Notice of Funding Opportunity for America's Marine Highway Projects, 12537-12546 [2022-04599]
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Federal Register / Vol. 87, No. 43 / Friday, March 4, 2022 / Notices
in their applications in the Executive
Summary of the TrAMS application.
FTA is committed to making
evidence-based decisions guided by the
best available science and data. In
accordance with the Foundations for
Evidence-based Policymaking Act of
2018 (Evidence Act), FTA may use
information submitted in discretionary
funding applications; information in
FTA’s Transit Award Management
System (TrAMS), including grant
applications, Milestone Progress Reports
(MPRs), Federal Financial Reports
(FFRs); transit service, ridership and
operational data submitted in FTA’s
National Transit Database;
documentation and results of FTA
oversight reviews, including triennial
and state management reviews; and
other publicly available sources of data
to build evidence to support policy,
budget, operational, regulatory, and
management processes and decisions
affecting FTA’s grant programs.
As part of completing the annual
certifications and assurances required of
FTA grant recipients, a successful
applicant must report on the suspension
or debarment status of itself and its
principals. If the award recipient’s
active grants, cooperative agreements,
and procurement contracts from all
Federal awarding agencies exceeds
$10,000,000 for any period of time
during the period of performance of an
award made pursuant to this Notice, the
recipient must comply with the
Recipient Integrity and Performance
Matters reporting requirements
described in Appendix XII to 2 CFR part
200.
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G. Federal Awarding Agency Contacts
For further information concerning
this notice, please contact the Low-No/
Bus grant program staff via email at
ftalownobusnofo@dot.gov, or call Amy
Volz, by phone at 202–366–7484. A
TDD is available for individuals who are
deaf or hard of hearing at 800–877–
8339. In addition, FTA will post
answers to questions and requests for
clarifications on FTA’s website at
https://www.transit.dot.gov. To ensure
applicants receive accurate information
about eligibility or the program,
applicants are encouraged to contact
FTA with questions directly, rather than
through intermediaries or third parties.
For issues with GRANTS.GOV, please
contact GRANTS.GOV by phone at 1–
800–518–4726 or by email at support@
grants.gov. Contact information for
FTA’s regional offices can be found on
FTA’s website at www.fta.dot.gov.
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H. Other Information
User-friendly information and
resources regarding DOT’s discretionary
grant programs relevant to rural
applicants can be found on the Rural
Opportunities to Use Transportation for
Economic Success (ROUTES) website at
www.transportation.gov/rural.
This program is not subject to
Executive Order 12372,
‘‘Intergovernmental Review of Federal
Programs.’’
Nuria I. Fernandez,
Administrator.
[FR Doc. 2022–04621 Filed 3–3–22; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–57–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Maritime Administration
Notice of Funding Opportunity for
America’s Marine Highway Projects
Maritime Administration,
Department of Transportation.
ACTION: Notice of funding opportunity.
AGENCY:
This notice announces the
availability of funding for grants and
establishes selection criteria and
application requirements for the
America’s Marine Highway Program
(‘‘AMHP’’). The purpose of this program
is to make grants available to previously
designated Marine Highway Projects
that support the development and
expansion of documented vessels or
port and landside infrastructure. The
U.S. Department of Transportation
(‘‘DOT’’ or ‘‘Department’’) also seeks
eligible grant projects that will
strengthen American supply chains. The
Department will award Marine Highway
Grants to implement projects or
components of projects previously
designated by the Secretary of
Transportation (‘‘Secretary’’) under the
AMHP. Only Marine Highway Projects
the Secretary designates before the
Notice of Funding Opportunity
(‘‘NOFO’’) closing date are eligible for
funding as described in this notice.
DATES: Grant applications must be
received by the Maritime
Administration (‘‘MARAD’’) by 5:00
p.m. E.D.T. on April 29, 2022.
ADDRESSES: Grant applications must be
submitted electronically using
Grants.gov (https://www.grants.gov).
Please be aware that you must complete
the Grants.gov registration process
before submitting your application and
that the registration process usually
takes 2 to 4 weeks to complete.
Applicants are strongly encouraged to
SUMMARY:
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make submissions in advance of the
deadline.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Fred
Jones, Office of Ports & Waterways
Planning, Room W21–311, Maritime
Administration, U.S. Department of
Transportation, 1200 New Jersey
Avenue SE, Washington, DC 20590,
phone 202–366–1123, or email
Fred.Jones@dot.gov. Persons who use a
telecommunications device for the deaf
(TDD) may call the Federal Information
Relay Service (FIRS) at 1–800–877–8339
to contact the above individual during
business hours. The FIRS is available
twenty-four hours a day, seven days a
week, to leave a message or question
with the above individual. You will
receive a reply during regular business
hours.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Each
section of this notice contains
information and instructions relevant to
the Marine Highway Grants application
process. All applicants should read this
notice in its entirety so that they have
the information they need to submit
eligible and competitive applications.
Applications received after the deadline
will not be considered except in the
case of unforeseen technical difficulties
as outlined below in Section D.6.
Table of Contents
A. Program Description
B. Federal Award Information
C. Eligibility Information
D. Application and Submission Information
E. Application Review Information
F. Federal Award Administration
Information
G. Federal Awarding Agency Contacts
A. Program Description
The Secretary, in accordance with 46
U.S.C. 55601, established a marine
highway transportation grant program to
implement projects or components of
designated Marine Highway Projects
that provide a coordinated and capable
alternative to landside transportation or
that promote marine highway
transportation. The primary goal of the
AMHP is to expand the use of the
nation’s navigable waters to relieve
landside congestion, reduce air
emissions, and generate other public
benefits by increasing the efficiency of
the surface transportation system, and
Marine Highway Grants will be awarded
to further this purpose.
The Infrastructure Investment and
Jobs Act (Pub. L. 117–58, November 15,
2021) (‘‘Bipartisan Infrastructure Law’’
or ‘‘BIL’’) appropriated $25,000,000 to
be awarded by the Department for
Marine Highway Grants. The grant
funds currently available are for projects
related to vessels documented under 46
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U.S.C. Chapter 121 and port and
landside infrastructure. Section E of this
notice, which outlines the Marine
Highway Grants selection criteria,
describes the process for selecting
projects that further this goal. Section
F.3. describes progress and performance
reporting requirements for selected
projects, including the relationship
between that reporting and the
program’s selection criteria.
Since this program was created, more
than $51.7 million has been awarded
through competitive grants to
implement projects or components of
projects designated under 46 U.S.C.
55601. Throughout the program, these
discretionary grants have been awarded
to projects that have supported the
development and expansion of
documented vessels and port and
landside infrastructure, consistent with
DOT’s strategic infrastructure goals.1
The AMHP continues to align with the
Department’s strategic goals by guiding
investments for port and landside
infrastructure that expand the use of the
nation’s navigable waters.2 The FY 2022
AMHP round will be implemented, as
appropriate and consistent with law, in
alignment with the priorities in
Executive Order 14052, Implementation
of the Infrastructure Investment and
Jobs Act (86 FR 64335), which are to
invest efficiently and equitably, promote
the competitiveness of the U.S.
economy, improve job opportunities by
focusing on high labor standards,
strengthen infrastructure resilience to
all hazards, which helps combat the
crisis of climate change, coordinate
effectively with State, local, Tribal, and
territorial government partners, and
support the Administration’s Justice40
Initiative goal that 40% of the overall
benefits from Federal investments in
climate and clean energy flow to
disadvantaged communities.
The expectations of this notice also
reflect the goal of strengthening
American supply chains. This vision is
consistent with the President’s Port
Action Plan, which calls for rapid action
to relieve supply chain constraints at
American ports through significant
investments in the near, medium, and
long term,3 and the program will seek
projects that address supply chain
disruptions.
This round of AMHP grant funding
also highlights the Administration’s
priorities to invest in infrastructure
projects that advance the goals of
Executive Order 14008, Tackling the
Climate Crisis at Home and Abroad (86
FR 7619), Executive Order 13985,
Advancing Racial Equity and Support
for Underserved Communities Through
the Federal Government (86 FR 7009),
and Executive Order 14025, Worker
Organizing and Empowerment (86 FR
22829) by, for example: Proactively
addressing equity 4 for all, including
people of color and others who have
been historically underserved,
marginalized, and adversely affected by
persistent poverty, inequality, and
barriers to opportunity; alleviating
surface transportation congestion; and
creating good paying jobs with the free
and fair choice to join a union.
The America’s Marine Highway
Program Office (Program Office) follows
a three-step approach when supporting
investment opportunities for marine
highway transportation services. The
first step is designation of a Marine
Highway Route by the Secretary. The
Department accepts Marine Highway
Route Designation requests at any time
from Route Sponsors. Once a Route is
designated, the second step is
designation as a Marine Highway
Project by the Secretary. Marine
Highway Projects represent concepts for
new services or expansions of existing
marine highway services on designated
Marine Highway Routes that use
documented vessels and mitigate
landside congestion or promote marine
highway transportation. MARAD
announces by notice in the Federal
Register open season periods to allow
Project Applicants opportunities to
submit Marine Highway Project
Designation applications. A Project
Applicant must receive a Project
Designation to then become eligible for
Marine Highway Grant funding for that
Project, the third step referenced above.
Marine Highway Grant funding (the
subject of this NOFO) is provided to
successful public and private sector
1 See U.S. Department of Transportation Strategic
Plan for FY 2018–2022 (Feb. 2018) at https://
www.transportation.gov/administrations/officepolicy/dot-strategic-plan-fy2018-2022.
2 See U.S. Department of Transportation Strategic
Framework FY 2022–2026 (Dec. 2021) at https://
www.transportation.gov/administrations/officepolicy/fy2022-2026-strategic-framework.
3 The President’s Port Action Plan may be found
here: https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/
statements-releases/2021/11/09/fact-sheet-thebiden-harris-action-plan-for-americas-ports-andwaterways/.
4 Executive Order 13985 defines ‘‘equity’’ as the
consistent and systematic fair, just, and impartial
treatment of all individuals, including individuals
who belong to underserved communities that have
been denied such treatment, such as Black, Latino,
and Indigenous and Native American persons,
Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders and other
persons of color; members of religious minorities;
lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer
(LGBTQ+) persons; persons with disabilities;
persons who live in rural areas; and persons
otherwise adversely affected by persistent poverty
or inequality.
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applicants as funds are appropriated by
Congress.
The America’s Marine Highway Grant
program is described in the Federal
Assistance Listings with Assistance
Listings Number 20.816.
B. Federal Award Information
The total funding available for awards
under this NOFO is $24,250,000. This
amount represents $25,000,000 from the
BIL appropriations less $750,000 for
grant administration and oversight as
permitted under 49 U.S.C. 109(i).
MARAD will seek to obtain the
maximum benefit from the available
funding by awarding grants to as many
qualified projects as possible; however,
per 46 U.S.C. 55601(g)(3), MARAD shall
give preference to those projects or
components that present the most
financially viable transportation
services and require the lowest
percentage of Federal share of costs.
Depending on the characteristics of the
pool of qualified applications, it is
possible MARAD may award all funds
to a single project. MARAD may also
award grant funds to support a portion
of a project described in an application
by selecting a discrete component(s). If
this solicitation does not result in the
award and obligation of all available
funds, MARAD may publish additional
solicitations.
MARAD will administer each Marine
Highway Grant pursuant to a grant
agreement with the successful
applicant, and the start date and period
of performance for each award will be
outlined in each grant agreement.
Marine Highway Grant funds will be
administered on a reimbursable basis.
Unless authorized in writing by
MARAD as allowable ‘‘pre-award
costs’’ 5 and incurred after the
Department’s announcement of Marine
Highway Grant awards, any costs
incurred prior to MARAD’s obligation of
funds for a project are ineligible for
reimbursement and are ineligible to
count as match for cost share
requirements. Obligation occurs when a
selected applicant and MARAD enter
into a written grant agreement after the
applicant has satisfied applicable
administrative requirements, including
environmental review requirements,
such as those under the National
Environmental Policy Act (NEPA), and
civil rights requirements, including
those under Title VI of the Civil Rights
Act of 1964, the Americans with
5 Pre-award costs are only costs incurred directly
pursuant to the negotiation and anticipation of the
Marine Highway grant award where such costs are
necessary for efficient and timely performance of
the scope of work, as determined and pre-approved
in writing by MARAD.
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Disabilities Act, and Section 504 of the
Rehabilitation Act of 1973. MARAD
seeks to obligate FY 2022 AMH funds
under this notice by September 30, 2025
and expects grant recipients to expend
funds within five years of obligation. As
part of the review and selection process
described in Section E.2., MARAD will
consider a project’s likelihood of
obligating funds by September 30, 2025
and liquidation of these obligations
within five years after the date of
obligation.
MARAD reserves the right to revoke
any award of Marine Highway Grant
funds and to award such funds to
another project to the extent that such
funds are not expended in a timely or
acceptable manner and in accordance
with the project schedule and
requirements detailed in the grant
agreement.
Prior recipients of Marine Highway
Grants may apply for funding to support
additional phases of a designated
project. However, to be competitive, the
grant applicant should demonstrate the
extent to which the previously funded
project phase has met estimated project
schedules and budget, as well as the
ability to realize the benefits expected
for the new award.
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C. Eligibility Information
To be selected for a Marine Highway
Grant, an applicant must be an Eligible
Applicant and the project must be an
Eligible Project.
1. Eligible Applicants
Eligible Applicants for funding
available under this notice are original
Project Applicants of projects that the
Secretary has previously designated as
Marine Highway Projects or substitute
applicants. A substitute applicant can
be either a public entity or a privatesector entity that has been referred to
the Program Office by the original
Project Applicant in a written letter of
support. This letter of support must be
included as an attachment to the
application for funding. Original Project
Applicants are defined as those public
entities named by the Secretary in
original designated projects. Eligible
applicants must have operational or
administrative areas of responsibility
that are adjacent to or near the relevant
designated Marine Highway Project.
Eligible Applicants include State
governments (including State
departments of transportation),
metropolitan planning organizations,
port authorities, and tribal governments,
or private sector operators of marine
highway services within designated
Marine Highway Projects. Private-sector
applicants should refer to Section
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D.2.vi.(G) for additional documentation
that must be submitted to support an
eligibility determination.
Eligible Applicants are encouraged to
develop coalitions and public/private
partnerships, which might include
vessel owners and operators; third-party
logistics providers; trucking companies;
shippers; railroads; port authorities;
state, regional, and local transportation
planners; environmental organizations;
impacted communities; or any
combination of entities working in
collaboration on a single grant
application that can be submitted by the
original Project Applicant or their
designated substitute. All successful
grant applicants, whether they are
public or private entities, must comply
with all Federal requirements, including
the necessary NEPA review and
documentation.
If multiple Eligible Applicants submit
a joint grant application, they must
identify in the application a lead
Eligible Applicant as the primary point
of contact. Joint grant applications must
include a description of the roles and
responsibilities of each applicant,
including designating the one entity that
will receive the Federal funds directly
from MARAD, and must include a
signed letter of support from each
Eligible Applicant as an attachment.
Refer to Section D.5., Funding
Restrictions, for more information.
2. Cost Sharing or Matching
An Eligible Applicant must provide at
least 20 percent of grant project costs
from non-Federal sources. Non-Federal
sources include State funds originating
from programs funded by State revenue,
local funds originating from State or
local revenue-funded programs, or
private funds. The application should
demonstrate, such as through a
commitment letter or other
documentation, the sources of these
non-Federal funds. Preference will be
given to those projects that provide a
larger percentage of costs from nonFederal sources. MARAD will not
consider previously incurred costs or
previously expended or encumbered
funds towards the matching
requirement for any project. Matching
funds are subject to the same Federal
requirements described in Section F.2.
as Federally awarded funds, including
applicable domestic content
requirements. Refer to Section D.2. for
information on documenting cost
sharing in the application.
For each project that receives a
Marine Highway Grant award, the terms
of the award will require the recipient
to complete the project using at least the
level of non-Federal funding that was
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12539
specified in the application. If the actual
costs of the project are greater than the
costs estimated in the application, the
recipient will be responsible for
increasing the non-Federal contribution.
If the actual costs of the project are less
than the costs estimated in the
application, the Department may reduce
the Federal contribution.
3. Other
i. Eligible Projects
(A) Capital Projects
Pursuant to the BIL, eligible projects
proposed for funding must support the
development and expansion of vessels
documented under 46 U.S.C. Chapter
121 or port and landside infrastructure.
Only projects or their components that
the Secretary has designated as Marine
Highway Projects by the closing date of
this notice are eligible for this round of
grant funding. The current list of
designated Marine Highway Projects can
be found on the MARAD website at:
https://cms.marad.dot.gov/sites/
marad.dot.gov/files/2021-08/AMH%20
Project%20Designations
%20Aug%202021.pdf.
Improvements to Federally owned
facilities are ineligible under the Marine
Highway Grant program.
(B) Planning Projects
Grant funds may also be requested for
eligible project planning activities;
however, market-related studies are
ineligible to receive Marine Highway
Grants. Activities eligible for funding
under Marine Highway planning grants
are related to the planning, preparation,
or design—including site design,
engineering drawings, cost estimation,
feasibility analysis, environmental
review, permitting, and preliminary
engineering and design work—of
eligible documented vessel or port and
landside infrastructure projects.
ii. Application Limit
Each applicant may submit no more
than one grant application per
designated project.
D. Application and Submission
Information
1. Address To Request Application
Package
This announcement contains all the
information needed for applicants to
apply for this funding opportunity.
Applications may be found at and must
be submitted through Grants.gov.
2. Content and Form of Application
Submission
The application must include the
Standard Form 424 (Application for
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Federal Assistance), which can be found
on Grants.gov, and the Project Narrative.
MARAD recommends that the Project
Narrative follows the basic outline
below to address the program
requirements and assist evaluators in
locating relevant information.
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I. First Page of Project Narrative ......................................................................................................................
II. Project Description .......................................................................................................................................
III. Project Location ...........................................................................................................................................
IV. Grant Funds, Sources, and Uses of Project Funds ....................................................................................
V. Selection Criteria ..........................................................................................................................................
VI. Other Application Requirements ...............................................................................................................
The Project Narrative should include
the information necessary for MARAD
to determine that the project satisfies
the requirements described in Sections
B and C, and to assess the selection
criteria specified in Section E.1.,
including a detailed project description,
location, and budget. To the extent
practicable, applicants should provide
supporting data and documentation in a
form that is directly verifiable by
MARAD. Applicants are strongly
encouraged to provide quantitative
information, including baseline
information, that demonstrates a
project’s merits and economic viability.
MARAD may ask any applicant to
supplement data in its application but
expects applications to be complete
upon submission. Incomplete
applications may not be considered for
an award.
The Project Narrative should also
include a table of contents, maps, and
graphics, as appropriate, to make the
information easier to review. MARAD
recommends that the Project Narrative
be prepared with standard formatting
preferences (a single-spaced document,
using a standard 12-point font such as
Times New Roman, with 1-inch
margins, and the narrative text in one
column only). The Project Narrative
may not exceed 12 pages in length,
excluding the table of contents and
appendices. The only substantive
portions that may exceed the 12-page
limit are documents supporting
assertions or conclusions made in the
12-page Project Narrative. If possible,
website links to supporting
documentation should be provided
rather than copies of these supporting
materials. It is important to ensure that
the website links are currently active,
accessible, and working. If supporting
documents are submitted, applicants
should clearly identify within the
Project Narrative the relevant portion of
the Project Narrative that each
supporting document supports. MARAD
recommends using appropriately
descriptive file names (e.g., ‘‘Project
Narrative,’’ ‘‘Maps,’’ ‘‘Letters of
Support’’) for all attachments. At the
applicant’s discretion, relevant
materials provided previously in
support of a Marine Highway Project
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application may be referenced, updated,
or described as unchanged. To the
extent documents provided previously
are referenced, they need not be
resubmitted in support of a Marine
Highway Grant application.
To ensure the Project Narrative is
sufficiently detailed and informative,
MARAD recommends applications
include the following sections:
i. First Page of Project Narrative
The first page of the Project Narrative
should provide the following items of
information:
(A) Marine Highway Designated
Project name and the original Project
Applicant (as stated on the Marine
Highway Program’s list of Designated
Projects);
(B) Primary point of contact,
including the name, phone number,
email address, and business address of
the primary point of contact for the
Eligible Applicant. If submitting a joint
application, the primary point of contact
should be for the lead Eligible
Applicant;
(C) Total amount of the proposed
grant project cost in dollars and the
amount of Federal grant funds the
applicant is seeking, along with sources
and share of matching funds;
(D) Executive Summary, which
should include an outline of the
background of the project, the need for
the project, and how the grant funding
will be applied in the context of the
service referenced in the original Project
Designation application;
(E) The public and private partners
engaged in the Marine Highway Project;
(F) The Unique Entity Identifier (UEI)
Number 6 associated with the
application—Marine Highway Grant
Recipients and their first-tier subawardees must obtain UEI numbers,
which are available in SAM.gov; and
6 On April 4, 2022, the Federal government will
stop using the Data Universal Numbering System
(DUNS) number to uniquely identify entities. At
that point, entities doing business with the Federal
government will use a Unique Entity Identifier
(UEI) created in SAM.gov. If your entity is currently
registered in SAM.gov, your UEI has already been
assigned and is viewable in SAM.gov. This includes
inactive registrations.
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See
See
See
See
See
See
D.2.i.
D.2.ii.
D.2.iii.
D.2.iv.
D.2.v. and E.1.
D.2.vi.
(G) Evidence of registration with the
System for Award Management (SAM)
at https://www.SAM.gov.
ii. Project Description
The next section of the application
should provide a description of the
project. The project description must be
in paragraph form providing a highlevel view of the overall project and its
major components. This section should
discuss the project’s history, including a
description of any previously completed
components. The applicant may use this
section to place the project into a
broader context of other transportation
infrastructure investments being
pursued by the grant applicant, and, if
applicable, how it will benefit
communities in rural areas. The project
description should be sufficiently
detailed so that the NEPA class of action
can be determined without additional
requests for information.
This section should also include a
timeline for implementing the project,
including identifying major project
milestones. The project schedule should
be sufficiently detailed to demonstrate
that the project can complete
construction and expend all funds
within five years after obligation. See
Section B.
Additionally, if a project addresses
regional or national supply chain delays
on the freight transportation network or
strengthens supply chain resiliency, this
section of the application should
include sufficient information to enable
evaluation of: (i) An existing or
anticipated regional or national supply
chain delay and (ii) how the project will
address the identified delay.
Applications should also address how
quickly the project can mitigate the
supply chain delay or strengthen supply
chain resiliency.
This section should also describe
whether the project addresses equity
and barriers to opportunity. Applicants
are encouraged to describe credible
planning activities and actions to
resolve potential inequities and barriers
to equal opportunity in the project as
reflected in Executive Order 13985,
Advancing Racial Equity and Support
for Underserved Communities Through
the Federal Government (86 FR 7009).
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For example, the applicant should
describe: How the project incorporates
an equity impact analysis; how the
project adopts an equity and inclusion
program/plan or implementation of
equity-focused policies related to
project procurement, material sourcing,
construction, inspection, or other
activities designed to ensure racial
equity in the overall project delivery
and implementation; or documentation
of equity-focused community outreach
and public engagement in the project’s
planning and project elements in
underserved communities, including
Historically Disadvantaged
Communities. DOT has been developing
a definition of Historically
Disadvantaged Communities as part of
its implementation of the Justice40
Initiative and will use that definition for
the purpose of this NOFO. Consistent
with OMB’s Interim Guidance for the
Justice40 Initiative,7 Historically
Disadvantaged Communities include (a)
certain qualifying census tracts, (b) any
Tribal land, or (c) any territory or
possession of the United States.
Additionally, DOT is providing a
mapping tool to assist applicants in
identifying whether a project is located
in a Historically Disadvantaged
Community at Transportation
Disadvantaged Census Tracts.8 Any
policies, plans, and outreach
documentation related to advancing
equity or removing barriers to
opportunity should be briefly discussed
and provided as an appendix to the
Project Narrative.
Consistent with the Department’s
Rural Opportunities to Use
Transportation for Economic Success
(ROUTES) Initiative (https://
www.transportation.gov/rural), the
Department encourages applicants to
describe how activities proposed in
their applications would address the
unique challenges facing rural
transportation networks, regardless of
the geographic location of those
activities.
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iii. Project Location
This section of the application should
describe the project location, including
a detailed geographical description of
the proposed project, a map of the
project’s location and connections to
existing transportation infrastructure,
7 https://www.whitehouse.gov/wp-content/
uploads/2021/07/M-21-28.pdf.
8 Information on DOT’s Disadvantaged Census
Tract tool (Transportation Disadvantaged Census
Tracts) can be found at: https://
usdot.maps.arcgis.com/apps/dashboards/d6f90dfcc
8b44525b04c7ce748a3674a. For technical
assistance in using this tool, please contact gmo@
dot.gov or the AMHP contact.
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and geospatial data describing the
project location.
The application should also identify:
(A) Whether the project is located in
a Federally designated community
development zone 9 such as a qualified
Opportunity Zone; 10 Empowerment
Zone; 11 Promise Zone; 12 or Choice
Neighborhood; 13
(B) whether the project is located in
a Historically Disadvantaged
Community, including the relevant
census tract(s) (as defined in Section
D.2.ii.); and
(C) whether the project is located in
a 2010 Census-designated urban area 14
or rural area.15
iv. Grant Funds, Sources, and Uses of
Project Funds
This section of the application should
describe the project’s budget (i.e., the
project scope that includes Marine
Highway funding and non-Federal cost
share). The budget should not include
any previously incurred expenses. At a
minimum, it should include:
(A) Project costs;
(B) The sources and amounts of funds
to be used for project costs;
(C) For non-Federal funds to be used
for eligible project costs, documentation
of funding commitments should be
referenced here and included as an
appendix to the application;
(D) For other Federal (non-AMHP)
funds to be used for eligible project
costs, the amounts, nature, and sources
of any required non-Federal match for
those funds; and
9 For projects that are located in a Federally
designated community development zone, the
applicant must identify the zone and provide
related identifying data (such as the Opportunity
Zone number).
10 See https://opportunityzones.hud.gov/.
11 See https://www.hud.gov/hudprograms/
empowerment_zones.
12 See https://www.hud.gov/program_offices/
field_policy_mgt/fieldpolicymgtpz.
13 See https://www.hud.gov/program_offices/
public_indian_housing/programs/ph/cn.
14 For the purpose of this NOFO, a project is
designated as urban if it is located within (or on the
boundary of) a Census-designated urbanized area
(UA) that had a population greater than 50,000 in
the 2010 Census. Lists of 2010 UAs as defined by
the Census Bureau are available on the Census
Bureau website at https://www.census.gov/
geographies/reference-maps/2010/geo/2010-censusurban-areas.html. For the purpose of this NOFO,
the definition of urban and rural is based on the
2010 Census-designated urban areas since urban
areas have not been designated for the 2020 Census
at the time of this NOFO publication.
15 MARAD will consider a project to be in a rural
area if the majority of the project (determined by
geographic location(s) where the majority of the
money is to be spent) is located outside of a Censusdesignated urbanized area with a population of
50,000 or greater. Grant funds utilized in an
urbanized area border, including an intersection
with an urbanized area, will be considered urban
for the purposes of the Marine Highway Grants
program.
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12541
(E) A budget showing how each
source of funds will be spent. The
budget should show how each funding
source will share in each project
component, and present that data in
dollars and percentages. Funding
sources should be grouped into three
categories: Non-Federal; Marine
Highway Grant funding; and other
Federal. A letter of commitment from
each funding source should be an
attachment to the application. If the
project contains individual components,
the budget should separate the costs of
each project component. The budget
should sufficiently demonstrate that the
project satisfies the statutory costsharing requirements described in
Section C.2.
v. Selection Criteria
This section of the application should
demonstrate how the project proposed
for grant funding aligns with the criteria
described below and in Section E.1.
MARAD encourages applicants to
address each criterion, or expressly state
that the project does not address the
criterion. Applicants are not required to
follow a specific format, but MARAD
recommends applicants address each
criterion separately using the outline
suggested below and provide a clear
discussion that assists project evaluators
in evaluating how each project meets
the selection criteria. Guidance
describing how MARAD will evaluate
projects against the selection criteria is
in Section E.1. of this notice. Applicants
also should review that section before
considering how to organize and
complete their applications. To
minimize redundant information in an
application, MARAD encourages
applicants to cross-reference from this
section of their application to relevant
substantive information in other
sections of the application.
(A) Primary Selection Criteria
(1) This section of the application
should demonstrate the extent to which
the project is financially viable. Per 46
U.S.C. 55601(g)(3), preference will be
given to projects or components that
present the most financially viable
transportation services.
(2) This section of the application
should demonstrate that the funds
received will be spent efficiently and
effectively.
(3) This section of the application
should demonstrate that a market exists
for the services of the proposed project
as evidenced by contracts or written
statements of intent from potential
customers.
(4) This section of the application
should describe the public benefits
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anticipated by the proposed grant
project, as outlined in 46 CFR
393.3(c)(8), and described below. The
public benefits described in the relevant
Marine Highway Project Designation
application may be referenced, updated,
or described as unchanged. Applicants
will need to clearly demonstrate that the
original public benefits outlined in the
original Project Designation application
apply to the specific grant funding
request associated with this notice, and
provide any updates or supplemental
information regarding the original
public benefits, as necessary. To the
extent referenced, this information need
not be resubmitted in support of a
Marine Highway Grant application.
Applicants should organize the external
net cost savings and public benefits of
the proposed grant project based on the
following six categories:
i. Emissions benefits;
ii. Energy savings;
iii. Landside transportation
infrastructure maintenance savings;
iv. Economic competitiveness;
v. Safety improvements; and
vi. System resiliency and redundancy.
vi. Other Application Requirements
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(A) National Environmental Policy Act
(NEPA) Requirements
(1) Information about the NEPA status
of the Project. Projects selected for grant
award must comply with NEPA and any
other applicable environmental laws.
The application should include
sufficient detail on the project in order
for MARAD to determine the NEPA
class of action. The application should
indicate the anticipated NEPA level of
review for the project and describe any
environmental analysis in progress or
completed. This includes Categorical
Exclusion, Environmental Assessment/
Finding of No Significant Impact, or
Environmental Impact Statement/
Record of Decision. The applicant
should review the Maritime
Administration Manual of Orders MAO
600–1 (available at https://
www.maritime.dot.gov/sites/
marad.dot.gov/files/docs/environmentsecurity-safety/office-environment/596/
mao600-001-0.pdf) prior to submission.
The application should detail the type
of NEPA review underway, where the
project is in the process, provide a
website link or other reference to copies
of any environmental documents
prepared, and indicate the anticipated
date of completion of all milestones and
of the final NEPA determination. If the
last agency action with respect to NEPA
documents occurred more than three
years before the application date, the
applicant should describe why the
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project has been delayed and include a
proposed approach for verifying and, if
necessary, updating this material in
accordance with applicable NEPA
requirements. The applicant should be
aware that the final determination of
NEPA class of action will be made by
MARAD after grant award
announcement. The successful
applicant will be responsible for the
completion of MARAD’s NEPA
documentation, in collaboration with
MARAD’s Office of Environmental
Compliance, prior to execution of the
grant agreement.
(2) Environmental Permits and
Reviews. The application should
demonstrate receipt (or reasonably
anticipated receipt) of all environmental
permits and approvals necessary, such
as Army Corps of Engineers permits.
Additionally, the successful applicant,
in collaboration with MARAD, will be
responsible for the completion of
Section 106 of the National Historic
Preservation Act, 54 U.S.C. 306108, and
Section 7 of the Endangered Species
Act, 16 U.S.C. 1531, consultations prior
to completing NEPA. Applications
should also identify any additional
Federal, State, and local permits and
approvals necessary for project
completion.
(B) Other Federal, State, and Local
Actions
An application must indicate whether
a proposed project is likely to require
actions by other agencies, indicate the
status of such actions, provide a website
link or other reference to materials
submitted to the other agencies, and
demonstrate compliance with other
Federal, state, or local regulations and
permits as applicable. This section
should also include a description of
whether the project is dependent on, or
affected by, U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers investment as well as the U.S.
Army Corps of Engineers planned
activities as it relates to the project.
(C) Domestic Preference
If a project intends to use any product
with foreign content or of foreign origin,
this information should be listed and
addressed in the application.
Applications should expressly address
how the applicant plans to comply with
domestic preference requirements and
the applicant’s current efforts and
planned efforts to maximize domestic
content. If an applicant anticipates any
potential foreign-content issues with its
proposed project, applications should
demonstrate that the domestic source is
not available and how that
determination was reached.
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(D) Addressing Climate Change and
Decarbonization
MARAD seeks to fund projects under
the AMHP that proactively consider
climate change and align with the
President’s greenhouse gas reduction
goals and promote energy efficiency. As
part of the Department’s
implementation of Executive Order
14008, Tackling the Climate Crisis at
Home and Abroad (86 FR 7619),
MARAD also seeks to fund projects that
address environmental justice,
particularly for communities that
disproportionally experience climate
change-related consequences. In support
of this priority, applications should
address whether the project has
incorporated climate change and
environmental justice 16 in project
planning and/or design components,
particularly for communities that
disproportionally experience climate
change-related consequences. To
address the planning element of this
criterion, the application should
describe what specific climate change or
environmental justice activities have
been completed or are planned for the
project. This could include identifying
how emissions reductions will
specifically benefit disadvantaged
communities or to what extent it will
create employment opportunities and
economic benefits to the local
community. The application should
indicate whether a project is
incorporated in a climate action plan,
whether an equitable development plan
has been prepared, and whether (and
how) the results of planning tools such
as DOT’s Disadvantaged Census Tract
tool or EPA’s EJSCREEN have been
incorporated into the project.17
To address whether the project has
incorporated climate change and
environmental justice in the design
components, the application should
describe specific and direct ways that
the project will mitigate or reduce
climate change impacts. This may
include a description of how the project
incorporates multimodal infrastructure
to reduce climate impacts, such as by
ensuring that cargo is moved by the
most climate-efficient/friendly mode of
transportation. This section should also
describe ways that the project reduces
emissions or uses technology to increase
energy efficiency, and whether the
16 Environmental justice, as defined by the
Environmental Protection Agency, is the fair
treatment and meaningful involvement of all people
regardless of race, color, national origin, or income,
with respect to the development, implementation,
and enforcement of environmental laws,
regulations, and policies.
17 The EJSCREEN tool can be found on the EPA
site: https://ejscreen.epa.gov/mapper/.
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proposed grant project demonstrates a
movement towards lower carbon
emissions or near-zero emissions. This
may include, but is not limited to:
(1) The use of alternative, low carbon
fuels for vessels or cargo handling
equipment;
(2) The use of alternative
technologies, such as fuels cells,
batteries, hybrid systems, etc. for vessels
or cargo handling equipment;
(3) The procurement or leasing of low
or no emission cargo-handling
equipment that make greater reductions
in energy consumption and harmful
emissions than comparable equipment;
(4) The use of port-based alternative
energy sources such as low carbonpowered microgrids or charging
stations; and/or
(5) Best practices that promote low
carbon/energy efficiency cargo
movement or handling operations.
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(E) Certification Requirements
For an application to be considered
for a grant award, the Chief Executive
Officer, or equivalent, of the Eligible
Applicant is required to certify, in
writing, the following:
(1) That, except as noted in this grant
application, nothing has changed from
the original application for formal
designation as a Marine Highway
Project; and
(2) The Eligible Applicant will
administer the project and any funds
received will be spent efficiently and
effectively; and
(3) The Eligible Applicant will
provide information, data, and reports
as required.
(F) Protection of Confidential
Commercial Information
Eligible Applicants should submit, as
part of or in support of applications,
publicly available data or data that can
be made public and methodologies that
are accepted by industry practice and
standards to the extent possible. If an
application includes information that
the applicant considers to be a trade
secret or confidential commercial or
financial information, the applicant
should do the following: (i) Note on the
front cover that the submission contains
‘‘Confidential Commercial Information
(CCI)’’; (ii) mark each affected page
‘‘CCI’’; and (iii) highlight or otherwise
denote the CCI portions. MARAD will
protect such information from
disclosure to the extent allowed under
applicable law. In the event MARAD
receives a Freedom of Information Act
(FOIA) request for the information,
procedures described in the
Department’s FOIA regulation at 49 CFR
7.29 will be followed. Only information
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that is ultimately determined to be
confidential under those procedures
will be exempt from disclosure under
FOIA.
(G) Additional Application Information
Needed From All Private-Sector
Applicants, Including Previous
Recipients of AMHP Grant Funding
(1) Written letter of support from the
original Project Applicant stating that
the private entity has been referred by
the original Project Applicant for the
relevant designated Marine Highway
Project.
(2) A description of the entity
including location of the headquarters;
a description of the entity’s assets (tugs,
barges, etc.); years in operation;
ownership; customer base; and website
address, if any.
(3) Unique Entity Identifier of the
parent company (when applicable): Data
Universal Numbering System (DUNS +
4 number).
(4) The most recent year-end audited,
reviewed, or compiled financial
statements, prepared by a certified
public accountant (CPA), per U.S.
generally accepted accounting
principles (not tax-based accounting
financial statements). If CPA prepared
financial statements are not available,
provide the most recent financial
statement for the entity. Do not provide
tax returns.
(5) Statement regarding the
relationship between applicants and any
parents, subsidiaries, or affiliates, if any
such entity is going to provide a portion
of the matching funds.
(6) Evidence documenting applicant’s
ability to make proposed matching
requirement (loan agreement,
commitment from investors, cash on
balance sheet, etc.).
(7) Pro-forma financial statements
reflecting financial condition at
beginning of period; effect on balance
sheet of grant and matching funds (e.g.,
a decrease in cash or increase in debt,
additional equity and an increase in
fixed assets); and impact on company’s
projected financial condition (balance
sheet) of completion of project, showing
that company will have sufficient
financial resources to remain in
business.
(8) Statement regarding whether
during the past five years, the applicant
or any predecessor or related company
has been in bankruptcy or in
reorganization under Chapter 11 of the
Bankruptcy Code, or in any insolvency
or reorganization proceedings, and
whether any substantial property of the
applicant or any predecessor or related
company has been acquired in any such
proceeding or has been subject to
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12543
foreclosure or receivership during such
period. If so, give details.
(9) Additional information may be
requested as deemed necessary by
MARAD to facilitate and complete its
review of the application. If such
information is not provided, MARAD
may deem the application incomplete
and cease processing it.
(10) Company Officer’s certification of
each of the following:
i. That the company operates in the
geographic location of the designated
Marine Highway Project;
ii. That the applicant has the
authority to carry out the proposed
project; and
iii. That the applicant has not, and
will not, make any prohibited payments
out of the requested grant, in accordance
with the Department of Transportation’s
regulation restricting lobbying, 49 CFR
part 20.
3. Unique Entity Identifier and System
for Award Management (SAM)
MARAD will not make an award to an
applicant until the applicant has
complied with all applicable Unique
Entity Identifier and SAM requirements.
Each applicant must be registered in
SAM before applying, provide a valid
Unique Entity Identifier number in its
application, and maintain an active
SAM registration with current
information at all times during which it
has an active Federal award or an
application or plan under consideration
by a Federal awarding agency.
Applicants may register with the SAM
at www.SAM.gov. If an applicant has not
fully complied with the requirements by
the time MARAD is ready to make an
award, MARAD may determine that the
applicant is not qualified to receive a
Federal award under this program.
4. Submission Dates and Times
Applications must be submitted to
Grants.gov by 5:00 p.m. E.D.T. on April
29, 2022.
5. Funding Restrictions
Grant funds may only be used for the
purposes described in this notice and
may not be used as an operating
subsidy. Market-related studies are
ineligible for Marine Highway Grant
funds, as are improvements to Federally
owned facilities.
MARAD will not consider previously
incurred costs or previously expended
or encumbered funds towards the
matching requirement for any project.
Unless authorized by MARAD in
writing after MARAD’s announcement
of Marine Highway Grant awards, any
costs incurred before a grant agreement
is executed will not be reimbursed and
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will not count towards cost share
requirements.
Federal award recipients and subrecipients are prohibited from obligating
or expending grant funds to procure or
obtain; extend or renew a contract to
procure or obtain; or enter into a
contract (or extend or renew a contract)
to procure or obtain equipment,
services, or systems that use covered
telecommunications equipment or
services as a substantial or essential
component of any system, or as critical
technology as part of any system. See
Section 889 of Public Law 115–232
(National Defense Authorization Act for
Fiscal Year 2019) and 2 CFR 200.216 &
200.471.
6. Other Submission Requirements
Grant applications must be submitted
electronically using Grants.gov (https://
www.grants.gov). To submit an
application through Grants.gov,
applicants must:
i. Obtain a Unique Entity Identifier
(UEI) number;
ii. Register with the System for Award
Management (SAM) at www.SAM.gov;
iii. Create a Grants.gov username and
password; and
iv. Complete Authorized Organization
Representative (AOR) registration in
Grants.gov. The E-Business Point of
Contact (POC) at the applicant’s
organization must respond to the
registration email from Grants.gov and
login at Grants.gov to authorize the
applicant as the AOR. Please note that
there can be more than one AOR for an
organization.
Please note that the Grants.gov
registration process usually takes 2–4
weeks to complete and the Department
will not consider late applications that
are the result of a failure to register or
comply with Grants.gov applicant
requirements in a timely manner. For
information and instruction on each of
these processes, please see instructions
at https://www.grants.gov/applicants/
applicant-faqs.html. If applicants
experience difficulties at any point
during the registration or application
process, please call the Grants.gov
Customer Service Support Hotline at 1
(800) 518–4726.
Late applications that are the result of
failure to register or comply with
Grants.gov application requirements in
a timely manner will not be considered.
Applicants experiencing technical
issues with Grants.gov that are beyond
the applicant’s control must contact
MH@dot.gov or Fred Jones at (202) 366–
1123 prior to the deadline with the
username of the registrant and details of
the technical issue experienced. The
applicant must provide: (i) Details of the
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technical issue experienced; (ii) screen
capture(s) of the technical issue
experienced along with the
corresponding ‘‘Grant tracking number’’
that is provided via Grants.gov; (iii) the
‘‘Legal Name’’ for the applicant that was
provided in the SF–424; (iv) the name
and contact information for the person
to be contacted on matters involving
submission that is included on the SF–
424; (v) the Unique Entity Identifier
number associated with the application;
and (vi) the Grants.gov Help Desk
Tracking Number.
E. Application Review Information
1. Selection Criteria
This section specifies the criteria that
MARAD will use to evaluate and award
applications for Marine Highway
Grants. These criteria incorporate the
statutory requirements for this program,
as well as Departmental and
programmatic priorities.
When reviewing grant applications,
MARAD will consider how the
proposed service could satisfy, in whole
or in part, 46 U.S.C. 55601(b)(1) and (3)
and the following criteria found at 46
U.S.C. 55601(g)(2)(B):
i. The project is financially viable;
ii. The funds received will be spent
efficiently and effectively; and
iii. A market exists for the services of
the proposed project as evidenced by
contracts or written statements of intent
from potential customers.
MARAD will also consider how the
proposed request for funding outlined
in the grant application supports the
elements of 46 CFR 393.3(c)(8) (Public
benefits) as a key programmatic
objective.
In awarding grants under the program,
MARAD will give preference to those
projects or components that present the
most financially viable marine highway
transportation services and require the
lowest total percentage Federal share of
the costs.
After applying the above criteria, in
support of Departmental priorities
related to climate change, including
advancing the goals outlined in
Executive Order 14008, Tackling the
Climate Crisis at Home and Abroad (86
FR 7619), MARAD will evaluate
whether the project incorporates climate
change, environmental justice, and
decarbonization activities in project
planning and/or design elements.
MARAD will give preference to projects
that demonstrate a movement towards
lower carbon emissions or near-zero
emissions, as described in Section
D.2.vi.(D).
In support of Executive Order 13985,
Advancing Racial Equity and Support
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for Underserved Communities Through
the Federal Government (86 FR 7009),
MARAD will also consider the extent to
which applications address equity and
the removal of barriers to opportunity
through the activities described in
Section D.2.ii., such as meaningful,
equity-focused community outreach and
public engagement of underserved
communities, and adoption of an equity
and inclusion program or plan or
equity-focused policies related to the
proposed project.
In addition, since the AMHP is
intended to create transportation
options that enhance supply chain
reliance, MARAD will consider how a
project improves the supply chain.
Reviewers will consider the extent to
which information in the narrative
demonstrates how the project positively
impacts the supply chain, as described
further in Section D.2.ii. For example,
reviewers will consider whether a
project proposes elements that improve
transportation links to critical
infrastructure, promotes lower-carbon
supply chain infrastructure, or invests
in supply chain reliability
improvements. Projects that have
significant regional or national supply
chain system impacts will be more
competitive than ones that do not.
DOT will consider whether a project
is located within a Historically
Disadvantaged Community or a
Federally designated community
development zone (a qualified
opportunity zone, Empowerment Zone,
Promise Zone, or Choice
Neighborhood). Applicants must specify
in their narrative which zone (or zones)
the project is in and provide sufficient
identifying information (such as the
Opportunity Zone tract number) so that
reviewers can verify the claim. A project
located in a Historically Disadvantaged
Community or a Federally designated
community development zone is more
competitive than a similar project that is
not. The Department will rely on
applicant-supplied information to assist
in making this assessment and will only
consider this if the applicant expressly
identifies the designation in their
application.
MARAD will also consider a project’s
likelihood of obligating funds by
September 30, 2025.
2. Review and Selection Process
Upon receipt, MARAD will conduct a
technical review to evaluate
applications using the criteria outlined
above. Upon completion of the technical
review, MARAD will forward the
applications to an inter-agency review
team (Intermodal Review Team). The
Intermodal Review Team will include
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members of MARAD, other Department
of Transportation Operating
Administrations, and representatives
from the Office of the Secretary of
Transportation. The Intermodal Review
Team will review and provide
comments to the Program Office for
each application based on the criteria
set forth above. The Program Office will
use those comments to inform the
recommendations that will be made to
the Maritime Administrator and the
Secretary.
3. Federal Awardee Performance and
Integrity Information System (FAPIIS)
Check
Before making a Federal award with
a total amount of Federal share greater
than the simplified acquisition
threshold of $250,000 (see 2 CFR 200.88
Simplified Acquisition Threshold),
MARAD will review and consider any
information about the applicant that is
in the designated integrity and
performance system accessible through
SAM (currently FAPIIS) (see 41 U.S.C.
2313). An applicant, at its option, may
review information in the designated
integrity and performance systems
accessible through SAM and comment
on any information about itself that a
Federal awarding agency previously
entered and is currently in the
designated integrity and performance
system accessible through SAM.
MARAD will consider any comments by
the applicant, in addition to the other
information in the designated integrity
and performance system, in making a
judgment about the applicant’s integrity,
business ethics, and record of
performance under Federal awards
when completing the review of risk
posed by applicants.
F. Federal Award Administration
Information
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1. Federal Award Notices
Following the evaluation outlined in
Section E, the Secretary will announce
the selected grant award recipients. The
award announcement will be posted on
the MARAD website (https://
www.maritime.dot.gov).
Recipients of an award will not
receive lump-sum cash disbursements at
the time of award announcement or
obligation of funds. Instead, Marine
Highway Grant funds will reimburse
recipients only after grant agreements
have been executed, allowable expenses
are incurred, and valid requests for
reimbursement have been submitted
and approved by the MARAD grants
officer. Marine Highway Grant
recipients must adhere to applicable
requirements and follow established
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procedures to receive reimbursement.
Unless authorized in writing by
MARAD, an expense incurred before a
grant agreement is executed will not be
reimbursed or count towards cost share
requirements.
2. Administrative and National Policy
Requirements
All awards must be administered
pursuant to the ‘‘Uniform
Administrative Requirements, Cost
Principles, and Audit Requirements for
Federal Awards’’ found at 2 CFR part
200, as adopted by the Department at 2
CFR part 1201. All procurement
transactions for the acquisition of
property or services under the Federal
award must be conducted in a manner
providing full and open competition
unless MARAD authorizes a
noncompetitive procurement in
accordance with 2 CFR 200.320(c).
Federal wage rate requirements
included at 40 U.S.C. 3141–3148 apply
to all projects receiving funds under this
program and apply to all parts of the
project, whether funded with Federal
funds or non-Federal funds.
Additionally, other applicable Federal
laws, Executive Orders, and any rules,
regulations, and requirements of
MARAD will apply to projects that
receive Marine Highway Grants.
As expressed in Executive Order
14005, Ensuring the Future is Made in
All of America by All of America’s
Workers (86 FR 7475), it is the policy of
the executive branch to use terms and
conditions of Federal financial
assistance awards to maximize,
consistent with law, the use of goods,
products, and materials produced in,
and services offered in, the United
States. Consistent with the requirements
of the Build America, Buy America Act
(Pub. L. 117–58, Division G, Title IX,
Subtitle A, November 15, 2021), no
amounts made available through this
NOFO may be obligated for a project
unless all iron, steel, manufactured
products, and construction materials
used in the project are produced in the
United States. Depending on other
funding streams, the project may be
subject to separate ‘‘Buy America’’
requirements.
All recipients must comply with the
requirements under Title VI of the Civil
Rights Act of 1964, Section 504 of the
Rehabilitation Act, and their
implementing regulations. Applicants
should review these civil rights statutes
carefully to ensure full compliance with
these obligations. These requirements
apply to recipients as well as all
subrecipients. The successful applicant
will be responsible for implementing an
effective and compliant Title VI and
PO 00000
Frm 00123
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
12545
Section 504 program under the
technical assistance from MARAD’s
Office of Civil Rights.
In connection with any program or
activity conducted with or benefiting
from funds awarded under this notice,
recipients of funds must comply with
all applicable requirements of Federal
law, including, without limitation, the
Constitution of the United States; the
conditions of performance,
nondiscrimination requirements, and
other assurances made applicable to the
award of funds in accordance with
regulations of the Department of
Transportation; and applicable Federal
financial assistance and contracting
principles promulgated by the Office of
Management and Budget. In complying
with these requirements, recipients, in
particular, must ensure that no
concession agreements are denied or
other contracting decisions made on the
basis of speech or other activities
protected by the First Amendment. If
the Department determines that a
recipient has failed to comply with
applicable Federal requirements, the
Department may terminate the award of
funds and disallow previously incurred
costs, requiring the recipient to
reimburse any expended award funds.
3. Reporting
a. Progress Reporting on Grant Activities
Award recipients are required to
submit quarterly reports, signed by
officers of the recipients, to the Program
Office to keep MARAD informed of all
activities during the reporting period.
The reports will indicate progress made,
planned activities for the next reporting
period, and a listing of any purchases
made with grant funds during the
reporting period. In addition, the report
will include an explanation of any
deviation from the projected budget and
timeline. Quarterly reports will also
contain, at a minimum, the following: (i)
A statement as to whether the award
recipient has used the grant funds
consistent with the terms contemplated
in the grant agreement; (ii) if applicable,
a description of the budgeted activities
not procured by recipient; (iii) if
applicable, the rationale for recipient’s
failure to execute the budgeted
activities; (iv) if applicable, an
explanation as to how and when
recipient intends to accomplish the
purposes of the grant agreement; and (v)
a budget summary showing funds
expended since commencement,
anticipated expenditures for the next
reporting period, and expenditures
compared to overall budget.
E:\FR\FM\04MRN1.SGM
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Federal Register / Vol. 87, No. 43 / Friday, March 4, 2022 / Notices
b. Performance Reporting
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Award recipients will also collect
information and report on a project’s
observed performance with respect to
the relevant long-term outcomes that are
expected to be achieved through the
project. Performance indicators will not
include formal goals or targets, but will
include observed measures under
baseline (pre-project) as well as postimplementation outcomes for an agreedupon timeline, and will be used to
evaluate and compare projects and
monitor the results that grant funds
achieve to the intended long-term
outcomes of the AMHP. Performance
reporting continues for several years
after the project is completed, and
MARAD does not provide Marine
Highway Grant funding specifically for
performance reporting.
National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration
c. Reporting of Matters Related to
Recipient Integrity and Performance
If the total value of a selected
applicant’s currently active grants,
cooperative agreements, and
procurement contracts from all Federal
awarding agencies exceeds $10,000,000
for any period of time during the period
of performance of this Federal award,
then the applicant during that period of
time must maintain the currency of
information reported to the SAM that is
made available in the designated
integrity and performance system
(currently FAPIIS) about civil, criminal,
or administrative proceedings described
in paragraph 2 of 2 CFR Appendix XII
to Part 200. This is a statutory
requirement under Section 872 of Public
Law 110–417, as amended (41 U.S.C.
2313). As required by Section 3010 of
Public Law 111–212, all information
posted in the designated integrity and
performance system on or after April 15,
2011, except past performance reviews
required for Federal procurement
contracts, will be publicly available.
G. Federal Awarding Agency Contacts
To ensure applicants receive accurate
information about eligibility, the
program, or in response to other
questions, applicants are encouraged to
contact MARAD directly, rather than
through intermediaries or third parties.
Please see contact information in the
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with NOTICES1
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT
section above.
*
*
*
*
*
By Order of the Acting Maritime
Administrator.
T. Mitchell Hudson, Jr.,
Secretary, Maritime Administration.
[FR Doc. 2022–04599 Filed 3–3–22; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–81–P
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:05 Mar 03, 2022
Jkt 256001
[Docket No. NHTSA–2019–0063; Notice 2]
General Motors, LLC, Denial of Petition
for Decision of Inconsequential
Noncompliance
National Highway Traffic
Safety Administration (NHTSA),
Department of Transportation (DOT).
ACTION: Denial of petition.
AGENCY:
General Motors, LLC, (GM)
has determined that certain model year
(MY) 2010–2017 GMC Terrain motor
vehicles do not fully comply with
Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standard
(FMVSS) No. 108, Lamps, Reflective
Devices, and Associated Equipment. GM
filed a noncompliance report dated May
15, 2019. GM subsequently petitioned
NHTSA on June 7, 2019, for a decision
that the subject noncompliance is
inconsequential as it relates to motor
vehicle safety. This document
announces the denial of GM’s petition.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Leroy Angeles, Office of Vehicle Safety
Compliance, the National Highway
Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA),
telephone (202) 366–5304,
leroy.angeles@dot.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
SUMMARY:
I. Overview
GM has determined that certain MY
2010–2017 GMC Terrain motor vehicles
do not fully comply with paragraph
S10.15.6 and Table XIX of FMVSS No.
108, Lamps, Reflective Devices, and
Associated Equipment (49 CFR
571.108). GM filed a noncompliance
report dated May 15, 2019, pursuant to
49 CFR part 573, Defect and
Noncompliance Responsibility and
Reports. GM subsequently petitioned
NHTSA on June 7, 2019, for an
exemption from the notification and
remedy requirements of 49 U.S.C.
Chapter 301 on the basis that this
noncompliance is inconsequential as it
relates to motor vehicle safety, pursuant
to 49 U.S.C. 30118(d) and 30120(h) and
49 CFR part 556, Exemption for
Inconsequential Defect or
Noncompliance.
Notice of receipt of GM’s petition was
published with a 30-day public
comment period, on February 12, 2020,
in the Federal Register (85 FR 8095). No
comments were received. To view the
petition and all supporting documents
log onto the Federal Docket
Management System (FDMS) website at
https://www.regulations.gov/. Then
follow the online search instructions to
PO 00000
Frm 00124
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
locate docket number ‘‘NHTSA–2019–
0063.’’
II. Equipment and Vehicles Involved
Approximately 726,959 MY 2010–
2017 GMC Terrain motor vehicles
manufactured between May 21, 2009,
and July 13, 2017, are potentially
involved.
III. Noncompliance
GM explains that the noncompliance
is that the subject vehicles are equipped
with lower beam headlamps that do not
meet the photometry requirements of
paragraph S10.15.6 and Table XIX of
FMVSS No. 108. Specifically, a
reflection from the headlamps’ housing
is directed 80 degrees outboard and 45
degrees upward, as measured from each
lamp’s optical axis, which illuminates
two small areas high above the vehicle.
When tested by GM, this reflection from
a single point on each lamp measured
approximately 450–470 candela (cd).
This is more than three times brighter
than the designated maximum of 125 cd
at test points 10°U to 90°U, as stated in
Table XIX–a.
IV. Rule Requirements
Paragraph S10.15.6 and Table XIX of
FMVSS No. 108 include the
requirements relevant to this petition.
Each replaceable bulb headlamp must
be designed to conform to the
photometry requirements of Table XVIII
for upper beam and Table XIX for lower
beam as specified in Table II–d for the
specific headlamp unit and aiming
method when tested according to the
procedure of paragraph S14.2.5 using
any replaceable light source designated
for use in the system under test.
V. Summary of GM’s Petition
The following views and arguments
presented in this section, ‘‘V. Summary
of GM’s Petition,’’ are the views and
arguments provided by GM and do not
reflect the views of the Agency. GM
described the subject noncompliance
and contends that the noncompliance is
inconsequential as it relates to motor
vehicle safety.
In support of its petition, GM
submitted the following reasoning:
1. The noncompliance caused by this
reflection has no effect on vehicle safety for
oncoming or surrounding vehicles. The
narrow reflection in question does not create
a safety risk for oncoming or surrounding
drivers, due to the extreme angle of the
reflection. This angle, 80 degrees outboard
and 45 degrees upward from each lamp’s
optical axis, is far above the range where the
reflection could cause glare for oncoming or
surrounding drivers, including the industryrecognized ‘‘glare points’’ referenced in Table
XIX of FMVSS No. 108 at the following
E:\FR\FM\04MRN1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 87, Number 43 (Friday, March 4, 2022)]
[Notices]
[Pages 12537-12546]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2022-04599]
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DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Maritime Administration
Notice of Funding Opportunity for America's Marine Highway
Projects
AGENCY: Maritime Administration, Department of Transportation.
ACTION: Notice of funding opportunity.
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SUMMARY: This notice announces the availability of funding for grants
and establishes selection criteria and application requirements for the
America's Marine Highway Program (``AMHP''). The purpose of this
program is to make grants available to previously designated Marine
Highway Projects that support the development and expansion of
documented vessels or port and landside infrastructure. The U.S.
Department of Transportation (``DOT'' or ``Department'') also seeks
eligible grant projects that will strengthen American supply chains.
The Department will award Marine Highway Grants to implement projects
or components of projects previously designated by the Secretary of
Transportation (``Secretary'') under the AMHP. Only Marine Highway
Projects the Secretary designates before the Notice of Funding
Opportunity (``NOFO'') closing date are eligible for funding as
described in this notice.
DATES: Grant applications must be received by the Maritime
Administration (``MARAD'') by 5:00 p.m. E.D.T. on April 29, 2022.
ADDRESSES: Grant applications must be submitted electronically using
Grants.gov (https://www.grants.gov). Please be aware that you must
complete the Grants.gov registration process before submitting your
application and that the registration process usually takes 2 to 4
weeks to complete. Applicants are strongly encouraged to make
submissions in advance of the deadline.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Fred Jones, Office of Ports &
Waterways Planning, Room W21-311, Maritime Administration, U.S.
Department of Transportation, 1200 New Jersey Avenue SE, Washington, DC
20590, phone 202-366-1123, or email [email protected]. Persons who use
a telecommunications device for the deaf (TDD) may call the Federal
Information Relay Service (FIRS) at 1-800-877-8339 to contact the above
individual during business hours. The FIRS is available twenty-four
hours a day, seven days a week, to leave a message or question with the
above individual. You will receive a reply during regular business
hours.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Each section of this notice contains
information and instructions relevant to the Marine Highway Grants
application process. All applicants should read this notice in its
entirety so that they have the information they need to submit eligible
and competitive applications. Applications received after the deadline
will not be considered except in the case of unforeseen technical
difficulties as outlined below in Section D.6.
Table of Contents
A. Program Description
B. Federal Award Information
C. Eligibility Information
D. Application and Submission Information
E. Application Review Information
F. Federal Award Administration Information
G. Federal Awarding Agency Contacts
A. Program Description
The Secretary, in accordance with 46 U.S.C. 55601, established a
marine highway transportation grant program to implement projects or
components of designated Marine Highway Projects that provide a
coordinated and capable alternative to landside transportation or that
promote marine highway transportation. The primary goal of the AMHP is
to expand the use of the nation's navigable waters to relieve landside
congestion, reduce air emissions, and generate other public benefits by
increasing the efficiency of the surface transportation system, and
Marine Highway Grants will be awarded to further this purpose.
The Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (Pub. L. 117-58,
November 15, 2021) (``Bipartisan Infrastructure Law'' or ``BIL'')
appropriated $25,000,000 to be awarded by the Department for Marine
Highway Grants. The grant funds currently available are for projects
related to vessels documented under 46
[[Page 12538]]
U.S.C. Chapter 121 and port and landside infrastructure. Section E of
this notice, which outlines the Marine Highway Grants selection
criteria, describes the process for selecting projects that further
this goal. Section F.3. describes progress and performance reporting
requirements for selected projects, including the relationship between
that reporting and the program's selection criteria.
Since this program was created, more than $51.7 million has been
awarded through competitive grants to implement projects or components
of projects designated under 46 U.S.C. 55601. Throughout the program,
these discretionary grants have been awarded to projects that have
supported the development and expansion of documented vessels and port
and landside infrastructure, consistent with DOT's strategic
infrastructure goals.\1\ The AMHP continues to align with the
Department's strategic goals by guiding investments for port and
landside infrastructure that expand the use of the nation's navigable
waters.\2\ The FY 2022 AMHP round will be implemented, as appropriate
and consistent with law, in alignment with the priorities in Executive
Order 14052, Implementation of the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs
Act (86 FR 64335), which are to invest efficiently and equitably,
promote the competitiveness of the U.S. economy, improve job
opportunities by focusing on high labor standards, strengthen
infrastructure resilience to all hazards, which helps combat the crisis
of climate change, coordinate effectively with State, local, Tribal,
and territorial government partners, and support the Administration's
Justice40 Initiative goal that 40% of the overall benefits from Federal
investments in climate and clean energy flow to disadvantaged
communities.
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\1\ See U.S. Department of Transportation Strategic Plan for FY
2018-2022 (Feb. 2018) at https://www.transportation.gov/administrations/office-policy/dot-strategic-plan-fy2018-2022.
\2\ See U.S. Department of Transportation Strategic Framework FY
2022-2026 (Dec. 2021) at https://www.transportation.gov/administrations/office-policy/fy2022-2026-strategic-framework.
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The expectations of this notice also reflect the goal of
strengthening American supply chains. This vision is consistent with
the President's Port Action Plan, which calls for rapid action to
relieve supply chain constraints at American ports through significant
investments in the near, medium, and long term,\3\ and the program will
seek projects that address supply chain disruptions.
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\3\ The President's Port Action Plan may be found here: https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/statements-releases/2021/11/09/fact-sheet-the-biden-harris-action-plan-for-americas-ports-and-waterways/.
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This round of AMHP grant funding also highlights the
Administration's priorities to invest in infrastructure projects that
advance the goals of Executive Order 14008, Tackling the Climate Crisis
at Home and Abroad (86 FR 7619), Executive Order 13985, Advancing
Racial Equity and Support for Underserved Communities Through the
Federal Government (86 FR 7009), and Executive Order 14025, Worker
Organizing and Empowerment (86 FR 22829) by, for example: Proactively
addressing equity \4\ for all, including people of color and others who
have been historically underserved, marginalized, and adversely
affected by persistent poverty, inequality, and barriers to
opportunity; alleviating surface transportation congestion; and
creating good paying jobs with the free and fair choice to join a
union.
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\4\ Executive Order 13985 defines ``equity'' as the consistent
and systematic fair, just, and impartial treatment of all
individuals, including individuals who belong to underserved
communities that have been denied such treatment, such as Black,
Latino, and Indigenous and Native American persons, Asian Americans
and Pacific Islanders and other persons of color; members of
religious minorities; lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer
(LGBTQ+) persons; persons with disabilities; persons who live in
rural areas; and persons otherwise adversely affected by persistent
poverty or inequality.
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The America's Marine Highway Program Office (Program Office)
follows a three-step approach when supporting investment opportunities
for marine highway transportation services. The first step is
designation of a Marine Highway Route by the Secretary. The Department
accepts Marine Highway Route Designation requests at any time from
Route Sponsors. Once a Route is designated, the second step is
designation as a Marine Highway Project by the Secretary. Marine
Highway Projects represent concepts for new services or expansions of
existing marine highway services on designated Marine Highway Routes
that use documented vessels and mitigate landside congestion or promote
marine highway transportation. MARAD announces by notice in the Federal
Register open season periods to allow Project Applicants opportunities
to submit Marine Highway Project Designation applications. A Project
Applicant must receive a Project Designation to then become eligible
for Marine Highway Grant funding for that Project, the third step
referenced above. Marine Highway Grant funding (the subject of this
NOFO) is provided to successful public and private sector applicants as
funds are appropriated by Congress.
The America's Marine Highway Grant program is described in the
Federal Assistance Listings with Assistance Listings Number 20.816.
B. Federal Award Information
The total funding available for awards under this NOFO is
$24,250,000. This amount represents $25,000,000 from the BIL
appropriations less $750,000 for grant administration and oversight as
permitted under 49 U.S.C. 109(i).
MARAD will seek to obtain the maximum benefit from the available
funding by awarding grants to as many qualified projects as possible;
however, per 46 U.S.C. 55601(g)(3), MARAD shall give preference to
those projects or components that present the most financially viable
transportation services and require the lowest percentage of Federal
share of costs. Depending on the characteristics of the pool of
qualified applications, it is possible MARAD may award all funds to a
single project. MARAD may also award grant funds to support a portion
of a project described in an application by selecting a discrete
component(s). If this solicitation does not result in the award and
obligation of all available funds, MARAD may publish additional
solicitations.
MARAD will administer each Marine Highway Grant pursuant to a grant
agreement with the successful applicant, and the start date and period
of performance for each award will be outlined in each grant agreement.
Marine Highway Grant funds will be administered on a reimbursable
basis. Unless authorized in writing by MARAD as allowable ``pre-award
costs'' \5\ and incurred after the Department's announcement of Marine
Highway Grant awards, any costs incurred prior to MARAD's obligation of
funds for a project are ineligible for reimbursement and are ineligible
to count as match for cost share requirements. Obligation occurs when a
selected applicant and MARAD enter into a written grant agreement after
the applicant has satisfied applicable administrative requirements,
including environmental review requirements, such as those under the
National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA), and civil rights
requirements, including those under Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of
1964, the Americans with
[[Page 12539]]
Disabilities Act, and Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973.
MARAD seeks to obligate FY 2022 AMH funds under this notice by
September 30, 2025 and expects grant recipients to expend funds within
five years of obligation. As part of the review and selection process
described in Section E.2., MARAD will consider a project's likelihood
of obligating funds by September 30, 2025 and liquidation of these
obligations within five years after the date of obligation.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ Pre-award costs are only costs incurred directly pursuant to
the negotiation and anticipation of the Marine Highway grant award
where such costs are necessary for efficient and timely performance
of the scope of work, as determined and pre-approved in writing by
MARAD.
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MARAD reserves the right to revoke any award of Marine Highway
Grant funds and to award such funds to another project to the extent
that such funds are not expended in a timely or acceptable manner and
in accordance with the project schedule and requirements detailed in
the grant agreement.
Prior recipients of Marine Highway Grants may apply for funding to
support additional phases of a designated project. However, to be
competitive, the grant applicant should demonstrate the extent to which
the previously funded project phase has met estimated project schedules
and budget, as well as the ability to realize the benefits expected for
the new award.
C. Eligibility Information
To be selected for a Marine Highway Grant, an applicant must be an
Eligible Applicant and the project must be an Eligible Project.
1. Eligible Applicants
Eligible Applicants for funding available under this notice are
original Project Applicants of projects that the Secretary has
previously designated as Marine Highway Projects or substitute
applicants. A substitute applicant can be either a public entity or a
private-sector entity that has been referred to the Program Office by
the original Project Applicant in a written letter of support. This
letter of support must be included as an attachment to the application
for funding. Original Project Applicants are defined as those public
entities named by the Secretary in original designated projects.
Eligible applicants must have operational or administrative areas of
responsibility that are adjacent to or near the relevant designated
Marine Highway Project. Eligible Applicants include State governments
(including State departments of transportation), metropolitan planning
organizations, port authorities, and tribal governments, or private
sector operators of marine highway services within designated Marine
Highway Projects. Private-sector applicants should refer to Section
D.2.vi.(G) for additional documentation that must be submitted to
support an eligibility determination.
Eligible Applicants are encouraged to develop coalitions and
public/private partnerships, which might include vessel owners and
operators; third-party logistics providers; trucking companies;
shippers; railroads; port authorities; state, regional, and local
transportation planners; environmental organizations; impacted
communities; or any combination of entities working in collaboration on
a single grant application that can be submitted by the original
Project Applicant or their designated substitute. All successful grant
applicants, whether they are public or private entities, must comply
with all Federal requirements, including the necessary NEPA review and
documentation.
If multiple Eligible Applicants submit a joint grant application,
they must identify in the application a lead Eligible Applicant as the
primary point of contact. Joint grant applications must include a
description of the roles and responsibilities of each applicant,
including designating the one entity that will receive the Federal
funds directly from MARAD, and must include a signed letter of support
from each Eligible Applicant as an attachment. Refer to Section D.5.,
Funding Restrictions, for more information.
2. Cost Sharing or Matching
An Eligible Applicant must provide at least 20 percent of grant
project costs from non-Federal sources. Non-Federal sources include
State funds originating from programs funded by State revenue, local
funds originating from State or local revenue-funded programs, or
private funds. The application should demonstrate, such as through a
commitment letter or other documentation, the sources of these non-
Federal funds. Preference will be given to those projects that provide
a larger percentage of costs from non-Federal sources. MARAD will not
consider previously incurred costs or previously expended or encumbered
funds towards the matching requirement for any project. Matching funds
are subject to the same Federal requirements described in Section F.2.
as Federally awarded funds, including applicable domestic content
requirements. Refer to Section D.2. for information on documenting cost
sharing in the application.
For each project that receives a Marine Highway Grant award, the
terms of the award will require the recipient to complete the project
using at least the level of non-Federal funding that was specified in
the application. If the actual costs of the project are greater than
the costs estimated in the application, the recipient will be
responsible for increasing the non-Federal contribution. If the actual
costs of the project are less than the costs estimated in the
application, the Department may reduce the Federal contribution.
3. Other
i. Eligible Projects
(A) Capital Projects
Pursuant to the BIL, eligible projects proposed for funding must
support the development and expansion of vessels documented under 46
U.S.C. Chapter 121 or port and landside infrastructure. Only projects
or their components that the Secretary has designated as Marine Highway
Projects by the closing date of this notice are eligible for this round
of grant funding. The current list of designated Marine Highway
Projects can be found on the MARAD website at: https://cms.marad.dot.gov/sites/marad.dot.gov/files/2021-08/AMH%20Project%20Designations%20Aug%202021.pdf.
Improvements to Federally owned facilities are ineligible under the
Marine Highway Grant program.
(B) Planning Projects
Grant funds may also be requested for eligible project planning
activities; however, market-related studies are ineligible to receive
Marine Highway Grants. Activities eligible for funding under Marine
Highway planning grants are related to the planning, preparation, or
design--including site design, engineering drawings, cost estimation,
feasibility analysis, environmental review, permitting, and preliminary
engineering and design work--of eligible documented vessel or port and
landside infrastructure projects.
ii. Application Limit
Each applicant may submit no more than one grant application per
designated project.
D. Application and Submission Information
1. Address To Request Application Package
This announcement contains all the information needed for
applicants to apply for this funding opportunity. Applications may be
found at and must be submitted through Grants.gov.
2. Content and Form of Application Submission
The application must include the Standard Form 424 (Application for
[[Page 12540]]
Federal Assistance), which can be found on Grants.gov, and the Project
Narrative. MARAD recommends that the Project Narrative follows the
basic outline below to address the program requirements and assist
evaluators in locating relevant information.
I. First Page of Project Narrative......... See D.2.i.
II. Project Description.................... See D.2.ii.
III. Project Location...................... See D.2.iii.
IV. Grant Funds, Sources, and Uses of See D.2.iv.
Project Funds.
V. Selection Criteria...................... See D.2.v. and E.1.
VI. Other Application Requirements......... See D.2.vi.
The Project Narrative should include the information necessary for
MARAD to determine that the project satisfies the requirements
described in Sections B and C, and to assess the selection criteria
specified in Section E.1., including a detailed project description,
location, and budget. To the extent practicable, applicants should
provide supporting data and documentation in a form that is directly
verifiable by MARAD. Applicants are strongly encouraged to provide
quantitative information, including baseline information, that
demonstrates a project's merits and economic viability. MARAD may ask
any applicant to supplement data in its application but expects
applications to be complete upon submission. Incomplete applications
may not be considered for an award.
The Project Narrative should also include a table of contents,
maps, and graphics, as appropriate, to make the information easier to
review. MARAD recommends that the Project Narrative be prepared with
standard formatting preferences (a single-spaced document, using a
standard 12-point font such as Times New Roman, with 1-inch margins,
and the narrative text in one column only). The Project Narrative may
not exceed 12 pages in length, excluding the table of contents and
appendices. The only substantive portions that may exceed the 12-page
limit are documents supporting assertions or conclusions made in the
12-page Project Narrative. If possible, website links to supporting
documentation should be provided rather than copies of these supporting
materials. It is important to ensure that the website links are
currently active, accessible, and working. If supporting documents are
submitted, applicants should clearly identify within the Project
Narrative the relevant portion of the Project Narrative that each
supporting document supports. MARAD recommends using appropriately
descriptive file names (e.g., ``Project Narrative,'' ``Maps,''
``Letters of Support'') for all attachments. At the applicant's
discretion, relevant materials provided previously in support of a
Marine Highway Project application may be referenced, updated, or
described as unchanged. To the extent documents provided previously are
referenced, they need not be resubmitted in support of a Marine Highway
Grant application.
To ensure the Project Narrative is sufficiently detailed and
informative, MARAD recommends applications include the following
sections:
i. First Page of Project Narrative
The first page of the Project Narrative should provide the
following items of information:
(A) Marine Highway Designated Project name and the original Project
Applicant (as stated on the Marine Highway Program's list of Designated
Projects);
(B) Primary point of contact, including the name, phone number,
email address, and business address of the primary point of contact for
the Eligible Applicant. If submitting a joint application, the primary
point of contact should be for the lead Eligible Applicant;
(C) Total amount of the proposed grant project cost in dollars and
the amount of Federal grant funds the applicant is seeking, along with
sources and share of matching funds;
(D) Executive Summary, which should include an outline of the
background of the project, the need for the project, and how the grant
funding will be applied in the context of the service referenced in the
original Project Designation application;
(E) The public and private partners engaged in the Marine Highway
Project;
(F) The Unique Entity Identifier (UEI) Number \6\ associated with
the application--Marine Highway Grant Recipients and their first-tier
sub-awardees must obtain UEI numbers, which are available in SAM.gov;
and
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\6\ On April 4, 2022, the Federal government will stop using the
Data Universal Numbering System (DUNS) number to uniquely identify
entities. At that point, entities doing business with the Federal
government will use a Unique Entity Identifier (UEI) created in
SAM.gov. If your entity is currently registered in SAM.gov, your UEI
has already been assigned and is viewable in SAM.gov. This includes
inactive registrations.
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(G) Evidence of registration with the System for Award Management
(SAM) at https://www.SAM.gov.
ii. Project Description
The next section of the application should provide a description of
the project. The project description must be in paragraph form
providing a high-level view of the overall project and its major
components. This section should discuss the project's history,
including a description of any previously completed components. The
applicant may use this section to place the project into a broader
context of other transportation infrastructure investments being
pursued by the grant applicant, and, if applicable, how it will benefit
communities in rural areas. The project description should be
sufficiently detailed so that the NEPA class of action can be
determined without additional requests for information.
This section should also include a timeline for implementing the
project, including identifying major project milestones. The project
schedule should be sufficiently detailed to demonstrate that the
project can complete construction and expend all funds within five
years after obligation. See Section B.
Additionally, if a project addresses regional or national supply
chain delays on the freight transportation network or strengthens
supply chain resiliency, this section of the application should include
sufficient information to enable evaluation of: (i) An existing or
anticipated regional or national supply chain delay and (ii) how the
project will address the identified delay. Applications should also
address how quickly the project can mitigate the supply chain delay or
strengthen supply chain resiliency.
This section should also describe whether the project addresses
equity and barriers to opportunity. Applicants are encouraged to
describe credible planning activities and actions to resolve potential
inequities and barriers to equal opportunity in the project as
reflected in Executive Order 13985, Advancing Racial Equity and Support
for Underserved Communities Through the Federal Government (86 FR
7009).
[[Page 12541]]
For example, the applicant should describe: How the project
incorporates an equity impact analysis; how the project adopts an
equity and inclusion program/plan or implementation of equity-focused
policies related to project procurement, material sourcing,
construction, inspection, or other activities designed to ensure racial
equity in the overall project delivery and implementation; or
documentation of equity-focused community outreach and public
engagement in the project's planning and project elements in
underserved communities, including Historically Disadvantaged
Communities. DOT has been developing a definition of Historically
Disadvantaged Communities as part of its implementation of the
Justice40 Initiative and will use that definition for the purpose of
this NOFO. Consistent with OMB's Interim Guidance for the Justice40
Initiative,\7\ Historically Disadvantaged Communities include (a)
certain qualifying census tracts, (b) any Tribal land, or (c) any
territory or possession of the United States. Additionally, DOT is
providing a mapping tool to assist applicants in identifying whether a
project is located in a Historically Disadvantaged Community at
Transportation Disadvantaged Census Tracts.\8\ Any policies, plans, and
outreach documentation related to advancing equity or removing barriers
to opportunity should be briefly discussed and provided as an appendix
to the Project Narrative.
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\7\ https://www.whitehouse.gov/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/M-21-28.pdf.
\8\ Information on DOT's Disadvantaged Census Tract tool
(Transportation Disadvantaged Census Tracts) can be found at:
https://usdot.maps.arcgis.com/apps/dashboards/d6f90dfcc8b44525b04c7ce748a3674a. For technical assistance in using
this tool, please contact [email protected] or the AMHP contact.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Consistent with the Department's Rural Opportunities to Use
Transportation for Economic Success (ROUTES) Initiative (https://www.transportation.gov/rural), the Department encourages applicants to
describe how activities proposed in their applications would address
the unique challenges facing rural transportation networks, regardless
of the geographic location of those activities.
iii. Project Location
This section of the application should describe the project
location, including a detailed geographical description of the proposed
project, a map of the project's location and connections to existing
transportation infrastructure, and geospatial data describing the
project location.
The application should also identify:
(A) Whether the project is located in a Federally designated
community development zone \9\ such as a qualified Opportunity Zone;
\10\ Empowerment Zone; \11\ Promise Zone; \12\ or Choice Neighborhood;
\13\
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\9\ For projects that are located in a Federally designated
community development zone, the applicant must identify the zone and
provide related identifying data (such as the Opportunity Zone
number).
\10\ See https://opportunityzones.hud.gov/.
\11\ See https://www.hud.gov/hudprograms/empowerment_zones.
\12\ See https://www.hud.gov/program_offices/field_policy_mgt/fieldpolicymgtpz.
\13\ See https://www.hud.gov/program_offices/public_indian_housing/programs/ph/cn.
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(B) whether the project is located in a Historically Disadvantaged
Community, including the relevant census tract(s) (as defined in
Section D.2.ii.); and
(C) whether the project is located in a 2010 Census-designated
urban area \14\ or rural area.\15\
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\14\ For the purpose of this NOFO, a project is designated as
urban if it is located within (or on the boundary of) a Census-
designated urbanized area (UA) that had a population greater than
50,000 in the 2010 Census. Lists of 2010 UAs as defined by the
Census Bureau are available on the Census Bureau website at https://www.census.gov/geographies/reference-maps/2010/geo/2010-census-urban-areas.html. For the purpose of this NOFO, the definition of
urban and rural is based on the 2010 Census-designated urban areas
since urban areas have not been designated for the 2020 Census at
the time of this NOFO publication.
\15\ MARAD will consider a project to be in a rural area if the
majority of the project (determined by geographic location(s) where
the majority of the money is to be spent) is located outside of a
Census-designated urbanized area with a population of 50,000 or
greater. Grant funds utilized in an urbanized area border, including
an intersection with an urbanized area, will be considered urban for
the purposes of the Marine Highway Grants program.
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iv. Grant Funds, Sources, and Uses of Project Funds
This section of the application should describe the project's
budget (i.e., the project scope that includes Marine Highway funding
and non-Federal cost share). The budget should not include any
previously incurred expenses. At a minimum, it should include:
(A) Project costs;
(B) The sources and amounts of funds to be used for project costs;
(C) For non-Federal funds to be used for eligible project costs,
documentation of funding commitments should be referenced here and
included as an appendix to the application;
(D) For other Federal (non-AMHP) funds to be used for eligible
project costs, the amounts, nature, and sources of any required non-
Federal match for those funds; and
(E) A budget showing how each source of funds will be spent. The
budget should show how each funding source will share in each project
component, and present that data in dollars and percentages. Funding
sources should be grouped into three categories: Non-Federal; Marine
Highway Grant funding; and other Federal. A letter of commitment from
each funding source should be an attachment to the application. If the
project contains individual components, the budget should separate the
costs of each project component. The budget should sufficiently
demonstrate that the project satisfies the statutory cost-sharing
requirements described in Section C.2.
v. Selection Criteria
This section of the application should demonstrate how the project
proposed for grant funding aligns with the criteria described below and
in Section E.1. MARAD encourages applicants to address each criterion,
or expressly state that the project does not address the criterion.
Applicants are not required to follow a specific format, but MARAD
recommends applicants address each criterion separately using the
outline suggested below and provide a clear discussion that assists
project evaluators in evaluating how each project meets the selection
criteria. Guidance describing how MARAD will evaluate projects against
the selection criteria is in Section E.1. of this notice. Applicants
also should review that section before considering how to organize and
complete their applications. To minimize redundant information in an
application, MARAD encourages applicants to cross-reference from this
section of their application to relevant substantive information in
other sections of the application.
(A) Primary Selection Criteria
(1) This section of the application should demonstrate the extent
to which the project is financially viable. Per 46 U.S.C. 55601(g)(3),
preference will be given to projects or components that present the
most financially viable transportation services.
(2) This section of the application should demonstrate that the
funds received will be spent efficiently and effectively.
(3) This section of the application should demonstrate that a
market exists for the services of the proposed project as evidenced by
contracts or written statements of intent from potential customers.
(4) This section of the application should describe the public
benefits
[[Page 12542]]
anticipated by the proposed grant project, as outlined in 46 CFR
393.3(c)(8), and described below. The public benefits described in the
relevant Marine Highway Project Designation application may be
referenced, updated, or described as unchanged. Applicants will need to
clearly demonstrate that the original public benefits outlined in the
original Project Designation application apply to the specific grant
funding request associated with this notice, and provide any updates or
supplemental information regarding the original public benefits, as
necessary. To the extent referenced, this information need not be
resubmitted in support of a Marine Highway Grant application.
Applicants should organize the external net cost savings and public
benefits of the proposed grant project based on the following six
categories:
i. Emissions benefits;
ii. Energy savings;
iii. Landside transportation infrastructure maintenance savings;
iv. Economic competitiveness;
v. Safety improvements; and
vi. System resiliency and redundancy.
vi. Other Application Requirements
(A) National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) Requirements
(1) Information about the NEPA status of the Project. Projects
selected for grant award must comply with NEPA and any other applicable
environmental laws. The application should include sufficient detail on
the project in order for MARAD to determine the NEPA class of action.
The application should indicate the anticipated NEPA level of review
for the project and describe any environmental analysis in progress or
completed. This includes Categorical Exclusion, Environmental
Assessment/Finding of No Significant Impact, or Environmental Impact
Statement/Record of Decision. The applicant should review the Maritime
Administration Manual of Orders MAO 600-1 (available at https://www.maritime.dot.gov/sites/marad.dot.gov/files/docs/environment-security-safety/office-environment/596/mao600-001-0.pdf) prior to
submission. The application should detail the type of NEPA review
underway, where the project is in the process, provide a website link
or other reference to copies of any environmental documents prepared,
and indicate the anticipated date of completion of all milestones and
of the final NEPA determination. If the last agency action with respect
to NEPA documents occurred more than three years before the application
date, the applicant should describe why the project has been delayed
and include a proposed approach for verifying and, if necessary,
updating this material in accordance with applicable NEPA requirements.
The applicant should be aware that the final determination of NEPA
class of action will be made by MARAD after grant award announcement.
The successful applicant will be responsible for the completion of
MARAD's NEPA documentation, in collaboration with MARAD's Office of
Environmental Compliance, prior to execution of the grant agreement.
(2) Environmental Permits and Reviews. The application should
demonstrate receipt (or reasonably anticipated receipt) of all
environmental permits and approvals necessary, such as Army Corps of
Engineers permits. Additionally, the successful applicant, in
collaboration with MARAD, will be responsible for the completion of
Section 106 of the National Historic Preservation Act, 54 U.S.C.
306108, and Section 7 of the Endangered Species Act, 16 U.S.C. 1531,
consultations prior to completing NEPA. Applications should also
identify any additional Federal, State, and local permits and approvals
necessary for project completion.
(B) Other Federal, State, and Local Actions
An application must indicate whether a proposed project is likely
to require actions by other agencies, indicate the status of such
actions, provide a website link or other reference to materials
submitted to the other agencies, and demonstrate compliance with other
Federal, state, or local regulations and permits as applicable. This
section should also include a description of whether the project is
dependent on, or affected by, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers investment
as well as the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers planned activities as it
relates to the project.
(C) Domestic Preference
If a project intends to use any product with foreign content or of
foreign origin, this information should be listed and addressed in the
application. Applications should expressly address how the applicant
plans to comply with domestic preference requirements and the
applicant's current efforts and planned efforts to maximize domestic
content. If an applicant anticipates any potential foreign-content
issues with its proposed project, applications should demonstrate that
the domestic source is not available and how that determination was
reached.
(D) Addressing Climate Change and Decarbonization
MARAD seeks to fund projects under the AMHP that proactively
consider climate change and align with the President's greenhouse gas
reduction goals and promote energy efficiency. As part of the
Department's implementation of Executive Order 14008, Tackling the
Climate Crisis at Home and Abroad (86 FR 7619), MARAD also seeks to
fund projects that address environmental justice, particularly for
communities that disproportionally experience climate change-related
consequences. In support of this priority, applications should address
whether the project has incorporated climate change and environmental
justice \16\ in project planning and/or design components, particularly
for communities that disproportionally experience climate change-
related consequences. To address the planning element of this
criterion, the application should describe what specific climate change
or environmental justice activities have been completed or are planned
for the project. This could include identifying how emissions
reductions will specifically benefit disadvantaged communities or to
what extent it will create employment opportunities and economic
benefits to the local community. The application should indicate
whether a project is incorporated in a climate action plan, whether an
equitable development plan has been prepared, and whether (and how) the
results of planning tools such as DOT's Disadvantaged Census Tract tool
or EPA's EJSCREEN have been incorporated into the project.\17\
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\16\ Environmental justice, as defined by the Environmental
Protection Agency, is the fair treatment and meaningful involvement
of all people regardless of race, color, national origin, or income,
with respect to the development, implementation, and enforcement of
environmental laws, regulations, and policies.
\17\ The EJSCREEN tool can be found on the EPA site: https://ejscreen.epa.gov/mapper/.
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To address whether the project has incorporated climate change and
environmental justice in the design components, the application should
describe specific and direct ways that the project will mitigate or
reduce climate change impacts. This may include a description of how
the project incorporates multimodal infrastructure to reduce climate
impacts, such as by ensuring that cargo is moved by the most climate-
efficient/friendly mode of transportation. This section should also
describe ways that the project reduces emissions or uses technology to
increase energy efficiency, and whether the
[[Page 12543]]
proposed grant project demonstrates a movement towards lower carbon
emissions or near-zero emissions. This may include, but is not limited
to:
(1) The use of alternative, low carbon fuels for vessels or cargo
handling equipment;
(2) The use of alternative technologies, such as fuels cells,
batteries, hybrid systems, etc. for vessels or cargo handling
equipment;
(3) The procurement or leasing of low or no emission cargo-handling
equipment that make greater reductions in energy consumption and
harmful emissions than comparable equipment;
(4) The use of port-based alternative energy sources such as low
carbon-powered microgrids or charging stations; and/or
(5) Best practices that promote low carbon/energy efficiency cargo
movement or handling operations.
(E) Certification Requirements
For an application to be considered for a grant award, the Chief
Executive Officer, or equivalent, of the Eligible Applicant is required
to certify, in writing, the following:
(1) That, except as noted in this grant application, nothing has
changed from the original application for formal designation as a
Marine Highway Project; and
(2) The Eligible Applicant will administer the project and any
funds received will be spent efficiently and effectively; and
(3) The Eligible Applicant will provide information, data, and
reports as required.
(F) Protection of Confidential Commercial Information
Eligible Applicants should submit, as part of or in support of
applications, publicly available data or data that can be made public
and methodologies that are accepted by industry practice and standards
to the extent possible. If an application includes information that the
applicant considers to be a trade secret or confidential commercial or
financial information, the applicant should do the following: (i) Note
on the front cover that the submission contains ``Confidential
Commercial Information (CCI)''; (ii) mark each affected page ``CCI'';
and (iii) highlight or otherwise denote the CCI portions. MARAD will
protect such information from disclosure to the extent allowed under
applicable law. In the event MARAD receives a Freedom of Information
Act (FOIA) request for the information, procedures described in the
Department's FOIA regulation at 49 CFR 7.29 will be followed. Only
information that is ultimately determined to be confidential under
those procedures will be exempt from disclosure under FOIA.
(G) Additional Application Information Needed From All Private-Sector
Applicants, Including Previous Recipients of AMHP Grant Funding
(1) Written letter of support from the original Project Applicant
stating that the private entity has been referred by the original
Project Applicant for the relevant designated Marine Highway Project.
(2) A description of the entity including location of the
headquarters; a description of the entity's assets (tugs, barges,
etc.); years in operation; ownership; customer base; and website
address, if any.
(3) Unique Entity Identifier of the parent company (when
applicable): Data Universal Numbering System (DUNS + 4 number).
(4) The most recent year-end audited, reviewed, or compiled
financial statements, prepared by a certified public accountant (CPA),
per U.S. generally accepted accounting principles (not tax-based
accounting financial statements). If CPA prepared financial statements
are not available, provide the most recent financial statement for the
entity. Do not provide tax returns.
(5) Statement regarding the relationship between applicants and any
parents, subsidiaries, or affiliates, if any such entity is going to
provide a portion of the matching funds.
(6) Evidence documenting applicant's ability to make proposed
matching requirement (loan agreement, commitment from investors, cash
on balance sheet, etc.).
(7) Pro-forma financial statements reflecting financial condition
at beginning of period; effect on balance sheet of grant and matching
funds (e.g., a decrease in cash or increase in debt, additional equity
and an increase in fixed assets); and impact on company's projected
financial condition (balance sheet) of completion of project, showing
that company will have sufficient financial resources to remain in
business.
(8) Statement regarding whether during the past five years, the
applicant or any predecessor or related company has been in bankruptcy
or in reorganization under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code, or in any
insolvency or reorganization proceedings, and whether any substantial
property of the applicant or any predecessor or related company has
been acquired in any such proceeding or has been subject to foreclosure
or receivership during such period. If so, give details.
(9) Additional information may be requested as deemed necessary by
MARAD to facilitate and complete its review of the application. If such
information is not provided, MARAD may deem the application incomplete
and cease processing it.
(10) Company Officer's certification of each of the following:
i. That the company operates in the geographic location of the
designated Marine Highway Project;
ii. That the applicant has the authority to carry out the proposed
project; and
iii. That the applicant has not, and will not, make any prohibited
payments out of the requested grant, in accordance with the Department
of Transportation's regulation restricting lobbying, 49 CFR part 20.
3. Unique Entity Identifier and System for Award Management (SAM)
MARAD will not make an award to an applicant until the applicant
has complied with all applicable Unique Entity Identifier and SAM
requirements. Each applicant must be registered in SAM before applying,
provide a valid Unique Entity Identifier number in its application, and
maintain an active SAM registration with current information at all
times during which it has an active Federal award or an application or
plan under consideration by a Federal awarding agency. Applicants may
register with the SAM at www.SAM.gov. If an applicant has not fully
complied with the requirements by the time MARAD is ready to make an
award, MARAD may determine that the applicant is not qualified to
receive a Federal award under this program.
4. Submission Dates and Times
Applications must be submitted to Grants.gov by 5:00 p.m. E.D.T. on
April 29, 2022.
5. Funding Restrictions
Grant funds may only be used for the purposes described in this
notice and may not be used as an operating subsidy. Market-related
studies are ineligible for Marine Highway Grant funds, as are
improvements to Federally owned facilities.
MARAD will not consider previously incurred costs or previously
expended or encumbered funds towards the matching requirement for any
project. Unless authorized by MARAD in writing after MARAD's
announcement of Marine Highway Grant awards, any costs incurred before
a grant agreement is executed will not be reimbursed and
[[Page 12544]]
will not count towards cost share requirements.
Federal award recipients and sub-recipients are prohibited from
obligating or expending grant funds to procure or obtain; extend or
renew a contract to procure or obtain; or enter into a contract (or
extend or renew a contract) to procure or obtain equipment, services,
or systems that use covered telecommunications equipment or services as
a substantial or essential component of any system, or as critical
technology as part of any system. See Section 889 of Public Law 115-232
(National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2019) and 2 CFR
200.216 & 200.471.
6. Other Submission Requirements
Grant applications must be submitted electronically using
Grants.gov (https://www.grants.gov). To submit an application through
Grants.gov, applicants must:
i. Obtain a Unique Entity Identifier (UEI) number;
ii. Register with the System for Award Management (SAM) at
www.SAM.gov;
iii. Create a Grants.gov username and password; and
iv. Complete Authorized Organization Representative (AOR)
registration in Grants.gov. The E-Business Point of Contact (POC) at
the applicant's organization must respond to the registration email
from Grants.gov and login at Grants.gov to authorize the applicant as
the AOR. Please note that there can be more than one AOR for an
organization.
Please note that the Grants.gov registration process usually takes
2-4 weeks to complete and the Department will not consider late
applications that are the result of a failure to register or comply
with Grants.gov applicant requirements in a timely manner. For
information and instruction on each of these processes, please see
instructions at https://www.grants.gov/applicants/applicant-faqs.html.
If applicants experience difficulties at any point during the
registration or application process, please call the Grants.gov
Customer Service Support Hotline at 1 (800) 518-4726.
Late applications that are the result of failure to register or
comply with Grants.gov application requirements in a timely manner will
not be considered. Applicants experiencing technical issues with
Grants.gov that are beyond the applicant's control must contact
[email protected] or Fred Jones at (202) 366-1123 prior to the deadline with
the username of the registrant and details of the technical issue
experienced. The applicant must provide: (i) Details of the technical
issue experienced; (ii) screen capture(s) of the technical issue
experienced along with the corresponding ``Grant tracking number'' that
is provided via Grants.gov; (iii) the ``Legal Name'' for the applicant
that was provided in the SF-424; (iv) the name and contact information
for the person to be contacted on matters involving submission that is
included on the SF- 424; (v) the Unique Entity Identifier number
associated with the application; and (vi) the Grants.gov Help Desk
Tracking Number.
E. Application Review Information
1. Selection Criteria
This section specifies the criteria that MARAD will use to evaluate
and award applications for Marine Highway Grants. These criteria
incorporate the statutory requirements for this program, as well as
Departmental and programmatic priorities.
When reviewing grant applications, MARAD will consider how the
proposed service could satisfy, in whole or in part, 46 U.S.C.
55601(b)(1) and (3) and the following criteria found at 46 U.S.C.
55601(g)(2)(B):
i. The project is financially viable;
ii. The funds received will be spent efficiently and effectively;
and
iii. A market exists for the services of the proposed project as
evidenced by contracts or written statements of intent from potential
customers.
MARAD will also consider how the proposed request for funding
outlined in the grant application supports the elements of 46 CFR
393.3(c)(8) (Public benefits) as a key programmatic objective.
In awarding grants under the program, MARAD will give preference to
those projects or components that present the most financially viable
marine highway transportation services and require the lowest total
percentage Federal share of the costs.
After applying the above criteria, in support of Departmental
priorities related to climate change, including advancing the goals
outlined in Executive Order 14008, Tackling the Climate Crisis at Home
and Abroad (86 FR 7619), MARAD will evaluate whether the project
incorporates climate change, environmental justice, and decarbonization
activities in project planning and/or design elements. MARAD will give
preference to projects that demonstrate a movement towards lower carbon
emissions or near-zero emissions, as described in Section D.2.vi.(D).
In support of Executive Order 13985, Advancing Racial Equity and
Support for Underserved Communities Through the Federal Government (86
FR 7009), MARAD will also consider the extent to which applications
address equity and the removal of barriers to opportunity through the
activities described in Section D.2.ii., such as meaningful, equity-
focused community outreach and public engagement of underserved
communities, and adoption of an equity and inclusion program or plan or
equity-focused policies related to the proposed project.
In addition, since the AMHP is intended to create transportation
options that enhance supply chain reliance, MARAD will consider how a
project improves the supply chain. Reviewers will consider the extent
to which information in the narrative demonstrates how the project
positively impacts the supply chain, as described further in Section
D.2.ii. For example, reviewers will consider whether a project proposes
elements that improve transportation links to critical infrastructure,
promotes lower-carbon supply chain infrastructure, or invests in supply
chain reliability improvements. Projects that have significant regional
or national supply chain system impacts will be more competitive than
ones that do not.
DOT will consider whether a project is located within a
Historically Disadvantaged Community or a Federally designated
community development zone (a qualified opportunity zone, Empowerment
Zone, Promise Zone, or Choice Neighborhood). Applicants must specify in
their narrative which zone (or zones) the project is in and provide
sufficient identifying information (such as the Opportunity Zone tract
number) so that reviewers can verify the claim. A project located in a
Historically Disadvantaged Community or a Federally designated
community development zone is more competitive than a similar project
that is not. The Department will rely on applicant-supplied information
to assist in making this assessment and will only consider this if the
applicant expressly identifies the designation in their application.
MARAD will also consider a project's likelihood of obligating funds
by September 30, 2025.
2. Review and Selection Process
Upon receipt, MARAD will conduct a technical review to evaluate
applications using the criteria outlined above. Upon completion of the
technical review, MARAD will forward the applications to an inter-
agency review team (Intermodal Review Team). The Intermodal Review Team
will include
[[Page 12545]]
members of MARAD, other Department of Transportation Operating
Administrations, and representatives from the Office of the Secretary
of Transportation. The Intermodal Review Team will review and provide
comments to the Program Office for each application based on the
criteria set forth above. The Program Office will use those comments to
inform the recommendations that will be made to the Maritime
Administrator and the Secretary.
3. Federal Awardee Performance and Integrity Information System
(FAPIIS) Check
Before making a Federal award with a total amount of Federal share
greater than the simplified acquisition threshold of $250,000 (see 2
CFR 200.88 Simplified Acquisition Threshold), MARAD will review and
consider any information about the applicant that is in the designated
integrity and performance system accessible through SAM (currently
FAPIIS) (see 41 U.S.C. 2313). An applicant, at its option, may review
information in the designated integrity and performance systems
accessible through SAM and comment on any information about itself that
a Federal awarding agency previously entered and is currently in the
designated integrity and performance system accessible through SAM.
MARAD will consider any comments by the applicant, in addition to the
other information in the designated integrity and performance system,
in making a judgment about the applicant's integrity, business ethics,
and record of performance under Federal awards when completing the
review of risk posed by applicants.
F. Federal Award Administration Information
1. Federal Award Notices
Following the evaluation outlined in Section E, the Secretary will
announce the selected grant award recipients. The award announcement
will be posted on the MARAD website (https://www.maritime.dot.gov).
Recipients of an award will not receive lump-sum cash disbursements
at the time of award announcement or obligation of funds. Instead,
Marine Highway Grant funds will reimburse recipients only after grant
agreements have been executed, allowable expenses are incurred, and
valid requests for reimbursement have been submitted and approved by
the MARAD grants officer. Marine Highway Grant recipients must adhere
to applicable requirements and follow established procedures to receive
reimbursement. Unless authorized in writing by MARAD, an expense
incurred before a grant agreement is executed will not be reimbursed or
count towards cost share requirements.
2. Administrative and National Policy Requirements
All awards must be administered pursuant to the ``Uniform
Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements
for Federal Awards'' found at 2 CFR part 200, as adopted by the
Department at 2 CFR part 1201. All procurement transactions for the
acquisition of property or services under the Federal award must be
conducted in a manner providing full and open competition unless MARAD
authorizes a noncompetitive procurement in accordance with 2 CFR
200.320(c). Federal wage rate requirements included at 40 U.S.C. 3141-
3148 apply to all projects receiving funds under this program and apply
to all parts of the project, whether funded with Federal funds or non-
Federal funds. Additionally, other applicable Federal laws, Executive
Orders, and any rules, regulations, and requirements of MARAD will
apply to projects that receive Marine Highway Grants.
As expressed in Executive Order 14005, Ensuring the Future is Made
in All of America by All of America's Workers (86 FR 7475), it is the
policy of the executive branch to use terms and conditions of Federal
financial assistance awards to maximize, consistent with law, the use
of goods, products, and materials produced in, and services offered in,
the United States. Consistent with the requirements of the Build
America, Buy America Act (Pub. L. 117-58, Division G, Title IX,
Subtitle A, November 15, 2021), no amounts made available through this
NOFO may be obligated for a project unless all iron, steel,
manufactured products, and construction materials used in the project
are produced in the United States. Depending on other funding streams,
the project may be subject to separate ``Buy America'' requirements.
All recipients must comply with the requirements under Title VI of
the Civil Rights Act of 1964, Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act,
and their implementing regulations. Applicants should review these
civil rights statutes carefully to ensure full compliance with these
obligations. These requirements apply to recipients as well as all
subrecipients. The successful applicant will be responsible for
implementing an effective and compliant Title VI and Section 504
program under the technical assistance from MARAD's Office of Civil
Rights.
In connection with any program or activity conducted with or
benefiting from funds awarded under this notice, recipients of funds
must comply with all applicable requirements of Federal law, including,
without limitation, the Constitution of the United States; the
conditions of performance, nondiscrimination requirements, and other
assurances made applicable to the award of funds in accordance with
regulations of the Department of Transportation; and applicable Federal
financial assistance and contracting principles promulgated by the
Office of Management and Budget. In complying with these requirements,
recipients, in particular, must ensure that no concession agreements
are denied or other contracting decisions made on the basis of speech
or other activities protected by the First Amendment. If the Department
determines that a recipient has failed to comply with applicable
Federal requirements, the Department may terminate the award of funds
and disallow previously incurred costs, requiring the recipient to
reimburse any expended award funds.
3. Reporting
a. Progress Reporting on Grant Activities
Award recipients are required to submit quarterly reports, signed
by officers of the recipients, to the Program Office to keep MARAD
informed of all activities during the reporting period. The reports
will indicate progress made, planned activities for the next reporting
period, and a listing of any purchases made with grant funds during the
reporting period. In addition, the report will include an explanation
of any deviation from the projected budget and timeline. Quarterly
reports will also contain, at a minimum, the following: (i) A statement
as to whether the award recipient has used the grant funds consistent
with the terms contemplated in the grant agreement; (ii) if applicable,
a description of the budgeted activities not procured by recipient;
(iii) if applicable, the rationale for recipient's failure to execute
the budgeted activities; (iv) if applicable, an explanation as to how
and when recipient intends to accomplish the purposes of the grant
agreement; and (v) a budget summary showing funds expended since
commencement, anticipated expenditures for the next reporting period,
and expenditures compared to overall budget.
[[Page 12546]]
b. Performance Reporting
Award recipients will also collect information and report on a
project's observed performance with respect to the relevant long-term
outcomes that are expected to be achieved through the project.
Performance indicators will not include formal goals or targets, but
will include observed measures under baseline (pre-project) as well as
post-implementation outcomes for an agreed-upon timeline, and will be
used to evaluate and compare projects and monitor the results that
grant funds achieve to the intended long-term outcomes of the AMHP.
Performance reporting continues for several years after the project is
completed, and MARAD does not provide Marine Highway Grant funding
specifically for performance reporting.
c. Reporting of Matters Related to Recipient Integrity and Performance
If the total value of a selected applicant's currently active
grants, cooperative agreements, and procurement contracts from all
Federal awarding agencies exceeds $10,000,000 for any period of time
during the period of performance of this Federal award, then the
applicant during that period of time must maintain the currency of
information reported to the SAM that is made available in the
designated integrity and performance system (currently FAPIIS) about
civil, criminal, or administrative proceedings described in paragraph 2
of 2 CFR Appendix XII to Part 200. This is a statutory requirement
under Section 872 of Public Law 110-417, as amended (41 U.S.C. 2313).
As required by Section 3010 of Public Law 111-212, all information
posted in the designated integrity and performance system on or after
April 15, 2011, except past performance reviews required for Federal
procurement contracts, will be publicly available.
G. Federal Awarding Agency Contacts
To ensure applicants receive accurate information about
eligibility, the program, or in response to other questions, applicants
are encouraged to contact MARAD directly, rather than through
intermediaries or third parties. Please see contact information in the
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section above.
* * * * *
By Order of the Acting Maritime Administrator.
T. Mitchell Hudson, Jr.,
Secretary, Maritime Administration.
[FR Doc. 2022-04599 Filed 3-3-22; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910-81-P