Privacy Act of 1974; System of Records: Section 811 Project Rental Assistance Evaluation-Phase II, 48237-48240 [2017-22474]
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Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 199 / Tuesday, October 17, 2017 / Notices
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with NOTICES
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Mike Villano, (202) 447–5446,
Mike.Villano@hq.dhs.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Under 41
U.S.C. 3306, agencies are required to use
advance procurement planning and
conduct market research. Advance
planning and market research is a
means of developing the agency’s
acquisition requirements. As part of this
process, companies frequently ask to
meet with DHS representatives for
numerous reasons including: sharing
information on technologies and
company capabilities or to ask how to
do business with DHS. DHS needs the
information being collected to prepare
for productive meetings, share
information across the enterprise about
touchpoints the company has had at
DHS, and to better track the frequency
and number of meetings between DHS
and companies. No personal
information is being collected.
This is a means of improving the
procurement process that is used to
support the DHS mission. The above
statute is implemented by 48 CFR (FAR)
Part 10, Market Research. The
information collection method the
agency requests is not specifically
mentioned in the regulation but it is
nonetheless permissible because it
reasonable and does not request more
information than is necessary. Under 48
CFR (FAR) 1.102–4(e), Role of the
Acquisition Team, agencies are allowed
to implement a policy, procedure,
strategy or practice if it is in the interest
of the Government and is not otherwise
prohibit.
The information is being used by DHS
to help determine the department
personnel who should be attending the
meetings. It is also used by DHS
representatives to better prepare for the
meeting, so that it is productive for both
DHS and the companies It is helpful for
DHS to know background information
about the company as well as whether
they have met with DHS before and
whether they currently support the
Department. DHS also receives inquiries
from oversight bodies, such as Congress,
regarding with how many companies
DHS has met with as well as whether
DHS has met with specific companies.
The meeting information provides
source data for answering those
inquiries in an accurate and timely
manner. EngageDHS is a fillable form
that will be used to collect vendor/
industry meetings with DHS.
Upon a request for a meeting, DHS
will ask companies to complete a
request form and submit via email to the
DHS Industry Liaison mailbox at
DHSIndustryLiaison@hq.dhs.gov. Once
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18:21 Oct 16, 2017
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it is received by DHS, this form could
be electronically loaded into DHS’
system, called EngageDHS. (EngageDHS
is DHS’ implementation of Microsoft
Dynamics CRM.) This process makes it
easier and faster for companies to send
in the form (email versus paper mail). It
also reduces the burden on DHS
employees as they do not need to
manually input the information into
EngageDHS. Performing data collection
as discussed above would also reduce
the burden on the companies requesting
meetings with DHS as they would only
have to fill out the form at the time of
their first meeting request. So for
example, if a company over time meets
with representatives from multiple DHS
Components (e.g., Transportation
Security Administration, Federal
Emergency Management Agency, Coast
Guard, Immigration and Customs
Enforcement, etc.), the company would
only have to fill out the form once.
There is no assurance of
confidentiality provided to the
respondents for the collection of this
information. The collection of
information is covered by DHS/ALL/
PIA–006 DHS General Contact Lists
DHS/ALL–021 Department of Homeland
Security Contractors and Consultants,
October 23, 2008, 73 FR 63179.
This is a new information collection.
OMB is particularly interested in
comments which:
1. Evaluate whether the proposed
collection of information is necessary
for the proper performance of the
functions of the agency, including
whether the information will have
practical utility;
2. Evaluate the accuracy of the
agency’s estimate of the burden of the
proposed collection of information,
including the validity of the
methodology and assumptions used;
3. Enhance the quality, utility, and
clarity of the information to be
collected; and
4. Minimize the burden of the
collection of information on those who
are to respond, including through the
use of appropriate automated,
electronic, mechanical, or other
technological collection techniques or
other forms of information technology,
e.g., permitting electronic submissions
of responses.
Analysis
Agency: Office of the Chief
Procurement Officer, DHS.
Title: Agency Information Collection
Activities: EngageDHS.
OMB Number: 1601–NEW.
Frequency: Annually.
Affected Public: Private and Public
Sector.
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Number of Respondents: 750.
Estimated Time per Respondent: 0.25
hours.
Total Burden Hours: 187.5.
Dated: October 10, 2017.
Melissa Bruce,
Executive Director, Enterprise Business
Management Office.
[FR Doc. 2017–22509 Filed 10–16–17; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 9110–9B–P
DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND
URBAN DEVELOPMENT
[Docket No. FR–6009–N–04]
Privacy Act of 1974; System of
Records: Section 811 Project Rental
Assistance Evaluation—Phase II
Office of Policy Development
and Research, HUD.
ACTION: Notice of a New System of
Records.
AGENCY:
Pursuant to the Privacy Act of
1974, as amended, notice is hereby
given that the Office of Policy
Development and Research (PD&R),
Department of Housing and Urban
Development (HUD), provides public
notice regarding its System of Records
for the Section 811 Project Rental
Assistance Evaluation—Phase II. This
evaluation will assess the
implementation and effectiveness of the
Section 811 Project Rental Assistance
program for extremely low-income
nonelderly adults with disabilities.
Primary data collection will include
interviews with grantees and program
partners and stakeholders and surveys
of Section 811 Project Rental Assistance
and Project Rental Assistance Contract
residents. Secondary (existing) datasets
will include HUD administrative data,
Medicare and Medicaid data from the
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services (CMS), state Medicaid data
from six state Medicaid agencies, Project
Rental Assistance and Project Rental
Assistance Contract program
documents, and neighborhood
administrative data. A more detailed
description of the proposed system of
records is contained in the purpose
section of this notice.
DATES:
Applicable Date: This notice action
shall become applicable November 16,
2017.
Comments Due Date: November 16,
2017.
SUMMARY:
You may submit comments
by one of the following methods:
Federal e-Rulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov.
ADDRESSES:
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Follow the instructions provided on
that site to submit comments
electronically.
Facsimile: 202–619–8365.
Email: www.privacy@hud.gov.
Mail: Attention: Privacy Office, Helen
Goff Foster, The Executive Secretariat,
451 7th Street SW., Room 10139,
Washington, DC 20410–0001.
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with NOTICES
Note: All submissions received must
include the agency name and docket number
for this rulemaking. All comments received
will be posted without change to https://
www.regulations.gov, including any personal
information provided.
Docket: For access to the docket to
read background documents or
comments received, go to https://
www.regulations.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Helen Goff Foster, Senior Agency
Official for Privacy, at 451 7th Street
SW., Room 10139; U.S. Department of
Housing and Urban Development;
Washington, DC 20410–0001; telephone
number 202–708–3054 (this is not a tollfree number). Individuals who are
hearing- or speech-impaired may access
this telephone number via TTY by
calling the Federal Relay Service at 800–
877–8339 (this is a toll-free number).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The new
System of Records will encompass data
collected by PD&R to evaluate the
Section 811 HUD Project Rental
Assistance program. The Section 811
Project Rental Assistance program funds
a new model of housing assistance that
provides funding to state housing
agencies to work in partnership with
state human services and Medicaid
agencies to create community-based
supportive housing for extremely lowincome nonelderly adults with
disabilities, including those who are
currently in or at risk for residing in
institutions or who are currently (or at
risk for becoming) homeless. This study
is the second phase of a multiphase
evaluation. Phase I documented the
implementation experience of the first
12 state housing agencies that were
awarded the first round of Project Rental
Assistance grants. In Phase II, the
evaluation is focused on 6 states
selected from 28 state grantees from the
first and second rounds of Section 811
Project Rental Assistance funding:
California, Delaware, Louisiana,
Maryland, Minneapolis, and
Washington. The Phase II evaluation
will continue to follow the
implementation of the program but will
also assess the impact of the program on
participants’ quality of life and care,
housing and neighborhood, and
utilization and access to health services
and supports, as well as assess the cost-
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effectiveness of this supportive housing
model compared to other models of
supportive housing for persons with
disabilities.
The new notice states the name and
location of the record system, the
authority for and manner of its
operations, the categories of individuals
that it covers, the type of records that it
contains, the sources of the information
for the records, the routine uses made of
the records, and the types of exemptions
in place for the records. The notice also
includes the business address of the
HUD officials who will inform
interested persons of how they may gain
access to and/or request amendments to
records pertaining to themselves.
Publication of this notice allows the
Department to provide new information
about its system of records notices in a
clear and cohesive format. The new
system of records will incorporate
Federal privacy requirements and
Department’s policy requirements. The
Privacy Act places on Federal agencies
principal responsibility for compliance
with its provisions, by requiring Federal
agencies to safeguard an individual’s
records against an invasion of personal
privacy; protect the records contained in
an agency system of records from
unauthorized disclosure; ensure that the
records collected are relevant,
necessary, current, and collected only
for their intended use; and adequately
safeguard the records to prevent misuse
of such information. In addition, this
notice demonstrates the Department’s
focus on industry best practices to
protect the personal privacy of the
individuals covered by this SORN.
Pursuant to the Privacy Act and the
Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) guidelines, a report of the
amended system of records was
submitted to OMB, the Senate
Committee on Homeland Security and
Governmental Affairs, and the House
Committee on Oversight and
Government Reform, as instructed by
paragraph 4c of Appendix l to OMB
Circular No. A–130, ‘‘Federal Agencies
Responsibilities for Maintaining
Records About Individuals,’’ November
28, 2000.
System Name and Number:
Section 811 Project Rental Assistance
Evaluation—Phase II
SECURITY CLASSIFICATION:
This information will not be
classified.
SYSTEM LOCATION:
The records are maintained at the Abt
Associates (contractor) offices at 55
Wheeler Street, Cambridge, MA 02138
PO 00000
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and 4550 Montgomery Avenue,
Bethesda, MD 20814, and the U.S.
Department of Housing and Urban
Development, 451 7th Street SW.,
Washington, DC 20410–0001.
SYSTEM MANAGER(S):
Carol S. Star, Program Evaluation
Division, Office of Policy Development
and Research, Department of Housing
and Urban Development, 451 7th Street
SW., Washington, DC 20410; telephone
number 202–402–6139 (this is not a tollfree number).
AUTHORITY FOR MAINTENANCE OF THE SYSTEM:
Sec. 501 and 502 of the Housing and
Urban Development Act of 1970 (Pub. L.
91–609), 12 U.S.C. 1701z–1, 1701z–2.
PURPOSE(S) OF THE SYSTEM:
The purpose of the system is to allow
the Department to collect, track, and
study information gathered on Section
811 Project Rental Assistance program
participants and to analyze the
effectiveness of this rental assistance
model compared to other supportive
housing models for extremely lowincome nonelderly adults with
disabilities. This is the second of a
multiphase evaluation. The evaluation
is funded by the Program Evaluation
Division in PD&R. The project will
evaluate the implementation of the
Section 811 Project Rental Assistance
program, its impact on residents, and
the cost-effectiveness of this new
housing assistance model for persons
with disabilities in six states: California,
Delaware, Louisiana, Maryland,
Minneapolis, and Washington.
Phase II of the Section 811 Project
Rental Assistance evaluation will rely
on both primary and secondary sources
of data to inform the overall evaluation.
Primary data collection includes
interviews with grantees and program’s
partners and stakeholders, and surveys
of Section 811 Project Rental Assistance
and Project Rental Assistance Contract
residents. Secondary (existing) datasets
will include HUD administrative data,
Medicare and Medicaid data from CMS,
state Medicaid data from six state
Medicaid agencies, Project Rental
Assistance and Project Rental
Assistance Contract program
documents, and neighborhood
administrative data.
Primary data collection with grantees,
partnering agencies, and Project Rental
Assistance and Project Rental
Assistance Contract residents is
necessary to describe the
implementation of the Project Rental
Assistance program, identify
characteristics of successful program
strategies, and assess the impact of the
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program on Project Rental Assistance
residents compared to residents in the
traditional Project Rental Assistance
Contract program. The collection of
secondary data is necessary to identify
the outcomes of the Project Rental
Assistance program and characteristics
of Project Rental Assistance residents,
Project Rental Assistance Contract
residents, and individuals in the
program and comparison groups, and to
determine the effectiveness of this new
model of housing assistance.
This analysis will inform HUD
leadership, policymakers, and HUD
partners that implement supportive
housing programs for nonelderly adults
with disabilities. In addition, the
records collected through this
evaluation represent HUD’s effort to
assess and report to Congress on the
implementation and effectiveness of this
rental assistance approach. The data
collected for Section 811 Project Rental
Assistance Evaluation—Phase II will be
used and stored solely for research
purposes, and will not be used to
identify individuals or make decisions
that affect the rights, benefits, or
privileges of specific individuals. The
data in this system will include location
data, which will be used to analyze the
neighborhoods in which Section 811
Project Rental Assistance and Project
Rental Assistance Contract residents
live. The data in the system will also
include information about health,
housing, and quality of life measures,
which will be used to analyze the extent
to which people’s lives are being
improved by the Section 811 Project
Rental Assistance program. The data in
this system will be analyzed using
statistical methods and only reported in
the aggregate. Resulting reports will not
disclose or identify any individuals or
sensitive personal information. The
Section 811 Project Rental Assistance
Evaluation is in direct service of the
mission of PD&R, which is to ‘‘inform
policy development and
implementation to improve life in
American communities through
conducting, supporting, and sharing
research, surveys, demonstrations,
program evaluations, and best
practices.’’
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CATEGORIES OF INDIVIDUALS COVERED BY THE
SYSTEM:
Data will be collected from
households assisted by the Section 811
Project Rental Assistance and Section
811 Project Rental Assistance Contract
programs, other extremely low-income
households including a person with a
disability served by other HUD-assisted
housing programs, a sample of
individuals receiving Medicaid or
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similar state plan services, Section 811
housing agency grantees, and partnering
agencies (state Medicaid agencies,
property owners, service providers, and
public housing agencies). All
individuals live in the states of
California, Delaware, Louisiana,
Maryland, Minnesota, and Washington.
CATEGORIES OF RECORDS IN THE SYSTEM:
The data sets will contain the
following categories of records:
• Responses to resident survey:
Include participants’ names, address,
telephone numbers, names and contact
information of proxies and/or legal
guardians (if applicable), study
identifier, information about their
experience with the transition to HUDassisted housing, subjective assessment
of housing quality, subjective
assessment of neighborhood quality,
information about access to supportive
services and unmet needs, information
about help with supportive services,
subjective assessment of quality of life
and community inclusion.
• Administrative interviews: Include
identifying information—such as full
name; job title; and contact information,
including addresses, email addresses,
and telephone numbers—of program
staff and stakeholders (grantee,
Medicaid agency, property owners,
service providers, and public housing
authorities), and qualitative responses
about several aspects of the program
design and implementation.
• HUD Administrative data: Include
data on individuals, households, and
properties available through HUD
administrative data. Collection will be
brought into the dataset directly from
HUD’s Tenant Rental Assistance
Certification System (TRACS), Public
and Indian Housing Information Center
(PIC) Inventory Management System
(IMS), and Integrated Real Estate
Management System (iREMS). Tenantlevel and household-level data include
participants’ full names, dates of birth,
addresses, phone numbers, Social
Security numbers; information
pertaining to the participating family
structure, household size, household
income, race and demographics,
disability status, unit characteristics;
and information about participation in
HUD programs. Property-level data
include housing agency, property, unit
characteristic, and financial information
and contact information for property
owners, including full names,
addresses, phone numbers, and email
addresses.
• Medicare and Medicaid data:
Include data on individuals available
through the Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services and state Medicaid
PO 00000
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Sfmt 4703
48239
agencies (CMS). Collection will be
brought into the dataset directly from
CMS and state Medicaid agencies under
a Data Use Agreement with HUD and its
contractor Abt Associates. Include study
identifier (that can be matched to
individuals’ full names, dates of birth,
Social Security numbers), (such as
diagnoses), healthcare utilization, and
costs. medical record number, and
information pertaining to the
individuals’ medical services, medical
information. RECORD SOURCE
CATEGORIES: (1) Resident surveys
collected directly from Section 811
Project Rental Assistance and Project
Rental Assistance Contract residents
who have agreed to participate in the
survey; (2) Administrative interviews
collected directly from state housing
agency grantees; (3) Administrative
interviews collected directly from
partnering agencies who have agreed to
participate in the study; Administrative
data derived from HUD’s tenant and
property data systems; and Non-HUD
administrative data, such as Medicare
and historical Medicaid data; and state
Medicaid data.
ROUTINE USES OF RECORDS MAINTAINED IN THE
SYSTEM, INCLUDING CATEGORIES OF USERS AND
PURPOSES OF SUCH USES:
To appropriate agencies, entities, and
persons to the extent that such
disclosures are compatible with the
purpose for which the records in this
system were collected, as set forth by
Appendix I1—HUD’s Library of Routine
Uses, published in the Federal Register
(July 17, 2012, at 77 FR 41996).
1. To researchers for the purpose of
producing a dataset to be used to
support the Rent Reform Demonstration
and Impact Evaluation of the Rent
Reform Demonstration. The data
collection will specifically provide data
of the household’s characteristics to
describe the sample and ensure that the
two study groups are random, and
provide information that allows for the
initial triennial calculations to be
verified.
2. To appropriate agencies, entities,
and persons when: (a) HUD suspects or
has confirmed that the security or
confidentiality of information in a
system of records has been
compromised; (b) HUD has determined
that, as a result of the suspected or
confirmed compromise, there is a risk of
harm to economic or property interests,
identity theft or fraud, or harm to the
security or integrity of systems or
programs (whether maintained by HUD
or another agency or entity) that rely
upon the compromised information; and
(c) the disclosure made to such
agencies, entities, and persons is
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reasonably necessary to assist in
connection with HUD’s efforts to
respond to the suspected or confirmed
compromise and prevent, minimize, or
remedy such harm for purposes of
facilitating responses and remediation
efforts in the event of a data breach.
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POLICIES AND PRACTICES FOR STORAGE OF
RECORDS:
Abt Associates provides all project
staff with HIPAA Rules of the Road—
Practical Information for Ensuring
Compliance, IRB 101 Training, General
Security Awareness Training, and
Collaborative Institutional Training
Initiative (CITI) Human Subjects
Training. All study team members also
undergo project-specific training on
maintaining privacy and safe data
storage and handling procedures. All
study team members sign a
nondisclosure agreement.
All study team members will be made
aware of the project-specific data
regulations and best practices associated
with handling data for the study. These
practices are incorporated in the study
protocol and will be detailed in training
plans for interviewers, support staff, and
data analytic staff. All staff who will
have access to the data containing
personally identifiable information (PII)
or protected health information (PHI)
will sign a confidentiality agreement
pursuant to the requirements of all data
use agreements, which will be attached
to the data security plan. All staff will
also receive an annual reminder of the
terms of the agreement.
Abt will guarantee this level of
restricted access by only using secure
transfer mechanisms, such as Huddle,
Abt’s FedRAMP Moderate accredited
file transfer service for moving data in
and out of the system, or another secure
file transfer system (SFTP) of the
transferring agency’s choice. Abt will
also only access the data through its
restricted access folder on the Analytic
Computing Environment, ACE 3, which
meets NIST SP 800–53, Revision 4
FISMA Moderate Standards and utilizes
FedRAMP Moderate accredited services
from Amazon as infrastructure. Abt
Associates will retain all data collected
over the life of the study and any
analysis files generated with those data
for as long as required and only under
conditions specified in the study
protocol. At the end of the contract, Abt
will destroy records that do not need to
be retained. Abt will destroy the
remainder of the files after the contract
ends, as is required in the contract. The
retention and disposal procedures are in
keeping with HUD’s records
management policies as described in 44
U.S.C. 3101 and 44 U.S.C. 3303 and
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17:10 Oct 16, 2017
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with HUD’s Records Disposition
Schedule 67 PD&R, Item 6 (https://
portal.hud.gov/hudportal/documents/
huddoc?id=22256x67ADMH.pdf). Abt
Associates will submit all de-identified
data over to HUD at the end of the
contract, with the exception of the
ResDAC and Medicaid data, which will
not be included as per memorandum of
understanding with these agencies.
ADMINISTRATIVE, TECHNICAL, AND PHYSICAL
SAFEGUARDS:
The study’s approved data security
plan describes the safeguarding of any
hardcopy, recorded, and electronic
information on human subjects that will
be a part of the study. All study team
members are aware of the projectspecific data regulations and best
practices associated with handling data
for the study. These practices are
incorporated in the study protocol and
will be detailed in training plans for
interviewers, support staff, and data
analytic staff. All staff who will have
access to the data containing PII or PHI
information sign a confidentiality
agreement, per the requirements of all
data use agreements.
Abt will guarantee this level of
restricted access by only using secure
transfer mechanisms, such as Huddle,
Abt’s FedRAMP Moderate accredited
file transfer service for moving data in
and out of the system, or another SFTP
of the transferring agency’s choice. Abt
will also only access the data through its
restricted access folder on the Analytic
Computing Environment, ACE 3, which
meets NIST SP 800–53 Revision 4
FISMA Moderate Standards and utilizes
FedRAMP Moderate accredited services
from Amazon as infrastructure.
RECORD ACCESS PROCEDURES:
For information, assistance, or inquiry
about records, contact Helen Goff
Foster, Senior Agency Official for
Privacy, at 451 7th Street SW., Room
10139, U.S. Department of Housing and
Urban Development, Washington, DC
20410–0001, telephone number 202–
708–3054 (this is not a toll-free
number). When seeking records about
yourself from this system of records or
any other Housing and Urban
Development (HUD) system of records,
your request must conform with the
Privacy Act regulations set forth in 24
CFR part 16. You must first verify your
identity, meaning that you must provide
your full name, address, and date and
place of birth. You must sign your
request, and your signature must either
be notarized or submitted under 28
U.S.C. 1746, a law that permits
statements to be made, under penalty of
PO 00000
Frm 00029
Fmt 4703
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perjury, as a substitute for notarization.
In addition, your request should:
a. Explain why you believe HUD
would have information on you.
b. Identify which Office of HUD you
believe has the records about you.
c. Specify when you believe the
records would have been created.
d. Provide any other information that
will help the Freedom of Information
Act (FOIA) staff determine which HUD
office may have responsive records.
If your request is seeking records
pertaining to another living individual,
you must include a statement from that
individual certifying their agreement for
you to access their records. Without the
above information, the HUD FOIA
Office may not conduct an effective
search, and your request may be denied
due to lack of specificity or lack of
compliance with regulations.
CONTESTING RECORD PROCEDURES:
The Department’s rules for contesting
contents of records and appealing initial
denials appear in 24 CFR part 16,
Procedures for Inquiries. Additional
assistance may be obtained by
contacting Helen Goff Foster, Senior
Agency Official for Privacy, at 451 7th
Street SW., Room 10139, Department of
Housing and Urban Development,
Washington, DC 20410–0001, or the
HUD Departmental Privacy Appeals
Officers; Office of General Counsel;
Department of Housing and Urban
Development; 451 7th Street SW.,
Washington, DC 20410–0001.
NOTIFICATION PROCEDURES:
Individual wishing to determine to
whether this system of records contains
information about them may do so by
contacting their lending institutions or
contacting HUD’s Privacy Officer or
Freedom of Information Act Office at
the addresses above.
EXEMPTIONS PROMULGATED FOR THE SYSTEM:
None.
HISTORY:
None.
Dated: September 5, 2017.
Helen Goff Foster,
Chief Administrative Officer and Executive
Secretary, Senior Agency Official for Privacy.
[FR Doc. 2017–22474 Filed 10–16–17; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4210–67–P
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 82, Number 199 (Tuesday, October 17, 2017)]
[Notices]
[Pages 48237-48240]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2017-22474]
=======================================================================
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DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT
[Docket No. FR-6009-N-04]
Privacy Act of 1974; System of Records: Section 811 Project
Rental Assistance Evaluation--Phase II
AGENCY: Office of Policy Development and Research, HUD.
ACTION: Notice of a New System of Records.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: Pursuant to the Privacy Act of 1974, as amended, notice is
hereby given that the Office of Policy Development and Research (PD&R),
Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), provides public
notice regarding its System of Records for the Section 811 Project
Rental Assistance Evaluation--Phase II. This evaluation will assess the
implementation and effectiveness of the Section 811 Project Rental
Assistance program for extremely low-income nonelderly adults with
disabilities. Primary data collection will include interviews with
grantees and program partners and stakeholders and surveys of Section
811 Project Rental Assistance and Project Rental Assistance Contract
residents. Secondary (existing) datasets will include HUD
administrative data, Medicare and Medicaid data from the Centers for
Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), state Medicaid data from six state
Medicaid agencies, Project Rental Assistance and Project Rental
Assistance Contract program documents, and neighborhood administrative
data. A more detailed description of the proposed system of records is
contained in the purpose section of this notice.
DATES:
Applicable Date: This notice action shall become applicable
November 16, 2017.
Comments Due Date: November 16, 2017.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments by one of the following methods:
Federal e-Rulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov.
[[Page 48238]]
Follow the instructions provided on that site to submit comments
electronically.
Facsimile: 202-619-8365.
Email: www.privacy@hud.gov.
Mail: Attention: Privacy Office, Helen Goff Foster, The Executive
Secretariat, 451 7th Street SW., Room 10139, Washington, DC 20410-0001.
Note: All submissions received must include the agency name and
docket number for this rulemaking. All comments received will be
posted without change to https://www.regulations.gov, including any
personal information provided.
Docket: For access to the docket to read background documents or
comments received, go to https://www.regulations.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Helen Goff Foster, Senior Agency
Official for Privacy, at 451 7th Street SW., Room 10139; U.S.
Department of Housing and Urban Development; Washington, DC 20410-0001;
telephone number 202-708-3054 (this is not a toll-free number).
Individuals who are hearing- or speech-impaired may access this
telephone number via TTY by calling the Federal Relay Service at 800-
877-8339 (this is a toll-free number).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The new System of Records will encompass
data collected by PD&R to evaluate the Section 811 HUD Project Rental
Assistance program. The Section 811 Project Rental Assistance program
funds a new model of housing assistance that provides funding to state
housing agencies to work in partnership with state human services and
Medicaid agencies to create community-based supportive housing for
extremely low-income nonelderly adults with disabilities, including
those who are currently in or at risk for residing in institutions or
who are currently (or at risk for becoming) homeless. This study is the
second phase of a multiphase evaluation. Phase I documented the
implementation experience of the first 12 state housing agencies that
were awarded the first round of Project Rental Assistance grants. In
Phase II, the evaluation is focused on 6 states selected from 28 state
grantees from the first and second rounds of Section 811 Project Rental
Assistance funding: California, Delaware, Louisiana, Maryland,
Minneapolis, and Washington. The Phase II evaluation will continue to
follow the implementation of the program but will also assess the
impact of the program on participants' quality of life and care,
housing and neighborhood, and utilization and access to health services
and supports, as well as assess the cost-effectiveness of this
supportive housing model compared to other models of supportive housing
for persons with disabilities.
The new notice states the name and location of the record system,
the authority for and manner of its operations, the categories of
individuals that it covers, the type of records that it contains, the
sources of the information for the records, the routine uses made of
the records, and the types of exemptions in place for the records. The
notice also includes the business address of the HUD officials who will
inform interested persons of how they may gain access to and/or request
amendments to records pertaining to themselves.
Publication of this notice allows the Department to provide new
information about its system of records notices in a clear and cohesive
format. The new system of records will incorporate Federal privacy
requirements and Department's policy requirements. The Privacy Act
places on Federal agencies principal responsibility for compliance with
its provisions, by requiring Federal agencies to safeguard an
individual's records against an invasion of personal privacy; protect
the records contained in an agency system of records from unauthorized
disclosure; ensure that the records collected are relevant, necessary,
current, and collected only for their intended use; and adequately
safeguard the records to prevent misuse of such information. In
addition, this notice demonstrates the Department's focus on industry
best practices to protect the personal privacy of the individuals
covered by this SORN.
Pursuant to the Privacy Act and the Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) guidelines, a report of the amended system of records was
submitted to OMB, the Senate Committee on Homeland Security and
Governmental Affairs, and the House Committee on Oversight and
Government Reform, as instructed by paragraph 4c of Appendix l to OMB
Circular No. A-130, ``Federal Agencies Responsibilities for Maintaining
Records About Individuals,'' November 28, 2000.
System Name and Number:
Section 811 Project Rental Assistance Evaluation--Phase II
SECURITY CLASSIFICATION:
This information will not be classified.
SYSTEM LOCATION:
The records are maintained at the Abt Associates (contractor)
offices at 55 Wheeler Street, Cambridge, MA 02138 and 4550 Montgomery
Avenue, Bethesda, MD 20814, and the U.S. Department of Housing and
Urban Development, 451 7th Street SW., Washington, DC 20410-0001.
SYSTEM MANAGER(S):
Carol S. Star, Program Evaluation Division, Office of Policy
Development and Research, Department of Housing and Urban Development,
451 7th Street SW., Washington, DC 20410; telephone number 202-402-6139
(this is not a toll-free number).
AUTHORITY FOR MAINTENANCE OF THE SYSTEM:
Sec. 501 and 502 of the Housing and Urban Development Act of 1970
(Pub. L. 91-609), 12 U.S.C. 1701z-1, 1701z-2.
PURPOSE(S) OF THE SYSTEM:
The purpose of the system is to allow the Department to collect,
track, and study information gathered on Section 811 Project Rental
Assistance program participants and to analyze the effectiveness of
this rental assistance model compared to other supportive housing
models for extremely low-income nonelderly adults with disabilities.
This is the second of a multiphase evaluation. The evaluation is funded
by the Program Evaluation Division in PD&R. The project will evaluate
the implementation of the Section 811 Project Rental Assistance
program, its impact on residents, and the cost-effectiveness of this
new housing assistance model for persons with disabilities in six
states: California, Delaware, Louisiana, Maryland, Minneapolis, and
Washington.
Phase II of the Section 811 Project Rental Assistance evaluation
will rely on both primary and secondary sources of data to inform the
overall evaluation. Primary data collection includes interviews with
grantees and program's partners and stakeholders, and surveys of
Section 811 Project Rental Assistance and Project Rental Assistance
Contract residents. Secondary (existing) datasets will include HUD
administrative data, Medicare and Medicaid data from CMS, state
Medicaid data from six state Medicaid agencies, Project Rental
Assistance and Project Rental Assistance Contract program documents,
and neighborhood administrative data.
Primary data collection with grantees, partnering agencies, and
Project Rental Assistance and Project Rental Assistance Contract
residents is necessary to describe the implementation of the Project
Rental Assistance program, identify characteristics of successful
program strategies, and assess the impact of the
[[Page 48239]]
program on Project Rental Assistance residents compared to residents in
the traditional Project Rental Assistance Contract program. The
collection of secondary data is necessary to identify the outcomes of
the Project Rental Assistance program and characteristics of Project
Rental Assistance residents, Project Rental Assistance Contract
residents, and individuals in the program and comparison groups, and to
determine the effectiveness of this new model of housing assistance.
This analysis will inform HUD leadership, policymakers, and HUD
partners that implement supportive housing programs for nonelderly
adults with disabilities. In addition, the records collected through
this evaluation represent HUD's effort to assess and report to Congress
on the implementation and effectiveness of this rental assistance
approach. The data collected for Section 811 Project Rental Assistance
Evaluation--Phase II will be used and stored solely for research
purposes, and will not be used to identify individuals or make
decisions that affect the rights, benefits, or privileges of specific
individuals. The data in this system will include location data, which
will be used to analyze the neighborhoods in which Section 811 Project
Rental Assistance and Project Rental Assistance Contract residents
live. The data in the system will also include information about
health, housing, and quality of life measures, which will be used to
analyze the extent to which people's lives are being improved by the
Section 811 Project Rental Assistance program. The data in this system
will be analyzed using statistical methods and only reported in the
aggregate. Resulting reports will not disclose or identify any
individuals or sensitive personal information. The Section 811 Project
Rental Assistance Evaluation is in direct service of the mission of
PD&R, which is to ``inform policy development and implementation to
improve life in American communities through conducting, supporting,
and sharing research, surveys, demonstrations, program evaluations, and
best practices.''
CATEGORIES OF INDIVIDUALS COVERED BY THE SYSTEM:
Data will be collected from households assisted by the Section 811
Project Rental Assistance and Section 811 Project Rental Assistance
Contract programs, other extremely low-income households including a
person with a disability served by other HUD-assisted housing programs,
a sample of individuals receiving Medicaid or similar state plan
services, Section 811 housing agency grantees, and partnering agencies
(state Medicaid agencies, property owners, service providers, and
public housing agencies). All individuals live in the states of
California, Delaware, Louisiana, Maryland, Minnesota, and Washington.
CATEGORIES OF RECORDS IN THE SYSTEM:
The data sets will contain the following categories of records:
Responses to resident survey: Include participants' names,
address, telephone numbers, names and contact information of proxies
and/or legal guardians (if applicable), study identifier, information
about their experience with the transition to HUD-assisted housing,
subjective assessment of housing quality, subjective assessment of
neighborhood quality, information about access to supportive services
and unmet needs, information about help with supportive services,
subjective assessment of quality of life and community inclusion.
Administrative interviews: Include identifying
information--such as full name; job title; and contact information,
including addresses, email addresses, and telephone numbers--of program
staff and stakeholders (grantee, Medicaid agency, property owners,
service providers, and public housing authorities), and qualitative
responses about several aspects of the program design and
implementation.
HUD Administrative data: Include data on individuals,
households, and properties available through HUD administrative data.
Collection will be brought into the dataset directly from HUD's Tenant
Rental Assistance Certification System (TRACS), Public and Indian
Housing Information Center (PIC) Inventory Management System (IMS), and
Integrated Real Estate Management System (iREMS). Tenant-level and
household-level data include participants' full names, dates of birth,
addresses, phone numbers, Social Security numbers; information
pertaining to the participating family structure, household size,
household income, race and demographics, disability status, unit
characteristics; and information about participation in HUD programs.
Property-level data include housing agency, property, unit
characteristic, and financial information and contact information for
property owners, including full names, addresses, phone numbers, and
email addresses.
Medicare and Medicaid data: Include data on individuals
available through the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services and
state Medicaid agencies (CMS). Collection will be brought into the
dataset directly from CMS and state Medicaid agencies under a Data Use
Agreement with HUD and its contractor Abt Associates. Include study
identifier (that can be matched to individuals' full names, dates of
birth, Social Security numbers), (such as diagnoses), healthcare
utilization, and costs. medical record number, and information
pertaining to the individuals' medical services, medical information.
RECORD SOURCE CATEGORIES: (1) Resident surveys collected directly from
Section 811 Project Rental Assistance and Project Rental Assistance
Contract residents who have agreed to participate in the survey; (2)
Administrative interviews collected directly from state housing agency
grantees; (3) Administrative interviews collected directly from
partnering agencies who have agreed to participate in the study;
Administrative data derived from HUD's tenant and property data
systems; and Non-HUD administrative data, such as Medicare and
historical Medicaid data; and state Medicaid data.
Routine uses of records maintained in the system, including categories
of users and purposes of such uses:
To appropriate agencies, entities, and persons to the extent that
such disclosures are compatible with the purpose for which the records
in this system were collected, as set forth by Appendix I1--HUD's
Library of Routine Uses, published in the Federal Register (July 17,
2012, at 77 FR 41996).
1. To researchers for the purpose of producing a dataset to be used
to support the Rent Reform Demonstration and Impact Evaluation of the
Rent Reform Demonstration. The data collection will specifically
provide data of the household's characteristics to describe the sample
and ensure that the two study groups are random, and provide
information that allows for the initial triennial calculations to be
verified.
2. To appropriate agencies, entities, and persons when: (a) HUD
suspects or has confirmed that the security or confidentiality of
information in a system of records has been compromised; (b) HUD has
determined that, as a result of the suspected or confirmed compromise,
there is a risk of harm to economic or property interests, identity
theft or fraud, or harm to the security or integrity of systems or
programs (whether maintained by HUD or another agency or entity) that
rely upon the compromised information; and (c) the disclosure made to
such agencies, entities, and persons is
[[Page 48240]]
reasonably necessary to assist in connection with HUD's efforts to
respond to the suspected or confirmed compromise and prevent, minimize,
or remedy such harm for purposes of facilitating responses and
remediation efforts in the event of a data breach.
POLICIES AND PRACTICES FOR STORAGE OF RECORDS:
Abt Associates provides all project staff with HIPAA Rules of the
Road--Practical Information for Ensuring Compliance, IRB 101 Training,
General Security Awareness Training, and Collaborative Institutional
Training Initiative (CITI) Human Subjects Training. All study team
members also undergo project-specific training on maintaining privacy
and safe data storage and handling procedures. All study team members
sign a nondisclosure agreement.
All study team members will be made aware of the project-specific
data regulations and best practices associated with handling data for
the study. These practices are incorporated in the study protocol and
will be detailed in training plans for interviewers, support staff, and
data analytic staff. All staff who will have access to the data
containing personally identifiable information (PII) or protected
health information (PHI) will sign a confidentiality agreement pursuant
to the requirements of all data use agreements, which will be attached
to the data security plan. All staff will also receive an annual
reminder of the terms of the agreement.
Abt will guarantee this level of restricted access by only using
secure transfer mechanisms, such as Huddle, Abt's FedRAMP Moderate
accredited file transfer service for moving data in and out of the
system, or another secure file transfer system (SFTP) of the
transferring agency's choice. Abt will also only access the data
through its restricted access folder on the Analytic Computing
Environment, ACE 3, which meets NIST SP 800-53, Revision 4 FISMA
Moderate Standards and utilizes FedRAMP Moderate accredited services
from Amazon as infrastructure. Abt Associates will retain all data
collected over the life of the study and any analysis files generated
with those data for as long as required and only under conditions
specified in the study protocol. At the end of the contract, Abt will
destroy records that do not need to be retained. Abt will destroy the
remainder of the files after the contract ends, as is required in the
contract. The retention and disposal procedures are in keeping with
HUD's records management policies as described in 44 U.S.C. 3101 and 44
U.S.C. 3303 and with HUD's Records Disposition Schedule 67 PD&R, Item 6
(https://portal.hud.gov/hudportal/documents/huddoc?id=22256x67ADMH.pdf). Abt Associates will submit all de-
identified data over to HUD at the end of the contract, with the
exception of the ResDAC and Medicaid data, which will not be included
as per memorandum of understanding with these agencies.
ADMINISTRATIVE, TECHNICAL, AND PHYSICAL SAFEGUARDS:
The study's approved data security plan describes the safeguarding
of any hardcopy, recorded, and electronic information on human subjects
that will be a part of the study. All study team members are aware of
the project-specific data regulations and best practices associated
with handling data for the study. These practices are incorporated in
the study protocol and will be detailed in training plans for
interviewers, support staff, and data analytic staff. All staff who
will have access to the data containing PII or PHI information sign a
confidentiality agreement, per the requirements of all data use
agreements.
Abt will guarantee this level of restricted access by only using
secure transfer mechanisms, such as Huddle, Abt's FedRAMP Moderate
accredited file transfer service for moving data in and out of the
system, or another SFTP of the transferring agency's choice. Abt will
also only access the data through its restricted access folder on the
Analytic Computing Environment, ACE 3, which meets NIST SP 800-53
Revision 4 FISMA Moderate Standards and utilizes FedRAMP Moderate
accredited services from Amazon as infrastructure.
RECORD ACCESS PROCEDURES:
For information, assistance, or inquiry about records, contact
Helen Goff Foster, Senior Agency Official for Privacy, at 451 7th
Street SW., Room 10139, U.S. Department of Housing and Urban
Development, Washington, DC 20410-0001, telephone number 202-708-3054
(this is not a toll-free number). When seeking records about yourself
from this system of records or any other Housing and Urban Development
(HUD) system of records, your request must conform with the Privacy Act
regulations set forth in 24 CFR part 16. You must first verify your
identity, meaning that you must provide your full name, address, and
date and place of birth. You must sign your request, and your signature
must either be notarized or submitted under 28 U.S.C. 1746, a law that
permits statements to be made, under penalty of perjury, as a
substitute for notarization. In addition, your request should:
a. Explain why you believe HUD would have information on you.
b. Identify which Office of HUD you believe has the records about
you.
c. Specify when you believe the records would have been created.
d. Provide any other information that will help the Freedom of
Information Act (FOIA) staff determine which HUD office may have
responsive records.
If your request is seeking records pertaining to another living
individual, you must include a statement from that individual
certifying their agreement for you to access their records. Without the
above information, the HUD FOIA Office may not conduct an effective
search, and your request may be denied due to lack of specificity or
lack of compliance with regulations.
CONTESTING RECORD PROCEDURES:
The Department's rules for contesting contents of records and
appealing initial denials appear in 24 CFR part 16, Procedures for
Inquiries. Additional assistance may be obtained by contacting Helen
Goff Foster, Senior Agency Official for Privacy, at 451 7th Street SW.,
Room 10139, Department of Housing and Urban Development, Washington, DC
20410-0001, or the HUD Departmental Privacy Appeals Officers; Office of
General Counsel; Department of Housing and Urban Development; 451 7th
Street SW., Washington, DC 20410-0001.
NOTIFICATION PROCEDURES:
Individual wishing to determine to whether this system of records
contains information about them may do so by contacting their lending
institutions or contacting HUD's Privacy Officer or Freedom of
Information Act Office at the addresses above.
EXEMPTIONS PROMULGATED FOR THE SYSTEM:
None.
HISTORY:
None.
Dated: September 5, 2017.
Helen Goff Foster,
Chief Administrative Officer and Executive Secretary, Senior Agency
Official for Privacy.
[FR Doc. 2017-22474 Filed 10-16-17; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4210-67-P