Funding Availability Under Supportive Services for Veteran Families Program, 51483-51489 [2017-24118]
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Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 213 / Monday, November 6, 2017 / Notices
respondents, including through the use
of automated collection techniques or
the use of other forms of information
technology.
Authority: 38 U.S.C. part 1, Chapter 5,
Section 527.
Title: VA Cooperative Studies
Program (CSP); VA Form 10–10074, CSP
Customer Satisfaction Survey; VA Form
10–10074a, Meeting Evaluation.
OMB Control Number: 2900–0772.
Type of Review: Reinstatement of a
currently approved collection.
Abstract: The information collected
will be used by VA Cooperative Studies
Program (CSP) leadership to evaluate
their Coordinating Centers’ effectiveness
in conducting meetings and interacting
with participating study sites and other
customers.
Affected Public: Individuals and
households.
Estimated Annual Burden:
VA Form 10–10074—83 hours.
VA Form 10–10074a—83 hours.
Estimated Average Burden per
Respondent:
VA Form 10–10074—10 minutes.
VA Form 10–10074a—10 minutes.
Frequency of Response: Annually.
Estimated Number of Respondents:
VA Form 10–10074—500.
VA Form 10–10074a—500.
By direction of the Secretary.
Cynthia Harvey-Pryor,
Department Clearance Officer, Office of
Quality, Privacy and Risk, Department of
Veterans Affairs.
[FR Doc. 2017–24057 Filed 11–3–17; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8320–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF VETERANS
AFFAIRS
Funding Availability Under Supportive
Services for Veteran Families Program
Department of Veterans Affairs.
Notice of Fund Availability
(NOFA).
AGENCY:
ACTION:
The Department of Veterans
Affairs (VA) is announcing the
availability of funds for supportive
services grants under the Supportive
Services for Veteran Families (SSVF)
Program. This Notice of Fund
Availability (NOFA) contains
information concerning the SSVF
Program, renewal supportive services
grant application processes, and the
amount of funding available. Awards
made for supportive services grants will
fund operations beginning October 1,
2018.
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SUMMARY:
Applications for supportive
services grants under the SSVF Program
must be received by the SSVF Program
DATES:
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Office by 4:00 p.m. Eastern Time on
January 12, 2018. In the interest of
fairness to all competing applicants, this
deadline is firm as to date and hour, and
VA will treat as ineligible for
consideration any application that is
received after the deadline. Applicants
should take this practice into account
and make early submission of their
materials to avoid any risk of loss of
eligibility brought about by
unanticipated delays, computer service
outages, or other submission-related
problems.
For a Copy of the Application
Package: Copies of the application can
be downloaded from the SSVF Web site
at www.va.gov/homeless/ssvf.asp.
Questions should be referred to the
SSVF Program Office via email at
SSVF@va.gov. For detailed SSVF
Program information and requirements,
see part 62 of Title 38, Code of Federal
Regulations (38 CFR part 62).
Submission of Application Package:
Applicants must submit applications
electronically following instructions
found at www.va.gov/homeless/ssvf.
Applications may not be mailed or sent
by facsimile (FAX). Applications must
be received in the SSVF Program Office
by 4:00 p.m. Eastern Time on the
application deadline date. Applications
must arrive as a complete package.
Materials arriving separately will not be
included in the application package for
consideration and may result in the
application being rejected. See Section
II.C. of this NOFA for maximum
allowable grant amounts.
Technical Assistance: Information
regarding how to obtain technical
assistance with the preparation of a
renewal supportive services grant
application is available on the SSVF
Program Web site at: www.va.gov/
HOMELESS/SSVF.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr.
John Kuhn, National Director,
Supportive Services for Veteran
Families, 151 Knollcroft Road, Lyons,
NJ 07939, SSVF@va.gov, (908) 413–4259
(this is not a toll-free number).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Funding Opportunity Title:
Supportive Services for Veteran
Families Program.
Announcement Type: Initial.
Funding Opportunity Number: VA–
SSVF–120517.
Catalog of Federal Domestic
Assistance Number: 64.033, VA
Supportive Services for Veteran
Families Program.
I. Funding Opportunity Description
A. Purpose: The SSVF Program’s
purpose is to provide supportive
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51483
services grants to private non-profit
organizations and consumer
cooperatives, who will coordinate or
provide supportive services to very lowincome veteran families who: (i) Are
residing in permanent housing; (ii) are
homeless and scheduled to become
residents of permanent housing within
a specified time period; or (iii) after
exiting permanent housing within a
specified time period, are seeking other
housing that is responsive to such very
low-income veteran family’s needs and
preferences. SSVF prioritizes the
delivery of rapid re-housing services to
homeless veteran households. Rapid rehousing is an intervention designed to
help individuals and families quickly
exit homelessness, return to housing in
the community, and avoid homelessness
again in the near term. The core
components of a rapid re-housing
program are housing identification,
move-in and rent assistance, and rapid
re-housing case management and
services. These core components
represent the minimum that a program
must be providing to households to be
considered a rapid re-housing program,
but do not provide guidance for what
constitutes an effective rapid re-housing
program. Applicants should familiarize
themselves with the Rapid Re-housing
Performance Benchmarks and Program
Standards found on at www.va.gov/
homeless/ssvf/index.asp.
B. Funding Priorities: The principle
goal for this NOFA is to provide support
to those applicants who demonstrate the
greatest capacity to end homelessness
among veterans or, in communities that
have already met US Interagency
Council on Homelessness (USICH)
Federal Criteria and Benchmarks,
sustain the gains made in ending
homelessness among veterans. Priority
will be given to grantees who can
demonstrate adoption of evidence-based
practices in their application. Under
Priority 1, VA will provide funding to
those grantees with 3-year accreditation
from the Commission on Accreditation
of Rehabilitation Facilities (CARF) in
Employment and Community Services:
Rapid Rehousing and Homeless
Prevention standards, a 4-year
accreditation from the Council on
Accreditation’s (COA) accreditation in
Supported Community Living Services
standards, or a 3-year accreditation in
The Joint Commission’s (JC) Behavioral
Health Care: Housing Support Services
Standards. Priority 2 includes existing
grantees seeking to renew their grants.
C. Definitions: Part 62 of title 38, Code
of Federal Regulations (38 CFR part 62),
contains definitions of terms used in the
SSVF Program. In addition to the
definitions and requirements described
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in 38 CFR 62, this NOFA provides
further clarification in this paragraph on
the use of Emergency Housing
Assistance (EHA). EHA may be
provided by the SSVF grantee under 38
CFR 62.34(f) to offer transition in place
when a permanent housing voucher,
such as is offered through the
Department of Housing and Urban
Development’s (HUD) Section 8
program, is available from any source,
but access to the permanent housing
voucher is pending completion of the
housing inspection and administrative
processes necessary for leasing. In such
circumstances, the EHA payment cannot
exceed what would otherwise be paid
when the voucher is utilized.
D. Approach: Respondents to this
NOFA should base their proposals and
applications on the current
requirements of Part 62. Grantees will
be expected to leverage supportive
services grant funds to enhance the
housing stability of very low-income
veteran families who are occupying
permanent housing. In doing so,
grantees are required to establish
relationships with local community
resources. Therefore, agencies must
work through coordinated partnerships
built either through formal agreements
or the informal working relationships
commonly found among successful
social service providers.
As part of the application, all
applicants are strongly encouraged to
provide letters of support from their
respective VA Network Homeless
Coordinator (or their designee). In
addition, applicants are strongly
encouraged to provide letters of support
from the Continuum of Care (CoC)
where they plan to deliver services that
reflect the applicant’s engagement in the
CoC’s efforts to coordinate services. A
CoC is a community plan to organize
and deliver housing and services to
meet the needs of people who are
homeless as they move to stable housing
and maximize self-sufficiency. It
includes action steps to end
homelessness and prevent a return to
homelessness (CoC locations and
contact information can be found at
www.hudhre.info/
index.cfm?do=viewCocMaps.
The CoC’s letter of support should
note if the applicant is providing
assistance to the CoC in building local
capacity to build Coordinated Entry
Systems (CES) and the value and form
of that assistance, whether support is
direct funding or staffing. CES requires
that providers ‘‘operating within the
CoC’s geographic area must also work
together to ensure the CoC’s coordinated
entry process allows for coordinated
screening, assessment and referrals’’
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(HUD Notice: CPD–17–01). The CoC’s
letter of support should also describe
the applicant’s participation in the
CoC’s community planning efforts.
Failure to provide a letter of support
from the CoC as described will limit the
maximum award to 90 percent of the
award made in the previous fiscal year
(as described in II.C.7).
In addition, any applicant proposing
to serve an Indian Tribal area is strongly
encouraged to provide a letter of
support from the relevant Indian Tribal
Government. The aim of the provision
of supportive services is to assist very
low-income veteran families residing in
permanent housing to remain stably
housed and to rapidly transition those
not currently in permanent housing to
stable housing. SSVF emphasizes the
placement of homeless veteran families
who are described in VA’s regulations
as (i) very low-income veteran families
who are homeless and scheduled to
become residents of permanent housing
within 90 days, and (ii) very lowincome veteran families who have
exited permanent housing within the
previous 90 days to seek other housing
that is responsive to their needs and
preferences. As a crisis intervention
program, the SSVF Program is not
intended to provide long-term support
for participants, nor will it be able to
address all of the financial and
supportive services needs of
participants that affect housing stability.
Rather, when participants require longterm support, grantees should focus on
connecting such participants to income
supports, such as employment and
mainstream Federal and community
resources (e.g., HUD–VA Supportive
Housing program, HUD Housing Choice
Voucher programs, McKinney-Vento
funded supportive housing programs,
Temporary Assistance for Needy
Families (TANF), and Social Security
Income/Social Security Disability
Insurance (SSI/SSDI), etc.) that can
provide ongoing support as required.
Assistance in obtaining or retaining
permanent housing is a fundamental
goal of the SSVF Program. Grantees
must provide case management services
in accordance with 38 CFR 62.31. Such
case management should include tenant
counseling, mediation with landlords,
and outreach to landlords.
E. Authority: Funding available under
this NOFA is authorized by 38 U.S.C.
2044. VA implements the SSVF Program
through regulations in 38 CFR part 62.
Funds made available under this NOFA
are subject to the requirements of these
regulations and other applicable laws
and regulations.
F. Requirements for the Use of
Supportive Services Grant Funds: The
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applicant’s request for funding must be
consistent with the limitations and uses
of supportive services grant funds set
forth in 38 CFR part 62 and this NOFA.
In accordance with the regulations and
this NOFA, the following requirements
apply to supportive services grants
awarded under this NOFA:
1. Grantees may use a maximum of 10
percent of supportive services grant
funds for administrative costs identified
in 38 CFR 62.70.
2. Grantees must use a minimum of 60
percent of the temporary financial
assistance portion of their supportive
services grant funds to serve very lowincome veteran families who qualify
under 38 CFR 62.11(b). (NOTE: Grantees
may request a waiver to decrease this
minimum, as discussed in section
V.B.3.a.)
3. Grantees may use a maximum of 50
percent of supportive services grant
funds to provide the supportive service
of temporary financial assistance paid
directly to a third party on behalf of a
participant for child care, emergency
housing assistance, transportation,
rental assistance, utility-fee payment
assistance, security deposits, utility
deposits, moving costs, and general
housing stability assistance (which
includes emergency supplies), in
accordance with 38 CFR 62.33 and 38
CFR 62.34.
G. Guidance for the Use of Supportive
Services Grant Funds: Grantees are
expected to demonstrate adoption of
evidence-based practices most likely to
lead to reductions in homelessness or,
in communities that have successfully
ended homelessness among veterans as
defined by the USICH’s Federal Criteria
and Benchmarks or, alternatively,
Community Solutions’ Functional Zero
(the latter can be found at https://
cmtysolutions.org/sites/default/files/
final_zero_2016_metrics.pdf), a capacity
to sustain these gains. As part of their
application, the applying organization’s
Executive Director must certify on
behalf of the agency that they will
actively participate in community
planning efforts and operate the rapid
re-housing component of their SSVF
grant in a manner consistent with the
Rapid Re-housing Performance
Benchmarks and Program Standards
found at www.va.gov/homeless/ssvf/. It
is VA policy to support a ‘‘Housing
First’’ model in addressing and ending
homelessness. Housing First establishes
housing stability as the primary
intervention in working with homeless
persons. The Housing First approach is
based on research that shows that a
homeless individual or household’s first
and primary need is to obtain stable
housing, and that other issues that may
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affect the household can and should be
addressed as housing is obtained.
Research supports this approach as an
effective means to ending homelessness.
Housing is not contingent on
compliance with mandated therapies or
services; instead, participants must
comply with a standard lease agreement
and are provided with the services and
supports that are necessary to help them
do so successfully.
Grantees must develop plans that will
ensure that veteran participants have
the level of income and economic
stability needed to remain in permanent
housing after the conclusion of the
SSVF intervention. Both employment
and benefits assistance from VA and
non-VA sources represent a significant
underutilized source of income stability
for homeless veterans. Income is not a
pre-condition for housing. Case
management should include income
maximization strategies to ensure
households have access to benefits,
employment, and financial counseling.
The complexity of program rules and
the stigma some associate with
entitlement programs contributes to
their lack of use. For this reason,
grantees are encouraged to consider
strategies that can lead to prompt and
successful access to employment and
benefits that are essential to retaining
housing.
1. Consistent with the Housing First
model supported by VA, grantees are
expected to offer the following
supportive services: Counseling
participants about housing; assisting
participants in understanding leases;
securing utilities; making moving
arrangements; providing representative
payee services concerning rent and
utilities when needed; and mediation
and outreach to property owners related
to locating or retaining housing.
Grantees may also assist participants by
providing rental assistance, security or
utility deposits, moving costs,
emergency housing, or general housing
stability assistance; or using other
Federal resources, such as the HUD’s
ESG, or supportive services grant funds
subject to the limitations described in
this NOFA and 38 CFR 62.34.
2. As SSVF is a short-term crisis
intervention, grantees must develop
plans that will produce sufficient
income to sustain veteran participants
in permanent housing after the
conclusion of the SSVF intervention.
Grantees must ensure the availability of
employment and vocational services
either through the direct provision of
these services or their availability
through formal or informal service
agreements. Agreements with Homeless
Veteran Reintegration Programs funded
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by the U.S. Department of Labor are
strongly encouraged. For participants
unable to work due to disability, income
must be established through available
benefits programs.
3. Per 38 CFR 62.33, grantees must
assist participants in obtaining public
benefits. Grantees must screen all
participants for eligibility for a broad
range of entitlements such as TANF,
Social Security, the Supplemental
Nutrition Assistance Program, the Low
Income Home Energy Assistance
Program, the Earned Income Tax Credit,
and local General Assistance programs.
Grantees are expected to access the
Substance Abuse and Mental Health
Services Administration’s SSI/SSDI
Outreach, Access, and Recovery (SOAR)
program directly by training staff and
providing the service or subcontracting
services to an organization to provide
SOAR services. In addition, where
available, grantees should access
information technology tools to support
case managers in their efforts to link
participants to benefits.
4. Grantees are encouraged to provide,
or assist participants in obtaining, legal
services relevant to issues that interfere
with the participants’ ability to obtain or
retain permanent housing. (NOTE:
Information regarding legal services
provided may be protected from being
released to the grantee or VA under
attorney-client privilege, although the
grantee must provide sufficient
information to demonstrate the
frequency and type of service
delivered.) Support for legal services
can include paying for court filing fees
to assist a participant with issues that
interfere with the participant’s ability to
obtain or retain permanent housing or
supportive services, including issues
that affect the participant’s
employability and financial security.
Grantees (in addition to employees and
members of grantees) may represent
participants before VA with respect to a
claim for VA benefits, but only if they
are recognized for that purpose pursuant
to 38 U.S.C. Chapter 59. Further, the
individual providing such
representation must be accredited
pursuant to 38 U.S.C. Chapter 59.
5. Access to mental health and
addiction services are required by SSVF;
however, grantees cannot fund these
services directly through the SSVF
grant. Therefore, applicants must
demonstrate, through either formal or
informal agreements, their ability to
promote rapid access to and engagement
with mental health and addiction
services for the veteran and family
members.
6. VA recognizes that extremely lowincome veterans, with incomes below
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30 percent of the area median income,
face greater barriers to permanent
housing placement. Grantees should
consider how they can support these
participants.
7. When serving participants who are
residing in permanent housing, the
defining question to ask is: ‘‘Would this
individual or family be homeless but for
this assistance?’’ The grantee must use
a VA-approved screening tool with
criteria that target those most at-risk of
homelessness. To qualify for SSVF
services, a participant who is served
under 38 CFR 62.11(a) (homeless
prevention) must not have sufficient
resources or support networks (e.g.,
family, friends, faith-based or other
social networks) immediately available
to prevent them from becoming
homeless. To further qualify for services
under 38 CFR 62.11(a), the grantee must
document that the participant meets at
least one of the following conditions:
(a) Has moved because of economic
reasons two or more times during the 60
days immediately preceding the
application for homelessness prevention
assistance;
(b) Is living in the home of another
because of economic hardship;
(c) Has been notified in writing that
their right to occupy their current
housing or living situation will be
terminated within 21 days after the date
of application for assistance;
(d) Lives in a hotel or motel, and the
cost of the hotel or motel stay is not paid
by charitable organizations or by
Federal, State, or local government
programs for low-income individuals;
(e) Is exiting a publicly funded
institution or system of care (such as a
health care facility, a mental health
facility, or correctional institution)
without a stable housing plan; or
(f) Otherwise lives in housing that has
characteristics associated with
instability and an increased risk of
homelessness, as identified in the
recipient’s approved screening tool.
8. SSVF grantees are required to
participate in local planning efforts
designed to end veteran homelessness.
Grantees may use grant funds to support
SSVF involvement in such community
planning by sub-contracting with CoCs,
when such funding is essential, to create
or sustain the development of these data
driven plans.
9. When other funds from community
resources are not readily available to
assist program participants, grantees
may choose to utilize supportive
services grants, to the extent described
in this NOFA and in 38 CFR 62.33 and
62.34, to provide temporary financial
assistance. Such assistance may, subject
to the limitations in this NOFA and 38
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CFR part 62, be paid directly to a third
party on behalf of a participant for child
care, transportation, family emergency
housing assistance, rental assistance,
utility-fee payment assistance, security
or utility deposits, moving costs and
general housing stability assistance as
necessary.
II. Award Information
A. Overview: This NOFA announces
the availability of funds for supportive
services grants under the SSVF Program
and pertains to proposals for renewal of
existing supportive services grant
programs.
B. Funding: The following funding
priorities for this NOFA are as follows.
1. Priority 1. Under Priority 1, VA will
provide funding to those grantees with
3-year CARF, 4-year COA
accreditations, or 3-year JC
accreditations. Proof of accreditation
must be submitted with the application
no later than the application due date.
Grantees previously awarded a 3-year
grant that is not scheduled to end by
October 1, 2018, cannot apply under
this NOFA but are required to submit a
letter of intent (LOI) by the NOFA
deadline indicating their intention of
continuing SSVF services in FY 2019.
Grantees submitting a LOI must include
proof of continued accreditation, a letter
of support from the CoC (see Section
II.C.7.) and a proposed budget for FY
2019.
2. Priority 2. Priority 2 includes all
other existing grantees seeking to renew
their grants. Eligible applicants include
those grantees who did not receive an
award in FY 2018, but had been granted
funding extensions on a previous SSVF
award that extended program operations
through the end of FY 2018 [NOTE: only
extensions that lasted through
September 30, 2018, will be considered
as being eligible to apply as renewal
applicants].
Both Priority 1 and 2 applicants must
apply using the renewal application. To
be eligible for renewal of a supportive
services grant, the Priority 1 and 2
applicants’ program concept must be
substantially the same as the program
concept of the grantees’ current grant
award. Renewal applications can
request funding that is equal to or less
than their current annualized award.
Depending on funding availability, VA
may reduce awards by an amount from
1 to 10 percent. Should such a decrease
take place, it will be applied uniformly
to all grant recipients regardless of their
grant award. This decrease would be
made after any reductions to awards
based on Sections II.C.4 and II.C.7. If
sufficient funding is available, VA may
provide an increase of up to 2 percent
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from the previous year’s award. Any
percentage increase, if provided, will be
awarded uniformly to all grant
recipients regardless of their grant
award.
C. Allocation of Funds: Funding will
be awarded under this NOFA to existing
grantees for a 1-year to 3-year period
beginning October 1, 2018. The
following requirements apply to
supportive services grants awarded
under this NOFA:
1. In response to this NOFA, only
existing grantees can apply as Priority 1
or 2 grantees.
2. Each renewal grant request cannot
exceed the current annualized award.
3. Applicants may request an amount
less than their current award (this will
not be considered a substantial change
to the program concept).
4. If a grantee failed to use all of
awarded funds in the previous fiscal
year (FY 2017) or had unspent funds
returned to VA in FY 2018, VA may
elect to limit renewal award to the
amount of funds used in the previous
fiscal year or in the current fiscal year
less the money swept.
5. If, during the course of the grant
year, VA determines that grantee
spending is not meeting the minimum
percentage milestones below, VA may
elect to recoup projected unused funds
and reprogram such funds to provide
supportive services in areas with higher
need. Should VA elect to recoup
unspent funds, reductions in available
grant funds would take place the first
business day following the end of the
quarter.
(a) By the end of the first quarter
(December 31, 2018) of the grantee’s
supportive services annualized grant
award period, the grantee’s cumulative
requests for supportive services grant
funds is fewer than 15 percent of total
supportive services grant award. (During
this same period, the grantee’s
cumulative requests for supportive
services grant funds may not exceed 35
percent of the total supportive services
grant award.)
(b) By the end of the second quarter
(March 31, 2019) of the grantee’s
supportive services annualized grant
award period, the grantee’s cumulative
requests for supportive services grant
funds is fewer than 40 percent of total
supportive services grant award. (During
this same period, the grantee’s
cumulative requests for supportive
services grant funds may not exceed 60
percent of the total supportive services
grant award.)
(c) By the end of the third quarter
(June 30, 2019) of the grantee’s
supportive services annualized grant
award period, the grantee’s cumulative
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requests for supportive services grant
funds is fewer than 65 percent of total
supportive services grant award. (During
this same period, the grantee’s
cumulative requests for supportive
services grant funds may not exceed 80
percent of the total supportive services
grant award).
6. Applicants should fill out separate
applications for each supportive
services funding request.
7. Applicants who fail to provide a
letter of support from at least one of the
CoCs they plan to serve will be eligible
for renewal funding at a level no greater
than 90 percent of their previous award.
Applicants are responsible for
determining who in each serviced CoC
is authorized to provide such letters of
support. This requirement applies to all
applicants, including existing multiyear grantees that are only required to
submit a LOI in response to this NOFA.
In order to meet this requirement and
allow the applicant to be eligible for full
funding, letters must include:
(a) A detailed description of the
applicant’s participation in the CoC’s
Coordinated Entry process or planning
activities and overall community
planning efforts (for instance,
confirmation of applicant’s active
participation in planning coordinated
entry, commitment to participating in
coordinated entry, hours spent on CoCsponsored committee or workgroup
assignments and names of said
committees or workgroups).
(b) The applicant’s contribution to the
CoC’s coordinated entry process
capacity building efforts, detailing the
specific nature of this contribution (for
instance, the hours of staff time and/or
the amount of funding provided), if
such SSVF capacity has been requested
by the CoC or otherwise has shown to
be of value to the CoC.
D. Supportive Services Grant Award
Period: Grant awards are generally made
for a 1-year period, although selected
grants may be eligible for a 3-year award
(see VI.C.6). All grants are eligible to be
renewed subject to the availability of
funding.
III. Eligibility Information
A. Eligible Applicants: For Priority 1
and 2, only eligible entities that are
existing grantees with grants scheduled
to end by September 30, 2018, can apply
in response to this NOFA.
B. Cost Sharing or Matching: None.
IV. Application and Submission
Information
A. Obtaining an Application Package:
Applications can be at www.va.gov/
homeless/ssvf.asp. Any questions
regarding this process should be
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referred to the SSVF Program Office via
email at SSVF@va.gov. For detailed
SSVF Program information and
requirements, see 38 CFR part 62.
B. Content and Form of Application:
Applicants must submit applications
electronically following instructions
found at www.va.gov/homeless/ssvf.asp.
C. Submission Dates and Times:
Applications for supportive services
grants under the SSVF Program must be
received by the SSVF Program Office by
4:00 p.m. Eastern Time on January 12,
2018. Awards made for supportive
services grants will fund operations
beginning October 1, 2018. Applications
must arrive as a complete package.
Materials arriving separately will not be
included in the application package for
consideration and may result in the
application being rejected. Additionally,
in the interest of fairness to all
competing applicants, this deadline is
firm as to date and hour, and VA will
treat as ineligible for consideration any
application that is received after the
deadline. Applicants should take this
practice into account and make early
submission of their materials to avoid
any risk of loss of eligibility brought
about by unanticipated delays,
computer service outages, or other
delivery-related problems.
D. Intergovernmental Review: This
section is not applicable to the SSVF
Program.
E. Funding Restrictions: Funding will
be awarded for supportive services
grants under this NOFA depending on
funding availability (currently funding
is only authorized to be appropriated for
the SSVF program through FY 2019).
Applicants should fill out separate
applications for each supportive
services funding request. Funding will
be awarded under this NOFA to existing
grantees for a 1-year to 3-year period
beginning October 1, 2018.
1. Funding used for staff education
and training cannot exceed 1 percent of
the overall program grant award. This
limitation does not include the cost to
attend VA mandated training. All
training costs must be directly related to
the provision of services to homeless
veterans and their families.
2. Expenses related to maintaining
accreditation are allowable. Grantees are
allowed to include expenses for seeking
initial accreditation only once in a 5year period. The expenses to renew full
accreditation is allowed and is based on
the schedule of the accrediting agency,
for instance every 3 years for CARF and
every 4 years for COA. Expenses related
to the renewal of less than full
accreditation are not allowed.
F. Other Submission Requirements:
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1. Existing applicants applying for
Priority 1 or 2 grants may apply only as
renewal applicants using the
application designed for renewal grants.
2. At the discretion of VA, multiple
grant proposals submitted by the same
lead agency may be combined into a
single grant award if the proposals
provide services to contiguous areas.
3. Additional supportive services
grant application requirements are
specified in the application package.
Submission of an incorrect or
incomplete application package will
result in the application being rejected
during threshold review. The
application packages must contain all
required forms and certifications.
Selections will be made based on
criteria described in 38 CFR part 62 and
this NOFA. Applicants and grantees
will be notified of any additional
information needed to confirm or clarify
information provided in the application
and the deadline by which to submit
such information. Applicants must
submit applications electronically.
Applications may not be mailed or sent
by facsimile.
V. Application Review Information
A. Criteria:
1. VA will only score applicants that
meet the threshold requirements
described in 38 CFR 62.21.
2. VA will use the criteria described
in 38 CFR 62.24 to score grantees
applying for renewal (Priority 1 and 2)
of a supportive services grant.
B. Review and Selection Process: VA
will review all supportive services
renewal grant applications in response
to this NOFA according to the following
steps:
1. Score all applications that meet the
threshold requirements described in 38
CFR 62.21.
2. Rank those applications who score
at least 75 cumulative points and
receive at least one point under each of
the categories identified for renewal
applicants in 38 CFR 62.24. The
applications will be ranked in order
from highest to lowest scores in
accordance with 38 CFR 62.25 for
renewal applicants.
3. Utilize the ranked scores of
applications as the primary basis for
selection. However, VA will also utilize
the following considerations in 38 CFR
62.23(d) to select applicants for funding:
(a) Give preference to applications
that provide or coordinate the provision
of supportive services for very lowincome veteran families transitioning
from homelessness to permanent
housing. Consistent with this
preference, where other funds from
community resources are not readily
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51487
available for temporary financial
assistance, applicants are required to
spend no less than 60 percent of all
budgeted temporary financial assistance
on participants occupying permanent
housing as defined in 38 CFR 62.11(b).
Waivers to this 60 percent requirement
may be requested when grantees can
demonstrate significant local progress
towards eliminating homelessness in
the target service area. Waiver requests
must include data from authoritative
sources such as USICH certification,
that a community has ended
homelessness as defined by Federal
Benchmarks and Criteria or has reached
Community Solution’s Functional Zero.
Waivers for the 60 percent requirement
may also be requested for services
provided to rural Indian tribal areas and
other rural areas where shelter capacity
is insufficient to meet local need.
Waiver requests must include an
endorsement by the impacted CoC
explicitly stating that a shift in
resources from rapid re-housing to
prevention will not result in an increase
in homelessness.
(b) To the extent practicable, ensure
that supportive services grants are
equitably distributed across geographic
regions, including rural communities
and tribal lands. This equitable
distribution criteria will be used to
ensure that SSVF resources are provided
to those communities with the highest
need as identified by VA’s assessment of
expected demand and available
resources to meet that demand.
4. Subject to the considerations noted
in paragraph B.3 above, VA will fund
the highest-ranked applicants for which
funding is available.
VI. Award Administration Information
A. Award Notices: Although subject to
change, the SSVF Program Office
expects to announce grant recipients for
all applicants in the fourth quarter of FY
2018 with grants beginning October 1,
2018. Prior to executing a funding
agreement, VA will contact the
applicants, make known the amount of
proposed funding and verify that the
applicant would still like the funding.
Once VA verifies that the applicant is
still seeking funding, VA will execute
an agreement and make payments to the
grant recipient in accordance with 38
CFR part 62 and this NOFA.
B. Administrative and National Policy
Requirements: It is VA policy to support
a ‘‘Housing First’’ model in addressing
and ending homelessness. Housing First
establishes housing stability as the
primary intervention in working with
homeless persons. The Housing First
approach is based on research that
shows that a homeless individual or
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household’s first and primary need is to
obtain stable housing, and that other
issues that may affect the household can
and should be addressed as housing is
obtained. Housing is not contingent on
compliance with services; instead,
participants must comply with a
standard lease agreement and are
provided with the services and supports
that are necessary to help them do so
successfully. Research supports this
approach as an effective means to
ending homelessness.
Consistent with the Housing First
model supported by VA, grantees are
expected to offer the following
supportive services: housing counseling;
assisting participants in understanding
leases; securing utilities; making moving
arrangements; providing representative
payee services concerning rent and
utilities when needed; and mediation
and outreach to property owners related
to locating or retaining housing.
Grantees may also assist participants by
providing rental assistance, security or
utility deposits, moving costs or general
housing stability assistance, using other
Federal resources, such as the ESG, or
supportive services grant funds to the
extent described in this NOFA and 38
CFR 62.34.
As SSVF grants cannot be used to
fund treatment for mental health or
substance use disorders, applicants
must provide evidence that they can
provide access to such services to all
program participants through formal
and informal agreements with
community providers.
C. Reporting: VA places great
emphasis on the responsibility and
accountability of grantees. As described
in 38 CFR 62.63 and 62.71, VA has
procedures in place to monitor
supportive services provided to
participants and outcomes associated
with the supportive services provided
under the SSVF Program. Applicants
should be aware of the following:
1. Upon execution of a supportive
services grant agreement with VA,
grantees will have a VA regional
coordinator assigned by the SSVF
Program Office who will provide
oversight and monitor supportive
services provided to participants.
2. Grantees will be required to enter
data into a Homeless Management
Information System (HMIS) Web-based
software application. This data will
consist of information on the
participants served and types of
supportive services provided by
grantees. Grantees must treat the data
for activities funded by the SSVF
Program separate from that of activities
funded by other programs. Grantees will
be required to work with their HMIS
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Administrators to export client-level
data for activities funded by the SSVF
Program to VA on at least a monthly
basis.
3. VA shall complete annual
monitoring evaluations of each grantee.
Monitoring will also include the
submittal of quarterly and annual
financial and performance reports by
the grantee. The grantee will be
expected to demonstrate adherence to
the grantee’s proposed program concept,
as described in the grantee’s
application. All grantees are subject to
audits conducted by the VA or its
representative.
4. Grantees will be assessed based on
their ability to meet critical performance
measures. In addition to meeting
program requirements defined by the
regulations and applicable NOFA(s),
grantees will be assessed on their ability
to place participants into housing and
the housing retention rates of
participants served. Higher placement
for homeless participants and higher
housing retention rates for at-risk
participants are expected for very-low
income veteran families when compared
to extremely low-income veteran
families with incomes below 30 percent
of the area median income.
5. Organizations receiving renewal
awards and that have had ongoing SSVF
program operation for at least 1 year (as
measured from the start of initial SSVF
services until November 6, 2017) may be
eligible for a 3-year award. Grantees
meeting outcome goals defined by VA
and in substantial compliance with their
grant agreements (defined by meeting
targets and having no outstanding
corrective action plans) and who, in
addition, receive 3-year accreditation
from CARF in Employment and
Community Services: Rapid Rehousing
and Homeless Prevention standards, a 4year accreditation from COA
accreditation in Supported Community
Living Services standards, or a 3 year
accreditation in The Joint Commission’s
Behavioral Health Care: Housing
Support Services Standards are eligible
for a 3-year grant renewal subject to
funding availability. (NOTE: Multi-year
awards are contingent on funding
availability). If awarded a multiple year
renewal, grantees may be eligible for
funding increases as defined in NOFAs
that correspond to years 2 and 3 of their
renewal funding.
VII. Agency Contact
Mr.
John Kuhn, National Director,
Supportive Services for Veteran
Families, 151 Knollcroft Road, Lyons,
NJ 07939, SSVF@va.gov, (908) 413–4259
(this is not a toll-free number).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
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VIII. Other Information
A. VA Goals and Objectives for Funds
Awarded Under This NOFA: In
accordance with 38 CFR 62.24(c), VA
will evaluate an applicant’s compliance
with VA goals and requirements for the
SSVF Program. VA goals and
requirements include the provision of
supportive services designed to enhance
the housing stability and independent
living skills of very low-income veteran
families occupying permanent housing
across geographic regions and program
administration in accordance with all
applicable laws, regulations, and
guidelines. For purposes of this NOFA,
VA goals and requirements also include
the provision of supportive services
designed to rapidly re-house or prevent
homelessness among people in the
following target populations who also
meet all requirements for being part of
a very low-income veteran family
occupying permanent housing:
1. Veteran families earning less than
30 percent of area median income as
most recently published by HUD for
programs under section 8 of the United
States Housing Act of 1937 (42 U.S.C.
1437f) (https://www.huduser.org).
2. Veterans with at least one
dependent family member.
3. Veterans returning from Operation
Enduring Freedom, Operation Iraqi
Freedom, or Operation New Dawn.
4. Veteran families located in a
community, as defined by HUD’s CoC,
or a county not currently served by a
SSVF grantee.
5. Veteran families located in a
community, as defined by HUD’s CoC,
where current level of SSVF services is
not sufficient to meet demand of
Category 2 and 3 (currently homeless)
veteran families.
6. Veteran families located in a rural
area.
7. Veteran families located on Indian
Tribal Property.
B. Payments of Supportive Services
Grant Funds: Grantees will receive
payments electronically through the
U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services Payment Management System.
Grantees will have the ability to request
payments as frequently as they choose
subject to the following limitations:
1. During the first quarter of the
grantee’s supportive services annualized
grant award period, the grantee’s
cumulative requests for supportive
services grant funds may not exceed 35
percent of the total supportive services
grant award without written approval by
VA.
2. By the end of the second quarter of
the grantee’s supportive services
annualized grant award period, the
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grantee’s cumulative requests for
supportive services grant funds may not
exceed 60 percent of the total
supportive services grant award without
written approval by VA.
3. By the end of the third quarter of
the grantee’s supportive services
annualized grant award period, the
grantee’s cumulative requests for
supportive services grant funds may not
exceed 80 percent of the total
supportive services grant award without
written approval by VA.
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4. By the end of the fourth quarter of
the grantee’s supportive services
annualized grant award period, the
grantee’s cumulative requests for
supportive services grant funds may not
exceed 100 percent of the total
supportive services grant award.
Signing Authority
The Secretary of Veterans Affairs, or
designee, approved this document and
authorized the undersigned to sign and
submit the document to the Office of the
Federal Register for publication
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51489
electronically as an official document of
the Department of Veterans Affairs. Gina
S. Farrisee, Deputy Chief of Staff,
Department of Veterans Affairs,
approved this document on October 30,
2017, for publication.
Dated: October 30, 2017.
Jeffrey Martin,
Office Program Manager, Office of Regulation
Policy & Management, Office of the Secretary,
Department of Veterans Affairs.
[FR Doc. 2017–24118 Filed 11–3–17; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8320–01–P
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 82, Number 213 (Monday, November 6, 2017)]
[Notices]
[Pages 51483-51489]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2017-24118]
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DEPARTMENT OF VETERANS AFFAIRS
Funding Availability Under Supportive Services for Veteran
Families Program
AGENCY: Department of Veterans Affairs.
ACTION: Notice of Fund Availability (NOFA).
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) is announcing the
availability of funds for supportive services grants under the
Supportive Services for Veteran Families (SSVF) Program. This Notice of
Fund Availability (NOFA) contains information concerning the SSVF
Program, renewal supportive services grant application processes, and
the amount of funding available. Awards made for supportive services
grants will fund operations beginning October 1, 2018.
DATES: Applications for supportive services grants under the SSVF
Program must be received by the SSVF Program Office by 4:00 p.m.
Eastern Time on January 12, 2018. In the interest of fairness to all
competing applicants, this deadline is firm as to date and hour, and VA
will treat as ineligible for consideration any application that is
received after the deadline. Applicants should take this practice into
account and make early submission of their materials to avoid any risk
of loss of eligibility brought about by unanticipated delays, computer
service outages, or other submission-related problems.
For a Copy of the Application Package: Copies of the application
can be downloaded from the SSVF Web site at www.va.gov/homeless/ssvf.asp. Questions should be referred to the SSVF Program Office via
email at SSVF@va.gov. For detailed SSVF Program information and
requirements, see part 62 of Title 38, Code of Federal Regulations (38
CFR part 62).
Submission of Application Package: Applicants must submit
applications electronically following instructions found at www.va.gov/homeless/ssvf. Applications may not be mailed or sent by facsimile
(FAX). Applications must be received in the SSVF Program Office by 4:00
p.m. Eastern Time on the application deadline date. Applications must
arrive as a complete package. Materials arriving separately will not be
included in the application package for consideration and may result in
the application being rejected. See Section II.C. of this NOFA for
maximum allowable grant amounts.
Technical Assistance: Information regarding how to obtain technical
assistance with the preparation of a renewal supportive services grant
application is available on the SSVF Program Web site at: www.va.gov/
HOMELESS/SSVF.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr. John Kuhn, National Director,
Supportive Services for Veteran Families, 151 Knollcroft Road, Lyons,
NJ 07939, SSVF@va.gov, (908) 413-4259 (this is not a toll-free number).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Funding Opportunity Title: Supportive Services for Veteran Families
Program.
Announcement Type: Initial.
Funding Opportunity Number: VA-SSVF-120517.
Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance Number: 64.033, VA
Supportive Services for Veteran Families Program.
I. Funding Opportunity Description
A. Purpose: The SSVF Program's purpose is to provide supportive
services grants to private non-profit organizations and consumer
cooperatives, who will coordinate or provide supportive services to
very low-income veteran families who: (i) Are residing in permanent
housing; (ii) are homeless and scheduled to become residents of
permanent housing within a specified time period; or (iii) after
exiting permanent housing within a specified time period, are seeking
other housing that is responsive to such very low-income veteran
family's needs and preferences. SSVF prioritizes the delivery of rapid
re-housing services to homeless veteran households. Rapid re-housing is
an intervention designed to help individuals and families quickly exit
homelessness, return to housing in the community, and avoid
homelessness again in the near term. The core components of a rapid re-
housing program are housing identification, move-in and rent
assistance, and rapid re-housing case management and services. These
core components represent the minimum that a program must be providing
to households to be considered a rapid re-housing program, but do not
provide guidance for what constitutes an effective rapid re-housing
program. Applicants should familiarize themselves with the Rapid Re-
housing Performance Benchmarks and Program Standards found on at
www.va.gov/homeless/ssvf/index.asp.
B. Funding Priorities: The principle goal for this NOFA is to
provide support to those applicants who demonstrate the greatest
capacity to end homelessness among veterans or, in communities that
have already met US Interagency Council on Homelessness (USICH) Federal
Criteria and Benchmarks, sustain the gains made in ending homelessness
among veterans. Priority will be given to grantees who can demonstrate
adoption of evidence-based practices in their application. Under
Priority 1, VA will provide funding to those grantees with 3-year
accreditation from the Commission on Accreditation of Rehabilitation
Facilities (CARF) in Employment and Community Services: Rapid Rehousing
and Homeless Prevention standards, a 4-year accreditation from the
Council on Accreditation's (COA) accreditation in Supported Community
Living Services standards, or a 3-year accreditation in The Joint
Commission's (JC) Behavioral Health Care: Housing Support Services
Standards. Priority 2 includes existing grantees seeking to renew their
grants.
C. Definitions: Part 62 of title 38, Code of Federal Regulations
(38 CFR part 62), contains definitions of terms used in the SSVF
Program. In addition to the definitions and requirements described
[[Page 51484]]
in 38 CFR 62, this NOFA provides further clarification in this
paragraph on the use of Emergency Housing Assistance (EHA). EHA may be
provided by the SSVF grantee under 38 CFR 62.34(f) to offer transition
in place when a permanent housing voucher, such as is offered through
the Department of Housing and Urban Development's (HUD) Section 8
program, is available from any source, but access to the permanent
housing voucher is pending completion of the housing inspection and
administrative processes necessary for leasing. In such circumstances,
the EHA payment cannot exceed what would otherwise be paid when the
voucher is utilized.
D. Approach: Respondents to this NOFA should base their proposals
and applications on the current requirements of Part 62. Grantees will
be expected to leverage supportive services grant funds to enhance the
housing stability of very low-income veteran families who are occupying
permanent housing. In doing so, grantees are required to establish
relationships with local community resources. Therefore, agencies must
work through coordinated partnerships built either through formal
agreements or the informal working relationships commonly found among
successful social service providers.
As part of the application, all applicants are strongly encouraged
to provide letters of support from their respective VA Network Homeless
Coordinator (or their designee). In addition, applicants are strongly
encouraged to provide letters of support from the Continuum of Care
(CoC) where they plan to deliver services that reflect the applicant's
engagement in the CoC's efforts to coordinate services. A CoC is a
community plan to organize and deliver housing and services to meet the
needs of people who are homeless as they move to stable housing and
maximize self-sufficiency. It includes action steps to end homelessness
and prevent a return to homelessness (CoC locations and contact
information can be found at www.hudhre.info/index.cfm?do=viewCocMaps.
The CoC's letter of support should note if the applicant is
providing assistance to the CoC in building local capacity to build
Coordinated Entry Systems (CES) and the value and form of that
assistance, whether support is direct funding or staffing. CES requires
that providers ``operating within the CoC's geographic area must also
work together to ensure the CoC's coordinated entry process allows for
coordinated screening, assessment and referrals'' (HUD Notice: CPD-17-
01). The CoC's letter of support should also describe the applicant's
participation in the CoC's community planning efforts. Failure to
provide a letter of support from the CoC as described will limit the
maximum award to 90 percent of the award made in the previous fiscal
year (as described in II.C.7).
In addition, any applicant proposing to serve an Indian Tribal area
is strongly encouraged to provide a letter of support from the relevant
Indian Tribal Government. The aim of the provision of supportive
services is to assist very low-income veteran families residing in
permanent housing to remain stably housed and to rapidly transition
those not currently in permanent housing to stable housing. SSVF
emphasizes the placement of homeless veteran families who are described
in VA's regulations as (i) very low-income veteran families who are
homeless and scheduled to become residents of permanent housing within
90 days, and (ii) very low-income veteran families who have exited
permanent housing within the previous 90 days to seek other housing
that is responsive to their needs and preferences. As a crisis
intervention program, the SSVF Program is not intended to provide long-
term support for participants, nor will it be able to address all of
the financial and supportive services needs of participants that affect
housing stability. Rather, when participants require long-term support,
grantees should focus on connecting such participants to income
supports, such as employment and mainstream Federal and community
resources (e.g., HUD-VA Supportive Housing program, HUD Housing Choice
Voucher programs, McKinney-Vento funded supportive housing programs,
Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF), and Social Security
Income/Social Security Disability Insurance (SSI/SSDI), etc.) that can
provide ongoing support as required.
Assistance in obtaining or retaining permanent housing is a
fundamental goal of the SSVF Program. Grantees must provide case
management services in accordance with 38 CFR 62.31. Such case
management should include tenant counseling, mediation with landlords,
and outreach to landlords.
E. Authority: Funding available under this NOFA is authorized by 38
U.S.C. 2044. VA implements the SSVF Program through regulations in 38
CFR part 62. Funds made available under this NOFA are subject to the
requirements of these regulations and other applicable laws and
regulations.
F. Requirements for the Use of Supportive Services Grant Funds: The
applicant's request for funding must be consistent with the limitations
and uses of supportive services grant funds set forth in 38 CFR part 62
and this NOFA. In accordance with the regulations and this NOFA, the
following requirements apply to supportive services grants awarded
under this NOFA:
1. Grantees may use a maximum of 10 percent of supportive services
grant funds for administrative costs identified in 38 CFR 62.70.
2. Grantees must use a minimum of 60 percent of the temporary
financial assistance portion of their supportive services grant funds
to serve very low-income veteran families who qualify under 38 CFR
62.11(b). (NOTE: Grantees may request a waiver to decrease this
minimum, as discussed in section V.B.3.a.)
3. Grantees may use a maximum of 50 percent of supportive services
grant funds to provide the supportive service of temporary financial
assistance paid directly to a third party on behalf of a participant
for child care, emergency housing assistance, transportation, rental
assistance, utility-fee payment assistance, security deposits, utility
deposits, moving costs, and general housing stability assistance (which
includes emergency supplies), in accordance with 38 CFR 62.33 and 38
CFR 62.34.
G. Guidance for the Use of Supportive Services Grant Funds:
Grantees are expected to demonstrate adoption of evidence-based
practices most likely to lead to reductions in homelessness or, in
communities that have successfully ended homelessness among veterans as
defined by the USICH's Federal Criteria and Benchmarks or,
alternatively, Community Solutions' Functional Zero (the latter can be
found at https://cmtysolutions.org/sites/default/files/final_zero_2016_metrics.pdf), a capacity to sustain these gains. As
part of their application, the applying organization's Executive
Director must certify on behalf of the agency that they will actively
participate in community planning efforts and operate the rapid re-
housing component of their SSVF grant in a manner consistent with the
Rapid Re-housing Performance Benchmarks and Program Standards found at
www.va.gov/homeless/ssvf/. It is VA policy to support a ``Housing
First'' model in addressing and ending homelessness. Housing First
establishes housing stability as the primary intervention in working
with homeless persons. The Housing First approach is based on research
that shows that a homeless individual or household's first and primary
need is to obtain stable housing, and that other issues that may
[[Page 51485]]
affect the household can and should be addressed as housing is
obtained. Research supports this approach as an effective means to
ending homelessness. Housing is not contingent on compliance with
mandated therapies or services; instead, participants must comply with
a standard lease agreement and are provided with the services and
supports that are necessary to help them do so successfully.
Grantees must develop plans that will ensure that veteran
participants have the level of income and economic stability needed to
remain in permanent housing after the conclusion of the SSVF
intervention. Both employment and benefits assistance from VA and non-
VA sources represent a significant underutilized source of income
stability for homeless veterans. Income is not a pre-condition for
housing. Case management should include income maximization strategies
to ensure households have access to benefits, employment, and financial
counseling. The complexity of program rules and the stigma some
associate with entitlement programs contributes to their lack of use.
For this reason, grantees are encouraged to consider strategies that
can lead to prompt and successful access to employment and benefits
that are essential to retaining housing.
1. Consistent with the Housing First model supported by VA,
grantees are expected to offer the following supportive services:
Counseling participants about housing; assisting participants in
understanding leases; securing utilities; making moving arrangements;
providing representative payee services concerning rent and utilities
when needed; and mediation and outreach to property owners related to
locating or retaining housing. Grantees may also assist participants by
providing rental assistance, security or utility deposits, moving
costs, emergency housing, or general housing stability assistance; or
using other Federal resources, such as the HUD's ESG, or supportive
services grant funds subject to the limitations described in this NOFA
and 38 CFR 62.34.
2. As SSVF is a short-term crisis intervention, grantees must
develop plans that will produce sufficient income to sustain veteran
participants in permanent housing after the conclusion of the SSVF
intervention. Grantees must ensure the availability of employment and
vocational services either through the direct provision of these
services or their availability through formal or informal service
agreements. Agreements with Homeless Veteran Reintegration Programs
funded by the U.S. Department of Labor are strongly encouraged. For
participants unable to work due to disability, income must be
established through available benefits programs.
3. Per 38 CFR 62.33, grantees must assist participants in obtaining
public benefits. Grantees must screen all participants for eligibility
for a broad range of entitlements such as TANF, Social Security, the
Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, the Low Income Home Energy
Assistance Program, the Earned Income Tax Credit, and local General
Assistance programs. Grantees are expected to access the Substance
Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration's SSI/SSDI Outreach,
Access, and Recovery (SOAR) program directly by training staff and
providing the service or subcontracting services to an organization to
provide SOAR services. In addition, where available, grantees should
access information technology tools to support case managers in their
efforts to link participants to benefits.
4. Grantees are encouraged to provide, or assist participants in
obtaining, legal services relevant to issues that interfere with the
participants' ability to obtain or retain permanent housing. (NOTE:
Information regarding legal services provided may be protected from
being released to the grantee or VA under attorney-client privilege,
although the grantee must provide sufficient information to demonstrate
the frequency and type of service delivered.) Support for legal
services can include paying for court filing fees to assist a
participant with issues that interfere with the participant's ability
to obtain or retain permanent housing or supportive services, including
issues that affect the participant's employability and financial
security. Grantees (in addition to employees and members of grantees)
may represent participants before VA with respect to a claim for VA
benefits, but only if they are recognized for that purpose pursuant to
38 U.S.C. Chapter 59. Further, the individual providing such
representation must be accredited pursuant to 38 U.S.C. Chapter 59.
5. Access to mental health and addiction services are required by
SSVF; however, grantees cannot fund these services directly through the
SSVF grant. Therefore, applicants must demonstrate, through either
formal or informal agreements, their ability to promote rapid access to
and engagement with mental health and addiction services for the
veteran and family members.
6. VA recognizes that extremely low-income veterans, with incomes
below 30 percent of the area median income, face greater barriers to
permanent housing placement. Grantees should consider how they can
support these participants.
7. When serving participants who are residing in permanent housing,
the defining question to ask is: ``Would this individual or family be
homeless but for this assistance?'' The grantee must use a VA-approved
screening tool with criteria that target those most at-risk of
homelessness. To qualify for SSVF services, a participant who is served
under 38 CFR 62.11(a) (homeless prevention) must not have sufficient
resources or support networks (e.g., family, friends, faith-based or
other social networks) immediately available to prevent them from
becoming homeless. To further qualify for services under 38 CFR
62.11(a), the grantee must document that the participant meets at least
one of the following conditions:
(a) Has moved because of economic reasons two or more times during
the 60 days immediately preceding the application for homelessness
prevention assistance;
(b) Is living in the home of another because of economic hardship;
(c) Has been notified in writing that their right to occupy their
current housing or living situation will be terminated within 21 days
after the date of application for assistance;
(d) Lives in a hotel or motel, and the cost of the hotel or motel
stay is not paid by charitable organizations or by Federal, State, or
local government programs for low-income individuals;
(e) Is exiting a publicly funded institution or system of care
(such as a health care facility, a mental health facility, or
correctional institution) without a stable housing plan; or
(f) Otherwise lives in housing that has characteristics associated
with instability and an increased risk of homelessness, as identified
in the recipient's approved screening tool.
8. SSVF grantees are required to participate in local planning
efforts designed to end veteran homelessness. Grantees may use grant
funds to support SSVF involvement in such community planning by sub-
contracting with CoCs, when such funding is essential, to create or
sustain the development of these data driven plans.
9. When other funds from community resources are not readily
available to assist program participants, grantees may choose to
utilize supportive services grants, to the extent described in this
NOFA and in 38 CFR 62.33 and 62.34, to provide temporary financial
assistance. Such assistance may, subject to the limitations in this
NOFA and 38
[[Page 51486]]
CFR part 62, be paid directly to a third party on behalf of a
participant for child care, transportation, family emergency housing
assistance, rental assistance, utility-fee payment assistance, security
or utility deposits, moving costs and general housing stability
assistance as necessary.
II. Award Information
A. Overview: This NOFA announces the availability of funds for
supportive services grants under the SSVF Program and pertains to
proposals for renewal of existing supportive services grant programs.
B. Funding: The following funding priorities for this NOFA are as
follows.
1. Priority 1. Under Priority 1, VA will provide funding to those
grantees with 3-year CARF, 4-year COA accreditations, or 3-year JC
accreditations. Proof of accreditation must be submitted with the
application no later than the application due date. Grantees previously
awarded a 3-year grant that is not scheduled to end by October 1, 2018,
cannot apply under this NOFA but are required to submit a letter of
intent (LOI) by the NOFA deadline indicating their intention of
continuing SSVF services in FY 2019. Grantees submitting a LOI must
include proof of continued accreditation, a letter of support from the
CoC (see Section II.C.7.) and a proposed budget for FY 2019.
2. Priority 2. Priority 2 includes all other existing grantees
seeking to renew their grants. Eligible applicants include those
grantees who did not receive an award in FY 2018, but had been granted
funding extensions on a previous SSVF award that extended program
operations through the end of FY 2018 [NOTE: only extensions that
lasted through September 30, 2018, will be considered as being eligible
to apply as renewal applicants].
Both Priority 1 and 2 applicants must apply using the renewal
application. To be eligible for renewal of a supportive services grant,
the Priority 1 and 2 applicants' program concept must be substantially
the same as the program concept of the grantees' current grant award.
Renewal applications can request funding that is equal to or less than
their current annualized award. Depending on funding availability, VA
may reduce awards by an amount from 1 to 10 percent. Should such a
decrease take place, it will be applied uniformly to all grant
recipients regardless of their grant award. This decrease would be made
after any reductions to awards based on Sections II.C.4 and II.C.7. If
sufficient funding is available, VA may provide an increase of up to 2
percent from the previous year's award. Any percentage increase, if
provided, will be awarded uniformly to all grant recipients regardless
of their grant award.
C. Allocation of Funds: Funding will be awarded under this NOFA to
existing grantees for a 1-year to 3-year period beginning October 1,
2018. The following requirements apply to supportive services grants
awarded under this NOFA:
1. In response to this NOFA, only existing grantees can apply as
Priority 1 or 2 grantees.
2. Each renewal grant request cannot exceed the current annualized
award.
3. Applicants may request an amount less than their current award
(this will not be considered a substantial change to the program
concept).
4. If a grantee failed to use all of awarded funds in the previous
fiscal year (FY 2017) or had unspent funds returned to VA in FY 2018,
VA may elect to limit renewal award to the amount of funds used in the
previous fiscal year or in the current fiscal year less the money
swept.
5. If, during the course of the grant year, VA determines that
grantee spending is not meeting the minimum percentage milestones
below, VA may elect to recoup projected unused funds and reprogram such
funds to provide supportive services in areas with higher need. Should
VA elect to recoup unspent funds, reductions in available grant funds
would take place the first business day following the end of the
quarter.
(a) By the end of the first quarter (December 31, 2018) of the
grantee's supportive services annualized grant award period, the
grantee's cumulative requests for supportive services grant funds is
fewer than 15 percent of total supportive services grant award. (During
this same period, the grantee's cumulative requests for supportive
services grant funds may not exceed 35 percent of the total supportive
services grant award.)
(b) By the end of the second quarter (March 31, 2019) of the
grantee's supportive services annualized grant award period, the
grantee's cumulative requests for supportive services grant funds is
fewer than 40 percent of total supportive services grant award. (During
this same period, the grantee's cumulative requests for supportive
services grant funds may not exceed 60 percent of the total supportive
services grant award.)
(c) By the end of the third quarter (June 30, 2019) of the
grantee's supportive services annualized grant award period, the
grantee's cumulative requests for supportive services grant funds is
fewer than 65 percent of total supportive services grant award. (During
this same period, the grantee's cumulative requests for supportive
services grant funds may not exceed 80 percent of the total supportive
services grant award).
6. Applicants should fill out separate applications for each
supportive services funding request.
7. Applicants who fail to provide a letter of support from at least
one of the CoCs they plan to serve will be eligible for renewal funding
at a level no greater than 90 percent of their previous award.
Applicants are responsible for determining who in each serviced CoC is
authorized to provide such letters of support. This requirement applies
to all applicants, including existing multi-year grantees that are only
required to submit a LOI in response to this NOFA. In order to meet
this requirement and allow the applicant to be eligible for full
funding, letters must include:
(a) A detailed description of the applicant's participation in the
CoC's Coordinated Entry process or planning activities and overall
community planning efforts (for instance, confirmation of applicant's
active participation in planning coordinated entry, commitment to
participating in coordinated entry, hours spent on CoC-sponsored
committee or workgroup assignments and names of said committees or
workgroups).
(b) The applicant's contribution to the CoC's coordinated entry
process capacity building efforts, detailing the specific nature of
this contribution (for instance, the hours of staff time and/or the
amount of funding provided), if such SSVF capacity has been requested
by the CoC or otherwise has shown to be of value to the CoC.
D. Supportive Services Grant Award Period: Grant awards are
generally made for a 1-year period, although selected grants may be
eligible for a 3-year award (see VI.C.6). All grants are eligible to be
renewed subject to the availability of funding.
III. Eligibility Information
A. Eligible Applicants: For Priority 1 and 2, only eligible
entities that are existing grantees with grants scheduled to end by
September 30, 2018, can apply in response to this NOFA.
B. Cost Sharing or Matching: None.
IV. Application and Submission Information
A. Obtaining an Application Package: Applications can be at
www.va.gov/homeless/ssvf.asp. Any questions regarding this process
should be
[[Page 51487]]
referred to the SSVF Program Office via email at SSVF@va.gov. For
detailed SSVF Program information and requirements, see 38 CFR part 62.
B. Content and Form of Application: Applicants must submit
applications electronically following instructions found at www.va.gov/homeless/ssvf.asp.
C. Submission Dates and Times: Applications for supportive services
grants under the SSVF Program must be received by the SSVF Program
Office by 4:00 p.m. Eastern Time on January 12, 2018. Awards made for
supportive services grants will fund operations beginning October 1,
2018. Applications must arrive as a complete package. Materials
arriving separately will not be included in the application package for
consideration and may result in the application being rejected.
Additionally, in the interest of fairness to all competing applicants,
this deadline is firm as to date and hour, and VA will treat as
ineligible for consideration any application that is received after the
deadline. Applicants should take this practice into account and make
early submission of their materials to avoid any risk of loss of
eligibility brought about by unanticipated delays, computer service
outages, or other delivery-related problems.
D. Intergovernmental Review: This section is not applicable to the
SSVF Program.
E. Funding Restrictions: Funding will be awarded for supportive
services grants under this NOFA depending on funding availability
(currently funding is only authorized to be appropriated for the SSVF
program through FY 2019). Applicants should fill out separate
applications for each supportive services funding request. Funding will
be awarded under this NOFA to existing grantees for a 1-year to 3-year
period beginning October 1, 2018.
1. Funding used for staff education and training cannot exceed 1
percent of the overall program grant award. This limitation does not
include the cost to attend VA mandated training. All training costs
must be directly related to the provision of services to homeless
veterans and their families.
2. Expenses related to maintaining accreditation are allowable.
Grantees are allowed to include expenses for seeking initial
accreditation only once in a 5-year period. The expenses to renew full
accreditation is allowed and is based on the schedule of the
accrediting agency, for instance every 3 years for CARF and every 4
years for COA. Expenses related to the renewal of less than full
accreditation are not allowed.
F. Other Submission Requirements:
1. Existing applicants applying for Priority 1 or 2 grants may
apply only as renewal applicants using the application designed for
renewal grants.
2. At the discretion of VA, multiple grant proposals submitted by
the same lead agency may be combined into a single grant award if the
proposals provide services to contiguous areas.
3. Additional supportive services grant application requirements
are specified in the application package. Submission of an incorrect or
incomplete application package will result in the application being
rejected during threshold review. The application packages must contain
all required forms and certifications. Selections will be made based on
criteria described in 38 CFR part 62 and this NOFA. Applicants and
grantees will be notified of any additional information needed to
confirm or clarify information provided in the application and the
deadline by which to submit such information. Applicants must submit
applications electronically. Applications may not be mailed or sent by
facsimile.
V. Application Review Information
A. Criteria:
1. VA will only score applicants that meet the threshold
requirements described in 38 CFR 62.21.
2. VA will use the criteria described in 38 CFR 62.24 to score
grantees applying for renewal (Priority 1 and 2) of a supportive
services grant.
B. Review and Selection Process: VA will review all supportive
services renewal grant applications in response to this NOFA according
to the following steps:
1. Score all applications that meet the threshold requirements
described in 38 CFR 62.21.
2. Rank those applications who score at least 75 cumulative points
and receive at least one point under each of the categories identified
for renewal applicants in 38 CFR 62.24. The applications will be ranked
in order from highest to lowest scores in accordance with 38 CFR 62.25
for renewal applicants.
3. Utilize the ranked scores of applications as the primary basis
for selection. However, VA will also utilize the following
considerations in 38 CFR 62.23(d) to select applicants for funding:
(a) Give preference to applications that provide or coordinate the
provision of supportive services for very low-income veteran families
transitioning from homelessness to permanent housing. Consistent with
this preference, where other funds from community resources are not
readily available for temporary financial assistance, applicants are
required to spend no less than 60 percent of all budgeted temporary
financial assistance on participants occupying permanent housing as
defined in 38 CFR 62.11(b). Waivers to this 60 percent requirement may
be requested when grantees can demonstrate significant local progress
towards eliminating homelessness in the target service area. Waiver
requests must include data from authoritative sources such as USICH
certification, that a community has ended homelessness as defined by
Federal Benchmarks and Criteria or has reached Community Solution's
Functional Zero. Waivers for the 60 percent requirement may also be
requested for services provided to rural Indian tribal areas and other
rural areas where shelter capacity is insufficient to meet local need.
Waiver requests must include an endorsement by the impacted CoC
explicitly stating that a shift in resources from rapid re-housing to
prevention will not result in an increase in homelessness.
(b) To the extent practicable, ensure that supportive services
grants are equitably distributed across geographic regions, including
rural communities and tribal lands. This equitable distribution
criteria will be used to ensure that SSVF resources are provided to
those communities with the highest need as identified by VA's
assessment of expected demand and available resources to meet that
demand.
4. Subject to the considerations noted in paragraph B.3 above, VA
will fund the highest-ranked applicants for which funding is available.
VI. Award Administration Information
A. Award Notices: Although subject to change, the SSVF Program
Office expects to announce grant recipients for all applicants in the
fourth quarter of FY 2018 with grants beginning October 1, 2018. Prior
to executing a funding agreement, VA will contact the applicants, make
known the amount of proposed funding and verify that the applicant
would still like the funding. Once VA verifies that the applicant is
still seeking funding, VA will execute an agreement and make payments
to the grant recipient in accordance with 38 CFR part 62 and this NOFA.
B. Administrative and National Policy Requirements: It is VA policy
to support a ``Housing First'' model in addressing and ending
homelessness. Housing First establishes housing stability as the
primary intervention in working with homeless persons. The Housing
First approach is based on research that shows that a homeless
individual or
[[Page 51488]]
household's first and primary need is to obtain stable housing, and
that other issues that may affect the household can and should be
addressed as housing is obtained. Housing is not contingent on
compliance with services; instead, participants must comply with a
standard lease agreement and are provided with the services and
supports that are necessary to help them do so successfully. Research
supports this approach as an effective means to ending homelessness.
Consistent with the Housing First model supported by VA, grantees
are expected to offer the following supportive services: housing
counseling; assisting participants in understanding leases; securing
utilities; making moving arrangements; providing representative payee
services concerning rent and utilities when needed; and mediation and
outreach to property owners related to locating or retaining housing.
Grantees may also assist participants by providing rental assistance,
security or utility deposits, moving costs or general housing stability
assistance, using other Federal resources, such as the ESG, or
supportive services grant funds to the extent described in this NOFA
and 38 CFR 62.34.
As SSVF grants cannot be used to fund treatment for mental health
or substance use disorders, applicants must provide evidence that they
can provide access to such services to all program participants through
formal and informal agreements with community providers.
C. Reporting: VA places great emphasis on the responsibility and
accountability of grantees. As described in 38 CFR 62.63 and 62.71, VA
has procedures in place to monitor supportive services provided to
participants and outcomes associated with the supportive services
provided under the SSVF Program. Applicants should be aware of the
following:
1. Upon execution of a supportive services grant agreement with VA,
grantees will have a VA regional coordinator assigned by the SSVF
Program Office who will provide oversight and monitor supportive
services provided to participants.
2. Grantees will be required to enter data into a Homeless
Management Information System (HMIS) Web-based software application.
This data will consist of information on the participants served and
types of supportive services provided by grantees. Grantees must treat
the data for activities funded by the SSVF Program separate from that
of activities funded by other programs. Grantees will be required to
work with their HMIS Administrators to export client-level data for
activities funded by the SSVF Program to VA on at least a monthly
basis.
3. VA shall complete annual monitoring evaluations of each grantee.
Monitoring will also include the submittal of quarterly and annual
financial and performance reports by the grantee. The grantee will be
expected to demonstrate adherence to the grantee's proposed program
concept, as described in the grantee's application. All grantees are
subject to audits conducted by the VA or its representative.
4. Grantees will be assessed based on their ability to meet
critical performance measures. In addition to meeting program
requirements defined by the regulations and applicable NOFA(s),
grantees will be assessed on their ability to place participants into
housing and the housing retention rates of participants served. Higher
placement for homeless participants and higher housing retention rates
for at-risk participants are expected for very-low income veteran
families when compared to extremely low-income veteran families with
incomes below 30 percent of the area median income.
5. Organizations receiving renewal awards and that have had ongoing
SSVF program operation for at least 1 year (as measured from the start
of initial SSVF services until November 6, 2017) may be eligible for a
3-year award. Grantees meeting outcome goals defined by VA and in
substantial compliance with their grant agreements (defined by meeting
targets and having no outstanding corrective action plans) and who, in
addition, receive 3-year accreditation from CARF in Employment and
Community Services: Rapid Rehousing and Homeless Prevention standards,
a 4-year accreditation from COA accreditation in Supported Community
Living Services standards, or a 3 year accreditation in The Joint
Commission's Behavioral Health Care: Housing Support Services Standards
are eligible for a 3-year grant renewal subject to funding
availability. (NOTE: Multi-year awards are contingent on funding
availability). If awarded a multiple year renewal, grantees may be
eligible for funding increases as defined in NOFAs that correspond to
years 2 and 3 of their renewal funding.
VII. Agency Contact
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr. John Kuhn, National Director,
Supportive Services for Veteran Families, 151 Knollcroft Road, Lyons,
NJ 07939, SSVF@va.gov, (908) 413-4259 (this is not a toll-free number).
VIII. Other Information
A. VA Goals and Objectives for Funds Awarded Under This NOFA: In
accordance with 38 CFR 62.24(c), VA will evaluate an applicant's
compliance with VA goals and requirements for the SSVF Program. VA
goals and requirements include the provision of supportive services
designed to enhance the housing stability and independent living skills
of very low-income veteran families occupying permanent housing across
geographic regions and program administration in accordance with all
applicable laws, regulations, and guidelines. For purposes of this
NOFA, VA goals and requirements also include the provision of
supportive services designed to rapidly re-house or prevent
homelessness among people in the following target populations who also
meet all requirements for being part of a very low-income veteran
family occupying permanent housing:
1. Veteran families earning less than 30 percent of area median
income as most recently published by HUD for programs under section 8
of the United States Housing Act of 1937 (42 U.S.C. 1437f) (https://www.huduser.org).
2. Veterans with at least one dependent family member.
3. Veterans returning from Operation Enduring Freedom, Operation
Iraqi Freedom, or Operation New Dawn.
4. Veteran families located in a community, as defined by HUD's
CoC, or a county not currently served by a SSVF grantee.
5. Veteran families located in a community, as defined by HUD's
CoC, where current level of SSVF services is not sufficient to meet
demand of Category 2 and 3 (currently homeless) veteran families.
6. Veteran families located in a rural area.
7. Veteran families located on Indian Tribal Property.
B. Payments of Supportive Services Grant Funds: Grantees will
receive payments electronically through the U.S. Department of Health
and Human Services Payment Management System. Grantees will have the
ability to request payments as frequently as they choose subject to the
following limitations:
1. During the first quarter of the grantee's supportive services
annualized grant award period, the grantee's cumulative requests for
supportive services grant funds may not exceed 35 percent of the total
supportive services grant award without written approval by VA.
2. By the end of the second quarter of the grantee's supportive
services annualized grant award period, the
[[Page 51489]]
grantee's cumulative requests for supportive services grant funds may
not exceed 60 percent of the total supportive services grant award
without written approval by VA.
3. By the end of the third quarter of the grantee's supportive
services annualized grant award period, the grantee's cumulative
requests for supportive services grant funds may not exceed 80 percent
of the total supportive services grant award without written approval
by VA.
4. By the end of the fourth quarter of the grantee's supportive
services annualized grant award period, the grantee's cumulative
requests for supportive services grant funds may not exceed 100 percent
of the total supportive services grant award.
Signing Authority
The Secretary of Veterans Affairs, or designee, approved this
document and authorized the undersigned to sign and submit the document
to the Office of the Federal Register for publication electronically as
an official document of the Department of Veterans Affairs. Gina S.
Farrisee, Deputy Chief of Staff, Department of Veterans Affairs,
approved this document on October 30, 2017, for publication.
Dated: October 30, 2017.
Jeffrey Martin,
Office Program Manager, Office of Regulation Policy & Management,
Office of the Secretary, Department of Veterans Affairs.
[FR Doc. 2017-24118 Filed 11-3-17; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8320-01-P