organization currently
owns and produces more than 50
percent of the raw agricultural
commodity that will be used for the
value added product that is the subject
of the proposal.
Response: The Agency agrees with the
commenter and applies this provision in
the Final Rule as described by the
commenter. As a reminder, however,
the applicant organization must be a
producer-based organization. So for
example, if an applicant organization is
composed of wheat growers and rice
growers and that organization is
proposing a VAPG project that benefits
only the wheat growers, the Agency
applies this provision by looking at
whether the wheat growers own and
produce more than 50 percent of the
raw agricultural commodity that will be
used for the VAPG project. To clarify
this, the Agency has revised this
paragraph to indicate that the members
of the applicant organization that are
benefiting from the proposed project
must currently own and produce more
than 50 percent of the raw agricultural
commodity that will be used for the
value added product that is the subject
of the proposal.
F. Eligible Uses of Grant and Matching
Funds (§ 4284.923)
Comment: One commenter suggested
that, in order to keep business and
enterprise planning of VAPG projects
farmer-centered, farmers and ranchers
directly participate in the development
of VAPG projects and be allowed to
count their time as an in-kind
contribution toward the program’s
matching requirements. The Interim
Rule responded to this suggestion by
allowing time to count as an in-kind
contribution up to 25 percent of the
total project costs.
The commenter applauded the
Agency for this decision and believes it
is a step in the right direction. The
commenter urged the Agency to do a
detailed assessment of the 25 percent
cap, including a survey of applicants
after the next grant round to get detailed
reactions to the 25 percent cap. If the
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assessment, including the survey,
reveals the 25 percent cap is a barrier to
the program meeting its objectives,
including participation by the statutory
priority groups, they would then urge
the Agency to raise the cap.
Response: The Agency appreciates the
commenter’s support of the change,
which is retained in the Final Rule. The
Agency will take under advisement the
commenter’s suggestion for an
assessment of the 25 percent cap.
G. Simplified Application (§ 4284.932)
Comment: One commenter
commended the Agency’s commitment
to developing a simplified application
form, as required by statute, in the
annual Notice of Solicitation of
Applications (NOSA) for the program.
The commenter stated that they trust it
will appear in the NOSA for FY 2010/
11 funding and thereafter and further
stated that they will comment on the
simplified application when it appears
in the NOSA.
Response: The Agency acknowledges
the comment and looks forward to
continuing to help improve the
simplified application for the program.
H. Priority Points (§ 4284.942)
The 2014 Farm Bill added Veteran
Farmers and Ranchers as an additional
priority group. The Agency is including
this group in the Final Rule as a priority
group and is implementing provisions
consistent with the provisions identified
in the March 24, 2014 notice published
in the Federal Register (79 FR 16277)
that extended the application deadline
and added priority for Veteran Farmers
and Ranchers.
The Agency also received the
comments concerning scoring
associated with priority groups as
presented below.
Priority Groups
Comment: One commenter opposed
the changes in point scoring that appear
to reduce the priority awarded to
statutory priority groups, which is
important to meeting the goals of the
VAPG program.
A second commenter stated that they
had recommended that the Agency
increase the percentage of total proposal
evaluation ranking points for projects
that foster the program’s statutory
priority for small and medium-sized
family farms and beginning and
Socially-Disadvantaged farmers, from 15
to 25 out of a total of 100 points. They
further stated that the Interim Rule,
however, moves in the exactly the
opposite direction, decreasing those
ranking points from 15 to 10 points.
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The commenter stated that it strains
the meaning of the word ‘‘priority’’ to
assign it a ten percent factor. Ten
percent might be appropriate in a
‘‘bonus’’ situation in which the factor
might be considered a minor
distinguishing item, but it certainly does
not come close to being a priority factor.
The commenter stated that they are
deeply concerned that, if this decision
is not reversed, non-priority applicants
will push aside priority applicants and
one of the intended goals of the program
will not be realized. The commenter
strongly urged the Agency to issue a
Final Rule that provides a real priority
to the statutory priority classes. The
commenter recommended that 25
percent of the total point value be
assigned to statutory priorities, with
review panels then assessing which
projects best foster the priority for small
and mid-sized family farms and
beginning and Socially-Disadvantaged
farmers and ranchers and providing
evaluative ranking points accordingly.
Response: Through the 2008 Farm
Bill, the Agency was instructed to give
priority to certain categories of
applicants. Giving priority does not
mean that the program should only fund
applications submitted by those groups,
but rather, all things being equal, the
applications from such groups should
receive priority. The Final Rule does
just that—making the priority groups
eligible for points that are not available
to applicants in non-priority groups.
The distribution of points during
application scoring process from the last
few application rounds, since the
Interim Rule was implemented, has
resulted in the majority of awards being
made to applicants from the priority
categories. Thus, the Agency has not
revised the distribution of points in
response to this comment.
Rural Areas
Comment: Two commenters were
concerned over the elimination in the
Interim Rule of the potential for
applicants to receive 10 points for being
located in a rural area. While the
commenters agree that VAPG projects
cannot be strictly limited to rural areas,
they disagree that the program should
not prioritize rural projects.
Commenters indicated that there are
good reasons to assign ranking points to
projects that are located in rural areas,
even if the markets they serve are both
rural and urban. A key purpose of the
program is to raise farm income and
improve the economy in farming
communities. This purpose can be
legitimately advanced by providing
some amount of ranking points to
projects located in rural areas.
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Furthermore, when compared to urban
agricultural producers, rural farmers
and ranchers face heightened challenges
in accessing markets for their products.
The commenter recommended
reinstating 10 points for rural projects,
thus demonstrating a continued
commitment to rural economic
development.
A third commenter also opposed
removing the priority points for rural
projects, which is important, according
to the commenter, to meeting the goals
of the VAPG program.
Response: The statute does not
include a rural area requirement for this
program and it is the opinion of the
agency that priority points for rural
areas was not practical in the
implementation of this program.
Therefore, a rural requirement has never
been implemented. And therefore, this
provision does not provide priority
points for rural projects.
I. Award Process (§ 4284.950)
The 2014 Farm Bill includes a
provision that requires the Agency to
give priority to Agricultural Producer
Groups, Farmer or Rancher
Cooperatives, and Majority-Controlled
Producer-Based Business Ventures
whose projects (including farmer or
rancher cooperative projects) best
contribute to creating or increasing
marketing opportunities for operators of
Small- and Medium-size Farms and
Ranches that are structured as Family
Farms, Beginning Farmers and
Ranchers, Socially-Disadvantaged
Farmers and Ranchers, and Veteran
Farmers and Ranchers. The Agency
received comments from stakeholders
on this provision during the April 25th
listening session. In addition, the
Agency received comments on very
similar language the Agency included in
the preamble to the Interim Rule. The
following summarizes the comments on
this provision and then presents the
Agency’s response as to how this
provision is implemented in the Final
Rule.
Comment: In commenting on the
Interim Rule, one commenter stated that
they had recommended that, when
proposals are equally ranked, those
targeting the VAPG priority groups—
small and medium-sized family farms,
beginning farmers and ranchers, and
Socially-Disadvantaged farmers and
ranchers—receive priority and
commended its inclusion in the
preamble to the Interim Rule. Without it
also appearing in the rule itself,
however, they fear it will be overlooked
by review panels in the future. The
commenter, therefore, recommended
that the Agency incorporate language as
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a new subsection (b) in § 4284.942 and
as a revision to subsection (a) in
§ 4284.950, as follows.
Response: The Agency has not revised
the rule in response to these comments.
The Administrator has the final
authority and discretion in assigning
points to any application based upon
unserved or underserved areas;
geographic diversity; emergency
conditions and priority mission area
plans, goals, and objectives. Based upon
this authority, there would never be a
need for breaking a tie in the manner
suggested.
IV. 2014 Farm Bill Implementation
The 2014 Farm Bill required the
Agency to make changes to the VAPG
program in two areas regarding priority:
• Priority to Veteran Farmers and
Ranchers
• Priority to Agricultural Producer
Groups, Farmer or Rancher
Cooperatives, and Majority-Controlled
Producer-Based Business Ventures for
projects that ‘best contribute’ to new or
expanded marketing opportunities for
Beginning Farmers and Ranchers,
Socially-Disadvantaged Farmers and
Ranchers, or operators of Small- and
Medium-sized Family Farms and
Ranches) The following paragraphs
discuss how the Agency is
implementing these priorities in the
Final Rule.
A. Veteran Farmer or Rancher Priority
The 2014 Farm Bill added a new
priority for Veteran Farmers and
Ranchers. The definition of a Veteran
Farmer or Rancher, as provided by the
2014 Farm Bill, is a farmer or rancher
who has served in the Armed Forces, as
defined in section 101(10) of title 38
United States Code, and who either has
not operated a farm or ranch or has
operated a farm or ranch for not more
than 10 years.
To qualify for priority points for
projects that contribute to increasing
opportunities for Veteran Farmers and
Ranchers, applicants must submit form
DD–214, Report of Separation from the
U.S. Military and meet the requirements
for Beginning Farmers or Ranchers at 7
CFR 4284.922(d) and in the application
guides, as well as all other program
requirements.
B. Best Contributing Priority
The 2014 Farm Bill added a new
priority for Agricultural Producer
Groups, Farmer and Rancher
Cooperatives, and Majority-Controlled
Producer-Based Business Ventures
(applicant group) whose projects ‘‘best
contribute to creating or increasing
marketing opportunities’’ for operators
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of Small- and Medium-sized Farms and
Ranches that are structured as Family
Farms, Beginning Farmers and
Ranchers, Socially-Disadvantaged
Farmers and Ranchers, and Veteran
Farmers and Ranchers (priority groups).
Applications must contain sufficient
information as described in the annual
solicitation and application package to
enable the Agency to make the
appropriate determinations for awarding
points for this priority. If the application
does not contain sufficient information,
the Agency will not award points
accordingly.
The Agency is implementing this
priority by awarding up to 5 additional
points based on documentation of the
composition of the applicant’s existing
membership and anticipated expansion
of membership as a way to assess
creating or increasing marketing
opportunities for the four priority
groups. The Agency will use the
following three criteria to award up to
five points for this new priority.
1. If the existing membership of the
applicant group is comprised of either
more than 75 percent of any one of the
four priority groups or more than 75
percent of any combination of the four
priority groups, the application is
eligible for two points.
2. If the existing membership of the
applicant group is comprised of two or
more of the priority groups, the
application is eligible to receive one
point. One point is awarded regardless
of whether a group’s membership is
comprised of two, three, or all of the
four priority groups.
3. If the proposed project in the
applicant group’s application will
increase the number of priority groups
that comprise the applicant group’s
membership by one or more priority
group, the application is eligible to
receive two points. However, if an
applicant group’s membership is
already comprised of all four priority
groups, such an applicant would not be
eligible for points under this criterion
because there is no opportunity to
increase the number of priority groups.
Note also that this criterion does not
consider either the percentage of the
existing membership that is comprised
of the four priority groups or the
number of priority groups currently
comprising the applicant group’s
membership.
List of Subjects in 7 CFR Part 4284
Agricultural commodities, Grant
programs, Housing and community
development, Rural areas, Rural
development, Value-added activities.
For the reasons set forth in the
preamble, under the authority at 5
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U.S.C. 301 and 7 U.S.C. 1989, chapter
XLII of title 7 of the Code of Federal
Regulations (CFR) is amended as
follows:
26799
4284.951 Obligate and award funds.
4284.952–4284.959 [Reserved]
PART 4284—GRANTS
Post Award Activities and Requirements
4284.960 Monitoring and reporting program
performance.
4284.961 Grant servicing.
4284.962 Transfer of obligations.
4284.963 Grant close out and related
activities.
4284.964–4284.999 [Reserved]
1. The authority citation for part 4284
is revised to read as follows:
General
§ 4284.901
CHAPTER XLII—RURAL BUSINESSCOOPERATIVE SERVICE AND RURAL
UTILITIES SERVICE, U.S. DEPARTMENT OF
AGRICULTURE
■
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 301 and 7 U.S.C. 1989.
Subpart F also issued under 7 U.S.C
1932(e). Subpart G also issued under 7 U.S.C
1926(a)(11). Subpart J also issued under 7
U.S.C. 1632(a). Subpart K also issued under
7 U.S.C. 1621 note.
2. Part 4284 is amended by revising
subpart J to read as follows:
■
Subpart J—Value-Added Producer Grant
Program
General
Sec.
4284.901 Purpose.
4284.902 Definitions.
4284.903 Review or appeal rights.
4284.904 Exception authority.
4284.905 Nondiscrimination and
compliance with other Federal laws.
4284.906 State laws, local laws, regulatory
commission regulations.
4284.907 Environmental requirements.
4284.908 Compliance with other
regulations.
4284.909 Forms, regulations, and
instructions.
4284.910–4284.914 [Reserved]
Funding and Programmatic Change
Notifications
4284.915 Notifications.
4284.916–4284.919 [Reserved]
Eligibility
4284.920 Applicant eligibility.
4284.921 Ineligible applicants.
4284.922 Project eligibility.
4284.923 Reserved funds eligibility.
4284.924 Priority scoring eligibility.
4284.925 Eligible uses of grant and
matching funds.
4284.926 Ineligible uses of grant and
matching funds.
4284.927 Funding limitations.
4284.928–4284.929 [Reserved]
Applying for a Grant
4284.930 Preliminary review.
4284.931 Application package.
4284.932 Simplified application.
4284.933 Filing instructions.
4284.934–4284.939 [Reserved]
Processing and Scoring Applications
4284.940 Processing applications.
4284.941 Application withdrawal.
4284.942 Proposal evaluation criteria and
scoring applications.
4284.943–4284.949 [Reserved]
Grant Awards and Agreement
4284.950 Award process.
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Purpose.
This subpart implements the ValueAdded Agricultural Product Market
Development grant program (ValueAdded Producer Grants (VAPG))
administered by the Rural BusinessCooperative Service whereby grants are
made to enable viable Agricultural
Producers (those who are prepared to
progress to the next business level of
planning for, or engaging in, ValueAdded Agricultural Production) to
develop businesses that produce and
market Value-Added Agricultural
Products and to create marketing
opportunities for such businesses. The
provisions of this subpart constitute the
entire provisions applicable to this
Program; the provisions of subpart A of
this part do not apply to this subpart.
§ 4284.902
Definitions.
The following definitions apply to
this subpart:
Administrator. The Administrator of
the Rural Business-Cooperative Service
or designees or successors.
Agency. The Rural BusinessCooperative Service or successor for the
programs it administers.
Agricultural commodity. An
unprocessed product of farms, ranches,
nurseries, and forests and natural and
man-made bodies of water, that the
Independent Producer has cultivated,
raised, or harvested with legal access
rights. Agricultural commodities
include plant and animal products and
their by-products, such as crops,
forestry products, hydroponics, nursery
stock, aquaculture, meat, on-farm
generated manure, and fish and seafood
products. Agricultural commodities do
not include horses or other animals
raised or sold as pets, such as cats, dogs,
and ferrets.
Agricultural food product.
Agricultural food products can be raw,
cooked, or processed edible substances,
beverages, or ingredients intended for
human consumption. These products
cannot be animal feed, live animals
(except for seafood products
customarily sold and/or consumed live),
non-harvested plants, fiber, medicinal
products, cosmetics, tobacco products,
or narcotics.
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Agricultural producer. (1) An
individual or entity that produces an
Agricultural Commodity through
participation in the day-to-day labor,
management, and field operations; or
that has the legal right to harvest an
Agricultural Commodity that is the
subject of the VAPG project.
(2) The Agency shall determine the
Agricultural producer status of Tribes
and Tribal entities without regard to
day-to-day labor, management, and field
operation and right to harvest status.
Agricultural producer group. A nonprofit membership organization that
represents Independent Producers and
whose mission includes working on
behalf of Independent Producers and
the majority of whose membership and
board of directors is comprised of
Independent Producers. The
Independent Producers, on whose
behalf the value-added work will be
done, must be confirmed as eligible and
identified by name or class.
Applicant. The legal entity submitting
an application to participate in the
competition for program funding. The
Applicant must be legally structured to
meet one of the four eligible Applicant
types: Independent Producer,
Agricultural Producer Group, Farmer or
Rancher Cooperative, or MajorityControlled Producer-Based Business
Venture.
Beginning farmer or rancher. (1) For
the purposes of determining eligibility
to receive priority points under
§ 4284.924, a Beginning Farmer or
Rancher is either:
(i) An individual Independent
Producer (other than a Harvester) that
has operated a Farm or Ranch for no
more than 10 years or
(ii) An eligible Applicant entity, other
than a Harvester, that has an Applicant
ownership or membership of more than
50 percent farmers or ranchers each of
whom have operated a Farm or Ranch
for no more than 10 years.
(2) For the purposes of determining
eligibility to receive funding reserved
for Beginning Farmers and Ranchers
under § 4284.923, a Beginning Farmer or
Rancher is either:
(i) An individual Independent
Producer (other than a Harvester) that
has operated a Farm or Ranch for no
more than 10 years or
(ii) An eligible Applicant entity, other
than a Harvester, that has an Applicant
ownership or membership comprised
entirely of (i.e., 100 percent) farmers or
ranchers that have operated a Farm or
Ranch for no more than 10 years.
Business plan. A formal statement of
a set of business goals, the reasons why
they are believed attainable, and the
plan for reaching those goals, including
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Pro Forma Financial Statements
appropriate to the term and scope of the
Project and sufficient to evidence the
viability of the Venture. It may also
contain background information about
the organization or team attempting to
reach those goals.
Change in physical state. An
irreversible processing activity that
alters the raw Agricultural Commodity
into a marketable Value-Added
Agricultural Product. This processing
activity must be something other than a
post-harvest process that primarily acts
to preserve the commodity for later sale.
Examples of eligible Value-Added
Agricultural Products in this category
include, but are not limited to, fish
fillets, diced tomatoes, bio-diesel fuel,
cheese, jam, and wool rugs. Examples of
ineligible products include, but are not
limited to, pressure-ripened produce;
raw bottled milk; container grown trees;
young plants, seedlings or plugs; and
cut flowers.
Conflict of interest. A situation in
which a person or entity has competing
personal, professional, or financial
interests that make it difficult for the
person or business to act impartially.
Regarding use of both grant and
Matching Funds, Federal procurement
standards apply to the use of grant
funds for purchases and hires, and
prohibit transactions that involve a real
or apparent Conflict of Interest for
owners, employees, officers, agents, or
their Immediate Family members having
a financial or other interest in the
outcome of the Project; or that restrict
open and free competition for
unrestrained trade. Specifically, grant
and Matching Funds may not be used to
support costs for services or goods going
to, or coming from, a person or entity
with a real or apparent Conflict of
Interest, including, but not limited to,
owner(s) and their Immediate Family
members. See § 4284.925(a) and (b) for
limited exceptions to this definition and
practice for VAPG.
Departmental regulations. The
regulations of the Department of
Agriculture’s Office of Chief Financial
Officer (or successor office) as codified
in 2 CFR parts 200 and 400 and any
successor regulations to these parts.
Emerging market. A new or
developing, geographic or demographic
market that is new to the Applicant or
the Applicant’s product. To qualify as
new, the Applicant cannot have
supplied this product, geographic, or
demographic market for more than two
years at time of application submission.
Family farm. A Farm (or Ranch) that
produces agricultural commodities for
sale in sufficient quantity to be
recognized as a farm and not a rural
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residence; whose owners are primarily
responsible for daily physical labor and
strategic management; whose hired help
only supplements family labor; and,
whose owners are related by blood or
marriage or are Immediate Family.
Farm or ranch. Any place from which
$1,000 or more of agricultural products
were raised and sold or would have
been raised and sold during the
previous year, but for an event beyond
the control of the farmer or rancher.
Farm- or Ranch-based renewable
energy. An Agricultural Commodity that
is used to generate renewable energy on
a Farm or Ranch owned or leased by the
Independent Producer Applicant that
produces the Agricultural Commodity,
such that the generated renewable
energy, is utilized in such a way that the
applicant can demonstrate expanded
customer base and increased revenues
returning to the producers of the
agricultural commodity as a result of the
project. On-farm generation of energy
from wind, solar, geothermal or hydro
sources is not eligible for this program.
Farmer or rancher cooperative. A
business owned and controlled by
Independent Producers that is
incorporated, or otherwise identified by
the state in which it operates, as a
cooperatively operated business. The
Independent Producers, on whose
behalf the value-added work will be
done, must be confirmed as eligible and
identified by name or class.
Feasibility study. An analysis of the
economic, market, technical, financial,
and management capabilities of a
proposed Project or business in terms of
the Project’s expectation for success.
Fiscal year. The Federal government’s
fiscal year.
Harvester. An Independent Producer
of an Agricultural Commodity that is an
individual or entity that can document
that it has a legal right to access and
harvest the majority of a primary
Agricultural Commodity that will be
used for the Value-Added Agricultural
Product. Individuals and entities that
merely glean, gather, or collect residual
commodities that result from an initial
harvesting or production of a primary
Agricultural Commodity are not
considered Harvesters and are not
eligible for this program.
Immediate family. Individuals who
are closely related by blood, marriage, or
adoption, or live within the same
household, such as a spouse, domestic
partner, parent, child, brother, sister,
aunt, uncle, grandparent, grandchild,
niece, or nephew.
Independent Producer. (1) Individual
Agricultural Producers or entities that
are solely owned and controlled by
Agricultural Producers. Independent
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Producers must produce and own more
than 50 percent of the Agricultural
Commodity to which value will be
added as the subject of the Project
proposal. Independent Producers must
maintain ownership of the Agricultural
Commodity or product from its raw
state through the production and
marketing of the Value-Added
Agricultural Product. Producers who
produce the Agricultural Commodity
under contract for another entity, but do
not own the Agricultural Commodity or
Value-Added Agricultural Product
produced, are not considered
Independent Producers. Entities that
contract out the production of an
Agricultural Commodity are not
considered Independent Producers.
Independent Producer entities must
confirm their owner members as eligible
and must identify them by name or
class.
(2) A Steering Committee must apply
as an Independent Producer and form a
program-eligible legal entity prior to
execution of the grant agreement by the
Agency. The Steering Committee and
entity subsequently formed must meet
all other program eligibility
requirements.
(3) A Harvester must apply as an
Independent Producer because harvester
operations do not meet the definition
requirements for a Farm or Ranch.
Harvester applicants are therefore not
eligible to receive Reserved Funds and/
or Priority Points for a Beginning
Farmer or Rancher, SociallyDisadvantaged Farmer or Rancher,
operator of a Small- or Medium-sized
farm or ranch that is structured as a
Family Farm, or a Farmer or Rancher
Cooperative, but may request Reserved
Funds and/or Priority Points for
qualified Mid-Tier Value Chain projects.
(4) The Agency shall determine the
Independent Producer status of Tribes
or Tribal entities without regard to
ownership of the commodity to which
value will be added so long as the tribal
member participant, tribal entity and/or
Tribe own and control at least 50
percent of the raw commodity necessary
for the project, per the definition of
Independent Producer in § 4284.902.
Local or regional supply network. An
interconnected group of individuals
and/or entities through which
agricultural based products move from
production through consumption in a
local or regional area of the United
States. Examples of participants in a
supply network may include
Agricultural Producers, aggregators,
processors, distributors, wholesalers,
retailers, consumers, and entities that
organize or provide facilitation services
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and technical assistance for
development of such networks.
Locally-produced Agricultural Food
Product. Any Agricultural Food
Product, as defined in this subpart, that
is raised, produced, and distributed in:
(1) The locality or region in which the
final product is marketed, so that the
total distance that the product is
transported is less than 400 miles from
the origin of the product; or
(2) The State in which the product is
produced.
Majority-controlled producer-based
business venture. An entity (except
Farmer or Rancher Cooperatives) in
which more than 50 percent of the
financial ownership and voting control
is held by Independent Producers.
Independent Producer members must be
confirmed as eligible and must be
identified by name or class, along with
their percentage of ownership.
Marketing plan. A plan for the project
that identifies a market window,
potential buyers, a description of the
distribution system and possible
promotional campaigns.
Matching funds. A cost-sharing
contribution to the project via
confirmed cash or funding
commitments from eligible sources
without a real or apparent Conflict of
Interest, that are used for eligible project
purposes during the grant funding
period. Matching Funds must be at least
equal to the grant amount, and
combined grant and Matching Funds
must equal 100 percent of the Total
Project Costs. All Matching Funds must
be provided for in the approved budget,
must be necessary and reasonable for
accomplishment of project or program
objectives and can be verified by
authentic documentation from the
source as part of the application.
Matching Funds must be provided in
the form of confirmed Applicant cash,
loan, or line of credit, or provided in the
form of a confirmed Applicant or family
member in-kind contribution that meets
the requirements and limitations in
§ 4284.925(a) and (b); or confirmed
third-party cash or eligible third-party
in-kind contribution; or confirmed nonfederal grant sources (unless otherwise
provided by law). Matching funds
cannot be paid by the Federal
Government under another Federal
award and are not included as
contributions for any other Federal
Award. See examples of ineligible
Matching Funds and Matching Funds
verification requirements in §§ 4284.926
and 4284.931.
Medium-sized farm or ranch. A Farm
or Ranch that is structured as a Family
Farm that has averaged $500,001 to
$1,000,000 in annual gross sales of
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agricultural commodities in the
previous three years.
Mid-tier value chain. Local and
regional supply networks that link
Independent Producers with businesses,
cooperatives, or consumers that market
Value-Added Agricultural Products in a
manner that:
(1) Targets and strengthens the
profitability and competitiveness of
Small- and Medium-sized Farms or
Ranches that are structured as a Family
Farm; and
(2) Obtains agreement from an eligible
Agricultural Producer Group, Farmer or
Rancher Cooperative, or MajorityControlled Producer-Based Business
Venture that is engaged in the value
chain on a marketing strategy.
(3) For Mid-tier Value Chain projects,
the Agency recognizes that, in a supply
chain network, a variety of raw
Agricultural Commodity and ValueAdded Agricultural Product ownership
and transfer arrangements may be
necessary. Consequently, Applicant
ownership of the raw Agricultural
Commodity and Value-Added
Agricultural Product from raw through
value-added stages is not necessarily
required, as long as the Mid-tier Value
Chain application can demonstrate an
increase in customer base and an
increase in revenue returns to the
Applicant producers supplying the
majority of the raw Agricultural
Commodity for the project.
Planning grant. A grant to facilitate
the development of a defined program
of economic planning activities to
determine the viability of a potential
value-added Venture, and specifically
for the purpose of paying for conducting
and developing a Feasibility Study,
Business Plan, and/or Marketing Plan
associated with the processing and/or
marketing of a Value-Added
Agricultural Product.
Produced in a manner that enhances
the value of the Agricultural
Commodity. The use of a recognizably
coherent set of agricultural production
practices in the growing or raising of the
raw commodity, such that a
differentiated market identity is created
for the resulting product. Examples of
eligible products in this category
include, but are not limited to,
sustainably grown apples, eggs
produced from free-range chickens, or
organically grown carrots.
Physical segregation. Separating an
Agricultural Commodity or product on
the same farm from other varieties of the
same commodity or product on the
same farm during production and
harvesting, with assurance of continued
separation from similar commodities
during processing and marketing in a
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manner that results in the enhancement
of the value of the separated commodity
or product. An example of a segregated
product is non-GMO corn separated
from GMO corn.
Pro forma financial statement. A
financial statement that projects the
future financial position of a company.
The statement is part of the Business
Plan and includes an explanation of all
assumptions, such as input prices,
finished product prices, and other
economic factors used to generate the
financial statements. The statement
must include projections for a minimum
of three years in the form of cash flow
statements, income statements, and
balance sheets.
Project. All of the eligible activities to
be funded by the grant under this
subpart and Matching Funds.
Qualified consultant. An
independent, third-party, without a
Conflict of Interest, possessing the
knowledge, expertise, and experience to
perform the specific task required in an
efficient, effective, and authoritative
manner.
Rural Development. A mission area of
the Under Secretary for Rural
Development within the U.S.
Department of Agriculture (USDA),
which includes Rural Housing Service,
Rural Utilities Service, and Rural
Business-Cooperative Service and their
successors.
Small-sized farm or ranch. A Farm or
Ranch that is structured as a Family
Farm that has averaged $500,000 or less
in annual gross sales of agricultural
products in the previous three years.
Socially-disadvantaged farmer or
rancher. This term has the meaning
given in section 355(e) of the
Consolidated Farm and Rural
Development Act (7 U.S.C. 2003(e)):
Socially-Disadvantaged Farmer or
Rancher means a farmer or rancher who
is a member of a ‘‘SociallyDisadvantaged Group.’’
(1) For the purposes of determining
eligibility to receive priority points
under § 4284.924, if there are multiple
farmer or rancher owners of the
Applicant organization, more than 50
percent of the ownership must be held
by members of a Socially-Disadvantaged
Group.
(2) For the purposes of determining
eligibility to received funding reserved
for Socially-Disadvantaged Farmers and
Ranchers under § 4284.923, if there are
multiple farmer or rancher owners of
the Applicant organization, all farmer
and rancher owners (i.e., 100 percent)
must be members of a SociallyDisadvantaged Group.
Socially-Disadvantaged group. A
group whose members have been
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subjected to racial, ethnic, or gender
prejudice because of their identity as
members of a group without regard to
their individual qualities.
State. Any of the 50 States of the
United States, the Commonwealth of
Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands,
Guam, American Samoa, the
Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana
Islands, the Republic of Palau, the
Federated States of Micronesia, and the
Republic of the Marshall Islands.
State office. USDA Rural
Development offices located in each
State.
Steering committee. An
unincorporated group comprised wholly
of specifically identified Independent
Producers in the process of organizing
one of the four program eligible entity
types (Independent Producer,
Agricultural Producer Group, Farmer or
Rancher Cooperative or MajorityControlled Producer-Based Business
Venture.
Total project cost. The sum of all
grant and Matching Funds in the project
budget that reflects the eligible project
tasks associated with the work plan.
Value-added agricultural product.
Any Agricultural Commodity produced
in the U.S. (including the Republic of
Palau, the Federated States of
Micronesia, the Republic of the
Marshall Islands, or American Samoa),
that meets the requirements specified in
paragraphs (1) and (2) of this definition.
(1) The Agricultural Commodity must
meet one of the following five valueadded methodologies:
(i) Has undergone a Change in
Physical State;
(ii) Was Produced in a Manner that
Enhances the Value of the Agricultural
Commodity;
(iii) Is Physically Segregated in a
manner that results in the enhancement
of the value of the Agricultural
Commodity;
(iv) Is a source of Farm- or Ranchbased Renewable Energy, including E–
85 fuel; or
(v) Is aggregated and marketed as a
Locally-Produced Agricultural Food
Product.
(2) As a result of the Change in
Physical State or the manner in which
the Agricultural Commodity was
produced, marketed, or segregated:
(i) The customer base for the
Agricultural Commodity is expanded
and
(ii) A greater portion of the revenue
derived from the marketing, processing,
or physical segregation of the
Agricultural Commodity is available to
the producer of the commodity.
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Venture. The business and its valueadded undertakings, including the
project and other related activities.
Veteran farmer or rancher. A farmer
or rancher who has served in the Armed
Forces, as defined in section 101(10) of
title 38 United States Code, and who
either has not operated a Farm or Ranch
or has operated a Farm or Ranch for not
more than 10 years.
(1) For the purposes of determining
eligibility to receive priority points
under § 4284.924, a Veteran Farmer or
Rancher is either:
(i) An individual Independent
Producer (other than a Harvester) that
has either never operated a Farm or
Ranch or has operated a Farm or Ranch
for no more than 10 years or
(ii) An eligible Applicant entity, other
than a Harvester, that has an Applicant
ownership or membership of more than
50 percent Veteran Farmers or Ranchers
each of whom have either never
operated a Farm or Ranch or operated a
Farm or Ranch for no more than 10
years.
(2) [Reserved]
Working capital grant. A grant to
provide funds to operate a value-added
project, specifically to pay the eligible
project expenses related to the
processing and/or marketing of the
Value-Added Agricultural Product that
are eligible uses of grant funds.
§ 4284.903
Review or appeal rights.
A person may seek a review of an
Agency decision under this subpart
from the appropriate Agency official
that oversees the program in question or
appeal to the National Appeals Division
in accordance with 7 CFR part 11.
§ 4284.904
Exception authority.
Except as specified in paragraphs (a)
and (b) of this section, the
Administrator may make exceptions to
any requirement or provision of this
subpart, if such exception is necessary
to implement the intent of the
authorizing statute in a time of national
emergency or in accordance with a
Presidentially-declared disaster, or, on a
case-by-case basis, when such an
exception is in the best financial
interests of the Federal Government and
is otherwise not in conflict with
applicable laws.
(a) Applicant eligibility. No exception
to Applicant eligibility can be made.
(b) Project eligibility. No exception to
project eligibility can be made.
§ 4284.905 Nondiscrimination and
compliance with other Federal laws.
(a) Other Federal laws. Applicants
must comply with other applicable
Federal laws, including the Equal
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Employment Opportunities Act of 1972,
the Americans with
Disabilities Act, the Equal Credit
Opportunity Act, Title VI of the Civil
Rights Act of 1964, Section 504 of the
Rehabilitation Act of 1973, the Age
Discrimination Act of 1975, and 7 CFR
part 1901, subpart E.
(b) Nondiscrimination. The U.S.
Department of Agriculture (USDA)
prohibits discrimination in all its
programs and activities on the basis of
race, color, national origin, age,
disability, and where applicable, sex,
marital status, familial status, parental
status, religion, sexual orientation,
genetic information, political beliefs,
reprisal, or because all or part of an
individual’s income is derived from any
public assistance program. (Not all
prohibited bases apply to all programs.)
Persons with disabilities who require
alternative means for communication of
program information (Braille, large
print, audiotape, etc.) should contact
USDA’s TARGET Center at (202) 720–
2600 (voice and TDD). Any Applicant
that believes it has been discriminated
against as a result of applying for funds
under this program should contact:
USDA, Director, Office of Adjudication
and Compliance, 1400 Independence
Avenue SW., Washington, DC 20250–
9410, or call (800) 795–3272 (voice) or
(202) 720–6382 (TDD) for information
and instructions regarding the filing of
a Civil Rights complaint. USDA is an
equal opportunity provider, employer,
and lender.
(c) Civil rights compliance. Recipients
of grants must comply with Title VI of
the Civil Rights Act of 1964, and Section
504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973.
This includes collection and
maintenance of data on the basis of race,
sex and national origin of the recipient’s
membership/ownership and employees.
These data must be available to conduct
compliance reviews in accordance with
7 CFR part 1901, subpart E. For grants,
compliance reviews will be conducted
after the grantee signs the applicable
Assurance Agreement, and after the last
disbursement of grant funds have been
made and the facility or program has
been in full operations for 90 days.
(d) Executive Order 12898. When a
project is proposed and financial
assistance is requested, the Agency will
conduct a Civil Rights Impact Analysis
(CRIA) with regards to environmental
justice. Civil Rights certification must be
done prior to grant approval, obligation
of funds, or other commitments of
Agency resources, including issuance of
a Letter of Conditions, whichever occurs
first.
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§ 4284.906 State laws, local laws,
regulatory commission regulations.
If there are conflicts between this
subpart and State or local laws or
regulatory commission regulations, the
provisions of this subpart will control.
§ 4284.907
Environmental requirements.
All grants awarded under this subpart
are subject to the environmental
requirements in subpart G of 7 CFR part
1940. Applications for both Planning
and Working Capital grants are
generally excluded from the
environmental review process by 7 CFR
1940.333.
§ 4284.908 Compliance with other
regulations.
(a) Departmental regulations.
Applicants must comply with all
applicable Departmental regulations and
Office of Management and Budget
regulations concerning grants in 2 CFR
chapter IV.
(b) Cost principles. Applicants must
comply with the cost principles found
in 2 CFR parts 200, subpart E, 2 CFR
part 400, and in 48 CFR subpart 31.2.
(c) Definitions. If a term is defined
differently in the Departmental
Regulations, 2 CFR parts 200 through
400 or 48 CFR subpart 31.2 and in this
subpart, such term shall have the
meaning as found in this subpart.
§ 4284.909 Forms, regulations, and
instructions.
Copies of all forms, regulations,
instructions, and other materials related
to the program referenced in this
subpart may be obtained through the
Agency’s Web site and at any Rural
Development office.
§§ 4284.910–4284.914
[Reserved]
(b) Programmatic changes. The
Agency will issue notifications of any
programmatic changes specified in
paragraphs (b)(1) through (4) of this
section.
(1) Priority categories to be used for
awarding Administrator or State
Director points, which may include any
of the following:
(i) Unserved or underserved areas.
(ii) Geographic diversity.
(iii) Emergency conditions.
(iv) Priority mission area plans, goals,
and objectives.
(2) Additional reports that are
generally applicable across projects
within a program associated with the
monitoring of and reporting on project
performance.
(3) Any application filing instructions
specified in § 4284.933.
(c) Notification methods. The Agency
will issue the information specified in
paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section in
one or more Federal Register notices. If
a funding level is not known at the time
of notification, it will be posted to the
program Web site once an appropriation
is enacted. In addition, all information
will be available at any Rural
Development office.
(d) Timing. The Agency will issue
notices under this section as follows:
(1) The Agency will make the
information specified in paragraph (a) of
this section available each Fiscal Year.
(2) The Agency will make the
information specified in paragraph
(b)(1) of this section available at least 60
days prior to the application deadline,
as applicable.
(3) The Agency will make the
information specified in paragraphs
(b)(2) through (4) of this section
available on an as needed basis.
Funding and Programmatic Change
Notifications
§§ 4284.916–4284.919
§ 4284.915
§ 4284.920
Notifications.
In implementing this subpart, the
Agency will issue public notifications
addressing funding and programmatic
changes, as specified in paragraphs (a)
and (b) of this section, respectively. The
methods that the Agency will use in
making these notifications is specified
in paragraph (c) of this section, and the
timing of these notifications is specified
in paragraph (d) of this section.
(a) Funding and simplified
applications. The Agency will issue
notifications concerning:
(1) The funding level, the minimum
and maximum grant amounts, and any
additional funding information as
determined by the Agency; and
(2) The contents of simplified
applications, as provided for in
§ 4284.932.
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26803
[Reserved]
Eligibility
Applicant eligibility.
To be eligible for a grant under this
subpart, an Applicant must demonstrate
that they meet the requirements
specified in paragraphs (a) through (d)
of this section, as applicable, and are
subject to the limitations specified in
paragraphs (e) and (f) of this section.
(a) Type of Applicant. The Applicant,
including any Federally-recognized
Tribes and tribal entities (Rural
Development State Offices and posted
application guidelines will provide
additional information on Tribal
eligibility), must demonstrate that they
meet all definition requirements for one
of the following Applicant types:
(1) An Independent Producer;
(2) An Agricultural Producer Group;
(3) A Farmer or Rancher Cooperative;
or
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(4) A Majority-Controlled ProducerBased Business Venture.
(b) Emerging market. An applicant
that is an agricultural producer group, a
farmer or rancher cooperative, or a
majority-controlled producer-based
business venture must demonstrate that
they are entering into an emerging
market as a result of the proposed
project.
(c) Citizenship. (1) Individual
Applicants must certify that they:
(i) Are citizens or nationals of the
United States (U.S.), the Republic of
Palau, the Federated States of
Micronesia, the Republic of the
Marshall Islands, or American Samoa;
or
(ii) Reside in the U.S. after legal
admittance for permanent residence.
(2) Entities other than individuals
must certify that they are more than 50
percent owned by individuals who are
either citizens as identified under
paragraph (c)(1)(i) of this section or
legally admitted permanent residents
residing in the U.S.
(d) Legal authority and responsibility.
Each Applicant must demonstrate that
they have, or can obtain, the legal
authority necessary to carry out the
purpose of the grant, and they must
evidence good standing from the
appropriate State agency or equivalent.
(e) Multiple grant eligibility. An
Applicant may submit only one
application in response to a solicitation,
and must explicitly direct that it
compete in either the general funds
competition or in one of the named
reserved funds competitions. Multiple
applications from separate entities with
identical or greater than 75 percent
common ownership, or from a parent,
subsidiary or affiliated organization
(with ‘‘affiliation’’ defined by Small
Business Administration regulation 13
CFR 121.103, or successor regulation)
are not permitted. Further, Applicants
who have already received a Planning
Grant for the proposed project cannot
receive another Planning Grant for the
same project. Applicants who have
already received a Working Capital
Grant for the proposed project cannot
receive any additional grants for that
project.
(f) Active VAPG grant. If an Applicant
has an active value-added grant at the
time of a subsequent application, the
currently active grant must be closed
out within 90 days of the application
submission deadline for the subsequent
competition, as published in the annual
solicitation.
§ 4284.921
Ineligible Applicants.
(a) Consistent with the Departmental
Regulations, an Applicant is ineligible if
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the Applicant is debarred or suspended
or is otherwise excluded from, or
ineligible for participation in, Federal
assistance programs under Executive
Order 12549, ‘‘Debarment and
Suspension.’’
(b) An Applicant will be considered
ineligible for a grant due to an
outstanding judgment obtained by the
U.S. in a Federal Court (other than U.S.
Tax Court), is delinquent on the
payment of Federal income taxes, or is
delinquent on Federal debt.
§ 4284.922
Project eligibility.
To be eligible for a VAPG grant, the
application must demonstrate that the
project meets the requirements specified
in paragraphs (a) through (c) of this
section, as applicable.
(a) Product eligibility. Each product
that is the subject of the proposed
project must meet the definition of a
Value-Added Agricultural Product
(b) Purpose eligibility. (1) The grant
funds requested must not exceed any
maximum amounts specified in the
annual solicitation for Planning and
Working Capital Grant requests, per
§ 4284.915.
(2) The Matching Funds required for
the project budget must be eligible and
without a real or apparent Conflict of
Interest, available during the project
period, and source verified in the
application.
(3) The proposed project must be
limited to eligible planning or working
capital activities as defined at
§ 4284.925, as applicable, with eligible
tasks directly related to the processing
and/or marketing of the subject ValueAdded Agricultural Product, to be
demonstrated in the required work plan
and budget as described at
§ 4284.922(b)(5).
(4) Applications that propose
ineligible expenses in excess of 10
percent of Total Project Costs will be
deemed ineligible to compete for funds.
Applicants who submit applications
containing ineligible expenses totaling
less than 10 percent of Total Project
Costs must remove those expenses from
the project budget or replace with
eligible expenses, if selected for an
award.
(5) The project work plan and budget
must demonstrate eligible sources and
uses of funds and must:
(i) Present a detailed narrative
description of the eligible activities and
tasks related to the processing and/or
marketing of the Value-Added
Agricultural Product along with a
detailed breakdown of all estimated
costs allocated to those activities and
tasks;
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(ii) Identify the key personnel that
will be responsible for overseeing and/
or conducting the activities or tasks and
provide reasonable and specific
timeframes for completion of the
activities and tasks;
(iii) Identify the sources and uses of
grant and Matching Funds for all
activities and tasks specified in the
budget; and indicate that Matching
Funds will be spent at a rate equal to or
in advance of grant funds; and
(iv) Present a project budget period
that commences within the start date
range specified in the annual
solicitation, concludes not later than 36
months after the proposed start date,
and is scaled to the complexity of the
project.
(6) Except as noted in paragraphs
(b)(6)(i) and (ii) of this section, working
capital applications must include a
Feasibility Study and Business Plan
completed specifically for the proposed
value-added project by a Qualified
Consultant. The Agency must concur in
the acceptability or adequacy of the
Feasibility Study and Business Plan for
eligibility purposes.
(i) An Independent Producer
Applicant seeking a Working Capital
Grant of $50,000 or more, who can
demonstrate that they are proposing
market expansion for an existing ValueAdded Agricultural Product(s) that they
currently own and produce from at least
50 percent of their own Agricultural
Commodity and that they have
produced and marketed for at least 2
years at time of application submission,
may submit a Business Plan or
Marketing Plan for the value-added
project in lieu of a Feasibility Study.
The Applicant must still adequately
document increased customer base and
increased revenues returning to the
Applicant producers as a result of the
project in their application, and meet all
other eligibility requirements. Further,
the waiver of the independent
Feasibility Study does not change the
proposal evaluation or scoring elements
that pertain to issues that might be
supported by an independent Feasibility
Study, so Applicants are encouraged to
well-document their project plans and
expectations for success in their
proposals.
(ii) All four Applicant types that
submit a Simplified Application for
Working Capital Grant funds of less
than $50,000 are not required to provide
an independent Feasibility Study or
Business Plan for the Project/Venture,
but must provide adequate
documentation to demonstrate the
expected increases in customer base and
revenues resulting from the project that
will benefit the producer Applicants
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supplying the majority of the
Agricultural Commodity for the project.
All other eligibility requirements remain
the same. The waiver of the requirement
to submit a Feasibility Study and
Business Plan does not change the
proposal evaluation or scoring elements
that pertain to issues that might be
supported by a Feasibility Study or
Business Plan, so Applicants are
encouraged to well-document their
project plans and expectations for
success in their proposals.
(7) All applicants applying for
Working Capital Grant funds must
document the quantity of the raw
Agricultural Commodity that will be
used for the Value-Added Agricultural
Product, expressed in an appropriate
unit of measure (pounds, tons, bushels,
etc.) to demonstrate the scale of the
applicant’s project. This quantification
must include an estimated total quantity
of the Agricultural Commodity needed
for the project, the quantity that will be
provided (produced and owned) by the
Agricultural Producers of the applicant
organization, and the quantity that will
be purchased or donated from thirdparty sources.
(8) All Applicants requesting Working
Capital grant funds must either be
currently marketing each Value-added
Agricultural Product that is the subject
of the grant application, or be ready to
implement the working capital activities
in accord with the budget and work
plan timeline proposed.
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§ 4284.923
Reserved funds eligibility.
The Applicant must meet the
requirements specified in this section,
as applicable, if the Applicant chooses
to compete for reserved funds. A
Harvester is not eligible to compete for
reserved funds under paragraph (a) of
this section, but is eligible to compete
for reserved funds under paragraph (b)
of this section. In accordance with
application deadlines, all eligible, but
unfunded reserved funds applications
will be eligible to compete for general
funds in that same Fiscal Year, as
funding levels permit.
(a) If the Applicant is applying for
Beginning Farmer or Rancher or
Socially-Disadvantaged Farmer or
Rancher reserved funds, the Applicant
must provide the following
documentation to demonstrate that the
applicant meets all of the requirements
for the applicable definition found in
§ 4284.902.
(1) For beginning farmers and
ranchers (including veterans),
documentation must include a
description from each of the individual
owner(s) of the applicant farm or ranch
organization, addressing the qualifying
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elements in the beginning farmer or
rancher definition, including the length
and nature of their individual owner/
operator experience at any farm in the
previous 10 years, along with one IRS
income tax form from the previous 10
years showing that each of the
individual owner(s) did not file farm
income; or a detailed letter from a
certified public accountant or attorney
certifying that each owner meets the
reserved funds beginning farmer or
rancher eligibility requirements. For
applicant entities with multiple owners,
all owners must be eligible beginning
farmers or ranchers.
(2) For Socially-Disadvantaged
farmers and ranchers, documentation
must include a description of the
applicant’s farm or ranch ownership
structure and demographic profile that
indicates the owner(s)’ membership in a
Socially-Disadvantaged group that has
been subjected to racial, ethnic or
gender prejudice; including identifying
the total number of owners of the
applicant organization; along with a
self-certification statement from the
individual owner(s) evidencing their
membership in a SociallyDisadvantaged group. All farmer and
rancher owners must be members of a
Socially-Disadvantaged group.
(b) If the Applicant is applying for
Mid-Tier Value Chain reserved funds,
the Applicant must be one of the four
VAPG Applicant types. The application
must:
(1) Provide documentation
demonstrating that the project meets the
definition of Mid-Tier Value Chain;
(2) Demonstrate that the project
proposes development of a Local or
Regional Supply Network of an
interconnected group of entities
(including nonprofit organizations, as
appropriate) through which agricultural
commodities and Value-Added
Agricultural Products move from
production through consumption in a
local or regional area of the United
States, including a description of the
network, its component members, either
by name or by class, and its purpose;
(3) Describe at least two alliances,
linkages, or partnerships within the
value chain that link Independent
Producers with businesses,
cooperatives, or consumers that market
value-added agricultural commodities
or Value-Added Agricultural Products
in a manner that benefits Small- or
Medium-sized Farms and Ranches that
are structured as a Family Farm,
including the names of the parties and
the nature of their collaboration;
(4) Demonstrate how the project, due
to the manner in which the ValueAdded Agricultural Product is
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marketed, will increase the profitability
and competitiveness of at least two,
eligible, Small- or Medium-sized Farms
or Ranches that are structured as a
Family Farm, including documentation
to confirm that the participating Smallor Medium-sized Farms or Ranches are
structured as a Family Farm and meet
these program definitions. A description
of the two farms or ranches confirming
they meet the Family Farm
requirements, and IRS income tax forms
or appropriate certifications evidencing
eligible farm income is sufficient.
(5) Document that the eligible
Agricultural Producer Group/Farmer or
Rancher Cooperative/MajorityControlled Producer-Based Business
Venture Applicant organization has
obtained at least one agreement with
another member of the supply network
that is engaged in the value chain on a
marketing strategy; or that the eligible
Independent Producer Applicant has
obtained at least one agreement from an
eligible Agricultural Producer Group/
Farmer or Rancher Cooperative/
Majority-Controlled Producer-Based
Business Venture engaged in the valuechain on a marketing strategy;
(i) For Planning Grants, agreements
may include letters of commitment or
intent to partner on marketing,
distribution or processing; and should
include the names of the parties with a
description of the nature of their
collaboration. For Working Capital
grants, demonstration of the actual
existence of the executed agreements is
required.
(ii) Independent Producer Applicants
must provide documentation to confirm
that the non-applicant Agricultural
Producer Group/Farmer or Rancher
Cooperative/majority-controlled
partnering entity meets program
eligibility definitions, except that, in
this context, the partnering entity does
not need to supply any of the raw
Agricultural Commodity for the project;
(6) Demonstrate that the members of
the Applicant organization that are
benefiting from the proposed project
currently own and produce more than
50 percent of the raw Agricultural
Commodity that will be used for the
Value-Added Agricultural Product that
is the subject of the proposal; and
(7) Demonstrate that the project will
result in an increase in customer base
and an increase in revenue returns to
the Applicant producers supplying the
majority of the raw Agricultural
Commodity for the project.
§ 4284.924
Priority scoring eligibility.
Applicants that demonstrate
eligibility may apply for priority points
if their applications: Propose projects
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that contribute to increasing
opportunities for Beginning Farmers or
Ranchers, Socially-Disadvantaged
Farmers or Ranchers, Veteran Farmers
or Ranchers, or Operators of Small- or
Medium-sized Farms or Ranches that
are structured as a Family Farm; or
propose Mid-Tier Value Chain projects;
or are a Farmer or Rancher Cooperative.
A Harvester is eligible for priority points
only if the Harvester is proposing a MidTier Value Chain project.
(a) Applicants seeking priority points
as Beginning Farmers or Ranchers or as
Socially Disadvantaged Farmers or
Ranchers must provide the
documentation specified in
§ 4284.923(a)(1) or (2), as applicable.
(b) Applicants seeking priority points
as Veteran Farmers or Ranchers must
provide the documentation specified in
§ 4284.923(a)(1) or (2), as applicable,
and must submit form DD–214, ‘‘Report
of Separation from the U.S. Military,’’ or
subsequent form.
(c) Applicants seeking priority points
as Operators of Small- or Medium-sized
Farms or Ranches that are structured as
a Family Farm must:
(1) Be structured as a Family Farm;
(2) Meet all requirements in the
associated definitions; and
(3) Provide the following
documentation:
(i) A description from the individual
owner(s) of the Applicant organization
addressing each qualifying element in
the definitions, including identification
of the average annual gross sales of
agricultural commodities from the farm
or ranch in the previous three years, not
to exceed $500,000 for operators of
small-sized farms or ranches or
$1,000,000 for operators of mediumsized farms or ranches;
(ii) The names and identification of
the blood or marriage relationships of
all Applicant/owners of the farm; and
(iii) A statement that the Applicant/
owners are primarily responsible for the
daily physical labor and management of
the farm with hired help merely
supplementing the family labor.
(d) Applicants seeking priority points
for Mid-Tier Value Chain proposals
must be one of the four eligible
Applicant types and provide the
documentation specified in
§ 4284.923(b)(1) through (7),
demonstrating that the project meets the
Mid-Tier Value Chain definition.
(e) Applicants seeking priority points
for a Farmer or Rancher Cooperative
must:
(1) Demonstrate that it is a business
owned and controlled by Independent
Producers that is legally incorporated as
a Cooperative; or that it is a business
owned and controlled by Independent
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Producers that is not legally
incorporated as a Cooperative, but is
identified by the State in which it
operates as a cooperatively operated
business;
(2) Identify, by name or class, and
confirm that the Independent Producers
on whose behalf the value-added work
will be done meet the definition
requirements for an Independent
Producer, including that each member is
an individual Agricultural Producer, or
an entity that is solely owned and
controlled by Agricultural Producers,
that substantially participates in the
production of the majority of the
Agricultural Commodity to which value
will be added; and
(3) Provide evidence of ‘‘good
standing’’ as a cooperatively operated
business in the State of incorporation or
operations, as applicable.
(f) Applicants applying as
Agricultural Producer Groups, Farmer
and Rancher Cooperatives, or MajorityControlled Producer-Based Business
Ventures (group Applicants) may
request additional priority points for
projects that ‘‘best contribute to creating
or increasing marketing opportunities’’
for operators of Small- and Mediumsized Farms and Ranches that are
structured as Family Farms, Beginning
Farmers and Ranchers, SociallyDisadvantaged Farmers and Ranchers,
and Veteran Farmers and Ranchers. The
annual solicitation and Agency
application package will provide
instructions and documentation
requirements for group Applicants to
apply for these additional priority
points.
§ 4284.925 Eligible uses of grant and
Matching Funds.
In general, grant and cost-share
Matching Funds have the same use
restrictions and must be used to fund
only the costs for eligible purposes as
defined in paragraphs (a) and (b) of this
section.
(a) Planning Grant funds may be used
to pay for a Qualified Consultant to
conduct and develop a Feasibility
Study, Business Plan, and/or Marketing
Plan associated with the processing
and/or marketing of a Value-added
Agricultural Product.
(1) Planning Grant funds may not be
used to compensate Applicants or
family members for participation in
Feasibility Studies.
(2) In-kind contribution of Matching
Funds to cover Applicant or family
member participation in planning
activities is allowed so long as the value
of such contribution does not exceed a
maximum of 25 percent of the Total
Project Costs and an adequate
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explanation of the basis for the
valuation, referencing comparable
market values, salary and wage data,
expertise or experience of the
contributor, per unit costs, industry
norms, etc., is provided. Final valuation
for Applicant or family member in-kind
contributions is at the discretion of the
Agency. Planning funds may not be
used to evaluate the agricultural
production of the commodity itself,
other than to determine the project’s
input costs related to the feasibility of
processing and marketing the ValueAdded Agricultural Product.
(b) Working capital funds may be
used to pay the project’s operational
costs directly related to the processing
and/or marketing of the Value-Added
Agricultural Product.
(1) Examples of eligible working
capital expenses include designing or
purchasing a financial accounting
system for the project, paying salaries of
employees without ownership or
Immediate Family interest to process
and/or market and deliver the ValueAdded Agricultural Product to
consumers, paying for raw commodity
inventory (less than 50 percent of the
amount required for the project) from an
unaffiliated third party, necessary to
produce the Value-Added Agricultural
Product, and paying for a marketing
campaign for the Value-Added
Agricultural Product.
(2) In-kind contributions may include
appropriately valued inventory of raw
commodity to be used in the project. Inkind contributions of Matching Funds
may also include contributions of time
spent on eligible tasks by Applicants or
Applicant family members so long as
the value of such contribution does not
exceed a maximum of 25 percent of the
Total Project Costs and an adequate
explanation of the basis for the
valuation, referencing comparable
market values, salary and wage data,
expertise or experience of the
contributor, per unit costs, industry
norms, etc. is provided. Final valuation
for Applicant or family member in-kind
contributions is at the discretion of the
Agency.
§ 4284.926 Ineligible uses of grant and
Matching Funds.
Federal procurement standards
prohibit transactions that involve a real
or apparent Conflict of Interest for
owners, employees, officers, agents, or
their Immediate Family members having
a personal, professional, financial or
other interest in the outcome of the
project; including organizational
conflicts, and conflicts that restrict open
and free competition for unrestrained
trade. In addition, the use of funds is
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limited to only the eligible activities
identified in § 4284.925 and prohibits
other uses of funds. Ineligible uses of
grant and Matching Funds awarded
under this subpart include, but are not
limited to:
(a) Support costs for services or goods
going to or coming from a person or
entity with a real or apparent Conflict of
Interest, except as specifically noted for
limited in-kind Matching Funds in
§ 4284.925(a) and (b);
(b) Pay costs for scenarios with
noncompetitive trade practices;
(c) Plan, repair, rehabilitate, acquire,
or construct a building or facility
(including a processing facility);
(d) Purchase, lease purchase, or install
fixed equipment, including processing
equipment;
(e) Purchase or repair vehicles,
including boats;
(f) Pay for the preparation of the grant
application;
(g) Pay expenses not directly related
to the funded project for the processing
and marketing of the Value-Added
Agricultural Product;
(h) Fund research and development;
(i) Fund political or lobbying
activities;
(j) Fund any activities prohibited by 2
CFR parts 200 through 400, and 48 CFR
subpart 31.2;
(k) Fund architectural or engineering
design work;
(l) Fund expenses related to the
production of any Agricultural
Commodity or product, including, but
not limited to production planning,
purchase of seed or rootstock or other
production inputs, labor for cultivation
or harvesting crops, and delivery of raw
commodity to a processing facility;
(m) Conduct activities on behalf of
anyone other than a specifically
identified Independent Producer or
group of Independent Producers, as
identified by name or class. The Agency
considers conducting industry-level
feasibility studies or business plans, that
are also known as feasibility study
templates or guides or business plan
templates or guides, to be ineligible
because the assistance is not provided to
a specific group of Independent
Producers;
(n) Pay for goods or services from a
person or entity that employs the owner
or an Immediate Family member;
(o) Duplicate current services or
replace or substitute support previously
provided;
(p) Pay any costs of the project
incurred prior to the date of grant
approval, including legal or other
expenses needed to incorporate or
organize a business;
(q) Pay any judgment or debt owed to
the United States;
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(r) Purchase land;
(s) Pay for costs associated with illegal
activities; or
(t) Purchase the Agricultural
Commodity to which value will be
added (raw commodity) from the
applicant entity; applicant-owned or
related entity, or members of the
applicant entity.
§ 4284.927
Funding limitations.
(a) Grant funds may be used to pay up
to 50 percent of the Total Project Costs,
subject to the limitations established for
maximum total grant amount.
(b) The maximum total grant amount
provided to a grantee in any one year
shall not exceed the amount announced
in an annual notice issued pursuant to
§ 4284.915, but in no event may the total
amount of grant funds provided to a
grant recipient exceed $500,000.
(c) A grant shall have a term that does
not exceed 3 years, and a project start
date within 90 days of the date of
award, unless otherwise specified in a
notice pursuant to § 4284.915. Grant
project periods should be scaled to the
complexity of the objectives for the
project. The Agency may extend the
term of the grant period, not to exceed
the 3-year maximum.
(d) The aggregate amount of awards to
Majority-Controlled Producer-Based
Business Ventures may not exceed 10
percent of the total funds obligated
under this subpart during any Fiscal
Year.
(e) Not more than 5 percent of funds
appropriated each year may be used to
fund the Agricultural Marketing
Resource Center, to support electronic
capabilities to provide information
regarding research, business, legal,
financial, or logistical assistance to
Independent Producers and processors.
(f) Each Fiscal Year, the following
amounts of reserved funds will be made
available:
(1) 10 percent of total program
funding to fund projects that benefit
Beginning Farmers or Ranchers or
Socially-Disadvantaged Farmers or
Ranchers; and
(2) 10 percent of total program
funding to fund projects that propose
development of Mid-tier Value Chains.
(3) Funds not obligated by June 30 of
each Fiscal Year shall be available to the
Secretary to make grants under this
subpart to eligible applicants in the
general funds competition.
§§ 4284.928–4284.929
[Reserved]
Applying for a Grant
§ 4284.930
Preliminary review.
The Agency encourages Applicants to
contact their State Office well in
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advance of the application submission
deadline, to ask questions and to
discuss Applicant and Project eligibility
potential. At its option, the Agency may
establish a preliminary review deadline
in accordance with § 4284.915, so that it
may informally assess the eligibility of
the application and its completeness.
The result of the preliminary review is
not binding on the Agency.
§ 4284.931
Application package.
All Applicants are required to submit
a complete application package that is
comprised of all of the elements in this
section.
(a) Application forms. The application
must include all forms listed in the
annually published notice for the
program. The following application
forms (or their successor forms) must be
completed when applying for a grant
under this subpart.
(1) ‘‘Application for Federal
Assistance.’’
(2) ‘‘Budget Information-NonConstruction Programs.’’
(3) ‘‘Assurances—Non-Construction
Programs.’’
(4) All Applicants (including
individuals and sole proprietorships)
are required to have a DUNS number
and maintain registration with the
System for Award Management (SAM).
(b) Application content. The
following content items must be
completed when applying for a grant
under this subpart:
(1) Eligibility discussion. The
Applicant must demonstrate in detail
how the:
(i) Applicant eligibility requirements
in §§ 4284.920 and 4284.921 are met;
(ii) Project eligibility requirements in
§ 4284.922 are met;
(iii) Eligible use of grant and Matching
Funds requirements in §§ 4284.925 and
4284.926 are met; and
(iv) Funding limitation requirements
in § 4284.927 are met.
(2) Evaluation criteria. Using the
format prescribed by the application
package, the Applicant must address
each evaluation criterion identified
below.
(i) Performance Evaluation Criteria.
The overall goal of this program and the
projects it supports is to create and
serve new markets, with a resulting
increase in jobs, customer base and
revenues returning to the producer.
Applicants must provide specific
information about plans to track and
evaluate progress toward these
outcomes as a way for the Agency to
ascertain whether or not the primary
program goals and project goals
proposed in the work plan are likely to
be accomplished during the project
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period. The application package will
provide additional instruction to assist
Applicants when responding to this
criterion. The required data, including
accomplishments as outlined in
§ 4284.960 and Applicant-suggested
performance criteria, will be
incorporated into the Applicant’s semiannual and final reporting requirements
if selected for award, and will be
specified in the grant agreement
associated with each award. At a
minimum, data included in each
application submission must include
both target outcomes and timeframes for
achieving results:
(A) The number of jobs anticipated to
be created or saved as a direct result of
the project.
(B) The current baseline number of
customers.
(C) The estimated expansion of
customer base as a direct result of the
project.
(D) The current baseline of revenue.
(E) The estimated increase in revenue
as a direct result of the project.
(F) Applicants for both Working
Capital and Planning Grants are invited
to suggest additional benchmarks for
evaluation that are specific to proposed
project activities or outcomes and the
corresponding timeframes for
accomplishing them; these should be
informed by the program objectives,
stated above, related to new markets,
expansion of customer base, and
revenues returning to producer
Applicants; as well as to the practical
and/or logistical activities and tasks to
be accomplished during the project
period.
(ii) Proposal evaluation criteria.
Applicants for both Planning and
Working Capital Grants must address
each proposal evaluation criterion
identified in § 4284.942 in narrative
form, in the application package.
(3) Certification of Matching Funds.
Using the format prescribed by the
application package, Applicants must
certify that:
(i) Cost-share Matching Funds will be
spent in advance of grant funding, such
that for every dollar of grant funds
disbursed, not less than an equal
amount of Matching Funds will have
been expended prior to submitting the
request for reimbursement; and
(ii) If Matching Funds are proposed in
an amount exceeding the grant amount,
those Matching Funds must be spent at
a proportional rate equal to the matchto-grant ratio identified in the proposed
budget.
(4) Verification of cost-share Matching
Funds. Using the format prescribed by
the application package, the Applicant
must demonstrate and provide authentic
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documentation from the source to
confirm the eligibility and availability of
both cash and in-kind contributions that
meet the definition requirements for
Matching Funds and Conflict of Interest
in § 4284.902, as well as the following
criteria:
(i) Except as provided at § 4284.925(a)
and (b), Matching Funds are subject to
the same use restrictions as grant funds,
and must be spent on eligible project
expenses during the grant funding
period.
(ii) Matching Funds must be from
eligible sources without a real or
apparent Conflict of Interest.
(iii) Matching Funds must be at least
equal to the amount of grant funds
requested, and combined grant and
Matching Funds must equal 100 percent
of the Total Project Costs.
(iv) Unless provided by other
authorizing legislation, other Federal
grant funds cannot be used as Matching
Funds.
(v) Matching Funds must be provided
in the form of confirmed Applicant
cash, loan, or line of credit; or provided
in the form of a confirmed Applicant or
family member in-kind contribution that
meets the requirements and limitations
specified in § 4284.925(a) and (b); or
provided in the form of confirmed thirdparty cash or eligible third-party in-kind
contribution; or non-federal grant
sources (unless otherwise provided by
law).
(vi) Examples of ineligible Matching
Funds include funds used for an
ineligible purpose, contributions
donated outside the proposed grant
funding period, applicant and thirdparty in-kind contributions that are
over-valued, or are without substantive
documentation for an independent
reviewer to confirm a valuation,
conducting activities on behalf of
anyone other than a specific
Independent Producer or group of
Independent Producers, expected
program income at time of application,
or instances where a real or apparent
Conflict of Interest exists, except as
detailed in § 4284.925(a) and (b).
(5) Business plan. For Working
Capital Grant applications, Applicants
must provide a copy of the Business
Plan that was completed for the
proposed value-added Venture, except
as provided for in §§ 4284.922(b)(6) and
4284.932. The Agency must concur in
the acceptability or adequacy of the
Business Plan. For all planning grant
applications including those proposing
product eligibility under ‘‘Produced in a
Manner that Enhances the Value of the
Agricultural Commodity,’’ a Business
Plan is not required as part of the grant
application.
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(6) Feasibility study. As part of the
application package, Applicants for
Working Capital Grants must provide a
copy of the third-party Feasibility Study
that was completed for the proposed
value-added project, except as provided
for at §§ 4284.922(b)(6) and 4284.932.
The Agency must concur in the
acceptability or adequacy of the
Feasibility Study.
§ 4284.932
Simplified application.
Applicants requesting less than
$50,000 will be allowed to submit a
simplified application, the contents of
which will be announced in an annual
solicitation issued pursuant to
§ 4284.915. Applicants requesting
Working Capital Grants of less than
$50,000 are not required to provide
Feasibility Studies or Business Plans,
but must provide information
demonstrating increases in customer
base and revenue returns to the
producers supplying the majority of the
Agricultural Commodity as a result of
the project. See § 4284.922(b)(6)(ii).
§ 4284.933
Filing instructions.
Unless otherwise specified in a
notification issued under § 4284.915,
the requirements specified in
paragraphs (a) through (e) of this section
apply to all applications.
(a) When to submit. Complete
applications must be received by the
Agency on or before the application
deadline established for a Fiscal Year to
be considered for funding for that Fiscal
Year. Applications received by the
Agency after the application deadline
established for a Fiscal Year will not be
considered. Revisions or additional
information will not be accepted after
the application deadline.
(b) Incomplete applications.
Incomplete applications will be
rejected. Applicants will be informed of
the elements that made the application
incomplete. If a resubmitted application
is received by the applicable application
deadline, the Agency will reconsider the
application.
(c) Where to submit. All applications
must be submitted to the State Office of
Rural Development in the State where
the project primarily takes place, or online through grants.gov.
(d) Format. Applications may be
submitted as paper copy, or
electronically via grants.gov. If
submitted as paper copy, only one
original copy should be submitted. An
application submission must contain all
required components in their entirety.
Emailed or faxed submissions will not
be acknowledged, accepted or processed
by the Agency.
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(e) Other forms and instructions.
Upon request, the Agency will make
available to the public the necessary
forms and instructions for filing
applications. These forms and
instructions may be obtained from any
State Office of Rural Development, or
the Agency’s Value-Added Producer
Grant program Web site in https://
www.rurdev.usda.gov/BCP_VAPG.html.
§§ 4284.934–4284.939
[Reserved]
Processing and Scoring Applications
§ 4284.940
Processing applications.
(a) Initial review. Upon receipt of an
application on or before the application
submission deadline for each Fiscal
Year, the Agency will conduct a review
to determine if the Applicant and
project are eligible, and if the
application is complete and sufficiently
responsive to program requirements.
(b) Notifications. After the review in
paragraph (a) of this section has been
conducted, if the Agency has
determined that either the Applicant or
project is ineligible or that the
application is not complete to allow
evaluation of the application or
sufficiently responsive to program
requirements, the Agency will notify the
Applicant in writing and will include in
the notification the reason(s) for its
determination(s).
(c) Resubmittal by Applicants.
Applicants may submit revised
applications to the Agency in response
to the notification received under
paragraph (b) of this section. If a revised
grant application is received on or
before the application deadline, it will
be processed by the Agency. If a revised
application is not received by the
specified application deadline, the
Agency will not process the application
and will inform the Applicant that their
application was not reviewed due to
tardiness.
(d) Subsequent ineligibility
determinations. If at any time an
application is determined to be
ineligible, the Agency will notify the
Applicant in writing of its
determination.
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§ 4284.941
Application withdrawal.
During the period between the
submission of an application and the
execution of award documents, the
Applicant must notify the Agency in
writing if the project is no longer viable
or the Applicant no longer is requesting
financial assistance for the project.
When the Applicant notifies the
Agency, the selection will be rescinded
or the application withdrawn.
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§ 4284.942 Proposal evaluation criteria
and scoring applications.
(a) General. The Agency will only
score applications for which it has
determined that the Applicant and
project are eligible, the application is
complete and sufficiently responsive to
program requirements. Any Applicant
whose application will not be reviewed
because the Agency has determined it
fails to meet the preceding criteria will
be notified of appeal rights pursuant to
§ 4284.903. Each such viable application
the Agency receives on or before the
application deadline in a Fiscal Year
will be scored in the Fiscal Year in
which it was received. Each application
will be scored based on the information
provided and adequately referenced in
the scoring section of the application at
the time the Applicant submits the
application to the Agency. Scoring
information must be readily identifiable
in the application or it will not be
considered.
(b) Scoring Applications. The criteria
specified in paragraphs (b)(1) through
(6) of this section will be used to score
all applications. For each criterion,
Applicants must demonstrate how the
project has merit, and provide rationale
for the likelihood of project success.
Responses that do not address all
aspects of the criterion, or that do not
comprehensively convey pertinent
project information will receive lower
scores. The maximum number of points
that will be awarded to an application
is 100. Points may be awarded lump
sum or on a graduated basis. The
Agency application package will
provide additional instruction to assist
Applicants when responding to the
criteria below.
(1) Nature of the Proposed Venture
(graduated score 0–30 points). Describe
the technological feasibility of the
project, as well as the operational
efficiency, profitability, and overall
economic sustainability resulting from
the project. In addition, demonstrate the
potential for expanding the customer
base for the Value-Added Agricultural
Product, and the expected increase in
revenue returns to the producer-owners
providing the majority of the raw
Agricultural Commodity to the project.
Applications that demonstrate high
likelihood of success in these areas will
receive more points than those that
demonstrate less potential in these
areas.
(2) Qualifications of Project Personnel
(graduated score 0–20 points). Identify
the individuals who will be responsible
for completing the proposed tasks in the
work plan, including the roles and
activities that owners, staff, contractors,
consultants or new hires may perform;
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26809
and demonstrate that these individuals
have the necessary qualifications and
expertise, including those hired to do
market or feasibility analyses, or to
develop a business operations plan for
the value-added venture. Include the
qualifications of those individuals
responsible to lead or manage the total
project (Applicant owners or project
managers), as well as those individuals
responsible for actually conducting the
various individual tasks in the work
plan (such as consultants, contractors,
staff or new hires). Demonstrate the
commitment and the availability of any
consultants or other professionals to be
hired for the project. If staff or
consultants have not been selected at
the time of application, provide specific
descriptions of the qualifications
required for the positions to be filled.
Applications that demonstrate the
strong credentials, education,
capabilities, experience and availability
of project personnel that will contribute
to a high likelihood of project success
will receive more points than those that
demonstrate less potential for success in
these areas.
(3) Commitments and Support
(graduated score 0–10 points). Producer
commitments to the project will be
evaluated based on the number of
Independent Producers currently
involved in the project; and the nature,
level and quality of their contributions.
End-user commitments will be
evaluated on the basis of potential or
identified markets and the potential
amount of output to be purchased, as
evidenced by letters of intent or
contracts from potential buyers
referenced within the application. Other
Third-Party commitments to the project
will be evaluated based on the critical
and tangible nature of the contribution
to the project, such as technical
assistance, storage, processing,
marketing, or distribution arrangements
that are necessary for the project to
proceed; and the level and quality of
these contributions. Applications that
demonstrate the project has strong
direct financial, technical and logistical
support to successfully complete the
project will receive more points than
those that demonstrate less potential for
success in these areas.
(4) Work Plan and Budget (graduated
score 0–20 points). In accord with
§ 4284.922(b)(5), Applicants must
submit a comprehensive work plan and
budget. The work plan must provide
specific and detailed narrative
descriptions of the tasks and the key
project personnel that will accomplish
the project’s goals. The budget must
present a detailed breakdown of all
estimated costs associated with the
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activities and allocate those costs among
the listed tasks. The source and use of
both grant and Matching Funds must be
specified for all tasks. An eligible start
and end date for the project itself and
for individual project tasks must be
clearly indicated and may not exceed
Agency specified timeframes for the
grant period. Points may not be awarded
unless sufficient detail is provided to
determine that both grant and Matching
Funds are being used for qualified
purposes and are from eligible sources
without a Conflict of Interest. It is
recommended that Applicants utilize
the budget format templates provided in
the Agency’s application package.
(5) Priority Points (up to 10 points).
Priority points may be awarded in both
the General Funds competition and the
Reserved Funds competitions.
Qualifying applications may be awarded
priority points under paragraphs
(b)(5)(i) and (ii) of this section, for up to
a total of 10 points.
(i) Priority categories (lump sum score
of 0 or 5 points). Qualifying Applicants
may request priority points under this
paragraph if they meet the requirements
for one of the following categories and
provide the documentation specified in
§ 4284.924, as applicable. Priority
categories are: Beginning Farmer or
Rancher, Socially-Disadvantaged Farmer
or Rancher, Veteran Farmer or Rancher,
Operator of a Small- or Medium-sized
Farm or Ranch that is structured as a
Family Farm, Mid-Tier Value Chain
proposals, and Farmer or Rancher
Cooperative. It is recommended that
Applicants utilize the Agency
application package when documenting
for priority points and refer to the
documentation requirements specified
in § 4284.924. Applications from
qualifying priority categories will be
awarded 5 points. Applicants will not
be awarded more than 5 points even if
they qualify for more than one of the
priority categories.
(ii) Best contributing (up to 5 points).
Applications from Agricultural
Producer Groups, Farmer or Rancher
Cooperatives, and Majority-Controlled
Producer-Based Business Ventures
(applicant groups) may be awarded up
to 5 additional points for contributing to
the creation of or increase in marketing
opportunities for Beginning Farmers or
Ranchers, Socially-Disadvantaged
Farmers or Ranchers, Veteran Farmers
or Ranchers, or Operators of a Small- or
Medium-sized Farm or Ranch that are
structured as a Family Farm (priority
groups). Applicant groups must submit
documentation on the percentage of
existing membership that is comprised
of one or a combination of the above
priority groups and on the anticipated
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expansion of membership to one or
more additional priority groups.
Applications must contain sufficient
information as described in the annual
solicitation and application package to
enable the Agency to make the
appropriate determinations for awarding
points. If the application does not
contain sufficient information, the
Agency will not award points
accordingly.
(6) Priority Categories (graduated
score 0–10 points). Unless otherwise
specified in a notification issued under
§ 4284.915(b)(1), the Administrator or
State Director has discretion to award
up to 10 points to an application to
improve the geographic diversity of
awardees in a Fiscal Year. In the event
of a National competition, the
Administrator will award points and for
a State-allocated competition, the State
Director will award points.
§§ 4284.943–4284.949
[Reserved]
Grant Awards and Agreement
§ 4284.950
Award process.
(a) Selection of applications for
funding and for potential funding. The
Agency will select and rank
applications for funding based on the
score an application has received in
response to the proposal evaluation
criteria, compared to the scores of other
value-added applications received in
the same Fiscal Year. Higher scoring
applications will receive first
consideration for funding. The Agency
may set a minimally acceptable score for
funding, which will be noted in the
published program notice. The Agency
will notify Applicants, in writing,
whether or not they have been selected
for funding. For those Applicants not
selected for funding, the Agency will
provide a brief explanation for why they
were not selected.
(b) Ranked applications not funded. A
ranked application that is not funded in
the Fiscal Year in which it was
submitted will not be carried forward
into the next Fiscal Year. The Agency
will notify the Applicant in writing.
(c) Intergovernmental review. If State
or local governments raise objections to
a proposed project under the
intergovernmental review process that
are not resolved within 90 days of the
Agency’s award announcement date, the
Agency will rescind the award and will
provide the Applicant with a written
notice to that effect. This is prior to the
signing of a Grant Agreement. The
Agency, in its sole discretion, may
extend the 90-day period if it appears
resolution is imminent.
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§ 4284.951
Obligate and award funds.
(a) Letter of conditions. When an
application is selected subject to
conditions established by the Agency,
the Agency will notify the Applicant
using a Letter of Conditions, which
defines the conditions under which the
grant will be made. Each grantee will be
required to meet all terms and
conditions of the award within 90 days
of receiving a Letter of Conditions
unless otherwise specified by the
Agency at the time of the award. If the
Applicant agrees with the conditions,
the Applicant must complete, an
applicable Letter of Intent to Meet
Conditions. If the Applicant believes
that certain conditions cannot be met,
the Applicant may propose alternate
conditions to the Agency. The Agency
must concur with any proposed changes
to the Letter of Conditions by the
Applicant before the application will be
further processed. If the Agency agrees
to any proposed changes, the Agency
will issue a revised or amended Letter
of Conditions that defines the final
conditions under which the grant will
be made.
(b) Grant agreement and conditions.
Each grantee will be required to sign a
grant agreement that outlines the
approved use of funds and actions
under the award, as well as the
restrictions and applicable laws and
regulations that pertain to the award.
(c) Other documentation. The grantee
will execute additional documentation
in order to obligate the award of funds;
including, but not limited to:
(1) ‘‘Request for Obligation of Funds;’’
(2) ‘‘Certification Regarding
Debarment, Suspension, and Other
Responsibility Matters-Primary Covered
Transaction;’’
(3) ‘‘Certification Regarding Drug-Free
Workplace Requirements;’’
(4) ‘‘Assurance Agreement (under
Title VI, Civil Rights Act of 1964);’’
(5) ‘‘ACH Vendor/Miscellaneous
Payment Enrollment Form;’’ or
(6) ‘‘Disclosure of Lobbying
Activities.’’
(d) Grant disbursements. Grant
disbursements will be made in
accordance with the Letter of
Conditions, and/or the grant agreement,
as applicable.
§§ 4284.952–4284.959
[Reserved]
Post Award Activities and
Requirements
§ 4284.960 Monitoring and reporting
program performance.
The requirements specified in this
section shall apply to grants made under
this subpart.
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(a) Grantees must complete the project
per the terms and conditions specified
in the approved work plan and budget,
and in the grant agreement and letter of
conditions. Grantees will expend funds
only for eligible purposes and will be
monitored by Agency staff for
compliance. Grantees must maintain a
financial management system, and
property and procurement standards in
accordance with Departmental
Regulations.
(b) Grantees must submit narrative
and financial performance reports, as
prescribed by the Agency in the grant
agreement, that include required data
elements related to achieving
programmatic objectives and a
comparison of accomplishments with
the objectives stated in the application.
At a minimum, these include
comparisons of anticipated activies and
outcomes and timeframes for achieving:
(1) Expansion of customer base as a
result of the project;
(2) Increased revenue returned to the
producer as a result of the project;
(3) Jobs created or saved as a result of
the project;
(4) Evidence of receipt of matching
funds, if included or provided for in
project.
(i) Semi-annual performance reports
shall be submitted within 45 days
following March 31 and September 30
each Fiscal Year. A final performance
report shall be submitted to the Agency
within 90 days of project completion.
Failure to submit a performance report
within the specified timeframes may
result in the Agency withholding grant
funds.
(ii) Additional reports shall be
submitted as specified in the grant
agreement or Letter of Conditions, or as
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otherwise provided in a notification
issued under § 4284.915.
(iii) Copies of supporting
documentation and/or project
deliverables for completed tasks must be
provided to the Agency in a timely
manner in accord with the development
or completion of materials and in
conjunction with the budget and project
timeline. Examples include, but are not
limited to, a Feasibility Study,
Marketing Plan, Business Plan, success
story, distribution network study, or
best practice.
(iv) The Agency may request any
additional project and/or performance
data for the project for which grant
funds have been received, including but
not limited to:
(A) Information that will enable
evaluation of the economic impact of
program awards, such as:
(1) Business starts and clients served;
(2) Data associated with producer
market expansion, new market
penetration, and changes in customer
base or revenues.
(B) Information that would promote
greater understanding of the key
determinants of the success of
individual projects or inform program
administration and evaluation, such as:
(1) The producer’s experience related
to financial management, budgeting,
and running a business enterprise.
(2) The nature of, and advantages or
disadvantages of, supply chain
arrangements or equitable distribution
of rewards and responsibilities for Midtier Value Chain projects; and
(3) Recommendations from Beginning
Farmers or Ranchers, SociallyDisadvantaged Farmers or Ranchers, or
Veteran Farmers or Ranchers.
(C) Information that would inform or
enable the aggregation of data for
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26811
program administration or evaluation
purposes.
(v) The Agency may terminate or
suspend the grant for lack of adequate
or timely progress, reporting, or
documentation, or for failure to comply
with Agency requirements.
§ 4284.961
Grant servicing.
All grants awarded under this subpart
shall be serviced in accordance with 7
CFR part 1951, subparts E and O, and
the Departmental Regulations with the
exception that delegation of the postaward servicing of the program does not
require the prior approval of the
Administrator.
§ 4284.962
Transfer of obligations.
At the discretion of the Agency and
on a case-by-case basis, an obligation of
funds established for an Applicant may
be transferred to a different (substituted)
Applicant provided:
(a) The substituted Applicant:
(1) Is eligible;
(2) Has a close and genuine
relationship with the original Applicant;
and
(3) Has the authority to receive the
assistance approved for the original
Applicant; and
(b) The project continues to meet all
product, purpose, and reserved funds
eligibility requirements so that the need,
purpose(s), and scope of the project for
which the Agency funds will be used
remain substantially unchanged.
§§ 4284.963–4284.999
[Reserved]
Dated: April 28, 2015.
Lisa Mensah,
Under Secretary, Rural Development.
[FR Doc. 2015–10441 Filed 5–7–15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3410–XY–P
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 80, Number 89 (Friday, May 8, 2015)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 26787-26811]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2015-10441]
[[Page 26787]]
Vol. 80
Friday,
No. 89
May 8, 2015
Part IV
Department of Agriculture
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Rural Business-Cooperative Service
Rural Utilities Service
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7 CFR Part 4284
Value-Added Producer Grant Program; Final Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 80 , No. 89 / Friday, May 8, 2015 / Rules and
Regulations
[[Page 26788]]
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DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Rural Business-Cooperative Service
Rural Utilities Service
7 CFR Part 4284
RIN 0570-AA79
Value-Added Producer Grant Program
AGENCY: Rural Business-Cooperative Service and Rural Utilities Service,
USDA.
ACTION: Final rule; request for comment.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Rural Business-Cooperative Service (Agency) is publishing
this final rule for the Value-Added Producer Grant (VAPG) program. This
final rule modifies the interim rule for VAPG based on comments
received on the interim rule, which was published on February 23, 2011,
on the Agricultural Act of 2014 (2014 Farm Bill), and on a listening
session, held on April 25, 2014, on the VAPG provisions in the 2014
Farm Bill.
Under the final rule, grants will be made to help eligible
producers of agricultural commodities enter into or expand value-added
activities including the development of feasibility studies, business
plans, and marketing strategies. The program also provides working
capital for expenses such as implementing an existing viable marketing
strategy.
The program provides a priority for funding for applicants that are
Beginning Farmers and Ranchers, Veteran Farmers and Ranchers, Socially-
Disadvantaged Farmers and Ranchers, operators of Small- and Medium-
sized Family Farms and Ranches, Farmer and Rancher Cooperatives and
applicants that propose a Mid-Tier Value Chain project. Additional
priority points will be given to Agricultural Producer Groups, Farmer
or Rancher Cooperatives, and Majority-Controlled Producer-Based
Business Ventures whose projects ``best contribute'' to creating or
increasing marketing opportunities for Beginning Farmers and Ranchers,
Veteran Farmers and Ranchers, Socially-Disadvantaged Farmers and
Ranchers, and operators of Small- and Medium-sized Family Farms and
Ranches. Further, it creates two reserved funds, each of which will
include 10 percent of program funds each year, for applications that
support opportunities for Beginning and Socially-Disadvantaged Farmers
and Ranchers and for proposed projects that develop mid-tier value
marketing chains.
DATES: Effective Date: This final rule is effective May 8, 2015.
Comments Due Date: Written comments on this rule must be received
on or before July 7, 2015.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments on this final rule by any of the
following methods:
Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov.
Follow the instructions for submitting comments.
Mail: Submit written comments via the U.S. Postal Service
to the Branch Chief, Regulations and Paperwork Management Branch, U.S.
Department of Agriculture, STOP 0742, 1400 Independence Avenue SW.,
Washington, DC 20250-0742.
Hand Delivery/Courier: Submit written comments via Federal
Express Mail or other courier service requiring a street address to the
Branch Chief, Regulations and Paperwork Management Branch, U.S.
Department of Agriculture, 300 7th Street SW., 7th Floor, Washington,
DC 20024.
All written comments will be available for public inspection during
regular work hours at the 300 7th Street SW., 7th Floor address listed
above.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: USDA, Rural Development, Rural
Business-Cooperative Service, Room 4008, South Agriculture Building,
Stop 3253, 1400 Independence Avenue SW., Washington, DC 20250-3253,
Telephone: (202) 690-1376, Email CPGrants@wdc.usda.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Executive Summary
I. Purpose of the Regulatory Action
This action is needed in order to implement the final rule for the
Value-Added Producer Grant (VAPG) program. This final rule modifies the
interim rule for VAPG based on comments received on the interim rule,
which was published on February 23, 2011 (76 FR 10122), on the
Agricultural Act of 2014 (2014 Farm Bill), and on a listening session,
held on April 25, 2014, on the VAPG provisions in the 2014 Farm Bill.
This action addresses these modifications, as well as a number of
program clarifications, including but not limited to, allowing seafood
producers to be able to apply under the locally-produced value-added
agricultural product methodology and eligibility for tribal entities.
Finally, this action gives the State Director discretion to award
priority points in the event that the VAPG program is State-allocated
in accordance with 7 CFR 1940.593.
II. Summary of the Major Provisions
1. Program. Section 6203 of Agricultural Act of 2014, Public Law
113-79 provides priority for funding applicants that are Veteran
Farmers and Ranchers. It further provides additional priority points
for Agricultural Producer Groups, Farmer or Rancher Cooperatives, and
Majority-Controlled Producer-Based Business Ventures whose projects
``best contribute'' to creating or increasing marketing opportunities
for Beginning Farmers and Ranchers, Veteran Farmers and Ranchers,
Socially-Disadvantaged Farmers and Ranchers, and operators of Small-
and Medium-sized Family Farms and Ranches.
2. Applications. Applicants must meet all program eligibility and
evaluation requirements to be considered for funding. To be eligible to
compete for reserved funding and/or receive priority points in the
scoring process, applicants must include additional information in
their grant application for their respective priority or reservation
category (Beginning Farmers and Ranchers, Veteran Farmers and Ranchers,
Socially-Disadvantaged Farmers and Ranchers, operators of Small- and
Medium-sized Family Farms and Ranches, Farmer and Rancher Cooperatives,
Mid-Tier Value Chain projects, and projects that `best contribute' to
new or expanded marketing opportunities for Beginning Farmers and
Ranchers, Socially-Disadvantaged Farmers and Ranchers, or operators of
Small-and Medium-sized Family Farms and Ranches) in accordance with the
VAPG program regulation and any additional guidance provided in the
annual solicitation for the program.
3. Scoring applications. The Agency will score applications based
upon the VAPG program regulation and any additional guidance provided
in the annual solicitation for the program. Priority points will be
awarded based on the applicant's qualification as one of the identified
priority categories. Additional priority points will be awarded to
Agricultural Producer Groups, Farmer or Rancher Cooperatives, and
Majority-Controlled Producer-Based Business Ventures who can
demonstrate, based on their current and projected composition of
owners/membership, how their project ``best contributes'' to creating
or increasing marketing opportunities for Beginning Farmers and
Ranchers, Veteran Farmers and Ranchers, Socially-Disadvantaged Farmers
and Ranchers, and operators of Small- and Medium-sized Family Farms and
Ranches. Any reserve funds not
[[Page 26789]]
obligated by June 30th will roll into the general program fund.
Applications will be awarded in rank order until funds are expended or
the minimum score threshold under the annual solicitation is reached.
III. Costs and Benefits
The Agency estimates the cost to complete an application to be
approximately $2,405, with changes resulting from this action estimated
to amount to $70. The Agency has identified potential offsetting
benefits to prospective program participants and the Agency that are
associated with this action. The primary benefit of this action is
improving the availability of funds to help agricultural producer
applicants in general, and priority category applicants in particular,
to expand their customer base for the products or commodities that they
produce.
Comments: While comments on the interim rule have been considered,
we are issuing this final rule without opportunity for prior notice and
comment on the changes made to implement the 2014 Farm Bill. The
Administrative Procedure Act exempts rules ``relating to agency
management or personnel or to public property, loans, grants, benefits,
or contracts'' from the statutory requirement for prior notice and
opportunity for comment. 5 U.S.C. 553(a)(2). However, we invite you to
participate in this rulemaking by submitting written comments, data, or
views before the noted deadline. We will consider the comments we
receive and may conduct additional rulemaking based on the comments.
Executive Order 12866
This final rule has been reviewed under Executive Order (EO) 12866
and has been determined not significant by the Office of Management and
Budget (OMB).
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
Title II of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act 1995 (UMRA), Public
Law 104-4, establishes requirements for Federal agencies to assess the
effects of their regulatory actions on State, local, and tribal
governments and the private sector. Under section 202 of the UMRA,
Rural Development generally must prepare a written statement, including
a cost-benefit analysis, for proposed and final rules with ``Federal
mandates'' that may result in expenditures to State, local, or tribal
governments, in the aggregate, or to the private sector of $100 million
or more in any one year. When such a statement is needed for a rule,
section 205 of the UMRA generally requires Rural Development to
identify and consider a reasonable number of regulatory alternatives
and adopt the least costly, more cost-effective, or least burdensome
alternative that achieves the objectives of the rule.
This final rule contains no Federal mandates (under the regulatory
provisions of Title II of the UMRA) for State, local, and tribal
governments or the private sector. Thus, this rule is not subject to
the requirements of sections 202 and 205 of the UMRA.
Environmental Impact Statement
This final rule has been reviewed in accordance with 7 CFR part
1940, subpart G, ``Environmental Program.'' Rural Development has
determined that this action does not constitute a major Federal action
significantly affecting the quality of the human environment, and in
accordance with NEPA of 1969, 42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq., an Environmental
Impact Statement is not required.
Executive Order 12988, Civil Justice Reform
This final rule has been reviewed under EO 12988, Civil Justice
Reform. In accordance with this rule: (1) All State and local laws and
regulations that are in conflict with this rule will be preempted; (2)
no retroactive effect will be given to this rule; and (3)
administrative proceedings in accordance with the regulations of the
Department of Agriculture's National Appeals Division (7 CFR part 11)
must be exhausted before bringing suit in court challenging action
taken under this rule unless those regulations specifically allow
bringing suit at an earlier time.
Executive Order 13132, Federalism
It has been determined, under EO 13132, Federalism, that this final
rule does not have sufficient federalism implications to warrant the
preparation of a Federalism Assessment. The provisions contained in the
rule will not have a substantial direct effect on States or their
political subdivisions or on the distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various government levels.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601-612) (RFA) generally
requires an agency to prepare a regulatory flexibility analysis of any
rule subject to notice and comment rulemaking requirements under the
Administrative Procedure Act or any other statute unless the Agency
certifies that the rule will not have an economically significant
impact on a substantial number of small entities. Small entities
include small businesses, small organizations, and small governmental
jurisdictions.
Under section 605(b) of the Regulatory Flexibility Act, 5 U.S.C.
605(b), the Agency certifies, that this action, while mostly affecting
small entities, will not have a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of these small entities for the reasons discussed
below. This regulation only affects agricultural producers that choose
to participate in the program. The Agency estimates that approximately
75 percent of the agricultural producers (operators of Family Farms and
beginning and Socially-Disadvantaged applicants) that utilize the
program are considered small entities, as defined by the Regulatory
Flexibility Act. Therefore, the Agency has determined that this final
rule will have an impact on a substantial number of small entities.
However, the economic impact of this final rule on small entities
will not be significant. Many of the changes being implemented in the
rule are in response to efforts to make the program more accessible to
applicants in general and to smaller applicants in particular, as well
as to clarify and simplify program requirements. In addition, a number
of changes are in response to comments and concerns voiced by
applicants and other stakeholders during listening sessions and public
comment periods for the proposed and interim rules. The most
significant changes in the rule that affects small producers are the
addition of Veteran Farmer or Rancher applicants as a priority category
and the additional priority points available for Agricultural Producer
Groups, Farmer or Rancher Cooperatives, and Majority-Controlled
Producer-Based Business Ventures whose projects meet the ``best
contribute'' provision from the 2014 Farm Bill. These changes do not
have a significant economic impact on small entities because the cost
to applicants as estimated by the Agency in the Paperwork Reduction Act
(PRA) burden package is approximately $70 per applicant impacted by the
changes. Of these applicants, those addressing the ``best contributes''
priority are expected to be comprised of larger entities. This is based
on determining which of the estimated costs in the PRA burden package
would be incurred by the applicants impacted by the incorporation of
the 2014 Farm Bill provisions and the percentage of those considered
``small entities.
[[Page 26790]]
Executive Order 13211, Actions Concerning Regulations That
Significantly Affect Energy Supply, Distribution, or Use
The regulatory impact analysis conducted for this final rule meets
the requirements for EO 13211, which states that an agency undertaking
regulatory actions related to energy supply, distribution, or use is to
prepare a Statement of Energy Effects. This analysis finds that this
rule will not have any adverse impacts on energy supply, distribution,
or use.
Executive Order 12372, Intergovernmental Review of Federal Programs
This program is subject to Executive Order 12372, which requires
intergovernmental consultation with State and local officials.
Intergovernmental consultation will occur for the assistance to
producers of agricultural commodities in accordance with the process
and procedures outlined in 7 CFR part 3015, subpart V. Note that not
all States have chosen to participate in the intergovernmental review
process. A list of participating States is available at the following
Web site: https://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/grants/spoc.html.
Executive Order 13175, Consultation and Coordination With Indian Tribes
This rule has been reviewed in accordance with the requirements of
Executive Order 13175, ``Consultation and Coordination with Indian
Tribal Governments.'' Executive Order 13175 requires Rural Development
to consult and coordinate with tribes on a government-to-government
basis on policies that have tribal implications, including regulations,
legislative comments or proposed legislation, and other policy
statements or actions that have substantial direct effects on one or
more Indian tribes, on the relationship between the Federal Government
and Indian tribes or on the distribution of power and responsibilities
between the Federal Government and Indian tribes.
In response to the 2008 Farm Bill USDA participated in a series of
formal Tribal consultation sessions to gain input by elected Tribal
officials, or their designees, concerning the impact of the Interim
rule on Tribal governments, Tribal producers and Tribal members. These
sessions were intended to establish a baseline of consultation for
future actions and informed USDA's policy development within the VAPG
program.
As a result of these consultations, USDA developed and issued
guidance on the eligibility of Tribes and Tribal entities, incorporated
this guidance into application materials, and provided updated guidance
to USDA field staff, Tribes and the general public on required
documentation.
As the 2014 Farm Bill contained no additional requirements that had
Tribal implications or substantial direct effects on one or more Indian
tribes, on the relationship between the Federal Government and Indian
tribes or on the distribution of power and responsibilities between the
Federal Government and Indian tribes, USDA has determined that no
further Tribal consultation is necessary. However, USDA will continue
to work directly with Tribes and Tribal applicants to improve access to
this program. The policies contained in this rule do not have Tribal
implications that preempt Tribal law. For further information on USDA
Rural Development's Tribal consultation efforts, please contact the
Agency's Native American Coordinator at aian@wdc.usda.gov or 720-544-
2911.
Programs Affected
VAPG is listed in the Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance under
Number 10.352.
Paperwork Reduction Act
In accordance with the Paperwork Reduction Act, the paperwork
burden associated with this Notice has been approved by the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) under the currently approved OMB Control
Number 0570-0039. The Agency has determined that changes contained in
this regulatory action do not substantially change current data
collection.
E-Government Act Compliance
The Agency is committed to complying with the E-Government Act, to
promote the use of the Internet and other information technologies to
provide increased opportunities for citizen access to Government
information and services, and for other purposes.
I. Background
On February 23, 2011 (76 FR 10090-10122), the Agency published an
interim rule for the VAPG program. The interim rule addressed comments
that the Agency received on the VAPG proposed rule, which was published
in the Federal Register on May 28, 2010 (75 FR 29920), and clarified
proposed provisions. Changes were made throughout the rule, with many
of the changes addressing definitions and how awards are made,
including assigning priority. The interim rule became effective on
March 25, 2011, and the Agency provided a 60-day comment period for the
public to submit comments on the interim rule.
On February 7, 2014, the Agricultural Act of 2014 (referred to
herein as the 2014 Farm Bill) was signed into law. Among its many
provisions were two that affected the VAPG program. Section 6203 of the
2014 Farm Bill authorized the Secretary of Agriculture to give priority
to:
Veteran Farmers and Ranchers and
Agricultural Producer Groups, Farmer or Rancher
Cooperatives, and Majority-Controlled Producer-Based Business Ventures
whose projects best contribute to creating or increasing marketing
opportunities for operators of Small- and Medium-sized Farms and
Ranches that are structured as Family Farms, Beginning Farmers and
Ranchers, Socially-Disadvantaged Farmers and Ranchers, and Veteran
Farmers and Ranchers.
The Agency held a listening session on April 25, 2014, to receive
input from interested stakeholders on how to best implement these two
provisions. There were a total of two participants who provided
comments and suggestions.
All of the comments received on the interim rule and during the
listening session are summarized in Section III of this final rule.
Most of the interim rule's provisions have been carried forward into
the final rule, although there have been some additional changes. A
summary of major changes to the interim rule are summarized below in
Section II.
II. Summary of Changes to the Final Rule
This section presents the major changes to the VAPG final rule.
Most of the changes were the result of the Agency's consideration of
public comments on the interim rule, during the listening session (see
Section III below for specifics on comments received), and on its own
experience with the program in order to improve the implementation and
administration. The Agency is also making changes to the rule due to
statutory changes resulting from the enactment of the 2014 Farm Bill
(see Section IV below).
A. Definitions (Sec. 4284.902)
1. The following definitions have been added:
``Harvester'' is defined to clarify that Harvesters must
be able to document their legal right to access and harvest the
Agricultural Commodity that is the subject of the value-added project.
It further conveys that individuals or entities that merely glean,
gather, or
[[Page 26791]]
collect residual commodities that result from an initial harvesting or
production of a primary Agricultural Commodity are not considered
Harvesters. This clarification is necessary because the definition in
Interim Rule did not contain sufficient information to guide potential
applicants in this category.
``Steering committee''--as a subset of the Independent
Producer definition--is defined to clarify that Steering Committees
must be comprised wholly of Independent Producers. This clarification
is necessary because there was confusion among potential applicants
about the required structure for this applicant type.
``Veteran farmer or rancher'' was added to conform to the
2014 Farm Bill definition that refers to 7 U.S.C. 2279(e).
2. The definitions of ``financial feasibility'' and ``branding''
have been removed because the terms are no longer included in the
regulation.
3. The following definitions have been revised:
``Agricultural food product'' was revised to include
seafood products customarily sold or consumed live, to remedy the
inadvertent exclusion of producers of these products from applying
under the Locally-Produced Value-Added Agricultural Product
methodology.
``Agricultural producer'' was revised in response to
public comments, to clarify that individuals and entities that may have
ownership and/or financial control without being engaged in the day-to-
day labor and management will not be eligible for a value-added
producer grant. Agricultural Producer was also revised to clarify that
the eligibility of Tribes and Tribal entities, due to their unique
structures, will be determined by the Agency without regard to day-to-
day labor, management, and field operation and right to harvest status.
``Agricultural producer group'' was revised to clarify
that this type of applicant must be a non-profit, to alleviate on-going
confusion about the structure of this applicant type and to conform to
long-used examples.
``Beginning farmer or rancher'' was revised to clarify the
required composition for reserved fund applicants (100 percent of owner
members must be beginning farmers or ranchers) and priority point
applicants (more than 50 percent must be beginning farmers or
ranchers).
``Family farm'' was revised to remove the reference to the
FSA definition of family farm.
``Farm- or Ranch-based renewable energy'' was revised to
clarify how generated energy must be utilized to meet the requirement
to demonstrate expanded customer base and increased revenue returned to
producers.
``Feasibility study'' was revised to limit the definition
to a description of the document, rather than the means by which the
document is developed by eliminating reference to qualified consultant.
``Independent producer'' was revised to clarify that a
``majority'' of raw commodity owned by the applicant is defined as more
than 50 percent. The definition was also revised to clarify that
Steering Committees must apply as an Independent Producer and that a
program-eligible legal entity must be established by the Steering
Committee prior to Agency approval of the grant agreement. Further, it
clarifies that Harvesters must apply as an Independent Producer and the
eligibility requirements for Harvesters with regards to priority points
and reserved funding. Independent Producer was also revised to clarify
the eligibility of Tribes and Tribal entities, with regard to raw
commodity ownership.
``Marketing plan'' was revised to eliminate an unnecessary
reference to Qualified Consultant.
``Medium-sized farm or ranch'' was revised to conform to
the Economic Research Service's more commonly used gross sales
threshold of $1,000,000 for operators of medium-sized farms or ranches.
``Mid-tier value chain'' was revised in response to public
comments to include consumers as participants of an eligible project.
``Planning grant'' was revised to limit the definition to
a description of this type of grant, rather than the means by which it
is developed, by eliminating reference to qualified consultant.
``Product segregation'' was revised to ``physical
segregation'' to be consistent with the statutory language within the
value-added agricultural product. In addition, an example of a physical
segregated product was provided.
``Small-sized farm or ranch'' was revised to conform to
the Economic Research Service's more commonly used gross sales
threshold of $500,000 for operators of small-sized farms or ranches.
``Socially-disadvantaged farmer or rancher'' was revised
to clarify eligibility requirements for individuals and entities in
regards to priority points and reserved funding as per the statute.
``Value-added agricultural product'' was revised to
clarify that the agricultural commodity (raw commodity) must be
produced in the United States (including the Republic of Palau, the
Federated States of Micronesia, the Republic of the Marshall Islands,
or American Samoa).
B. Environmental Review (Sec. 4284.907)
The language of this section was modified to indicate that working
capital awards are generally excluded from the documentation
requirements in 7 CFR part 1940, subpart G.
C. Applicant Eligibility (Sec. 4284.920)
1. Type of applicant. Since information regarding the eligibility
of Tribes and Tribal entities had previously been provided only in
Agency guidance through an Administrative Notice, the Agency added
language indicating that Tribes and Tribal entities may be eligible for
the program if they meet all requirements. In addition, the
availability of additional guidance from the Agency is noted.
2. Citizenship. Language providing an exemption to the requirement
that applicants be comprised of at least 50 percent U.S. citizens or
legally-admitted permanent residents was deleted to ensure that awards
are not made to non-U.S. citizens or entities.
3. Multiple applications. Since information regarding the
limitation on application submissions by affiliated entities was
previously included only in the annual solicitation, the Agency added
language more specifically defining ``affiliated'' entities and the
limitations on submission of multiple applications.
D. Project Eligibility (Sec. 4284.922)
1. Purpose eligibility. While the Interim Rule indicates that
applications containing ineligible costs totaling more than 10 percent
of Total Project Costs will be deemed ineligible, it does not discuss
the status of applications containing less than 10 percent ineligible
costs. Therefore, the Agency is clarifying that applications containing
ineligible expenses totaling less than 10 percent of Total Project
Costs must have those expenses removed from the project budget or
replaced with eligible expenses if selected for an award.
2. Working Capital. While the Interim Rule provides requirements
for working capital grants, it does not include the requirement of
specific quantification of the amount of commodity necessary for the
project. This information instead was included in an Agency-developed
application template. The Agency, therefore, is adding in this final
rule the requirement that applicants quantify and document within their
applications, the amount of commodity required for the project, as well
as the amount they
[[Page 26792]]
will produce, and the amount to be procured from third-parties. This
change will assist the Agency in determining whether applicants meet
the eligibility requirement to supply a majority of the raw commodity
needed for the project.
E. Reserved Fund Eligibility (Sec. 4284.923)
1. A separate section was created for Reserved fund eligibility to
delineate between it and Priority point eligibility, and for ease in
navigating the requirements.
2. Clarification regarding the eligibility of Independent Producer
Harvesters was included.
F. Priority Point Scoring Eligibility (Sec. 4284.924)
1. A separate section was created for Priority point eligibility to
delineate between it and Reserved fund eligibility, and for ease in
navigating the requirements.
2. Priority point eligibility status of Harvesters was included.
3. Documentation requirements for Veteran Farmers and Ranchers was
included.
4. The gross sales dollar threshold was changed to conform to the
Economic Research Service's more commonly used definition.
5. Priority point eligibility was changed to include a new Farm
Bill requirement providing points to Agricultural Producer Groups,
Farmer or Rancher Cooperatives, and Majority-Controlled Producer-Based
Business Ventures whose projects best contribute to creating or
increasing marketing opportunities for operators of Small- and Medium-
sized Farms and Ranches that are structure as Family Farms, Beginning
Farmers and Ranchers, Socially-Disadvantaged Farmers and Ranchers, and
Veteran Farmers and Ranchers.
6. Administrator Priority Categories was amended to give State
Director discretion to award priority points in the event that the VAPG
program is State-allocated in accordance with 7 CFR 1940.593.
G. Ineligible Uses of Grant and Matching Funds (Sec. 4284.926)
1. Use of funds for agricultural production expenses. Based on
applications received and inquiries from applicants, current language
on the prohibition of use of grant or matching funds for expenses
related to the production of the raw commodity does not include enough
specific information to fully inform prospective applicants. Therefore,
the Agency is adding language to clarify that production planning,
purchase of production inputs, and delivery of raw commodity is
explicitly prohibited.
2. Use of funds to pay for applicant-supplied raw commodity. While
the Interim Rule is clear that applicants may use grant funds to
purchase raw commodity (49 percent or less of the total necessary) from
third-parties, it does not contain specific language prohibiting the
use of grant funds to purchase commodity from the applicant itself. It
is the long-held position of the Agency that applicants cannot use
grant funds to purchase raw commodities from themselves. Thus, the
Agency is adding language to indicate that applicants or applicant
entities cannot use grant funds to purchase raw commodity from
themselves, from applicant-owned or affiliated entities, or from member
producers.
3. Use of funds to pay salaries for applicant or applicant family
member was deleted from this section as it only applied to use of grant
funds. This section refers to ineligible uses of both grant AND
matching funds. The prohibition on use of grant funds for this purpose
and an explanation of the allowability of use of applicant or family
member time as an in-kind matching contribution is detailed in Sec.
4284.925 and in Sec. 4284.931.
H. Application Package (Sec. 4284.931)
1. System for Awards Management (SAM) Registration. This
registration requirement became mandatory after publication of the
Interim Rule and the Agency has only included it in the annual
solicitation. Therefore, language is being added to clarify that all
applicants must be registered in SAM.
2. Use of Grant and Matching Funds. The Interim Rule indicates that
grant funds and matching funds are subject to the same use
restrictions. However, there are two exceptions in Sec. 4284.925(a)
and (b). For both planning and working capital grants, grant funds
cannot be used to pay applicants or family members for their time spent
on the project. But, appropriately-valued applicant or family member
time up to a maximum of 25 percent of Total Project Costs can be used
as an in-kind matching contribution. Similarly, for working capital
grants, grant funds cannot be used to pay the applicant or affiliated
parties for raw commodity to be used in project. However, the raw
commodity can be used as in-kind match. Therefore the Agency has
revised this section to reflect this change.
3. Performance Evaluation Criteria. Required Performance evaluation
criteria were modified to respond to program metrics requirements in
Section 6209 of the 2014 Farm Bill and also to ensure that data
collected for program outcome and evaluation purposes is consistent,
robust, and relevant to both the stated program purposes and ongoing
evaluation efforts. Corresponding changes were made to Sec. 4284.960
(Monitoring and reporting program performance) to specify that
performance reports would include required data related to achieving
programmatic objectives and a comparison of accomplishments with the
objectives stated in the application. At a minimum, this would include
information on: (i) Expansion of customer base as a result of the
project; (ii) Increased revenue returned to the producer as a result of
the project; (iii) Jobs created or saved as a result of the project;
and (iv) Evidence of receipt of matching funds, if included or provided
for in the project. The Agency also may request any additional project
and/or performance data for the project for which grant funds have been
received, for example, information that would promote greater
understanding of the determinants of success of individual projects,
inform program administration and evaluation, or that would enable the
use of data for program administration or evaluation purposes.
Until such time as the Agency determines that additional data may
be necessary to further inform program performance, the Agency will
continue to utilize the data associated with the current Office of
Management and Budget approved information collection requirements for
the program. If and when the Agency determines that additional data is
necessary, it will submit a new information collection package to OMB
for review and approval prior to publication in the Federal Register
for public review and input.
I. Filing Instructions (Sec. 4284.933)
Submission requirements provide information on completeness of
applications, but do not explicitly state that because the program is a
nationally-competitive program, no revisions or additional information
will be accepted after the application deadline. Therefore, the Agency
is clarifying that no revisions or additional information will be
accepted after the application deadline.
J. Proposal Evaluation Criteria and Scoring Applications (Sec.
4284.942)
The priority point criterion (Criterion 5) was reconfigured to
accommodate awarding of points to projects that ``best contribute'' to
the creation of or increase
[[Page 26793]]
in marketing opportunities for members of specified priority groups,
per the 2014 Farm Bill language.
III. Summary of Comments and Responses
The Interim Rule was published in the Federal Register on February
23, 2011 (76 FR 10090), with a 60-day comment period that ended April
25, 2011. The Agency also conducted a listening session on April 25,
2014, to receive comments on the VAPG provisions in the 2014 Farm Bill.
Comments on the Interim Rule were received from 11 commenters, and
comments on the VAPG provisions in the 2014 Farm Bill were received
from 2 commenters. Combined, these commenters provided approximately 14
similar comments. Commenters included industry and trade associations
and individuals. As a result of some of the comments, the Agency made
changes in the rule. The Agency sincerely appreciates the time and
effort of all commenters.
Responses to the comments on the interim rule and those received
during the listening session are discussed below. Comments are grouped
by category and rule section.
A. General
Timing of Final Rule
Comment: Two commenters stated that some of the shortfalls in the
Interim Rule are quite serious and deserve to be addressed shortly
after conclusion of the 2010/11 grant round. The commenters urged the
Agency not to leave this Interim Rule in place for more than this
upcoming grant cycle and recommended that the Agency issue a second
Interim Rule or a Final Rule by the time the 2012 NOSA is issued.
Response: While the Agency appreciates the fact that the commenters
are concerned about certain provisions in the Interim Rule published in
2011, the Agency has had to continue implementing the VAPG program
under the Interim Rule until it had the opportunity to consider fully
all of the comments received on the Interim Rule and now to also be
able to incorporate new provisions associated with the 2014 Farm Bill.
Hence, the Agency is publishing this Final Rule to address all of the
comments received on the Interim Rule.
Review Panels
Comment: One commenter stated that they understand the Agency chose
not to put information in the Interim Rule about who will do the review
and evaluation of project proposals. This information has instead
appeared in the annual NOSA. The commenter stated that they can
appreciate the Agency's hesitancy in placing this type of information
in the rule. The iterative NOSA process allows for the evolution of the
program in a more flexible manner. The commenter stated that they
believe the Agency should reflect on the experience of the program over
time, especially with respect to the 2009 and 2010/11 process, and
should include in either a second Interim Rule or in the Final Rule the
broad outlines of the review process which could then still be adjusted
within those broad parameters on a year-by-year basis.
As part of the review, the commenter strongly encourages the Agency
to explore the experiences of sister agencies at USDA that also operate
review panels. The program would be improved by insertion of a section
in the rule on review panels, provided that it is not as specific and
rigid as to not allow positive program evolution over time.
Response: The Agency disagrees with the recommendation to
incorporate into the rule even a broad outline of the review process
because of the ensuing loss of flexibility. The Agency also disagrees
with the suggestion to include a section in the rule concerning review
panels. Compared to some programs that use a review panel process, the
VAPG program has a much higher volume of applications and applications
that are more diverse in nature. Because of these two characteristics,
a set review panel process, in the Agency's estimation, does not offer
any benefits compared to the current process in which applications are
scored by both Rural Development state office personnel and assigned,
qualified, non-federal independent reviewers. Therefore, the Agency has
not incorporated either of the commenter's suggestions in the Final
Rule.
B. Purpose (Sec. 4284.901)
Comment: One commenter stated that the ``Purpose'' section of the
rule speaks to the major activities of the program--``to develop
businesses that produce and market value-added agricultural
products''--but does not actually address the underlying purpose of the
program. The commenter recommended the addition of language that speaks
to the purpose of the program, namely to ``create expanded marketing
opportunities, increase producer income, and enhance community economic
development.''
Response: In consideration of this comment, the Agency has included
reference to creating marketing opportunities for businesses in the
Purpose section.
C. Definitions (Sec. 4284.902)
Agricultural Producer
Comment: Two commenters noted that the definition of ``agricultural
producer'' has been expanded from individuals and entities actively
engaged in production to also include those who maintain ownership and
financial control of an operation without being actively engaged in
labor and management.
The commenters claimed that this change could ``open the
floodgates'' to non-farm passive investors and landlords to reap the
benefits of a program clearly intended to raise incomes for producers.
The commenters urge USDA to amend the definition of ``agricultural
producer'' to read as follows:
``Agricultural producer''. An individual or entity directly engaged
in the production of an agricultural commodity, or that has the legal
right to harvest an agricultural commodity, that is the subject of the
value-added project. Agricultural producers may ``directly engage''
through substantially participating in the labor, management, and field
operations.''
Response: The Agency agrees with the basic concerns expressed by
the commenters and has revised the definition by removing reference to
agricultural producers who only maintain ownership and financial
control of the agricultural operation.
Beginning Farmer or Rancher
Comment: Two commenters expressed concern over the definition of
beginning farmer or rancher.
One of the commenters stated that a citation for a very lengthy
statutory definition (4 pages) is provided in the Interim Rule as part
of this VAPG program definition for ``beginning farmer or rancher,''
even though the majority of the requirements in the statutory
definition apply only to FSA loan programs and do not appear applicable
to RD grant programs.
The commenter recommended that the Agency drop the statutory
citation in the Interim Rule and simply specify the eligibility
requirements that are applicable to beginning farmers and ranchers. The
other commenter stated that the ``beginning farmer or rancher''
definition, as well as the related language in Sec. 4284.922(c)(1)(i),
must be fixed to make its meaning clear and precise. According to the
commenter, the definition in the Interim Rule is extremely convoluted,
could be difficult
[[Page 26794]]
for users, administrators, and review panels to interpret in its
current form, and thus needs to be clearer and cleaner.
Response: The Agency agrees with both commenters that the
definition needs to be both simpler and clearer. The Agency has removed
the statutory citation and added reference to Independent Producer to
address the ``substantial participation'' concern. In addition, we have
reformatted the definition to make clearer the definitional requirement
to be eligible for priority points and for the reserved funding pool
that includes beginning farmers and ranchers. The following table
illustrates the application of the definition for determining whether
the applicant qualifies as a beginning farmer or rancher for priority
points or the above mentioned reserved funding pool.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Is the applicant a
beginning farmer or
rancher eligible for . .
If the applicant is . . . and has the following .
characteristics ---------------------------
Priority Reserved
points? funding?
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
An Independent Producer Individual.............. More than 10 years of No No
experience. Yes Yes
10 years or less of
experience.
An eligible entity (agricultural producer, a 50 percent or less of the No No
farmer/rancher cooperative, or an independent members have 10 years or. ............ ............
producer other than a harvester). less of experience............... Yes No
More than 50 percent of
the members have 10 years or less
of experience.
100 percent of the Yes Yes
members have 10 years or less of
experience.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Farm- or Ranch-Based Renewable Energy
Comment: Two commenters stated that USDA should clarify that an
accepted new added value of an agricultural commodity is its use in
qualifying for a tradable carbon credit if the production of renewable
energy destroys, reduces or mitigates the production of green-house
gases (GHG), or possibly for a renewable energy credit. If this new
added value of an agricultural commodity is accepted, then the Agency
needs to clarify in the rule, where appropriate, that equipment used to
measure and monitor greenhouse gases for trading purposes is a
legitimate expense covered by the program.
Response: The Agency is not revising the rule as suggested by the
commenter because the Agency is bound by the authorizing statute to
consider only the following, whether the agricultural product: (1) Has
undergone a change in physical state, (2) was produced in a manner that
enhances the value of the agricultural commodity, (3) is physically
segregated in a manner that results in the enhancement of the value-
added agricultural commodity, (4) is a source of farm- or ranch-based
renewable energy, including E-85 fuel, and (5) is aggregated and
marketed as a locally produced agricultural food product.
Comment: One commenter stated that this definition requires on-farm
generation of renewable energy by an Independent Producer that produces
the agricultural commodity used to generate the renewable energy on-
farm as a value-added product. The commenter then stated that the
Agency needs to clarify its policy regarding whether these projects
fulfill the statutory eligibility requirement that all VAPG projects
demonstrate an increase in customer base and an increase in revenues
returning to the producers as a result of the VA project. Specifically,
the Agency needs to clarify whether on-farm energy savings that result
from bio-based net metering of electricity, or utilizing methane for
thermal energy, or utilizing liquid fuels for farm machinery operations
will qualify (in other words, whether a farmer can use his own value-
added products to reduce his own operating costs to demonstrate
increased customer base and revenues).
Response: The Agency agrees with the commenter that all VAPG
projects must demonstrate an increase in customer base and an increase
in revenues returning to the producers as a result of the value-added
project. A farmer that uses a value-added product to simply reduce the
farm's operating costs does not meet the intent of these two conditions
and would not qualify (see Scenario 3 below). Thus, there is no
``perk'' as characterized by the commenter and as such there is no
effect on the other product eligibility categories to put them at a
disadvantage.
The Agency acknowledges, however, that there are situations where
making such determinations with regards to renewable energy are not
necessarily clear. To help understand the application of this
definition with regard to determining project eligibility, consider the
following scenarios.
Scenario 1. A farmer installs an anaerobic digester to use cow
manure to produce electricity and sells that electricity to the local
utility. The electricity generated by the digester qualifies as
renewable energy. The local utility represents an increase in the
customer base and the farmer sees a direct increase in revenues from
the sale of the electricity to the utility. Thus, this project
qualifies as a value-added project eligible for consideration for a
grant.
Scenario 2. Same scenario as Scenario 1, except that, instead of
selling the electricity to the local utility, the farmer uses it to
generate heat and power for a hydroponics facility on the farm from
which a value-added product is produced. In this second example, the
renewable energy project also qualifies. By producing the value-added
product, the farmer is expanding his customers to those customers
buying the value-added product. The farmer is seeing an increase in his
revenue either directly as the result of sales of the new value-added
product or indirectly as a reduction in operating costs of the farm.
Thus, this project also qualifies as a value-added project eligible for
consideration for a grant.
Scenario 3. Same scenario as Scenario 1, except under Scenario 3
the farmer uses all of the electricity generated by the anaerobic
digester to replace electricity purchased from the local utility to
help power current farm operations. While the farmer sees an indirect
increase in revenues through a reduction in operating costs (as in
Scenario 2), there is no increase in the customer base for the farmer.
Therefore, both conditions are not met and the project would not be
eligible for a VAPG grant.
[[Page 26795]]
The Agency revised the subject definition in order to clarify how
the definition is to be applied.
Comment: One commenter, as a marketer of photovoltaic solar
systems, believes that the elimination of grants for renewable energy
systems is not a step we can take if we want to move forward as a
nation.
Response: The definition for ``Farm- or Ranch-based renewable
energy'' states, in part, that on-farm generation of energy from wind,
solar, geothermal, or hydro sources are not eligible. The project
eligibility category related to renewable energy was set by the 2008
Farm Bill and states that a Value-Added Agricultural Product is ``a
source of farm- or ranch-based renewable energy, including E-85 fuel.''
Notwithstanding the virtues of solar systems as described by the
commenter, it is the Agency's position that solar is not an
agricultural commodity or a Value-Added agricultural product. The
Agency notes that agricultural producers and rural small businesses may
apply for grants under the Rural Energy for America Program for solar
projects as described by the applicant.
Feasibility Study, Marketing Plan, and Planning Grant
Comment: Two commenters recommended adding a sentence cross-
referencing the up to 25 percent in-kind match option in Sec.
4284.923(a) and (b), as is already done for the ``conflict of
interest'' definition and the ``matching grant'' definition. According
to the commenters, the addition of the cross reference will remove
confusion that is otherwise created as to whether the definitions
override the exception.
One of the commenters stated that another viable option with
respect to the feasibility study, marketing plan, and planning grant
definitions is to simply describe the study, plan or grant, without
reference to the qualified consultant as has been done in the case of
``business plan.'' The commenter further stated that they would support
either option.
Response: The Agency has decided to adopt the second suggestion in
order to minimize the confusion identified by the commenters and thus
has revised the three definitions by removing reference to ``qualified
consultant.''
Independent Producers
Comment: Three commenters were concerned that the definition of
``harvester'' within the Independent Producer definition needed
clarification.
Two of the commenters stated that clarifications may be in order to
ensure that third-party entities used to build, manage and operate
anaerobic digesters are considered to be ``harvesters of an
agricultural commodity'' (e.g., animal manure) and eligible for
participation in the VAPG Program as an ``Independent Producer.''
The third commenter stated that the Interim Rule lacks sufficient
detail to demonstrate ``what and who'' qualifies as a ``harvester.''
Because the definition is limited to an Independent Producer
Agricultural Producer who has the ``legal right to harvest an
agricultural commodity,'' it raises a potential, yet unintended,
conflict with the primary program purpose that all Independent
Producers ``currently own and produce the agricultural commodity to
which value will be added.''
This commenter recommended that the Agency clarify ``what and who''
qualifies in the ``harvester'' category, and specifically state whether
or not a simple collection or gathering of any agricultural commodity
suffices. According to the commenter, simple collection of an
agricultural commodity by a non-agricultural producer would not meet
the stated intention of the program. The commenter provided the
following examples: (1) A logger who has the legal right to harvest
logs from a land owner would be eligible, but a non-logger wanting to
simply collect unwanted slash from the landing of a land-owner or
logger would not be eligible, and (2) a non-agricultural producer
business simply wanting to collect dairy manure from various farming
operations to convert it to renewable energy would not be eligible. The
commenter stated that, for these reasons, the Interim Rule needs to
clarify these eligibility distinctions.
Response: The Agency agrees with the commenters that the meaning of
``Harvester'' needs to be clarified and strengthened and has done so
(including adding a definition for Harvester).
The Agency disagrees, however, with the two commenters that the
third-party entities collecting animal manure for use in anaerobic
digesters, as described by the two commenters, are eligible for the
program. The Agency agrees with the examples provided by the third
commenter as to which ``Harvesters'' would or would not be eligible to
participate in the VAPG program.
For the purposes of the VAPG program, the Agency has determined
that entities and individuals, such as those described by the
commenter, that merely glean, gather or collect residual commodities
that result from an initial harvesting or production of a primary
agricultural commodity are not considered ``Harvesters'' and are not
eligible for this program. For example, see the 2014 NOFA for the
program (78 FR 70261, November 25, 2013). In the added definition, the
Agency has clarified that the entity's (or individual's) harvest must
be a ``primary'' agricultural commodity in order to be eligible; a
harvester cannot merely glean, gather, or collect residual commodities.
So for example, a logger who has a legal right to access and harvest
logs from the forest that are then converted into boards would be an
eligible applicant, as would a fisherman that has the legal right to
access and harvest fish from the ocean or river that are then
processed.
Comment: One commenter recommended revising the definition of
``Independent Producers'' and elsewhere as appropriate to clarify
whether ``harvesters'' are eligible for priority points and reserved
funds for certain applicant types. Specifically, one or more
definitions need to clarify whether ``harvesters'' are the equivalent
of ``farmers'' and, if so, the Interim Rule needs to specify their
eligibility for both priority points and reserved funds in applicable
categories.
Response: As indicated by the commenter, harvesters may only apply
as an Independent Producer applicant type in order to be eligible for
the VAPG program. However, harvester operations do not meet the
definition requirements for a Farm or Ranch and, as such, harvesters
are not equivalent to farmers or ranchers. Harvester applicants,
therefore, are not eligible to receive reserve funds for a Beginning
Farmer or Rancher or a Socially-Disadvantaged Farmer or Rancher; and
are not eligible to receive Priority Points for a Beginning Farmer or
Rancher, a Socially-Disadvantaged Farmer or Rancher, Operator of a
Small or Medium-sized Farm or Ranch structured as a Family Farm, or a
Farmer or Rancher Cooperative.
However, if the harvester is proposing a mid-tier value chain
project, then the harvester would be eligible for priority points and
for competing for mid-tier value chain reserve funding. The Agency has
revised the rule to clarify who is eligible for priority points (see
Sec. 4284.924) and who is eligible for reserved funding (see Sec.
4284.923).
Medium-Sized Farm
Comment: One commenter supported the increase from $700,000 to $1
million in the annual gross sales-based definition of medium-sized farm
or ranch. The commenter believes this will more adequately reflect
commodity, enterprise, and regional differences, while ensuring program
funds are
[[Page 26796]]
targeted to the ``disappearing middle'' of agriculture.
Response: The Agency thanks the commenter for supporting the change
made to this definition in the Interim Rule and has retained the $1
million ceiling in the Final Rule.
Mid-Tier Value Chain
Comment: Four commenters recommended expanding the definition of a
Mid-Tier to include direct sales to consumers as well as to businesses
and cooperatives.
Response: The Agency agrees with the recommendation and has added
reference to ``consumers'' to the definition in the rule.
D. Applicant Eligibility (7 CFR 4284.920)
Comment: One commenter recommended that, because many local food
initiatives have been created as community based non-profits, non-
profit entities that are benefitting small and medium producer or
ranchers be included as a fifth type of eligible applicant type for the
reserve funds for the Mid-Tier Value Chain.
Response: The Agency has not revised the rule as requested by the
commenter because the authorizing statute identifies the applicant
types that are eligible for the VAPG program and the Agency cannot add
another applicant type without statutory authority.
E. Project Eligibility (Sec. 4284.922)
Branding
Comment: Three commenters oppose the removal of limitations on
branding activity costs. One of the commenters stated that the VAPG
program should not promote advertising as a primary project function.
One of the commenters agreed that, though branding is an essential
part of developing a new product, it should not be the sole focus of a
VAPG project. Even a complete marketing plan (of which branding is just
one part) is only a fraction of what's needed for any good VAPG
project--one which helps farmers develop new value-added products.
The commenter recommended that the Final Rule stress Sec.
4284.922(a)(1) in stating that projects that are primarily branding
projects do not meet the criteria of VAPG. The commenter suggested that
one way this could be done is to include relevant language from the
past NOSAs. The 2009 NOFA under the section titled ``Other Eligibility
Requirements'' and from the Proposed Rule, under Sec. 4284.922(c):
``Applications that propose only branding, packaging, or other similar
means of product differentiation are not eligible in any category.
However, applications may propose branding, packaging, or other product
differentiation activities as a component of a value-added strategy for
products otherwise eligible in one of the above categories.''
One of the commenters stated that, by eliminating this section, the
Agency gives the impression that it is endorsing projects that are 100
percent for branding. This is in direct contradiction to the
requirement under Sec. 4284.222(a)(1) that the project must focus on
adding value to a product in one of five defined ways. The commenter
stated that, by permitting all grant funds to be used for branding, the
Agency would be opening the floodgates to becoming a program to support
the advertising and branding budgets as if it were a domestic
equivalent of the Market Access Program.
Response: As stated in the response to comments on branding in the
Interim Rule, the Agency recognizes that branding and packaging are
important components of value-added marketing strategies. The program's
authorizing statute is clear that creation of marketing opportunities
is an important component of the program. The use of funds to develop
plans and strategies to create marketing opportunities necessarily
includes product differentiation and promotional activities, without
which, there would be no ability to accomplish two key program
requirements: Expansion of customer base and increased revenue returned
to the producers of the value-added product. All applicants, including
those with significant branding or advertising components must still
meet all other program eligibility requirements, including meeting one
of the five value-added project methodology categories. Therefore, no
changes related to branding have been made.
Purpose Eligibility
Comment: Two commenters noted that, in Sec. 4284.922(b)(6)(i) of
the Interim Rule, a new provision exempts Independent Producers with
existing products from applying for working capital grants of $50,000
or more from providing feasibility studies. The commenters stated that
they recognize that in theory this modification to the rule could serve
individual farmers in need of marketing assistance for their value-
added products. However, the commenters worry that, without
limitations, VAPG could easily become a program for marketing rather
than predominantly for developing value-added products. One of the
commenters encouraged the Agency to comprehensively track applications
and awards for this subset of the program and to monitor the extent to
which it modifies the current success of VAPG.
The other commenter stated that this new provision seems to open a
loophole for any old products that need a new advertising campaign.
Response: The program's authorizing statute provides that only
Agricultural Producer Groups, Farmer or Rancher Cooperatives, and
Majority Controlled Producer-Based Business Ventures are subject to the
`emerging market' requirement. That leaves otherwise qualified
Independent Producer applicants free to propose projects that expand
markets for existing value-added products. As such, the Agency deems
the long-standing requirement of a business or marketing plan in lieu
of a feasibility study as sufficient and plans no changes in rule. In
addition, as stated in response to the comments above regarding
branding and advertising, it is the Agencies position that the use of
grant funds to create marketing opportunities through product
differentiation and promotional campaigns are important components in
accomplishing program objectives.
Reserved Funds Eligibility
Comment: One commenter stated that a problem occurs in Sec.
4284.922(c)(1)(i) (as found in the Interim Rule) in the last sentence
of that paragraph. According to the commenter, the sentence appears to
mean that any independent farm, in order to qualify for the beginning
farmer set-aside or priority, must be a farm in which all owners are
beginning farmers. The way the sentence is stated, however, it could
also mean that any applicant entity, made up of multiple farms, must be
entirely made up of beginning farmers.
In support, the commenter pointed out that Sec. 4284.922(c)(1)(i)
says ``For applicant entities with multiple owners, all owners must be
eligible beginning farmers or ranchers'' while (d)(1) says ``For
entities with multiple owners or members, 51 percent of owners or
members must be eligible beginning farmers or ranchers.'' This is
contradictory and requires a simple clarification of terms to
distinguish between eligible farms and eligible entities under the
beginning farmer priority and set-aside.
Response: While the commenter is correct in identifying the
differences between the paragraphs, the differences are not in error.
As stated earlier in response to a comment on the definition of
``Beginning Farmer or Rancher,'' there
[[Page 26797]]
is an eligibility distinction with regard to priority points versus
reserved funding. Specifically, to be eligible for priority points, at
least 51 percent of the farmers in an entity composed of multiple
farmers must each have no more than 10 years of experience. (Note: In
the Final Rule, ``at least 51 percent'' has been changed to ``more than
50 percent''.) However, to be eligible for the reserved funding that
includes beginning farmers and ranchers, all of the farmers (100
percent) in an entity composed of multiple farmers must have no more
than 10 years of experience. This is based on the differences contained
in the authorizing language in the Food, Conservation, and Energy Act
of 2008 (2008 Farm Bill), resulting in two separate priority
categories. The Food, Conservation, and Energy Act of 2008 in section
6002(6) stated that the Secretary shall give priority to projects that
``contribute to opportunities'' for beginning and socially
disadvantaged farmers and ranchers, while subparagraph (7)(C) stated
that the Secretary shall reserve 10 percent of the amounts made
available for each fiscal year under this paragraph to fund projects
``that benefit: beginning farmers or ranchers or socially-disadvantaged
farmers or ranchers.'' While the Agricultural Act of 2014 does not
contain the ``contribute to opportunities'' language, it still contains
separate language in paragraph (6) that gives ``priority'' to beginning
farmers or ranchers and socially-disadvantaged farmers or ranchers. The
Agency has revised the rule to clarify this.
Comment: Four commenters who recommended that the definition of a
Mid-Tier be expanded to include direct sales to consumers, recommended
the following change to Sec. 4284.922(c)(2)(ii) (as found in the
Interim Rule): Describe at least two alliances, linkages, or
partnerships within the value chain that link independent producers
with businesses, cooperatives or consumers directly that market value-
added agricultural commodities or value added products in a manner that
benefits small or medium-sized farms and ranches that are structured as
a family farm, including the names of the parties and the nature of
their collaboration.
Response: The Agency agrees with the commenters and has revised the
rule accordingly.
Comment: Four commenters stated that they recognize the
requirements in Sec. 4284.922(c)(2)(v) (as found in the Interim Rule)
and the critical importance of the raw agricultural product being
utilized for the value-added product comes from the project
participants. However, in the case of the Mid-Tier Value Chain, the
commenters feel that 50 percent ownership of the product should not be
required of the applicant organization because this organization is not
an agricultural producer. Rather, the benefiting agricultural farmers
and ranchers of the applicant organization should be required to adhere
to this rule. The commenters proposed the following change to the
Interim Rule for this section: Demonstrate that the benefiting small or
medium sized farms or ranches that are structured as a family farm of
the applicant organization currently owns and produces more than 50
percent of the raw agricultural commodity that will be used for the
value added product that is the subject of the proposal.
Response: The Agency agrees with the commenter and applies this
provision in the Final Rule as described by the commenter. As a
reminder, however, the applicant organization must be a producer-based
organization. So for example, if an applicant organization is composed
of wheat growers and rice growers and that organization is proposing a
VAPG project that benefits only the wheat growers, the Agency applies
this provision by looking at whether the wheat growers own and produce
more than 50 percent of the raw agricultural commodity that will be
used for the VAPG project. To clarify this, the Agency has revised this
paragraph to indicate that the members of the applicant organization
that are benefiting from the proposed project must currently own and
produce more than 50 percent of the raw agricultural commodity that
will be used for the value added product that is the subject of the
proposal.
F. Eligible Uses of Grant and Matching Funds (Sec. 4284.923)
Comment: One commenter suggested that, in order to keep business
and enterprise planning of VAPG projects farmer-centered, farmers and
ranchers directly participate in the development of VAPG projects and
be allowed to count their time as an in-kind contribution toward the
program's matching requirements. The Interim Rule responded to this
suggestion by allowing time to count as an in-kind contribution up to
25 percent of the total project costs.
The commenter applauded the Agency for this decision and believes
it is a step in the right direction. The commenter urged the Agency to
do a detailed assessment of the 25 percent cap, including a survey of
applicants after the next grant round to get detailed reactions to the
25 percent cap. If the assessment, including the survey, reveals the 25
percent cap is a barrier to the program meeting its objectives,
including participation by the statutory priority groups, they would
then urge the Agency to raise the cap.
Response: The Agency appreciates the commenter's support of the
change, which is retained in the Final Rule. The Agency will take under
advisement the commenter's suggestion for an assessment of the 25
percent cap.
G. Simplified Application (Sec. 4284.932)
Comment: One commenter commended the Agency's commitment to
developing a simplified application form, as required by statute, in
the annual Notice of Solicitation of Applications (NOSA) for the
program. The commenter stated that they trust it will appear in the
NOSA for FY 2010/11 funding and thereafter and further stated that they
will comment on the simplified application when it appears in the NOSA.
Response: The Agency acknowledges the comment and looks forward to
continuing to help improve the simplified application for the program.
H. Priority Points (Sec. 4284.942)
The 2014 Farm Bill added Veteran Farmers and Ranchers as an
additional priority group. The Agency is including this group in the
Final Rule as a priority group and is implementing provisions
consistent with the provisions identified in the March 24, 2014 notice
published in the Federal Register (79 FR 16277) that extended the
application deadline and added priority for Veteran Farmers and
Ranchers.
The Agency also received the comments concerning scoring associated
with priority groups as presented below.
Priority Groups
Comment: One commenter opposed the changes in point scoring that
appear to reduce the priority awarded to statutory priority groups,
which is important to meeting the goals of the VAPG program.
A second commenter stated that they had recommended that the Agency
increase the percentage of total proposal evaluation ranking points for
projects that foster the program's statutory priority for small and
medium-sized family farms and beginning and Socially-Disadvantaged
farmers, from 15 to 25 out of a total of 100 points. They further
stated that the Interim Rule, however, moves in the exactly the
opposite direction, decreasing those ranking points from 15 to 10
points.
[[Page 26798]]
The commenter stated that it strains the meaning of the word
``priority'' to assign it a ten percent factor. Ten percent might be
appropriate in a ``bonus'' situation in which the factor might be
considered a minor distinguishing item, but it certainly does not come
close to being a priority factor.
The commenter stated that they are deeply concerned that, if this
decision is not reversed, non-priority applicants will push aside
priority applicants and one of the intended goals of the program will
not be realized. The commenter strongly urged the Agency to issue a
Final Rule that provides a real priority to the statutory priority
classes. The commenter recommended that 25 percent of the total point
value be assigned to statutory priorities, with review panels then
assessing which projects best foster the priority for small and mid-
sized family farms and beginning and Socially-Disadvantaged farmers and
ranchers and providing evaluative ranking points accordingly.
Response: Through the 2008 Farm Bill, the Agency was instructed to
give priority to certain categories of applicants. Giving priority does
not mean that the program should only fund applications submitted by
those groups, but rather, all things being equal, the applications from
such groups should receive priority. The Final Rule does just that--
making the priority groups eligible for points that are not available
to applicants in non-priority groups. The distribution of points during
application scoring process from the last few application rounds, since
the Interim Rule was implemented, has resulted in the majority of
awards being made to applicants from the priority categories. Thus, the
Agency has not revised the distribution of points in response to this
comment.
Rural Areas
Comment: Two commenters were concerned over the elimination in the
Interim Rule of the potential for applicants to receive 10 points for
being located in a rural area. While the commenters agree that VAPG
projects cannot be strictly limited to rural areas, they disagree that
the program should not prioritize rural projects.
Commenters indicated that there are good reasons to assign ranking
points to projects that are located in rural areas, even if the markets
they serve are both rural and urban. A key purpose of the program is to
raise farm income and improve the economy in farming communities. This
purpose can be legitimately advanced by providing some amount of
ranking points to projects located in rural areas. Furthermore, when
compared to urban agricultural producers, rural farmers and ranchers
face heightened challenges in accessing markets for their products. The
commenter recommended reinstating 10 points for rural projects, thus
demonstrating a continued commitment to rural economic development.
A third commenter also opposed removing the priority points for
rural projects, which is important, according to the commenter, to
meeting the goals of the VAPG program.
Response: The statute does not include a rural area requirement for
this program and it is the opinion of the agency that priority points
for rural areas was not practical in the implementation of this
program. Therefore, a rural requirement has never been implemented. And
therefore, this provision does not provide priority points for rural
projects.
I. Award Process (Sec. 4284.950)
The 2014 Farm Bill includes a provision that requires the Agency to
give priority to Agricultural Producer Groups, Farmer or Rancher
Cooperatives, and Majority-Controlled Producer-Based Business Ventures
whose projects (including farmer or rancher cooperative projects) best
contribute to creating or increasing marketing opportunities for
operators of Small- and Medium-size Farms and Ranches that are
structured as Family Farms, Beginning Farmers and Ranchers, Socially-
Disadvantaged Farmers and Ranchers, and Veteran Farmers and Ranchers.
The Agency received comments from stakeholders on this provision during
the April 25th listening session. In addition, the Agency received
comments on very similar language the Agency included in the preamble
to the Interim Rule. The following summarizes the comments on this
provision and then presents the Agency's response as to how this
provision is implemented in the Final Rule.
Comment: In commenting on the Interim Rule, one commenter stated
that they had recommended that, when proposals are equally ranked,
those targeting the VAPG priority groups--small and medium-sized family
farms, beginning farmers and ranchers, and Socially-Disadvantaged
farmers and ranchers--receive priority and commended its inclusion in
the preamble to the Interim Rule. Without it also appearing in the rule
itself, however, they fear it will be overlooked by review panels in
the future. The commenter, therefore, recommended that the Agency
incorporate language as a new subsection (b) in Sec. 4284.942 and as a
revision to subsection (a) in Sec. 4284.950, as follows.
Response: The Agency has not revised the rule in response to these
comments. The Administrator has the final authority and discretion in
assigning points to any application based upon unserved or underserved
areas; geographic diversity; emergency conditions and priority mission
area plans, goals, and objectives. Based upon this authority, there
would never be a need for breaking a tie in the manner suggested.
IV. 2014 Farm Bill Implementation
The 2014 Farm Bill required the Agency to make changes to the VAPG
program in two areas regarding priority:
Priority to Veteran Farmers and Ranchers
Priority to Agricultural Producer Groups, Farmer or
Rancher Cooperatives, and Majority-Controlled Producer-Based Business
Ventures for projects that `best contribute' to new or expanded
marketing opportunities for Beginning Farmers and Ranchers, Socially-
Disadvantaged Farmers and Ranchers, or operators of Small- and Medium-
sized Family Farms and Ranches) The following paragraphs discuss how
the Agency is implementing these priorities in the Final Rule.
A. Veteran Farmer or Rancher Priority
The 2014 Farm Bill added a new priority for Veteran Farmers and
Ranchers. The definition of a Veteran Farmer or Rancher, as provided by
the 2014 Farm Bill, is a farmer or rancher who has served in the Armed
Forces, as defined in section 101(10) of title 38 United States Code,
and who either has not operated a farm or ranch or has operated a farm
or ranch for not more than 10 years.
To qualify for priority points for projects that contribute to
increasing opportunities for Veteran Farmers and Ranchers, applicants
must submit form DD-214, Report of Separation from the U.S. Military
and meet the requirements for Beginning Farmers or Ranchers at 7 CFR
4284.922(d) and in the application guides, as well as all other program
requirements.
B. Best Contributing Priority
The 2014 Farm Bill added a new priority for Agricultural Producer
Groups, Farmer and Rancher Cooperatives, and Majority-Controlled
Producer-Based Business Ventures (applicant group) whose projects
``best contribute to creating or increasing marketing opportunities''
for operators
[[Page 26799]]
of Small- and Medium-sized Farms and Ranches that are structured as
Family Farms, Beginning Farmers and Ranchers, Socially-Disadvantaged
Farmers and Ranchers, and Veteran Farmers and Ranchers (priority
groups). Applications must contain sufficient information as described
in the annual solicitation and application package to enable the Agency
to make the appropriate determinations for awarding points for this
priority. If the application does not contain sufficient information,
the Agency will not award points accordingly.
The Agency is implementing this priority by awarding up to 5
additional points based on documentation of the composition of the
applicant's existing membership and anticipated expansion of membership
as a way to assess creating or increasing marketing opportunities for
the four priority groups. The Agency will use the following three
criteria to award up to five points for this new priority.
1. If the existing membership of the applicant group is comprised
of either more than 75 percent of any one of the four priority groups
or more than 75 percent of any combination of the four priority groups,
the application is eligible for two points.
2. If the existing membership of the applicant group is comprised
of two or more of the priority groups, the application is eligible to
receive one point. One point is awarded regardless of whether a group's
membership is comprised of two, three, or all of the four priority
groups.
3. If the proposed project in the applicant group's application
will increase the number of priority groups that comprise the applicant
group's membership by one or more priority group, the application is
eligible to receive two points. However, if an applicant group's
membership is already comprised of all four priority groups, such an
applicant would not be eligible for points under this criterion because
there is no opportunity to increase the number of priority groups. Note
also that this criterion does not consider either the percentage of the
existing membership that is comprised of the four priority groups or
the number of priority groups currently comprising the applicant
group's membership.
List of Subjects in 7 CFR Part 4284
Agricultural commodities, Grant programs, Housing and community
development, Rural areas, Rural development, Value-added activities.
For the reasons set forth in the preamble, under the authority at 5
U.S.C. 301 and 7 U.S.C. 1989, chapter XLII of title 7 of the Code of
Federal Regulations (CFR) is amended as follows:
CHAPTER XLII--RURAL BUSINESS-COOPERATIVE SERVICE AND RURAL UTILITIES
SERVICE, U.S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
PART 4284--GRANTS
0
1. The authority citation for part 4284 is revised to read as follows:
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 301 and 7 U.S.C. 1989.
Subpart F also issued under 7 U.S.C 1932(e). Subpart G also
issued under 7 U.S.C 1926(a)(11). Subpart J also issued under 7
U.S.C. 1632(a). Subpart K also issued under 7 U.S.C. 1621 note.
0
2. Part 4284 is amended by revising subpart J to read as follows:
Subpart J--Value-Added Producer Grant Program
General
Sec.
4284.901 Purpose.
4284.902 Definitions.
4284.903 Review or appeal rights.
4284.904 Exception authority.
4284.905 Nondiscrimination and compliance with other Federal laws.
4284.906 State laws, local laws, regulatory commission regulations.
4284.907 Environmental requirements.
4284.908 Compliance with other regulations.
4284.909 Forms, regulations, and instructions.
4284.910-4284.914 [Reserved]
Funding and Programmatic Change Notifications
4284.915 Notifications.
4284.916-4284.919 [Reserved]
Eligibility
4284.920 Applicant eligibility.
4284.921 Ineligible applicants.
4284.922 Project eligibility.
4284.923 Reserved funds eligibility.
4284.924 Priority scoring eligibility.
4284.925 Eligible uses of grant and matching funds.
4284.926 Ineligible uses of grant and matching funds.
4284.927 Funding limitations.
4284.928-4284.929 [Reserved]
Applying for a Grant
4284.930 Preliminary review.
4284.931 Application package.
4284.932 Simplified application.
4284.933 Filing instructions.
4284.934-4284.939 [Reserved]
Processing and Scoring Applications
4284.940 Processing applications.
4284.941 Application withdrawal.
4284.942 Proposal evaluation criteria and scoring applications.
4284.943-4284.949 [Reserved]
Grant Awards and Agreement
4284.950 Award process.
4284.951 Obligate and award funds.
4284.952-4284.959 [Reserved]
Post Award Activities and Requirements
4284.960 Monitoring and reporting program performance.
4284.961 Grant servicing.
4284.962 Transfer of obligations.
4284.963 Grant close out and related activities.
4284.964-4284.999 [Reserved]
General
Sec. 4284.901 Purpose.
This subpart implements the Value-Added Agricultural Product Market
Development grant program (Value-Added Producer Grants (VAPG))
administered by the Rural Business-Cooperative Service whereby grants
are made to enable viable Agricultural Producers (those who are
prepared to progress to the next business level of planning for, or
engaging in, Value-Added Agricultural Production) to develop businesses
that produce and market Value-Added Agricultural Products and to create
marketing opportunities for such businesses. The provisions of this
subpart constitute the entire provisions applicable to this Program;
the provisions of subpart A of this part do not apply to this subpart.
Sec. 4284.902 Definitions.
The following definitions apply to this subpart:
Administrator. The Administrator of the Rural Business-Cooperative
Service or designees or successors.
Agency. The Rural Business-Cooperative Service or successor for the
programs it administers.
Agricultural commodity. An unprocessed product of farms, ranches,
nurseries, and forests and natural and man-made bodies of water, that
the Independent Producer has cultivated, raised, or harvested with
legal access rights. Agricultural commodities include plant and animal
products and their by-products, such as crops, forestry products,
hydroponics, nursery stock, aquaculture, meat, on-farm generated
manure, and fish and seafood products. Agricultural commodities do not
include horses or other animals raised or sold as pets, such as cats,
dogs, and ferrets.
Agricultural food product. Agricultural food products can be raw,
cooked, or processed edible substances, beverages, or ingredients
intended for human consumption. These products cannot be animal feed,
live animals (except for seafood products customarily sold and/or
consumed live), non-harvested plants, fiber, medicinal products,
cosmetics, tobacco products, or narcotics.
[[Page 26800]]
Agricultural producer. (1) An individual or entity that produces an
Agricultural Commodity through participation in the day-to-day labor,
management, and field operations; or that has the legal right to
harvest an Agricultural Commodity that is the subject of the VAPG
project.
(2) The Agency shall determine the Agricultural producer status of
Tribes and Tribal entities without regard to day-to-day labor,
management, and field operation and right to harvest status.
Agricultural producer group. A non-profit membership organization
that represents Independent Producers and whose mission includes
working on behalf of Independent Producers and the majority of whose
membership and board of directors is comprised of Independent
Producers. The Independent Producers, on whose behalf the value-added
work will be done, must be confirmed as eligible and identified by name
or class.
Applicant. The legal entity submitting an application to
participate in the competition for program funding. The Applicant must
be legally structured to meet one of the four eligible Applicant types:
Independent Producer, Agricultural Producer Group, Farmer or Rancher
Cooperative, or Majority-Controlled Producer-Based Business Venture.
Beginning farmer or rancher. (1) For the purposes of determining
eligibility to receive priority points under Sec. 4284.924, a
Beginning Farmer or Rancher is either:
(i) An individual Independent Producer (other than a Harvester)
that has operated a Farm or Ranch for no more than 10 years or
(ii) An eligible Applicant entity, other than a Harvester, that has
an Applicant ownership or membership of more than 50 percent farmers or
ranchers each of whom have operated a Farm or Ranch for no more than 10
years.
(2) For the purposes of determining eligibility to receive funding
reserved for Beginning Farmers and Ranchers under Sec. 4284.923, a
Beginning Farmer or Rancher is either:
(i) An individual Independent Producer (other than a Harvester)
that has operated a Farm or Ranch for no more than 10 years or
(ii) An eligible Applicant entity, other than a Harvester, that has
an Applicant ownership or membership comprised entirely of (i.e., 100
percent) farmers or ranchers that have operated a Farm or Ranch for no
more than 10 years.
Business plan. A formal statement of a set of business goals, the
reasons why they are believed attainable, and the plan for reaching
those goals, including Pro Forma Financial Statements appropriate to
the term and scope of the Project and sufficient to evidence the
viability of the Venture. It may also contain background information
about the organization or team attempting to reach those goals.
Change in physical state. An irreversible processing activity that
alters the raw Agricultural Commodity into a marketable Value-Added
Agricultural Product. This processing activity must be something other
than a post-harvest process that primarily acts to preserve the
commodity for later sale. Examples of eligible Value-Added Agricultural
Products in this category include, but are not limited to, fish
fillets, diced tomatoes, bio-diesel fuel, cheese, jam, and wool rugs.
Examples of ineligible products include, but are not limited to,
pressure-ripened produce; raw bottled milk; container grown trees;
young plants, seedlings or plugs; and cut flowers.
Conflict of interest. A situation in which a person or entity has
competing personal, professional, or financial interests that make it
difficult for the person or business to act impartially. Regarding use
of both grant and Matching Funds, Federal procurement standards apply
to the use of grant funds for purchases and hires, and prohibit
transactions that involve a real or apparent Conflict of Interest for
owners, employees, officers, agents, or their Immediate Family members
having a financial or other interest in the outcome of the Project; or
that restrict open and free competition for unrestrained trade.
Specifically, grant and Matching Funds may not be used to support costs
for services or goods going to, or coming from, a person or entity with
a real or apparent Conflict of Interest, including, but not limited to,
owner(s) and their Immediate Family members. See Sec. 4284.925(a) and
(b) for limited exceptions to this definition and practice for VAPG.
Departmental regulations. The regulations of the Department of
Agriculture's Office of Chief Financial Officer (or successor office)
as codified in 2 CFR parts 200 and 400 and any successor regulations to
these parts.
Emerging market. A new or developing, geographic or demographic
market that is new to the Applicant or the Applicant's product. To
qualify as new, the Applicant cannot have supplied this product,
geographic, or demographic market for more than two years at time of
application submission.
Family farm. A Farm (or Ranch) that produces agricultural
commodities for sale in sufficient quantity to be recognized as a farm
and not a rural residence; whose owners are primarily responsible for
daily physical labor and strategic management; whose hired help only
supplements family labor; and, whose owners are related by blood or
marriage or are Immediate Family.
Farm or ranch. Any place from which $1,000 or more of agricultural
products were raised and sold or would have been raised and sold during
the previous year, but for an event beyond the control of the farmer or
rancher.
Farm- or Ranch-based renewable energy. An Agricultural Commodity
that is used to generate renewable energy on a Farm or Ranch owned or
leased by the Independent Producer Applicant that produces the
Agricultural Commodity, such that the generated renewable energy, is
utilized in such a way that the applicant can demonstrate expanded
customer base and increased revenues returning to the producers of the
agricultural commodity as a result of the project. On-farm generation
of energy from wind, solar, geothermal or hydro sources is not eligible
for this program.
Farmer or rancher cooperative. A business owned and controlled by
Independent Producers that is incorporated, or otherwise identified by
the state in which it operates, as a cooperatively operated business.
The Independent Producers, on whose behalf the value-added work will be
done, must be confirmed as eligible and identified by name or class.
Feasibility study. An analysis of the economic, market, technical,
financial, and management capabilities of a proposed Project or
business in terms of the Project's expectation for success.
Fiscal year. The Federal government's fiscal year.
Harvester. An Independent Producer of an Agricultural Commodity
that is an individual or entity that can document that it has a legal
right to access and harvest the majority of a primary Agricultural
Commodity that will be used for the Value-Added Agricultural Product.
Individuals and entities that merely glean, gather, or collect residual
commodities that result from an initial harvesting or production of a
primary Agricultural Commodity are not considered Harvesters and are
not eligible for this program.
Immediate family. Individuals who are closely related by blood,
marriage, or adoption, or live within the same household, such as a
spouse, domestic partner, parent, child, brother, sister, aunt, uncle,
grandparent, grandchild, niece, or nephew.
Independent Producer. (1) Individual Agricultural Producers or
entities that are solely owned and controlled by Agricultural
Producers. Independent
[[Page 26801]]
Producers must produce and own more than 50 percent of the Agricultural
Commodity to which value will be added as the subject of the Project
proposal. Independent Producers must maintain ownership of the
Agricultural Commodity or product from its raw state through the
production and marketing of the Value-Added Agricultural Product.
Producers who produce the Agricultural Commodity under contract for
another entity, but do not own the Agricultural Commodity or Value-
Added Agricultural Product produced, are not considered Independent
Producers. Entities that contract out the production of an Agricultural
Commodity are not considered Independent Producers. Independent
Producer entities must confirm their owner members as eligible and must
identify them by name or class.
(2) A Steering Committee must apply as an Independent Producer and
form a program-eligible legal entity prior to execution of the grant
agreement by the Agency. The Steering Committee and entity subsequently
formed must meet all other program eligibility requirements.
(3) A Harvester must apply as an Independent Producer because
harvester operations do not meet the definition requirements for a Farm
or Ranch. Harvester applicants are therefore not eligible to receive
Reserved Funds and/or Priority Points for a Beginning Farmer or
Rancher, Socially-Disadvantaged Farmer or Rancher, operator of a Small-
or Medium-sized farm or ranch that is structured as a Family Farm, or a
Farmer or Rancher Cooperative, but may request Reserved Funds and/or
Priority Points for qualified Mid-Tier Value Chain projects.
(4) The Agency shall determine the Independent Producer status of
Tribes or Tribal entities without regard to ownership of the commodity
to which value will be added so long as the tribal member participant,
tribal entity and/or Tribe own and control at least 50 percent of the
raw commodity necessary for the project, per the definition of
Independent Producer in Sec. 4284.902.
Local or regional supply network. An interconnected group of
individuals and/or entities through which agricultural based products
move from production through consumption in a local or regional area of
the United States. Examples of participants in a supply network may
include Agricultural Producers, aggregators, processors, distributors,
wholesalers, retailers, consumers, and entities that organize or
provide facilitation services and technical assistance for development
of such networks.
Locally-produced Agricultural Food Product. Any Agricultural Food
Product, as defined in this subpart, that is raised, produced, and
distributed in:
(1) The locality or region in which the final product is marketed,
so that the total distance that the product is transported is less than
400 miles from the origin of the product; or
(2) The State in which the product is produced.
Majority-controlled producer-based business venture. An entity
(except Farmer or Rancher Cooperatives) in which more than 50 percent
of the financial ownership and voting control is held by Independent
Producers. Independent Producer members must be confirmed as eligible
and must be identified by name or class, along with their percentage of
ownership.
Marketing plan. A plan for the project that identifies a market
window, potential buyers, a description of the distribution system and
possible promotional campaigns.
Matching funds. A cost-sharing contribution to the project via
confirmed cash or funding commitments from eligible sources without a
real or apparent Conflict of Interest, that are used for eligible
project purposes during the grant funding period. Matching Funds must
be at least equal to the grant amount, and combined grant and Matching
Funds must equal 100 percent of the Total Project Costs. All Matching
Funds must be provided for in the approved budget, must be necessary
and reasonable for accomplishment of project or program objectives and
can be verified by authentic documentation from the source as part of
the application. Matching Funds must be provided in the form of
confirmed Applicant cash, loan, or line of credit, or provided in the
form of a confirmed Applicant or family member in-kind contribution
that meets the requirements and limitations in Sec. 4284.925(a) and
(b); or confirmed third-party cash or eligible third-party in-kind
contribution; or confirmed non-federal grant sources (unless otherwise
provided by law). Matching funds cannot be paid by the Federal
Government under another Federal award and are not included as
contributions for any other Federal Award. See examples of ineligible
Matching Funds and Matching Funds verification requirements in
Sec. Sec. 4284.926 and 4284.931.
Medium-sized farm or ranch. A Farm or Ranch that is structured as a
Family Farm that has averaged $500,001 to $1,000,000 in annual gross
sales of agricultural commodities in the previous three years.
Mid-tier value chain. Local and regional supply networks that link
Independent Producers with businesses, cooperatives, or consumers that
market Value-Added Agricultural Products in a manner that:
(1) Targets and strengthens the profitability and competitiveness
of Small- and Medium-sized Farms or Ranches that are structured as a
Family Farm; and
(2) Obtains agreement from an eligible Agricultural Producer Group,
Farmer or Rancher Cooperative, or Majority-Controlled Producer-Based
Business Venture that is engaged in the value chain on a marketing
strategy.
(3) For Mid-tier Value Chain projects, the Agency recognizes that,
in a supply chain network, a variety of raw Agricultural Commodity and
Value-Added Agricultural Product ownership and transfer arrangements
may be necessary. Consequently, Applicant ownership of the raw
Agricultural Commodity and Value-Added Agricultural Product from raw
through value-added stages is not necessarily required, as long as the
Mid-tier Value Chain application can demonstrate an increase in
customer base and an increase in revenue returns to the Applicant
producers supplying the majority of the raw Agricultural Commodity for
the project.
Planning grant. A grant to facilitate the development of a defined
program of economic planning activities to determine the viability of a
potential value-added Venture, and specifically for the purpose of
paying for conducting and developing a Feasibility Study, Business
Plan, and/or Marketing Plan associated with the processing and/or
marketing of a Value-Added Agricultural Product.
Produced in a manner that enhances the value of the Agricultural
Commodity. The use of a recognizably coherent set of agricultural
production practices in the growing or raising of the raw commodity,
such that a differentiated market identity is created for the resulting
product. Examples of eligible products in this category include, but
are not limited to, sustainably grown apples, eggs produced from free-
range chickens, or organically grown carrots.
Physical segregation. Separating an Agricultural Commodity or
product on the same farm from other varieties of the same commodity or
product on the same farm during production and harvesting, with
assurance of continued separation from similar commodities during
processing and marketing in a
[[Page 26802]]
manner that results in the enhancement of the value of the separated
commodity or product. An example of a segregated product is non-GMO
corn separated from GMO corn.
Pro forma financial statement. A financial statement that projects
the future financial position of a company. The statement is part of
the Business Plan and includes an explanation of all assumptions, such
as input prices, finished product prices, and other economic factors
used to generate the financial statements. The statement must include
projections for a minimum of three years in the form of cash flow
statements, income statements, and balance sheets.
Project. All of the eligible activities to be funded by the grant
under this subpart and Matching Funds.
Qualified consultant. An independent, third-party, without a
Conflict of Interest, possessing the knowledge, expertise, and
experience to perform the specific task required in an efficient,
effective, and authoritative manner.
Rural Development. A mission area of the Under Secretary for Rural
Development within the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), which
includes Rural Housing Service, Rural Utilities Service, and Rural
Business-Cooperative Service and their successors.
Small-sized farm or ranch. A Farm or Ranch that is structured as a
Family Farm that has averaged $500,000 or less in annual gross sales of
agricultural products in the previous three years.
Socially-disadvantaged farmer or rancher. This term has the meaning
given in section 355(e) of the Consolidated Farm and Rural Development
Act (7 U.S.C. 2003(e)): Socially-Disadvantaged Farmer or Rancher means
a farmer or rancher who is a member of a ``Socially-Disadvantaged
Group.''
(1) For the purposes of determining eligibility to receive priority
points under Sec. 4284.924, if there are multiple farmer or rancher
owners of the Applicant organization, more than 50 percent of the
ownership must be held by members of a Socially-Disadvantaged Group.
(2) For the purposes of determining eligibility to received funding
reserved for Socially-Disadvantaged Farmers and Ranchers under Sec.
4284.923, if there are multiple farmer or rancher owners of the
Applicant organization, all farmer and rancher owners (i.e., 100
percent) must be members of a Socially-Disadvantaged Group.
Socially-Disadvantaged group. A group whose members have been
subjected to racial, ethnic, or gender prejudice because of their
identity as members of a group without regard to their individual
qualities.
State. Any of the 50 States of the United States, the Commonwealth
of Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands, Guam, American Samoa, the
Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, the Republic of Palau,
the Federated States of Micronesia, and the Republic of the Marshall
Islands.
State office. USDA Rural Development offices located in each State.
Steering committee. An unincorporated group comprised wholly of
specifically identified Independent Producers in the process of
organizing one of the four program eligible entity types (Independent
Producer, Agricultural Producer Group, Farmer or Rancher Cooperative or
Majority-Controlled Producer-Based Business Venture.
Total project cost. The sum of all grant and Matching Funds in the
project budget that reflects the eligible project tasks associated with
the work plan.
Value-added agricultural product. Any Agricultural Commodity
produced in the U.S. (including the Republic of Palau, the Federated
States of Micronesia, the Republic of the Marshall Islands, or American
Samoa), that meets the requirements specified in paragraphs (1) and (2)
of this definition.
(1) The Agricultural Commodity must meet one of the following five
value-added methodologies:
(i) Has undergone a Change in Physical State;
(ii) Was Produced in a Manner that Enhances the Value of the
Agricultural Commodity;
(iii) Is Physically Segregated in a manner that results in the
enhancement of the value of the Agricultural Commodity;
(iv) Is a source of Farm- or Ranch-based Renewable Energy,
including E-85 fuel; or
(v) Is aggregated and marketed as a Locally-Produced Agricultural
Food Product.
(2) As a result of the Change in Physical State or the manner in
which the Agricultural Commodity was produced, marketed, or segregated:
(i) The customer base for the Agricultural Commodity is expanded
and
(ii) A greater portion of the revenue derived from the marketing,
processing, or physical segregation of the Agricultural Commodity is
available to the producer of the commodity.
Venture. The business and its value-added undertakings, including
the project and other related activities.
Veteran farmer or rancher. A farmer or rancher who has served in
the Armed Forces, as defined in section 101(10) of title 38 United
States Code, and who either has not operated a Farm or Ranch or has
operated a Farm or Ranch for not more than 10 years.
(1) For the purposes of determining eligibility to receive priority
points under Sec. 4284.924, a Veteran Farmer or Rancher is either:
(i) An individual Independent Producer (other than a Harvester)
that has either never operated a Farm or Ranch or has operated a Farm
or Ranch for no more than 10 years or
(ii) An eligible Applicant entity, other than a Harvester, that has
an Applicant ownership or membership of more than 50 percent Veteran
Farmers or Ranchers each of whom have either never operated a Farm or
Ranch or operated a Farm or Ranch for no more than 10 years.
(2) [Reserved]
Working capital grant. A grant to provide funds to operate a value-
added project, specifically to pay the eligible project expenses
related to the processing and/or marketing of the Value-Added
Agricultural Product that are eligible uses of grant funds.
Sec. 4284.903 Review or appeal rights.
A person may seek a review of an Agency decision under this subpart
from the appropriate Agency official that oversees the program in
question or appeal to the National Appeals Division in accordance with
7 CFR part 11.
Sec. 4284.904 Exception authority.
Except as specified in paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section, the
Administrator may make exceptions to any requirement or provision of
this subpart, if such exception is necessary to implement the intent of
the authorizing statute in a time of national emergency or in
accordance with a Presidentially-declared disaster, or, on a case-by-
case basis, when such an exception is in the best financial interests
of the Federal Government and is otherwise not in conflict with
applicable laws.
(a) Applicant eligibility. No exception to Applicant eligibility
can be made.
(b) Project eligibility. No exception to project eligibility can be
made.
Sec. 4284.905 Nondiscrimination and compliance with other Federal
laws.
(a) Other Federal laws. Applicants must comply with other
applicable Federal laws, including the Equal
[[Page 26803]]
Employment Opportunities Act of 1972, the Americans with
Disabilities Act, the Equal Credit Opportunity Act, Title VI of the
Civil Rights Act of 1964, Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of
1973, the Age Discrimination Act of 1975, and 7 CFR part 1901, subpart
E.
(b) Nondiscrimination. The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA)
prohibits discrimination in all its programs and activities on the
basis of race, color, national origin, age, disability, and where
applicable, sex, marital status, familial status, parental status,
religion, sexual orientation, genetic information, political beliefs,
reprisal, or because all or part of an individual's income is derived
from any public assistance program. (Not all prohibited bases apply to
all programs.) Persons with disabilities who require alternative means
for communication of program information (Braille, large print,
audiotape, etc.) should contact USDA's TARGET Center at (202) 720-2600
(voice and TDD). Any Applicant that believes it has been discriminated
against as a result of applying for funds under this program should
contact: USDA, Director, Office of Adjudication and Compliance, 1400
Independence Avenue SW., Washington, DC 20250-9410, or call (800) 795-
3272 (voice) or (202) 720-6382 (TDD) for information and instructions
regarding the filing of a Civil Rights complaint. USDA is an equal
opportunity provider, employer, and lender.
(c) Civil rights compliance. Recipients of grants must comply with
Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, and Section 504 of the
Rehabilitation Act of 1973. This includes collection and maintenance of
data on the basis of race, sex and national origin of the recipient's
membership/ownership and employees. These data must be available to
conduct compliance reviews in accordance with 7 CFR part 1901, subpart
E. For grants, compliance reviews will be conducted after the grantee
signs the applicable Assurance Agreement, and after the last
disbursement of grant funds have been made and the facility or program
has been in full operations for 90 days.
(d) Executive Order 12898. When a project is proposed and financial
assistance is requested, the Agency will conduct a Civil Rights Impact
Analysis (CRIA) with regards to environmental justice. Civil Rights
certification must be done prior to grant approval, obligation of
funds, or other commitments of Agency resources, including issuance of
a Letter of Conditions, whichever occurs first.
Sec. 4284.906 State laws, local laws, regulatory commission
regulations.
If there are conflicts between this subpart and State or local laws
or regulatory commission regulations, the provisions of this subpart
will control.
Sec. 4284.907 Environmental requirements.
All grants awarded under this subpart are subject to the
environmental requirements in subpart G of 7 CFR part 1940.
Applications for both Planning and Working Capital grants are generally
excluded from the environmental review process by 7 CFR 1940.333.
Sec. 4284.908 Compliance with other regulations.
(a) Departmental regulations. Applicants must comply with all
applicable Departmental regulations and Office of Management and Budget
regulations concerning grants in 2 CFR chapter IV.
(b) Cost principles. Applicants must comply with the cost
principles found in 2 CFR parts 200, subpart E, 2 CFR part 400, and in
48 CFR subpart 31.2.
(c) Definitions. If a term is defined differently in the
Departmental Regulations, 2 CFR parts 200 through 400 or 48 CFR subpart
31.2 and in this subpart, such term shall have the meaning as found in
this subpart.
Sec. 4284.909 Forms, regulations, and instructions.
Copies of all forms, regulations, instructions, and other materials
related to the program referenced in this subpart may be obtained
through the Agency's Web site and at any Rural Development office.
Sec. Sec. 4284.910-4284.914 [Reserved]
Funding and Programmatic Change Notifications
Sec. 4284.915 Notifications.
In implementing this subpart, the Agency will issue public
notifications addressing funding and programmatic changes, as specified
in paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section, respectively. The methods
that the Agency will use in making these notifications is specified in
paragraph (c) of this section, and the timing of these notifications is
specified in paragraph (d) of this section.
(a) Funding and simplified applications. The Agency will issue
notifications concerning:
(1) The funding level, the minimum and maximum grant amounts, and
any additional funding information as determined by the Agency; and
(2) The contents of simplified applications, as provided for in
Sec. 4284.932.
(b) Programmatic changes. The Agency will issue notifications of
any programmatic changes specified in paragraphs (b)(1) through (4) of
this section.
(1) Priority categories to be used for awarding Administrator or
State Director points, which may include any of the following:
(i) Unserved or underserved areas.
(ii) Geographic diversity.
(iii) Emergency conditions.
(iv) Priority mission area plans, goals, and objectives.
(2) Additional reports that are generally applicable across
projects within a program associated with the monitoring of and
reporting on project performance.
(3) Any application filing instructions specified in Sec.
4284.933.
(c) Notification methods. The Agency will issue the information
specified in paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section in one or more
Federal Register notices. If a funding level is not known at the time
of notification, it will be posted to the program Web site once an
appropriation is enacted. In addition, all information will be
available at any Rural Development office.
(d) Timing. The Agency will issue notices under this section as
follows:
(1) The Agency will make the information specified in paragraph (a)
of this section available each Fiscal Year.
(2) The Agency will make the information specified in paragraph
(b)(1) of this section available at least 60 days prior to the
application deadline, as applicable.
(3) The Agency will make the information specified in paragraphs
(b)(2) through (4) of this section available on an as needed basis.
Sec. Sec. 4284.916-4284.919 [Reserved]
Eligibility
Sec. 4284.920 Applicant eligibility.
To be eligible for a grant under this subpart, an Applicant must
demonstrate that they meet the requirements specified in paragraphs (a)
through (d) of this section, as applicable, and are subject to the
limitations specified in paragraphs (e) and (f) of this section.
(a) Type of Applicant. The Applicant, including any Federally-
recognized Tribes and tribal entities (Rural Development State Offices
and posted application guidelines will provide additional information
on Tribal eligibility), must demonstrate that they meet all definition
requirements for one of the following Applicant types:
(1) An Independent Producer;
(2) An Agricultural Producer Group;
(3) A Farmer or Rancher Cooperative; or
[[Page 26804]]
(4) A Majority-Controlled Producer-Based Business Venture.
(b) Emerging market. An applicant that is an agricultural producer
group, a farmer or rancher cooperative, or a majority-controlled
producer-based business venture must demonstrate that they are entering
into an emerging market as a result of the proposed project.
(c) Citizenship. (1) Individual Applicants must certify that they:
(i) Are citizens or nationals of the United States (U.S.), the
Republic of Palau, the Federated States of Micronesia, the Republic of
the Marshall Islands, or American Samoa; or
(ii) Reside in the U.S. after legal admittance for permanent
residence.
(2) Entities other than individuals must certify that they are more
than 50 percent owned by individuals who are either citizens as
identified under paragraph (c)(1)(i) of this section or legally
admitted permanent residents residing in the U.S.
(d) Legal authority and responsibility. Each Applicant must
demonstrate that they have, or can obtain, the legal authority
necessary to carry out the purpose of the grant, and they must evidence
good standing from the appropriate State agency or equivalent.
(e) Multiple grant eligibility. An Applicant may submit only one
application in response to a solicitation, and must explicitly direct
that it compete in either the general funds competition or in one of
the named reserved funds competitions. Multiple applications from
separate entities with identical or greater than 75 percent common
ownership, or from a parent, subsidiary or affiliated organization
(with ``affiliation'' defined by Small Business Administration
regulation 13 CFR 121.103, or successor regulation) are not permitted.
Further, Applicants who have already received a Planning Grant for the
proposed project cannot receive another Planning Grant for the same
project. Applicants who have already received a Working Capital Grant
for the proposed project cannot receive any additional grants for that
project.
(f) Active VAPG grant. If an Applicant has an active value-added
grant at the time of a subsequent application, the currently active
grant must be closed out within 90 days of the application submission
deadline for the subsequent competition, as published in the annual
solicitation.
Sec. 4284.921 Ineligible Applicants.
(a) Consistent with the Departmental Regulations, an Applicant is
ineligible if the Applicant is debarred or suspended or is otherwise
excluded from, or ineligible for participation in, Federal assistance
programs under Executive Order 12549, ``Debarment and Suspension.''
(b) An Applicant will be considered ineligible for a grant due to
an outstanding judgment obtained by the U.S. in a Federal Court (other
than U.S. Tax Court), is delinquent on the payment of Federal income
taxes, or is delinquent on Federal debt.
Sec. 4284.922 Project eligibility.
To be eligible for a VAPG grant, the application must demonstrate
that the project meets the requirements specified in paragraphs (a)
through (c) of this section, as applicable.
(a) Product eligibility. Each product that is the subject of the
proposed project must meet the definition of a Value-Added Agricultural
Product
(b) Purpose eligibility. (1) The grant funds requested must not
exceed any maximum amounts specified in the annual solicitation for
Planning and Working Capital Grant requests, per Sec. 4284.915.
(2) The Matching Funds required for the project budget must be
eligible and without a real or apparent Conflict of Interest, available
during the project period, and source verified in the application.
(3) The proposed project must be limited to eligible planning or
working capital activities as defined at Sec. 4284.925, as applicable,
with eligible tasks directly related to the processing and/or marketing
of the subject Value-Added Agricultural Product, to be demonstrated in
the required work plan and budget as described at Sec. 4284.922(b)(5).
(4) Applications that propose ineligible expenses in excess of 10
percent of Total Project Costs will be deemed ineligible to compete for
funds. Applicants who submit applications containing ineligible
expenses totaling less than 10 percent of Total Project Costs must
remove those expenses from the project budget or replace with eligible
expenses, if selected for an award.
(5) The project work plan and budget must demonstrate eligible
sources and uses of funds and must:
(i) Present a detailed narrative description of the eligible
activities and tasks related to the processing and/or marketing of the
Value-Added Agricultural Product along with a detailed breakdown of all
estimated costs allocated to those activities and tasks;
(ii) Identify the key personnel that will be responsible for
overseeing and/or conducting the activities or tasks and provide
reasonable and specific timeframes for completion of the activities and
tasks;
(iii) Identify the sources and uses of grant and Matching Funds for
all activities and tasks specified in the budget; and indicate that
Matching Funds will be spent at a rate equal to or in advance of grant
funds; and
(iv) Present a project budget period that commences within the
start date range specified in the annual solicitation, concludes not
later than 36 months after the proposed start date, and is scaled to
the complexity of the project.
(6) Except as noted in paragraphs (b)(6)(i) and (ii) of this
section, working capital applications must include a Feasibility Study
and Business Plan completed specifically for the proposed value-added
project by a Qualified Consultant. The Agency must concur in the
acceptability or adequacy of the Feasibility Study and Business Plan
for eligibility purposes.
(i) An Independent Producer Applicant seeking a Working Capital
Grant of $50,000 or more, who can demonstrate that they are proposing
market expansion for an existing Value-Added Agricultural Product(s)
that they currently own and produce from at least 50 percent of their
own Agricultural Commodity and that they have produced and marketed for
at least 2 years at time of application submission, may submit a
Business Plan or Marketing Plan for the value-added project in lieu of
a Feasibility Study. The Applicant must still adequately document
increased customer base and increased revenues returning to the
Applicant producers as a result of the project in their application,
and meet all other eligibility requirements. Further, the waiver of the
independent Feasibility Study does not change the proposal evaluation
or scoring elements that pertain to issues that might be supported by
an independent Feasibility Study, so Applicants are encouraged to well-
document their project plans and expectations for success in their
proposals.
(ii) All four Applicant types that submit a Simplified Application
for Working Capital Grant funds of less than $50,000 are not required
to provide an independent Feasibility Study or Business Plan for the
Project/Venture, but must provide adequate documentation to demonstrate
the expected increases in customer base and revenues resulting from the
project that will benefit the producer Applicants
[[Page 26805]]
supplying the majority of the Agricultural Commodity for the project.
All other eligibility requirements remain the same. The waiver of the
requirement to submit a Feasibility Study and Business Plan does not
change the proposal evaluation or scoring elements that pertain to
issues that might be supported by a Feasibility Study or Business Plan,
so Applicants are encouraged to well-document their project plans and
expectations for success in their proposals.
(7) All applicants applying for Working Capital Grant funds must
document the quantity of the raw Agricultural Commodity that will be
used for the Value-Added Agricultural Product, expressed in an
appropriate unit of measure (pounds, tons, bushels, etc.) to
demonstrate the scale of the applicant's project. This quantification
must include an estimated total quantity of the Agricultural Commodity
needed for the project, the quantity that will be provided (produced
and owned) by the Agricultural Producers of the applicant organization,
and the quantity that will be purchased or donated from third-party
sources.
(8) All Applicants requesting Working Capital grant funds must
either be currently marketing each Value-added Agricultural Product
that is the subject of the grant application, or be ready to implement
the working capital activities in accord with the budget and work plan
timeline proposed.
Sec. 4284.923 Reserved funds eligibility.
The Applicant must meet the requirements specified in this section,
as applicable, if the Applicant chooses to compete for reserved funds.
A Harvester is not eligible to compete for reserved funds under
paragraph (a) of this section, but is eligible to compete for reserved
funds under paragraph (b) of this section. In accordance with
application deadlines, all eligible, but unfunded reserved funds
applications will be eligible to compete for general funds in that same
Fiscal Year, as funding levels permit.
(a) If the Applicant is applying for Beginning Farmer or Rancher or
Socially-Disadvantaged Farmer or Rancher reserved funds, the Applicant
must provide the following documentation to demonstrate that the
applicant meets all of the requirements for the applicable definition
found in Sec. 4284.902.
(1) For beginning farmers and ranchers (including veterans),
documentation must include a description from each of the individual
owner(s) of the applicant farm or ranch organization, addressing the
qualifying elements in the beginning farmer or rancher definition,
including the length and nature of their individual owner/operator
experience at any farm in the previous 10 years, along with one IRS
income tax form from the previous 10 years showing that each of the
individual owner(s) did not file farm income; or a detailed letter from
a certified public accountant or attorney certifying that each owner
meets the reserved funds beginning farmer or rancher eligibility
requirements. For applicant entities with multiple owners, all owners
must be eligible beginning farmers or ranchers.
(2) For Socially-Disadvantaged farmers and ranchers, documentation
must include a description of the applicant's farm or ranch ownership
structure and demographic profile that indicates the owner(s)'
membership in a Socially-Disadvantaged group that has been subjected to
racial, ethnic or gender prejudice; including identifying the total
number of owners of the applicant organization; along with a self-
certification statement from the individual owner(s) evidencing their
membership in a Socially-Disadvantaged group. All farmer and rancher
owners must be members of a Socially-Disadvantaged group.
(b) If the Applicant is applying for Mid-Tier Value Chain reserved
funds, the Applicant must be one of the four VAPG Applicant types. The
application must:
(1) Provide documentation demonstrating that the project meets the
definition of Mid-Tier Value Chain;
(2) Demonstrate that the project proposes development of a Local or
Regional Supply Network of an interconnected group of entities
(including nonprofit organizations, as appropriate) through which
agricultural commodities and Value-Added Agricultural Products move
from production through consumption in a local or regional area of the
United States, including a description of the network, its component
members, either by name or by class, and its purpose;
(3) Describe at least two alliances, linkages, or partnerships
within the value chain that link Independent Producers with businesses,
cooperatives, or consumers that market value-added agricultural
commodities or Value-Added Agricultural Products in a manner that
benefits Small- or Medium-sized Farms and Ranches that are structured
as a Family Farm, including the names of the parties and the nature of
their collaboration;
(4) Demonstrate how the project, due to the manner in which the
Value-Added Agricultural Product is marketed, will increase the
profitability and competitiveness of at least two, eligible, Small- or
Medium-sized Farms or Ranches that are structured as a Family Farm,
including documentation to confirm that the participating Small- or
Medium-sized Farms or Ranches are structured as a Family Farm and meet
these program definitions. A description of the two farms or ranches
confirming they meet the Family Farm requirements, and IRS income tax
forms or appropriate certifications evidencing eligible farm income is
sufficient.
(5) Document that the eligible Agricultural Producer Group/Farmer
or Rancher Cooperative/Majority-Controlled Producer-Based Business
Venture Applicant organization has obtained at least one agreement with
another member of the supply network that is engaged in the value chain
on a marketing strategy; or that the eligible Independent Producer
Applicant has obtained at least one agreement from an eligible
Agricultural Producer Group/Farmer or Rancher Cooperative/Majority-
Controlled Producer-Based Business Venture engaged in the value-chain
on a marketing strategy;
(i) For Planning Grants, agreements may include letters of
commitment or intent to partner on marketing, distribution or
processing; and should include the names of the parties with a
description of the nature of their collaboration. For Working Capital
grants, demonstration of the actual existence of the executed
agreements is required.
(ii) Independent Producer Applicants must provide documentation to
confirm that the non-applicant Agricultural Producer Group/Farmer or
Rancher Cooperative/majority-controlled partnering entity meets program
eligibility definitions, except that, in this context, the partnering
entity does not need to supply any of the raw Agricultural Commodity
for the project;
(6) Demonstrate that the members of the Applicant organization that
are benefiting from the proposed project currently own and produce more
than 50 percent of the raw Agricultural Commodity that will be used for
the Value-Added Agricultural Product that is the subject of the
proposal; and
(7) Demonstrate that the project will result in an increase in
customer base and an increase in revenue returns to the Applicant
producers supplying the majority of the raw Agricultural Commodity for
the project.
Sec. 4284.924 Priority scoring eligibility.
Applicants that demonstrate eligibility may apply for priority
points if their applications: Propose projects
[[Page 26806]]
that contribute to increasing opportunities for Beginning Farmers or
Ranchers, Socially-Disadvantaged Farmers or Ranchers, Veteran Farmers
or Ranchers, or Operators of Small- or Medium-sized Farms or Ranches
that are structured as a Family Farm; or propose Mid-Tier Value Chain
projects; or are a Farmer or Rancher Cooperative. A Harvester is
eligible for priority points only if the Harvester is proposing a Mid-
Tier Value Chain project.
(a) Applicants seeking priority points as Beginning Farmers or
Ranchers or as Socially Disadvantaged Farmers or Ranchers must provide
the documentation specified in Sec. 4284.923(a)(1) or (2), as
applicable.
(b) Applicants seeking priority points as Veteran Farmers or
Ranchers must provide the documentation specified in Sec.
4284.923(a)(1) or (2), as applicable, and must submit form DD-214,
``Report of Separation from the U.S. Military,'' or subsequent form.
(c) Applicants seeking priority points as Operators of Small- or
Medium-sized Farms or Ranches that are structured as a Family Farm
must:
(1) Be structured as a Family Farm;
(2) Meet all requirements in the associated definitions; and
(3) Provide the following documentation:
(i) A description from the individual owner(s) of the Applicant
organization addressing each qualifying element in the definitions,
including identification of the average annual gross sales of
agricultural commodities from the farm or ranch in the previous three
years, not to exceed $500,000 for operators of small-sized farms or
ranches or $1,000,000 for operators of medium-sized farms or ranches;
(ii) The names and identification of the blood or marriage
relationships of all Applicant/owners of the farm; and
(iii) A statement that the Applicant/owners are primarily
responsible for the daily physical labor and management of the farm
with hired help merely supplementing the family labor.
(d) Applicants seeking priority points for Mid-Tier Value Chain
proposals must be one of the four eligible Applicant types and provide
the documentation specified in Sec. 4284.923(b)(1) through (7),
demonstrating that the project meets the Mid-Tier Value Chain
definition.
(e) Applicants seeking priority points for a Farmer or Rancher
Cooperative must:
(1) Demonstrate that it is a business owned and controlled by
Independent Producers that is legally incorporated as a Cooperative; or
that it is a business owned and controlled by Independent Producers
that is not legally incorporated as a Cooperative, but is identified by
the State in which it operates as a cooperatively operated business;
(2) Identify, by name or class, and confirm that the Independent
Producers on whose behalf the value-added work will be done meet the
definition requirements for an Independent Producer, including that
each member is an individual Agricultural Producer, or an entity that
is solely owned and controlled by Agricultural Producers, that
substantially participates in the production of the majority of the
Agricultural Commodity to which value will be added; and
(3) Provide evidence of ``good standing'' as a cooperatively
operated business in the State of incorporation or operations, as
applicable.
(f) Applicants applying as Agricultural Producer Groups, Farmer and
Rancher Cooperatives, or Majority-Controlled Producer-Based Business
Ventures (group Applicants) may request additional priority points for
projects that ``best contribute to creating or increasing marketing
opportunities'' for operators of Small- and Medium-sized Farms and
Ranches that are structured as Family Farms, Beginning Farmers and
Ranchers, Socially-Disadvantaged Farmers and Ranchers, and Veteran
Farmers and Ranchers. The annual solicitation and Agency application
package will provide instructions and documentation requirements for
group Applicants to apply for these additional priority points.
Sec. 4284.925 Eligible uses of grant and Matching Funds.
In general, grant and cost-share Matching Funds have the same use
restrictions and must be used to fund only the costs for eligible
purposes as defined in paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section.
(a) Planning Grant funds may be used to pay for a Qualified
Consultant to conduct and develop a Feasibility Study, Business Plan,
and/or Marketing Plan associated with the processing and/or marketing
of a Value-added Agricultural Product.
(1) Planning Grant funds may not be used to compensate Applicants
or family members for participation in Feasibility Studies.
(2) In-kind contribution of Matching Funds to cover Applicant or
family member participation in planning activities is allowed so long
as the value of such contribution does not exceed a maximum of 25
percent of the Total Project Costs and an adequate explanation of the
basis for the valuation, referencing comparable market values, salary
and wage data, expertise or experience of the contributor, per unit
costs, industry norms, etc., is provided. Final valuation for Applicant
or family member in-kind contributions is at the discretion of the
Agency. Planning funds may not be used to evaluate the agricultural
production of the commodity itself, other than to determine the
project's input costs related to the feasibility of processing and
marketing the Value-Added Agricultural Product.
(b) Working capital funds may be used to pay the project's
operational costs directly related to the processing and/or marketing
of the Value-Added Agricultural Product.
(1) Examples of eligible working capital expenses include designing
or purchasing a financial accounting system for the project, paying
salaries of employees without ownership or Immediate Family interest to
process and/or market and deliver the Value-Added Agricultural Product
to consumers, paying for raw commodity inventory (less than 50 percent
of the amount required for the project) from an unaffiliated third
party, necessary to produce the Value-Added Agricultural Product, and
paying for a marketing campaign for the Value-Added Agricultural
Product.
(2) In-kind contributions may include appropriately valued
inventory of raw commodity to be used in the project. In-kind
contributions of Matching Funds may also include contributions of time
spent on eligible tasks by Applicants or Applicant family members so
long as the value of such contribution does not exceed a maximum of 25
percent of the Total Project Costs and an adequate explanation of the
basis for the valuation, referencing comparable market values, salary
and wage data, expertise or experience of the contributor, per unit
costs, industry norms, etc. is provided. Final valuation for Applicant
or family member in-kind contributions is at the discretion of the
Agency.
Sec. 4284.926 Ineligible uses of grant and Matching Funds.
Federal procurement standards prohibit transactions that involve a
real or apparent Conflict of Interest for owners, employees, officers,
agents, or their Immediate Family members having a personal,
professional, financial or other interest in the outcome of the
project; including organizational conflicts, and conflicts that
restrict open and free competition for unrestrained trade. In addition,
the use of funds is
[[Page 26807]]
limited to only the eligible activities identified in Sec. 4284.925
and prohibits other uses of funds. Ineligible uses of grant and
Matching Funds awarded under this subpart include, but are not limited
to:
(a) Support costs for services or goods going to or coming from a
person or entity with a real or apparent Conflict of Interest, except
as specifically noted for limited in-kind Matching Funds in Sec.
4284.925(a) and (b);
(b) Pay costs for scenarios with noncompetitive trade practices;
(c) Plan, repair, rehabilitate, acquire, or construct a building or
facility (including a processing facility);
(d) Purchase, lease purchase, or install fixed equipment, including
processing equipment;
(e) Purchase or repair vehicles, including boats;
(f) Pay for the preparation of the grant application;
(g) Pay expenses not directly related to the funded project for the
processing and marketing of the Value-Added Agricultural Product;
(h) Fund research and development;
(i) Fund political or lobbying activities;
(j) Fund any activities prohibited by 2 CFR parts 200 through 400,
and 48 CFR subpart 31.2;
(k) Fund architectural or engineering design work;
(l) Fund expenses related to the production of any Agricultural
Commodity or product, including, but not limited to production
planning, purchase of seed or rootstock or other production inputs,
labor for cultivation or harvesting crops, and delivery of raw
commodity to a processing facility;
(m) Conduct activities on behalf of anyone other than a
specifically identified Independent Producer or group of Independent
Producers, as identified by name or class. The Agency considers
conducting industry-level feasibility studies or business plans, that
are also known as feasibility study templates or guides or business
plan templates or guides, to be ineligible because the assistance is
not provided to a specific group of Independent Producers;
(n) Pay for goods or services from a person or entity that employs
the owner or an Immediate Family member;
(o) Duplicate current services or replace or substitute support
previously provided;
(p) Pay any costs of the project incurred prior to the date of
grant approval, including legal or other expenses needed to incorporate
or organize a business;
(q) Pay any judgment or debt owed to the United States;
(r) Purchase land;
(s) Pay for costs associated with illegal activities; or
(t) Purchase the Agricultural Commodity to which value will be
added (raw commodity) from the applicant entity; applicant-owned or
related entity, or members of the applicant entity.
Sec. 4284.927 Funding limitations.
(a) Grant funds may be used to pay up to 50 percent of the Total
Project Costs, subject to the limitations established for maximum total
grant amount.
(b) The maximum total grant amount provided to a grantee in any one
year shall not exceed the amount announced in an annual notice issued
pursuant to Sec. 4284.915, but in no event may the total amount of
grant funds provided to a grant recipient exceed $500,000.
(c) A grant shall have a term that does not exceed 3 years, and a
project start date within 90 days of the date of award, unless
otherwise specified in a notice pursuant to Sec. 4284.915. Grant
project periods should be scaled to the complexity of the objectives
for the project. The Agency may extend the term of the grant period,
not to exceed the 3-year maximum.
(d) The aggregate amount of awards to Majority-Controlled Producer-
Based Business Ventures may not exceed 10 percent of the total funds
obligated under this subpart during any Fiscal Year.
(e) Not more than 5 percent of funds appropriated each year may be
used to fund the Agricultural Marketing Resource Center, to support
electronic capabilities to provide information regarding research,
business, legal, financial, or logistical assistance to Independent
Producers and processors.
(f) Each Fiscal Year, the following amounts of reserved funds will
be made available:
(1) 10 percent of total program funding to fund projects that
benefit Beginning Farmers or Ranchers or Socially-Disadvantaged Farmers
or Ranchers; and
(2) 10 percent of total program funding to fund projects that
propose development of Mid-tier Value Chains.
(3) Funds not obligated by June 30 of each Fiscal Year shall be
available to the Secretary to make grants under this subpart to
eligible applicants in the general funds competition.
Sec. Sec. 4284.928-4284.929 [Reserved]
Applying for a Grant
Sec. 4284.930 Preliminary review.
The Agency encourages Applicants to contact their State Office well
in advance of the application submission deadline, to ask questions and
to discuss Applicant and Project eligibility potential. At its option,
the Agency may establish a preliminary review deadline in accordance
with Sec. 4284.915, so that it may informally assess the eligibility
of the application and its completeness. The result of the preliminary
review is not binding on the Agency.
Sec. 4284.931 Application package.
All Applicants are required to submit a complete application
package that is comprised of all of the elements in this section.
(a) Application forms. The application must include all forms
listed in the annually published notice for the program. The following
application forms (or their successor forms) must be completed when
applying for a grant under this subpart.
(1) ``Application for Federal Assistance.''
(2) ``Budget Information-Non-Construction Programs.''
(3) ``Assurances--Non-Construction Programs.''
(4) All Applicants (including individuals and sole proprietorships)
are required to have a DUNS number and maintain registration with the
System for Award Management (SAM).
(b) Application content. The following content items must be
completed when applying for a grant under this subpart:
(1) Eligibility discussion. The Applicant must demonstrate in
detail how the:
(i) Applicant eligibility requirements in Sec. Sec. 4284.920 and
4284.921 are met;
(ii) Project eligibility requirements in Sec. 4284.922 are met;
(iii) Eligible use of grant and Matching Funds requirements in
Sec. Sec. 4284.925 and 4284.926 are met; and
(iv) Funding limitation requirements in Sec. 4284.927 are met.
(2) Evaluation criteria. Using the format prescribed by the
application package, the Applicant must address each evaluation
criterion identified below.
(i) Performance Evaluation Criteria. The overall goal of this
program and the projects it supports is to create and serve new
markets, with a resulting increase in jobs, customer base and revenues
returning to the producer. Applicants must provide specific information
about plans to track and evaluate progress toward these outcomes as a
way for the Agency to ascertain whether or not the primary program
goals and project goals proposed in the work plan are likely to be
accomplished during the project
[[Page 26808]]
period. The application package will provide additional instruction to
assist Applicants when responding to this criterion. The required data,
including accomplishments as outlined in Sec. 4284.960 and Applicant-
suggested performance criteria, will be incorporated into the
Applicant's semi-annual and final reporting requirements if selected
for award, and will be specified in the grant agreement associated with
each award. At a minimum, data included in each application submission
must include both target outcomes and timeframes for achieving results:
(A) The number of jobs anticipated to be created or saved as a
direct result of the project.
(B) The current baseline number of customers.
(C) The estimated expansion of customer base as a direct result of
the project.
(D) The current baseline of revenue.
(E) The estimated increase in revenue as a direct result of the
project.
(F) Applicants for both Working Capital and Planning Grants are
invited to suggest additional benchmarks for evaluation that are
specific to proposed project activities or outcomes and the
corresponding timeframes for accomplishing them; these should be
informed by the program objectives, stated above, related to new
markets, expansion of customer base, and revenues returning to producer
Applicants; as well as to the practical and/or logistical activities
and tasks to be accomplished during the project period.
(ii) Proposal evaluation criteria. Applicants for both Planning and
Working Capital Grants must address each proposal evaluation criterion
identified in Sec. 4284.942 in narrative form, in the application
package.
(3) Certification of Matching Funds. Using the format prescribed by
the application package, Applicants must certify that:
(i) Cost-share Matching Funds will be spent in advance of grant
funding, such that for every dollar of grant funds disbursed, not less
than an equal amount of Matching Funds will have been expended prior to
submitting the request for reimbursement; and
(ii) If Matching Funds are proposed in an amount exceeding the
grant amount, those Matching Funds must be spent at a proportional rate
equal to the match-to-grant ratio identified in the proposed budget.
(4) Verification of cost-share Matching Funds. Using the format
prescribed by the application package, the Applicant must demonstrate
and provide authentic documentation from the source to confirm the
eligibility and availability of both cash and in-kind contributions
that meet the definition requirements for Matching Funds and Conflict
of Interest in Sec. 4284.902, as well as the following criteria:
(i) Except as provided at Sec. 4284.925(a) and (b), Matching Funds
are subject to the same use restrictions as grant funds, and must be
spent on eligible project expenses during the grant funding period.
(ii) Matching Funds must be from eligible sources without a real or
apparent Conflict of Interest.
(iii) Matching Funds must be at least equal to the amount of grant
funds requested, and combined grant and Matching Funds must equal 100
percent of the Total Project Costs.
(iv) Unless provided by other authorizing legislation, other
Federal grant funds cannot be used as Matching Funds.
(v) Matching Funds must be provided in the form of confirmed
Applicant cash, loan, or line of credit; or provided in the form of a
confirmed Applicant or family member in-kind contribution that meets
the requirements and limitations specified in Sec. 4284.925(a) and
(b); or provided in the form of confirmed third-party cash or eligible
third-party in-kind contribution; or non-federal grant sources (unless
otherwise provided by law).
(vi) Examples of ineligible Matching Funds include funds used for
an ineligible purpose, contributions donated outside the proposed grant
funding period, applicant and third-party in-kind contributions that
are over-valued, or are without substantive documentation for an
independent reviewer to confirm a valuation, conducting activities on
behalf of anyone other than a specific Independent Producer or group of
Independent Producers, expected program income at time of application,
or instances where a real or apparent Conflict of Interest exists,
except as detailed in Sec. 4284.925(a) and (b).
(5) Business plan. For Working Capital Grant applications,
Applicants must provide a copy of the Business Plan that was completed
for the proposed value-added Venture, except as provided for in
Sec. Sec. 4284.922(b)(6) and 4284.932. The Agency must concur in the
acceptability or adequacy of the Business Plan. For all planning grant
applications including those proposing product eligibility under
``Produced in a Manner that Enhances the Value of the Agricultural
Commodity,'' a Business Plan is not required as part of the grant
application.
(6) Feasibility study. As part of the application package,
Applicants for Working Capital Grants must provide a copy of the third-
party Feasibility Study that was completed for the proposed value-added
project, except as provided for at Sec. Sec. 4284.922(b)(6) and
4284.932. The Agency must concur in the acceptability or adequacy of
the Feasibility Study.
Sec. 4284.932 Simplified application.
Applicants requesting less than $50,000 will be allowed to submit a
simplified application, the contents of which will be announced in an
annual solicitation issued pursuant to Sec. 4284.915. Applicants
requesting Working Capital Grants of less than $50,000 are not required
to provide Feasibility Studies or Business Plans, but must provide
information demonstrating increases in customer base and revenue
returns to the producers supplying the majority of the Agricultural
Commodity as a result of the project. See Sec. 4284.922(b)(6)(ii).
Sec. 4284.933 Filing instructions.
Unless otherwise specified in a notification issued under Sec.
4284.915, the requirements specified in paragraphs (a) through (e) of
this section apply to all applications.
(a) When to submit. Complete applications must be received by the
Agency on or before the application deadline established for a Fiscal
Year to be considered for funding for that Fiscal Year. Applications
received by the Agency after the application deadline established for a
Fiscal Year will not be considered. Revisions or additional information
will not be accepted after the application deadline.
(b) Incomplete applications. Incomplete applications will be
rejected. Applicants will be informed of the elements that made the
application incomplete. If a resubmitted application is received by the
applicable application deadline, the Agency will reconsider the
application.
(c) Where to submit. All applications must be submitted to the
State Office of Rural Development in the State where the project
primarily takes place, or on-line through grants.gov.
(d) Format. Applications may be submitted as paper copy, or
electronically via grants.gov. If submitted as paper copy, only one
original copy should be submitted. An application submission must
contain all required components in their entirety. Emailed or faxed
submissions will not be acknowledged, accepted or processed by the
Agency.
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(e) Other forms and instructions. Upon request, the Agency will
make available to the public the necessary forms and instructions for
filing applications. These forms and instructions may be obtained from
any State Office of Rural Development, or the Agency's Value-Added
Producer Grant program Web site in https://www.rurdev.usda.gov/BCP_VAPG.html.
Sec. Sec. 4284.934-4284.939 [Reserved]
Processing and Scoring Applications
Sec. 4284.940 Processing applications.
(a) Initial review. Upon receipt of an application on or before the
application submission deadline for each Fiscal Year, the Agency will
conduct a review to determine if the Applicant and project are
eligible, and if the application is complete and sufficiently
responsive to program requirements.
(b) Notifications. After the review in paragraph (a) of this
section has been conducted, if the Agency has determined that either
the Applicant or project is ineligible or that the application is not
complete to allow evaluation of the application or sufficiently
responsive to program requirements, the Agency will notify the
Applicant in writing and will include in the notification the reason(s)
for its determination(s).
(c) Resubmittal by Applicants. Applicants may submit revised
applications to the Agency in response to the notification received
under paragraph (b) of this section. If a revised grant application is
received on or before the application deadline, it will be processed by
the Agency. If a revised application is not received by the specified
application deadline, the Agency will not process the application and
will inform the Applicant that their application was not reviewed due
to tardiness.
(d) Subsequent ineligibility determinations. If at any time an
application is determined to be ineligible, the Agency will notify the
Applicant in writing of its determination.
Sec. 4284.941 Application withdrawal.
During the period between the submission of an application and the
execution of award documents, the Applicant must notify the Agency in
writing if the project is no longer viable or the Applicant no longer
is requesting financial assistance for the project. When the Applicant
notifies the Agency, the selection will be rescinded or the application
withdrawn.
Sec. 4284.942 Proposal evaluation criteria and scoring applications.
(a) General. The Agency will only score applications for which it
has determined that the Applicant and project are eligible, the
application is complete and sufficiently responsive to program
requirements. Any Applicant whose application will not be reviewed
because the Agency has determined it fails to meet the preceding
criteria will be notified of appeal rights pursuant to Sec. 4284.903.
Each such viable application the Agency receives on or before the
application deadline in a Fiscal Year will be scored in the Fiscal Year
in which it was received. Each application will be scored based on the
information provided and adequately referenced in the scoring section
of the application at the time the Applicant submits the application to
the Agency. Scoring information must be readily identifiable in the
application or it will not be considered.
(b) Scoring Applications. The criteria specified in paragraphs
(b)(1) through (6) of this section will be used to score all
applications. For each criterion, Applicants must demonstrate how the
project has merit, and provide rationale for the likelihood of project
success. Responses that do not address all aspects of the criterion, or
that do not comprehensively convey pertinent project information will
receive lower scores. The maximum number of points that will be awarded
to an application is 100. Points may be awarded lump sum or on a
graduated basis. The Agency application package will provide additional
instruction to assist Applicants when responding to the criteria below.
(1) Nature of the Proposed Venture (graduated score 0-30 points).
Describe the technological feasibility of the project, as well as the
operational efficiency, profitability, and overall economic
sustainability resulting from the project. In addition, demonstrate the
potential for expanding the customer base for the Value-Added
Agricultural Product, and the expected increase in revenue returns to
the producer-owners providing the majority of the raw Agricultural
Commodity to the project. Applications that demonstrate high likelihood
of success in these areas will receive more points than those that
demonstrate less potential in these areas.
(2) Qualifications of Project Personnel (graduated score 0-20
points). Identify the individuals who will be responsible for
completing the proposed tasks in the work plan, including the roles and
activities that owners, staff, contractors, consultants or new hires
may perform; and demonstrate that these individuals have the necessary
qualifications and expertise, including those hired to do market or
feasibility analyses, or to develop a business operations plan for the
value-added venture. Include the qualifications of those individuals
responsible to lead or manage the total project (Applicant owners or
project managers), as well as those individuals responsible for
actually conducting the various individual tasks in the work plan (such
as consultants, contractors, staff or new hires). Demonstrate the
commitment and the availability of any consultants or other
professionals to be hired for the project. If staff or consultants have
not been selected at the time of application, provide specific
descriptions of the qualifications required for the positions to be
filled. Applications that demonstrate the strong credentials,
education, capabilities, experience and availability of project
personnel that will contribute to a high likelihood of project success
will receive more points than those that demonstrate less potential for
success in these areas.
(3) Commitments and Support (graduated score 0-10 points). Producer
commitments to the project will be evaluated based on the number of
Independent Producers currently involved in the project; and the
nature, level and quality of their contributions. End-user commitments
will be evaluated on the basis of potential or identified markets and
the potential amount of output to be purchased, as evidenced by letters
of intent or contracts from potential buyers referenced within the
application. Other Third-Party commitments to the project will be
evaluated based on the critical and tangible nature of the contribution
to the project, such as technical assistance, storage, processing,
marketing, or distribution arrangements that are necessary for the
project to proceed; and the level and quality of these contributions.
Applications that demonstrate the project has strong direct financial,
technical and logistical support to successfully complete the project
will receive more points than those that demonstrate less potential for
success in these areas.
(4) Work Plan and Budget (graduated score 0-20 points). In accord
with Sec. 4284.922(b)(5), Applicants must submit a comprehensive work
plan and budget. The work plan must provide specific and detailed
narrative descriptions of the tasks and the key project personnel that
will accomplish the project's goals. The budget must present a detailed
breakdown of all estimated costs associated with the
[[Page 26810]]
activities and allocate those costs among the listed tasks. The source
and use of both grant and Matching Funds must be specified for all
tasks. An eligible start and end date for the project itself and for
individual project tasks must be clearly indicated and may not exceed
Agency specified timeframes for the grant period. Points may not be
awarded unless sufficient detail is provided to determine that both
grant and Matching Funds are being used for qualified purposes and are
from eligible sources without a Conflict of Interest. It is recommended
that Applicants utilize the budget format templates provided in the
Agency's application package.
(5) Priority Points (up to 10 points). Priority points may be
awarded in both the General Funds competition and the Reserved Funds
competitions. Qualifying applications may be awarded priority points
under paragraphs (b)(5)(i) and (ii) of this section, for up to a total
of 10 points.
(i) Priority categories (lump sum score of 0 or 5 points).
Qualifying Applicants may request priority points under this paragraph
if they meet the requirements for one of the following categories and
provide the documentation specified in Sec. 4284.924, as applicable.
Priority categories are: Beginning Farmer or Rancher, Socially-
Disadvantaged Farmer or Rancher, Veteran Farmer or Rancher, Operator of
a Small- or Medium-sized Farm or Ranch that is structured as a Family
Farm, Mid-Tier Value Chain proposals, and Farmer or Rancher
Cooperative. It is recommended that Applicants utilize the Agency
application package when documenting for priority points and refer to
the documentation requirements specified in Sec. 4284.924.
Applications from qualifying priority categories will be awarded 5
points. Applicants will not be awarded more than 5 points even if they
qualify for more than one of the priority categories.
(ii) Best contributing (up to 5 points). Applications from
Agricultural Producer Groups, Farmer or Rancher Cooperatives, and
Majority-Controlled Producer-Based Business Ventures (applicant groups)
may be awarded up to 5 additional points for contributing to the
creation of or increase in marketing opportunities for Beginning
Farmers or Ranchers, Socially-Disadvantaged Farmers or Ranchers,
Veteran Farmers or Ranchers, or Operators of a Small- or Medium-sized
Farm or Ranch that are structured as a Family Farm (priority groups).
Applicant groups must submit documentation on the percentage of
existing membership that is comprised of one or a combination of the
above priority groups and on the anticipated expansion of membership to
one or more additional priority groups. Applications must contain
sufficient information as described in the annual solicitation and
application package to enable the Agency to make the appropriate
determinations for awarding points. If the application does not contain
sufficient information, the Agency will not award points accordingly.
(6) Priority Categories (graduated score 0-10 points). Unless
otherwise specified in a notification issued under Sec.
4284.915(b)(1), the Administrator or State Director has discretion to
award up to 10 points to an application to improve the geographic
diversity of awardees in a Fiscal Year. In the event of a National
competition, the Administrator will award points and for a State-
allocated competition, the State Director will award points.
Sec. Sec. 4284.943-4284.949 [Reserved]
Grant Awards and Agreement
Sec. 4284.950 Award process.
(a) Selection of applications for funding and for potential
funding. The Agency will select and rank applications for funding based
on the score an application has received in response to the proposal
evaluation criteria, compared to the scores of other value-added
applications received in the same Fiscal Year. Higher scoring
applications will receive first consideration for funding. The Agency
may set a minimally acceptable score for funding, which will be noted
in the published program notice. The Agency will notify Applicants, in
writing, whether or not they have been selected for funding. For those
Applicants not selected for funding, the Agency will provide a brief
explanation for why they were not selected.
(b) Ranked applications not funded. A ranked application that is
not funded in the Fiscal Year in which it was submitted will not be
carried forward into the next Fiscal Year. The Agency will notify the
Applicant in writing.
(c) Intergovernmental review. If State or local governments raise
objections to a proposed project under the intergovernmental review
process that are not resolved within 90 days of the Agency's award
announcement date, the Agency will rescind the award and will provide
the Applicant with a written notice to that effect. This is prior to
the signing of a Grant Agreement. The Agency, in its sole discretion,
may extend the 90-day period if it appears resolution is imminent.
Sec. 4284.951 Obligate and award funds.
(a) Letter of conditions. When an application is selected subject
to conditions established by the Agency, the Agency will notify the
Applicant using a Letter of Conditions, which defines the conditions
under which the grant will be made. Each grantee will be required to
meet all terms and conditions of the award within 90 days of receiving
a Letter of Conditions unless otherwise specified by the Agency at the
time of the award. If the Applicant agrees with the conditions, the
Applicant must complete, an applicable Letter of Intent to Meet
Conditions. If the Applicant believes that certain conditions cannot be
met, the Applicant may propose alternate conditions to the Agency. The
Agency must concur with any proposed changes to the Letter of
Conditions by the Applicant before the application will be further
processed. If the Agency agrees to any proposed changes, the Agency
will issue a revised or amended Letter of Conditions that defines the
final conditions under which the grant will be made.
(b) Grant agreement and conditions. Each grantee will be required
to sign a grant agreement that outlines the approved use of funds and
actions under the award, as well as the restrictions and applicable
laws and regulations that pertain to the award.
(c) Other documentation. The grantee will execute additional
documentation in order to obligate the award of funds; including, but
not limited to:
(1) ``Request for Obligation of Funds;''
(2) ``Certification Regarding Debarment, Suspension, and Other
Responsibility Matters-Primary Covered Transaction;''
(3) ``Certification Regarding Drug-Free Workplace Requirements;''
(4) ``Assurance Agreement (under Title VI, Civil Rights Act of
1964);''
(5) ``ACH Vendor/Miscellaneous Payment Enrollment Form;'' or
(6) ``Disclosure of Lobbying Activities.''
(d) Grant disbursements. Grant disbursements will be made in
accordance with the Letter of Conditions, and/or the grant agreement,
as applicable.
Sec. Sec. 4284.952-4284.959 [Reserved]
Post Award Activities and Requirements
Sec. 4284.960 Monitoring and reporting program performance.
The requirements specified in this section shall apply to grants
made under this subpart.
[[Page 26811]]
(a) Grantees must complete the project per the terms and conditions
specified in the approved work plan and budget, and in the grant
agreement and letter of conditions. Grantees will expend funds only for
eligible purposes and will be monitored by Agency staff for compliance.
Grantees must maintain a financial management system, and property and
procurement standards in accordance with Departmental Regulations.
(b) Grantees must submit narrative and financial performance
reports, as prescribed by the Agency in the grant agreement, that
include required data elements related to achieving programmatic
objectives and a comparison of accomplishments with the objectives
stated in the application. At a minimum, these include comparisons of
anticipated activies and outcomes and timeframes for achieving:
(1) Expansion of customer base as a result of the project;
(2) Increased revenue returned to the producer as a result of the
project;
(3) Jobs created or saved as a result of the project;
(4) Evidence of receipt of matching funds, if included or provided
for in project.
(i) Semi-annual performance reports shall be submitted within 45
days following March 31 and September 30 each Fiscal Year. A final
performance report shall be submitted to the Agency within 90 days of
project completion. Failure to submit a performance report within the
specified timeframes may result in the Agency withholding grant funds.
(ii) Additional reports shall be submitted as specified in the
grant agreement or Letter of Conditions, or as otherwise provided in a
notification issued under Sec. 4284.915.
(iii) Copies of supporting documentation and/or project
deliverables for completed tasks must be provided to the Agency in a
timely manner in accord with the development or completion of materials
and in conjunction with the budget and project timeline. Examples
include, but are not limited to, a Feasibility Study, Marketing Plan,
Business Plan, success story, distribution network study, or best
practice.
(iv) The Agency may request any additional project and/or
performance data for the project for which grant funds have been
received, including but not limited to:
(A) Information that will enable evaluation of the economic impact
of program awards, such as:
(1) Business starts and clients served;
(2) Data associated with producer market expansion, new market
penetration, and changes in customer base or revenues.
(B) Information that would promote greater understanding of the key
determinants of the success of individual projects or inform program
administration and evaluation, such as:
(1) The producer's experience related to financial management,
budgeting, and running a business enterprise.
(2) The nature of, and advantages or disadvantages of, supply chain
arrangements or equitable distribution of rewards and responsibilities
for Mid-tier Value Chain projects; and
(3) Recommendations from Beginning Farmers or Ranchers, Socially-
Disadvantaged Farmers or Ranchers, or Veteran Farmers or Ranchers.
(C) Information that would inform or enable the aggregation of data
for program administration or evaluation purposes.
(v) The Agency may terminate or suspend the grant for lack of
adequate or timely progress, reporting, or documentation, or for
failure to comply with Agency requirements.
Sec. 4284.961 Grant servicing.
All grants awarded under this subpart shall be serviced in
accordance with 7 CFR part 1951, subparts E and O, and the Departmental
Regulations with the exception that delegation of the post-award
servicing of the program does not require the prior approval of the
Administrator.
Sec. 4284.962 Transfer of obligations.
At the discretion of the Agency and on a case-by-case basis, an
obligation of funds established for an Applicant may be transferred to
a different (substituted) Applicant provided:
(a) The substituted Applicant:
(1) Is eligible;
(2) Has a close and genuine relationship with the original
Applicant; and
(3) Has the authority to receive the assistance approved for the
original Applicant; and
(b) The project continues to meet all product, purpose, and
reserved funds eligibility requirements so that the need, purpose(s),
and scope of the project for which the Agency funds will be used remain
substantially unchanged.
Sec. Sec. 4284.963-4284.999 [Reserved]
Dated: April 28, 2015.
Lisa Mensah,
Under Secretary, Rural Development.
[FR Doc. 2015-10441 Filed 5-7-15; 8:45 am]
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