Changes to HOME Investment Partnerships (HOME) Program Commitment Requirement, 86947-86953 [2016-28591]
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Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 232 / Friday, December 2, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
no lower than a Vice President or Chief
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(3) The certification of final indirect
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Certificate of Final Indirect Costs
This is to certify that I have reviewed
this proposal to establish final indirect
cost rates and to the best of my
knowledge and belief:
1. All costs included in this proposal
(identify proposal and date) to establish
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accordance with the cost principles in 2
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under applicable cost principles of 2
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[FR Doc. 2016–28977 Filed 12–1–16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–22–P
DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND
URBAN DEVELOPMENT
24 CFR Parts 91 and 92
[Docket No. FR 5792–I–01]
RIN 2501–AD69
Changes to HOME Investment
Partnerships (HOME) Program
Commitment Requirement
Office of the Assistant
Secretary for Community Planning and
Development, HUD.
ACTION: Interim final rule.
AGENCY:
This rule changes the method
by which HUD will determine
participating jurisdictions’ compliance
with the statutory 24-month
commitment requirement. Beginning
with Fiscal Year (FY) 2015 grants, HUD
will implement a grant-specific method
for determining compliance with these
requirements. This rule also establishes
a method of administering program
income that will prevent participating
jurisdictions from losing appropriated
funds when they expend program
income.
SUMMARY:
Effective Date: January 31, 2017.
Comment Due Date: January 3, 2017.
ADDRESSES: Interested persons are
invited to submit comments regarding
this interim final rule. All
communications must refer to the above
docket number and title. To receive
consideration as public comments,
comments must be submitted through
one of the two methods specified below:
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DATES:
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1. Submission of Comments by Mail.
Comments may be submitted by mail to
the Regulations Division, Office of
General Counsel, Department of
Housing and Urban Development, 451
7th Street SW., Room 10276,
Washington, DC 20410–0500.
2. Electronic Submission of
Comments. Interested persons may
submit comments electronically through
the Federal eRulemaking Portal at
www.regulations.gov. HUD strongly
encourages commenters to submit
comments electronically. Electronic
submission of comments allows the
commenter maximum time to prepare
and submit a comment, ensures timely
receipt by HUD, and enables HUD to
make them immediately available to the
public. Comments submitted
electronically through the
www.regulations.gov Web site can be
viewed by other commenters and
interested members of the public.
Commenters should follow the
instructions provided on that site to
submit comments electronically.
No Facsimiled Comments. Facsimiled
(faxed) comments are not acceptable.
Public Inspection of Public
Comments. All properly submitted
comments and communications
submitted to HUD will be available for
public inspection and copying between
8 a.m. and 5 p.m. weekdays at the above
address. Due to security measures at the
HUD Headquarters building, an advance
appointment to review the public
comments must be scheduled by calling
the Regulations Division at 202–708–
3055 (this is not a toll-free number).
Individuals with speech or hearing
impairments may access this number
via TTY by calling the Federal Relay
Service at 800–877–8339 (this is a tollfree number). Copies of all comments
submitted are available for inspection
and downloading at
www.regulations.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Virginia Sardone, Director, Office of
Affordable Housing Programs,
Department of Housing and Urban
Development, Office of Community
Planning and Development, 451 7th
Street SW., Suite 7286, Washington, DC
20410; or at 202–708–2684 (this is not
a toll-free number). Individuals with
speech or hearing impairments may
access this number via TTY by calling
the Federal Relay Service at 800–877–
8339 (this is a toll-free number).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
Section 218(g) of the National
Affordable Housing Act of 1990
(NAHA), as amended, requires that
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participating jurisdictions place Home
Investment Partnerships Program
(HOME) funds under binding
commitment within 24 months after the
last day of the month in which HUD
made the funds available (i.e., obligated
the grant by executing the HOME grant
agreement). This section of NAHA
further states that a participating
jurisdiction loses the right to draw any
funds that are not placed under binding
commitment by that date and that HUD
shall reduce the participating
jurisdiction’s line of credit by the
expiring amount.
To date, HUD has measured
compliance with the HOME program 24month requirement for committing
funds using a cumulative methodology.
Because HUD’s Integrated Disbursement
and Information System (IDIS)
committed and disbursed funds on a
first-in, first-out basis through
participating jurisdictions’ FY 2014
HOME grants, participating jurisdictions
did not have the ability to designate
funds from a specific allocation when
committing HOME funds to a project.
Consequently, HUD implemented the
commitment requirement through a
cumulative methodology under which
HUD determined a participating
jurisdiction’s compliance with the 24month deadline by determining whether
the total amount committed by the
participating jurisdiction from all
HOME grants it had received was equal
to or greater than the participating
jurisdiction’s cumulative commitment
requirement for all grants that had been
obligated for 24 months or longer. This
methodology has been described in the
HOME program regulations since 1997.
HUD will begin using a grant-specific
method of determining compliance with
the 24-month commitment deadline,
beginning with FY 2015 HOME grants.
HUD has made changes to IDIS so that,
beginning with FY 2015 grants, the
participating jurisdiction will select the
grant year’s funds that will be
committed to a specific project or
activity. When the participating
jurisdiction requests a draw of grant
funds for that project or activity, HUD,
through IDIS, will disburse the funds
committed to that project or activity,
rather than the oldest funds available.
As mentioned above, prior to this
change, IDIS did not permit
participating jurisdictions to specify
which grant years’ funds they were
committing to a specific project. This
system change makes it possible for
participating jurisdictions to commit
funds and for HUD to assess
commitment deadline compliance on a
grant-specific basis, beginning with FY
2015 HOME grants.
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HOME program regulatory changes
are also needed to address the timely
commitment and expenditure of
program income, repaid funds,
recaptured funds, and funds committed
for programs to be administered by State
recipients and subrecipients.
Conforming changes to the consolidated
plan regulations with respect to program
income, repaid funds, and recaptured
funds are also made.
The following section of this
preamble provides a section-by-section
overview of the interim regulatory
changes.
II. This Interim Rule—Section-bySection
Consolidated Planning (§§ 91.220 and
91.320)
HUD has revised the regulations
governing the HOME program
components of the action plans for local
governments (§ 91.220) and States
(§ 91.320). Specifically, this rule revises
sections § 91.220(l)(2)(i) and
§ 91.320(k)(2)(i) to require the
participating jurisdiction to include
uncommitted program income,
repayments, and recaptured funds that
it has received during the previous year
in the resources it describes in its
annual action plan. The rule gives
participating jurisdictions the option to
include program income, repayments, or
recaptures expected to be received
during the program year in the summary
of anticipated Federal resources
described in their annual action plan.
Participating jurisdictions are not
required to include these anticipated
funds in their action plan, because
doing so would result in them having a
period of less than 24 months to commit
these funds. However, if a participating
jurisdiction did not include anticipated
program income, repayments, or
recaptured funds in the annual action
plan and later wished to commit such
funds to a HOME project or activity, it
would be required to amend its annual
action plan, in accordance with the
provisions of § 91.505.
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Definitions (§ 92.2)
This rule eliminates reference to an
agreement with a contractor from the
definition of ‘‘commitment’’ in § 92.2.
Unlike State recipients and
subrecipients, which design programs
and develop policies and procedures to
administer those programs, contractors
that administer HOME-funded programs
carry out the participating jurisdiction’s
policies and procedures. When a
participating jurisdiction carries out
HOME activities using its own
employees, HOME funds are committed
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when the participating jurisdiction
executes an agreement with a project
owner to assist a specific project. When
a participating jurisdiction uses
contractors in place of its own
employees to carry out activities, the
agreement with those contractors should
not constitute a commitment.
HUD has added language to the
definition clarifying that community
housing development organization
(CHDO) operating expense funds, CHDO
capacity building funds, and CHDO
project-specific technical assistance and
site control loans are considered
committed when the participating
jurisdiction executes a legally binding
agreement for the use of the funds.
Similarly, the rule includes language
clarifying that administrative and
planning cost funds are considered
committed based on the amount set
aside for such purposes in IDIS. These
revisions reflect HUD’s longstanding
practice of considering these three types
of CHDO funds, each of which is
designated as a unique fund type in
IDIS, as committed based upon legally
binding written agreements for the
activities and make the regulatory
definition of ‘‘commitment’’
comprehensive.
HOME Investment Trust Fund (§ 92.500)
Commitment Deadline
This rule revises § 92.500(d).
Currently, 24 CFR 92.500(d)(1) describes
the requirements for reducing a
participating jurisdiction’s grant for
failure to meet the 24-month
commitment deadline, the 24-month
deadline for committing 15 percent of a
HOME allocation for CHDO set-aside
projects, and the 5-year deadline for
expending HOME funds. Section
92.500(d)(2) then describes the
cumulative method for determining
compliance with the deadlines outlined
in paragraph (d)(1) of § 92.500. This rule
reorganizes these paragraphs so that
§ 92.500(d)(1) addresses commitment,
CHDO set-aside commitment, and
expenditure requirements for FY 2015
and subsequent-year HOME allocations
and § 92.500(d)(2) addresses these
requirements for FY 2014 and prior-year
HOME allocations.
At § 92.500(d)(1)(i), this rule requires
that HUD recapture any funds
(including funds for CHDOs under
§ 92.300) from a specific grant allocation
that are in the participating
jurisdiction’s United States Treasury
Account and are not committed within
24 months of the last day of the month
in which HUD notifies the participating
jurisdiction of HUD’s execution of the
HOME Investment Partnership
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Agreement for the specific fiscal year
allocation. Participating jurisdictions
will no longer have flexibility to meet
the requirement that 15 percent of its
HOME allocation be used for housing
owned, developed, or sponsored by
CHDOs on a cumulative basis (e.g.,
committing less than 15 percent to
CHDOs in some years and more than 15
percent to CHDOs in others, but
maintaining compliance by ensuring
that 15 percent of cumulative HOME
allocations are used for CHDO projects).
Each participating jurisdiction is now
required to commit a minimum of 15
percent of each year’s allocation or HUD
will recapture the funds.
The rule at § 92.500(d)(1)(ii)
establishes a new deadline to ensure
that funds that have been committed to
State recipients or subrecipients are
subsequently committed timely to a
specific local project. HOME funds that
a participating jurisdiction committed to
a State recipient or subrecipient must be
committed to a specific local project
within 36 months after the last day of
the month in which HUD notified the
participating jurisdiction of HUD’s
execution of its HOME Investment
Partnership Agreement for the specific
fiscal year allocation. HUD has
established this deadline because, with
the elimination of the 5-year
expenditure deadline described below,
HOME funds committed to a State
recipient or subrecipient could remain
uncommitted to a project until the
expiration of the funds at the end of 9
years, at which point they would be
recaptured. The additional deadline is
necessary to ensure that HOME funds
that have been committed to State
recipients or subrecipients are
committed to projects within a
reasonable period of time.
For FY 2014 and previous grants,
HUD will continue using the cumulative
method for determining compliance
with the commitment deadline.
Participating jurisdictions have relied
on the existing HOME regulations at
§ 92.500(d)(2) and the HOME Deadline
Compliance reports that HUD has
posted monthly on its HOME program
Web site 1 since 2005, which describe
and implement the cumulative method
of determining compliance with the
HOME commitment, CHDO
commitment, and expenditure
deadlines. However, HUD has
eliminated the existing § 92.500(d)(2)
and added new text to fully explain the
cumulative methodology that will
1 HUD’s HOME program Web site is located at
https://portal.hud.gov/hudportal/HUD?src=/
program_offices/comm_planning/
affordablehousing/programs/home.
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continue to apply to FY 2014 and
previous grants. A new paragraph
(d)(2)(i)(A) in § 92.500 establishes the
24-month commitment requirement for
FY 2014 and previous HOME
allocations, including the 15 percent
CHDO reservation requirement. New
paragraph (d)(2)(i)(B) describes the
cumulative method that HUD will
continue to use to measure compliance
with the 24-month commitment
deadlines for these grants. New
paragraph (d)(2)(i)(C) retains existing
regulatory language stating that HUD
may recapture HOME funds for any
penalties assessed by HUD under
§ 92.552 (Sanctions).
New paragraph § 92.500(d)(2)(iii)
requires FY 2014 and previous
allocations to be committed by the
participating jurisdiction’s deadline for
FY 2015 allocations. For deadlines
occurring in 2016 for FY 2014 HOME
allocations, HUD is following the
existing regulation and using the
cumulative method for determining
compliance with the 24-month
commitment requirement. As a result, it
was necessary to include commitments
from FY 2015 allocations in the
cumulative calculation of commitments,
creating a situation in which FY 2014
and earlier funds would not be
separately subject to any commitment
requirement.
Expenditure Deadline
In this rule, HUD has eliminated the
5-year deadline for expenditure of
HOME funds appropriated for FY 2015
and subsequent years. This regulatory
deadline was established in the
December 16, 1991, interim rule (56 FR
65313) issued to implement the HOME
statute. At that time, funds appropriated
for the HOME program were available
until expended and HUD determined
that it was necessary to establish a
deadline to ensure that HOME funds
were expended expeditiously to develop
affordable housing. Beginning with the
FY 2002 HOME appropriation, and for
all subsequent appropriations, funds
appropriated for the HOME program are
available for obligation to participating
jurisdictions for 3 years after the first
day of the fiscal year for which they
were appropriated and expire 5 years
after the period of obligation (i.e., at the
end of the eighth year). Expired funds
are recaptured by the United States
Treasury. HUD’s FY 2015 and FY 2016
appropriations laws have extended the
period of obligation of HOME funds to
4 years; the funds expire 5 years after
the period of obligation (i.e., at the end
of the ninth year). In addition, in 2013,
HUD established a 4-year deadline for
completing projects assisted with
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HOME funds in § 92.205(e)(2). Because
of these new deadlines for expiration of
appropriated funds and completion of
projects, HUD believes that the 5-year
expenditure deadline is duplicative and
creates an unnecessary burden on
participating jurisdictions. Thus, the
deadline is eliminated.
This rule also eliminates the separate
5-year deadline for expenditure of
CHDO set-aside funds appropriated for
FY 2015 and subsequent years. In its
2013 HOME rulemaking, HUD
determined that a separate examination
of CHDO expenditures was necessary
because, under the cumulative method
of determining compliance with the 5year expenditure requirement, rapid
expenditure of other HOME funds
frequently shielded older, unexpended
CHDO funds from deobligation. This
separate deadline is no longer necessary
and this rule eliminates both the overall
and the CHDO-specific 5-year deadlines
for expending HOME funds.
Expiration of Funds
For clarity, HUD has included the 9year deadline for the expiration of
HOME funds in § 92.500(d)(2)(iii)(C).
The new provision states that HUD will
recapture funds from a specific fiscal
year allocation that are in the United
States Treasury account and are not
expended by the end of the fifth year
after the period of availability for
obligation by HUD. These funds will be
deobligated from the participating
jurisdiction and returned to the United
States Treasury.
Program Disbursement and Information
System (§ 92.502)
This rule eliminates § 92.502(b)(2),
which contained two provisions related
to HUD cancellation of projects. The
first provision stated that HUD’s
information system could cancel a
project for which project set-up
information was not completed within
20 days. This provision is not necessary,
because IDIS does not permit project set
up to occur until all required
information has been entered. The
second provision permitted HUD to
automatically cancel projects that had
been committed in IDIS for 12 months
without an initial disbursement of
funds. HUD will continue to monitor
projects for timely initial disbursement
of funds. However, the automatic
cancellation of projects by IDIS is no
longer appropriate because it may result
in the loss of funds that become
uncommitted after the 24-month
commitment deadline irrespective of the
nature and extent of any project delay.
The rule revises § 92.502(c)(3) to add
language stating that, beginning with FY
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2015 allocations, the specific funds that
are committed to a project will be
disbursed for that project. This
provision is necessary because,
beginning with FY 2015 HOME grants,
IDIS no longer disburses funds on a
first-in, first-out basis. HUD also adds
language to this paragraph stating that if
funds in both the HOME local account
and in the United States Treasury
account are committed to a HOME
project, the funds in the local account
must be disbursed before the
participating jurisdiction requests that
HOME funds be disbursed from the
United States Treasury account. This
provision ensures that program income
and other HOME funds in the local
account are disbursed before HOME
funds are drawn from the Treasury.
Program Income, Repayments, and
Recaptured Funds (§ 92.503)
HUD has revised paragraphs
§ 92.503(b)(2) and (3) so that
participating jurisdictions that must
repay HOME funds for any reason must
seek HUD’s instructions with respect to
the account to which the HOME funds
must be repaid. By providing specific
instructions on a case-by-case basis,
HUD can avoid situations in which a
participating jurisdiction repays funds
to a Federal HOME account after the 24month deadline and loses access to the
funds as a result.
Under the first-in, first-out method of
disbursing funds, it was generally not
necessary for participating jurisdictions
to commit program income and other
funds in the local HOME account
through IDIS prior to expending the
funds. When a participating jurisdiction
had program income on hand, it,
generally, disbursed program income for
the next HOME cost. Since 2007, HUD
has excluded expended HOME program
income from the calculation of total
commitments or expenditures for
determining compliance with the 24month commitment and the 5-year
expenditure deadlines.
This rule changes the manner in
which program income and other funds
in the local HOME account are treated.
Otherwise, a participating jurisdiction
would be required to uncommit
appropriated HOME funds from a
specific project each time it disbursed
program income for that project. This
would then subject the newly
uncommitted HOME funds to recapture
by HUD if the 24-month commitment
deadline for those funds had passed. To
avoid unnecessary loss of funds, HUD
has determined that participating
jurisdictions should be permitted to
accumulate program income,
repayments, and recaptured funds
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during a program year and that a
deadline for committing HOME funds
should be applied to those funds in the
local account. Although participating
jurisdictions are required to include
program income expected to be received
in their consolidated plan or annual
action plans, HUD recognizes that
participating jurisdictions cannot
always accurately estimate the amount
and timing of program income,
recaptures, or repaid funds that they
may receive. Consequently, to
accommodate the unpredictability
associated with the receipt of program
income, HUD has established special
provisions with respect to program
income.
The rule adds a new § 92.503(d) to
establish a deadline for committing
funds deposited in a participating
jurisdiction’s local HOME account.
These funds include program income as
defined at § 92.2, repayments of HOME
funds pursuant to § 92.503(b), and
recaptured funds as described in
§ 92.503(c). HUD has determined it is
necessary to establish this deadline
because, under the new requirements
for committing funds from specific
allocations, funds in the local account
will have to be committed to specific
projects before they can be expended.
The deadline for committing program
income, repayments, and recaptured
funds received during a program year is
the same as the commitment deadline
for the HOME grant allocation for the
subsequent program year. HUD has
determined that this approach is
appropriate because: (1) The deadline
for committing program income should
not be shorter than for appropriated
funds, and, unlike appropriated funds,
program income, repayments, and
recaptured funds are received
sporadically throughout the year; and
(2) it would be administratively
burdensome for participating
jurisdictions to track and comply with
two separate deadlines each year for
committing their HOME allocation and
funds in their local account. Further,
while the amount and approximate date
of receipt for program income can often
be estimated by a participating
jurisdiction, repaid funds and
recaptured funds generally cannot be
anticipated in advance.
Participating Jurisdiction
Responsibilities; Written Agreements;
On-Site Inspections (§ 92.504)
This rule adds new paragraphs at
§ 92.504(c)(7) and (8) to establish the
requirements for written agreements for
CHDO project-specific technical
assistance, site control loans, projectspecific seed money loans, and
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community development capacity
building activities. These provisions are
added to correspond to the addition of
these agreements to the definition of
‘‘commitment’’ at § 92.2.
III. Justification for Interim Rule
HUD generally publishes rules for
advance public comment in accordance
with its rule on rulemaking at 24 CFR
part 10. However, under 24 CFR 10.1,
HUD may omit prior public notice and
comment if it is ‘‘impracticable,
unnecessary, or contrary to the public
interest.’’ In this instance, HUD has
determined that it is unnecessary to
delay the effectiveness of this rule for
advance public comment.
The HOME statute requires that
HOME funds be placed under legally
binding agreement within 24 months of
HUD’s obligation of the HOME grant to
the participating jurisdiction. As
described in the HOME regulations at 24
CFR 92.500(d)(2), since 1997 HUD has
determined compliance with the
commitment requirement by comparing
cumulative commitments through the
deadline date to the cumulative amount
of HOME funds required to have been
committed as of that date.
Beginning in 2013, HUD has
frequently discussed with HOME
participating jurisdictions the planned
change from the cumulative method of
measuring commitment compliance to a
grant-specific method as part of HUD’s
transition to grant-based accounting for
its formula grant programs. HUD
notified all HOME participating
jurisdictions of the planned IDIS
programming changes to implement
grant-specific commitment deadline
compliance for FY 2015 HOME grants.2
HUD has also conducted webinars to
explain the pending changes in the
method for determining compliance
with the commitment deadline
beginning with FY 2015 HOME grants.3
During 2015 and 2016, HUD provided
HOME grant-based accounting training
at numerous HOME conferences
2 HUD memorandum, ‘‘System and Regulatory
Changes to Eliminate First-In-First-Out Accounting
in the Integrated Disbursement and Information
System,’’ May 9, 2014, https://
www.hudexchange.info/resources/documents/CPDMemo-System-and-Regulatory-Changes-toEliminate-First-In-First-Out-Accounting-in-IDIS.pdf;
HUD fact sheet, ‘‘Transition to Grant Based
Accounting,’’ June 2015, https://
www.hudexchange.info/resources/documents/
Transition-to-Grant-Based-Accounting.pdf; and
HOME FACTS—Vol. 6 No. 2, June 2015, https://
www.hudexchange.info/resources/documents/
HOME-FACTS-Vo6-No2-HOME-IDIS-Grant-BasedAccounting.pdf.
3 ‘‘HOME IDIS Webinar: Grant Based Accounting
Changes for FY 2015 and Onward,’’ August 12,
2015, https://www.hudexchange.info/trainingevents/courses/home-idis-grant-based-accountingchanges-for-fy-2015-and-onward-webinar/.
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sponsored by membership associations
for HOME participating jurisdictions
and at meetings hosted by HUD field
offices across the country.
The scope of the rule amendments is
limited to this change and to other
changes that: (1) Conform the
regulations to the new method or make
minor corrections and clarifications of
provisions relating to commitments and
the written agreements through which
HOME funds are committed; (2)
eliminate the expenditure deadline and
automatic project cancellation
provisions that are no longer required
under the grant-specific method of
committing and expending funds, or
which may otherwise help to minimize
undue risk of HOME funding
deobligations; and (3) establish a project
commitment deadline for funds
provided to State recipients and
subrecipients to ensure timely
deployment of funds for affordable
housing projects.
With the exception of the new
requirements related to program
income, this rule does not establish new
and unfamiliar requirements for HOME
participating jurisdictions. Moreover, if
HUD were to issue this rule without
adjusting the program income
requirements, HOME participating
jurisdictions could potentially lose
millions of dollars of appropriated
HOME funds each time they expended
program income while HUD conducted
proposed and final rulemaking
processes. Consequently, the program
income changes are included in the rule
because they help to avert the loss of
large amounts of HOME funds by the
communities and beneficiaries for
which they were appropriated.
Although HUD has determined that
good cause exists to publish this rule for
effect without prior solicitation of
public comment, HUD recognizes the
value and importance of public input in
the rulemaking process. Accordingly,
HUD is issuing these regulatory
amendments on an interim basis and
providing a 60-day public comment
period. HUD is specifically soliciting
comment on the best way to treat
program income to avoid loss of
appropriated HOME funds. All
comments will be considered in the
development of the final rule.
IV. Findings and Certifications
Information Collection Requirements
In accordance with the Paperwork
Reduction Act, an agency may not
conduct or sponsor, and a person is not
required to respond to, a collection of
information unless the collection
displays a currently valid Office of
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Management and Budget (OMB) control
number. The information collection
requirements contained in this rule have
been submitted to OMB under the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44
U.S.C. 3501–3520) and assigned OMB
control number 2506–0171.
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
Title II of the Unfunded Mandates
Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA) establishes
requirements for Federal agencies to
assess the effects of their regulatory
actions on State, local, and tribal
governments and the private sector.
This rule will not impose any Federal
mandates on any State, local, or tribal
governments or the private sector within
the meaning of UMRA.
Environmental Review
A Finding of No Significant Impact
(FONSI) with respect to the
environment has been made in
accordance with HUD regulations in 24
CFR part 50 that implement section
102(2)(C) of the National Environmental
Policy Act of 1969 (42 U.S.C.
4332(2)(C)). The FONSI is available for
public inspection during regular
business hours in the Regulations
Division, Office of General Counsel,
Department of Housing and Urban
Development, 451 7th Street SW., Room
10276, Washington, DC 20410–0500,
and is also available to view on
www.regulations.gov. Due to security
measures at the HUD Headquarters
building, please schedule an
appointment to review the FONSI by
calling the Regulations Division at (202)
708–3055 (this is not a toll-free
number). Individuals with speech or
hearing impairments may access this
number via TTY by calling the Federal
Relay Service at (800) 877–8339 (this is
a toll-free number).
jstallworth on DSK7TPTVN1PROD with RULES
Impact on Small Entities
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
(5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.) generally requires
an agency to conduct a regulatory
flexibility analysis of any rule subject to
notice and comment rulemaking
requirements, unless the agency certifies
that the rule will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities. As discussed,
this regulation changes the manner in
which HUD measures compliance with
the statutory 24-month commitment
deadline in the HOME program and
does not alter the manner in which
participating jurisdictions administer
their HOME programs. Given this fact,
HUD anticipates the regulatory changes
will have minimal, or no, economic
impacts.
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Therefore, the undersigned certifies
that this rule will not have a significant
impact on a substantial number of small
entities.
Notwithstanding HUD’s belief that
this rule will not have a significant
effect on a substantial number of small
entities, HUD specifically invites
comments regarding any less
burdensome alternatives to this rule that
will meet HUD’s objectives as described
in this preamble.
Executive Order 13132, Federalism
Executive Order 13132 (entitled
‘‘Federalism’’) prohibits an agency from
publishing any rule that has federalism
implications if the rule either imposes
substantial direct compliance costs on
State and local governments and is not
required by statute or the rule preempts
State law, unless the agency meets the
consultation and funding requirements
of section 6 of the Executive order. This
rule does not have federalism
implications and does not impose
substantial direct compliance costs on
State and local governments nor
preempt State law within the meaning
of the Executive order.
Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance
The Catalog of Federal Domestic
Assistance number applicable to the
program that would be affected by this
rule is 14.239.
List of Subjects
24 CFR Part 91
Aged, Grant programs-housing and
community development, Homeless,
Individuals with disabilities, Low and
moderate income housing, Reporting
and recordkeeping requirements.
24 CFR Part 92
Administrative practice and
procedure, Grant programs-housing and
community development, Low and
moderate income housing,
Manufactured homes, Rent subsidies,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
Accordingly, for the reasons stated in
the preamble, HUD amends 24 CFR
parts 91 and 92 as follows:
PART 91—CONSOLIDATED
SUBMISSIONS FOR COMMUNITY
PLANNING AND DEVELOPMENT
PROGRAMS
1. The authority citation for part 91
continues to read as follows:
■
86951
(viii), and add new paragraph (l)(2)(i) to
read as follows:
§ 91.220
Action plan.
*
*
*
*
*
(l) * * *
(2) * * *
(i) The HOME program resources that
the participating jurisdiction must
describe in the action plan are the fiscal
year HOME allocation plus the amount
of program income, repayments, and
recaptured funds in the participating
jurisdiction’s HOME Investment Trust
Fund local account (see 24 CFR
92.500(c)(1)) at the beginning of the
participating jurisdiction’s program
year. The jurisdiction may choose to
include program income, repayments,
and recaptured funds that are expected
to be received during the program year
if the jurisdiction plans to commit these
funds during the program year.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 3. In § 91.320, redesignate paragraphs
(k)(2)(i) through (vii) as paragraphs
(k)(2)(ii) through (viii), and add new
paragraph (k)(2)(i) to read as follows.
§ 91.320
Action plan.
*
*
*
*
*
(k) * * *
(2) * * *
(i) The HOME program resources that
the State must describe in the action
plan are the fiscal year HOME allocation
plus the amount of program income,
repayments, and recaptured funds in the
State’s HOME Investment Trust Fund
local account (see 24 CFR 92.500(c)(1))
at the beginning of the State’s program
year. The State may choose to include
program income, repayments, and
recaptured funds that are expected to be
received during the program year if the
State plans to commit these funds
during the program year.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 4. Revise § 91.505(a)(2) to read as
follows:
§ 91.505
plan.
Amendments to the consolidated
(a) * * *
(2) To carry out an activity, using
funds from any program covered by the
consolidated plan (including program
income, reimbursements, repayment,
recaptures, or reallocations from HUD),
not previously described in the action
plan; or
*
*
*
*
*
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 3535(d), 3601–3619,
5301–5315, 11331–11388, 12701–12711,
12741–12756, and 12901–12912.
PART 92—HOME INVESTMENT
PARTNERSHIPS PROGRAM
2. In § 91.220, redesignate paragraphs
(l)(2)(i) through (vii) as (l)(2)(ii) through
■
■
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5. The authority citation for part 92
continues to read as follows:
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Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 232 / Friday, December 2, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 3535(d) and 12701–
12839.
6. In § 92.2, revise paragraph (1) of the
definition of ‘‘Commitment’’ to read as
follows:
■
§ 92.2
Definitions.
*
*
*
*
*
Commitment means:
(1) The participating jurisdiction has
executed a legally binding written
agreement (that includes the date of the
signature of each person signing the
agreement) that meets the minimum
requirements for a written agreement in
§ 92.504(c). An agreement between the
participating jurisdiction and a
subrecipient that is controlled by the
participating jurisdiction (e.g., an
agency whose officials or employees are
official or employees of the participating
jurisdiction) does not constitute a
commitment. An agreement between the
representative unit and a member unit
of general local government of a
consortium does not constitute a
commitment. Funds for administrative
and planning costs of the HOME
program are committed based on the
amount in the program disbursement
and information system for
administration and planning. The
written agreement must be:
(i) With a State recipient or a
subrecipient to use a specific amount of
HOME funds to produce affordable
housing, provide downpayment
assistance, or provide tenant-based
rental assistance;
(ii) With a community housing
development organization to provide
operating expenses;
(iii) With a community housing
development organization to provide
project-specific technical assistance and
site control loans or project-specific
seed money loans, in accordance with
§ 92.301;
(iv) To develop the capacity of
community housing development
organizations in the jurisdiction, in
accordance with § 92.300(b); or
(v) To commit to a specific local
project, as defined in paragraph (2) of
this definition.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 7. Revise § 92.500(d) to read as
follows:
jstallworth on DSK7TPTVN1PROD with RULES
§ 92.500
Fund.
The HOME Investment Trust
*
*
*
*
*
(d)(1) Reductions of Fiscal Year 2015
and subsequent fiscal year allocations.
HUD will reduce or recapture HOME
funds in the HOME Investment Trust
Fund, as follows:
(i) Any funds from a specific fiscal
year allocation that are in the United
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14:49 Dec 01, 2016
Jkt 241001
States Treasury account that are not
committed (including funds for
community housing development
organizations under § 92.300) within 24
months after the last day of the month
in which HUD notifies the participating
jurisdiction of HUD’s execution of the
HOME Investment Partnership
Agreement for the specific fiscal year
allocation;
(ii) Any funds from a specific fiscal
year allocation that were committed to
a State recipient or subrecipient that are
not committed to a specific local project
within 36 months after the last day of
the month in which HUD notifies the
participating jurisdiction of HUD’s
execution of the HOME Investment
Partnership Agreement for the specific
fiscal year allocation;
(iii) Any funds from a specific fiscal
year allocation that are in the United
States Treasury account that are not
expended (drawn down) by September
30 of the fifth year after the end of the
period of availability of the fiscal year
allocation for obligation by HUD. Due to
end-of-year financial system closeouts
that begin before this date and prevent
electronic access to the payment system,
requests to draw down the funds must
be made at least 7 full business days
before this date to ensure that the funds
still can be drawn from the United
States Treasury account through the
computerized disbursement and
information system; and
(iv) Any penalties assessed by HUD
under § 92.552.
(2)(i) Reductions of Fiscal Year 2014
and prior fiscal year allocations. HUD
will reduce or recapture HOME funds in
the HOME Investment Trust Fund by
the amount of:
(A) Any funds from Fiscal Year 2014
and prior fiscal year allocations in the
United States Treasury account that are
required to be reserved (i.e., 15 percent
of the funds) by a participating
jurisdiction, under § 92.300, and which
are not committed to a community
housing development organization
project within 24 months after the last
day of the month in which HUD notifies
the participating jurisdiction of HUD’s
execution of the HOME Investment
Partnership Agreement;
(B) Any funds from Fiscal Year 2014
and prior fiscal year allocations in the
United States Treasury account that are
not committed within 24 months after
the last day of the month in which HUD
notifies the participating jurisdiction of
HUD’s execution of the HOME
Investment Partnership Agreement;
(C) Any funds from Fiscal Year 2014
and prior fiscal year allocations in the
United States Treasury account that are
not expended within 5 years after the
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Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
last day of the month in which HUD
notifies the participating jurisdiction of
HUD’s execution of the HOME
Investment Partnership Agreement; and
(D) Any penalties assessed by HUD
under § 92.552.
(ii) For purposes of determining the
amount by which the HOME Investment
Trust Fund will be reduced or
recaptured under paragraphs
(d)(2)(i)(A), (B), and (C) of this section,
HUD will consider the sum of
commitments to CHDOs, commitments,
or expenditures, as applicable, from all
fiscal year allocations through the Fiscal
Year 2014 allocation. This sum must be
equal to or greater than the sum of all
fiscal year allocations through the fiscal
year allocation being examined (minus
previous reductions to the HOME
Investment Trust Fund), or in the case
of commitments to CHDOs, 15 percent
of those fiscal year allocations.
(iii) HUD will reduce or recapture
HOME funds in the HOME Investment
Trust Fund by the amount of all fiscal
year allocations through the Fiscal Year
2014 allocation that are uncommitted by
the commitment deadline for the Fiscal
Year 2015 allocation.
■ 8. In § 92.502, remove paragraph
(b)(2), redesignate paragraph (b)(1) as
(b), and revise paragraph (c)(3) to read
as follows:
§ 92.502 Program disbursement and
information system.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) * * *
(3) HOME funds in the local account
of the HOME Investment Trust Fund
must be disbursed before requests are
made for HOME funds in the United
States Treasury account. Beginning with
the Fiscal Year 2015 allocation, the
specific funds that are committed to a
project will be disbursed for that
project. If both funds in the local
account and funds in the United States
Treasury account are committed to a
project, the funds in the local account
must be disbursed before requests are
made for HOME funds in the United
States Treasury account for the project.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 9. In § 92.503, revise paragraphs (b)(2)
and (3) and add paragraph (d) to read as
follows:
§ 92.503 Program income, repayments,
and recaptured funds.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(2) Any HOME funds invested in a
project that is terminated before
completion, either voluntarily or
otherwise, must be repaid by the
participating jurisdiction, in accordance
with paragraph (b)(3) of this section,
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Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 232 / Friday, December 2, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
except for repayments of project-specific
community housing development
organization loans that are waived, in
accordance with §§ 92.301(a)(3) and
(b)(3). In addition, any HOME funds
used for costs that are not eligible under
this part must be repaid by the
participating jurisdiction, in accordance
with paragraph (b)(3) of this section.
(3) HUD will instruct the participating
jurisdiction to either repay the funds to
the HOME Investment Trust Fund
Treasury account or the local account. If
the jurisdiction is not a participating
jurisdiction at the time the repayment is
made, the funds must be remitted to
HUD and reallocated, in accordance
with § 92.454.
*
*
*
*
*
(d) Commitment of funds in the local
account. Beginning with the Fiscal Year
2017 action plan, as provided in 24 CFR
91.220(l)(2) and 91.320(k)(2), program
income, repayments, and recaptured
funds in the participating jurisdiction’s
HOME Investment Trust Fund local
account must be used in accordance
with the requirements of this part, and
the amount of program income,
repayments, and recaptured funds in the
participating jurisdiction’s HOME
Investment Trust Fund local account at
the beginning of the program year must
be committed before HOME funds in the
HOME Investment Trust Fund United
States Treasury account, except for the
HOME funds in the United States
Treasury account that are required to be
reserved (i.e., 15 percent of the funds),
under § 92.300(a), for investment only
in housing to be owned, developed, or
sponsored by community housing
development organizations. The
deadline for committing program
income, repayments, and recaptured
funds received during a program year is
the date of the participating
jurisdiction’s commitment deadline for
the subsequent year’s grant allocation.
■ 10. Add § 92.504(c)(7) and (8) to read
as follows:
§ 92.504 Participating jurisdiction
responsibilities; written agreements; on-site
inspection.
jstallworth on DSK7TPTVN1PROD with RULES
*
*
*
*
*
(c) * * *
(7) Community housing development
organization receiving assistance for
project-specific technical assistance and
site control loans or project-specific
seed money loans. The agreement must
identify the specific site or sites and
describe the amount and use of the
HOME funds (in accordance with
§ 92.301), including a budget for work,
a period of performance, and a schedule
for completion. The agreement must
also set forth the basis upon which the
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14:49 Dec 01, 2016
Jkt 241001
participating jurisdiction may waive
repayment of the loans, consistent with
§ 92.301, if applicable.
(8) Technical assistance provider to
develop the capacity of community
housing development organizations in
the jurisdiction. The agreement must
identify the specific nonprofit
organization(s) to receive capacity
building assistance. The agreement must
describe the amount and use (scope of
work) of the HOME funds, including a
budget, a period of performance, and a
schedule for completion.
*
*
*
*
*
Dated: November 22, 2016.
Harriet Tregoning,
Principal Deputy Assistant, Secretary for
Community Planning and Development.
Approved on November 2, 2016.
Nani A. Coloretti,
Deputy Secretary.
86953
On June
30, 2016, the Department published an
interim final rule (81 FR 42478) to
adjust the level of civil monetary
penalties contained in Indian Affairs
regulations with an initial ‘‘catch-up’’
adjustment under the Federal Civil
Penalties Inflation Adjustment Act
Improvements Act of 2015 and OMB
guidance.
The Department received no
comments on the rule. Consequently,
the Department did not make any
change to the interim final rule. For
these reasons, the Department adopts
the interim rule published June 30, 2016
(81 FR 42478), as final without change.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Dated: November 18, 2016.
Lawrence S. Roberts,
Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary—Indian
Affairs.
[FR Doc. 2016–28750 Filed 12–1–16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4337–15–P
[FR Doc. 2016–28591 Filed 12–1–16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4210–67–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Internal Revenue Service
Bureau of Indian Affairs
26 CFR Part 1
25 CFR Parts 140, 141, 211, 213, 225,
226, 227, 243, and 249
[TD 9797]
RIN 1545–BM98
Consistent Basis Reporting Between
Estate and Person Acquiring Property
From Decedent
[178A2100DD/AAKC001030/
A0A501010.999900 253G]
RIN 1076–AF32
Internal Revenue Service (IRS),
Treasury.
ACTION: Final regulations and removal of
temporary regulations.
AGENCY:
Civil Penalties Inflation Adjustments
Bureau of Indian Affairs,
Interior.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
The Bureau of Indian Affairs
(BIA) is adopting as final the interim
final rule published on June 30, 2016,
adjusting the level of civil monetary
penalties contained in Indian Affairs
regulations with an initial ‘‘catch-up’’
adjustment under the Federal Civil
Penalties Inflation Adjustment Act
Improvements Act of 2015 and Office of
Management and Budget (OMB)
guidance. The Department of the
Interior (Department) did not receive
any significant adverse comments
during the public comment period on
the interim final rule, and therefore
adopts the rule as final without change.
DATES: Effective date: December 2, 2016.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Elizabeth Appel, Director, Office of
Regulatory Affairs and Collaborative
Action, Office of the Assistant
Secretary—Indian Affairs; telephone
(202) 273–4680, elizabeth.appel@
bia.gov.
SUMMARY:
PO 00000
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Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
This document contains final
regulations that provide transition rules
providing that executors and other
persons required to file or furnish a
statement under section 6035(a)(1) or (2)
regarding the value of property included
in a decedent’s gross estate for federal
estate tax purposes before June 30, 2016,
need not have done so until June 30,
2016. These final regulations are
applicable to executors and other
persons who file federal estate tax
returns required by section 6018(a) or
(b) after July 31, 2015.
DATES: Effective Date. These regulations
are effective on December 2, 2016.
Applicability Dates: For date of
applicability, see § 1.6035–2(b).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Theresa Melchiorre (202) 317–6859 (not
a toll-free number).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
SUMMARY:
Background
Section 6018(a) requires executors to
file federal estate tax returns with
E:\FR\FM\02DER1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 81, Number 232 (Friday, December 2, 2016)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 86947-86953]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2016-28591]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT
24 CFR Parts 91 and 92
[Docket No. FR 5792-I-01]
RIN 2501-AD69
Changes to HOME Investment Partnerships (HOME) Program Commitment
Requirement
AGENCY: Office of the Assistant Secretary for Community Planning and
Development, HUD.
ACTION: Interim final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This rule changes the method by which HUD will determine
participating jurisdictions' compliance with the statutory 24-month
commitment requirement. Beginning with Fiscal Year (FY) 2015 grants,
HUD will implement a grant-specific method for determining compliance
with these requirements. This rule also establishes a method of
administering program income that will prevent participating
jurisdictions from losing appropriated funds when they expend program
income.
DATES: Effective Date: January 31, 2017.
Comment Due Date: January 3, 2017.
ADDRESSES: Interested persons are invited to submit comments regarding
this interim final rule. All communications must refer to the above
docket number and title. To receive consideration as public comments,
comments must be submitted through one of the two methods specified
below:
1. Submission of Comments by Mail. Comments may be submitted by
mail to the Regulations Division, Office of General Counsel, Department
of Housing and Urban Development, 451 7th Street SW., Room 10276,
Washington, DC 20410-0500.
2. Electronic Submission of Comments. Interested persons may submit
comments electronically through the Federal eRulemaking Portal at
www.regulations.gov. HUD strongly encourages commenters to submit
comments electronically. Electronic submission of comments allows the
commenter maximum time to prepare and submit a comment, ensures timely
receipt by HUD, and enables HUD to make them immediately available to
the public. Comments submitted electronically through the
www.regulations.gov Web site can be viewed by other commenters and
interested members of the public. Commenters should follow the
instructions provided on that site to submit comments electronically.
No Facsimiled Comments. Facsimiled (faxed) comments are not
acceptable.
Public Inspection of Public Comments. All properly submitted
comments and communications submitted to HUD will be available for
public inspection and copying between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. weekdays at the
above address. Due to security measures at the HUD Headquarters
building, an advance appointment to review the public comments must be
scheduled by calling the Regulations Division at 202-708-3055 (this is
not a toll-free number). Individuals with speech or hearing impairments
may access this number via TTY by calling the Federal Relay Service at
800-877-8339 (this is a toll-free number). Copies of all comments
submitted are available for inspection and downloading at
www.regulations.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Virginia Sardone, Director, Office of
Affordable Housing Programs, Department of Housing and Urban
Development, Office of Community Planning and Development, 451 7th
Street SW., Suite 7286, Washington, DC 20410; or at 202-708-2684 (this
is not a toll-free number). Individuals with speech or hearing
impairments may access this number via TTY by calling the Federal Relay
Service at 800-877-8339 (this is a toll-free number).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
Section 218(g) of the National Affordable Housing Act of 1990
(NAHA), as amended, requires that participating jurisdictions place
Home Investment Partnerships Program (HOME) funds under binding
commitment within 24 months after the last day of the month in which
HUD made the funds available (i.e., obligated the grant by executing
the HOME grant agreement). This section of NAHA further states that a
participating jurisdiction loses the right to draw any funds that are
not placed under binding commitment by that date and that HUD shall
reduce the participating jurisdiction's line of credit by the expiring
amount.
To date, HUD has measured compliance with the HOME program 24-month
requirement for committing funds using a cumulative methodology.
Because HUD's Integrated Disbursement and Information System (IDIS)
committed and disbursed funds on a first-in, first-out basis through
participating jurisdictions' FY 2014 HOME grants, participating
jurisdictions did not have the ability to designate funds from a
specific allocation when committing HOME funds to a project.
Consequently, HUD implemented the commitment requirement through a
cumulative methodology under which HUD determined a participating
jurisdiction's compliance with the 24-month deadline by determining
whether the total amount committed by the participating jurisdiction
from all HOME grants it had received was equal to or greater than the
participating jurisdiction's cumulative commitment requirement for all
grants that had been obligated for 24 months or longer. This
methodology has been described in the HOME program regulations since
1997.
HUD will begin using a grant-specific method of determining
compliance with the 24-month commitment deadline, beginning with FY
2015 HOME grants. HUD has made changes to IDIS so that, beginning with
FY 2015 grants, the participating jurisdiction will select the grant
year's funds that will be committed to a specific project or activity.
When the participating jurisdiction requests a draw of grant funds for
that project or activity, HUD, through IDIS, will disburse the funds
committed to that project or activity, rather than the oldest funds
available.
As mentioned above, prior to this change, IDIS did not permit
participating jurisdictions to specify which grant years' funds they
were committing to a specific project. This system change makes it
possible for participating jurisdictions to commit funds and for HUD to
assess commitment deadline compliance on a grant-specific basis,
beginning with FY 2015 HOME grants.
[[Page 86948]]
HOME program regulatory changes are also needed to address the
timely commitment and expenditure of program income, repaid funds,
recaptured funds, and funds committed for programs to be administered
by State recipients and subrecipients. Conforming changes to the
consolidated plan regulations with respect to program income, repaid
funds, and recaptured funds are also made.
The following section of this preamble provides a section-by-
section overview of the interim regulatory changes.
II. This Interim Rule--Section-by-Section
Consolidated Planning (Sec. Sec. 91.220 and 91.320)
HUD has revised the regulations governing the HOME program
components of the action plans for local governments (Sec. 91.220) and
States (Sec. 91.320). Specifically, this rule revises sections Sec.
91.220(l)(2)(i) and Sec. 91.320(k)(2)(i) to require the participating
jurisdiction to include uncommitted program income, repayments, and
recaptured funds that it has received during the previous year in the
resources it describes in its annual action plan. The rule gives
participating jurisdictions the option to include program income,
repayments, or recaptures expected to be received during the program
year in the summary of anticipated Federal resources described in their
annual action plan. Participating jurisdictions are not required to
include these anticipated funds in their action plan, because doing so
would result in them having a period of less than 24 months to commit
these funds. However, if a participating jurisdiction did not include
anticipated program income, repayments, or recaptured funds in the
annual action plan and later wished to commit such funds to a HOME
project or activity, it would be required to amend its annual action
plan, in accordance with the provisions of Sec. 91.505.
Definitions (Sec. 92.2)
This rule eliminates reference to an agreement with a contractor
from the definition of ``commitment'' in Sec. 92.2. Unlike State
recipients and subrecipients, which design programs and develop
policies and procedures to administer those programs, contractors that
administer HOME-funded programs carry out the participating
jurisdiction's policies and procedures. When a participating
jurisdiction carries out HOME activities using its own employees, HOME
funds are committed when the participating jurisdiction executes an
agreement with a project owner to assist a specific project. When a
participating jurisdiction uses contractors in place of its own
employees to carry out activities, the agreement with those contractors
should not constitute a commitment.
HUD has added language to the definition clarifying that community
housing development organization (CHDO) operating expense funds, CHDO
capacity building funds, and CHDO project-specific technical assistance
and site control loans are considered committed when the participating
jurisdiction executes a legally binding agreement for the use of the
funds. Similarly, the rule includes language clarifying that
administrative and planning cost funds are considered committed based
on the amount set aside for such purposes in IDIS. These revisions
reflect HUD's longstanding practice of considering these three types of
CHDO funds, each of which is designated as a unique fund type in IDIS,
as committed based upon legally binding written agreements for the
activities and make the regulatory definition of ``commitment''
comprehensive.
HOME Investment Trust Fund (Sec. 92.500)
Commitment Deadline
This rule revises Sec. 92.500(d). Currently, 24 CFR 92.500(d)(1)
describes the requirements for reducing a participating jurisdiction's
grant for failure to meet the 24-month commitment deadline, the 24-
month deadline for committing 15 percent of a HOME allocation for CHDO
set-aside projects, and the 5-year deadline for expending HOME funds.
Section 92.500(d)(2) then describes the cumulative method for
determining compliance with the deadlines outlined in paragraph (d)(1)
of Sec. 92.500. This rule reorganizes these paragraphs so that Sec.
92.500(d)(1) addresses commitment, CHDO set-aside commitment, and
expenditure requirements for FY 2015 and subsequent-year HOME
allocations and Sec. 92.500(d)(2) addresses these requirements for FY
2014 and prior-year HOME allocations.
At Sec. 92.500(d)(1)(i), this rule requires that HUD recapture any
funds (including funds for CHDOs under Sec. 92.300) from a specific
grant allocation that are in the participating jurisdiction's United
States Treasury Account and are not committed within 24 months of the
last day of the month in which HUD notifies the participating
jurisdiction of HUD's execution of the HOME Investment Partnership
Agreement for the specific fiscal year allocation. Participating
jurisdictions will no longer have flexibility to meet the requirement
that 15 percent of its HOME allocation be used for housing owned,
developed, or sponsored by CHDOs on a cumulative basis (e.g.,
committing less than 15 percent to CHDOs in some years and more than 15
percent to CHDOs in others, but maintaining compliance by ensuring that
15 percent of cumulative HOME allocations are used for CHDO projects).
Each participating jurisdiction is now required to commit a minimum of
15 percent of each year's allocation or HUD will recapture the funds.
The rule at Sec. 92.500(d)(1)(ii) establishes a new deadline to
ensure that funds that have been committed to State recipients or
subrecipients are subsequently committed timely to a specific local
project. HOME funds that a participating jurisdiction committed to a
State recipient or subrecipient must be committed to a specific local
project within 36 months after the last day of the month in which HUD
notified the participating jurisdiction of HUD's execution of its HOME
Investment Partnership Agreement for the specific fiscal year
allocation. HUD has established this deadline because, with the
elimination of the 5-year expenditure deadline described below, HOME
funds committed to a State recipient or subrecipient could remain
uncommitted to a project until the expiration of the funds at the end
of 9 years, at which point they would be recaptured. The additional
deadline is necessary to ensure that HOME funds that have been
committed to State recipients or subrecipients are committed to
projects within a reasonable period of time.
For FY 2014 and previous grants, HUD will continue using the
cumulative method for determining compliance with the commitment
deadline. Participating jurisdictions have relied on the existing HOME
regulations at Sec. 92.500(d)(2) and the HOME Deadline Compliance
reports that HUD has posted monthly on its HOME program Web site \1\
since 2005, which describe and implement the cumulative method of
determining compliance with the HOME commitment, CHDO commitment, and
expenditure deadlines. However, HUD has eliminated the existing Sec.
92.500(d)(2) and added new text to fully explain the cumulative
methodology that will
[[Page 86949]]
continue to apply to FY 2014 and previous grants. A new paragraph
(d)(2)(i)(A) in Sec. 92.500 establishes the 24-month commitment
requirement for FY 2014 and previous HOME allocations, including the 15
percent CHDO reservation requirement. New paragraph (d)(2)(i)(B)
describes the cumulative method that HUD will continue to use to
measure compliance with the 24-month commitment deadlines for these
grants. New paragraph (d)(2)(i)(C) retains existing regulatory language
stating that HUD may recapture HOME funds for any penalties assessed by
HUD under Sec. 92.552 (Sanctions).
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\1\ HUD's HOME program Web site is located at https://portal.hud.gov/hudportal/HUD?src=/program_offices/comm_planning/affordablehousing/programs/home.
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New paragraph Sec. 92.500(d)(2)(iii) requires FY 2014 and previous
allocations to be committed by the participating jurisdiction's
deadline for FY 2015 allocations. For deadlines occurring in 2016 for
FY 2014 HOME allocations, HUD is following the existing regulation and
using the cumulative method for determining compliance with the 24-
month commitment requirement. As a result, it was necessary to include
commitments from FY 2015 allocations in the cumulative calculation of
commitments, creating a situation in which FY 2014 and earlier funds
would not be separately subject to any commitment requirement.
Expenditure Deadline
In this rule, HUD has eliminated the 5-year deadline for
expenditure of HOME funds appropriated for FY 2015 and subsequent
years. This regulatory deadline was established in the December 16,
1991, interim rule (56 FR 65313) issued to implement the HOME statute.
At that time, funds appropriated for the HOME program were available
until expended and HUD determined that it was necessary to establish a
deadline to ensure that HOME funds were expended expeditiously to
develop affordable housing. Beginning with the FY 2002 HOME
appropriation, and for all subsequent appropriations, funds
appropriated for the HOME program are available for obligation to
participating jurisdictions for 3 years after the first day of the
fiscal year for which they were appropriated and expire 5 years after
the period of obligation (i.e., at the end of the eighth year). Expired
funds are recaptured by the United States Treasury. HUD's FY 2015 and
FY 2016 appropriations laws have extended the period of obligation of
HOME funds to 4 years; the funds expire 5 years after the period of
obligation (i.e., at the end of the ninth year). In addition, in 2013,
HUD established a 4-year deadline for completing projects assisted with
HOME funds in Sec. 92.205(e)(2). Because of these new deadlines for
expiration of appropriated funds and completion of projects, HUD
believes that the 5-year expenditure deadline is duplicative and
creates an unnecessary burden on participating jurisdictions. Thus, the
deadline is eliminated.
This rule also eliminates the separate 5-year deadline for
expenditure of CHDO set-aside funds appropriated for FY 2015 and
subsequent years. In its 2013 HOME rulemaking, HUD determined that a
separate examination of CHDO expenditures was necessary because, under
the cumulative method of determining compliance with the 5-year
expenditure requirement, rapid expenditure of other HOME funds
frequently shielded older, unexpended CHDO funds from deobligation.
This separate deadline is no longer necessary and this rule eliminates
both the overall and the CHDO-specific 5-year deadlines for expending
HOME funds.
Expiration of Funds
For clarity, HUD has included the 9-year deadline for the
expiration of HOME funds in Sec. 92.500(d)(2)(iii)(C). The new
provision states that HUD will recapture funds from a specific fiscal
year allocation that are in the United States Treasury account and are
not expended by the end of the fifth year after the period of
availability for obligation by HUD. These funds will be deobligated
from the participating jurisdiction and returned to the United States
Treasury.
Program Disbursement and Information System (Sec. 92.502)
This rule eliminates Sec. 92.502(b)(2), which contained two
provisions related to HUD cancellation of projects. The first provision
stated that HUD's information system could cancel a project for which
project set-up information was not completed within 20 days. This
provision is not necessary, because IDIS does not permit project set up
to occur until all required information has been entered. The second
provision permitted HUD to automatically cancel projects that had been
committed in IDIS for 12 months without an initial disbursement of
funds. HUD will continue to monitor projects for timely initial
disbursement of funds. However, the automatic cancellation of projects
by IDIS is no longer appropriate because it may result in the loss of
funds that become uncommitted after the 24-month commitment deadline
irrespective of the nature and extent of any project delay.
The rule revises Sec. 92.502(c)(3) to add language stating that,
beginning with FY 2015 allocations, the specific funds that are
committed to a project will be disbursed for that project. This
provision is necessary because, beginning with FY 2015 HOME grants,
IDIS no longer disburses funds on a first-in, first-out basis. HUD also
adds language to this paragraph stating that if funds in both the HOME
local account and in the United States Treasury account are committed
to a HOME project, the funds in the local account must be disbursed
before the participating jurisdiction requests that HOME funds be
disbursed from the United States Treasury account. This provision
ensures that program income and other HOME funds in the local account
are disbursed before HOME funds are drawn from the Treasury.
Program Income, Repayments, and Recaptured Funds (Sec. 92.503)
HUD has revised paragraphs Sec. 92.503(b)(2) and (3) so that
participating jurisdictions that must repay HOME funds for any reason
must seek HUD's instructions with respect to the account to which the
HOME funds must be repaid. By providing specific instructions on a
case-by-case basis, HUD can avoid situations in which a participating
jurisdiction repays funds to a Federal HOME account after the 24-month
deadline and loses access to the funds as a result.
Under the first-in, first-out method of disbursing funds, it was
generally not necessary for participating jurisdictions to commit
program income and other funds in the local HOME account through IDIS
prior to expending the funds. When a participating jurisdiction had
program income on hand, it, generally, disbursed program income for the
next HOME cost. Since 2007, HUD has excluded expended HOME program
income from the calculation of total commitments or expenditures for
determining compliance with the 24-month commitment and the 5-year
expenditure deadlines.
This rule changes the manner in which program income and other
funds in the local HOME account are treated. Otherwise, a participating
jurisdiction would be required to uncommit appropriated HOME funds from
a specific project each time it disbursed program income for that
project. This would then subject the newly uncommitted HOME funds to
recapture by HUD if the 24-month commitment deadline for those funds
had passed. To avoid unnecessary loss of funds, HUD has determined that
participating jurisdictions should be permitted to accumulate program
income, repayments, and recaptured funds
[[Page 86950]]
during a program year and that a deadline for committing HOME funds
should be applied to those funds in the local account. Although
participating jurisdictions are required to include program income
expected to be received in their consolidated plan or annual action
plans, HUD recognizes that participating jurisdictions cannot always
accurately estimate the amount and timing of program income,
recaptures, or repaid funds that they may receive. Consequently, to
accommodate the unpredictability associated with the receipt of program
income, HUD has established special provisions with respect to program
income.
The rule adds a new Sec. 92.503(d) to establish a deadline for
committing funds deposited in a participating jurisdiction's local HOME
account. These funds include program income as defined at Sec. 92.2,
repayments of HOME funds pursuant to Sec. 92.503(b), and recaptured
funds as described in Sec. 92.503(c). HUD has determined it is
necessary to establish this deadline because, under the new
requirements for committing funds from specific allocations, funds in
the local account will have to be committed to specific projects before
they can be expended. The deadline for committing program income,
repayments, and recaptured funds received during a program year is the
same as the commitment deadline for the HOME grant allocation for the
subsequent program year. HUD has determined that this approach is
appropriate because: (1) The deadline for committing program income
should not be shorter than for appropriated funds, and, unlike
appropriated funds, program income, repayments, and recaptured funds
are received sporadically throughout the year; and (2) it would be
administratively burdensome for participating jurisdictions to track
and comply with two separate deadlines each year for committing their
HOME allocation and funds in their local account. Further, while the
amount and approximate date of receipt for program income can often be
estimated by a participating jurisdiction, repaid funds and recaptured
funds generally cannot be anticipated in advance.
Participating Jurisdiction Responsibilities; Written Agreements; On-
Site Inspections (Sec. 92.504)
This rule adds new paragraphs at Sec. 92.504(c)(7) and (8) to
establish the requirements for written agreements for CHDO project-
specific technical assistance, site control loans, project-specific
seed money loans, and community development capacity building
activities. These provisions are added to correspond to the addition of
these agreements to the definition of ``commitment'' at Sec. 92.2.
III. Justification for Interim Rule
HUD generally publishes rules for advance public comment in
accordance with its rule on rulemaking at 24 CFR part 10. However,
under 24 CFR 10.1, HUD may omit prior public notice and comment if it
is ``impracticable, unnecessary, or contrary to the public interest.''
In this instance, HUD has determined that it is unnecessary to delay
the effectiveness of this rule for advance public comment.
The HOME statute requires that HOME funds be placed under legally
binding agreement within 24 months of HUD's obligation of the HOME
grant to the participating jurisdiction. As described in the HOME
regulations at 24 CFR 92.500(d)(2), since 1997 HUD has determined
compliance with the commitment requirement by comparing cumulative
commitments through the deadline date to the cumulative amount of HOME
funds required to have been committed as of that date.
Beginning in 2013, HUD has frequently discussed with HOME
participating jurisdictions the planned change from the cumulative
method of measuring commitment compliance to a grant-specific method as
part of HUD's transition to grant-based accounting for its formula
grant programs. HUD notified all HOME participating jurisdictions of
the planned IDIS programming changes to implement grant-specific
commitment deadline compliance for FY 2015 HOME grants.\2\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ HUD memorandum, ``System and Regulatory Changes to Eliminate
First-In-First-Out Accounting in the Integrated Disbursement and
Information System,'' May 9, 2014, https://www.hudexchange.info/resources/documents/CPD-Memo-System-and-Regulatory-Changes-to-Eliminate-First-In-First-Out-Accounting-in-IDIS.pdf; HUD fact sheet,
``Transition to Grant Based Accounting,'' June 2015, https://www.hudexchange.info/resources/documents/Transition-to-Grant-Based-Accounting.pdf; and HOME FACTS--Vol. 6 No. 2, June 2015, https://www.hudexchange.info/resources/documents/HOME-FACTS-Vo6-No2-HOME-IDIS-Grant-Based-Accounting.pdf.
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HUD has also conducted webinars to explain the pending changes in
the method for determining compliance with the commitment deadline
beginning with FY 2015 HOME grants.\3\ During 2015 and 2016, HUD
provided HOME grant-based accounting training at numerous HOME
conferences sponsored by membership associations for HOME participating
jurisdictions and at meetings hosted by HUD field offices across the
country.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ ``HOME IDIS Webinar: Grant Based Accounting Changes for FY
2015 and Onward,'' August 12, 2015, https://www.hudexchange.info/training-events/courses/home-idis-grant-based-accounting-changes-for-fy-2015-and-onward-webinar/.
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The scope of the rule amendments is limited to this change and to
other changes that: (1) Conform the regulations to the new method or
make minor corrections and clarifications of provisions relating to
commitments and the written agreements through which HOME funds are
committed; (2) eliminate the expenditure deadline and automatic project
cancellation provisions that are no longer required under the grant-
specific method of committing and expending funds, or which may
otherwise help to minimize undue risk of HOME funding deobligations;
and (3) establish a project commitment deadline for funds provided to
State recipients and subrecipients to ensure timely deployment of funds
for affordable housing projects.
With the exception of the new requirements related to program
income, this rule does not establish new and unfamiliar requirements
for HOME participating jurisdictions. Moreover, if HUD were to issue
this rule without adjusting the program income requirements, HOME
participating jurisdictions could potentially lose millions of dollars
of appropriated HOME funds each time they expended program income while
HUD conducted proposed and final rulemaking processes. Consequently,
the program income changes are included in the rule because they help
to avert the loss of large amounts of HOME funds by the communities and
beneficiaries for which they were appropriated.
Although HUD has determined that good cause exists to publish this
rule for effect without prior solicitation of public comment, HUD
recognizes the value and importance of public input in the rulemaking
process. Accordingly, HUD is issuing these regulatory amendments on an
interim basis and providing a 60-day public comment period. HUD is
specifically soliciting comment on the best way to treat program income
to avoid loss of appropriated HOME funds. All comments will be
considered in the development of the final rule.
IV. Findings and Certifications
Information Collection Requirements
In accordance with the Paperwork Reduction Act, an agency may not
conduct or sponsor, and a person is not required to respond to, a
collection of information unless the collection displays a currently
valid Office of
[[Page 86951]]
Management and Budget (OMB) control number. The information collection
requirements contained in this rule have been submitted to OMB under
the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501-3520) and assigned
OMB control number 2506-0171.
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
Title II of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA)
establishes requirements for Federal agencies to assess the effects of
their regulatory actions on State, local, and tribal governments and
the private sector. This rule will not impose any Federal mandates on
any State, local, or tribal governments or the private sector within
the meaning of UMRA.
Environmental Review
A Finding of No Significant Impact (FONSI) with respect to the
environment has been made in accordance with HUD regulations in 24 CFR
part 50 that implement section 102(2)(C) of the National Environmental
Policy Act of 1969 (42 U.S.C. 4332(2)(C)). The FONSI is available for
public inspection during regular business hours in the Regulations
Division, Office of General Counsel, Department of Housing and Urban
Development, 451 7th Street SW., Room 10276, Washington, DC 20410-0500,
and is also available to view on www.regulations.gov. Due to security
measures at the HUD Headquarters building, please schedule an
appointment to review the FONSI by calling the Regulations Division at
(202) 708-3055 (this is not a toll-free number). Individuals with
speech or hearing impairments may access this number via TTY by calling
the Federal Relay Service at (800) 877-8339 (this is a toll-free
number).
Impact on Small Entities
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA) (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.)
generally requires an agency to conduct a regulatory flexibility
analysis of any rule subject to notice and comment rulemaking
requirements, unless the agency certifies that the rule will not have a
significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.
As discussed, this regulation changes the manner in which HUD measures
compliance with the statutory 24-month commitment deadline in the HOME
program and does not alter the manner in which participating
jurisdictions administer their HOME programs. Given this fact, HUD
anticipates the regulatory changes will have minimal, or no, economic
impacts.
Therefore, the undersigned certifies that this rule will not have a
significant impact on a substantial number of small entities.
Notwithstanding HUD's belief that this rule will not have a
significant effect on a substantial number of small entities, HUD
specifically invites comments regarding any less burdensome
alternatives to this rule that will meet HUD's objectives as described
in this preamble.
Executive Order 13132, Federalism
Executive Order 13132 (entitled ``Federalism'') prohibits an agency
from publishing any rule that has federalism implications if the rule
either imposes substantial direct compliance costs on State and local
governments and is not required by statute or the rule preempts State
law, unless the agency meets the consultation and funding requirements
of section 6 of the Executive order. This rule does not have federalism
implications and does not impose substantial direct compliance costs on
State and local governments nor preempt State law within the meaning of
the Executive order.
Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance
The Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance number applicable to the
program that would be affected by this rule is 14.239.
List of Subjects
24 CFR Part 91
Aged, Grant programs-housing and community development, Homeless,
Individuals with disabilities, Low and moderate income housing,
Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
24 CFR Part 92
Administrative practice and procedure, Grant programs-housing and
community development, Low and moderate income housing, Manufactured
homes, Rent subsidies, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
Accordingly, for the reasons stated in the preamble, HUD amends 24
CFR parts 91 and 92 as follows:
PART 91--CONSOLIDATED SUBMISSIONS FOR COMMUNITY PLANNING AND
DEVELOPMENT PROGRAMS
0
1. The authority citation for part 91 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 3535(d), 3601-3619, 5301-5315, 11331-11388,
12701-12711, 12741-12756, and 12901-12912.
0
2. In Sec. 91.220, redesignate paragraphs (l)(2)(i) through (vii) as
(l)(2)(ii) through (viii), and add new paragraph (l)(2)(i) to read as
follows:
Sec. 91.220 Action plan.
* * * * *
(l) * * *
(2) * * *
(i) The HOME program resources that the participating jurisdiction
must describe in the action plan are the fiscal year HOME allocation
plus the amount of program income, repayments, and recaptured funds in
the participating jurisdiction's HOME Investment Trust Fund local
account (see 24 CFR 92.500(c)(1)) at the beginning of the participating
jurisdiction's program year. The jurisdiction may choose to include
program income, repayments, and recaptured funds that are expected to
be received during the program year if the jurisdiction plans to commit
these funds during the program year.
* * * * *
0
3. In Sec. 91.320, redesignate paragraphs (k)(2)(i) through (vii) as
paragraphs (k)(2)(ii) through (viii), and add new paragraph (k)(2)(i)
to read as follows.
Sec. 91.320 Action plan.
* * * * *
(k) * * *
(2) * * *
(i) The HOME program resources that the State must describe in the
action plan are the fiscal year HOME allocation plus the amount of
program income, repayments, and recaptured funds in the State's HOME
Investment Trust Fund local account (see 24 CFR 92.500(c)(1)) at the
beginning of the State's program year. The State may choose to include
program income, repayments, and recaptured funds that are expected to
be received during the program year if the State plans to commit these
funds during the program year.
* * * * *
0
4. Revise Sec. 91.505(a)(2) to read as follows:
Sec. 91.505 Amendments to the consolidated plan.
(a) * * *
(2) To carry out an activity, using funds from any program covered
by the consolidated plan (including program income, reimbursements,
repayment, recaptures, or reallocations from HUD), not previously
described in the action plan; or
* * * * *
PART 92--HOME INVESTMENT PARTNERSHIPS PROGRAM
0
5. The authority citation for part 92 continues to read as follows:
[[Page 86952]]
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 3535(d) and 12701-12839.
0
6. In Sec. 92.2, revise paragraph (1) of the definition of
``Commitment'' to read as follows:
Sec. 92.2 Definitions.
* * * * *
Commitment means:
(1) The participating jurisdiction has executed a legally binding
written agreement (that includes the date of the signature of each
person signing the agreement) that meets the minimum requirements for a
written agreement in Sec. 92.504(c). An agreement between the
participating jurisdiction and a subrecipient that is controlled by the
participating jurisdiction (e.g., an agency whose officials or
employees are official or employees of the participating jurisdiction)
does not constitute a commitment. An agreement between the
representative unit and a member unit of general local government of a
consortium does not constitute a commitment. Funds for administrative
and planning costs of the HOME program are committed based on the
amount in the program disbursement and information system for
administration and planning. The written agreement must be:
(i) With a State recipient or a subrecipient to use a specific
amount of HOME funds to produce affordable housing, provide downpayment
assistance, or provide tenant-based rental assistance;
(ii) With a community housing development organization to provide
operating expenses;
(iii) With a community housing development organization to provide
project-specific technical assistance and site control loans or
project-specific seed money loans, in accordance with Sec. 92.301;
(iv) To develop the capacity of community housing development
organizations in the jurisdiction, in accordance with Sec. 92.300(b);
or
(v) To commit to a specific local project, as defined in paragraph
(2) of this definition.
* * * * *
0
7. Revise Sec. 92.500(d) to read as follows:
Sec. 92.500 The HOME Investment Trust Fund.
* * * * *
(d)(1) Reductions of Fiscal Year 2015 and subsequent fiscal year
allocations. HUD will reduce or recapture HOME funds in the HOME
Investment Trust Fund, as follows:
(i) Any funds from a specific fiscal year allocation that are in
the United States Treasury account that are not committed (including
funds for community housing development organizations under Sec.
92.300) within 24 months after the last day of the month in which HUD
notifies the participating jurisdiction of HUD's execution of the HOME
Investment Partnership Agreement for the specific fiscal year
allocation;
(ii) Any funds from a specific fiscal year allocation that were
committed to a State recipient or subrecipient that are not committed
to a specific local project within 36 months after the last day of the
month in which HUD notifies the participating jurisdiction of HUD's
execution of the HOME Investment Partnership Agreement for the specific
fiscal year allocation;
(iii) Any funds from a specific fiscal year allocation that are in
the United States Treasury account that are not expended (drawn down)
by September 30 of the fifth year after the end of the period of
availability of the fiscal year allocation for obligation by HUD. Due
to end-of-year financial system closeouts that begin before this date
and prevent electronic access to the payment system, requests to draw
down the funds must be made at least 7 full business days before this
date to ensure that the funds still can be drawn from the United States
Treasury account through the computerized disbursement and information
system; and
(iv) Any penalties assessed by HUD under Sec. 92.552.
(2)(i) Reductions of Fiscal Year 2014 and prior fiscal year
allocations. HUD will reduce or recapture HOME funds in the HOME
Investment Trust Fund by the amount of:
(A) Any funds from Fiscal Year 2014 and prior fiscal year
allocations in the United States Treasury account that are required to
be reserved (i.e., 15 percent of the funds) by a participating
jurisdiction, under Sec. 92.300, and which are not committed to a
community housing development organization project within 24 months
after the last day of the month in which HUD notifies the participating
jurisdiction of HUD's execution of the HOME Investment Partnership
Agreement;
(B) Any funds from Fiscal Year 2014 and prior fiscal year
allocations in the United States Treasury account that are not
committed within 24 months after the last day of the month in which HUD
notifies the participating jurisdiction of HUD's execution of the HOME
Investment Partnership Agreement;
(C) Any funds from Fiscal Year 2014 and prior fiscal year
allocations in the United States Treasury account that are not expended
within 5 years after the last day of the month in which HUD notifies
the participating jurisdiction of HUD's execution of the HOME
Investment Partnership Agreement; and
(D) Any penalties assessed by HUD under Sec. 92.552.
(ii) For purposes of determining the amount by which the HOME
Investment Trust Fund will be reduced or recaptured under paragraphs
(d)(2)(i)(A), (B), and (C) of this section, HUD will consider the sum
of commitments to CHDOs, commitments, or expenditures, as applicable,
from all fiscal year allocations through the Fiscal Year 2014
allocation. This sum must be equal to or greater than the sum of all
fiscal year allocations through the fiscal year allocation being
examined (minus previous reductions to the HOME Investment Trust Fund),
or in the case of commitments to CHDOs, 15 percent of those fiscal year
allocations.
(iii) HUD will reduce or recapture HOME funds in the HOME
Investment Trust Fund by the amount of all fiscal year allocations
through the Fiscal Year 2014 allocation that are uncommitted by the
commitment deadline for the Fiscal Year 2015 allocation.
0
8. In Sec. 92.502, remove paragraph (b)(2), redesignate paragraph
(b)(1) as (b), and revise paragraph (c)(3) to read as follows:
Sec. 92.502 Program disbursement and information system.
* * * * *
(c) * * *
(3) HOME funds in the local account of the HOME Investment Trust
Fund must be disbursed before requests are made for HOME funds in the
United States Treasury account. Beginning with the Fiscal Year 2015
allocation, the specific funds that are committed to a project will be
disbursed for that project. If both funds in the local account and
funds in the United States Treasury account are committed to a project,
the funds in the local account must be disbursed before requests are
made for HOME funds in the United States Treasury account for the
project.
* * * * *
0
9. In Sec. 92.503, revise paragraphs (b)(2) and (3) and add paragraph
(d) to read as follows:
Sec. 92.503 Program income, repayments, and recaptured funds.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(2) Any HOME funds invested in a project that is terminated before
completion, either voluntarily or otherwise, must be repaid by the
participating jurisdiction, in accordance with paragraph (b)(3) of this
section,
[[Page 86953]]
except for repayments of project-specific community housing development
organization loans that are waived, in accordance with Sec. Sec.
92.301(a)(3) and (b)(3). In addition, any HOME funds used for costs
that are not eligible under this part must be repaid by the
participating jurisdiction, in accordance with paragraph (b)(3) of this
section.
(3) HUD will instruct the participating jurisdiction to either
repay the funds to the HOME Investment Trust Fund Treasury account or
the local account. If the jurisdiction is not a participating
jurisdiction at the time the repayment is made, the funds must be
remitted to HUD and reallocated, in accordance with Sec. 92.454.
* * * * *
(d) Commitment of funds in the local account. Beginning with the
Fiscal Year 2017 action plan, as provided in 24 CFR 91.220(l)(2) and
91.320(k)(2), program income, repayments, and recaptured funds in the
participating jurisdiction's HOME Investment Trust Fund local account
must be used in accordance with the requirements of this part, and the
amount of program income, repayments, and recaptured funds in the
participating jurisdiction's HOME Investment Trust Fund local account
at the beginning of the program year must be committed before HOME
funds in the HOME Investment Trust Fund United States Treasury account,
except for the HOME funds in the United States Treasury account that
are required to be reserved (i.e., 15 percent of the funds), under
Sec. 92.300(a), for investment only in housing to be owned, developed,
or sponsored by community housing development organizations. The
deadline for committing program income, repayments, and recaptured
funds received during a program year is the date of the participating
jurisdiction's commitment deadline for the subsequent year's grant
allocation.
0
10. Add Sec. 92.504(c)(7) and (8) to read as follows:
Sec. 92.504 Participating jurisdiction responsibilities; written
agreements; on-site inspection.
* * * * *
(c) * * *
(7) Community housing development organization receiving assistance
for project-specific technical assistance and site control loans or
project-specific seed money loans. The agreement must identify the
specific site or sites and describe the amount and use of the HOME
funds (in accordance with Sec. 92.301), including a budget for work, a
period of performance, and a schedule for completion. The agreement
must also set forth the basis upon which the participating jurisdiction
may waive repayment of the loans, consistent with Sec. 92.301, if
applicable.
(8) Technical assistance provider to develop the capacity of
community housing development organizations in the jurisdiction. The
agreement must identify the specific nonprofit organization(s) to
receive capacity building assistance. The agreement must describe the
amount and use (scope of work) of the HOME funds, including a budget, a
period of performance, and a schedule for completion.
* * * * *
Dated: November 22, 2016.
Harriet Tregoning,
Principal Deputy Assistant, Secretary for Community Planning and
Development.
Approved on November 2, 2016.
Nani A. Coloretti,
Deputy Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2016-28591 Filed 12-1-16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4210-67-P