Notice of Neighborhood Stabilization Program; Changes to Closeout Requirements Related to Program Income, 38730-38732 [2016-14062]
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38730
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 114 / Tuesday, June 14, 2016 / Notices
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BILLING CODE 9111–14–P
DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND
URBAN DEVELOPMENT
[Docket No. FR–5933–N–01]
Notice of Neighborhood Stabilization
Program; Changes to Closeout
Requirements Related to Program
Income
Office of the Assistant
Secretary for Community Planning and
Development, HUD.
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
This notice describes changes
to closeout requirements applied to and
additional regulations waived for
grantees receiving grants under the three
rounds of funding under the
Neighborhood Stabilization Program
who are also grantees under the
Community Development Block Grant
(CDBG) program.
DATES: Effective Date: June 14, 2016.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Stanley Gimont, Director, Office of
Block Grant Assistance, Office of
Community Planning and Development,
Department of Housing and Urban
Development, 451 Seventh Street SW.,
Room 7286, Washington, DC 20410;
telephone number 202–708–3587 (this
is not a toll-free number). Persons with
hearing or speech impairments may
access this number via TTY by calling
the Federal Relay Service at 1–800–877–
8339.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
SUMMARY:
srobinson on DSK5SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
I. Background
The Neighborhood Stabilization
Program (NSP) was established by
Division B, Title III of the Housing and
Economic Recovery Act of 2008 (HERA)
(Pub. L. 110–289, approved July 30,
2008), for the purpose of stabilizing
communities that have suffered from
foreclosures and abandonment. As
established by HERA, NSP provided
grants to all states and selected local
governments on a formula basis. The
American Recovery and Reinvestment
Act of 2009 (Recovery Act) (Pub. L. 111–
5, approved February 17, 2009)
authorized additional NSP grants to be
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19:36 Jun 13, 2016
Jkt 238001
awarded to states, local governments,
nonprofits and a consortium of
nonprofit entities, but on a competitive
basis. The Recovery Act also authorized
funding for national and local technical
assistance providers to support NSP
grantees. The Dodd-Frank Wall Street
Reform and Consumer Protection Act
(Dodd- Frank Act) (Pub. L. 111–203,
approved July 21, 2010) authorized a
third round of Neighborhood
Stabilization grants to all states and
select local governments on a formula
basis.
The purpose of the funds awarded
under the three rounds of NSP is to
target the stabilization of neighborhoods
negatively affected by properties that
have been foreclosed upon and
abandoned. The notice, Notice of
Formula Allocations and Program
Requirements for Neighborhood
Stabilization Program Formula Grants,
published October 19, 2010 (75 FR
64322) (‘‘Unified NSP Notice’’),
provides further background for these
programs, the program principles, and
the objectives and outcomes of the NSP
program. The Notice of Neighborhood
Stabilization Program; Closeout
Requirements and Recapture (Closeout
Notice), published November 27, 2012
(77 FR 70799), amended the Unified
Notice by adding grant closeout and
related provisions. In addition, the
Notice of Fund Availability (NOFA) for
the Neighborhood Stabilization Program
2 under the American Recovery and
Reinvestment Act, 2009, 74 FR 21377
(May 7, 2009), as amended by
subsequent notices (‘‘NSP2 NOFA’’),
includes requirements specific to the
competitive round of funding under the
Recovery Act.
II. This Notice
The primary purpose of this notice is
to revise requirements set forth in the
amended Unified NSP Notice and the
Closeout Notice to revise the treatment
of program income for all three rounds
of NSP by allowing NSP program
income received by a CDBG recipient to
be transferred by the recipient from the
NSP program to the CDBG program.
After the transfer is carried out, any
transferred program income will be
subject to the CDBG program income
regulations. Following publication of
this notice, HUD will update the issued
NSP closeout instructions (Notice CPD
14–02) to conform the instructions for
consideration of program income during
and after closeout of NSP grants.
The Closeout Notice generally
required that with the exception of de
minimis amounts received after grant
closeout, program income generated by
NSP-assisted activities must continue to
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Frm 00075
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
be used for NSP uses. In attempting to
implement this requirement, HUD has
become aware that it is, in many
instances, administratively unworkable
for NSP grantees and difficult for HUD
to oversee effectively. For NSP grantees
that are generating a substantial amount
of program income, the requirement to
use this program income prior to
drawing additional funds from the
grant’s line of credit is also impeding
their ability to completely expend their
NSP grant funds. Further, some grantees
no longer have an adequate pool of NSPeligible foreclosed or abandoned
properties in their target areas although
they do have other needs that CDBG
funding could be used to address. On
HUD’s part, with dwindling
administrative resources remaining from
those provided for the NSP program, the
inability to achieve the criteria for grant
closeout for these grantees creates a
looming oversight issue.
Several NSP grantees have asked that
HUD reconsider the NSP program
income requirements and allow the
same flexibility for the NSP program
income as is currently allowed for the
CDBG Disaster Recovery (CDBG–DR)
grants under Public Law 113–2. These
requirements allow a grantee to transfer
CDBG–DR program income received
prior to grant closeout to the recipient’s
CDBG program. HUD agrees that this
solution addresses the issues identified
above and so this notice will provide
the same flexibility to any NSP grantee
that is also a CDBG grantee (entitlement
or state) with an open formula
entitlement grant or a unit of general
local government (UGLG) recipient of a
CDBG grant from a state. HUD will not
allow transfer of NSP program income
to the CDBG program if the transfer will
result in the NSP grantee failing to meet
the statutory NSP 25 percent set-aside
requirement for low-income housing. To
prevent such a failure, the grantee must
obtain HUD approval by notifying HUD
in writing prior to a transfer of program
income from NSP to CDBG to permit
HUD’s review of compliance with the
NSP 25 percent requirement. HUD will
notify the grantee of any possible issues.
Based on the data available, HUD
anticipates that issues of this sort will
be uncommon.
Since this notice applies to grantees
receiving grants under any of the three
rounds of NSP funding, the terms NSP1,
NSP2 or NSP3 are used to describe each
of the three funding rounds. When
referring to the grants, grantees, assisted
activities, and implementation rules
under HERA, this notice will use the
term ‘‘NSP1.’’ When referring to the
grants, grantees, assisted activities, and
implementation rules under the
E:\FR\FM\14JNN1.SGM
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Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 114 / Tuesday, June 14, 2016 / Notices
Recovery Act, this notice will use the
term ‘‘NSP2.’’ When referring to the
grants, grantees, assisted activities, and
implementation rules under the DoddFrank Act, this notice will use the term
‘‘NSP3.’’ Collectively, the grants,
grantees, assisted activities, and
implementation rules under these three
rounds of funding are referred to as
NSP. NSP is a component of the CDBG
program, authorized under the Housing
and Community Development Act of
1974 (HCD Act) (42 U.S.C. 5301 et seq.).
srobinson on DSK5SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
III. Authority To Provide Alternative
Requirements and Grant Regulatory
Waivers
HERA appropriated $3.92 billion for
emergency assistance for redevelopment
of abandoned and foreclosed homes and
residential properties, and provides
under a rule of construction that, unless
HERA states otherwise, the funds are to
be treated as CDBG funds. HERA, the
Recovery Act, and the Dodd-Frank Act
authorize the Secretary of HUD to
specify alternative requirements to any
provision under Title I of the HCD Act
except for requirements related to fair
housing, nondiscrimination, labor
standards, and the environment. Any
alternative requirements must be in
accordance with the terms of section
2301 of HERA and for the sole purpose
of expediting for NSP1 or facilitating the
NSP2 or NSP3 use of grant funds. The
CDBG requirements will apply to NSP
funds except where this or other
published notices supersede or amend
such requirements.
This Notice amends an existing
alternative requirement by allowing an
NSP grantee that is also a CDBG formula
grantee or a State CDBG UGLG grant
recipient to transfer NSP program
income to the CDBG program rather
than limiting the use of such program
income to NSP purposes before, at, and
after grant closeout. Except as described
in this notice and previous notices
governing NSP, statutory and regulatory
provisions governing the CDBG
program, including those at 24 CFR part
570, subpart I, for states or, for CDBG
entitlement communities, including
those at 24 CFR part 570, subparts A, C,
D, J, K, and O, as appropriate, apply to
the use of these funds. The State of
Hawaii was allocated funds and will be
subject to part 570, subpart I, as
modified by this notice.
IV. Alternative Requirements and
Regulatory Waivers
1. Section N of the Unified NSP
Notice and section N of Appendix I of
the NSP2 NOFA is amended to add a
new subparagraph 4, as follows:
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‘‘4. An NSP grantee may transfer NSP
program income at any time before, at
the time of, or after closeout to its
annual CDBG program, or, if it is an
UGLG that is also a State CDBG grant
recipient, to its State CDBG program. In
addition, a State grantee may transfer
NSP program income before or at
closeout to any annual CDBG-funded
activities carried out by a UGLG or
Indian tribe within the State. Program
income generated by an NSP-assisted
activity and received by a CDBG
grantee, or received and retained by a
CDBG subgrantee, after closeout of the
grant that generated the program
income, may also be transferred to a
grantee’s annual CDBG award.
Transferred NSP program income will
become CDBG program income upon
receipt in the Integrated Disbursement
and Information System (IDIS). Prior to
carrying out a transfer, the grantee must
notify HUD in writing of the amount of
program income on hand to be
transferred, the grant number and
activity number associated with the NSP
activity that generated the program
income, and the name of the CDBG
program grantee (or subgrantee, if
appropriate) to which the funds will
transfer. On receipt of a notification,
HUD will review NSP grant information
reported in the Disaster Recovery Grant
Reporting System (DRGR) for the
applicable grant to ensure the grantee is
in compliance with the requirement at
paragraph E.2.e of the Unified Notice,
75 FR 64331, for NSP1 and NSP3
grantees, and Appendix I of the NSP2
NOFA for NSP2 grantees, and only
approve the transfer if use of NSP funds
remaining after the transfer will comply
with this requirement. After HUD
approval, if NSP program income funds
have already been receipted in DRGR,
the grantee must first revise the DRGR
submission to subtract the amounts
receipted there prior to receipting any
transferred amounts in IDIS. Subsequent
to transfer, all transferred program
income must be treated (documented,
receipted in IDIS, used, and reported
on) in accordance with CDBG program
requirements. Any NSP program income
that is not receipted in IDIS will retain
its NSP characteristics and requirements
in accordance with published notices
governing NSP.’’
2. Section Y(c)(3)(i) of the Unified
NSP Notice is amended to read as
follows:
‘‘Any NSP program income on deposit
in financial institutions at the time the
closeout agreement is signed and any
NSP program income currently held by
subrecipients or consortium members,
together with the amounts of any NSP
program income that have been
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Fmt 4703
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38731
transferred to the CDBG program of the
grantee or a specified UGLG recipient
prior to execution of the closeout
agreement.’’
3. Under the ‘‘Background’’
subheading in section Z of the Unified
NSP Notice, the Program Income
paragraphs are amended to read as
follows:
‘‘Program Income. NSP program
income received before, at the time of,
or after closeout may be transferred to
an annual CDBG program as provided in
section N and transferred funds will
become CDBG program income upon
receipt in IDIS (such receipt in IDIS will
be subsequent to edits to remove receipt
of the funds in DRGR, if such receipt
was already entered). Upon transfer,
CDBG program income will be subject to
all CDBG statutory and regulatory
requirements for program income.
‘‘Any NSP program income not
transferred to CDBG shall, subject to the
de minimis exception provided for in
section Y, continue to be used in
accordance with NSP requirements. The
un-transferred funds will retain NSP
characteristics and be subject to NSP
requirements so the additional
flexibility created by the legislation for
the creation of financing mechanisms,
development of new housing, operation
of land banks, and service of families up
to 120 percent of Area Median Income
(AMI), will remain in place. However,
HUD notes that continued acquisition of
new land bank property after closeout
with NSP program income could
undermine the urgency of finding uses
for the properties already acquired.
Grantees will be required to allocate 25
percent of NSP program income to
housing for families with less than 50
percent of AMI when the amount of
annual program income received by a
grantee is sufficient to make application
of this requirement reasonable. After
grant closeout, former NSP grantees that
are CDBG entitlements or State
governments will report at least
annually as provided for by HUD,
initially in DRGR and later in an
enhanced IDIS, on the receipt and use
of NSP program income, and the
disposition of land-banked properties.
These grantees must also include NSP
program income in the annual CDBG
Action Plan or substantial amendment
in accordance with CDBG requirements.
All former NSP grantees, including
nonprofits and nonentitlement units of
general local government receiving
funds directly from HUD, must report at
least annually in a form acceptable to
the Secretary regarding enforcement of
any NSP continuing affordability
restrictions. Reporting will continue
over the course of the minimum period
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Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 114 / Tuesday, June 14, 2016 / Notices
srobinson on DSK5SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
of affordability set forth in HOME
program standards at 24 CFR 92.252 (e)
and 92.254(a)(4).
‘‘Finally, most program income will
be received by CDBG entitlement cities
and counties, and by states, which have
systems and procedures to manage NSP
revenues, which are treated in most
respects like CDBG revenues. However,
non-profit consortium members in NSP2
grant consortia that receive revenues
generated by NSP projects will not have
access to the state and municipal CDBG
tracking systems. Further, the CDBG
regulation and Office of Management
and Budget (OMB) circular
implemented at 24 CFR 84.24(e) or 2
CFR 200.307(f), as applicable, do not
require that non-profit grantees continue
to treat revenues generated from use of
NSP funds and received after grant
closeout as federal funds unless HUD
regulations or the terms and conditions
of the award provide otherwise. Thus,
for NSP2 grantees that are not direct
formula CDBG grantees (non-profits and
non-entitlement local governments,
including those that are part of a
consortium), HUD is requiring that
revenues generated by projects funded
before closeout but received within 5
years after grant closeout must be used
for NSP-eligible activities and meet NSP
benefit requirements, but no other
federal requirements would apply. With
the exception of income earned from the
sale of NSP-assisted real property or
loans, any income earned by such postcloseout use of funds would not be
governed by any NSP requirements and
would be miscellaneous revenues,
although HUD encourages such grantees
to apply NSP principles to subsequent
uses of the funds.’’
4. The paragraphs in section Z under
the ‘‘Requirements’’ subheading are
amended to read as follows:
‘‘Requirements
‘‘1. Program Income. Gross revenues
received by NSP grantees after closeout
will be governed by the following
requirements:
‘‘a.i. After notifying HUD in writing
and receiving prior written approval,
the grantee may receipt the amounts to
IDIS (after first revising any DRGR
entries related to the funds) and add
them to the grantee’s CDBG program
income receipts and all relevant CDBG
program income requirements shall then
apply. HUD will approve a transfer
unless the transfer would result in noncompliance with the requirement at 75
FR 64331, paragraph E.2.e based on the
use of the NSP funds that would remain
after transfer.
‘‘a.ii. If the amounts are not receipted
in IDIS, annual amounts of program
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income in excess of $25,000 shall be
used in accordance with all NSP
requirements for eligible NSP
properties, uses, and activities,
including new construction, financing
mechanisms, and management and
disposition of land bank property.
‘‘b. If annual NSP program income
does not exceed $25,000, the funds shall
be used for general administrative costs
related to ensuring continued
affordability of NSP units or added to
the grantee’s CDBG program income
receipts and the CDBG requirements at
24 CFR 570.500(a)(4) shall apply, which
may exclude such amounts from the
definition of program income.
‘‘c. NSP program income may provide
benefit to individuals and families with
incomes up to 120 percent of AMI as
permitted in NSP under section II.E;
‘‘d. If a grantee’s annual NSP program
income exceeds $250,000 (after any
transfer of program income to CDBG), 25
percent of the program income shall be
used to house individuals or families
below 50 percent of AMI; in instances
in which a grantee’s annual NSP
program income does not exceed
$250,000, the requirements of paragraph
II.E.2.e do not apply.
‘‘e. NSP2 grantees that are not CDBG
entitlement communities or States must
use post-closeout revenues generated
from NSP-assisted activities funded
before closeout for NSP purposes. If the
grantee does not have another ongoing
grant received directly from HUD at the
time of closeout, then in accordance
with 24 CFR 570.504(b)(5), income
received after closeout from the
disposition of real property or from
loans outstanding at the time of closeout
shall not be governed by NSP or CDBG
rules, except that such income shall be
used for activities that meet one of the
national objectives in 24 CFR 570.208
and the eligibility requirements
described in section 105 of the HCD Act.
The provisions of 24 CFR 570.504(b)(5)
are waived to limit its application to
income received within 5 years of grant
closeout. Any income received 5 years
after grant closeout, as well as program
income from funds outlaid after the date
of the closeout agreement may be used
without restriction. Such grantees are
encouraged to use such funds in
accordance with the principles above.
‘‘f. States may continue to act directly
to implement NSP activities postcloseout.
‘‘g. HUD will provide direction to
grantees by the date of closeout on
procedures for reporting and tracking
NSP program income revenues.
Tracking will continue in DRGR until
IDIS enhancements to allow NSP
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Frm 00077
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
property registry and program income
tracking are developed and released.’’
Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance
The Catalog of Federal Domestic
Assistance numbers for grants made
under NSP are as follows: 14.218;
14.225; and 14.228.
Paperwork Reduction Act
HUD has approval from OMB for
information collection requirements in
accordance with the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501–
3520). OMB approval is under OMB
control number 2506–0165. In
accordance with the Paperwork
Reduction Act, HUD may not conduct or
sponsor and a person is not required to
respond to, a collection of information,
unless the collection displays a valid
control number.
Environmental Review
A Finding of No Significant Impact
(FONSI) with respect to the
environment has been made in
accordance with HUD regulations at 24
CFR part 50, which implement section
102(2)(C) of the National Environmental
Policy Act of 1969 (42 U.S.C.
4332(2)(C)). The FONSI is available for
public inspection between the hours of
8 a.m. and 5 p.m. weekdays in the
Regulations Division, Office of General
Counsel, Department of Housing and
Urban Development, 451 Seventh Street
SW., Room 10276, Washington, DC
20410. Due to security measures at the
HUD Headquarters building, please
schedule an appointment to review the
FONSI by calling the Regulations
Division at 202–708–3055 (this is not a
toll-free number). Individuals with
speech or hearing impairments may
access this number via TTY by calling
the Federal Relay Service, toll free, at 1–
800–877–8339.
Dated: May 16, 2016.
Harriet Tregoning,
Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary for
Community Planning and Development.
[FR Doc. 2016–14062 Filed 6–13–16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4210–67–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
U.S. Geological Survey
[GX.16.CG00.GDQ03.00]
Agency Information Collection
Activities: Request for Comments
AGENCY:
U.S. Geological Survey (USGS),
Interior.
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 81, Number 114 (Tuesday, June 14, 2016)]
[Notices]
[Pages 38730-38732]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2016-14062]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT
[Docket No. FR-5933-N-01]
Notice of Neighborhood Stabilization Program; Changes to Closeout
Requirements Related to Program Income
AGENCY: Office of the Assistant Secretary for Community Planning and
Development, HUD.
ACTION: Notice.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This notice describes changes to closeout requirements applied
to and additional regulations waived for grantees receiving grants
under the three rounds of funding under the Neighborhood Stabilization
Program who are also grantees under the Community Development Block
Grant (CDBG) program.
DATES: Effective Date: June 14, 2016.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Stanley Gimont, Director, Office of
Block Grant Assistance, Office of Community Planning and Development,
Department of Housing and Urban Development, 451 Seventh Street SW.,
Room 7286, Washington, DC 20410; telephone number 202-708-3587 (this is
not a toll-free number). Persons with hearing or speech impairments may
access this number via TTY by calling the Federal Relay Service at 1-
800-877-8339.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
The Neighborhood Stabilization Program (NSP) was established by
Division B, Title III of the Housing and Economic Recovery Act of 2008
(HERA) (Pub. L. 110-289, approved July 30, 2008), for the purpose of
stabilizing communities that have suffered from foreclosures and
abandonment. As established by HERA, NSP provided grants to all states
and selected local governments on a formula basis. The American
Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (Recovery Act) (Pub. L. 111-5,
approved February 17, 2009) authorized additional NSP grants to be
awarded to states, local governments, nonprofits and a consortium of
nonprofit entities, but on a competitive basis. The Recovery Act also
authorized funding for national and local technical assistance
providers to support NSP grantees. The Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform
and Consumer Protection Act (Dodd- Frank Act) (Pub. L. 111-203,
approved July 21, 2010) authorized a third round of Neighborhood
Stabilization grants to all states and select local governments on a
formula basis.
The purpose of the funds awarded under the three rounds of NSP is
to target the stabilization of neighborhoods negatively affected by
properties that have been foreclosed upon and abandoned. The notice,
Notice of Formula Allocations and Program Requirements for Neighborhood
Stabilization Program Formula Grants, published October 19, 2010 (75 FR
64322) (``Unified NSP Notice''), provides further background for these
programs, the program principles, and the objectives and outcomes of
the NSP program. The Notice of Neighborhood Stabilization Program;
Closeout Requirements and Recapture (Closeout Notice), published
November 27, 2012 (77 FR 70799), amended the Unified Notice by adding
grant closeout and related provisions. In addition, the Notice of Fund
Availability (NOFA) for the Neighborhood Stabilization Program 2 under
the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, 2009, 74 FR 21377 (May 7,
2009), as amended by subsequent notices (``NSP2 NOFA''), includes
requirements specific to the competitive round of funding under the
Recovery Act.
II. This Notice
The primary purpose of this notice is to revise requirements set
forth in the amended Unified NSP Notice and the Closeout Notice to
revise the treatment of program income for all three rounds of NSP by
allowing NSP program income received by a CDBG recipient to be
transferred by the recipient from the NSP program to the CDBG program.
After the transfer is carried out, any transferred program income will
be subject to the CDBG program income regulations. Following
publication of this notice, HUD will update the issued NSP closeout
instructions (Notice CPD 14-02) to conform the instructions for
consideration of program income during and after closeout of NSP
grants.
The Closeout Notice generally required that with the exception of
de minimis amounts received after grant closeout, program income
generated by NSP-assisted activities must continue to be used for NSP
uses. In attempting to implement this requirement, HUD has become aware
that it is, in many instances, administratively unworkable for NSP
grantees and difficult for HUD to oversee effectively. For NSP grantees
that are generating a substantial amount of program income, the
requirement to use this program income prior to drawing additional
funds from the grant's line of credit is also impeding their ability to
completely expend their NSP grant funds. Further, some grantees no
longer have an adequate pool of NSP-eligible foreclosed or abandoned
properties in their target areas although they do have other needs that
CDBG funding could be used to address. On HUD's part, with dwindling
administrative resources remaining from those provided for the NSP
program, the inability to achieve the criteria for grant closeout for
these grantees creates a looming oversight issue.
Several NSP grantees have asked that HUD reconsider the NSP program
income requirements and allow the same flexibility for the NSP program
income as is currently allowed for the CDBG Disaster Recovery (CDBG-DR)
grants under Public Law 113-2. These requirements allow a grantee to
transfer CDBG-DR program income received prior to grant closeout to the
recipient's CDBG program. HUD agrees that this solution addresses the
issues identified above and so this notice will provide the same
flexibility to any NSP grantee that is also a CDBG grantee (entitlement
or state) with an open formula entitlement grant or a unit of general
local government (UGLG) recipient of a CDBG grant from a state. HUD
will not allow transfer of NSP program income to the CDBG program if
the transfer will result in the NSP grantee failing to meet the
statutory NSP 25 percent set-aside requirement for low-income housing.
To prevent such a failure, the grantee must obtain HUD approval by
notifying HUD in writing prior to a transfer of program income from NSP
to CDBG to permit HUD's review of compliance with the NSP 25 percent
requirement. HUD will notify the grantee of any possible issues. Based
on the data available, HUD anticipates that issues of this sort will be
uncommon.
Since this notice applies to grantees receiving grants under any of
the three rounds of NSP funding, the terms NSP1, NSP2 or NSP3 are used
to describe each of the three funding rounds. When referring to the
grants, grantees, assisted activities, and implementation rules under
HERA, this notice will use the term ``NSP1.'' When referring to the
grants, grantees, assisted activities, and implementation rules under
the
[[Page 38731]]
Recovery Act, this notice will use the term ``NSP2.'' When referring to
the grants, grantees, assisted activities, and implementation rules
under the Dodd-Frank Act, this notice will use the term ``NSP3.''
Collectively, the grants, grantees, assisted activities, and
implementation rules under these three rounds of funding are referred
to as NSP. NSP is a component of the CDBG program, authorized under the
Housing and Community Development Act of 1974 (HCD Act) (42 U.S.C. 5301
et seq.).
III. Authority To Provide Alternative Requirements and Grant Regulatory
Waivers
HERA appropriated $3.92 billion for emergency assistance for
redevelopment of abandoned and foreclosed homes and residential
properties, and provides under a rule of construction that, unless HERA
states otherwise, the funds are to be treated as CDBG funds. HERA, the
Recovery Act, and the Dodd-Frank Act authorize the Secretary of HUD to
specify alternative requirements to any provision under Title I of the
HCD Act except for requirements related to fair housing,
nondiscrimination, labor standards, and the environment. Any
alternative requirements must be in accordance with the terms of
section 2301 of HERA and for the sole purpose of expediting for NSP1 or
facilitating the NSP2 or NSP3 use of grant funds. The CDBG requirements
will apply to NSP funds except where this or other published notices
supersede or amend such requirements.
This Notice amends an existing alternative requirement by allowing
an NSP grantee that is also a CDBG formula grantee or a State CDBG UGLG
grant recipient to transfer NSP program income to the CDBG program
rather than limiting the use of such program income to NSP purposes
before, at, and after grant closeout. Except as described in this
notice and previous notices governing NSP, statutory and regulatory
provisions governing the CDBG program, including those at 24 CFR part
570, subpart I, for states or, for CDBG entitlement communities,
including those at 24 CFR part 570, subparts A, C, D, J, K, and O, as
appropriate, apply to the use of these funds. The State of Hawaii was
allocated funds and will be subject to part 570, subpart I, as modified
by this notice.
IV. Alternative Requirements and Regulatory Waivers
1. Section N of the Unified NSP Notice and section N of Appendix I
of the NSP2 NOFA is amended to add a new subparagraph 4, as follows:
``4. An NSP grantee may transfer NSP program income at any time
before, at the time of, or after closeout to its annual CDBG program,
or, if it is an UGLG that is also a State CDBG grant recipient, to its
State CDBG program. In addition, a State grantee may transfer NSP
program income before or at closeout to any annual CDBG-funded
activities carried out by a UGLG or Indian tribe within the State.
Program income generated by an NSP-assisted activity and received by a
CDBG grantee, or received and retained by a CDBG subgrantee, after
closeout of the grant that generated the program income, may also be
transferred to a grantee's annual CDBG award. Transferred NSP program
income will become CDBG program income upon receipt in the Integrated
Disbursement and Information System (IDIS). Prior to carrying out a
transfer, the grantee must notify HUD in writing of the amount of
program income on hand to be transferred, the grant number and activity
number associated with the NSP activity that generated the program
income, and the name of the CDBG program grantee (or subgrantee, if
appropriate) to which the funds will transfer. On receipt of a
notification, HUD will review NSP grant information reported in the
Disaster Recovery Grant Reporting System (DRGR) for the applicable
grant to ensure the grantee is in compliance with the requirement at
paragraph E.2.e of the Unified Notice, 75 FR 64331, for NSP1 and NSP3
grantees, and Appendix I of the NSP2 NOFA for NSP2 grantees, and only
approve the transfer if use of NSP funds remaining after the transfer
will comply with this requirement. After HUD approval, if NSP program
income funds have already been receipted in DRGR, the grantee must
first revise the DRGR submission to subtract the amounts receipted
there prior to receipting any transferred amounts in IDIS. Subsequent
to transfer, all transferred program income must be treated
(documented, receipted in IDIS, used, and reported on) in accordance
with CDBG program requirements. Any NSP program income that is not
receipted in IDIS will retain its NSP characteristics and requirements
in accordance with published notices governing NSP.''
2. Section Y(c)(3)(i) of the Unified NSP Notice is amended to read
as follows:
``Any NSP program income on deposit in financial institutions at
the time the closeout agreement is signed and any NSP program income
currently held by subrecipients or consortium members, together with
the amounts of any NSP program income that have been transferred to the
CDBG program of the grantee or a specified UGLG recipient prior to
execution of the closeout agreement.''
3. Under the ``Background'' subheading in section Z of the Unified
NSP Notice, the Program Income paragraphs are amended to read as
follows:
``Program Income. NSP program income received before, at the time
of, or after closeout may be transferred to an annual CDBG program as
provided in section N and transferred funds will become CDBG program
income upon receipt in IDIS (such receipt in IDIS will be subsequent to
edits to remove receipt of the funds in DRGR, if such receipt was
already entered). Upon transfer, CDBG program income will be subject to
all CDBG statutory and regulatory requirements for program income.
``Any NSP program income not transferred to CDBG shall, subject to
the de minimis exception provided for in section Y, continue to be used
in accordance with NSP requirements. The un-transferred funds will
retain NSP characteristics and be subject to NSP requirements so the
additional flexibility created by the legislation for the creation of
financing mechanisms, development of new housing, operation of land
banks, and service of families up to 120 percent of Area Median Income
(AMI), will remain in place. However, HUD notes that continued
acquisition of new land bank property after closeout with NSP program
income could undermine the urgency of finding uses for the properties
already acquired. Grantees will be required to allocate 25 percent of
NSP program income to housing for families with less than 50 percent of
AMI when the amount of annual program income received by a grantee is
sufficient to make application of this requirement reasonable. After
grant closeout, former NSP grantees that are CDBG entitlements or State
governments will report at least annually as provided for by HUD,
initially in DRGR and later in an enhanced IDIS, on the receipt and use
of NSP program income, and the disposition of land-banked properties.
These grantees must also include NSP program income in the annual CDBG
Action Plan or substantial amendment in accordance with CDBG
requirements. All former NSP grantees, including nonprofits and
nonentitlement units of general local government receiving funds
directly from HUD, must report at least annually in a form acceptable
to the Secretary regarding enforcement of any NSP continuing
affordability restrictions. Reporting will continue over the course of
the minimum period
[[Page 38732]]
of affordability set forth in HOME program standards at 24 CFR 92.252
(e) and 92.254(a)(4).
``Finally, most program income will be received by CDBG entitlement
cities and counties, and by states, which have systems and procedures
to manage NSP revenues, which are treated in most respects like CDBG
revenues. However, non-profit consortium members in NSP2 grant
consortia that receive revenues generated by NSP projects will not have
access to the state and municipal CDBG tracking systems. Further, the
CDBG regulation and Office of Management and Budget (OMB) circular
implemented at 24 CFR 84.24(e) or 2 CFR 200.307(f), as applicable, do
not require that non-profit grantees continue to treat revenues
generated from use of NSP funds and received after grant closeout as
federal funds unless HUD regulations or the terms and conditions of the
award provide otherwise. Thus, for NSP2 grantees that are not direct
formula CDBG grantees (non-profits and non-entitlement local
governments, including those that are part of a consortium), HUD is
requiring that revenues generated by projects funded before closeout
but received within 5 years after grant closeout must be used for NSP-
eligible activities and meet NSP benefit requirements, but no other
federal requirements would apply. With the exception of income earned
from the sale of NSP-assisted real property or loans, any income earned
by such post-closeout use of funds would not be governed by any NSP
requirements and would be miscellaneous revenues, although HUD
encourages such grantees to apply NSP principles to subsequent uses of
the funds.''
4. The paragraphs in section Z under the ``Requirements''
subheading are amended to read as follows:
``Requirements
``1. Program Income. Gross revenues received by NSP grantees after
closeout will be governed by the following requirements:
``a.i. After notifying HUD in writing and receiving prior written
approval, the grantee may receipt the amounts to IDIS (after first
revising any DRGR entries related to the funds) and add them to the
grantee's CDBG program income receipts and all relevant CDBG program
income requirements shall then apply. HUD will approve a transfer
unless the transfer would result in non-compliance with the requirement
at 75 FR 64331, paragraph E.2.e based on the use of the NSP funds that
would remain after transfer.
``a.ii. If the amounts are not receipted in IDIS, annual amounts of
program income in excess of $25,000 shall be used in accordance with
all NSP requirements for eligible NSP properties, uses, and activities,
including new construction, financing mechanisms, and management and
disposition of land bank property.
``b. If annual NSP program income does not exceed $25,000, the
funds shall be used for general administrative costs related to
ensuring continued affordability of NSP units or added to the grantee's
CDBG program income receipts and the CDBG requirements at 24 CFR
570.500(a)(4) shall apply, which may exclude such amounts from the
definition of program income.
``c. NSP program income may provide benefit to individuals and
families with incomes up to 120 percent of AMI as permitted in NSP
under section II.E;
``d. If a grantee's annual NSP program income exceeds $250,000
(after any transfer of program income to CDBG), 25 percent of the
program income shall be used to house individuals or families below 50
percent of AMI; in instances in which a grantee's annual NSP program
income does not exceed $250,000, the requirements of paragraph II.E.2.e
do not apply.
``e. NSP2 grantees that are not CDBG entitlement communities or
States must use post-closeout revenues generated from NSP-assisted
activities funded before closeout for NSP purposes. If the grantee does
not have another ongoing grant received directly from HUD at the time
of closeout, then in accordance with 24 CFR 570.504(b)(5), income
received after closeout from the disposition of real property or from
loans outstanding at the time of closeout shall not be governed by NSP
or CDBG rules, except that such income shall be used for activities
that meet one of the national objectives in 24 CFR 570.208 and the
eligibility requirements described in section 105 of the HCD Act. The
provisions of 24 CFR 570.504(b)(5) are waived to limit its application
to income received within 5 years of grant closeout. Any income
received 5 years after grant closeout, as well as program income from
funds outlaid after the date of the closeout agreement may be used
without restriction. Such grantees are encouraged to use such funds in
accordance with the principles above.
``f. States may continue to act directly to implement NSP
activities post-closeout.
``g. HUD will provide direction to grantees by the date of closeout
on procedures for reporting and tracking NSP program income revenues.
Tracking will continue in DRGR until IDIS enhancements to allow NSP
property registry and program income tracking are developed and
released.''
Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance
The Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance numbers for grants made
under NSP are as follows: 14.218; 14.225; and 14.228.
Paperwork Reduction Act
HUD has approval from OMB for information collection requirements
in accordance with the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501-
3520). OMB approval is under OMB control number 2506-0165. In
accordance with the Paperwork Reduction Act, HUD may not conduct or
sponsor and a person is not required to respond to, a collection of
information, unless the collection displays a valid control number.
Environmental Review
A Finding of No Significant Impact (FONSI) with respect to the
environment has been made in accordance with HUD regulations at 24 CFR
part 50, which implement section 102(2)(C) of the National
Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (42 U.S.C. 4332(2)(C)). The FONSI is
available for public inspection between the hours of 8 a.m. and 5 p.m.
weekdays in the Regulations Division, Office of General Counsel,
Department of Housing and Urban Development, 451 Seventh Street SW.,
Room 10276, Washington, DC 20410. Due to security measures at the HUD
Headquarters building, please schedule an appointment to review the
FONSI by calling the Regulations Division at 202-708-3055 (this is not
a toll-free number). Individuals with speech or hearing impairments may
access this number via TTY by calling the Federal Relay Service, toll
free, at 1-800-877-8339.
Dated: May 16, 2016.
Harriet Tregoning,
Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary for Community Planning and
Development.
[FR Doc. 2016-14062 Filed 6-13-16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4210-67-P