Authority To Accept Unsolicited Proposals for Research Partnerships, 38207-38210 [2016-13945]
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Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 113 / Monday, June 13, 2016 / Notices
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ACTION:
Notice.
BILLING CODE 9110–12–P
This notice announces that
HUD’s Office of Policy Development
and Research (PD&R) has the authority
to accept unsolicited research proposals
that address current research priorities.
In accordance with statutory
requirements, the research projects must
be funded at least 50 percent by
philanthropic entities or Federal, state,
or local government agencies. This
notice announces that HUD is accepting
research proposals and provides a
general description of information that
SUMMARY:
DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND
URBAN DEVELOPMENT
srobinson on DSK5SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
Community
No.
City of Tucson
The Honorable Jonathan
(15–09–2996P).
Rothschild, Mayor, City
of Tucson, City Hall,
255 West Alameda
Street, 10th Floor, Tucson, AZ 85701.
City of Tucson
The Honorable Jonathan
(16–09–0139P).
Rothschild, Mayor, City
of Tucson, City Hall,
255 West Alameda
Street, 10th Floor, Tucson, AZ 85701.
Unincorporated
The Honorable Sharon
areas of Pima
Bronson, Chair, Board
County (15–
of Supervisors, Pima
09–2996P).
County, 130 West Congress Street, 11th
Floor, Tucson, AZ
85701.
Unincorporated
The Honorable Sharon
areas of Pima
Bronson, Chair, Board
County (15–
of Supervisors, Pima
09–3190P).
County, 130 West Congress Street, 11th
Floor, Tucson, AZ
85701.
Town of Florence The Honorable Tom J.
(15–09–2494X).
Rankin, Mayor, Town of
Florence, 775 North
Main Street, Florence,
AZ 85132.
Unincorporated
The Honorable Cheryl
areas of Pinal
Chase, Chair, Board of
County (15–
Supervisors, Pinal
09–2494X).
County, 135 North Pinal
Street, Florence, AZ
85132.
[FR Doc. 2016–13811 Filed 6–10–16; 8:45 am]
[Docket No. FR–5952–N–01]
Authority To Accept Unsolicited
Proposals for Research Partnerships
Office of the Assistant
Secretary for Policy Development and
Research, HUD.
AGENCY:
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should be included in any research
proposal.
DATES: There are no set deadlines.
Proposals may be submitted at any time
and will be evaluated as they are
received; however, available funds will
be awarded as proposals are received,
evaluated, and approved, until funds are
exhausted.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Questions should be directed by email
to ResearchPartnerships@hud.gov, by
telephone to Madlyn WohlmanRodriguez at 202–402–5939 or Kinnard
Wright at 202–402–7495, or by mail to
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Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 113 / Monday, June 13, 2016 / Notices
the Department of Housing and Urban
Development, Office of University
Partnerships, 451 7th Street SW., Room
8226, Washington, DC 20410. These are
not toll-free numbers. Persons with
speech or hearing impairments may
access these number through TTY by
calling the Federal Relay Service, tollfree, at 800–877–8339.
I. Funding Opportunity Description
A. Program Description, Requirements
and Purpose
HUD developed the Research
Partnerships vehicle to allow greater
flexibility in addressing important
policy questions and to better utilize
external expertise in evaluating the local
innovations and effectiveness of
programs impacting residents of urban,
suburban, rural and tribal areas.
Through this notice, HUD is able to
accept unsolicited research proposals
that address current research priorities
and allow PD&R to participate in
innovative research projects that inform
HUD’s policies and programs. These
projects are meant to align with PD&R’s
research priorities and help the HUD
answer key policy and programmatic
questions in ways that can inform new
policy and program development
efforts.
B. Authority
The Consolidated Appropriations Act,
2016, (Pub. L. 114–53, approved
December 11, 2015) (FY 2016
appropriation) authorizes PD&R to enter
into non-competitive cooperative
agreements for research projects that are
aligned with PD&R’s research priorities
and that will help inform HUD’s
policies and programs.
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C. Program Description
1. Research Priorities. The two
primary documents that provide a
framework for HUD’s research priorities
are the FY2010–2015 Strategic Plan
(available at, https://portal.hud.gov/
hudportal/HUD?src=/program_offices/
cfo/stratplan), which specifies the
Department’s mission and strategic
goals for program activities, and the
HUD Research Roadmap (available at,
https://www.huduser.gov/portal/about/
pdr_roadmap.html), which takes the
strategic plan as a starting point and
integrates extensive input from diverse
stakeholder groups to define a five-year
research agenda. PD&R developed and
published this research agenda to focus
research resources on timely, policyrelevant research questions that lie
within the Department’s area of
comparative advantage. This focus on
comparative advantage has a corollary,
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which is the accompanying need for
PD&R to collaborate with other research
organizations to support their
comparative advantage in areas that are
mutually important.
The authority that Congress provided
HUD to enter into noncompetitive
cooperative agreements for research is a
central tool for fulfilling the Roadmap’s
vision for research collaboration.
Research proposals should be developed
that inform important policy and
program objectives of HUD that are not
otherwise being addressed and that
focus on one of HUD’s research
priorities, including:
(1) Strengthening Housing Markets:
Homeownership and Housing Finance.
HUD is interested in research in many
areas of homeownership and housing
finance, which include, but are not
limited to:
(a) Improving outcomes for struggling
homeowners and communities in the
areas of foreclosures, mortgage
modification protocols, and real-estate
owned properties;
(b) Finding ways that are safer for
both borrowers and lenders to extend
mortgage credit to first-time homebuyers
and homeowners with less-than-stellar
credit; and
(c) Updating federal support
structures for single-family and
multifamily housing finance in a
reformed housing finance system.
(2) Affordable Quality Rental
Housing. HUD is interested in research
that improves the efficiency and
effectiveness of HUD’s housing
programs (e.g., public housing, Housing
Choice Vouchers, assisted multifamily
programs, and FHA insurance) which
include, but are not limited to:
(a) Improving program operations and
responses to changing market
conditions;
(b) Identifying rent subsidy
approaches that could more efficiently
and beneficially meet the full range of
housing needs; and
(c) Better understanding how HUD’s
programs are affected by tenant and
landlord behavior.
(3) Housing as a platform for
improving quality of life. HUD is
interested in how HUD-provided
housing assistance can be best used to
improve quality of life, including, but
not limited to:
(a) Improving educational outcomes
and early learning and development;
(b) Improving health outcomes;
(c) Increasing economic security and
self-sufficiency; and
(d) Improving housing stability for
vulnerable populations, including the
elderly, people with disabilities,
homeless families and individuals, and
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those individuals and families at risk of
becoming homeless.
To evaluate the ability of housing
assistance to positively affect these
various outcomes requires reaching
beyond the sphere of housing to health,
education, and other areas, which may
involve targeted provision of costeffective services in association with
housing.
(4) Resilient and inclusive
communities. HUD’s goal of advancing
resilient and inclusive communities
seeks innovative and transformational
evidence-based approaches to deal with
long-standing and emerging community
development challenges in suburban,
rural and tribal areas. HUD is interested
in research questions such as, but not
limited to:
(a) Leveraging cost-effective housing
technology in HUD-funded housing or
other housing to accomplish key HUD
priority goals;
(b) Understanding and addressing
persistent segregation along racial,
ethnic and economic lines, including
the role of promising community
development and housing strategies for
strengthening communities;
(c) Strengthening community
resilience in the face of climate change,
disasters, pestilence and energy shocks;
(d) Improving integrated and regional
planning for cross-agency alignment,
such as land use and transportation.
(5) HUD Assets. HUD has made, and
continues to make, significant
investments in ‘‘Research Assets,’’ as
described below, including program
demonstrations and in the production of
datasets, that PD&R is interested in
seeing leveraged in ways that may, or
may not, be specifically referenced in
the Research Roadmap or HUD’s
Strategic Plan. Such studies
demonstrate a broader usefulness of
HUD’s Research Assets that further
increases the return on these
investments for the taxpayer.
2. HUD’s Research Assets. In
considering potential research
partnerships, PD&R urges organizations
to consider ways to take advantage of
key research assets that the Research
Roadmap identifies as part of HUD’s
comparative advantage.
(1) HUD demonstrations. HUD values
demonstrations as a method for
evaluating new policy and program
initiatives and significantly advancing
evidence-based policy, especially when
rigorous random-assignment methods
are feasible. HUD also is interested in
research opportunities that take
advantage of completed and ongoing
demonstrations. For example, the
Moving to Opportunity demonstration
was completed in 2011, but researchers
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continue to answer relevant policy
questions using the existing data.
Examples of demonstrations that are
underway include Choice
Neighborhoods, Family Options, the
Rental Assistance Demonstration, PrePurchase Counseling Outcome Study,
and Rent Reform. Electronic versions of
published HUD research can be found
at: https://www.huduser.gov/portal/
publications/pdrpubli.html.
(2) HUD data infrastructure. HUD
makes significant investments to
improve and support the nation’s
housing data, so submitting institutions
are encouraged to consider
opportunities to use HUD-sponsored
survey data and administrative data.
The American Housing Survey (AHS) is
one of HUD’s largest research
investments. The AHS provides a
wealth of data on size and composition
of the nation’s housing inventory that
researchers could use more effectively
to address questions about housing
market dynamics. The AHS, the 2012
Rental Housing Finance Survey, and
other datasets sponsored by PD&R,
along with HUD administrative data
made available by PD&R, represent HUD
research assets that PD&R encourages
the use, and further analysis of, through
Research Partnerships. Data assets are
described at: https://www.huduser.gov/
portal/pdrdatas_landing.html.
D. Other Requirements
1. Protection of Human Research
Subjects. HUD will require successful
applicants to comply with requirements
of the federal Common Rule (45 CFR
part 46) for protecting human research
subjects when applicable. Compliance
may require grantees to seek review and
approval of research plans by an
Institutional Review Board (IRB). For
research requiring an IRB review, work
plans shall identify the IRB that the
awardee will use and factor in the
necessary cost and time involved in that
review. HUD will require awardees to
provide appropriate assurances and
certifications of compliance before
human subjects research begins.
2. Privacy. Submission of any
information to databases (whether Web
site, computer, paper, or other format) of
personal identifiable information is
subject to the protections of the Privacy
Act of 1974. You should also check to
ensure you meet state and local privacy
regulations.
3. Cost Sharing. The Uniform
Administrative Requirements, Cost
Principles, and Audit Requirements for
Federal Awards, set forth in 2 CFR part
200, shall apply to this Federal award.
Cost sharing or matching means the
portion of project costs not paid by
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Federal funds (unless otherwise
authorized by Federal statute.)
Applicants should refer to 2 CFR
200.306 for specific requirements.
4. Data Only Requests. For those who
are interested in requesting only HUD
data (no funds), a HUD data license
agreement will be required. To obtain a
copy of the data license application go
to the following Web site: https://
www.huduser.gov/portal/research/
pdr_data-license.html. Please be
advised that a data license will only be
considered for research that is in
alignment with one of the research
priorities listed in this notice.
Applications may be submitted to HUD
at DataLicense@hud.gov. Upon receipt,
the application will be forwarded to the
appropriate PD&R office for review and
approval.
II. Description of Awards
A. Available Funds
HUD is making approximately $1
million available for Research
Partnerships. Additional funds may
become available for award as a result
of HUD’s efforts to recapture unused
funds or use carryover funds. Use of
these funds will be subject to statutory
constraints.
B. Number of Awards
The number of awards will be based
on the number of proposals HUD
reviews, approves, and funds.
C. Period of Performance
The period of performance will be
determined by the applicant’s proposal
and subject to negotiation by HUD.
D. Type of Funding Instrument
Funding Instrument Type:
Cooperative Agreement.
III. Eligibility Information
A. Eligible Applicants
Eligible applicants under this Notice
include academic institutions,
philanthropic entities, state and units of
local government, not-for-profit and forprofit institutions located in the United
States. For-profit firms are not allowed
to earn a fee (i.e., make a profit from the
project).
B. Cost Sharing
Cost sharing is required for research
projects to be eligible for funding
through HUD’s non-competitive
cooperative agreement authority.
Research projects must include at least
a 50 percent cost share from
philanthropic organizations, Federal,
state, local government agencies, or a
combination of these entities. For the
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38209
purposes of the cost-sharing
requirement, HUD defines a
philanthropic entity as the subset of
501(c)(3) organizations that directly
fund research activities. These include
private foundations, educational
institutions that may have a separate
foundation, public charities, and
operating foundations. Philanthropic
entities may include foreign entities.
HUD will not count waiver of overhead
or similar costs as cost-sharing
contributions.
IV. Proposal and Submission
Information
A. Proposal Submission
All proposals should be submitted
electronically to ResearchPartnerships@
hud.gov, or by mail to: U.S. Department
of Housing and Urban Development,
Office of University Partnerships, 451
7th Street SW., Room 8226, Washington,
DC 20410, ATTENTION: Research
Partnerships
B. Content and Form of Proposal
Submission
Proposals should contain sufficient
information for PD&R to identify
whether the research would meet
statutory requirements for cost sharing
and alignment with the research
priorities identified in Section I.C.1 of
this Notice. At a minimum, proposals
must include:
1. Proposal Abstract. Applicants
should provide a Proposal Abstract with
the project title, the names and
affiliations of all investigators, a
summary of the objectives, study design
and expected results, and the total funds
requested.
2. Points of Contact. Applicants
should clearly identify the name of the
entity(s) submitting the proposal and
detailed contact information for the
point of contact;
3. Key Personnel. Applicants should
provide information on key personnel
that will be engaged with the project.
HUD will assess the qualifications of
key personnel to carry out the proposed
study as evidenced by academic and
professional background, publications,
and recent (within the past 5 years)
research experience. The proposed
Principal Investigator must directly
represent and be compensated directly
by the applicant for his or her role in the
proposed study. Publications and/or
research experience are considered
relevant if they required the acquisition
and use of knowledge and skills that can
be applied in the planning and
execution of the technical study that is
proposed.
4. Research Proposal Description.
Applicants should provide a clear
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Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 113 / Monday, June 13, 2016 / Notices
srobinson on DSK5SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
description of the research project,
including the methodology being used,
and its alignment with the PD&R
research priorities identified. Specific
components should include:
(1) Clearly and thoroughly describe
your proposed study and its design, and
identify the major objectives;
(2) The study should be presented as
a logical sequence of steps or phases
with individual tasks described for each
phase;
(3) Your narrative should reflect the
relevant literature, which should be
thoroughly cited in your application.
Your proposed study will be judged in
part on the soundness of the underlying
body of research upon which it is based
and the clarity and soundness of your
summary and interpretation of this
research base;
(4) Describe the statistical basis for
your study design and demonstrate that
you would have adequate statistical
power to test your stated hypotheses
and achieve your study objectives;
(5) Discuss your plans for data
management, analysis, and archiving;
(6) You should identify any important
‘‘decision points’’ in your study plan;
(7) You should describe/list
deliverables and associated timeframes;
and
(8) You should demonstrate that it is
clearly feasible to complete the study
within the proposed period of
performance and successfully achieve
your objectives.
5. Budget. Applicants should provide
a detailed budget with line items
including the amount of the HUD share
and the contributions of any partners
(cost sharing component) and/or the
submitting institution. HUD strongly
encourages using form HUD–424CBW to
detail your budget request. The form is
available at: https://
www.hudexchange.info/resource/304/
hud-form-424cbw/. Proposals for
research partnerships that have already
been submitted to HUD as part of a grant
competition are ineligible as the subject
of a non-competitive cooperative
agreement.
C. Review and Selection Process
1. Proposals that meet all of the
threshold requirements will be eligible
for review and rating.
2. Proposals will be reviewed by
individuals who are knowledgeable in
the field covered by the research
proposal.
3. As required by the statutory
authority within the appropriations bill,
HUD will report each award provided
through a cooperative agreement in the
Federal Funding Accountability and
Transparency Act Sub-award Reporting
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System created under the Federal
Funding Accountability and
Transparency Act of 2006.
Dated: June 7, 2016.
Matthew E. Ammon
General Deputy Assistant Secretary for Policy
Development and Research.
[FR Doc. 2016–13945 Filed 6–10–16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4210–67–P
DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND
URBAN DEVELOPMENT
[Docket No. FR–5921–N–07]
Implementation of the Privacy Act of
1974, as Amended New System of
Records, Choice Neighborhoods
Evaluation
Office of Policy Development
and Research, HUD.
ACTION: New system of records notice.
AGENCY:
Pursuant to the Privacy Act of
1974 (5 U.S.C. 552a(e)(4)), as amended,
notice is hereby given that the
Department of Housing and Urban
Development (HUD), Office of Policy
Development and Research provides
public notice regarding its Choice
Neighborhoods Evaluation System of
Records. This evaluation will study
HUD’s Choice Neighborhoods program,
which is intended to help people living
in HUD-assisted housing developments
and surrounding distressed
neighborhoods improve their quality of
life. This study will allow the
Department to evaluate the benefits and
impacts of the Choice Neighborhoods
program, to determine whether it
accomplishes its goals, and to inform
policymaking decisions. The data
sources covered in this notice are
gathered from Federal, local, and private
databases, and directly from individuals
that the program intends to help. A
more detailed description of the
proposed requirements is contained in
the purpose section of this notice.
DATES: Effective Date: The notice will be
effective July 13, 2016, unless comments
are received that would result in a
contrary determination. [Comments due
date]: July 13, 2016.
ADDRESSES: Interested persons are
invited to submit comments regarding
this notice to the Rules Docket Clerk,
Office of General Counsel, Department
of Housing and Urban Development,
451 Seventh Street SW., Room 10276,
Washington, DC 20410.
Communications should refer to the
above docket number and title. Faxed
comments are not accepted. A copy of
each communication submitted will be
available for public inspection and
SUMMARY:
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copying between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m.
weekdays at the above address.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Frieda B. Edwards, Acting Chief Privacy
Officer, 451 Seventh Street SW., Room
10139, Washington, DC 20410,
telephone number 202–402–6828 (this
is not a toll-free number). Individuals
who are hearing- and speech-impaired
may access this number via TTY by
calling the Federal Relay Service at 800–
877–8339 (this is a toll-free number).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The new
SORN will encompass data collected by
the Department’s Office of Policy
Development and Research in order to
evaluate the Choice Neighborhoods
program. The Choice Neighborhoods
program supports the implementation of
plans that transform distressed HUD
housing and address challenges
impacting people living in surrounding
distressed areas: Boston, Chicago, New
Orleans, San Francisco, and Seattle. The
new notice states the name and location
of the record system, the authority for
and manner of its operations, the
categories of individuals that it covers,
the type of records that it contains, the
sources of the information for the
records, the routine uses made of the
records, and the types of exemptions in
place for the records. The notice also
includes the business address of the
HUD officials who will inform
interested persons of how they may gain
access to and/or request amendments to
records pertaining to themselves.
Publication of this notice allows the
Department to provide new information
about its system of records notices in a
clear and cohesive format. The Privacy
Act places on Federal agencies principal
responsibility for compliance with its
provisions, by requiring Federal
agencies to safeguard an individual’s
records against an invasion of personal
privacy; protect the records contained in
an agency system of records from
unauthorized disclosure; ensure that the
records collected are relevant,
necessary, current, and collected only
for their intended use; and adequately
safeguard the records to prevent misuse
of such information. In addition, this
notice demonstrates the Department’s
focus on industry best practices and
laws that protect interest such as
personal privacy and privacy protect
records from inappropriate release.
Pursuant to the Privacy Act and the
Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) guidelines, a report of the
amended system of records was
submitted to OMB, the Senate
Committee on Homeland Security and
Governmental Affairs, and the House
Committee on Oversight and
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 81, Number 113 (Monday, June 13, 2016)]
[Notices]
[Pages 38207-38210]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2016-13945]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT
[Docket No. FR-5952-N-01]
Authority To Accept Unsolicited Proposals for Research
Partnerships
AGENCY: Office of the Assistant Secretary for Policy Development and
Research, HUD.
ACTION: Notice.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This notice announces that HUD's Office of Policy Development
and Research (PD&R) has the authority to accept unsolicited research
proposals that address current research priorities. In accordance with
statutory requirements, the research projects must be funded at least
50 percent by philanthropic entities or Federal, state, or local
government agencies. This notice announces that HUD is accepting
research proposals and provides a general description of information
that should be included in any research proposal.
DATES: There are no set deadlines. Proposals may be submitted at any
time and will be evaluated as they are received; however, available
funds will be awarded as proposals are received, evaluated, and
approved, until funds are exhausted.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Questions should be directed by email
to ResearchPartnerships@hud.gov, by telephone to Madlyn Wohlman-
Rodriguez at 202-402-5939 or Kinnard Wright at 202-402-7495, or by mail
to
[[Page 38208]]
the Department of Housing and Urban Development, Office of University
Partnerships, 451 7th Street SW., Room 8226, Washington, DC 20410.
These are not toll-free numbers. Persons with speech or hearing
impairments may access these number through TTY by calling the Federal
Relay Service, toll-free, at 800-877-8339.
I. Funding Opportunity Description
A. Program Description, Requirements and Purpose
HUD developed the Research Partnerships vehicle to allow greater
flexibility in addressing important policy questions and to better
utilize external expertise in evaluating the local innovations and
effectiveness of programs impacting residents of urban, suburban, rural
and tribal areas. Through this notice, HUD is able to accept
unsolicited research proposals that address current research priorities
and allow PD&R to participate in innovative research projects that
inform HUD's policies and programs. These projects are meant to align
with PD&R's research priorities and help the HUD answer key policy and
programmatic questions in ways that can inform new policy and program
development efforts.
B. Authority
The Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2016, (Pub. L. 114-53,
approved December 11, 2015) (FY 2016 appropriation) authorizes PD&R to
enter into non-competitive cooperative agreements for research projects
that are aligned with PD&R's research priorities and that will help
inform HUD's policies and programs.
C. Program Description
1. Research Priorities. The two primary documents that provide a
framework for HUD's research priorities are the FY2010-2015 Strategic
Plan (available at, https://portal.hud.gov/hudportal/HUD?src=/program_offices/cfo/stratplan), which specifies the Department's
mission and strategic goals for program activities, and the HUD
Research Roadmap (available at, https://www.huduser.gov/portal/about/pdr_roadmap.html), which takes the strategic plan as a starting point
and integrates extensive input from diverse stakeholder groups to
define a five-year research agenda. PD&R developed and published this
research agenda to focus research resources on timely, policy-relevant
research questions that lie within the Department's area of comparative
advantage. This focus on comparative advantage has a corollary, which
is the accompanying need for PD&R to collaborate with other research
organizations to support their comparative advantage in areas that are
mutually important.
The authority that Congress provided HUD to enter into
noncompetitive cooperative agreements for research is a central tool
for fulfilling the Roadmap's vision for research collaboration.
Research proposals should be developed that inform important policy and
program objectives of HUD that are not otherwise being addressed and
that focus on one of HUD's research priorities, including:
(1) Strengthening Housing Markets: Homeownership and Housing
Finance. HUD is interested in research in many areas of homeownership
and housing finance, which include, but are not limited to:
(a) Improving outcomes for struggling homeowners and communities in
the areas of foreclosures, mortgage modification protocols, and real-
estate owned properties;
(b) Finding ways that are safer for both borrowers and lenders to
extend mortgage credit to first-time homebuyers and homeowners with
less-than-stellar credit; and
(c) Updating federal support structures for single-family and
multifamily housing finance in a reformed housing finance system.
(2) Affordable Quality Rental Housing. HUD is interested in
research that improves the efficiency and effectiveness of HUD's
housing programs (e.g., public housing, Housing Choice Vouchers,
assisted multifamily programs, and FHA insurance) which include, but
are not limited to:
(a) Improving program operations and responses to changing market
conditions;
(b) Identifying rent subsidy approaches that could more efficiently
and beneficially meet the full range of housing needs; and
(c) Better understanding how HUD's programs are affected by tenant
and landlord behavior.
(3) Housing as a platform for improving quality of life. HUD is
interested in how HUD-provided housing assistance can be best used to
improve quality of life, including, but not limited to:
(a) Improving educational outcomes and early learning and
development;
(b) Improving health outcomes;
(c) Increasing economic security and self-sufficiency; and
(d) Improving housing stability for vulnerable populations,
including the elderly, people with disabilities, homeless families and
individuals, and those individuals and families at risk of becoming
homeless.
To evaluate the ability of housing assistance to positively affect
these various outcomes requires reaching beyond the sphere of housing
to health, education, and other areas, which may involve targeted
provision of cost-effective services in association with housing.
(4) Resilient and inclusive communities. HUD's goal of advancing
resilient and inclusive communities seeks innovative and
transformational evidence-based approaches to deal with long-standing
and emerging community development challenges in suburban, rural and
tribal areas. HUD is interested in research questions such as, but not
limited to:
(a) Leveraging cost-effective housing technology in HUD-funded
housing or other housing to accomplish key HUD priority goals;
(b) Understanding and addressing persistent segregation along
racial, ethnic and economic lines, including the role of promising
community development and housing strategies for strengthening
communities;
(c) Strengthening community resilience in the face of climate
change, disasters, pestilence and energy shocks;
(d) Improving integrated and regional planning for cross-agency
alignment, such as land use and transportation.
(5) HUD Assets. HUD has made, and continues to make, significant
investments in ``Research Assets,'' as described below, including
program demonstrations and in the production of datasets, that PD&R is
interested in seeing leveraged in ways that may, or may not, be
specifically referenced in the Research Roadmap or HUD's Strategic
Plan. Such studies demonstrate a broader usefulness of HUD's Research
Assets that further increases the return on these investments for the
taxpayer.
2. HUD's Research Assets. In considering potential research
partnerships, PD&R urges organizations to consider ways to take
advantage of key research assets that the Research Roadmap identifies
as part of HUD's comparative advantage.
(1) HUD demonstrations. HUD values demonstrations as a method for
evaluating new policy and program initiatives and significantly
advancing evidence-based policy, especially when rigorous random-
assignment methods are feasible. HUD also is interested in research
opportunities that take advantage of completed and ongoing
demonstrations. For example, the Moving to Opportunity demonstration
was completed in 2011, but researchers
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continue to answer relevant policy questions using the existing data.
Examples of demonstrations that are underway include Choice
Neighborhoods, Family Options, the Rental Assistance Demonstration,
Pre-Purchase Counseling Outcome Study, and Rent Reform. Electronic
versions of published HUD research can be found at: https://www.huduser.gov/portal/publications/pdrpubli.html.
(2) HUD data infrastructure. HUD makes significant investments to
improve and support the nation's housing data, so submitting
institutions are encouraged to consider opportunities to use HUD-
sponsored survey data and administrative data. The American Housing
Survey (AHS) is one of HUD's largest research investments. The AHS
provides a wealth of data on size and composition of the nation's
housing inventory that researchers could use more effectively to
address questions about housing market dynamics. The AHS, the 2012
Rental Housing Finance Survey, and other datasets sponsored by PD&R,
along with HUD administrative data made available by PD&R, represent
HUD research assets that PD&R encourages the use, and further analysis
of, through Research Partnerships. Data assets are described at:
https://www.huduser.gov/portal/pdrdatas_landing.html.
D. Other Requirements
1. Protection of Human Research Subjects. HUD will require
successful applicants to comply with requirements of the federal Common
Rule (45 CFR part 46) for protecting human research subjects when
applicable. Compliance may require grantees to seek review and approval
of research plans by an Institutional Review Board (IRB). For research
requiring an IRB review, work plans shall identify the IRB that the
awardee will use and factor in the necessary cost and time involved in
that review. HUD will require awardees to provide appropriate
assurances and certifications of compliance before human subjects
research begins.
2. Privacy. Submission of any information to databases (whether Web
site, computer, paper, or other format) of personal identifiable
information is subject to the protections of the Privacy Act of 1974.
You should also check to ensure you meet state and local privacy
regulations.
3. Cost Sharing. The Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost
Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Awards, set forth in 2
CFR part 200, shall apply to this Federal award. Cost sharing or
matching means the portion of project costs not paid by Federal funds
(unless otherwise authorized by Federal statute.) Applicants should
refer to 2 CFR 200.306 for specific requirements.
4. Data Only Requests. For those who are interested in requesting
only HUD data (no funds), a HUD data license agreement will be
required. To obtain a copy of the data license application go to the
following Web site: https://www.huduser.gov/portal/research/pdr_data-license.html. Please be advised that a data license will only be
considered for research that is in alignment with one of the research
priorities listed in this notice. Applications may be submitted to HUD
at DataLicense@hud.gov. Upon receipt, the application will be forwarded
to the appropriate PD&R office for review and approval.
II. Description of Awards
A. Available Funds
HUD is making approximately $1 million available for Research
Partnerships. Additional funds may become available for award as a
result of HUD's efforts to recapture unused funds or use carryover
funds. Use of these funds will be subject to statutory constraints.
B. Number of Awards
The number of awards will be based on the number of proposals HUD
reviews, approves, and funds.
C. Period of Performance
The period of performance will be determined by the applicant's
proposal and subject to negotiation by HUD.
D. Type of Funding Instrument
Funding Instrument Type: Cooperative Agreement.
III. Eligibility Information
A. Eligible Applicants
Eligible applicants under this Notice include academic
institutions, philanthropic entities, state and units of local
government, not-for-profit and for-profit institutions located in the
United States. For-profit firms are not allowed to earn a fee (i.e.,
make a profit from the project).
B. Cost Sharing
Cost sharing is required for research projects to be eligible for
funding through HUD's non-competitive cooperative agreement authority.
Research projects must include at least a 50 percent cost share from
philanthropic organizations, Federal, state, local government agencies,
or a combination of these entities. For the purposes of the cost-
sharing requirement, HUD defines a philanthropic entity as the subset
of 501(c)(3) organizations that directly fund research activities.
These include private foundations, educational institutions that may
have a separate foundation, public charities, and operating
foundations. Philanthropic entities may include foreign entities. HUD
will not count waiver of overhead or similar costs as cost-sharing
contributions.
IV. Proposal and Submission Information
A. Proposal Submission
All proposals should be submitted electronically to
ResearchPartnerships@hud.gov, or by mail to: U.S. Department of Housing
and Urban Development, Office of University Partnerships, 451 7th
Street SW., Room 8226, Washington, DC 20410, ATTENTION: Research
Partnerships
B. Content and Form of Proposal Submission
Proposals should contain sufficient information for PD&R to
identify whether the research would meet statutory requirements for
cost sharing and alignment with the research priorities identified in
Section I.C.1 of this Notice. At a minimum, proposals must include:
1. Proposal Abstract. Applicants should provide a Proposal Abstract
with the project title, the names and affiliations of all
investigators, a summary of the objectives, study design and expected
results, and the total funds requested.
2. Points of Contact. Applicants should clearly identify the name
of the entity(s) submitting the proposal and detailed contact
information for the point of contact;
3. Key Personnel. Applicants should provide information on key
personnel that will be engaged with the project. HUD will assess the
qualifications of key personnel to carry out the proposed study as
evidenced by academic and professional background, publications, and
recent (within the past 5 years) research experience. The proposed
Principal Investigator must directly represent and be compensated
directly by the applicant for his or her role in the proposed study.
Publications and/or research experience are considered relevant if they
required the acquisition and use of knowledge and skills that can be
applied in the planning and execution of the technical study that is
proposed.
4. Research Proposal Description. Applicants should provide a clear
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description of the research project, including the methodology being
used, and its alignment with the PD&R research priorities identified.
Specific components should include:
(1) Clearly and thoroughly describe your proposed study and its
design, and identify the major objectives;
(2) The study should be presented as a logical sequence of steps or
phases with individual tasks described for each phase;
(3) Your narrative should reflect the relevant literature, which
should be thoroughly cited in your application. Your proposed study
will be judged in part on the soundness of the underlying body of
research upon which it is based and the clarity and soundness of your
summary and interpretation of this research base;
(4) Describe the statistical basis for your study design and
demonstrate that you would have adequate statistical power to test your
stated hypotheses and achieve your study objectives;
(5) Discuss your plans for data management, analysis, and
archiving;
(6) You should identify any important ``decision points'' in your
study plan;
(7) You should describe/list deliverables and associated
timeframes; and
(8) You should demonstrate that it is clearly feasible to complete
the study within the proposed period of performance and successfully
achieve your objectives.
5. Budget. Applicants should provide a detailed budget with line
items including the amount of the HUD share and the contributions of
any partners (cost sharing component) and/or the submitting
institution. HUD strongly encourages using form HUD-424CBW to detail
your budget request. The form is available at: https://www.hudexchange.info/resource/304/hud-form-424cbw/. Proposals for
research partnerships that have already been submitted to HUD as part
of a grant competition are ineligible as the subject of a non-
competitive cooperative agreement.
C. Review and Selection Process
1. Proposals that meet all of the threshold requirements will be
eligible for review and rating.
2. Proposals will be reviewed by individuals who are knowledgeable
in the field covered by the research proposal.
3. As required by the statutory authority within the appropriations
bill, HUD will report each award provided through a cooperative
agreement in the Federal Funding Accountability and Transparency Act
Sub-award Reporting System created under the Federal Funding
Accountability and Transparency Act of 2006.
Dated: June 7, 2016.
Matthew E. Ammon
General Deputy Assistant Secretary for Policy Development and Research.
[FR Doc. 2016-13945 Filed 6-10-16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4210-67-P