Veterans Employment Pay for Success Grant Program, 52770-52778 [2016-18721]
Download as PDF
52770
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 154 / Wednesday, August 10, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 1—Continued
2. Save the Date Fireworks Display, Ellis Island Safety Zone; 33 CFR
165.160 (2.2).
• Launch site: A barge located between Federal Anchorages 20–A
and 20–B, in approximate position 40°41′45″ N., 074°02′09″ W.
(NAD 1983) about 365 yards east of Ellis Island. This Safety Zone is
a 360-yard radius from the barge.
• Date: October 27, 2016.
• Time: 8:30 p.m.–10:00 p.m.
TABLE 2
1. Rose Pitonof Swim, Swim Event; 33 CFR 165.160 (4.2) ....................
Under the provisions of 33 CFR
165.160, vessels may not enter the safety
zones unless given permission from the
COTP or a designated representative.
Spectator vessels may transit outside the
safety zones but may not anchor, block,
loiter in, or impede the transit of other
vessels. The Coast Guard may be
assisted by other Federal, State, or local
law enforcement agencies in enforcing
this regulation.
This document is issued under
authority of 33 CFR 165.160(a) and 5
U.S.C. 552(a). In addition to this
notification in the Federal Register, the
Coast Guard will provide mariners with
advanced notification of enforcement
periods via the Local Notice to Mariners
and marine information broadcasts. If
the COTP determines that a safety zone
need not be enforced for the full
duration stated in this notice, a
Broadcast Notice to Mariners may be
used to grant general permission to
enter the safety zone.
Dated: July 22, 2016.
M.H. Day,
Captain, U.S. Coast Guard, Captain of the
Port New York.
[FR Doc. 2016–18894 Filed 8–9–16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 9110–04–P
DEPARTMENT OF VETERANS
AFFAIRS
Lhorne on DSK30JT082PROD with RULES
38 CFR Part 21
RIN 2900–AP72
Veterans Employment Pay for Success
Grant Program
Department of Veterans Affairs.
Interim final rule.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
VerDate Sep<11>2014
13:57 Aug 09, 2016
Jkt 238001
• Location: Participants will swim between Manhattan, New York and
the shore of Coney Island, New York transiting through the Upper
New York Bay, under the Verrazano-Narrows Bridge and south in
the Lower New York Bay. The route direction is determined by the
predicted tide state and direction of current on the scheduled day of
the event.
• This Safety Zone includes all waters within a 100-yard radius of
each participating swimmer.
• Date: August 13, 2016.
• Time: 6:00 a.m.–12:00 p.m.
The Department of Veterans
Affairs (VA) is establishing a grant
program (Veterans Employment Pay for
Success (VEPFS)) under the authority of
the U.S.C. to award grants to eligible
entities to fund projects that are
successful in accomplishing
employment rehabilitation for Veterans
with service-connected disabilities. VA
will award grants on the basis of an
eligible entity’s proposed use of a Pay
for Success (PFS) strategy to achieve
goals. This interim final rule establishes
regulations for awarding a VEPFS grant,
including the general process for
awarding the grant, criteria and
parameters for evaluating grant
applications, priorities related to the
award of a grant, and general
requirements and guidance for
administering a VEPFS grant program.
DATES: Effective Date: This rule is
effective on August 10, 2016.
Comment Date: Comments must be
received on or before October 11, 2016.
ADDRESSES: Written comments may be
submitted through
www.Regulations.gov; by mail or handdelivery to Director, Regulation Policy
and Management (02REG), Department
of Veterans Affairs, 810 Vermont
Avenue NW., Room 1068, Washington,
DC 20420; or by fax to (202) 273–9026.
Comments should indicate that they are
submitted in response to ‘‘RIN 2900–
AP72—Veterans Employment Pay for
Success Grant Program.’’ Copies of
comments received will be available for
public inspection in the Office of
Regulation Policy and Management,
Room 1068, between the hours of 8:00
a.m. and 4:30 p.m., Monday through
Friday (except holidays). Please call
(202) 461–4902 for an appointment.
(This is not a toll-free number.) In
addition, during the comment period,
SUMMARY:
PO 00000
Frm 00030
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
comments may be viewed online
through the Federal Docket Management
System (FDMS) at www.Regulations.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Patrick Littlefield, Director, VA Center
for Innovation, Department of Veterans
Affairs, (08), 810 Vermont Ave. NW.,
Washington, DC, (202) 256–7176. (This
is not a toll-free number.)
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: VA’s
Vocational Rehabilitation &
Employment (VR&E) Service provides
services and assistance necessary to
enable Veterans with compensable
service-connected disabilities and
employment barriers to achieve
maximum independence in daily living
and, to the maximum extent feasible, to
become employable and to obtain and
maintain suitable employment. (A
Veteran with a noncompensable serviceconnected disability is not entitled to
vocational rehabilitation services and
assistance under chapter 31 of title 38,
United States Code. See 38 U.S.C. 3102.)
Section 3119 of title 38, United States
Code, authorizes the Secretary of
Veterans Affairs (Secretary) to make
grants to or contract with public or
nonprofit agencies, including
institutions of higher learning, to
advance ‘‘the knowledge, methods,
techniques, and resources available for
use in rehabilitation programs for
veterans.’’ Section 3119 specifically
authorizes the Secretary to make grants
to such agencies to conduct or provide
support for projects which are
‘‘designed to increase the resources and
potential for accomplishing the
rehabilitation of disabled veterans.’’
(See also implementing regulation at 38
CFR 21.390.)
PFS is a strategy for successfully
attaining positive social or
environmental outcomes by paying for
E:\FR\FM\10AUR1.SGM
10AUR1
Lhorne on DSK30JT082PROD with RULES
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 154 / Wednesday, August 10, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
an intervention to achieve such
outcomes only after the intervention
produces these outcomes. Using a PFS
strategy, a party to an agreement agrees
to pay for services for specific people or
communities in need of particular
services only if and when an agreedupon set of outcomes related to meeting
the people’s or communities’ needs has
been achieved or a level of impact has
been verified. Instead of funding
services regardless of the results,
payments are made only if interventions
achieve the outcomes agreed upon in
advance. For example, instead of paying
for the provision of job training without
knowing whether such training will
have a successful result, an entity might
use a PFS strategy to pay for the
provision of job training only when
individuals gain stable employment in
good jobs. When the party committed to
pay for outcomes is a Government
entity, taxpayers will not have to pay for
ineffective services. However, the party
that provides services may not have the
funding for the services before outcomes
are measured. PFS agreements can
incorporate PFS financing, sometimes
referred to as ‘‘social impact bonds,’’ to
cover the costs of the services until
success is achieved and payments are
due. PFS financing involves third-party,
independent investors that provide the
financing necessary to carry out the
intervention. In addition, a PFS model
typically involves a project coordinator
or intermediary to facilitate and manage
the project, a service provider to deliver
the intervention, and an independent
evaluator to determine whether the
intervention achieves the desired
outcomes.
There is a need to find new,
innovative methods for rehabilitating
Veterans with compensable serviceconnected disabilities (as defined in 38
CFR 3.1(k)) who qualify for benefits
under VA’s VR&E program so that they
become employable and are ultimately
able to obtain and maintain suitable
employment. Through PFS grant
programs, which may serve various
Veteran populations including those
Veterans with noncompensable serviceconnected disabilities who do not
qualify for VR&E benefits, we hope to
obtain information to establish new,
innovative methods for rehabilitating
Veterans who qualify for VR&E benefits.
PFS offers an economical mechanism,
which can save taxpayers’ money, for
exploring the resources and techniques
that are available for rehabilitating
Veterans with service-connected
disabilities with regard to employment.
We interpret the authority in Sec. 3119
to award grants to conduct or provide
VerDate Sep<11>2014
13:57 Aug 09, 2016
Jkt 238001
support for projects which are designed
to increase the potential for
accomplishing the rehabilitation of
disabled Veterans broadly, to allow for
the funding of projects that serve
Veterans with either compensable or
noncompensable service-connected
disabilities. By funding projects that
serve Veterans with either compensable
or noncompensable service-connected
disabilities, there is increased potential
to discover new techniques and
resources for use in VA’s VR&E program
to enable Veterans who qualify for
VR&E services to become employable
and to obtain and maintain suitable
employment.
Accordingly, under the authority of
Sec. 3119, VA will award grants to
eligible entities that will become
‘‘outcomes payors,’’ to administer
payment for outcomes of interventions
that are successful in accomplishing
employment rehabilitation for Veterans
with service-connected disabilities. In
other words, VA will fund outcomes of
projects that achieve favorable
employment outcomes related to
success in the ability or potential to
secure or sustain stable employment or
to achieve increased earnings of
Veterans with service-connected
disabilities. The funding will be referred
to as ‘‘outcomes payments’’ and the
grant known as the ‘‘Veterans
Employment Pay for Success (VEPFS)’’
grant. This interim final rule establishes
regulations for awarding a VEPFS grant,
including the general process for
awarding the grant, criteria and
parameters for evaluating grant
applications, priorities related to the
award of a grant, and general
requirements and guidance for
administering a VEPFS grant program.
§ 21.440
Purpose and Scope.
Section 21.440 sets forth the purpose
of a VEPFS grant program and explains
what the program provides. This section
indicates that VA may provide a grant
to an eligible entity to fund outcomes
payments for a project that achieves
favorable employment outcomes for
Veterans with service-connected
disabilities. There is a need to find new
and innovative methods for
rehabilitating Veterans with
compensable service-connected
disabilities with regard to employment
and, as noted above, the VEPFS grant
program offers an economical
mechanism, which can save taxpayers’
money, for exploring the resources and
techniques that may be available to
address that need.
PO 00000
Frm 00031
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
§ 21.441
52771
Definitions.
Section 21.441 defines terms used in
§§ 21.440–21.449 and any Notices of
Funding Availability (NOFA) issued
pursuant to §§ 21.440–21.449. The
definitions are set out in the regulatory
text, but we elaborate on some of them
as follows:
‘‘Eligible entity’’ is defined as a public
or nonprofit agency, to include
institutions of higher learning. Section
3119 of title 38, United States Code,
provides authorization to make grants to
public or nonprofit agencies, including
institutions of higher learning. We
interpret the term ‘‘nonprofit agency,’’
as used in Sec. 3119, to include taxexempt, incorporated or unincorporated
organizations that serve the public
interest and generally have a charitable,
educational, scientific, religious, or
literary goal. We interpret the term
‘‘public agency’’, as used in Sec. 3119,
to include the government of the United
States or of a State or political
subdivision of a State.
‘‘Employment outcome’’ is defined as
the employment or earnings of a
participant in the intervention or
control group member after the service
period. The VEPFS program will
measure certain outcomes, including
competitive employment, skill
development, achieving a sustained
period of employment, wage-earnings,
and achieving employment that aligns
with the interests and aptitude of the job
seeker. Improving employment
outcomes means creating positive
impact in terms of these outcomes,
where the results for individuals that
receive the intervention are better than
the results for a valid control group that
did not receive the intervention.
‘‘Intervention’’ is defined as a service
or technology that is provided to
individuals and intended to achieve
certain results. Examples of service
interventions or technological
interventions to improve Veteran
employment outcomes include, but are
not limited to, support services,
employment coaching, mental health
treatment, vocational training,
occupational therapy, community
engagement, and outreach.
‘‘Project partnership’’ is defined as a
collaboration among entities that
negotiate an agreement and execute a
project to improve employment
outcomes for Veterans with serviceconnected disabilities. For the purpose
of the VEPFS grant program, a project
partnership is not a distinct legal entity.
Section 21.441 includes definitions for
the entities that may be involved in a
project partnership.
E:\FR\FM\10AUR1.SGM
10AUR1
52772
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 154 / Wednesday, August 10, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
Lhorne on DSK30JT082PROD with RULES
‘‘Social finance strategy’’ is defined as
a method for securing financial
resources using an investment approach
that focuses on achieving positive social
and/or environmental impact with some
form of financial return. Examples of
social finance strategies include: (1)
Matching taxpayer dollars with nongovernment contributions to extend the
impact of not-for-profit organizations;
(2) simplifying access to government
funding for community organizations
and institutions of higher learning.
‘‘Strong evidence’’ is defined as
results from previous studies, the
designs of which can support causal
conclusions (i.e., studies with high
internal validity), which include enough
of the range of participants and settings
to support scaling up to the state,
regional, or national level (i.e., studies
with high external validity). The
following are examples of strong
evidence: (1) More than one welldesigned and well-implemented
experimental study or well-designed
and well-implemented quasiexperimental study that supports the
effectiveness of the practice, strategy, or
program; or (2) one large, well-designed
and well-implemented randomized
controlled, multisite trial that supports
the effectiveness of the practice,
strategy, or program.
‘‘Work-plan’’ is defined as a
document that articulates tasks and
milestones with regard to a particular
project. A work plan contains a detailed
overview of all activities that will be
undertaken to complete a project, and
the goals, objectives, outcomes,
responsible parties, and timeline for
each task of a project, which collectively
serve as the roadmap for execution of
project tasks.
§ 21.442 VEPFS Grants—General.
Section 21.442 provides general
information pertaining to VEPFS grants.
Section 21.442(a) establishes that only
an eligible entity may receive a VEPFS
grant. Section 21.442(b) establishes that
the available grant funding amount will
be specified in the NOFA. The amount
of funding VA may provide in a VEPFS
grant is not limited by or otherwise
specified in statute. In addition, VA may
combine its funds with funds of another
Federal entity to increase the amount
available for a VEPFS project. VA will
determine the amount of funding
available for an individual VEPFS
project, including any contributions
from another Federal agency, on a caseby-case basis and will announce the
amount of available grant funding for
that VEPFS project in the applicable
NOFA. Section 21.442(c) states that the
period for a VEPFS grant will be a
VerDate Sep<11>2014
13:57 Aug 09, 2016
Jkt 238001
minimum of 5 years and a predetermined maximum number of years,
as specified in the NOFA, beginning on
the date on which the VEPFS grant is
awarded, with the availability of no-cost
extensions. At the end of the predetermined maximum period, the
effectiveness of the project will be
assessed to determine the project’s
success. Five years is the minimum
length of time necessary to maximize
the effectiveness of a project and obtain
meaningful data on a project’s success
through periodic reporting. This
timeframe allows 1 year to develop,
refine and launch the project, 3 years for
service delivery to produce outcomes
and data, and 1 year for a thorough
evaluation of outcomes. Section
21.442(d) specifies that a recipient must
provide matching funds from nonFederal sources that are at least equal to
or greater than the amount of Federal
grant funds awarded, which will be
combined with the amount of Federal
grant funds awarded to be used to fund
the proposed PFS project as a condition
of receiving a VEPFS grant. Requiring
matching funds increases the amount of
available funding for VEPFS projects.
Section 21.442(e) specifies that a VEPFS
grant is not a Veterans’ benefit, and,
therefore, any decisions of the Secretary
as to whether to award a VEPFS grant
are final and not subject to the same
rights of appeal as decisions related to
Veterans’ benefits.
§ 21.443 Permissible Uses of VEPFS
Grant Funds.
Section 21.443(a) specifies that
VEPFS grant funds may be used to make
outcomes payments only if an
intervention achieves outcomes at a preset level that has been agreed to in a PFS
agreement before service delivery begins
for a PFS project with a goal to improve
employment outcomes for Veterans with
service-connected disabilities. As stated
above, the reason for using a PFS
strategy is to avoid using taxpayer
dollars for ineffective services and
therefore save taxpayer money. VA is
specifically funding PFS projects that
aim to improve employment outcomes
for Veterans with service-connected
disabilities to carry out Congress’
intention that VA ‘‘advance the
knowledge, methods, techniques, and
resources available for use in
rehabilitation programs for veterans’’
and increase the ‘‘potential for
accomplishing the rehabilitation of
disabled veterans.’’
In addition, to cover the indirect costs
of administering the grant (costs
associated with general administration
and expenses), § 21.443(b) allows a
recipient to use a Federally approved
PO 00000
Frm 00032
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
indirect cost rate (a rate already
negotiated with the Federal
Government), use a 10% de minimis
rate of modified total direct costs,
negotiate an indirect cost rate for the
first time, or claim certain costs directly
following 2 CFR 200.413 so as to not
limit the pool of eligible applicants to
entities that will use a particular
permissible option. This is consistent
with regulatory guidance to Federal
agencies that provide grant awards to
non-Federal entities, including States,
local governments, Indian tribes,
institutions of higher education, and
non-profit organizations issued by the
Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) and codified in in part 200 of
title 2 of the Code of Federal
Regulations. 2 CFR 200.414; see also 2
CFR 200.69. These administrative costs
may be claimed before outcomes are
measured and regardless of whether
outcomes are achieved at pre-set levels.
§ 21.444 Notice of Funding
Availability.
Section 21.444 states that when funds
are available to award a VEPFS grant,
VA will publish a NOFA announcing
the funding opportunity in the Federal
Register and on Grants.gov (https://
www.grants.gov) providing specific
details about the opportunity. Section
21.444, in paragraphs (a)–(f), lists
generally the information the NOFA
will include. Section 200.203 of title 2,
Code of Federal Regulations, requires
the issuance of a NOFA, which includes
specific identifying information,
information describing the funding
opportunity, and information regarding
the award, eligibility, application,
application review, and Federal award
administration. OMB requires the
issuance of a NOFA and publication of
this information to ensure that eligible
entities have the information required to
apply for grants.
§ 21.445 Application.
Section 21.445 identifies VEPFS grant
application procedures and the
information required to constitute a
complete application package. This
section requires eligible entities to
submit a complete grant application
package, in accordance with
instructions provided in the NOFA
through Grants.gov (https://
www.grants.gov) to apply for a VEPFS
grant. Use of this Web site is the easiest
and most efficient way to process grant
applications. Furthermore, eligible
entities submitting an application for a
VEPFS grant will likely be familiar with
this Web site. In describing the
information a complete application
package must contain, paragraph (a)
E:\FR\FM\10AUR1.SGM
10AUR1
Lhorne on DSK30JT082PROD with RULES
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 154 / Wednesday, August 10, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
requires the complete application to
contain a project description, including
a description of the intervention, the
Veteran population to be served, and
anticipated employment outcomes. VA
needs this information to determine
whether the project proposed has a
reasonable chance of providing positive
employment outcomes for Veterans with
service-connected disabilities.
Paragraph (b) requires the complete
application to contain a description of
the anticipated project partnership(s),
including the responsibilities of each of
the partner entities, the experience of
any involved entities with serving
Veteran populations, and other
qualifications of the involved entities
that may be relevant in carrying out
responsibilities of the project
partnership. VA needs this information
to assess the likelihood of success an
applicant will have carrying out a
VEPFS project. In addition, paragraph
(b) informs applicants that, in procuring
partners such as the project coordinator
and investor, procurement standards set
forth in 2 CFR 200.317–200.326 must be
followed. Paragraph (c) requires the
complete application to include a work
plan with a budget and timelines. These
disclosures will help reviewers assess
how close the project is to beginning to
provide services and the extent to which
an applicant has considered all aspects
of planning. Paragraph (d) requires the
complete application to contain a
description of applicant’s expertise or
experience with PFS or other social
finance strategies or experience
administering programs that serve
Veterans with disabilities. Paragraph (e)
requires the complete application to
include documentation of an applicant’s
ability and capacity to administer the
project. Having the information
obtained from the requirements of
paragraphs (d) and (e) will also allow
VA to assess the likelihood of success of
a VEPFS project. Paragraph (f) requires
the complete application to include
proof of matching funds already
secured, the applicant’s ability to secure
matching funds, or commitments of
matching funds the applicant has
received. Reviewers need this
documentation to confirm an
applicant’s ability to meet the VEPFS
grant funding requirements. Paragraph
(g) requires that the complete
application contain any additional
information VA deems appropriate and
sets out in the NOFA so that VA can
tailor the NOFA as necessary.
§ 21.446 Scoring and Selection.
Section 21.446(a) states that VA will
score only complete applications
received from eligible entities by the
VerDate Sep<11>2014
13:57 Aug 09, 2016
Jkt 238001
deadline established in the NOFA and
identifies the criteria to be used in
selecting a recipient. Selection of a
recipient will be based on the likelihood
of successful implementation of the
project and the likelihood that the
project will meet objectives. The
information described in § 21.446(a)
will allow VA to make such
determination regarding the likelihood
of project success.
Section 21.446(b) indicates that
NOFA announcements may clarify the
selection criteria in paragraph (a) and
will specify the relative weight (point
value) assigned for each selection
criterion according to the criterion’s
importance in ensuring the successful
development and implementation of a
VEPFS project and that eligible entities
will be ranked in order from highest to
lowest total score. This section also
indicates that VA will award any VEPFS
grant on the primary basis of scores but
will also consider a risk assessment
evaluation.
§ 21.447
VEPFS Grant Agreement.
Section 21.447 states that VA will
draft a grant agreement for execution
between VA and the applicant selected
to receive a VEPFS grant, and VA will
obligate the grant funds to cover the
amount of the approved grant, subject to
the availability of funding, upon
execution of the agreement. This section
also states that the VEPFS grant
agreement will provide that the
recipient agrees (and will ensure that
any subcontractors agree) to: Operate
the program in accordance with the
provisions of §§ 21.440–21.449, 2 CFR
part 200, and the applicant’s VEPFS
grant application; comply with such
other terms and conditions, including
recordkeeping and reports for program
monitoring and evaluation purposes, as
VA may establish for purposes of
carrying out the VEPFS program in an
effective and efficient manner; and
provide any additional information VA
requests in the manner and timeframe
VA specifies. Part 200 provides uniform
guidance and government-wide terms
and conditions for the management of
awards and the administration of
Federal grants, and this rulemaking
provides additional guidance and
conditions for the administration of
VEPFS grants in particular. Adherence
to the government-wide rules is
mandatory and compliance with the
additional rules specific to VEPFS
grants will ensure program integrity
across any VEPFS grants VA awards. In
addition, timely and accurate reporting
is critical to allow VA to evaluate the
VEPFS program.
PO 00000
Frm 00033
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
52773
§ 21.448 Recipient Reporting
Requirements.
Section 21.448 requires recipients to
submit a quarterly report 30 days after
the close of each Federal fiscal quarter
of the grant period that includes a
detailed record of the time involved and
resources expended administering the
VEPFS program; the number of Veterans
served, including demographics of this
population; the types of employment
assistance provided; a full accounting of
VEPFS grant funds used or unused
during the quarter; a comparison of
accomplishments related to the
objectives of the award; an explanation
for any goals not met; and an analysis
and explanation for any cost overruns.
With such information, VA can
effectively analyze program
performance and ensure that a recipient
is using grant funds in accordance with
the grant agreement. In addition,
§ 21.448 requires recipients to provide
additional reports if necessary to allow
VA to assess program accountability and
effectiveness on an ongoing basis.
§ 21.449
Recovery of Funds.
Section 21.449 specifies that VA can
impose additional conditions as
specified in 2 CFR 200.207 if a recipient
fails to comply with any Federal statutes
or regulations or the terms and
conditions of an award made under
§§ 21.440–21.449. Section 21.449 also
allows VA to take any appropriate
actions specified in 2 CFR part 200 as
remedies for non-compliance if noncompliance cannot be remedied. These
measures help safeguard Federal funds
and ensure appropriate use of the
VEPFS grant funds awarded.
Administrative Procedure Act
In accordance with 5 U.S.C. 553(b)(B)
and (d)(3), the Secretary finds that there
is good cause to dispense with the
opportunity for prior notice and
comment and good cause to publish this
rule with an immediate effective date.
The Secretary finds that it is
impracticable and contrary to the public
interest to delay this rule for the
purpose of soliciting prior public
comment or to have a delayed effective
date. As stated above, the Secretary is
issuing this rule because there is a need
to find new methods for rehabilitating
Veterans with service-connected
disabilities so that they become
employable and are able to obtain and
maintain suitable employment. This
rulemaking provides the opportunity for
the discovery of new methods for
rehabilitating Veterans with serviceconnected disabilities with regard to
employment using a strategy that will
E:\FR\FM\10AUR1.SGM
10AUR1
52774
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 154 / Wednesday, August 10, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
Lhorne on DSK30JT082PROD with RULES
save taxpayer money. However, the
funding for a grant which would be
awarded based on a NOFA to be
published concurrently with this
interim final rule, and which will be
used to fund a project that achieves
favorable employment outcomes for
Veterans with a service-connected
disability of post-traumatic stress
disorder, is available only in this
current fiscal year and must be obligated
by September 30, 2016, if it is to be used
for such purpose. To provide sufficient
time to obligate the funds by September
30, 2016, the regulations established by
this rulemaking must be in effect by
August 9, 2016. Failure to obligate the
funds by September 30, 2016, will cause
the funds to expire.
Because this interim final rule will
serve an important Veterans’ need in an
economical way, which would not be
possible if publication were to be
delayed, the Secretary finds that it is
impracticable and contrary to the public
interest to delay this rule for the
purpose of soliciting advance public
comment or to have a delayed effective
date. Accordingly, VA is issuing this
rule as an interim final rule with an
immediate effective date. We will
consider and address any comments
received within 60 days of the date this
interim final rule is published in the
Federal Register.
Executive Orders 12866 and 13563
Executive Orders 12866 and 13563
direct agencies to assess the costs and
benefits of available regulatory
alternatives and, when regulation is
necessary, to select regulatory
approaches that maximize net benefits
(including potential economic,
environmental, public health and safety
effects, and other advantages;
distributive impacts; and equity).
Executive Order 13563 (Improving
Regulation and Regulatory Review)
emphasizes the importance of
quantifying both costs and benefits,
reducing costs, harmonizing rules, and
promoting flexibility. Executive Order
12866 (Regulatory Planning and
Review) defines a ‘‘significant
regulatory action’’ requiring review by
OMB, unless OMB waives such review,
as ‘‘any regulatory action that is likely
to result in a rule that may: (1) Have an
annual effect on the economy of $100
million or more or adversely affect in a
material way the economy, a sector of
the economy, productivity, competition,
jobs, the environment, public health or
safety, or State, local, or tribal
governments or communities; (2) Create
a serious inconsistency or otherwise
interfere with an action taken or
planned by another agency; (3)
VerDate Sep<11>2014
13:57 Aug 09, 2016
Jkt 238001
Materially alter the budgetary impact of
entitlements, grants, user fees, or loan
programs or the rights and obligations of
recipients thereof; or (4) Raise novel
legal or policy issues arising out of legal
mandates, the President’s priorities, or
the principles set forth in the Executive
Order.’’
The economic, interagency,
budgetary, legal, and policy
implications of this regulatory action
have been examined, and it has been
determined not to be a significant
regulatory action under Executive Order
12866. VA’s impact analysis can be
found as a supporting document at
https://www.regulations.gov, usually
within 48 hours after the rulemaking
document is published. Additionally, a
copy of the rulemaking and its impact
analysis are available on VA’s Web site
at https://www.va.gov/orpm/, by
following the link for ‘‘VA Regulations
Published From FY 2004 Through Fiscal
Year to Date.’’
Paperwork Reduction Act
This interim final rule includes
provisions constituting collections of
information under the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501–
3521) that require approval by OMB.
Specifically, sections 21.445, 21.447,
and 21.448 contain collections of
information under the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995. VA has
submitted the following information
collection request to OMB for review
and clearance in accordance with the
emergency review procedures of the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995. The
proposed information collection is
published to obtain comments from the
public and affected agencies. An
emergency approval under the
Paperwork Reduction Act is only valid
for 180 days. Comments should be
directed to OMB, Office of Information
and Regulatory Affairs, Attention:
Department of Veterans Affairs Desk
Officer, Washington, DC 20530, with
copies sent by mail or hand delivery to
the Director, Regulation Policy and
Management (02REG), Department of
Veterans Affairs, 810 Vermont Avenue
NW., Room 1068, Washington, DC
20420; fax to (202) 273–9026; email to
www.Regulations.gov. Comments
should indicate that they are submitted
in response to ‘‘RIN 2900–AP72.’’
A regular review of this information
collection will also be undertaken and
announced in a future Federal Register
notice indicating approval of this
collection of information under the
emergency review procedures of the
Paperwork Reduction Act. All
comments and suggestions, or questions
regarding additional information,
PO 00000
Frm 00034
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
including obtaining a copy of the
proposed information collection
instrument with instructions, should be
directed to Patrick Littlefield, Director,
VA Center for Innovation, Department
of Veterans Affairs, (08), 810 Vermont
Ave. NW., Washington, DC, (202) 256–
7176. We request written comments and
suggestions from the public and affected
agencies concerning the proposed
emergency collection of information.
The Department considers comments
by the public on proposed collections of
information in—
• Evaluating whether the proposed
collections of information are necessary
for the proper performance of the
functions of the Department, including
whether the information will have
practical utility;
• Evaluating the accuracy of the
Department’s estimate of the burden of
the proposed collections of information,
including the validity of the
methodology and assumptions used;
• Enhancing the quality, usefulness,
and clarity of the information to be
collected; and
• Minimizing the burden of the
collections of information on those who
are to respond, including through the
use of appropriate automated,
electronic, mechanical, or other
technological collection techniques or
other forms of information technology,
e.g., permitting electronic submission of
responses.
The collections of information
contained in 38 CFR 21.445, 21.447, and
21.448 are described immediately
following this paragraph, under their
respective titles.
Title: Grant Applications.
• Summary of collection of
information: The new collection of
information in proposed 38 CFR 21.445
would require applicants to submit a
complete VEPFS grant application.
• Description of need for information
and proposed use of information: The
collection of information is necessary to
award grants to eligible entities. VA will
use this information to decide whether
an applicant meets the requirements
and satisfies the scoring criteria for
award of VEPFS grants under 38 U.S.C.
3119.
• Description of likely respondents:
Public and non-profit entities, including
institutions of higher learning, that have
an interest in serving Veterans with
service-connected disabilities.
• Estimated number of respondents:
25 in FY 2016; 25 in FY 2017; 25 in FY
2018.
• Estimated frequency of responses:
This is a one-time collection.
• Estimated average burden per
response: 80 hours.
E:\FR\FM\10AUR1.SGM
10AUR1
Lhorne on DSK30JT082PROD with RULES
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 154 / Wednesday, August 10, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
• Estimated total annual reporting
and recordkeeping burden: 2,000 hours
in FY 2016; 2,000 hours in FY 2017;
2,000 hours in 2018.
Title: Quarterly Fiscal Reports.
• Summary of collection of
information: The new collection of
information in proposed 38 CFR
21.447(a)(1) and 21.448(a) would
require each recipient to agree in the
grant agreement to submit quarterly
reports, which would include detailed
records of the time expended and
employment outcomes accomplished in
the provision of VEPFS activities,
accounting of how the grant funds were
used.
• Description of need for information
and proposed use of information: The
collection of information is necessary to
determine compliance with the
requirements for a grant.
• Description of likely respondents:
Public and non-profit entities, including
institutions of higher learning, that have
an interest in serving Veterans with
service-connected disabilities.
• Estimated number of respondents: 1
in FY 2017, up to 10 in FY 2018, up to
10 in FY 2019.
• Estimated frequency of responses: 4
quarterly reports per year for 5 years.
• Estimated average burden per
response: 1 hour.
• Estimated total annual reporting
and recordkeeping burden: 4 hours in
FY 2017, 44 hours in FY 2018, 84 hours
in FY 2019, 84 hours in 2020, 84 hours
in 2021, 80 hours in 2022, 40 hours in
2023.
The regulatory terms also authorize
VA to impose additional recordkeeping
or reporting requirements as defined in
the Terms and Conditions of the grant
agreement (38 CFR 21.447(a)(2)), request
additional information as defined in the
Terms and Conditions of the grant
agreement (38 CFR 21.447(a)(3)), and
request additional reports in the Terms
and Conditions of the grant agreement if
necessary to fully and effectively assess
program accountability and
effectiveness (38 CFR 21.448(b)).
Because these information collection
requirements will depend on the terms
and conditions of the grant agreement
for a particular funding opportunity, VA
is not seeking emergency approval for
these regulatory provisions at this time.
Rather, VA will more clearly define and
articulate these potential record-keeping
and reporting requirements when it
submits the PRA package when it
undertakes a regular review of this
collection.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Secretary hereby certifies that
this interim final rule will not have a
VerDate Sep<11>2014
13:57 Aug 09, 2016
Jkt 238001
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities as
they are defined in the Regulatory
Flexibility Act, 5 U.S.C. 601–612. The
Secretary estimates that, for any VEPFS
grant program, no more than ten nonrenewable grants will be awarded. For
each grant awarded, usually one of each,
but no more than a few, outcomes
payors, project coordinators, evaluators,
investors, and service providers will be
involved with the grant program. The
goal of these grants is to rehabilitate
Veterans with service-connected
disabilities with regard to employment.
Thus, an insubstantial number of small
entities will be affected by this interim
final rule and, accordingly, there will
not be a significant economic impact on
such affected entities. Therefore,
pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 605(b), this rule is
exempt from the initial and final
regulatory flexibility analysis
requirements of sections 603 and 604.
Unfunded Mandates
The Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
of 1995 requires, at 2 U.S.C. 1532, that
agencies prepare an assessment of
anticipated costs and benefits before
issuing any rule that may result in the
expenditure by State, local, and tribal
governments, in the aggregate, or by the
private sector, of $100 million or more
(adjusted annually for inflation) in any
one year. This interim final rule will
have no such effect on State, local, and
tribal governments, or on the private
sector.
Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance
The Catalog of Federal Domestic
Assistance number and title for the
program affected by this document is
64.116, Vocational Rehabilitation for
Disabled Veterans.
Signing Authority
The Secretary of Veterans Affairs, or
designee, approved this document and
authorized the undersigned to sign and
submit the document to the Office of the
Federal Register for publication
electronically as an official document of
the Department of Veterans Affairs.
Robert D. Snyder, Chief of Staff,
Department of Veterans Affairs,
approved this document on July 11,
2016, for publication.
Dated: August 3, 2016.
Jeffrey Martin,
Office Program Manager, Office of Regulation
Policy & Management Office of the Secretary,
Department of Veterans Affairs.
List of Subjects in 38 CFR Part 21
Administrative practice and
procedure, Armed forces, Civil rights,
Claims, Colleges and universities,
PO 00000
Frm 00035
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
52775
Conflict of interests, Education,
Employment, Grant programs—
education, Grant programs—veterans,
Health care, Loan programs—education,
Loan programs—veterans, Manpower
training programs, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements, Schools,
Travel and transportation expenses,
Veterans, Vocational education,
Vocational rehabilitation.
For the reasons stated in the
preamble, VA amends 38 CFR part 21,
subpart A as follows:
PART 21—VOCATIONAL
REHABILITATION AND EDUCATION
Subpart A—Vocational Rehabilitation
and Employment Under 38 U.S.C.
Chapter 31
1. The authority citation for part 21,
subpart A, continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 38 U.S.C. 501(a), chs. 18, 31,
and as noted in specific sections.
2. Add an undesignated center
heading and §§ 21.440 through 21.449 to
subpart A to read as follows:
■
Veterans Employment Pay for Success
Grant Program
Sec.
21.440 Purpose and scope.
21.441 Definitions.
21.442 VEPFS grants—general.
21.443 Permissible uses of VEPFS grant
funds.
21.444 Notice of funding availability.
21.445 Application.
21.446 Scoring and selection.
21.447 VEPFS grant agreement.
21.448 Recipient reporting requirements.
21.449 Recovery of funds.
§ 21.440
Purpose and scope.
Sections 21.440 through 21.449
establish and implement the Veterans
Employment Pay for Success (VEPFS)
grant program, which provides grants to
eligible entities to fund outcomes
payments for projects that are successful
in accomplishing employment
rehabilitation for Veterans with serviceconnected disabilities. These sections
apply only to the administration of the
VEPFS grant program, unless
specifically provided otherwise.
(Authority: 38 U.S.C. 501(d), 3119)
§ 21.441
Definitions.
For the purposes of §§ 21.440 through
21.449, and any Notices of Funding
Availability (NOFA) issued pursuant to
§§ 21.440 through 21.449, the following
definitions apply:
Applicant is an eligible entity that
submits an application for a VEPFS
grant announced in a NOFA.
E:\FR\FM\10AUR1.SGM
10AUR1
Lhorne on DSK30JT082PROD with RULES
52776
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 154 / Wednesday, August 10, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
Eligible entity is a public or nonprofit
agency, to include institutions of higher
learning.
Employment outcome is the
employment or earnings of a participant
in the intervention or control group
member after the service period.
Improving employment outcomes
means creating positive impact in terms
of these outcomes, where the results for
individuals that receive the intervention
are better than the results for a valid
control group that did not receive the
intervention.
Intervention is a service or technology
that is provided to individuals and is
intended to achieve certain results.
Outcomes payments are funds that are
paid to an investor or service provider
and that are released only for the
achievement of outcomes, as compared
to those of a control group, that meet
target levels that have been agreed to in
advance of the provision of intervention
(i.e., if positive impact has been created
by the intervention in terms of these
outcomes). When investors have
provided the upfront capital for the
project, these payments generally cover
repayment of the principal investment
and provide a modest return on
investment for any associated risks of
paying for the intervention upfront.
Pay for Success (PFS) agreement is a
multi-party agreement to deliver an
innovative or evidence-based
intervention intended to improve
outcomes for a targeted population
signed by the entities that constitute the
project partnership.
Project partnership is a collaboration
among entities that negotiate an
agreement and execute a project to
improve employment outcomes for
Veterans with service-connected
disabilities. The entities that may be
involved in a project partnership
include:
(1)(i) Outcomes payor. Entity that
receives a VEPFS grant and pays for
outcomes of services that meet target
levels that have been agreed to in
advance of the provision of the
intervention.
(ii) Project coordinator. Facilitates,
coordinates, and executes a PFS
agreement to improve employment
outcomes for Veterans with serviceconnected disabilities. With respect to
other PFS projects, project coordinators
are sometimes referred to as
intermediaries.
(iii) Evaluator. Independent entity
that determines the impact of the
services provided, including whether
the services have resulted in
employment outcomes that meet target
levels that have been agreed to in
VerDate Sep<11>2014
13:57 Aug 09, 2016
Jkt 238001
advance of the provision of the
intervention.
(iv) Investor. Person or entity that
provides upfront capital to cover costs
of providing services/delivering an
intervention and other associated costs
before a determination has been made as
to whether certain employment
outcomes have been achieved at pre-set
target levels.
(v) Service provider. Entity that
delivers an intervention designed to
achieve improved employment
outcomes for Veterans with serviceconnected disabilities.
(2) A full project partnership is a
project partnership that includes an
outcomes payor, evaluator, investor (if
the PFS agreement involves PFS
financing), and service provider. A
partial project partnership includes an
outcomes payor and at least one of the
following: Evaluator, investor (if the
PFS agreement involves PFS financing),
or service provider.
Recipient is the entity that receives a
VEPFS grant under §§ 21.440 through
21.449. The recipient is also the
outcomes payor.
Secretary refers to the Secretary of
Veterans Affairs.
Service-connected disability is a
disability that is ‘‘service-connected’’ as
defined in 38 CFR 3.1.
Social finance strategy is a method for
securing financial resources using an
investment approach that focuses on
achieving positive social and/or
environmental impact with some form
of financial return.
Strong evidence constitutes results
from previous studies, the designs of
which can support causal conclusions
(i.e., studies with high internal validity),
that include enough of the range of
participants and settings to support
scaling up to the state, regional, or
national level (i.e., studies with high
external validity).
Veteran has the same definition as
provided in 38 CFR 3.1.
Veterans Employment Pay for Success
(VEPFS) agreement is a PFS agreement
to deliver an innovative, evidence-based
intervention intended to improve
Veteran employment outcomes.
Veterans Employment Pay for Success
(VEPFS) project is a project with a
strategy for delivering a service with a
goal to significantly improve a current
condition with respect to
unemployment of a target Veteran
population and sufficient evidence to
support the theory behind the project
using a financial model that includes
cost savings by funding the project only
if it is successful.
PO 00000
Frm 00036
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
Work-plan is a document that
articulates tasks and milestones with
regard to a particular project.
(Authority: 38 U.S.C. 3119)
§ 21.442
VEPFS grants—general.
(a) VA may award a VEPFS grant only
to an eligible entity selected under
§ 21.446.
(b) The amount of Federal funding
available to be awarded in a VEPFS
grant will be specified in the NOFA.
(c) A VEPFS grant will be awarded for
a minimum of 5 years and a predetermined maximum number of years,
beginning on the date on which the
VEPFS grant is awarded, with the
availability of no-cost extensions.
(d) As a condition of receiving a
VEPFS grant, a recipient will be
required to provide matching funds
from non-Federal sources equal to or
greater than the amount of Federal grant
funds awarded, to be combined with the
amount of Federal grant funds awarded
and used as specified in § 21.443.
(e) A VEPFS grant award is not a
Veterans’ benefit. Decisions of the
Secretary are final and not subject to the
same appeal rights as decisions related
to Veterans’ benefits.
(Authority: 38 U.S.C. 3119)
§ 21.443
funds.
Permissible uses of VEPFS grant
(a) VEPFS grant funds may be used
only to fund outcomes payments if an
intervention achieves outcomes at a preset target level that has been agreed to
in a PFS agreement before service
delivery begins for a PFS project with a
goal to improve employment outcomes
for Veterans with service-connected
disabilities.
(b) To pay for the indirect costs of
administering a grant, regardless of
whether an intervention achieves
outcomes at a pre-set target level, a
recipient may:
(1) Use a Federally approved indirect
cost rate (a rate already negotiated with
the Federal Government);
(2) Use a 10% de minimis rate of
modified total direct costs;
(3) Negotiate an indirect cost rate for
the first time; or
(4) Claim certain costs directly
following 2 CFR 200.413.
(Authority: 38 U.S.C. 3119, 2 CFR 200.414)
§ 21.444
Notice of funding availability.
When funds are available for a VEPFS
grant, VA will publish a NOFA in the
Federal Register and on Grants.gov
(https://www.grants.gov). The NOFA will
identify:
(a) The location for obtaining grant
applications and the specific forms that
will be required;
E:\FR\FM\10AUR1.SGM
10AUR1
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 154 / Wednesday, August 10, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
(b) The date, time, and place for
submitting completed grant
applications;
(c) The total amount and type of funds
available and the maximum amount
available to a single applicant;
(d) Information regarding eligibility
and the scoring process;
(e) Any timeframes and manner for
payments under the grant; and
(f) Other information necessary for the
VEPFS grant application process, as
determined by VA, including contact
information for the VA office that will
oversee the VEPFS grant.
(Authority: 38 U.S.C. 501(d), 3119)
Lhorne on DSK30JT082PROD with RULES
§ 21.445
Application.
To apply for a VEPFS grant, eligible
entities must submit to VA a complete
application package in accordance with
the instructions in the NOFA and
include the forms specified in the
NOFA. Applications will be accepted
only through Grants.gov (https://
www.grants.gov). A complete grant
application package, as further
described in the NOFA, includes
standard forms specified in the NOFA
and the following:
(a) Project description, including a
description of the intervention, the
Veteran population to be served, and
anticipated employment outcomes;
(b) Description of anticipated project
partnership(s), including the
responsibilities of each of the partner
entities, the experience of any involved
entities with serving Veteran
populations, and other qualifications of
the involved entities that may be
relevant in carrying out responsibilities
of the project partnership. In procuring
partners such as the project coordinator
and investor, procurement standards set
forth in 2 CFR 200.317 through 200.326
must be followed;
(c) A work plan, including a budget
and timelines;
(d) Description of applicant’s
expertise or experience with PFS or
other social finance strategies or
experience administering programs that
serve Veterans with disabilities;
(e) Documentation of applicant’s
ability and capacity to administer the
project;
(f) Proof of matching funds already
secured, ability to secure matching
funds, or commitments received; and
(g) Any additional information as
deemed appropriate by VA and set forth
in the NOFA.
(Authority: 38 U.S.C. 3119)
§ 21.446
Scoring and selection.
(a) Scoring. VA will score only
complete applications received from
VerDate Sep<11>2014
13:57 Aug 09, 2016
Jkt 238001
eligible entities by the deadline
established in the NOFA. VA will score
applications using the following criteria:
(1) Project description. Applicant
identifies and describes an intervention
that is designed to improve employment
outcomes for Veterans with serviceconnected disabilities through a PFS
agreement and demonstrates with strong
evidence the ability of the intervention
to meet objectives. Project description
should explain and justify the need for
the intervention, and include concept,
size and scope of the project, and the
Veteran population to be served.
(2) Project partnership. Applicant
provides a description of the
partnership and the level of partnership
(full, partial, or none) attained at the
time of application.
(3) Work plan and budget. Applicant
provides a work plan that describes in
detail the timeline for the tasks outlined
in the project description and proposed
milestones. Applicant provides a budget
that specifies amount of outcome
payments and indirect and other
relevant costs.
(4) Expertise and capacity. Applicant
provides evidence of its past experience
with PFS or other social finance
strategies or experience administering
programs that serve Veterans with
disabilities, and of its ability and
capacity to successfully administer the
project.
(5) Match. Applicant provides
evidence of secured cash matching (1:1)
funds or of its ability to secure or
commitments to receive such funds.
(b) Selection of recipients. All
complete applications from eligible
entities will be scored using the criteria
in paragraph (a) of this section and
ranked in order from highest to lowest
total score. NOFA announcements may
also clarify the selection criteria in
paragraph (a). The relative weight (point
value) for each selection criterion will
be specified in the NOFA. Point values
will be assigned according to the
criterion’s importance in ensuring the
successful development and
implementation of a VEPFS project. VA
will award any VEPFS grant on the
primary basis of scores but will also
consider a risk assessment evaluation.
(Authority: 38 U.S.C. 3119)
§ 21.447
VEPFS grant agreement.
After an applicant is selected to
receive a VEPFS grant in accordance
with § 21.446, VA will draft a grant
agreement to be executed by VA and the
applicant. Upon execution of the VEPFS
grant agreement, VA will obligate grant
funds to cover the amount of the
approved grant, subject to the
availability of funding. The VEPFS grant
PO 00000
Frm 00037
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
52777
agreement will provide that the
recipient agrees, and will ensure that
each subcontractor (if applicable)
agrees, to:
(a) Operate the program in accordance
with the provisions of §§ 21.440 through
21.449, 2 CFR part 200, and the
applicant’s VEPFS grant application;
(b) Comply with such other terms and
conditions, including recordkeeping
and reports for program monitoring and
evaluation purposes, as VA may
establish in the Terms and Conditions of
the grant agreement for purposes of
carrying out the VEPFS program in an
effective and efficient manner; and
(c) Provide additional information
that VA requests with respect to:
(1) Program effectiveness, as defined
in the Terms and Conditions of the grant
agreement;
(2) Compliance with the Terms and
Conditions of the grant agreement; and
(3) Criteria for evaluation, as defined
in the Terms and Conditions of the grant
agreement.
(Authority: 38 U.S.C. 501(d), 3119)
§ 21.448
Recipient reporting requirements.
(a) Recipients must submit to VA a
quarterly report 30 days after the close
of each Federal fiscal quarter of the
grant period. The report must include
the following information:
(1) A detailed record of the time
involved and resources expended
administering the VEPFS program.
(2) The number of Veterans served,
including demographics of this
population.
(3) The types of employment
assistance provided.
(4) A full accounting of VEPFS grant
funds used or unused during the
quarter.
(5) A comparison of accomplishments
related to the objectives of the award.
(6) An explanation for any goals not
met.
(7) An analysis and explanation for
any cost overruns.
(b) VA may request additional reports
in the Terms and Conditions of the grant
agreement if necessary to allow VA to
fully and effectively assess program
accountability and effectiveness.
(Authority: 38 U.S.C. 501(d), 3119, 2 CFR
200.327–200.328)
§ 21.449
Recovery of funds.
If a recipient fails to comply with any
Federal statutes or regulations or the
terms and conditions of an award made
under §§ 21.440 through 21.449, VA
may impose additional conditions as
specified in 2 CFR 200.207 or, if noncompliance cannot be remedied, take
any appropriate actions specified in 2
E:\FR\FM\10AUR1.SGM
10AUR1
52778
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 154 / Wednesday, August 10, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
and the separate document describing
the full basis for this action are available
in the docket the EPA established under
Docket ID No. EPA–HQ–OAR–2010–
0505. In addition, following signature,
an electronic copy of this final action
and the document will be available on
the World Wide Web (WWW) at the
following address: https://
www3.epa.gov/airquality/oilandgas/
actions.html.
CFR part 200 as remedies for noncompliance.
(Authority: 38 U.S.C. 501(d), 3119, 2 CFR
200.338 through 200.342)
[FR Doc. 2016–18721 Filed 8–9–16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8320–01–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 60
[EPA–HQ–OAR–2010–0505; FRL–9950–34–
OAR]
Reconsideration of the Oil and Natural
Gas Sector: New Source Performance
Standards; Final Action
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Denial of petitions for
reconsideration.
AGENCY:
The U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA) is providing
notice that it has responded to 11
petitions for reconsideration of the final
rule titled ‘‘Oil and Natural Gas Sector:
New Source Performance Standards and
National Emission Standards for
Hazardous Air Pollutants Reviews,’’
published in the Federal Register on
August 16, 2012, and seven petitions for
reconsideration of subsequent
amendments published in the Federal
Register on September 23, 2013, and
December 31, 2014. The agency
previously granted reconsideration of
several discrete issues and took final
action on reconsideration through
documents published in the Federal
Register on September 23, 2013,
December 31, 2014, August 12, 2015,
and June 3, 2016. The Administrator
denied the remaining requests for
reconsideration in separate letters to the
petitioners. The basis for the EPA’s
action is set out fully in a separate
document available in the rulemaking
docket.
DATES: Effective August 10, 2016.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ms.
Lisa Thompson, Sector Policies and
Programs Division (E143–05), Office of
Air Quality Planning and Standards,
Environmental Protection Agency,
Research Triangle Park, North Carolina
27711; telephone number: (919) 541–
9775; fax number: (919) 541–3470;
email address: thompson.lisa@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Lhorne on DSK30JT082PROD with RULES
SUMMARY:
I. Where can I get a copy of this
document and other related
information?
A copy of this Federal Register
notice, the petitions for reconsideration,
VerDate Sep<11>2014
13:57 Aug 09, 2016
Jkt 238001
II. Judicial Review
Section 307(b)(1) of the Clean Air Act
(CAA) specifies which Federal Courts of
Appeal have venue over petitions for
review of final EPA actions. This section
provides, in part, that ‘‘a petition for
review of action of the Administrator in
promulgating . . . any standard of
performance or requirement under
section [111] of [the CAA],’’ or any other
‘‘nationally applicable’’ final action,
‘‘may be filed only in the United States
Court of Appeals for the District of
Columbia.’’
The EPA has determined that its
action denying the petitions for
reconsideration is nationally applicable
for purposes of CAA section 307(b)(1)
because the action directly affects the
Oil and Natural Gas Sector: New Source
Performance Standards and National
Emission Standards for Hazardous Air
Pollutants Reviews, which are
nationally applicable CAA section 111
standards. Thus, any petitions for
review of the EPA’s decision to deny
petitioners’ requests for reconsideration
must be filed in the United States Court
of Appeals for the District of Columbia
Circuit by October 11, 2016.
III. Description of Action
On August 16, 2012, pursuant to CAA
section 111(b) of the CAA, the EPA
published the final rule titled ‘‘Oil and
Natural Gas Sector: New Source
Performance Standards and National
Emission Standards for Hazardous Air
Pollutants Reviews.’’ 77 FR 49490. The
EPA published subsequent amendments
to the rule on September 23, 2013 (78
FR 58416), and December 31, 2014 (79
FR 79018). Following publication of
these final rules, the Administrator
received petitions for reconsideration of
certain provisions of the final rules
pursuant to CAA section 307(d)(7)(B).
CAA section 307(d)(7)(B) requires the
EPA to convene a proceeding for
reconsideration of a rule if a party
raising an objection to the rule ‘‘can
demonstrate to the Administrator that it
was impracticable to raise such
objection within [the public comment
period] or if the grounds for such
objection arose after the period for
public comment (but within the time
PO 00000
Frm 00038
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
specified for judicial review) and if such
objection is of central relevance to the
outcome of the rule.’’ The requirement
to convene a proceeding to reconsider a
rule is, thus, based on the petitioner
demonstrating to the EPA both: (1) That
it was impracticable to raise the
objection during the comment period, or
that the grounds for such objection arose
after the comment period, but within
the time specified for judicial review
(i.e., within 60 days after publication of
the final rulemaking notice in the
Federal Register, see CAA section
307(b)(1)); and (2) that the objection is
of central relevance to the outcome of
the rule.
The EPA received 18 petitions for
reconsideration of the new source
performance standards and subsequent
amendments from the following 13
organizations or groups of organizations:
• America’s Natural Gas Alliance and the
American Exploration and Production
Council (ANGA & AXPC)
• American Petroleum Institute (API) (3
petitions)
• California Communities Against Toxics,
California Safe Schools, Clean Air Council,
Coalition For A Safe Environment, Desert
Citizens Against Pollution, Natural Resources
Defense Council, and the Sierra Club
(Earthjustice)
• Clean Air Council, Clean Air Task Force,
Environmental Defense Fund, Group Against
Smog and Pollution, the Natural Resources
Defense Council, and the Sierra Club
• Gas Processors Association (GPA) (2
petitions)
• Independent Petroleum Association of
America, Independent Oil and Gas
Association of West Virginia, Inc., Kentucky
Oil & Gas Association, Inc., Indiana Oil and
Gas Association, Pennsylvania Independent
Oil & Gas Association, Ohio Oil and Gas
Association, Illinois Oil & Gas Association
• Interstate Natural Gas Association of
America
• M-Squared Products & Services, Inc. (MSquared)
• REM Technology Inc.
• Texas Commission On Environmental
Quality (TCEQ)
• Texas Oil & Gas Association (TXOGA) (2
petitions)
• Texas Pipeline Association
• Western Energy Alliance (WEA) (2
petitions)
The EPA previously granted
reconsideration of all issues in seven of
the petitions and on several discrete
issues contained in some of the other
petitions it received and took final
action on reconsideration through
documents published in the Federal
Register on September 23, 2013,
December 31, 2014, August 12, 2015,
and June 3, 2016. The EPA has now
denied the issues in the remaining 11
petitions as not satisfying one or both of
the statutory conditions for compelled
E:\FR\FM\10AUR1.SGM
10AUR1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 81, Number 154 (Wednesday, August 10, 2016)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 52770-52778]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2016-18721]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF VETERANS AFFAIRS
38 CFR Part 21
RIN 2900-AP72
Veterans Employment Pay for Success Grant Program
AGENCY: Department of Veterans Affairs.
ACTION: Interim final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) is establishing a
grant program (Veterans Employment Pay for Success (VEPFS)) under the
authority of the U.S.C. to award grants to eligible entities to fund
projects that are successful in accomplishing employment rehabilitation
for Veterans with service-connected disabilities. VA will award grants
on the basis of an eligible entity's proposed use of a Pay for Success
(PFS) strategy to achieve goals. This interim final rule establishes
regulations for awarding a VEPFS grant, including the general process
for awarding the grant, criteria and parameters for evaluating grant
applications, priorities related to the award of a grant, and general
requirements and guidance for administering a VEPFS grant program.
DATES: Effective Date: This rule is effective on August 10, 2016.
Comment Date: Comments must be received on or before October 11,
2016.
ADDRESSES: Written comments may be submitted through
www.Regulations.gov; by mail or hand-delivery to Director, Regulation
Policy and Management (02REG), Department of Veterans Affairs, 810
Vermont Avenue NW., Room 1068, Washington, DC 20420; or by fax to (202)
273-9026. Comments should indicate that they are submitted in response
to ``RIN 2900-AP72--Veterans Employment Pay for Success Grant
Program.'' Copies of comments received will be available for public
inspection in the Office of Regulation Policy and Management, Room
1068, between the hours of 8:00 a.m. and 4:30 p.m., Monday through
Friday (except holidays). Please call (202) 461-4902 for an
appointment. (This is not a toll-free number.) In addition, during the
comment period, comments may be viewed online through the Federal
Docket Management System (FDMS) at www.Regulations.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Patrick Littlefield, Director, VA
Center for Innovation, Department of Veterans Affairs, (08), 810
Vermont Ave. NW., Washington, DC, (202) 256-7176. (This is not a toll-
free number.)
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: VA's Vocational Rehabilitation & Employment
(VR&E) Service provides services and assistance necessary to enable
Veterans with compensable service-connected disabilities and employment
barriers to achieve maximum independence in daily living and, to the
maximum extent feasible, to become employable and to obtain and
maintain suitable employment. (A Veteran with a noncompensable service-
connected disability is not entitled to vocational rehabilitation
services and assistance under chapter 31 of title 38, United States
Code. See 38 U.S.C. 3102.) Section 3119 of title 38, United States
Code, authorizes the Secretary of Veterans Affairs (Secretary) to make
grants to or contract with public or nonprofit agencies, including
institutions of higher learning, to advance ``the knowledge, methods,
techniques, and resources available for use in rehabilitation programs
for veterans.'' Section 3119 specifically authorizes the Secretary to
make grants to such agencies to conduct or provide support for projects
which are ``designed to increase the resources and potential for
accomplishing the rehabilitation of disabled veterans.'' (See also
implementing regulation at 38 CFR 21.390.)
PFS is a strategy for successfully attaining positive social or
environmental outcomes by paying for
[[Page 52771]]
an intervention to achieve such outcomes only after the intervention
produces these outcomes. Using a PFS strategy, a party to an agreement
agrees to pay for services for specific people or communities in need
of particular services only if and when an agreed-upon set of outcomes
related to meeting the people's or communities' needs has been achieved
or a level of impact has been verified. Instead of funding services
regardless of the results, payments are made only if interventions
achieve the outcomes agreed upon in advance. For example, instead of
paying for the provision of job training without knowing whether such
training will have a successful result, an entity might use a PFS
strategy to pay for the provision of job training only when individuals
gain stable employment in good jobs. When the party committed to pay
for outcomes is a Government entity, taxpayers will not have to pay for
ineffective services. However, the party that provides services may not
have the funding for the services before outcomes are measured. PFS
agreements can incorporate PFS financing, sometimes referred to as
``social impact bonds,'' to cover the costs of the services until
success is achieved and payments are due. PFS financing involves third-
party, independent investors that provide the financing necessary to
carry out the intervention. In addition, a PFS model typically involves
a project coordinator or intermediary to facilitate and manage the
project, a service provider to deliver the intervention, and an
independent evaluator to determine whether the intervention achieves
the desired outcomes.
There is a need to find new, innovative methods for rehabilitating
Veterans with compensable service-connected disabilities (as defined in
38 CFR 3.1(k)) who qualify for benefits under VA's VR&E program so that
they become employable and are ultimately able to obtain and maintain
suitable employment. Through PFS grant programs, which may serve
various Veteran populations including those Veterans with
noncompensable service-connected disabilities who do not qualify for
VR&E benefits, we hope to obtain information to establish new,
innovative methods for rehabilitating Veterans who qualify for VR&E
benefits. PFS offers an economical mechanism, which can save taxpayers'
money, for exploring the resources and techniques that are available
for rehabilitating Veterans with service-connected disabilities with
regard to employment. We interpret the authority in Sec. 3119 to award
grants to conduct or provide support for projects which are designed to
increase the potential for accomplishing the rehabilitation of disabled
Veterans broadly, to allow for the funding of projects that serve
Veterans with either compensable or noncompensable service-connected
disabilities. By funding projects that serve Veterans with either
compensable or noncompensable service-connected disabilities, there is
increased potential to discover new techniques and resources for use in
VA's VR&E program to enable Veterans who qualify for VR&E services to
become employable and to obtain and maintain suitable employment.
Accordingly, under the authority of Sec. 3119, VA will award grants
to eligible entities that will become ``outcomes payors,'' to
administer payment for outcomes of interventions that are successful in
accomplishing employment rehabilitation for Veterans with service-
connected disabilities. In other words, VA will fund outcomes of
projects that achieve favorable employment outcomes related to success
in the ability or potential to secure or sustain stable employment or
to achieve increased earnings of Veterans with service-connected
disabilities. The funding will be referred to as ``outcomes payments''
and the grant known as the ``Veterans Employment Pay for Success
(VEPFS)'' grant. This interim final rule establishes regulations for
awarding a VEPFS grant, including the general process for awarding the
grant, criteria and parameters for evaluating grant applications,
priorities related to the award of a grant, and general requirements
and guidance for administering a VEPFS grant program.
Sec. 21.440 Purpose and Scope.
Section 21.440 sets forth the purpose of a VEPFS grant program and
explains what the program provides. This section indicates that VA may
provide a grant to an eligible entity to fund outcomes payments for a
project that achieves favorable employment outcomes for Veterans with
service-connected disabilities. There is a need to find new and
innovative methods for rehabilitating Veterans with compensable
service-connected disabilities with regard to employment and, as noted
above, the VEPFS grant program offers an economical mechanism, which
can save taxpayers' money, for exploring the resources and techniques
that may be available to address that need.
Sec. 21.441 Definitions.
Section 21.441 defines terms used in Sec. Sec. 21.440-21.449 and
any Notices of Funding Availability (NOFA) issued pursuant to
Sec. Sec. 21.440-21.449. The definitions are set out in the regulatory
text, but we elaborate on some of them as follows:
``Eligible entity'' is defined as a public or nonprofit agency, to
include institutions of higher learning. Section 3119 of title 38,
United States Code, provides authorization to make grants to public or
nonprofit agencies, including institutions of higher learning. We
interpret the term ``nonprofit agency,'' as used in Sec. 3119, to
include tax-exempt, incorporated or unincorporated organizations that
serve the public interest and generally have a charitable, educational,
scientific, religious, or literary goal. We interpret the term ``public
agency'', as used in Sec. 3119, to include the government of the United
States or of a State or political subdivision of a State.
``Employment outcome'' is defined as the employment or earnings of
a participant in the intervention or control group member after the
service period. The VEPFS program will measure certain outcomes,
including competitive employment, skill development, achieving a
sustained period of employment, wage-earnings, and achieving employment
that aligns with the interests and aptitude of the job seeker.
Improving employment outcomes means creating positive impact in terms
of these outcomes, where the results for individuals that receive the
intervention are better than the results for a valid control group that
did not receive the intervention.
``Intervention'' is defined as a service or technology that is
provided to individuals and intended to achieve certain results.
Examples of service interventions or technological interventions to
improve Veteran employment outcomes include, but are not limited to,
support services, employment coaching, mental health treatment,
vocational training, occupational therapy, community engagement, and
outreach.
``Project partnership'' is defined as a collaboration among
entities that negotiate an agreement and execute a project to improve
employment outcomes for Veterans with service-connected disabilities.
For the purpose of the VEPFS grant program, a project partnership is
not a distinct legal entity. Section 21.441 includes definitions for
the entities that may be involved in a project partnership.
[[Page 52772]]
``Social finance strategy'' is defined as a method for securing
financial resources using an investment approach that focuses on
achieving positive social and/or environmental impact with some form of
financial return. Examples of social finance strategies include: (1)
Matching taxpayer dollars with non-government contributions to extend
the impact of not-for-profit organizations; (2) simplifying access to
government funding for community organizations and institutions of
higher learning.
``Strong evidence'' is defined as results from previous studies,
the designs of which can support causal conclusions (i.e., studies with
high internal validity), which include enough of the range of
participants and settings to support scaling up to the state, regional,
or national level (i.e., studies with high external validity). The
following are examples of strong evidence: (1) More than one well-
designed and well-implemented experimental study or well-designed and
well-implemented quasi-experimental study that supports the
effectiveness of the practice, strategy, or program; or (2) one large,
well-designed and well-implemented randomized controlled, multisite
trial that supports the effectiveness of the practice, strategy, or
program.
``Work-plan'' is defined as a document that articulates tasks and
milestones with regard to a particular project. A work plan contains a
detailed overview of all activities that will be undertaken to complete
a project, and the goals, objectives, outcomes, responsible parties,
and timeline for each task of a project, which collectively serve as
the roadmap for execution of project tasks.
Sec. 21.442 VEPFS Grants--General.
Section 21.442 provides general information pertaining to VEPFS
grants. Section 21.442(a) establishes that only an eligible entity may
receive a VEPFS grant. Section 21.442(b) establishes that the available
grant funding amount will be specified in the NOFA. The amount of
funding VA may provide in a VEPFS grant is not limited by or otherwise
specified in statute. In addition, VA may combine its funds with funds
of another Federal entity to increase the amount available for a VEPFS
project. VA will determine the amount of funding available for an
individual VEPFS project, including any contributions from another
Federal agency, on a case-by-case basis and will announce the amount of
available grant funding for that VEPFS project in the applicable NOFA.
Section 21.442(c) states that the period for a VEPFS grant will be a
minimum of 5 years and a pre-determined maximum number of years, as
specified in the NOFA, beginning on the date on which the VEPFS grant
is awarded, with the availability of no-cost extensions. At the end of
the pre-determined maximum period, the effectiveness of the project
will be assessed to determine the project's success. Five years is the
minimum length of time necessary to maximize the effectiveness of a
project and obtain meaningful data on a project's success through
periodic reporting. This timeframe allows 1 year to develop, refine and
launch the project, 3 years for service delivery to produce outcomes
and data, and 1 year for a thorough evaluation of outcomes. Section
21.442(d) specifies that a recipient must provide matching funds from
non-Federal sources that are at least equal to or greater than the
amount of Federal grant funds awarded, which will be combined with the
amount of Federal grant funds awarded to be used to fund the proposed
PFS project as a condition of receiving a VEPFS grant. Requiring
matching funds increases the amount of available funding for VEPFS
projects. Section 21.442(e) specifies that a VEPFS grant is not a
Veterans' benefit, and, therefore, any decisions of the Secretary as to
whether to award a VEPFS grant are final and not subject to the same
rights of appeal as decisions related to Veterans' benefits.
Sec. 21.443 Permissible Uses of VEPFS Grant Funds.
Section 21.443(a) specifies that VEPFS grant funds may be used to
make outcomes payments only if an intervention achieves outcomes at a
pre-set level that has been agreed to in a PFS agreement before service
delivery begins for a PFS project with a goal to improve employment
outcomes for Veterans with service-connected disabilities. As stated
above, the reason for using a PFS strategy is to avoid using taxpayer
dollars for ineffective services and therefore save taxpayer money. VA
is specifically funding PFS projects that aim to improve employment
outcomes for Veterans with service-connected disabilities to carry out
Congress' intention that VA ``advance the knowledge, methods,
techniques, and resources available for use in rehabilitation programs
for veterans'' and increase the ``potential for accomplishing the
rehabilitation of disabled veterans.''
In addition, to cover the indirect costs of administering the grant
(costs associated with general administration and expenses), Sec.
21.443(b) allows a recipient to use a Federally approved indirect cost
rate (a rate already negotiated with the Federal Government), use a 10%
de minimis rate of modified total direct costs, negotiate an indirect
cost rate for the first time, or claim certain costs directly following
2 CFR 200.413 so as to not limit the pool of eligible applicants to
entities that will use a particular permissible option. This is
consistent with regulatory guidance to Federal agencies that provide
grant awards to non-Federal entities, including States, local
governments, Indian tribes, institutions of higher education, and non-
profit organizations issued by the Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) and codified in in part 200 of title 2 of the Code of Federal
Regulations. 2 CFR 200.414; see also 2 CFR 200.69. These administrative
costs may be claimed before outcomes are measured and regardless of
whether outcomes are achieved at pre-set levels.
Sec. 21.444 Notice of Funding Availability.
Section 21.444 states that when funds are available to award a
VEPFS grant, VA will publish a NOFA announcing the funding opportunity
in the Federal Register and on Grants.gov (https://www.grants.gov)
providing specific details about the opportunity. Section 21.444, in
paragraphs (a)-(f), lists generally the information the NOFA will
include. Section 200.203 of title 2, Code of Federal Regulations,
requires the issuance of a NOFA, which includes specific identifying
information, information describing the funding opportunity, and
information regarding the award, eligibility, application, application
review, and Federal award administration. OMB requires the issuance of
a NOFA and publication of this information to ensure that eligible
entities have the information required to apply for grants.
Sec. 21.445 Application.
Section 21.445 identifies VEPFS grant application procedures and
the information required to constitute a complete application package.
This section requires eligible entities to submit a complete grant
application package, in accordance with instructions provided in the
NOFA through Grants.gov (https://www.grants.gov) to apply for a VEPFS
grant. Use of this Web site is the easiest and most efficient way to
process grant applications. Furthermore, eligible entities submitting
an application for a VEPFS grant will likely be familiar with this Web
site. In describing the information a complete application package must
contain, paragraph (a)
[[Page 52773]]
requires the complete application to contain a project description,
including a description of the intervention, the Veteran population to
be served, and anticipated employment outcomes. VA needs this
information to determine whether the project proposed has a reasonable
chance of providing positive employment outcomes for Veterans with
service-connected disabilities. Paragraph (b) requires the complete
application to contain a description of the anticipated project
partnership(s), including the responsibilities of each of the partner
entities, the experience of any involved entities with serving Veteran
populations, and other qualifications of the involved entities that may
be relevant in carrying out responsibilities of the project
partnership. VA needs this information to assess the likelihood of
success an applicant will have carrying out a VEPFS project. In
addition, paragraph (b) informs applicants that, in procuring partners
such as the project coordinator and investor, procurement standards set
forth in 2 CFR 200.317-200.326 must be followed. Paragraph (c) requires
the complete application to include a work plan with a budget and
timelines. These disclosures will help reviewers assess how close the
project is to beginning to provide services and the extent to which an
applicant has considered all aspects of planning. Paragraph (d)
requires the complete application to contain a description of
applicant's expertise or experience with PFS or other social finance
strategies or experience administering programs that serve Veterans
with disabilities. Paragraph (e) requires the complete application to
include documentation of an applicant's ability and capacity to
administer the project. Having the information obtained from the
requirements of paragraphs (d) and (e) will also allow VA to assess the
likelihood of success of a VEPFS project. Paragraph (f) requires the
complete application to include proof of matching funds already
secured, the applicant's ability to secure matching funds, or
commitments of matching funds the applicant has received. Reviewers
need this documentation to confirm an applicant's ability to meet the
VEPFS grant funding requirements. Paragraph (g) requires that the
complete application contain any additional information VA deems
appropriate and sets out in the NOFA so that VA can tailor the NOFA as
necessary.
Sec. 21.446 Scoring and Selection.
Section 21.446(a) states that VA will score only complete
applications received from eligible entities by the deadline
established in the NOFA and identifies the criteria to be used in
selecting a recipient. Selection of a recipient will be based on the
likelihood of successful implementation of the project and the
likelihood that the project will meet objectives. The information
described in Sec. 21.446(a) will allow VA to make such determination
regarding the likelihood of project success.
Section 21.446(b) indicates that NOFA announcements may clarify the
selection criteria in paragraph (a) and will specify the relative
weight (point value) assigned for each selection criterion according to
the criterion's importance in ensuring the successful development and
implementation of a VEPFS project and that eligible entities will be
ranked in order from highest to lowest total score. This section also
indicates that VA will award any VEPFS grant on the primary basis of
scores but will also consider a risk assessment evaluation.
Sec. 21.447 VEPFS Grant Agreement.
Section 21.447 states that VA will draft a grant agreement for
execution between VA and the applicant selected to receive a VEPFS
grant, and VA will obligate the grant funds to cover the amount of the
approved grant, subject to the availability of funding, upon execution
of the agreement. This section also states that the VEPFS grant
agreement will provide that the recipient agrees (and will ensure that
any subcontractors agree) to: Operate the program in accordance with
the provisions of Sec. Sec. 21.440-21.449, 2 CFR part 200, and the
applicant's VEPFS grant application; comply with such other terms and
conditions, including recordkeeping and reports for program monitoring
and evaluation purposes, as VA may establish for purposes of carrying
out the VEPFS program in an effective and efficient manner; and provide
any additional information VA requests in the manner and timeframe VA
specifies. Part 200 provides uniform guidance and government-wide terms
and conditions for the management of awards and the administration of
Federal grants, and this rulemaking provides additional guidance and
conditions for the administration of VEPFS grants in particular.
Adherence to the government-wide rules is mandatory and compliance with
the additional rules specific to VEPFS grants will ensure program
integrity across any VEPFS grants VA awards. In addition, timely and
accurate reporting is critical to allow VA to evaluate the VEPFS
program.
Sec. 21.448 Recipient Reporting Requirements.
Section 21.448 requires recipients to submit a quarterly report 30
days after the close of each Federal fiscal quarter of the grant period
that includes a detailed record of the time involved and resources
expended administering the VEPFS program; the number of Veterans
served, including demographics of this population; the types of
employment assistance provided; a full accounting of VEPFS grant funds
used or unused during the quarter; a comparison of accomplishments
related to the objectives of the award; an explanation for any goals
not met; and an analysis and explanation for any cost overruns. With
such information, VA can effectively analyze program performance and
ensure that a recipient is using grant funds in accordance with the
grant agreement. In addition, Sec. 21.448 requires recipients to
provide additional reports if necessary to allow VA to assess program
accountability and effectiveness on an ongoing basis.
Sec. 21.449 Recovery of Funds.
Section 21.449 specifies that VA can impose additional conditions
as specified in 2 CFR 200.207 if a recipient fails to comply with any
Federal statutes or regulations or the terms and conditions of an award
made under Sec. Sec. 21.440-21.449. Section 21.449 also allows VA to
take any appropriate actions specified in 2 CFR part 200 as remedies
for non-compliance if non-compliance cannot be remedied. These measures
help safeguard Federal funds and ensure appropriate use of the VEPFS
grant funds awarded.
Administrative Procedure Act
In accordance with 5 U.S.C. 553(b)(B) and (d)(3), the Secretary
finds that there is good cause to dispense with the opportunity for
prior notice and comment and good cause to publish this rule with an
immediate effective date. The Secretary finds that it is impracticable
and contrary to the public interest to delay this rule for the purpose
of soliciting prior public comment or to have a delayed effective date.
As stated above, the Secretary is issuing this rule because there is a
need to find new methods for rehabilitating Veterans with service-
connected disabilities so that they become employable and are able to
obtain and maintain suitable employment. This rulemaking provides the
opportunity for the discovery of new methods for rehabilitating
Veterans with service-connected disabilities with regard to employment
using a strategy that will
[[Page 52774]]
save taxpayer money. However, the funding for a grant which would be
awarded based on a NOFA to be published concurrently with this interim
final rule, and which will be used to fund a project that achieves
favorable employment outcomes for Veterans with a service-connected
disability of post-traumatic stress disorder, is available only in this
current fiscal year and must be obligated by September 30, 2016, if it
is to be used for such purpose. To provide sufficient time to obligate
the funds by September 30, 2016, the regulations established by this
rulemaking must be in effect by August 9, 2016. Failure to obligate the
funds by September 30, 2016, will cause the funds to expire.
Because this interim final rule will serve an important Veterans'
need in an economical way, which would not be possible if publication
were to be delayed, the Secretary finds that it is impracticable and
contrary to the public interest to delay this rule for the purpose of
soliciting advance public comment or to have a delayed effective date.
Accordingly, VA is issuing this rule as an interim final rule with an
immediate effective date. We will consider and address any comments
received within 60 days of the date this interim final rule is
published in the Federal Register.
Executive Orders 12866 and 13563
Executive Orders 12866 and 13563 direct agencies to assess the
costs and benefits of available regulatory alternatives and, when
regulation is necessary, to select regulatory approaches that maximize
net benefits (including potential economic, environmental, public
health and safety effects, and other advantages; distributive impacts;
and equity). Executive Order 13563 (Improving Regulation and Regulatory
Review) emphasizes the importance of quantifying both costs and
benefits, reducing costs, harmonizing rules, and promoting flexibility.
Executive Order 12866 (Regulatory Planning and Review) defines a
``significant regulatory action'' requiring review by OMB, unless OMB
waives such review, as ``any regulatory action that is likely to result
in a rule that may: (1) Have an annual effect on the economy of $100
million or more or adversely affect in a material way the economy, a
sector of the economy, productivity, competition, jobs, the
environment, public health or safety, or State, local, or tribal
governments or communities; (2) Create a serious inconsistency or
otherwise interfere with an action taken or planned by another agency;
(3) Materially alter the budgetary impact of entitlements, grants, user
fees, or loan programs or the rights and obligations of recipients
thereof; or (4) Raise novel legal or policy issues arising out of legal
mandates, the President's priorities, or the principles set forth in
the Executive Order.''
The economic, interagency, budgetary, legal, and policy
implications of this regulatory action have been examined, and it has
been determined not to be a significant regulatory action under
Executive Order 12866. VA's impact analysis can be found as a
supporting document at https://www.regulations.gov, usually within 48
hours after the rulemaking document is published. Additionally, a copy
of the rulemaking and its impact analysis are available on VA's Web
site at https://www.va.gov/orpm/, by following the link for ``VA
Regulations Published From FY 2004 Through Fiscal Year to Date.''
Paperwork Reduction Act
This interim final rule includes provisions constituting
collections of information under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(44 U.S.C. 3501-3521) that require approval by OMB. Specifically,
sections 21.445, 21.447, and 21.448 contain collections of information
under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995. VA has submitted the
following information collection request to OMB for review and
clearance in accordance with the emergency review procedures of the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995. The proposed information collection is
published to obtain comments from the public and affected agencies. An
emergency approval under the Paperwork Reduction Act is only valid for
180 days. Comments should be directed to OMB, Office of Information and
Regulatory Affairs, Attention: Department of Veterans Affairs Desk
Officer, Washington, DC 20530, with copies sent by mail or hand
delivery to the Director, Regulation Policy and Management (02REG),
Department of Veterans Affairs, 810 Vermont Avenue NW., Room 1068,
Washington, DC 20420; fax to (202) 273-9026; email to
www.Regulations.gov. Comments should indicate that they are submitted
in response to ``RIN 2900-AP72.''
A regular review of this information collection will also be
undertaken and announced in a future Federal Register notice indicating
approval of this collection of information under the emergency review
procedures of the Paperwork Reduction Act. All comments and
suggestions, or questions regarding additional information, including
obtaining a copy of the proposed information collection instrument with
instructions, should be directed to Patrick Littlefield, Director, VA
Center for Innovation, Department of Veterans Affairs, (08), 810
Vermont Ave. NW., Washington, DC, (202) 256-7176. We request written
comments and suggestions from the public and affected agencies
concerning the proposed emergency collection of information.
The Department considers comments by the public on proposed
collections of information in--
Evaluating whether the proposed collections of information
are necessary for the proper performance of the functions of the
Department, including whether the information will have practical
utility;
Evaluating the accuracy of the Department's estimate of
the burden of the proposed collections of information, including the
validity of the methodology and assumptions used;
Enhancing the quality, usefulness, and clarity of the
information to be collected; and
Minimizing the burden of the collections of information on
those who are to respond, including through the use of appropriate
automated, electronic, mechanical, or other technological collection
techniques or other forms of information technology, e.g., permitting
electronic submission of responses.
The collections of information contained in 38 CFR 21.445, 21.447,
and 21.448 are described immediately following this paragraph, under
their respective titles.
Title: Grant Applications.
Summary of collection of information: The new collection
of information in proposed 38 CFR 21.445 would require applicants to
submit a complete VEPFS grant application.
Description of need for information and proposed use of
information: The collection of information is necessary to award grants
to eligible entities. VA will use this information to decide whether an
applicant meets the requirements and satisfies the scoring criteria for
award of VEPFS grants under 38 U.S.C. 3119.
Description of likely respondents: Public and non-profit
entities, including institutions of higher learning, that have an
interest in serving Veterans with service-connected disabilities.
Estimated number of respondents: 25 in FY 2016; 25 in FY
2017; 25 in FY 2018.
Estimated frequency of responses: This is a one-time
collection.
Estimated average burden per response: 80 hours.
[[Page 52775]]
Estimated total annual reporting and recordkeeping burden:
2,000 hours in FY 2016; 2,000 hours in FY 2017; 2,000 hours in 2018.
Title: Quarterly Fiscal Reports.
Summary of collection of information: The new collection
of information in proposed 38 CFR 21.447(a)(1) and 21.448(a) would
require each recipient to agree in the grant agreement to submit
quarterly reports, which would include detailed records of the time
expended and employment outcomes accomplished in the provision of VEPFS
activities, accounting of how the grant funds were used.
Description of need for information and proposed use of
information: The collection of information is necessary to determine
compliance with the requirements for a grant.
Description of likely respondents: Public and non-profit
entities, including institutions of higher learning, that have an
interest in serving Veterans with service-connected disabilities.
Estimated number of respondents: 1 in FY 2017, up to 10 in
FY 2018, up to 10 in FY 2019.
Estimated frequency of responses: 4 quarterly reports per
year for 5 years.
Estimated average burden per response: 1 hour.
Estimated total annual reporting and recordkeeping burden:
4 hours in FY 2017, 44 hours in FY 2018, 84 hours in FY 2019, 84 hours
in 2020, 84 hours in 2021, 80 hours in 2022, 40 hours in 2023.
The regulatory terms also authorize VA to impose additional
recordkeeping or reporting requirements as defined in the Terms and
Conditions of the grant agreement (38 CFR 21.447(a)(2)), request
additional information as defined in the Terms and Conditions of the
grant agreement (38 CFR 21.447(a)(3)), and request additional reports
in the Terms and Conditions of the grant agreement if necessary to
fully and effectively assess program accountability and effectiveness
(38 CFR 21.448(b)). Because these information collection requirements
will depend on the terms and conditions of the grant agreement for a
particular funding opportunity, VA is not seeking emergency approval
for these regulatory provisions at this time. Rather, VA will more
clearly define and articulate these potential record-keeping and
reporting requirements when it submits the PRA package when it
undertakes a regular review of this collection.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Secretary hereby certifies that this interim final rule will
not have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small
entities as they are defined in the Regulatory Flexibility Act, 5
U.S.C. 601-612. The Secretary estimates that, for any VEPFS grant
program, no more than ten non-renewable grants will be awarded. For
each grant awarded, usually one of each, but no more than a few,
outcomes payors, project coordinators, evaluators, investors, and
service providers will be involved with the grant program. The goal of
these grants is to rehabilitate Veterans with service-connected
disabilities with regard to employment. Thus, an insubstantial number
of small entities will be affected by this interim final rule and,
accordingly, there will not be a significant economic impact on such
affected entities. Therefore, pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 605(b), this rule is
exempt from the initial and final regulatory flexibility analysis
requirements of sections 603 and 604.
Unfunded Mandates
The Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 requires, at 2 U.S.C.
1532, that agencies prepare an assessment of anticipated costs and
benefits before issuing any rule that may result in the expenditure by
State, local, and tribal governments, in the aggregate, or by the
private sector, of $100 million or more (adjusted annually for
inflation) in any one year. This interim final rule will have no such
effect on State, local, and tribal governments, or on the private
sector.
Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance
The Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance number and title for the
program affected by this document is 64.116, Vocational Rehabilitation
for Disabled Veterans.
Signing Authority
The Secretary of Veterans Affairs, or designee, approved this
document and authorized the undersigned to sign and submit the document
to the Office of the Federal Register for publication electronically as
an official document of the Department of Veterans Affairs. Robert D.
Snyder, Chief of Staff, Department of Veterans Affairs, approved this
document on July 11, 2016, for publication.
Dated: August 3, 2016.
Jeffrey Martin,
Office Program Manager, Office of Regulation Policy & Management Office
of the Secretary, Department of Veterans Affairs.
List of Subjects in 38 CFR Part 21
Administrative practice and procedure, Armed forces, Civil rights,
Claims, Colleges and universities, Conflict of interests, Education,
Employment, Grant programs--education, Grant programs--veterans, Health
care, Loan programs--education, Loan programs--veterans, Manpower
training programs, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Schools,
Travel and transportation expenses, Veterans, Vocational education,
Vocational rehabilitation.
For the reasons stated in the preamble, VA amends 38 CFR part 21,
subpart A as follows:
PART 21--VOCATIONAL REHABILITATION AND EDUCATION
Subpart A--Vocational Rehabilitation and Employment Under 38 U.S.C.
Chapter 31
0
1. The authority citation for part 21, subpart A, continues to read as
follows:
Authority: 38 U.S.C. 501(a), chs. 18, 31, and as noted in
specific sections.
0
2. Add an undesignated center heading and Sec. Sec. 21.440 through
21.449 to subpart A to read as follows:
Veterans Employment Pay for Success Grant Program
Sec.
21.440 Purpose and scope.
21.441 Definitions.
21.442 VEPFS grants--general.
21.443 Permissible uses of VEPFS grant funds.
21.444 Notice of funding availability.
21.445 Application.
21.446 Scoring and selection.
21.447 VEPFS grant agreement.
21.448 Recipient reporting requirements.
21.449 Recovery of funds.
Sec. 21.440 Purpose and scope.
Sections 21.440 through 21.449 establish and implement the Veterans
Employment Pay for Success (VEPFS) grant program, which provides grants
to eligible entities to fund outcomes payments for projects that are
successful in accomplishing employment rehabilitation for Veterans with
service-connected disabilities. These sections apply only to the
administration of the VEPFS grant program, unless specifically provided
otherwise.
(Authority: 38 U.S.C. 501(d), 3119)
Sec. 21.441 Definitions.
For the purposes of Sec. Sec. 21.440 through 21.449, and any
Notices of Funding Availability (NOFA) issued pursuant to Sec. Sec.
21.440 through 21.449, the following definitions apply:
Applicant is an eligible entity that submits an application for a
VEPFS grant announced in a NOFA.
[[Page 52776]]
Eligible entity is a public or nonprofit agency, to include
institutions of higher learning.
Employment outcome is the employment or earnings of a participant
in the intervention or control group member after the service period.
Improving employment outcomes means creating positive impact in terms
of these outcomes, where the results for individuals that receive the
intervention are better than the results for a valid control group that
did not receive the intervention.
Intervention is a service or technology that is provided to
individuals and is intended to achieve certain results.
Outcomes payments are funds that are paid to an investor or service
provider and that are released only for the achievement of outcomes, as
compared to those of a control group, that meet target levels that have
been agreed to in advance of the provision of intervention (i.e., if
positive impact has been created by the intervention in terms of these
outcomes). When investors have provided the upfront capital for the
project, these payments generally cover repayment of the principal
investment and provide a modest return on investment for any associated
risks of paying for the intervention upfront.
Pay for Success (PFS) agreement is a multi-party agreement to
deliver an innovative or evidence-based intervention intended to
improve outcomes for a targeted population signed by the entities that
constitute the project partnership.
Project partnership is a collaboration among entities that
negotiate an agreement and execute a project to improve employment
outcomes for Veterans with service-connected disabilities. The entities
that may be involved in a project partnership include:
(1)(i) Outcomes payor. Entity that receives a VEPFS grant and pays
for outcomes of services that meet target levels that have been agreed
to in advance of the provision of the intervention.
(ii) Project coordinator. Facilitates, coordinates, and executes a
PFS agreement to improve employment outcomes for Veterans with service-
connected disabilities. With respect to other PFS projects, project
coordinators are sometimes referred to as intermediaries.
(iii) Evaluator. Independent entity that determines the impact of
the services provided, including whether the services have resulted in
employment outcomes that meet target levels that have been agreed to in
advance of the provision of the intervention.
(iv) Investor. Person or entity that provides upfront capital to
cover costs of providing services/delivering an intervention and other
associated costs before a determination has been made as to whether
certain employment outcomes have been achieved at pre-set target
levels.
(v) Service provider. Entity that delivers an intervention designed
to achieve improved employment outcomes for Veterans with service-
connected disabilities.
(2) A full project partnership is a project partnership that
includes an outcomes payor, evaluator, investor (if the PFS agreement
involves PFS financing), and service provider. A partial project
partnership includes an outcomes payor and at least one of the
following: Evaluator, investor (if the PFS agreement involves PFS
financing), or service provider.
Recipient is the entity that receives a VEPFS grant under
Sec. Sec. 21.440 through 21.449. The recipient is also the outcomes
payor.
Secretary refers to the Secretary of Veterans Affairs.
Service-connected disability is a disability that is ``service-
connected'' as defined in 38 CFR 3.1.
Social finance strategy is a method for securing financial
resources using an investment approach that focuses on achieving
positive social and/or environmental impact with some form of financial
return.
Strong evidence constitutes results from previous studies, the
designs of which can support causal conclusions (i.e., studies with
high internal validity), that include enough of the range of
participants and settings to support scaling up to the state, regional,
or national level (i.e., studies with high external validity).
Veteran has the same definition as provided in 38 CFR 3.1.
Veterans Employment Pay for Success (VEPFS) agreement is a PFS
agreement to deliver an innovative, evidence-based intervention
intended to improve Veteran employment outcomes.
Veterans Employment Pay for Success (VEPFS) project is a project
with a strategy for delivering a service with a goal to significantly
improve a current condition with respect to unemployment of a target
Veteran population and sufficient evidence to support the theory behind
the project using a financial model that includes cost savings by
funding the project only if it is successful.
Work-plan is a document that articulates tasks and milestones with
regard to a particular project.
(Authority: 38 U.S.C. 3119)
Sec. 21.442 VEPFS grants--general.
(a) VA may award a VEPFS grant only to an eligible entity selected
under Sec. 21.446.
(b) The amount of Federal funding available to be awarded in a
VEPFS grant will be specified in the NOFA.
(c) A VEPFS grant will be awarded for a minimum of 5 years and a
pre-determined maximum number of years, beginning on the date on which
the VEPFS grant is awarded, with the availability of no-cost
extensions.
(d) As a condition of receiving a VEPFS grant, a recipient will be
required to provide matching funds from non-Federal sources equal to or
greater than the amount of Federal grant funds awarded, to be combined
with the amount of Federal grant funds awarded and used as specified in
Sec. 21.443.
(e) A VEPFS grant award is not a Veterans' benefit. Decisions of
the Secretary are final and not subject to the same appeal rights as
decisions related to Veterans' benefits.
(Authority: 38 U.S.C. 3119)
Sec. 21.443 Permissible uses of VEPFS grant funds.
(a) VEPFS grant funds may be used only to fund outcomes payments if
an intervention achieves outcomes at a pre-set target level that has
been agreed to in a PFS agreement before service delivery begins for a
PFS project with a goal to improve employment outcomes for Veterans
with service-connected disabilities.
(b) To pay for the indirect costs of administering a grant,
regardless of whether an intervention achieves outcomes at a pre-set
target level, a recipient may:
(1) Use a Federally approved indirect cost rate (a rate already
negotiated with the Federal Government);
(2) Use a 10% de minimis rate of modified total direct costs;
(3) Negotiate an indirect cost rate for the first time; or
(4) Claim certain costs directly following 2 CFR 200.413.
(Authority: 38 U.S.C. 3119, 2 CFR 200.414)
Sec. 21.444 Notice of funding availability.
When funds are available for a VEPFS grant, VA will publish a NOFA
in the Federal Register and on Grants.gov (https://www.grants.gov). The
NOFA will identify:
(a) The location for obtaining grant applications and the specific
forms that will be required;
[[Page 52777]]
(b) The date, time, and place for submitting completed grant
applications;
(c) The total amount and type of funds available and the maximum
amount available to a single applicant;
(d) Information regarding eligibility and the scoring process;
(e) Any timeframes and manner for payments under the grant; and
(f) Other information necessary for the VEPFS grant application
process, as determined by VA, including contact information for the VA
office that will oversee the VEPFS grant.
(Authority: 38 U.S.C. 501(d), 3119)
Sec. 21.445 Application.
To apply for a VEPFS grant, eligible entities must submit to VA a
complete application package in accordance with the instructions in the
NOFA and include the forms specified in the NOFA. Applications will be
accepted only through Grants.gov (https://www.grants.gov). A complete
grant application package, as further described in the NOFA, includes
standard forms specified in the NOFA and the following:
(a) Project description, including a description of the
intervention, the Veteran population to be served, and anticipated
employment outcomes;
(b) Description of anticipated project partnership(s), including
the responsibilities of each of the partner entities, the experience of
any involved entities with serving Veteran populations, and other
qualifications of the involved entities that may be relevant in
carrying out responsibilities of the project partnership. In procuring
partners such as the project coordinator and investor, procurement
standards set forth in 2 CFR 200.317 through 200.326 must be followed;
(c) A work plan, including a budget and timelines;
(d) Description of applicant's expertise or experience with PFS or
other social finance strategies or experience administering programs
that serve Veterans with disabilities;
(e) Documentation of applicant's ability and capacity to administer
the project;
(f) Proof of matching funds already secured, ability to secure
matching funds, or commitments received; and
(g) Any additional information as deemed appropriate by VA and set
forth in the NOFA.
(Authority: 38 U.S.C. 3119)
Sec. 21.446 Scoring and selection.
(a) Scoring. VA will score only complete applications received from
eligible entities by the deadline established in the NOFA. VA will
score applications using the following criteria:
(1) Project description. Applicant identifies and describes an
intervention that is designed to improve employment outcomes for
Veterans with service-connected disabilities through a PFS agreement
and demonstrates with strong evidence the ability of the intervention
to meet objectives. Project description should explain and justify the
need for the intervention, and include concept, size and scope of the
project, and the Veteran population to be served.
(2) Project partnership. Applicant provides a description of the
partnership and the level of partnership (full, partial, or none)
attained at the time of application.
(3) Work plan and budget. Applicant provides a work plan that
describes in detail the timeline for the tasks outlined in the project
description and proposed milestones. Applicant provides a budget that
specifies amount of outcome payments and indirect and other relevant
costs.
(4) Expertise and capacity. Applicant provides evidence of its past
experience with PFS or other social finance strategies or experience
administering programs that serve Veterans with disabilities, and of
its ability and capacity to successfully administer the project.
(5) Match. Applicant provides evidence of secured cash matching
(1:1) funds or of its ability to secure or commitments to receive such
funds.
(b) Selection of recipients. All complete applications from
eligible entities will be scored using the criteria in paragraph (a) of
this section and ranked in order from highest to lowest total score.
NOFA announcements may also clarify the selection criteria in paragraph
(a). The relative weight (point value) for each selection criterion
will be specified in the NOFA. Point values will be assigned according
to the criterion's importance in ensuring the successful development
and implementation of a VEPFS project. VA will award any VEPFS grant on
the primary basis of scores but will also consider a risk assessment
evaluation.
(Authority: 38 U.S.C. 3119)
Sec. 21.447 VEPFS grant agreement.
After an applicant is selected to receive a VEPFS grant in
accordance with Sec. 21.446, VA will draft a grant agreement to be
executed by VA and the applicant. Upon execution of the VEPFS grant
agreement, VA will obligate grant funds to cover the amount of the
approved grant, subject to the availability of funding. The VEPFS grant
agreement will provide that the recipient agrees, and will ensure that
each subcontractor (if applicable) agrees, to:
(a) Operate the program in accordance with the provisions of
Sec. Sec. 21.440 through 21.449, 2 CFR part 200, and the applicant's
VEPFS grant application;
(b) Comply with such other terms and conditions, including
recordkeeping and reports for program monitoring and evaluation
purposes, as VA may establish in the Terms and Conditions of the grant
agreement for purposes of carrying out the VEPFS program in an
effective and efficient manner; and
(c) Provide additional information that VA requests with respect
to:
(1) Program effectiveness, as defined in the Terms and Conditions
of the grant agreement;
(2) Compliance with the Terms and Conditions of the grant
agreement; and
(3) Criteria for evaluation, as defined in the Terms and Conditions
of the grant agreement.
(Authority: 38 U.S.C. 501(d), 3119)
Sec. 21.448 Recipient reporting requirements.
(a) Recipients must submit to VA a quarterly report 30 days after
the close of each Federal fiscal quarter of the grant period. The
report must include the following information:
(1) A detailed record of the time involved and resources expended
administering the VEPFS program.
(2) The number of Veterans served, including demographics of this
population.
(3) The types of employment assistance provided.
(4) A full accounting of VEPFS grant funds used or unused during
the quarter.
(5) A comparison of accomplishments related to the objectives of
the award.
(6) An explanation for any goals not met.
(7) An analysis and explanation for any cost overruns.
(b) VA may request additional reports in the Terms and Conditions
of the grant agreement if necessary to allow VA to fully and
effectively assess program accountability and effectiveness.
(Authority: 38 U.S.C. 501(d), 3119, 2 CFR 200.327-200.328)
Sec. 21.449 Recovery of funds.
If a recipient fails to comply with any Federal statutes or
regulations or the terms and conditions of an award made under
Sec. Sec. 21.440 through 21.449, VA may impose additional conditions
as specified in 2 CFR 200.207 or, if non-compliance cannot be remedied,
take any appropriate actions specified in 2
[[Page 52778]]
CFR part 200 as remedies for non-compliance.
(Authority: 38 U.S.C. 501(d), 3119, 2 CFR 200.338 through 200.342)
[FR Doc. 2016-18721 Filed 8-9-16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8320-01-P